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+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott
+
+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: Peveril of the Peak
+
+Author: Sir Walter Scott
+
+Release Date: May 1, 2009 [EBook #5959]
+Last Updated: August 31, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEVERIL OF THE PEAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emma Wong Shee, John Bickers, Dagny, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+
+
+<p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+<hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
+ </h2>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0001m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0001m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0001.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0013m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0013m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0013.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0581m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0581m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0581.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0006m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0006m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0006.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0012m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0012m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0012.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0011m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0011m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0011.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <big><b>PEVERIL OF THE PEAK</b></big>
+ </a><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XLI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XLII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XLIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XLIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XLV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER XLVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER XLVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0048"> CHAPTER XLVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0049"> CHAPTER XLIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ When civil dudgeon first grew high,
+ And men fell out, they knew not why;
+ When foul words, jealousies, and fears,
+ Set folk together by the ears&mdash;
+ &mdash;BUTLER.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ William, the Conqueror of England, was, or supposed himself to be, the
+ father of a certain William Peveril, who attended him to the battle of
+ Hastings, and there distinguished himself. The liberal-minded monarch, who
+ assumed in his charters the veritable title of Gulielmus Bastardus, was
+ not likely to let his son&rsquo;s illegitimacy be any bar to the course of his
+ royal favour, when the laws of England were issued from the mouth of the
+ Norman victor, and the lands of the Saxons were at his unlimited disposal.
+ William Peveril obtained a liberal grant of property and lordships in
+ Derbyshire, and became the erecter of that Gothic fortress, which, hanging
+ over the mouth of the Devil&rsquo;s Cavern, so well known to tourists, gives the
+ name of Castleton to the adjacent village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this feudal Baron, who chose his nest upon the principles on which an
+ eagle selects her eyry, and built it in such a fashion as if he had
+ intended it, as an Irishman said of the Martello towers, for the sole
+ purpose of puzzling posterity, there was, or conceived themselves to be,
+ descended (for their pedigree was rather hypothetical) an opulent family
+ of knightly rank, in the same county of Derby. The great fief of
+ Castleton, with its adjacent wastes and forests, and all the wonders which
+ they contain, had been forfeited in King John&rsquo;s stormy days, by one
+ William Peveril, and had been granted anew to the Lord Ferrers of that
+ day. Yet this William&rsquo;s descendants, though no longer possessed of what
+ they alleged to have been their original property, were long distinguished
+ by the proud title of Peverils of the Peak, which served to mark their
+ high descent and lofty pretensions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Charles the Second&rsquo;s time, the representative of this ancient family
+ was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, a man who had many of the ordinary attributes of
+ an old-fashioned country gentleman, and very few individual traits to
+ distinguish him from the general portrait of that worthy class of mankind.
+ He was proud of small advantages, angry at small disappointments,
+ incapable of forming any resolution or opinion abstracted from his own
+ prejudices&mdash;he was proud of his birth, lavish in his housekeeping,
+ convivial with those kindred and acquaintances, who would allow his
+ superiority in rank&mdash;contentious and quarrelsome with all that
+ crossed his pretensions&mdash;kind to the poor, except when they plundered
+ his game&mdash;a Royalist in his political opinions, and one who detested
+ alike a Roundhead, a poacher, and a Presbyterian. In religion Sir Geoffrey
+ was a high-churchman, of so exalted a strain that many thought he still
+ nourished in private the Roman Catholic tenets, which his family had only
+ renounced in his father&rsquo;s time, and that he had a dispensation for
+ conforming in outward observances to the Protestant faith. There was at
+ least such a scandal amongst the Puritans, and the influence which Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril certainly appeared to possess amongst the Catholic
+ gentlemen of Derbyshire and Cheshire, seemed to give countenance to the
+ rumour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Sir Geoffrey, who might have passed to his grave without further
+ distinction than a brass-plate in the chancel, had he not lived in times
+ which forced the most inactive spirits into exertion, as a tempest
+ influences the sluggish waters of the deadest mere. When the Civil Wars
+ broke out, Peveril of the Peak, proud from pedigree, and brave by
+ constitution, raised a regiment for the King, and showed upon several
+ occasions more capacity for command than men had heretofore given him
+ credit for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in the midst of the civil turmoil, he fell in love with, and married,
+ a beautiful and amiable young lady of the noble house of Stanley; and from
+ that time had the more merit in his loyalty, as it divorced him from her
+ society, unless at very brief intervals, when his duty permitted an
+ occasional visit to his home. Scorning to be allured from his military
+ duty by domestic inducements, Peveril of the Peak fought on for several
+ rough years of civil war, and performed his part with sufficient
+ gallantry, until his regiment was surprised and cut to pieces by Poyntz,
+ Cromwell&rsquo;s enterprising and successful general of cavalry. The defeated
+ Cavalier escaped from the field of battle, and, like a true descendant of
+ William the Conqueror, disdaining submission, threw himself into his own
+ castellated mansion, which was attacked and defended in a siege of that
+ irregular kind which caused the destruction of so many baronial residences
+ during the course of those unhappy wars. Martindale Castle, after having
+ suffered severely from the cannon which Cromwell himself brought against
+ it, was at length surrendered when in the last extremity. Sir Geoffrey
+ himself became a prisoner, and while his liberty was only restored upon a
+ promise of remaining a peaceful subject to the Commonwealth in future, his
+ former delinquencies, as they were termed by the ruling party, were
+ severely punished by fine and sequestration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither his forced promise, nor the fear of farther unpleasant
+ consequences to his person or property, could prevent Peveril of the Peak
+ from joining the gallant Earl of Derby the night before the fatal
+ engagement in Wiggan Lane, where the Earl&rsquo;s forces were dispersed. Sir
+ Geoffrey having had his share in that action, escaped with the relics of
+ the Royalists after the defeat, to join Charles II. He witnessed also the
+ final defeat of Worcester, where he was a second time made prisoner; and
+ as, in the opinion of Cromwell and the language of the times, he was
+ regarded as an obstinate malignant, he was in great danger of having
+ shared with the Earl of Derby his execution at Bolton-le-Moor, having
+ partaken with him the dangers of two actions. But Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s life was
+ preserved by the interest of a friend, who possessed influence in the
+ councils of Oliver.&mdash;This was a Mr. Bridgenorth, a gentleman of
+ middling quality, whose father had been successful in some commercial
+ adventure during the peaceful reign of James I.; and who had bequeathed
+ his son a considerable sum of money, in addition to the moderate patrimony
+ which he inherited from his father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The substantial, though small-sized, brick building of Moultrassie Hall,
+ was but two miles distant from Martindale Castle, and the young
+ Bridgenorth attended the same school with the heir of the Peverils. A sort
+ of companionship, if not intimacy, took place betwixt them, which
+ continued during their youthful sports&mdash;the rather that Bridgenorth,
+ though he did not at heart admit Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s claims of superiority to
+ the extent which the other&rsquo;s vanity would have exacted, paid deference in
+ a reasonable degree to the representative of a family so much more ancient
+ and important than his own, without conceiving that he in any respect
+ degraded himself by doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bridgenorth did not, however, carry his complaisance so far as to
+ embrace Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s side during the Civil War. On the contrary, as an
+ active Justice of the Peace, he rendered much assistance in arraying the
+ militia in the cause of the Parliament, and for some time held a military
+ commission in that service. This was partly owing to his religious
+ principles, for he was a zealous Presbyterian, partly to his political
+ ideas, which, without being absolutely democratical, favoured the popular
+ side of the great national question. Besides, he was a moneyed man, and to
+ a certain extent had a shrewd eye to his worldly interest. He understood
+ how to improve the opportunities which civil war afforded, of advancing
+ his fortune, by a dexterous use of his capital; and he was not at a loss
+ to perceive that these were likely to be obtained in joining the
+ Parliament; while the King&rsquo;s cause, as it was managed, held out nothing to
+ the wealthy but a course of exaction and compulsory loans. For these
+ reasons, Bridgenorth became a decided Roundhead, and all friendly
+ communication betwixt his neighbour and him was abruptly broken asunder.
+ This was done with the less acrimony, that, during the Civil War, Sir
+ Geoffrey was almost constantly in the field, following the vacillating and
+ unhappy fortunes of his master; while Major Bridgenorth, who soon
+ renounced active military service, resided chiefly in London, and only
+ occasionally visited the Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon these visits, it was with great pleasure he received the
+ intelligence, that Lady Peveril had shown much kindness to Mrs.
+ Bridgenorth, and had actually given her and her family shelter in
+ Martindale Castle, when Moultrassie Hall was threatened with pillage by a
+ body of Prince Rupert&rsquo;s ill-disciplined Cavaliers. This acquaintance had
+ been matured by frequent walks together, which the vicinity of their
+ places of residence suffered the Lady Peveril to have with Mrs.
+ Bridgenorth, who deemed herself much honoured in being thus admitted into
+ the society of so distinguished a lady. Major Bridgenorth heard of this
+ growing intimacy with great pleasure, and he determined to repay the
+ obligation, as far as he could without much hurt to himself, by
+ interfering with all his influence, in behalf of her unfortunate husband.
+ It was chiefly owing to Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s mediation, that Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s
+ life was saved after the battle of Worcester. He obtained him permission
+ to compound for his estate on easier terms than many who had been less
+ obstinate in malignancy; and, finally, when, in order to raise the money
+ to the composition, the Knight was obliged to sell a considerable portion
+ of his patrimony, Major Bridgenorth became the purchaser, and that at a
+ larger price than had been paid to any Cavalier under such circumstances,
+ by a member of the Committee for Sequestrations. It is true, the prudent
+ committeeman did not, by any means, lose sight of his own interest in the
+ transaction, for the price was, after all, very moderate, and the property
+ lay adjacent to Moultrassie Hall, the value of which was at least trebled
+ by the acquisition. But then it was also true, that the unfortunate owner
+ must have submitted to much worse conditions, had the committeeman used,
+ as others did, the full advantages which his situation gave him; and
+ Bridgenorth took credit to himself, and received it from others, for
+ having, on this occasion, fairly sacrificed his interest to his
+ liberality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril was of the same opinion, and the rather that Mr.
+ Bridgenorth seemed to bear his exaltation with great moderation, and was
+ disposed to show him personally the same deference in his present sunshine
+ of prosperity, which he had exhibited formerly in their early
+ acquaintance. It is but justice to Major Bridgenorth to observe, that in
+ this conduct he paid respect as much to the misfortunes as to the
+ pretensions of his far-descended neighbour, and that, with the frank
+ generosity of a blunt Englishman, he conceded points of ceremony, about
+ which he himself was indifferent, merely because he saw that his doing so
+ gave pleasure to Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril of the Peak did justice to his neighbour&rsquo;s delicacy, in
+ consideration of which he forgot many things. He forgot that Major
+ Bridgenorth was already in possession of a fair third of his estate, and
+ had various pecuniary claims affecting the remainder, to the extent of
+ one-third more. He endeavoured even to forget, what it was still more
+ difficult not to remember, the altered situation in which they and their
+ mansions now stood to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the Civil War, the superb battlements and turrets of Martindale
+ Castle looked down on the red brick-built Hall, as it stole out from the
+ green plantations, just as an oak in Martindale Chase would have looked
+ beside one of the stunted and formal young beech-trees with which
+ Bridgenorth had graced his avenue; but after the siege which we have
+ commemorated, the enlarged and augmented Hall was as much predominant in
+ the landscape over the shattered and blackened ruins of the Castle, of
+ which only one wing was left habitable, as the youthful beech, in all its
+ vigour of shoot and bud, would appear to the same aged oak stripped of its
+ boughs, and rifted by lightning, one-half laid in shivers on the ground,
+ and the other remaining a blackened and ungraceful trunk, rent and
+ splintered, and without either life or leaves. Sir Geoffrey could not but
+ feel, that the situation and prospects were exchanged as disadvantageously
+ for himself as the appearance of their mansions; and that though the
+ authority of the man in office under the Parliament, the sequestrator, and
+ the committeeman, had been only exerted for the protection of the Cavalier
+ and the malignant, they would have been as effectual if applied to procure
+ his utter ruin; and that he was become a client, while his neighbour was
+ elevated into a patron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two considerations, besides the necessity of the case and the
+ constant advice of his lady, which enabled Peveril of the Peak to endure,
+ with some patience, this state of degradation. The first was, that the
+ politics of Major Bridgenorth began, on many points, to assimilate
+ themselves to his own. As a Presbyterian, he was not an utter enemy to
+ monarchy, and had been considerably shocked at the unexpected trial and
+ execution of the King; as a civilian and a man of property, he feared the
+ domination of the military; and though he wished not to see Charles
+ restored by force of arms, yet he arrived at the conclusion, that to bring
+ back the heir of the royal family on such terms of composition as might
+ ensure the protection of those popular immunities and privileges for which
+ the Long Parliament had at first contended, would be the surest and most
+ desirable termination to the mutations in state affairs which had agitated
+ Britain. Indeed, the Major&rsquo;s ideas on this point approached so nearly
+ those of his neighbour, that he had well-nigh suffered Sir Geoffrey, who
+ had a finger in almost all the conspiracies of the Royalists, to involve
+ him in the unfortunate rising of Penruddock and Groves, in the west, in
+ which many of the Presbyterian interest, as well as the Cavalier party,
+ were engaged. And though his habitual prudence eventually kept him out of
+ this and other dangers, Major Bridgenorth was considered during the last
+ years of Cromwell&rsquo;s domination, and the interregnum which succeeded, as a
+ disaffected person to the Commonwealth, and a favourer of Charles Stewart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But besides this approximation to the same political opinions, another
+ bond of intimacy united the families of the Castle and the Hall. Major
+ Bridgenorth, fortunate, and eminently so, in all his worldly transactions,
+ was visited by severe and reiterated misfortunes in his family, and
+ became, in this particular, an object of compassion to his poorer and more
+ decayed neighbour. Betwixt the breaking out of the Civil War and the
+ Restoration, he lost successively a family of no less than six children,
+ apparently through a delicacy of constitution, which cut off the little
+ prattlers at the early age when they most wind themselves round the heart
+ of the parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the beginning of the year 1658, Major Bridgenorth was childless; ere it
+ ended, he had a daughter, indeed, but her birth was purchased by the death
+ of an affectionate wife, whose constitution had been exhausted by maternal
+ grief, and by the anxious and harrowing reflection, that from her the
+ children they had lost derived that delicacy of health, which proved
+ unable to undergo the tear and wear of existence. The same voice which
+ told Bridgenorth that he was the father of a living child (it was the
+ friendly voice of Lady Peveril), communicated to him the melancholy
+ intelligence that he was no longer a husband. The feelings of Major
+ Bridgenorth were strong and deep, rather than hasty and vehement; and his
+ grief assumed the form of a sullen stupor, from which neither the friendly
+ remonstrances of Sir Geoffrey, who did not fail to be with his neighbour
+ at this distressing conjuncture, even though he knew he must meet the
+ Presbyterian pastor, nor the ghastly exhortations of this latter person,
+ were able to rouse the unfortunate widower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Lady Peveril, with the ready invention of a female sharped by
+ the sight of distress and the feelings of sympathy, tried on the sufferer
+ one of those experiments by which grief is often awakened from despondency
+ into tears. She placed in Bridgenorth&rsquo;s arms the infant whose birth had
+ cost him so dear, and conjured him to remember that his Alice was not yet
+ dead, since she survived in the helpless child she had left to his
+ paternal care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take her away&mdash;take her away!&rdquo; said the unhappy man, and they were
+ the first words he had spoken; &ldquo;let me not look on her&mdash;it is but
+ another blossom that has bloomed to fade, and the tree that bore it will
+ never flourish more!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He almost threw the child into Lady Peveril&rsquo;s arms, placed his hands
+ before his face, and wept aloud. Lady Peveril did not say &ldquo;be comforted,&rdquo;
+ but she ventured to promise that the blossom should ripen to fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never, never!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;take the unhappy child away, and let me
+ only know when I shall wear black for her&mdash;Wear black!&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+ interrupting himself, &ldquo;what other colour shall I wear during the remainder
+ of my life?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will take the child for a season,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;since the sight
+ of her is so painful to you; and the little Alice shall share the nursery
+ of our Julian, until it shall be pleasure and not pain for you to look on
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That hour will never come,&rdquo; said the unhappy father; &ldquo;her doom is written&mdash;she
+ will follow the rest&mdash;God&rsquo;s will be done.&mdash;Lady, I thank you&mdash;I
+ trust her to your care; and I thank God that my eye shall not see her
+ dying agonies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without detaining the reader&rsquo;s attention longer on this painful theme, it
+ is enough to say that the Lady Peveril did undertake the duties of a
+ mother to the little orphan; and perhaps it was owing, in a great measure,
+ to her judicious treatment of the infant, that its feeble hold of life was
+ preserved, since the glimmering spark might probably have been altogether
+ smothered, had it, like the Major&rsquo;s former children, undergone the
+ over-care and over-nursing of a mother rendered nervously cautious and
+ anxious by so many successive losses. The lady was the more ready to
+ undertake this charge, that she herself had lost two infant children; and
+ that she attributed the preservation of the third, now a fine healthy
+ child of three years old, to Julian&rsquo;s being subjected to rather a
+ different course of diet and treatment than was then generally practised.
+ She resolved to follow the same regiment with the little orphan, which she
+ had observed in the case of her own boy; and it was equally successful. By
+ a more sparing use of medicine, by a bolder admission of fresh air, by a
+ firm, yet cautious attention to encourage rather than to supersede the
+ exertions of nature, the puny infant, under the care of an excellent
+ nurse, gradually improved in strength and in liveliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, like most men of his frank and good-natured disposition, was
+ naturally fond of children, and so much compassionated the sorrows of his
+ neighbour, that he entirely forgot his being a Presbyterian, until it
+ became necessary that the infant should be christened by a teacher of that
+ persuasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a trying case&mdash;the father seemed incapable of giving
+ direction; and that the threshold of Martindale Castle should be violated
+ by the heretical step of a dissenting clergyman, was matter of horror to
+ its orthodox owner. He had seen the famous Hugh Peters, with a Bible in
+ one hand and a pistol in the other, ride in triumph through the court-door
+ when Martindale was surrendered; and the bitterness of that hour had
+ entered like iron into his soul. Yet such was Lady Peveril&rsquo;s influence
+ over the prejudices of her husband, that he was induced to connive at the
+ ceremony taking place in a remote garden house, which was not properly
+ within the precincts of the Castle-wall. The lady even dared to be present
+ while the ceremony was performed by the Reverend Master Solsgrace, who had
+ once preached a sermon of three hours&rsquo; length before the House of Commons,
+ upon a thanksgiving occasion after the relief of Exeter. Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril took care to be absent the whole day from the Castle, and it was
+ only from the great interest which he took in the washing, perfuming, and
+ as it were purification of the summer-house, that it could have been
+ guessed he knew anything of what had taken place in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, whatever prejudices the good Knight might entertain against his
+ neighbour&rsquo;s form of religion, they did not in any way influence his
+ feelings towards him as a sufferer under severe affliction. The mode in
+ which he showed his sympathy was rather singular, but exactly suited the
+ character of both, and the terms on which they stood with each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning after morning the good Baronet made Moultrassie Hall the
+ termination of his walk or ride, and said a single word of kindness as he
+ passed. Sometimes he entered the old parlour where the proprietor sat in
+ solitary wretchedness and despondency; but more frequently (for Sir
+ Geoffrey did not pretend to great talents of conversation), he paused on
+ the terrace, and stopping or halting his horse by the latticed window,
+ said aloud to the melancholy inmate, &ldquo;How is it with you, Master
+ Bridgenorth?&rdquo; (the Knight would never acknowledge his neighbour&rsquo;s military
+ rank of Major); &ldquo;I just looked in to bid you keep a good heart, man, and
+ to tell you that Julian is well, and little Alice is well, and all are
+ well at Martindale Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep sigh, sometimes coupled with &ldquo;I thank you, Sir Geoffrey; my
+ grateful duty waits on Lady Peveril,&rdquo; was generally Bridgenorth&rsquo;s only
+ answer. But the news was received on the one part with the kindness which
+ was designed upon the other; it gradually became less painful and more
+ interesting; the lattice window was never closed, nor was the leathern
+ easy-chair which stood next to it ever empty, when the usual hour of the
+ Baronet&rsquo;s momentary visit approached. At length the expectation of that
+ passing minute became the pivot upon which the thoughts of poor
+ Bridgenorth turned during all the rest of the day. Most men have known the
+ influence of such brief but ruling moments at some period of their lives.
+ The moment when a lover passes the window of his mistress&mdash;the moment
+ when the epicure hears the dinner-bell,&mdash;is that into which is
+ crowded the whole interest of the day; the hours which precede it are
+ spent in anticipation; the hours which follow, in reflection on what has
+ passed; and fancy dwelling on each brief circumstance, gives to seconds
+ the duration of minutes, to minutes that of hours. Thus seated in his
+ lonely chair, Bridgenorth could catch at a distance the stately step of
+ Sir Geoffrey, or the heavy tramp of his war-horse, Black Hastings, which
+ had borne him in many an action; he could hear the hum of &ldquo;The King shall
+ enjoy his own again,&rdquo; or the habitual whistle of &ldquo;Cuckolds and
+ Roundheads,&rdquo; die unto reverential silence, as the Knight approached the
+ mansion of affliction; and then came the strong hale voice of the huntsman
+ soldier with its usual greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By degrees the communication became something more protracted, as Major
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s grief, like all human feelings, lost its overwhelming
+ violence, and permitted him to attend, in some degree, to what passed
+ around him, to discharge various duties which pressed upon him, and to
+ give a share of attention to the situation of the country, distracted as
+ it was by the contending factions, whose strife only terminated in the
+ Restoration. Still, however, though slowly recovering from the effects of
+ the shock which he had sustained, Major Bridgenorth felt himself as yet
+ unable to make up his mind to the effort necessary to see his infant; and
+ though separated by so short a distance from the being in whose existence
+ he was more interested than in anything the world afforded, he only made
+ himself acquainted with the windows of the apartment where little Alice
+ was lodged, and was often observed to watch them from the terrace, as they
+ brightened in the evening under the influence of the setting sun. In
+ truth, though a strong-minded man in most respects, he was unable to lay
+ aside the gloomy impression that this remaining pledge of affection was
+ soon to be conveyed to that grave which had already devoured all besides
+ that was dear to him; and he awaited in miserable suspense the moment when
+ he should hear that symptoms of the fatal malady had begun to show
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice of Peveril continued to be that of a comforter until the month
+ of April 1660, when it suddenly assumed a new and different tone. &ldquo;The
+ King shall enjoy his own again,&rdquo; far from ceasing, as the hasty tread of
+ Black Hastings came up the avenue, bore burden to the clatter of his hoofs
+ on the paved courtyard, as Sir Geoffrey sprang from his great war-saddle,
+ now once more garnished with pistols of two feet in length, and, armed
+ with steel-cap, back and breast, and a truncheon in his hand, he rushed
+ into the apartment of the astonished Major, with his eyes sparkling, and
+ his cheek inflamed, while he called out, &ldquo;Up! up, neighbour! No time now
+ to mope in the chimney-corner! Where is your buff-coat and broadsword,
+ man? Take the true side once in your life, and mend past mistakes. The
+ King is all lenity, man&mdash;all royal nature and mercy. I will get your
+ full pardon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What means all this?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth&mdash;&ldquo;Is all well with you&mdash;all
+ well at Martindale Castle, Sir Geoffrey?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well as you could wish them, Alice, and Julian, and all. But I have news
+ worth twenty of that&mdash;Monk has declared at London against those
+ stinking scoundrels the Rump. Fairfax is up in Yorkshire&mdash;for the
+ King&mdash;for the King, man! Churchmen, Presbyterians, and all, are in
+ buff and bandoleer for King Charles. I have a letter from Fairfax to
+ secure Derby and Chesterfield with all the men I can make. D&mdash;n him,
+ fine that I should take orders from him! But never mind that&mdash;all are
+ friends now, and you and I, good neighbour, will charge abreast, as good
+ neighbours should. See there! read&mdash;read&mdash;read&mdash;and then
+ boot and saddle in an instant.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Hey for cavaliers&mdash;ho for cavaliers,
+ Pray for cavaliers,
+ Dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub,
+ Have at old Beelzebub,
+ Oliver shakes in his bier!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ After thundering forth this elegant effusion of loyal enthusiasm, the
+ sturdy Cavalier&rsquo;s heart became too full. He threw himself on a seat, and
+ exclaiming, &ldquo;Did ever I think to live to see this happy day!&rdquo; he wept, to
+ his own surprise, as much as to that of Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon considering the crisis in which the country was placed, it appeared
+ to Major Bridgenorth, as it had done to Fairfax, and other leaders of the
+ Presbyterian party, that their frank embracing of the royal interest was
+ the wisest and most patriotic measure which they could adopt in the
+ circumstances, when all ranks and classes of men were seeking refuge from
+ the uncertainty and varied oppression attending the repeated contests
+ between the factions of Westminster Hall and of Wallingford House.
+ Accordingly he joined with Sir Geoffrey, with less enthusiasm indeed, but
+ with equal sincerity, taking such measures as seemed proper to secure
+ their part of the country on the King&rsquo;s behalf, which was done as
+ effectually and peaceably as in other parts of England. The neighbours
+ were both at Chesterfield, when news arrived that the King had landed in
+ England; and Sir Geoffrey instantly announced his purpose of waiting upon
+ his Majesty, even before his return to the Castle of Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who knows, neighbour,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;whether Sir Geoffrey Peveril will ever
+ return to Martindale? Titles must be going amongst them yonder, and I have
+ deserved something among the rest.&mdash;Lord Peveril would sound well&mdash;or
+ stay, Earl of Martindale&mdash;no, not of Martindale&mdash;Earl of the
+ Peak.&mdash;Meanwhile, trust your affairs to me&mdash;I will see you
+ secured&mdash;I would you had been no Presbyterian, neighbour&mdash;a
+ knighthood,&mdash;I mean a knight-bachelor, not a knight-baronet,&mdash;would
+ have served your turn well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I leave these things to my betters, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;and
+ desire nothing so earnestly as to find all well at Martindale when I
+ return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will&mdash;you will find them all well,&rdquo; said the Baronet; &ldquo;Julian,
+ Alice, Lady Peveril, and all of them&mdash;Bear my commendations to them,
+ and kiss them all, neighbour, Lady Peveril and all&mdash;you may kiss a
+ Countess when I come back; all will go well with you now you are turned
+ honest man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I always meant to be so, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, well&mdash;no offence meant,&rdquo; said the Knight, &ldquo;all is well
+ now&mdash;so you to Moultrassie Hall, and I to Whitehall. Said I well,
+ aha! So ho, mine host, a stoup of Canary to the King&rsquo;s health ere we get
+ to horse&mdash;I forgot, neighbour&mdash;you drink no healths.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish the King&rsquo;s health as sincerely as if I drank a gallon to it,&rdquo;
+ replied the Major; &ldquo;and I wish you, Sir Geoffrey, all success on your
+ journey, and a safe return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Why, then, we will have bellowing of beeves,
+ Broaching of barrels, brandishing of spigots;
+ Blood shall flow freely, but it shall be gore
+ Of herds and flocks, and venison and poultry,
+ Join&rsquo;d to the brave heart&rsquo;s-blood of John-a-Barleycorn!
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whatever rewards Charles might have condescended to bestow in
+ acknowledgement of the sufferings and loyalty of Peveril of the Peak, he
+ had none in his disposal equal to the pleasure which Providence had
+ reserved for Bridgenorth on his return to Derbyshire. The exertion to
+ which he had been summoned, had had the usual effect of restoring to a
+ certain extent the activity and energy of his character, and he felt it
+ would be unbecoming to relapse into the state of lethargic melancholy from
+ which it had roused him. Time also had its usual effect in mitigating the
+ subjects of his regret; and when he had passed one day at the Hall in
+ regretting that he could not expect the indirect news of his daughter&rsquo;s
+ health, which Sir Geoffrey used to communicate in his almost daily call,
+ he reflected that it would be in every respect becoming that he should pay
+ a personal visit at Martindale Castle, carry thither the remembrances of
+ the Knight to his lady, assure her of his health, and satisfy himself
+ respecting that of his daughter. He armed himself for the worst&mdash;he
+ called to recollection the thin cheeks, faded eye, wasted hand, pallid
+ lip, which had marked the decaying health of all his former infants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall see,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;these signs of mortality once more&mdash;I shall
+ once more see a beloved being to whom I have given birth, gliding to the
+ grave which ought to enclose me long before her. No matter&mdash;it is
+ unmanly so long to shrink from that which must be&mdash;God&rsquo;s will be
+ done!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went accordingly, on the subsequent morning, to Martindale Castle, and
+ gave the lady the welcome assurances of her husband&rsquo;s safety, and of his
+ hopes of preferment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the first, may Almighty God be praised!&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril; &ldquo;and
+ be the other as our gracious and restored Sovereign may will it. We are
+ great enough for our means, and have means sufficient for contentment,
+ though not for splendour. And now I see, good Master Bridgenorth, the
+ folly of putting faith in idle presentiments of evil. So often had Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s repeated attempts in favour of the Stewarts led him into new
+ misfortunes, that when, the other morning, I saw him once more dressed in
+ his fatal armour, and heard the sound of his trumpet, which had been so
+ long silent, it seemed to me as if I saw his shroud, and heard his
+ death-knell. I say this to you, good neighbour, the rather because I fear
+ your own mind has been harassed with anticipations of impending calamity,
+ which it may please God to avert in your case as it has done in mine; and
+ here comes a sight which bears good assurance of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of the apartment opened as she spoke, and two lovely children
+ entered. The eldest, Julian Peveril, a fine boy betwixt four and five
+ years old, led in his hand, with an air of dignified support and
+ attention, a little girl of eighteen months, who rolled and tottered
+ along, keeping herself with difficulty upright by the assistance of her
+ elder, stronger, and masculine companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth cast a hasty and fearful glance upon the countenance of his
+ daughter, and, even in that glimpse, perceived, with exquisite delight,
+ that his fears were unfounded. He caught her in his arms, pressed her to
+ his heart, and the child, though at first alarmed at the vehemence of his
+ caresses, presently, as if prompted by Nature, smiled in reply to them.
+ Again he held her at some distance from him, and examined her more
+ attentively; he satisfied himself that the complexion of the young cherub
+ he had in his arms was not the hectic tinge of disease, but the clear hue
+ of ruddy health; and that though her little frame was slight, it was firm
+ and springy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not think that it could have been thus,&rdquo; he said, looking to Lady
+ Peveril, who had sat observing the scene with great pleasure; &ldquo;but praise
+ be to God in the first instance, and next, thanks to you, madam, who have
+ been His instrument.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Julian must lose his playfellow now, I suppose?&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;but the
+ Hall is not distant, and I will see my little charge often. Dame Martha,
+ the housekeeper at Moultrassie, has sense, and is careful. I will tell her
+ the rules I have observed with little Alice, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid my girl should ever come to Moultrassie,&rdquo; said Major
+ Bridgenorth hastily; &ldquo;it has been the grave of her race. The air of the
+ low grounds suited them not&mdash;or there is perhaps a fate connected
+ with the mansion. I will seek for her some other place of abode.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you shall not, under your favour be it spoken, Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo;
+ answered the lady. &ldquo;If you do so, we must suppose that you are
+ undervaluing my qualities as a nurse. If she goes not to her father&rsquo;s
+ house, she shall not quit mine. I will keep the little lady as a pledge of
+ her safety and my own skill; and since you are afraid of the damp of the
+ low grounds, I hope you will come here frequently to visit her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a proposal which went to the heart of Major Bridgenorth. It was
+ precisely the point which he would have given worlds to arrive at, but
+ which he saw no chance of attaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is too well known, that those whose families are long pursued by such a
+ fatal disease as existed in his, become, it may be said, superstitious
+ respecting its fatal effects, and ascribe to place, circumstance, and
+ individual care, much more perhaps than these can in any case contribute
+ to avert the fatality of constitutional distemper. Lady Peveril was aware
+ that this was peculiarly the impression of her neighbour; that the
+ depression of his spirits, the excess of his care, the feverishness of his
+ apprehensions, the restraint and gloom of the solitude in which he dwelt,
+ were really calculated to produce the evil which most of all he dreaded.
+ She pitied him, she felt for him, she was grateful for former protection
+ received at his hands&mdash;she had become interested in the child itself.
+ What female fails to feel such interest in the helpless creature she has
+ tended? And to sum the whole up, the dame had a share of human vanity; and
+ being a sort of Lady Bountiful in her way (for the character was not then
+ confined to the old and the foolish), she was proud of the skill by which
+ she had averted the probable attacks of hereditary malady, so inveterate
+ in the family of Bridgenorth. It needed not, perhaps, in other cases, that
+ so many reasons should be assigned for an act of neighbourly humanity; but
+ civil war had so lately torn the country asunder, and broken all the usual
+ ties of vicinage and good neighbourhood, that it was unusual to see them
+ preserved among persons of different political opinions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth himself felt this; and while the tear of joy in his eye
+ showed how gladly he would accept Lady Peveril&rsquo;s proposal, he could not
+ help stating the obvious inconveniences attendant upon her scheme, though
+ it was in the tone of one who would gladly hear them overruled. &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;your kindness makes me the happiest and most thankful of men;
+ but can it be consistent with your own convenience? Sir Geoffrey has his
+ opinions on many points, which have differed, and probably do still
+ differ, from mine. He is high-born, and I of middling parentage only. He
+ uses the Church Service, and I the Catechism of the Assembly of Divines at
+ Westminster&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope you will find prescribed in neither of them,&rdquo; said the Lady
+ Peveril, &ldquo;that I may not be a mother to your motherless child. I trust,
+ Master Bridgenorth, the joyful Restoration of his Majesty, a work wrought
+ by the direct hand of Providence, may be the means of closing and healing
+ all civil and religious dissensions among us, and that, instead of showing
+ the superior purity of our faith, by persecuting those who think otherwise
+ from ourselves on doctrinal points, we shall endeavour to show its real
+ Christian tendency, by emulating each other in actions of good-will
+ towards man, as the best way of showing our love to God.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your ladyship speaks what your own kind heart dictates,&rdquo; answered
+ Bridgenorth, who had his own share of the narrow-mindedness of the time;
+ &ldquo;and sure am I, that if all who call themselves loyalists and Cavaliers,
+ thought like you&mdash;and like my friend Sir Geoffrey&rdquo;&mdash;(this he
+ added after a moment&rsquo;s pause, being perhaps rather complimentary than
+ sincere)&mdash;&ldquo;we, who thought it our duty in time past to take arms for
+ freedom of conscience, and against arbitrary power, might now sit down in
+ peace and contentment. But I wot not how it may fall. You have sharp and
+ hot spirits amongst you; I will not say our power was always moderately
+ used, and revenge is sweet to the race of fallen Adam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril gaily, &ldquo;those evil
+ omenings do but point out conclusions, which, unless they were so
+ anticipated, are most unlikely to come to pass. You know what Shakespeare
+ says&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;To fly the boar before the boar pursues,
+ Were to incense the boar to follow us,
+ And make pursuit when he did mean no chase.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I crave your pardon&mdash;it is so long since we have met, that I
+ forgot you love no play-books.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With reverence to your ladyship,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I were much to blame
+ did I need the idle words of a Warwickshire stroller, to teach me my
+ grateful duty to your ladyship on this occasion, which appoints me to be
+ directed by you in all things which my conscience will permit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since you permit me such influence, then,&rdquo; replied the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;I
+ shall be moderate in exercising it, in order that I may, in my domination
+ at least, give you a favourable impression of the new order of things. So,
+ if you will be a subject of mine for one day, neighbour, I am going, at my
+ lord and husband&rsquo;s command, to issue out my warrants to invite the whole
+ neighbourhood to a solemn feast at the Castle, on Thursday next; and I not
+ only pray you to be personally present yourself, but to prevail on your
+ worthy pastor, and such neighbours and friends, high and low, as may think
+ in your own way, to meet with the rest of the neighbourhood, to rejoice on
+ this joyful occasion of the King&rsquo;s Restoration, and thereby to show that
+ we are to be henceforward a united people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parliamentarian Major was considerably embarrassed by this proposal.
+ He looked upward, and downward, and around, cast his eye first to the
+ oak-carved ceiling, and anon fixed it upon the floor; then threw it around
+ the room till it lighted on his child, the sight of whom suggested another
+ and a better train of reflections than ceiling and floor had been able to
+ supply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have long been a stranger to festivity, perhaps from
+ constitutional melancholy, perhaps from the depression which is natural to
+ a desolate and deprived man, in whose ear mirth is marred, like a pleasant
+ air when performed on a mistuned instrument. But though neither my
+ thoughts nor temperament are Jovial or Mercurial, it becomes me to be
+ grateful to Heaven for the good He has sent me by the means of your
+ ladyship. David, the man after God&rsquo;s own heart, did wash and eat bread
+ when his beloved child was removed&mdash;mine is restored to me, and shall
+ I not show gratitude under a blessing, when he showed resignation under an
+ affliction? Madam, I will wait on your gracious invitation with
+ acceptance; and such of my friends with whom I may possess influence, and
+ whose presence your ladyship may desire, shall accompany me to the
+ festivity, that our Israel may be as one people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spoken these words with an aspect which belonged more to a martyr
+ than to a guest bidden to a festival, and having kissed, and solemnly
+ blessed his little girl, Major Bridgenorth took his departure for
+ Moultrassie Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Here&rsquo;s neither want of appetite nor mouths;
+ Pray Heaven we be not scant of meat or mirth!
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Even upon ordinary occasions, and where means were ample, a great
+ entertainment in those days was not such a sinecure as in modern times,
+ when the lady who presides has but to intimate to her menials the day and
+ hour when she wills it to take place. At that simple period, the lady was
+ expected to enter deeply into the arrangement and provision of the whole
+ affair; and from a little gallery, which communicated with her own private
+ apartment, and looked down upon the kitchen, her shrill voice was to be
+ heard, from time to time, like that of the warning spirit in a tempest,
+ rising above the clash of pots and stewpans&mdash;the creaking spits&mdash;the
+ clattering of marrowbones and cleavers&mdash;the scolding of cooks&mdash;and
+ all the other various kinds of din which form an accompaniment to dressing
+ a large dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this toil and anxiety was more than doubled in the case of the
+ approaching feast at Martindale Castle, where the presiding Genius of the
+ festivity was scarce provided with adequate means to carry her hospitable
+ purpose into effect. The tyrannical conduct of husbands, in such cases, is
+ universal; and I scarce know one householder of my acquaintance who has
+ not, on some ill-omened and most inconvenient season, announced suddenly
+ to his innocent helpmate, that he had invited
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Some odious Major Rock,
+ To drop in at six o&rsquo;clock.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ to the great discomposure of the lady, and the discredit, perhaps, of her
+ domestic arrangements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril of the Peak was still more thoughtless; for he had directed his
+ lady to invite the whole honest men of the neighbourhood to make good
+ cheer at Martindale Castle, in honour of the blessed Restoration of his
+ most sacred Majesty, without precisely explaining where the provisions
+ were to come from. The deer-park had lain waste ever since the siege; the
+ dovecot could do little to furnish forth such an entertainment; the
+ fishponds, it is true, were well provided (which the neighbouring
+ Presbyterians noted as a suspicious circumstance); and game was to be had
+ for the shooting, upon the extensive heaths and hills of Derbyshire. But
+ these were but the secondary parts of a banquet; and the house-steward and
+ bailiff, Lady Peveril&rsquo;s only coadjutors and counsellors, could not agree
+ how the butcher-meat&mdash;the most substantial part, or, as it were, the
+ main body of the entertainment&mdash;was to be supplied. The house-steward
+ threatened the sacrifice of a fine yoke of young bullocks, which the
+ bailiff, who pleaded the necessity of their agricultural services,
+ tenaciously resisted; and Lady Peveril&rsquo;s good and dutiful nature did not
+ prevent her from making some impatient reflections on the want of
+ consideration of her absent Knight, who had thus thoughtlessly placed her
+ in so embarrassing a situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These reflections were scarcely just, if a man is only responsible for
+ such resolutions as he adopts when he is fully master of himself. Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s loyalty, like that of many persons in his situation, had, by
+ dint of hopes and fears, victories and defeats, struggles and sufferings,
+ all arising out of the same moving cause, and turning, as it were, on the
+ same pivot, acquired the character of an intense and enthusiastic passion;
+ and the singular and surprising change of fortune, by which his highest
+ wishes were not only gratified, but far exceeded, occasioned for some time
+ a kind of intoxication of loyal rapture which seemed to pervade the whole
+ kingdom. Sir Geoffrey had seen Charles and his brothers, and had been
+ received by the merry monarch with that graceful, and at the same time
+ frank urbanity, by which he conciliated all who approached him; the
+ Knight&rsquo;s services and merits had been fully acknowledged, and recompense
+ had been hinted at, if not expressly promised. Was it for Peveril of the
+ Peak, in the jubilee of his spirits, to consider how his wife was to find
+ beef and mutton to feast his neighbours?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luckily, however, for the embarrassed lady, there existed some one who had
+ composure of mind sufficient to foresee this difficulty. Just as she had
+ made up her mind, very reluctantly, to become debtor to Major Bridgenorth
+ for the sum necessary to carry her husband&rsquo;s commands into effect, and
+ whilst she was bitterly regretting this departure from the strictness of
+ her usual economy, the steward, who, by-the-bye, had not been absolutely
+ sober since the news of the King&rsquo;s landing at Dover, burst into the
+ apartment, snapping his fingers, and showing more marks of delight than
+ was quite consistent with the dignity of my lady&rsquo;s large parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What means this, Whitaker?&rdquo; said the lady, somewhat peevishly; for she
+ was interrupted in the commencement of a letter to her neighbour on the
+ unpleasant business of the proposed loan,&mdash;&ldquo;Is it to be always thus
+ with you?&mdash;Are you dreaming?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A vision of good omen, I trust,&rdquo; said the steward, with a triumphant
+ flourish of the hand; &ldquo;far better than Pharaoh&rsquo;s, though, like his, it be
+ of fat kine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I prithee be plain, man,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;or fetch some one who can speak
+ to purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, odds-my-life, madam,&rdquo; said the steward, &ldquo;mine errand can speak for
+ itself. Do you not hear them low? Do you not hear them bleat? A yoke of
+ fat oxen, and half a score prime wethers. The Castle is victualled for
+ this bout, let them storm when they will; and Gatherill may have his d&mdash;d
+ mains ploughed to the boot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady, without farther questioning her elated domestic, rose and went
+ to the window, where she certainly beheld the oxen and sheep which had
+ given rise to Whitaker&rsquo;s exultation. &ldquo;Whence come they?&rdquo; said she, in some
+ surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let them construe that who can,&rdquo; answered Whitaker; &ldquo;the fellow who drove
+ them was a west-country man, and only said they came from a friend to help
+ to furnish out your ladyship&rsquo;s entertainment; the man would not stay to
+ drink&mdash;I am sorry he would not stay to drink&mdash;I crave your
+ ladyship&rsquo;s pardon for not keeping him by the ears to drink&mdash;it was
+ not my fault.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I&rsquo;ll be sworn it was not,&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam, by G&mdash;, I assure you it was not,&rdquo; said the zealous
+ steward; &ldquo;for, rather than the Castle should lose credit, I drank his
+ health myself in double ale, though I had had my morning draught already.
+ I tell you the naked truth, my lady, by G&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was no great compulsion, I suppose,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;but, Whitaker,
+ suppose you should show your joy on such occasions, by drinking and
+ swearing a little less, rather than a little more, would it not be as
+ well, think you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave your ladyship&rsquo;s pardon,&rdquo; said Whitaker, with much reverence; &ldquo;I
+ hope I know my place. I am your ladyship&rsquo;s poor servant; and I know it
+ does not become me to drink and swear like your ladyship&mdash;that is,
+ like his honour, Sir Geoffrey, I would say. But I pray you, if I am not to
+ drink and swear after my degree, how are men to know Peveril of the Peak&rsquo;s
+ steward,&mdash;and I may say butler too, since I have had the keys of the
+ cellar ever since old Spigots was shot dead on the northwest turret, with
+ a black jack in his hand,&mdash;I say, how is an old Cavalier like me to
+ be known from those cuckoldly Roundheads that do nothing but fast and
+ pray, if we are not to drink and swear according to our degree?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady was silent, for she well knew speech availed nothing; and, after
+ a moment&rsquo;s pause, proceeded to intimate to the steward that she would have
+ the persons, whose names were marked in a written paper, which she
+ delivered to him, invited to the approaching banquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker, instead of receiving the list with the mute acquiescence of a
+ modern Major Domo, carried it into the recess of one of the windows, and,
+ adjusting his spectacles, began to read it to himself. The first names,
+ being those of distinguished Cavalier families in the neighbourhood, he
+ muttered over in a tone of approbation&mdash;paused and pshawed at that of
+ Bridgenorth&mdash;yet acquiesced, with the observation, &ldquo;But he is a good
+ neighbour, so it may pass for once.&rdquo; But when he read the name and surname
+ of Nehemiah Solsgrace, the Presbyterian parson, Whitaker&rsquo;s patience
+ altogether forsook him; and he declared he would as soon throw himself
+ into Eldon-hole,[*] as consent that the intrusive old puritan howlet, who
+ had usurped the pulpit of a sound orthodox divine, should ever darken the
+ gates of Martindale Castle by any message or mediation of his.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A chasm in the earth supposed to be unfathomable, one of the
+ wonders of the Peak.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The false crop-eared hypocrites,&rdquo; cried he, with a hearty oath, &ldquo;have had
+ their turn of the good weather. The sun is on our side of the hedge now,
+ and we will pay off old scores, as sure as my name is Richard Whitaker.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You presume on your long services, Whitaker, and on your master&rsquo;s
+ absence, or you had not dared to use me thus,&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unwonted agitation of her voice attracted the attention of the
+ refractory steward, notwithstanding his present state of elevation; but he
+ no sooner saw that her eye glistened, and her cheek reddened, than his
+ obstinacy was at once subdued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A murrain on me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but I have made my lady angry in good
+ earnest! and that is an unwonted sight for to see.&mdash;I crave your
+ pardon, my lady! It was not poor Dick Whitaker disputed your honourable
+ commands, but only that second draught of double ale. We have put a double
+ stroke of malt to it, as your ladyship well knows, ever since the happy
+ Restoration. To be sure I hate a fanatic as I do the cloven foot of Satan;
+ but then your honourable ladyship hath a right to invite Satan himself,
+ cloven foot and all, to Martindale Castle; and to send me to hell&rsquo;s gate
+ with a billet of invitation&mdash;and so your will shall be done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invitations were sent round accordingly, in all due form; and one of
+ the bullocks was sent down to be roasted whole at the market-place of a
+ little village called Martindale-Moultrassie, which stood considerably to
+ the eastward both of the Castle and Hall, from which it took its double
+ name, at about an equal distance from both; so that, suppose a line drawn
+ from the one manor-house to the other, to be the base of a triangle, the
+ village would have occupied the salient angle. As the said village, since
+ the late transference of a part of Peveril&rsquo;s property, belonged to Sir
+ Geoffrey and to Bridgenorth in nearly equal portions, the lady judged it
+ not proper to dispute the right of the latter to add some hogsheads of
+ beer to the popular festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, she could not but suspect the Major of being the unknown
+ friend who had relieved her from the dilemma arising from the want of
+ provisions; and she esteemed herself happy when a visit from him, on the
+ day preceding the proposed entertainment, gave her, as she thought, an
+ opportunity of expressing her gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ No, sir&mdash;I will not pledge&mdash;I&rsquo;m one of those
+ Who think good wine needs neither bush nor preface
+ To make it welcome. If you doubt my word,
+ Fill the quart-cup, and see if I will choke on&rsquo;t.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was a serious gravity of expression in the disclamation with which
+ Major Bridgenorth replied to the thanks tendered to him by Lady Peveril,
+ for the supply of provisions which had reached her Castle so opportunely.
+ He seemed first not to be aware what she alluded to; and, when she
+ explained the circumstance, he protested so seriously that he had no share
+ in the benefit conferred, that Lady Peveril was compelled to believe him,
+ the rather that, being a man of plain downright character, affecting no
+ refined delicacy of sentiment, and practising almost a quaker-like
+ sincerity of expression, it would have been much contrary to his general
+ character to have made such a disavowal, unless it were founded in truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My present visit to you, madam,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;had indeed some reference to
+ the festivity of to-morrow.&rdquo; Lady Peveril listened, but as her visitor
+ seemed to find some difficulty in expressing himself, she was compelled to
+ ask an explanation. &ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;you are not perhaps entirely
+ ignorant that the more tender-conscienced among us have scruples at
+ certain practices, so general amongst your people at times of rejoicing,
+ that you may be said to insist upon them as articles of faith, or at least
+ greatly to resent their omission.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, not fully
+ comprehending the drift of his discourse, &ldquo;that we shall, as your
+ entertainers, carefully avoid all allusions or reproaches founded on past
+ misunderstanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We would expect no less, madam, from your candour and courtesy,&rdquo; said
+ Bridgenorth; &ldquo;but I perceive you do not fully understand me. To be plain,
+ then, I allude to the fashion of drinking healths, and pledging each other
+ in draughts of strong liquor, which most among us consider as a
+ superfluous and sinful provoking of each other to debauchery, and the
+ excessive use of strong drink; and which, besides, if derived, as learned
+ divines have supposed, from the custom of the blinded Pagans, who made
+ libations and invoked idols when they drank, may be justly said to have
+ something in it heathenish, and allied to demon-worship.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady had already hastily considered all the topics which were likely
+ to introduce discord into the proposed festivity; but this very
+ ridiculous, yet fatal discrepancy, betwixt the manners of the parties on
+ convivial occasions, had entirely escaped her. She endeavoured to soothe
+ the objecting party, whose brows were knit like one who had fixed an
+ opinion by which he was determined to abide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grant,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my good neighbour, that this custom is at least
+ idle, and may be prejudicial if it leads to excess in the use of liquor,
+ which is apt enough to take place without such conversation. But I think,
+ when it hath not this consequence, it is a thing indifferent, affords a
+ unanimous mode of expressing our good wishes to our friends, and our loyal
+ duty to our sovereign; and, without meaning to put any force upon the
+ inclination of those who believe otherwise, I cannot see how I can deny my
+ guests and friends the privilege of drinking a health to the King, or to
+ my husband, after the old English fashion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;if the age of fashion were to command it,
+ Popery is one of the oldest English fashions that I have heard of; but it
+ is our happiness that we are not benighted like our fathers, and therefore
+ we must act according to the light that is in us, and not after their
+ darkness. I had myself the honour to attend the Lord-Keeper Whitelocke,
+ when, at the table of the Chamberlain of the kingdom of Sweden, he did
+ positively refuse to pledge the health of his Queen, Christina, thereby
+ giving great offence, and putting in peril the whole purpose of that
+ voyage; which it is not to be thought so wise a man would have done, but
+ that he held such compliance a thing not merely indifferent, but rather
+ sinful and damnable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all respect to Whitelocke,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;I continue of my
+ own opinion, though, Heaven knows, I am no friend to riot or wassail. I
+ would fain accommodate myself to your scruples, and will discourage all
+ other pledges; but surely those of the King and of Peveril of the Peak may
+ be permitted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dare not,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;lay even the ninety-ninth part of a
+ grain of incense upon an altar erected to Satan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, sir!&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;do you bring Satan into comparison with our
+ master King Charles, and with my noble lord and husband?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, madam,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I have no such thoughts&mdash;indeed
+ they would ill become me. I do wish the King&rsquo;s health and Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s
+ devoutly, and I will pray for both. But I see not what good it should do
+ their health if I should prejudice my own by quaffing pledges out of quart
+ flagons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since we cannot agree upon this matter,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;we must find
+ some resource by which to offend those of neither party. Suppose you
+ winked at our friends drinking these pledges, and we should connive at
+ your sitting still?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither would this composition satisfy Bridgenorth, who was of
+ opinion, as he expressed himself, that it would be holding a candle to
+ Beelzebub. In fact, his temper, naturally stubborn, was at present
+ rendered much more so by a previous conference with his preacher, who,
+ though a very good man in the main, was particularly and illiberally
+ tenacious of the petty distinctions which his sect adopted; and while he
+ thought with considerable apprehension on the accession of power which
+ Popery, Prelacy, and Peveril of the Peak, were like to acquire by the late
+ Revolution, became naturally anxious to put his flock on their guard, and
+ prevent their being kidnapped by the wolf. He disliked extremely that
+ Major Bridgenorth, indisputably the head of the Presbyterian interest in
+ that neighbourhood, should have given his only daughter to be, as he
+ termed it, nursed by a Canaanitish woman; and he told him plainly that he
+ liked not this going to feast in the high places with the uncircumcised in
+ heart, and looked on the whole conviviality only as a making-merry in the
+ house of Tirzah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon receiving this rebuke from his pastor, Bridgenorth began to suspect
+ he might have been partly wrong in the readiness which, in his first
+ ardour of gratitude, he had shown to enter into intimate intercourse with
+ the Castle of Martindale; but he was too proud to avow this to the
+ preacher, and it was not till after a considerable debate betwixt them,
+ that it was mutually agreed their presence at the entertainment should
+ depend upon the condition, that no healths or pledges should be given in
+ their presence. Bridgenorth, therefore, as the delegate and representative
+ of his party, was bound to stand firm against all entreaty, and the lady
+ became greatly embarrassed. She now regretted sincerely that her
+ well-intended invitation had ever been given, for she foresaw that its
+ rejection was to awaken all former subjects of quarrel, and perhaps to
+ lead to new violences amongst people who had not many years since been
+ engaged in civil war. To yield up the disputed point to the Presbyterians,
+ would have been to offend the Cavalier party, and Sir Geoffrey in
+ particular, in the most mortal degree; for they made it as firm a point of
+ honour to give healths, and compel others to pledge them, as the Puritans
+ made it a deep article of religion to refuse both. At length the lady
+ changed the discourse, introduced that of Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s child,
+ caused it to be sent for, and put into his arms. The mother&rsquo;s stratagem
+ took effect; for, though the parliamentary major stood firm, the father,
+ as in the case of the Governor of Tilbury, was softened, and he agreed
+ that his friends should accept a compromise. This was, that the major
+ himself, the reverend divine, and such of their friends as held strict
+ Puritan tenets, should form a separate party in the Large Parlour, while
+ the Hall should be occupied by the jovial Cavaliers; and that each party
+ should regulate their potations after their own conscience, or after their
+ own fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth himself seemed greatly relieved after this important
+ matter had been settled. He had held it matter of conscience to be
+ stubborn in maintaining his own opinion, but was heartily glad when he
+ escaped from the apparently inevitable necessity of affronting Lady
+ Peveril by the refusal of her invitation. He remained longer than usual,
+ and spoke and smiled more than was his custom. His first care on his
+ return was to announce to the clergyman and his congregation the
+ compromise which he had made, and this not as a matter for deliberation,
+ but one upon which he had already resolved; and such was his authority
+ among them, that though the preacher longed to pronounce a separation of
+ the parties, and to exclaim&mdash;&ldquo;To your tents, O Israel!&rdquo; he did not
+ see the chance of being seconded by so many, as would make it worth while
+ to disturb the unanimous acquiescence in their delegate&rsquo;s proposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, each party being put upon the alert by the consequences of
+ Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s embassy, so many points of doubt and delicate
+ discussion were started in succession, that the Lady Peveril, the only
+ person, perhaps, who was desirous of achieving an effectual reconciliation
+ between them, incurred, in reward for her good intentions, the censure of
+ both factions, and had much reason to regret her well-meant project of
+ bringing the Capulets and Montagues of Derbyshire together on the same
+ occasion of public festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was now settled that the guests were to form two different parties,
+ it became not only a subject of dispute betwixt themselves, which should
+ be first admitted within the Castle of Martindale, but matter of serious
+ apprehension to Lady Peveril and Major Bridgenorth, lest, if they were to
+ approach by the same avenue and entrance, a quarrel might take place
+ betwixt them, and proceed to extremities, even before they reached the
+ place of entertainment. The lady believed she had discovered an admirable
+ expedient for preventing the possibility of such interference, by
+ directing that the Cavaliers should be admitted by the principal entrance,
+ while the Roundheads should enter the Castle through a great breach which
+ had been made in the course of the siege, and across which there had been
+ made a sort of by-path to drive the cattle down to their pasture in the
+ wood. By this contrivance the Lady Peveril imagined she had altogether
+ avoided the various risks which might occur from two such parties
+ encountering each other, and disputing for precedence. Several other
+ circumstances of less importance were adjusted at the same time, and
+ apparently so much to the satisfaction of the Presbyterian teacher, that,
+ in a long lecture on the subject of the Marriage Garment, he was at the
+ pains to explain to his hearers, that outward apparel was not alone meant
+ by that scriptural expression, but also a suitable frame of mind for
+ enjoyment of peaceful festivity; and therefore he exhorted the brethren,
+ that whatever might be the errors of the poor blinded malignants, with
+ whom they were in some sort to eat and drink upon the morrow they ought
+ not on this occasion to show any evil will against them, lest they should
+ therein become troublers of the peace of Israel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honest Doctor Dummerar, the elected Episcopal Vicar of Martindale <i>cum</i>
+ Moultrassie, preached to the Cavaliers on the same subject. He had served
+ the cure before the breaking out of the rebellion, and was in high favour
+ with Sir Geoffrey, not merely on account of his sound orthodoxy and deep
+ learning, but his exquisite skill in playing at bowls, and his facetious
+ conversation over a pipe and tankard of October. For these latter
+ accomplishments, the Doctor had the honour to be recorded by old Century
+ White amongst the roll of lewd, incompetent, profligate clergymen of the
+ Church of England, whom he denounced to God and man, on account chiefly of
+ the heinous sin of playing at games of skill and chance, and of
+ occasionally joining in the social meetings of their parishioners. When
+ the King&rsquo;s party began to lose ground, Doctor Dummerar left his vicarage,
+ and, betaking himself to the camp, showed upon several occasions, when
+ acting as chaplain to Sir Geoffrey Peveril&rsquo;s regiment, that his portly
+ bodily presence included a stout and masculine heart. When all was lost,
+ and he himself, with most other loyal divines, was deprived of his living,
+ he made such shift as he could; now lurking in the garrets of old friends
+ in the University, who shared with him, and such as him, the slender means
+ of livelihood which the evil times had left them; and now lying hid in the
+ houses of the oppressed and sequestered gentry, who respected at once his
+ character and sufferings. When the Restoration took place, Doctor Dummerar
+ emerged from some one of his hiding-places, and hied him to Martindale
+ Castle, to enjoy the triumph inseparable from this happy change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His appearance at the Castle in his full clerical dress, and the warm
+ reception which he received from the neighbouring gentry, added not a
+ little to the alarm which was gradually extending itself through the party
+ which were so lately the uppermost. It is true, Doctor Dummerar framed
+ (honest worthy man) no extravagant views of elevation or preferment; but
+ the probability of his being replaced in the living, from which he had
+ been expelled under very flimsy pretences, inferred a severe blow to the
+ Presbyterian divine, who could not be considered otherwise than as an
+ intruder. The interest of the two preachers, therefore, as well as the
+ sentiments of their flocks, were at direct variance; and here was another
+ fatal objection in the way of Lady Peveril&rsquo;s scheme of a general and
+ comprehensive healing ordinance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, as we have already hinted, Doctor Dummerar behaved as
+ handsomely upon the occasion as the Presbyterian incumbent had done. It is
+ true, that in a sermon which he preached in the Castle hall to several of
+ the most distinguished Cavalier families, besides a world of boys from the
+ village, who went to see the novel circumstance of a parson in a cassock
+ and surplice, he went at great length into the foulness of the various
+ crimes committed by the rebellious party during the late evil times, and
+ greatly magnified the merciful and peaceful nature of the honourable Lady
+ of the Manor, who condescended to look upon, or receive into her house in
+ the way of friendship and hospitality, men holding the principles which
+ had led to the murder of the King&mdash;the slaying and despoiling his
+ loyal subjects&mdash;and the plundering and breaking down of the Church of
+ God. But then he wiped all this handsomely up again, with the observation,
+ that since it was the will of their gracious and newly-restored Sovereign,
+ and the pleasure of the worshipful Lady Peveril, that this contumacious
+ and rebellious race should be, for a time, forborne by their faithful
+ subjects, it would be highly proper that all the loyal liegemen should,
+ for the present, eschew subjects of dissension or quarrel with these sons
+ of Shimei; which lesson of patience he enforced by the comfortable
+ assurance, that they could not long abstain from their old rebellious
+ practices; in which case, the Royalists would stand exculpated before God
+ and man, in extirpating them from the face of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The close observers of the remarkable passages of the times from which we
+ draw the events of our history, have left it upon record, that these two
+ several sermons, much contrary, doubtless, to the intention of the worthy
+ divines by whom they were delivered, had a greater effect in exasperating,
+ than in composing, the disputes betwixt the two factions. Under such evil
+ auspices, and with corresponding forebodings on the mind of Lady Peveril,
+ the day of festivity at length arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By different routes, and forming each a sort of procession, as if the
+ adherents of each party were desirous of exhibiting its strength and
+ numbers, the two several factions approached Martindale Castle; and so
+ distinct did they appear in dress, aspect, and manners, that it seemed as
+ if the revellers of a bridal party, and the sad attendants upon a funeral
+ solemnity, were moving towards the same point from different quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The puritanical party was by far the fewer in numbers, for which two
+ excellent reasons might be given. In the first place, they had enjoyed
+ power for several years, and, of course, became unpopular among the common
+ people, never at any time attached to those, who, being in the immediate
+ possession of authority, are often obliged to employ it in controlling
+ their humours. Besides, the country people of England had, and still have,
+ an animated attachment to field sports, and a natural unrestrained
+ joviality of disposition, which rendered them impatient under the severe
+ discipline of the fanatical preachers; while they were not less naturally
+ discontented with the military despotism of Cromwell&rsquo;s Major-Generals.
+ Secondly, the people were fickle as usual, and the return of the King had
+ novelty in it, and was therefore popular. The side of the Puritans was
+ also deserted at this period by a numerous class of more thinking and
+ prudential persons, who never forsook them till they became unfortunate.
+ These sagacious personages were called in that age the Waiters upon
+ Providence, and deemed it a high delinquency towards Heaven if they
+ afforded countenance to any cause longer than it was favoured by fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though thus forsaken by the fickle and the selfish, a solemn
+ enthusiasm, a stern and determined depth of principle, a confidence in the
+ sincerity of their own motives, and the manly English pride which inclined
+ them to cling to their former opinions, like the traveller in the fable to
+ his cloak, the more strongly that the tempest blew around them, detained
+ in the ranks of the Puritans many, who, if no longer formidable from
+ numbers, were still so from their character. They consisted chiefly of the
+ middling gentry, with others whom industry or successful speculations in
+ commerce or in mining had raised into eminence&mdash;the persons who feel
+ most umbrage from the overshadowing aristocracy, and are usually the most
+ vehement in defence of what they hold to be their rights. Their dress was
+ in general studiously simple and unostentatious, or only remarkable by the
+ contradictory affectation of extreme simplicity or carelessness. The dark
+ colour of their cloaks, varying from absolute black to what was called
+ sad-coloured&mdash;their steeple-crowned hats, with their broad shadowy
+ brims&mdash;their long swords, suspended by a simple strap around the
+ loins, without shoulder-belt, sword-knot, plate, buckles, or any of the
+ other decorations with which the Cavaliers loved to adorn their trusty
+ rapiers,&mdash;the shortness of their hair, which made their ears appear
+ of disproportioned size,&mdash;above all, the stern and gloomy gravity of
+ their looks, announced their belonging to that class of enthusiasts, who,
+ resolute and undismayed, had cast down the former fabric of government,
+ and who now regarded with somewhat more than suspicion, that which had
+ been so unexpectedly substituted in its stead. There was gloom in their
+ countenances; but it was not that of dejection, far less of despair. They
+ looked like veterans after a defeat, which may have checked their career
+ and wounded their pride, but has left their courage undiminished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The melancholy, now become habitual, which overcast Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s
+ countenance, well qualified him to act as the chief of the group who now
+ advanced from the village. When they reached the point by which they were
+ first to turn aside into the wood which surrounded the Castle, they felt a
+ momentary impression of degradation, as if they were yielding the high
+ road to their old and oft-defeated enemies the Cavaliers. When they began
+ to ascend the winding path, which had been the daily passage of the
+ cattle, the opening of the wooded glade gave them a view of the Castle
+ ditch, half choked with the rubbish of the breach, and of the breach
+ itself, which was made at the angle of a large square flanking-tower,
+ one-half of which had been battered into ruins, while the other fragment
+ remained in a state strangely shattered and precarious, and seemed to be
+ tottering above the huge aperture in the wall. A stern still smile was
+ exchanged among the Puritans, as the sight reminded them of the victories
+ of former days. Holdfast Clegg, a millwright of Derby, who had been
+ himself active at the siege, pointed to the breach, and said, with a grim
+ smile to Mr. Solsgrace, &ldquo;I little thought, that when my own hand helped to
+ level the cannon which Oliver pointed against yon tower, we should have
+ been obliged to climb like foxes up the very walls which we won by our bow
+ and by our spear. Methought these malignants had then enough of shutting
+ their gates and making high their horn against us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be patient, my brother,&rdquo; said Solsgrace; &ldquo;be patient, and let not thy
+ soul be disquieted. We enter not this high place dishonourably, seeing we
+ ascend by the gate which the Lord opened to the godly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words of the pastor were like a spark to gunpowder. The countenances
+ of the mournful retinue suddenly expanded, and, accepting what had fallen
+ from him as an omen and a light from heaven how they were to interpret
+ their present situation, they uplifted, with one consent, one of the
+ triumphant songs in which the Israelites celebrated the victories which
+ had been vouchsafed to them over the heathen inhabitants of the Promised
+ Land:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Let God arise, and then His foes
+ Shall turn themselves to flight,
+ His enemies for fear shall run,
+ And scatter out of sight;
+
+ And as wax melts before the fire,
+ And wind blows smoke away,
+ So in the presence of the Lord,
+ The wicked shall decay.
+
+ God&rsquo;s army twenty thousand is,
+ Of angels bright and strong,
+ The Lord also in Sinai
+ Is present them among.
+
+ Thou didst, O Lord, ascend on high,
+ And captive led&rsquo;st them all,
+ Who, in times past, Thy chosen flock
+ In bondage did enthral.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ These sounds of devotional triumph reached the joyous band of the
+ Cavaliers, who, decked in whatever pomp their repeated misfortunes and
+ impoverishment had left them, were moving towards the same point, though
+ by a different road, and were filling the principal avenue to the Castle,
+ with tiptoe mirth and revelry. The two parties were strongly contrasted;
+ for, during that period of civil dissension, the manners of the different
+ factions distinguished them as completely as separate uniforms might have
+ done. If the Puritan was affectedly plain in his dress, and ridiculously
+ precise in his manners, the Cavalier often carried his love of ornament
+ into tawdry finery, and his contempt of hypocrisy into licentious
+ profligacy. Gay gallant fellows, young and old, thronged together towards
+ the ancient Castle, with general and joyous manifestation of those
+ spirits, which, as they had been buoyant enough to support their owners
+ during the worst of times, as they termed Oliver&rsquo;s usurpation, were now so
+ inflated as to transport them nearly beyond the reach of sober reason.
+ Feathers waved, lace glittered, spears jingled, steeds caracoled; and here
+ and there a petronel, or pistol, was fired off by some one, who found his
+ own natural talents for making a noise inadequate to the dignity of the
+ occasion. Boys&mdash;for, as we said before, the rabble were with the
+ uppermost party, as usual&mdash;halloo&rsquo;d and whooped, &ldquo;Down with the
+ Rump,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Fie upon Oliver!&rdquo; Musical instruments, of as many different
+ fashions as were then in use, played all at once, and without any regard
+ to each other&rsquo;s tune; and the glee of the occasion, while it reconciled
+ the pride of the high-born of the party to fraternise with the general
+ rout, derived an additional zest from the conscious triumph, that their
+ exultation was heard by their neighbours, the crestfallen Roundheads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the loud and sonorous swell of the psalm-tune, multiplied by all the
+ echoes of the cliffs and ruinous halls, came full upon their ear, as if to
+ warn them how little they were to reckon upon the depression of their
+ adversaries, at first it was answered with a scornful laugh, raised to as
+ much height as the scoffers&rsquo; lungs would permit, in order that it might
+ carry to the psalmodists the contempt of their auditors; but this was a
+ forced exertion of party spleen. There is something in melancholy feelings
+ more natural to an imperfect and suffering state than in those of gaiety,
+ and when they are brought into collision, the former seldom fail to
+ triumph. If a funeral-train and wedding-procession were to meet
+ unexpectedly, it will readily be allowed that the mirth of the last would
+ be speedily merged in the gloom of the others. But the Cavaliers,
+ moreover, had sympathies of a different kind. The psalm-tune, which now
+ came rolling on their ear, had been heard too often, and upon too many
+ occasions had preceded victory gained over the malignants, to permit them,
+ even in their triumph, to hear it without emotion. There was a sort of
+ pause, of which the party themselves seemed rather ashamed, until the
+ silence was broken by the stout old knight, Sir Jasper Cranbourne, whose
+ gallantry was so universally acknowledged, that he could afford, if we may
+ use such an expression, to confess emotions, which men whose courage was
+ in any respect liable to suspicion, would have thought it imprudent to
+ acknowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Adad,&rdquo; said the old Knight, &ldquo;may I never taste claret again, if that is
+ not the very tune with which the prick-eared villains began their onset at
+ Wiggan Lane, where they trowled us down like so many ninepins! Faith,
+ neighbours, to say truth, and shame the devil, I did not like the sound of
+ it above half.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I thought the round-headed rogues did it in scorn of us,&rdquo; said Dick
+ Wildblood of the Dale, &ldquo;I would cudgel their psalmody out of their
+ peasantly throats with this very truncheon;&rdquo; a motion which, being
+ seconded by old Roger Raine, the drunken tapster of the Peveril Arms in
+ the village, might have brought on a general battle, but that Sir Jasper
+ forbade the feud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have no ranting, Dick,&rdquo; said the old Knight to the young Franklin;
+ &ldquo;adad, man, we&rsquo;ll have none, for three reasons: first, because it would be
+ ungentle to Lady Peveril; then, because it is against the King&rsquo;s peace;
+ and, lastly, Dick, because if we did set on the psalm-singing knaves, thou
+ mightest come by the worst, my boy, as has chanced to thee before.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, I! Sir Jasper?&rdquo; answered Dick&mdash;&ldquo;I come by the worst!&mdash;I&rsquo;ll
+ be d&mdash;d if it ever happened but in that accursed lane, where we had
+ no more flank, front, or rear, than if we had been so many herrings in a
+ barrel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was the reason, I fancy,&rdquo; answered Sir Jasper, &ldquo;that you, to mend
+ the matter, scrambled into the hedge, and stuck there, horse and man, till
+ I beat thee through it with my leading-staff; and then, instead of
+ charging to the front, you went right-about, and away as fast as your feet
+ would carry you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reminiscence produced a laugh at Dick&rsquo;s expense, who was known, or at
+ least suspected, to have more tongue in his head than mettle in his bosom.
+ And this sort of rallying on the part of the Knight having fortunately
+ abated the resentment which had begun to awaken in the breasts of the
+ royalist cavalcade, farther cause for offence was removed, by the sudden
+ ceasing of the sounds which they had been disposed to interpret into those
+ of premeditated insult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was owing to the arrival of the Puritans at the bottom of the large
+ and wide breach, which had been formerly made in the wall of the Castle by
+ their victorious cannon. The sight of its gaping heaps of rubbish, and
+ disjointed masses of building, up which slowly winded a narrow and steep
+ path, such as is made amongst ancient ruins by the rare passage of those
+ who occasionally visit them, was calculated, when contrasted with the grey
+ and solid massiveness of the towers and curtains which yet stood
+ uninjured, to remind them of their victory over the stronghold of their
+ enemies, and how they had bound nobles and princes with fetters of iron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But feelings more suitable to the purpose of their visit to Martindale
+ Castle, were awakened in the bosoms even of these stern sectaries, when
+ the Lady of the Castle, still in the very prime of beauty and of
+ womanhood, appeared at the top of the breach with her principal female
+ attendants, to receive her guests with the honour and courtesy becoming
+ her invitation. She had laid aside the black dress which had been her sole
+ attire for several years, and was arrayed with a splendour not unbecoming
+ her high descent and quality. Jewels, indeed, she had none; but her long
+ and dark hair was surmounted with a chaplet made of oak leaves,
+ interspersed with lilies; the former being the emblem of the King&rsquo;s
+ preservation in the Royal Oak, and the latter of his happy Restoration.
+ What rendered her presence still more interesting to those who looked on
+ her, was the presence of the two children whom she held in either hand;
+ one of whom was well known to them all to be the child of their leader,
+ Major Bridgenorth, who had been restored to life and health by the almost
+ maternal care of the Lady Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If even the inferior persons of the party felt the healing influence of
+ her presence, thus accompanied, poor Bridgenorth was almost overwhelmed
+ with it. The strictness of his cast and manners permitted him not to sink
+ on his knee, and kiss the hand which held his little orphan; but the
+ deepness of his obeisance&mdash;the faltering tremor of his voice&mdash;and
+ the glistening of his eye, showed a grateful respect for the lady whom he
+ addressed, deeper and more reverential than could have been expressed even
+ by Persian prostration. A few courteous and mild words, expressive of the
+ pleasure she found in once more seeing her neighbours as her friends&mdash;a
+ few kind inquiries, addressed to the principal individuals among her
+ guests, concerning their families and connections, completed her triumph
+ over angry thoughts and dangerous recollections, and disposed men&rsquo;s bosoms
+ to sympathise with the purposes of the meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Solsgrace himself, although imagining himself bound by his office and
+ duty to watch over and counteract the wiles of the &ldquo;Amalekitish woman,&rdquo;
+ did not escape the sympathetic infection; being so much struck with the
+ marks of peace and good-will exhibited by Lady Peveril, that he
+ immediately raised the psalm&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O what a happy thing it is,
+ And joyful, for to see
+ Brethren to dwell together in
+ Friendship and unity!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Accepting this salutation as a mark of courtesy repaid, the Lady Peveril
+ marshalled in person this party of her guests to the apartment, where
+ ample good cheer was provided for them; and had even the patience to
+ remain while Master Nehemiah Solsgrace pronounced a benediction of
+ portentous length, as an introduction to the banquet. Her presence was in
+ some measure a restraint on the worthy divine, whose prolusion lasted the
+ longer, and was the more intricate and embarrassed, that he felt himself
+ debarred from rounding it off by his usual alliterative petition for
+ deliverance from Popery, Prelacy, and Peveril of the Peak, which had
+ become so habitual to him, that, after various attempts to conclude with
+ some other form of words, he found himself at last obliged to pronounce
+ the first words of his usual <i>formula</i> aloud, and mutter the rest in
+ such a manner as not to be intelligible even by those who stood nearest to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister&rsquo;s silence was followed by all the various sounds which
+ announce the onset of a hungry company on a well-furnished table; and at
+ the same time gave the lady an opportunity to leave the apartment, and
+ look to the accommodation of her other company. She felt, indeed, that it
+ was high time to do so; and that the royalist guests might be disposed to
+ misapprehend, or even to resent, the prior attentions which she had
+ thought it prudent to offer to the Puritans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These apprehensions were not altogether ill-founded. It was in vain that
+ the steward had displayed the royal standard, with its proud motto of <i>Tandem
+ Triumphans</i>, on one of the great towers which flanked the main entrance
+ of the Castle; while, from the other, floated the banner of Peveril of the
+ Peak, under which many of those who now approached had fought during all
+ the vicissitudes of civil war. It was in vain he repeated his clamorous
+ &ldquo;Welcome, noble Cavaliers! welcome, generous gentlemen!&rdquo; There was a
+ slight murmur amongst them, that their welcome ought to have come from the
+ mouth of the Colonel&rsquo;s lady&mdash;not from that of a menial. Sir Jasper
+ Cranbourne, who had sense as well as spirit and courage, and who was aware
+ of his fair cousin&rsquo;s motives, having been indeed consulted by her upon all
+ the arrangements which she had adopted, saw matters were in such a state
+ that no time ought to be lost in conducting the guests to the banqueting
+ apartment, where a fortunate diversion from all these topics of rising
+ discontent might be made, at the expense of the good cheer of all sorts,
+ which the lady&rsquo;s care had so liberally provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stratagem of the old soldier succeeded in its utmost extent. He
+ assumed the great oaken-chair usually occupied by the steward at his
+ audits; and Dr. Dummerar having pronounced a brief Latin benediction
+ (which was not the less esteemed by the hearers that none of them
+ understood it), Sir Jasper exhorted the company to wet their appetites to
+ the dinner by a brimming cup to his Majesty&rsquo;s health, filled as high and
+ as deep as their goblets would permit. In a moment all was bustle, with
+ the clank of wine-cups and of flagons. In another moment the guests were
+ on their feet like so many statues, all hushed as death, but with eyes
+ glancing with expectation, and hands outstretched, which displayed their
+ loyal brimmers. The voice of Sir Jasper, clear, sonorous, and emphatic, as
+ the sound of his war-trumpet, announced the health of the restored
+ Monarch, hastily echoed back by the assemblage, impatient to render it due
+ homage. Another brief pause was filled by the draining of their cups, and
+ the mustering breath to join in a shout so loud, that not only the rafters
+ of the old hall trembled while they echoed it back, but the garlands of
+ oaken boughs and flowers with which they were decorated, waved wildly, and
+ rustled as if agitated by a sudden whirlwind. This rite observed, the
+ company proceeded to assail the good cheer with which the table groaned,
+ animated as they were to the attack both by mirth and melody, for they
+ were attended by all the minstrels of the district, who, like the
+ Episcopal clergy, had been put to silence during the reign of the
+ self-entitled saints of the Commonwealth. The social occupation of good
+ eating and drinking, the exchange of pledges betwixt old neighbours who
+ had been fellow-soldiers in the moment of resistance&mdash;fellow-sufferers
+ in the time of depression and subjugation, and were now partners in the
+ same general subject of congratulation, soon wiped from their memory the
+ trifling cause of complaint, which in the minds of some had darkened the
+ festivity of the day; so that when the Lady Peveril walked into the hall,
+ accompanied as before with the children and her female attendants, she was
+ welcomed with the acclamations due to the mistress of the banquet and of
+ the Castle&mdash;the dame of the noble Knight, who had led most of them to
+ battle with an undaunted and persevering valour, which was worthy of
+ better success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her address to them was brief and matronly, yet spoken with so much
+ feeling as found its way to every bosom. She apologised for the lateness
+ of her personal welcome, by reminding them that there were then present in
+ Martindale Castle that day, persons whom recent happy events had converted
+ from enemies into friends, but on whom the latter character was so
+ recently imposed, that she dared not neglect with them any point of
+ ceremonial. But those whom she now addressed, were the best, the dearest
+ the most faithful friends of her husband&rsquo;s house, to whom and to their
+ valour Peveril had not only owed those successes, which had given them and
+ him fame during the late unhappy times, but to whose courage she in
+ particular had owed the preservation of their leader&rsquo;s life, even when it
+ could not avert defeat. A word or two of heartfelt authority, completed
+ all which she had boldness to add, and, bowing gracefully round her, she
+ lifted a cup to her lips as if to welcome her guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There still remained, and especially amongst the old Cavaliers of the
+ period, some glimmering of that spirit which inspired Froissart, when he
+ declares that a knight hath double courage at need, when animated by the
+ looks and words of a beautiful and virtuous woman. It was not until the
+ reign which was commencing at the moment we are treating of, that the
+ unbounded licence of the age, introducing a general course of profligacy,
+ degraded the female sex into mere servants of pleasure, and, in so doing,
+ deprived society of that noble tone of feeling towards the sex, which,
+ considered as a spur to &ldquo;raise the clear spirit,&rdquo; is superior to every
+ other impulse, save those of religion and of patriotism. The beams of the
+ ancient hall of Martindale Castle instantly rang with a shout louder and
+ shriller than that at which they had so lately trembled, and the names of
+ the Knight of the Peak and his lady were proclaimed amid waving of caps
+ and hats, and universal wishes for their health and happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these auspices the Lady Peveril glided from the hall, and left free
+ space for the revelry of the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That of the Cavaliers may be easily conceived, since it had the usual
+ accompaniments of singing, jesting, quaffing of healths, and playing of
+ tunes, which have in almost every age and quarter of the world been the
+ accompaniments of festive cheer. The enjoyments of the Puritans were of a
+ different and less noisy character. They neither sung, jested, heard
+ music, nor drank healths; and yet they seemed not the less, in their own
+ phrase, to enjoy the creature-comforts, which the frailty of humanity
+ rendered grateful to their outward man. Old Whitaker even protested, that,
+ though much the smaller party in point of numbers, they discussed nearly
+ as much sack and claret as his own more jovial associates. But those who
+ considered the steward&rsquo;s prejudices, were inclined to think, that, in
+ order to produce such a result, he must have thrown in his own
+ by-drinkings&mdash;no inconsiderable item&mdash;to the sum total of the
+ Presbyterian potations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without adopting such a partial and scandalous report, we shall only say,
+ that on this occasion, as on most others, the rareness of indulgence
+ promoted the sense of enjoyment, and that those who made abstinence, or at
+ least moderation, a point of religious principle, enjoyed their social
+ meeting the better that such opportunities rarely presented themselves. If
+ they did not actually drink each other&rsquo;s healths, they at least showed, by
+ looking and nodding to each other as they raised their glasses, that they
+ all were sharing the same festive gratification of the appetite, and felt
+ it enhanced, because it was at the same time enjoyed by their friends and
+ neighbours. Religion, as it was the principal topic of their thoughts,
+ became also the chief subject of their conversation, and as they sat
+ together in small separate knots, they discussed doctrinal and
+ metaphysical points of belief, balanced the merits of various preachers,
+ compared the creeds of contending sects, and fortified by scriptural
+ quotations those which they favoured. Some contests arose in the course of
+ these debates, which might have proceeded farther than was seemly, but for
+ the cautious interference of Major Bridgenorth. He suppressed also, in the
+ very bud, a dispute betwixt Gaffer Hodgeson of Charnelycot and the
+ Reverend Mr. Solsgrace, upon the tender subject of lay-preaching and
+ lay-ministering; nor did he think it altogether prudent or decent to
+ indulge the wishes of some of the warmer enthusiasts of the party, who
+ felt disposed to make the rest partakers of their gifts in extemporaneous
+ prayer and exposition. These were absurdities that belonged to the time,
+ which, however, the Major had sense enough to perceive were unfitted,
+ whether the offspring of hypocrisy or enthusiasm, for the present time and
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major was also instrumental in breaking up the party at an early and
+ decorous hour, so that they left the Castle long before their rivals, the
+ Cavaliers, had reached the springtide of their merriment; an arrangement
+ which afforded the greatest satisfaction to the lady, who dreaded the
+ consequences which might not improbably have taken place, had both parties
+ met at the same period and point of retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was near midnight ere the greater part of the Cavaliers, meaning such
+ as were able to effect their departure without assistance, withdrew to the
+ village of Martindale Moultrassie, with the benefit of the broad moon to
+ prevent the chance of accidents. Their shouts, and the burden of their
+ roaring chorus of&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The King shall enjoy his own again!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ were heard with no small pleasure by the lady, heartily glad that the riot
+ of the day was over without the occurrence of any unpleasing accident. The
+ rejoicing was not, however, entirely ended; for the elevated Cavaliers,
+ finding some of the villagers still on foot around a bonfire on the
+ street, struck merrily in with them&mdash;sent to Roger Raine of the
+ Peveril Arms, the loyal publican whom we have already mentioned, for two
+ tubs of merry stingo (as it was termed), and lent their own powerful
+ assistance at the <i>dusting</i> it off to the health of the King and the
+ loyal General Monk. Their shouts for a long time disturbed, and even
+ alarmed, the little village; but no enthusiasm is able to withstand for
+ ever the natural consequences of late hours, and potations pottle-deep.
+ The tumult of the exulting Royalists at last sunk into silence, and the
+ moon and the owl were left in undisturbed sovereignty over the old tower
+ of the village church, which, rising white above a circle of knotty oaks,
+ was tenanted by the bird, and silvered by the planet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Twas when they raised, &lsquo;mid sap and siege,
+ The banners of their rightful liege,
+ At their she-captain&rsquo;s call,
+ Who, miracle of womankind!
+ Lent mettle to the meanest hind
+ That mann&rsquo;d her castle wall.
+ &mdash;WILLIAM S. ROSE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the morning succeeding the feast, the Lady Peveril, fatigued with the
+ exertions and the apprehensions of the former day, kept her apartment for
+ two or three hours later than her own active habits, and the matutinal
+ custom of the time, rendered usual. Meanwhile, Mistress Ellesmere, a
+ person of great trust in the family, and who assumed much authority in her
+ mistress&rsquo;s absence, laid her orders upon Deborah, the governante,
+ immediately to carry the children to their airing in the park, and not to
+ let any one enter the gilded chamber, which was usually their
+ sporting-place. Deborah, who often rebelled, and sometimes successfully,
+ against the deputed authority of Ellesmere, privately resolved that it was
+ about to rain, and that the gilded chamber was a more suitable place for
+ the children&rsquo;s exercise than the wet grass of the park on a raw morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a woman&rsquo;s brain is sometimes as inconstant as a popular assembly; and
+ presently after she had voted the morning was like to be rainy, and that
+ the gilded chamber was the fittest play-room for the children, Mistress
+ Deborah came to the somewhat inconsistent resolution, that the park was
+ the fittest place for her own morning walk. It is certain, that during the
+ unrestrained joviality of the preceding evening, she had danced till
+ midnight with Lance Outram the park-keeper; but how far the seeing him
+ just pass the window in his woodland trim, with a feather in his hat, and
+ a crossbow under his arm, influenced the discrepancy of the opinions
+ Mistress Deborah formed concerning the weather, we are far from presuming
+ to guess. It is enough for us, that, so soon as Mistress Ellesmere&rsquo;s back
+ was turned, Mistress Deborah carried the children into the gilded chamber,
+ not without a strict charge (for we must do her justice) to Master Julian
+ to take care of his little wife, Mistress Alice; and then, having taken so
+ satisfactory a precaution, she herself glided into the park by the
+ glass-door of the still-room, which was nearly opposite to the great
+ breach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gilded chamber in which the children were, by this arrangement, left
+ to amuse themselves, without better guardianship than what Julian&rsquo;s
+ manhood afforded, was a large apartment, hung with stamped Spanish
+ leather, curiously gilded, representing, in a manner now obsolete, but far
+ from unpleasing, a series of tilts and combats betwixt the Saracens of
+ Grenada, and the Spaniards under the command of King Ferdinand and Queen
+ Isabella, during that memorable siege, which was terminated by the
+ overthrow of the last fragments of the Moorish empire in Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Julian was careering about the room for the amusement of his
+ infant friend, as well as his own, mimicking with a reed the menacing
+ attitude of the Abencerrages and Zegris engaged in the Eastern sport of
+ hurling the JERID, or javelin; and at times sitting down beside her, and
+ caressing her into silence and good humour, when the petulant or timid
+ child chose to become tired of remaining an inactive spectator of his
+ boisterous sport; when, on a sudden, he observed one of the panelled
+ compartments of the leather hangings slide apart, so as to show a fair
+ hand, with its fingers resting upon its edge, prepared, it would seem, to
+ push it still farther back. Julian was much surprised, and somewhat
+ frightened, at what he witnessed, for the tales of the nursery had
+ strongly impressed on his mind the terrors of the invisible world. Yet,
+ naturally bold and high-spirited, the little champion placed himself
+ beside his defenceless sister, continuing to brandish his weapon in her
+ defence, as boldly as he had himself been an Abencerrage of Grenada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The panel, on which his eye was fixed, gradually continued to slide back,
+ and display more and more the form to which the hand appertained, until,
+ in the dark aperture which was disclosed, the children saw the figure of a
+ lady in a mourning dress, past the meridian of life, but whose countenance
+ still retained traces of great beauty, although the predominant character
+ both of her features and person was an air of almost royal dignity. After
+ pausing a moment on the threshold of the portal which she had thus
+ unexpectedly disclosed, and looking with some surprise at the children,
+ whom she had not probably observed while engaged with the management of
+ the panel, the stranger stepped into the apartment, and the panel, upon a
+ touch of a spring, closed behind her so suddenly, that Julian almost
+ doubted it had ever been open, and began to apprehend that the whole
+ apparition had been a delusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stately lady, however, advanced to him, and said, &ldquo;Are not you the
+ little Peveril?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the boy, reddening, not altogether without a juvenile feeling
+ of that rule of chivalry which forbade any one to disown his name,
+ whatever danger might be annexed to the avowal of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said the stately stranger, &ldquo;go to your mother&rsquo;s room, and tell her
+ to come instantly to speak with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wo&rsquo;not,&rdquo; said the little Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; said the lady,&mdash;&ldquo;so young and so disobedient?&mdash;but you do
+ but follow the fashion of the time. Why will you not go, my pretty boy,
+ when I ask it of you as a favour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would go, madam,&rdquo; said the boy, &ldquo;but&rdquo;&mdash;and he stopped short, still
+ drawing back as the lady advanced on him, but still holding by the hand
+ Alice Bridgenorth, who, too young to understand the nature of the
+ dialogue, clung, trembling, to her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger saw his embarrassment, smiled, and remained standing fast,
+ while she asked the child once more, &ldquo;What are you afraid of, my brave boy&mdash;and
+ why should you not go to your mother on my errand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; answered Julian firmly, &ldquo;if I go, little Alice must stay alone
+ with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a gallant fellow,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;and will not disgrace your
+ blood, which never left the weak without protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy understood her not, and still gazed with anxious apprehension,
+ first on her who addressed him, and then upon his little companion, whose
+ eyes, with the vacant glance of infancy, wandered from the figure of the
+ lady to that of her companion and protector, and at length, infected by a
+ portion of the fear which the latter&rsquo;s magnanimous efforts could not
+ entirely conceal, she flew into Julian&rsquo;s arms, and, clinging to him,
+ greatly augmented his alarm, and by screaming aloud, rendered it very
+ difficult for him to avoid the sympathetic fear which impelled him to do
+ the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in the manner and bearing of this unexpected inmate
+ which might justify awe at least, if not fear, when joined to the singular
+ and mysterious mode in which she had made her appearance. Her dress was
+ not remarkable, being the hood and female riding attire of the time, such
+ as was worn by the inferior class of gentlewomen; but her black hair was
+ very long, and, several locks having escaped from under her hood, hung
+ down dishevelled on her neck and shoulders. Her eyes were deep black,
+ keen, and piercing, and her features had something of a foreign
+ expression. When she spoke, her language was marked by a slight foreign
+ accent, although, in construction, it was pure English. Her slightest tone
+ and gesture had the air of one accustomed to command and to be obeyed; the
+ recollection of which probably suggested to Julian the apology he
+ afterwards made for being frightened, that he took the stranger for an
+ &ldquo;enchanted queen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0153m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0153m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0153.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ While the stranger lady and the children thus confronted each other, two
+ persons entered almost at the same instant, but from different doors,
+ whose haste showed that they had been alarmed by the screams of the
+ latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first was Major Bridgenorth, whose ears had been alarmed with the
+ cries of his child, as he entered the hall, which corresponded with what
+ was called the gilded chamber. His intention had been to remain in the
+ more public apartment, until the Lady Peveril should make her appearance,
+ with the good-natured purpose of assuring her that the preceding day of
+ tumult had passed in every respect agreeably to his friends, and without
+ any of those alarming consequences which might have been apprehended from
+ a collision betwixt the parties. But when it is considered how severely he
+ had been agitated by apprehensions for his child&rsquo;s safety and health, too
+ well justified by the fate of those who had preceded her, it will not be
+ thought surprising that the infantine screams of Alice induced him to
+ break through the barriers of form, and intrude farther into the interior
+ of the house than a sense of strict propriety might have warranted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He burst into the gilded chamber, therefore, by a side-door and narrow
+ passage, which communicated betwixt that apartment and the hall, and,
+ snatching the child up in his arms, endeavoured, by a thousand caresses,
+ to stifle the screams which burst yet more violently from the little girl,
+ on beholding herself in the arms of one to whose voice and manner she was,
+ but for one brief interview, an entire stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, Alice&rsquo;s shrieks were redoubled, and seconded by those of Julian
+ Peveril, who, on the appearance of this second intruder, was frightened
+ into resignation of every more manly idea of rescue than that which
+ consisted in invoking assistance at the very top of his lungs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alarmed by this noise, which in half a minute became very clamorous, Lady
+ Peveril, with whose apartment the gilded chamber was connected by a
+ private door of communication opening into her wardrobe, entered on the
+ scene. The instant she appeared, the little Alice, extricating herself
+ from the grasp of her father, ran towards <i>her</i> protectress, and when
+ she had once taken hold of her skirts, not only became silent, but turned
+ her large blue eyes, in which the tears were still glistening, with a look
+ of wonder rather than alarm, towards the strange lady. Julian manfully
+ brandished his reed, a weapon which he had never parted with during the
+ whole alarm, and stood prepared to assist his mother if there should be
+ danger in the encounter betwixt her and the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, it might have puzzled an older person to account for the sudden
+ and confused pause which the Lady Peveril made, as she gazed on her
+ unexpected guest, as if dubious whether she did, or did not recognise, in
+ her still beautiful though wasted and emaciated features, a countenance
+ which she had known well under far different circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger seemed to understand the cause of hesitation, for she said in
+ that heart-thrilling voice which was peculiarly her own&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time and misfortune have changed me much, Margaret&mdash;that every
+ mirror tells me&mdash;yet methinks, Margaret Stanley might still have
+ known Charlotte de la Tremouille.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Peveril was little in the custom of giving way to sudden emotion,
+ but in the present case she threw herself on her knees in a rapture of
+ mingled joy and grief, and, half embracing those of the stranger,
+ exclaimed, in broken language&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My kind, my noble benefactress&mdash;the princely Countess of Derby&mdash;the
+ royal queen in Man&mdash;could I doubt your voice, your features, for a
+ moment&mdash;Oh, forgive, forgive me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess raised the suppliant kinswoman of her husband&rsquo;s house, with
+ all the grace of one accustomed from early birth to receive homage and to
+ grant protection. She kissed the Lady Peveril&rsquo;s forehead, and passed her
+ hand in a caressing manner over her face as she said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You too are changed, my fair cousin, but it is a change becomes you, from
+ a pretty and timid maiden to a sage and comely matron. But my own memory,
+ which I once held a good one, has failed me strangely, if this gentleman
+ be Sir Geoffrey Peveril.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A kind and good neighbour only, madam,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril; &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey
+ is at Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understood so much,&rdquo; said the Countess of Derby, &ldquo;when I arrived here
+ last night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, madam!&rdquo; said Lady Peveril&mdash;&ldquo;Did you arrive at Martindale Castle&mdash;at
+ the house of Margaret Stanley, where you have such right to command, and
+ did not announce your presence to her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I know you are a dutiful subject, Margaret,&rdquo; answered the Countess,
+ &ldquo;though it be in these days a rare character&mdash;but it was our
+ pleasure,&rdquo; she added, with a smile, &ldquo;to travel incognito&mdash;and finding
+ you engaged in general hospitality, we desired not to disturb you with our
+ royal presence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how and where were you lodged, madam?&rdquo; said Lady Peveril; &ldquo;or why
+ should you have kept secret a visit which would, if made, have augmented
+ tenfold the happiness of every true heart that rejoiced here yesterday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lodging was well cared for by Ellesmere&mdash;your Ellesmere now, as
+ she was formerly mine&mdash;she has acted as quartermaster ere now, you
+ know, and on a broader scale; you must excuse her&mdash;she had my
+ positive order to lodge me in the most secret part of your Castle&rdquo;&mdash;(here
+ she pointed to the sliding panel)&mdash;&ldquo;she obeyed orders in that, and I
+ suppose also in sending you now hither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed I have not yet seen her,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;and therefore was
+ totally ignorant of a visit so joyful, so surprising.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;was equally surprised to find none but these
+ beautiful children in the apartment where I thought I heard you moving.
+ Our Ellesmere has become silly&mdash;your good-nature has spoiled her&mdash;she
+ has forgotten the discipline she learned under me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I saw her run through the wood,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, after a moment&rsquo;s
+ recollection, &ldquo;undoubtedly to seek the person who has charge of the
+ children, in order to remove them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your own darlings, I doubt not,&rdquo; said the Countess, looking at the
+ children. &ldquo;Margaret, Providence has blessed you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is my son,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, pointing to Julian, who stood
+ devouring their discourse with greedy ear; &ldquo;the little girl&mdash;I may
+ call mine too.&rdquo; Major Bridgenorth, who had in the meantime again taken up
+ his infant, and was engaged in caressing it, set it down as the Countess
+ of Derby spoke, sighed deeply, and walked towards the oriel window. He was
+ well aware that the ordinary rules of courtesy would have rendered it
+ proper that he should withdraw entirely, or at least offer to do so; but
+ he was not a man of ceremonious politeness, and he had a particular
+ interest in the subjects on which the Countess&rsquo;s discourse was likely to
+ turn, which induced him to dispense with ceremony. The ladies seemed
+ indeed scarce to notice his presence. The Countess had now assumed a
+ chair, and motioned to the Lady Peveril to sit upon a stool which was
+ placed by her side. &ldquo;We will have old times once more, though there are
+ here no roaring of rebel guns to drive you to take refuge at my side, and
+ almost in my pocket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a gun, madam,&rdquo; said little Julian, &ldquo;and the park-keeper is to
+ teach me how to fire it next year.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will list you for my soldier, then,&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ladies have no soldiers,&rdquo; said the boy, looking wistfully at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has the true masculine contempt of our frail sex, I see,&rdquo; said the
+ Countess; &ldquo;it is born with the insolent varlets of mankind, and shows
+ itself so soon as they are out of their long clothes.&mdash;Did Ellesmere
+ never tell you of Latham House and Charlotte of Derby, my little master?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand thousand times,&rdquo; said the boy, colouring; &ldquo;and how the Queen
+ of Man defended it six weeks against three thousand Roundheads, under
+ Rogue Harrison the butcher.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was your mother defended Latham House,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;not I, my
+ little soldier&mdash;Hadst thou been there, thou hadst been the best
+ captain of the three.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not say so, madam,&rdquo; said the boy, &ldquo;for mamma would not touch a gun for
+ all the universe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, indeed, Julian,&rdquo; said his mother; &ldquo;there I was for certain, but as
+ useless a part of the garrison&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;you nursed our hospital, and made lint
+ for the soldiers&rsquo; wounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But did not papa come to help you?&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Papa came at last,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;and so did Prince Rupert&mdash;but
+ not, I think, till they were both heartily wished for.&mdash;Do you
+ remember that morning, Margaret, when the round-headed knaves, that kept
+ us pent up so long, retreated without bag or baggage, at the first glance
+ of the Prince&rsquo;s standards appearing on the hill&mdash;and how you took
+ every high-crested captain you saw for Peveril of the Peak, that had been
+ your partner three months before at the Queen&rsquo;s mask? Nay, never blush for
+ the thought of it&mdash;it was an honest affection&mdash;and though it was
+ the music of trumpets that accompanied you both to the old chapel, which
+ was almost entirely ruined by the enemy&rsquo;s bullets; and though Prince
+ Rupert, when he gave you away at the altar, was clad in buff and
+ bandoleer, with pistols in his belt, yet I trust these warlike signs were
+ no type of future discord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven has been kind to me,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;in blessing me with
+ an affectionate husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And in preserving him to you,&rdquo; said the Countess, with a deep sigh;
+ &ldquo;while mine, alas! sealed with his blood his devotion to his king[*]&mdash;Oh,
+ had he lived to see this day!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The Earl of Derby and King in Man was beheaded at Bolton-on-the-
+ Moors, after having been made prisoner in a previous skirmish in
+ Wiggan Lane.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! alas! that he was not permitted!&rdquo; answered Lady Peveril; &ldquo;how had
+ that brave and noble Earl rejoiced in the unhoped-for redemption of our
+ captivity!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess looked on Lady Peveril with an air of surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast not then heard, cousin, how it stands with our house?&mdash;How
+ indeed had my noble lord wondered, had he been told that the very monarch
+ for whom he had laid down his noble life on the scaffold at
+ Bolton-le-Moor, should make it his first act of restored monarchy to
+ complete the destruction of our property, already well-nigh ruined in the
+ royal cause, and to persecute me his widow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You astonish me, madam!&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril. &ldquo;It cannot be, that you&mdash;that
+ you, the wife of the gallant, the faithful, the murdered Earl&mdash;you,
+ Countess of Derby, and Queen in Man&mdash;you, who took on you even the
+ character of a soldier, and seemed a man when so many men proved women&mdash;that
+ you should sustain evil from the event which has fulfilled&mdash;exceeded&mdash;the
+ hopes of every faithful subject&mdash;it cannot be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art as simple, I see, in this world&rsquo;s knowledge as ever, my fair
+ cousin,&rdquo; answered the Countess. &ldquo;This restoration, which has given others
+ security, has placed me in danger&mdash;this change which relieved other
+ Royalists, scarce less zealous, I presume to think, than I&mdash;has sent
+ me here a fugitive, and in concealment, to beg shelter and assistance from
+ you, fair cousin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From me,&rdquo; answered the Lady Peveril&mdash;&ldquo;from me, whose youth your
+ kindness sheltered&mdash;from the wife of Peveril, your gallant Lord&rsquo;s
+ companion in arms&mdash;you have a right to command everything; but, alas!
+ that you should need such assistance as I can render&mdash;forgive me, but
+ it seems like some ill-omened vision of the night&mdash;I listen to your
+ words as if I hoped to be relieved from their painful import by awaking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is indeed a dream&mdash;a vision,&rdquo; said the Countess of Derby; &ldquo;but it
+ needs no seer to read it&mdash;the explanation hath been long since given&mdash;Put
+ not your faith in princes. I can soon remove your surprise.&mdash;This
+ gentleman, your friend, is doubtless <i>honest?</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Peveril well knew that the Cavaliers, like other factions,
+ usurped to themselves the exclusive denomination of the <i>honest</i>
+ party, and she felt some difficulty in explaining that her visitor was not
+ honest in that sense of the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had we not better retire, madam?&rdquo; she said to the Countess, rising, as if
+ in order to attend her. But the Countess retained her seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was but a question of habit,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;the gentleman&rsquo;s principles
+ are nothing to me, for what I have to tell you is widely blazed, and I
+ care not who hears my share of it. You remember&mdash;you must have heard,
+ for I think Margaret Stanley would not be indifferent to my fate&mdash;that
+ after my husband&rsquo;s murder at Bolton, I took up the standard which he never
+ dropped until his death, and displayed it with my own hand in our
+ Sovereignty of Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did indeed hear so, madam,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril; &ldquo;and that you had
+ bidden a bold defiance to the rebel government, even after all other parts
+ of Britain had submitted to them. My husband, Sir Geoffrey, designed at
+ one time to have gone to your assistance with some few followers; but we
+ learned that the island was rendered to the Parliament party, and that
+ you, dearest lady, were thrown into prison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you heard not,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;how that disaster befell me.&mdash;Margaret,
+ I would have held out that island against the knaves as long as the sea
+ continued to flow around it. Till the shoals which surround it had become
+ safe anchorage&mdash;till its precipices had melted beneath the sunshine&mdash;till
+ of all its strong abodes and castles not one stone remained upon another,&mdash;would
+ I have defended against these villainous hypocritical rebels, my dear
+ husband&rsquo;s hereditary dominion. The little kingdom of Man should have been
+ yielded only when not an arm was left to wield a sword, not a finger to
+ draw a trigger in its defence. But treachery did what force could never
+ have done. When we had foiled various attempts upon the island by open
+ force&mdash;treason accomplished what Blake and Lawson, with their
+ floating castles, had found too hazardous an enterprise&mdash;a base
+ rebel, whom we had nursed in our own bosoms, betrayed us to the enemy.
+ This wretch was named Christian&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth started and turned towards the speaker, but instantly
+ seemed to recollect himself, and again averted his face. The Countess
+ proceeded, without noticing the interruption, which, however, rather
+ surprised Lady Peveril, who was acquainted with her neighbour&rsquo;s general
+ habits of indifference and apathy, and therefore the more surprised at his
+ testifying such sudden symptoms of interest. She would once again have
+ moved the Countess to retire to another apartment, but Lady Derby
+ proceeded with too much vehemence to endure interruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This Christian,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;had eaten of my lord his sovereign&rsquo;s bread,
+ and drunk of his cup, even from childhood&mdash;for his fathers had been
+ faithful servants to the House of Man and Derby. He himself had fought
+ bravely by my husband&rsquo;s side, and enjoyed all his confidence; and when my
+ princely Earl was martyred by the rebels, he recommended to me, amongst
+ other instructions communicated in the last message I received from him,
+ to continue my confidence in Christian&rsquo;s fidelity. I obeyed, although I
+ never loved the man. He was cold and phlegmatic, and utterly devoid of
+ that sacred fire which is the incentive to noble deeds, suspected, too, of
+ leaning to the cold metaphysics of Calvinistic subtlety. But he was brave,
+ wise, and experienced, and, as the event proved, possessed but too much
+ interest with the islanders. When these rude people saw themselves without
+ hope of relief, and pressed by a blockade, which brought want and disease
+ into their island, they began to fall off from the faith which they had
+ hitherto shown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;could they forget what was due to the
+ widow of their benefactor&mdash;she who had shared with the generous Derby
+ the task of bettering their condition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not blame them,&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;the rude herd acted but according
+ to their kind&mdash;in present distress they forgot former benefits, and,
+ nursed in their earthen hovels, with spirits suited to their dwellings,
+ they were incapable of feeling the glory which is attached to constancy in
+ suffering. But that Christian should have headed their revolt&mdash;that
+ he, born a gentleman, and bred under my murdered Derby&rsquo;s own care in all
+ that was chivalrous and noble&mdash;that <i>he</i> should have forgot a
+ hundred benefits&mdash;why do I talk of benefits?&mdash;that he should
+ have forgotten that kindly intercourse which binds man to man far more
+ than the reciprocity of obligation&mdash;that he should have headed the
+ ruffians who broke suddenly into my apartment&mdash;immured me with my
+ infants in one of my own castles, and assumed or usurped the tyranny of
+ the island&mdash;that this should have been done by William Christian, my
+ vassal, my servant, my friend, was a deed of ungrateful treachery, which
+ even this age of treason will scarcely parallel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you were then imprisoned,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;and in your own
+ sovereignty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For more than seven years I have endured strict captivity,&rdquo; said the
+ Countess. &ldquo;I was indeed offered my liberty, and even some means of
+ support, if I would have consented to leave the island, and pledge my word
+ that I would not endeavour to repossess my son in his father&rsquo;s rights. But
+ they little knew the princely house from which I spring&mdash;and as
+ little the royal house of Stanley which I uphold, who hoped to humble
+ Charlotte of Tremouille into so base a composition. I would rather have
+ starved in the darkest and lowest vault of Rushin Castle, than have
+ consented to aught which might diminish in one hair&rsquo;s-breadth the right of
+ my son over his father&rsquo;s sovereignty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And could not your firmness, in a case where hope seemed lost, induce
+ them to be generous and dismiss you without conditions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They knew me better than thou dost, wench,&rdquo; answered the Countess; &ldquo;once
+ at liberty, I had not been long without the means of disturbing their
+ usurpation, and Christian would have as soon encaged a lioness to combat
+ with, as have given me the slightest power of returning to the struggle
+ with him. But time had liberty and revenge in store&mdash;I had still
+ friends and partisans in the island, though they were compelled to give
+ way to the storm. Even among the islanders at large, most had been
+ disappointed in the effects which they expected from the change of power.
+ They were loaded with exactions by their new masters, their privileges
+ were abridged, and their immunities abolished, under the pretext of
+ reducing them to the same condition with the other subjects of the
+ pretended republic. When the news arrived of the changes which were
+ current in Britain, these sentiments were privately communicated to me.
+ Calcott and others acted with great zeal and fidelity; and a rising,
+ effected as suddenly and effectually as that which had made me a captive,
+ placed me at liberty and in possession of the sovereignty of Man, as
+ Regent for my son, the youthful Earl of Derby. Do you think I enjoyed that
+ sovereignty long without doing justice on that traitor Christian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, madam,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, who, though she knew the high and
+ ambitious spirit of the Countess, scarce anticipated the extremities to
+ which it was capable of hurrying her&mdash;&ldquo;have you imprisoned
+ Christian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, wench&mdash;in that sure prison which felon never breaks from,&rdquo;
+ answered the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth, who had insensibly approached them, and was listening with an
+ agony of interest which he was unable any longer to suppress, broke in
+ with the stern exclamation&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, I trust you have not dared&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess interrupted him in her turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not who you are who question&mdash;and you know not me when you
+ speak to me of that which I dare, or dare not do. But you seem interested
+ in the fate of this Christian, and you shall hear it.&mdash;I was no
+ sooner placed in possession of my rightful power, than I ordered the
+ Dempster of the island to hold upon the traitor a High Court of Justice,
+ with all the formalities of the isle, as prescribed in its oldest records.
+ The Court was held in the open air, before the Dempster and the Keys of
+ the island, assembled under the vaulted cope of heaven, and seated on the
+ terrace of the Zonwald Hill, where of old Druid and Scald held their
+ courts of judgment. The criminal was heard at length in his own defence,
+ which amounted to little more than those specious allegations of public
+ consideration, which are ever used to colour the ugly front of treason. He
+ was fully convicted of his crime, and he received the doom of a traitor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But which, I trust, is not yet executed?&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, not without
+ an involuntary shudder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a fool, Margaret,&rdquo; said the Countess sharply; &ldquo;think you I
+ delayed such an act of justice, until some wretched intrigues of the new
+ English Court might have prompted their interference? No, wench&mdash;he
+ passed from the judgment-seat to the place of execution, with no farther
+ delay than might be necessary for his soul&rsquo;s sake. He was shot to death by
+ a file of musketeers in the common place of execution called Hango Hill.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth clasped his hands together, wrung them, and groaned bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you seem interested for this criminal,&rdquo; added the Countess, addressing
+ Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I do him but justice in repeating to you, that his death was
+ firm and manly, becoming the general tenor of his life, which, but for
+ that gross act of traitorous ingratitude, had been fair and honourable.
+ But what of that? The hypocrite is a saint, and the false traitor a man of
+ honour, till opportunity, that faithful touchstone, proves their metal to
+ be base.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is false, woman&mdash;it is false!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, no longer
+ suppressing his indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What means this bearing, Master Bridgenorth?&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, much
+ surprised. &ldquo;What is this Christian to you, that you should insult the
+ Countess of Derby under my roof?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not to me of countesses and of ceremonies,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth;
+ &ldquo;grief and anger leave me no leisure for idle observances to humour the
+ vanity of overgrown children.&mdash;O Christian&mdash;worthy, well worthy,
+ of the name thou didst bear! My friend&mdash;my brother&mdash;the brother
+ of my blessed Alice&mdash;the only friend of my desolate estate! art thou
+ then cruelly murdered by a female fury, who, but for thee, had deservedly
+ paid with her own blood that of God&rsquo;s saints, which she, as well as her
+ tyrant husband, had spilled like water!&mdash;Yes, cruel murderess!&rdquo; he
+ continued, addressing the Countess, &ldquo;he whom thou hast butchered in thy
+ insane vengeance, sacrificed for many a year the dictates of his own
+ conscience to the interest of thy family, and did not desert it till thy
+ frantic zeal for royalty had well-nigh brought to utter perdition the
+ little community in which he was born. Even in confining thee, he acted
+ but as the friends of the madman, who bind him with iron for his own
+ preservation; and for thee, as I can bear witness, he was the only barrier
+ between thee and the wrath of the Commons of England; and but for his
+ earnest remonstrances, thou hadst suffered the penalty of thy malignancy,
+ even like the wicked wife of Ahab.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;I will allow for your
+ impatience upon hearing these unpleasing tidings; but there is neither use
+ nor propriety in farther urging this question. If in your grief you forget
+ other restraints, I pray you to remember that the Countess is my guest and
+ kinswoman, and is under such protection as I can afford her. I beseech
+ you, in simple courtesy, to withdraw, as what must needs be the best and
+ most becoming course in these trying circumstances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, let him remain,&rdquo; said the Countess, regarding him with composure,
+ not unmingled with triumph; &ldquo;I would not have it otherwise; I would not
+ that my revenge should be summed up in the stinted gratification which
+ Christian&rsquo;s death hath afforded. This man&rsquo;s rude and clamorous grief only
+ proves that the retribution I have dealt has been more widely felt than by
+ the wretched sufferer himself. I would I knew that it had but made sore as
+ many rebel hearts, as there were loyal breasts afflicted by the death of
+ my princely Derby!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So please you, madam,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;since Master Bridgenorth hath
+ not the manners to leave us upon my request, we will, if your ladyship
+ lists, leave him, and retire to my apartment.&mdash;Farewell, Master
+ Bridgenorth; we will meet hereafter on better terms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, madam,&rdquo; said the Major, who had been striding hastily through
+ the room, but now stood fast, and drew himself up, as one who has taken a
+ resolution;&mdash;&ldquo;to yourself I have nothing to say but what is
+ respectful; but to this woman I must speak as a magistrate. She has
+ confessed a murder in my presence&mdash;the murder too of my
+ brother-in-law&mdash;as a man, and as a magistrate, I cannot permit her to
+ pass from hence, excepting under such custody as may prevent her farther
+ flight. She has already confessed that she is a fugitive, and in search of
+ a place of concealment, until she should be able to escape into foreign
+ parts.&mdash;Charlotte, Countess of Derby, I attach thee of the crime of
+ which thou hast but now made thy boast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not obey your arrest,&rdquo; said the Countess composedly; &ldquo;I was born
+ to give, but not to receive such orders. What have your English laws to do
+ with my acts of justice and of government, within my son&rsquo;s hereditary
+ kingdom? Am I not Queen in Man, as well as Countess of Derby? A feudatory
+ Sovereign indeed; but yet independent so long as my dues of homage are
+ duly discharged. What right can you assert over me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That given by the precepts of Scripture,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;Whoso
+ spilleth man&rsquo;s blood, by man shall his blood be spilled.&rsquo; Think not the
+ barbarous privileges of ancient feudal customs will avail to screen you
+ from the punishment due for an Englishman murdered upon pretexts
+ inconsistent with the act of indemnity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;if by fair terms you desist
+ not from your present purpose, I tell you that I neither dare, nor will,
+ permit any violence against this honourable lady within the walls of my
+ husband&rsquo;s castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will find yourself unable to prevent me from executing my duty,
+ madam,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, whose native obstinacy now came in aid of his
+ grief and desire of revenge; &ldquo;I am a magistrate, and act by authority.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not that,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril. &ldquo;That you <i>were</i> a magistrate,
+ Master Bridgenorth, under the late usurping powers, I know well; but till
+ I hear of your having a commission in the name of the King, I now hesitate
+ to obey you as such.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall stand on small ceremony,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Were I no
+ magistrate, every man has title to arrest for murder against the terms of
+ the indemnities held out by the King&rsquo;s proclamations, and I will make my
+ point good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What indemnities? What proclamations?&rdquo; said the Countess of Derby
+ indignantly. &ldquo;Charles Stuart may, if he pleases (and it doth seem to
+ please him), consort with those whose hands have been red with the blood,
+ and blackened with the plunder, of his father and of his loyal subjects.
+ He may forgive them if he will, and count their deeds good service. What
+ has that to do with this Christian&rsquo;s offence against me and mine? Born a
+ Mankesman&mdash;bred and nursed in the island&mdash;he broke the laws
+ under which he lived, and died for the breach of them, after the fair
+ trial which they allowed.&mdash;Methinks, Margaret, we have enough of this
+ peevish and foolish magistrate&mdash;I attend you to your apartment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth placed himself betwixt them and the door, in a manner
+ which showed him determined to interrupt their passage; when the Lady
+ Peveril, who thought she already showed more deference to him in this
+ matter than her husband was likely to approve of, raised her voice, and
+ called loudly on her steward, Whitaker. That alert person, who had heard
+ high talking, and a female voice with which he was unacquainted, had
+ remained for several minutes stationed in the anteroom, much afflicted
+ with the anxiety of his own curiosity. Of course he entered in an instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let three of the men instantly take arms,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;bring them
+ into the anteroom, and wait my farther orders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ You shall have no worse prison than my chamber,
+ Nor jailer than myself.
+ &mdash;THE CAPTAIN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The command which Lady Peveril laid on her domestics to arm themselves,
+ was so unlike the usual gentle acquiescence of her manners, that Major
+ Bridgenorth was astonished. &ldquo;How mean you, madam?&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;I thought
+ myself under a friendly roof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are so, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, without
+ departing from the natural calmness of her voice and manner; &ldquo;but it is a
+ roof which must not be violated by the outrage of one friend against
+ another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well, madam,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, turning to the door of the
+ apartment. &ldquo;The worthy Master Solsgrace has already foretold, that the
+ time was returned when high houses and proud names should be once more an
+ excuse for the crimes of those who inhabit the one and bear the other. I
+ believed him not, but now see he is wiser than I. Yet think not I will
+ endure this tamely. The blood of my brother&mdash;of the friend of my
+ bosom&mdash;shall not long call from the altar, &lsquo;How long, O Lord, how
+ long!&rsquo; If there is one spark of justice left in this unhappy England, that
+ proud woman and I shall meet where she can have no partial friend to
+ protect her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he was about to leave the apartment, when Lady Peveril said,
+ &ldquo;You depart not from this place, Master Bridgenorth, unless you give me
+ your word to renounce all purpose against the noble Countess&rsquo;s liberty
+ upon the present occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would sooner,&rdquo; answered he, &ldquo;subscribe to my own dishonour, madam,
+ written down in express words, than to any such composition. If any man
+ offers to interrupt me, his blood be on his own head!&rdquo; As Major
+ Bridgenorth spoke, Whitaker threw open the door, and showed that, with the
+ alertness of an old soldier, who was not displeased to see things tend
+ once more towards a state of warfare, he had got with him four stout
+ fellows in the Knight of the Peak&rsquo;s livery, well armed with swords and
+ carabines, buff-coats, and pistols at their girdles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will see,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth, &ldquo;if any of these men be so desperate
+ as to stop me, a freeborn Englishman, and a magistrate in the discharge of
+ my duty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he advanced upon Whitaker and his armed assistants, with his
+ hand on the hilt of his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not be so desperate, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; exclaimed Lady Peveril; and
+ added, in the same moment, &ldquo;Lay hold upon, and disarm him, Whitaker; but
+ do him no injury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her commands were obeyed. Bridgenorth, though a man of moral resolution,
+ was not one of those who undertook to cope in person with odds of a
+ description so formidable. He half drew his sword, and offered such show
+ of resistance as made it necessary to secure him by actual force; but then
+ yielded up his weapon, and declared that, submitting to force which one
+ man was unable to resist, he made those who commanded, and who employed
+ it, responsible for assailing his liberty without a legal warrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind a warrant on a pinch, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said old Whitaker;
+ &ldquo;sure enough you have often acted upon a worse yourself. My lady&rsquo;s word is
+ as good as a warrant, sure, as Old Noll&rsquo;s commission; and you bore that
+ many a day, Master Bridgenorth, and, moreover, you laid me in the stocks
+ for drinking the King&rsquo;s health, Master Bridgenorth, and never cared a
+ farthing about the laws of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your saucy tongue, Whitaker,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril; &ldquo;and do you,
+ Master Bridgenorth, not take it to heart that you are detained prisoner
+ for a few hours, until the Countess of Derby can have nothing to fear from
+ your pursuit. I could easily send an escort with her that might bid
+ defiance to any force you could muster; but I wish, Heaven knows, to bury
+ the remembrance of old civil dissensions, not to awaken new. Once more,
+ will you think better of it&mdash;assume your sword again, and forget whom
+ you have now seen at Martindale Castle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;The crime of this cruel woman will be the last
+ of human injuries which I can forget. The last thought of earthly kind
+ which will leave me, will be the desire that justice shall be done on
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If such be your sentiments,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;though they are more
+ allied to revenge than to justice, I must provide for my friend&rsquo;s safety,
+ by putting restraint upon your person. In this room you will be supplied
+ with every necessary of life, and every convenience; and a message shall
+ relieve your domestics of the anxiety which your absence from the Hall is
+ not unlikely to occasion. When a few hours, at most two days, are over, I
+ will myself relieve you from confinement, and demand your pardon for now
+ acting as your obstinacy compels me to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major made no answer, but that he was in her hands, and must submit to
+ her pleasure; and then turned sullenly to the window, as if desirous to be
+ rid of their presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess and the Lady Peveril left the apartment arm in arm; and the
+ lady issued forth her directions to Whitaker concerning the mode in which
+ she was desirous that Bridgenorth should be guarded and treated during his
+ temporary confinement; at the same time explaining to him, that the safety
+ of the Countess of Derby required that he should be closely watched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all proposals for the prisoner&rsquo;s security, such as the regular relief
+ of guards, and the like, Whitaker joyfully acquiesced, and undertook, body
+ for body, that he should be detained in captivity for the necessary
+ period. But the old steward was not half so docile when it came to be
+ considered how the captive&rsquo;s bedding and table should be supplied; and he
+ thought Lady Peveril displayed a very undue degree of attention to her
+ prisoner&rsquo;s comforts. &ldquo;I warrant,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that the cuckoldly Roundhead
+ ate enough of our fat beef yesterday to serve him for a month; and a
+ little fasting will do his health good. Marry, for drink, he shall have
+ plenty of cold water to cool his hot liver, which I will be bound is still
+ hissing with the strong liquors of yesterday. And as for bedding, there
+ are the fine dry board&mdash;more wholesome than the wet straw I lay upon
+ when I was in the stocks, I trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whitaker,&rdquo; said the lady peremptorily, &ldquo;I desire you to provide Master
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s bedding and food in the way I have signified to you; and to
+ behave yourself towards him in all civility.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lack-a-day! yes, my lady,&rdquo; said Whitaker; &ldquo;you shall have all your
+ directions punctually obeyed; but as an old servant, I cannot but speak my
+ mind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies retired after this conference with the steward in the
+ antechamber, and were soon seated in another apartment, which was
+ peculiarly dedicated to the use of the mistress of the mansion&mdash;having,
+ on the one side, access to the family bedroom; and, on the other, to the
+ still-room which communicated with the garden. There was also a small door
+ which, ascending a few steps, led to that balcony, already mentioned, that
+ overhung the kitchen; and the same passage, by a separate door, admitted
+ to the principal gallery in the chapel; so that the spiritual and temporal
+ affairs of the Castle were placed almost at once within the reach of the
+ same regulating and directing eye.[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] This peculiar collocation of apartments may be seen at Haddon
+ Hall, Derbyshire, once a seat of the Vernons, where, in the lady&rsquo;s
+ pew in the chapel, there is a sort of scuttle, which opens into
+ the kitchen, so that the good lady could ever and anon, without
+ much interruption of her religious duties, give an eye that the
+ roast-meat was not permitted to burn, and that the turn-broche did
+ his duty.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the tapestried room, from which issued these various sally-ports, the
+ Countess and Lady Peveril were speedily seated; and the former, smiling
+ upon the latter, said, as she took her hand, &ldquo;Two things have happened
+ to-day, which might have surprised me, if anything ought to surprise me in
+ such times:&mdash;the first is, that yonder roundheaded fellow should have
+ dared to use such insolence in the house of Peveril of the Peak. If your
+ husband is yet the same honest and downright Cavalier whom I once knew,
+ and had chanced to be at home, he would have thrown the knave out of
+ window. But what I wonder at still more, Margaret, is your generalship. I
+ hardly thought you had courage sufficient to have taken such decided
+ measures, after keeping on terms with the man so long. When he spoke of
+ justices and warrants, you looked so overawed that I thought I felt the
+ clutch of the parish-beadles on my shoulder, to drag me to prison as a
+ vagrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We owe Master Bridgenorth some deference, my dearest lady,&rdquo; answered the
+ Lady Peveril; &ldquo;he has served us often and kindly, in these late times; but
+ neither he, nor any one else, shall insult the Countess of Derby in the
+ house of Margaret Stanley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art become a perfect heroine, Margaret,&rdquo; replied the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two sieges, and alarms innumerable,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;may have taught
+ me presence of mind. My courage is, I believe, as slender as ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Presence of mind <i>is</i> courage,&rdquo; answered the Countess. &ldquo;Real valour
+ consists not in being insensible to danger, but in being prompt to
+ confront and disarm it;&mdash;and we may have present occasion for all
+ that we possess,&rdquo; she added, with some slight emotion, &ldquo;for I hear the
+ trampling of horses&rsquo; steps on the pavement of the court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one moment, the boy Julian, breathless with joy, came flying into the
+ room, to say that papa was returned, with Lamington and Sam Brewer; and
+ that he was himself to ride Black Hastings to the stable. In the second
+ the tramp of the honest Knight&rsquo;s heavy jack-boots was heard, as, in his
+ haste to see his lady, he ascended the staircase by two steps at a time.
+ He burst into the room; his manly countenance and disordered dress showing
+ marks that he had been riding fast; and without looking to any one else,
+ caught his good lady in his arms, and kissed her a dozen of times.&mdash;Blushing,
+ and with some difficulty, Lady Peveril extricated herself from Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s arms; and in a voice of bashful and gentle rebuke, bid him, for
+ shame, observe who was in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One,&rdquo; said the Countess, advancing to him, &ldquo;who is right glad to see that
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril, though turned courtier and favourite, still values
+ the treasure which she had some share in bestowing upon him. You cannot
+ have forgot the raising of the leaguer of Latham House!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The noble Countess of Derby!&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, doffing his plumed hat
+ with an air of deep deference, and kissing with much reverence the hand
+ which she held out to him; &ldquo;I am as glad to see your ladyship in my poor
+ house, as I would be to hear that they had found a vein of lead in the
+ Brown Tor. I rode hard, in the hope of being your escort through the
+ country. I feared you might have fallen into bad hands, hearing there was
+ a knave sent out with a warrant from the Council.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When heard you so? and from whom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was from Cholmondley of Vale Royal,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;he is come
+ down to make provision for your safety through Cheshire; and I promised to
+ bring you there in safety. Prince Rupert, Ormond, and other friends, do
+ not doubt the matter will be driven to a fine; but they say the
+ Chancellor, and Harry Bennet, and some others of the over-sea counsellors,
+ are furious at what they call a breach of the King&rsquo;s proclamation. Hang
+ them, say I!&mdash;They left us to bear all the beating; and now they are
+ incensed that we should wish to clear scores with those who rode us like
+ nightmares!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What did they talk of for my chastisement?&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wot not,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;some friends, as I said, from our kind
+ Cheshire, and others, tried to bring it to a fine; but some, again, spoke
+ of nothing but the Tower, and a long imprisonment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have suffered imprisonment long enough for King Charles&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; said
+ the Countess; &ldquo;and have no mind to undergo it at his hand. Besides, if I
+ am removed from the personal superintendence of my son&rsquo;s dominions in Man,
+ I know not what new usurpation may be attempted there. I must be obliged
+ to you, cousin, to contrive that I may get in security to Vale Royal, and
+ from thence I know I shall be guarded safely to Liverpool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may rely on my guidance and protection, noble lady,&rdquo; answered her
+ host, &ldquo;though you had come here at midnight, and with the rogue&rsquo;s head in
+ your apron, like Judith in the Holy Apocrypha, which I joy to hear once
+ more read in churches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do the gentry resort much to the Court?&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, madam,&rdquo; replied Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;and according to our saying, when
+ miners do begin to bore in these parts, it is <i>for the grace of God, and
+ what they there may find</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meet the old Cavaliers with much countenance?&rdquo; continued the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, madam, to speak truth,&rdquo; replied the Knight, &ldquo;the King hath so
+ gracious a manner, that it makes every man&rsquo;s hopes blossom, though we have
+ seen but few that have ripened into fruit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have not, yourself, my cousin,&rdquo; answered the Countess, &ldquo;had room to
+ complain of ingratitude, I trust? Few have less deserved it at the King&rsquo;s
+ hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey was unwilling, like most prudent persons, to own the
+ existence of expectations which had proved fallacious, yet had too little
+ art in his character to conceal his disappointment entirely. &ldquo;Who, I,
+ madam?&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;Alas! what should a poor country knight expect from the
+ King, besides the pleasure of seeing him in Whitehall once more, and
+ enjoying his own again? And his Majesty was very gracious when I was
+ presented, and spoke to me of Worcester, and of my horse, Black Hastings&mdash;he
+ had forgot his name, though&mdash;faith, and mine, too, I believe, had not
+ Prince Rupert whispered it to him. And I saw some old friends, such as his
+ Grace of Ormond, Sir Marmaduke Langdale, Sir Philip Musgrave, and so
+ forth; and had a jolly rouse or two, to the tune of old times.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should have thought so many wounds received&mdash;so many dangers
+ risked&mdash;such considerable losses&mdash;merited something more than a
+ few smooth words,&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lady, there were other friends of mine who had the same thought,&rdquo;
+ answered Peveril. &ldquo;Some were of opinion that the loss of so many hundred
+ acres of fair land was worth some reward of honour at least; and there
+ were who thought my descent from William the Conqueror&mdash;craving your
+ ladyship&rsquo;s pardon for boasting it in your presence&mdash;would not have
+ become a higher rank or title worse than the pedigree of some who have
+ been promoted. But what said the witty Duke of Buckingham, forsooth?
+ (whose grandsire was a Lei&rsquo;stershire Knight&mdash;rather poorer, and
+ scarcely so well-born as myself)&mdash;Why, he said, that if all of my
+ degree who deserved well of the King in the late times were to be made
+ peers, the House of Lords must meet upon Salisbury Plain!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that bad jest passed for a good argument!&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;and
+ well it might, where good arguments pass for bad jests. But here comes one
+ I must be acquainted with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was little Julian, who now re-entered the hall, leading his little
+ sister, as if he had brought her to bear witness to the boastful tale
+ which he told his father, of his having manfully ridden Black Hastings to
+ the stable-yard, alone in the saddle; and that Saunders though he walked
+ by the horse&rsquo;s head, did not once put his hand upon the rein, and Brewer,
+ though he stood beside him, scarce held him by the knee. The father kissed
+ the boy heartily; and the Countess, calling him to her so soon as Sir
+ Geoffrey had set him down, kissed his forehead also, and then surveyed all
+ his features with a keen and penetrating eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a true Peveril,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;mixed as he should be with some touch
+ of the Stanley. Cousin, you must grant me my boon, and when I am safely
+ established, and have my present affair arranged, you must let me have
+ this little Julian of yours some time hence, to be nurtured in my house,
+ held as my page, and the playfellow of the little Derby. I trust in
+ Heaven, they will be such friends as their fathers have been, and may God
+ send them more fortunate times!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, and I thank you for the proposal with all my heart, madam,&rdquo; said
+ the Knight. &ldquo;There are so many noble houses decayed, and so many more in
+ which the exercise and discipline for the training of noble youths is
+ given up and neglected, that I have often feared I must have kept Gil to
+ be young master at home; and I have had too little nurture myself to teach
+ him much, and so he would have been a mere hunting hawking knight of
+ Derbyshire. But in your ladyship&rsquo;s household, and with the noble young
+ Earl, he will have all, and more than all, the education which I could
+ desire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There shall be no distinction betwixt them, cousin,&rdquo; said the Countess;
+ &ldquo;Margaret Stanley&rsquo;s son shall be as much the object of care to me as my
+ own, since you are kindly disposed to entrust him to my charge.&mdash;You
+ look pale, Margaret,&rdquo; she continued, &ldquo;and the tear stands in your eye? Do
+ not be so foolish, my love&mdash;what I ask is better than you can desire
+ for your boy; for the house of my father, the Duke de la Tremouille, was
+ the most famous school of chivalry in France; nor have I degenerated from
+ him, or suffered any relaxation in that noble discipline which trained
+ young gentlemen to do honour to their race. You can promise your Julian no
+ such advantages, if you train him up a mere home-bred youth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I acknowledge the importance of the favour, madam,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril,
+ &ldquo;and must acquiesce in what your ladyship honours us by proposing, and Sir
+ Geoffrey approves of; but Julian is an only child, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An only son,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;but surely not an only child. You pay
+ too high deference to our masters, the male sex, if you allow Julian to
+ engross all your affection, and spare none for this beautiful girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, she set down Julian, and, taking Alice Bridgenorth on her lap,
+ began to caress her; and there was, notwithstanding her masculine
+ character, something so sweet in the tone of her voice and in the cast of
+ her features, that the child immediately smiled, and replied to her marks
+ of fondness. This mistake embarrassed Lady Peveril exceedingly. Knowing
+ the blunt impetuosity of her husband&rsquo;s character, his devotion to the
+ memory of the deceased Earl of Derby, and his corresponding veneration for
+ his widow, she was alarmed for the consequences of his hearing the conduct
+ of Bridgenorth that morning, and was particularly desirous that he should
+ not learn it save from herself in private, and after due preparation. But
+ the Countess&rsquo;s error led to a more precipitate disclosure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That pretty girl, madam,&rdquo; answered Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;is none of ours&mdash;I
+ wish she were. She belongs to a neighbour hard by&mdash;a good man, and,
+ to say truth, a good neighbour&mdash;though he was carried off from his
+ allegiance in the late times by a d&mdash;d Presbyterian scoundrel, who
+ calls himself a parson, and whom I hope to fetch down from his perch
+ presently, with a wannion to him! He has been cock of the roost long
+ enough.&mdash;There are rods in pickle to switch the Geneva cloak with, I
+ can tell the sour-faced rogues that much. But this child is the daughter
+ of Bridgenorth&mdash;neighbour Bridgenorth, of Moultrassie Hall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bridgenorth?&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;I thought I had known all the
+ honourable names in Derbyshire&mdash;I remember nothing of Bridgenorth.&mdash;But
+ stay&mdash;was there not a sequestrator and committeeman of that name?
+ Sure, it cannot be he?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril took some shame to himself, as he replied, &ldquo;It is the very man
+ whom your ladyship means, and you may conceive the reluctance with which I
+ submitted to receive good offices from one of his kidney; but had I not
+ done so, I should have scarce known how to find a roof to cover Dame
+ Margaret&rsquo;s head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, as he spoke, raised the child gently from her lap, and
+ placed it upon the carpet, though little Alice showed a disinclination to
+ the change of place, which the lady of Derby and Man would certainly have
+ indulged in a child of patrician descent and loyal parentage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I blame you not,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;no one knows what temptation will bring us
+ down to. Yet I <i>did</i> think Peveril of the Peak would have resided in
+ its deepest cavern, sooner than owed an obligation to a regicide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, madam,&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;my neighbour is bad enough, but not so
+ bad as you would make him; he is but a Presbyterian&mdash;that I must
+ confess&mdash;but not an Independent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A variety of the same monster,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;who hallooed while
+ the others hunted, and bound the victim whom the Independents massacred.
+ Betwixt such sects I prefer the Independents. They are at least bold,
+ bare-faced, merciless villains, have more of the tiger in them, and less
+ of the crocodile. I have no doubt it was that worthy gentleman who took it
+ upon him this morning&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped short, for she saw Lady Peveril was vexed and embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the most luckless of beings. I have said something, I
+ know not what, to distress you, Margaret&mdash;Mystery is a bad thing, and
+ betwixt us there should be none.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is none, madam,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, something impatiently; &ldquo;I
+ waited but an opportunity to tell my husband what had happened&mdash;Sir
+ Geoffrey, Master Bridgenorth was unfortunately here when the Lady Derby
+ and I met; and he thought it part of his duty to speak of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To speak of what?&rdquo; said the Knight, bending his brows. &ldquo;You were ever
+ something too fond, dame, of giving way to the usurpation of such people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only mean,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;that as the person&mdash;he to whom
+ Lord Derby&rsquo;s story related&mdash;was the brother of his late lady, he
+ threatened&mdash;but I cannot think that he was serious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Threaten?&mdash;threaten the Lady of Derby and Man in my house!&mdash;the
+ widow of my friend&mdash;the noble Charlotte of Latham House!&mdash;by
+ Heaven, the prick-eared slave shall answer it! How comes it that my knaves
+ threw him not out of the window?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! Sir Geoffrey, you forget how much we owe him,&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Owe him!&rdquo; said the Knight, still more indignant; for in his singleness of
+ apprehension he conceived that his wife alluded to pecuniary obligations,&mdash;&ldquo;if
+ I do owe him some money, hath he not security for it? and must he have the
+ right, over and above, to domineer and play the magistrate in Martindale
+ Castle?&mdash;Where is he?&mdash;what have you made of him? I will&mdash;I
+ must speak with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be patient, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Countess, who now discerned the cause
+ of her kinswoman&rsquo;s apprehension; &ldquo;and be assured I did not need your
+ chivalry to defend me against this discourteous faitour, as <i>Morte
+ d&rsquo;Arthur</i> would have called him. I promise you my kinswoman hath fully
+ righted my wrong; and I am so pleased to owe my deliverance entirely to
+ her gallantry, that I charge and command you, as a true knight, not to
+ mingle in the adventure of another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, who knew her husband&rsquo;s blunt and impatient temper, and
+ perceived that he was becoming angry, now took up the story, and plainly
+ and simply pointed out the cause of Master Bridgenorth&rsquo;s interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry for it,&rdquo; said the Knight; &ldquo;I thought he had more sense; and
+ that this happy change might have done some good upon him. But you should
+ have told me this instantly&mdash;It consists not with my honour that he
+ should be kept prisoner in this house, as if I feared anything he could do
+ to annoy the noble Countess, while she is under my roof, or within twenty
+ miles of this Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and bowing to the Countess, he went straight to the gilded
+ chamber, leaving Lady Peveril in great anxiety for the event of an angry
+ meeting between a temper hasty as that of her husband, and stubborn like
+ that of Bridgenorth. Her apprehensions were, however, unnecessary; for the
+ meeting was not fated to take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Sir Geoffrey Peveril, having dismissed Whitaker and his sentinels,
+ entered the gilded chamber, in which he expected to find his captive, the
+ prisoner had escaped, and it was easy to see in what manner. The sliding
+ panel had, in the hurry of the moment, escaped the memory of Lady Peveril,
+ and of Whitaker, the only persons who knew anything of it. It was probable
+ that a chink had remained open, sufficient to indicate its existence to
+ Bridgenorth; who withdrawing it altogether, had found his way into the
+ secret apartment with which it communicated, and from thence to the
+ postern of the Castle by another secret passage, which had been formed in
+ the thickness of the wall, as is not uncommon in ancient mansions; the
+ lords of which were liable to so many mutations of fortune, that they
+ usually contrived to secure some lurking place and secret mode of retreat
+ from their fortresses. That Bridgenorth had discovered and availed himself
+ of this secret mode of retreat was evident; because the private doors
+ communicating with the postern and the sliding panel in the gilded chamber
+ were both left open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey returned to the ladies with looks of perplexity. While he
+ deemed Bridgenorth within his reach, he was apprehensive of nothing he
+ could do; for he felt himself his superior in personal strength, and in
+ that species of courage which induces a man to rush, without hesitation,
+ upon personal danger. But when at a distance, he had been for many years
+ accustomed to consider Bridgenorth&rsquo;s power and influence as something
+ formidable; and notwithstanding the late change of affairs, his ideas so
+ naturally reverted to his neighbour as a powerful friend or dangerous
+ enemy, that he felt more apprehension on the Countess&rsquo;s score, than he was
+ willing to acknowledge even to himself. The Countess observed his downcast
+ and anxious brow, and requested to know if her stay there was likely to
+ involve him in any trouble, or in any danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The trouble should be welcome,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;and more welcome the
+ danger, which should come on such an account. My plan was, that your
+ ladyship should have honoured Martindale with a few days&rsquo; residence, which
+ might have been kept private until the search after you was ended. Had I
+ seen this fellow Bridgenorth, I have no doubt I could have compelled him
+ to act discreetly; but he is now at liberty, and will keep out of my
+ reach; and, what is worse, he has the secret of the priest&rsquo;s chamber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Knight paused, and seemed much embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can, then, neither conceal nor protect me?&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon, my honoured lady,&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;and let me say out my
+ say. The plain truth is, that this man hath many friends among the
+ Presbyterians here, who are more numerous than I would wish them; and if
+ he falls in with the pursuivant fellow who carries the warrant of the
+ Privy Council, it is likely he will back him with force sufficient to try
+ to execute it. And I doubt whether any of our friends can be summoned
+ together in haste, sufficient to resist such a power as they are like to
+ bring together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor would I wish any friends to take arms, in my name, against the King&rsquo;s
+ warrant, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, for that matter,&rdquo; replied the Knight, &ldquo;an his Majesty will grant
+ warrants against his best friends, he must look to have them resisted. But
+ the best I can think of in this emergence is&mdash;though the proposal be
+ something inhospitable&mdash;that your ladyship should take presently to
+ horse, if your fatigue will permit. I will mount also, with some brisk
+ fellows, who will lodge you safe at Vale Royal, though the Sheriff stopped
+ the way with a whole <i>posse comitatus</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby willingly acquiesced in this proposal. She had
+ enjoyed a night&rsquo;s sound repose in the private chamber, to which Ellesmere
+ had guided her on the preceding evening, and was quite ready to resume her
+ route, or flight&mdash;&ldquo;she scarce knew,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;which of the two she
+ should term it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril wept at the necessity which seemed to hurry her earliest
+ friend and protectress from under her roof, at the instant when the clouds
+ of adversity were gathering around her; but she saw no alternative equally
+ safe. Nay, however strong her attachment to Lady Derby, she could not but
+ be more readily reconciled to her hasty departure, when she considered the
+ inconvenience, and even danger, in which her presence, at such a time, and
+ in such circumstances, was likely to involve a man so bold and
+ hot-tempered as her husband Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Lady Peveril, therefore, made every arrangement which time permitted
+ and circumstances required, for the Countess prosecuting her journey, her
+ husband, whose spirits always rose with the prospect of action, issued his
+ orders to Whitaker to get together a few stout fellows, with back and
+ breast pieces, and steel-caps. &ldquo;There are the two lackeys, and Outram and
+ Saunders, besides the other groom fellow, and Roger Raine, and his son;
+ but bid Roger not come drunk again;&mdash;thyself, young Dick of the Dale
+ and his servant, and a file or two of the tenants,&mdash;we shall be
+ enough for any force they can make. All these are fellows that will strike
+ hard, and ask no question why&mdash;their hands are ever readier than
+ their tongues, and their mouths are more made for drinking than speaking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker, apprised of the necessity of the case, asked if he should not
+ warn Sir Jasper Cranbourne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a word to him, as you live,&rdquo; said the Knight; &ldquo;this may be an
+ outlawry, as they call it, for what I know; and therefore I will bring no
+ lands or tenements into peril, saving mine own. Sir Jasper hath had a
+ troublesome time of it for many a year. By my will, he shall sit quiet for
+ the rest of&rsquo;s days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Fang.</i>&mdash;A rescue! a rescue!
+ <i>Mrs. Quickly.</i>&mdash;Good people, bring a rescue or two.
+ &mdash;Henry IV. <i>Part I.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The followers of Peveril were so well accustomed to the sound of &ldquo;Boot and
+ Saddle,&rdquo; that they were soon mounted and in order; and in all the form,
+ and with some of the dignity of danger, proceeded to escort the Countess
+ of Derby through the hilly and desert tract of country which connects the
+ frontier of the shire with the neighbouring county of Cheshire. The
+ cavalcade moved with considerable precaution, which they had been taught
+ by the discipline of the Civil Wars. One wary and well-mounted trooper
+ rode about two hundred yards in advance; followed, at about half that
+ distance, by two more, with their carabines advanced, as if ready for
+ action. About one hundred yards behind the advance, came the main body;
+ where the Countess of Derby, mounted on Lady Peveril&rsquo;s ambling palfrey
+ (for her own had been exhausted by the journey from London to Martindale
+ Castle), accompanied by one groom, of approved fidelity, and one
+ waiting-maid, was attended and guarded by the Knight of the Peak, and
+ three files of good and practised horsemen. In the rear came Whitaker,
+ with Lance Outram, as men of especial trust, to whom the covering the
+ retreat was confided. They rode, as the Spanish proverb expresses it,
+ &ldquo;with the beard on the shoulder,&rdquo; looking around, that is, from time to
+ time, and using every precaution to have the speediest knowledge of any
+ pursuit which might take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, however wise in discipline, Peveril and his followers were somewhat
+ remiss in civil policy. The Knight had communicated to Whitaker, though
+ without any apparent necessity, the precise nature of their present
+ expedition; and Whitaker was equally communicative to his comrade Lance,
+ the keeper. &ldquo;It is strange enough, Master Whitaker,&rdquo; said the latter, when
+ he had heard the case, &ldquo;and I wish you, being a wise man, would expound
+ it;&mdash;why, when we have been wishing for the King&mdash;and praying
+ for the King&mdash;and fighting for the King&mdash;and dying for the King,
+ for these twenty years, the first thing we find to do on his return, is to
+ get into harness to resist his warrant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh! you silly fellow,&rdquo; said Whitaker, &ldquo;that is all you know of the true
+ bottom of our quarrel! Why, man, we fought for the King&rsquo;s person against
+ his warrant, all along from the very beginning; for I remember the rogues&rsquo;
+ proclamations, and so forth, always ran in the name of the King and
+ Parliament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay! was it even so?&rdquo; replied Lance. &ldquo;Nay, then, if they begin the old
+ game so soon again, and send out warrants in the King&rsquo;s name against his
+ loyal subjects, well fare our stout Knight, say I, who is ready to take
+ them down in their stocking-soles. And if Bridgenorth takes the chase
+ after us, I shall not be sorry to have a knock at him for one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the man, bating he is a pestilent Roundhead and Puritan,&rdquo; said
+ Whitaker, &ldquo;is no bad neighbour. What has he done to thee, man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has poached on the manor,&rdquo; answered the keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil he has!&rdquo; replied Whitaker. &ldquo;Thou must be jesting, Lance.
+ Bridgenorth is neither hunter nor hawker; he hath not so much of honesty
+ in him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but he runs after game you little think of, with his sour, melancholy
+ face, that would scare babes and curdle milk,&rdquo; answered Lance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou canst not mean the wenches?&rdquo; said Whitaker; &ldquo;why, he hath been
+ melancholy mad with moping for the death of his wife. Thou knowest our
+ lady took the child, for fear he should strangle it for putting him in
+ mind of its mother, in some of his tantrums. Under her favour, and among
+ friends, there are many poor Cavaliers&rsquo; children, that care would be
+ better bestowed upon&mdash;But to thy tale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, thus it runs,&rdquo; said Lance. &ldquo;I think you may have noticed, Master
+ Whitaker, that a certain Mistress Deborah hath manifested a certain favour
+ for a certain person in a certain household.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For thyself, to wit,&rdquo; answered Whitaker; &ldquo;Lance Outram, thou art the
+ vainest coxcomb&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Coxcomb?&rdquo; said Lance; &ldquo;why, &lsquo;twas but last night the whole family saw
+ her, as one would say, fling herself at my head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would she had been a brickbat then, to have broken it, for thy
+ impertinence and conceit,&rdquo; said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but do but hearken. The next morning&mdash;that is, this very
+ blessed morning&mdash;I thought of going to lodge a buck in the park,
+ judging a bit of venison might be wanted in the larder, after yesterday&rsquo;s
+ wassail; and, as I passed under the nursery window, I did but just look up
+ to see what madam governante was about; and so I saw her, through the
+ casement, whip on her hood and scarf as soon as she had a glimpse of me.
+ Immediately after I saw the still-room door open, and made sure she was
+ coming through the garden, and so over the breach and down to the park;
+ and so, thought I, &lsquo;Aha, Mistress Deb, if you are so ready to dance after
+ my pipe and tabor, I will give you a couranto before you shall come up
+ with me.&rsquo; And so I went down Ivy-tod Dingle, where the copse is tangled,
+ and the ground swampy, and round by Haxley-bottom, thinking all the while
+ she was following, and laughing in my sleeve at the round I was giving
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You deserved to be ducked for it,&rdquo; said Whitaker, &ldquo;for a weather-headed
+ puppy; but what is all this Jack-a-lantern story to Bridgenorth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, it was all along of he, man,&rdquo; continued Lance, &ldquo;that is, of
+ Bridgenorth, that she did not follow me&mdash;Gad, I first walked slow,
+ and then stopped, and then turned back a little, and then began to wonder
+ what she had made of herself, and to think I had borne myself something
+ like a jackass in the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I deny,&rdquo; said Whitaker, &ldquo;never jackass but would have borne him
+ better&mdash;but go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, turning my face towards the Castle, I went back as if I had my nose
+ bleeding, when just by the Copely thorn, which stands, you know, a
+ flight-short from the postern-gate, I saw Madam Deb in close conference
+ with the enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What enemy?&rdquo; said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What enemy! why, who but Bridgenorth? They kept out of sight, and among
+ the copse; but, thought I, it is hard if I cannot stalk you, that have
+ stalked so many bucks. If so, I had better give my shafts to be pudding
+ pins. So I cast round the thicket, to watch their waters; and may I never
+ bend crossbow again, if I did not see him give her gold, and squeeze her
+ by the hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And was that all you saw pass between them?&rdquo; said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, and it was enough to dismount me from my hobby,&rdquo; said Lance.
+ &ldquo;What! when I thought I had the prettiest girl in the Castle dancing after
+ my whistle, to find that she gave me the bag to hold, and was smuggling in
+ a corner with a rich old Puritan!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Credit me, Lance, it is not as thou thinkest,&rdquo; said Whitaker.
+ &ldquo;Bridgenorth cares not for these amorous toys, and thou thinkest of
+ nothing else. But it is fitting our Knight should know that he has met
+ with Deborah in secret, and given her gold; for never Puritan gave gold
+ yet, but it was earnest for some devil&rsquo;s work done, or to be done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;I would not be such a dog-bolt as to go and
+ betray the girl to our master. She hath a right to follow her fancy, as
+ the dame said who kissed her cow&mdash;only I do not much approve her
+ choice, that is all. He cannot be six years short of fifty; and a verjuice
+ countenance, under the penthouse of a slouched beaver, and bag of meagre
+ dried bones, swaddled up in a black cloak, is no such temptation,
+ methinks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you once more,&rdquo; said Whitaker, &ldquo;you are mistaken; and that there
+ neither is, nor can be, any matter of love between them, but only some
+ intrigue, concerning, perhaps, this same noble Countess of Derby. I tell
+ thee, it behoves my master to know it, and I will presently tell it to
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and in spite of all the remonstrances which Lance continued to
+ make on behalf of Mistress Deborah, the steward rode up to the main body
+ of their little party, and mentioned to the Knight, and the Countess of
+ Derby, what he had just heard from the keeper, adding at the same time his
+ own suspicions, that Master Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall was desirous
+ to keep up some system of espial in the Castle of Martindale, either in
+ order to secure his menaced vengeance on the Countess of Derby, as
+ authoress of his brother-in-law&rsquo;s death, or for some unknown, but probably
+ sinister purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of the Peak was filled with high resentment at Whitaker&rsquo;s
+ communication. According to his prejudices, those of the opposite faction
+ were supposed to make up by wit and intrigue what they wanted in open
+ force; and he now hastily conceived that his neighbour, whose prudence he
+ always respected, and sometimes even dreaded, was maintaining for his
+ private purposes, a clandestine correspondence with a member of his
+ family. If this was for the betrayal of his noble guest, it argued at once
+ treachery and presumption; or, viewing the whole as Lance had done, a
+ criminal intrigue with a woman so near the person of Lady Peveril, was in
+ itself, he deemed, a piece of sovereign impertinence and disrespect on the
+ part of such a person as Bridgenorth, against whom Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s anger
+ was kindled accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker had scarce regained his post in the rear, when he again quitted
+ it, and galloped to the main body with more speed than before, with the
+ unpleasing tidings that they were pursued by half a score of horseman, and
+ better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ride on briskly to Hartley-nick,&rdquo; said the Knight, &ldquo;and there, with God
+ to help, we will bide the knaves.&mdash;Countess of Derby&mdash;one word
+ and a short one&mdash;Farewell!&mdash;you must ride forward with Whitaker
+ and another careful fellow, and let me alone to see that no one treads on
+ your skirts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will abide with you and stand them,&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;you know of
+ old, I fear not to look on man&rsquo;s work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You <i>must</i> ride on, madam,&rdquo; said the Knight, &ldquo;for the sake of the
+ young Earl, and the rest of my noble friends&rsquo; family. There is no manly
+ work which can be worth your looking upon; it is but child&rsquo;s play that
+ these fellows bring with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she yielded a reluctant consent to continue her flight, they reached
+ the bottom of Hartley-nick, a pass very steep and craggy, and where the
+ road, or rather path, which had hitherto passed over more open ground,
+ became pent up and confined betwixt copsewood on the one side, and, on the
+ other, the precipitous bank of a mountain stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby, after an affectionate adieu to Sir Geoffrey, and
+ having requested him to convey her kind commendations to her little
+ page-elect and his mother, proceeded up the pass at a round pace, and with
+ her attendants and escort, was soon out of sight. Immediately after she
+ had disappeared, the pursuers came up with Sir Geoffrey Peveril, who had
+ divided and drawn up his party so as completely to occupy the road at
+ three different points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opposite party was led, as Sir Geoffrey had expected, by Major
+ Bridgenorth. At his side was a person in black, with a silver greyhound on
+ his arm; and he was followed by about eight or ten inhabitants of the
+ village of Martindale Moultrassie, two or three of whom were officers of
+ the peace, and others were personally known to Sir Geoffrey as favourers
+ of the subverted government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the party rode briskly up, Sir Geoffrey called to them to halt; and as
+ they continued advancing, he ordered his own people to present their
+ pistols and carabines; and after assuming that menacing attitude, he
+ repeated, with a voice of thunder, &ldquo;Halt, or we fire!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other party halted accordingly, and Major Bridgenorth advanced, as if
+ to parley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how now, neighbour,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, as if he had at that moment
+ recognised him for the first time,&mdash;&ldquo;what makes you ride so sharp
+ this morning? Are you not afraid to harm your horse, or spoil your spurs?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;I have not time for jesting&mdash;I&rsquo;m on
+ the King&rsquo;s affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure it is not upon Old Noll&rsquo;s, neighbour? You used to hold his
+ the better errand,&rdquo; said the Knight, with a smile which gave occasion to a
+ horse-laugh among his followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show him your warrant,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth to the man in black formerly
+ mentioned, who was a pursuivant. Then taking the warrant from the officer,
+ he gave it to Sir Geoffrey&mdash;&ldquo;To this, at least, you will pay regard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same regard which you would have paid to it a month back or so,&rdquo; said
+ the Knight, tearing the warrant to shreds.&mdash;&ldquo;What a plague do you
+ stare at? Do you think you have a monopoly of rebellion, and that we have
+ not a right to show a trick of disobedience in our turn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make way, Sir Geoffrey Peveril,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;or you will compel me
+ to do that I may be sorry for. I am in this matter the avenger of the
+ blood of one of the Lord&rsquo;s saints, and I will follow the chase while
+ Heaven grants me an arm to make my way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall make no way here but at your peril,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;this
+ is my ground&mdash;I have been harassed enough for these twenty years by
+ saints, as you call yourselves. I tell you, master, you shall neither
+ violate the security of my house, nor pursue my friends over the grounds,
+ nor tamper, as you have done, amongst my servants, with impunity. I have
+ had you in respect for certain kind doings, which I will not either forget
+ or deny, and you will find it difficult to make me draw a sword or bend a
+ pistol against you; but offer any hostile movement, or presume to advance
+ a foot, and I will make sure of you presently. And for those rascals, who
+ come hither to annoy a noble lady on my bounds, unless you draw them off,
+ I will presently send some of them to the devil before their time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make room at your proper peril,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth; and he put his
+ right hand on his holster-pistol. Sir Geoffrey closed with him instantly,
+ seized him by the collar, and spurred Black Hastings, checking him at the
+ same time, so that the horse made a courbette, and brought the full weight
+ of his chest against the counter of the other. A ready soldier might, in
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s situation, have rid himself of his adversary with a bullet.
+ But Bridgenorth&rsquo;s courage, notwithstanding his having served some time
+ with the Parliament army, was rather of a civil than a military character;
+ and he was inferior to his adversary, not only in strength and
+ horsemanship, but also and especially in the daring and decisive
+ resolution which made Sir Geoffrey thrust himself readily into personal
+ contest. While, therefore, they tugged and grappled together upon terms
+ which bore such little accordance with their long acquaintance and close
+ neighbourhood, it was no wonder that Bridgenorth should be unhorsed with
+ much violence. While Sir Geoffrey sprung from the saddle, the party of
+ Bridgenorth advanced to rescue their leader, and that of the Knight to
+ oppose them. Swords were unsheathed, and pistols presented; but Sir
+ Geoffrey, with the voice of a herald, commanded both parties to stand
+ back, and to keep the peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pursuivant took the hint, and easily found a reason for not
+ prosecuting a dangerous duty. &ldquo;The warrant,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;was destroyed. They
+ that did it must be answerable to the Council; for his part, he could
+ proceed no farther without his commission.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well said, and like a peaceable fellow!&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey.&mdash;&ldquo;Let
+ him have refreshment at the Castle&mdash;his nag is sorely out of
+ condition.&mdash;Come, neighbour Bridgenorth, get up, man&mdash;I trust
+ you have had no hurt in this mad affray? I was loath to lay hand on you,
+ man, till you plucked out your petronel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke thus, he aided the Major to rise. The pursuivant, meanwhile,
+ drew aside; and with him the constable and head-borough, who were not
+ without some tacit suspicion, that though Peveril was interrupting the
+ direct course of law in this matter, yet he was likely to have his offence
+ considered by favourable judges; and therefore it might be as much for
+ their interest and safety to give way as to oppose him. But the rest of
+ the party, friends of Bridgenorth, and of his principles, kept their
+ ground notwithstanding this defection, and seemed, from their looks,
+ sternly determined to rule their conduct by that of their leader, whatever
+ it might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was evident that Bridgenorth did not intend to renew the struggle.
+ He shook himself rather roughly free from the hands of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril; but it was not to draw his sword. On the contrary, he mounted his
+ horse with a sullen and dejected air; and, making a sign to his followers,
+ turned back the same road which he had come. Sir Geoffrey looked after him
+ for some minutes. &ldquo;Now, there goes a man,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;who would have been a
+ right honest fellow had he not been a Presbyterian. But there is no
+ heartiness about them&mdash;they can never forgive a fair fall upon the
+ sod&mdash;they bear malice, and that I hate as I do a black cloak, or a
+ Geneva skull-cap, and a pair of long ears rising on each side on&rsquo;t, like
+ two chimneys at the gable ends of a thatched cottage. They are as sly as
+ the devil to boot; and, therefore, Lance Outram, take two with you, and
+ keep after them, that they may not turn our flank, and get on the track of
+ the Countess again after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had as soon they should course my lady&rsquo;s white tame doe,&rdquo; answered
+ Lance, in the spirit of his calling. He proceeded to execute his master&rsquo;s
+ orders by dogging Major Bridgenorth at a distance, and observing his
+ course from such heights as commanded the country. But it was soon evident
+ that no manoeuvre was intended, and that the Major was taking the direct
+ road homeward. When this was ascertained, Sir Geoffrey dismissed most of
+ his followers; and retaining only his own domestics, rode hastily forward
+ to overtake the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only necessary to say farther, that he completed his purpose of
+ escorting the Countess of Derby to Vale Royal, without meeting any further
+ hindrance by the way. The lord of the mansion readily undertook to conduct
+ the high-minded lady to Liverpool, and the task of seeing her safely
+ embarked for her son&rsquo;s hereditary dominions, where there was no doubt of
+ her remaining in personal safety until the accusation against her for
+ breach of the Royal Indemnity, by the execution of Christian, could be
+ brought to some compromise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a length of time this was no easy matter. Clarendon, then at the head
+ of Charles&rsquo;s administration, considered her rash action, though dictated
+ by motives which the human breast must, in some respects, sympathise with,
+ as calculated to shake the restored tranquillity of England, by exciting
+ the doubts and jealousies of those who had to apprehend the consequences
+ of what is called, in our own time, a <i>reaction</i>. At the same time,
+ the high services of this distinguished family&mdash;the merits of the
+ Countess herself&mdash;the memory of her gallant husband&mdash;and the
+ very peculiar circumstances of jurisdiction which took the case out of all
+ common rules, pleaded strongly in her favour; and the death of Christian
+ was at length only punished by the imposition of a heavy fine, amounting,
+ we believe, to many thousand pounds; which was levied, with great
+ difficulty, out of the shattered estates of the young Earl of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My native land, good night!
+ &mdash;BYRON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril remained in no small anxiety for several hours after her
+ husband and the Countess had departed from Martindale Castle; more
+ especially when she learned that Major Bridgenorth, concerning whose
+ motions she made private inquiry, had taken horse with a party, and was
+ gone to the westward in the same direction with Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length her immediate uneasiness in regard to the safety of her husband
+ and the Countess was removed, by the arrival of Whitaker, with her
+ husband&rsquo;s commendations, and an account of the scuffle betwixt himself and
+ Major Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril shuddered to see how nearly they had approached to renewal of
+ the scenes of civil discord; and while she was thankful to Heaven for her
+ husband&rsquo;s immediate preservation, she could not help feeling both regret
+ and apprehension for the consequences of his quarrel with Major
+ Bridgenorth. They had now lost an old friend, who had showed himself such
+ under those circumstances of adversity by which friendship is most
+ severely tried; and she could not disguise from herself that Bridgenorth,
+ thus irritated, might be a troublesome, if not a dangerous enemy. His
+ rights as a creditor, he had hitherto used with gentleness; but if he
+ should employ rigour, Lady Peveril, whose attention to domestic economy
+ had made her much better acquainted with her husband&rsquo;s affairs than he was
+ himself, foresaw considerable inconvenience from the measures which the
+ law put in his power. She comforted herself with the recollection,
+ however, that she had still a strong hold on Bridgenorth, through his
+ paternal affection, and from the fixed opinion which he had hitherto
+ manifested, that his daughter&rsquo;s health could only flourish while under her
+ charge. But any expectations of reconciliation which Lady Peveril might
+ probably have founded on this circumstance, were frustrated by an incident
+ which took place in the course of the following morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governante, Mistress Deborah, who has been already mentioned, went
+ forth, as usual, with the children, to take their morning exercise in the
+ Park, attended by Rachael, a girl who acted occasionally as her assistant
+ in attending upon them. But not as usual did she return. It was near the
+ hour of breakfast, when Ellesmere, with an unwonted degree of primness in
+ her mouth and manner, came to acquaint her lady that Mistress Deborah had
+ not thought proper to come back from the Park, though the breakfast hour
+ approached so near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She will come, then, presently,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril with indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ellesmere gave a short and doubtful cough, and then proceeded to say, that
+ Rachael had been sent home with little Master Julian, and that Mistress
+ Deborah had been pleased to say, she would walk on with Miss Bridgenorth
+ as far as Moultrassie Holt; which was a point at which the property of the
+ Major, as matters now stood, bounded that of Sir Geoffrey Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is the wench turned silly,&rdquo; exclaimed the lady, something angrily, &ldquo;that
+ she does not obey my orders, and return at regular hours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She may be turning silly,&rdquo; said Ellesmere mysteriously; &ldquo;or she may be
+ turning too sly; and I think it were as well your ladyship looked to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looked to what, Ellesmere?&rdquo; said the lady impatiently. &ldquo;You are strangely
+ oracular this morning. If you know anything to the prejudice of this young
+ woman, I pray you speak it out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I prejudice!&rdquo; said Ellesmere; &ldquo;I scorn to prejudice man, woman, or child,
+ in the way of a fellow-servant; only I wish your ladyship to look about
+ you, and use your own eyes&mdash;that is all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bid me use my own eyes, Ellesmere; but I suspect,&rdquo; answered the lady,
+ &ldquo;you would be better pleased were I contented to see through your
+ spectacles. I charge you&mdash;and you know I will be obeyed&mdash;I
+ charge you to tell me what you know or suspect about this girl, Deborah
+ Debbitch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see through spectacles!&rdquo; exclaimed the indignant Abigail; &ldquo;your
+ ladyship will pardon me in that, for I never use them, unless a pair that
+ belonged to my poor mother, which I put on when your ladyship wants your
+ pinners curiously wrought. No woman above sixteen ever did white-seam
+ without barnacles. And then as to suspecting, I suspect nothing; for as
+ your ladyship hath taken Mistress Deborah Debbitch from under my hand, to
+ be sure it is neither bread nor butter of mine. Only&rdquo; (here she began to
+ speak with her lips shut, so as scarce to permit a sound to issue, and
+ mincing her words as if she pinched off the ends of them before she
+ suffered them to escape),&mdash;&ldquo;only, madam, if Mistress Deborah goes so
+ often of a morning to Moultrassie Holt, why, I should not be surprised if
+ she should never find the way back again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once more, what do you mean, Ellesmere? You were wont to have some sense&mdash;let
+ me know distinctly what the matter is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only, madam,&rdquo; pursued the Abigail, &ldquo;that since Bridgenorth came back from
+ Chesterfield, and saw you at the Castle Hall, Mistress Deborah has been
+ pleased to carry the children every morning to that place; and it has so
+ happened that she has often met the Major, as they call him, there in his
+ walks; for he can walk about now like other folks; and I warrant you she
+ hath not been the worse of the meeting&mdash;one way at least, for she
+ hath bought a new hood might serve yourself, madam; but whether she hath
+ had anything in hand besides a piece of money, no doubt your ladyship is
+ best judge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, who readily adopted the more good-natured construction of
+ the governante&rsquo;s motives, could not help laughing at the idea of a man of
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s precise appearance, strict principles, and reserved habits,
+ being suspected of a design of gallantry; and readily concluded, that
+ Mistress Deborah had found her advantage in gratifying his parental
+ affection by a frequent sight of his daughter during the few days which
+ intervened betwixt his first seeing little Alice at the Castle, and the
+ events which had followed. But she was somewhat surprised, when, an hour
+ after the usual breakfast hour, during which neither the child nor
+ Mistress Deborah appeared, Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s only man-servant arrived at
+ the Castle on horseback, dressed as for a journey; and having delivered a
+ letter addressed to herself, and another to Mistress Ellesmere, rode away
+ without waiting any answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There would have been nothing remarkable in this, had any other person
+ been concerned; but Major Bridgenorth was so very quiet and orderly in all
+ his proceedings&mdash;so little liable to act hastily or by impulse, that
+ the least appearance of bustle where he was concerned, excited surprise
+ and curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril broke her letter hastily open, and found that it contained
+ the following lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;<i>For the Hands of the Honourable and Honoured Lady Peveril&mdash;
+ These:</i>
+
+ &ldquo;Madam&mdash;Please it your Ladyship,&mdash;I write more to excuse myself to
+ your ladyship, than to accuse either you or others, in respect
+ that I am sensible it becomes our frail nature better to confess
+ our own imperfections, than to complain of those of others.
+ Neither do I mean to speak of past times, particularly in respect
+ of your worthy ladyship, being sensible that if I have served you
+ in that period when our Israel might be called triumphant, you
+ have more than requited me, in giving to my arms a child,
+ redeemed, as it were, from the vale of the shadow of death. And
+ therefore, as I heartily forgive to your ladyship the unkind and
+ violent measure which you dealt to me at our last meeting (seeing
+ that the woman who was the cause of strife is accounted one of
+ your kindred people), I do entreat you, in like manner, to pardon
+ my enticing away from your service the young woman called Deborah
+ Debbitch, whose direction, is, it may be, indispensable to the
+ health of my dearest child. I had purposed, madam, with your
+ gracious permission, that Alice should have remained at Martindale
+ Castle, under your kind charge, until she could so far discern
+ betwixt good and evil, that it should be matter of conscience to
+ teach her the way in which she should go. For it is not unknown to
+ your ladyship, and in no way do I speak it reproachfully, but
+ rather sorrowfully, that a person so excellently gifted as
+ yourself&mdash;I mean touching natural qualities&mdash;has not yet received
+ that true light, which is a lamp to the paths, but are contented
+ to stumble in darkness, and among the graves of dead men. It has
+ been my prayer in the watches of the night, that your ladyship
+ should cease from the doctrine which causeth to err; but I grieve
+ to say, that our candlestick being about to be removed, the land
+ will most likely be involved in deeper darkness than ever; and the
+ return of the King, to which I and many looked forward as a
+ manifestation of divine favour, seems to prove little else than a
+ permitted triumph of the Prince of the Air, who setteth about to
+ restore his Vanity-fair of bishops, deans, and such like,
+ extruding the peaceful ministers of the word, whose labours have
+ proved faithful to many hungry souls. So, hearing from a sure
+ hand, that commission has gone forth to restore these dumb dogs,
+ the followers of Laud and of Williams, who were cast forth by the
+ late Parliament, and that an Act of Conformity, or rather of
+ deformity, of worship, was to be expected, it is my purpose to
+ flee from the wrath to come, and to seek some corner where I may
+ dwell in peace, and enjoy liberty of conscience. For who would
+ abide in the Sanctuary, after the carved work thereof is broken
+ down, and when it hath been made a place for owls, and satyrs of
+ the wilderness?&mdash;And herein I blame myself, madam, that I went in
+ the singleness of my heart too readily into that carousing in the
+ house of feasting, wherein my love of union, and my desire to show
+ respect to your ladyship, were made a snare to me. But I trust it
+ will be an atonement, that I am now about to absent myself from
+ the place of my birth, and the house of my fathers, as well as
+ from the place which holdeth the dust of those pledges of my
+ affection. I have also to remember, that in this land my honour
+ (after the worldly estimation) hath been abated, and my utility
+ circumscribed, by your husband, Sir Geoffrey Peveril; and that
+ without any chance of my obtaining reparation at his hand, whereby
+ I may say the hand of a kinsman was lifted up against my credit
+ and my life. These things are bitter to the taste of the old Adam;
+ wherefore to prevent farther bickerings, and, it may be,
+ bloodshed, it is better that I leave this land for a time. The
+ affairs which remain to be settled between Sir Geoffrey and
+ myself, I shall place in the hand of the righteous Master Joachim
+ Win-the-Fight, an attorney in Chester, who will arrange them with
+ such attention to Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s convenience, as justice, and the
+ due exercise of the law, will permit; for, as I trust I shall
+ have grace to resist the temptation to make the weapons of carnal
+ warfare the instruments of my revenge, so I scorn to effect it
+ through the means of Mammon. Wishing, madam, that the Lord may
+ grant you every blessing, and, in especial, that which is over all
+ others, namely, the true knowledge of His way, I remain, your
+ devoted servant to command, RALPH BRIDGENORTH.
+
+ &ldquo;<i>Written at Moultrassie Hall, this tenth
+ day of July, 1660.</i>&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ So soon as Lady Peveril had perused this long and singular homily, in
+ which it seemed to her that her neighbour showed more spirit of religious
+ fanaticism than she could have supposed him possessed of, she looked up
+ and beheld Ellesmere,&mdash;with a countenance in which mortification, and
+ an affected air of contempt, seemed to struggle together,&mdash;who, tired
+ with watching the expression of her mistress&rsquo;s countenance, applied for
+ confirmation of her suspicions in plain terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose, madam,&rdquo; said the waiting-woman, &ldquo;the fanatic fool intends to
+ marry the wench? They say he goes to shift the country. Truly it&rsquo;s time,
+ indeed; for, besides that the whole neighbourhood would laugh him to
+ scorn, I should not be surprised if Lance Outram, the keeper, gave him a
+ buck&rsquo;s head to bear; for that is all in the way of his office.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no great occasion for your spite at present, Ellesmere,&rdquo; replied
+ her lady. &ldquo;My letter says nothing of marriage; but it would appear that
+ Master Bridgenorth, being to leave this country, has engaged Deborah to
+ take care of his child; and I am sure I am heartily glad of it, for the
+ infant&rsquo;s sake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am glad of it for my own,&rdquo; said Ellesmere; &ldquo;and, indeed, for the
+ sake of the whole house.&mdash;And your ladyship thinks she is not like to
+ be married to him? Troth, I could never see how he should be such an
+ idiot; but perhaps she is going to do worse; for she speaks here of coming
+ to high preferment, and that scarce comes by honest servitude nowadays;
+ then she writes me about sending her things, as if I were mistress of the
+ wardrobe to her ladyship&mdash;ay, and recommends Master Julian to the
+ care of my age and experience, forsooth, as if she needed to recommend the
+ dear little jewel to me; and then, to speak of my age&mdash;But I will
+ bundle away her rags to the Hall, with a witness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do it with all civility,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;and let Whitaker send her the
+ wages for which she has served, and a broad-piece over and above; for
+ though a light-headed young woman, she was kind to the children.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know who is kind to their servants, madam, and would spoil the best
+ ever pinned a gown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I spoiled a good one, Ellesmere, when I spoiled thee,&rdquo; said the lady;
+ &ldquo;but tell Mistress Deborah to kiss the little Alice for me, and to offer
+ my good wishes to Major Bridgenorth, for his temporal and future
+ happiness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She permitted no observation or reply, but dismissed her attendant,
+ without entering into farther particulars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ellesmere had withdrawn, Lady Peveril began to reflect, with much
+ feeling of compassion, on the letter of Major Bridgenorth; a person in
+ whom there were certainly many excellent qualities, but whom a series of
+ domestic misfortunes, and the increasing gloom of a sincere, yet stern
+ feeling of devotion, rendered lonely and unhappy; and she had more than
+ one anxious thought for the happiness of the little Alice, brought up, as
+ she was likely to be, under such a father. Still the removal of
+ Bridgenorth was, on the whole, a desirable event; for while he remained at
+ the Hall, it was but too likely that some accidental collision with Sir
+ Geoffrey might give rise to a rencontre betwixt them, more fatal than the
+ last had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, she could not help expressing to Doctor Dummerar her
+ surprise and sorrow, that all which she had done and attempted, to
+ establish peace and unanimity betwixt the contending factions, had been
+ perversely fated to turn out the very reverse of what she had aimed at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But for my unhappy invitation,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Bridgenorth would not have
+ been at the Castle on the morning which succeeded the feast, would not
+ have seen the Countess, and would not have incurred the resentment and
+ opposition of my husband. And but for the King&rsquo;s return, an event which
+ was so anxiously expected as the termination of all our calamities,
+ neither the noble lady nor ourselves had been engaged in this new path of
+ difficulty and danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Honoured madam,&rdquo; said Doctor Dummerar, &ldquo;were the affairs of this world to
+ be guided implicitly by human wisdom, or were they uniformly to fall out
+ according to the conjectures of human foresight, events would no longer be
+ under the domination of that time and chance, which happen unto all men,
+ since we should, in the one case, work out our own purposes to a
+ certainty, by our own skill, and in the other, regulate our conduct
+ according to the views of unerring prescience. But man is, while in this
+ vale of tears, like an uninstructed bowler, so to speak, who thinks to
+ attain the jack, by delivering his bowl straight forward upon it, being
+ ignorant that there is a concealed bias within the spheroid, which will
+ make it, in all probability, swerve away, and lose the cast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spoken this with a sententious air, the Doctor took his
+ shovel-shaped hat, and went down to the Castle green, to conclude a match
+ of bowls with Whitaker, which had probably suggested this notable
+ illustration of the uncertain course of human events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards, Sir Geoffrey arrived. He had waited at Vale Royal
+ till he heard of the Countess&rsquo;s being safely embarked for Man, and then
+ had posted homeward to his Castle and Dame Margaret. On his way, he
+ learned from some of his attendants, the mode in which his lady had
+ conducted the entertainment which she had given to the neighbourhood at
+ his order; and notwithstanding the great deference he usually showed in
+ cases where Lady Peveril was concerned, he heard of her liberality towards
+ the Presbyterian party with great indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could have admitted Bridgenorth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for he always bore him in
+ neighbourly and kindly fashion till this last career&mdash;I could have
+ endured him, so he would have drunk the King&rsquo;s health, like a true man&mdash;but
+ to bring that snuffling scoundrel Solsgrace, with all his beggarly,
+ long-eared congregation, to hold a conventicle in my father&rsquo;s house&mdash;to
+ let them domineer it as they listed&mdash;why, I would not have permitted
+ them such liberty, when they held their head the highest! They never, in
+ the worst of times, found any way into Martindale Castle but what Noll&rsquo;s
+ cannon made for them; and that they should come and cant there, when good
+ King Charles is returned&mdash;By my hand, Dame Margaret shall hear of
+ it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, notwithstanding these ireful resolutions, resentment altogether
+ subsided in the honest Knight&rsquo;s breast, when he saw the fair features of
+ his lady lightened with affectionate joy at his return in safety. As he
+ took her in his arms and kissed her, he forgave her ere he mentioned her
+ offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou hast played the knave with me, Meg,&rdquo; he said, shaking his head, and
+ smiling at the same time, &ldquo;and thou knowest in what manner; but I think
+ thou art true church-woman, and didst only act from silly womanish fancy
+ of keeping fair with these roguish Roundheads. But let me have no more of
+ this. I had rather Martindale Castle were again rent by their bullets,
+ than receive any of the knaves in the way of friendship&mdash;I always
+ except Ralph Bridgenorth of the Hall, if he should come to his senses
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was here under the necessity of explaining what she had heard
+ of Master Bridgenorth&mdash;the disappearance of the governante with his
+ daughter, and placed Bridgenorth&rsquo;s letter in his hand. Sir Geoffrey shook
+ his head at first, and then laughed extremely at the idea that there was
+ some little love-intrigue between Bridgenorth and Mistress Deborah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the true end of a dissenter,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to marry his own
+ maid-servant, or some other person&rsquo;s. Deborah is a good likely wench, and
+ on the merrier side of thirty, as I should think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;you are as uncharitable as Ellesmere&mdash;I
+ believe it but to be affection to his child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! pshaw!&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;women are eternally thinking of
+ children; but among men, dame, many one carresses the infant that he may
+ kiss the child&rsquo;s maid; and where&rsquo;s the wonder or the harm either, if
+ Bridgenorth should marry the wench? Her father is a substantial yeoman;
+ his family has had the same farm since Bosworthfield&mdash;as good a
+ pedigree as that of the great-grandson of a Chesterfield brewer, I trow.
+ But let us hear what he says for himself&mdash;I shall spell it out if
+ there is any roguery in the letter about love and liking, though it might
+ escape your innocence, Dame Margaret.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of the Peak began to peruse the letter accordingly, but was
+ much embarrassed by the peculiar language in which it was couched. &ldquo;What
+ he means by moving of candlesticks, and breaking down of carved work in
+ the church, I cannot guess; unless he means to bring back the large silver
+ candlesticks which my grandsire gave to be placed on the altar at
+ Martindale Moultrassie; and which his crop-eared friends, like
+ sacrilegious villains as they are, stole and melted down. And in like
+ manner, the only breaking I know of, was when they pulled down the rails
+ of the communion table (for which some of their fingers are hot enough by
+ this time), and when the brass ornaments were torn down from Peveril
+ monuments; and that was breaking and removing with a vengeance. However,
+ dame, the upshot is, that poor Bridgenorth is going to leave the
+ neighbourhood. I am truly sorry for it, though I never saw him oftener
+ than once a day, and never spoke to him above two words. But I see how it
+ is&mdash;that little shake by the shoulder sticks in his stomach; and yet,
+ Meg, I did but lift him out of the saddle as I might have lifted thee into
+ it, Margaret&mdash;I was careful not to hurt him; and I did not think him
+ so tender in point of honour as to mind such a thing much; but I see
+ plainly where his sore lies; and I warrant you I will manage that he stays
+ at the Hall, and that you get back Julian&rsquo;s little companion. Faith, I am
+ sorry myself at the thought of losing the baby, and of having to choose
+ another ride when it is not hunting weather, than round by the Hall, with
+ a word at the window.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should be very glad, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril, &ldquo;that you
+ could come to a reconciliation with this worthy man, for such I must hold
+ Master Bridgenorth to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But for his dissenting principles, as good a neighbour as ever lived,&rdquo;
+ said Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I scarce see,&rdquo; continued the lady, &ldquo;any possibility of bringing about
+ a conclusion so desirable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tush, dame,&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;thou knowest little of such matters. I
+ know the foot he halts upon, and you shall see him go as sound as ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril had, from her sincere affection and sound sense, as good a
+ right to claim the full confidence of her husband, as any woman in
+ Derbyshire; and, upon this occasion, to confess the truth, she had more
+ anxiety to know his purpose than her sense of their mutual and separate
+ duties permitted her in general to entertain. She could not imagine what
+ mode of reconciliation with his neighbour, Sir Geoffrey (no very acute
+ judge of mankind or their peculiarities) could have devised, which might
+ not be disclosed to her; and she felt some secret anxiety lest the means
+ resorted to might be so ill chosen as to render the breach rather wider.
+ But Sir Geoffrey would give no opening for farther inquiry. He had been
+ long enough colonel of a regiment abroad, to value himself on the right of
+ absolute command at home; and to all the hints which his lady&rsquo;s ingenuity
+ could devise and throw out, he only answered, &ldquo;Patience, Dame Margaret,
+ patience. This is no case for thy handling. Thou shalt know enough on&rsquo;t
+ by-and-by, dame.&mdash;Go, look to Julian. Will the boy never have done
+ crying for lack of that little sprout of a Roundhead? But we will have
+ little Alice back with us in two or three days, and all will be well
+ again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the good Knight spoke these words, a post winded his horn in the court,
+ and a large packet was brought in, addressed to the worshipful Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril, Justice of the Peace, and so forth; for he had been
+ placed in authority as soon as the King&rsquo;s Restoration was put upon a
+ settled basis. Upon opening the packet, which he did with no small feeling
+ of importance, he found that it contained the warrant which he had
+ solicited for replacing Doctor Dummerar in the parish, from which he had
+ been forcibly ejected during the usurpation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few incidents could have given more delight to Sir Geoffrey. He could
+ forgive a stout able-bodied sectary or nonconformist, who enforced his
+ doctrines in the field by downright blows on the casques and cuirasses of
+ himself and other Cavaliers. But he remembered with most vindictive
+ accuracy, the triumphant entrance of Hugh Peters through the breach of his
+ Castle; and for his sake, without nicely distinguishing betwixt sects or
+ their teachers, he held all who mounted a pulpit without warrant from the
+ Church of England&mdash;perhaps he might also in private except that of
+ Rome&mdash;to be disturbers of the public tranquillity&mdash;seducers of
+ the congregation from their lawful preachers&mdash;instigators of the late
+ Civil War&mdash;and men well disposed to risk the fate of a new one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, on the other hand, besides gratifying his dislike to Solsgrace, he
+ saw much satisfaction in the task of replacing his old friend and
+ associate in sport and in danger, the worthy Doctor Dummerar, in his
+ legitimate rights and in the ease and comforts of his vicarage. He
+ communicated the contents of the packet, with great triumph, to the lady,
+ who now perceived the sense of the mysterious paragraph in Major
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s letter, concerning the removal of the candlestick, and the
+ extinction of light and doctrine in the land. She pointed this out to Sir
+ Geoffrey, and endeavoured to persuade him that a door was now opened to
+ reconciliation with his neighbour, by executing the commission which he
+ had received in an easy and moderate manner, after due delay, and with all
+ respect to the feelings both of Solsgrace and his congregation, which
+ circumstances admitted of. This, the lady argued, would be doing no injury
+ whatever to Doctor Dummerar;&mdash;nay, might be the means of reconciling
+ many to his ministry, who might otherwise be disgusted with it for ever,
+ by the premature expulsion of a favourite preacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was much wisdom, as well as moderation, in this advice; and, at
+ another time, Sir Geoffrey would have sense enough to have adopted it. But
+ who can act composedly or prudently in the hour of triumph? The ejection
+ of Mr. Solsgrace was so hastily executed, as to give it some appearance of
+ persecution; though, more justly considered, it was the restoring of his
+ predecessor to his legal rights. Solsgrace himself seemed to be desirous
+ to make his sufferings as manifest as possible. He held out to the last;
+ and on the Sabbath after he had received intimation of his ejection,
+ attempted to make his way to the pulpit, as usual, supported by Master
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s attorney, Win-the-Fight, and a few zealous followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as their party came into the churchyard on the one side, Doctor
+ Dummerar, dressed in full pontificals, in a sort of triumphal procession
+ accompanied by Peveril of the Peak, Sir Jasper Cranbourne, and other
+ Cavaliers of distinction, entered at the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To prevent an actual struggle in the church, the parish officers were sent
+ to prevent the farther approach of the Presbyterian minister; which was
+ effected without farther damage than a broken head, inflicted by Roger
+ Raine, the drunken innkeeper of the Peveril Arms, upon the Presbyterian
+ attorney of Chesterfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unsubdued in spirit, though compelled to retreat by superior force, the
+ undaunted Mr. Solsgrace retired to the vicarage; where under some legal
+ pretext which had been started by Mr. Win-the-Fight (in that day unaptly
+ named), he attempted to maintain himself&mdash;bolted gates&mdash;barred
+ windows&mdash;and, as report said (though falsely), made provision of
+ fire-arms to resist the officers. A scene of clamour and scandal
+ accordingly took place, which being reported to Sir Geoffrey, he came in
+ person, with some of his attendants carrying arms&mdash;forced the
+ outer-gate and inner-doors of the house; and proceeding to the study,
+ found no other garrison save the Presbyterian parson, with the attorney,
+ who gave up possession of the premises, after making protestation against
+ the violence that had been used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rabble of the village being by this time all in motion, Sir Geoffrey,
+ both in prudence and good-nature, saw the propriety of escorting his
+ prisoners, for so they might be termed, safely through the tumult; and
+ accordingly conveyed them in person, through much noise and clamour, as
+ far as the avenue of Moultrassie Hall, which they chose for the place of
+ their retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the absence of Sir Geoffrey gave the rein to some disorders, which, if
+ present, he would assuredly have restrained. Some of the minister&rsquo;s books
+ were torn and flung about as treasonable and seditious trash, by the
+ zealous parish-officers or their assistants. A quantity of his ale was
+ drunk up in healths to the King and Peveril of the Peak. And, finally, the
+ boys, who bore the ex-parson no good-will for his tyrannical interference
+ with their games at skittles, foot-ball, and so forth, and, moreover,
+ remembered the unmerciful length of his sermons, dressed up an effigy with
+ his Geneva gown and band, and his steeple-crowned hat, which they paraded
+ through the village, and burned on the spot whilom occupied by a stately
+ Maypole, which Solsgrace had formerly hewed down with his own reverend
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey was vexed at all this and sent to Mr. Solsgrace, offering
+ satisfaction for the goods which he had lost; but the Calvinistical divine
+ replied, &ldquo;From a thread to a shoe-latchet, I will not take anything that
+ is thine. Let the shame of the work of thy hands abide with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considerable scandal, indeed, arose against Sir Geoffrey Peveril as having
+ proceeded with indecent severity and haste upon this occasion; and rumour
+ took care to make the usual additions to the reality. It was currently
+ reported, that the desperate Cavalier, Peveril of the Peak, had fallen on
+ a Presbyterian congregation, while engaged in the peaceable exercise of
+ religion, with a band of armed men&mdash;had slain some, desperately
+ wounded many more, and finally pursued the preacher to his vicarage which
+ he burned to the ground. Some alleged the clergyman had perished in the
+ flames; and the most mitigated report bore, that he had only been able to
+ escape by disposing his gown, cap, and band, near a window, in such a
+ manner as to deceive them with the idea of his person being still
+ surrounded by flames, while he himself fled by the back part of the house.
+ And although few people believed in the extent of the atrocities thus
+ imputed to our honest Cavalier, yet still enough of obloquy attached to
+ him to infer very serious consequences, as the reader will learn at a
+ future period of our history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Bessus</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Tis a challenge, sir, is it not?
+ <i>Gentleman</i>.&mdash;&lsquo;Tis an inviting to the field.
+ &mdash;King and No King.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For a day or two after this forcible expulsion from the vicarage, Mr.
+ Solsgrace continued his residence at Moultrassie Hall, where the natural
+ melancholy attendant on his situation added to the gloom of the owner of
+ the mansion. In the morning, the ejected divine made excursions to
+ different families in the neighbourhood, to whom his ministry had been
+ acceptable in the days of his prosperity, and from whose grateful
+ recollections of that period he now found sympathy and consolation. He did
+ not require to be condoled with, because he was deprived of an easy and
+ competent maintenance, and thrust out upon the common of life, after he
+ had reason to suppose he would be no longer liable to such mutations of
+ fortune. The piety of Mr. Solsgrace was sincere; and if he had many of the
+ uncharitable prejudices against other sects, which polemical controversy
+ had generated, and the Civil War brought to a head, he had also that deep
+ sense of duty, by which enthusiasm is so often dignified, and held his
+ very life little, if called upon to lay it down in attestation of the
+ doctrines in which he believed. But he was soon to prepare for leaving the
+ district which Heaven, he conceived, had assigned to him as his corner of
+ the vineyard; he was to abandon his flock to the wolf&mdash;was to forsake
+ those with whom he had held sweet counsel in religious communion&mdash;was
+ to leave the recently converted to relapse into false doctrines, and
+ forsake the wavering, whom his continued cares might have directed into
+ the right path,&mdash;these were of themselves deep causes of sorrow, and
+ were aggravated, doubtless, by those natural feelings with which all men,
+ especially those whose duties or habits have confined them to a limited
+ circle, regard the separation from wonted scenes, and their accustomed
+ haunts of solitary musing, or social intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, indeed, a plan of placing Mr. Solsgrace at the head of a
+ nonconforming congregation in his present parish, which his followers
+ would have readily consented to endow with a sufficient revenue. But
+ although the act for universal conformity was not yet passed, such a
+ measure was understood to be impending, and there existed a general
+ opinion among the Presbyterians, that in no hands was it likely to be more
+ strictly enforced, than in those of Peveril of the Peak. Solsgrace himself
+ considered not only his personal danger as being considerable,&mdash;for,
+ assuming perhaps more consequence than was actually attached to him or his
+ productions, he conceived the honest Knight to be his mortal and
+ determined enemy,&mdash;but he also conceived that he should serve the
+ cause of his Church by absenting himself from Derbyshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Less known pastors,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;though perhaps more worthy of the name,
+ may be permitted to assemble the scattered flocks in caverns or in secret
+ wilds, and to them shall the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim be better
+ than the vintage of Abiezer. But I, that have so often carried the banner
+ forth against the mighty&mdash;I, whose tongue hath testified, morning and
+ evening, like the watchman upon the tower, against Popery, Prelacy, and
+ the tyrant of the Peak&mdash;for me to abide here, were but to bring the
+ sword of bloody vengeance amongst you, that the shepherd might be smitten,
+ and the sheep scattered. The shedders of blood have already assailed me,
+ even within that ground which they themselves call consecrated; and
+ yourselves have seen the scalp of the righteous broken, as he defended my
+ cause. Therefore, I will put on my sandals, and gird my loins, and depart
+ to a far country, and there do as my duty shall call upon me, whether it
+ be to act or to suffer&mdash;to bear testimony at the stake or in the
+ pulpit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the sentiments which Mr. Solsgrace expressed to his desponding
+ friends, and which he expatiated upon at more length with Major
+ Bridgenorth; not failing, with friendly zeal, to rebuke the haste which
+ the latter had shown to thrust out the hand of fellowship to the Amalekite
+ woman, whereby he reminded him, &ldquo;He had been rendered her slave and
+ bondsman for a season, like Samson, betrayed by Delilah, and might have
+ remained longer in the house of Dagon, had not Heaven pointed to him a way
+ out of the snare. Also, it sprung originally from the Major&rsquo;s going up to
+ feast in the high place of Baal, that he who was the champion of the truth
+ was stricken down, and put to shame by the enemy, even in the presence of
+ the host.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These objurgations seeming to give some offence to Major Bridgenorth, who
+ liked, no better than any other man, to hear of his own mishaps, and at
+ the same time to have them imputed to his own misconduct, the worthy
+ divine proceeded to take shame to himself for his own sinful compliance in
+ that matter; for to the vengeance justly due for that unhappy dinner at
+ Martindale Castle (which was, he said, a crying of peace when there was no
+ peace, and a dwelling in the tents of sin), he imputed his ejection from
+ his living, with the destruction of some of his most pithy and highly
+ prized volumes of divinity, with the loss of his cap, gown, and band, and
+ a double hogshead of choice Derby ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind of Major Bridgenorth was strongly tinged with devotional feeling,
+ which his late misfortunes had rendered more deep and solemn; and it is
+ therefore no wonder, that, when he heard these arguments urged again and
+ again, by a pastor whom he so much respected, and who was now a confessor
+ in the cause of their joint faith, he began to look back with disapproval
+ on his own conduct, and to suspect that he had permitted himself to be
+ seduced by gratitude towards Lady Peveril, and by her special arguments in
+ favour of a mutual and tolerating liberality of sentiments, into an action
+ which had a tendency to compromise his religious and political principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning, as Major Bridgenorth had wearied himself with several details
+ respecting the arrangement of his affairs, he was reposing in the leathern
+ easy-chair, beside the latticed window, a posture which, by natural
+ association, recalled to him the memory of former times, and the feelings
+ with which he was wont to expect the recurring visit of Sir Geoffrey, who
+ brought him news of his child&rsquo;s welfare,&mdash;&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he said,
+ thinking, as it were, aloud, &ldquo;there was no sin in the kindness with which
+ I then regarded that man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solsgrace, who was in the apartment, and guessed what passed through his
+ friend&rsquo;s mind, acquainted as he was with every point of his history,
+ replied&mdash;&ldquo;When God caused Elijah to be fed by ravens, while hiding at
+ the brook Cherith, we hear not of his fondling the unclean birds, whom,
+ contrary to their ravening nature, a miracle compelled to minister to
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;yet the flap of their wings must
+ have been gracious in the ear of the famished prophet, like the tread of
+ his horse in mine. The ravens, doubtless, resumed their nature when the
+ season was passed, and even so it has fared with him.&mdash;Hark!&rdquo; he
+ exclaimed, starting, &ldquo;I hear his horse&rsquo;s hoof tramp even now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was seldom that the echoes of that silent house and courtyard were
+ awakened by the trampling of horses, but such was now the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Bridgenorth and Solsgrace were surprised at the sound, and even
+ disposed to anticipate some farther oppression on the part of the
+ government, when the Major&rsquo;s old servant introduced, with little ceremony
+ (for his manners were nearly as plain as his master&rsquo;s), a tall gentleman
+ on the farther side of middle life, whose vest and cloak, long hair,
+ slouched hat and drooping feather, announced him as a Cavalier. He bowed
+ formally, but courteously, to both gentlemen, and said, that he was &ldquo;Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne, charged with an especial message to Master Ralph
+ Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall, by his honourable friend Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril of the Peak, and that he requested to know whether Master
+ Bridgenorth would be pleased to receive his acquittal of commission here
+ or elsewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything which Sir Geoffrey Peveril can have to say to me,&rdquo; said Major
+ Bridgenorth, &ldquo;may be told instantly, and before my friend, from whom I
+ have no secrets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The presence of any other friend were, instead of being objectionable,
+ the thing in the world most to be desired,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper, after a
+ moment&rsquo;s hesitation, and looking at Mr. Solsgrace; &ldquo;but this gentleman
+ seems to be a sort of clergyman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not conscious of any secrets,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;nor do I
+ desire to have any, in which a clergyman is unfitting confidant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At your pleasure,&rdquo; replied Sir Jasper. &ldquo;The confidence, for aught I know,
+ may be well enough chosen, for your divines (always under your favour)
+ have proved no enemies to such matters as I am to treat with you upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Proceed, sir,&rdquo; answered Mr. Bridgenorth gravely; &ldquo;and I pray you to be
+ seated, unless it is rather your pleasure to stand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must, in the first place, deliver myself of my small commission,&rdquo;
+ answered Sir Jasper, drawing himself up; &ldquo;and it will be after I have seen
+ the reception thereof, that I shall know whether I am, or am not, to sit
+ down at Moultrassie Hall.&mdash;Sir Geoffrey Peveril, Master Bridgenorth,
+ hath carefully considered with himself the unhappy circumstances which at
+ present separate you as neighbours. And he remembers many passages in
+ former times&mdash;I speak his very words&mdash;which incline him to do
+ all that can possibly consist with his honour, to wipe out unkindness
+ between you; and for this desirable object, he is willing to condescend in
+ a degree, which, as you could not have expected, it will no doubt give you
+ great pleasure to learn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Allow me to say, Sir Jasper,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;that this is
+ unnecessary. I have made no complaints of Sir Geoffrey&mdash;I have
+ required no submission from him&mdash;I am about to leave this country;
+ and what affairs we may have together, can be as well settled by others as
+ by ourselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a word,&rdquo; said the divine, &ldquo;the worthy Major Bridgenorth hath had
+ enough of trafficking with the ungodly, and will no longer, on any terms,
+ consort with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gentleman both,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper, with imperturbable politeness, bowing,
+ &ldquo;you greatly mistake the tenor of my commission, which you will do as well
+ to hear out, before making any reply to it.&mdash;I think, Master
+ Bridgenorth, you cannot but remember your letter to the Lady Peveril, of
+ which I have here a rough copy, in which you complain of the hard measure
+ which you have received at Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s hand, and, in particular, when
+ he pulled you from your horse at or near Hartley-nick. Now, Sir Geoffrey
+ thinks so well of you, as to believe, that, were it not for the wide
+ difference betwixt his descent and rank and your own, you would have
+ sought to bring this matter to a gentleman-like arbitrament, as the only
+ mode whereby your stain may be honourably wiped away. Wherefore, in this
+ slight note, he gives you, in his generosity, the offer of what you, in
+ your modesty (for to nothing else does he impute your acquiescence), have
+ declined to demand of him. And withal, I bring you the measure of his
+ weapon; and when you have accepted the cartel which I now offer you, I
+ shall be ready to settle the time, place, and other circumstances of your
+ meeting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said Solsgrace, with a solemn voice, &ldquo;should the Author of Evil
+ tempt my friend to accept of so bloodthirsty a proposal, would be the
+ first to pronounce against him sentence of the greater excommunication.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not you whom I address, reverend sir,&rdquo; replied the envoy; &ldquo;your
+ interest, not unnaturally, may determine you to be more anxious about your
+ patron&rsquo;s life than about his honour. I must know, from himself, to which
+ <i>he</i> is disposed to give the preference.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and with a graceful bow, he again tendered the challenge to
+ Major Bridgenorth. There was obviously a struggle in that gentleman&rsquo;s
+ bosom, between the suggestions of human honour and those of religious
+ principle; but the latter prevailed. He calmly waived receiving the paper
+ which Sir Jasper offered to him, and spoke to the following purpose:&mdash;&ldquo;It
+ may not be known to you, Sir Jasper, that since the general pouring out of
+ Christian light upon this kingdom, many solid men have been led to doubt
+ whether the shedding human blood by the hand of a fellow-creature be in <i>any</i>
+ respect justifiable. And although this rule appears to me to be scarcely
+ applicable to our state in this stage of trial, seeing that such
+ non-resistance, if general, would surrender our civil and religious rights
+ into the hands of whatsoever daring tyrants might usurp the same; yet I
+ am, and have been, inclined to limit the use of carnal arms to the case of
+ necessary self-defence, whether such regards our own person, or the
+ protection of our country against invasion; or of our rights of property,
+ and the freedom of our laws and of our conscience, against usurping power.
+ And as I have never shown myself unwilling to draw my sword in any of the
+ latter causes, so you shall excuse my suffering it now to remain in the
+ scabbard, when, having sustained a grievous injury, the man who inflicted
+ it summons me to combat, either upon an idle punctilio, or, as is more
+ likely, in mere bravado.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard you with patience,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper; &ldquo;and now, Master
+ Bridgenorth, take it not amiss, if I beseech you to bethink yourself
+ better on this matter. I vow to Heaven, sir, that your honour lies
+ a-bleeding; and that in condescending to afford you this fair meeting, and
+ thereby giving you some chance to stop its wounds, Sir Geoffrey has been
+ moved by a tender sense of your condition, and an earnest wish to redeem
+ your dishonour. And it will be but the crossing of your blade with his
+ honoured sword for the space of some few minutes, and you will either live
+ or die a noble and honoured gentleman. Besides, that the Knight&rsquo;s
+ exquisite skill of fence may enable him, as his good-nature will incline
+ him, to disarm you with some flesh wound, little to the damage of your
+ person, and greatly to the benefit of your reputation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The tender mercies of the wicked,&rdquo; said Master Solsgrace emphatically, by
+ way of commenting on this speech, which Sir Jasper had uttered very
+ pathetically, &ldquo;are cruel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray to have no farther interruption from your reverence,&rdquo; said Sir
+ Jasper; &ldquo;especially as I think this affair very little concerns you; and I
+ entreat that you permit me to discharge myself regularly of my commission
+ from my worthy friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he took his sheathed rapier from his belt, and passing the
+ point through the silk thread which secured the letter, he once more, and
+ literally at sword point, gracefully tendered it to Major Bridgenorth who
+ again waved it aside, though colouring deeply at the same time, as if he
+ was putting a marked constraint upon himself&mdash;drew back, and made Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne a deep bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since it is to be thus,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper, &ldquo;I must myself do violence to
+ the seal of Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s letter, and read it to you, that I may fully
+ acquit myself of the charge entrusted to me, and make you, Master
+ Bridgenorth, equally aware of the generous intentions of Sir Geoffrey on
+ your behalf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth, &ldquo;the contents of the letter be to no other
+ purpose than you have intimated, methinks farther ceremony is unnecessary
+ on this occasion, as I have already taken my course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nevertheless,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper, breaking open the letter, &ldquo;it is fitting
+ that I read to you the letter of my worshipful friend.&rdquo; And he read
+ accordingly as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;<i>For the worthy hands of Ralph Bridgenorth, Esquire, of
+ Moultrassie Hall&mdash;These:</i>
+
+ &ldquo;By the honoured conveyance of the Worshipful Sir Jasper
+ Cranbourne, Knight, of Long-Mallington.
+
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&mdash;We have been given to understand by your
+ letter to our loving wife, Dame Margaret Peveril, that you hold
+ hard construction of certain passages betwixt you and I, of a late
+ date, as if your honour should have been, in some sort, prejudiced
+ by what then took place. And although you have not thought it fit
+ to have direct recourse to me, to request such satisfaction as is
+ due from one gentleman of condition to another, yet I am fully
+ minded that this proceeds only from modesty, arising out of the
+ distinction of our degree, and from no lack of that courage which
+ you have heretofore displayed, I would I could say in a good
+ cause. Wherefore I am purposed to give you, by my friend, Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne, a meeting, for the sake of doing that which
+ doubtless you entirely long for. Sir Jasper will deliver you the
+ length of my weapon, and appoint circumstances and an hour for our
+ meeting; which, whether early or late&mdash;on foot or horseback&mdash;with
+ rapier or backsword&mdash;I refer to yourself, with all the other
+ privileges of a challenged person; only desiring, that if you
+ decline to match my weapon, you will send me forthwith the length
+ and breadth of your own. And nothing doubting that the issue of
+ this meeting must needs be to end, in one way or other, all
+ unkindness betwixt two near neighbours,&mdash;I remain, your humble
+ servant to command,
+ &ldquo;Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Given from my poor house of Martindale Castle, this same ____ of
+ ____, sixteen hundred and sixty.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bear back my respects to Sir Geoffrey Peveril,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth.
+ &ldquo;According to his light, his meaning may be fair towards me; but tell him
+ that our quarrel had its rise in his own wilful aggression towards me; and
+ that though I wish to be in charity with all mankind, I am not so wedded
+ to his friendship as to break the laws of God, and run the risk of
+ suffering or committing murder, in order to regain it. And for you, sir,
+ methinks your advanced years and past misfortunes might teach you the
+ folly of coming on such idle errands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall do your message, Master Ralph Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Sir Jasper; &ldquo;and
+ shall then endeavour to forget your name, as a sound unfit to be
+ pronounced, or even remembered, by a man of honour. In the meanwhile, in
+ return for your uncivil advice, be pleased to accept of mine; namely, that
+ as your religion prevents your giving a gentleman satisfaction, it ought
+ to make you very cautious of offering him provocation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and with a look of haughty scorn, first at the Major, and then
+ at the divine, the envoy of Sir Geoffrey put his hat on his head, replaced
+ his rapier in its belt, and left the apartment. In a few minutes
+ afterwards, the tread of his horse died away at a considerable distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth had held his hand upon his brow ever since his departure, and
+ a tear of anger and shame was on his face as he raised it when the sound
+ was heard no more. &ldquo;He carries this answer to Martindale Castle,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;Men will hereafter think of me as a whipped, beaten, dishonourable
+ fellow, whom every one may baffle and insult at their pleasure. It is well
+ I am leaving the house of my father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master Solsgrace approached his friend with much sympathy, and grasped him
+ by the hand. &ldquo;Noble brother,&rdquo; he said, with unwonted kindness of manner,
+ &ldquo;though a man of peace, I can judge what this sacrifice hath cost to thy
+ manly spirit. But God will not have from us an imperfect obedience. We
+ must not, like Ananias and Sapphira, reserve behind some darling lust,
+ some favourite sin, while we pretend to make sacrifice of our worldly
+ affections. What avails it to say that we have but secreted a little
+ matter, if the slightest remnant of the accursed thing remain hidden in
+ our tent? Would it be a defence in thy prayers to say, I have not murdered
+ this man for the lucre of gain, like a robber&mdash;nor for the
+ acquisition of power, like a tyrant,&mdash;nor for the gratification of
+ revenge, like a darkened savage; but because the imperious voice of
+ worldly honour said, &lsquo;Go forth&mdash;kill or be killed&mdash;is it not I
+ that have sent thee?&rsquo; Bethink thee, my worthy friend, how thou couldst
+ frame such a vindication in thy prayers; and if thou art forced to tremble
+ at the blasphemy of such an excuse, remember in thy prayers the thanks due
+ to Heaven, which enabled thee to resist the strong temptation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reverend and dear friend,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I feel that you speak
+ the truth. Bitterer, indeed, and harder, to the old Adam, is the text
+ which ordains him to suffer shame, than that which bids him to do
+ valiantly for the truth. But happy am I that my path through the
+ wilderness of this world will, for some space at least, be along with one,
+ whose zeal and friendship are so active to support me when I am fainting
+ in the way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall thus communicated together upon
+ the purport of Sir Jasper Cranbourne&rsquo;s visit, that worthy knight greatly
+ excited the surprise of Sir Geoffrey Peveril, by reporting the manner in
+ which his embassy had been received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I took him for a man of other metal,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey;&mdash;&ldquo;nay, I
+ would have sworn it, had any one asked my testimony. But there is no
+ making a silken purse out of a sow&rsquo;s ear. I have done a folly for him that
+ I will never do for another: and that is, to think a Presbyterian would
+ fight without his preacher&rsquo;s permission. Give them a two hours&rsquo; sermon,
+ and let them howl a psalm to a tune that is worse than the cries of a
+ flogged hound, and the villains will lay on like threshers; but for a
+ calm, cool, gentleman-like turn upon the sod, hand to hand, in a
+ neighbourly way, they have not honour enough to undertake it. But enough
+ of our crop-eared cur of a neighbour.&mdash;Sir Jasper, you will tarry
+ with us to dine, and see how Dame Margaret&rsquo;s kitchen smokes; and after
+ dinner I will show you a long-winged falcon fly. She is not mine, but the
+ Countess&rsquo;s, who brought her from London on her fist almost the whole way,
+ for all the haste she was in, and left her with me to keep the perch for a
+ season.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This match was soon arranged, and Dame Margaret overheard the good
+ Knight&rsquo;s resentment mutter itself off, with those feelings with which we
+ listen to the last growling of the thunderstorm; which, as the black cloud
+ sinks beneath the hill, at once assures us that there has been danger, and
+ that the peril is over. She could not, indeed, but marvel in her own mind
+ at the singular path of reconciliation with his neighbour which her
+ husband had, with so much confidence, and in the actual sincerity of his
+ goodwill to Mr. Bridgenorth, attempted to open; and she blessed God
+ internally that it had not terminated in bloodshed. But these reflections
+ she locked carefully within her own bosom, well knowing that they referred
+ to subjects in which the Knight of the Peak would neither permit his
+ sagacity to be called in question, nor his will to be controlled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The progress of the history hath hitherto been slow; but after this period
+ so little matter worth of mark occurred at Martindale, that we must hurry
+ over hastily the transactions of several years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Cleopatra.</i>&mdash;Give me to drink mandragora,
+ That I may sleep away this gap of time.
+ &mdash;Antony and Cleopatra.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There passed, as we hinted at the conclusion of the last chapter, four or
+ five years after the period we have dilated upon; the events of which
+ scarcely require to be discussed, so far as our present purpose is
+ concerned, in as many lines. The Knight and his Lady continued to reside
+ at their Castle&mdash;she, with prudence and with patience, endeavouring
+ to repair the damages which the Civil Wars had inflicted upon their
+ fortune; and murmuring a little when her plans of economy were interrupted
+ by the liberal hospitality, which was her husband&rsquo;s principal expense, and
+ to which he was attached, not only from his own English heartiness of
+ disposition, but from ideas of maintaining the dignity of his ancestry&mdash;no
+ less remarkable, according to the tradition of their buttery, kitchen, and
+ cellar, for the fat beeves which they roasted, and the mighty ale which
+ they brewed, than for their extensive estates, and the number of their
+ retainers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world, however, upon the whole, went happily and easily with the
+ worthy couple. Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s debt to his neighbour Bridgenorth continued,
+ it is true, unabated; but he was the only creditor upon the Martindale
+ estate&mdash;all others being paid off. It would have been most desirable
+ that this encumbrance also should be cleared, and it was the great object
+ of Dame Margaret&rsquo;s economy to effect the discharge; for although interest
+ was regularly settled with Master Win-the-Fight, the Chesterfield
+ attorney, yet the principal sum, which was a large one, might be called
+ for at an inconvenient time. The man, too, was gloomy, important, and
+ mysterious, and always seemed as if he was thinking upon his broken head
+ in the churchyard of Martindale-cum-Moultrassie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Margaret sometimes transacted the necessary business with him in
+ person; and when he came to the Castle on these occasions, she thought she
+ saw a malicious and disobliging expression in his manner and countenance.
+ Yet his actual conduct was not only fair, but liberal; for indulgence was
+ given, in the way of delay of payment, whenever circumstances rendered it
+ necessary to the debtor to require it. It seemed to Lady Peveril that the
+ agent, in such cases, was acting under the strict orders of his absent
+ employer, concerning whose welfare she could not help feeling a certain
+ anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after the failure of the singular negotiation for attaining peace
+ by combat, which Peveril had attempted to open with Major Bridgenorth,
+ that gentleman left his seat of Moultrassie Hall in the care of his old
+ housekeeper, and departed, no one knew whither, having in company with him
+ his daughter Alice and Mrs. Deborah Debbitch, now formally installed in
+ all the duties of a governante; to these was added the Reverend Master
+ Solsgrace. For some time public rumour persisted in asserting, that Major
+ Bridgenorth had only retreated to a distant part of the country for a
+ season, to achieve his supposed purpose of marrying Mrs. Deborah, and of
+ letting the news be cold, and the laugh of the neighbourhood be ended, ere
+ he brought her down as mistress of Moultrassie Hall. This rumour died
+ away; and it was then affirmed, that he had removed to foreign parts, to
+ ensure the continuance of health in so delicate a constitution as that of
+ little Alice. But when the Major&rsquo;s dread of Popery was remembered,
+ together with the still deeper antipathies of worthy Master Nehemiah
+ Solsgrace, it was resolved unanimously, that nothing less than what they
+ might deem a fair chance of converting the Pope would have induced the
+ parties to trust themselves within Catholic dominions. The most prevailing
+ opinion was, that they had gone to New England, the refuge then of many
+ whom too intimate concern with the affairs of the late times, or the
+ desire of enjoying uncontrolled freedom of conscience, had induced to
+ emigrate from Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril could not help entertaining a vague idea, that Bridgenorth
+ was not so distant. The extreme order in which everything was maintained
+ at Moultrassie Hall, seemed&mdash;no disparagement to the care of Dame
+ Dickens the housekeeper, and the other persons engaged&mdash;to argue,
+ that the master&rsquo;s eye was not so very far off, but that its occasional
+ inspection might be apprehended. It is true, that neither the domestics
+ nor the attorney answered any questions respecting the residence of Master
+ Bridgenorth; but there was an air of mystery about them when interrogated,
+ that seemed to argue more than met the ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About five years after Master Bridgenorth had left the country, a singular
+ incident took place. Sir Geoffrey was absent at the Chesterfield races,
+ and Lady Peveril, who was in the habit of walking around every part of the
+ neighbourhood unattended, or only accompanied by Ellesmere, or her little
+ boy, had gone down one evening upon a charitable errand to a solitary hut,
+ whose inhabitant lay sick of a fever, which was supposed to be infectious.
+ Lady Peveril never allowed apprehensions of this kind to stop &ldquo;devoted
+ charitable deeds;&rdquo; but she did not choose to expose either her son or her
+ attendant to the risk which she herself, in some confidence that she knew
+ precautions for escaping the danger, did not hesitate to incur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril had set out at a late hour in the evening, and the way proved
+ longer than she expected&mdash;several circumstances also occurred to
+ detain her at the hut of her patient. It was a broad autumn moonlight,
+ when she prepared to return homeward through the broken glades and upland
+ which divided her from the Castle. This she considered as a matter of very
+ little importance, in so quiet and sequestered a country, where the road
+ lay chiefly through her own domains, especially as she had a lad about
+ fifteen years old, the son of her patient, to escort her on the way. The
+ distance was better than two miles, but might be considerably abridged by
+ passing through an avenue belonging to the estate of Moultrassie Hall,
+ which she had avoided as she came, not from the ridiculous rumours which
+ pronounced it to be haunted, but because her husband was much displeased
+ when any attempt was made to render the walks of the Castle and Hall
+ common to the inhabitants of both. The good lady, in consideration,
+ perhaps, of extensive latitude allowed to her in the more important
+ concerns of the family, made a point of never interfering with her
+ husband&rsquo;s whims or prejudices; and it is a compromise which we would
+ heartily recommend to all managing matrons of our acquaintance; for it is
+ surprising how much real power will be cheerfully resigned to the fair
+ sex, for the pleasure of being allowed to ride one&rsquo;s hobby in peace and
+ quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the present occasion, however, although the Dobby&rsquo;s Walk[*] was
+ within the inhabited domains of the Hall, the Lady Peveril determined to
+ avail herself of it, for the purpose of shortening her road home, and she
+ directed her steps accordingly. But when the peasant-boy, her companion,
+ who had hitherto followed her, whistling cheerily, with a hedge-bill in
+ his hand, and his hat on one side, perceived that she turned to the stile
+ which entered to the Dobby&rsquo;s Walk, he showed symptoms of great fear, and
+ at length coming to the lady&rsquo;s side, petitioned her, in a whimpering tone,&mdash;&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+ ye now&mdash;don&rsquo;t ye now, my lady, don&rsquo;t ye go yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Dobby, an old English name for goblin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, observing that his teeth chattered in his head, and that his
+ whole person exhibited great signs of terror, began to recollect the
+ report, that the first Squire of Moultrassie, the brewer of Chesterfield,
+ who had brought the estate, and then died of melancholy for lack of
+ something to do (and, as was said, not without suspicions of suicide), was
+ supposed to walk in this sequestered avenue, accompanied by a large
+ headless mastiff, which, when he was alive, was a particular favourite of
+ the ex-brewer. To have expected any protection from her escort, in the
+ condition to which superstitious fear had reduced him, would have been
+ truly a hopeless trust; and Lady Peveril, who was not apprehensive of any
+ danger, thought there would be great cruelty in dragging the cowardly boy
+ into a scene which he regarded with so much apprehension. She gave him,
+ therefore, a silver piece, and permitted him to return. The latter boon
+ seemed even more acceptable than the first; for ere she could return the
+ purse into her pocket, she heard the wooden clogs of her bold convoy in
+ full retreat, by the way from whence they came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smiling within herself at the fear she esteemed so ludicrous, Lady Peveril
+ ascended the stile, and was soon hidden from the broad light of the
+ moonbeams, by the numerous and entangled boughs of the huge elms, which,
+ meeting from either side, totally overarched the old avenue. The scene was
+ calculated to excite solemn thoughts; and the distant glimmer of a light
+ from one of the numerous casements in the front of Moultrassie Hall, which
+ lay at some distance, was calculated to make them even melancholy. She
+ thought of the fate of that family&mdash;of the deceased Mrs. Bridgenorth,
+ with whom she had often walked in this very avenue, and who, though a
+ woman of no high parts or accomplishments, had always testified the
+ deepest respect, and the most earnest gratitude, for such notice as she
+ had shown to her. She thought of her blighted hopes&mdash;her premature
+ death&mdash;the despair of her self-banished husband&mdash;the uncertain
+ fate of their orphan child, for whom she felt, even at this distance of
+ time, some touch of a mother&rsquo;s affection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon such sad subjects her thoughts were turned, when, just as she
+ attained the middle of the avenue, the imperfect and checkered light which
+ found its way through the silvan archway, showed her something which
+ resembled the figure of a man. Lady Peveril paused a moment, but instantly
+ advanced;&mdash;her bosom, perhaps, gave one startled throb, as a debt to
+ the superstitious belief of the times, but she instantly repelled the
+ thought of supernatural appearances. From those that were merely mortal,
+ she had nothing to fear. A marauder on the game was the worst character
+ whom she was likely to encounter; and he would be sure to hide himself
+ from her observation. She advanced, accordingly, steadily; and, as she did
+ so, had the satisfaction to observe that the figure, as she expected, gave
+ place to her, and glided away amongst the trees on the left-hand side of
+ the avenue. As she passed the spot on which the form had been so lately
+ visible, and bethought herself that this wanderer of the night might, nay
+ must, be in her vicinity, her resolution could not prevent her mending her
+ pace, and that with so little precaution, that, stumbling over the limb of
+ a tree, which, twisted off by a late tempest, still lay in the avenue, she
+ fell, and, as she fell, screamed aloud. A strong hand in a moment
+ afterwards added to her fears by assisting her to rise, and a voice, to
+ whose accents she was not a stranger, though they had been long unheard,
+ said, &ldquo;Is it not you, Lady Peveril?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is I,&rdquo; said she, commanding her astonishment and fear; &ldquo;and if my ear
+ deceive me not, I speak to Master Bridgenorth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was that man,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;while oppression left me a name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke nothing more, but continued to walk beside her for a minute or
+ two in silence. She felt her situation embarrassing; and to divest it of
+ that feeling, as well as out of real interest in the question, she asked
+ him, &ldquo;How her god-daughter Alice now was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of god-daughter, madam,&rdquo; answered Major Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I know nothing;
+ that being one of the names which have been introduced, to the corruption
+ and pollution of God&rsquo;s ordinances. The infant who owed to your ladyship
+ (so called) her escape from disease and death, is a healthy and thriving
+ girl, as I am given to understand by those in whose charge she is lodged,
+ for I have not lately seen her. And it is even the recollection of these
+ passages, which in a manner impelled me, alarmed also by your fall, to
+ offer myself to you at this time and mode, which in other respects is no
+ way consistent with my present safety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With your safety, Master Bridgenorth?&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril; &ldquo;surely, I
+ could never have thought that it was in danger!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have some news, then, yet to learn, madam,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth;
+ &ldquo;but you will hear in the course of tomorrow, reasons why I dare not
+ appear openly in the neighbourhood of my own property, and wherefore there
+ is small judgment in committing the knowledge of my present residence to
+ any one connected with Martindale Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;you were in former times prudent and
+ cautious&mdash;I hope you have been misled by no hasty impression&mdash;by
+ no rash scheme&mdash;I hope&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon my interrupting you, madam,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;I have indeed been
+ changed&mdash;ay, my very heart within me hath been changed. In the times
+ to which your ladyship (so called) thinks proper to refer, I was a man of
+ this world&mdash;bestowing on it all my thoughts&mdash;all my actions,
+ save formal observances&mdash;little deeming what was the duty of a
+ Christian man, and how far his self-denial ought to extend&mdash;even unto
+ his giving all as if he gave nothing. Hence I thought chiefly on carnal
+ things&mdash;on the adding of field to field, and wealth to wealth&mdash;of
+ balancing between party and party&mdash;securing a friend here, without
+ losing a friend there&mdash;But Heaven smote me for my apostasy, the
+ rather that I abused the name of religion, as a self-seeker, and a most
+ blinded and carnal will-worshipper&mdash;But I thank Him who hath at
+ length brought me out of Egypt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our day&mdash;although we have many instances of enthusiasm among us&mdash;we
+ might still suspect one who avowed it thus suddenly and broadly of
+ hypocrisy, or of insanity; but according to the fashion of the times, such
+ opinions as those which Bridgenorth expressed were openly pleaded, as the
+ ruling motives of men&rsquo;s actions. The sagacious Vane&mdash;the brave and
+ skilful Harrison&mdash;were men who acted avowedly under the influence of
+ such. Lady Peveril, therefore, was more grieved than surprised at the
+ language she heard Major Bridgenorth use, and reasonably concluded that
+ the society and circumstances in which he might lately have been engaged,
+ had blown into a flame the spark of eccentricity which always smouldered
+ in his bosom. This was the more probable, considering that he was
+ melancholy by constitution and descent&mdash;that he had been unfortunate
+ in several particulars&mdash;and that no passion is more easily nursed by
+ indulgence, than the species of enthusiasm of which he now showed tokens.
+ She therefore answered him by calmly hoping, &ldquo;That the expression of his
+ sentiments had not involved him in suspicion or in danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In suspicion, madam?&rdquo; answered the Major;&mdash;&ldquo;for I cannot forbear
+ giving to you, such is the strength of habit, one of those idle titles by
+ which we poor potsherds are wont, in our pride, to denominate each other&mdash;I
+ walk not only in suspicion, but in that degree of danger, that, were your
+ husband to meet me at this instant&mdash;me, a native Englishman, treading
+ on my own lands&mdash;I have no doubt he would do his best to offer me to
+ the Moloch of Roman superstition, who now rages abroad for victims among
+ God&rsquo;s people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You surprise me by your language, Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the lady, who
+ now felt rather anxious to be relieved from his company, and with that
+ purpose walked on somewhat hastily. He mended his pace, however, and kept
+ close by her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know you not,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that Satan hath come down upon earth with great
+ wrath, because his time is short? The next heir to the crown is an avowed
+ Papist; and who dare assert, save sycophants and time-servers, that he who
+ wears it is not equally ready to stoop to Rome, were he not kept in awe by
+ a few noble spirits in the Commons&rsquo; House? You believe not this&mdash;yet
+ in my solitary and midnight walks, when I thought on your kindness to the
+ dead and to the living, it was my prayer that I might have the means
+ granted to warn you&mdash;and lo! Heaven hath heard me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I was while in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity,
+ it signifies not to recall,&rdquo; answered he. &ldquo;I was then like to Gallio, who
+ cared for none of these things. I doted on creature comforts&mdash;I clung
+ to worldly honour and repute&mdash;my thoughts were earthward&mdash;or
+ those I turned to Heaven were cold, formal, pharisaical meditations&mdash;I
+ brought nothing to the altar save straw and stubble. Heaven saw need to
+ chastise me in love&mdash;I was stript of all I clung to on earth&mdash;my
+ worldly honour was torn from me&mdash;I went forth an exile from the home
+ of my fathers, a deprived and desolate man&mdash;a baffled, and beaten,
+ and dishonoured man. But who shall find out the ways of Providence? Such
+ were the means by which I was chosen forth as a champion for the truth&mdash;holding
+ my life as nothing, if thereby that may be advanced. But this was not what
+ I wished to speak of. Thou hast saved the earthly life of my child&mdash;let
+ me save the eternal welfare of yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was silent. They were now approaching the point where the
+ avenue terminated in a communication with a public road, or rather
+ pathway, running through an unenclosed common field; this the lady had to
+ prosecute for a little way, until a turn of the path gave her admittance
+ into the Park of Martindale. She now felt sincerely anxious to be in the
+ open moonshine, and avoided reply to Bridgenorth that she might make the
+ more haste. But as they reached the junction of the avenue and the public
+ road, he laid his hand on her arm, and commanded rather than requested her
+ to stop. She obeyed. He pointed to a huge oak, of the largest size, which
+ grew on the summit of a knoll in the open ground which terminated the
+ avenue, and was exactly so placed as to serve for a termination to the
+ vista. The moonshine without the avenue was so strong, that, amidst the
+ flood of light which it poured on the venerable tree, they could easily
+ discover, from the shattered state of the boughs on one side, that it had
+ suffered damage from lightning. &ldquo;Remember you,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when we last
+ looked together on that tree? I had ridden from London, and brought with
+ me a protection from the committee for your husband; and as I passed the
+ spot&mdash;here on this spot where we now stand, you stood with my lost
+ Alice&mdash;two&mdash;the last two of my beloved infants gambolled before
+ you. I leaped from my horse&mdash;to her I was a husband&mdash;to those a
+ father&mdash;to you a welcome and revered protector&mdash;What am I now to
+ any one?&rdquo; He pressed his hand on his brow, and groaned in agony of spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not in the Lady Peveril&rsquo;s nature to hear sorrow without an attempt
+ at consolation. &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I blame no man&rsquo;s creed,
+ while I believe and follow my own; and I rejoice that in yours you have
+ sought consolation for temporal afflictions. But does not every Christian
+ creed teach us alike, that affliction should soften our heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, woman,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth sternly, &ldquo;as the lightning which shattered
+ yonder oak hath softened its trunk. No; the seared wood is the fitter for
+ the use of the workmen&mdash;the hardened and the dried-up heart is that
+ which can best bear the task imposed by these dismal times. God and man
+ will no longer endure the unbridled profligacy of the dissolute&mdash;the
+ scoffing of the profane&mdash;the contempt of the divine laws&mdash;the
+ infraction of human rights. The times demand righters and avengers, and
+ there will be no want of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I deny not the existence of much evil,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, compelling
+ herself to answer, and beginning at the same time to walk forward; &ldquo;and
+ from hearsay, though not, I thank Heaven, from observation, I am convinced
+ of the wild debauchery of the times. But let us trust it may be corrected
+ without such violent remedies as you hint at. Surely the ruin of a second
+ civil war&mdash;though I trust your thoughts go not that dreadful length&mdash;were
+ at best a desperate alternative.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sharp, but sure,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth. &ldquo;The blood of the Paschal lamb
+ chased away the destroying angel&mdash;the sacrifices offered on the
+ threshing-floor of Araunah, stayed the pestilence. Fire and sword are
+ severe remedies, but they pure and purify.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;wise and moderate in your
+ youth, can you have adopted in your advanced life the thoughts and
+ language of those whom you yourself beheld drive themselves and the nation
+ to the brink of ruin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not what I then was&mdash;you know not what I now am,&rdquo; he replied,
+ and suddenly broke off; for they even then came forth into the open light,
+ and it seemed as if, feeling himself under the lady&rsquo;s eye, he was disposed
+ to soften his tone and his language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first distinct view which she had of his person, she was aware that
+ he was armed with a short sword, a poniard, and pistols at his belt&mdash;precautions
+ very unusual for a man who formerly had seldom, and only on days of
+ ceremony, carried a walking rapier, though such was the habitual and
+ constant practice of gentlemen of his station in life. There seemed also
+ something of more stern determination than usual in his air, which indeed
+ had always been rather sullen than affable; and ere she could repress the
+ sentiment, she could not help saying, &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth, you are indeed
+ changed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see but the outward man,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;the change within is yet
+ deeper. But it was not of myself that I desired to talk&mdash;I have
+ already said, that as you have preserved my child from the darkness of the
+ grave, I would willingly preserve yours from that more utter darkness,
+ which, I fear, hath involved the path and walks of his father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must not hear this of Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Lady Peveril; &ldquo;I must bid
+ you farewell for the present; and when we again meet at a more suitable
+ time, I will at least listen to your advice concerning Julian, although I
+ should not perhaps incline to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That more suitable time may never come,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Time
+ wanes, eternity draws nigh. Hearken! it is said to be your purpose to send
+ the young Julian to be bred up in yonder bloody island, under the hand of
+ your kinswoman, that cruel murderess, by whom was done to death a man more
+ worthy of vital existence than any that she can boast among her vaunted
+ ancestry. These are current tidings&mdash;Are they true?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not blame you, Master Bridgenorth, for thinking harshly of my cousin
+ of Derby,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril; &ldquo;nor do I altogether vindicate the rash
+ action of which she hath been guilty. Nevertheless, in her habitation, it
+ is my husband&rsquo;s opinion and my own, that Julian may be trained in the
+ studies and accomplishments becoming his rank, along with the young Earl
+ of Derby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Under the curse of God, and the blessing of the Pope of Rome,&rdquo; said
+ Bridgenorth. &ldquo;You, lady, so quick-sighted in matters of earthly prudence,
+ are you blind to the gigantic pace at which Rome is moving to regain this
+ country, once the richest gem in her usurped tiara? The old are seduced by
+ gold&mdash;the youth by pleasure&mdash;the weak by flattery&mdash;cowards
+ by fear&mdash;and the courageous by ambition. A thousand baits for each
+ taste, and each bait concealing the same deadly hook.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am well aware, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;that my
+ kinswoman is a Catholic;[*] but her son is educated in the Church of
+ England&rsquo;s principles, agreeably to the command of her deceased husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] I have elsewhere noticed that this is a deviation from
+ the truth Charlotte, Countess of Derby, was a Huguenot.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it likely,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;that she, who fears not shedding
+ the blood of the righteous, whether on the field or scaffold, will regard
+ the sanction of her promise when her religion bids her break it? Or, if
+ she does, what shall your son be the better, if he remain in the mire of
+ his father? What are your Episcopal tenets but mere Popery? save that ye
+ have chosen a temporal tyrant for your Pope, and substitute a mangled mass
+ in English for that which your predecessors pronounced in Latin.&mdash;But
+ why speak I of these things to one who hath ears, indeed, and eyes, yet
+ cannot see, listen to, or understand what is alone worthy to be heard,
+ seen, and known? Pity that what hath been wrought so fair and exquisite in
+ form and disposition, should be yet blind, deaf, and ignorant, like the
+ things which perish!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall not agree on these subjects, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the lady,
+ anxious still to escape from this strange conference, though scarce
+ knowing what to apprehend; &ldquo;once more, I must bid you farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay yet an instant,&rdquo; he said, again laying his hand on her arm; &ldquo;I would
+ stop you if I saw you rushing on the brink of an actual precipice&mdash;let
+ me prevent you from a danger still greater. How shall I work upon your
+ unbelieving mind? Shall I tell you that the debt of bloodshed yet remains
+ a debt to be paid by the bloody house of Derby? And wilt thou send thy son
+ to be among those from whom it shall be exacted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wish to alarm me in vain, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; answered the lady;
+ &ldquo;what penalty can be exacted from the Countess, for an action, which I
+ have already called a rash one, has been long since levied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You deceive yourself,&rdquo; retorted he sternly. &ldquo;Think you a paltry sum of
+ money, given to be wasted on the debaucheries of Charles, can atone for
+ the death of such a man as Christian&mdash;a man precious alike to heaven
+ and to earth? Not on such terms is the blood of the righteous to be poured
+ forth! Every hour&rsquo;s delay is numbered down as adding interest to the
+ grievous debt, which will one day be required from that blood-thirsty
+ woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the distant tread of horses was heard on the road on which
+ they held this singular dialogue. Bridgenorth listened a moment, and then
+ said, &ldquo;Forget that you have seen me&mdash;name not my name to your nearest
+ or dearest&mdash;lock my counsel in your breast&mdash;profit by it, and it
+ shall be well with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he turned from her, and plunging through a gap in the fence,
+ regained the cover of his own wood, along which the path still led.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise of horses advancing at full trot now came nearer; and Lady
+ Peveril was aware of several riders, whose forms rose indistinctly on the
+ summit of the rising ground behind her. She became also visible to them;
+ and one or two of the foremost made towards her at increased speed,
+ challenging her as they advanced with the cry of &ldquo;Stand! Who goes there?&rdquo;
+ The foremost who came up, however, exclaimed, &ldquo;Mercy on us, if it be not
+ my lady!&rdquo; and Lady Peveril, at the same moment, recognised one of her own
+ servants. Her husband rode up immediately afterwards, with, &ldquo;How now, Dame
+ Margaret? What makes you abroad so far from home and at an hour so late?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril mentioned her visit at the cottage, but did not think it
+ necessary to say aught of having seen Major Bridgenorth; afraid, it may
+ be, that her husband might be displeased with that incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charity is a fine thing and a fair,&rdquo; answered Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;but I must
+ tell you, you do ill, dame, to wander about the country like a
+ quacksalver, at the call of every old woman who has a colic-fit; and at
+ this time of night especially, and when the land is so unsettled besides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sorry to hear that it so,&rdquo; said the lady. &ldquo;I had heard no such
+ news.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;News?&rdquo; repeated Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;why, here has a new plot broken out among
+ the Roundheads, worse than Venner&rsquo;s by a butt&rsquo;s length;[*] and who should
+ be so deep in it as our old neighbour Bridgenorth? There is search for him
+ everywhere; and I promise you if he is found, he is like to pay old
+ scores.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The celebrated insurrection of the Anabaptists and Fifth Monarchy
+ men in London, in the year 1661.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I am sure, I trust he will not be found,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you so?&rdquo; replied Sir Geoffrey. &ldquo;Now I, on my part hope that he will;
+ and it shall not be my fault if he be not; for which effect I will
+ presently ride down to Moultrassie, and make strict search, according to
+ my duty; there shall neither rebel nor traitor earth so near Martindale
+ Castle, that I will assure them. And you, my lady, be pleased for once to
+ dispense with a pillion, and get up, as you have done before, behind
+ Saunders, who shall convey you safe home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady obeyed in silence; indeed she did not dare to trust her voice in
+ an attempt to reply, so much was she disconcerted with the intelligence
+ she had just heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rode behind the groom to the Castle, where she awaited in great
+ anxiety the return of her husband. He came back at length; but to her
+ great relief, without any prisoner. He then explained more fully than his
+ haste had before permitted, that an express had come down to Chesterfield,
+ with news from Court of a proposed insurrection amongst the old
+ Commonwealth men, especially those who had served in the army; and that
+ Bridgenorth, said to be lurking in Derbyshire, was one of the principal
+ conspirators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After some time, this report of a conspiracy seemed to die away like many
+ others of that period. The warrants were recalled, but nothing more was
+ seen or heard of Major Bridgenorth; although it is probable he might
+ safely enough have shown himself as openly as many did who lay under the
+ same circumstances of suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time also, Lady Peveril, with many tears, took a temporary
+ leave of her son Julian, who was sent, as had long been intended, for the
+ purpose of sharing the education of the young Earl of Derby. Although the
+ boding words of Bridgenorth sometimes occurred to Lady Peveril&rsquo;s mind, she
+ did not suffer them to weigh with her in opposition to the advantages
+ which the patronage of the Countess of Derby secured to her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plan seemed to be in every respect successful; and when, from time to
+ time, Julian visited the house of his father, Lady Peveril had the
+ satisfaction to see him, on every occasion, improved in person and in
+ manner, as well as ardent in the pursuit of more solid acquirements. In
+ process of time he became a gallant and accomplished youth, and travelled
+ for some time upon the continent with the young Earl. This was the more
+ especially necessary for the enlarging of their acquaintance with the
+ world; because the Countess had never appeared in London, or at the Court
+ of King Charles, since her flight to the Isle of Man in 1660; but had
+ resided in solitary and aristocratic state, alternately on her estates in
+ England and in that island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had given to the education of both the young men, otherwise as
+ excellent as the best teachers could render it, something of a narrow and
+ restricted character; but though the disposition of the young Earl was
+ lighter and more volatile than that of Julian, both the one and the other
+ had profited, in a considerable degree, by the opportunities afforded
+ them. It was Lady Derby&rsquo;s strict injunction to her son, now returning from
+ the continent, that he should not appear at the Court of Charles. But
+ having been for some time of age, he did not think it absolutely necessary
+ to obey her in this particular; and had remained for some time in London,
+ partaking the pleasures of the gay Court there, with all the ardour of a
+ young man bred up in comparative seclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to reconcile the Countess to this transgression of her authority
+ (for he continued to entertain for her the profound respect in which he
+ had been educated), Lord Derby agreed to make a long sojourn with her in
+ her favourite island, which he abandoned almost entirely to her
+ management.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had spent at Martindale Castle a good deal of the time
+ which his friend had bestowed in London; and at the period to which,
+ passing over many years, our story has arrived, as it were, <i>per saltum</i>,
+ they were both living as the Countess&rsquo;s guests, in the Castle of Rushin,
+ in the venerable kingdom of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mona&mdash;long hid from those who roam the main.
+ &mdash;COLLINS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Isle of Man, in the middle of the seventeenth century, was very
+ different, as a place of residence, from what it is now. Men had not then
+ discovered its merit as a place of occasional refuge from the storms of
+ life, and the society to be there met with was of a very uniform tenor.
+ There were no smart fellows, whom fortune had tumbled from the seat of
+ their barouches&mdash;no plucked pigeons or winged rooks&mdash;no
+ disappointed speculators&mdash;no ruined miners&mdash;in short, no one
+ worth talking to. The society of the island was limited to the natives
+ themselves, and a few merchants, who lived by contraband trade. The
+ amusements were rare and monotonous, and the mercurial young Earl was soon
+ heartily tired of his dominions. The islanders, also, become too wise for
+ happiness, had lost relish for the harmless and somewhat childish sports
+ in which their simple ancestors had indulged themselves. May was no longer
+ ushered in by the imaginary contest between the Queen of returning winter
+ and advancing spring; the listeners no longer sympathised with the lively
+ music of the followers of the one, or the discordant sounds with which the
+ other asserted a more noisy claim to attention. Christmas, too, closed,
+ and the steeples no longer jangled forth a dissonant peal. The wren, to
+ seek for which used to be the sport dedicated to the holytide, was left
+ unpursued and unslain. Party spirit had come among these simple people,
+ and destroyed their good humour, while it left them their ignorance. Even
+ the races, a sport generally interesting to people of all ranks, were no
+ longer performed, because they were no longer interesting. The gentlemen
+ were divided by feuds hitherto unknown, and each seemed to hold it scorn
+ to be pleased with the same diversions that amused those of the opposite
+ faction. The hearts of both parties revolted from the recollection of
+ former days, when all was peace among them, when the Earl of Derby, now
+ slaughtered, used to bestow the prize, and Christian, since so
+ vindictively executed, started horses to add to the amusement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was seated in the deep recess which led to a latticed window of the
+ old Castle; and, with his arms crossed, and an air of profound
+ contemplation, was surveying the long perspective of ocean, which rolled
+ its successive waves up to the foot of the rock on which the ancient pile
+ is founded. The Earl was suffering under the infliction of ennui&mdash;now
+ looking into a volume of Homer&mdash;now whistling&mdash;now swinging on
+ his chair&mdash;now traversing the room&mdash;till, at length, his
+ attention became swallowed up in admiration of the tranquillity of his
+ companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;King of Men!&rdquo; he said, repeating the favourite epithet by which Homer
+ describes Agamemnon,&mdash;&ldquo;I trust, for the old Greek&rsquo;s sake, he had a
+ merrier office than being King of Man&mdash;Most philosophical Julian,
+ will nothing rouse thee&mdash;not even a bad pun on my own royal dignity?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you would be a little more the King in Man,&rdquo; said Julian, starting
+ from his reverie, &ldquo;and then you would find more amusement in your
+ dominions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! dethrone that royal Semiramis my mother,&rdquo; said the young lord, &ldquo;who
+ has as much pleasure in playing Queen as if she were a real Sovereign?&mdash;I
+ wonder you can give me such counsel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your mother, as you well know, my dear Derby, would be delighted, did you
+ take any interest in the affairs of the island.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, truly, she would permit me to be King; but she would choose to remain
+ Viceroy over me. Why, she would only gain a subject the more, by my
+ converting my spare time, which is so very valuable to me, to the cares of
+ royalty. No, no, Julian, she thinks it power, to direct all the affairs of
+ these poor Manxmen; and, thinking it power, she finds it pleasure. I shall
+ not interfere, unless she hold a high court of justice again. I cannot
+ afford to pay another fine to my brother, King Charles&mdash;But I forget&mdash;this
+ is a sore point with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the Countess, at least,&rdquo; replied Julian; &ldquo;and I wonder you will
+ speak of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I bear no malice against the poor man&rsquo;s memory any more than
+ yourself, though I have not the same reasons for holding it in
+ veneration,&rdquo; replied the Earl of Derby; &ldquo;and yet I have some respect for
+ it too. I remember their bringing him out to die&mdash;It was the first
+ holiday I ever had in my life, and I heartily wish it had been on some
+ other account.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would rather hear you speak of anything else, my lord,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, there it goes,&rdquo; answered the Earl; &ldquo;whenever I talk of anything that
+ puts you on your mettle, and warms your blood, that runs as cold as a
+ merman&rsquo;s&mdash;to use a simile of this happy island&mdash;hey pass! you
+ press me to change the subject.&mdash;Well, what shall we talk of?&mdash;O
+ Julian, if you had not gone down to earth yourself among the castles and
+ caverns of Derbyshire, we should have had enough of delicious topics&mdash;the
+ play-houses, Julian&mdash;Both the King&rsquo;s house and the Duke&rsquo;s&mdash;Louis&rsquo;s
+ establishment is a jest to them;&mdash;and the Ring in the Park, which
+ beats the Corso at Naples&mdash;and the beauties, who beat the whole
+ world!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am very willing to hear you speak on the subject, my lord,&rdquo; answered
+ Julian; &ldquo;the less I have seen of London world myself, the more I am likely
+ to be amused by your account of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, my friend&mdash;but where to begin?&mdash;with the wit of Buckingham,
+ and Sedley, and Etherege, or with the grace of Harry Jermyn&mdash;the
+ courtesy of the Duke of Monmouth, or with the loveliness of La Belle
+ Hamilton&mdash;of the Duchess of Richmond&mdash;of Lady &mdash;&mdash;,
+ the person of Roxalana, the smart humour of Mrs. Nelly&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or what say you to the bewitching sorceries of Lady Cynthia?&rdquo; demanded
+ his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, I would have kept these to myself,&rdquo; said the Earl, &ldquo;to follow your
+ prudent example. But since you ask me, I fairly own I cannot tell what to
+ say of them; only I think of them twenty times as often as all the
+ beauties I have spoken of. And yet she is neither the twentieth part so
+ beautiful as the plainest of these Court beauties, nor so witty as the
+ dullest I have named, nor so modish&mdash;that is the great matter&mdash;as
+ the most obscure. I cannot tell what makes me dote on her, except that she
+ is a capricious as her whole sex put together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I should think a small recommendation,&rdquo; answered his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Small, do you term it,&rdquo; replied the Earl, &ldquo;and write yourself a brother
+ of the angle? Why, which like you best? to pull a dead strain on a
+ miserable gudgeon, which you draw ashore by main force, as the fellows
+ here tow in their fishing-boats&mdash;or a lively salmon, that makes your
+ rod crack, and your line whistle&mdash;plays you ten thousand mischievous
+ pranks&mdash;wearies your heart out with hopes and fears&mdash;and is only
+ laid panting on the bank, after you have shown the most unmatchable
+ display of skill, patience, and dexterity?&mdash;But I see you have a mind
+ to go on angling after your own old fashion. Off laced coat, and on brown
+ jerkin;&mdash;lively colours scare fish in the sober waters of the Isle of
+ Man;&mdash;faith, in London you will catch few, unless the bait glistens a
+ little. But you <i>are</i> going?&mdash;Well, good luck to you. I will
+ take to the barge;&mdash;the sea and wind are less inconstant than the
+ tide you have embarked on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have learned to say all these smart things in London, my lord,&rdquo;
+ answered Julian; &ldquo;but we shall have you a penitent for them, if Lady
+ Cynthia be of my mind. Adieu, and pleasure till we meet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young men parted accordingly; and while the Earl betook him to his
+ pleasure voyage, Julian, as his friend had prophesied, assumed the dress
+ of one who means to amuse himself with angling. The hat and feather were
+ exchanged for a cap of grey cloth; the deeply-laced cloak and doublet for
+ a simple jacket of the same colour, with hose conforming; and finally,
+ with rod in hand, and pannier at his back, mounted upon a handsome Manx
+ pony, young Peveril rode briskly over the country which divided him from
+ one of those beautiful streams that descend to the sea from the
+ Kirk-Merlagh mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having reached the spot where he meant to commence his day&rsquo;s sport, Julian
+ let his little steed graze, which, accustomed to the situation, followed
+ him like a dog; and now and then, when tired of picking herbage in the
+ valley through which the stream winded, came near her master&rsquo;s side, and,
+ as if she had been a curious amateur of the sport, gazed on the trouts as
+ Julian brought them struggling to the shore. But Fairy&rsquo;s master showed, on
+ that day, little of the patience of a real angler, and took no heed to old
+ Isaac Walton&rsquo;s recommendation, to fish the streams inch by inch. He chose,
+ indeed, with an angler&rsquo;s eye, the most promising casts, which the stream
+ broke sparkling over a stone, affording the wonted shelter to a trout; or
+ where, gliding away from a rippling current to a still eddy it streamed
+ under the projecting bank, or dashed from the pool of some low cascade. By
+ this judicious selection of spots whereon to employ his art, the
+ sportsman&rsquo;s basket was soon sufficiently heavy, to show that his
+ occupation was not a mere pretext; and so soon as this was the case, he
+ walked briskly up the glen, only making a cast from time to time, in case
+ of his being observed from any of the neighbouring heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a little green and rocky valley through which the brook strayed,
+ very lonely, although the slight track of an unformed road showed that it
+ was occasionally traversed, and that it was not altogether void of
+ inhabitants. As Peveril advanced still farther, the right bank reached to
+ some distance from the stream, leaving a piece of meadow ground, the lower
+ part of which, being close to the brook, was entirely covered with rich
+ herbage, being possibly occasionally irrigated by its overflow. The higher
+ part of the level ground afforded a stance for an old house, of singular
+ structure, with a terraced garden, and a cultivated field or two beside
+ it. In former times, a Danish or Norwegian fastness had stood here, called
+ the Black Fort, from the colour of a huge healthy hill, which, rising
+ behind the building, appeared to be the boundary of the valley, and to
+ afford the source of the brook. But the original structure had been long
+ demolished, as, indeed, it probably only consisted of dry stones, and its
+ materials had been applied to the construction of the present mansion&mdash;the
+ work of some churchman during the sixteenth century, as was evident from
+ the huge stone-work of its windows, which scarce left room for light to
+ pass through, as well as from two or three heavy buttresses, which
+ projected from the front of the house, and exhibited on their surface
+ little niches for images. These had been carefully destroyed, and pots of
+ flowers were placed in the niches in their stead, besides their being
+ ornamented by creeping plants of various kinds, fancifully twined around
+ them. The garden was also in good order; and though the spot was extremely
+ solitary, there was about it altogether an air of comfort, accommodation,
+ and even elegance, by no means generally characteristic of the habitations
+ of the island at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much circumspection, Julian Peveril approached the low Gothic porch,
+ which defended the entrance of the mansion from the tempests incident to
+ its situation, and was, like the buttresses, overrun with ivy and other
+ creeping plants. An iron ring, contrived so as when drawn up and down to
+ rattle against the bar of notched iron through which it was suspended,
+ served the purpose of a knocker; and to this he applied himself, though
+ with the greatest precaution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received no answer for some time, and indeed it seemed as if the house
+ was totally uninhabited; when, at length, his impatience getting the upper
+ hand, he tried to open the door, and, as it was only upon the latch, very
+ easily succeeded. He passed through a little low-arched hall, the upper
+ end of which was occupied by a staircase, and turning to the left, opened
+ the door of a summer parlour, wainscoted with black oak, and very simply
+ furnished with chairs and tables of the same materials; the former
+ cushioned with the leather. The apartment was gloomy&mdash;one of those
+ stone-shafted windows which we have mentioned, with its small latticed
+ panes, and thick garland of foliage, admitting but an imperfect light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over the chimneypiece (which was of the same massive materials with the
+ panelling of the apartment) was the only ornament of the room; a painting,
+ namely, representing an officer in the military dress of the Civil Wars.
+ It was a green jerkin, then the national and peculiar wear of the Manxmen;
+ his short band which hung down on the cuirass&mdash;the orange-coloured
+ scarf, but, above all, the shortness of his close-cut hair, showing
+ evidently to which of the great parties he had belonged. His right hand
+ rested on the hilt of his sword; and in the left he held a small Bible,
+ bearing the inscription, &ldquo;<i>In hoc signo</i>.&rdquo; The countenance was of a
+ light complexion, with fair and almost effeminate blue eyes, and an oval
+ form of face&mdash;one of those physiognomies, to which, though not
+ otherwise unpleasing, we naturally attach the idea of melancholy and of
+ misfortune.[*] Apparently it was well known to Julian Peveril; for after
+ having looked at it for a long time, he could not forbear muttering aloud,
+ &ldquo;What would I give that that man had never been born, or that he still
+ lived!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] I am told that a portrait of the unfortunate William Christian is
+ still preserved in the family of Waterson of Ballnabow of Kirk
+ Church, Rushin. William Dhône is dressed in a green coat without
+ collar or cape, after the fashion of those puritanic times, with
+ the head in a close cropt wig, resembling the bishop&rsquo;s peruke of
+ the present day. The countenance is youthful and well-looking,
+ very unlike the expression of foreboding melancholy. I have so far
+ taken advantage of this criticism, as to bring my ideal portrait
+ in the present edition, nearer to the complexion at least of the
+ fair-haired William Dhône.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now&mdash;how is this?&rdquo; said a female, who entered the room as he
+ uttered this reflection. &ldquo;<i>You</i> here, Master Peveril, in spite of all
+ the warnings you have had! You here in the possession of folk&rsquo;s house when
+ they are abroad, and talking to yourself, as I shall warrant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Mistress Deborah,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;I am here once more, as you see,
+ against every prohibition, and in defiance of all danger.&mdash;Where is
+ Alice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where you will never see her, Master Julian&mdash;you may satisfy
+ yourself of that,&rdquo; answered Mistress Deborah, for it was that respectable
+ governante; and sinking down at the same time upon one of the large
+ leathern chairs, she began to fan herself with her handkerchief, and
+ complain of the heat in a most ladylike fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Mistress Debbitch, while her exterior intimated a considerable
+ change of condition for the better, and her countenance showed the less
+ favourable effects of the twenty years which had passed over her head, was
+ in mind and manners very much what she had been when she battled the
+ opinions of Madam Ellesmere at Martindale Castle. In a word, she was
+ self-willed, obstinate, and coquettish as ever, otherwise no ill-disposed
+ person. Her present appearance was that of a woman of the better rank.
+ From the sobriety of the fashion of her dress, and the uniformity of its
+ colours, it was plain she belonged to some sect which condemned
+ superfluous gaiety in attire; but no rules, not those of a nunnery or of a
+ quaker&rsquo;s society, can prevent a little coquetry in that particular, where
+ a woman is desirous of being supposed to retain some claim to personal
+ attention. All Mistress Deborah&rsquo;s garments were so arranged as might best
+ set off a good-looking woman, whose countenance indicated ease and good
+ cheer&mdash;who called herself five-and-thirty, and was well entitled, if
+ she had a mind, to call herself twelve or fifteen years older.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was under the necessity of enduring all her tiresome and fantastic
+ airs, and awaiting with patience till she had &ldquo;prinked herself and pinned
+ herself&rdquo;&mdash;flung her hoods back, and drawn them forward&mdash;snuffed
+ at a little bottle of essences&mdash;closed her eyes like a dying fowl&mdash;turned
+ them up like duck in a thunderstorm; when at length, having exhausted her
+ round of <i>minauderies</i>, she condescended to open the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These walks will be the death of me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and all on your account,
+ Master Julian Peveril; for if Dame Christian should learn that you have
+ chosen to make your visits to her niece, I promise you Mistress Alice
+ would be soon obliged to find other quarters, and so should I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come now, Mistress Deborah, be good-humoured,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;consider,
+ was not all this intimacy of ours of your own making? Did you not make
+ yourself known to me the very first time I strolled up this glen with my
+ fishing-rod, and tell me that you were my former keeper, and that Alice
+ had been my little playfellow? And what could there be more natural, than
+ that I should come back and see two such agreeable persons as often as I
+ could?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Dame Deborah; &ldquo;but I did not bid you fall in love with us,
+ though, or propose such a matter as marriage either to Alice or myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To do you justice, you never did, Deborah,&rdquo; answered the youth; &ldquo;but what
+ of that? Such things will come out before one is aware. I am sure you must
+ have heard such proposals fifty times when you least expected them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie, fie, fie, Master Julian Peveril,&rdquo; said the governante; &ldquo;I would have
+ you to know that I have always so behaved myself, that the best of the
+ land would have thought twice of it, and have very well considered both
+ what he was going to say, and how he was going to say it, before he came
+ out with such proposals to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, true, Mistress Deborah,&rdquo; continued Julian; &ldquo;but all the world hath
+ not your discretion. Then Alice Bridgenorth is a child&mdash;a mere child;
+ and one always asks a baby to be one&rsquo;s little wife, you know. Come, I know
+ you will forgive me. Thou wert ever the best-natured, kindest woman in the
+ world; and you know you have said twenty times we were made for each
+ other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh no, Master Julian Peveril; no, no, no!&rdquo; ejaculated Deborah. &ldquo;I may
+ indeed have said your estates were born to be united; and to be sure it is
+ natural for me, that come of the old stock of the yeomanry of Peveril of
+ the Peak&rsquo;s estate, to wish that it was all within the ring fence again;
+ which sure enough it might be, were you to marry Alice Bridgenorth. But
+ then there is the knight your father, and my lady your mother; and there
+ is her father, that is half crazy with his religion; and her aunt that
+ wears eternal black grogram for that unlucky Colonel Christian; and there
+ is the Countess of Derby, that would serve us all with the same sauce if
+ we were thinking of anything that would displease her. And besides all
+ that, you have broke your word with Mistress Alice, and everything is over
+ between you; and I am of opinion it is quite right it should be all over.
+ And perhaps it may be, Master Julian, that I should have thought so a long
+ time ago, before a child like Alice put it into my head; but I am so
+ good-natured.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No flatterer like a lover, who wishes to carry his point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are the best-natured, kindest creature in the world, Deborah.&mdash;But
+ you have never seen the ring I bought for you at Paris. Nay, I will put it
+ on your finger myself;&mdash;what! your foster-son, whom you loved so
+ well, and took such care of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He easily succeeded in putting a pretty ring of gold, with a humorous
+ affectation of gallantry, on the fat finger of Mistress Deborah Debbitch.
+ Hers was a soul of a kind often to be met with, both among the lower and
+ higher vulgar, who, without being, on a broad scale, accessible to bribes
+ or corruption, are nevertheless much attached to perquisites, and
+ considerably biassed in their line of duty, though perhaps insensibly, by
+ the love of petty observances, petty presents, and trivial compliments.
+ Mistress Debbitch turned the ring round, and round, and round, and at
+ length said, in a whisper, &ldquo;Well, Master Julian Peveril, it signifies
+ nothing denying anything to such a young gentleman as you, for young
+ gentlemen are always so obstinate! and so I may as well tell you, that
+ Mistress Alice walked back from the Kirk-Truagh along with me, just now,
+ and entered the house at the same time with myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did you not tell me so before?&rdquo; said Julian, starting up; &ldquo;where&mdash;where
+ is she?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You had better ask why I tell you so <i>now</i>, Master Julian,&rdquo; said
+ Dame Deborah; &ldquo;for, I promise you, it is against her express commands; and
+ I would not have told you, had you not looked so pitiful;&mdash;but as for
+ seeing you, that she will not&mdash;and she is in her own bedroom, with a
+ good oak door shut and bolted upon her&mdash;that is one comfort.&mdash;And
+ so, as for any breach of trust on my part&mdash;I promise you the little
+ saucy minx gives it no less name&mdash;it is quite impossible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not say so, Deborah&mdash;only go&mdash;only try&mdash;tell her to
+ hear me&mdash;tell her I have a hundred excuses for disobeying her
+ commands&mdash;tell her I have no doubt to get over all obstacles at
+ Martindale Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I tell you it is all in vain,&rdquo; replied the Dame. &ldquo;When I saw your
+ cap and rod lying in the hall, I did but say, &lsquo;There he is again,&rsquo; and she
+ ran up the stairs like a young deer; and I heard key turned, and bolt
+ shot, ere I could say a single word to stop her&mdash;I marvel you heard
+ her not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was because I am, as I ever was, an owl&mdash;a dreaming fool, who let
+ all those golden minutes pass, which my luckless life holds out to me so
+ rarely.&mdash;Well&mdash;tell her I go&mdash;go for ever&mdash;go where
+ she will hear no more of me&mdash;where no one shall hear more of me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, the Father!&rdquo; said the dame, &ldquo;hear how he talks!&mdash;What will
+ become of Sir Geoffrey, and your mother, and of me, and of the Countess,
+ if you were to go so far as you talk of? And what would become of poor
+ Alice too? for I will be sworn she likes you better than she says, and I
+ know she used to sit and look the way that you used to come up the stream,
+ and now and then ask me if the morning were good for fishing. And all the
+ while you were on the continent, as they call it, she scarcely smiled
+ once, unless it was when she got two beautiful long letters about foreign
+ parts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friendship, Dame Deborah&mdash;only friendship&mdash;cold and calm
+ remembrance of one who, by your kind permission, stole in on your solitude
+ now and then, with news from the living world without&mdash;Once, indeed,
+ I thought&mdash;but it is all over&mdash;farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he covered his face with one hand, and extended the other, in
+ the act of bidding adieu to Dame Debbitch, whose kind heart became unable
+ to withstand the sight of his affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, do not be in such haste,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;I will go up again, and tell
+ her how it stands with you, and bring her down, if it is in woman&rsquo;s power
+ to do it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so saying, she left the apartment, and ran upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, meanwhile, paced the apartment in great agitation, waiting
+ the success of Deborah&rsquo;s intercession; and she remained long enough absent
+ to give us time to explain, in a short retrospect, the circumstances which
+ had led to his present situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ah me! for aught that ever I could read,
+ Could ever hear by tale or history,
+ The course of true love never did run smooth!
+ &mdash;Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The celebrated passage which we have prefixed to this chapter has, like
+ most observations of the same author, its foundation in real experience.
+ The period at which love is formed for the first time, and felt most
+ strongly, is seldom that at which there is much prospect of its being
+ brought to a happy issue. The state of artificial society opposes many
+ complicated obstructions to early marriages; and the chance is very great,
+ that such obstacles prove insurmountable. In fine, there are few men who
+ do not look back in secret to some period of their youth, at which a
+ sincere and early affection was repulsed, or betrayed, or become abortive
+ from opposing circumstances. It is these little passages of secret
+ history, which leave a tinge of romance in every bosom, scarce permitting
+ us, even in the most busy or the most advanced period of life, to listen
+ with total indifference to a tale of true love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had so fixed his affections, as to insure the fullest share
+ of that opposition which early attachments are so apt to encounter. Yet
+ nothing so natural as that he should have done so. In early youth, Dame
+ Debbitch had accidentally met with the son of her first patroness, and who
+ had himself been her earliest charge, fishing in the little brook already
+ noticed, which watered the valley in which she resided with Alice
+ Bridgenorth. The dame&rsquo;s curiosity easily discovered who he was; and
+ besides the interest which persons in her condition usually take in the
+ young people who have been under their charge, she was delighted with the
+ opportunity to talk about former times&mdash;about Martindale Castle, and
+ friends there&mdash;about Sir Geoffrey and his good lady&mdash;and, now
+ and then, about Lance Outram the park-keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mere pleasure of gratifying her inquiries, would scarce have had power
+ enough to induce Julian to repeat his visits to the lonely glen; but
+ Deborah had a companion&mdash;a lovely girl&mdash;bred in solitude, and in
+ the quiet and unpretending tastes which solitude encourages&mdash;spirited,
+ also, and inquisitive, and listening, with laughing cheek, and an eager
+ eye, to every tale which the young angler brought from the town and
+ castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visits of Julian to the Black Fort were only occasional&mdash;so far
+ Dame Deborah showed common-sense&mdash;which was, perhaps, inspired by the
+ apprehension of losing her place, in case of discovery. She had, indeed,
+ great confidence in the strong and rooted belief&mdash;amounting almost to
+ superstition&mdash;which Major Bridgenorth entertained, that his
+ daughter&rsquo;s continued health could only be insured by her continuing under
+ the charge of one who had acquired Lady Peveril&rsquo;s supposed skill in
+ treating those subject to such ailments. This belief Dame Deborah had
+ improved to the utmost of her simple cunning,&mdash;always speaking in
+ something of an oracular tone, upon the subject of her charge&rsquo;s health,
+ and hinting at certain mysterious rules necessary to maintain it in the
+ present favourable state. She had availed herself of this artifice, to
+ procure for herself and Alice a separate establishment at the Black Fort;
+ for it was originally Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s resolution, that his daughter
+ and her governante should remain under the same roof with the
+ sister-in-law of his deceased wife, the widow of the unfortunate Colonel
+ Christian. But this lady was broken down with premature age, brought on by
+ sorrow; and, in a short visit which Major Bridgenorth made to the island,
+ he was easily prevailed on to consider her house at Kirk-Truagh, as a very
+ cheerless residence for his daughter. Dame Deborah, who longed for
+ domestic independence, was careful to increase this impression by alarming
+ her patron&rsquo;s fears on account of Alice&rsquo;s health. The mansion of
+ Kirk-Truagh stood, she said, much exposed to the Scottish winds, which
+ could not but be cold, as they came from a country where, as she was
+ assured, there was ice and snow at midsummer. In short, she prevailed, and
+ was put into full possession of the Black Fort, a house which, as well as
+ Kirk-Truagh, belonged formerly to Christian, and now to his widow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, however, it was enjoined on the governante and her charge, to visit
+ Kirk-Truagh from time to time, and to consider themselves as under the
+ management and guardianship of Mistress Christian&mdash;a state of
+ subjection, the sense of which Deborah endeavoured to lessen, by assuming
+ as much freedom of conduct as she possibly dared, under the influence,
+ doubtless, of the same feelings of independence, which induced her, at
+ Martindale Hall, to spurn the advice of Mistress Ellesmere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this generous disposition to defy control which induced her to
+ procure for Alice, secretly, some means of education, which the stern
+ genius of puritanism would have proscribed. She ventured to have her
+ charge taught music&mdash;nay, even dancing; and the picture of the stern
+ Colonel Christian trembled on the wainscot where it was suspended, while
+ the sylph-like form of Alice, and the substantial person of Dame Deborah,
+ executed French <i>chaussées</i> and <i>borrées</i>, to the sound of a
+ small kit, which screamed under the bow of Monsieur De Pigal, half
+ smuggler, half dancing-master. This abomination reached the ears of the
+ Colonel&rsquo;s widow, and by her was communicated to Bridgenorth, whose sudden
+ appearance in the island showed the importance he attached to the
+ communication. Had she been faithless to her own cause, that had been the
+ latest hour of Mrs. Deborah&rsquo;s administration. But she retreated into her
+ stronghold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dancing,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;was exercise, regulated and timed by music; and it
+ stood to reason, that it must be the best of all exercise for a delicate
+ person, especially as it could be taken within doors, and in all states of
+ the weather.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth listened, with a clouded and thoughtful brow, when, in
+ exemplification of her doctrine, Mistress Deborah, who was no contemptible
+ performer on the viol, began to jangle Sellenger&rsquo;s Round, and desired
+ Alice to dance an old English measure to the tune. As the half-bashful,
+ half-smiling girl, about fourteen&mdash;for such was her age&mdash;moved
+ gracefully to the music, the father&rsquo;s eye unavoidably followed the light
+ spring of her step, and marked with joy the rising colour in her cheek.
+ When the dance was over, he folded her in his arms, smoothed her somewhat
+ disordered locks with a father&rsquo;s affectionate hand, smiled, kissed her
+ brow, and took his leave, without one single word farther interdicting the
+ exercise of dancing. He did not himself communicate the result of his
+ visit at the Black Fort to Mrs. Christian, but she was not long of
+ learning it, by the triumph of Dame Deborah on her next visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said the stern old lady; &ldquo;my brother Bridgenorth hath
+ permitted you to make a Herodias of Alice, and teach her dancing. You have
+ only now to find her a partner for life&mdash;I shall neither meddle nor
+ make more in their affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, the triumph of Dame Deborah, or rather of Dame Nature, on this
+ occasion, had more important effects than the former had ventured to
+ anticipate; for Mrs. Christian, though she received with all formality the
+ formal visits of the governante and her charge, seemed thenceforth so
+ pettish with the issue of her remonstrance, upon the enormity of her niece
+ dancing to a little fiddle, that she appeared to give up interference in
+ her affairs, and left Dame Debbitch and Alice to manage both education and
+ housekeeping&mdash;in which she had hitherto greatly concerned herself&mdash;much
+ after their own pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this independent state that they lived, when Julian first
+ visited their habitation; and he was the rather encouraged to do so by
+ Dame Deborah, that she believed him to be one of the last persons in the
+ world with whom Mistress Christian would have desired her niece to be
+ acquainted&mdash;the happy spirit of contradiction superseding, with Dame
+ Deborah, on this, as on other occasions, all consideration of the fitness
+ of things. She did not act altogether without precaution neither. She was
+ aware she had to guard not only against any reviving interest or curiosity
+ on the part of Mistress Christian, but against the sudden arrival of Major
+ Bridgenorth, who never failed once in the year to make his appearance at
+ the Black Fort when least expected, and to remain there for a few days.
+ Dame Debbitch, therefore, exacted of Julian, that his visits should be few
+ and far between; that he should condescend to pass for a relation of her
+ own, in the eyes of two ignorant Manx girls and a lad, who formed her
+ establishment; and that he should always appear in his angler&rsquo;s dress made
+ of the simple <i>Loughtan</i>, or buff-coloured wool of the island, which
+ is not subjected to dyeing. By these cautions, she thought his intimacy at
+ the Black Fort would be entirely unnoticed, or considered as immaterial,
+ while, in the meantime, it furnished much amusement to her charge and
+ herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was accordingly the case during the earlier part of their
+ intercourse, while Julian was a lad, and Alice a girl two or three years
+ younger. But as the lad shot up to youth, and the girl to womanhood, even
+ Dame Deborah Debbitch&rsquo;s judgment saw danger in their continued intimacy.
+ She took an opportunity to communicate to Julian who Miss Bridgenorth
+ actually was, and the peculiar circumstances which placed discord between
+ their fathers. He heard the story of their quarrel with interest and
+ surprise, for he had only resided occasionally at Martindale Castle, and
+ the subject of Bridgenorth&rsquo;s quarrel with his father had never been
+ mentioned in his presence. His imagination caught fire at the sparks
+ afforded by this singular story; and, far from complying with the prudent
+ remonstrance of Dame Deborah, and gradually estranging himself from the
+ Black Fort and its fair inmate, he frankly declared, he considered his
+ intimacy there, so casually commenced, as intimating the will of Heaven,
+ that Alice and he were designed for each other, in spite of every obstacle
+ which passion or prejudice could raise up betwixt them. They had been
+ companions in infancy; and a little exertion of memory enabled him to
+ recall his childish grief for the unexpected and sudden disappearance of
+ his little companion, whom he was destined again to meet with in the early
+ bloom of opening beauty, in a country which was foreign to them both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Deborah was confounded at the consequences of her communication,
+ which had thus blown into a flame the passion which she hoped it would
+ have either prevented or extinguished. She had not the sort of head which
+ resists the masculine and energetic remonstrances of passionate
+ attachment, whether addressed to her on her own account, or on behalf of
+ another. She lamented, and wondered, and ended her feeble opposition, by
+ weeping, and sympathising, and consenting to allow the continuance of
+ Julian&rsquo;s visits, provided he should only address himself to Alice as a
+ friend; to gain the world, she would consent to nothing more. She was not,
+ however, so simple, but that she also had her forebodings of the designs
+ of Providence on this youthful couple; for certainly they could not be
+ more formed to be united than the good estates of Martindale and
+ Moultrassie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came a long sequence of reflections. Martindale Castle wanted but
+ some repairs to be almost equal to Chatsworth. The Hall might be allowed
+ to go to ruin; or, what would be better, when Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s time came
+ (for the good knight had seen service, and must be breaking now), the Hall
+ would be a good dowery-house, to which my lady and Ellesmere might
+ retreat; while (empress of the still-room, and queen of the pantry)
+ Mistress Deborah Debbitch should reign housekeeper at the Castle, and
+ extend, perhaps, the crown-matrimonial to Lance Outram, provided he was
+ not become too old, too fat, or too fond of ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the soothing visions under the influence of which the dame
+ connived at an attachment, which lulled also to pleasing dreams, though of
+ a character so different, her charge and her visitant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visits of the young angler became more and more frequent; and the
+ embarrassed Deborah, though foreseeing all the dangers of discovery, and
+ the additional risk of an explanation betwixt Alice and Julian, which must
+ necessarily render their relative situation so much more delicate, felt
+ completely overborne by the enthusiasm of the young lover, and was
+ compelled to let matters take their course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The departure of Julian for the continent interrupted the course of his
+ intimacy at the Black Fort, and while it relieved the elder of its inmates
+ from much internal apprehension, spread an air of languor and dejection
+ over the countenance of the younger, which, at Bridgenorth&rsquo;s next visit to
+ the Isle of Man, renewed all his terrors for his daughter&rsquo;s constitutional
+ malady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deborah promised faithfully she should look better the next morning, and
+ she kept her word. She had retained in her possession for some time a
+ letter which Julian had, by some private conveyance, sent to her charge,
+ for his youthful friend. Deborah had dreaded the consequences of
+ delivering it as a billet-doux, but, as in the case of the dance, she
+ thought there could be no harm in administering it as a remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had complete effect; and next day the cheeks of the maiden had a tinge
+ of the rose, which so much delighted her father, that, as he mounted his
+ horse, he flung his purse into Deborah&rsquo;s hand, with the desire she should
+ spare nothing that could make herself and his daughter happy, and the
+ assurance that she had his full confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This expression of liberality and confidence from a man of Major
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s reserved and cautious disposition, gave full plumage to
+ Mistress Deborah&rsquo;s hopes; and emboldened her not only to deliver another
+ letter of Julian&rsquo;s to the young lady, but to encourage more boldly and
+ freely than formerly the intercourse of the lovers when Peveril returned
+ from abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, in spite of all Julian&rsquo;s precaution, the young Earl became
+ suspicious of his frequent solitary fishing parties; and he himself, now
+ better acquainted with the world than formerly, became aware that his
+ repeated visits and solitary walks with a person so young and beautiful as
+ Alice, might not only betray prematurely the secret of his attachment, but
+ be of essential prejudice to her who was its object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of this conviction, he abstained, for an unusual
+ period, from visiting the Black Fort. But when he next indulged himself
+ with spending an hour in the place where he would gladly have abode for
+ ever, the altered manner of Alice&mdash;the tone in which she seemed to
+ upbraid his neglect, penetrated his heart, and deprived him of that power
+ of self-command, which he had hitherto exercised in their interviews. It
+ required but a few energetic words to explain to Alice at once his
+ feelings, and to make her sensible of the real nature of her own. She wept
+ plentifully, but her tears were not all of bitterness. She sat passively
+ still, and without reply, while he explained to her, with many an
+ interjection, the circumstances which had placed discord between their
+ families; for hitherto, all that she had known was, that Master Peveril,
+ belonging to the household of the great Countess or Lady of Man, must
+ observe some precautions in visiting a relative of the unhappy Colonel
+ Christian. But, when Julian concluded his tale with the warmest
+ protestations of eternal love, &ldquo;My poor father!&rdquo; she burst forth, &ldquo;and was
+ this to be the end of all thy precautions?&mdash;This, that the son of him
+ that disgraced and banished thee, should hold such language to your
+ daughter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You err, Alice, you err,&rdquo; cried Julian eagerly. &ldquo;That I hold this
+ language&mdash;that the son of Peveril addresses thus the daughter of your
+ father&mdash;that he thus kneels to you for forgiveness of injuries which
+ passed when we were both infants, shows the will of Heaven, that in our
+ affection should be quenched the discord of our parents. What else could
+ lead those who parted infants on the hills of Derbyshire, to meet thus in
+ the valleys of Man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice, however new such a scene, and, above all, her own emotions, might
+ be, was highly endowed with that exquisite delicacy which is imprinted in
+ the female heart, to give warning of the slightest approach to impropriety
+ in a situation like hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rise, rise, Master Peveril,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;do not do yourself and me this
+ injustice&mdash;we have done both wrong&mdash;very wrong; but my fault was
+ done in ignorance. O God! my poor father, who needs comfort so much&mdash;is
+ it for me to add to his misfortunes? Rise!&rdquo; she added more firmly; &ldquo;if you
+ retain this unbecoming posture any longer, I will leave the room and you
+ shall never see me more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commanding tone of Alice overawed the impetuosity of her lover, who
+ took in silence a seat removed to some distance from hers, and was again
+ about to speak. &ldquo;Julian,&rdquo; said she in a milder tone, &ldquo;you have spoken
+ enough, and more than enough. Would you had left me in the pleasing dream
+ in which I could have listened to you for ever! but the hour of wakening
+ is arrived.&rdquo; Peveril waited the prosecution of her speech as a criminal
+ while he waits his doom; for he was sufficiently sensible that an answer,
+ delivered not certainly without emotion, but with firmness and resolution,
+ was not to be interrupted. &ldquo;We have done wrong,&rdquo; she repeated, &ldquo;very
+ wrong; and if we now separate for ever, the pain we may feel will be but a
+ just penalty for our error. We should never have met: meeting, we should
+ part as soon as possible. Our farther intercourse can but double our pain
+ at parting. Farewell, Julian; and forget we ever have seen each other!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forget!&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;never, never. To <i>you</i>, it is easy to speak
+ the word&mdash;to think the thought. To <i>me</i>, an approach to either
+ can only be by utter destruction. Why should you doubt that the feud of
+ our fathers, like so many of which we have heard, might be appeased by our
+ friendship? You are my only friend. I am the only one whom Heaven has
+ assigned to you. Why should we separate for the fault of others, which
+ befell when we were but children?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak in vain, Julian,&rdquo; said Alice; &ldquo;I pity you&mdash;perhaps I pity
+ myself&mdash;indeed, I should pity myself, perhaps, the most of the two;
+ for you will go forth to new scenes and new faces, and will soon forget
+ me; but, I, remaining in this solitude, how shall <i>I</i> forget?&mdash;that,
+ however, is not now the question&mdash;I can bear my lot, and it commands
+ us to part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me yet a moment,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;this evil is not, cannot be
+ remediless. I will go to my father,&mdash;I will use the intercession of
+ my mother, to whom he can refuse nothing&mdash;I will gain their consent&mdash;they
+ have no other child&mdash;and they must consent, or lose him for ever.
+ Say, Alice, if I come to you with my parents&rsquo; consent to my suit, will you
+ again say, with that tone so touching and so sad, yet so incredibly
+ determined&mdash;Julian, we must part?&rdquo; Alice was silent. &ldquo;Cruel girl,
+ will you not even deign to answer me?&rdquo; said her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would refer you to my father,&rdquo; said Alice, blushing and casting her
+ eyes down; but instantly raising them again, she repeated, in a firmer and
+ a sadder tone, &ldquo;Yes, Julian, I would refer you to my father; and you would
+ find that your pilot, Hope, had deceived you; and that you had but escaped
+ the quicksands to fall upon the rocks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would that could be tried!&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;Methinks I could persuade
+ your father that in ordinary eyes our alliance is not undesirable. My
+ family have fortune, rank, long descent&mdash;all that fathers look for
+ when they bestow a daughter&rsquo;s hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this would avail you nothing,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;The spirit of my father
+ is bent upon the things of another world; and if he listened to hear you
+ out, it would be but to tell you that he spurned your offers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know not&mdash;you know not, Alice,&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;Fire can soften
+ iron&mdash;thy father&rsquo;s heart cannot be so hard, or his prejudices so
+ strong, but I shall find some means to melt him. Forbid me not&mdash;Oh,
+ forbid me not at least the experiment!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can but advise,&rdquo; said Alice; &ldquo;I can forbid you nothing; for, to forbid,
+ implies power to command obedience. But if you will be wise, and listen to
+ me&mdash;Here, and on this spot, we part for ever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, by Heaven!&rdquo; said Julian, whose bold and sanguine temper scarce
+ saw difficulty in attaining aught which he desired. &ldquo;We now part, indeed,
+ but it is that I may return armed with my parents&rsquo; consent. They desire
+ that I should marry&mdash;in their last letters they pressed it more
+ openly&mdash;they shall have their desire; and such a bride as I will
+ present to them has not graced their house since the Conqueror gave it
+ origin. Farewell, Alice! Farewell, for a brief space!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She replied, &ldquo;Farewell, Julian! Farewell for ever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, within a week of this interview, was at Martindale Castle, with
+ the view of communicating his purpose. But the task which seems easy at a
+ distance, proves as difficult, upon a nearer approach, as the fording of a
+ river, which from afar appeared only a brook. There lacked not
+ opportunities of entering upon the subject; for in the first ride which he
+ took with his father, the Knight resumed the subject of his son&rsquo;s
+ marriage, and liberally left the lady to his choice; but under the strict
+ proviso, that she was of a loyal and an honourable family;&mdash;if she
+ had fortune, it was good and well, or rather, it was better than well; but
+ if she was poor, why, &ldquo;there is still some picking,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey,
+ &ldquo;on the bones of the old estate; and Dame Margaret and I will be content
+ with the less, that you young folks may have your share of it. I am turned
+ frugal already, Julian. You see what a north-country shambling bit of a
+ Galloway nag I ride upon&mdash;a different beast, I wot, from my own old
+ Black Hastings, who had but one fault, and that was his wish to turn down
+ Moultrassie avenue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that so great a fault?&rdquo; said Julian, affecting indifference, while
+ his heart was trembling, as it seemed to him, almost in his very throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It used to remind me of that base, dishonourable Presbyterian fellow,
+ Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;and I would as lief think of a toad:&mdash;they
+ say he has turned Independent, to accomplish the full degree of rascality.&mdash;I
+ tell you, Gill, I turned off the cow-boy, for gathering nuts in his woods&mdash;I
+ would hang a dog that would so much as kill a hare there.&mdash;But what
+ is the matter with you? You look pale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian made some indifferent answer, but too well understood, from the
+ language and tone which his father used, that his prejudices against
+ Alice&rsquo;s father were both deep and envenomed, as those of country gentlemen
+ often become, who, having little to do or think of, are but too apt to
+ spend their time in nursing and cherishing petty causes of wrath against
+ their next neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the same day, he mentioned the Bridgenorth to his mother,
+ as if in a casual manner. But the Lady Peveril instantly conjured him
+ never to mention the name, especially in his father&rsquo;s presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was that Major Bridgenorth, of whom I have heard the name mentioned,&rdquo;
+ said Julian, &ldquo;so very bad a neighbour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not say so,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril; &ldquo;nay, we were more than once obliged
+ to him, in the former unhappy times; but your father and he took some
+ passages so ill at each other&rsquo;s hands, that the least allusion to him
+ disturbs Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s temper, in a manner quite unusual, and which, now
+ that his health is somewhat impaired, is sometimes alarming to me. For
+ Heaven&rsquo;s sake, then, my dear Julian, avoid upon all occasions the
+ slightest allusion to Moultrassie, or any of its inhabitants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This warning was so seriously given, that Julian himself saw that
+ mentioning his secret purpose would be the sure way to render it abortive,
+ and therefore he returned disconsolate to the Isle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril had the boldness, however, to make the best he could of what had
+ happened, by requesting an interview with Alice, in order to inform her
+ what had passed betwixt his parents and him on her account. It was with
+ great difficulty that this boon was obtained; and Alice Bridgenorth showed
+ no slight degree of displeasure, when she discovered, after much
+ circumlocution, and many efforts to give an air of importance to what he
+ had to communicate, that all amounted but to this, that Lady Peveril
+ continued to retain a favourable opinion of her father, Major Bridgenorth,
+ which Julian would fain have represented as an omen of their future more
+ perfect reconciliation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not think you would thus have trifled with me, Master Peveril,&rdquo;
+ said Alice, assuming an air of dignity; &ldquo;but I will take care to avoid
+ such intrusion in future&mdash;I request you will not again visit the
+ Black Fort; and I entreat of you, good Mistress Debbitch, that you will no
+ longer either encourage or permit this gentleman&rsquo;s visits, as the result
+ of such persecution will be to compel me to appeal to my aunt and father
+ for another place of residence, and perhaps also for another and more
+ prudent companion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last hint struck Mistress Deborah with so much terror, that she
+ joined her ward in requiring and demanding Julian&rsquo;s instant absence, and
+ he was obliged to comply with their request. But the courage of a youthful
+ lover is not easily subdued; and Julian, after having gone through the
+ usual round of trying to forget his ungrateful mistress, and entertaining
+ his passion with augmented violence, ended by the visit to the Black Fort,
+ the beginning of which we narrated in the last chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We then left him anxious for, yet almost fearful of, an interview with
+ Alice, which he prevailed upon Deborah to solicit; and such was the tumult
+ of his mind, that, while he traversed the parlour, it seemed to him that
+ the dark melancholy eyes of the slaughtered Christian&rsquo;s portrait followed
+ him wherever he went, with the fixed, chill, and ominous glance, which
+ announced to the enemy of his race mishap and misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of the apartment opened at length, and these visions were
+ dissipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Parents have flinty hearts! No tears can move them.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Alice Bridgenorth at length entered the parlour where her anxious
+ lover had so long expected her, it was with a slow step, and a composed
+ manner. Her dress was arranged with an accurate attention to form, which
+ at once enhanced the appearance of its puritanic simplicity, and struck
+ Julian as a bad omen; for although the time bestowed upon the toilet may,
+ in many cases, intimate the wish to appear advantageously at such an
+ interview, yet a ceremonious arrangement of attire is very much allied
+ with formality, and a preconceived determination to treat a lover with
+ cold politeness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sad-coloured gown&mdash;the pinched and plaited cap, which carefully
+ obscured the profusion of long dark-brown hair&mdash;the small ruff, and
+ the long sleeves, would have appeared to great disadvantage on a shape
+ less graceful than Alice Bridgenorth&rsquo;s; but an exquisite form, though not,
+ as yet, sufficiently rounded in the outlines to produce the perfection of
+ female beauty, was able to sustain and give grace even to this unbecoming
+ dress. Her countenance, fair and delicate, with eyes of hazel, and a brow
+ of alabaster, had, notwithstanding, less regular beauty than her form, and
+ might have been justly subjected to criticism. There was, however, a life
+ and spirit in her gaiety, and a depth of sentiment in her gravity, which
+ made Alice, in conversation with the very few persons with whom she
+ associated, so fascinating in her manners and expression, whether of
+ language or countenance&mdash;so touching, also, in her simplicity and
+ purity of thought, that brighter beauties might have been overlooked in
+ her company. It was no wonder, therefore, that an ardent character like
+ Julian, influenced by these charms, as well as by the secrecy and mystery
+ attending his intercourse with Alice, should prefer the recluse of the
+ Black Fort to all others with whom he had become acquainted in general
+ society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart beat high as she came into the apartment, and it was almost
+ without an attempt to speak that his profound obeisance acknowledged her
+ entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a mockery, Master Peveril,&rdquo; said Alice, with an effort to speak
+ firmly, which yet was disconcerted by a slightly tremulous inflection of
+ voice&mdash;&ldquo;a mockery, and a cruel one. You come to this lone place,
+ inhabited only by two women, too simple to command your absence&mdash;too
+ weak to enforce it&mdash;you come, in spite of my earnest request&mdash;to
+ the neglect of your own time&mdash;to the prejudice, I may fear, of my
+ character&mdash;you abuse the influence you possess over the simple person
+ to whom I am entrusted&mdash;All this you do, and think to make up by low
+ reverences and constrained courtesy! Is this honourable, or is it fair?&mdash;Is
+ it,&rdquo; she added, after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation&mdash;&ldquo;is it kind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tremulous accent fell especially on the last word she uttered, and it
+ was spoken in a low tone of gentle reproach, which went to Julian&rsquo;s heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;there was a mode by which, at the peril of my life, Alice,
+ I could show my regard&mdash;my respect&mdash;my devoted tenderness&mdash;the
+ danger would be dearer to me than ever was pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said such things often,&rdquo; said Alice, &ldquo;and they are such as I
+ ought not to hear, and do not desire to hear. I have no tasks to impose on
+ you&mdash;no enemies to be destroyed&mdash;no need or desire of protection&mdash;no
+ wish, Heaven knows, to expose you to danger&mdash;It is your visits here
+ alone to which danger attaches. You have but to rule your own wilful
+ temper&mdash;to turn your thoughts and your cares elsewhere, and I can
+ have nothing to ask&mdash;nothing to wish for. Use your own reason&mdash;consider
+ the injury you do yourself&mdash;the injustice you do us&mdash;and let me,
+ once more, in fair terms, entreat you to absent yourself from this place&mdash;till&mdash;till&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused, and Julian eagerly interrupted her.&mdash;&ldquo;Till when, Alice?&mdash;till
+ when?&mdash;impose on me any length of absence which your severity can
+ inflict, short of a final separation&mdash;Say, Begone for years, but
+ return when these years are over; and, slow and wearily as they must pass
+ away, still the thought that they must at length have their period, will
+ enable me to live through them. Let me, then, conjure thee, Alice, to name
+ a date&mdash;to fix a term&mdash;to say till <i>when!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Till you can bear to think of me only as a friend and sister.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a sentence of eternal banishment indeed!&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;it is
+ seeming, no doubt, to fix a term of exile, but attaching to it an
+ impossible condition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why impossible, Julian?&rdquo; said Alice, in a tone of persuasion; &ldquo;were
+ we not happier ere you threw the mask from your own countenance, and tore
+ the veil from my foolish eyes? Did we not meet with joy, spend our time
+ happily, and part cheerily, because we transgressed no duty, and incurred
+ no self-reproach? Bring back that state of happy ignorance, and you shall
+ have no reason to call me unkind. But while you form schemes which I know
+ to be visionary, and use language of such violence and passion, you shall
+ excuse me if I now, and once for all, declare, that since Deborah shows
+ herself unfit for the trust reposed in her, and must needs expose me to
+ persecutions of this nature, I will write to my father, that he may fix me
+ another place of residence; and in the meanwhile I will take shelter with
+ my aunt at Kirk-Truagh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me, unpitying girl,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;hear me, and you shall see how
+ devoted I am to obedience, in all that I can do to oblige you! You say you
+ were happy when we spoke not on such topics&mdash;well&mdash;at all
+ expense of my own suppressed feelings, that happy period shall return. I
+ will meet you&mdash;walk with you&mdash;read with you&mdash;but only as a
+ brother would with his sister, or a friend with his friend; the thoughts I
+ may nourish, be they of hope or of despair, my tongue shall not give birth
+ to, and therefore I cannot offend; Deborah shall be ever by your side, and
+ her presence shall prevent my even hinting at what might displease you&mdash;only
+ do not make a crime to me of those thoughts which are the dearest part of
+ my existence; for believe me it were better and kinder to rob me of
+ existence itself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is the mere ecstasy of passion, Julian,&rdquo; answered Alice Bridgenorth;
+ &ldquo;that which is unpleasant, our selfish and stubborn will represents as
+ impossible. I have no confidence in the plan you propose&mdash;no
+ confidence in your resolution, and less than none in the protection of
+ Deborah. Till you can renounce, honestly and explicitly, the wishes you
+ have lately expressed, we must be strangers;&mdash;and could you renounce
+ them even at this moment, it were better that we should part for a long
+ time; and, for Heaven&rsquo;s sake, let it be as soon as possible&mdash;perhaps
+ it is even now too late to prevent some unpleasant accident&mdash;I
+ thought I heard a noise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Deborah,&rdquo; answered Julian. &ldquo;Be not afraid, Alice; we are secure
+ against surprise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; said Alice, &ldquo;what you mean by such security&mdash;I have
+ nothing to hide. I sought not this interview; on the contrary, averted it
+ as long as I could&mdash;and am now most desirous to break it off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore, Alice, since you say it must be our last? Why should you
+ shake the sand which is passing so fast? the very executioner hurries not
+ the prayers of the wretches upon the scaffold.&mdash;And see you not&mdash;I
+ will argue as coldly as you can desire&mdash;see you not that you are
+ breaking your own word, and recalling the hope which yourself held out to
+ me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What hope have I suggested? What word have I given, Julian?&rdquo; answered
+ Alice. &ldquo;You yourself build wild hopes in the air, and accuse me of
+ destroying what had never any earthly foundation. Spare yourself, Julian&mdash;spare
+ me&mdash;and in mercy to us both depart, and return not again till you can
+ be more reasonable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reasonable?&rdquo; replied Julian; &ldquo;it is you, Alice, who will deprive me
+ altogether of reason. Did you not say, that if our parents could be
+ brought to consent to our union, you would no longer oppose my suit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;no&mdash;no,&rdquo; said Alice eagerly, and blushing deeply,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ did not say so, Julian&mdash;it was your own wild imagination which put
+ construction on my silence and my confusion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do <i>not</i> say so, then?&rdquo; answered Julian; &ldquo;and if all other
+ obstacles were removed, I should find one in the cold flinty bosom of her
+ who repays the most devoted and sincere affection with contempt and
+ dislike?&mdash;Is that,&rdquo; he added, in a deep tone of feeling&mdash;&ldquo;is
+ that what Alice Bridgenorth says to Julian Peveril?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed&mdash;indeed, Julian,&rdquo; said the almost weeping girl, &ldquo;I do not say
+ so&mdash;I say nothing, and I ought not to say anything concerning what I
+ might do, in a state of things which can never take place. Indeed, Julian,
+ you ought not thus to press me. Unprotected as I am&mdash;wishing you well&mdash;very
+ well&mdash;why should you urge me to say or do what would lessen me in my
+ own eyes? to own affection for one from whom fate has separated me for
+ ever? It is ungenerous&mdash;it is cruel&mdash;it is seeking a momentary
+ and selfish gratification to yourself, at the expense of every feeling
+ which I ought to entertain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said enough, Alice,&rdquo; said Julian, with sparkling eyes; &ldquo;you have
+ said enough in deprecating my urgency, and I will press you no farther.
+ But you overrate the impediments which lie betwixt us&mdash;they must and
+ shall give way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you said before,&rdquo; answered Alice, &ldquo;and with what probability, your own
+ account may show. You dared not to mention the subject to your own father&mdash;how
+ should you venture to mention it to mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I will soon enable you to decide upon. Major Bridgenorth, by my
+ mother&rsquo;s account, is a worthy and an estimable man. I will remind him,
+ that to my mother&rsquo;s care he owes the dearest treasure and comfort of his
+ life; and I will ask him if it is a just retribution to make that mother
+ childless. Let me but know where to find him, Alice, and you shall soon
+ hear if I have feared to plead my cause with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; answered Alice, &ldquo;you well know my uncertainty as to my dear
+ father&rsquo;s residence. How often has it been my earnest request to him that
+ he would let me share his solitary abode, or his obscure wanderings! But
+ the short and infrequent visits which he makes to this house are all that
+ he permits me of his society. Something I might surely do, however little,
+ to alleviate the melancholy by which he is oppressed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something we might both do,&rdquo; said Peveril. &ldquo;How willingly would I aid you
+ in so pleasing a task! All old griefs should be forgotten&mdash;all old
+ friendships revived. My father&rsquo;s prejudices are those of an Englishman&mdash;strong,
+ indeed, but not insurmountable by reason. Tell me, then, where Major
+ Bridgenorth is, and leave the rest to me; or let me but know by what
+ address your letters reach him, and I will forthwith essay to discover his
+ dwelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not attempt it, I charge you,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;He is already a man of
+ sorrows; and what would he think were I capable of entertaining a suit so
+ likely to add to them? Besides, I could not tell you, if I would, where he
+ is now to be found. My letters reach him from time to time, by means of my
+ aunt Christian; but of his address I am entirely ignorant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, by Heaven,&rdquo; answered Julian, &ldquo;I will watch his arrival in this
+ island, and in this house; and ere he has locked thee in his arms, he
+ shall answer to me on the subject of my suit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then demand that answer now,&rdquo; said a voice from without the door, which
+ was at the same time slowly opened&mdash;&ldquo;Demand that answer now, for here
+ stands Ralph Bridgenorth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he entered the apartment with his usual slow and sedate step&mdash;raised
+ his flapp&rsquo;d and steeple-crowned hat from his brows, and, standing in the
+ midst of the room, eyed alternately his daughter and Julian Peveril with a
+ fixed and penetrating glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; said Alice, utterly astonished, and terrified besides, by his
+ sudden appearance at such a conjuncture,&mdash;&ldquo;Father, I am not to
+ blame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of that anon, Alice,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;meantime retire to your
+ apartment&mdash;I have that to say to this youth which will not endure
+ your presence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed&mdash;indeed, father,&rdquo; said Alice, alarmed at what she supposed
+ these words indicated, &ldquo;Julian is as little to be blamed as I! It was
+ chance, it was fortune, which caused our meeting together.&rdquo; Then suddenly
+ rushing forward, she threw her arms around her father, saying, &ldquo;Oh, do him
+ no injury&mdash;he meant no wrong! Father, you were wont to be a man of
+ reason and religious peace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore should I not be so now, Alice?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, raising
+ his daughter from the ground, on which she had almost sunk in the
+ earnestness of her supplication. &ldquo;Dost thou know aught, maiden, which
+ should inflame my anger against this young man, more than reason or
+ religion may bridle? Go&mdash;go to thy chamber. Compose thine own
+ passions&mdash;learn to rule these&mdash;and leave it to me to deal with
+ this stubborn young man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice arose, and, with her eyes fixed on the ground, retired slowly from
+ the apartment. Julian followed her steps with his eyes till the last wave
+ of her garment was visible at the closing door; then turned his looks to
+ Major Bridgenorth, and then sunk them on the ground. The Major continued
+ to regard him in profound silence; his looks were melancholy and even
+ austere; but there was nothing which indicated either agitation or keen
+ resentment. He motioned to Julian to take a seat, and assumed one himself.
+ After which he opened the conversation in the following manner:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You seemed but now, young gentleman, anxious to learn where I was to be
+ found. Such I at least conjectured, from the few expressions which I
+ chanced to overhear; for I made bold, though it may be contrary to the
+ code of modern courtesy, to listen a moment or two, in order to gather
+ upon what subject so young a man as you entertained so young a woman as
+ Alice, in a private interview.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust, sir,&rdquo; said Julian, rallying spirits in what he felt to be a case
+ of extremity, &ldquo;you have heard nothing on my part which has given offence
+ to a gentleman, whom, though unknown, I am bound to respect so highly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, with the same formal gravity, &ldquo;I am
+ pleased to find that your business is, or appears to be, with me, rather
+ than with my daughter. I only think you had done better to have entrusted
+ it to me in the first instance, as my sole concern.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The utmost sharpness of attention which Julian applied, could not discover
+ if Bridgenorth spoke seriously or ironically to the above purpose. He was,
+ however, quick-witted beyond his experience, and was internally determined
+ to endeavour to discover something of the character and the temper of him
+ with whom he spoke. For that purpose, regulating his reply in the same
+ tone with Bridgenorth&rsquo;s observation, he said, that not having the
+ advantage to know his place of residence, he had applied for information
+ to his daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is now known to you for the first time?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Am I so
+ to understand you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means,&rdquo; answered Julian, looking down; &ldquo;I have been known to your
+ daughter for many years; and what I wished to say, respects both her
+ happiness and my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must understand you,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;even as carnal men understand
+ each other on the matters of this world. You are attached to my daughter
+ by the cords of love; I have long known this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, Master Bridgenorth?&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril&mdash;&ldquo;<i>You</i> have long
+ known it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, young man. Think you, that as the father of an only child, I could
+ have suffered Alice Bridgenorth&mdash;the only living pledge of her who is
+ now an angel in heaven&mdash;to have remained in this seclusion without
+ the surest knowledge of all her material actions? I have, in person, seen
+ more, both of her and of you, than you could be aware of; and when absent
+ in the body, I had the means of maintaining the same superintendence.
+ Young man, they say that such love as you entertain for my daughter
+ teaches much subtilty; but believe not that it can overreach the affection
+ which a widowed father bears to an only child.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; said Julian, his heart beating thick and joyfully, &ldquo;if you have
+ known this intercourse so long, may I not hope that it has not met your
+ disapprobation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major paused for an instant, and then answered, &ldquo;In some respects,
+ certainly not. Had it done so&mdash;had there seemed aught on your side,
+ or on my daughter&rsquo;s, to have rendered your visits here dangerous to her,
+ or displeasing to me, she had not been long the inhabitant of this
+ solitude, or of this island. But be not so hasty as to presume, that all
+ which you may desire in this matter can be either easily or speedily
+ accomplished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I foresee, indeed, difficulties,&rdquo; answered Julian; &ldquo;but with your kind
+ acquiescence, they are such as I trust to remove. My father is generous&mdash;my
+ mother is candid and liberal. They loved you once; I trust they will love
+ you again. I will be the mediator betwixt you&mdash;peace and harmony
+ shall once more inhabit our neighbourhood, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth interrupted him with a grim smile; for such it seemed, as it
+ passed over a face of deep melancholy. &ldquo;My daughter well said, but short
+ while past, that you were a dreamer of dreams&mdash;an architect of plans
+ and hopes fantastic as the visions of the night. It is a great thing you
+ ask of me;&mdash;the hand of my only child&mdash;the sum of my worldly
+ substance, though that is but dross in comparison. You ask the key of the
+ only fountain from which I may yet hope to drink one pleasant draught; you
+ ask to be the sole and absolute keeper of my earthly happiness&mdash;and
+ what have you offered, or what have you to offer in return, for the
+ surrender you require of me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am but too sensible,&rdquo; said Peveril, abashed at his own hasty
+ conclusions, &ldquo;how difficult it may be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but interrupt me not,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;till I show you the
+ amount of what you offer me in exchange for a boon, which, whatever may be
+ its intrinsic value, is earnestly desired by you, and comprehends all that
+ is valuable on earth which I have it in my power to bestow. You may have
+ heard that in the late times I was the antagonist of your father&rsquo;s
+ principles and his profane faction, but not the enemy of his person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have ever heard,&rdquo; replied Julian, &ldquo;much the contrary; and it was but
+ now that I reminded you that you had been his friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay. When he was in affliction and I in prosperity, I was neither
+ unwilling, nor altogether unable, to show myself such. Well, the tables
+ are turned&mdash;the times are changed. A peaceful and unoffending man
+ might have expected from a neighbour, now powerful in his turn, such
+ protection, when walking in the paths of the law, as all men, subjects of
+ the same realm, have a right to expect even from perfect strangers. What
+ chances? I pursue, with the warrant of the King and law, a murderess,
+ bearing on her hand the blood of my near connection, and I had, in such a
+ case, a right to call on every liege subject to render assistance to the
+ execution. My late friendly neighbour, bound, as a man and a magistrate,
+ to give ready assistance to a legal action&mdash;bound, as a grateful and
+ obliged friend, to respect my rights and my person&mdash;thrusts himself
+ betwixt me&mdash;me, the avenger of blood&mdash;and my lawful captive;
+ beats me to the earth, at once endangering my life, and, in mere human
+ eyes, sullying mine honour; and under his protection, the Midianitish
+ woman reaches, like a sea-eagle, the nest which she hath made in the
+ wave-surrounded rocks, and remains there till gold, duly administered at
+ Court, wipes out all memory of her crime, and baffles the vengeance due to
+ the memory of the best and bravest of men.&mdash;But,&rdquo; he added,
+ apostrophising the portrait of Christian, &ldquo;thou art not yet forgotten, my
+ fair-haired William! The vengeance which dogs thy murderess is slow,&mdash;but
+ it is sure!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause of some moments, which Julian Peveril, willing to hear
+ to what conclusion Major Bridgenorth was finally to arrive, did not care
+ to interrupt. Accordingly, in a few minutes, the latter proceeded.&mdash;&ldquo;These
+ things,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I recall not in bitterness, so far as they are personal
+ to me&mdash;I recall them not in spite of heart, though they have been the
+ means of banishing me from my place of residence, where my fathers dwelt,
+ and where my earthly comforts lie interred. But the public cause sets
+ further strife betwixt your father and me. Who so active as he to execute
+ the fatal edict of black St. Bartholomew&rsquo;s day, when so many hundreds of
+ gospel-preachers were expelled from house and home&mdash;from hearth and
+ altar&mdash;from church and parish, to make room for belly-gods and
+ thieves? Who, when a devoted few of the Lord&rsquo;s people were united to lift
+ the fallen standard, and once more advance the good cause, was the
+ readiest to break their purpose&mdash;to search for, persecute, and
+ apprehend them? Whose breath did I feel warm on my neck&mdash;whose naked
+ sword was thrust within a foot of my body, whilst I lurked darkling, like
+ a thief in concealment, in the house of my fathers?&mdash;It was Geoffrey
+ Peveril&rsquo;s&mdash;it was your father&rsquo;s!&mdash;What can you answer to all
+ this, or how can you reconcile it with your present wishes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These things I point out to you, Julian, that I may show you how
+ impossible, in the eyes of a merely worldly man, would be the union which
+ you are desirous of. But Heaven hath at times opened a door, where man
+ beholds no means of issue. Julian, your mother, for one to whom the truth
+ is unknown, is, after the fashion of the world, one of the best, and one
+ of the wisest of women; and Providence, which gave her so fair a form, and
+ tenanted that form with a mind as pure as the original frailty of our vile
+ nature will permit, means not, I trust, that she shall continue to the end
+ to be a vessel of wrath and perdition. Of your father I say nothing&mdash;he
+ is what the times and example of others, and the counsels of his lordly
+ priest, have made him; and of him, once more, I say nothing, save that I
+ have power over him, which ere now he might have felt, but that there is
+ one within his chambers, who might have suffered in his suffering. Nor do
+ I wish to root up your ancient family. If I prize not your boast of family
+ honours and pedigree, I would not willingly destroy them; more than I
+ would pull down a moss-grown tower, or hew to the ground an ancient oak,
+ save for the straightening of the common path, and advantage of the
+ public. I have, therefore, no resentment against the humbled House of
+ Peveril&mdash;nay, I have regard to it in its depression.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He here made a second pause, as if he expected Julian to say something.
+ But notwithstanding the ardour with which the young man had pressed his
+ suit, he was too much trained in ideas of the importance of his family,
+ and in the better habit of respect for his parents, to hear, without
+ displeasure, some part of Bridgenorth&rsquo;s discourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The House of Peveril,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;was never humbled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had you said the sons of that House had never been <i>humble</i>,&rdquo;
+ answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;you would have come nearer the truth.&mdash;Are <i>you</i>
+ not humbled? Live you not here, the lackey of a haughty woman, the
+ play-companion of an empty youth? If you leave this Isle, and go to the
+ Court of England, see what regard will there be paid to the old pedigree
+ that deduces your descent from kings and conquerors. A scurril or obscene
+ jest, an impudent carriage, a laced cloak, a handful of gold, and the
+ readiness to wager it on a card, or a die, will better advance you at the
+ Court of Charles, than your father&rsquo;s ancient name, and slavish devotion of
+ blood and fortune to the cause of <i>his</i> father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is, indeed, but too probable,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;but the Court shall be
+ no element of mine. I will live like my fathers, among my people, care for
+ their comforts, decide their differences&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Build Maypoles, and dance around them,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, with another of
+ those grim smiles which passed over his features like the light of a
+ sexton&rsquo;s torch, as it glares and is reflected by the window of the church,
+ when he comes from locking a funeral vault. &ldquo;No, Julian, these are not
+ times in which, by the dreaming drudgery of a country magistrate, and the
+ petty cares of a country proprietor, a man can serve his unhappy country.
+ There are mighty designs afloat, and men are called to make their choice
+ betwixt God and Baal. The ancient superstition&mdash;the abomination of
+ our fathers&mdash;is raising its head, and flinging abroad its snares,
+ under the protection of the princes of the earth; but she raises not her
+ head unmarked or unwatched; the true English hearts are as thousands,
+ which wait but a signal to arise as one man, and show the kings of the
+ earth that they have combined in vain! We will cast their cords from us&mdash;the
+ cup of their abominations we will not taste.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak in darkness, Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Peveril. &ldquo;Knowing so
+ much of me, you may, perhaps, also be aware, that I at least have seen too
+ much of the delusions of Rome, to desire that they should be propagated at
+ home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Else, wherefore do I speak to thee friendly and so free?&rdquo; said
+ Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Do I not know, with what readiness of early wit you baffled
+ the wily attempts of the woman&rsquo;s priest, to seduce thee from the
+ Protestant faith? Do I not know, how thou wast beset when abroad, and that
+ thou didst both hold thine own faith, and secure the wavering belief of
+ thy friend? Said I not, this was done like the son of Margaret Peveril?
+ Said I not, he holdeth, as yet, but the dead letter&mdash;but the seed
+ which is sown shall one day sprout and quicken?&mdash;Enough, however, of
+ this. For to-day this is thy habitation. I will see in thee neither the
+ servant of the daughter of Eshbaal, nor the son of him who pursued my
+ life, and blemished my honours; but thou shalt be to me, for this day, as
+ the child of her, without whom my house had been extinct.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he stretched out his thin, bony hand, and grasped that of
+ Julian Peveril; but there was such a look of mourning in his welcome, that
+ whatever delight the youth anticipated, spending so long a time in the
+ neighbourhood of Alice Bridgenorth, perhaps in her society, or however
+ strongly he felt the prudence of conciliating her father&rsquo;s good-will, he
+ could not help feeling as if his heart was chilled in his company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This day at least is friendship&rsquo;s&mdash;on the morrow
+ Let strife come an she will.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Deborah Debbitch, summoned by her master, now made her appearance, with
+ her handkerchief at her eyes, and an appearance of great mental trouble.
+ &ldquo;It was not my fault, Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;how could I help it?
+ like will to like&mdash;the boy would come&mdash;the girl would see him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, foolish woman,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;and hear what I have got to
+ say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know what your honour has to say well enough,&rdquo; said Deborah. &ldquo;Service,
+ I wot, is no inheritance nowadays&mdash;some are wiser than other some&mdash;if
+ I had not been wheedled away from Martindale, I might have had a house of
+ mine own by this time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, idiot!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; but so intent was Deborah on her
+ vindication, that he could but thrust the interjection, as it were
+ edgewise, between her exclamations, which followed as thick as is usual in
+ cases, where folks endeavour to avert deserved censure by a clamorous
+ justification ere the charge be brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No wonder she was cheated,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;out of sight of her own interest,
+ when it was to wait on pretty Miss Alice. All your honour&rsquo;s gold should
+ never have tempted me, but that I knew she was but a dead castaway, poor
+ innocent, if she were taken away from my lady or me.&mdash;And so this is
+ the end on&rsquo;t!&mdash;up early, and down late&mdash;and this is all my
+ thanks!&mdash;But your honour had better take care what you do&mdash;she
+ has the short cough yet sometimes&mdash;and should take physic, spring and
+ fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, chattering fool!&rdquo; said her master, so soon as her failing breath
+ gave him an opportunity to strike in, &ldquo;thinkest thou I knew not of this
+ young gentleman&rsquo;s visits to the Black Fort, and that, if they had
+ displeased me, I would not have known how to stop them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I know that your honour knew of his visits!&rdquo; exclaimed Deborah, in a
+ triumphant tone,&mdash;for, like most of her condition, she never sought
+ farther for her defence than a lie, however inconsistent and improbable&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Did</i>
+ I know that your honour knew of it!&mdash;Why, how should I have permitted
+ his visits else? I wonder what your honour takes me for! Had I not been
+ sure it was the thing in this world that your honour most desired would I
+ have presumed to lend it a hand forward? I trust I know my duty better.
+ Hear if I ever asked another youngster into the house, save himself&mdash;for
+ I knew your honour was wise, and quarrels cannot last for ever, and love
+ begins where hatred ends; and, to be sure, they love as if they were born
+ one for the other&mdash;and then, the estates of Moultrassie and
+ Martindale suit each other like sheath and knife.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Parrot of a woman, hold your tongue!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, his patience
+ almost completely exhausted; &ldquo;or, if you will prate, let it be to your
+ playfellows in the kitchen, and bid them get ready some dinner presently,
+ for Master Peveril is far from home.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I will, and with all my heart,&rdquo; said Deborah; &ldquo;and if there are a
+ pair of fatter fowls in Man than shall clap their wings on the table
+ presently, your honour shall call me goose as well as parrot.&rdquo; She then
+ left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is to such a woman as that,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, looking after her
+ significantly, &ldquo;that you conceived me to have abandoned the charge of my
+ only child! But enough of this subject&mdash;we will walk abroad, if you
+ will, while she is engaged in a province fitter for her understanding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he left the house, accompanied by Julian Peveril, and they were
+ soon walking side by side, as if they had been old acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may have happened to many of our readers, as it has done to ourselves,
+ to be thrown by accident into society with some individual whose claims to
+ what is called a <i>serious</i> character stand considerably higher than
+ our own, and with whom, therefore, we have conceived ourselves likely to
+ spend our time in a very stiff and constrained manner; while, on the other
+ hand, our destined companion may have apprehended some disgust from the
+ supposed levity and thoughtless gaiety of a disposition that when we, with
+ that urbanity and good-humour which is our principal characteristic, have
+ accommodated ourself to our companion, by throwing as much seriousness
+ into our conversation as our habits will admit, he, on the other hand,
+ moved by our liberal example, hath divested his manners of part of their
+ austerity; and our conversation has, in consequence, been of that pleasant
+ texture, betwixt the useful and agreeable, which best resembles &ldquo;the
+ fairy-web of night and day,&rdquo; usually called in prose the twilight. It is
+ probable both parties may, on such occasions, have been the better for
+ their encounter, even if it went no farther than to establish for the time
+ a community of feeling between men, who, separated more perhaps by temper
+ than by principle, are too apt to charge each other with profane frivolity
+ on the one hand, or fanaticism on the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It fared thus in Peveril&rsquo;s walk with Bridgenorth, and in the conversation
+ which he held with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carefully avoiding the subject on which he had already spoken, Major
+ Bridgenorth turned his conversation chiefly on foreign travel, and on the
+ wonders he had seen in distant countries, and which he appeared to have
+ marked with a curious and observant eye. This discourse made the time fly
+ light away; for although the anecdotes and observations thus communicated
+ were all tinged with the serious and almost gloomy spirit of the narrator,
+ they yet contained traits of interest and of wonder, such as are usually
+ interesting to a youthful ear, and were particularly so to Julian, who
+ had, in his disposition, some cast of the romantic and adventurous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared that Bridgenorth knew the south of France, and could tell many
+ stories of the French Huguenots, who already began to sustain those
+ vexations which a few years afterwards were summed up by the revocation of
+ the Edict of Nantz. He had even been in Hungary, for he spoke as from
+ personal knowledge of the character of several of the heads of the great
+ Protestant insurrection, which at this time had taken place under the
+ celebrated Tekeli; and laid down solid reasons why they were entitled to
+ make common cause with the Great Turk, rather than submit to the Pope of
+ Rome. He talked also of Savoy, where those of the reformed religion still
+ suffered a cruel persecution; and he mentioned with a swelling spirit, the
+ protection which Oliver had afforded to the oppressed Protestant Churches;
+ &ldquo;therein showing himself,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;more fit to wield the supreme power,
+ than those who, claiming it by right of inheritance, use it only for their
+ own vain and voluptuous pursuits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not expect,&rdquo; said Peveril modestly, &ldquo;to have heard Oliver&rsquo;s
+ panegyric from you, Master Bridgenorth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not panegyrise him,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth; &ldquo;I speak but truth of
+ that extraordinary man, now being dead, whom, when alive, I feared not to
+ withstand to his face. It is the fault of the present unhappy King, if he
+ make us look back with regret to the days when the nation was respected
+ abroad, and when devotion and sobriety were practised at home.&mdash;But I
+ mean not to vex your spirit by controversy. You have lived amongst those
+ who find it more easy and more pleasant to be the pensioners of France
+ than her controllers&mdash;to spend the money which she doles out to
+ themselves, than to check the tyranny with which she oppresses our poor
+ brethren of the religion. When the scales shall fall from thine eyes, all
+ this thou shalt see; and seeing, shalt learn to detest and despise it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they had completed their walk, and were returned to the Black
+ Fort, by a different path from that which had led them up the valley. The
+ exercise and the general tone of conversation had removed, in some degree,
+ the shyness and embarrassment which Peveril originally felt in
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s presence and which the tenor of his first remarks had rather
+ increased than diminished. Deborah&rsquo;s promised banquet was soon on the
+ board; and in simplicity as well as neatness and good order, answered the
+ character she had claimed for it. In one respect alone, there seemed some
+ inconsistency, perhaps a little affectation. Most of the dishes were of
+ silver, and the plates were of the same metal; instead of the trenchers
+ and pewter which Peveril had usually seen employed on similar occasions at
+ the Black Fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, with the feeling of one who walks in a pleasant dream from
+ which he fears to awake, and whose delight is mingled with wonder and with
+ uncertainty, Julian Peveril found himself seated between Alice Bridgenorth
+ and her father&mdash;the being he most loved on earth, and the person whom
+ he had ever considered as the great obstacle to their intercourse. The
+ confusion of his mind was such, that he could scarcely reply to the
+ importunate civilities of Dame Deborah; who, seated with them at table in
+ her quality of governante, now dispensed the good things which had been
+ prepared under her own eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Alice she seemed to have found a resolution to play the mute; for
+ she answered not, excepting briefly, to the questions of Dame Debbitch;
+ nay, even when her father, which happened once or twice, attempted to
+ bring her forward in the conversation, she made no further reply than
+ respect for him rendered absolutely necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Bridgenorth himself, then, devolved the task of entertaining the
+ company; and contrary to his ordinary habits, he did not seem to shrink
+ from it. His discourse was not only easy, but almost cheerful, though ever
+ and anon crossed by some expressions indicative of natural and habitual
+ melancholy, or prophetic of future misfortune and woe. Flashes of
+ enthusiasm, too, shot along his conversation, gleaming like the
+ sheet-lightening of an autumn eve, which throws a strong, though momentary
+ illumination, across the sober twilight, and all the surrounding objects,
+ which, touched by it, assume a wilder and more striking character. In
+ general, however, Bridgenorth&rsquo;s remarks were plain and sensible; and as he
+ aimed at no graces of language, any ornament which they received arose out
+ of the interest with which they were impressed on his hearers. For
+ example, when Deborah, in the pride and vulgarity of her heart, called
+ Julian&rsquo;s attention to the plate from which they had been eating,
+ Bridgenorth seemed to think an apology necessary for such superfluous
+ expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a symptom,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;of approaching danger, when such men, as
+ were not usually influenced by the vanities of life employed much money in
+ ornaments composed of the precious metals. It was a sign that the merchant
+ could not obtain a profit for the capital, which, for the sake of
+ security, he invested in this inert form. It was a proof that the noblemen
+ or gentlemen feared the rapacity of power, when they put their wealth into
+ forms the most portable and the most capable of being hidden; and it
+ showed the uncertainty of credit, when a man of judgment preferred the
+ actual possession of a mass of a silver to the convenience of a
+ goldsmith&rsquo;s or a banker&rsquo;s receipt. While a shadow of liberty remained,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;domestic rights were last invaded; and, therefore, men disposed
+ upon their cupboards and tables the wealth which in these places would
+ remain longest, though not perhaps finally, sacred from the grasp of a
+ tyrannical government. But let there be a demand for capital to support a
+ profitable commerce, and the mass is at once consigned to the furnace,
+ and, ceasing to be a vain and cumbrous ornament of the banquet, becomes a
+ potent and active agent for furthering the prosperity of the country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In war, too,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;plate has been found a ready resource.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But too much so,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth. &ldquo;In the late times, the plate of
+ the nobles and gentry, with that of the colleges, and the sale of the
+ crown-jewels, enabled the King to make his unhappy stand, which prevented
+ matters returning to a state of peace and good order, until the sword had
+ attained an undue superiority both over King and Parliament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at Julian as he spoke, much as he who proves a horse offers some
+ object suddenly to his eyes, then watches to see if he starts or blenches
+ from it. But Julian&rsquo;s thoughts were too much bent on other topics to
+ manifest any alarm. His answer referred to a previous part of
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s discourse, and was not returned till after a brief pause.
+ &ldquo;War, then,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;war, the grand impoverisher, is also a creator of
+ wealth which it wastes and devours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;even as the sluice brings into action the
+ sleeping waters of the lake, which it finally drains. Necessity invents
+ arts and discovers means; and what necessity is sterner than that of civil
+ war? Therefore, even war is not in itself unmixed evil, being the creator
+ of impulses and energies which could not otherwise have existed in
+ society.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men should go to war, then,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;that they may send their
+ silver plate to the mint, and eat from pewter dishes and wooden plates?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, my son,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. Then checking himself as he observed
+ the deep crimson in Julian&rsquo;s cheek and brow, he added, &ldquo;I crave your
+ pardon for such familiarity; but I meant not to limit what I said even now
+ to such trifling consequences, although it may be something salutary to
+ tear men from their pomps and luxuries, and teach those to be Romans who
+ would otherwise be Sybarites. But I would say, that times of public
+ danger, as they call into circulation the miser&rsquo;s hoard and the proud
+ man&rsquo;s bullion, and so add to the circulating wealth of the country, do
+ also call into action many a brave and noble spirit, which would otherwise
+ lie torpid, give no example to the living, and bequeath no name to future
+ ages. Society knows not, and cannot know, the mental treasures which
+ slumber in her bosom, till necessity and opportunity call forth the
+ statesman and the soldier from the shades of lowly life to the parts they
+ are designed by Providence to perform, and the stations which nature had
+ qualified them to hold. So rose Oliver&mdash;so rose Milton&mdash;so rose
+ many another name which cannot be forgotten&mdash;even as the tempest
+ summons forth and displays the address of the mariner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;as if national calamity might be, in some
+ sort, an advantage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if it were not so,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;it had not existed in this
+ state of trial, where all temporal evil is alleviated by something good in
+ its progress or result, and where all that is good is close coupled with
+ that which is in itself evil.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be a noble sight,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;to behold the slumbering
+ energies of a great mind awakened into energy, and to see it assume the
+ authority which is its due over spirits more meanly endowed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I once witnessed,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;something to the same effect; and
+ as the tale is brief, I will tell it you, if you will:&mdash;Amongst my
+ wanderings, the Transatlantic settlements have not escaped me; more
+ especially the country of New England, into which our native land has
+ shaken from her lap, as a drunkard flings from him his treasures, so much
+ that is precious in the eyes of God and of His children. There thousands
+ of our best and most godly men&mdash;such whose righteousness might come
+ of cities&mdash;are content to be the inhabitants of the desert, rather
+ encountering the unenlightened savages, than stooping to extinguish, under
+ the oppression practised in Britain, the light that is within their own
+ minds. There I remained for a time, during the wars which the colony
+ maintained with Philip, a great Indian Chief, or Sachem, as they were
+ called, who seemed a messenger sent from Satan to buffet them. His cruelty
+ was great&mdash;his dissimulation profound; and the skill and promptitude
+ with which he maintained a destructive and desultory warfare, inflicted
+ many dreadful calamities on the settlement. I was, by chance, at a small
+ village in the woods, more than thirty miles from Boston, and in its
+ situation exceedingly lonely, and surrounded with thickets. Nevertheless,
+ there was no idea of any danger from the Indians at that time, for men
+ trusted to the protection of a considerable body of troops who had taken
+ the field for protection of the frontiers, and who lay, or were supposed
+ to lie, betwixt the hamlet and the enemy&rsquo;s country. But they had to do
+ with a foe, whom the devil himself had inspired at once with cunning and
+ cruelty. It was on a Sabbath morning, when we had assembled to take sweet
+ counsel together in the Lord&rsquo;s house. Our temple was but constructed of
+ wooden logs; but when shall the chant of trained hirelings, or the
+ sounding of tin and brass tubes amid the aisles of a minster, arise so
+ sweetly to Heaven, as did the psalm in which we united at once our voices
+ and our hearts! An excellent worthy, who now sleeps in the Lord, Nehemia
+ Solsgrace, long the companion of my pilgrimage, had just begun to wrestle
+ in prayer, when a woman, with disordered looks and dishevelled hair,
+ entered our chapel in a distracted manner, screaming incessantly, &lsquo;The
+ Indians! The Indians!&rsquo;&mdash;In that land no man dares separate himself
+ from his means of defence; and whether in the city or in the field, in the
+ ploughed land or the forest, men keep beside them their weapons, as did
+ the Jews at the rebuilding of the Temple. So we sallied forth with our
+ guns and pikes, and heard the whoop of these incarnate devils, already in
+ possession of a part of the town, and exercising their cruelty on the few
+ whom weighty causes or indisposition had withheld from public worship; and
+ it was remarked as a judgment, that, upon that bloody Sabbath, Adrian
+ Hanson, a Dutchman, a man well enough disposed towards man, but whose mind
+ was altogether given to worldly gain, was shot and scalped as he was
+ summing his weekly gains in his warehouse. In fine, there was much damage
+ done; and although our arrival and entrance into combat did in some sort
+ put them back, yet being surprised and confused, and having no appointed
+ leader of our band, the devilish enemy shot hard at us and had some
+ advantage. It was pitiful to hear the screams of women and children amid
+ the report of guns and the whistling of bullets, mixed with the ferocious
+ yells of these savages, which they term their war-whoop. Several houses in
+ the upper part of the village were soon on fire; and the roaring of the
+ flames, and crackling of the great beams as they blazed, added to the
+ horrible confusion; while the smoke which the wind drove against us gave
+ farther advantage to the enemy, who fought as it were, invisible, and
+ under cover, whilst we fell fast by their unerring fire. In this state of
+ confusion, and while we were about to adopt the desperate project of
+ evacuating the village, and, placing the women and children in the centre,
+ of attempting a retreat to the nearest settlement, it pleased Heaven to
+ send us unexpected assistance. A tall man, of a reverend appearance, whom
+ no one of us had ever seen before, suddenly was in the midst of us, as we
+ hastily agitated the resolution of retreating. His garments were of the
+ skin of the elk, and he wore sword and carried gun; I never saw anything
+ more august than his features, overshadowed by locks of grey hair, which
+ mingled with a long beard of the same colour. &lsquo;Men and brethren,&rsquo; he said,
+ in a voice like that which turns back the flight, &lsquo;why sink your hearts?
+ and why are you thus disquieted? Fear ye that the God we serve will give
+ you up to yonder heathen dogs? Follow me, and you shall see this day that
+ there is a captain in Israel!&rsquo; He uttered a few brief but distinct orders,
+ in a tone of one who was accustomed to command; and such was the influence
+ of his appearance, his mien, his language, and his presence of mind, that
+ he was implicitly obeyed by men who had never seen him until that moment.
+ We were hastily divided, by his orders, into two bodies; one of which
+ maintained the defence of the village with more courage than ever,
+ convinced that the Unknown was sent by God to our rescue. At his command
+ they assumed the best and most sheltered positions for exchanging their
+ deadly fire with the Indians; while, under cover of the smoke, the
+ stranger sallied from the town, at the head of the other division of the
+ New England men, and, fetching a circuit, attacked the Red Warriors in the
+ rear. The surprise, as is usual amongst savages, had complete effect; for
+ they doubted not that they were assailed in their turn, and placed betwixt
+ two hostile parties by the return of a detachment from the provincial
+ army. The heathens fled in confusion, abandoning the half-won village, and
+ leaving behind them such a number of their warriors, that the tribe hath
+ never recovered its loss. Never shall I forget the figure of our venerable
+ leader, when our men, and not they only, but the women and children of the
+ village, rescued from the tomahawk and scalping-knife, stood crowded
+ around him, yet scarce venturing to approach his person, and more minded,
+ perhaps, to worship him as a descended angel, than to thank him as a
+ fellow-mortal. &lsquo;Not unto me be the glory,&rsquo; he said; &lsquo;I am but an
+ implement, frail as yourselves, in the hand of Him who is strong to
+ deliver. Bring me a cup of water, that I may allay my parched throat, ere
+ I essay the task of offering thanks where they are most due.&rsquo; I was
+ nearest to him as he spoke, and I gave into his hand the water he
+ requested. At that moment we exchanged glances, and it seemed to me that I
+ recognised a noble friend whom I had long since deemed in glory; but he
+ gave me no time to speak, had speech been prudent. Sinking on his knees,
+ and signing us to obey him, he poured forth a strong and energetic
+ thanksgiving for the turning back of the battle, which, pronounced with a
+ voice loud and clear as a war-trumpet, thrilled through the joints and
+ marrow of the hearers. I have heard many an act of devotion in my life,
+ had Heaven vouchsafed me grace to profit by them; but such a prayer as
+ this, uttered amid the dead and the dying, with a rich tone of mingled
+ triumph and adoration, was beyond them all&mdash;it was like the song of
+ the inspired prophetess who dwelt beneath the palm-tree between Ramah and
+ Bethel. He was silent; and for a brief space we remained with our faces
+ bent to the earth&mdash;no man daring to lift his head. At length we
+ looked up, but our deliverer was no longer amongst us; nor was he ever
+ again seen in the land which he had rescued.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Bridgenorth, who had told this singular story with an eloquence and
+ vivacity of detail very contrary to the usual dryness of his conversation,
+ paused for an instant, and then resumed&mdash;&ldquo;Thou seest, young man, that
+ men of valour and of discretion are called forth to command in
+ circumstances of national exigence, though their very existence is unknown
+ in the land which they are predestined to deliver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what thought the people of the mysterious stranger?&rdquo; said Julian, who
+ had listened with eagerness, for the story was of a kind interesting to
+ the youthful and the brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Many things,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;and, as usual, little to the
+ purpose. The prevailing opinion was, notwithstanding his own disclamation,
+ that the stranger was really a supernatural being; others believed him an
+ inspired champion, transported in the body from some distant climate, to
+ show us the way to safety; others, again, concluded that he was a recluse,
+ who, either from motives of piety, or other cogent reasons, had become a
+ dweller in the wilderness, and shunned the face of man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, if I may presume to ask,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;to which of these opinions
+ were you disposed to adhere?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The last suited best with the transient though close view with which I
+ had perused the stranger&rsquo;s features,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth; &ldquo;for although I
+ dispute not that it may please Heaven, on high occasions, even to raise
+ one from the dead in defence of his country, yet I doubted not then, as I
+ doubt not now, that I looked on the living form of one, who had indeed
+ powerful reasons to conceal him in the cleft of the rock.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are these reasons a secret?&rdquo; said Julian Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not properly a secret,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth; &ldquo;for I fear not thy
+ betraying what I might tell thee in private discourse; and besides, wert
+ thou so base, the prey lies too distant for any hunters to whom thou
+ couldst point out its traces. But the name of this worthy will sound harsh
+ in thy ear, on account of one action of his life&mdash;being his accession
+ to a great measure, which made the extreme isles of the earth to tremble.
+ Have you never heard of Richard Whalley?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of the regicide?&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Call his act what thou wilt,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;he was not less the
+ rescuer of that devoted village, that, with other leading spirits of the
+ age, he sat in the judgment-seat when Charles Stewart was arraigned at the
+ bar, and subscribed the sentence that went forth upon him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have ever heard,&rdquo; said Julian, in an altered voice, and colouring
+ deeply, &ldquo;that you, Master Bridgenorth, with other Presbyterians, were
+ totally averse to that detestable crime, and were ready to have made
+ joint-cause with the Cavaliers in preventing so horrible a parricide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it were so,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;we have been richly rewarded by his
+ successor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rewarded!&rdquo; exclaimed Julian; &ldquo;does the distinction of good and evil, and
+ our obligation to do the one and forbear the other, depend on the reward
+ which may attach to our actions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth; &ldquo;yet those who view the havoc which
+ this house of Stewart have made in the Church and State&mdash;the tyranny
+ which they exercise over men&rsquo;s persons and consciences&mdash;may well
+ doubt whether it be lawful to use weapons in their defence. Yet you hear
+ me not praise, or even vindicate the death of the King, though so far
+ deserved, as he was false to his oath as a Prince and Magistrate. I only
+ tell you what you desired to know, that Richard Whalley, one of the late
+ King&rsquo;s judges, was he of whom I have just been speaking. I knew his lofty
+ brow, though time had made it balder and higher; his grey eye retained all
+ its lustre; and though the grizzled beard covered the lower part of his
+ face, it prevented me not from recognising him. The scent was hot after
+ him for his blood; but by the assistance of those friends whom Heaven had
+ raised up for his preservation, he was concealed carefully, and emerged
+ only to do the will of Providence in the matter of that battle. Perhaps
+ his voice may be heard in the field once more, should England need one of
+ her noblest hearts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, God forbid!&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; returned Bridgenorth. &ldquo;May God avert civil war, and pardon those
+ whose madness would bring it on us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a long pause, during which Julian, who had scarce lifted his
+ eyes towards Alice, stole a glance in that direction, and was struck by
+ the deep cast of melancholy which had stolen over features, to which a
+ cheerful, if not gay expression, was most natural. So soon as she caught
+ his eye, she remarked, and, as Julian thought, with significance, that the
+ shadows were lengthening, and evening coming on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard; and although satisfied that she hinted at his departure, he
+ could not, upon the instant, find resolution to break the spell which
+ detained him. The language which Bridgenorth held was not only new and
+ alarming, but so contrary to the maxims in which he was brought up, that,
+ as a son of Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak, he would, in another case,
+ have thought himself called upon to dispute its conclusions, even at the
+ sword&rsquo;s point. But Bridgenorth&rsquo;s opinions were delivered with so much
+ calmness&mdash;seemed so much the result of conviction&mdash;that they
+ excited in Julian rather a spirit of wonder, than of angry controversy.
+ There was a character of sober decision, and sedate melancholy, in all
+ that he said, which, even had he not been the father of Alice (and perhaps
+ Julian was not himself aware how much he was influenced by that
+ circumstance), would have rendered it difficult to take personal offence.
+ His language and sentiments were of that quiet, yet decided kind, upon
+ which it is difficult either to fix controversy, or quarrel, although it
+ be impossible to acquiesce in the conclusions to which they lead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Julian remained, as if spell-bound to his chair, scarce more
+ surprised at the company in which he found himself, than at the opinions
+ to which he was listening, another circumstance reminded him that the
+ proper time of his stay at Black Fort had been expended. Little Fairy, the
+ Manx pony, which, well accustomed to the vicinity of Black Fort, used to
+ feed near the house while her master made his visits there, began to find
+ his present stay rather too long. She had been the gift of the Countess to
+ Julian, whilst a youth, and came of a high-spirited mountain breed,
+ remarkable alike for hardiness, for longevity, and for a degree of
+ sagacity approaching to that of the dog. Fairy showed the latter quality,
+ by the way in which she chose to express her impatience to be moving
+ homewards. At least such seemed the purpose of the shrill neigh with which
+ she startled the female inmates of the parlour, who, the moment
+ afterwards, could not forbear smiling to see the nose of the pony advanced
+ through the opened casement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairy reminds me,&rdquo; said Julian, looking to Alice, and rising, &ldquo;that the
+ term of my stay here is exhausted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak with me yet one moment,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, withdrawing him into a
+ Gothic recess of the old-fashioned apartment, and speaking so low that he
+ could not be overheard by Alice and her governante, who, in the meantime,
+ caressed, and fed with fragments of bread the intruder Fairy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have not, after all,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;told me the cause of your
+ coming hither.&rdquo; He stopped, as if to enjoy his embarrassment, and then
+ added, &ldquo;And indeed it were most unnecessary that you should do so. I have
+ not so far forgotten the days of my youth, or those affections which bind
+ poor frail humanity but too much to the things of this world. Will you
+ find no words to ask of me the great boon which you seek, and which,
+ peradventure, you would not have hesitated to have made your own, without
+ my knowledge, and against my consent?&mdash;Nay, never vindicate thyself,
+ but mark me farther. The patriarch bought his beloved by fourteen years&rsquo;
+ hard service to her father Laban, and they seemed to him but as a few
+ days. But he that would wed my daughter must serve, in comparison, but a
+ few days; though in matters of such mighty import, that they shall seem as
+ the service of many years. Reply not to me now, but go, and peace be with
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He retired so quickly, after speaking, that Peveril had literally not an
+ instant to reply. He cast his eyes around the apartment, but Deborah and
+ her charge had also disappeared. His gaze rested for a moment on the
+ portrait of Christian, and his imagination suggested that his dark
+ features were illuminated by a smile of haughty triumph. He stared, and
+ looked more attentively&mdash;it was but the effect of the evening beam,
+ which touched the picture at the instant. The effect was gone, and there
+ remained but the fixed, grave, inflexible features of the republican
+ soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian left the apartment as one who walks in a dream; he mounted Fairy,
+ and, agitated by a variety of thoughts, which he was unable to reduce to
+ order, he returned to Castle Rushin before the night sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he found all in movement. The Countess, with her son, had, upon some
+ news received, or resolution formed, during his absence, removed, with a
+ principal part of their family, to the yet stronger Castle of Holm-Peel,
+ about eight miles&rsquo; distance across the island; and which had been suffered
+ to fall into a much more dilapidated condition than that of Castletown, so
+ far as it could be considered as a place of residence. But as a fortress,
+ Holm-Peel was stronger than Castletown; nay, unless assailed regularly,
+ was almost impregnable; and was always held by a garrison belonging to the
+ Lords of Man. Here Peveril arrived at nightfall. He was told in the
+ fishing-village, that the night-bell of the Castle had been rung earlier
+ than usual, and the watch set with circumstances of unusual and jealous
+ repetition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resolving, therefore, not to disturb the garrison by entering at that late
+ hour, he obtained an indifferent lodging in the town for the night, and
+ determined to go to the Castle early on the succeeding morning. He was not
+ sorry thus to gain a few hours of solitude, to think over the agitating
+ events of the preceding day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;What seem&rsquo;d its head,
+ The likeness of a kingly crown had on.
+ &mdash;PARADISE LOST.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sodor, or Holm-Peel, so is named the castle to which our Julian directed
+ his course early on the following morning, is one of those extraordinary
+ monuments of antiquity with which this singular and interesting island
+ abounds. It occupies the whole of a high rocky peninsula, or rather an
+ island, for it is surrounded by the sea at high-water, and scarcely
+ accessible even when the tide is out, although a stone causeway, of great
+ solidity, erected for the express purpose, connects the island with the
+ mainland. The whole space is surrounded by double walls of great strength
+ and thickness; and the access to the interior, at the time which we treat
+ of, was only by two flights of steep and narrow steps, divided from each
+ other by a strong tower and guard-house; under the former of which, there
+ is an entrance-arch. The open space within the walls extends to two acres,
+ and contains many objects worthy of antiquarian curiosity. There were
+ besides the castle itself, two cathedral churches, dedicated, the earlier
+ to St. Patrick, the latter to St. Germain; besides two smaller churches;
+ all of which had become, even in that day, more or less ruinous. Their
+ decayed walls, exhibiting the rude and massive architecture of the most
+ remote period, were composed of a ragged grey-stone, which formed a
+ singular contrast with the bright red freestone of which the window-cases,
+ corner-stones, arches, and other ornamental parts of the building, were
+ composed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these four ruinous churches, the space of ground enclosed by the
+ massive exterior walls of Holm-Peel exhibited many other vestiges of the
+ olden time. There was a square mound of earth, facing, with its angles to
+ the points of the compass, one of those motes, as they were called, on
+ which, in ancient times, the northern tribes elected or recognised their
+ chiefs, and held their solemn popular assemblies, or <i>comitia</i>. There
+ was also one of those singular towers, so common in Ireland as to have
+ proved the favourite theme of her antiquaries; but of which the real use
+ and meaning seems yet to be hidden in the mist of ages. This of Holm-Peel
+ had been converted to the purpose of a watch-tower. There were, besides,
+ Runic monuments, of which legends could not be deciphered; and later
+ inscriptions to the memory of champions, of whom the names only were
+ preserved from oblivion. But tradition and superstitious eld, still most
+ busy where real history is silent, had filled up the long blank of
+ accurate information with tales of Sea-kings and Pirates, Hebridean Chiefs
+ and Norwegian Resolutes, who had formerly warred against, and in defence
+ of, this famous castle. Superstition, too, had her tales of fairies,
+ ghosts, and spectres&mdash;her legions of saints and demons, of fairies
+ and of familiar spirits, which in no corner of the British empire are told
+ and received with more absolute credulity than in the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst all these ruins of an older time arose the Castle itself,&mdash;now
+ ruinous&mdash;but in Charles II.&lsquo;s reign well garrisoned, and, in a
+ military point of view, kept in complete order. It was a venerable and
+ very ancient building, containing several apartments of sufficient size
+ and height to be termed noble. But in the surrender of the island by
+ Christian, the furniture had been, in a great measure, plundered or
+ destroyed by the republican soldiers; so that, as we have before hinted,
+ its present state was ill adapted for the residence of the noble
+ proprietor. Yet it had been often the abode, not only of the Lords of Man,
+ but of those state prisoners whom the Kings of Britain sometimes committed
+ to their charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Castle of Holm-Peel the great king-maker, Richard, Earl of
+ Warwick, was confined, during one period of his eventful life, to ruminate
+ at leisure on his farther schemes of ambition. And here, too, Eleanor, the
+ haughty wife of the good Duke of Gloucester, pined out in seclusion the
+ last days of her banishment. The sentinels pretended that her discontented
+ spectre was often visible at night, traversing the battlements of the
+ external walls, or standing motionless beside a particular solitary turret
+ of one of the watch-towers with which they are flanked; but dissolving
+ into air at cock-crow, or when the bell tolled from the yet remaining
+ tower of St. Germain&rsquo;s church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Holm-Peel, as records inform us, till towards the end of the
+ seventeenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in one of the lofty but almost unfurnished apartments of this
+ ancient Castle that Julian Peveril found his friend the Earl of Derby, who
+ had that moment sat down to a breakfast composed of various sorts of fish.
+ &ldquo;Welcome, most imperial Julian,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;welcome to our royal fortress;
+ in which, as yet, we are not like to be starved with hunger, though
+ well-nigh dead for cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian answered by inquiring the meaning of this sudden movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Upon my word,&rdquo; replied the Earl, &ldquo;you know nearly as much of it as I do.
+ My mother has told me nothing about it; supposing I believe, that I shall
+ at length be tempted to inquire; but she will find herself much mistaken.
+ I shall give her credit for full wisdom in her proceedings, rather than
+ put her to the trouble to render a reason, though no woman can render one
+ better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come; this is affectation, my good friend,&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;You
+ should inquire into these matters a little more curiously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what purpose?&rdquo; said the Earl. &ldquo;To hear old stories about the Tinwald
+ laws, and the contending rights of the lords and the clergy, and all the
+ rest of that Celtic barbarism, which, like Burgesse&rsquo;s thorough-paced
+ doctrine enters at one ear, paces through, and goes out at the other?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, my lord,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;you are not so indifferent as you would
+ represent yourself&mdash;you are dying of curiosity to know what this
+ hurry is about; only you think it the courtly humour to appear careless
+ about your own affairs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what should it be about,&rdquo; said the young Earl &ldquo;unless some factious
+ dispute between our Majesty&rsquo;s minister, Governor Nowel, and our vassals?
+ or perhaps some dispute betwixt our Majesty and the ecclesiastical
+ jurisdictions? for all which our Majesty cares as little as any king in
+ Christendom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I rather suppose there is intelligence from England,&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;I
+ heard last night in Peel-town, that Greenhalgh is come over with
+ unpleasant news.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He brought me nothing that was pleasant, I wot well,&rdquo; said the Earl. &ldquo;I
+ expected something from St. Evremond or Hamilton&mdash;some new plays by
+ Dryden or Lee, and some waggery or lampoons from the Rose Coffee-house;
+ and the fellow has brought me nothing but a parcel of tracts about
+ Protestants and Papists, and a folio play-book, one of the conceptions, as
+ she calls them, of that old mad-woman the Duchess of Newcastle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, my lord, for Heaven&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;here comes the
+ Countess; and you know she takes fire at the least slight to her ancient
+ friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let her read her ancient friend&rsquo;s works herself, then,&rdquo; said the Earl,
+ &ldquo;and think her as wise as she can; but I would not give one of Waller&rsquo;s
+ songs, or Denham&rsquo;s satires, for a whole cart-load of her Grace&rsquo;s trash.&mdash;But
+ here comes our mother with care on her brow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby entered the apartment accordingly, holding in her
+ hand a number of papers. Her dress was a mourning habit, with a deep train
+ of black velvet, which was borne by a little favourite attendant, a deaf
+ and dumb girl, whom, in compassion to her misfortune, the Countess had
+ educated about her person for some years. Upon this unfortunate being,
+ with the touch of romance which marked many of her proceedings, Lady Derby
+ had conferred the name of Fenella, after some ancient princess of the
+ island. The Countess herself was not much changed since we last presented
+ her to our readers. Age had rendered her step more slow, but not less
+ majestic; and while it traced some wrinkles on her brow, had failed to
+ quench the sedate fire of her dark eye. The young men rose to receive her
+ with the formal reverence which they knew she loved, and were greeted by
+ her with equal kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cousin Peveril,&rdquo; she said (for so she always called Julian, in respect of
+ his mother being a kinswoman of her husband), &ldquo;you were ill abroad last
+ night, when we much needed your counsel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian answered with a blush which he could not prevent, &ldquo;That he had
+ followed his sport among the mountains too far&mdash;had returned late&mdash;and
+ finding her ladyship was removed from Castletown, had instantly followed
+ the family hither; but as the night-bell was rung, and the watch set, he
+ had deemed it more respectful to lodge for the night in the town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is well,&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;and, to do you justice, Julian, you are
+ seldom a truant neglecter of appointed hours, though, like the rest of the
+ youth of this age, you sometimes suffer your sports to consume too much of
+ time that should be spent otherwise. But for your friend Philip, he is an
+ avowed contemner of good order, and seems to find pleasure in wasting
+ time, even when he does not enjoy it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been enjoying my time just now at least,&rdquo; said the Earl, rising
+ from table, and picking his teeth carelessly. &ldquo;These fresh mullets are
+ delicious, and so is the Lachrymæ Christi. I pray you to sit down to
+ breakfast, Julian, and partake the goods my royal foresight has provided.
+ Never was King of Man nearer being left to the mercy of the execrable
+ brandy of his dominions. Old Griffiths would never, in the midst of our
+ speedy retreat of last night, have had sense enough to secure a few
+ flasks, had I not given him a hint on that important subject. But presence
+ of mind amid danger and tumult, is a jewel I have always possessed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish, then, Philip, you would exert it to better purpose,&rdquo; said the
+ Countess, half smiling, half displeased; for she doated upon her son with
+ all a mother&rsquo;s fondness, even when she was most angry with him for being
+ deficient in the peculiar and chivalrous disposition which had
+ distinguished his father, and which was so analogous to her own romantic
+ and high-minded character. &ldquo;Lend me your signet,&rdquo; she added with a sigh;
+ &ldquo;for it were, I fear, vain to ask you to read over these despatches from
+ England, and execute the warrants which I have thought necessary to
+ prepare in consequence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My signet you shall command with all my heart, madam,&rdquo; said Earl Philip;
+ &ldquo;but spare me the revision of what you are much more capable to decide
+ upon. I am, you know, a most complete <i>Roi fainéant</i>, and never once
+ interfered with my <i>Maire de palais</i> in her proceedings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess made signs to her little train-bearer, who immediately went
+ to seek for wax and a light, with which she presently returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile the Countess continued, addressing Peveril. &ldquo;Philip does
+ himself less than justice. When you were absent, Julian (for if you had
+ been here I would have given you the credit of prompting your friend), he
+ had a spirited controversy with the Bishop, for an attempt to enforce
+ spiritual censures against a poor wretch, by confining her in the vault
+ under the chapel.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Beneath the only one of the four churches in Castle Rushin, which
+ is or was kept a little in repair, is a prison or dungeon, for
+ ecclesiastical offenders. &ldquo;This,&rdquo; says Waldron, &ldquo;is certainly one
+ of the most dreadful places that imagination can form; the sea
+ runs under it through the hollows of the rock with such a
+ continual roar, that you would think it were every moment breaking
+ in upon you, and over it are the vaults for burying the dead. The
+ stairs descending to this place of terrors are not above thirty,
+ but so steep and narrow, that they are very difficult to go down,
+ a child of eight or nine years not being able to pass them but
+ sideways.&rdquo;&mdash;WALDRON&rsquo;S <i>Description of the Isle of Man, in his
+ Works</i>, p. 105, folio.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not think better of me than I deserve,&rdquo; said the Earl to Peveril; &ldquo;my
+ mother has omitted to tell you the culprit was pretty Peggy of Ramsey, and
+ her crime what in Cupid&rsquo;s courts would have been called a peccadillo.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not make yourself worse than you are,&rdquo; replied Peveril, who observed
+ the Countess&rsquo;s cheek redden,&mdash;&ldquo;you know you would have done as much
+ for the oldest and poorest cripple in the island. Why, the vault is under
+ the burial-ground of the chapel, and, for aught I know, under the ocean
+ itself, such a roaring do the waves make in its vicinity. I think no one
+ could remain there long, and retain his reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is an infernal hole,&rdquo; answered the Earl, &ldquo;and I will have it built up
+ one day&mdash;that is full certain.&mdash;But hold&mdash;hold&mdash;for
+ God&rsquo;s sake, madam&mdash;what are you going to do?&mdash;Look at the seal
+ before you put it to the warrant&mdash;you will see it is a choice antique
+ cameo Cupid, riding on a flying fish&mdash;I had it for twenty zechins,
+ from Signor Furabosco at Rome&mdash;a most curious matter for an
+ antiquary, but which will add little faith to a Manx warrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My signet&mdash;my signet&mdash;Oh! you mean that with the three
+ monstrous legs, which I supposed was devised as the most preposterous
+ device, to represent our most absurd Majesty of Man.&mdash;The signet&mdash;I
+ have not seen it since I gave it to Gibbon, my monkey, to play with.&mdash;He
+ did whine for it most piteously&mdash;I hope he has not gemmed the green
+ breast of ocean with my symbol of sovereignty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by Heaven,&rdquo; said the Countess, trembling, and colouring deeply with
+ anger, &ldquo;it was your father&rsquo;s signet! the last pledge which he sent, with
+ his love to me, and his blessing to thee, the night before they murdered
+ him at Bolton!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mother, dearest mother,&rdquo; said the Earl, startled out of his apathy, and
+ taking her hand, which he kissed tenderly, &ldquo;I did but jest&mdash;the
+ signet is safe&mdash;Peveril knows that it is so.&mdash;Go fetch it,
+ Julian, for Heaven&rsquo;s sake&mdash;here are my keys&mdash;it is in the
+ left-hand drawer of my travelling cabinet&mdash;Nay, mother, forgive me&mdash;it
+ was but a <i>mauvaise plaisanterie</i>; only an ill-imagined jest,
+ ungracious, and in bad taste, I allow&mdash;but only one of Philip&rsquo;s
+ follies. Look at me, dearest mother, and forgive me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess turned her eyes towards him, from which the tears were fast
+ falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Philip,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you try me too unkindly, and too severely. If times
+ are changed, as I have heard you allege&mdash;if the dignity of rank, and
+ the high feelings of honour and duty, are now drowned in giddy jests and
+ trifling pursuits, let <i>me</i> at least, who live secluded from all
+ others, die without perceiving the change which has happened, and, above
+ all, without perceiving it in mine own son. Let me not learn the general
+ prevalence of this levity, which laughs at every sense of dignity or duty,
+ through your personal disrespect&mdash;Let me not think that when I die&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak nothing of it, mother,&rdquo; said the Earl, interrupting her
+ affectionately. &ldquo;It is true, I cannot promise to be all my father and his
+ fathers were; for we wear silk vests for their steel coats, and feathered
+ beavers for their crested helmets. But believe me, though to be an
+ absolute Palmerin of England is not in my nature, no son ever loved a
+ mother more dearly, or would do more to oblige her. And that you may own
+ this, I will forthwith not only seal the warrants, to the great
+ endangerment of my precious fingers, but also read the same from end to
+ end, as well as the despatches thereunto appertaining.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mother is easily appeased, even when most offended; and it was with an
+ expanding heart that the Countess saw her son&rsquo;s very handsome features,
+ while reading these papers, settle into an expression of deep seriousness,
+ such as they seldom wore. It seemed to her as if the family likeness to
+ his gallant but unfortunate father increased, when the expression of their
+ countenances became similar in gravity. The Earl had no sooner perused the
+ despatches, which he did with great attention, than he rose and said,
+ &ldquo;Julian, come with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess looked surprised. &ldquo;I was wont to share your father&rsquo;s
+ counsels, my son,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;but do not think that I wish to intrude
+ myself upon yours. I am too well pleased to see you assume the power and
+ the duty of thinking for yourself, which is what I have so long urged you
+ to do. Nevertheless, my experience, who have been so long administrator of
+ your authority in Man, might not, I think, be superfluous to the matter in
+ hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold me excused, dearest mother,&rdquo; said the Earl gravely. &ldquo;The
+ interference was none of my seeking; had you taken your own course,
+ without consulting me, it had been well; but since I have entered on the
+ affair&mdash;and it appears sufficiently important&mdash;I must transact
+ it to the best of my own ability.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go, then, my son,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;and may Heaven enlighten thee with
+ its counsel, since thou wilt have none of mine.&mdash;I trust that you,
+ Master Peveril, will remind him of what is fit for his own honour; and
+ that only a coward abandons his rights, and only a fool trusts his
+ enemies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl answered not, but, taking Peveril by the arm, led him up a
+ winding stair to his own apartment, and from thence into a projecting
+ turret, where, amidst the roar of waves and sea-mews&rsquo; clang, he held with
+ him the following conversation:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peveril, it is well I looked into these warrants. My mother queens it at
+ such a rate as may cost me not only my crown, which I care little for, but
+ perhaps my head, which, though others may think little of, I would feel it
+ an inconvenience to be deprived of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What on earth is the matter?&rdquo; said Peveril, with considerable anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems,&rdquo; said the Earl of Derby, &ldquo;that old England who takes a
+ frolicsome brain-fever once every two or three years, for the benefit of
+ her doctors, and the purification of the torpid lethargy brought on by
+ peace and prosperity, is now gone stark staring mad on the subject of a
+ real or supposed Popish plot. I read one programme on the subject, by a
+ fellow called Oates, and thought it the most absurd foolery I ever
+ perused. But that cunning fellow Shaftesbury, and some others amongst the
+ great ones, having taken it up, and are driving on at such a rate as makes
+ harness crack, and horses smoke for it. The King, who has sworn never to
+ kiss the pillow his father went to sleep on, temporises, and gives way to
+ the current; the Duke of York, suspected and hated on account of his
+ religion, is about to be driven to the continent; several principal
+ Catholic nobles are in the Tower already; and the nation, like a bull at
+ Tutbury-running, is persecuted with so many inflammatory rumours and
+ pestilent pamphlets, that she has cocked her tail, flung up her heels,
+ taken the bit betwixt her teeth and is as furiously unmanageable as in the
+ year 1642.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All this you must have known already,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;I wonder you told
+ me not of news so important.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would have taken long to tell,&rdquo; said the Earl; &ldquo;moreover, I desired to
+ have you <i>solus</i>; thirdly, I was about to speak when my mother
+ entered; and, to conclude, it was no business of mine. But these
+ despatches of my politic mother&rsquo;s private correspondent put a new face on
+ the whole matter; for it seems some of the informers&mdash;a trade which,
+ having become a thriving one, is now pursued by many&mdash;have dared to
+ glance at the Countess herself as an agent in this same plot&mdash;ay, and
+ have found those that are willing enough to believe their report.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On mine honour,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;you both take it with great coolness. I
+ think the Countess the more composed of the two; for, except her movement
+ hither, she exhibited no mark of alarm, and, moreover, seemed no way more
+ anxious to communicate the matter to your lordship than decency rendered
+ necessary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My good mother,&rdquo; said the Earl, &ldquo;loves power, though it has cost her
+ dear. I wish I could truly say that my neglect of business is entirely
+ assumed in order to leave it in her hands, but that better motive combines
+ with natural indolence. But she seems to have feared I should not think
+ exactly like her in this emergency, and she was right in supposing so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How comes the emergency upon you?&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and what form does the
+ danger assume?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, thus it is,&rdquo; said the Earl: &ldquo;I need not bid you remember the
+ affair of Colonel Christian. That man, besides his widow, who is possessed
+ of large property&mdash;Dame Christian of Kirk Truagh, whom you have often
+ heard of, and perhaps seen&mdash;left a brother called Edward Christian,
+ whom you never saw at all. Now this brother&mdash;but I dare say you know
+ all about it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, on my honour,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;you know the Countess seldom or
+ never alludes to the subject.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; replied the Earl, &ldquo;I believe in her heart she is something ashamed
+ of that gallant act of royalty and supreme jurisdiction, the consequences
+ of which maimed my estate so cruelly.&mdash;Well, cousin, this same Edward
+ Christian was one of the dempsters at the time, and, naturally enough, was
+ unwilling to concur in the sentence which adjudged his <i>aîné</i> to be
+ shot like a dog. My mother, who was then in high force, and not to be
+ controlled by any one, would have served the dempster with the same sauce
+ with which she dressed his brother, had he not been wise enough to fly
+ from the island. Since that time, the thing has slept on all hands; and
+ though we knew that Dempster Christian made occasionally secret visits to
+ his friends in the island, along with two or three other Puritans of the
+ same stamp, and particularly a prick-eared rogue, called Bridgenorth,
+ brother-in-law to the deceased, yet my mother, thank Heaven, has hitherto
+ had the sense to connive at them, though, for some reason or other, she
+ holds this Bridgenorth in especial disfavour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why,&rdquo; said Peveril, forcing himself to speak, in order to conceal the
+ very unpleasant surprise which he felt, &ldquo;why does the Countess now depart
+ from so prudent a line of conduct?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must know the case is now different. The rogues are not satisfied
+ with toleration&mdash;they would have supremacy. They have found friends
+ in the present heat of the popular mind. My mother&rsquo;s name, and especially
+ that of her confessor, Aldrick the Jesuit, have been mentioned in this
+ beautiful maze of a plot, which if any such at all exists, she knows as
+ little of as you or I. However, she is a Catholic, and that is enough; and
+ I have little doubt, that if the fellows could seize on our scrap of a
+ kingdom here, and cut all our throats, they would have the thanks of the
+ present House of Commons, as willingly as old Christian had those of the
+ Rump, for a similar service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;From whence did you receive all this information?&rdquo; said Peveril, again
+ speaking, though by the same effort which a man makes who talks in his
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aldrick has seen the Duke of York in secret, and his Royal Highness, who
+ wept while he confessed his want of power to protect his friends&mdash;and
+ it is no trifle will wring tears from him&mdash;told him to send us
+ information that we should look to our safety, for that Dempster Christian
+ and Bridgenorth were in the island, with secret and severe orders; that
+ they had formed a considerable party there, and were likely to be owned
+ and protected in anything they might undertake against us. The people of
+ Ramsey and Castletown are unluckily discontented about some new regulation
+ of the imposts; and to tell you the truth, though I thought yesterday&rsquo;s
+ sudden remove a whim of my mother&rsquo;s, I am almost satisfied they would have
+ blockaded us in Rushin Castle, where we could not have held out for lack
+ of provisions. Here we are better supplied, and, as we are on our guard,
+ it is likely the intended rising will not take place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is to be done in this emergency?&rdquo; said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is the very question, my gentle coz,&rdquo; answered the Earl. &ldquo;My mother
+ sees but one way of going to work, and that is by royal authority. Here
+ are the warrants she had prepared, to search for, take, and apprehend the
+ bodies of Edward Christian and Robert&mdash;no, Ralph Bridgenorth, and
+ bring them to instant trial. No doubt, she would soon have had them in the
+ Castle court, with a dozen of the old matchlocks levelled against them&mdash;that
+ is her way of solving all sudden difficulties.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But in which, I trust, you do not acquiesce, my lord,&rdquo; answered Peveril,
+ whose thoughts instantly reverted to Alice, if they could ever be said to
+ be absent from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly I acquiesce in no such matter,&rdquo; said the Earl. &ldquo;William Christian&rsquo;s
+ death cost me a fair half of my inheritance. I have no fancy to fall under
+ the displeasure of my royal brother, King Charles, for a new escapade of
+ the same kind. But how to pacify my mother, I know not. I wish the
+ insurrection would take place, and then, as we are better provided than
+ they can be, we might knock the knaves on the head; and yet, since they
+ began the fray, we should keep the law on our side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were it not better,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;if by any means these men could be
+ induced to quit the island?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; replied the Earl; &ldquo;but that will be no easy matter&mdash;they
+ are stubborn on principle, and empty threats will not move them. This
+ stormblast in London is wind in their sails, and they will run their
+ length, you may depend on it. I have sent orders, however, to clap up the
+ Manxmen upon whose assistance they depended, and if I can find the two
+ worthies themselves, here are sloops enough in the harbour&mdash;I will
+ take the freedom to send them on a pretty distant voyage, and I hope
+ matters will be settled before they return to give an account of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a soldier belonging to the garrison approached the two
+ young men, with many bows and tokens of respect. &ldquo;How now, friend?&rdquo; said
+ the Earl to him. &ldquo;Leave off thy courtesies, and tell thy business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man, who was a native islander, answered in Manx, that he had a letter
+ for his honour, Master Julian Peveril. Julian snatched the billet hastily,
+ and asked whence it came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was delivered to him by a young woman,&rdquo; the soldier replied, &ldquo;who had
+ given him a piece of money to deliver it into Master Peveril&rsquo;s own hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a lucky fellow, Julian,&rdquo; said the Earl. &ldquo;With that grave brow of
+ thine, and thy character for sobriety and early wisdom, you set the girls
+ a-wooing, without waiting till they are asked; whilst I, their drudge and
+ vassal, waste both language and leisure, without getting a kind word or
+ look, far less a billet-doux.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This the young Earl said with a smile of conscious triumph, as in fact he
+ valued himself not a little upon the interest which he supposed himself to
+ possess with the fair sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the letter impressed on Peveril a different train of thoughts
+ from what his companion apprehended. It was in Alice&rsquo;s hand, and contained
+ these few words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I fear what I am going to do is wrong; but I must see you. Meet me
+ at noon at Goddard Crovan&rsquo;s Stone, with as much secrecy as you
+ may.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The letter was signed only with the initials A. B.; but Julian had no
+ difficulty in recognising the handwriting, which he had often seen, and
+ which was remarkably beautiful. He stood suspended, for he saw the
+ difficulty and impropriety of withdrawing himself from the Countess and
+ his friend at this moment of impending danger; and yet, to neglect this
+ invitation was not to be thought of. He paused in the utmost perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall I read your riddle?&rdquo; said the Earl. &ldquo;Go where love calls you&mdash;I
+ will make an excuse to my mother&mdash;only, most grave anchorite, be
+ hereafter more indulgent to the failings of others than you have been
+ hitherto, and blaspheme not the power of the little deity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but, Cousin Derby&mdash;&rdquo; said Peveril, and stopped short, for he
+ really knew not what to say. Secured himself by a virtuous passion from
+ the contagious influence of the time, he had seen with regret his noble
+ kinsman mingle more in its irregularities than he approved of, and had
+ sometimes played the part of a monitor. Circumstances seemed at present to
+ give the Earl a right of retaliation. He kept his eye fixed on his friend,
+ as if he waited till he should complete his sentence, and at length
+ exclaimed, &ldquo;What! cousin, quite <i>à-la-mort!</i> Oh, most judicious
+ Julian! Oh, most precise Peveril! have you bestowed so much wisdom on me
+ that you have none left for yourself? Come, be frank&mdash;tell me name
+ and place&mdash;or say but the colour of the eyes of the most emphatic she&mdash;or
+ do but let me have the pleasure to hear thee say, &lsquo;I love!&rsquo;&mdash;confess
+ one touch of human frailty&mdash;conjugate the verb <i>amo</i>, and I will
+ be a gentle schoolmaster, and you shall have, as father Richards used to
+ say, when we were under his ferule, &lsquo;<i>licentia exeundi</i>.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enjoy your pleasant humour at my expense, my lord,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;I
+ fairly will confess thus much, that I would fain, if it consisted with my
+ honour and your safety, have two hours at my own disposal; the more
+ especially as the manner in which I shall employ them may much concern the
+ safety of the island.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very likely, I dare say,&rdquo; answered the Earl, still laughing. &ldquo;No doubt
+ you are summoned out by some Lady Politic Wouldbe of the isle, to talk
+ over some of the breast-laws: but never mind&mdash;go, and go speedily,
+ that you may return as quickly as possible. I expect no immediate
+ explosion of this grand conspiracy. When the rogues see us on our guard,
+ they will be cautious how they break out. Only, once more make haste.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril thought this last advice was not to be neglected; and, glad to
+ extricate himself from the raillery of his cousin, walked down towards the
+ gate of the Castle, meaning to cross over to the village, and there take
+ horse at the Earl&rsquo;s stables, for the place of rendezvous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Acasto.</i>&mdash;Can she not speak?
+ <i>Oswald.</i>&mdash;If speech be only in accented sounds,
+ Framed by the tongue and lips, the maiden&rsquo;s dumb;
+ But if by quick and apprehensive look,
+ By motion, sign, and glance, to give each meaning,
+ Express as clothed in language, be term&rsquo;d speech,
+ She hath that wondrous faculty; for her eyes,
+ Like the bright stars of heaven, can hold discourse,
+ Though it be mute and soundless.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the head of the first flight of steps which descended towards the
+ difficult and well-defended entrance of the Castle of Holm-Peel, Peveril
+ was met and stopped by the Countess&rsquo;s train-bearer. This little creature&mdash;for
+ she was of the least and slightest size of womankind&mdash;was exquisitely
+ well formed in all her limbs, which the dress she usually wore (a green
+ silk tunic, of a peculiar form) set off to the best advantage. Her face
+ was darker than the usual hue of Europeans; and the profusion of long and
+ silken hair, which, when she undid the braids in which she commonly wore
+ it, fell down almost to her ankles, was also rather a foreign attribute.
+ Her countenance resembled a most beautiful miniature; and there was a
+ quickness, decision, and fire, in Fenella&rsquo;s look, and especially in her
+ eyes, which was probably rendered yet more alert and acute, because,
+ through the imperfection of her other organs, it was only by sight that
+ she could obtain information of what passed around her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pretty mute was mistress of many little accomplishments, which the
+ Countess had caused to be taught to her in compassion for her forlorn
+ situation, and which she learned with the most surprising quickness. Thus,
+ for example, she was exquisite in the use of the needle, and so ready and
+ ingenious a draughtswoman, that, like the ancient Mexicans, she sometimes
+ made a hasty sketch with her pencil the means of conveying her ideas,
+ either by direct or emblematical representation. Above all, in the art of
+ ornamental writing, much studied at that period, Fenella was so great a
+ proficient, as to rival the fame of Messrs. Snow, Shelley, and other
+ masters of the pen, whose copybooks, preserved in the libraries of the
+ curious, still show the artists smiling on the frontispiece in all the
+ honours of flowing gowns and full-bottomed wigs, to the eternal glory of
+ caligraphy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little maiden had, besides these accomplishments, much ready wit and
+ acuteness of intellect. With Lady Derby, and with the two young gentlemen,
+ she was a great favourite, and used much freedom in conversing with them,
+ by means of a system of signs which had been gradually established amongst
+ them, and which served all ordinary purposes of communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though happy in the indulgence and favour of her mistress, from whom
+ indeed she was seldom separate, Fenella was by no means a favourite with
+ the rest of the household. In fact, it seemed that her temper, exasperated
+ perhaps by a sense of her misfortune, was by no means equal to her
+ abilities. She was very haughty in her demeanour, even towards the upper
+ domestics, who in that establishment were of a much higher rank and better
+ birth than in the families of the nobility in general. These often
+ complained, not only of her pride and reserve, but of her high and
+ irascible temper and vindictive disposition. Her passionate propensity had
+ been indeed idly encouraged by the young men, and particularly by the
+ Earl, who sometimes amused himself with teasing her, that he might enjoy
+ the various singular motions and murmurs by which she expressed her
+ resentment. Towards him, these were of course only petulant and whimsical
+ indications of pettish anger. But when she was angry with others of
+ inferior degree&mdash;before whom she did not control herself&mdash;the
+ expression of her passion, unable to display itself in language, had
+ something even frightful, so singular were the tones, contortions, and
+ gestures, to which she had recourse. The lower domestics, to whom she was
+ liberal almost beyond her apparent means, observed her with much deference
+ and respect, but much more from fear than from any real attachment; for
+ the caprices of her temper displayed themselves even in her gifts; and
+ those who most frequently shared her bounty, seemed by no means assured of
+ the benevolence of the motives which dictated her liberality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these peculiarities led to a conclusion consonant with Manx
+ superstition. Devout believers in all the legends of fairies so dear to
+ the Celtic tribes, the Manx people held it for certainty that the elves
+ were in the habit of carrying off mortal children before baptism, and
+ leaving in the cradle of the new born babe one of their own brood, which
+ was almost always imperfect in some one or other of the organs proper to
+ humanity. Such a being they conceived Fenella to be; and the smallness of
+ her size, her dark complexion, her long locks of silken hair, the
+ singularity of her manners and tones, as well as the caprices of her
+ temper, were to their thinking all attributes of the irritable, fickle,
+ and dangerous race from which they supposed her to be sprung. And it
+ seemed, that although no jest appeared to offend her more than when Lord
+ Derby called her in sport the Elfin Queen, or otherwise alluded to her
+ supposed connection with &ldquo;the pigmy folk,&rdquo; yet still her perpetually
+ affecting to wear the colour of green, proper to the fairies, as well as
+ some other peculiarities, seemed voluntarily assumed by her, in order to
+ countenance the superstition, perhaps because it gave her more authority
+ among the lower orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many were the tales circulated respecting the Countess&rsquo;s <i>Elf</i>, as
+ Fenella was currently called in the island; and the malcontents of the
+ stricter persuasion were convinced, that no one but a Papist and a
+ malignant would have kept near her person a creature of such doubtful
+ origin. They conceived that Fenella&rsquo;s deafness and dumbness were only
+ towards those of this world, and that she had been heard talking, and
+ singing, and laughing most elvishly, with the invisibles of her own race.
+ They alleged, also, that she had a <i>Double</i>, a sort of apparition
+ resembling her, which slept in the Countess&rsquo;s ante-room, or bore her
+ train, or wrought in her cabinet, while the real Fenella joined the song
+ of the mermaids on the moonlight sands, or the dance of the fairies in the
+ haunted valley of Glenmoy, or on the heights of Snawfell and Barool. The
+ sentinels, too, would have sworn they had seen the little maiden trip past
+ them in their solitary night walks, without their having it in their power
+ to challenge her, any more than if they had been as mute as herself. To
+ all this mass of absurdities the better informed paid no more attention
+ than to the usual idle exaggerations of the vulgar, which so frequently
+ connect that which is unusual with what is supernatural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in form and habits, was the little female, who, holding in her hand
+ a small old-fashioned ebony rod, which might have passed for a divining
+ wand, confronted Julian on the top of the flight of steps which led down
+ the rock from the Castle court. We ought to observe, that as Julian&rsquo;s
+ manner to the unfortunate girl had been always gentle, and free from those
+ teasing jests in which his gay friend indulged, with less regard to the
+ peculiarity of her situation and feelings; so Fenella, on her part, had
+ usually shown much greater deference to him than to any of the household,
+ her mistress, the Countess, always excepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the present occasion, planting herself in the very midst of the narrow
+ descent, so as to make it impossible for Peveril to pass by her, she
+ proceeded to put him to the question by a series of gestures, which we
+ will endeavour to describe. She commenced by extending her hand slightly,
+ accompanied with the sharp inquisitive look which served her as a note of
+ interrogation. This was meant as an inquiry whether he was going to a
+ distance. Julian, in reply, extended his arm more than half, to intimate
+ that the distance was considerable. Fenella looked grave, shook her head,
+ and pointed to the Countess&rsquo;s window, which was visible from the spot
+ where they stood. Peveril smiled, and nodded, to intimate there was no
+ danger in quitting her mistress for a short space. The little maiden next
+ touched an eagle&rsquo;s feather which she wore in her hair, a sign which she
+ usually employed to designate the Earl, and then looked inquisitively at
+ Julian once more, as if to say, &ldquo;Goes he with you?&rdquo; Peveril shook his
+ head, and, somewhat wearied by these interrogatories, smiled, and made an
+ effort to pass. Fenella frowned, struck the end of her ebony rod
+ perpendicularly on the ground, and again shook her head, as if opposing
+ his departure. But finding that Julian persevered in his purpose, she
+ suddenly assumed another and milder mood, held him by the skirt of his
+ cloak with one hand, and raised the other in an imploring attitude, whilst
+ every feature of her lively countenance was composed into the like
+ expression of supplication; and the fire of the large dark eyes, which
+ seemed in general so keen and piercing as almost to over-animate the
+ little sphere to which they belonged, seemed quenched, for the moment, in
+ the large drops which hung on her long eyelashes, but without falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril was far from being void of sympathy towards the poor girl,
+ whose motives in opposing his departure appeared to be her affectionate
+ apprehension for her mistress&rsquo;s safety. He endeavoured to reassure by
+ smiles, and, at the same time, by such signs as he could devise, to
+ intimate that there was no danger, and that he would return presently; and
+ having succeeded in extricating his cloak from her grasp, and in passing
+ her on the stair, he began to descend the steps as speedily as he could,
+ in order to avoid farther importunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with activity much greater than his, the dumb maiden hastened to
+ intercept him, and succeeded by throwing herself, at the imminent risk of
+ life and limb, a second time into the pass which he was descending, so as
+ to interrupt his purpose. In order to achieve this, she was obliged to let
+ herself drop a considerable height from the wall of a small flanking
+ battery, where two patereroes were placed to scour the pass, in case any
+ enemy could have mounted so high. Julian had scarce time to shudder at her
+ purpose, as he beheld her about to spring from the parapet, ere, like a
+ thing of gossamer, she stood light and uninjured on the rocky platform
+ below. He endeavoured, by the gravity of his look and gesture, to make her
+ understand how much he blamed her rashness; but the reproof, though
+ obviously quite intelligible, was entirely thrown away. A hasty wave of
+ her hand intimated how she contemned the danger and the remonstrance;
+ while, at the same time, she instantly resumed, with more eagerness than
+ before, the earnest and impressive gestures by which she endeavoured to
+ detain him in the fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was somewhat staggered by her pertinacity. &ldquo;Is it possible,&rdquo; he
+ thought, &ldquo;that any danger can approach the Countess, of which this poor
+ maiden has, by the extreme acuteness of her observation, obtained
+ knowledge which has escaped others?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He signed to Fenella hastily to give him the tablets and the pencil which
+ she usually carried with her, and wrote on them the question, &ldquo;Is there
+ danger near to your mistress, that you thus stop me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is danger around the Countess,&rdquo; was the answer instantly written
+ down; &ldquo;but there is much more in your own purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&mdash;what?&mdash;what know you of my purpose?&rdquo; said Julian,
+ forgetting, in his surprise, that the party he addressed had neither ear
+ to comprehend, nor voice to reply to uttered language. She had regained
+ her book in the meantime, and sketched, with a rapid pencil, on one of the
+ leaves, a scene which she showed to Julian. To his infinite surprise he
+ recognised Goddard Crovan&rsquo;s Stone, a remarkable monument, of which she had
+ given the outline with sufficient accuracy; together with a male and
+ female figure, which, though only indicated by a few slight touches of the
+ pencil, bore yet, he thought, some resemblance to himself and Alice
+ Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had gazed on the sketch for an instant with surprise, Fenella took
+ the book from his hand, laid her finger upon the drawing, and slowly and
+ sternly shook her head, with a frown which seemed to prohibit the meeting
+ which was there represented. Julian, however, though disconcerted, was in
+ no shape disposed to submit to the authority of his monitress. By whatever
+ means she, who so seldom stirred from the Countess&rsquo;s apartment, had become
+ acquainted with a secret which he thought entirely his own, he esteemed it
+ the more necessary to keep the appointed rendezvous, that he might learn
+ from Alice, if possible, how the secret had transpired. He had also formed
+ the intention of seeking out Bridgenorth; entertaining an idea that a
+ person so reasonable and calm as he had shown himself in their late
+ conference, might be persuaded, when he understood that the Countess was
+ aware of his intrigues, to put an end to her danger and his own, by
+ withdrawing from the island. And could he succeed in this point, he should
+ at once, he thought, render a material benefit to the father of his
+ beloved Alice&mdash;remove the Earl from his state of anxiety&mdash;save
+ the Countess from a second time putting her feudal jurisdiction in
+ opposition to that of the Crown of England&mdash;and secure quiet
+ possession of the island to her and her family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this scheme of mediation on his mind, Peveril determined to rid
+ himself of the opposition of Fenella to his departure, with less ceremony
+ than he had hitherto observed towards her; and suddenly lifting up the
+ damsel in his arms before she was aware of his purpose, he turned about,
+ set her down on the steps above him, and began to descend the pass himself
+ as speedily as possible. It was then that the dumb maiden gave full course
+ to the vehemence of her disposition; and clapping her hands repeatedly,
+ expressed her displeasure in sound, or rather a shriek, so extremely
+ dissonant, that it resembled more the cry of a wild creature, than
+ anything which could have been uttered by female organs. Peveril was so
+ astounded at the scream as it rung through the living rocks, that he could
+ not help stopping and looking back in alarm, to satisfy himself that she
+ had not sustained some injury. He saw her, however, perfectly safe, though
+ her face seemed inflamed and distorted with passion. She stamped at him
+ with her foot, shook her clenched hand, and turning her back upon him,
+ without further adieu, ran up the rude steps as lightly as a kid could
+ have tripped up that rugged ascent, and paused for a moment at the summit
+ of the first flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian could feel nothing but wonder and compassion for the impotent
+ passion of a being so unfortunately circumstanced, cut off, as it were,
+ from the rest of mankind, and incapable of receiving in childhood that
+ moral discipline which teaches us mastery of our wayward passions, ere yet
+ they have attained their meridian strength and violence. He waved his hand
+ to her, in token of amicable farewell; but she only replied by once more
+ menacing him with her little hand clenched; and then ascending the rocky
+ staircase with almost preternatural speed, was soon out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, on his part, gave no farther consideration to her conduct or its
+ motives, but hastening to the village on the mainland, where the stables
+ of the Castle were situated, he again took his palfrey from the stall, and
+ was soon mounted and on his way to the appointed place of rendezvous, much
+ marvelling, as he ambled forward with speed far greater than was promised
+ by the diminutive size of the animal he was mounted on, what could have
+ happened to produce so great a change in Alice&rsquo;s conduct towards him, that
+ in place of enjoining his absence as usual, or recommending his departure
+ from the island, she should now voluntarily invite him to a meeting. Under
+ impression of the various doubts which succeeded each other in his
+ imagination, he sometimes pressed Fairy&rsquo;s sides with his legs; sometimes
+ laid his holly rod lightly on her neck; sometimes incited her by his
+ voice, for the mettled animal needed neither whip nor spur, and achieved
+ the distance betwixt the Castle of Holm-Peel and the stone at Goddard
+ Crovan, at the rate of twelve miles within the hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monumental stone, designed to commemorate some feat of an ancient King
+ of Man, which had been long forgotten, was erected on the side of a narrow
+ lonely valley, or rather glen, secluded from observation by the steepness
+ of its banks, upon a projection of which stood the tall, shapeless,
+ solitary rock, frowning, like a shrouded giant, over the brawling of the
+ small rivulet which watered the ravine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This a love-meeting? See the maiden mourns,
+ And the sad suitor bends his looks on earth.
+ There&rsquo;s more hath pass&rsquo;d between them than belongs
+ To Love&rsquo;s sweet sorrows.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As he approached the monument of Goddard Crovan, Julian cast many an
+ anxious glance to see whether any object visible beside the huge grey
+ stone should apprise him, whether he was anticipated, at the appointed
+ place of rendezvous, by her who had named it. Nor was it long before the
+ flutter of a mantle, which the breeze slightly waved, and the motion
+ necessary to replace it upon the wearer&rsquo;s shoulders, made him aware that
+ Alice had already reached their place of meeting. One instant set the
+ palfrey at liberty, with slackened girths and loosened reins, to pick its
+ own way through the dell at will; another placed Julian Peveril by the
+ side of Alice Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Alice should extend her hand to her lover, as with the ardour of a
+ young greyhound he bounded over the obstacles of the rugged path, was as
+ natural as that Julian, seizing on the hand so kindly stretched out,
+ should devour it with kisses, and, for a moment or two, without
+ reprehension; while the other hand, which should have aided in the
+ liberation of its fellow, served to hide the blushes of the fair owner.
+ But Alice, young as she was, and attached to Julian by such long habits of
+ kindly intimacy, still knew well how to subdue the tendency of her own
+ treacherous affections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is not right,&rdquo; she said, extricating her hand from Julian&rsquo;s grasp,
+ &ldquo;this is not right, Julian. If I have been too rash in admitting such a
+ meeting as the present, it is not you that should make me sensible of my
+ folly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril&rsquo;s mind had been early illuminated with that touch of
+ romantic fire which deprives passion of selfishness, and confers on it the
+ high and refined tone of generous and disinterested devotion. He let go
+ the hand of Alice with as much respect as he could have paid to that of a
+ princess; and when she seated herself upon a rocky fragment, over which
+ nature had stretched a cushion of moss and lichen, interspersed with wild
+ flowers, backed with a bush of copsewood, he took his place beside her,
+ indeed, but at such distance as to intimate the duty of an attendant, who
+ was there only to hear and to obey. Alice Bridgenorth became more assured
+ as she observed the power which she possessed over her lover; and the
+ self-command which Peveril exhibited, which other damsels in her situation
+ might have judged inconsistent with intensity of passion, she appreciated
+ more justly, as a proof of his respectful and disinterested sincerity. She
+ recovered, in addressing him, the tone of confidence which rather belonged
+ to the scenes of their early acquaintance, than to those which had passed
+ betwixt them since Peveril had disclosed his affection, and thereby had
+ brought restraint upon their intercourse.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0093m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0093m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0093.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Julian,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;your visit of yesterday&mdash;your most ill-timed
+ visit, has distressed me much. It has misled my father&mdash;it has
+ endangered you. At all risks, I resolved that you should know this, and
+ blame me not if I have taken a bold and imprudent step in desiring this
+ solitary interview, since you are aware how little poor Deborah is to be
+ trusted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you fear misconstruction from me, Alice?&rdquo; replied Peveril warmly;
+ &ldquo;from me, whom you have thus highly favoured&mdash;thus deeply obliged?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cease your protestations, Julian,&rdquo; answered the maiden; &ldquo;they do but make
+ me the more sensible that I have acted over boldly. But I did for the
+ best.&mdash;I could not see you whom I have known so long&mdash;you, who
+ say you regard me with partiality&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Say</i> that I regard you with partiality!&rdquo; interrupted Peveril in his
+ turn. &ldquo;Ah, Alice, with a cold and doubtful phrase you have used to express
+ the most devoted, the most sincere affection!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said Alice sadly, &ldquo;we will not quarrel about words; but do
+ not again interrupt me.&mdash;I could not, I say, see you, who, I believe,
+ regard me with sincere though vain and fruitless attachment, rush
+ blindfold into a snare, deceived and seduced by those very feelings
+ towards me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand you not, Alice,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;nor can I see any danger to
+ which I am at present exposed. The sentiments which your father has
+ expressed towards me, are of a nature irreconcilable with hostile
+ purposes. If he is not offended with the bold wishes I may have formed,&mdash;and
+ his whole behaviour shows the contrary,&mdash;I know not a man on earth
+ from whom I have less cause to apprehend any danger or ill-will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My father,&rdquo; said Alice, &ldquo;means well by his country, and well by you; yet
+ I sometimes fear he may rather injure than serve his good cause; and still
+ more do I dread, that in attempting to engage you as an auxiliary, he may
+ forget those ties which ought to bind you, and I am sure which will bind
+ you, to a different line of conduct from his own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You lead me into still deeper darkness, Alice,&rdquo; answered Peveril. &ldquo;That
+ your father&rsquo;s especial line of politics differs widely from mine, I know
+ well; but how many instances have occurred, even during the bloody scenes
+ of civil warfare, of good and worthy men laying the prejudice of party
+ affections aside, and regarding each other with respect, and even with
+ friendly attachment, without being false to principle on either side?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be so,&rdquo; said Alice; &ldquo;but such is not the league which my father
+ desires to form with you, and that to which he hopes your misplaced
+ partiality towards his daughter may afford a motive for your forming with
+ him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is it,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;which I would refuse, with such a
+ prospect before me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treachery and dishonour!&rdquo; replied Alice; &ldquo;whatever would render you
+ unworthy of the poor boon at which you aim&mdash;ay, were it more
+ worthless than I confess it to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would your father,&rdquo; said Peveril, as he unwillingly received the
+ impression which Alice designed to convey,&mdash;&ldquo;would he, whose views of
+ duty are so strict and severe&mdash;would he wish to involve me in aught,
+ to which such harsh epithets as treachery and dishonour can be applied
+ with the lightest shadow of truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not mistake me, Julian,&rdquo; replied the maiden; &ldquo;my father is incapable
+ of requesting aught of you that is not to his thinking just and
+ honourable; nay, he conceives that he only claims from you a debt, which
+ is due as a creature to the Creator, and as a man to your fellow-men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So guarded, where can be the danger of our intercourse?&rdquo; replied Julian.
+ &ldquo;If he be resolved to require, and I determined to accede to, nothing save
+ what flows from conviction, what have I to fear, Alice? And how is my
+ intercourse with your father dangerous? Believe not so; his speech has
+ already made impression on me in some particulars, and he listened with
+ candour and patience to the objections which I made occasionally. You do
+ Master Bridgenorth less than justice in confounding him with the
+ unreasonable bigots in policy and religion, who can listen to no argument
+ but what favours their own prepossessions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Julian,&rdquo; replied Alice; &ldquo;it is you who misjudge my father&rsquo;s powers, and
+ his purpose with respect to you, and who overrate your own powers of
+ resistance. I am but a girl, but I have been taught by circumstances to
+ think for myself, and to consider the character of those around me. My
+ father&rsquo;s views in ecclesiastical and civil policy are as dear to him as
+ the life which he cherishes only to advance them. They have been, with
+ little alteration, his companions through life. They brought him at one
+ period into prosperity, and when they suited not the times, he suffered
+ for having held them. They have become not only a part, but the very
+ dearest part, of his existence. If he shows them not to you at first, in
+ the flexible strength which they have acquired over his mind, do not
+ believe that they are the less powerful. He who desires to make converts,
+ must begin by degrees. But that he should sacrifice to an inexperienced
+ young man, whose ruling motive he will term a childish passion, any part
+ of those treasured principles which he has maintained through good repute
+ and bad repute&mdash;Oh, do not dream of such an impossibility! If you
+ meet at all, you must be the wax, he the seal&mdash;you must receive, he
+ must bestow, an absolute impression.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;were unreasonable. I will frankly avow to you,
+ Alice, that I am not a sworn bigot to the opinions entertained by my
+ father, much as I respect his person. I could wish that our Cavaliers, or
+ whatsoever they are pleased to call themselves, would have some more
+ charity towards those who differ from them in Church and State. But to
+ hope that I would surrender the principles in which I have lived, were to
+ suppose me capable of deserting my benefactress, and breaking the hearts
+ of my parents.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even so I judged of you,&rdquo; answered Alice; &ldquo;and therefore I asked this
+ interview, to conjure that you will break off all intercourse with our
+ family&mdash;return to your parents&mdash;or, what will be much safer,
+ visit the continent once more, and abide till God send better days to
+ England, for these are black with many a storm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And can you bid me go, Alice?&rdquo; said the young man, taking her unresisting
+ hand; &ldquo;can you bid me go, and yet own an interest in my fate?&mdash;Can
+ you bid me, for fear of dangers, which, as a man, as a gentleman, and a
+ loyal one, I am bound to show my face to, meanly abandon my parents, my
+ friends, my country&mdash;suffer the existence of evils which I might aid
+ to prevent&mdash;forego the prospect of doing such little good as might be
+ in my power&mdash;fall from an active and honourable station, into the
+ condition of a fugitive and time-server&mdash;Can you bid me do all this,
+ Alice? Can you bid me do all this, and, in the same breath, bid farewell
+ for ever to you and happiness?&mdash;It is impossible&mdash;I cannot
+ surrender at once my love and my honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no remedy,&rdquo; said Alice, but she could not suppress a sigh while
+ she said so&mdash;&ldquo;there is no remedy&mdash;none whatever. What we might
+ have been to each other, placed in more favourable circumstances, it
+ avails not to think of now; and, circumstanced as we are, with open war
+ about to break out betwixt our parents and friends, we can be but
+ well-wishers&mdash;cold and distant well-wishers, who must part on this
+ spot, and at this hour, never meet again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, by Heaven!&rdquo; said Peveril, animated at the same time by his own
+ feelings, and by the sight of the emotions which his companion in vain
+ endeavoured to suppress,&mdash;&ldquo;No, by Heaven!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;we part not&mdash;Alice,
+ we part not. If I am to leave my native land, you shall be my companion in
+ my exile. What have you to lose?&mdash;Whom have you to abandon?&mdash;Your
+ father?&mdash;The good old cause, as it is termed, is dearer to him than a
+ thousand daughters; and setting him aside, what tie is there between you
+ and this barren isle&mdash;between my Alice and any spot of the British
+ dominions, where her Julian does not sit by her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Julian,&rdquo; answered the maiden, &ldquo;why make my duty more painful by
+ visionary projects, which you ought not to name, or I to listen to? Your
+ parents&mdash;my father&mdash;it cannot be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not for my parents, Alice,&rdquo; replied Julian, and pressing close to
+ his companion&rsquo;s side, he ventured to throw his arm around her; &ldquo;they love
+ me, and they will soon learn to love, in Alice, the only being on earth
+ who could have rendered their son happy. And for your own father, when
+ State and Church intrigues allow him to bestow a thought upon you, will he
+ not think that your happiness, your security, is better cared for when you
+ are my wife, than were you to continue under the mercenary charge of
+ yonder foolish woman? What could his pride desire better for you, than the
+ establishment which will one day be mine? Come then, Alice, and since you
+ condemn me to banishment&mdash;since you deny me a share in those stirring
+ achievements which are about to agitate England&mdash;come! do you&mdash;for
+ you only can&mdash;do you reconcile me to exile and inaction, and give
+ happiness to one, who, for your sake, is willing to resign honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It cannot&mdash;it cannot be,&rdquo; said Alice, faltering as she uttered her
+ negative. &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;how many in my place&mdash;left alone and
+ unprotected, as I am&mdash;But I must not&mdash;I must not&mdash;for your
+ sake, Julian, I must not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say not for my sake you must not, Alice,&rdquo; said Peveril eagerly; &ldquo;this is
+ adding insult to cruelty. If you will do aught for my sake, you will say
+ yes; or you will suffer this dear head to drop on my shoulder&mdash;the
+ slightest sign&mdash;the moving of an eyelid, shall signify consent. All
+ shall be prepared within an hour; within another the priest shall unite
+ us; and within a third, we leave the isle behind us, and seek our fortunes
+ on the continent.&rdquo; But while he spoke, in joyful anticipation of the
+ consent which he implored, Alice found means to collect together her
+ resolution, which, staggered by the eagerness of her lover, the impulse of
+ her own affections, and the singularity of her situation,&mdash;seeming,
+ in her case, to justify what would have been most blamable in another,&mdash;had
+ more than half abandoned her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of a moment&rsquo;s deliberation was fatal to Julian&rsquo;s proposal. She
+ extricated herself from the arm which had pressed her to his side&mdash;arose,
+ and repelling his attempts to approach or detain her, said, with a
+ simplicity not unmingled with dignity, &ldquo;Julian, I always knew I risked
+ much in inviting you to this meeting; but I did not guess that I could
+ have been so cruel to both to you and to myself, as to suffer you to
+ discover what you have to-day seen too plainly&mdash;that I love you
+ better than you love me. But since you do know it, I will show you that
+ Alice&rsquo;s love is disinterested&mdash;She will not bring an ignoble name
+ into your ancient house. If hereafter, in your line, there should arise
+ some who may think the claims of the hierarchy too exorbitant, the powers
+ of the crown too extensive, men shall not say these ideas were derived
+ from Alice Bridgenorth, their whig granddame.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you speak thus, Alice?&rdquo; said her lover. &ldquo;Can you use such
+ expressions? and are you not sensible that they show plainly it is your
+ own pride, not regard for me, that makes you resist the happiness of
+ both?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, Julian; not so,&rdquo; answered Alice, with tears in her eyes; &ldquo;it is
+ the command of duty to us both&mdash;of duty, which we cannot transgress,
+ without risking our happiness here and hereafter. Think what I, the cause
+ of all, should feel, when your father frowns, your mother weeps, your
+ noble friends stand aloof, and you, even you yourself, shall have made the
+ painful discovery, that you have incurred the contempt and resentment of
+ all to satisfy a boyish passion; and that the poor beauty, once sufficient
+ to mislead you, is gradually declining under the influence of grief and
+ vexation. This I will not risk. I see distinctly it is best we should here
+ break off and part; and I thank God, who gives me light enough to
+ perceive, and strength enough to withstand, your folly as well as my own.
+ Farewell, then, Julian; but first take the solemn advice which I called
+ you hither to impart to you:&mdash;Shun my father&mdash;you cannot walk in
+ his paths, and be true to gratitude and to honour. What he doth from pure
+ and honourable motives, you cannot aid him in, except upon the suggestion
+ of a silly and interested passion, at variance with all the engagements
+ you have formed at coming into life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Once more, Alice,&rdquo; answered Julian, &ldquo;I understand you not. If a course of
+ action is good, it needs no vindication from the actor&rsquo;s motives&mdash;if
+ bad, it can derive none.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You cannot blind me with your sophistry, Julian,&rdquo; replied Alice
+ Bridgenorth, &ldquo;any more than you can overpower me with your passion. Had
+ the patriarch destined his son to death upon any less ground than faith
+ and humble obedience to a divine commandment, he had meditated a murder
+ and not a sacrifice. In our late bloody and lamentable wars, how many drew
+ swords on either side, from the purest and most honourable motives? How
+ many from the culpable suggestions of ambition, self-seeking, and love of
+ plunder? Yet while they marched in the same ranks, and spurred their
+ horses at the same trumpet-sound, the memory of the former is dear to us
+ as patriots or loyalists&mdash;that of those who acted on mean or unworthy
+ promptings, is either execrated or forgotten. Once more, I warn you, avoid
+ my father&mdash;leave this island, which will be soon agitated by strange
+ incidents&mdash;while you stay, be on your guard&mdash;distrust everything&mdash;be
+ jealous of every one, even of those to whom it may seem almost impossible,
+ from circumstances, to attach a shadow of suspicion&mdash;trust not the
+ very stones of the most secret apartment in Holm-Peel, for that which hath
+ wings shall carry the matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Alice broke off suddenly, and with a faint shriek; for, stepping from
+ behind the stunted copse which had concealed him, her father stood
+ unexpectedly before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader cannot have forgotten that this was the second time in which
+ the stolen interviews of the lovers had been interrupted by the unexpected
+ apparition of Major Bridgenorth. On this second occasion his countenance
+ exhibited anger mixed with solemnity, like that of the spirit to a
+ ghost-seer, whom he upbraids with having neglected a charge imposed at
+ their first meeting. Even his anger, however, produced no more violent
+ emotion than a cold sternness of manner in his speech and action. &ldquo;I thank
+ you, Alice,&rdquo; he said to his daughter, &ldquo;for the pains you have taken to
+ traverse my designs towards this young man, and towards yourself. I thank
+ you for the hints you have thrown out before my appearance, the suddenness
+ of which alone has prevented you from carrying your confidence to a pitch
+ which would have placed my life and that of others at the discretion of a
+ boy, who, when the cause of God and his country is laid before him, has
+ not leisure to think of them, so much is he occupied with such a baby-face
+ as thine.&rdquo; Alice, pale as death, continued motionless, with her eyes fixed
+ on the ground, without attempting the slightest reply to the ironical
+ reproaches of her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you,&rdquo; continued Major Bridgenorth, turning from his daughter to her
+ lover,&mdash;&ldquo;you sir, have well repaid the liberal confidence which I
+ placed in you with so little reserve. You I have to thank also for some
+ lessons, which may teach me to rest satisfied with the churl&rsquo;s blood which
+ nature has poured into my veins, and with the rude nurture which my father
+ allotted to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand you not, sir,&rdquo; replied Julian Peveril, who, feeling the
+ necessity of saying something, could not, at the moment, find anything
+ more fitting to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir, I thank you,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth, in the same cold
+ sarcastic tone, &ldquo;for having shown me that breach of hospitality,
+ infringement of good faith, and such like peccadilloes, are not utterly
+ foreign to the mind and conduct of the heir of a knightly house of twenty
+ descents. It is a great lesson to me, sir: for hitherto I had thought with
+ the vulgar, that gentle manners went with gentle blood. But perhaps
+ courtesy is too chivalrous a quality to be wasted in intercourse with a
+ round-headed fanatic like myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;whatever has happened in this interview
+ which may have displeased you, has been the result of feelings suddenly
+ and strongly animated by the crisis of the moment&mdash;nothing was
+ premeditated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not even your meeting, I suppose?&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, in the same cold
+ tone. &ldquo;You, sir, wandered hither from Holm-Peel&mdash;my daughter strolled
+ forth from the Black Fort; and chance, doubtless, assigned you a meeting
+ by the stone of Goddard Crovan?&mdash;Young man, disgrace yourself by no
+ more apologies&mdash;they are worse than useless.&mdash;And you, maiden,
+ who, in your fear of losing your lover, could verge on betraying what
+ might have cost a father his life&mdash;begone to your home. I will talk
+ with you at more leisure, and teach you practically those duties which you
+ seem to have forgotten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my honour, sir,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;your daughter is guiltless of all that
+ can offend you; she resisted every offer which the headstrong violence of
+ my passion urged me to press upon her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, in brief,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I am not to believe that you met in
+ this remote place of rendezvous by Alice&rsquo;s special appointment?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril knew not what to reply, and Bridgenorth again signed with his hand
+ to his daughter to withdraw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I obey you, father,&rdquo; said Alice, who had by this time recovered from the
+ extremity of her surprise,&mdash;&ldquo;I obey you; but Heaven is my witness
+ that you do me more than injustice in suspecting me capable of betraying
+ your secrets, even had it been necessary to save my own life or that of
+ Julian. That you are walking in a dangerous path I well know; but you do
+ it with your eyes open, and are actuated by motives of which you can
+ estimate the worth and value. My sole wish was, that this young man should
+ not enter blindfold on the same perils; and I had a right to warn him,
+ since the feelings by which he is hoodwinked had a direct reference to
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis well, minion,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;you have spoken your say. Retire,
+ and let me complete the conference which you have so considerately
+ commenced.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I go, sir,&rdquo; said Alice.&mdash;&ldquo;Julian, to you my last words are, and I
+ would speak them with my last breath&mdash;Farewell, and caution!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned from them, disappeared among the underwood, and was seen no
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A true specimen of womankind,&rdquo; said her father, looking after her, &ldquo;who
+ would give the cause of nations up, rather than endanger a hair of her
+ lover&rsquo;s head.&mdash;You, Master Peveril, doubtless, hold her opinion, that
+ the best love is a safe love!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were danger alone in my way,&rdquo; said Peveril, much surprised at the
+ softened tone in which Bridgenorth made this observation, &ldquo;there are few
+ things which I would not face to&mdash;to&mdash;deserve your good
+ opinion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or rather to win my daughter&rsquo;s hand,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Well, young man,
+ one thing has pleased me in your conduct, though of much I have my reasons
+ to complain&mdash;one thing <i>has</i> pleased me. You have surmounted
+ that bounding wall of aristocratical pride, in which your father, and, I
+ suppose, his fathers, remained imprisoned, as in the precincts of a feudal
+ fortress&mdash;you have leaped over this barrier, and shown yourself not
+ unwilling to ally yourself with a family whom your father spurns as
+ low-born and ignoble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However favourable this speech sounded towards success in his suit, it so
+ broadly stated the consequences of that success so far as his parents were
+ concerned, that Julian felt it in the last degree difficult to reply. At
+ length, perceiving that Major Bridgenorth seemed resolved quietly to await
+ his answer, he mustered up courage to say, &ldquo;The feelings which I entertain
+ towards your daughter, Master Bridgenorth, are of a nature to supersede
+ many other considerations, to which in any other case, I should feel it my
+ duty to give the most reverential attention. I will not disguise from you,
+ that my father&rsquo;s prejudices against such a match would be very strong; but
+ I devoutly believe they would disappear when he came to know the merit of
+ Alice Bridgenorth, and to be sensible that she only could make his son
+ happy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the meanwhile, you are desirous to complete the union which you
+ propose without the knowledge of your parents, and take the chance of
+ their being hereafter reconciled to it? So I understand, from the proposal
+ which you made but lately to my daughter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turns of human nature, and of human passion, are so irregular and
+ uncertain, that although Julian had but a few minutes before urged to
+ Alice a private marriage, and an elopement to the continent, as a measure
+ upon which the whole happiness of his life depended, the proposal seemed
+ not to him half so delightful when stated by the calm, cold, dictatorial
+ accents of her father. It sounded no longer like the dictates of ardent
+ passion, throwing all other considerations aside, but as a distinct
+ surrender of the dignity of his house to one who seemed to consider their
+ relative situation as the triumph of Bridgenorth over Peveril. He was mute
+ for a moment, in the vain attempt to shape his answer so as at once to
+ intimate acquiescence in what Bridgenorth stated, and a vindication of his
+ own regard for his parents, and for the honour of his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This delay gave rise to suspicion, and Bridgenorth&rsquo;s eye gleamed, and his
+ lip quivered while he gave vent to it. &ldquo;Hark ye, young man&mdash;deal
+ openly with me in this matter, if you would not have me think you the
+ execrable villain who would have seduced an unhappy girl, under promises
+ which he never designed to fulfil. Let me but suspect this, and you shall
+ see, on the spot, how far your pride and your pedigree will preserve you
+ against the just vengeance of a father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do me wrong,&rdquo; said Peveril&mdash;&ldquo;you do me infinite wrong, Major
+ Bridgenorth, I am incapable of the infamy which you allude to. The
+ proposal I made to your daughter was as sincere as ever was offered by man
+ to woman. I only hesitated, because you think it necessary to examine me
+ so very closely; and to possess yourself of all my purposes and
+ sentiments, in their fullest extent, without explaining to me the tendency
+ of your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your proposal, then, shapes itself thus,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth:&mdash;&ldquo;You
+ are willing to lead my only child into exile from her native country, to
+ give her a claim to kindness and protection from your family, which you
+ know will be disregarded, on condition I consent to bestow her hand on
+ you, with a fortune sufficient to have matched your ancestors, when they
+ had most reason to boast of their wealth. This, young man, seems no equal
+ bargain. And yet,&rdquo; he continued, after a momentary pause, &ldquo;so little do I
+ value the goods of this world, that it might not be utterly beyond thy
+ power to reconcile me to the match which you have proposed to me, however
+ unequal it may appear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show me but the means which can propitiate your favour, Major
+ Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Peveril,&mdash;&ldquo;for I will not doubt that they will be
+ consistent with my honour and duty&mdash;and you shall soon see how
+ eagerly I will obey your directions, or submit to your conditions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are summed in few words,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Be an honest man,
+ and the friend of your country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No one has ever doubted,&rdquo; replied Peveril, &ldquo;that I am both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me,&rdquo; replied the Major; &ldquo;no one has, as yet, seen you show
+ yourself either. Interrupt me not&mdash;I question not your will to be
+ both; but you have hitherto neither had the light nor the opportunity
+ necessary for the display of your principles, or the service of your
+ country. You have lived when an apathy of mind, succeeding to the
+ agitations of the Civil War, had made men indifferent to state affairs,
+ and more willing to cultivate their own ease, than to stand in the gap
+ when the Lord was pleading with Israel. But we are Englishmen; and with us
+ such unnatural lethargy cannot continue long. Already, many of those who
+ most desired the return of Charles Stewart, regard him as a King whom
+ Heaven, importuned by our entreaties, gave to us in His anger. His
+ unlimited licence&mdash;and example so readily followed by the young and
+ the gay around him&mdash;has disgusted the minds of all sober and thinking
+ men. I had not now held conference with you in this intimate fashion, were
+ I not aware that you, Master Julian, were free from such stain of the
+ times. Heaven, that rendered the King&rsquo;s course of license fruitful, had
+ denied issue to his bed of wedlock; and in the gloomy and stern character
+ of his bigoted successor, we already see what sort of monarch shall
+ succeed to the crown of England. This is a critical period, at which it
+ necessarily becomes the duty of all men to step forward, each in his
+ degree, and aid in rescuing the country which gave us birth.&rdquo; Peveril
+ remembered the warning which he had received from Alice, and bent his eyes
+ on the ground, without returning any reply. &ldquo;How is it, young man,&rdquo;
+ continued Bridgenorth, after a pause&mdash;&ldquo;so young as thou art, and
+ bound by no ties of kindred profligacy with the enemies of your country,
+ you can be already hardened to the claims she may form on you at this
+ crisis?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It were easy to answer you generally, Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; replied Peveril&mdash;&ldquo;It
+ were easy to say that my country cannot make a claim on me which I will
+ not promptly answer at the risk of lands and life. But in dealing thus
+ generally, we should but deceive each other. What is the nature of this
+ call? By whom is it to be sounded? And what are to be the results? for I
+ think you have already seen enough of the evils of civil war, to be wary
+ of again awakening its terrors in a peaceful and happy country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They that are drenched with poisonous narcotics,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;must
+ be awakened by their physicians, though it were with the sound of the
+ trumpet. Better that men should die bravely, with their arms in their
+ hands, like free-born Englishmen, than that they should slide into the
+ bloodless but dishonoured grave which slavery opens for its vassals&mdash;But
+ it is not of war that I was about to speak,&rdquo; he added, assuming a milder
+ tone. &ldquo;The evils of which England now complains, are such as can be
+ remedied by the wholesome administration of her own laws, even in the
+ state in which they are still suffered to exist. Have these laws not a
+ right to the support of every individual who lives under them? Have they
+ not a right to yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he seemed to pause for an answer, Peveril replied, &ldquo;I have to learn,
+ Major Bridgenorth, how the laws of England have become so far weakened as
+ to require such support as mine. When that is made plain to me, no man
+ will more willingly discharge the duty of a faithful liegeman to the law
+ as well as the King. But the laws of England are under the guardianship of
+ upright and learned judges, and of a gracious monarch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And of a House of Commons,&rdquo; interrupted Bridgenorth, &ldquo;no longer doting
+ upon restored monarchy, but awakened, as with a peal of thunder, to the
+ perilous state of our religion, and of our freedom. I appeal to your own
+ conscience, Julian Peveril, whether this awakening hath not been in time,
+ since you yourself know, and none better than you, the secret but rapid
+ strides which Rome has made to erect her Dagon of idolatry within our
+ Protestant land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Julian seeing, or thinking he saw, the drift of Bridgenorth&rsquo;s
+ suspicions, hastened to exculpate himself from the thought of favouring
+ the Roman Catholic religion. &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have been educated
+ in a family where that faith is professed by one honoured individual, and
+ that I have since travelled in Popish countries; but even for these very
+ reasons I have seen Popery too closely to be friendly to its tenets. The
+ bigotry of the laymen&mdash;the persevering arts of the priesthood&mdash;the
+ perpetual intrigue for the extension of the forms without the spirit of
+ religion&mdash;the usurpation of that Church over the consciences of men&mdash;and
+ her impious pretensions to infallibility, are as inconsistent to my mind
+ as they can seem to yours, with common-sense, rational liberty, freedom of
+ conscience, and pure religion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken like the son of your excellent mother,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, grasping
+ his hand; &ldquo;for whose sake I have consented to endure so much from your
+ house unrequited, even when the means of requital were in my own hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was indeed from the instructions of that excellent parent,&rdquo; said
+ Peveril, &ldquo;that I was enabled, in my early youth, to resist and repel the
+ insidious attacks made upon my religious faith by the Catholic priests
+ into whose company I was necessarily thrown. Like her, I trust to live and
+ die in the faith of the reformed Church of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Church of England!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, dropping his young friend&rsquo;s
+ hand, but presently resuming it&mdash;&ldquo;Alas! that Church, as now
+ constituted, usurps scarcely less than Rome herself upon men&rsquo;s consciences
+ and liberties; yet, out of the weakness of this half-reformed Church, may
+ God be pleased to work out deliverance to England, and praise to Himself.
+ I must not forget, that one whose services have been in the cause
+ incalculable, wears the garb of an English priest, and hath had Episcopal
+ ordination. It is not for us to challenge the instrument, so that our
+ escape is achieved from the net of the fowler. Enough, that I find thee
+ not as yet enlightened with the purer doctrine, but prepared to profit by
+ it when the spark shall reach thee. Enough, in especial, that I find thee
+ willing to uplift thy testimony to cry aloud and spare not, against the
+ errors and arts of the Church of Rome. But remember, what thou hast now
+ said, thou wilt soon be called upon to justify, in a manner the most
+ solemn&mdash;the most awful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I have said,&rdquo; replied Julian Peveril, &ldquo;being the unbiassed
+ sentiments of my heart, shall, upon no proper occasion, want the support
+ of my open avowal; and I think it strange you should doubt me so far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I doubt thee not, my young friend,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;and I trust to see
+ that name rank high amongst those by whom the prey shall be rent from the
+ mighty. At present, thy prejudices occupy thy mind like the strong keeper
+ of the house mentioned in Scripture. But there shall come a stronger than
+ he, and make forcible entry, displaying on the battlements that sign of
+ faith in which alone there is found salvation.&mdash;Watch, hope, and
+ pray, that the hour may come.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause in the conversation, which was first broken by Peveril.
+ &ldquo;You have spoken to me in riddles, Major Bridgenorth; and I have asked you
+ for no explanation. Listen to a caution on my part, given with the most
+ sincere good-will. Take a hint from me, and believe it, though it is
+ darkly expressed. You are here&mdash;at least are believed to be here&mdash;on
+ an errand dangerous to the Lord of the island. That danger will be
+ retorted on yourself, if you make Man long your place of residence. Be
+ warned, and depart in time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And leave my daughter to the guardianship of Julian Peveril! Runs not
+ your counsel so, young man?&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Trust my safety,
+ Julian, to my own prudence. I have been accustomed to guide myself through
+ worse dangers than now environ me. But I thank you for your caution, which
+ I am willing to believe was at least partly disinterested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We do not, then, part in anger?&rdquo; said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in anger, my son,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;but in love and strong
+ affection. For my daughter, thou must forbear every thought of seeing her,
+ save through me. I accept not thy suit, neither do I reject it; only this
+ I intimate to you, that he who would be my son, must first show himself
+ the true and loving child of his oppressed and deluded country. Farewell;
+ do not answer me now, thou art yet in the gall of bitterness, and it may
+ be that strife (which I desire not) should fall between us. Thou shalt
+ hear of me sooner than thou thinkest for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook Peveril heartily by the hand, and again bid him farewell, leaving
+ him under the confused and mingled impression of pleasure, doubt, and
+ wonder. Not a little surprised to find himself so far in the good graces
+ of Alice&rsquo;s father, that his suit was even favoured with a sort of negative
+ encouragement, he could not help suspecting, as well from the language of
+ the daughter as of the father, that Bridgenorth was desirous, as the price
+ of his favour, that he should adopt some line of conduct inconsistent with
+ the principles in which he had been educated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not fear, Alice,&rdquo; he said in his heart; &ldquo;not even your hand
+ would I purchase by aught which resembled unworthy or truckling compliance
+ with tenets which my heart disowns; and well I know, were I mean enough to
+ do so, even the authority of thy father were insufficient to compel thee
+ to the ratification of so mean a bargain. But let me hope better things.
+ Bridgenorth, though strong-minded and sagacious, is haunted by the fears
+ of Popery, which are the bugbears of his sect. My residence in the family
+ of the Countess of Derby is more than enough to inspire him with
+ suspicions of my faith, from which, thank Heaven, I can vindicate myself
+ with truth and a good conscience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So thinking, he again adjusted the girths of his palfrey, replaced the bit
+ which he had slipped out of its mouth, that it might feed at liberty, and
+ mounting, pursued his way back to the Castle of Holm-Peel, where he could
+ not help fearing that something extraordinary might have happened in his
+ absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the old pile soon rose before him, serene, and sternly still, amid the
+ sleeping ocean. The banner, which indicated that the Lord of Man held
+ residence within its ruinous precincts, hung motionless by the
+ ensign-staff. The sentinels walked to and fro on their posts, and hummed
+ or whistled their Manx airs. Leaving his faithful companion, Fairy, in the
+ village as before, Julian entered the Castle, and found all within in the
+ same state of quietness and good order which external appearances had
+ announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now rede me, rede me, brother dear,
+ Throughout Merry England,
+ Where will I find a messenger,
+ Betwixt us two to send.
+ &mdash;BALLAD OF KING ESTMERE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian&rsquo;s first encounter, after re-entering the Castle, was with its young
+ Lord, who received him with his usual kindness and lightness of humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thrice welcome, Sir Knight of Dames,&rdquo; said the Earl; &ldquo;here you rove
+ gallantly, and at free will, through our dominions, fulfilling of
+ appointments, and achieving amorous adventures; while we are condemned to
+ sit in our royal halls, as dull and as immovable as if our Majesty was
+ carved on the stern of some Manx smuggling dogger, and christened the King
+ Arthur of Ramsey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, in that case you would take the sea,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;and so enjoy
+ travel and adventure enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, but suppose me wind-bound, or detained in harbour by a revenue pink,
+ or ashore, if you like it, and lying high and dry upon the sand. Imagine
+ the royal image in the dullest of all predicaments, and you have not
+ equalled mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am happy to hear, at least, that you have had no disagreeable
+ employment,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;the morning&rsquo;s alarm has blown over, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In faith it has, Julian; and our close inquiries cannot find any cause
+ for the apprehended insurrection. That Bridgenorth is in the island seems
+ certain; but private affairs of consequence are alleged as the cause of
+ his visit; and I am not desirous to have him arrested unless I could prove
+ some malpractices against him and his companions. In fact, it would seem
+ we had taken the alarm too soon. My mother speaks of consulting you on the
+ subject, Julian; and I will not anticipate her solemn communication. It
+ will be partly apologetical, I suppose; for we begin to think our retreat
+ rather unroyal, and that, like the wicked, we have fled when no man
+ pursued. This idea afflicts my mother, who, as a Queen-Dowager, a
+ Queen-Regent, a heroine, and a woman in general, would be extremely
+ mortified to think that her precipitate retreat hither had exposed her to
+ the ridicule of the islanders; and she is disconcerted and out of humour
+ accordingly. In the meanwhile, my sole amusement has been the grimaces and
+ fantastic gestures of that ape Fenella, who is more out of humour, and
+ more absurd, in consequence, than you ever saw her. Morris says, it is
+ because you pushed her downstairs, Julian&mdash;how is that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Morris has misreported me,&rdquo; answered Julian; &ldquo;I did but lift her <i>up</i>
+ stairs to be rid of her importunity; for she chose, in her way, to contest
+ my going abroad in such an obstinate manner, that I had no other mode of
+ getting rid of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She must have supposed your departure, at a moment so critical, was
+ dangerous to the state of our garrison,&rdquo; answered the Earl; &ldquo;it shows how
+ dearly she esteems my mother&rsquo;s safety, how highly she rates your prowess.
+ But, thank Heaven, there sounds the dinner-bell. I would the philosophers,
+ who find a sin and waste of time in good cheer, could devise us any
+ pastime half so agreeable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meal which the young Earl had thus longed for, as a means of consuming
+ a portion of the time which hung heavy on his hands, was soon over; as
+ soon, at least, as the habitual and stately formality of the Countess&rsquo;s
+ household permitted. She herself, accompanied by her gentlewomen and
+ attendants, retired early after the tables were drawn; and the young
+ gentlemen were left to their own company. Wine had, for the moment, no
+ charms for either; for the Earl was out of spirits from ennui, and
+ impatience of his monotonous and solitary course of life; and the events
+ of the day had given Peveril too much matter for reflection, to permit his
+ starting amusing or interesting topics of conversation. After having
+ passed the flask in silence betwixt them once or twice, they withdrew each
+ to a separate embrasure of the windows of the dining apartment, which,
+ such was the extreme thickness of the wall, were deep enough to afford a
+ solitary recess, separated, as it were, from the chamber itself. In one of
+ these sat the Earl of Derby, busied in looking over some of the new
+ publications which had been forwarded from London; and at intervals
+ confessing how little power or interest these had for him, by yawning
+ fearfully as he looked out on the solitary expanse of waters, which, save
+ from the flight of a flock of sea-gulls, or a solitary cormorant, offered
+ so little of variety to engage his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, on his part, held a pamphlet also in his hand, without giving, or
+ affecting to give it, even his occasional attention. His whole soul turned
+ upon the interview which he had had that day with Alice Bridgenorth, and
+ with her father; while he in vain endeavoured to form any hypothesis which
+ could explain to him why the daughter, to whom he had no reason to think
+ himself indifferent, should have been so suddenly desirous of their
+ eternal separation, while her father, whose opposition he so much dreaded,
+ seemed to be at least tolerant of his addresses. He could only suppose, in
+ explanation, that Major Bridgenorth had some plan in prospect, which it
+ was in his own power to farther or to impede; while, from the demeanour,
+ and indeed the language, of Alice, he had but too much reason to apprehend
+ that her father&rsquo;s favour could only be conciliated by something, on his
+ own part, approaching to dereliction of principle. But by no conjecture
+ which he could form, could he make the least guess concerning the nature
+ of that compliance, of which Bridgenorth seemed desirous. He could not
+ imagine, notwithstanding Alice had spoken of treachery, that her father
+ would dare to propose to him uniting in any plan by which the safety of
+ the Countess, or the security of her little kingdom of Man, was to be
+ endangered. This carried such indelible disgrace in the front, that he
+ could not suppose the scheme proposed to him by any who was not prepared
+ to defend with his sword, upon the spot, so flagrant an insult offered to
+ his honour. And such a proceeding was totally inconsistent with the
+ conduct of Major Bridgenorth in every other respect, besides his being too
+ calm and cold-blooded to permit of his putting a mortal affront upon the
+ son of his old neighbour, to whose mother he confessed so much of
+ obligation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Peveril in vain endeavoured to extract something like a probable
+ theory out of the hints thrown out by the father and by the daughter&mdash;not
+ without the additional and lover-like labour of endeavouring to reconcile
+ his passion to his honour and conscience&mdash;he felt something gently
+ pull him by the cloak. He unclasped his arms, which, in meditation, had
+ been folded on his bosom; and withdrawing his eyes from the vacant
+ prospect of sea-coast and sea which they perused, without much
+ consciousness upon what they rested, he beheld beside him the little dumb
+ maiden, the elfin Fenella. She was seated on a low cushion or stool, with
+ which she had nestled close to Peveril&rsquo;s side, and had remained there for
+ a short space of time, expecting, no doubt, he would become conscious of
+ her presence; until, tired of remaining unnoticed, she at length solicited
+ his attention in the manner which we have described. Startled out of his
+ reverie by this intimation of her presence, he looked down, and could not,
+ without interest, behold this singular and helpless being.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0231m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0231m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0231.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Her hair was unloosened, and streamed over her shoulders in such length,
+ that much of it lay upon the ground, and in such quantity, that it formed
+ a dark veil, or shadow, not only around her face, but over her whole
+ slender and minute form. From the profusion of her tresses looked forth
+ her small and dark, but well-formed features, together with the large and
+ brilliant black eyes; and her whole countenance was composed into the
+ imploring look of one who is doubtful of the reception she is about to
+ meet with from a valued friend, while she confesses a fault, pleads an
+ apology, or solicits a reconciliation. In short, the whole face was so
+ much alive with expression, that Julian, though her aspect was so familiar
+ to him, could hardly persuade himself but that her countenance was
+ entirely new. The wild, fantastic, elvish vivacity of the features, seemed
+ totally vanished, and had given place to a sorrowful, tender, and pathetic
+ cast of countenance, aided by the expression of the large dark eyes,
+ which, as they were turned up towards Julian, glistened with moisture,
+ that, nevertheless, did not overflow the eyelids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conceiving that her unwonted manner arose from a recollection of the
+ dispute which had taken place betwixt them in the morning, Peveril was
+ anxious to restore the little maiden&rsquo;s gaiety, by making her sensible that
+ there dwelt on his mind no unpleasing recollection of their quarrel. He
+ smiled kindly, and shook her hand in one of his; while, with the
+ familiarity of one who had known her from childhood, he stroked down her
+ long dark tresses with the other. She stooped her head, as if ashamed,
+ and, at the same time, gratified with his caresses&mdash;and he was thus
+ induced to continue them, until, under the veil of her rich and abundant
+ locks, he suddenly felt his other hand, which she still held in hers,
+ slightly touched with her lips, and, at the same time, moistened with a
+ tear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once, and for the first time in his life, the danger of being
+ misinterpreted in his familiarity with a creature to whom the usual modes
+ of explanation were a blank, occurred to Julian&rsquo;s mind; and, hastily
+ withdrawing his hand, and changing his posture, he asked her, by a sign
+ which custom had rendered familiar, whether she brought any message to him
+ from the Countess. She started up, and arranged herself in her seat with
+ the rapidity of lightning; and, at the same moment, with one turn of her
+ hand, braided her length of locks into a natural head-dress of the most
+ beautiful kind. There was, indeed, when she looked up, a blush still
+ visible on her dark features; but their melancholy and languid expression
+ had given place to that of wild and restless vivacity, which was most
+ common to them. Her eyes gleamed with more than their wonted fire, and her
+ glances were more piercingly wild and unsettled than usual. To Julian&rsquo;s
+ inquiry, she answered, by laying her hand on her heart&mdash;a motion by
+ which she always indicated the Countess&mdash;and rising, and taking the
+ direction of her apartment, she made a sign to Julian to follow her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distance was not great betwixt the dining apartment and that to which
+ Peveril now followed his mute guide; yet, in going thither, he had time
+ enough to suffer cruelly from the sudden suspicion, that this unhappy girl
+ had misinterpreted the uniform kindness with which he had treated her, and
+ hence come to regard him with feelings more tender than those which belong
+ to friendship. The misery which such a passion was likely to occasion to a
+ creature in her helpless situation, and actuated by such lively feelings,
+ was great enough to make him refuse credit to the suspicion which pressed
+ itself upon his mind; while, at the same time, he formed the internal
+ resolution so to conduct himself towards Fenella, as to check such
+ misplaced sentiments, if indeed she unhappily entertained them towards
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the Countess&rsquo;s apartment, they found her with writing
+ implements, and many sealed letters before her. She received Julian with
+ her usual kindness; and having caused him to be seated, beckoned to the
+ mute to resume her needle. In an instant Fenella was seated at an
+ embroidering-frame; where, but for the movement of her dexterous fingers,
+ she might have seemed a statue, so little did she move from her work
+ either head or eye. As her infirmity rendered her presence no bar to the
+ most confidential conversation, the Countess proceeded to address Peveril
+ as if they had been literally alone together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Julian,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am not now about to complain to you of the
+ sentiments and conduct of Derby. He is your friend&mdash;he is my son. He
+ has kindness of heart and vivacity of talent; and yet&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dearest lady,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;why will you distress yourself with fixing
+ your eye on deficiencies which arise rather from a change of times and
+ manners, than any degeneracy of my noble friend? Let him be once engaged
+ in his duty, whether in peace or war, and let me pay the penalty if he
+ acquits not himself becoming his high station.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied the Countess; &ldquo;but when will the call of duty prove superior
+ to that of the most idle or trivial indulgence which can serve to drive
+ over the lazy hour? His father was of another mould; and how often was it
+ my lot to entreat that he would spare, from the rigid discharge of those
+ duties which his high station imposed, the relaxation absolutely necessary
+ to recruit his health and his spirits!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, my dearest lady,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;you must allow, that the duties
+ to which the times summoned your late honoured lord, were of a more
+ stirring, as well as a more peremptory cast, than those which await your
+ son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not that,&rdquo; said the Countess. &ldquo;The wheel appears to be again
+ revolving; and the present period is not unlikely to bring back such
+ scenes as my young years witnessed.&mdash;Well, be it so; they will not
+ find Charlotte de la Tremouille broken in spirit, though depressed by
+ years. It was even on this subject I would speak with you, my young
+ friend. Since our first early acquaintance&mdash;when I saw your gallant
+ behaviour as I issued forth to your childish eye, like an apparition, from
+ my place of concealment in your father&rsquo;s castle&mdash;it has pleased me to
+ think you a true son of Stanley and Peveril. I trust your nurture in this
+ family has been ever suited to the esteem in which I hold you.&mdash;Nay,
+ I desire no thanks.&mdash;I have to require of you, in return, a piece of
+ service, not perhaps entirely safe to yourself, but which, as times are
+ circumstanced, no person is so well able to render to my house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have been ever my good and noble lady,&rdquo; answered Peveril, &ldquo;as well as
+ my kind, and I may say maternal, protectress. You have a right to command
+ the blood of Stanley in the veins of every one&mdash;You have a thousand
+ rights to command it in mine.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The reader cannot have forgotten that the Earl of Derby was head
+ of the great house of Stanley.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My advices from England,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;resemble more the dreams of
+ a sick man, than the regular information which I might have expected from
+ such correspondents as mine;&mdash;their expressions are like those of men
+ who walk in their sleep, and speak by snatches of what passes in their
+ dreams. It is said, a plot, real or fictitious, has been detected among
+ the Catholics, which has spread far wider and more uncontrollable terror
+ than that of the fifth of November. Its outlines seem utterly incredible,
+ and are only supported by the evidence of wretches, the meanest and most
+ worthless in the creation; yet it is received by the credulous people of
+ England with the most undoubting belief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a singular delusion, to rise without some real ground,&rdquo; answered
+ Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am no bigot, cousin, though a Catholic,&rdquo; replied the Countess. &ldquo;I have
+ long feared that the well-meant zeal of our priests for increasing
+ converts, would draw on them the suspicion of the English nation. These
+ efforts have been renewed with double energy since the Duke of York
+ conformed to the Catholic faith; and the same event has doubled the hate
+ and jealousy of the Protestants. So far, I fear, there may be just cause
+ of suspicion, that the Duke is a better Catholic than an Englishman, and
+ that bigotry has involved him, as avarice, or the needy greed of a
+ prodigal, has engaged his brother, in relations with France, whereof
+ England may have too much reason to complain. But the gross, thick, and
+ palpable fabrications of conspiracy and murder, blood and fire&mdash;the
+ imaginary armies&mdash;the intended massacres&mdash;form a collection of
+ falsehoods, that one would have thought indigestible, even by the coarse
+ appetite of the vulgar for the marvellous and horrible; but which are,
+ nevertheless, received as truth by both Houses of Parliament, and
+ questioned by no one who is desirous to escape the odious appellation of
+ friend to the bloody Papists, and favourer of their infernal schemes of
+ cruelty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what say those who are most likely to be affected by these wild
+ reports?&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;What say the English Catholics themselves?&mdash;a
+ numerous and wealthy body, comprising so many noble names?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their hearts are dead within them,&rdquo; said the Countess. &ldquo;They are like
+ sheep penned up in the shambles, that the butcher may take his choice
+ among them. In the obscure and brief communications which I have had by a
+ secure hand, they do but anticipate their own utter ruin, and ours&mdash;so
+ general is the depression, so universal the despair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the King,&rdquo; said Peveril,&mdash;&ldquo;the King and the Protestant Royalists&mdash;what
+ say they to this growing tempest?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charles,&rdquo; replied the Countess, &ldquo;with his usual selfish prudence,
+ truckles to the storm; and will let cord and axe do their work on the most
+ innocent men in his dominions, rather than lose an hour of pleasure in
+ attempting their rescue. And, for the Royalists, either they have caught
+ the general delirium which has seized on Protestants in general, or they
+ stand aloof and neutral, afraid to show any interest in the unhappy
+ Catholics, lest they be judged altogether such as themselves, and abettors
+ of the fearful conspiracy in which they are alleged to be engaged. In
+ fact, I cannot blame them. It is hard to expect that mere compassion for a
+ persecuted sect&mdash;or, what is yet more rare, an abstract love of
+ justice&mdash;should be powerful enough to engage men to expose themselves
+ to the awakened fury of a whole people; for, in the present state of
+ general agitation, whoever disbelieves the least tittle of the enormous
+ improbabilities which have been accumulated by these wretched reformers,
+ is instantly hunted down, as one who would smother the discovery of the
+ Plot. It is indeed an awful tempest; and, remote as we lie from its
+ sphere, we must expect soon to feel its effects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Derby already told me something of this,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and that
+ there were agents in this island whose object was to excite insurrection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the Countess, and her eye flashed fire as she spoke; &ldquo;and
+ had my advice been listened to, they had been apprehended in the very
+ fact; and so dealt with, as to be a warning to all others how they sought
+ this independent principality on such an errand. But my son, who is
+ generally so culpably negligent of his own affairs, was pleased to assume
+ the management of them upon this crisis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am happy to learn, madam,&rdquo; answered Peveril, &ldquo;that the measures of
+ precaution which my kinsman has adopted, have had the complete effect of
+ disconcerting the conspiracy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the present, Julian; but they should have been such as would have
+ made the boldest tremble to think of such infringement of our rights in
+ future. But Derby&rsquo;s present plan is fraught with greater danger; and yet
+ there is something in it of gallantry, which has my sympathy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, madam?&rdquo; inquired Julian anxiously; &ldquo;and in what can I aid it,
+ or avert its dangers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He purposes,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;instantly to set forth for London. He
+ is, he says, not merely the feudal chief of a small island, but one of the
+ noble Peers of England, who must not remain in the security of an obscure
+ and distant castle, when his name, or that of his mother, is slandered
+ before his Prince and people. He will take his place, he says, in the
+ House of Lords, and publicly demand justice for the insult thrown on his
+ house, by perjured and interested witnesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is a generous resolution, and worthy of my friend,&rdquo; said Julian
+ Peveril. &ldquo;I will go with him and share his fate, be it what it may.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, foolish boy!&rdquo; answered the Countess, &ldquo;as well may you ask a hungry
+ lion to feel compassion, as a prejudiced and furious people to do justice.
+ They are like the madman at the height of frenzy, who murders without
+ compunction his best and dearest friend; and only wonders and wails over
+ his own cruelty, when he is recovered from his delirium.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, dearest lady,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;this cannot be. The noble and
+ generous people of England cannot be thus strangely misled. Whatever
+ prepossessions may be current among the more vulgar, the House of
+ Legislature cannot be deeply infected by them&mdash;they will remember
+ their own dignity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! cousin,&rdquo; answered the Countess, &ldquo;when did Englishmen, even of the
+ highest degree, remember anything, when hurried away by the violence of
+ party feeling? Even those who have too much sense to believe in the
+ incredible fictions which gull the multitude, will beware how they expose
+ them, if their own political party can gain a momentary advantage by their
+ being accredited. It is amongst such, too, that your kinsman has found
+ friends and associates. Neglecting the old friends of his house, as too
+ grave and formal companions for the humour of the times, his intercourse
+ has been with the versatile Shaftesbury&mdash;the mercurial Buckingham&mdash;men
+ who would not hesitate to sacrifice to the popular Moloch of the day,
+ whatsoever or whomsoever, whose ruin could propitiate the deity.&mdash;Forgive
+ a mother&rsquo;s tears, kinsman; but I see the scaffold at Bolton again erected.
+ If Derby goes to London while these bloodhounds are in full cry, obnoxious
+ as he is, and I have made him by my religious faith, and my conduct in
+ this island, he dies his father&rsquo;s death. And yet upon what other course to
+ resolve!&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me go to London, madam,&rdquo; said Peveril, much moved by the distress of
+ his patroness; &ldquo;your ladyship was wont to rely something on my judgment. I
+ will act for the best&mdash;will communicate with those whom you point out
+ to me, and only with them; and I trust soon to send you information that
+ this delusion, however strong it may now be, is in the course of passing
+ away; at the worst, I can apprise you of the danger, should it menace the
+ Earl or yourself; and may be able also to point out the means by which it
+ may be eluded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess listened with a countenance in which the anxiety of maternal
+ affection, which prompted her to embrace Peveril&rsquo;s generous offer,
+ struggled with her native disinterested and generous disposition. &ldquo;Think
+ what you ask of me, Julian,&rdquo; she replied with a sigh. &ldquo;Would you have me
+ expose the life of my friend&rsquo;s son to those perils to which I refuse my
+ own?&mdash;No, never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but madam,&rdquo; replied Julian, &ldquo;I do not run the same risk&mdash;my
+ person is not known in London&mdash;my situation, though not obscure in my
+ own country, is too little known to be noticed in that huge assemblage of
+ all that is noble and wealthy. No whisper, I presume, however indirect,
+ has connected my name with the alleged conspiracy. I am a Protestant,
+ above all; and can be accused of no intercourse, direct or indirect, with
+ the Church of Rome. My connections also lie amongst those, who, if they do
+ not, or cannot, befriend me, cannot, at least, be dangerous to me. In a
+ word, I run no danger where the Earl might incur great peril.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; said the Countess of Derby, &ldquo;all this generous reasoning may be
+ true; but it could only be listened to by a widowed mother. Selfish as I
+ am, I cannot but reflect that my kinswoman has, in all events, the support
+ of an affectionate husband&mdash;such is the interested reasoning to which
+ we are not ashamed to subject our better feelings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not call it so, madam,&rdquo; answered Peveril; &ldquo;think of me as the younger
+ brother of my kinsman. You have ever done by me the duties of a mother;
+ and have a right to my filial service, were it at a risk ten times greater
+ than a journey to London, to inquire into the temper of the times. I will
+ instantly go and announce my departure to the Earl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Julian,&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;if you must make this journey in our
+ behalf,&mdash;and, alas! I have not generosity enough to refuse your noble
+ proffer,&mdash;you must go alone, and without communication with Derby. I
+ know him well; his lightness of mind is free from selfish baseness; and
+ for the world, would he not suffer you to leave Man without his company.
+ And if he went with you, your noble and disinterested kindness would be of
+ no avail&mdash;you would but share his ruin, as the swimmer who attempts
+ to save a drowning man is involved in his fate, if he permit the sufferer
+ to grapple with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as you please, madam,&rdquo; said Peveril. &ldquo;I am ready to depart
+ upon half-an-hour&rsquo;s notice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This night, then,&rdquo; said the Countess, after a moment&rsquo;s pause&mdash;&ldquo;this
+ night I will arrange the most secret means of carrying your generous
+ project into effect; for I would not excite that prejudice against you,
+ which will instantly arise, were it known you had so lately left this
+ island, and its Popish lady. You will do well, perhaps, to use a feigned
+ name in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, madam,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;I will do nothing that can draw on me
+ unnecessary attention; but to bear a feigned name, or affect any disguise
+ beyond living with extreme privacy, would, I think, be unwise as well as
+ unworthy; and what, if challenged, I might find some difficulty in
+ assigning a reason for, consistent with perfect fairness of intentions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you are right,&rdquo; answered the Countess, after a moment&rsquo;s
+ consideration; and then added, &ldquo;You propose, doubtless, to pass through
+ Derbyshire, and visit Martindale Castle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should wish it, madam, certainly,&rdquo; replied Peveril, &ldquo;did time permit,
+ and circumstances render it advisable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of that,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;you must yourself judge. Despatch is,
+ doubtless, desirable; on the other hand, arriving from your own
+ family-seat, you will be less an object of doubt and suspicion, than if
+ you posted up from hence, without even visiting your parents. You must be
+ guided in this,&mdash;in all,&mdash;by your own prudence. Go, my dearest
+ son&mdash;for to me you should be dear as a son&mdash;go, and prepare for
+ your journey. I will get ready some despatches, and a supply of money&mdash;Nay,
+ do not object. Am I not your mother; and are you not discharging a son&rsquo;s
+ duty? Dispute not my right of defraying your expenses. Nor is this all;
+ for, as I must trust your zeal and prudence to act in our behalf when
+ occasion shall demand, I will furnish you with effectual recommendations
+ to our friends and kindred, entreating and enjoining them to render
+ whatever aid you may require, either for your own protection, or the
+ advancement of what you may propose in our favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril made no farther opposition to an arrangement, which in truth the
+ moderate state of his own finances rendered almost indispensable, unless
+ with his father&rsquo;s assistance; and the Countess put into his hand bills of
+ exchange to the amount of two hundred pounds, upon a merchant in the city.
+ She then dismissed Julian for the space of an hour; after which, she said,
+ she must again require his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preparations for his journey were not of a nature to divert the
+ thoughts which speedily pressed on him. He found that half-an-hour&rsquo;s
+ conversation had once more completely changed his immediate prospects and
+ plans for the future. He had offered to the Countess of Derby a service,
+ which her uniform kindness had well deserved at his hand; but, by her
+ accepting it, he was upon the point of being separated from Alice
+ Bridgenorth, at a time when she was become dearer to him than ever, by her
+ avowal of mutual passion. Her image rose before him, such as he had that
+ day pressed her to his bosom&mdash;her voice was in his ear, and seemed to
+ ask whether he could desert her in the crisis which everything seemed to
+ announce as impending. But Julian Peveril, his youth considered, was
+ strict in judging his duty, and severely resolved in executing it. He
+ trusted not his imagination to pursue the vision which presented itself;
+ but resolutely seizing his pen, wrote to Alice the following letter,
+ explaining his situation, as far as justice to the Countess permitted him
+ to do so:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I leave you, dearest Alice,&rdquo; thus ran the letter.&mdash;&ldquo;I leave you;
+ and though, in doing so, I but obey the command you have laid on
+ me, yet I can claim little merit for my compliance, since, without
+ additional and most forcible reasons in aid of your orders, I fear
+ I should have been unable to comply with them. But family affairs
+ of importance compel me to absent myself from this island, for, I
+ fear, more than one week. My thoughts, hopes, and wishes will be
+ on the moment that shall restore me to the Black Fort, and its
+ lovely valley. Let me hope that yours will sometimes rest on the
+ lonely exile, whom nothing could render such, but the command of
+ honour and duty. Do not fear that I mean to involve you in a
+ private correspondence, and let not your father fear it. I could
+ not love you so much, but for the openness and candour of your
+ nature; and I would not that you concealed from Major Bridgenorth
+ one syllable of what I now avow. Respecting other matters, he
+ himself cannot desire the welfare of our common country with more
+ zeal than I do. Differences may occur concerning the mode in which
+ that is to be obtained; but, in the principle, I am convinced
+ there can be only one mind between us; nor can I refuse to listen
+ to his experience and wisdom, even where they may ultimately fail
+ to convince me. Farewell&mdash;Alice, farewell! Much might be added to
+ that melancholy word, but nothing that could express the
+ bitterness with which it is written. Yet I could transcribe it
+ again and again, rather than conclude the last communication which
+ I can have with you for some time. My sole comfort is, that my
+ stay will scarce be so long as to permit you to forget one who
+ never can forget you.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ He held the paper in his hand for a minute after he had folded, but before
+ he had sealed it, while he hurriedly debated in his own mind whether he
+ had not expressed himself towards Major Bridgenorth in so conciliating a
+ manner as might excite hopes of proselytism, which his conscience told him
+ he could not realise with honour. Yet, on the other hand, he had no right,
+ from what Bridgenorth had said, to conclude that their principles were
+ diametrically irreconcilable; for though the son of a high Cavalier, and
+ educated in the family of the Countess of Derby, he was himself, upon
+ principle, an enemy of prerogative, and a friend to the liberty of the
+ subject. And with such considerations, he silenced all internal objections
+ on the point of honour; although his conscience secretly whispered that
+ these conciliatory expressions towards the father were chiefly dictated by
+ the fear, that during his absence Major Bridgenorth might be tempted to
+ change the residence of his daughter, and perhaps to convey her altogether
+ out of his reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having sealed his letter, Julian called his servant, and directed him to
+ carry it under cover of one addressed to Mrs. Debbitch, to a house in the
+ town of Rushin, where packets and messages intended for the family at
+ Black Fort were usually deposited; and for that purpose to take horse
+ immediately. He thus got rid of an attendant, who might have been in some
+ degree a spy on his motions. He then exchanged the dress he usually wore
+ for one more suited to travelling; and, having put a change or two of
+ linen into a small cloak-bag, selected as arms a strong double-edged sword
+ and an excellent pair of pistols, which last he carefully loaded with
+ double bullets. Thus appointed, and with twenty pieces in his purse, and
+ the bills we have mentioned secured in a private pocket-book, he was in
+ readiness to depart as soon as he should receive the Countess&rsquo;s commands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The buoyant spirit of youth and hope, which had, for a moment, been
+ chilled by the painful and dubious circumstances in which he was placed,
+ as well as the deprivation which he was about to undergo, now revived in
+ full vigour. Fancy, turning from more painful anticipations, suggested to
+ him that he was now entering upon life, at a crisis when resolution and
+ talents were almost certain to make the fortune of their possessor. How
+ could he make a more honourable entry on the bustling scene, than sent by,
+ and acting in behalf of, one of the noblest houses in England; and should
+ he perform what his charge might render incumbent with the resolution and
+ the prudence necessary to secure success, how many occurrences might take
+ place to render his mediation necessary to Bridgenorth; and thus enable
+ him, on the most equal and honourable terms, to establish a claim to his
+ gratitude and to his daughter&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst he was dwelling on such pleasing, though imaginary prospects, he
+ could not help exclaiming aloud&mdash;&ldquo;Yes, Alice, I will win thee nobly!&rdquo;
+ The words had scarce escaped his lips, when he heard at the door of his
+ apartment, which the servant had left ajar, a sound like a deep sigh,
+ which was instantly succeeded by a gentle tap&mdash;&ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; replied
+ Julian, somewhat ashamed of his exclamation, and not a little afraid that
+ it had been caught up by some eavesdropper&mdash;&ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; he again
+ repeated; but his command was not obeyed; on the contrary, the knock was
+ repeated somewhat louder. He opened the door, and Fenella stood before
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With eyes that seemed red with recent tears, and with a look of the
+ deepest dejection, the little mute, first touching her bosom, and
+ beckoning with her finger, made to him the usual sign that the Countess
+ desired to see him&mdash;then turned, as if to usher him to her apartment.
+ As he followed her through the long gloomy vaulted passages which afforded
+ communication betwixt the various apartments of the castle, he could not
+ but observe that her usual light trip was exchanged for a tardy and
+ mournful step, which she accompanied with low inarticulate moaning (which
+ she was probably the less able to suppress, because she could not judge
+ how far it was audible), and also with wringing of the hands, and other
+ marks of extreme affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a thought came across Peveril&rsquo;s mind, which, in spite of
+ his better reason, made him shudder involuntarily. As a Peaksman, and a
+ long resident in the Isle of Man, he was well acquainted with many a
+ superstitious legend, and particularly with a belief, which attached to
+ the powerful family of the Stanleys, for their peculiar demon, a Banshie,
+ or female spirit, who was wont to shriek &ldquo;foreboding evil times;&rdquo; and who
+ was generally seen weeping and bemoaning herself before the death of any
+ person of distinction belonging to the family. For an instant, Julian
+ could scarcely divest himself of the belief that the wailing, jibbering
+ form, which glided before him, with a lamp in her hand, was a genius of
+ his mother&rsquo;s race, come to announce to him as an analogous reflection,
+ that if the suspicion which had crossed his mind concerning Fenella was a
+ just one, her ill-fated attachment to him, like that of the prophetic
+ spirit to his family, could bode nothing but disaster, and lamentation,
+ and woe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now, hoist the anchor, mates&mdash;and let the sails
+ Give their broad bosom to the buxom wind,
+ Like lass that woos a lover.
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The presence of the Countess dispelled the superstitious feeling, which,
+ for an instant, had encroached on Julian&rsquo;s imagination, and compelled him
+ to give attention to the matters of ordinary life. &ldquo;Here are your
+ credentials,&rdquo; she said, giving him a small packet, carefully packed up in
+ a sealskin cover; &ldquo;you had better not open them till you come to London.
+ You must not be surprised to find that there are one or two addressed to
+ men of my own persuasion. These, for all our sakes, you will observe
+ caution in delivering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I go your messenger, madam,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;and whatever you desire me to
+ charge myself with, of that I undertake the care. Yet allow me to doubt
+ whether an intercourse with Catholics will at this moment forward the
+ purposes of my mission.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have caught the general suspicion of this wicked sect already,&rdquo; said
+ the Countess, smiling, &ldquo;and are the fitter to go amongst Englishmen in
+ their present mood. But, my cautious friend, these letters are so
+ addressed, and the persons to whom they are addressed so disguised, that
+ you will run no danger in conversing with them. Without their aid, indeed,
+ you will not be able to obtain the accurate information you go in search
+ of. None can tell so exactly how the wind sets, as the pilot whose vessel
+ is exposed to the storm. Besides, though you Protestants deny our
+ priesthood the harmlessness of the dove, you are ready enough to allow us
+ a full share of the wisdom of the serpent; in plain terms, their means of
+ information are extensive, and they are not deficient in the power of
+ applying it. I therefore wish you to have the benefit of their
+ intelligence and advice, if possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whatever you impose upon me as a part of my duty, madam, rely on its
+ being discharged punctually,&rdquo; answered Peveril. &ldquo;And, now, as there is
+ little use in deferring the execution of a purpose when once fixed, let me
+ know your ladyship&rsquo;s wishes concerning my departure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be sudden and secret,&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;the island is full of
+ spies; and I would not wish that any of them should have notice that an
+ envoy of mine was about to leave Man for London. Can you be ready to go on
+ board to-morrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-night&mdash;this instant if you will,&rdquo; said Julian,&mdash;&ldquo;my little
+ preparations are complete.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be ready, then, in your chamber, at two hours after midnight. I will send
+ one to summon you, for our secret must be communicated, for the present,
+ to as few as possible. A foreign sloop is engaged to carry you over; then
+ make the best of your way to London, by Martindale Castle, or otherwise,
+ as you find most advisable. When it is necessary to announce your absence,
+ I will say you are gone to see your parents. But stay&mdash;your journey
+ will be on horseback, of course, from Whitehaven. You have bills of
+ exchange, it is true; but are you provided with ready money to furnish
+ yourself with a good horse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sufficiently rich, madam,&rdquo; answered Julian; &ldquo;and good nags are
+ plenty in Cumberland. There are those among them who know how to come by
+ them good and cheap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trust not to that,&rdquo; said the Countess. &ldquo;Here is what will purchase for
+ you the best horse on the Borders.&mdash;Can you be simple enough to
+ refuse it?&rdquo; she added, as she pressed on him a heavy purse, which he saw
+ himself obliged to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good horse, Julian,&rdquo; continued the Countess, &ldquo;and a good sword, next to
+ a good heart and head, are the accomplishments of a cavalier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I kiss your hands, then, madam,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;and humbly beg you to
+ believe, that whatever may fail in my present undertaking, my purpose to
+ serve you, my noble kinswoman and benefactress, can at least never swerve
+ or falter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it, my son, I know it; and may God forgive me if my anxiety for
+ your friend has sent you on dangers which should have been his! Go&mdash;go&mdash;May
+ saints and angels bless you! Fenella shall acquaint him that you sup in
+ your own apartment. So indeed will I; for to-night I should be unable to
+ face my son&rsquo;s looks. Little will he thank me for sending you on his
+ errand; and there will be many to ask, whether it was like the Lady of
+ Latham to trust her friend&rsquo;s son on the danger which should have been
+ braved by her own. But oh! Julian, I am now a forlorn widow, whom sorrow
+ has made selfish!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tush, madam,&rdquo; answered Peveril; &ldquo;it is more unlike the Lady of Latham to
+ anticipate dangers which may not exist at all, and to which, if they do
+ indeed occur, I am less obnoxious than my noble kinsman. Farewell!&mdash;All
+ blessings attend you, madam. Commend me to Derby, and make him my excuses.
+ I shall expect a summons at two hours after midnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took an affectionate leave of each other; the more affectionate,
+ indeed, on the part of the Countess, that she could not entirely reconcile
+ her generous mind to exposing Peveril to danger on her son&rsquo;s behalf; and
+ Julian betook himself to his solitary apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His servant soon afterwards brought him wine and refreshments; to which,
+ notwithstanding the various matters he had to occupy his mind, he
+ contrived to do reasonable justice. But when this needful occupation was
+ finished, his thoughts began to stream in upon him like a troubled tide&mdash;at
+ once recalling the past, and anticipating the future. It was in vain that
+ he wrapped himself in his riding cloak, and, lying down on his bed,
+ endeavoured to compose himself to sleep. The uncertainty of the prospect
+ before him&mdash;the doubt how Bridgenorth might dispose of his daughter
+ during his absence&mdash;the fear that the Major himself might fall into
+ the power of the vindictive Countess, besides a numerous train of vague
+ and half-formed apprehensions, agitated his blood, and rendered slumber
+ impossible. Alternately to recline in the old oaken easy-chair, and listen
+ to the dashing of the waves under the windows, mingled, as the sound was,
+ with the scream of the sea-birds; or traverse the apartment with long and
+ slow steps, pausing occasionally to look out on the sea, slumbering under
+ the influence of a full moon, which tipped each wave with silver&mdash;such
+ were the only pastimes he could invent, until midnight had passed for one
+ hour; the next was wasted in anxious expectation of the summons of
+ departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length it arrived&mdash;a tap at his door was followed by a low murmur,
+ which made him suspect that the Countess had again employed her mute
+ attendant as the most secure minister of her pleasure on this occasion. He
+ felt something like impropriety in this selection; and it was with a
+ feeling of impatience alien to the natural generosity of his temper, that,
+ when he opened the door, he beheld the dumb maiden standing before him.
+ The lamp which he held in his hand showed his features distinctly, and
+ probably made Fenella aware of the expression which animated them. She
+ cast her large dark eyes mournfully on the ground; and, without again
+ looking him in the face, made him a signal to follow her. He delayed no
+ longer than was necessary to secure his pistols in his belt, wrap his
+ cloak closer around him, and take his small portmanteau under his arm.
+ Thus accoutred, he followed her out of the Keep, or inhabited part of the
+ Castle, by a series of obscure passages leading to a postern gate, which
+ she unlocked with a key, selected from a bundle which she carried at her
+ girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They now stood in the castle-yard, in the open moonlight, which glimmered
+ white and ghastly on the variety of strange and ruinous objects to which
+ we have formerly alluded, and which gave the scene rather the appearance
+ of some ancient cemetery, than of the interior of a fortification. The
+ round and elevated tower&mdash;the ancient mount, with its quadrangular
+ sides facing the ruinous edifices which once boasted the name of Cathedral&mdash;seemed
+ of yet more antique and anomalous form, when seen by the pale light which
+ now displayed them. To one of these churches Fenella took the direct
+ course, and was followed by Julian; although he at once divined, and was
+ superstitious enough to dislike, the path which she was about to adopt. It
+ was by a secret passage through this church that in former times the
+ guard-room of the garrison, situated at the lower and external defences,
+ communicated with the Keep of the Castle; and through this passage were
+ the keys of the Castle every night carried to the Governor&rsquo;s apartment, so
+ soon as the gates were locked, and the watch set. The custom was given up
+ in James the First&rsquo;s time, and the passage abandoned, on account of the
+ well-known legend of the <i>Mauthe Dog</i>&mdash;a fiend, or demon, in the
+ shape of a large, shaggy, black mastiff, by which the church was said to
+ be haunted. It was devoutly believed, that in former times this spectre
+ became so familiar with mankind, as to appear nightly in the guard-room,
+ issuing from the passage which we have mentioned at night, and retiring to
+ it at daybreak. The soldiers became partly familiarised to its presence;
+ yet not so much so as to use any licence of language while the apparition
+ was visible; until one fellow, rendered daring by intoxication, swore he
+ would know whether it was dog or devil, and, with his drawn sword,
+ followed the spectre when it retreated by the usual passage. The man
+ returned in a few minutes, sobered by terror, his mouth gaping, and his
+ hair standing on end, under which horror he died; but, unhappily for the
+ lovers of the marvellous, altogether unable to disclose the horrors which
+ he had seen. Under the evil repute arising from this tale of wonder, the
+ guard-room was abandoned, and a new one constructed. In like manner, the
+ guards after that period held another and more circuitous communication
+ with the Governor or Seneschal of the Castle; and that which lay through
+ the ruinous church was entirely abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In defiance of the legendary terrors which tradition had attached to the
+ original communication, Fenella, followed by Peveril, now boldly traversed
+ the ruinous vaults through which it lay&mdash;sometimes only guided over
+ heaps of ruins by the precarious light of the lamp borne by the dumb
+ maiden&mdash;sometimes having the advantage of a gleam of moonlight,
+ darting into the dreary abyss through the shafted windows, or through
+ breaches made by time. As the path was by no means a straight one, Peveril
+ could not but admire the intimate acquaintance with the mazes which his
+ singular companion displayed, as well as the boldness with which she
+ traversed them. He himself was not so utterly void of the prejudices of
+ the times, but that he contemplated, with some apprehension, the
+ possibility of their intruding on the lair of the phantom hound, of which
+ he had heard so often; and in every remote sight of the breeze among the
+ ruins, he thought he heard him baying at the mortal footsteps which
+ disturbed his gloomy realm. No such terrors, however, interrupted their
+ journey; and in the course of a few minutes, they attained the deserted
+ and now ruinous guard-house. The broken walls of the little edifice served
+ to conceal them from the sentinels, one of whom was keeping a drowsy watch
+ at the lower gate of the Castle; whilst another, seated on the stone steps
+ which communicated with the parapet of the bounding and exterior wall, was
+ slumbering, in full security, with his musket peacefully grounded by his
+ side. Fenella made a sign to Peveril to move with silence and caution, and
+ then showed him, to his surprise, from the window of the deserted
+ guard-room, a boat, for it was now high water, with four rowers, lurking
+ under the cliff on which the castle was built; and made him farther
+ sensible that he was to have access to it by a ladder of considerable
+ height placed at the window of the ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was both displeased and alarmed by the security and carelessness of
+ the sentinels, who had suffered such preparations to be made without
+ observation or alarm given; and he hesitated whether he should not call
+ the officer of the guard, upbraid him with negligence, and show him how
+ easily Holm-Peel, in spite of its natural strength, and although reported
+ impregnable, might be surprised by a few resolute men. Fenella seemed to
+ guess his thoughts with that extreme acuteness of observation which her
+ deprivations had occasioned her acquiring. She laid one hand on his arm,
+ and a finger of the other on her own lips, as if to enjoin forbearance;
+ and Julian, knowing that she acted by the direct authority of the
+ Countess, obeyed her accordingly; but with the internal resolution to lose
+ no time in communicating his sentiments to the Earl, concerning the danger
+ to which the Castle was exposed on this point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, he descended the ladder with some precaution, for the
+ steps were unequal, broken, wet, and slippery; and having placed himself
+ in the stern of the boat, made a signal to the men to push off, and turned
+ to take farewell of his guide. To his utter astonishment, Fenella rather
+ slid down, than descended regularly, the perilous ladder, and, the boat
+ being already pushed off, made a spring from the last step of it with
+ incredible agility, and seated herself beside Peveril, ere he could
+ express either remonstrance or surprise. He commanded the men once more to
+ pull in to the precarious landing-place; and throwing into his countenance
+ a part of the displeasure which he really felt, endeavoured to make her
+ comprehend the necessity of returning to her mistress. Fenella folded her
+ arms, and looked at him with a haughty smile, which completely expressed
+ the determination of her purpose. Peveril was extremely embarrassed; he
+ was afraid of offending the Countess, and interfering with her plan, by
+ giving alarm, which otherwise he was much tempted to have done. On
+ Fenella, it was evident, no species of argument which he could employ was
+ likely to make the least impression; and the question remained, how, if
+ she went on with him, he was to rid himself of so singular and
+ inconvenient a companion, and provide, at the same time, sufficiently for
+ her personal security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boatmen brought the matter to a decision; for, after lying on their
+ oars for a minute, and whispering among themselves in Low Dutch or German,
+ they began to pull stoutly, and were soon at some distance from the
+ Castle. The possibility of the sentinels sending a musket-ball, or even a
+ cannon-shot, after them, was one of the contingencies which gave Peveril
+ momentary anxiety; but they left the fortress, as they must have
+ approached it, unnoticed, or at least unchallenged&mdash;a carelessness on
+ the part of the garrison, which, notwithstanding that the oars were
+ muffled, and that the men spoke little, and in whispers, argued, in
+ Peveril&rsquo;s opinion, great negligence on the part of the sentinels. When
+ they were a little way from the Castle, the men began to row briskly
+ towards a small vessel which lay at some distance. Peveril had, in the
+ meantime, leisure to remark, that the boatmen spoke to each other
+ doubtfully, and bent anxious looks on Fenella, as if uncertain whether
+ they had acted properly in bringing her off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After about a quarter of an hour&rsquo;s rowing, they reached the little sloop,
+ where Peveril was received by the skipper, or captain, on the
+ quarter-deck, with an offer of spirits or refreshments. A word or two
+ among the seamen withdrew the captain from his hospitable cares, and he
+ flew to the ship&rsquo;s side, apparently to prevent Fenella from entering the
+ vessel. The men and he talked eagerly in Dutch, looking anxiously at
+ Fenella as they spoke together; and Peveril hoped the result would be,
+ that the poor woman should be sent ashore again. But she baffled whatever
+ opposition could be offered to her; and when the accommodation-ladder, as
+ it is called, was withdrawn, she snatched the end of a rope, and climbed
+ on board with the dexterity of a sailor, leaving them no means of
+ preventing her entrance, save by actual violence, to which apparently they
+ did not choose to have recourse. Once on deck, she took the captain by the
+ sleeve, and led him to the head of the vessel, where they seemed to hold
+ intercourse in a manner intelligible to both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril soon forgot the presence of the mute, as he began to muse upon his
+ own situation, and the probability that he was separated for some
+ considerable time from the object of his affections. &ldquo;Constancy,&rdquo; he
+ repeated to himself,&mdash;&ldquo;Constancy.&rdquo; And, as if in coincidence with the
+ theme of his reflections, he fixed his eyes on the polar star, which that
+ night twinkled with more than ordinary brilliancy. Emblem of pure passion
+ and steady purpose&mdash;the thoughts which arose as he viewed its clear
+ and unchanging light, were disinterested and noble. To seek his country&rsquo;s
+ welfare, and secure the blessings of domestic peace&mdash;to discharge a
+ bold and perilous duty to his friend and patron&mdash;to regard his
+ passion for Alice Bridgenorth, as the loadstar which was to guide him to
+ noble deeds&mdash;were the resolutions which thronged upon his mind, and
+ which exalted his spirits to that state of romantic melancholy, which
+ perhaps is ill exchanged even for feelings of joyful rapture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was recalled from those contemplations by something which nestled
+ itself softly and closely to his side&mdash;a woman&rsquo;s sigh sounded so near
+ him, as to disturb his reverie; and as he turned his head, he saw Fenella
+ seated beside him, with her eyes fixed on the same star which had just
+ occupied his own. His first emotion was that of displeasure; but it was
+ impossible to persevere in it towards a being so helpless in many
+ respects, so interesting in others; whose large dark eyes were filled with
+ dew, which glistened in the moonlight; and the source of whose emotions
+ seemed to be in a partiality which might well claim indulgence, at least
+ from him who was the object of it. At the same time, Julian resolved to
+ seize the present opportunity, for such expostulations with Fenella on the
+ strangeness of her conduct, as the poor maiden might be able to
+ comprehend. He took her hand with great kindness, but at the same time
+ with much gravity, pointed to the boat, and to the Castle, whose towers
+ and extended walls were now scarce visible in the distance; and thus
+ intimated to her the necessity of her return to Holm-Peel. She looked
+ down, and shook her head, as if negativing his proposal with obstinate
+ decision. Julian renewed his expostulation by look and gesture&mdash;pointed
+ to his own heart, to intimate the Countess&mdash;and bent his brows, to
+ show the displeasure which she must entertain. To all which the maiden
+ only answered by her tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, as if driven to explanation by his continued remonstrances, she
+ suddenly seized him by the arm, to arrest his attention&mdash;cast her eye
+ hastily around, as if to see whether she was watched by any one&mdash;then
+ drew the other hand, edge-wise, across her slender throat&mdash;pointed to
+ the boat, and to the Castle, and nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this series of signs, Peveril could put no interpretation, excepting
+ that he was menaced with some personal danger, from which Fenella seemed
+ to conceive that her presence was a protection. Whatever was her meaning,
+ her purpose seemed unalterably adopted; at least it was plain he had no
+ power to shake it. He must therefore wait till the end of their short
+ voyage, to disembarrass himself of his companion; and, in the meanwhile,
+ acting on the idea of her having harboured a misplaced attachment to him,
+ he thought he should best consult her interest, and his own character, in
+ keeping at as great a distance from her as circumstances admitted. With
+ this purpose, he made the sign she used for going to sleep, by leaning his
+ head on his palm; and having thus recommended to her to go to rest, he
+ himself desired to be conducted to his berth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain readily showed him a hammock, in the after-cabin, into which
+ he threw himself, to seek that repose which the exercise and agitation of
+ the preceding day, as well as the lateness of the hour, made him now feel
+ desirable. Sleep, deep and heavy, sunk down on him in a few minutes, but
+ it did not endure long. In his sleep he was disturbed by female cries; and
+ at length, as he thought, distinctly heard the voice of Alice Bridgenorth
+ call on his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He awoke, and starting up to quit his bed, became sensible, from the
+ motion of the vessel, and the swinging of the hammock, that his dream had
+ deceived him. He was still startled by its extreme vivacity and
+ liveliness. &ldquo;Julian Peveril, help! Julian Peveril!&rdquo; The sounds still rung
+ in his ears&mdash;the accents were those of Alice&mdash;and he could
+ scarce persuade himself that his imagination had deceived him. Could she
+ be in the same vessel? The thought was not altogether inconsistent with
+ her father&rsquo;s character, and the intrigues in which he was engaged; but
+ then, if so, to what peril was she exposed, that she invoked his name so
+ loudly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determined to make instant inquiry, he jumped out of his hammock,
+ half-dressed as he was, and stumbling about the little cabin, which was as
+ dark as pitch, at length, with considerable difficulty, reached the door.
+ The door, however, he was altogether unable to open; and was obliged to
+ call loudly to the watch upon deck. The skipper, or captain, as he was
+ called, being the only person aboard who could speak English, answered to
+ the summons, and replied to Peveril&rsquo;s demand, what noise that was?&mdash;that
+ a boat was going off with the young woman&mdash;that she whimpered a
+ little as she left the vessel&mdash;and &ldquo;dat vaas all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His dream was thus fully explained. Fancy had caught up the inarticulate
+ and vehement cries with which Fenella was wont to express resistance or
+ displeasure&mdash;had coined them into language, and given them the
+ accents of Alice Bridgenorth. Our imagination plays wilder tricks with us
+ almost every night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain now undid the door, and appeared with a lantern; without the
+ aid of which Peveril could scarce have regained his couch, where he now
+ slumbered secure and sound, until day was far advanced, and the invitation
+ of the captain called him up to breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now, what is this that haunts me like my shadow,
+ Frisking and mumming like an elf in moonlight!
+ &mdash;BEN JONSON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Peveril found the master of the vessel rather less rude than those in his
+ station of life usually are, and received from him full satisfaction
+ concerning the fate of Fenella, upon whom the captain bestowed a hearty
+ curse, for obliging him to lay-to until he had sent his boat ashore, and
+ had her back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;no violence was necessary to reconcile her to go
+ ashore? I trust she offered no foolish resistance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Resist! mein Gott,&rdquo; said the captain, &ldquo;she did resist like a troop of
+ horse&mdash;she did cry, you might hear her at Whitehaven&mdash;she did go
+ up the rigging like a cat up a chimney; but dat vas ein trick of her old
+ trade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What trade do you mean?&rdquo; said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the seaman, &ldquo;I vas know more about her than you, Meinheer. I
+ vas know that she vas a little, very little girl, and prentice to one
+ seiltanzer, when my lady yonder had the good luck to buy her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A seiltanzer!&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;what do you mean by that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mean a rope-danzer, a mountebank, a Hans pickel-harring. I vas know
+ Adrian Brackel vell&mdash;he sell de powders dat empty men&rsquo;s stomach, and
+ fill him&rsquo;s own purse. Not know Adrian Brackel, mein Gott! I have smoked
+ many a pound of tabak with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril now remembered that Fenella had been brought into the family when
+ he and the young Earl were in England, and while the Countess was absent
+ on an expedition to the continent. Where the Countess found her, she never
+ communicated to the young men; but only intimated, that she had received
+ her out of compassion, in order to relieve her from a situation of extreme
+ distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hinted so much to the communicative seaman, who replied, &ldquo;that for
+ distress he knew nocht&rsquo;s on&rsquo;t; only, that Adrian Brackel beat her when she
+ would not dance on the rope, and starved her when she did, to prevent her
+ growth.&rdquo; The bargain between the countess and the mountebank, he said, he
+ had made himself; because the Countess had hired his brig upon her
+ expedition to the continent. None else knew where she came from. The
+ Countess had seen her on a public stage at Ostend&mdash;compassionated her
+ helpless situation, and the severe treatment she received&mdash;and had
+ employed him to purchase the poor creature from her master, and charged
+ him with silence towards all her retinue.&mdash;&ldquo;And so I do keep
+ silence,&rdquo; continued the faithful confidant, &ldquo;van I am in the havens of
+ Man; but when I am on the broad seas, den my tongue is mine own, you know.
+ Die foolish beoples in the island, they say she is a wechsel-balg&mdash;what
+ you call a fairy-elf changeling. My faith, they do not never have seen ein
+ wechsel-balg; for I saw one myself at Cologne, and it was twice as big as
+ yonder girl, and did break the poor people, with eating them up, like de
+ great big cuckoo in the sparrow&rsquo;s nest; but this Venella eat no more than
+ other girls&mdash;it was no wechsel-balg in the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a different train of reasoning, Julian had arrived at the same
+ conclusion; in which, therefore, he heartily acquiesced. During the
+ seaman&rsquo;s prosing, he was reflecting within himself, how much of the
+ singular flexibility of her limbs and movements the unfortunate girl must
+ have derived from the discipline and instructions of Adrian Brackel; and
+ also how far the germs of her wilful and capricious passions might have
+ been sown during her wandering and adventurous childhood. Aristocratic,
+ also, as his education had been, these anecdotes respecting Fenella&rsquo;s
+ original situation and education, rather increased his pleasure of having
+ shaken off her company; and yet he still felt desirous to know any farther
+ particulars which the seaman could communicate on the same subject. But he
+ had already told all he knew. Of her parents he knew nothing, except that
+ &ldquo;her father must have been a damned hundsfoot, and a schelm, for selling
+ his own flesh and blood to Adrian Brackel;&rdquo; for by such a transaction had
+ the mountebank become possessed of his pupil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conversation tended to remove any passing doubts which might have
+ crept on Peveril&rsquo;s mind concerning the fidelity of the master of the
+ vessel, who appeared from thence to have been a former acquaintance of the
+ Countess, and to have enjoyed some share of her confidence. The
+ threatening motion used by Fenella, he no longer considered as worthy of
+ any notice, excepting as a new mark of the irritability of her temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He amused himself with walking the deck, and musing on his past and future
+ prospects, until his attention was forcibly arrested by the wind, which
+ began to rise in gusts from the north-west, in a manner so unfavourable to
+ the course they intended to hold, that the master, after many efforts to
+ beat against it, declared his bark, which was by no means an excellent
+ sea-boat, was unequal to making Whitehaven; and that he was compelled to
+ make a fair wind of it, and run for Liverpool. To this course Peveril did
+ not object. It saved him some land journey, in case he visited his
+ father&rsquo;s castle; and the Countess&rsquo;s commission would be discharged as
+ effectually the one way as the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vessel was put, accordingly, before the wind, and ran with great
+ steadiness and velocity. The captain, notwithstanding, pleading some
+ nautical hazards, chose to lie off, and did not attempt the mouth of the
+ Mersey until morning, when Peveril had at length the satisfaction of being
+ landed upon the quay of Liverpool, which even then showed symptoms of the
+ commercial prosperity that has since been carried to such a height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The master, who was well acquainted with the port, pointed out to Julian a
+ decent place of entertainment, chiefly frequented by seafaring people;
+ for, although he had been in the town formerly, he did not think it proper
+ to go anywhere at present where he might have been unnecessarily
+ recognised. Here he took leave of the seaman, after pressing upon him with
+ difficulty a small present for his crew. As for his passage, the captain
+ declined any recompense whatever; and they parted upon the most civil
+ terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inn to which he was recommended was full of strangers, seamen, and
+ mercantile people, all intent upon their own affairs, and discussing them
+ with noise and eagerness, peculiar to the business of a thriving seaport.
+ But although the general clamour of the public room, in which the guests
+ mixed with each other, related chiefly to their own commercial dealings,
+ there was a general theme mingling with them, which was alike common and
+ interesting to all; so that, amidst disputes about freight, tonnage,
+ demurrage, and such like, were heard the emphatic sounds of &ldquo;Deep,
+ damnable, accursed plot,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Bloody Papist villains,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;The King
+ in danger&mdash;the gallows too good for them,&rdquo; and so forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fermentation excited in London had plainly reached even this remote
+ seaport, and was received by the inhabitants with the peculiar stormy
+ energy which invests men in their situation with the character of the
+ winds and waves with which they are chiefly conversant. The commercial and
+ nautical interests of England were indeed particularly anti-Catholic;
+ although it is not, perhaps, easy to give any distinct reason why they
+ should be so, since theological disputes in general could scarce be
+ considered as interesting to them. But zeal, amongst the lower orders at
+ least, is often in an inverse ratio to knowledge; and sailors were not
+ probably the less earnest and devoted Protestants, that they did not
+ understand the controversy between the Churches. As for the merchants,
+ they were almost necessarily inimical to the gentry of Lancashire and
+ Cheshire; many of whom still retained the faith of Rome, which was
+ rendered ten times more odious to the men of commerce, as the badge of
+ their haughty aristocratic neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the little which Peveril heard of the sentiments of the people of
+ Liverpool, he imagined he should act most prudently in leaving the place
+ as soon as possible, and before any suspicion should arise of his having
+ any connection with the party which appeared to have become so obnoxious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to accomplish his journey, it was first necessary that he should
+ purchase a horse; and for this purpose he resolved to have recourse to the
+ stables of a dealer well known at the time, and who dwelt in the outskirts
+ of the place; and having obtained directions to his dwelling, he went
+ thither to provide himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joe Bridlesley&rsquo;s stables exhibited a large choice of good horses; for that
+ trade was in former days more active than at present. It was an ordinary
+ thing for a stranger to buy a horse for the purpose of a single journey,
+ and to sell him, as well as he could, when he had reached the point of his
+ destination; and hence there was a constant demand, and a corresponding
+ supply; upon both of which, Bridlesley, and those of his trade, contrived,
+ doubtless, to make handsome profits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, who was no despicable horse-jockey, selected for his purpose a
+ strong well-made horse, about sixteen hands high, and had him led into the
+ yard, to see whether the paces corresponded with his appearance. As these
+ also gave perfect satisfaction to the customer, it remained only to settle
+ the price with Bridlesley; who of course swore his customer had pitched
+ upon the best horse ever darkened the stable-door, since he had dealt that
+ way; that no such horses were to be had nowadays, for that the mares were
+ dead that foaled them; and having named a corresponding price, the usual
+ haggling commenced betwixt the seller and purchaser, for adjustment of
+ what the French dealers call <i>le prix juste</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader, if he be at all acquainted with this sort of traffic, well
+ knows it is generally a keen encounter of wits, and attracts the notice of
+ all the idlers within hearing, who are usually very ready to offer their
+ opinions, or their evidence. Amongst these, upon the present occasion, was
+ a thin man, rather less than the ordinary size, and meanly dressed; but
+ whose interference was in a confident tone, and such as showed himself
+ master of the subject on which he spoke. The price of the horse being
+ settled to about fifteen pounds, which was very high for the period, that
+ of the saddle and bridle had next to be adjusted, and the thin
+ mean-looking person before-mentioned, found nearly as much to say on this
+ subject as on the other. As his remarks had a conciliating and obliging
+ tendency towards the stranger, Peveril concluded he was one of those idle
+ persons, who, unable or unwilling to supply themselves with the means of
+ indulgence at their own cost, do not scruple to deserve them at the hands
+ of others, by a little officious complaisance; and considering that he
+ might acquire some useful information from such a person, was just about
+ to offer him the courtesy of a morning draught, when he observed he had
+ suddenly left the yard. He had scarce remarked this circumstance, before a
+ party of customers entered the place, whose haughty assumption of
+ importance claimed the instant attention of Bridlesley, and all his
+ militia of grooms and stable-boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three good horses,&rdquo; said the leader of the party, a tall bulky man, whose
+ breath was drawn full and high, under a consciousness of fat, and of
+ importance&mdash;&ldquo;three good and able-bodied horses, for the service of
+ the Commons of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridlesley said he had some horses which might serve the Speaker himself
+ at need; but that, to speak Christian truth, he had just sold the best in
+ his stable to that gentleman present, who, doubtless, would give up the
+ bargain if the horse was needed for the service of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak well, friend,&rdquo; said the important personage; and advancing to
+ Julian, demanded, in a very haughty tone, the surrender of the purchase
+ which he had just made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, with some difficulty, subdued the strong desire which he felt to
+ return a round refusal to so unreasonable a request, but fortunately,
+ recollecting that the situation in which he at present stood, required, on
+ his part, much circumspection, he replied simply, that upon showing him
+ any warrant to seize upon horses for the public service, he must of course
+ submit to resign his purchase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man, with an air of extreme dignity, pulled from his pocket, and
+ thrust into Peveril&rsquo;s hand, a warrant, subscribed by the Speaker of the
+ House of Commons, empowering Charles Topham, their officer of the Black
+ Rod, to pursue and seize upon the persons of certain individuals named in
+ the warrant; and of all other persons who are, or should be, accused by
+ competent witnesses, of being accessory to, or favourers of, the hellish
+ and damnable Popish Plot, at present carried on within the bowels of the
+ kingdom; and charging all men, as they loved their allegiance, to render
+ the said Charles Topham their readiest and most effective assistance, in
+ execution of the duty entrusted to his care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On perusing a document of such weighty import, Julian had no hesitation to
+ give up his horse to this formidable functionary; whom somebody compared
+ to a lion, which, as the House of Commons was pleased to maintain such an
+ animal, they were under the necessity of providing for by frequent
+ commitments; until &ldquo;<i>Take him, Topham</i>,&rdquo; became a proverb, and a
+ formidable one, in the mouth of the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The acquiescence of Peveril procured him some grace in the sight of the
+ emissary; who, before selecting two horses for his attendants, gave
+ permission to the stranger to purchase a grey horse, much inferior,
+ indeed, to that which he had resigned, both in form and in action, but
+ very little lower in price, as Mr. Bridlesley, immediately on learning the
+ demand for horses upon the part of the Commons of England, had passed a
+ private resolution in his own mind, augmenting the price of his whole
+ stud, by an imposition of at least twenty per cent., <i>ad valorem</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril adjusted and paid the price with much less argument than on the
+ former occasion; for, to be plain with the reader, he had noticed in the
+ warrant of Mr. Topham, the name of his father, Sir Geoffrey Peveril of
+ Martindale Castle, engrossed at full length, as one of those subjected to
+ arrest by that officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When aware of this material fact, it became Julian&rsquo;s business to leave
+ Liverpool directly, and carry the alarm to Derbyshire, if, indeed, Mr.
+ Topham had not already executed his charge in that county, which he
+ thought unlikely, as it was probable they would commence by securing those
+ who lived nearest to the seaports. A word or two which he overheard
+ strengthened his hopes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And hark ye, friend,&rdquo; said Mr. Topham; &ldquo;you will have the horses at the
+ door of Mr. Shortell, the mercer, in two hours, as we shall refresh
+ ourselves there with a cool tankard, and learn what folks live in the
+ neighbourhood that may be concerned in my way. And you will please to have
+ that saddle padded, for I am told the Derbyshire roads are rough.&mdash;And
+ you, Captain Dangerfield, and Master Everett, you must put on your
+ Protestant spectacles, and show me where there is the shadow of a priest,
+ or of a priest&rsquo;s favourer; for I am come down with a broom in my cap to
+ sweep this north country of such like cattle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the persons he thus addressed, who wore the garb of a broken-down
+ citizen, only answered, &ldquo;Ay, truly, Master Topham, it is time to purge the
+ garner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other, who had a formidable pair of whiskers, a red nose, and a
+ tarnished laced coat, together with a hat of Pistol&rsquo;s dimensions, was more
+ loquacious. &ldquo;I take it on my damnation,&rdquo; said this zealous Protestant
+ witness, &ldquo;that I will discover the marks of the beast on every one of them
+ betwixt sixteen and seventy, as plainly as if they had crossed themselves
+ with ink, instead of holy water. Since we have a King willing to do
+ justice, and a House of Commons to uphold prosecutions, why, damn me, the
+ cause must not stand still for lack of evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stick to that, noble captain,&rdquo; answered the officer; &ldquo;but, prithee,
+ reserve thy oaths for the court of justice; it is but sheer waste to throw
+ them away, as you do in your ordinary conversation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear you nothing, Master Topham,&rdquo; answered Dangerfield; &ldquo;it is right to
+ keep a man&rsquo;s gifts in use; and were I altogether to renounce oaths in my
+ private discourse, how should I know how to use one when I needed it? But
+ you hear me use none of your Papist abjurations. I swear not by the mass,
+ or before George, or by anything that belongs to idolatry; but such
+ downright oaths as may serve a poor Protestant gentleman, who would fain
+ serve Heaven and the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bravely spoken, most noble Festus,&rdquo; said his yoke-fellow. &ldquo;But do not
+ suppose, that although I am not in the habit of garnishing my words with
+ oaths out of season, I shall be wanting, when called upon, to declare the
+ height and the depth, the width and the length, of this hellish plot
+ against the King and the Protestant faith.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dizzy, and almost sick, with listening to the undisguised brutality of
+ these fellows, Peveril, having with difficulty prevailed on Bridlesley to
+ settle his purchase, at length led forth his grey steed; but was scarce
+ out of the yard, when he heard the following alarming conversation pass,
+ of which he seemed himself the object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is that youth?&rdquo; said the slow soft voice of the more precise of the
+ two witnesses. &ldquo;Methinks I have seen him somewhere before. Is he from
+ these parts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that I know of,&rdquo; said Bridlesley; who, like all the other inhabitants
+ of England at the time, answered the interrogatories of these fellows with
+ the deference which is paid in Spain to the questions of an inquisitor. &ldquo;A
+ stranger&mdash;entirely a stranger&mdash;never saw him before&mdash;a wild
+ young colt, I warrant him; and knows a horse&rsquo;s mouth as well as I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I begin to bethink me I saw such a face as his at the Jesuits&rsquo; consult,
+ in the White Horse Tavern,&rdquo; answered Everett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I think I recollect,&rdquo; said Captain Dangerfield&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, master and captain,&rdquo; said the authoritative voice of Topham,
+ &ldquo;we will have none of your recollections at present. We all know what
+ these are likely to end in. But I will have you know, you are not to run
+ till the leash is slipped. The young man is a well-looking lad, and gave
+ up his horse handsomely for the service of the House of Commons. He knows
+ how to behave himself to his betters, I warrant you; and I scarce think he
+ has enough in his purse to pay the fees.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech concluded the dialogue, which Peveril, finding himself so much
+ concerned in the issue, thought it best to hear to an end. Now, when it
+ ceased, to get out of the town unobserved, and take the nearest way to his
+ father&rsquo;s castle, seemed his wisest plan. He had settled his reckoning at
+ the inn, and brought with him to Bridlesley&rsquo;s the small portmanteau which
+ contained his few necessaries, so that he had no occasion to return
+ thither. He resolved, therefore, to ride some miles before he stopped,
+ even for the purpose of feeding his horse; and being pretty well
+ acquainted with the country, he hoped to be able to push forward to
+ Martindale Castle sooner than the worshipful Master Topham; whose saddle
+ was, in the first place, to be padded, and who, when mounted, would, in
+ all probability, ride with the precaution of those who require such
+ security against the effects of a hard trot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of these feelings, Julian pushed for Warrington, a
+ place with which he was well acquainted; but, without halting in the town,
+ he crossed the Mersey, by the bridge built by an ancestor of his friend
+ the Earl of Derby, and continued his route towards Dishley, on the borders
+ of Derbyshire. He might have reached this latter village easily, had his
+ horse been fitter for a forced march; but in the course of the journey, he
+ had occasion, more than once, to curse the official dignity of the person
+ who had robbed him of his better steed, while taking the best direction he
+ could through a country with which he was only generally acquainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, near Altringham, a halt became unavoidable; and Peveril had
+ only to look for some quiet and sequestered place of refreshment. This
+ presented itself, in the form of a small cluster of cottages; the best of
+ which united the characters of an alehouse and a mill, where the sign of
+ the Cat (the landlord&rsquo;s faithful ally in defence of his meal-sacks),
+ booted as high as Grimalkin in the fairy tale, and playing on the fiddle
+ for the more grace, announced that John Whitecraft united the two honest
+ occupations of landlord and miller; and, doubtless, took toll from the
+ public in both capacities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a place promised a traveller, who journeyed incognito, safer, if not
+ better accommodation, than he was like to meet with in more frequented
+ inns; and at the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian halted accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In these distracted times, when each man dreads
+ The bloody stratagems of busy hands.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian received the usual attention
+ paid to the customers of an inferior house of entertainment. His horse was
+ carried by a ragged lad, who acted as hostler, into a paltry stable;
+ where, however, the nag was tolerably supplied with food and litter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having seen the animal on which his comfort, perhaps his safety, depended,
+ properly provided for, Peveril entered the kitchen, which indeed was also
+ the parlour and hall of the little hostelry, to try what refreshment he
+ could obtain for himself. Much to his satisfaction, he found there was
+ only one guest in the house besides himself; but he was less pleased when
+ he found that he must either go without dinner, or share with that single
+ guest the only provisions which chanced to be in the house, namely, a dish
+ of trouts and eels, which their host, the miller, had brought in from his
+ mill-stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the particular request of Julian, the landlady undertook to add a
+ substantial dish of eggs and bacon, which perhaps she would not have
+ undertaken for, had not the sharp eye of Peveril discovered the flitch
+ hanging in its smoky retreat, when, as its presence could not be denied,
+ the hostess was compelled to bring it forward as a part of her supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a buxom dame about thirty, whose comely and cheerful countenance
+ did honour to the choice of the jolly miller, her loving mate; and was now
+ stationed under the shade of an old-fashioned huge projecting chimney,
+ within which it was her province to &ldquo;work i&rsquo; the fire,&rdquo; and provide for
+ the wearied wayfaring man, the good things which were to send him
+ rejoicing on his course. Although, at first, the honest woman seemed
+ little disposed to give herself much additional trouble on Julian&rsquo;s
+ account, yet the good looks, handsome figure, and easy civility of her new
+ guest, soon bespoke the principal part of her attention; and while busy in
+ his service, she regarded him, from time to time, with looks, where
+ something like pity mingled with complacency. The rich smoke of the
+ rasher, and the eggs with which it was flanked, already spread itself
+ through the apartment; and the hissing of these savoury viands bore chorus
+ to the simmering of the pan, in which the fish were undergoing a slower
+ decoction. The table was covered with a clean huck-aback napkin, and all
+ was in preparation for the meal, which Julian began to expect with a good
+ deal of impatience, when the companion, who was destined to share it with
+ him, entered the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first glance Julian recognised, to his surprise, the same
+ indifferently dressed, thin-looking person, who, during the first bargain
+ which he had made with Bridlesley, had officiously interfered with his
+ advice and opinion. Displeased at having the company of any stranger
+ forced upon him, Peveril was still less satisfied to find one who might
+ make some claim of acquaintance with him, however slender, since the
+ circumstances in which he stood compelled him to be as reserved as
+ possible. He therefore turned his back upon his destined messmate, and
+ pretended to amuse himself by looking out of the window, determined to
+ avoid all intercourse until it should be inevitably forced upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, the other stranger went straight up to the landlady,
+ where she toiled on household cares intent, and demanded of her, what she
+ meant by preparing bacon and eggs, when he had positively charged her to
+ get nothing ready but the fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good woman, important as every cook in the discharge of her duty,
+ deigned not for some time so much as to acknowledge that she heard the
+ reproof of her guest; and when she did so, it was only to repel it in a
+ magisterial and authoritative tone.&mdash;&ldquo;If he did not like bacon&mdash;(bacon
+ from their own hutch, well fed on pease and bran)&mdash;if he did not like
+ bacon and eggs&mdash;(new-laid eggs, which she had brought in from the
+ hen-roost with her own hands)&mdash;why so put case&mdash;it was the worse
+ for his honour, and the better for those who did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The better for those who like them?&rdquo; answered the guest; &ldquo;that is as much
+ as to say I am to have a companion, good woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not good woman me, sir,&rdquo; replied the miller&rsquo;s wife, &ldquo;till I call you
+ good man; and, I promise you, many would scruple to do that to one who
+ does not love eggs and bacon of a Friday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my good lady,&rdquo; said her guest, &ldquo;do not fix any misconstruction upon
+ me&mdash;I dare say the eggs and the bacon are excellent; only they are
+ rather a dish too heavy for my stomach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, or your conscience perhaps, sir,&rdquo; answered the hostess. &ldquo;And now, I
+ bethink me, you must needs have your fish fried with oil, instead of the
+ good drippings I was going to put to them. I would I could spell the
+ meaning of all this now; but I warrant John Bigstaff, the constable, could
+ conjure something out of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause here; but Julian, somewhat alarmed at the tone which the
+ conversation assumed, became interested in watching the dumb show which
+ succeeded. By bringing his head a little towards the left, but without
+ turning round, or quitting the projecting latticed window where he had
+ taken his station, he could observe that the stranger, secured, as he
+ seemed to think himself, from observation, had sidled close up to the
+ landlady, and, as he conceived, had put a piece of money into her hand.
+ The altered tone of the miller&rsquo;s moiety corresponded very much with this
+ supposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, indeed, and forsooth,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;her house was Liberty Hall; and so
+ should every publican&rsquo;s be. What was it to her what gentlefolks ate or
+ drank, providing they paid for it honestly? There were many honest
+ gentlemen, whose stomachs could not abide bacon, grease, or dripping,
+ especially on a Friday; and what was that to her, or any one in her line,
+ so gentlefolks paid honestly for the trouble? Only, she would say, that
+ her bacon and eggs could not be mended betwixt this and Liverpool, and
+ that she would live and die upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall hardly dispute it,&rdquo; said the stranger; and turning towards
+ Julian, he added, &ldquo;I wish this gentleman, who I suppose is my
+ trencher-companion, much joy of the dainties which I cannot assist him in
+ consuming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I assure you, sir,&rdquo; answered Peveril, who now felt himself compelled to
+ turn about, and reply with civility, &ldquo;that it was with difficulty I could
+ prevail on my landlady to add my cover to yours, though she seems now such
+ a zealot for the consumption of eggs and bacon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am zealous for nothing,&rdquo; said the landlady, &ldquo;save that men would eat
+ their victuals, and pay their score; and if there be enough in one dish to
+ serve two guests, I see little purpose in dressing them two; however, they
+ are ready now, and done to a nicety.&mdash;Here, Alice! Alice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound of that well-known name made Julian start; but the Alice who
+ replied to the call ill resembled the vision which his imagination
+ connected with the accents, being a dowdy slipshod wench, the drudge of
+ the low inn which afforded him shelter. She assisted her mistress in
+ putting on the table the dishes which the latter had prepared; and a
+ foaming jug of home-brewed ale being placed betwixt them, was warranted by
+ Dame Whitecraft as excellent; &ldquo;for,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;we know by practice that
+ too much water drowns the miller, and we spare it on our malt as we would
+ in our mill-dam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I drink to your health in it, dame,&rdquo; said the elder stranger; &ldquo;and a cup
+ of thanks for these excellent fish; and to the drowning of all unkindness
+ between us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you, sir,&rdquo; said the dame, &ldquo;and wish you the like; but I dare not
+ pledge you, for our Gaffer says that ale is brewed too strong for women;
+ so I only drink a glass of canary at a time with a gossip, or any
+ gentleman guest that is so minded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall drink one with me, then, dame,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;so you will let
+ me have a flagon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That you shall, sir, and as good as ever was broached; but I must to the
+ mill, to get the key from the goodman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and tucking her clean gown through the pocket-holes, that her
+ steps might be the more alert, and her dress escape dust, off she tripped
+ to the mill, which lay close adjoining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A dainty dame, and dangerous, is the miller&rsquo;s wife,&rdquo; said the stranger,
+ looking at Peveril. &ldquo;Is not that old Chaucer&rsquo;s phrase?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&mdash;I believe so,&rdquo; said Peveril, not much read in Chaucer, who was
+ then even more neglected than at present; and much surprised at a literary
+ quotation from one of the mean appearance exhibited by the person before
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the stranger, &ldquo;I see that you, like other young gentlemen
+ of the time, are better acquainted with Cowley and Waller, than with the
+ &lsquo;well of English undefiled.&rsquo; I cannot help differing. There are touches of
+ nature about the old bard of Woodstock, that, to me, are worth all the
+ turns of laborious wit in Cowley, and all the ornate and artificial
+ simplicity of his courtly competitor. The description, for instance, of
+ his country coquette&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Wincing she was, as is a wanton colt,
+ Sweet as a flower, and upright as a bolt.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then, again, for pathos, where will you mend the dying scene of Arcite?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Alas, my heart&rsquo;s queen! alas, my wife!
+ Giver at once, and ender of my life.
+ What is this world?&mdash;What axen men to have?
+ Now with his love&mdash;now in his cold grave
+ Alone, withouten other company.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But I tire you, sir; and do injustice to the poet, whom I remember but by
+ halves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary, sir,&rdquo; replied Peveril, &ldquo;you make him more intelligible
+ to me in your recitation, than I have found him when I have tried to
+ peruse him myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were only frightened by the antiquated spelling, and &lsquo;the letters
+ black,&rsquo;&rdquo; said his companion. &ldquo;It is many a scholar&rsquo;s case, who mistakes a
+ nut, which he could crack with a little exertion, for a bullet, which he
+ must needs break his teeth on; but yours are better employed.&mdash;Shall
+ I offer you some of this fish?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, sir,&rdquo; replied Julian, willing to show himself a man of reading in
+ his turn; &ldquo;I hold with old Caius, and profess to fear judgment, to fight
+ where I cannot choose, and to eat no fish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger cast a startled look around him at this observation, which
+ Julian had thrown out, on purpose to ascertain, if possible, the quality
+ of his companion, whose present language was so different from the
+ character he had assumed at Bridlesley&rsquo;s. His countenance, too, although
+ the features were of an ordinary, not to say mean cast, had that character
+ of intelligence which education gives to the most homely face; and his
+ manners were so easy and disembarrassed, as plainly showed a complete
+ acquaintance with society, as well as the habit of mingling with it in the
+ higher stages. The alarm which he had evidently shown at Peveril&rsquo;s answer,
+ was but momentary; for he almost instantly replied, with a smile, &ldquo;I
+ promise you, sir, that you are in no dangerous company; for
+ notwithstanding my fish dinner, I am much disposed to trifle with some of
+ your savoury mess, if you will indulge me so far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril accordingly reinforced the stranger&rsquo;s trencher with what remained
+ of the bacon and eggs, and saw him swallow a mouthful or two with apparent
+ relish; but presently after began to dally with his knife and fork, like
+ one whose appetite was satiated; and then took a long draught of the black
+ jack, and handed his platter to the large mastiff dog, who, attracted by
+ the smell of the dinner, had sat down before him for some time, licking
+ his chops, and following with his eye every morsel which the guest raised
+ to his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, my poor fellow,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;thou hast had no fish, and needest this
+ supernumerary trencher-load more than I do. I cannot withstand thy mute
+ supplication any longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dog answered these courtesies by a civil shake of the tail, while he
+ gobbled up what was assigned him by the stranger&rsquo;s benevolence, in the
+ greater haste, that he heard his mistress&rsquo;s voice at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is the canary, gentlemen,&rdquo; said the landlady; &ldquo;and the goodman has
+ set off the mill, to come to wait on you himself. He always does so, when
+ company drink wine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That he may come in for the host&rsquo;s, that is, for the lion&rsquo;s share,&rdquo; said
+ the stranger, looking at Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The shot is mine,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and if mine host will share it, I will
+ willingly bestow another quart on him, and on you, sir. I never break old
+ customs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These sounds caught the ear of Gaffer Whitecraft, who had entered the
+ room, a strapping specimen of his robust trade, prepared to play the
+ civil, or the surly host, as his company should be acceptable or
+ otherwise. At Julian&rsquo;s invitation, he doffed his dusty bonnet&mdash;brushed
+ from his sleeve the looser particles of his professional dust&mdash;and
+ sitting down on the end of a bench, about a yard from the table, filled a
+ glass of canary, and drank to his guests, and &ldquo;especially to this noble
+ gentleman,&rdquo; indicating Peveril, who had ordered the canary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian returned the courtesy by drinking his health, and asking what news
+ were about in the country?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nought, sir, I hears on nought, except this Plot, as they call it, that
+ they are pursuing the Papishers about; but it brings water to my mill, as
+ the saying is. Between expresses hurrying hither and thither, and guards
+ and prisoners riding to and again, and the custom of the neighbours, that
+ come to speak over the news of an evening, nightly, I may say, instead of
+ once a week, why, the spigot is in use, gentlemen, and your land thrives;
+ and then I, serving as constable, and being a known Protestant, I have
+ tapped, I may venture to say, it may be ten stands of ale extraordinary,
+ besides a reasonable sale of wine for a country corner. Heaven make us
+ thankful, and keep all good Protestants from Plot and Popery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can easily conceive, my friend,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;that curiosity is a
+ passion which runs naturally to the alehouse; and that anger, and
+ jealousy, and fear, are all of them thirsty passions, and great consumers
+ of home-brewed. But I am a perfect stranger in these parts; and I would
+ willingly learn, from a sensible man like you, a little of this same Plot,
+ of which men speak so much, and appear to know so little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Learn a little of it?&mdash;Why, it is the most horrible&mdash;the most
+ damnable, bloodthirsty beast of a Plot&mdash;But hold, hold, my good
+ master; I hope, in the first place, you believe there is a Plot; for,
+ otherwise, the Justice must have a word with you, as sure as my name is
+ John Whitecraft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall not need,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;for I assure you, mine host, I believe
+ in the Plot as freely and fully as a man can believe in anything he cannot
+ understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid that anybody should pretend to understand it,&rdquo; said the
+ implicit constable; &ldquo;for his worship the Justice says it is a mile beyond
+ him; and he be as deep as most of them. But men may believe, though they
+ do not understand; and that is what the Romanists say themselves. But this
+ I am sure of, it makes a rare stirring time for justices, and witnesses,
+ and constables.&mdash;So here&rsquo;s to your health again, gentlemen, in a cup
+ of neat canary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, John Whitecraft,&rdquo; said the wife, &ldquo;do not you demean yourself
+ by naming witnesses along with justices and constables. All the world
+ knows how they come by their money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but all the world knows that they <i>do</i> come by it, dame; and
+ that is a great comfort. They rustle in their canonical silks, and swagger
+ in their buff and scarlet, who but they?&mdash;Ay, ay, the cursed fox
+ thrives&mdash;and not so cursed neither. Is there not Doctor Titus Oates,
+ the saviour of the nation&mdash;does he not live at Whitehall, and eat off
+ plate, and have a pension of thousands a year, for what I know? and is he
+ not to be Bishop of Litchfield, so soon as Dr. Doddrum dies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I hope Dr. Doddrum&rsquo;s reverence will live these twenty years; and I
+ dare say I am the first that ever wished such a wish,&rdquo; said the hostess.
+ &ldquo;I do not understand these doings, not I; and if a hundred Jesuits came to
+ hold a consult at my house, as they did at the White Horse Tavern, I
+ should think it quite out of the line of business to bear witness against
+ them, provided they drank well, and paid their score.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very true, dame,&rdquo; said her elder guest; &ldquo;that is what I call keeping a
+ good publican conscience; and so I will pay my score presently, and be
+ jogging on my way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, on his part, also demanded a reckoning, and discharged it so
+ liberally, that the miller flourished his hat as he bowed, and the hostess
+ courtesied down to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horses of both guests were brought forth; and they mounted, in order
+ to depart in company. The host and hostess stood in the doorway, to see
+ them depart. The landlord proffered a stirrup-cup to the elder guest,
+ while the landlady offered Peveril a glass from her own peculiar bottle.
+ For this purpose, she mounted on the horse-block, with flask and glass in
+ hand; so that it was easy for the departing guest, although on horse-back,
+ to return the courtesy in the most approved manner, namely, by throwing
+ his arm over his landlady&rsquo;s shoulder, and saluting her at parting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Whitecraft did not decline this familiarity; for there is no room for
+ traversing upon a horse-block, and the hands which might have served her
+ for resistance, were occupied with glass and bottle&mdash;matters too
+ precious to be thrown away in such a struggle. Apparently, however, she
+ had something else in her head; for as, after a brief affectation of
+ reluctance, she permitted Peveril&rsquo;s face to approach hers, she whispered
+ in his ear, &ldquo;Beware of trepans!&rdquo;&mdash;an awful intimation, which, in
+ those days of distrust, suspicion, and treachery, was as effectual in
+ interdicting free and social intercourse, as the advertisement of
+ &ldquo;man-traps and spring-guns,&rdquo; to protect an orchard. Pressing her hand, in
+ intimation that he comprehended her hint, she shook his warmly in return,
+ and bade God speed him. There was a cloud on John Whitecraft&rsquo;s brow; nor
+ did his final farewell sound half so cordial as that which had been spoken
+ within doors. But then Peveril reflected, that the same guest is not
+ always equally acceptable to landlord and landlady; and unconscious of
+ having done anything to excite the miller&rsquo;s displeasure, he pursued his
+ journey without thinking farther of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was a little surprised, and not altogether pleased, to find that
+ his new acquaintance held the same road with him. He had many reasons for
+ wishing to travel alone; and the hostess&rsquo;s caution still rung in his ears.
+ If this man, possessed of so much shrewdness as his countenance and
+ conversation intimated, versatile, as he had occasion to remark, and
+ disguised beneath his condition, should prove, as was likely, to be a
+ concealed Jesuit or seminary-priest, travelling upon their great task of
+ the conversion of England, and rooting out of the Northern heresy,&mdash;a
+ more dangerous companion, for a person in his own circumstances, could
+ hardly be imagined; since keeping society with him might seem to authorise
+ whatever reports had been spread concerning the attachment of his family
+ to the Catholic cause. At the same time, it was very difficult, without
+ actual rudeness, to shake off the company of one who seemed so determined,
+ whether spoken to or not, to remain alongside of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril tried the experiment of riding slow; but his companion, determined
+ not to drop him, slackened his pace, so as to keep close by him. Julian
+ then spurred his horse to a full trot; and was soon satisfied, that the
+ stranger, notwithstanding the meanness of his appearance, was so much
+ better mounted than himself, as to render vain any thought of outriding
+ him. He pulled up his horse to a more reasonable pace, therefore, in a
+ sort of despair. Upon his doing so, his companion, who had been hitherto
+ silent, observed, that Peveril was not so well qualified to try speed upon
+ the road, as he would have been had he abode by his first bargain of
+ horse-flesh that morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril assented dryly, but observed, that the animal would serve his
+ immediate purpose, though he feared it would render him indifferent
+ company for a person better mounted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means,&rdquo; answered his civil companion; &ldquo;I am one of those who have
+ travelled so much, as to be accustomed to make my journey at any rate of
+ motion which may be most agreeable to my company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril made no reply to this polite intimation, being too sincere to
+ tender the thanks which, in courtesy, were the proper answer.&mdash;A
+ second pause ensued, which was broken by Julian asking the stranger
+ whether their roads were likely to lie long together in the same
+ direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; said the stranger, smiling, &ldquo;unless I knew which way you
+ were travelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am uncertain how far I shall go to-night,&rdquo; said Julian, willingly
+ misunderstanding the purport of the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so am I,&rdquo; replied the stranger; &ldquo;but though my horse goes better than
+ yours, I think it will be wise to spare him; and in case our road
+ continues to lie the same way, we are likely to sup, as we have dined
+ together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian made no answer whatever to this round intimation, but continued to
+ ride on, turning, in his own mind, whether it would not be wisest to come
+ to a distinct understanding with his pertinacious attendant, and to
+ explain, in so many words, that it was his pleasure to travel alone. But,
+ besides that the sort of acquaintance which they had formed during dinner,
+ rendered him unwilling to be directly uncivil towards a person of
+ gentleman-like manners, he had also to consider that he might very
+ possibly be mistaken in this man&rsquo;s character and purpose; in which case,
+ the cynically refusing the society of a sound Protestant, would afford as
+ pregnant matter of suspicion, as travelling in company with a disguised
+ Jesuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After brief reflection, therefore, he resolved to endure the encumbrance
+ of the stranger&rsquo;s society, until a fair opportunity should occur to rid
+ himself of it; and, in the meantime, to act with as much caution as he
+ possibly could, in any communication that might take place between them;
+ for Dame Whitecraft&rsquo;s parting caution still rang anxiously in his ears,
+ and the consequences of his own arrest upon suspicion, must deprive him of
+ every opportunity of serving his father, or the countess, or Major
+ Bridgenorth, upon whose interest, also, he had promised himself to keep an
+ eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he revolved these things in his mind, they had journeyed several
+ miles without speaking; and now entered upon a more waste country, and
+ worse roads, than they had hitherto found, being, in fact, approaching the
+ more hilly district of Derbyshire. In travelling on a very stony and
+ uneven lane, Julian&rsquo;s horse repeatedly stumbled; and, had he not been
+ supported by the rider&rsquo;s judicious use of the bridle, must at length
+ certainly have fallen under him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These are times which crave wary riding, sir,&rdquo; said his companion; &ldquo;and
+ by your seat in the saddle, and your hand on the rein, you seem to
+ understand it to be so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have been long a horseman, sir,&rdquo; answered Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And long a traveller, too, sir, I should suppose; since by the great
+ caution you observe, you seem to think the human tongue requires a curb,
+ as well as the horse&rsquo;s jaws.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wiser men than I have been of opinion,&rdquo; answered Peveril, &ldquo;that it were a
+ part of prudence to be silent, when men have little or nothing to say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot approve of their opinion,&rdquo; answered the stranger. &ldquo;All knowledge
+ is gained by communication, either with the dead, through books, or, more
+ pleasingly, through the conversation of the living. The <i>deaf and dumb</i>,
+ alone, are excluded from improvement; and surely their situation is not so
+ enviable that we should imitate them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this illustration, which awakened a startling echo in Peveril&rsquo;s bosom,
+ the young man looked hard at his companion; but in the composed
+ countenance, and calm blue eye, he read no consciousness of a farther
+ meaning than the words immediately and directly implied. He paused a
+ moment, and then answered, &ldquo;You seem to be a person, sir, of shrewd
+ apprehension; and I should have thought it might have occurred to you,
+ that in the present suspicious times, men may, without censure, avoid
+ communication with strangers. You know not me; and to me you are totally
+ unknown. There is not room for much discourse between us, without
+ trespassing on the general topics of the day, which carry in them seeds of
+ quarrel between friends, much more betwixt strangers. At any other time,
+ the society of an intelligent companion would have been most acceptable
+ upon my solitary ride; but at present&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At present!&rdquo; said the other, interrupting him. &ldquo;You are like the old
+ Romans, who held that <i>hostis</i> meant both a stranger and an enemy. I
+ will therefore be no longer a stranger. My name is Ganlesse&mdash;by
+ profession I am a Roman Catholic priest&mdash;I am travelling here in
+ dread of my life&mdash;and I am very glad to have you for a companion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you for the information with all my heart,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;and to
+ avail myself of it to the uttermost, I must beg you to ride forward, or
+ lag behind, or take a side-path, at your own pleasure; for as I am no
+ Catholic, and travel upon business of high concernment, I am exposed both
+ to risk and delay, and even to danger, by keeping such suspicious company.
+ And so, Master Ganlesse, keep your own pace, and I will keep the contrary;
+ for I beg leave to forbear your company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Peveril spoke thus, he pulled up his horse, and made a full stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger burst out a-laughing. &ldquo;What!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you forbear my
+ company for a trifle of danger? Saint Anthony! How the warm blood of the
+ Cavaliers is chilled in the young men of the present day! This young
+ gallant, now, has a father, I warrant, who has endured as many adventures
+ for hunting priests, as a knight-errant for distressed damsels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This raillery avails nothing, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril. &ldquo;I must request you
+ will keep your own way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My way is yours,&rdquo; said the pertinacious Master Ganlesse, as he called
+ himself; &ldquo;and we will both travel the safer, that we journey in company. I
+ have the receipt of fern-seed, man, and walk invisible. Besides, you would
+ not have me quit you in this lane, where there is no turn to right or
+ left?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril moved on, desirous to avoid open violence&mdash;for which the
+ indifferent tone of the traveller, indeed, afforded no apt pretext&mdash;yet
+ highly disliking his company, and determined to take the first opportunity
+ to rid himself of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger proceeded at the same pace with him, keeping cautiously on
+ his bridle hand, as if to secure that advantage in case of a struggle. But
+ his language did not intimate the least apprehension. &ldquo;You do me wrong,&rdquo;
+ he said to Peveril, &ldquo;and you equally wrong yourself. You are uncertain
+ where to lodge to-night&mdash;trust to my guidance. Here is an ancient
+ hall, within four miles, with an old knightly Pantaloon for its lord&mdash;an
+ all-be-ruffed Dame Barbara for the lady gay&mdash;a Jesuit, in a butler&rsquo;s
+ habit, to say grace&mdash;an old tale of Edgehill and Worster fights to
+ relish a cold venison pasty, and a flask of claret mantled with cobwebs&mdash;a
+ bed for you in the priest&rsquo;s hiding-hole&mdash;and, for aught I know,
+ pretty Mistress Betty, the dairy-maid, to make it ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This has no charms for me, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril, who, in spite of himself,
+ could not but be amused with the ready sketch which the stranger gave of
+ many an old mansion in Cheshire and Derbyshire, where the owners retained
+ the ancient faith of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, I see I cannot charm you in this way,&rdquo; continued his companion; &ldquo;I
+ must strike another key. I am no longer Ganlesse, the seminary priest, but
+ (changing his tone, and snuffling in the nose) Simon Canter, a poor
+ preacher of the Word, who travels this way to call sinners to repentance;
+ and to strengthen, and to edify, and to fructify among the scattered
+ remnant who hold fast the truth.&mdash;What say you to this, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I admire your versatility, sir, and could be entertained with it at
+ another time. At present sincerity is more in request.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sincerity!&rdquo; said the stranger;&mdash;&ldquo;a child&rsquo;s whistle, with but two
+ notes in it&mdash;yea, yea, and nay, nay. Why, man, the very Quakers have
+ renounced it, and have got in its stead a gallant recorder, called
+ Hypocrisy, that is somewhat like Sincerity in form, but of much greater
+ compass, and combines the whole gamut. Come, be ruled&mdash;be a disciple
+ of Simon Canter for the evening, and we will leave the old tumble-down
+ castle of the knight aforesaid, on the left hand, for a new brick-built
+ mansion, erected by an eminent salt-boiler from Namptwich, who expects the
+ said Simon to make a strong spiritual pickle for the preservation of a
+ soul somewhat corrupted by the evil communications of this wicked world.
+ What say you? He has two daughters&mdash;brighter eyes never beamed under
+ a pinched hood; and for myself, I think there is more fire in those who
+ live only to love and to devotion, than in your court beauties, whose
+ hearts are running on twenty follies besides. You know not the pleasure of
+ being conscience-keeper to a pretty precisian, who in one breath repeats
+ her foibles, and in the next confesses her passion. Perhaps, though, you
+ may have known such in your day? Come, sir, it grows too dark to see your
+ blushes; but I am sure they are burning on your cheek.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You take great freedom, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril, as they now approached the
+ end of the lane, where it opened on a broad common; &ldquo;and you seem rather
+ to count more on my forbearance, than you have room to do with safety. We
+ are now nearly free of the lane which has made us companions for this late
+ half hour. To avoid your farther company, I will take the turn to the
+ left, upon that common; and if you follow me, it shall be at your peril.
+ Observe, I am well armed; and you will fight at odds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not at odds,&rdquo; returned the provoking stranger, &ldquo;while I have my brown
+ jennet, with which I can ride round and round you at pleasure; and this
+ text, of a handful in length (showing a pistol which he drew from his
+ bosom), which discharges very convincing doctrine on the pressure of a
+ forefinger, and is apt to equalise all odds, as you call them, of youth
+ and strength. Let there be no strife between us, however&mdash;the moor
+ lies before us&mdash;choose your path on it&mdash;I take the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish you good night, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril to the stranger. &ldquo;I ask your
+ forgiveness, if I have misconstrued you in anything; but the times are
+ perilous, and a man&rsquo;s life may depend on the society in which he travels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said the stranger; &ldquo;but in your case, the danger is already
+ undergone, and you should seek to counteract it. You have travelled in my
+ company long enough to devise a handsome branch of the Popish Plot. How
+ will you look, when you see come forth, in comely folio form, The
+ Narrative of Simon Canter, otherwise called Richard Ganlesse, concerning
+ the horrid Popish Conspiracy for the Murder of the King, and Massacre of
+ all Protestants, as given on oath to the Honourable House of Commons;
+ setting forth, how far Julian Peveril, younger of Martindale Castle, is
+ concerned in carrying on the same&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, sir? What mean you?&rdquo; said Peveril, much startled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, sir,&rdquo; replied his companion, &ldquo;do not interrupt my title-page. Now
+ that Oates and Bedloe have drawn the great prizes, the subordinate
+ discoverers get little but by the sale of their Narrative; and Janeway,
+ Newman, Simmons, and every bookseller of them, will tell you that the
+ title is half the narrative. Mine shall therefore set forth the various
+ schemes you have communicated to me, of landing ten thousand soldiers from
+ the Isle of Man upon the coast of Lancashire; and marching into Wales, to
+ join the ten thousand pilgrims who are to be shipped from Spain; and so
+ completing the destruction of the Protestant religion, and of the devoted
+ city of London. Truly, I think such a Narrative, well spiced with a few
+ horrors, and published <i>cum privilegio parliamenti</i>, might, though
+ the market be somewhat overstocked, be still worth some twenty or thirty
+ pieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You seem to know me, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;and if so, I think I may fairly
+ ask you your purpose in thus bearing me company, and the meaning of all
+ this rhapsody. If it be mere banter, I can endure it within proper limit;
+ although it is uncivil on the part of a stranger. If you have any farther
+ purpose, speak it out; I am not to be trifled with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good, now,&rdquo; said the stranger, laughing, &ldquo;into what an unprofitable chafe
+ you have put yourself! An Italian <i>fuoruscito</i>, when he desires a
+ parley with you, takes aim from behind a wall, with his long gun, and
+ prefaces his conference with <i>Posso tirare</i>. So does your man-of-war
+ fire a gun across the bows of a Hansmogan Indiaman, just to bring her to;
+ and so do I show Master Julian Peveril, that, if I were one of the
+ honourable society of witnesses and informers, with whom his imagination
+ has associated me for these two hours past, he is as much within my danger
+ now, as what he is ever likely to be.&rdquo; Then, suddenly changing his tone to
+ serious, which was in general ironical, he added, &ldquo;Young man, when the
+ pestilence is diffused through the air of a city, it is in vain men would
+ avoid the disease, by seeking solitude, and shunning the company of their
+ fellow-sufferers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what, then, consists their safety?&rdquo; said Peveril, willing to
+ ascertain, if possible, the drift of his companion&rsquo;s purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In following the counsels of wise physicians;&rdquo; such was the stranger&rsquo;s
+ answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And as such,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;you offer me your advice?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, young man,&rdquo; said the stranger haughtily, &ldquo;I see no reason I
+ should do so.&mdash;I am not,&rdquo; he added, in his former tone, &ldquo;your fee&rsquo;d
+ physician&mdash;I offer no advice&mdash;I only say it would be wise that
+ you sought it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And from whom, or where, can I obtain it?&rdquo; said Peveril. &ldquo;I wander in
+ this country like one in a dream; so much a few months have changed it.
+ Men who formerly occupied themselves with their own affairs, are now
+ swallowed up in matters of state policy; and those tremble under the
+ apprehension of some strange and sudden convulsion of empire, who were
+ formerly only occupied by the fear of going to bed supperless. And to sum
+ up the matter, I meet a stranger apparently well acquainted with my name
+ and concerns, who first attaches himself to me, whether I will or no; and
+ then refuses me an explanation of his business, while he menaces me with
+ the strangest accusations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had I meant such infamy,&rdquo; said the stranger, &ldquo;believe me, I had not given
+ you the thread of my intrigue. But be wise, and come one with me. There
+ is, hard by, a small inn, where, if you can take a stranger&rsquo;s warrant for
+ it, we shall sleep in perfect security.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet, you yourself,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;but now were anxious to avoid
+ observation; and in that case, how can you protect me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! I did but silence that tattling landlady, in the way in which such
+ people are most readily hushed; and for Topham, and his brace of night
+ owls, they must hawk at other and lesser game than I should prove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril could not help admiring the easy and confident indifference with
+ which the stranger seemed to assume a superiority to all the circumstances
+ of danger around him; and after hastily considering the matter with
+ himself, came to the resolution to keep company with him for this night at
+ least; and to learn, if possible, who he really was, and to what party in
+ the estate he was attached. The boldness and freedom of his talk seemed
+ almost inconsistent with his following the perilous, though at that time
+ the gainful trade of an informer. No doubt, such persons assumed every
+ appearance which could insinuate them into the confidence of their
+ destined victims; but Julian thought he discovered in this man&rsquo;s manner, a
+ wild and reckless frankness, which he could not but connect with the idea
+ of sincerity in the present case. He therefore answered, after a moment&rsquo;s
+ recollection, &ldquo;I embrace your proposal, sir; although, by doing so, I am
+ reposing a sudden, and perhaps an unwary, confidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what am I, then, reposing in you?&rdquo; said the stranger. &ldquo;Is not our
+ confidence mutual?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No; much the contrary. I know nothing of you whatever&mdash;you have
+ named me; and, knowing me to be Julian Peveril, know you may travel with
+ me in perfect security.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil I do!&rdquo; answered his companion. &ldquo;I travel in the same security
+ as with a lighted petard, which I may expect to explode every moment. Are
+ you not the son of Peveril of the Peak, with whose name Prelacy and Popery
+ are so closely allied, that no old woman of either sex in Derbyshire
+ concludes her prayer without a petition to be freed from all three? And do
+ you not come from the Popish Countess of Derby, bringing, for aught I
+ know, a whole army of Manxmen in your pocket, with full complement of
+ arms, ammunition, baggage, and a train of field artillery?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not very likely I should be so poorly mounted,&rdquo; said Julian,
+ laughing, &ldquo;if I had such a weight to carry. But lead on, sir. I see I must
+ wait for your confidence, till you think proper to confer it; for you are
+ already so well acquainted with my affairs, that I have nothing to offer
+ you in exchange for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Allons</i>, then,&rdquo; said his companion; &ldquo;give your horse the spur, and
+ raise the curb rein, lest he measure the ground with his nose instead of
+ his paces. We are not now more than a furlong or two from the place of
+ entertainment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They mended their pace accordingly, and soon arrived at the small solitary
+ inn which the traveller had mentioned. When its light began to twinkle
+ before them, the stranger, as if recollecting something he had forgotten,
+ &ldquo;By the way, you must have a name to pass by; for it may be ill travelling
+ under your own, as the fellow who keeps this house is an old Cromwellian.
+ What will you call yourself?&mdash;My name is&mdash;for the present&mdash;Ganlesse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no occasion to assume a name at all,&rdquo; answered Julian. &ldquo;I do not
+ incline to use a borrowed one, especially as I may meet with some one who
+ knows my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will call you Julian, then,&rdquo; said Master Ganlesse; &ldquo;for Peveril will
+ smell, in the nostrils of mine host, of idolatry, conspiracy, Smithfield
+ faggots, fish on Fridays, the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey, and the
+ fire of purgatory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke thus, they alighted under the great broad-branched oak tree,
+ that served to canopy the ale-bench, which, at an earlier hour, had
+ groaned under the weight of a frequent conclave of rustic politicians.
+ Ganlesse, as he dismounted, whistled in a particularly shrill note, and
+ was answered from within the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He was a fellow in a peasant&rsquo;s garb;
+ Yet one could censure you a woodcock&rsquo;s carving.
+ Like any courtier at the ordinary.
+ &mdash;THE ORDINARY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The person who appeared at the door of the little inn to receive Ganlesse,
+ as we mentioned in our last chapter, sung, as he came forward, this scrap
+ of an old ballad,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good even to you, Diccon;
+ And how have you sped;
+ Bring you the bonny bride
+ To banquet and bed?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ To which Ganlesse answered, in the same tone and tune,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Content thee, kind Robin;
+ He need little care,
+ Who brings home a fat buck
+ Instead of a hare.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have missed your blow, then?&rdquo; said the other, in reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you I have not,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse; &ldquo;but you will think of nought
+ but your own thriving occupation&mdash;May the plague that belongs to it
+ stick to it! though it hath been the making of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A man must live, Diccon Ganlesse,&rdquo; said the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said Ganlesse, &ldquo;bid my friend welcome, for my sake. Hast
+ thou got any supper?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reeking like a sacrifice&mdash;Chaubert has done his best. That fellow is
+ a treasure! give him a farthing candle, and he will cook a good supper out
+ of it.&mdash;Come in, sir. My friend&rsquo;s friend is welcome, as we say in my
+ country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must have our horses looked to first,&rdquo; said Peveril, who began to be
+ considerably uncertain about the character of his companions&mdash;&ldquo;that
+ done, I am for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ganlesse gave a second whistle; a groom appeared, who took charge of both
+ their horses, and they themselves entered the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ordinary room of a poor inn seemed to have undergone some alterations,
+ to render it fit for company of a higher description. There were a
+ beaufet, a couch, and one or two other pieces of furniture, of a style
+ inconsistent with the appearance of the place. The tablecloth, which was
+ already laid, was of the finest damask; and the spoons, forks, &amp;c.,
+ were of silver. Peveril looked at this apparatus with some surprise; and
+ again turning his eyes attentively upon his travelling companion,
+ Ganlesse, he could not help discovering (by the aid of imagination,
+ perhaps), that though insignificant in person, plain in features, and
+ dressed like one in indigence, there lurked still about his person and
+ manners, that indefinable ease of manner which belongs only to men of
+ birth and quality, or to those who are in the constant habit of
+ frequenting the best company. His companion, whom he called Will Smith,
+ although tall and rather good-looking, besides being much better dressed,
+ had not, nevertheless, exactly the same ease of demeanour; and was obliged
+ to make up for the want, by an additional proportion of assurance. Who
+ these two persons could be, Peveril could not attempt even to form a
+ guess. There was nothing for it but to watch their manner and
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After speaking a moment in whispers, Smith said to his companion, &ldquo;We must
+ go look after our nags for ten minutes, and allow Chaubert to do his
+ office.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will not he appear, and minister before us, then?&rdquo; said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! he?&mdash;he shift a trencher&mdash;he hand a cup?&mdash;No, you
+ forget whom you speak of. Such an order were enough to make him fall on
+ his own sword&mdash;he is already on the borders of despair, because no
+ craw-fish are to be had.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack-a day!&rdquo; replied Ganlesse. &ldquo;Heaven forbid I should add to such a
+ calamity! To stable, then, and see we how our steeds eat their provender,
+ while ours is getting ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They adjourned to the stable accordingly, which, though a poor one, had
+ been hastily supplied with whatever was necessary for the accommodation of
+ four excellent horses; one of which, that from which Ganlesse was just
+ dismounted, the groom we have mentioned was cleaning and dressing by the
+ light of a huge wax-candle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am still so far Catholic,&rdquo; said Ganlesse, laughing, as he saw that
+ Peveril noticed this piece of extravagance. &ldquo;My horse is my saint, and I
+ dedicate a candle to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Without asking so great a favour for mine, which I see standing behind
+ yonder old hen-coop,&rdquo; replied Peveril, &ldquo;I will at least relieve him of his
+ saddle and bridle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave him to the lad of the inn,&rdquo; said Smith; &ldquo;he is not worthy of any
+ other person&rsquo;s handling; and I promise you, if you slip a single buckle,
+ you will so flavour of that stable duty, that you might as well eat
+ roast-beef as ragouts, for any relish you will have of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I love roast-beef as well as ragouts, at any time,&rdquo; said Peveril,
+ adjusting himself to a task which every young man should know how to
+ perform when need is; &ldquo;and my horse, though it be but a sorry jade, will
+ champ better on hay and corn, than on an iron bit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was unsaddling his horse, and shaking down some litter for the
+ poor wearied animal, he heard Smith observe to Ganlesse,&mdash;&ldquo;By my
+ faith, Dick, thou hast fallen into poor Slender&rsquo;s blunder; missed Anne
+ Page, and brought us a great lubberly post-master&rsquo;s boy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, he will hear thee,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse; &ldquo;there are reasons for all
+ things&mdash;it is well as it is. But, prithee, tell thy fellow to help
+ the youngster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; replied Smith, &ldquo;d&rsquo;ye think I am mad?&mdash;Ask Tom Beacon&mdash;Tom
+ of Newmarket&mdash;Tom of ten thousand, to touch such a four-legged brute
+ as that?&mdash;Why, he would turn me away on the spot&mdash;discard me,
+ i&rsquo;faith. It was all he would do to take in hand your own, my good friend;
+ and if you consider him not the better, you are like to stand groom to him
+ yourself to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Will,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse, &ldquo;I will say that for thee, thou hast a
+ set of the most useless, scoundrelly, insolent vermin about thee, that
+ ever ate up a poor gentleman&rsquo;s revenues.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Useless? I deny it,&rdquo; replied Smith. &ldquo;Every one of my fellows does
+ something or other so exquisitely, that it were sin to make him do
+ anything else&mdash;it is your jacks-of-all-trades who are masters of
+ none.&mdash;But hark to Chaubert&rsquo;s signal. The coxcomb is twangling it on
+ the lute, to the tune of <i>Eveillez-vous, belle endormie</i>.&mdash;Come,
+ Master What d&rsquo;ye call (addressing Peveril),&mdash;get ye some water, and
+ wash this filthy witness from your hand, as Betterton says in the play;
+ for Chaubert&rsquo;s cookery is like Friar Bacon&rsquo;s Head&mdash;time is&mdash;time
+ was&mdash;time will soon be no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and scarce allowing Julian time to dip his hands in a bucket,
+ and dry them on a horse-cloth, he hurried him from the stable back to the
+ supper-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here all was prepared for their meal, with an epicurean delicacy, which
+ rather belonged to the saloon of a palace, than the cabin in which it was
+ displayed. Four dishes of silver, with covers of the same metal, smoked on
+ the table; and three seats were placed for the company. Beside the lower
+ end of the board, was a small side-table, to answer the purpose of what is
+ now called a dumb waiter; on which several flasks reared their tall,
+ stately, and swan-like crests, above glasses and rummers. Clean covers
+ were also placed within reach; and a small travelling-case of morocco,
+ hooped with silver, displayed a number of bottles, containing the most
+ approved sauces that culinary ingenuity had then invented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith, who occupied the lower seat, and seemed to act as president of the
+ feast, motioned the two travellers to take their places and begin. &ldquo;I
+ would not stay a grace-time,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to save a whole nation from
+ perdition. We could bring no chauffettes with any convenience; and even
+ Chaubert is nothing, unless his dishes are tasted in the very moment of
+ projection. Come, uncover, and let us see what he has done for us.&mdash;Hum!&mdash;ha!&mdash;ay&mdash;squab-pigeons&mdash;wildfowl&mdash;young
+ chickens&mdash;venison cutlets&mdash;and a space in the centre, wet, alas!
+ by a gentle tear from Chaubert&rsquo;s eye, where should have been the <i>soupe
+ aux écrevisses</i>. The zeal of that poor fellow is ill repaid by his
+ paltry ten louis per month.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mere trifle,&rdquo; said Ganlesse; &ldquo;but, like yourself, Will, he serves a
+ generous master.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repast now commenced; and Julian, though he had seen his young friend
+ the Earl of Derby, and other gallants, affect a considerable degree of
+ interest and skill in the science of the kitchen, and was not himself
+ either an enemy or a stranger to the pleasures of a good table, found
+ that, on the present occasion, he was a mere novice. Both his companions,
+ but Smith in especial, seemed to consider that they were now engaged in
+ the only true business of life; and weighed all its minutiæ with a
+ proportional degree of accuracy. To carve the morsel in the most delicate
+ manner&mdash;and to apportion the proper seasoning with the accuracy of
+ the chemist,&mdash;to be aware, exactly, of the order in which one dish
+ should succeed another, and to do plentiful justice to all&mdash;was a
+ minuteness of science to which Julian had hitherto been a stranger. Smith
+ accordingly treated him as a mere novice in epicurism, cautioning him to
+ eat his soup before the bouilli, and to forget the Manx custom of bolting
+ the boiled meat before the broth, as if Cutlar MacCulloch and all his
+ whingers were at the door. Peveril took the hint in good part, and the
+ entertainment proceeded with animation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Ganlesse paused, and declared the supper exquisite. &ldquo;But, my
+ friend Smith,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;are your wines curious? When you brought all
+ that trash of plates and trumpery into Derbyshire, I hope you did not
+ leave us at the mercy of the strong ale of the shire, as thick and muddy
+ as the squires who drink it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I not know that <i>you</i> were to meet me, Dick Ganlesse?&rdquo; answered
+ their host. &ldquo;And can you suspect me of such an omission? It is true, you
+ must make champagne and claret serve, for my burgundy would not bear
+ travelling. But if you have a fancy for sherry, or Vin de Cahors, I have a
+ notion Chaubert and Tom Beacon have brought some for their own drinking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps the gentlemen would not care to impart,&rdquo; said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, fie!&mdash;anything in the way of civility,&rdquo; replied Smith. &ldquo;They
+ are, in truth, the best-natured lads alive, when treated respectfully; so
+ that if you would prefer&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By no means,&rdquo; said Ganlesse&mdash;&ldquo;a glass of champagne will serve in a
+ scarcity of better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;The cork shall start obsequious to my thumb.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ said Smith; and as he spoke, he untwisted the wire, and the cork struck
+ the roof of the cabin. Each guest took a large rummer glass of the
+ sparkling beverage, which Peveril had judgment and experience enough to
+ pronounce exquisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your hand, sir,&rdquo; said Smith; &ldquo;it is the first word of sense you
+ have spoken this evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wisdom, sir,&rdquo; replied Peveril, &ldquo;is like the best ware in the pedlar&rsquo;s
+ pack, which he never produces till he knows his customer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sharp as mustard,&rdquo; returned the <i>bon vivant</i>; &ldquo;but be wise, most
+ noble pedlar, and take another rummer of this same flask, which you see I
+ have held in an oblique position for your service&mdash;not permitting it
+ to retrograde to the perpendicular. Nay, take it off before the bubble
+ bursts on the rim, and the zest is gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do me honour, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril, taking the second glass. &ldquo;I wish
+ you a better office than that of my cup-bearer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You cannot wish Will Smith one more congenial to his nature,&rdquo; said
+ Ganlesse. &ldquo;Others have a selfish delight in the objects of sense, Will
+ thrives, and is happy by imparting them to his friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better help men to pleasures than to pains, Master Ganlesse,&rdquo; answered
+ Smith, somewhat angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, wrath thee not, Will,&rdquo; said Ganlesse; &ldquo;and speak no words in haste,
+ lest you may have cause to repent at leisure. Do I blame thy social
+ concern for the pleasures of others? Why, man, thou dost therein most
+ philosophically multiply thine own. A man has but one throat, and can but
+ eat, with his best efforts, some five or six times a day; but thou dinest
+ with every friend that cuts a capon, and art quaffing wine in other men&rsquo;s
+ gullets, from morning to night&mdash;<i>et sic de cæteris</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friend Ganlesse,&rdquo; returned Smith, &ldquo;I prithee beware&mdash;thou knowest I
+ can cut gullets as well as tickle them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Will,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse carelessly; &ldquo;I think I have seen thee wave
+ thy whinyard at the throat of a Hogan-Mogan&mdash;a Netherlandish weasand,
+ which expanded only on thy natural and mortal objects of aversion,&mdash;Dutch
+ cheese, rye-bread, pickled herring, onion, and Geneva.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For pity&rsquo;s sake, forbear the description!&rdquo; said Smith; &ldquo;thy words
+ overpower the perfumes, and flavour the apartment like a dish of
+ salmagundi!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But for an epiglottis like mine,&rdquo; continued Ganlesse, &ldquo;down which the
+ most delicate morsels are washed by such claret as thou art now pouring
+ out, thou couldst not, in thy bitterest mood, wish a worse fate than to be
+ necklaced somewhat tight by a pair of white arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By a tenpenny cord,&rdquo; answered Smith; &ldquo;but not till you were dead; that
+ thereafter you be presently embowelled, you being yet alive; that your
+ head be then severed from your body, and your body divided into quarters,
+ to be disposed of at his Majesty&rsquo;s pleasure.&mdash;How like you that,
+ Master Richard Ganlesse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E&rsquo;en as you like the thoughts of dining on bran-bread and milk-porridge&mdash;an
+ extremity which you trust never to be reduced to. But all this shall not
+ prevent me from pledging you in a cup of sound claret.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the claret circulated, the glee of the company increased; and Smith
+ placing the dishes which had been made use of upon the side-table, stamped
+ with his foot on the floor, and the table sinking down a trap, again rose,
+ loaded with olives, sliced neat&rsquo;s tongue, caviare, and other provocatives
+ for the circulation of the bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Will,&rdquo; said Ganlesse, &ldquo;thou art a more complete mechanist than I
+ suspected; thou hast brought thy scene-shifting inventions to Derbyshire
+ in marvellously short time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A rope and pullies can be easily come by,&rdquo; answered Will; &ldquo;and with a saw
+ and a plane, I can manage that business in half a day. I love the knack of
+ clean and secret conveyance&mdash;thou knowest it was the foundation of my
+ fortunes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be the wreck of them too, Will,&rdquo; replied his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, Diccon,&rdquo; answered Will; &ldquo;but, <i>dum vivimus, vivamus</i>,&mdash;that
+ is my motto; and therewith I present you a brimmer to the health of the
+ fair lady you wot of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let it come, Will,&rdquo; replied his friend; and the flask circulated briskly
+ from hand to hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did not think it prudent to seem a check on their festivity, as he
+ hoped in its progress something might occur to enable him to judge of the
+ character and purposes of his companions. But he watched them in vain.
+ Their conversation was animated and lively, and often bore reference to
+ the literature of the period, in which the elder seemed particularly well
+ skilled. They also talked freely of the Court, and of that numerous class
+ of gallants who were then described as &ldquo;men of wit and pleasure about
+ town;&rdquo; and to which it seemed probable they themselves appertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the universal topic of the Popish Plot was started; upon which
+ Ganlesse and Smith seemed to entertain the most opposite opinions.
+ Ganlesse, if he did not maintain the authority of Oates in its utmost
+ extent, contended, that at least it was confirmed in a great measure by
+ the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey, and the letters written by Coleman
+ to the confessor of the French King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much more noise, and less power of reasoning, Will Smith hesitated
+ not to ridicule and run down the whole discovery, as one of the wildest
+ and most causeless alarms which had ever been sounded in the ears of a
+ credulous public. &ldquo;I shall never forget,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Sir Godfrey&rsquo;s most
+ original funeral. Two bouncing parsons, well armed with sword and pistol,
+ mounted the pulpit, to secure the third fellow who preached from being
+ murdered in the face of the congregation. Three parsons in one pulpit&mdash;three
+ suns in one hemisphere&mdash;no wonder men stood aghast at such a
+ prodigy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What then, Will,&rdquo; answered his companion, &ldquo;you are one of those who think
+ the good knight murdered himself, in order to give credit to the Plot?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith, not I,&rdquo; said the other; &ldquo;but some true blue Protestant might
+ do the job for him, in order to give the thing a better colour.&mdash;I
+ will be judged by our silent friend, whether that be not the most feasible
+ solution of the whole.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray you, pardon me, gentlemen,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;I am but just landed in
+ England, and am a stranger to the particular circumstances which have
+ thrown the nation into such a ferment. It would be the highest degree of
+ assurance in me to give my opinion betwixt gentlemen who argue the matter
+ so ably; besides, to say truth, I confess weariness&mdash;your wine is
+ more potent than I expected, or I have drunk more of it than I meant to
+ do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, if an hour&rsquo;s nap will refresh you,&rdquo; said the elder of the strangers,
+ &ldquo;make no ceremony with us. Your bed&mdash;all we can offer as such&mdash;is
+ that old-fashioned Dutch-built sofa, as the last new phrase calls it. We
+ shall be early stirrers tomorrow morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that we may be so,&rdquo; said Smith, &ldquo;I propose that we do sit up all this
+ night&mdash;I hate lying rough, and detest a pallet-bed. So have at
+ another flask, and the newest lampoon to help it out&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Now a plague of their votes
+ Upon Papists and Plots,
+ And be d&mdash;d Doctor Oates.
+ Tol de rol.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but our Puritanic host,&rdquo; said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have him in my pocket, man&mdash;his eyes, ears, nose, and tongue,&rdquo;
+ answered his boon companion, &ldquo;are all in my possession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that case, when you give him back his eyes and nose, I pray you keep
+ his ears and tongue,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse. &ldquo;Seeing and smelling are organs
+ sufficient for such a knave&mdash;to hear and tell are things he should
+ have no manner of pretensions to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I grant you it were well done,&rdquo; answered Smith; &ldquo;but it were a robbing of
+ the hangman and the pillory; and I am an honest fellow, who would give
+ Dun[*] and the devil his due. So,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;All joy to great Cæsar,
+ Long life, love, and pleasure;
+ May the King live for ever,
+ &lsquo;Tis no matter for us, boys.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Dun was the hangman of the day at Tyburn. He was successor of
+ Gregory Brunden, who was by many believed to be the same who
+ dropped the axe upon Charles I., though others were suspected of
+ being the actual regicide.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While this Bacchanalian scene proceeded, Julian had wrapt himself closely
+ in his cloak, and stretched himself on the couch which they had shown him.
+ He looked towards the table he had left&mdash;the tapers seemed to become
+ hazy and dim as he gazed&mdash;he heard the sound of voices, but they
+ ceased to convey any impression to his understanding; and in a few
+ minutes, he was faster asleep than he had ever been in the whole course of
+ his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Gordon then his bugle blew,
+ And said, awa, awa;
+ The House of Rhodes is all on flame,
+ I hauld it time to ga&rsquo;.
+ &mdash;OLD BALLAD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Julian awaked the next morning, all was still and vacant in the
+ apartment. The rising sun, which shone through the half-closed shutters,
+ showed some relics of the last night&rsquo;s banquet, which his confused and
+ throbbing head assured him had been carried into a debauch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without being much of a boon companion, Julian, like other young men of
+ the time, was not in the habit of shunning wine, which was then used in
+ considerable quantities; and he could not help being surprised, that the
+ few cups he had drunk over night had produced on his frame the effects of
+ excess. He rose up, adjusted his dress, and sought in the apartment for
+ water to perform his morning ablutions, but without success. Wine there
+ was on the table; and beside it one stool stood, and another lay, as if
+ thrown down in the heedless riot of the evening. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he thought to
+ himself, &ldquo;the wine must have been very powerful, which rendered me
+ insensible to the noise my companions must have made ere they finished
+ their carouse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With momentary suspicion he examined his weapons, and the packet which he
+ had received from the Countess, and kept in a secret pocket of his upper
+ coat, bound close about his person. All was safe; and the very operation
+ reminded him of the duties which lay before him. He left the apartment
+ where they had supped, and went into another, wretched enough, where, in a
+ truckle-bed, were stretched two bodies, covered with a rug, the heads
+ belonging to which were amicably deposited upon the same truss of hay. The
+ one was the black shock-head of the groom; the other, graced with a long
+ thrum nightcap, showed a grizzled pate, and a grave caricatured
+ countenance, which the hook-nose and lantern-jaws proclaimed to belong to
+ the Gallic minister of good cheer, whose praises he had heard sung forth
+ on the preceding evening. These worthies seemed to have slumbered in the
+ arms of Bacchus as well as of Morpheus, for there were broken flasks on
+ the floor; and their deep snoring alone showed that they were alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bent upon resuming his journey, as duty and expedience alike dictated,
+ Julian next descended the trap-stair, and essayed a door at the bottom of
+ the steps. It was fastened within. He called&mdash;no answer was returned.
+ It must be, he thought, the apartment of the revellers, now probably
+ sleeping as soundly as their dependants still slumbered, and as he himself
+ had done a few minutes before. Should he awake them?&mdash;To what
+ purpose? They were men with whom accident had involved him against his own
+ will; and situated as he was, he thought it wise to take the earliest
+ opportunity of breaking off from society which was suspicious, and might
+ be perilous. Ruminating thus, he essayed another door, which admitted him
+ to a bedroom, where lay another harmonious slumberer. The mean utensils,
+ pewter measures, empty cans and casks, with which this room was lumbered,
+ proclaimed it that of the host, who slept surrounded by his professional
+ implements of hospitality and stock-in-trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This discovery relieved Peveril from some delicate embarrassment which he
+ had formerly entertained. He put upon the table a piece of money,
+ sufficient, as he judged, to pay his share of the preceding night&rsquo;s
+ reckoning; not caring to be indebted for his entertainment to the
+ strangers, whom he was leaving without the formality of an adieu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His conscience cleared of this gentleman-like scruple, Peveril proceeded
+ with a light heart, though somewhat a dizzy head, to the stable, which he
+ easily recognised among a few other paltry outhouses. His horse, refreshed
+ with rest, and perhaps not unmindful of his services the evening before,
+ neighed as his master entered the stable; and Peveril accepted the sound
+ as an omen of a prosperous journey. He paid the augury with a sieveful of
+ corn; and, while his palfrey profited by his attention, walked into the
+ fresh air to cool his heated blood, and consider what course he should
+ pursue in order to reach the Castle of Martindale before sunset. His
+ acquaintance with the country in general gave him confidence that he could
+ not have greatly deviated from the nearest road; and with his horse in
+ good condition, he conceived he might easily reach Martindale before
+ nightfall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having adjusted his route in his mind, he returned into the stable to
+ prepare his steed for the journey, and soon led him into the ruinous
+ courtyard of the inn, bridled, saddled, and ready to be mounted. But as
+ Peveril&rsquo;s hand was upon the mane, and his left foot in the stirrup, a hand
+ touched his cloak, and the voice of Ganlesse said, &ldquo;What, Master Peveril,
+ is this your foreign breeding? or have you learned in France to take
+ French leave of your friends?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian started like a guilty thing, although a moment&rsquo;s reflection assured
+ him that he was neither wrong nor in danger. &ldquo;I cared not to disturb you,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;although I did come as far as the door of your chamber. I
+ supposed your friend and you might require, after our last night&rsquo;s revel,
+ rather sleep than ceremony. I left my own bed, though a rough one, with
+ more reluctance than usual; and as my occasions oblige me to be an early
+ traveller, I thought it best to depart without leave-taking. I have left a
+ token for mine host on the table of his apartment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was unnecessary,&rdquo; said Ganlesse; &ldquo;the rascal is already overpaid.&mdash;But
+ are you not rather premature in your purpose of departing? My mind tells
+ me that Master Julian Peveril had better proceed with me to London, than
+ turn aside for any purpose whatever. You may see already that I am no
+ ordinary person, but a master-spirit of the time. For the cuckoo I travel
+ with, and whom I indulge in his prodigal follies, he also has his uses.
+ But you are a different cast; and I not only would serve you, but even
+ wish you, to be my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian gazed on this singular person when he spoke. We have already said
+ his figure was mean and slight, with very ordinary and unmarked features,
+ unless we were to distinguish the lightnings of a keen grey eye, which
+ corresponded in its careless and prideful glance, with the haughty
+ superiority which the stranger assumed in his conversation. It was not
+ till after a momentary pause that Julian replied, &ldquo;Can you wonder, sir,
+ that in my circumstances&mdash;if they are indeed known to you so well as
+ they seem&mdash;I should decline unnecessary confidence on the affairs of
+ moment which have called me hither, or refuse the company of a stranger,
+ who assigns no reason for desiring mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it as you list, young man,&rdquo; answered Ganlesse; &ldquo;only remember
+ hereafter, you had a fair offer&mdash;it is not every one to whom I would
+ have made it. If we should meet hereafter, on other, and on worse terms,
+ impute it to yourself and not to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand not your threat,&rdquo; answered Peveril, &ldquo;If a threat be indeed
+ implied. I have done no evil&mdash;I feel no apprehension&mdash;and I
+ cannot, in common sense, conceive why I should suffer for refusing my
+ confidence to a stranger, who seems to require that I should submit me
+ blindfold to his guidance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, then, Sir Julian of the Peak,&mdash;that may soon be,&rdquo; said the
+ stranger, removing the hand which he had as yet left carelessly on the
+ horse&rsquo;s bridle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How mean you by that phrase?&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and why apply such a title to
+ me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger smiled, and only answered, &ldquo;Here our conference ends. The way
+ is before you. You will find it longer and rougher than that by which I
+ would have guided you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Ganlesse turned his back and walked toward the house. On the
+ threshold he turned about once more, and seeing that Peveril had not yet
+ moved from the spot, he again smiled and beckoned to him; but Julian,
+ recalled by that sign to recollection, spurred his horse and set forward
+ on his journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long ere his local acquaintance with the country enabled him to
+ regain the road to Martindale, from which he had diverged on the preceding
+ evening for about two miles. But the roads, or rather the paths, of this
+ wild country, so much satirised by their native poet, Cotton, were so
+ complicated in some places, so difficult to be traced in others, and so
+ unfit for hasty travelling in almost all, that in spite of Julian&rsquo;s utmost
+ exertions, and though he made no longer delay upon the journey than was
+ necessary to bait his horse at a small hamlet through which he passed at
+ noon, it was nightfall ere he reached an eminence, from which, an hour
+ sooner, the battlements of Martindale Castle would have been visible; and
+ where, when they were hid in night, their situation was indicated by a
+ light constantly maintained in a lofty tower, called the Warder&rsquo;s Turret;
+ and which domestic beacon had acquired, through all the neighbourhood, the
+ name of Peveril&rsquo;s Polestar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was regularly kindled at curfew toll, and supplied with as much wood
+ and charcoal as maintained the light till sunrise; and at no period was
+ the ceremonial omitted, saving during the space intervening between the
+ death of a Lord of the Castle and his interment. When this last event had
+ taken place, the nightly beacon was rekindled with some ceremony, and
+ continued till fate called the successor to sleep with his fathers. It is
+ not known from which circumstance the practice of maintaining this light
+ originally sprung. Tradition spoke of it doubtfully. Some thought it was
+ the signal of general hospitality, which, in ancient times, guided the
+ wandering knight, or the weary pilgrim, to rest and refreshment. Others
+ spoke of it as a &ldquo;love-lighted watchfire,&rdquo; by which the provident anxiety
+ of a former lady of Martindale guided her husband homeward through the
+ terrors of a midnight storm. The less favourable construction of
+ unfriendly neighbours of the dissenting persuasion, ascribed the origin
+ and continuance of this practice to the assuming pride of the family of
+ Peveril, who thereby chose to intimate their ancient <i>suzerainté</i>
+ over the whole country, in the manner of the admiral who carries the
+ lantern in the poop, for the guidance of the fleet. And in the former
+ times, our old friend, Master Solsgrace, dealt from the pulpit many a hard
+ hit against Sir Geoffrey, as he that had raised his horn, and set up his
+ candlestick on high. Certain it is, that all the Peverils, from father to
+ son, had been especially attentive to the maintenance of this custom, as
+ something intimately connected with the dignity of their family; and in
+ the hands of Sir Geoffrey, the observance was not likely to be omitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the polar-star of Peveril had continued to beam more or less
+ brightly during all the vicissitudes of the Civil War; and glimmered,
+ however faintly, during the subsequent period of Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s
+ depression. But he was often heard to say, and sometimes to swear, that
+ while there was a perch of woodland left to the estate, the old
+ beacon-grate should not lack replenishing. All this his son Julian well
+ knew; and therefore it was with no ordinary feelings of surprise and
+ anxiety, that, looking in the direction of the Castle, he perceived that
+ the light was not visible. He halted&mdash;rubbed his eyes&mdash;shifted
+ his position&mdash;and endeavoured, in vain, to persuade himself that he
+ had mistaken the point from which the polar-star of his house was visible,
+ or that some newly intervening obstacle, the growth of a plantation,
+ perhaps, or the erection of some building, intercepted the light of the
+ beacon. But a moment&rsquo;s reflection assured him, that from the high and free
+ situation which Martindale Castle bore in reference to the surrounding
+ country, this could not have taken place; and the inference necessarily
+ forced itself upon his mind, that Sir Geoffrey, his father, was either
+ deceased, or that the family must have been disturbed by some strange
+ calamity, under the pressure of which, their wonted custom and solemn
+ usage had been neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of undefinable apprehension, young Peveril now struck
+ the spurs into his jaded steed, and forcing him down the broken and steep
+ path, at a pace which set safety at defiance, he arrived at the village of
+ Martindale-Moultrassie, eagerly desirous to ascertain the cause of this
+ ominous eclipse. The street, through which his tired horse paced slow and
+ reluctantly, was now deserted and empty; and scarcely a candle twinkled
+ from a casement, except from the latticed window of the little inn, called
+ the Peveril Arms, from which a broad light shone, and several voices were
+ heard in rude festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the door of this inn, the jaded palfrey, guided by the instinct or
+ experience which makes a hackney well acquainted with the outside of a
+ house of entertainment, made so sudden and determined a pause, that,
+ notwithstanding his haste, the rider thought it best to dismount,
+ expecting to be readily supplied with a fresh horse by Roger Raine, the
+ landlord, the ancient dependant of his family. He also wished to relive
+ his anxiety, by inquiring concerning the state of things at the Castle,
+ when he was surprised to hear, bursting from the taproom of the loyal old
+ host, a well-known song of the Commonwealth time, which some puritanical
+ wag had written in reprehension of the Cavaliers, and their dissolute
+ courses, and in which his father came in for a lash of the satirist.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Ye thought in the world there was no power to tame ye,
+ So you tippled and drabb&rsquo;d till the saints overcame ye;
+ &lsquo;Forsooth,&rsquo; and &lsquo;Ne&rsquo;er stir,&rsquo; sir, have vanquish&rsquo;d &lsquo;G&mdash; d&mdash;n me,&rsquo;
+ Which nobody can deny.
+
+ There was bluff old Sir Geoffrey loved brandy and mum well,
+ And to see a beer-glass turned over the thumb well;
+ But he fled like the wind, before Fairfax and Cromwell,
+ Which nobody can deny.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Some strange revolution, Julian was aware, must have taken place, both in
+ the village and in the Castle, ere these sounds of unseemly insult could
+ have been poured forth in the very inn which was decorated with the
+ armorial bearings of his family; and not knowing how far it might be
+ advisable to intrude on these unfriendly revellers, without the power of
+ repelling or chastising their insolence, he led his horse to a back-door,
+ which as he recollected, communicated with the landlord&rsquo;s apartment,
+ having determined to make private inquiry of him concerning the state of
+ matters at the Castle. He knocked repeatedly, and as often called on Roger
+ Raine with an earnest but stifled voice. At length a female voice replied
+ by the usual inquiry, &ldquo;Who is there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is I, Dame Raine&mdash;I, Julian Peveril&mdash;tell your husband to
+ come to me presently.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack, and a well-a-day, Master Julian, if it be really you&mdash;you are
+ to know my poor goodman has gone where he can come to no one; but,
+ doubtless, we shall all go to him, as Matthew Chamberlain says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is dead, then?&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;I am extremely sorry&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead six months and more, Master Julian; and let me tell you, it is a
+ long time for a lone woman, as Matt Chamberlain says.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, do you or your chamberlain undo the door. I want a fresh horse; and
+ I want to know how things are at the Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Castle&mdash;lack-a-day!&mdash;Chamberlain&mdash;Matthew Chamberlain&mdash;I
+ say, Matt!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matt Chamberlain apparently was at no great distance, for he presently
+ answered her call; and Peveril, as he stood close to the door, could hear
+ them whispering to each other, and distinguish in a great measure what
+ they said. And here it may be noticed, that Dame Raine, accustomed to
+ submit to the authority of old Roger, who vindicated as well the husband&rsquo;s
+ domestic prerogative, as that of the monarch in the state, had, when left
+ a buxom widow, been so far incommoded by the exercise of her newly
+ acquired independence, that she had recourse, upon all occasions, to the
+ advice of Matt Chamberlain; and as Matt began no longer to go slipshod,
+ and in a red nightcap, but wore Spanish shoes, and a high-crowned beaver
+ (at least of a Sunday), and moreover was called Master Matthew by his
+ fellow-servants, the neighbours in the village argued a speedy change of
+ the name of the sign-post; nay, perhaps, of the very sign itself, for
+ Matthew was a bit of a Puritan, and no friend to Peveril of the Peak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now counsel me, an you be a man, Matt Chamberlain,&rdquo; said Widow Raine;
+ &ldquo;for never stir, if here be not Master Julian&rsquo;s own self, and he wants a
+ horse, and what not, and all as if things were as they wont to be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, dame, an ye will walk by my counsel,&rdquo; said the Chamberlain, &ldquo;e&rsquo;en
+ shake him off&mdash;let him be jogging while his boots are green. This is
+ no world for folks to scald their fingers in other folks&rsquo; broth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that is well spoken, truly,&rdquo; answered Dame Raine; &ldquo;but then look you,
+ Matt, we have eaten their bread, and, as my poor goodman used to say&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay, dame, they that walk by the counsel of the dead, shall have
+ none of the living; and so you may do as you list; but if you will walk by
+ mine, drop latch, and draw bolt, and bid him seek quarters farther&mdash;that
+ is my counsel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I desire nothing of you, sirrah,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;save but to know how Sir
+ Geoffrey and his lady do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lack-a-day!&mdash;lack-a-day!&rdquo; in a tone of sympathy, was the only answer
+ he received from the landlady; and the conversation betwixt her and her
+ chamberlain was resumed, but in a tone too low to be overheard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Matt Chamberlain spoke aloud, and with a tone of authority: &ldquo;We
+ undo no doors at this time of night, for it is against the Justices&rsquo;
+ orders, and might cost us our licence; and for the Castle, the road up to
+ it lies before you, and I think you know it as well as we do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I know you,&rdquo; said Peveril, remounting his wearied horse, &ldquo;for an
+ ungrateful churl, whom, on the first opportunity, I will assuredly cudgel
+ to a mummy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this menace Matthew made no reply, and Peveril presently heard him
+ leave the apartment, after a few earnest words betwixt him and his
+ mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatient at this delay, and at the evil omen implied in these people&rsquo;s
+ conversation and deportment, Peveril, after some vain spurring of his
+ horse, which positively refused to move a step farther, dismounted once
+ more, and was about to pursue his journey on foot, notwithstanding the
+ extreme disadvantage under which the high riding-boots of the period laid
+ those who attempted to walk with such encumbrances, when he was stopped by
+ a gentle call from the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her counsellor was no sooner gone, than the good-nature and habitual
+ veneration of the dame for the house of Peveril, and perhaps some fear for
+ her counsellor&rsquo;s bones, induced her to open the casement, and cry, but in
+ a low and timid tone, &ldquo;Hist! hist! Master Julian&mdash;be you gone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not yet, dame,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;though it seems my stay is unwelcome.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but good young master, it is because men counsel so differently; for
+ here was my poor old Roger Raine would have thought the chimney corner too
+ cold for you; and here is Matt Chamberlain thinks the cold courtyard is
+ warm enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind that, dame,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;do but only tell me what has
+ happened at Martindale Castle? I see the beacon is extinguished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it in troth?&mdash;ay, like enough&mdash;then good Sir Geoffrey has
+ gone to heaven with my old Roger Raine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sacred Heaven!&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril; &ldquo;when was my father taken ill?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never as I knows of,&rdquo; said the dame; &ldquo;but, about three hours since,
+ arrived a party at the Castle, with buff-coats and bandoleers, and one of
+ the Parliament&rsquo;s folks, like in Oliver&rsquo;s time. My old Roger Raine would
+ have shut the gates of the inn against them, but he is in the churchyard,
+ and Matt says it is against law; and so they came in and refreshed men and
+ horses, and sent for Master Bridgenorth, that is at Moultrassie Hall even
+ now; and so they went up to the Castle, and there was a fray, it is like,
+ as the old Knight was no man to take napping, as poor Roger Raine used to
+ say. Always the officers had the best on&rsquo;t; and reason there is, since
+ they had the law of their side, as our Matthew says. But since the
+ pole-star of the Castle is out, as your honour says, why, doubtless, the
+ old gentleman is dead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious Heaven!&mdash;Dear dame, for love or gold, let me have a horse
+ to make for the Castle!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Castle?&rdquo; said the dame; &ldquo;the Roundheads, as my poor Roger called
+ them, will kill you as they have killed your father! Better creep into the
+ woodhouse, and I will send Bett with a blanket and some supper&mdash;Or
+ stay&mdash;my old Dobbin stands in the little stable beside the hencoop&mdash;e&rsquo;en
+ take him, and make the best of your way out of the country, for there is
+ no safety here for you. Hear what songs some of them are singing at the
+ tap!&mdash;so take Dobbin, and do not forget to leave your own horse
+ instead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril waited to hear no farther, only, that just as he turned to go off
+ to the stable, the compassionate female was heard to exclaim&mdash;&ldquo;O
+ Lord! what will Matthew Chamberlain say!&rdquo; but instantly added, &ldquo;Let him
+ say what he will, I may dispose of what&rsquo;s my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the haste of a double-fee&rsquo;d hostler did Julian exchange the
+ equipments of his jaded brute with poor Dobbin, who stood quietly tugging
+ at his rackful of hay, without dreaming of the business which was that
+ night destined for him. Notwithstanding the darkness of the place, Julian
+ succeeded marvellous quickly in preparing for his journey; and leaving his
+ own horse to find its way to Dobbin&rsquo;s rack by instinct, he leaped upon his
+ new acquisition, and spurred him sharply against the hill, which rises
+ steeply from the village to the Castle. Dobbin, little accustomed to such
+ exertions, snorted, panted, and trotted as briskly as he could, until at
+ length he brought his rider before the entrance-gate of his father&rsquo;s
+ ancient seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon was now rising, but the portal was hidden from its beams, being
+ situated, as we have mentioned elsewhere, in a deep recess betwixt two
+ large flanking towers. Peveril dismounted, turned his horse loose, and
+ advanced to the gate, which, contrary to his expectation, he found open.
+ He entered the large courtyard; and could then perceive that lights yet
+ twinkled in the lower part of the building, although he had not before
+ observed them, owing to the height of the outward walls. The main door, or
+ great hall-gate, as it was called, was, since the partially decayed state
+ of the family, seldom opened, save on occasions of particular ceremony. A
+ smaller postern door served the purpose of ordinary entrance; and to that
+ Julian now repaired. This also was open&mdash;a circumstance which would
+ of itself have alarmed him, had he not already had so many causes for
+ apprehension. His heart sunk within him as he turned to the left, through
+ a small outward hall, towards the great parlour, which the family usually
+ occupied as a sitting apartment; and his alarm became still greater, when,
+ on a nearer approach, he heard proceeding from thence the murmur of
+ several voices. He threw the door of the apartment wide; and the sight
+ which was thus displayed, warranted all the evil bodings which he had
+ entertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of him stood the old Knight, whose arms were strongly secured,
+ over the elbows, by a leathern belt drawn tight round them, and made fast
+ behind; two ruffianly-looking men, apparently his guards, had hold of his
+ doublet. The scabbard-less sword which lay on the floor, and the empty
+ sheath which hung by Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s side, showed the stout old Cavalier
+ had not been reduced to this state of bondage without an attempt at
+ resistance. Two or three persons, having their backs turned towards
+ Julian, sat round a table, and appeared engaged in writing&mdash;the
+ voices which he had heard were theirs, as they murmured to each other.
+ Lady Peveril&mdash;the emblem of death, so pallid was her countenance&mdash;stood
+ at the distance of a yard or two from her husband, upon whom her eyes were
+ fixed with an intenseness of gaze, like that of one who looks her last on
+ the object which she loves the best. She was the first to perceive Julian;
+ and she exclaimed, &ldquo;Merciful Heaven!&mdash;my son!&mdash;the misery of our
+ house is complete!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son!&rdquo; echoed Sir Geoffrey, starting from the sullen state of
+ dejection, and swearing a deep oath&mdash;&ldquo;thou art come in the right
+ time, Julian. Strike me one good blow&mdash;cleave me that traitorous
+ thief from the crown to the brisket! and that done, I care not what comes
+ next.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight of his father&rsquo;s situation made the son forget the inequality of
+ the contest which he was about to provoke.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0497m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0497m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0497.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villains,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;unhand him!&rdquo; and rushing on the guards with his
+ drawn sword, compelled them to let go Sir Geoffrey, and stand on their own
+ defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, thus far liberated, shouted to his lady. &ldquo;Undo the belt,
+ dame, and we will have three good blows for it yet&mdash;they must fight
+ well that beat both father and son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one of those men who had started up from the writing-table when the
+ fray commenced, prevented Lady Peveril from rendering her husband this
+ assistance; while another easily mastered the hampered Knight, though not
+ without receiving several severe kicks from his heavy boots&mdash;his
+ condition permitting him no other mode of defence. A third, who saw that
+ Julian, young, active, and animated with the fury of a son who fights for
+ his parents, was compelling the two guards to give ground, seized on his
+ collar, and attempted to master his sword. Suddenly dropping that weapon,
+ and snatching one of his pistols, Julian fired it at the head of the
+ person by whom he was thus assailed. He did not drop, but, staggering back
+ as if he had received a severe blow, showed Peveril, as he sunk into a
+ chair, the features of old Bridgenorth, blackened with the explosion,
+ which had even set fire to a part of his grey hair. A cry of astonishment
+ escaped from Julian; and in the alarm and horror of the moment, he was
+ easily secured and disarmed by those with whom he had been at first
+ engaged.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0299m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0299m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0299.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heed it not, Julian,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;heed it not, my brave boy&mdash;that
+ shot has balanced all accounts!&mdash;but how&mdash;what the devil&mdash;he
+ lives!&mdash;Was your pistol loaded with chaff? or has the foul fiend
+ given him proof against lead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was some reason for Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s surprise, since, as he spoke,
+ Major Bridgenorth collected himself&mdash;sat up in the chair as one who
+ recovers from a stunning blow&mdash;then rose, and wiping with his
+ handkerchief the marks of the explosion from his face, he approached
+ Julian, and said, in the same cold unaltered tone in which he usually
+ expressed himself, &ldquo;Young man, you have reason to bless God, who has this
+ day saved you from the commission of a great crime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bless the devil, ye crop-eared knave!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;for
+ nothing less than the father of all fanatics saved your brains from being
+ blown about like the rinsings of Beelzebub&rsquo;s porridge pot!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I have already told you, that
+ with you I will hold no argument; for to you I am not accountable for any
+ of my actions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the lady, making a strong effort to speak, and
+ to speak with calmness, &ldquo;whatever revenge your Christian state of
+ conscience may permit you to take on my husband&mdash;I&mdash;I, who have
+ some right to experience compassion at your hand, for most sincerely did I
+ compassionate you when the hand of Heaven was heavy on you&mdash;I implore
+ you not to involve my son in our common ruin!&mdash;Let the destruction of
+ the father and mother, with the ruin of our ancient house, satisfy your
+ resentment for any wrong which you have ever received at my husband&rsquo;s
+ hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your peace, housewife,&rdquo; said the Knight, &ldquo;you speak like a fool, and
+ meddle with what concerns you not.&mdash;Wrong at <i>my</i> hand? The
+ cowardly knave has ever had but even too much right. Had I cudgelled the
+ cur soundly when he first bayed at me, the cowardly mongrel had been now
+ crouching at my feet, instead of flying at my throat. But if I get through
+ this action, as I have got through worse weather, I will pay off old
+ scores, as far as tough crab-tree and cold iron will bear me out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;if the birth you boast of has made
+ you blind to better principles, it might have at least taught you
+ civility. What do you complain of? I am a magistrate; and I execute a
+ warrant, addressed to me by the first authority in that state. I am a
+ creditor also of yours; and law arms me with powers to recover my own
+ property from the hands of an improvident debtor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You a magistrate!&rdquo; said the Knight; &ldquo;much such a magistrate as Noll was a
+ monarch. Your heart is up, I warrant, because you have the King&rsquo;s pardon;
+ and are replaced on the bench, forsooth, to persecute the poor Papist.
+ There was never turmoil in the state, but knaves had their vantage by it&mdash;never
+ pot boiled, but the scum was cast uppermost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, my dearest husband,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, &ldquo;cease this wild
+ talk! It can but incense Master Bridgenorth, who might otherwise consider,
+ that in common charity&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Incense him!&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, impatiently interrupting her;
+ &ldquo;God&rsquo;s-death, madam, you will drive me mad! Have you lived so long in this
+ world, and yet expect consideration and charity from an old starved wolf
+ like that? And if he had it, do you think that I, or you, madam, as my
+ wife, are subjects for his charity?&mdash;Julian, my poor fellow, I am
+ sorry thou hast come so unluckily, since thy petronel was not better
+ loaded&mdash;but thy credit is lost for ever as a marksman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This angry colloquy passed so rapidly on all sides, that Julian, scarce
+ recovered from the extremity of astonishment with which he was overwhelmed
+ at finding himself suddenly plunged into a situation of such extremity,
+ had no time to consider in what way he could most effectually act for the
+ succour of his parents. To speak to Bridgenorth fair seemed the more
+ prudent course; but to this his pride could hardly stoop; yet he forced
+ himself to say, with as much calmness as he could assume,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth, since you act as a magistrate, I desire to be treated
+ according to the laws of England; and demand to know of what we are
+ accused, and by whose authority we are arrested?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is another howlet for ye!&rdquo; exclaimed the impetuous old Knight; &ldquo;his
+ mother speaks to a Puritan of charity; and thou must talk of law to a
+ round-headed rebel, with a wannion to you! What warrant hath he, think ye,
+ beyond the Parliament&rsquo;s or the devil&rsquo;s?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who speaks of the Parliament?&rdquo; said a person entering, whom Peveril
+ recognised as the official person whom he had before seen at the
+ horse-dealer&rsquo;s, and who now bustled in with all the conscious dignity of
+ plenary authority,&mdash;&ldquo;Who talks of the Parliament?&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;I
+ promise you, enough has been found in this house to convict twenty
+ plotters&mdash;Here be arms, and that good store. Bring them in, Captain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The very same,&rdquo; exclaimed the Captain, approaching, &ldquo;which I mention in
+ my printed Narrative of Information, lodged before the Honourable House of
+ Commons; they were commissioned from old Vander Huys of Rotterdam, by
+ orders of Don John of Austria, for the service of the Jesuits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by this light,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;they are the pikes, musketoons,
+ and pistols, that have been hidden in the garret ever since Naseby fight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here,&rdquo; said the Captain&rsquo;s yoke-fellow, Everett, &ldquo;are proper priest&rsquo;s
+ trappings&mdash;antiphoners, and missals, and copes, I warrant you&mdash;ay,
+ and proper pictures, too, for Papists to mutter and bow over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now plague on thy snuffling whine,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; &ldquo;here is a rascal
+ will swear my grandmother&rsquo;s old farthingale to be priest&rsquo;s vestments, and
+ the story book of Owlenspiegel a Popish missal!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how&rsquo;s this, Master Bridgenorth?&rdquo; said Topham, addressing the
+ magistrate; &ldquo;your honour has been as busy as we have; and you have caught
+ another knave while we recovered these toys.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think, sir,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;if you look into your warrant, which, if I
+ mistake not, names the persons whom you are directed to arrest, you will
+ find you have not title to apprehend me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the officer, puffing with importance, &ldquo;I do not know who you
+ are; but I would you were the best man in England, that I might teach you
+ the respect due to the warrant of the House. Sir, there steps not the man
+ within the British seas, but I will arrest him on authority of this bit of
+ parchment; and I do arrest you accordingly.&mdash;What do you accuse him
+ of, gentlemen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dangerfield swaggered forward, and peeping under Julian&rsquo;s hat, &ldquo;Stop my
+ vital breath,&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;but I have seen you before, my friend, an I
+ could but think where; but my memory is not worth a bean, since I have
+ been obliged to use it so much of late, in the behalf of the poor state.
+ But I do know the fellow; and I have seen him amongst the Papists&mdash;,
+ I&rsquo;ll take that on my assured damnation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Captain Dangerfield,&rdquo; said the Captain&rsquo;s smoother, but more
+ dangerous associate,&mdash;&ldquo;verily, it is the same youth whom we saw at
+ the horse-merchant&rsquo;s yesterday; and we had matter against him then, only
+ Master Topham did not desire us to bring it out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye may bring out what ye will against him now,&rdquo; said Topham, &ldquo;for he hath
+ blasphemed the warrant of the House. I think ye said ye saw him
+ somewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, verily,&rdquo; said Everett, &ldquo;I have seen him amongst the seminary pupils
+ at Saint Omer&rsquo;s&mdash;he was who but he with the regents there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Master Everett, collect yourself,&rdquo; said Topham; &ldquo;for as I think, you
+ said you saw him at a consult of the Jesuits in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was I said so, Master Topham,&rdquo; said the undaunted Dangerfield; &ldquo;and
+ mine is the tongue that will swear it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Master Topham,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;you may suspend farther inquiry
+ at present, as it doth but fatigue and perplex the memory of the King&rsquo;s
+ witnesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are wrong, Master Bridgenorth&mdash;clearly wrong. It doth but keep
+ them in wind&mdash;only breathes them like greyhounds before a coursing
+ match.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, with his usual indifference of manner; &ldquo;but
+ at present this youth must stand committed upon a warrant, which I will
+ presently sign, of having assaulted me while in discharge of my duty as a
+ magistrate, for the rescue of a person legally attached. Did you not hear
+ the report of a pistol?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will swear to it,&rdquo; said Everett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said Dangerfield. &ldquo;While we were making search in the cellar, I
+ heard something very like a pistol-shot; but I conceived it to be the
+ drawing of a long-corked bottle of sack, to see whether there were any
+ Popish relics in the inside on&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pistol-shot!&rdquo; exclaimed Topham; &ldquo;here might have been a second Sir
+ Edmondsbury Godfrey&rsquo;s matter.&mdash;Oh, thou real spawn of the red old
+ dragon! for he too would have resisted the House&rsquo;s warrant, had we not
+ taken him something at unawares.&mdash;Master Bridgenorth, you are a
+ judicious magistrate, and a worthy servant of the state&mdash;I would we
+ had many such sound Protestant justices. Shall I have this young fellow
+ away with his parents&mdash;what think you?&mdash;or will you keep him for
+ re-examination?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Lady Peveril, in spite of her husband&rsquo;s efforts
+ to interrupt her, &ldquo;for God&rsquo;s sake, if ever you knew what it was to love
+ one of the many children you have lost, or her who is now left to you, do
+ not pursue your vengeance to the blood of my poor boy! I will forgive you
+ all the rest&mdash;all the distress you have wrought&mdash;all the yet
+ greater misery with which you threaten us; but do not be extreme with one
+ who never can have offended you! Believe, that if your ears are shut
+ against the cry of a despairing mother, those which are open to the
+ complaint of all who sorrow, will hear my petition and your answer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agony of mind and of voice with which Lady Peveril uttered these
+ words, seemed to thrill through all present, though most of them were but
+ too much inured to such scenes. Every one was silent, when, ceasing to
+ speak, she fixed on Bridgenorth her eyes, glistening with tears, with the
+ eager anxiety of one whose life or death seemed to depend upon the answer
+ to be returned. Even Bridgenorth&rsquo;s inflexibility seemed to be shaken; and
+ his voice was tremulous, as he answered, &ldquo;Madam, I would to God I had the
+ present means of relieving your great distress, otherwise than by
+ recommending to you a reliance upon Providence; and that you take heed to
+ your spirit, that it murmur not under this crook in your lot. For me, I am
+ but as a rod in the hand of the strong man, which smites not of itself,
+ but because it is wielded by the arm of him who holds the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even as I and my black rod are guided by the Commons of England,&rdquo; said
+ Master Topham, who seemed marvellously pleased with the illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian now thought it time to say something in his own behalf; and he
+ endeavoured to temper it with as much composure as it was possible for him
+ to assume. &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I neither dispute your
+ authority, nor this gentleman&rsquo;s warrant&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do not?&rdquo; said Topham. &ldquo;Oh, ho, master youngster, I thought we should
+ bring you to your senses presently!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, if you so will it, Master Topham,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;thus it shall
+ be. You shall set out with early day, taking you, towards London, the
+ persons of Sir Geoffrey and Lady Peveril; and that they may travel
+ according to their quality, you will allow them their coach, sufficiently
+ guarded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will travel with them myself,&rdquo; said Topham; &ldquo;for these rough Derbyshire
+ roads are no easy riding; and my very eyes are weary with looking on these
+ bleak hills. In the coach I can sleep as sound as if I were in the House,
+ and Master Bodderbrains on his legs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will become you so to take your ease, Master Topham,&rdquo; answered
+ Bridgenorth. &ldquo;For this youth, I will take him under my charge, and bring
+ him up myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may not be answerable for that, worthy Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said
+ Topham, &ldquo;since he comes within the warrant of the House.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;he is only under custody for an assault,
+ with the purpose of a rescue; and I counsel you against meddling with him,
+ unless you have stronger guard. Sir Geoffrey is now old and broken, but
+ this young fellow is in the flower of his youth, and hath at his beck all
+ the debauched young Cavaliers of the neighbourhood&mdash;You will scarce
+ cross the country without a rescue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Topham eyed Julian wistfully, as a spider may be supposed to look upon a
+ stray wasp which has got into his web, and which he longs to secure,
+ though he fears the consequences of attempting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian himself replied, &ldquo;I know not if this separation be well or ill
+ meant on your part, Master Bridgenorth; but on mine, I am only desirous to
+ share the fate of my parents; and therefore I will give my word of honour
+ to attempt neither rescue nor escape, on condition you do not separate me
+ from them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not say so, Julian,&rdquo; said his mother; &ldquo;abide with Master Bridgenorth&mdash;my
+ mind tells me he cannot mean so ill by us as his rough conduct would now
+ lead us to infer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;know, that between the doors of my father&rsquo;s
+ house and the gates of hell, there steps not such a villain on the ground!
+ And if I wish my hands ever to be unbound again, it is because I hope for
+ one downright blow at a grey head, that has hatched more treason than the
+ whole Long Parliament.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away with thee,&rdquo; said the zealous officer; &ldquo;is Parliament a word for so
+ foul a mouth as thine?&mdash;Gentlemen,&rdquo; he added, turning to Everett and
+ Dangerfield, &ldquo;you will bear witness to this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To his having reviled the House of Commons&mdash;by G&mdash;d, that I
+ will!&rdquo; said Dangerfield; &ldquo;I will take it on my damnation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And verily,&rdquo; said Everett, &ldquo;as he spoke of Parliament generally, he hath
+ contemned the House of Lords also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ye poor insignificant wretches,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;whose very life
+ is a lie&mdash;and whose bread is perjury&mdash;would you pervert my
+ innocent words almost as soon as they have quitted my lips? I tell you the
+ country is well weary of you; and should Englishmen come to their senses,
+ the jail, the pillory, the whipping-post, and the gibbet, will be too good
+ preferment for such base blood-suckers.&mdash;And now, Master Bridgenorth,
+ you and they may do your worst; for I will not open my mouth to utter a
+ single word while I am in the company of such knaves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;you would better have
+ consulted your own safety in adopting that resolution a little sooner&mdash;the
+ tongue is a little member, but it causes much strife.&mdash;You, Master
+ Julian, will please to follow me, and without remonstrance or resistance;
+ for you must be aware that I have the means of compelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was, indeed, but too sensible, that he had no other course but that
+ of submission to superior force; but ere he left the apartment, he kneeled
+ down to receive his father&rsquo;s blessing, which the old man bestowed not
+ without a tear in his eye, and in the emphatic words, &ldquo;God bless thee, my
+ boy; and keep thee good and true to Church and King, whatever wind shall
+ bring foul weather!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mother was only able to pass her hand over his head, and to implore
+ him, in a low tone of voice, not to be rash or violent in any attempt to
+ render them assistance. &ldquo;We are innocent,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my son&mdash;we are
+ innocent&mdash;and we are in God&rsquo;s hands. Be the thought our best comfort
+ and protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth now signed to Julian to follow him, which he did, accompanied,
+ or rather conducted, by the two guards who had first disarmed him. When
+ they had passed from the apartment, and were at the door of the outward
+ hall, Bridgenorth asked Julian whether he should consider him as under
+ parole; in which case, he said, he would dispense with all other security
+ but his own promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, who could not help hoping somewhat from the favourable and
+ unresentful manner in which he was treated by one whose life he had so
+ recently attempted, replied, without hesitation, that he would give his
+ parole for twenty-four hours, neither to attempt to escape by force nor by
+ flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is wisely said,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth; &ldquo;for though you might cause
+ bloodshed, be assured that your utmost efforts could do no service to your
+ parents.&mdash;Horses there&mdash;horses to the courtyard!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trampling of horses was soon heard; and in obedience to Bridgenorth&rsquo;s
+ signal, and in compliance with his promise, Julian mounted one which was
+ presented to him, and prepared to leave the house of his fathers, in which
+ his parents were now prisoners, and to go, he knew not whither, under the
+ custody of one known to be the ancient enemy of his family. He was rather
+ surprised at observing, that Bridgenorth and he were about to travel
+ without any other attendants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were mounted, and as they rode slowly towards the outer gate of
+ the courtyard, Bridgenorth said to him, &ldquo;it is not every one who would
+ thus unreservedly commit his safety by travelling at night, and unaided,
+ with the hot-brained youth who so lately attempted his life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;I might tell you truly, that I knew
+ you not at the time when I directed my weapon against you; but I must also
+ add, that the cause in which I used it, might have rendered me, even had I
+ known you, a slight respecter of your person. At present, I do know you;
+ and have neither malice against your person, nor the liberty of a parent
+ to fight for. Besides, you have my word; and when was a Peveril known to
+ break it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied his companion, &ldquo;a Peveril&mdash;a Peveril of the Peak!&mdash;a
+ name which has long sounded like a war-trumpet in the land; but which has
+ now perhaps sounded its last loud note. Look back, young man, on the
+ darksome turrets of your father&rsquo;s house, which uplift themselves above the
+ sons of their people. Think upon your father, a captive&mdash;yourself in
+ some sort a fugitive&mdash;your light quenched&mdash;your glory abased&mdash;your
+ estate wrecked and impoverished. Think that Providence has subjected the
+ destinies of the race of Peveril to one, whom, in their aristocratic
+ pride, they held as a plebeian upstart. Think of this; and when you again
+ boast of your ancestry, remember, that he who raiseth the lowly can also
+ abase the high in heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did indeed gaze for an instant, with a swelling heart, upon the
+ dimly seen turrets of his paternal mansion, on which poured the moonlight,
+ mixed with long shadows of the towers and trees. But while he sadly
+ acknowledged the truth of Bridgenorth&rsquo;s observation, he felt indignant at
+ his ill-timed triumph. &ldquo;If fortune had followed worth,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the
+ Castle of Martindale, and the name of Peveril, had afforded no room for
+ their enemy&rsquo;s vainglorious boast. But those who have stood high on
+ Fortune&rsquo;s wheel, must abide by the consequence of its revolutions. This
+ much I will at least say for my father&rsquo;s house, that it has not stood
+ unhonoured; nor will it fall&mdash;if it is to fall&mdash;unlamented.
+ Forbear, then, if you are indeed the Christian you call yourself, to exult
+ in the misfortunes of others, or to confide in your own prosperity. If the
+ light of our house be now quenched, God can rekindle it in His own good
+ time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril broke off in extreme surprise; for as he spake the last words, the
+ bright red beams of the family beacon began again to glimmer from its
+ wonted watch-tower, checkering the pale moonbeam with a ruddier glow.
+ Bridgenorth also gazed on this unexpected illumination with surprise, and
+ not, as it seemed, without disquietude. &ldquo;Young man,&rdquo; he resumed, &ldquo;it can
+ scarcely be but that Heaven intends to work great things by your hand, so
+ singularly has that augury followed on your words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he put his horse once more in motion; and looking back, from
+ time to time, as if to assure himself that the beacon of the Castle was
+ actually rekindled, he led the way through the well-known paths and
+ alleys, to his own house of Moultrassie, followed by Peveril, who although
+ sensible that the light might be altogether accidental, could not but
+ receive as a good omen an event so intimately connected with the
+ traditions and usages of his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They alighted at the hall-door, which was hastily opened by a female; and
+ while the deep tone of Bridgenorth called on the groom to take their
+ horses, the well-known voice of his daughter Alice was heard to exclaim in
+ thanksgiving to God, who had restored her father in safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ We meet, as men see phantoms in a dream,
+ Which glide, and sigh, and sign, and move their lips,
+ But make no sound; or, if they utter voice,
+ &lsquo;Tis but a low and undistinguish&rsquo;d moaning,
+ Which has nor word nor sense of utter&rsquo;d sound.
+ &mdash;THE CHIEFTAIN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We said, at the conclusion of the last chapter, that a female form
+ appeared at the door of Moultrassie Hall; and that the well-known accents
+ of Alice Bridgenorth were heard to hail the return of her father, from
+ what she naturally dreaded as a perilous visit to the Castle of
+ Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, who followed his conductor with a throbbing heart into the lighted
+ hall, was therefore prepared to see her whom he best loved, with her arms
+ thrown around her father. The instant she had quitted his paternal
+ embrace, she was aware of the unexpected guest who had returned in his
+ company. A deep blush, rapidly succeeded by a deadly paleness, and again
+ by a slighter suffusion, showed plainly to her lover that his sudden
+ appearance was anything but indifferent to her. He bowed profoundly&mdash;a
+ courtesy which she returned with equal formality, but did not venture to
+ approach more nearly, feeling at once the delicacy of his own situation
+ and of hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth turned his cold, fixed, grey, melancholy glance, first
+ on the one of them and then on the other. &ldquo;Some,&rdquo; he said gravely, &ldquo;would,
+ in my case, have avoided this meeting; but I have confidence in you both,
+ although you are young, and beset with the snares incidental to your age.
+ There are those within who should not know that ye have been acquainted.
+ Wherefore, be wise, and be as strangers to each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian and Alice exchanged glances as her father turned from them, and
+ lifting a lamp which stood in the entrance-hall, led the way to the
+ interior apartment. There was little of consolation in this exchange of
+ looks; for the sadness of Alice&rsquo;s glance was mingled with fear, and that
+ of Julian clouded by an anxious sense of doubt. The look also was but
+ momentary; for Alice, springing to her father, took the light out of his
+ hand, and stepping before him, acted as the usher of both into the large
+ oaken parlour, which has been already mentioned as the apartment in which
+ Bridgenorth had spent the hours of dejection which followed the death of
+ his consort and family. It was now lighted up as for the reception of
+ company; and five or six persons sat in it, in the plain, black, stiff
+ dress, which was affected by the formal Puritans of the time, in evidence
+ of their contempt of the manners of the luxurious Court of Charles the
+ Second; amongst whom, excess of extravagance in apparel, like excess of
+ every other kind, was highly fashionable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian at first glanced his eyes but slightly along the range of grave and
+ severe faces which composed this society&mdash;men sincere, perhaps, in
+ their pretensions to a superior purity of conduct and morals, but in whom
+ that high praise was somewhat chastened by an affected austerity in dress
+ and manners, allied to those Pharisees of old, who made broad their
+ phylacteries, and would be seen of man to fast, and to discharge with
+ rigid punctuality the observances of the law. Their dress was almost
+ uniformly a black cloak and doublet, cut straight and close, and
+ undecorated with lace or embroidery of any kind, black Flemish breeches
+ and hose, square-toed shoes, with large roses made of serge ribbon. Two or
+ three had large loose boots of calf-leather, and almost every one was
+ begirt with a long rapier, which was suspended by leathern thongs, to a
+ plain belt of buff, or of black leather. One or two of the elder guests,
+ whose hair had been thinned by time, had their heads covered with a
+ skull-cap of black silk or velvet, which, being drawn down betwixt the
+ ears and the skull, and permitting no hair to escape, occasioned the
+ former to project in the ungraceful manner which may be remarked in old
+ pictures, and which procured for the Puritans the term of &ldquo;prickeared
+ Roundheads,&rdquo; so unceremoniously applied to them by their contemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These worthies were ranged against the wall, each in his ancient
+ high-backed, long-legged chair; neither looking towards, nor apparently
+ discoursing with each other; but plunged in their own reflections, or
+ awaiting, like an assembly of Quakers, the quickening power of divine
+ inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth glided along this formal society with noiseless step,
+ and a composed severity of manner, resembling their own. He paused before
+ each in succession, and apparently communicated, as he passed, the
+ transactions of the evening, and the circumstances under which the heir of
+ Martindale Castle was now a guest at Moultrassie Hall. Each seemed to stir
+ at his brief detail, like a range of statues in an enchanted hall,
+ starting into something like life, as a talisman is applied to them
+ successively. Most of them, as they heard the narrative of their host,
+ cast upon Julian a look of curiosity, blended with haughty scorn and the
+ consciousness of spiritual superiority; though, in one or two instances,
+ the milder influences of compassion were sufficiently visible.&mdash;Peveril
+ would have undergone this gantlet of eyes with more impatience, had not
+ his own been for the time engaged in following the motions of Alice, who
+ glided through the apartment; and only speaking very briefly, and in
+ whispers, to one or two of the company who addressed her, took her place
+ beside a treble-hooded old lady, the only female of the party, and
+ addressed herself to her in such earnest conversation, as might dispense
+ with her raising her head, or looking at any others in the company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her father put a question, to which she was obliged to return an answer&mdash;&ldquo;Where
+ was Mistress Debbitch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has gone out,&rdquo; Alice replied, &ldquo;early after sunset, to visit some old
+ acquaintances in the neighbourhood, and she was not yet returned.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth made a gesture indicative of displeasure; and, not
+ content with that, expressed his determined resolution that Dame Deborah
+ should no longer remain a member of his family. &ldquo;I will have those,&rdquo; he
+ said aloud, and without regarding the presence of his guests, &ldquo;and those
+ only, around me, who know to keep within the sober and modest bounds of a
+ Christian family. Who pretends to more freedom, must go out from among us,
+ as not being of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep and emphatic humming noise, which was at that time the mode in
+ which the Puritans signified their applause, as well of the doctrines
+ expressed by a favourite divine in the pulpit, as of those delivered in
+ private society, ratified the approbation of the assessors, and seemed to
+ secure the dismission of the unfortunate governante, who stood thus
+ detected of having strayed out of bounds. Even Peveril, although he had
+ reaped considerable advantages, in his early acquaintance with Alice, from
+ the mercenary and gossiping disposition of her governess, could not hear
+ of her dismissal without approbation, so much was he desirous, that, in
+ the hour of difficulty which might soon approach, Alice might have the
+ benefit of countenance and advice from one of her own sex of better
+ manners, and less suspicious probity, than Mistress Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost immediately after this communication had taken place, a servant in
+ mourning showed his thin, pinched, and wrinkled visage in the apartment,
+ announcing, with a voice more like a passing bell than the herald of a
+ banquet, that refreshments were provided in an adjoining apartment.
+ Gravely leading the way, with his daughter on one side, and the
+ puritanical female whom we have distinguished on the other, Bridgenorth
+ himself ushered his company, who followed, with little attention to order
+ or ceremony, into the eating-room, where a substantial supper was
+ provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner, Peveril, although entitled according to ordinary
+ ceremonial, to some degree of precedence&mdash;a matter at that time
+ considered of much importance, although now little regarded&mdash;was left
+ among the last of those who quitted the parlour; and might indeed have
+ brought up the rear of all, had not one of the company, who was himself
+ late in the retreat, bowed and resigned to Julian the rank in the company
+ which had been usurped by others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This act of politeness naturally induced Julian to examine the features of
+ the person who had offered him this civility; and he started to observe,
+ under the pinched velvet cap, and above the short band-strings, the
+ countenance of Ganlesse, as he called himself&mdash;his companion on the
+ preceding evening. He looked again and again, especially when all were
+ placed at the supper board, and when, consequently, he had frequent
+ opportunities of observing this person fixedly without any breach of good
+ manners. At first he wavered in his belief, and was much inclined to doubt
+ the reality of his recollection; for the difference of dress was such as
+ to effect a considerable change of appearance; and the countenance itself,
+ far from exhibiting anything marked or memorable, was one of those
+ ordinary visages which we see almost without remarking them, and which
+ leave our memory so soon as the object is withdrawn from our eyes. But the
+ impression upon his mind returned, and became stronger, until it induced
+ him to watch with peculiar attention the manners of the individual who had
+ thus attracted his notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the time of a very prolonged grace before meat, which was delivered
+ by one of the company&mdash;who, from his Geneva band and serge doublet,
+ presided, as Julian supposed, over some dissenting congregation&mdash;he
+ noticed that this man kept the same demure and severe cast of countenance
+ usually affected by the Puritans, and which rather caricatured the
+ reverence unquestionably due upon such occasions. His eyes were turned
+ upward, and his huge penthouse hat, with a high crown and broad brim, held
+ in both hands before him, rose and fell with the cadences of the speaker&rsquo;s
+ voice; thus marking time, as it were, to the periods of the benediction.
+ Yet when the slight bustle took place which attends the adjusting of
+ chairs, &amp;c., as men sit down to table, Julian&rsquo;s eye encountered that
+ of the stranger; and as their looks met, there glanced from those of the
+ latter an expression of satirical humour and scorn, which seemed to
+ intimate internal ridicule of the gravity of his present demeanour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian again sought to fix his eye, in order to ascertain that he had not
+ mistaken the tendency of this transient expression, but the stranger did
+ not allow him another opportunity. He might have been discovered by the
+ tone of his voice; but the individual in question spoke little, and in
+ whispers, which was indeed the fashion of the whole company, whose
+ demeanour at table resembled that of mourners at a funeral feast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entertainment itself was coarse, though plentiful; and must, according
+ to Julian&rsquo;s opinion, be distasteful to one so exquisitely skilled in good
+ cheer, and so capable of enjoying, critically and scientifically, the
+ genial preparations of his companion Smith, as Ganlesse had shown himself
+ on the preceding evening. Accordingly, upon close observation, he remarked
+ that the food which he took upon his plate remained there unconsumed; and
+ that his actual supper consisted only of a crust of bread, with a glass of
+ wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repast was hurried over with the haste of those who think it shame, if
+ not sin, to make mere animal enjoyments the means of consuming time, or of
+ receiving pleasure; and when men wiped their mouths and moustaches, Julian
+ remarked that the object of his curiosity used a handkerchief of the
+ finest cambric&mdash;an article rather inconsistent with the exterior
+ plainness, not to say coarseness, of his appearance. He used also several
+ of the more minute refinements, then only observed at tables of the higher
+ rank; and Julian thought he could discern, at every turn, something of
+ courtly manners and gestures, under the precise and rustic simplicity of
+ the character which he had assumed.[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A Scottish gentleman <i>in hiding</i>, as it was emphatically termed,
+ for some concern in a Jacobite insurrection or plot, was
+ discovered among a number of ordinary persons, by the use of his
+ toothpick.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But if this were indeed that same Ganlesse with whom Julian had met on the
+ preceding evening, and who had boasted the facility with which he could
+ assume any character which he pleased to represent for the time, what
+ could be the purpose of this present disguise? He was, if his own words
+ could be credited, a person of some importance, who dared to defy the
+ danger of those officers and informers, before whom all ranks at that time
+ trembled; nor was he likely, as Julian conceived, without some strong
+ purpose, to subject himself to such a masquerade as the present, which
+ could not be otherwise than irksome to one whose conversation proclaimed
+ him of light life and free opinions. Was his appearance here for good or
+ for evil? Did it respect his father&rsquo;s house, or his own person, or the
+ family of Bridgenorth? Was the real character of Ganlesse known to the
+ master of the house, inflexible as he was in all which concerned morals as
+ well as religion? If not, might not the machinations of a brain so subtile
+ affect the peace and happiness of Alice Bridgenorth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were questions which no reflection could enable Peveril to answer.
+ His eyes glanced from Alice to the stranger; and new fears, and undefined
+ suspicions, in which the safety of that beloved and lovely girl was
+ implicated, mingled with the deep anxiety which already occupied his mind,
+ on account of his father and his father&rsquo;s house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in this tumult of mind, when after a thanksgiving as long as the
+ grace, the company arose from table, and were instantly summoned to the
+ exercise of family worship. A train of domestics, grave, sad, and
+ melancholy as their superiors, glided in to assist at this act of
+ devotion, and ranged themselves at the lower end of the apartment. Most of
+ these men were armed with long tucks, as the straight stabbing swords,
+ much used by Cromwell&rsquo;s soldiery, were then called. Several had large
+ pistols also; and the corselets or cuirasses of some were heard to clank,
+ as they seated themselves to partake in this act of devotion. The ministry
+ of him whom Julian had supposed a preacher was not used on this occasion.
+ Major Bridgenorth himself read and expounded a chapter of Scripture, with
+ much strength and manliness of expression, although so as not to escape
+ the charge of fanaticism. The nineteenth chapter of Jeremiah was the
+ portion of Scripture which he selected; in which, under the type of
+ breaking a potter&rsquo;s vessel, the prophet presages the desolation of the
+ Jews. The lecturer was not naturally eloquent; but a strong, deep, and
+ sincere conviction of the truth of what he said supplied him with language
+ of energy and fire, as he drew parallel between the abominations of the
+ worship of Baal, and the corruptions of the Church of Rome&mdash;so
+ favourite a topic with the Puritans of that period; and denounced against
+ the Catholics, and those who favoured them, that hissing and desolation
+ which the prophet directed against the city of Jerusalem. His hearers made
+ a yet closer application than the lecturer himself suggested; and many a
+ dark proud eye intimated, by a glance on Julian, that on his father&rsquo;s
+ house were already, in some part, realised those dreadful maledictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lecture finished, Bridgenorth summoned them to unite with him in
+ prayer; and on a slight change of arrangements amongst the company, which
+ took place as they were about to kneel down, Julian found his place next
+ to the single-minded and beautiful object of his affection, as she knelt,
+ in her loveliness, to adore her Creator. A short time was permitted for
+ mental devotion; during which Peveril could hear her half-breathed
+ petition for the promised blessings of peace on earth, and good-will
+ towards the children of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prayer which ensued was in a different tone. It was poured forth by
+ the same person who had officiated as chaplain at the table; and was in
+ the tone of a Boanerges, or Son of Thunder&mdash;a denouncer of crimes&mdash;an
+ invoker of judgments&mdash;almost a prophet of evil and of destruction.
+ The testimonies and the sins of the day were not forgotten&mdash;the
+ mysterious murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey was insisted upon&mdash;and
+ thanks and praise were offered, that the very night on which they were
+ assembled, had not seen another offering of a Protestant magistrate, to
+ the bloodthirsty fury of revengeful Catholics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had Julian found it more difficult, during an act of devotion, to
+ maintain his mind in a frame befitting the posture and the occasion; and
+ when he heard the speaker return thanks for the downfall and devastation
+ of his family, he was strongly tempted to have started upon his feet, and
+ charged him with offering a tribute, stained with falsehood and calumny,
+ at the throne of truth itself. He resisted, however, an impulse which it
+ would have been insanity to have yielded to, and his patience was not
+ without its reward; for when his fair neighbour arose from her knees, the
+ lengthened and prolonged prayer being at last concluded, he observed that
+ her eyes were streaming with tears; and one glance with which she looked
+ at him in that moment, showed more of affectionate interest for him in his
+ fallen fortunes and precarious condition, than he had been able to obtain
+ from her when his worldly estate seemed so much the more exalted of the
+ two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cheered and fortified with the conviction that one bosom in the company,
+ and that in which he most eagerly longed to secure an interest,
+ sympathised with his distress, he felt strong to endure whatever was to
+ follow, and shrunk not from the stern still smile with which, one by one,
+ the meeting regarded him, as, gliding to their several places of repose,
+ they indulged themselves at parting with a look of triumph on one whom
+ they considered as their captive enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice also passed by her lover, her eyes fixed on the ground, and answered
+ his low obeisance without raising them. The room was now empty, but for
+ Bridgenorth and his guest, or prisoner; for it is difficult to say in
+ which capacity Peveril ought to regard himself. He took an old brazen lamp
+ from the table, and, leading the way, said at the same time, &ldquo;I must be
+ the uncourtly chamberlain, who am to usher you to a place of repose, more
+ rude, perhaps, than you have been accustomed to occupy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian followed him, in silence, up an old-fashioned winding staircase,
+ within a turret. At the landing-place on the top was a small apartment,
+ where an ordinary pallet bed, two chairs, and a small stone table, were
+ the only furniture. &ldquo;Your bed,&rdquo; continued Bridgenorth, as if desirous to
+ prolong their interview, &ldquo;is not of the softest; but innocence sleeps as
+ sound upon straw as on down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sorrow, Major Bridgenorth, finds little rest on either,&rdquo; replied Julian.
+ &ldquo;Tell me, for you seem to await some question from me, what is to be the
+ fate of my parents, and why you separate me from them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth, for answer, indicated with his finger the mark which his
+ countenance still showed from the explosion of Julian&rsquo;s pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That,&rdquo; replied Julian, &ldquo;is not the real cause of your proceedings against
+ me. It cannot be, that you, who have been a soldier, and are a man, can be
+ surprised or displeased by my interference in the defence of my father.
+ Above all, you cannot, and I must needs say you do not, believe that I
+ would have raised my hand against you personally, had there been a
+ moment&rsquo;s time for recognition.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I may grant all this,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;but what the better are you for
+ my good opinion, or for the ease with which I can forgive you the injury
+ which you aimed at me? You are in my custody as a magistrate, accused of
+ abetting the foul, bloody, and heathenish plot, for the establishment of
+ Popery, the murder of the King, and the general massacre of all true
+ Protestants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And on what grounds, either of fact or suspicion, dare any one accuse me
+ of such a crime?&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;I have hardly heard of the plot, save by
+ the mouth of common rumour, which, while it speaks of nothing else, takes
+ care to say nothing distinctly even on that subject.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It may be enough for me to tell you,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;and perhaps
+ it is a word too much&mdash;that you are a discovered intriguer&mdash;a
+ spied spy&mdash;who carries tokens and messages betwixt the Popish
+ Countess of Derby and the Catholic party in London. You have not conducted
+ your matters with such discretion, but that this is well known, and can be
+ sufficiently proved. To this charge, which you are well aware you cannot
+ deny, these men, Everett and Dangerfield, are not unwilling to add, from
+ the recollection of your face, other passages, which will certainly cost
+ you your life when you come before a Protestant jury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They lie like villains,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;who hold me accessory to any plot
+ either against the King, the nation, or the state of religion; and for the
+ Countess, her loyalty has been too long, and too highly proved, to permit
+ her being implicated in such injurious suspicions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What she has already done,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, his face darkening as he
+ spoke, &ldquo;against the faithful champions of pure religion, hath sufficiently
+ shown of what she is capable. She hath betaken herself to her rock, and
+ sits, as she thinks, in security, like the eagle reposing after his bloody
+ banquet. But the arrow of the fowler may yet reach her&mdash;the shaft is
+ whetted&mdash;the bow is bended&mdash;and it will be soon seen whether
+ Amalek or Israel shall prevail. But for thee, Julian Peveril&mdash;why
+ should I conceal it from thee?&mdash;my heart yearns for thee as a woman&rsquo;s
+ for her first-born. To thee I will give, at the expense of my own
+ reputation&mdash;perhaps at the risk of personal suspicion&mdash;for who,
+ in these days of doubt, shall be exempted from it&mdash;to thee, I say, I
+ will give means of escape, which else were impossible to thee. The
+ staircase of this turret descends to the gardens&mdash;the postern-gate is
+ unlatched&mdash;on the right hand lie the stables, where you will find
+ your own horse&mdash;take it, and make for Liverpool&mdash;I will give you
+ credit with a friend under the name of Simon Simonson, one persecuted by
+ the prelates; and he will expedite your passage from the kingdom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;I will not deceive you. Were I to
+ accept your offer of freedom, it would be to attend to a higher call than
+ that of mere self-preservation. My father is in danger&mdash;my mother in
+ sorrow&mdash;the voices of religion and nature call me to their side. I am
+ their only child&mdash;their only hope&mdash;I will aid them, or perish
+ with them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art mad,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth&mdash;&ldquo;aid them thou canst not&mdash;perish
+ with them thou mayst, and even accelerate their ruin; for, in addition to
+ the charges with which thy unhappy father is loaded, it would be no slight
+ aggravation, that while he meditated arming and calling together the
+ Catholics and High Churchmen of Cheshire and Derbyshire, his son should
+ prove to be the confidential agent of the Countess of Derby, who aided her
+ in making good her stronghold against the Protestant commissioners, and
+ was despatched by her to open secret communication with the Popish
+ interest in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have twice stated me as such an agent,&rdquo; said Peveril, resolved that
+ his silence should not be construed into an admission of the charge,
+ though he felt it was in some degree well founded&mdash;&ldquo;What reason have
+ you for such an allegation?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will it suffice for a proof of my intimate acquaintance with your
+ mystery,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;if I should repeat to you the last words
+ which the Countess used to you when you left the Castle of that
+ Amalekitish woman? Thus she spoke: &lsquo;I am now a forlorn widow,&rsquo; she said,
+ &lsquo;whom sorrow has made selfish.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril started, for these were the very words the Countess had used; but
+ he instantly recovered himself, and replied, &ldquo;Be your information of what
+ nature it will, I deny, and I defy it, so far as it attaches aught like
+ guilt to me. There lives not a man more innocent of a disloyal thought, or
+ of a traitorous purpose. What I say for myself, I will, to the best of my
+ knowledge, say and maintain on account of the noble Countess, to whom I am
+ indebted for nurture.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perish, then, in thy obstinacy!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; and turning hastily
+ from him, he left the room, and Julian heard him hasten down the narrow
+ staircase, as if distrusting his own resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a heavy heart, yet with that confidence in an overruling Providence
+ which never forsakes a good and brave man, Peveril betook himself to his
+ lowly place of repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The course of human life is changeful still,
+ As is the fickle wind and wandering rill;
+ Or, like the light dance which the wild-breeze weaves
+ Amidst the fated race of fallen leaves;
+ Which now its breath bears down, now tosses high,
+ Beats to the earth, or wafts to middle sky.
+ Such, and so varied, the precarious play
+ Of fate with man, frail tenant of a day!
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst, overcome with fatigue, and worn out by anxiety, Julian Peveril
+ slumbered as a prisoner in the house of his hereditary enemy, Fortune was
+ preparing his release by one of those sudden frolics with which she loves
+ to confound the calculations and expectancies of humanity; and as she
+ fixes on strange agents for such purposes, she condescended to employ on
+ the present occasion, no less a personage than Mistress Deborah Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instigated, doubtless, by the pristine reminiscences of former times, no
+ sooner had that most prudent and considerate dame found herself in the
+ vicinity of the scenes of her earlier days, than she bethought herself of
+ a visit to the ancient house-keeper of Martindale Castle, Dame Ellesmere
+ by name, who, long retired from active service, resided at the keeper&rsquo;s
+ lodge, in the west thicket, with her nephew, Lance Outram, subsisting upon
+ the savings of her better days, and on a small pension allowed by Sir
+ Geoffrey to her age and faithful services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Dame Ellesmere and Mistress Deborah had not by any means been formerly
+ on so friendly a footing, as this haste to visit her might be supposed to
+ intimate. But years had taught Deborah to forget and forgive; or perhaps
+ she had no special objection, under cover of a visit to Dame Ellesmere, to
+ take the chance of seeing what changes time had made on her old admirer
+ the keeper. Both inhabitants were in the cottage when, after having seen
+ her master set forth on his expedition to the Castle, Mistress Debbitch,
+ dressed in her very best gown, footed it through gutter, and over stile,
+ and by pathway green, to knock at their door, and to lift the hatch at the
+ hospitable invitation which bade her come in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Ellesmere&rsquo;s eyes were so often dim, that, even with the aid of
+ spectacles, she failed to recognise, in the portly and mature personage
+ who entered their cottage, the tight well-made lass, who, presuming on her
+ good looks and flippant tongue, had so often provoked her by
+ insubordination; and her former lover, the redoubted Lance, not being
+ conscious that ale had given rotundity to his own figure, which was
+ formerly so slight and active, and that brandy had transferred to his nose
+ the colour which had once occupied his cheeks, was unable to discover that
+ Deborah&rsquo;s French cap, composed of sarsenet and Brussels lace, shaded the
+ features which had so often procured him a rebuke from Dr. Dummerar, for
+ suffering his eyes, during the time of prayers, to wander to the
+ maid-servants&rsquo; bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the blushing visitor was compelled to make herself known; and
+ when known, was received by aunt and nephew with the most sincere
+ cordiality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The home-brewed was produced; and, in lieu of more vulgar food, a few
+ slices of venison presently hissed in the frying pan, giving strong room
+ for inference that Lance Outram, in his capacity of keeper, neglected not
+ his own cottage when he supplied the larder at the Castle. A modest sip of
+ the excellent Derbyshire ale, and a taste of the highly-seasoned hash,
+ soon placed Deborah entirely at home with her old acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having put all necessary questions, and received all suitable answers,
+ respecting the state of the neighbourhood, and such of her own friends as
+ continued to reside there, the conversation began rather to flag, until
+ Deborah found the art of again re-newing its interest, by communicating to
+ her friends the dismal intelligence that they must soon look for deadly
+ bad news from the Castle; for that her present master, Major Bridgenorth,
+ had been summoned, by some great people from London, to assist in taking
+ her old master, Sir Geoffrey; and that all Master Bridgenorth&rsquo;s servants,
+ and several other persons whom she named, friends and adherents of the
+ same interest, had assembled a force to surprise the Castle; and that as
+ Sir Geoffrey was now so old, and gouty withal, it could not be expected he
+ should make the defence he was wont; and then he was known to be so
+ stout-hearted, that it was not to be supposed that he would yield up
+ without stroke of sword; and then if he was killed, as he was like to be,
+ amongst them that liked never a bone of his body, and now had him at their
+ mercy, why, in that case, she, Dame Deborah, would look upon Lady Peveril
+ as little better than a dead woman; and undoubtedly there would be a
+ general mourning through all that country, where they had such great kin;
+ and silks were likely to rise on it, as Master Lutestring, the mercer of
+ Chesterfield, was like to feel in his purse bottom. But for her part, let
+ matters wag how they would, an if Master Julian Peveril was to come to his
+ own, she could give as near a guess as e&rsquo;er another who was likely to be
+ Lady at Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The text of this lecture, or, in other words, the fact that Bridgenorth
+ was gone with a party to attack Sir Geoffrey Peveril in his own Castle of
+ Martindale, sounded so stunningly strange in the ears of those old
+ retainers of his family, that they had no power either to attend to
+ Mistress Deborah&rsquo;s inferences, or to interrupt the velocity of speech with
+ which she poured them forth. And when at length she made a breathless
+ pause, all that poor Dame Ellesmere could reply, was the emphatic
+ question, &ldquo;Bridgenorth brave Peveril of the Peak!&mdash;Is the woman mad?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, dame,&rdquo; said Deborah, &ldquo;woman me no more than I woman you. I
+ have not been called Mistress at the head of the table for so many years,
+ to be woman&rsquo;d here by you. And for the news, it is as true as that you are
+ sitting there in a white hood, who will wear a black one ere long.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lance Outram,&rdquo; said the old woman, &ldquo;make out, if thou be&rsquo;st a man, and
+ listen about if aught stirs up at the Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If there should,&rdquo; said Outram, &ldquo;I am even too long here;&rdquo; and he caught
+ up his crossbow, and one or two arrows, and rushed out of the cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well-a-day!&rdquo; said Mistress Deborah, &ldquo;see if my news have not frightened
+ away Lance Outram too, whom they used to say nothing could start. But do
+ not take on so, dame; for I dare say if the Castle and the lands pass to
+ my new master, Major Bridgenorth, as it is like they will&mdash;for I have
+ heard that he has powerful debts over the estate&mdash;you shall have my
+ good word with him, and I promise you he is no bad man; something precise
+ about preaching and praying, and about the dress which one should wear,
+ which, I must own, beseems not a gentleman, as, to be sure, every woman
+ knows best what becomes her. But for you, dame, that wear a prayer-book at
+ your girdle, with your housewife-case, and never change the fashion of
+ your white hood, I dare say he will not grudge you the little matter you
+ need, and are not able to win.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out, sordid jade!&rdquo; exclaimed Dame Ellesmere, her very flesh quivering
+ betwixt apprehension and anger, &ldquo;and hold your peace this instant, or I
+ will find those that shall flay the very hide from thee with dog-whips.
+ Hast thou ate thy noble master&rsquo;s bread, not only to betray his trust, and
+ fly from his service, but wouldst thou come here, like an ill-omened bird
+ as thou art, to triumph over his downfall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, dame,&rdquo; said Deborah, over whom the violence of the old woman had
+ obtained a certain predominance; &ldquo;it is not I that say it&mdash;only the
+ warrant of the Parliament folks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought we had done with their warrants ever since the blessed
+ twenty-ninth of May,&rdquo; said the old housekeeper of Martindale Castle; &ldquo;but
+ this I tell thee, sweetheart, that I have seen such warrants crammed, at
+ the sword&rsquo;s point, down the throats of them that brought them; and so
+ shall this be, if there is one true man left to drink of the Dove.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke, Lance Outram re-entered the cottage. &ldquo;Naunt,&rdquo; he said in
+ dismay, &ldquo;I doubt it is true what she says. The beacon tower is as black as
+ my belt. No Pole-star of Peveril. What does that betoken?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Death, ruin, and captivity,&rdquo; exclaimed old Ellesmere. &ldquo;Make for the
+ Castle, thou knave. Thrust in thy great body. Strike for the house that
+ bred thee and fed thee; and if thou art buried under the ruins, thou diest
+ a man&rsquo;s death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, naunt, I shall not be slack,&rdquo; answered Outram. &ldquo;But here come folks
+ that I warrant can tell us more on&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two of the female servants, who had fled from the Castle during the
+ alarm, now rushed in with various reports of the case; but all agreeing
+ that a body of armed men were in possession of the Castle, and that Major
+ Bridgenorth had taken young Master Julian prisoner, and conveyed him down
+ to Moultrassie Hall, with his feet tied under the belly of the nag&mdash;a
+ shameful sight to be seen&mdash;and he so well born and so handsome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance scratched his head; and though feeling the duty incumbent upon him
+ as a faithful servant, which was indeed specially dinned into him by the
+ cries and exclamations of his aunt, he seemed not a little dubious how to
+ conduct himself. &ldquo;I would to God, naunt,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;that old
+ Whitaker were alive now, with his long stories about Marston Moor and Edge
+ Hill, that made us all yawn our jaws off their hinges, in spite of broiled
+ rashers and double beer! When a man is missed, he is moaned, as they say;
+ and I would rather than a broad piece he had been here to have sorted this
+ matter, for it is clean out of my way as a woodsman, that have no skill of
+ war. But dang it, if old Sir Geoffrey go to the wall without a knock for
+ it!&mdash;Here you, Nell&rdquo;&mdash;(speaking to one of the fugitive maidens
+ from the Castle)&mdash;&ldquo;but, no&mdash;you have not the heart of a cat, and
+ are afraid of your own shadow by moonlight&mdash;But, Cis, you are a
+ stout-hearted wench, and know a buck from a bullfinch. Hark thee, Cis, as
+ you would wish to be married, get up to the Castle again, and get thee in&mdash;thou
+ best knowest where&mdash;for thou hast oft gotten out of postern to a
+ dance or junketing, to my knowledge&mdash;Get thee back to the Castle, as
+ ye hope to be married&mdash;See my lady&mdash;they cannot hinder thee of
+ that&mdash;my lady has a head worth twenty of ours&mdash;If I am to gather
+ force, light up the beacon for a signal; and spare not a tar barrel on&rsquo;t.
+ Thou mayst do it safe enough. I warrant the Roundheads busy with drink and
+ plunder.&mdash;And, hark thee, say to my lady I am gone down to the
+ miners&rsquo; houses at Bonadventure. The rogues were mutinying for their wages
+ but yesterday; they will be all ready for good or bad. Let her send orders
+ down to me; or do you come yourself, your legs are long enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whether they are or not, Master Lance (and you know nothing of the
+ matter), they shall do your errand to-night, for love of the old knight
+ and his lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Cisly Sellok, a kind of Derbyshire Camilla, who had won the smock at
+ the foot-race at Ashbourne, sprung forward towards the Castle with a speed
+ which few could have equalled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There goes a mettled wench,&rdquo; said Lance; &ldquo;and now, naunt, give me the old
+ broadsword&mdash;it is above the bed-head&mdash;and my wood-knife; and I
+ shall do well enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is to become of me?&rdquo; bleated the unfortunate Mistress Deborah
+ Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must remain here with my aunt, Mistress Deb; and, for old
+ acquaintance&rsquo; sake, she will take care no harm befalls you; but take heed
+ how you attempt to break bounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and pondering in his own mind the task which he had undertaken,
+ the hardy forester strode down the moonlight glade, scarcely hearing the
+ blessings and cautions which Dame Ellesmere kept showering after him. His
+ thoughts were not altogether warlike. &ldquo;What a tight ankle the jade hath!&mdash;she
+ trips it like a doe in summer over dew. Well, but here are the huts&mdash;Let
+ us to this gear.&mdash;Are ye all asleep, you dammers, sinkers, and
+ drift-drivers? turn out, ye subterranean badgers. Here is your master, Sir
+ Geoffrey, dead, for aught ye know or care. Do not you see the beacon is
+ unlit, and you sit there like so many asses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered one of the miners, who now began to come out of their huts&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;An he be dead,
+ He will eat no more bread.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you are like to eat none neither,&rdquo; said Lance; &ldquo;for the works will be
+ presently stopped, and all of you turned off.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, and what of it, Master Lance? As good play for nought as work for
+ nought. Here is four weeks we have scarce seen the colour of Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s coin; and you ask us to care whether he be dead or in life? For
+ you, that goes about, trotting upon your horse, and doing for work what
+ all men do for pleasure, it may be well enough; but it is another matter
+ to be leaving God&rsquo;s light, and burrowing all day and night in darkness,
+ like a toad in a hole&mdash;that&rsquo;s not to be done for nought, I trow; and
+ if Sir Geoffrey is dead, his soul will suffer for&rsquo;t; and if he&rsquo;s alive,
+ we&rsquo;ll have him in the Barmoot Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark ye, gaffer,&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;and take notice, my mates, all of you,&rdquo;
+ for a considerable number of these rude and subterranean people had now
+ assembled to hear the discussion&mdash;&ldquo;Has Sir Geoffrey, think you, ever
+ put a penny in his pouch out of this same Bonadventure mine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot say as I think he has,&rdquo; answered old Ditchley, the party who
+ maintained the controversy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Answer on your conscience, though it be but a leaden one. Do not you know
+ that he hath lost a good penny?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I believe he may,&rdquo; said Gaffer Ditchley. &ldquo;What then!&mdash;lose
+ to-day, win to-morrow&mdash;the miner must eat in the meantime.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True; but what will you eat when Master Bridgenorth gets the land, that
+ will not hear of a mine being wrought on his own ground? Will he work on
+ at dead loss, think ye?&rdquo; demanded trusty Lance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bridgenorth?&mdash;he of Moultrassie Hall, that stopped the great
+ Felicity Work, on which his father laid out, some say, ten thousand
+ pounds, and never got in a penny? Why, what has he to do with Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s property down here at Bonadventure? It was never his, I trow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, what do I know?&rdquo; answered Lance, who saw the impression he had made.
+ &ldquo;Law and debt will give him half Derbyshire, I think, unless you stand by
+ old Sir Geoffrey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if Sir Geoffrey be dead,&rdquo; said Ditchley cautiously, &ldquo;what good will
+ our standing by do to him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not say he was dead, but only as bad as dead; in the hands of the
+ Roundheads&mdash;a prisoner up yonder, at his own Castle,&rdquo; said Lance;
+ &ldquo;and will have his head cut off, like the good Earl of Derby&rsquo;s at
+ Bolton-le-Moors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, comrades,&rdquo; said Gaffer Ditchley, &ldquo;an it be as Master Lance
+ says, I think we should bear a hand for stout old Sir Geoffrey, against a
+ low-born mean-spirited fellow like Bridgenorth, who shut up a shaft had
+ cost thousands, without getting a penny profit on&rsquo;t. So hurra for Sir
+ Geoffrey, and down with the Rump! But hold ye a blink&mdash;hold&rdquo;&mdash;(and
+ the waving of his hand stopped the commencing cheer)&mdash;&ldquo;Hark ye,
+ Master Lance, it must be all over, for the beacon is as black as night;
+ and you know yourself that marks the Lord&rsquo;s death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will kindle again in an instant,&rdquo; said Lance; internally adding, &ldquo;I
+ pray to God it may!&mdash;It will kindle in an instant&mdash;lack of fuel,
+ and the confusion of the family.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, like enow, like enow,&rdquo; said Ditchley; &ldquo;but I winna budge till I see
+ it blazing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, there a-goes!&rdquo; said Lance. &ldquo;Thank thee, Cis&mdash;thank thee,
+ my good wench.&mdash;Believe your own eyes, my lads, if you will not
+ believe me; and now hurra for Peveril of the Peak&mdash;the King and his
+ friends&mdash;and down with Rumps and Roundheads!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sudden rekindling of the beacon had all the effect which Lance could
+ have desired upon the minds of his rude and ignorant hearers, who, in
+ their superstitious humour, had strongly associated the Polar-star of
+ Peveril with the fortunes of the family. Once moved, according to the
+ national character of their countrymen, they soon became enthusiastic; and
+ Lance found himself at the head of thirty stout fellows and upwards, armed
+ with their pick-axes, and ready to execute whatever task he should impose
+ on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trusting to enter the Castle by the postern, which had served to
+ accommodate himself and other domestics upon an emergency, his only
+ anxiety was to keep his march silent; and he earnestly recommended to his
+ followers to reserve their shouts for the moment of the attack. They had
+ not advanced far on their road to the Castle, when Cisly Sellok met them
+ so breathless with haste, that the poor girl was obliged to throw herself
+ into Master Lance&rsquo;s arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand up, my mettled wench,&rdquo; said he, giving her a sly kiss at the same
+ time, &ldquo;and let us know what is going on up at the Castle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady bids you, as you would serve God and your master, not to come up
+ to the Castle, which can but make bloodshed; for she says Sir Geoffrey is
+ lawfully in hand, and that he must bide the issue; and that he is innocent
+ of what he is charged with, and is going up to speak for himself before
+ King and Council, and she goes up with him. And besides, they have found
+ out the postern, the Roundhead rogues; for two of them saw me when I went
+ out of door, and chased me; but I showed them a fair pair of heels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As ever dashed dew from the cowslip,&rdquo; said Lance. &ldquo;But what the foul
+ fiend is to be done? for if they have secured the postern, I know not how
+ the dickens we can get in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All is fastened with bolt and staple, and guarded with gun and pistol, at
+ the Castle,&rdquo; quoth Cisly; &ldquo;and so sharp are they, that they nigh caught me
+ coming with my lady&rsquo;s message, as I told you. But my lady says, if you
+ could deliver her son, Master Julian, from Bridgenorth, that she would
+ hold it good service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;is young master at the Castle? I taught him to shoot
+ his first shaft. But how to get in!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was at the Castle in the midst of the ruffle, but old Bridgenorth has
+ carried him down prisoner to the hall,&rdquo; answered Cisly. &ldquo;There was never
+ faith nor courtesy in an old Puritan who never had pipe and tabor in his
+ house since it was built.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or who stopped a promising mine,&rdquo; said Ditchley, &ldquo;to save a few thousand
+ pounds, when he might have made himself as rich as Lord of Chatsworth, and
+ fed a hundred good fellows all the whilst.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then,&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;since you are all of a mind, we will go draw the
+ cover for the old badger; and I promise you that the Hall is not like one
+ of your real houses of quality where the walls are as thick as
+ whinstone-dikes, but foolish brick-work, that your pick-axes will work
+ through as if it were cheese. Huzza once more for Peveril of the Peak!
+ down with Bridgenorth, and all upstart cuckoldly Roundheads!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having indulged the throats of his followers with one buxom huzza, Lance
+ commanded them to cease their clamours, and proceeded to conduct them, by
+ such paths as seemed the least likely to be watched, to the courtyard of
+ Moultrassie Hall. On the road they were joined by several stout yeoman
+ farmers, either followers of the Peveril family, or friends to the High
+ Church and Cavalier party; most of whom, alarmed by the news which began
+ to fly fast through the neighbourhood, were armed with sword and pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance Outram halted his party, at the distance, as he himself described
+ it, of a flight-shot from the house, and advanced, alone, and in silence,
+ to reconnoitre; and having previously commanded Ditchley and his
+ subterranean allies to come to his assistance whenever he should whistle,
+ he crept cautiously forward, and soon found that those whom he came to
+ surprise, true to the discipline which had gained their party such decided
+ superiority during the Civil War, had posted a sentinel, who paced through
+ the courtyard, piously chanting a psalm-tune, while his arms, crossed on
+ his bosom, supported a gun of formidable length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, a true solder,&rdquo; said Lance Outram to himself, &ldquo;would put a stop to
+ thy snivelling ditty, by making a broad arrow quiver in your heart, and no
+ great alarm given. But, dang it, I have not the right spirit for a soldier&mdash;I
+ cannot fight a man till my blood&rsquo;s up; and for shooting him from behind a
+ wall it is cruelly like to stalking a deer. I&rsquo;ll e&rsquo;en face him, and try
+ what to make of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this doughty resolution, and taking no farther care to conceal
+ himself, he entered the courtyard boldly, and was making forward to the
+ front door of the hall, as a matter of course. But the old Cromwellian,
+ who was on guard, had not so learned his duty. &ldquo;Who goes there?&mdash;Stand,
+ friend&mdash;stand; or, verily, I will shoot thee to death!&rdquo; were
+ challenges which followed each other quick, the last being enforced by the
+ levelling and presenting the said long-barrelled gun with which he was
+ armed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what a murrain!&rdquo; answered Lance. &ldquo;Is it your fashion to go
+ a-shooting at this time o&rsquo; night? Why, this is but a time for
+ bat-fowling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but hark thee, friend,&rdquo; said the experienced sentinel, &ldquo;I am none of
+ those who do this work negligently. Thou canst not snare me with thy
+ crafty speech, though thou wouldst make it to sound simple in mine ear. Of
+ a verity I will shoot, unless thou tell thy name and business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Name!&rdquo; said Lance; &ldquo;why, what a dickens should it be but Robin Round&mdash;honest
+ Robin of Redham; and for business, an you must needs know, I come on a
+ message from some Parliament man, up yonder at the Castle, with letters
+ for worshipful Master Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall; and this be the
+ place, as I think; though why ye be marching up and down at his door, like
+ the sign of a Red Man, with your old firelock there, I cannot so well
+ guess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me the letters, my friend,&rdquo; said the sentinel, to whom this
+ explanation seemed very natural and probable, &ldquo;and I will cause them
+ forthwith to be delivered into his worship&rsquo;s own hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rummaging in his pockets, as if to pull out the letters which never
+ existed, Master Lance approached within the sentinel&rsquo;s piece, and, before
+ he was aware, suddenly seized him by the collar, whistled sharp and
+ shrill, and exerting his skill as a wrestler, for which he had been
+ distinguished in his youth, he stretched his antagonist on his back&mdash;the
+ musket for which they struggled going off in the fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miners rushed into the courtyard at Lance&rsquo;s signal; and hopeless any
+ longer of prosecuting his design in silence, Lance commanded two of them
+ to secure the prisoner, and the rest to cheer loudly, and attack the door
+ of the house. Instantly the courtyard of the mansion rang with the cry of
+ &ldquo;Peveril of the Peak for ever!&rdquo; with all the abuse which the Royalists had
+ invented to cast upon the Roundheads, during so many years of contention;
+ and at the same time, while some assailed the door with their mining
+ implements, others directed their attack against the angle, where a kind
+ of porch joined to the main front of the building; and there, in some
+ degree protected by the projection of the wall, and of a balcony which
+ overhung the porch, wrought in more security, as well as with more effect,
+ than the others; for the doors being of oak, thickly studded with nails,
+ offered a more effectual resistance to violence than the brick-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise of this hubbub on the outside, soon excited wild alarm and
+ tumult within. Lights flew from window to window, and voices were heard
+ demanding the cause of the attack; to which the party cries of those who
+ were in the courtyard afforded a sufficient, or at least the only answer,
+ which was vouchsafed. At length the window of a projecting staircase
+ opened, and the voice of Bridgenorth himself demanded authoritatively what
+ the tumult meant, and commanded the rioters to desist, upon their own
+ proper and immediate peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We want our young master, you canting old thief,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;and if
+ we have him not instantly, the topmost stone of your house shall lie as
+ low as the foundation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall try that presently,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;for if there is another
+ blow struck against the walls of my peaceful house, I will fire my
+ carabine among you, and your blood be upon your own head. I have a score
+ of friends, well armed with musket and pistol, to defend my house; and we
+ have both the means and heart, with Heaven&rsquo;s assistance, to repay any
+ violence you can offer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Bridgenorth,&rdquo; replied Lance, who, though no soldier, was sportsman
+ enough to comprehend the advantage which those under cover, and using
+ firearms, must necessarily have over his party, exposed to their aim, in a
+ great measure, and without means of answering their fire,&mdash;&ldquo;Master
+ Bridgenorth, let us crave parley with you, and fair conditions. We desire
+ to do you no evil, but will have back our young master; it is enough that
+ you have got our old one and his lady. It is foul chasing to kill hart,
+ hind, and fawn; and we will give you some light on the subject in an
+ instant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech was followed by a great crash amongst the lower windows of the
+ house, according to a new species of attack which had been suggested by
+ some of the assailants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would take the honest fellow&rsquo;s word, and let young Peveril go,&rdquo; said
+ one of the garrison, who, carelessly yawning, approached on the inside of
+ the post at which Bridgenorth had stationed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you mad?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;or do you think me poor enough in spirit
+ to give up the advantages I now possess over the family of Peveril, for
+ the awe of a parcel of boors, whom the first discharge will scatter like
+ chaff before the whirlwind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered the speaker, who was the same individual that had struck
+ Julian by his resemblance to the man who called himself Ganlesse, &ldquo;I love
+ a dire revenge, but we shall buy it somewhat too dear if these rascals set
+ the house on fire, as they are like to do, while you are parleying from
+ the window. They have thrown torches or firebrands into the hall; and it
+ is all our friends can do to keep the flame from catching the wainscoting,
+ which is old and dry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, may Heaven judge thee for thy lightness of spirit,&rdquo; answered
+ Bridgenorth; &ldquo;one would think mischief was so properly thy element, that
+ to thee it was indifferent whether friend or foe was the sufferer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he ran hastily downstairs towards the hall, into which, through
+ broken casements, and betwixt the iron bars, which prevented human
+ entrance, the assailants had thrust lighted straw, sufficient to excite
+ much smoke and some fire, and to throw the defenders of the house into
+ great confusion; insomuch, that of several shots fired hastily from the
+ windows, little or no damage followed to the besiegers, who, getting warm
+ on the onset, answered the hostile charges with loud shouts of &ldquo;Peveril
+ for ever!&rdquo; and had already made a practicable breach through the
+ brick-wall of the tenement, through which Lance, Ditchley, and several of
+ the most adventurous among their followers, made their way into the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The complete capture of the house remained, however, as far off as ever.
+ The defenders mixed with much coolness and skill that solemn and deep
+ spirit of enthusiasm which sets life at less than nothing, in comparison
+ to real or supposed duty. From the half-open doors which led into the
+ hall, they maintained a fire which began to grow fatal. One miner was shot
+ dead; three or four were wounded; and Lance scarce knew whether he should
+ draw his forces from the house, and leave it a prey to the flames, or,
+ making a desperate attack on the posts occupied by the defenders, try to
+ obtain unmolested possession of the place. At this moment, his course of
+ conduct was determined by an unexpected occurrence, of which it is
+ necessary to trace the cause.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0545m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0545m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0545.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had been, like other inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall on
+ that momentous night, awakened by the report of the sentinel&rsquo;s musket,
+ followed by the shouts of his father&rsquo;s vassals and followers; of which he
+ collected enough to guess that Bridgenorth&rsquo;s house was attacked with a
+ view to his liberation. Very doubtful of the issue of such an attempt,
+ dizzy with the slumber from which he had been so suddenly awakened, and
+ confounded with the rapid succession of events to which he had been lately
+ a witness, he speedily put on a part of his clothes, and hastened to the
+ window of his apartment. From this he could see nothing to relieve his
+ anxiety, for it looked towards a quarter different from that on which the
+ attack was made. He attempted his door; it was locked on the outside; and
+ his perplexity and anxiety became extreme, when suddenly the lock was
+ turned, and in an underdress, hastily assumed in the moment of alarm, her
+ hair streaming on her shoulders, her eyes gleaming betwixt fear and
+ resolution, Alice Bridgenorth rushed into his apartment, and seized his
+ hand with the fervent exclamation, &ldquo;Julian, save my father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The light which she bore in her hand served to show those features which
+ could rarely have been viewed by any one without emotion, but which bore
+ an expression irresistible to a lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alice,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what means this? What is the danger? Where is your
+ father?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not stay to question,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;but if you would save him,
+ follow me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time she led the way, with great speed, half-way down the
+ turret stair case which led to his room, thence turning through a side
+ door, along a long gallery, to a larger and wider stair, at the bottom of
+ which stood her father, surrounded by four or five of his friends, scarce
+ discernible through the smoke of the fire which began to take hold in the
+ hall, as well as that which arose from the repeated discharge of their own
+ firearms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian saw there was not a moment to be lost, if he meant to be a
+ successful mediator. He rushed through Bridgenorth&rsquo;s party ere they were
+ aware of his approach, and throwing himself amongst the assailants who
+ occupied the hall in considerable numbers, he assured them of his personal
+ safety, and conjured them to depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not without a few more slices at the Rump, master,&rdquo; answered Lance. &ldquo;I am
+ principally glad to see you safe and well; but here is Joe Rimegap shot as
+ dead as a buck in season, and more of us are hurt; and we&rsquo;ll have revenge,
+ and roast the Puritans like apples for lambswool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you shall roast me along with them,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;for I vow to God,
+ I will not leave the hall, being bound by parole of honour to abide with
+ Major Bridgenorth till lawfully dismissed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out on you, an you were ten times a Peveril!&rdquo; said Ditchley; &ldquo;to give
+ so many honest fellows loss and labour on your behalf, and to show them no
+ kinder countenance.&mdash;I say, beat up the fire, and burn all together!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay; but peace, my masters, and hearken to reason,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;we
+ are all here in evil condition, and you will only make it worse by
+ contention. Do you help to put out this same fire, which will else cost us
+ all dear. Keep yourselves under arms. Let Master Bridgenorth and me settle
+ some grounds of accommodation, and I trust all will be favourably made up
+ on both sides; and if not, you shall have my consent and countenance to
+ fight it out; and come on it what will, I will never forget this night&rsquo;s
+ good service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then drew Ditchley and Lance Outram aside, while the rest stood
+ suspended at his appearance and words, and expressing the utmost thanks
+ and gratitude for what they had already done, urged them, as the greatest
+ favour which they could do towards him and his father&rsquo;s house, to permit
+ him to negotiate the terms of his emancipation from thraldom; at the same
+ time forcing on Ditchley five or six gold pieces, that the brave lads of
+ Bonadventure might drink his health; whilst to Lance he expressed the
+ warmest sense of his active kindness, but protested he could only consider
+ it as good service to his house, if he was allowed to manage the matter
+ after his own fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; answered Lance, &ldquo;I am well out on it, Master Julian; for it is
+ matter beyond my mastery. All that I stand to is, that I will see you safe
+ out of this same Moultrassie Hall; for our old Naunt Ellesmere will else
+ give me but cold comfort when I come home. Truth is, I began unwillingly;
+ but when I saw the poor fellow Joe shot beside me, why, I thought we
+ should have some amends. But I put it all in your Honour&rsquo;s hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this colloquy both parties had been amicably employed in
+ extinguishing the fire, which might otherwise have been fatal to all. It
+ required a general effort to get it under; and both parties agreed on the
+ necessary labour, with as much unanimity, as if the water they brought in
+ leathern buckets from the well to throw upon the fire, had some effect in
+ slaking their mutual hostility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Necessity&mdash;thou best of peacemakers,
+ As well as surest prompter of invention&mdash;
+ Help us to composition!
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While the fire continued, the two parties laboured in active union, like
+ the jarring factions of the Jews during the siege of Jerusalem, when
+ compelled to unite in resisting an assault of the besiegers. But when the
+ last bucket of water had hissed on the few embers that continued to
+ glimmer&mdash;when the sense of mutual hostility, hitherto suspended by a
+ feeling of common danger, was in its turn rekindled&mdash;the parties,
+ mingled as they had hitherto been in one common exertion, drew off from
+ each other, and began to arrange themselves at opposite sides of the hall,
+ and handle their weapons, as if for a renewal of the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth interrupted any farther progress of this menaced hostility.
+ &ldquo;Julian Peveril,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou art free to walk thine own path, since
+ thou wilt not walk with me that road which is more safe, as well as more
+ honourable. But if you do by my counsel, you will get soon beyond the
+ British seas.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ralph Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said one of his friends, &ldquo;this is but evil and feeble
+ conduct on thine own part. Wilt thou withhold thy hand from the battle, to
+ defend, from these sons of Belial, the captive of thy bow and of thy
+ spear? Surely we are enow to deal with them in the security of the old
+ serpent, until we essay whether the Lord will not give us victory
+ therein.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hum of stern assent followed; and had not Ganlesse now interfered, the
+ combat would probably have been renewed. He took the advocate for war
+ apart into one of the window recesses, and apparently satisfied his
+ objections; for as he returned to his companions, he said to them, &ldquo;Our
+ friend hath so well argued this matter, that, verily, since he is of the
+ same mind with the worthy Major Bridgenorth, I think the youth may be set
+ at liberty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As no farther objection was offered, it only remained with Julian to thank
+ and reward those who had been active in his assistance. Having first
+ obtained from Bridgenorth a promise of indemnity to them for the riot they
+ had committed, a few kind words conveyed his sense of their services; and
+ some broad pieces, thrust into the hand of Lance Outram, furnished the
+ means for affording them a holiday. They would have remained to protect
+ him, but, fearful of farther disorder, and relying entirely on the good
+ faith of Major Bridgenorth, he dismissed them all except Lance, whom he
+ detained to attend upon him for a few minutes, till he should depart from
+ Moultrassie. But ere leaving the Hall, he could not repress his desire to
+ speak with Bridgenorth in secret; and advancing towards him, he expressed
+ such a desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tacitly granting what was asked of him, Bridgenorth led the way to a small
+ summer saloon adjoining to the Hall, where, with his usual gravity and
+ indifference of manner, he seemed to await in silence what Peveril had to
+ communicate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian found it difficult, where so little opening was afforded him, to
+ find a tone in which to open the subjects he had at heart, that should be
+ at once dignified and conciliating. &ldquo;Major Bridgenorth,&rdquo; he said at
+ length, &ldquo;you have been a son, and an affectionate one&mdash;You may
+ conceive my present anxiety&mdash;My father!&mdash;What has been designed
+ for him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the law will,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Had he walked by the counsels
+ which I procured to be given to him, he might have dwelt safely in the
+ house of his ancestors. His fate is now beyond my control&mdash;far beyond
+ yours. It must be with him as his country decide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And my mother?&rdquo; said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will consult, as she has ever done, her own duty; and create her own
+ happiness by doing so,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Believe, my designs towards
+ your family are better than they may seem through the mist which adversity
+ has spread around your house. I may triumph as a man; but as a man I must
+ also remember, in my hour, that mine enemies have had theirs.&mdash;Have
+ you aught else to say?&rdquo; he added, after a momentary pause. &ldquo;You have
+ rejected once, yea, and again, the hand I stretched out to you. Methinks
+ little more remains between us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words, which seemed to cut short farther discussion, were calmly
+ spoken; so that though they appeared to discourage farther question, they
+ could not interrupt that which still trembled on Julian&rsquo;s tongue. He made
+ a step or two towards the door; then suddenly returned. &ldquo;Your daughter?&rdquo;
+ he said&mdash;&ldquo;Major Bridgenorth&mdash;I should ask&mdash;I <i>do</i> ask
+ forgiveness for mentioning her name&mdash;but may I not inquire after her?&mdash;May
+ I not express my wishes for her future happiness?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your interest in her is but too flattering,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;but you
+ have already chosen your part; and you must be, in future, strangers to
+ each other. I may have wished it otherwise, but the hour of grace is
+ passed, during which your compliance with my advice might&mdash;I will
+ speak it plainly&mdash;have led to your union. For her happiness&mdash;if
+ such a word belongs to mortal pilgrimage&mdash;I shall care for it
+ sufficiently. She leaves this place to-day, under the guardianship of a
+ sure friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not of&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril, and stopped short; for he felt
+ he had no right to pronounce the name which came to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you pause?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;a sudden thought is often a wise,
+ almost always an honest one. With whom did you suppose I meant to entrust
+ my child, that the idea called forth so anxious an expression?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Again I should ask your forgiveness,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;for meddling where I
+ have little right to interfere. But I saw a face here that is known to me&mdash;the
+ person calls himself Ganlesse&mdash;Is it with him that you mean to
+ entrust your daughter?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even to the person who call himself Ganlesse,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, without
+ expressing either anger or surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And do you know to whom you commit a charge so precious to all who know
+ her, and so dear to yourself?&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do <i>you</i> know, who ask me the question?&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I own I do not,&rdquo; answered Julian; &ldquo;but I have seen him in a character so
+ different from that he now wears, that I feel it my duty to warn you, how
+ you entrust the charge of your child to one who can alternately play the
+ profligate or the hypocrite, as it suits his own interest or humour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth smiled contemptuously. &ldquo;I might be angry,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;with the
+ officious zeal which supposes that its green conceptions can instruct my
+ grey hairs; but, good Julian, I do but only ask from you the liberal
+ construction, that I, who have had much converse with mankind, know with
+ whom I trust what is dearest to me. He of whom thou speakest hath one
+ visage to his friends, though he may have others to the world, living
+ amongst those before whom honest features should be concealed under a
+ grotesque vizard; even as in the sinful sports of the day, called maskings
+ and mummeries, where the wise, if he show himself at all, must be
+ contented to play the apish and fantastic fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would only pray your wisdom to beware,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;of one, who, as
+ he has a vizard for others, may also have one which can disguise his real
+ features from you yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is being over careful, young man,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, more shortly
+ than he had hitherto spoken; &ldquo;if you would walk by my counsel, you will
+ attend to your own affairs, which, credit me, deserve all your care, and
+ leave others to the management of theirs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was too plain to be misunderstood; and Peveril was compelled to take
+ his leave of Bridgenorth, and of Moultrassie Hall, without farther parley
+ or explanation. The reader may imagine how oft he looked back, and tried
+ to guess, amongst the lights which continued to twinkle in various parts
+ of the building, which sparkle it was that gleamed from the bower of
+ Alice. When the road turned into another direction, he sunk into deep
+ reverie, from which he was at length roused by the voice of Lance, who
+ demanded where he intended to quarter for the night. He was unprepared to
+ answer the question, but the honest keeper himself prompted a solution of
+ the problem, by requesting that he would occupy a spare bed in the Lodge;
+ to which Julian willingly agreed. The rest of the inhabitants had retired
+ to rest when they entered; but Dame Ellesmere, apprised by a messenger of
+ her nephew&rsquo;s hospitable intent, had everything in the best readiness she
+ could, for the son of her ancient patron. Peveril betook himself to rest;
+ and, notwithstanding so many subjects of anxiety, slept soundly till the
+ morning was far advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His slumbers were first broken by Lance, who had been long up, and already
+ active in his service. He informed him, that his horse, arms, and small
+ cloak-bag had been sent from the Castle by one of Major Bridgenorth&rsquo;s
+ servants, who brought a letter, discharging from the Major&rsquo;s service the
+ unfortunate Deborah Debbitch, and prohibiting her return to the Hall. The
+ officer of the House of Commons, escorted by a strong guard, had left
+ Martindale Castle that morning early, travelling in Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s
+ carriage&mdash;his lady being also permitted to attend on him. To this he
+ had to add, that the property at the Castle was taken possession of by
+ Master Win-the-fight, the attorney, from Chesterfield, with other officers
+ of law, in name of Major Bridgenorth, a large creditor of the unfortunate
+ knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having told these Job&rsquo;s tidings, Lance paused; and, after a moment&rsquo;s
+ hesitation, declared he was resolved to quit the country, and go up to
+ London along with his young master. Julian argued the point with him; and
+ insisted he had better stay to take charge of his aunt, in case she should
+ be disturbed by these strangers. Lance replied, &ldquo;She would have one with
+ her, who would protect her well enough; for there was wherewithal to buy
+ protection amongst them. But for himself, he was resolved to follow Master
+ Julian to the death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian heartily thanked him for his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, it is not altogether out of love neither,&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;though I am
+ as loving as another; but it is, as it were, partly out of fear, lest I be
+ called over the coals for last night&rsquo;s matter; for as for the miners, they
+ will never trouble them, as the creatures only act after their kind.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will write in your behalf to Major Bridgenorth, who is bound to afford
+ you protection, if you have such fear,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, for that matter, it is not altogether fear, more than altogether
+ love,&rdquo; answered the enigmatical keeper, &ldquo;although it hath a tasting of
+ both in it. And, to speak plain truth, thus it is&mdash;Dame Debbitch and
+ Naunt Ellesmere have resolved to set up their horses together, and have
+ made up all their quarrels. And of all ghosts in the world, the worst is,
+ when an old true-love comes back to haunt a poor fellow like me. Mistress
+ Deborah, though distressed enow for the loss of her place, has been
+ already speaking of a broken sixpence, or some such token, as if a man
+ could remember such things for so many years, even if she had not gone
+ over seas, like woodcock, in the meanwhile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian could scarce forbear laughing. &ldquo;I thought you too much of a man,
+ Lance, to fear a woman marrying you whether you would or no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has been many an honest man&rsquo;s luck, for all that,&rdquo; said Lance; &ldquo;and a
+ woman in the very house has so many deuced opportunities. And then there
+ would be two upon one; for Naunt, though high enough when any of <i>your</i>
+ folks are concerned, hath some look to the main chance; and it seems
+ Mistress Deb is as rich as a Jew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you, Lance,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;have no mind to marry for cake and
+ pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, truly, master,&rdquo; answered Lance, &ldquo;unless I knew of what dough they
+ were baked. How the devil do I know how the jade came by so much? And then
+ if she speaks of tokens and love-passages, let her be the same tight lass
+ I broke the sixpence with, and I will be the same true lad to her. But I
+ never heard of true love lasting ten years; and hers, if it lives at all,
+ must be nearer twenty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then, Lance,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;since you are resolved on the thing, we
+ will go to London together; where, if I cannot retain you in my service,
+ and if my father recovers not these misfortunes, I will endeavour to
+ promote you elsewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay,&rdquo; said Lance, &ldquo;I trust to be back to bonny Martindale before it
+ is long, and to keep the greenwood, as I have been wont to do; for, as to
+ Dame Debbitch, when they have not me for their common butt, Naunt and she
+ will soon bend bows on each other. So here comes old Dame Ellesmere with
+ your breakfast. I will but give some directions about the deer to Rough
+ Ralph, my helper, and saddle my forest pony, and your honour&rsquo;s horse,
+ which is no prime one, and we will be ready to trot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was not sorry for this addition to his establishment; for Lance had
+ shown himself, on the preceding evening, a shrewd and bold fellow, and
+ attached to his master. He therefore set himself to reconcile his aunt to
+ parting with her nephew for some time. Her unlimited devotion for &ldquo;the
+ family,&rdquo; readily induced the old lady to acquiesce in his proposal, though
+ not without a gentle sigh over the ruins of a castle in the air, which was
+ founded on the well-saved purse of Mistress Deborah Debbitch. &ldquo;At any
+ rate,&rdquo; she thought, &ldquo;it was as well that Lance should be out of the way of
+ that bold, long-legged, beggarly trollop, Cis Sellok.&rdquo; But to poor Deb
+ herself, the expatriation of Lance, whom she had looked to as a sailor to
+ a port under his lee, for which he can run, if weather becomes foul, was a
+ second severe blow, following close on her dismissal from the profitable
+ service of Major Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian visited the disconsolate damsel, in hopes of gaining some light
+ upon Bridgenorth&rsquo;s projects regarding his daughter&mdash;the character of
+ this Ganlesse&mdash;and other matters, with which her residence in the
+ family might have made her acquainted; but he found her by far too much
+ troubled in mind to afford him the least information. The name of Ganlesse
+ she did not seem to recollect&mdash;that of Alice rendered her hysterical&mdash;that
+ of Bridgenorth, furious. She numbered up the various services she had
+ rendered in the family&mdash;and denounced the plague of swartness to the
+ linen&mdash;of leanness to the poultry&mdash;of dearth and dishonour to
+ the housekeeping&mdash;and of lingering sickness and early death to Alice;&mdash;all
+ which evils, she averred, had only been kept off by her continued,
+ watchful, and incessant cares.&mdash;Then again turning to the subject of
+ the fugitive Lance, she expressed such a total contempt of that
+ mean-spirited fellow, in a tone between laughing and crying, as satisfied
+ Julian it was not a topic likely to act as a sedative; and that,
+ therefore, unless he made a longer stay than the urgent state of his
+ affairs permitted, he was not likely to find Mistress Deborah in such a
+ state of composure as might enable him to obtain from her any rational or
+ useful information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance, who good-naturedly took upon himself the whole burden of Dame
+ Debbitch&rsquo;s mental alienation, or &ldquo;taking on,&rdquo; as such fits of <i>passio
+ hysterica</i> are usually termed in the country, had too much feeling to
+ present himself before the victim of her own sensibility, and of his
+ obduracy. He therefore intimated to Julian, by his assistant Ralph, that
+ the horses stood saddled behind the Lodge, and that all was ready for
+ their departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian took the hint, and they were soon mounted, and clearing the road,
+ at a rapid trot, in the direction of London; but not by the most usual
+ route. Julian calculated that the carriage in which his father was
+ transported would travel slowly; and it was his purpose, if possible, to
+ get to London before it should arrive there, in order to have time to
+ consult, with the friends of his family, what measures should be taken in
+ his father&rsquo;s behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner they advanced a day&rsquo;s journey towards London; at the
+ conclusion of which, Julian found his resting-place in a small inn upon
+ the road. No one came, at the first call, to attend upon the guests and
+ their horses, although the house was well lighted up; and there was a
+ prodigious chattering in the kitchen, such as can only be produced by a
+ French cook when his mystery is in the very moment of projection. It
+ instantly occurred to Julian&mdash;so rare was the ministry of these
+ Gallic artists at that time&mdash;that the clamour he heard must
+ necessarily be produced by the Sieur Chaubert, on whose <i>plats</i> he
+ had lately feasted, along with Smith and Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One, or both of these, were therefore probably in the little inn; and if
+ so, he might have some opportunity to discover their real purpose and
+ character. How to avail himself of such a meeting he knew not; but chance
+ favoured him more than he could have expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can scarce receive you, gentlefolks,&rdquo; said the landlord, who at length
+ appeared at the door; &ldquo;here be a sort of quality in my house to-night,
+ whom less than all will not satisfy; nor all neither, for that matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are but plain fellows, landlord,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;we are bound for
+ Moseley-market, and can get no farther to-night. Any hole will serve us,
+ no matter what.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said the honest host, &ldquo;if that be the case, I must e&rsquo;en put one of
+ you behind the bar, though the gentlemen have desired to be private; the
+ other must take heart of grace and help me at the tap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The tap for me,&rdquo; said Lance, without waiting his master&rsquo;s decision. &ldquo;It
+ is an element which I could live and die in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The bar, then, for me,&rdquo; said Peveril; and stepping back, whispered to
+ Lance to exchange cloaks with him, desirous, if possible, to avoid being
+ recognised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exchange was made in an instant; and presently afterwards the landlord
+ brought a light; and as he guided Julian into his hostelry, cautioned him
+ to sit quiet in the place where he should stow him; and if he was
+ discovered, to say that he was one of the house, and leave him to make it
+ good. &ldquo;You will hear what the gallants say,&rdquo; he added; &ldquo;but I think thou
+ wilt carry away but little on it; for when it is not French, it is Court
+ gibberish; and that is as hard to construe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bar, into which our hero was inducted on these conditions, seemed
+ formed, with respect to the public room, upon the principle of a citadel,
+ intended to observe and bridle a rebellious capital. Here sat the host on
+ the Saturday evenings, screened from the observation of his guests, yet
+ with the power of observing both their wants and their behaviour, and also
+ that of overhearing their conversation&mdash;a practice which he was much
+ addicted to, being one of that numerous class of philanthropists, to whom
+ their neighbours&rsquo; business is of as much consequence, or rather more, than
+ their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he planted his new guest, with a repeated caution not to disturb the
+ gentlemen by speech or motion; and a promise that he should be speedily
+ accommodated with a cold buttock of beef, and a tankard of home-brewed.
+ And here he left him with no other light than that which glimmered from
+ the well-illuminated apartment within, through a sort of shuttle which
+ accommodated the landlord with a view into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This situation, inconvenient enough in itself, was, on the present
+ occasion, precisely what Julian would have selected. He wrapped himself in
+ the weather-beaten cloak of Lance Outram, which had been stained, by age
+ and weather, into a thousand variations from its original Lincoln green;
+ and with as little noise as he could, set himself to observe the two
+ inmates, who had engrossed to themselves the whole of the apartment, which
+ was usually open to the public. They sat by a table well covered with such
+ costly rarities, as could only have been procured by much forecast, and
+ prepared by the exquisite Mons. Chaubert; to which both seemed to do much
+ justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian had little difficulty in ascertaining, that one of the travellers
+ was, as he had anticipated, the master of the said Chaubert, or, as he was
+ called by Ganlesse, Smith; the other, who faced him, he had never seen
+ before. This last was dressed like a gallant of the first order. His
+ periwig, indeed, as he travelled on horseback, did not much exceed in size
+ the bar-wig of a modern lawyer; but then the essence which he shook from
+ it with every motion, impregnated a whole apartment, which was usually
+ only perfumed by that vulgar herb, tobacco. His riding-coat was laced in
+ the newest and most courtly style; and Grammont himself might have envied
+ the embroidery of his waistcoat, and the peculiar cut of his breeches,
+ which buttoned above the knee, permitting the shape of a very handsome leg
+ to be completely seen. This, by the proprietor thereof, had been stretched
+ out upon a stool, and he contemplated its proportions, from time to time,
+ with infinite satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conversation between these worthies was so interesting, that we
+ propose to assign to it another chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;This is some creature of the elements,
+ Most like your sea-gull. He can wheel and whistle
+ His screaming song, e&rsquo;en when the storm is loudest&mdash;
+ Take for his sheeted couch the restless foam
+ Of the wild wave-crest&mdash;slumber in the calm,
+ And daily with the storm. Yet &lsquo;tis a gull,
+ An arrant gull, with all this.
+ &mdash;THE CHAMPION.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And here is to thee,&rdquo; said the fashionable gallant whom we have
+ described, &ldquo;honest Tom; and a cup of welcome to thee out of Looby-land.
+ Why, thou hast been so long in the country, that thou hast got a bumpkinly
+ clod-compelling sort of look thyself. That greasy doublet fits thee as if
+ it were thy reserved Sunday&rsquo;s apparel; and the points seem as if they were
+ stay-laces bought for thy true-love Marjory. I marvel thou canst still
+ relish a ragout. Methinks now, to a stomach bound in such a jacket, eggs
+ and bacon were a diet more conforming.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rally away, my good lord, while wit lasts,&rdquo; answered his companion;
+ &ldquo;yours is not the sort of ammunition which will bear much expenditure. Or
+ rather, tell me news from Court, since we have met so opportunely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would have asked me these an hour ago,&rdquo; said the lord, &ldquo;had not your
+ very soul been under Chaubert&rsquo;s covered dishes. You remembered King&rsquo;s
+ affairs will keep cool, and <i>entre-mets</i> must be eaten hot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, my lord; I only kept common talk whilst that eavesdropping rascal
+ of a landlord was in the room; so that, now the coast is clear once more,
+ I pray you for news from Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Plot is nonsuited,&rdquo; answered the courtier&mdash;&ldquo;Sir George Wakeman
+ acquitted&mdash;the witnesses discredited by the jury&mdash;Scroggs, who
+ ranted on one side, is now ranting on t&rsquo;other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rat the Plot, Wakeman, witnesses, Papists, and Protestants, all together!
+ Do you think I care for such trash as that?&mdash;Till the Plot comes up
+ the Palace backstair, and gets possession of old Rowley&rsquo;s own imagination,
+ I care not a farthing who believes or disbelieves. I hang by him will bear
+ me out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said the lord, &ldquo;the next news is Rochester&rsquo;s disgrace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Disgraced!&mdash;How, and for what? The morning I came off he stood as
+ fair as any one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s over&mdash;the epitaph[*] has broken his neck&mdash;and now he may
+ write one for his own Court favour, for it is dead and buried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The epitaph alluded to is the celebrated epigram made by Rochester
+ on Charles II. It was composed at the King&rsquo;s request, who
+ nevertheless resented its poignancy.
+
+ The lines are well known:&mdash;
+
+ &ldquo;Here lies our sovereign lord the King,
+ Whose word no man relies on,
+ Who never said a foolish thing,
+ And never did a wise one.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The epitaph!&rdquo; exclaimed Tom; &ldquo;why, I was by when it was made; and it
+ passed for an excellent good jest with him whom it was made upon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, so it did amongst ourselves,&rdquo; answered his companion; &ldquo;but it got
+ abroad, and had a run like a mill-race. It was in every coffee-house, and
+ in half the diurnals. Grammont translated it into French too; and there is
+ no laughing at so sharp a jest, when it is dinned into your ears on all
+ sides. So disgraced is the author; and but for his Grace of Buckingham,
+ the Court would be as dull as my Lord Chancellor&rsquo;s wig.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or as the head it covers.&mdash;Well, my lord, the fewer at Court, there
+ is the more room for those that can bustle there. But there are two
+ mainstrings of Shaftesbury&rsquo;s fiddle broken&mdash;the Popish Plot fallen
+ into discredit&mdash;and Rochester disgraced. Changeful times&mdash;but
+ here is to the little man who shall mend them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I apprehend you,&rdquo; replied his lordship; &ldquo;and meet your health with my
+ love. Trust me, my lord loves you, and longs for you.&mdash;Nay, I have
+ done you reason.&mdash;By your leave, the cup is with me. Here is to his
+ buxom Grace of Bucks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As blithe a peer,&rdquo; said Smith, &ldquo;as ever turned night to day. Nay, it
+ shall be an overflowing bumper, an you will; and I will drink it <i>super
+ naculum</i>.&mdash;And how stands the great Madam?&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The Duchess of Portsmouth, Charles II.&lsquo;s favourite mistress; very
+ unpopular at the time of the Popish Plot, as well from her
+ religion as her country, being a Frenchwoman and a Catholic.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stoutly against all change,&rdquo; answered the lord&mdash;&ldquo;Little Anthony[*]
+ can make nought of her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, the politician and
+ intriguer of the period.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then he shall bring her influence to nought. Hark in thine ear. Thou
+ knowest&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; (Here he whispered so low that Julian could not
+ catch the sound.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know him?&rdquo; answered the other&mdash;&ldquo;Know Ned of the Island?&mdash;To be
+ sure I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is the man that shall knot the great fiddle-strings that have snapped.
+ Say I told you so; and thereupon I give thee his health.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thereupon I pledge thee,&rdquo; said the young nobleman, &ldquo;which on any
+ other argument I were loath to do&mdash;thinking of Ned as somewhat the
+ cut of a villain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Granted, man&mdash;granted,&rdquo; said the other,&mdash;&ldquo;a very thorough-paced
+ rascal; but able, my lord, able and necessary; and, in this plan,
+ indispensable.&mdash;Pshaw!&mdash;This champagne turns stronger as it gets
+ older, I think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark, mine honest fellow,&rdquo; said the courtier; &ldquo;I would thou wouldst give
+ me some item of all this mystery. Thou hast it, I know; for whom do men
+ entrust but trusty Chiffinch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is your pleasure to say so, my lord,&rdquo; answered Smith (whom we shall
+ hereafter call by his real name of Chiffinch) with such drunken gravity,
+ for his speech had become a little altered by his copious libations in the
+ course of the evening,&mdash;&ldquo;few men know more, or say less, than I do;
+ and it well becomes my station. <i>Conticuere omnes</i>, as the grammar
+ hath it&mdash;all men should learn to hold their tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Except with a friend, Tom&mdash;except with a friend. Thou wilt never be
+ such a dogbolt as to refuse a hint to a friend? Come, you get too wise and
+ statesman-like for your office.&mdash;The ligatures of thy most peasantly
+ jacket there are like to burst with thy secret. Come, undo a button, man;
+ it is for the health of thy constitution&mdash;Let out a reef; and let thy
+ chosen friend know what is meditating. Thou knowest I am as true as
+ thyself to little Anthony, if he can but get uppermost.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>If</i>, thou lordly infidel!&rdquo; said Chiffinch&mdash;&ldquo;talk&rsquo;st thou to me
+ of <i>ifs?</i>&mdash;There is neither <i>if</i> nor <i>and</i> in the
+ matter. The great Madam shall be pulled a peg down&mdash;the great Plot
+ screwed a peg or two up. Thou knowest Ned?&mdash;Honest Ned had a
+ brother&rsquo;s death to revenge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have heard so,&rdquo; said the nobleman; &ldquo;and that his persevering resentment
+ of that injury was one of the few points which seemed to be a sort of
+ heathenish virtue in him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Chiffinch, &ldquo;in manoeuvring to bring about this revenge,
+ which he hath laboured at many a day, he hath discovered a treasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&mdash;In the Isle of Man?&rdquo; said his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assure yourself of it.&mdash;She is a creature so lovely, that she needs
+ but be seen to put down every one of the favourites, from Portsmouth and
+ Cleveland down to that threepenny baggage, Mistress Nelly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my word, Chiffinch,&rdquo; said my lord, &ldquo;that is a reinforcement after the
+ fashion of thine own best tactics. But bethink thee, man! To make such a
+ conquest, there wants more than a cherry-cheek and a bright eye&mdash;there
+ must be wit&mdash;wit, man, and manners, and a little sense besides, to
+ keep influence when it is gotten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! will you tell me what goes to this vocation?&rdquo; said Chiffinch.
+ &ldquo;Here, pledge me her health in a brimmer.&mdash;Nay, you shall do it on
+ knees, too.&mdash;Never such a triumphant beauty was seen&mdash;I went to
+ church on purpose, for the first time these ten years&mdash;Yet I lie, it
+ was not to church neither&mdash;it was to chapel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To chapel!&mdash;What the devil, is she a Puritan?&rdquo; exclaimed the other
+ courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure she is. Do you think I would be accessory to bringing a Papist
+ into favour in these times, when, as my good Lord said in the House, there
+ should not be a Popish manservant, nor a Popish maid-servant, not so much
+ as dog or cat, left to bark or mew about the King!&rdquo;[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Such was the extravagance of Shaftesbury&rsquo;s eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But consider, Chiffie, the dislikelihood of her pleasing,&rdquo; said the noble
+ courtier.&mdash;&ldquo;What! old Rowley, with his wit, and love of wit&mdash;his
+ wildness, and love of wildness&mdash;he form a league with a silly,
+ scrupulous, unidea&rsquo;d Puritan!&mdash;Not if she were Venus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou knowest nought of the matter,&rdquo; answered Chiffinch. &ldquo;I tell thee, the
+ fine contrast between the seeming saint and falling sinner will give zest
+ to the old gentleman&rsquo;s inclination. If I do not know him, who does?&mdash;Her
+ health, my lord, on your bare knee, as you would live to be of the
+ bedchamber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pledge you most devoutly,&rdquo; answered his friend. &ldquo;But you have not told
+ me how the acquaintance is to be made; for you cannot, I think, carry her
+ to Whitehall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, my dear lord, you would have the whole secret! but that I cannot
+ afford&mdash;I can spare a friend a peep at my ends, but no one must look
+ on the means by which they are achieved.&rdquo;&mdash;So saying, he shook his
+ drunken head most wisely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The villainous design which this discourse implied, and which his heart
+ told him was designed against Alice Bridgenorth, stirred Julian so
+ extremely, that he involuntarily shifted his posture, and laid his hand on
+ his sword hilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch heard a rustling, and broke off, exclaiming, &ldquo;Hark!&mdash;Zounds,
+ something moved&mdash;I trust I have told the tale to no ears but thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will cut off any which have drunk in but a syllable of thy words,&rdquo; said
+ the nobleman; and raising a candle, he took a hasty survey of the
+ apartment. Seeing nothing that could incur his menaced resentment, he
+ replaced the light and continued:&mdash;&ldquo;Well, suppose the Belle Louise de
+ Querouaille[*] shoots from her high station in the firmament, how will you
+ rear up the downfallen Plot again&mdash;for without that same Plot, think
+ of it as thou wilt, we have no change of hands&mdash;and matters remain as
+ they were, with a Protestant courtezan instead of a Papist&mdash;Little
+ Anthony can but little speed without that Plot of his&mdash;I believe, in
+ my conscience, he begot it himself.&rdquo; [+]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Charles&rsquo;s principal mistress <i>en titre</i>. She was created Duchess
+ of Portsmouth.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[+] Shaftesbury himself is supposed to have said that he knew not who
+ was the inventor of the Plot, but that he himself had all the
+ advantage of the discovery.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whoever begot it,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, &ldquo;he hath adopted it; and a thriving
+ babe it has been to him. Well, then, though it lies out of my way, I will
+ play Saint Peter again&mdash;up with t&rsquo;other key, and unlock t&rsquo;other
+ mystery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now thou speakest like a good fellow; and I will, with my own hands,
+ unwire this fresh flask, to begin a brimmer to the success of thy
+ achievement.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; continued the communicative Chiffinch, &ldquo;thou knowest that
+ they have long had a nibbling at the old Countess of Derby.&mdash;So Ned
+ was sent down&mdash;he owes her an old accompt, thou knowest&mdash;with
+ private instructions to possess himself of the island, if he could, by
+ help of some of his old friends. He hath ever kept up spies upon her; and
+ happy man was he, to think his hour of vengeance was come so nigh. But he
+ missed his blow; and the old girl being placed on her guard, was soon in a
+ condition to make Ned smoke for it. Out of the island he came with little
+ advantage for having entered it; when, by some means&mdash;for the devil,
+ I think, stands ever his friend&mdash;he obtained information concerning a
+ messenger, whom her old Majesty of Man had sent to London to make party in
+ her behalf. Ned stuck himself to this fellow&mdash;a raw, half-bred lad,
+ son of an old blundering Cavalier of the old stamp, down in Derbyshire&mdash;and
+ so managed the swain, that he brought him to the place where I was
+ waiting, in anxious expectation of the pretty one I told you of. By Saint
+ Anthony, for I will swear by no meaner oath, I stared when I saw this
+ great lout&mdash;not that the fellow is so ill-looked neither&mdash;I
+ stared like&mdash;like&mdash;good now, help me to a simile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Like Saint Anthony&rsquo;s pig, an it were sleek,&rdquo; said the young lord; &ldquo;your
+ eyes, Chiffie, have the very blink of one. But what hath all this to do
+ with the Plot? Hold, I have had wine enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall not balk me,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; and a jingling was heard, as if
+ he were filling his comrade&rsquo;s glass with a very unsteady hand. &ldquo;Hey&mdash;What
+ the devil is the matter?&mdash;I used to carry my glass steady&mdash;very
+ steady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, but this stranger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, he swept at game and ragout as he would at spring beef or summer
+ mutton. Never saw so unnurtured a cub&mdash;Knew no more what he ate than
+ an infidel&mdash;I cursed him by my gods when I saw Chaubert&rsquo;s <i>chef-d&rsquo;
+ oeuvres</i> glutted down so indifferent a throat. We took the freedom to
+ spice his goblet a little, and ease him of his packet of letters; and the
+ fool went on his way the next morning with a budget artificially filled
+ with grey paper. Ned would have kept him, in hopes to have made a witness
+ of him, but the boy was not of that mettle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How will you prove your letters?&rdquo; said the courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La you there, my lord,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; &ldquo;one may see with half an eye,
+ for all your laced doublet, that you have been of the family of
+ Furnival&rsquo;s, before your brother&rsquo;s death sent you to Court. How prove the
+ letters?&mdash;Why, we have but let the sparrow fly with a string round
+ his foot.&mdash;We have him again so soon as we list.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, thou art turned a very Machiavel, Chiffinch,&rdquo; said his friend. &ldquo;But
+ how if the youth proved restive?&mdash;I have heard these Peak men have
+ hot heads and hard hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Trouble not yourself&mdash;that was cared for, my lord,&rdquo; said Chiffinch&mdash;&ldquo;his
+ pistols might bark, but they could not bite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most exquisite Chiffinch, thou art turned micher as well as padder&mdash;Canst
+ both rob a man and kidnap him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Micher and padder&mdash;what terms be these?&rdquo; said Chiffinch. &ldquo;Methinks
+ these are sounds to lug out upon. You will have me angry to the degree of
+ falling foul&mdash;robber and kidnapper!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mistake verb for noun-substantive,&rdquo; replied his lordship; &ldquo;I said <i>rob</i>
+ and <i>kidnap</i>&mdash;a man may do either once and away without being
+ professional.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But not without spilling a little foolish noble blood, or some such
+ red-coloured gear,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, starting up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh yes,&rdquo; said his lordship; &ldquo;all this may be without these dire
+ consequences, and as you will find to-morrow, when you return to England;
+ for at present you are in the land of Champagne, Chiffie; and that you may
+ continue so, I drink thee this parting cup to line thy nightcap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not refuse your pledge,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; &ldquo;but I drink to thee in
+ dudgeon and in hostility&mdash;It is cup of wrath, and a gage of battle.
+ To-morrow, by dawn, I will have thee at point of fox, wert thou the last
+ of the Savilles.&mdash;What the devil! think you I fear you because you
+ are a lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, Chiffinch,&rdquo; answered his companion. &ldquo;I know thou fearest nothing
+ but beans and bacon, washed down with bumpkin-like beer.&mdash;Adieu,
+ sweet Chiffinch&mdash;to bed&mdash;Chiffinch&mdash;to bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he lifted a candle, and left the apartment. And Chiffinch, whom
+ the last draught had nearly overpowered, had just strength enough left to
+ do the same, muttering, as he staggered out, &ldquo;Yes, he shall answer it.&mdash;Dawn
+ of day? D&mdash;n me&mdash;It is come already&mdash;Yonder&rsquo;s the dawn&mdash;No,
+ d&mdash;n me, &lsquo;tis the fire glancing on the cursed red lattice&mdash;It is
+ the smell of the brandy in this cursed room&mdash;It could not be the wine&mdash;Well,
+ old Rowley shall send me no more errands to the country again&mdash;Steady,
+ steady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he reeled out of the apartment, leaving Peveril to think over
+ the extraordinary conversation he had just heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of Chiffinch, the well-known minister of Charles&rsquo;s pleasures, was
+ nearly allied to the part which he seemed about to play in the present
+ intrigue; but that Christian, whom he had always supposed a Puritan as
+ strict as his brother-in-law, Bridgenorth, should be associated with him
+ in a plot so infamous, seemed alike unnatural and monstrous. The near
+ relationship might blind Bridgenorth, and warrant him in confiding his
+ daughter to such a man&rsquo;s charge; but what a wretch he must be, that could
+ coolly meditate such an ignominious abuse of his trust! In doubt whether
+ he could credit for a moment the tale which Chiffinch had revealed, he
+ hastily examined his packet, and found that the sealskin case in which it
+ had been wrapt up, now only contained an equal quantity of waste paper. If
+ he had wanted farther confirmation, the failure of the shot which he fired
+ at Bridgenorth, and of which the wadding only struck him, showed that his
+ arms had been tampered with. He examined the pistol which still remained
+ charged, and found that the ball had been drawn. &ldquo;May I perish,&rdquo; said he
+ to himself, &ldquo;amid these villainous intrigues, but thou shalt be more
+ surely loaded, and to better purpose! The contents of these papers may
+ undo my benefactress&mdash;their having been found on me, may ruin my
+ father&mdash;that I have been the bearer of them, may cost, in these fiery
+ times, my own life&mdash;that I care least for&mdash;they form a branch of
+ the scheme laid against the honour and happiness of a creature so
+ innocent, that it is almost sin to think of her within the neighbourhood
+ of such infamous knaves. I will recover the letters at all risks&mdash;But
+ how?&mdash;that is to be thought on.&mdash;Lance is stout and trusty; and
+ when a bold deed is once resolved upon, there never yet lacked the means
+ of executing it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His host now entered, with an apology for his long absence; and after
+ providing Peveril with some refreshments, invited him to accept, for his
+ night-quarters, the accommodation of a remote hayloft, which he was to
+ share with his comrade; professing, at the same time, he could hardly have
+ afforded them this courtesy, but out of deference to the exquisite talents
+ of Lance Outram, as assistant at the tap; where, indeed, it seems probable
+ that he, as well as the admiring landlord, did that evening contrive to
+ drink nearly as much liquor as they drew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lance was a seasoned vessel, on whom liquor made no lasting
+ impression; so that when Peveril awaked that trusty follower at dawn, he
+ found him cool enough to comprehend and enter into the design which he
+ expressed, of recovering the letters which had been abstracted from his
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having considered the whole matter with much attention, Lance shrugged,
+ grinned, and scratched his head; and at length manfully expressed his
+ resolution. &ldquo;Well, my naunt speaks truth in her old saw&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;He that serves Peveril maunna be slack,
+ Neither for weather, nor yet for wrack.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And then again, my good dame was wont to say, that whenever Peveril was in
+ a broil, Outram was in a stew; so I will never bear a base mind, but even
+ hold a part with you as my fathers have done with yours, for four
+ generations, whatever more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken like a most gallant Outram,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and were we but rid of
+ that puppy lord and his retinue, we two could easily deal with the other
+ three.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two Londoners and a Frenchman?&rdquo; said Lance,&mdash;&ldquo;I would take them in
+ mine own hand. And as for my Lord Saville, as they call him, I heard word
+ last night that he and all his men of gilded gingerbread&mdash;that looked
+ at an honest fellow like me, as if they were the ore and I the dross&mdash;are
+ all to be off this morning to some races, or such-like junketings, about
+ Tutbury. It was that brought him down here, where he met this other
+ civet-cat by accident.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, even as Lance spoke, a trampling was heard of horses in the
+ yard; and from the hatch of their hayloft they beheld Lord Saville&rsquo;s
+ attendants mustered, and ready to set out as soon as he could make his
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So ho, Master Jeremy,&rdquo; said one of the fellows, to a sort of principal
+ attendant, who just came out of the house, &ldquo;methinks the wine has proved a
+ sleeping cup to my lord this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Jeremy, &ldquo;he hath been up before light writing letters for
+ London; and to punish thy irreverence, thou, Jonathan, shalt be the man to
+ ride back with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so to miss the race?&rdquo; said Jonathan sulkily; &ldquo;I thank you for this
+ good turn, good Master Jeremy; and hang me if I forget it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther discussion was cut short by the appearance of the young nobleman,
+ who, as he came out of the inn, said to Jeremy, &ldquo;These be the letters. Let
+ one of the knaves ride to London for life and death, and deliver them as
+ directed; and the rest of them get to horse and follow me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jeremy gave Jonathan the packet with a malicious smile; and the
+ disappointed groom turned his horse&rsquo;s head sullenly towards London, while
+ Lord Saville, and the rest of his retinue, rode briskly off in an opposite
+ direction, pursued by the benedictions of the host and his family, who
+ stood bowing and courtesying at the door, in gratitude, doubtless, for the
+ receipt of an unconscionable reckoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was full three hours after their departure, that Chiffinch lounged into
+ the room in which they had supped, in a brocade nightgown, and green
+ velvet cap, turned up with the most costly Brussels lace. He seemed but
+ half awake; and it was with drowsy voice that he called for a cup of cold
+ small beer. His manner and appearance were those of a man who had wrestled
+ hard with Bacchus on the preceding evening, and had scarce recovered the
+ effects of his contest with the jolly god. Lance, instructed by his master
+ to watch the motions of the courtier, officiously attended with the
+ cooling beverage he called for, pleading, as an excuse to the landlord,
+ his wish to see a Londoner in his morning-gown and cap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had Chiffinch taken his morning draught, than he inquired after
+ Lord Saville.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His lordship was mounted and away by peep of dawn,&rdquo; was Lance&rsquo;s reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the devil!&rdquo; exclaimed Chiffinch; &ldquo;why, this is scarce civil.&mdash;What!
+ off for the races with his whole retinue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All but one,&rdquo; replied Lance, &ldquo;whom his lordship sent back to London with
+ letters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To London with letters!&rdquo; said Chiffinch. &ldquo;Why, I am for London, and could
+ have saved his express a labour.&mdash;But stop&mdash;hold&mdash;I begin
+ to recollect&mdash;d&mdash;&mdash;n, can I have blabbed?&mdash;I have&mdash;I
+ have&mdash;I remember it all now&mdash;I have blabbed; and to the very
+ weasel of the Court, who sucks the yelk out of every man&rsquo;s secret. Furies
+ and fire&mdash;that my afternoons should ruin my mornings thus!&mdash;I
+ must turn boon companion and good fellow in my cups&mdash;and have my
+ confidences and my quarrels&mdash;my friends and my enemies, with a plague
+ to me, as if any one could do a man much good or harm but his own self.
+ His messenger must be stopped, though&mdash;I will put a spoke in his
+ wheel.&mdash;Hark ye, drawer-fellow&mdash;call my groom hither&mdash;call
+ Tom Beacon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance obeyed; but failed not, when he had introduced the domestic, to
+ remain in the apartment, in order to hear what should pass betwixt him and
+ his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark ye, Tom,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, &ldquo;here are five pieces for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What&rsquo;s to be done now, I trow?&rdquo; said Tom, without even the ceremony of
+ returning thanks, which he was probably well aware would not be received
+ even in part payment of the debt he was incurring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mount your fleet nag, Tom&mdash;ride like the devil&mdash;overtake the
+ groom whom Lord Saville despatched to London this morning&mdash;lame his
+ horse&mdash;break his bones&mdash;fill him as drunk as the Baltic sea; or
+ do whatever may best and most effectively stop his journey.&mdash;Why does
+ the lout stand there without answering me? Dost understand me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ay, Master Chiffinch,&rdquo; said Tom; &ldquo;and so I am thinking doth this
+ honest man here, who need not have heard quite so much of your counsel, an
+ it had been your will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am bewitched this morning,&rdquo; said Chiffinch to himself, &ldquo;or else the
+ champagne runs in my head still. My brain has become the very lowlands of
+ Holland&mdash;a gill-cup would inundate it&mdash;Hark thee, fellow,&rdquo; he
+ added, addressing Lance, &ldquo;keep my counsel&mdash;there is a wager betwixt
+ Lord Saville and me, which of us shall first have a letter in London. Here
+ is to drink my health, and bring luck on my side. Say nothing of it; but
+ help Tom to his nag.&mdash;Tom, ere thou startest come for thy credentials&mdash;I
+ will give thee a letter to the Duke of Bucks, that may be evidence thou
+ wert first in town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Beacon ducked and exited; and Lance, after having made some show of
+ helping him to horse, ran back to tell his master the joyful intelligence,
+ that a lucky accident had abated Chiffinch&rsquo;s party to their own number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril immediately ordered his horses to be got ready; and, so soon as
+ Tom Beacon was despatched towards London, on a rapid trot, had the
+ satisfaction to observe Chiffinch, with his favourite Chaubert, mount to
+ pursue the same journey, though at a more moderate rate. He permitted them
+ to attain such a distance, that they might be dogged without suspicion;
+ then paid his reckoning, mounted his horse, and followed, keeping his men
+ carefully in view, until he should come to a place proper for the
+ enterprise which he meditated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been Peveril&rsquo;s intention, that when they came to some solitary part
+ of the road, they should gradually mend their pace, until they overtook
+ Chaubert&mdash;that Lance Outram should then drop behind, in order to
+ assail the man of spits and stoves, while he himself, spurring onwards,
+ should grapple with Chiffinch. But this scheme presupposed that the master
+ and servant should travel in the usual manner&mdash;the latter riding a
+ few yards behind the former. Whereas, such and so interesting were the
+ subjects of discussion betwixt Chiffinch and the French cook, that,
+ without heeding the rules of etiquette, they rode on together, amicably
+ abreast, carrying on a conversation on the mysteries of the table, which
+ the ancient Comus, or a modern gastronome, might have listened to with
+ pleasure. It was therefore necessary to venture on them both at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose, when they saw a long tract of road before them, unvaried
+ by the least appearance of man, beast, or human habitation, they began to
+ mend their pace, that they might come up to Chiffinch, without giving him
+ any alarm, by a sudden and suspicious increase of haste. In this manner
+ they lessened the distance which separated them till they were within
+ about twenty yards, when Peveril, afraid that Chiffinch might recognise
+ him at a nearer approach, and so trust to his horse&rsquo;s heels, made Lance
+ the signal to charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sudden increase of their speed, and the noise with which it was
+ necessarily attended, Chiffinch looked around, but had time to do no more,
+ for Lance, who had pricked his pony (which was much more speedy than
+ Julian&rsquo;s horse) into full gallop, pushed, without ceremony, betwixt the
+ courtier and his attendant; and ere Chaubert had time for more than one
+ exclamation, he upset both horse and Frenchman,&mdash;<i>morbleu!</i>
+ thrilling from his tongue as he rolled on the ground amongst the various
+ articles of his occupation, which, escaping from the budget in which he
+ bore them, lay tumbled upon the highway in strange disorder; while Lance,
+ springing from his palfrey, commanded his foeman to be still, under no
+ less a penalty than that of death, if he attempted to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Chiffinch could avenge his trusty follower&rsquo;s downfall, his own
+ bridle was seized by Julian, who presented a pistol with the other hand,
+ and commanded him to stand or die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch, though effeminate, was no coward. He stood still as commanded,
+ and said, with firmness, &ldquo;Rogue, you have taken me at surprise. If you are
+ highwaymen, there is my purse. Do us no bodily harm, and spare the budget
+ of spices and sauces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look you, Master Chiffinch,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;this is no time for dallying.
+ I am no highwayman, but a man of honour. Give me back that packet which
+ you stole from me the other night; or, by all that is good, I will send a
+ brace of balls through you, and search for it at leisure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What night?&mdash;What packet?&rdquo; answered Chiffinch, confused; yet willing
+ to protract the time for the chance of assistance, or to put Peveril off
+ his guard. &ldquo;I know nothing of what you mean. If you are a man of honour,
+ let me draw my sword, and I will do you right, as a gentleman should do to
+ another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dishonourable rascal!&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;you escape not in this manner. You
+ plundered me when you had me at odds; and I am not the fool to let my
+ advantage escape, now that my turn is come. Yield up the packet; and then,
+ if you will, I will fight you on equal terms. But first,&rdquo; he reiterated,
+ &ldquo;yield up the packet, or I will instantly send you where the tenor of your
+ life will be hard to answer for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of Peveril&rsquo;s voice, the fierceness of his eye, and the manner in
+ which he held the loaded weapon, within a hand&rsquo;s-breadth of Chiffinch&rsquo;s
+ head, convinced the last there was neither room for compromise, nor time
+ for trifling. He thrust his hand into a side pocket of his cloak, and with
+ visible reluctance, produced those papers and despatches with which Julian
+ had been entrusted by the Countess of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are five in number,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and you have given me only four.
+ Your life depends on full restitution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It escaped from my hand,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, producing the missing document&mdash;&ldquo;There
+ it is. Now, sir, your pleasure is fulfilled, unless,&rdquo; he added sulkily,
+ &ldquo;you design either murder or farther robbery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Base wretch!&rdquo; said Peveril, withdrawing his pistol, yet keeping a
+ watchful eye on Chiffinch&rsquo;s motions, &ldquo;thou art unworthy any honest man&rsquo;s
+ sword; and yet, if you dare draw your own, as you proposed but now, I am
+ willing to give you a chance upon fair equality of terms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Equality!&rdquo; said Chiffinch sneeringly; &ldquo;yes, a proper equality&mdash;sword
+ and pistol against single rapier, and two men upon one, for Chaubert is no
+ fighter. No sir; I shall seek amends upon some more fitting occasion, and
+ with more equal weapons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By backbiting, or by poison, base pander!&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;these are thy
+ means of vengeance. But mark me&mdash;I know your vile purpose respecting
+ a lady who is too worthy that her name should be uttered in such a
+ worthless ear. Thou hast done me one injury, and thou see&rsquo;st I have repaid
+ it. But prosecute this farther villainy, and be assured I will put thee to
+ death like a foul reptile, whose very slaver is fatal to humanity. Rely
+ upon this, as if Machiavel had sworn it; for so surely as you keep your
+ purpose, so surely will I prosecute my revenge.&mdash;Follow me, Lance,
+ and leave him to think on what I have told him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance had, after the first shock, sustained a very easy part in this
+ recontre; for all he had to do, was to point the butt of his whip, in the
+ manner of a gun, at the intimidated Frenchman, who, lying on his back, and
+ gazing at random on the skies, had as little the power or purpose of
+ resistance, as any pig which had ever come under his own slaughter-knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Summoned by his master from the easy duty of guarding such an unresisting
+ prisoner, Lance remounted his horse, and they both rode off, leaving their
+ discomfited antagonists to console themselves for their misadventure as
+ they best could. But consolation was hard to come by in the circumstances.
+ The French artist had to lament the dispersion of his spices, and the
+ destruction of his magazine of sauces&mdash;an enchanter despoiled of his
+ magic wand and talisman, could scarce have been in more desperate
+ extremity. Chiffinch had to mourn the downfall of his intrigue, and its
+ premature discovery. &ldquo;To this fellow, at least,&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;I can have
+ bragged none&mdash;here my evil genius alone has betrayed me. With this
+ infernal discovery, which may cost me so dear on all hands, champagne had
+ nought to do. If there be a flask left unbroken, I will drink it after
+ dinner, and try if it may not even yet suggest some scheme of redemption
+ and of revenge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this manly resolution, he prosecuted his journey to London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A man so various, that he seem&rsquo;d to be
+ Not one, but all mankind&rsquo;s epitome;
+ Stiff in opinions&mdash;always in the wrong&mdash;
+ Was everything by starts, but nothing long;
+ Who, in the course of one revolving moon,
+ Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon;
+ Then, all for women, painting, fiddling, drinking;
+ Besides a thousand freaks that died in thinking.
+ &mdash;DRYDEN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We must now transport the reader to the magnificent hotel in &mdash;&mdash;Street,
+ inhabited at this time by the celebrated George Villiers, Duke of
+ Buckingham, whom Dryden has doomed to a painful immortality by the few
+ lines which we have prefixed to this chapter. Amid the gay and licentious
+ of the laughing Court of Charles, the Duke was the most licentious and
+ most gay; yet, while expending a princely fortune, a strong constitution,
+ and excellent talents, in pursuit of frivolous pleasures, he nevertheless
+ nourished deeper and more extensive designs; in which he only failed from
+ want of that fixed purpose and regulated perseverance essential to all
+ important enterprises, but particularly in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was long past noon; and the usual hour of the Duke&rsquo;s levee&mdash;if
+ anything could be termed usual where all was irregular&mdash;had been long
+ past. His hall was filled with lackeys and footmen, in the most splendid
+ liveries; the interior apartments, with the gentlemen and pages of his
+ household, arrayed as persons of the first quality, and, in that respect,
+ rather exceeding than falling short of the Duke in personal splendour. But
+ his antechamber, in particular, might be compared to a gathering of eagles
+ to the slaughter, were not the simile too dignified to express that vile
+ race, who, by a hundred devices all tending to one common end, live upon
+ the wants of needy greatness, or administer to the pleasures of
+ summer-teeming luxury, or stimulate the wild wishes of lavish and wasteful
+ extravagance, by devising new modes and fresh motives of profusion. There
+ stood the projector, with his mysterious brow, promising unbounded wealth
+ to whomsoever might choose to furnish the small preliminary sum necessary
+ to change egg-shells into the great <i>arcanum</i>. There was Captain
+ Seagull, undertaker for a foreign settlement, with the map under his arm
+ of Indian or American kingdoms, beautiful as the primitive Eden, waiting
+ the bold occupants, for whom a generous patron should equip two
+ brigantines and a fly-boat. Thither came, fast and frequent, the
+ gamesters, in their different forms and calling. This, light, young, gay
+ in appearance, the thoughtless youth of wit and pleasure&mdash;the pigeon
+ rather than the rook&mdash;but at heart the same sly, shrewd, cold-blooded
+ calculator, as yonder old hard-featured professor of the same science,
+ whose eyes are grown dim with watching of the dice at midnight; and whose
+ fingers are even now assisting his mental computation of chances and of
+ odds. The fine arts, too&mdash;I would it were otherwise&mdash;have their
+ professors amongst this sordid train. The poor poet, half ashamed, in
+ spite of habit, of the part which he is about to perform, and abashed by
+ consciousness at once of his base motive and his shabby black coat, lurks
+ in yonder corner for the favourable moment to offer his dedication. Much
+ better attired, the architect presents his splendid vision of front and
+ wings, and designs a palace, the expense of which may transfer his
+ employer to a jail. But uppermost of all, the favourite musician, or
+ singer, who waits on my lord to receive, in solid gold, the value of the
+ dulcet sounds which solaced the banquet of the preceding evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, and many such like, were the morning attendants of the Duke of
+ Buckingham&mdash;all genuine descendants of the daughter of the
+ horse-leech, whose cry is &ldquo;Give, give.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the levee of his Grace contained other and very different characters;
+ and was indeed as various as his own opinions and pursuits. Besides many
+ of the young nobility and wealthy gentry of England, who made his Grace
+ the glass at which they dressed themselves for the day, and who learned
+ from him how to travel, with the newest and best grace, the general Road
+ to Ruin; there were others of a graver character&mdash;discarded
+ statesmen, political spies, opposition orators, servile tools of
+ administration, men who met not elsewhere, but who regarded the Duke&rsquo;s
+ mansion as a sort of neutral ground; sure, that if he was not of their
+ opinion to-day, this very circumstance rendered it most likely he should
+ think with them to-morrow. The Puritans themselves did not shun
+ intercourse with a man whose talents must have rendered him formidable,
+ even if they had not been united with high rank and an immense fortune.
+ Several grave personages, with black suits, short cloaks, and band-strings
+ of a formal cut, were mingled, as we see their portraits in a gallery of
+ paintings, among the gallants who ruffled in silk and embroidery. It is
+ true, they escaped the scandal of being thought intimates of the Duke, by
+ their business being supposed to refer to money matters. Whether these
+ grave and professing citizens mixed politics with money lending, was not
+ known; but it had been long observed, that the Jews, who in general
+ confine themselves to the latter department, had become for some time
+ faithful attendants at the Duke&rsquo;s levee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was high-tide in the antechamber, and had been so for more than an
+ hour, ere the Duke&rsquo;s gentleman-in-ordinary ventured into his bedchamber,
+ carefully darkened, so as to make midnight at noonday, to know his Grace&rsquo;s
+ pleasure. His soft and serene whisper, in which he asked whether it were
+ his Grace&rsquo;s pleasure to rise, was briefly and sharply answered by the
+ counter questions, &ldquo;Who waits?&mdash;What&rsquo;s o&rsquo;clock?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is Jerningham, your Grace,&rdquo; said the attendant. &ldquo;It is one, afternoon;
+ and your Grace appointed some of the people without at eleven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are they?&mdash;What do they want?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A message from Whitehall, your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! it will keep cold. Those who make all others wait, will be the
+ better of waiting in their turn. Were I to be guilty of ill-breeding, it
+ should rather be to a king than a beggar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The gentlemen from the city.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am tired of them&mdash;tired of their all cant, and no religion&mdash;all
+ Protestantism, and no charity. Tell them to go to Shaftesbury&mdash;to
+ Aldersgate Street with them&mdash;that&rsquo;s the best market for their wares.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jockey, my lord, from Newmarket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him ride to the devil&mdash;he has horse of mine, and spurs of his
+ own. Any more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The whole antechamber is full, my lord&mdash;knights and squires, doctors
+ and dicers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dicers, with their doctors[*] in their pockets, I presume.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] Doctor, a cant name for false dice.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Counts, captains, and clergymen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are alliterative, Jerningham,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and that is a proof
+ you are poetical. Hand me my writing things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Getting half out of bed&mdash;thrusting one arm into a brocade nightgown,
+ deeply furred with sables, and one foot into a velvet slipper, while the
+ other pressed in primitive nudity the rich carpet&mdash;his Grace, without
+ thinking farther on the assembly without, began to pen a few lines of a
+ satirical poem; then suddenly stopped&mdash;threw the pen into the chimney&mdash;exclaimed
+ that the humour was past&mdash;and asked his attendant if there were any
+ letters. Jerningham produced a huge packet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What the devil!&rdquo; said his Grace, &ldquo;do you think I will read all these? I
+ am like Clarence, who asked a cup of wine, and was soused into a butt of
+ sack. I mean, is there anything which presses?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This letter, your Grace,&rdquo; said Jerningham, &ldquo;concerning the Yorkshire
+ mortgage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did I not bid thee carry it to old Gatheral, my steward?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did, my lord,&rdquo; answered the other; &ldquo;but Gatheral says there are
+ difficulties.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let the usurers foreclose, then&mdash;there is no difficulty in that; and
+ out of a hundred manors I shall scarce miss one,&rdquo; answered the Duke. &ldquo;And
+ hark ye, bring me my chocolate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lord, Gatheral does not say it is impossible&mdash;only
+ difficult.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what is the use of him, if he cannot make it easy? But you are all
+ born to make difficulties,&rdquo; replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, if your Grace approves the terms in this schedule, and pleases to
+ sign it, Gatheral will undertake for the matter,&rdquo; answered Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And could you not have said so at first, you blockhead?&rdquo; said the Duke,
+ signing the paper without looking at the contents&mdash;&ldquo;What other
+ letters? And remember, I must be plagued with no more business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Billets-doux, my lord&mdash;five or six of them. This left at the
+ porter&rsquo;s lodge by a vizard mask.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; answered the Duke, tossing them over, while his attendant
+ assisted in dressing him&mdash;&ldquo;an acquaintance of a quarter&rsquo;s standing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This given to one of the pages by my Lady &mdash;&mdash;&lsquo;s
+ waiting-woman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Plague on it&mdash;a Jeremiade on the subject of perjury and treachery,
+ and not a single new line to the old tune,&rdquo; said the Duke, glancing over
+ the billet. &ldquo;Here is the old cant&mdash;<i>cruel man&mdash;broken vows&mdash;Heaven&rsquo;s
+ just revenge</i>. Why, the woman is thinking of murder&mdash;not of love.
+ No one should pretend to write upon so threadbare a topic without having
+ at least some novelty of expression. <i>The despairing Araminta</i>&mdash;Lie
+ there, fair desperate. And this&mdash;how comes it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Flung into the window of the hall, by a fellow who ran off at full
+ speed,&rdquo; answered Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is a better text,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and yet it is an old one too&mdash;three
+ weeks old at least&mdash;The little Countess with the jealous lord&mdash;I
+ should not care a farthing for her, save for that same jealous lord&mdash;Plague
+ on&rsquo;t, and he&rsquo;s gone down to the country&mdash;<i>this evening&mdash;in
+ silence and safety&mdash;written with a quill pulled from the wing of
+ Cupid</i>&mdash;Your ladyship has left him pen-feathers enough to fly away
+ with&mdash;better clipped his wings when you had caught him, my lady&mdash;And
+ <i>so confident of her Buckingham&rsquo;s faith</i>,&mdash;I hate confidence in
+ a young person. She must be taught better&mdash;I will not go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You Grace will not be so cruel!&rdquo; said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a compassionate fellow, Jerningham; but conceit must be
+ punished.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if your lordship should resume your fancy for her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, you must swear the billet-doux miscarried,&rdquo; answered the Duke.
+ &ldquo;And stay, a thought strikes me&mdash;it shall miscarry in great style.
+ Hark ye&mdash;Is&mdash;what is the fellow&rsquo;s name&mdash;the poet&mdash;is
+ he yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are six gentlemen, sir, who, from the reams of paper in their
+ pocket, and the threadbare seams at their elbows, appear to wear the
+ livery of the Muses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poetical once more, Jerningham. He, I mean, who wrote the last lampoon,&rdquo;
+ said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To whom your Grace said you owed five pieces and a beating!&rdquo; replied
+ Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The money for his satire, and the cudgel for his praise&mdash;Good&mdash;find
+ him&mdash;give him the five pieces, and thrust the Countess&rsquo;s billet-doux&mdash;Hold&mdash;take
+ Araminta&rsquo;s and the rest of them&mdash;thrust them all into his portfolio&mdash;All
+ will come out at the Wit&rsquo;s Coffee-house; and if the promulgator be not
+ cudgelled into all the colours of the rainbow, there is no spite in woman,
+ no faith in crabtree, or pith in heart of oak&mdash;Araminta&rsquo;s wrath alone
+ would overburden one pair of mortal shoulders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said his attendant, &ldquo;this Settle[*] is so dull a
+ rascal, that nothing he can write will take.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Elkana Settle, the unworthy scribbler whom the envy of Rochester
+ and others tried to raise to public estimation, as a rival to
+ Dryden; a circumstance which has been the means of elevating him
+ to a very painful species of immortality.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then as we have given him steel to head the arrow,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;we
+ will give him wings to waft it with&mdash;wood, he has enough of his own
+ to make a shaft or bolt of. Hand me my own unfinished lampoon&mdash;give
+ it to him with the letters&mdash;let him make what he can of them all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke&mdash;I crave pardon&mdash;but your Grace&rsquo;s style will be
+ discovered; and though the ladies&rsquo; names are not at the letters, yet they
+ will be traced.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would have it so, you blockhead. Have you lived with me so long, and
+ cannot discover that the éclat of an intrigue is, with me, worth all the
+ rest of it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the danger, my Lord Duke?&rdquo; replied Jerningham. &ldquo;There are husbands,
+ brothers, friends, whose revenge may be awakened.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And beaten to sleep again,&rdquo; said Buckingham haughtily. &ldquo;I have Black Will
+ and his cudgel for plebeian grumblers; and those of quality I can deal
+ with myself. I lack breathing and exercise of late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But yet your Grace&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your peace, fool! I tell you that your poor dwarfish spirit cannot
+ measure the scope of mine. I tell thee I would have the course of my life
+ a torrent&mdash;I am weary of easy achievements, and wish for obstacles,
+ that I can sweep before my irresistible course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another gentleman now entered the apartment. &ldquo;I humbly crave your Grace&rsquo;s
+ pardon,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but Master Christian is so importunate for admission
+ instantly, that I am obliged to take your Grace&rsquo;s pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell him to call three hours hence. Damn his politic pate, that would
+ make all men dance after his pipe!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank thee for the compliment, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, entering
+ the apartment in somewhat a more courtly garb, but with the same
+ unpretending and undistinguished mien, and in the same placid and
+ indifferent manner with which he had accosted Julian Peveril upon
+ different occasions during his journey to London. &ldquo;It is precisely my
+ present object to pipe to you; and you may dance to your own profit, if
+ you will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my word, Master Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke haughtily, &ldquo;the affair
+ should be weighty, that removes ceremony so entirely from betwixt us. If
+ it relates to the subject of our last conversation, I must request our
+ interview be postponed to some farther opportunity. I am engaged in an
+ affair of some weight.&rdquo; Then turning his back on Christian, he went on
+ with his conversation with Jerningham. &ldquo;Find the person you wot of, and
+ give him the papers; and hark ye, give him this gold to pay for the shaft
+ of his arrow&mdash;the steel-head and peacock&rsquo;s wing we have already
+ provided.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is all well, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian calmly, and taking his seat at
+ the same time in an easy-chair at some distance; &ldquo;but your Grace&rsquo;s levity
+ is no match for my equanimity. It is necessary I should speak with you;
+ and I will await your Grace&rsquo;s leisure in the apartment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Very well</i>, sir,&rdquo; said the Duke peevishly; &ldquo;if an evil is to be
+ undergone, the sooner it is over the better&mdash;I can take measures to
+ prevent its being renewed. So let me hear your errand without farther
+ delay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will wait till your Grace&rsquo;s toilette is completed,&rdquo; said Christian,
+ with the indifferent tone which was natural to him. &ldquo;What I have to say
+ must be between ourselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Begone, Jerningham; and remain without till I call. Leave my doublet on
+ the couch.&mdash;How now, I have worn this cloth of silver a hundred
+ times.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only twice, if it please your Grace,&rdquo; replied Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As well twenty times&mdash;keep it for yourself, or give it to my valet,
+ if you are too proud of your gentility.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace has made better men than me wear your cast clothes,&rdquo; said
+ Jerningham submissively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art sharp, Jerningham,&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;in one sense I have,
+ and I may again. So now, that pearl-coloured will do with the ribbon and
+ George. Get away with thee.&mdash;And now that he is gone, Master
+ Christian, may I once more crave your pleasure?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;you are a worshipper of difficulties in
+ state affairs, as in love matters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust you have been no eavesdropper, Master Christian,&rdquo; replied the
+ Duke; &ldquo;it scarce argues the respect due to me, or to my roof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not what you mean, my lord,&rdquo; replied Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I care not if the whole world heard what I said but now to
+ Jerningham. But to the matter,&rdquo; replied the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace is so much occupied with conquests over the fair and over the
+ witty, that you have perhaps forgotten what a stake you have in the little
+ Island of Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a whit, Master Christian. I remember well enough that my roundheaded
+ father-in-law, Fairfax, had the island from the Long Parliament; and was
+ ass enough to quit hold of it at the Restoration, when, if he had closed
+ his clutches, and held fast, like a true bird of prey, as he should have
+ done, he might have kept it for him and his. It had been a rare thing to
+ have had a little kingdom&mdash;made laws of my own&mdash;had my
+ Chamberlain with his white staff&mdash;I would have taught Jerningham, in
+ half a day, to look as wise, walk as stiffly, and speak as silly, as Harry
+ Bennet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You might have done this, and more, if it had pleased your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, and if it had pleased my Grace, thou, Ned Christian, shouldst have
+ been the Jack Ketch of my dominions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> your Jack Ketch, my lord?&rdquo; said Christian, more in a tone of
+ surprise than of displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ay; thou hast been perpetually intriguing against the life of yonder
+ poor old woman. It were a kingdom to thee to gratify thy spleen with thy
+ own hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I only seek justice against the Countess,&rdquo; said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the end of justice is always a gibbet,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so,&rdquo; answered Christian. &ldquo;Well, the Countess is in the Plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil confound the Plot, as I believe he first invented it!&rdquo; said the
+ Duke of Buckingham; &ldquo;I have heard of nothing else for months. If one must
+ go to hell, I would it were by some new road, and in gentlemen&rsquo;s company.
+ I should not like to travel with Oates, Bedloe, and the rest of that
+ famous cloud of witnesses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace is then resolved to forego all the advantages which may arise?
+ If the House of Derby fall under forfeiture, the grant to Fairfax, now
+ worthily represented by your Duchess, revives, and you become the Lord and
+ Sovereign of Man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In right of a woman,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;but, in troth, my godly dame owes
+ me some advantage for having lived the first year of our marriage with her
+ and old Black Tom, her grim, fighting, puritanic father. A man might as
+ well have married the Devil&rsquo;s daughter, and set up housekeeping with his
+ father-in-law.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Mary, daughter of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, was wedded to the Duke of
+ Buckingham, whose versatility made him capable of rendering
+ himself for a time as agreeable to his father-in-law, though a
+ rigid Presbyterian, as to the gay Charles II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand you are willing, then, to join your interest for a heave at
+ the House of Derby, my Lord Duke?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As they are unlawfully possessed of my wife&rsquo;s kingdom, they certainly can
+ expect no favour at my hand. But thou knowest there is an interest at
+ Whitehall predominant over mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is only by your Grace&rsquo;s sufferance,&rdquo; said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, no; I tell thee a hundred times, no,&rdquo; said the Duke, rousing himself
+ to anger at the recollection. &ldquo;I tell thee that base courtezan, the
+ Duchess of Portsmouth, hath impudently set herself to thwart and
+ contradict me; and Charles has given me both cloudy looks and hard words
+ before the Court. I would he could but guess what is the offence between
+ her and me! I would he knew but that! But I will have her plumes picked,
+ or my name is not Villiers. A worthless French fille-de-joie to brave me
+ thus!&mdash;Christian, thou art right; there is no passion so
+ spirit-stirring as revenge. I will patronise the Plot, if it be but to
+ spite her, and make it impossible for the King to uphold her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Duke spoke, he gradually wrought himself into a passion, and
+ traversed the apartment with as much vehemence as if the only object he
+ had on earth was to deprive the Duchess of her power and favour with the
+ King. Christian smiled internally to see him approach the state of mind in
+ which he was most easily worked upon, and judiciously kept silence, until
+ the Duke called out to him, in a pet, &ldquo;Well, Sir Oracle, you that have
+ laid so many schemes to supplant this she-wolf of Gaul, where are all your
+ contrivances now?&mdash;Where is the exquisite beauty who was to catch the
+ Sovereign&rsquo;s eye at the first glance?&mdash;Chiffinch, hath he seen her?&mdash;and
+ what does he say, that exquisite critic in beauty and blank-mange, women
+ and wine?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He has <i>seen</i> and approves, but has not yet heard her; and her
+ speech answers to all the rest. We came here yesterday; and to-day I
+ intend to introduce Chiffinch to her, the instant he arrives from the
+ country; and I expect him every hour. I am but afraid of the damsel&rsquo;s
+ peevish virtue, for she hath been brought up after the fashion of our
+ grandmothers&mdash;our mothers had better sense.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! so fair, so young, so quick-witted, and so difficult?&rdquo; said the
+ Duke. &ldquo;By your leave, you shall introduce me as well as Chiffinch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That your Grace may cure her of her intractable modesty?&rdquo; said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; replied the Duke, &ldquo;it will but teach her to stand in her own light.
+ Kings do not love to court and sue; they should have their game run down
+ for them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Under your Grace&rsquo;s favour,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;this cannot be&mdash;<i>Non
+ omnibus dormio</i>&mdash;Your Grace knows the classic allusion. If this
+ maiden become a Prince&rsquo;s favourite, rank gilds the shame and the sin. But
+ to any under Majesty, she must not vail topsail.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, thou suspicious fool, I was but in jest,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Do you
+ think I would interfere to spoil a plan so much to my own advantage as
+ that which you have laid before me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian smiled and shook his head. &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I know your
+ Grace as well, or better, perhaps, than you know yourself. To spoil a
+ well-concerted intrigue by some cross stroke of your own, would give you
+ more pleasure, than to bring it to a successful termination according to
+ the plans of others. But Shaftesbury, and all concerned, have determined
+ that our scheme shall at least have fair play. We reckon, therefore, on
+ your help; and&mdash;forgive me when I say so&mdash;we will not permit
+ ourselves to be impeded by your levity and fickleness of purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&mdash;I light and fickle of purpose?&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;You see me
+ here as resolved as any of you, to dispossess the mistress, and to carry
+ on the plot; these are the only two things I live for in this world. No
+ one can play the man of business like me, when I please, to the very
+ filing and labelling of my letters. I am regular as a scrivener.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have Chiffinch&rsquo;s letter from the country; he told me he had written
+ to you about some passages betwixt him and the young Lord Saville.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He did so&mdash;he did so,&rdquo; said the Duke, looking among his letters;
+ &ldquo;but I see not his letter just now&mdash;I scarcely noted the contents&mdash;I
+ was busy when it came&mdash;but I have it safely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You should have acted on it,&rdquo; answered Christian. &ldquo;The fool suffered
+ himself to be choused out of his secret, and prayed you to see that my
+ lord&rsquo;s messenger got not to the Duchess with some despatches which he sent
+ up from Derbyshire, betraying our mystery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke was now alarmed, and rang the bell hastily. Jerningham appeared.
+ &ldquo;Where is the letter I had from Master Chiffinch some hours since?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it be not amongst those your Grace has before you, I know nothing of
+ it,&rdquo; said Jerningham. &ldquo;I saw none such arrive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You lie, you rascal,&rdquo; said Buckingham; &ldquo;have you a right to remember
+ better than I do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your Grace will forgive me reminding you, you have scarce opened a
+ letter this week,&rdquo; said his gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever hear such a provoking rascal?&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;He might be a
+ witness in the Plot. He has knocked my character for regularity entirely
+ on the head with his damned counter-evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace&rsquo;s talent and capacity will at least remain unimpeached,&rdquo; said
+ Christian; &ldquo;and it is those that must serve yourself and your friends. If
+ I might advise, you will hasten to Court, and lay some foundation for the
+ impression we wish to make. If your Grace can take the first word, and
+ throw out a hint to crossbite Saville, it will be well. But above all,
+ keep the King&rsquo;s ear employed, which no one can do so well as you. Leave
+ Chiffinch to fill his heart with a proper object. Another thing is, there
+ is a blockhead of an old Cavalier, who must needs be a bustler in the
+ Countess of Derby&rsquo;s behalf&mdash;he is fast in hold, with the whole tribe
+ of witnesses at his haunches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, take him, Topham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Topham has taken him already, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and there is,
+ besides, a young gallant, a son of the said Knight, who was bred in the
+ household of the Countess of Derby, and who has brought letters from her
+ to the Provincial of the Jesuits, and others in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What are their names?&rdquo; said the Duke dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, in Derbyshire, and his son
+ Julian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! Peveril of the Peak?&rdquo; said the Duke,&mdash;&ldquo;a stout old Cavalier as
+ ever swore an oath.&mdash;A Worcester-man, too&mdash;and, in truth, a man
+ of all work, when blows were going. I will not consent to his ruin,
+ Christian. These fellows must be flogged of such false scents&mdash;flogged
+ in every sense, they must, and will be, when the nation comes to its
+ eyesight again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is of more than the last importance, in the meantime, to the
+ furtherance of our plan,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;that your Grace should stand
+ for a space between them and the King&rsquo;s favour. The youth hath influence
+ with the maiden, which we should find scarce favourable to our views;
+ besides, her father holds him as high as he can any one who is no such
+ puritanic fool as himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, most Christian Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;I have heard your
+ commands at length. I will endeavour to stop the earths under the throne,
+ that neither the lord, knight, nor squire in question, shall find it
+ possible to burrow there. For the fair one, I must leave Chiffinch and you
+ to manage her introduction to her high destinies, since I am not to be
+ trusted. Adieu, most Christian Christian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fixed his eyes on him, and then exclaimed, as he shut the door of the
+ apartment,&mdash;&ldquo;Most profligate and damnable villain! And what provokes
+ me most of all, is the knave&rsquo;s composed insolence. Your Grace will do this&mdash;and
+ your Grace will condescend to do that&mdash;A pretty puppet I should be,
+ to play the second part, or rather the third, in such a scheme! No, they
+ shall all walk according to my purpose, or I will cross them. I will find
+ this girl out in spite of them, and judge if their scheme is likely to be
+ successful. If so, she shall be mine&mdash;mine entirely, before she
+ becomes the King&rsquo;s; and I will command her who is to guide Charles.&mdash;Jerningham&rdquo;
+ (his gentleman entered), &ldquo;cause Christian to be dogged where-ever he goes,
+ for the next four-and-twenty hours, and find out where he visits a female
+ newly come to town.&mdash;You smile, you knave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did but suspect a fresh rival to Araminta and the little Countess,&rdquo;
+ said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away to your business, knave,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;and let me think of mine.&mdash;To
+ subdue a Puritan in Esse&mdash;a King&rsquo;s favourite in Posse&mdash;the very
+ muster of western beauties&mdash;that is point first. The impudence of
+ this Manx mongrel to be corrected&mdash;the pride of Madame la Duchesse to
+ be pulled down&mdash;and important state intrigue to be farthered, or
+ baffled, as circumstances render most to my own honour and glory&mdash;I
+ wished for business but now, and I have got enough of it. But Buckingham
+ will keep his own steerage-way through shoal and through weather.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;Mark you this, Bassanio&mdash;
+ The devil can quote Scripture for his purpose.
+ &mdash;MERCHANT OF VENICE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the proud mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, Christian, full
+ of the deep and treacherous schemes which he meditated, hastened to the
+ city, where, in a decent inn, kept by a person of his own persuasion, he
+ had been unexpectedly summoned to meet with Ralph Bridgenorth of
+ Moultrassie. He was not disappointed&mdash;the Major had arrived that
+ morning, and anxiously expected him. The usual gloom of his countenance
+ was darkened into a yet deeper shade of anxiety, which was scarcely
+ relieved, even while, in answer to his inquiry after his daughter,
+ Christian gave the most favourable account of her health and spirits,
+ naturally and unaffectedly intermingled with such praises of her beauty
+ and her disposition, as were likely to be most grateful to a father&rsquo;s ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Christian had too much cunning to expatiate on this theme, however
+ soothing. He stopped short exactly at the point where, as an affectionate
+ relative, he might be supposed to have said enough. &ldquo;The lady,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;with whom he had placed Alice, was delighted with her aspect and manners,
+ and undertook to be responsible for her health and happiness. He had not,
+ he said, deserved so little confidence at the hand of his brother,
+ Bridgenorth, as that the Major should, contrary to his purpose, and to the
+ plan which they had adjusted together, have hurried up from the country,
+ as if his own presence were necessary for Alice&rsquo;s protection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brother Christian,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth in reply, &ldquo;I must see my child&mdash;I
+ must see this person with whom she is entrusted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what purpose?&rdquo; answered Christian. &ldquo;Have you not often confessed that
+ the over excess of the carnal affection which you have entertained for
+ your daughter, hath been a snare to you?&mdash;Have you not, more than
+ once, been on the point of resigning those great designs which should
+ place righteousness as a counsellor beside the throne, because you desired
+ to gratify your daughter&rsquo;s girlish passion for this descendant of your old
+ persecutor&mdash;this Julian Peveril?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I own it,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;and worlds would I have given, and would
+ yet give, to clasp that youth to my bosom, and call him my son. The spirit
+ of his mother looks from his eye, and his stately step is as that of his
+ father, when he daily spoke comfort to me in my distress, and said, &lsquo;The
+ child liveth.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the youth walks,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;after his own lights, and mistakes
+ the meteor of the marsh for the Polar star. Ralph Bridgenorth, I will
+ speak to thee in friendly sincerity. Thou must not think to serve both the
+ good cause and Baal. Obey, if thou wilt, thine own carnal affections,
+ summon this Julian Peveril to thy house, and let him wed thy daughter&mdash;But
+ mark the reception she will meet with from the proud old knight, whose
+ spirit is now, even now, as little broken with his chains, as after the
+ sword of the Saints had prevailed at Worcester. Thou wilt see thy daughter
+ spurned from his feet like an outcast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, interrupting him, &ldquo;thou dost urge me hard;
+ but thou dost it in love, my brother, and I forgive thee&mdash;Alice shall
+ never be spurned.&mdash;But this friend of thine&mdash;this lady&mdash;thou
+ art my child&rsquo;s uncle; and after me, thou art next to her in love and
+ affection&mdash;Still, thou art not her father&mdash;hast not her father&rsquo;s
+ fears. Art thou sure of the character of this woman to whom my child is
+ entrusted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I sure of my own?&mdash;Am I sure that my name is Christian&mdash;yours
+ Bridgenorth?&mdash;Is it a thing I am likely to be insecure in?&mdash;Have
+ I not dwelt for many years in this city?&mdash;Do I not know this Court?&mdash;And
+ am I likely to be imposed upon? For I will not think you can fear my
+ imposing upon you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art my brother,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth&mdash;&ldquo;the blood and bone of my
+ departed Saint&mdash;and I am determined that I will trust thee in this
+ matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou dost well,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and who knows what reward may be in
+ store for thee?&mdash;I cannot look upon Alice, but it is strongly borne
+ in on my mind, that there will be work for a creature so excellent beyond
+ ordinary women. Courageous Judith freed Bethulia by her valour, and the
+ comely features of Esther made her a safeguard and a defence to her people
+ in the land of captivity, when she found favour in the sight of King
+ Ahasuerus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it with her as Heaven wills,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;and now tell me what
+ progress there is in the great work.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The people are weary of the iniquity of this Court,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and
+ if this man will continue to reign, it must be by calling to his councils
+ men of another stamp. The alarm excited by the damnable practices of the
+ Papists has called up men&rsquo;s souls, and awakened their eyes to the dangers
+ of their state.&mdash;He himself&mdash;for he will give up brother and
+ wife to save himself&mdash;is not averse to a change of measures; and
+ though we cannot at first see the Court purged as with a winnowing fan,
+ yet there will be enough of the good to control the bad&mdash;enough of
+ the sober party to compel the grant of that universal toleration, for
+ which we have sighed so long, as a maiden for her beloved. Time and
+ opportunity will lead the way to more thorough reformation; and that will
+ be done without stroke of sword, which our friends failed to establish on
+ a sure foundation, even when their victorious blades were in their hands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May God grant it!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;for I fear me I should scruple to
+ do aught which should once more unsheath the civil sword; but welcome all
+ that comes in a peaceful and parliamentary way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;and which will bring with it the bitter amends,
+ which our enemies have so long merited at our hands. How long hath our
+ brother&rsquo;s blood cried for vengeance from the altar!&mdash;Now shall that
+ cruel Frenchwoman find that neither lapse of years, nor her powerful
+ friends, nor the name of Stanley, nor the Sovereignty of Man, shall stop
+ the stern course of the pursuer of blood. Her name shall be struck from
+ the noble, and her heritage shall another take.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but, brother Christian,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;art thou not over eager
+ in pursuing this thing?&mdash;It is thy duty as a Christian to forgive
+ thine enemies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, but not the enemies of Heaven&mdash;not those who shed the blood of
+ the saints,&rdquo; said Christian, his eyes kindling that vehement and fiery
+ expression which at times gave to his uninteresting countenance the only
+ character of passion which it ever exhibited. &ldquo;No, Bridgenorth,&rdquo; he
+ continued, &ldquo;I esteem this purpose of revenge holy&mdash;I account it a
+ propitiatory sacrifice for what may have been evil in my life. I have
+ submitted to be spurned by the haughty&mdash;I have humbled myself to be
+ as a servant; but in my breast was the proud thought, I who do this&mdash;do
+ it that I may avenge my brother&rsquo;s blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still, my brother,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;although I participate thy
+ purpose, and have aided thee against this Moabitish woman, I cannot but
+ think thy revenge is more after the law of Moses than after the law of
+ love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This comes well from thee, Ralph Bridgenorth,&rdquo; answered Christian; &ldquo;from
+ thee, who has just smiled over the downfall of thine own enemy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you mean Sir Geoffrey Peveril,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I smile not on his
+ ruin. It is well he is abased; but if it lies with me, I may humble his
+ pride, but will never ruin his house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know your purpose best,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and I do justice, brother
+ Bridgenorth, to the purity of your principles; but men who see with but
+ worldly eyes, would discern little purpose of mercy in the strict
+ magistrate and severe creditor&mdash;and such have you been to Peveril.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And, brother Christian,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, his colour rising as he spoke,
+ &ldquo;neither do I doubt your purpose, nor deny the surprising address with
+ which you have procured such perfect information concerning the purposes
+ of yonder woman of Ammon. But it is free to me to think, that in your
+ intercourse with the Court, and with courtiers, you may, in your carnal
+ and worldly policy, sink the value of those spiritual gifts, for which you
+ were once so much celebrated among the brethren.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not apprehend it,&rdquo; said Christian, recovering his temper, which had
+ been a little ruffled by the previous discussion. &ldquo;Let us but work
+ together as heretofore; and I trust each of us shall be found doing the
+ work of a faithful servant to that good old cause for which we have
+ heretofore drawn the sword.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he took his hat, and bidding Bridgenorth farewell, declared his
+ intention of returning in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fare thee well!&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;to that cause wilt thou find me ever
+ a true and devoted adherent. I will act by that counsel of thine, and will
+ not even ask thee&mdash;though it may grieve my heart as a parent&mdash;with
+ whom, or where, thou hast entrusted my child. I will try to cut off, and
+ cast from me, even my right hand, and my right eye; but for thee,
+ Christian, if thou dost deal otherwise than prudently and honestly in this
+ matter, it is what God and man will require at thy hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not me,&rdquo; said Christian hastily, and left the place, agitated by
+ reflections of no pleasant kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ought to have persuaded him to return,&rdquo; he said, as he stepped out into
+ the street. &ldquo;Even his hovering in this neighbourhood may spoil the plan on
+ which depends the rise of my fortunes&mdash;ay, and of his child&rsquo;s. Will
+ men say I have ruined her, when I shall have raised her to the dazzling
+ height of the Duchess of Portsmouth, and perhaps made her a mother to a
+ long line of princes? Chiffinch hath vouched for opportunity; and the
+ voluptuary&rsquo;s fortune depends upon his gratifying the taste of his master
+ for variety. If she makes an impression, it must be a deep one; and once
+ seated in his affections, I fear not her being supplanted.&mdash;What will
+ her father say? Will he, like a prudent man, put his shame in his pocket,
+ because it is well gilded? or will he think it fitting to make a display
+ of moral wrath and parental frenzy? I fear the latter&mdash;He has ever
+ kept too strict a course to admit his conniving at such licence. But what
+ will his anger avail?&mdash;I need not be seen in the matter&mdash;those
+ who are will care little for the resentment of a country Puritan. And
+ after all, what I am labouring to bring about is best for himself, the
+ wench, and above all, for me, Edward Christian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such base opiates did this unhappy wretch stifle his own conscience,
+ while anticipating the disgrace of his friend&rsquo;s family, and the ruin of a
+ near relative, committed in confidence to his charge. The character of
+ this man was of no common description; nor was it by an ordinary road that
+ he had arrived at the present climax of unfeeling and infamous
+ selfishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Christian, as the reader is aware, was the brother of that William
+ Christian, who was the principal instrument in delivering up the Isle of
+ Man to the Republic, and who became the victim of the Countess of Derby&rsquo;s
+ revenge on that account. Both had been educated as Puritans, but William
+ was a soldier, which somewhat modified the strictness of his religious
+ opinions; Edward, a civilian, seemed to entertain these principles in the
+ utmost rigour. But it was only seeming. The exactness of deportment, which
+ procured him great honour and influence among the <i>sober party</i>, as
+ they were wont to term themselves, covered a voluptuous disposition, the
+ gratification of which was sweet to him as stolen waters, and pleasant as
+ bread eaten in secret. While, therefore, his seeming godliness brought him
+ worldly gain, his secret pleasures compensated for his outward austerity;
+ until the Restoration, and the Countess&rsquo;s violent proceedings against his
+ brother interrupted the course of both. He then fled from his native
+ island, burning with the desire of revenging his brother&rsquo;s death&mdash;the
+ only passion foreign to his own gratification which he was ever known to
+ cherish, and which was also, at least, partly selfish, since it concerned
+ the restoration of his own fortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found easy access to Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, who, in right of his
+ Duchess, claimed such of the Derby estate as had been bestowed by the
+ Parliament on his celebrated father-in-law, Lord Fairfax. His influence at
+ the Court of Charles, where a jest was a better plea than a long claim of
+ faithful service, was so successfully exerted, as to contribute greatly to
+ the depression of that loyal and ill-rewarded family. But Buckingham was
+ incapable, even for his own interest, of pursuing the steady course which
+ Christian suggested to him; and his vacillation probably saved the remnant
+ of the large estates of the Earl of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, Christian was too useful a follower to be dismissed. From
+ Buckingham, and others of that stamp, he did not affect to conceal the
+ laxity of his morals; but towards the numerous and powerful party to which
+ he belonged, he was able to disguise them by a seeming gravity of
+ exterior, which he never laid aside. Indeed, so wide and absolute was then
+ the distinction betwixt the Court and the city, that a man might have for
+ some time played two several parts, as in two different spheres, without
+ its being discovered in the one that he exhibited himself in a different
+ light in the other. Besides, when a man of talent shows himself an able
+ and useful partisan, his party will continue to protect and accredit him,
+ in spite of conduct the most contradictory to their own principles. Some
+ facts are, in such cases, denied&mdash;some are glossed over&mdash;and
+ party zeal is permitted to cover at least as many defects as ever doth
+ charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Christian had often need of the partial indulgence of his friends;
+ but he experienced it, for he was eminently useful. Buckingham, and other
+ courtiers of the same class, however dissolute in their lives, were
+ desirous of keeping some connection with the Dissenting or Puritanic
+ party, as it was termed; thereby to strengthen themselves against their
+ opponents at Court. In such intrigues, Christian was a notable agent; and
+ at one time had nearly procured an absolute union between a class which
+ professed the most rigid principles of religion and morality, and the
+ latitudinarian courtiers, who set all principle at defiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst the vicissitudes of a life of intrigue, during which Buckingham&rsquo;s
+ ambitious schemes, and his own, repeatedly sent him across the Atlantic,
+ it was Edward Christian&rsquo;s boast that he never lost sight of his principal
+ object,&mdash;revenge on the Countess of Derby. He maintained a close and
+ intimate correspondence with his native island, so as to be perfectly
+ informed of whatever took place there; and he stimulated, on every
+ favourable opportunity, the cupidity of Buckingham to possess himself of
+ this petty kingdom, by procuring the forfeiture of its present Lord. It
+ was not difficult to keep his patron&rsquo;s wild wishes alive on this topic,
+ for his own mercurial imagination attached particular charms to the idea
+ of becoming a sort of sovereign even in this little island; and he was,
+ like Catiline, as covetous of the property of others, as he was profuse of
+ his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not until the pretended discovery of the Papist Plot that the
+ schemes of Christian could be brought to ripen; and then, so odious were
+ the Catholics in the eyes of the credulous people of England, that, upon
+ the accusation of the most infamous of mankind, common informers, the
+ scourings of jails, and the refuse of the whipping-post, the most
+ atrocious charges against persons of the highest rank and fairest
+ character were readily received and credited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a period which Christian did not fail to improve. He drew close
+ his intimacy with Bridgenorth, which had indeed never been interrupted,
+ and readily engaged him in his schemes, which, in the eyes of his
+ brother-in-law, were alike honourable and patriotic. But, while he
+ flattered Bridgenorth with the achieving a complete reformation in the
+ state&mdash;checking the profligacy of the Court&mdash;relieving the
+ consciences of the Dissenters from the pressures of the penal laws&mdash;amending,
+ in fine, the crying grievances of the time&mdash;while he showed him also,
+ in prospect, revenge upon the Countess of Derby, and a humbling
+ dispensation on the house of Peveril, from whom Bridgenorth had suffered
+ such indignity, Christian did not neglect, in the meanwhile, to consider
+ how he could best benefit himself by the confidence reposed in him by his
+ unsuspicious relation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme beauty of Alice Bridgenorth&mdash;the great wealth which time
+ and economy had accumulated on her father&mdash;pointed her out as a most
+ desirable match to repair the wasted fortunes of some of the followers of
+ the Court; and he flattered himself that he could conduct such a
+ negotiation so as to be in a high degree conducive to his own advantage.
+ He found there would be little difficulty in prevailing on Major
+ Bridgenorth to entrust him with the guardianship of his daughter. That
+ unfortunate gentleman had accustomed himself, from the very period of her
+ birth, to regard the presence of his child as a worldly indulgence too
+ great to be allowed to him; and Christian had little trouble in convincing
+ him that the strong inclination which he felt to bestow her on Julian
+ Peveril, provided he could be brought over to his own political opinions,
+ was a blameable compromise with his more severe principles. Late
+ circumstances had taught him the incapacity and unfitness of Dame Debbitch
+ for the sole charge of so dear a pledge; and he readily and thankfully
+ embraced the kind offer of her maternal uncle, Christian, to place Alice
+ under the protection of a lady of rank in London, whilst he himself was to
+ be engaged in the scenes of bustle and blood, which, in common with all
+ good Protestants, he expected was speedily to take place on a general
+ rising of the Papists, unless prevented by the active and energetic
+ measures of the good people of England. He even confessed his fears, that
+ his partial regard for Alice&rsquo;s happiness might enervate his efforts in
+ behalf of his country; and Christian had little trouble in eliciting from
+ him a promise, that he would forbear to inquire after her for some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus certain of being the temporary guardian of his niece for a space long
+ enough, he flattered himself, for the execution of his purpose, Christian
+ endeavoured to pave the way by consulting Chiffinch, whose known skill in
+ Court policy qualified him best as an adviser on this occasion. But this
+ worthy person, being, in fact, a purveyor for his Majesty&rsquo;s pleasures, and
+ on that account high in his good graces, thought it fell within the line
+ of his duty to suggest another scheme than that on which Christian
+ consulted him. A woman of such exquisite beauty as Alice was described, he
+ deemed more worthy to be a partaker of the affections of the merry
+ Monarch, whose taste in female beauty was so exquisite, than to be made
+ the wife of some worn-out prodigal of quality. And then, doing perfect
+ justice to his own character, he felt it would not be one whit impaired,
+ while his fortune would be, in every respect, greatly amended, if, after
+ sharing the short reign of the Gwyns, the Davises, the Robertses, and so
+ forth, Alice Bridgenorth should retire from the state of a royal
+ favourite, into the humble condition of Mrs. Chiffinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After cautiously sounding Christian, and finding that the near prospect of
+ interest to himself effectually prevented his starting at this iniquitous
+ scheme, Chiffinch detailed it to him fully, carefully keeping the final
+ termination out of sight, and talking of the favour to be acquired by the
+ fair Alice as no passing caprice, but the commencement of a reign as long
+ and absolute as that of the Duchess of Portsmouth, of whose avarice and
+ domineering temper Charles was now understood to be much tired, though the
+ force of habit rendered him unequal to free himself of her yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus chalked out, the scene prepared was no longer the intrigue of a Court
+ pander, and a villainous resolution for the ruin of an innocent girl, but
+ became a state intrigue, for the removal of an obnoxious favourite, and
+ the subsequent change of the King&rsquo;s sentiments upon various material
+ points, in which he was at present influenced by the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth. In this light it was exhibited to the Duke of Buckingham, who,
+ either to sustain his character for daring gallantry, or in order to
+ gratify some capricious fancy, had at one time made love to the reigning
+ favourite, and experienced a repulse which he had never forgiven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one scheme was too little to occupy the active and enterprising spirit
+ of the Duke. An appendix of the Popish Plot was easily so contrived as to
+ involve the Countess of Derby, who, from character and religion, was
+ precisely the person whom the credulous part of the public were inclined
+ to suppose the likely accomplice of such a conspiracy. Christian and
+ Bridgenorth undertook the perilous commission of attacking her even in her
+ own little kingdom of Man, and had commissions for this purpose, which
+ were only to be produced in case of their scheme taking effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It miscarried, as the reader is aware, from the Countess&rsquo;s alert
+ preparations for defence; and neither Christian nor Bridgenorth held it
+ sound policy to practise openly, even under parliamentary authority,
+ against a lady so little liable to hesitate upon the measures most likely
+ to secure her feudal sovereignty; wisely considering that even the
+ omnipotence, as it has been somewhat too largely styled, of Parliament,
+ might fail to relieve them from the personal consequences of a failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the continent of Britain, however, no opposition was to be feared; and
+ so well was Christian acquainted with all the motions in the interior of
+ the Countess&rsquo;s little court, or household, that Peveril would have been
+ arrested the instant he set foot on shore, but for the gale of wind which
+ obliged the vessel, in which he was a passenger, to run for Liverpool.
+ Here Christian, under the name of Ganlesse, unexpectedly met with him, and
+ preserved him from the fangs of the well-breathed witnesses of the Plot,
+ with the purpose of securing his despatches, or, if necessary, his person
+ also, in such a manner as to place him at his own discretion&mdash;a
+ narrow and perilous game, which he thought it better, however, to
+ undertake, than to permit these subordinate agents, who were always ready
+ to mutiny against all in league with them, to obtain the credit which they
+ must have done by the seizure of the Countess of Derby&rsquo;s despatches. It
+ was, besides, essential to Buckingham&rsquo;s schemes that these should not pass
+ into the hands of a public officer like Topham, who, however pompous and
+ stupid, was upright and well-intentioned, until they had undergone the
+ revisal of a private committee, where something might have probably been
+ suppressed, even supposing that nothing had been added. In short,
+ Christian, in carrying on his own separate and peculiar intrigue, by the
+ agency of the Great Popish Plot, as it was called, acted just like an
+ engineer, who derives the principle of motion which turns his machinery,
+ by means of a steam-engine, or large water-wheel, constructed to drive a
+ separate and larger engine. Accordingly, he was determined that, while he
+ took all the advantage he could from their supposed discoveries, no one
+ should be admitted to tamper or interfere with his own plans of profit and
+ revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch, who, desirous of satisfying himself with his own eyes of that
+ excellent beauty which had been so highly extolled, had gone down to
+ Derbyshire on purpose, was infinitely delighted, when, during the course
+ of a two hours&rsquo; sermon at the dissenting chapel in Liverpool, which
+ afforded him ample leisure for a deliberate survey, he arrived at the
+ conclusion that he had never seen a form or face more captivating. His
+ eyes having confirmed what was told him, he hurried back to the little inn
+ which formed their place of rendezvous, and there awaited Christian and
+ his niece, with a degree of confidence in the success of their project
+ which he had not before entertained; and with an apparatus of luxury,
+ calculated, as he thought, to make a favourable impression on the mind of
+ a rustic girl. He was somewhat surprised, when, instead of Alice
+ Bridgenorth, to whom he expected that night to have been introduced, he
+ found that Christian was accompanied by Julian Peveril. It was indeed a
+ severe disappointment, for he had prevailed on his own indolence to
+ venture this far from the Court, in order that he might judge, with his
+ own paramount taste, whether Alice was really the prodigy which her
+ uncle&rsquo;s praises had bespoken her, and, as such, a victim worthy of the
+ fate to which she was destined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few words betwixt the worthy confederates determined them on the plan of
+ stripping Peveril of the Countess&rsquo;s despatches; Chiffinch absolutely
+ refusing to take any share in arresting him, as a matter of which his
+ Master&rsquo;s approbation might be very uncertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian had also his own reasons for abstaining from so decisive a step.
+ It was by no means likely to be agreeable to Bridgenorth, whom it was
+ necessary to keep in good humour;&mdash;it was not necessary, for the
+ Countess&rsquo;s despatches were of far more importance than the person of
+ Julian. Lastly, it was superfluous in this respect also, that Julian was
+ on the road to his father&rsquo;s castle, where it was likely he would be
+ seized, as a matter of course, along with the other suspicious persons who
+ fell under Topham&rsquo;s warrant, and the denunciations of his infamous
+ companions. He, therefore, far from using any violence to Peveril, assumed
+ towards him such a friendly tone, as might seem to warn him against
+ receiving damage from others, and vindicate himself from having any share
+ in depriving him of his charge. This last manoeuvre was achieved by an
+ infusion of a strong narcotic into Julian&rsquo;s wine; under the influence of
+ which he slumbered so soundly, that the confederates were easily able to
+ accomplish their inhospitable purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The events of the succeeding days are already known to the reader.
+ Chiffinch set forward to return to London, with the packet, which it was
+ desirable should be in Buckingham&rsquo;s hands as soon as possible; while
+ Christian went to Moultrassie, to receive Alice from her father, and
+ convey her safely to London&mdash;his accomplice agreeing to defer his
+ curiosity to see more of her until they should have arrived in that city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before parting with Bridgenorth, Christian had exerted his utmost address
+ to prevail on him to remain at Moultrassie; he had even overstepped the
+ bounds of prudence, and, by his urgency, awakened some suspicions of an
+ indefinite nature, which he found it difficult to allay. Bridgenorth,
+ therefore, followed his brother-in-law to London; and the reader has
+ already been made acquainted with the arts which Christian used to prevent
+ his farther interference with the destinies of his daughter, or the
+ unhallowed schemes of her ill-chosen guardian. Still Christian, as he
+ strode along the street in profound reflection, saw that his undertaking
+ was attended with a thousand perils; and the drops stood like beads on his
+ brow when he thought of the presumptuous levity and fickle temper of
+ Buckingham&mdash;the frivolity and intemperance of Chiffinch&mdash;the
+ suspicions of the melancholy and bigoted, yet sagacious and honest
+ Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Had I,&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;but tools fitted, each to their portion
+ of the work, how easily could I heave asunder and disjoint the strength
+ that opposes me! But with these frail and insufficient implements, I am in
+ daily, hourly, momentary danger, that one lever or other gives way, and
+ that the whole ruin recoils on my own head. And yet, were it not for those
+ failings I complain of, how were it possible for me to have acquired that
+ power over them all which constitutes them my passive tools, even when
+ they seem most to exert their own free will? Yes, the bigots have some
+ right when they affirm that all is for the best.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem strange, that, amidst the various subjects of Christian&rsquo;s
+ apprehension, he was never visited by any long or permanent doubt that the
+ virtue of his niece might prove the shoal on which his voyage should be
+ wrecked. But he was an arrant rogue, as well as a hardened libertine; and,
+ in both characters, a professed disbeliever in the virtue of the fair sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As for John Dryden&rsquo;s Charles, I own that King
+ Was never any very mighty thing;
+ And yet he was a devilish honest fellow&mdash;
+ Enjoy&rsquo;d his friend and bottle, and got mellow.
+ &mdash;DR. WOLOOT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ London, the grand central point of intrigues of every description, had now
+ attracted within its dark and shadowy region the greater number of the
+ personages whom we have had occasion to mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, amongst others of the <i>dramatis personæ</i>, had
+ arrived, and taken up his abode in a remote inn in the suburbs. His
+ business, he conceived, was to remain incognito until he should have
+ communicated in private with the friends who were most likely to lend
+ assistance to his parents, as well as to his patroness, in their present
+ situation of doubt and danger. Amongst these, the most powerful was the
+ Duke of Ormond, whose faithful services, high rank, and acknowledged worth
+ and virtue, still preserved an ascendancy in that very Court, where, in
+ general, he was regarded as out of favour. Indeed, so much consciousness
+ did Charles display in his demeanour towards that celebrated noble, and
+ servant of his father, that Buckingham once took the freedom to ask the
+ King whether the Duke of Ormond had lost his Majesty&rsquo;s favour, or his
+ Majesty the Duke&rsquo;s? since, whenever they chanced to meet, the King
+ appeared the more embarrassed of the two. But it was not Peveril&rsquo;s good
+ fortune to obtain the advice or countenance of this distinguished person.
+ His Grace of Ormond was not at that time in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter, about the delivery of which the Countess had seemed most
+ anxious after that to the Duke of Ormond, was addressed to Captain Barstow
+ (a Jesuit, whose real name was Fenwicke), to be found, or at least to be
+ heard of, in the house of one Martin Christal in the Savoy. To this place
+ hastened Peveril, upon learning the absence of the Duke of Ormond. He was
+ not ignorant of the danger which he personally incurred, by thus becoming
+ a medium of communication betwixt a Popish priest and a suspected
+ Catholic. But when he undertook the perilous commission of his patroness,
+ he had done so frankly, and with the unreserved resolution of serving her
+ in the manner in which she most desired her affairs to be conducted. Yet
+ he could not forbear some secret apprehension, when he felt himself
+ engaged in the labyrinth of passages and galleries, which led to different
+ obscure sets of apartments in the ancient building termed the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This antiquated and almost ruinous pile occupied a part of the site of the
+ public offices in the Strand, commonly called Somerset House. The Savoy
+ had been formerly a palace, and took its name from an Earl of Savoy, by
+ whom it was founded. It had been the habitation of John of Gaunt, and
+ various persons of distinction&mdash;had become a convent, an hospital,
+ and finally, in Charles II.&lsquo;s time, a waste of dilapidated buildings and
+ ruinous apartments, inhabited chiefly by those who had some connection
+ with, or dependence upon, the neighbouring palace of Somerset House,
+ which, more fortunate than the Savoy, had still retained its royal title,
+ and was the abode of a part of the Court, and occasionally of the King
+ himself, who had apartments there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not without several inquiries, and more than one mistake, that, at
+ the end of a long and dusky passage, composed of boards so wasted by time
+ that they threatened to give way under his feet, Julian at length found
+ the name of Martin Christal, broker and appraiser, upon a shattered door.
+ He was about to knock, when some one pulled his cloak; and looking round,
+ to his great astonishment, which indeed almost amounted to fear, he saw
+ the little mute damsel, who had accompanied him for a part of the way on
+ his voyage from the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fenella!&rdquo; he exclaimed, forgetting that she could neither hear nor reply,&mdash;&ldquo;Fenella!
+ Can this be you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenella, assuming the air of warning and authority, which she had
+ heretofore endeavoured to adopt towards him, interposed betwixt Julian and
+ the door at which he was about to knock&mdash;pointed with her finger
+ towards it in a prohibiting manner, and at the same time bent her brows,
+ and shook her head sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment&rsquo;s consideration, Julian could place but one interpretation
+ upon Fenella&rsquo;s appearance and conduct, and that was, by supposing her lady
+ had come up to London, and had despatched this mute attendant, as a
+ confidential person, to apprise him of some change of her intended
+ operations, which might render the delivery of her letters to Barstow, <i>alias</i>
+ Fenwicke, superfluous, or perhaps dangerous. He made signs to Fenella,
+ demanding to know whether she had any commission from the Countess. She
+ nodded. &ldquo;Had she any letter?&rdquo; he continued, by the same mode of inquiry.
+ She shook her head impatiently, and, walking hastily along the passage,
+ made a signal to him to follow. He did so, having little doubt that he was
+ about to be conducted into the Countess&rsquo;s presence; but his surprise, at
+ first excited by Fenella&rsquo;s appearance, was increased by the rapidity and
+ ease with which she seemed to track the dusky and decayed mazes of the
+ dilapidated Savoy, equal to that with which he had seen her formerly lead
+ the way through the gloomy vaults of Castle Rushin, in the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he recollected, however, that Fenella had accompanied the Countess on
+ a long visit to London, it appeared not improbable that she might then
+ have acquired this local knowledge which seemed so accurate. Many
+ foreigners, dependent on Queen or Queen Dowager, had apartments in the
+ Savoy. Many Catholic priests also found refuge in its recesses, under
+ various disguises, and in defiance of the severity of the laws against
+ Popery. What was more likely than that the Countess of Derby, a Catholic
+ and a Frenchwoman, should have had secret commissions amongst such people;
+ and that the execution of such should be entrusted, at least occasionally,
+ to Fenella?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus reflecting, Julian continued to follow her light and active footsteps
+ as she glided from the Strand to Spring-Garden, and thence into the Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was still early in the morning, and the Mall was untenanted, save by a
+ few walkers, who frequented these shades for the wholesome purposes of air
+ and exercise. Splendour, gaiety, and display, did not come forth, at that
+ period, until noon was approaching. All readers have heard that the whole
+ space where the Horse Guards are now built, made, in the time of Charles
+ II., a part of St. James&rsquo;s Park; and that the old building, now called the
+ Treasury, was a part of the ancient Palace of Whitehall, which was thus
+ immediately connected with the Park. The canal had been constructed, by
+ the celebrated Le Notre, for the purpose of draining the Park; and it
+ communicated with the Thames by a decoy, stocked with a quantity of the
+ rarer waterfowl. It was towards this decoy that Fenella bent her way with
+ unabated speed; and they were approaching a group of two or three
+ gentlemen, who sauntered by its banks, when, on looking closely at him who
+ appeared to be the chief of the party, Julian felt his heart beat
+ uncommonly thick, as if conscious of approaching some one of the highest
+ consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person whom he looked upon was past the middle age of life, of a dark
+ complexion, corresponding with the long, black, full-bottomed periwig,
+ which he wore instead of his own hair. His dress was plain black velvet,
+ with a diamond star, however, on his cloak, which hung carelessly over one
+ shoulder. His features, strongly lined, even to harshness, had yet an
+ expression of dignified good-humour; he was well and strongly built,
+ walked upright and yet easily, and had upon the whole the air of a person
+ of the highest consideration. He kept rather in advance of his companions,
+ but turned and spoke to them, from time to time, with much affability, and
+ probably with some liveliness, judging by the smiles, and sometimes the
+ scarce restrained laughter, by which some of his sallies were received by
+ his attendants. They also wore only morning dresses; but their looks and
+ manner were those of men of rank, in presence of one in station still more
+ elevated. They shared the attention of their principal in common with
+ seven or eight little black curly-haired spaniels, or rather, as they are
+ now called, cockers, which attended their master as closely, and perhaps
+ with as deep sentiments of attachment, as the bipeds of the group; and
+ whose gambols, which seemed to afford him much amusement, he sometimes
+ checked, and sometimes encouraged. In addition to this pastime, a lackey,
+ or groom, was also in attendance, with one or two little baskets and bags,
+ from which the gentleman we have described took, from time to time, a
+ handful of seeds, and amused himself with throwing them to the waterfowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This the King&rsquo;s favourite occupation, together with his remarkable
+ countenance, and the deportment of the rest of the company towards him,
+ satisfied Julian Peveril that he was approaching, perhaps indecorously,
+ near the person of Charles Stewart, the second of that unhappy name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he hesitated to follow his dumb guide any nearer, and felt the
+ embarrassment of being unable to communicate to her his repugnance to
+ further intrusion, a person in the royal retinue touched a light and
+ lively air on the flageolet, at a signal from the King, who desired to
+ have some tune repeated which had struck him in the theatre on the
+ preceding evening. While the good-natured monarch marked time with his
+ foot, and with the motion of his hand, Fenella continued to approach him,
+ and threw into her manner the appearance of one who was attracted, as it
+ were in spite of herself, by the sounds of the instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anxious to know how this was to end, and astonished to see the dumb girl
+ imitate so accurately the manner of one who actually heard the musical
+ notes, Peveril also drew near, though at somewhat greater distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked good-humouredly at both, as if he admitted their musical
+ enthusiasm as an excuse for their intrusion; but his eyes became riveted
+ on Fenella, whose face and appearance, although rather singular than
+ beautiful, had something in them wild, fantastic, and, as being so, even
+ captivating, to an eye which had been gratified perhaps to satiety with
+ the ordinary forms of female beauty. She did not appear to notice how
+ closely she was observed; but, as if acting under an irresistible impulse,
+ derived from the sounds to which she seemed to listen, she undid the
+ bodkin round which her long tresses were winded, and flinging them
+ suddenly over her slender person, as if using them as a natural veil, she
+ began to dance, with infinite grace and agility, to the tune which the
+ flageolet played.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril lost almost his sense of the King&rsquo;s presence, when he observed
+ with what wonderful grace and agility Fenella kept time to notes, which
+ could only be known to her by the motions of the musician&rsquo;s fingers. He
+ had heard, indeed, among other prodigies, of a person in Fenella&rsquo;s unhappy
+ situation acquiring, by some unaccountable and mysterious tact, the power
+ of acting as an instrumental musician, nay, becoming so accurate a
+ performer as to be capable of leading a musical band; and he also heard of
+ deaf and dumb persons dancing with sufficient accuracy, by observing the
+ motions of their partner. But Fenella&rsquo;s performance seemed more wonderful
+ than either, since the musician was guided by his written notes, and the
+ dancer by the motions of the others; whereas Fenella had no intimation,
+ save what she seemed to gather, with infinite accuracy, by observing the
+ motion of the artist&rsquo;s fingers on his small instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the King, who was ignorant of the particular circumstances which
+ rendered Fenella&rsquo;s performance almost marvellous, he was contented, at her
+ first commencement, to authorise what seemed to him the frolic of this
+ singular-looking damsel, by a good-natured smile, but when he perceived
+ the exquisite truth and justice, as well as the wonderful combination of
+ grace and agility, with which she executed to this favourite air a dance
+ which was perfectly new to him, Charles turned his mere acquiescence into
+ something like enthusiastic applause. He bore time to her motions with the
+ movement of his foot&mdash;applauded with head and with hand&mdash;and
+ seemed, like herself, carried away by the enthusiasm of the gestic art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a rapid yet graceful succession of <i>entrechats</i>, Fenella
+ introduced a slow movement, which terminated the dance; then dropping a
+ profound courtesy, she continued to stand motionless before the King, her
+ arms folded on her bosom, her head stooped, and her eyes cast down, after
+ the manner of an Oriental slave; while through the misty veil of her
+ shadowy locks, it might be observed, that the colour which exercise had
+ called to her cheeks was dying fast away, and resigning them to their
+ native dusky hue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my honour,&rdquo; exclaimed the King, &ldquo;she is like a fairy who trips it in
+ moonlight. There must be more of air and fire than of earth in her
+ composition. It is well poor Nelly Gwyn saw her not, or she would have
+ died of grief and envy. Come, gentlemen, which of you contrived this
+ pretty piece of morning pastime?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The courtiers looked at each other, but none of them felt authorised to
+ claim the merit of a service so agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must ask the quick-eyed nymph herself then,&rdquo; said the King; and,
+ looking at Fenella, he added, &ldquo;Tell us, my pretty one, to whom we owe the
+ pleasure of seeing you?&mdash;I suspect the Duke of Buckingham; for this
+ is exactly a <i>tour de son métier</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenella, on observing that the King addressed her, bowed low, and shook
+ her head, in signal that she did not understand what he said. &ldquo;Oddsfish,
+ that is true,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;she must perforce be a foreigner&mdash;her
+ complexion and agility speak it. France or Italy has had the moulding of
+ those elastic limbs, dark cheek, and eye of fire.&rdquo; He then put to her in
+ French, and again in Italian, the question, &ldquo;By whom she had been sent
+ hither?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the second repetition, Fenella threw back her veiling tresses, so as to
+ show the melancholy which sat on her brow; while she sadly shook her head,
+ and intimated by imperfect muttering, but of the softest and most
+ plaintive kind, her organic deficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it possible Nature can have made such a fault?&rdquo; said Charles. &ldquo;Can she
+ have left so curious a piece as thou art without the melody of voice,
+ whilst she has made thee so exquisitely sensible to the beauty of sound?&mdash;Stay:
+ what means this? and what young fellow are you bringing up there? Oh, the
+ master of the show, I suppose.&mdash;Friend,&rdquo; he added, addressing himself
+ to Peveril, who, on the signal of Fenella, stepped forward almost
+ instinctively, and kneeled down, &ldquo;we thank thee for the pleasure of this
+ morning.&mdash;My Lord Marquis, you rooked me at piquet last night; for
+ which disloyal deed thou shalt now atone, by giving a couple of pieces to
+ this honest youth, and five to the girl.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the nobleman drew out his purse and came forward to perform the King&rsquo;s
+ generous commission, Julian felt some embarrassment ere he was able to
+ explain, that he had not title to be benefited by the young person&rsquo;s
+ performance, and that his Majesty had mistaken his character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who art thou, then, my friend?&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;but, above all, and
+ particularly, who is this dancing nymph, whom thou standest waiting on
+ like an attendant fawn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The young person is a retainer of the Countess-Dowager of Derby, so
+ please your Majesty,&rdquo; said Peveril, in a low tone of voice; &ldquo;and I am&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, hold,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;this is a dance to another tune, and not fit
+ for a place so public. Hark thee, friend; do thou and the young woman
+ follow Empson where he will conduct thee.&mdash;Empson, carry them&mdash;hark
+ in thy ear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Majesty, I ought to say,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;that I am
+ guiltless of any purpose of intrusion&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now a plague on him who can take no hint,&rdquo; said the King, cutting short
+ his apology. &ldquo;Oddsfish, man, there are times when civility is the greatest
+ impertinence in the world. Do thou follow Empson, and amuse thyself for a
+ half-hour&rsquo;s space with the fairy&rsquo;s company, till we shall send for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles spoke this not without casting an anxious eye around, and in a
+ tone which intimated apprehension of being overheard. Julian could only
+ bow obedience, and follow Empson, who was the same person that played so
+ rarely on the flageolet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were out of sight of the King and his party, the musician wished
+ to enter into conversation with his companions, and addressed himself
+ first to Fenella with a broad compliment of, &ldquo;By the mass, ye dance rarely&mdash;ne&rsquo;er
+ a slut on the boards shows such a shank! I would be content to play to you
+ till my throat were as dry as my whistle. Come, be a little free&mdash;old
+ Rowley will not quit the Park till nine. I will carry you to
+ Spring-Garden, and bestow sweet-cakes and a quart of Rhenish on both of
+ you; and we&rsquo;ll be cameradoes,&mdash;What the devil? no answer?&mdash;How&rsquo;s
+ this, brother?&mdash;Is this neat wench of yours deaf or dumb or both? I
+ should laugh at that, and she trip it so well to the flageolet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To rid himself of this fellow&rsquo;s discourse, Peveril answered him in French,
+ that he was a foreigner, and spoke no English; glad to escape, though at
+ the expense of a fiction, from the additional embarrassment of a fool, who
+ was likely to ask more questions than his own wisdom might have enabled
+ him to answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Étranger</i>&mdash;that means stranger,&rdquo; muttered their guide; &ldquo;more
+ French dogs and jades come to lick the good English butter of our bread,
+ or perhaps an Italian puppet-show. Well if it were not that they have a
+ mortal enmity to the whole <i>gamut</i>, this were enough to make any
+ honest fellow turn Puritan. But if I am to play to her at the Duchess&rsquo;s,
+ I&rsquo;ll be d&mdash;d but I put her out in the tune, just to teach her to have
+ the impudence to come to England, and to speak no English.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having muttered to himself this truly British resolution, the musician
+ walked briskly on towards a large house near the bottom of St. James&rsquo;s
+ Street, and entered the court, by a grated door from the Park, of which
+ the mansion commanded an extensive prospect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril finding himself in front of a handsome portico, under which opened
+ a stately pair of folding-doors, was about to ascend the steps that led to
+ the main entrance, when his guide seized him by the arm, exclaiming.
+ &ldquo;Hold, Mounseer! What! you&rsquo;ll lose nothing, I see, for want of courage;
+ but you must keep the back way, for all your fine doublet. Here it is not,
+ knock, and it shall be opened; but may be instead, knock and you shall be
+ knocked.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suffering himself to be guided by Empson, Julian deviated from the
+ principal door, to one which opened, with less ostentation, in an angle of
+ the courtyard. On a modest tap from the flute-player, admittance was
+ afforded him and his companions by a footman, who conducted them through a
+ variety of stone passages, to a very handsome summer parlour, where a
+ lady, or something resembling one, dressed in a style of extra elegance,
+ was trifling with a play-book while she finished her chocolate. It would
+ not be easy to describe her, but by weighing her natural good qualities
+ against the affectations which counterbalanced them. She would have been
+ handsome, but for rouge and <i>minauderie</i>&mdash;would have been civil,
+ but for overstrained airs of patronage and condescension&mdash;would have
+ had an agreeable voice, had she spoken in her natural tone&mdash;and fine
+ eyes, had she not made such desperate hard use of them. She could only
+ spoil a pretty ankle by too liberal display; but her shape, though she
+ could not yet be thirty years old, had the embon-point which might have
+ suited better with ten years more advanced. She pointed Empson to a seat
+ with the air of a Duchess, and asked him, languidly, how he did this age,
+ that she had not seen him? and what folks these were he had brought with
+ him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Foreigners, madam; d&mdash;d foreigners,&rdquo; answered Empson; &ldquo;starving
+ beggars, that our old friend has picked up in the Park this morning&mdash;the
+ wench dances, and the fellow plays on the Jew&rsquo;s trump, I believe. On my
+ life, madam, I begin to be ashamed of old Rowley; I must discard him,
+ unless he keeps better company in future.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie, Empson,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;consider it is our duty to countenance him,
+ and keep him afloat; and indeed I always make a principle of it. Hark ye,
+ he comes not hither this morning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will be here,&rdquo; answered Empson, &ldquo;in the walking of a minuet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My God!&rdquo; exclaimed the lady, with unaffected alarm; and starting up with
+ utter neglect of her usual and graceful languor, she tripped as swiftly as
+ a milk-maid into an adjoining apartment, where they heard presently a few
+ words of eager and animated discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something to be put out of the way, I suppose,&rdquo; said Empson. &ldquo;Well for
+ madam I gave her the hint. There he goes, the happy swain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was so situated, that he could, from the same casement through
+ which Empson was peeping, observe a man in a laced roquelaure, and
+ carrying his rapier under his arm, glide from the door by which he had
+ himself entered, and out of the court, keeping as much as possible under
+ the shade of the buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady re-entered at this moment, and observing how Empson&rsquo;s eyes were
+ directed, said with a slight appearance of hurry, &ldquo;A gentleman of the
+ Duchess of Portsmouth&rsquo;s with a billet; and so tiresomely pressing for an
+ answer, that I was obliged to write without my diamond pen. I have daubed
+ my fingers, I dare say,&rdquo; she added, looking at a very pretty hand, and
+ presently after dipping her fingers in a little silver vase of rose-water.
+ &ldquo;But that little exotic monster of yours, Empson, I hope she really
+ understands no English?&mdash;On my life she coloured.&mdash;Is she such a
+ rare dancer?&mdash;I must see her dance, and hear him play on the Jew&rsquo;s
+ harp.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dance!&rdquo; replied Empson; &ldquo;she danced well enough when <i>I</i> played to
+ her. I can make anything dance. Old Counsellor Clubfoot danced when he had
+ a fit of the gout; you have seen no such <i>pas seul</i> in the theatre. I
+ would engage to make the Archbishop of Canterbury dance the hays like a
+ Frenchman. There is nothing in dancing; it all lies in the music. Rowley
+ does not know that now. He saw this poor wench dance; and thought so much
+ on&rsquo;t, when it was all along of me. I would have defied her to sit still.
+ And Rowley gives her the credit of it, and five pieces to boot; and I have
+ only two for my morning&rsquo;s work!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, Master Empson,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;but you are of the family, though
+ in a lower station; and you ought to consider&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By G&mdash;, madam,&rdquo; answered Empson, &ldquo;all I consider is, that I play the
+ best flageolet in England; and that they can no more supply my place, if
+ they were to discard me, than they could fill Thames from Fleet-Ditch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Master Empson, I do not dispute but you are a man of talents,&rdquo;
+ replied the lady; &ldquo;still, I say, mind the main chance&mdash;you please the
+ ear to-day&mdash;another has the advantage of you to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never, mistress, while ears have the heavenly power of distinguishing one
+ note from another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heavenly power, say you, Master Empson?&rdquo; said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, madam, heavenly; for some very neat verses which we had at our
+ festival say,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;What know we of the blest above,
+ But that they sing and that they love?&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is Master Waller wrote them, as I think; who, upon my word, ought to be
+ encouraged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so should you, my dear Empson,&rdquo; said the dame, yawning, &ldquo;were it only
+ for the honour you do to your own profession. But in the meantime, will
+ you ask these people to have some refreshment?&mdash;and will you take
+ some yourself?&mdash;the chocolate is that which the Ambassador Portuguese
+ fellow brought over to the Queen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If it be genuine,&rdquo; said the musician.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, sir?&rdquo; said the fair one, half rising from her pile of cushions&mdash;&ldquo;Not
+ genuine, and in this house!&mdash;Let me understand you, Master Empson&mdash;I
+ think, when I first saw you, you scarce knew chocolate from coffee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By G&mdash;, madam,&rdquo; answered the flageolet-player, &ldquo;you are perfectly
+ right. And how can I show better how much I have profited by your
+ ladyship&rsquo;s excellent cheer, except by being critical?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You stand excused, Master Empson,&rdquo; said the <i>petite maitresse</i>,
+ sinking gently back on the downy couch, from which a momentary irritation
+ had startled her&mdash;&ldquo;I think the chocolate will please you, though
+ scarce equal to what we had from the Spanish resident Mendoza.&mdash;But
+ we must offer these strange people something. Will you ask them if they
+ would have coffee and chocolate, or cold wild-fowl, fruit, and wine? They
+ must be treated, so as to show them where they are, since here they are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unquestionably, madam,&rdquo; said Empson; &ldquo;but I have just at this instant
+ forgot the French for chocolate, hot bread, coffee, game, and drinkables.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is odd,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;and I have forgot my French and Italian at
+ the same moment. But it signifies little&mdash;I will order the things to
+ be brought, and they will remember the names of them themselves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Empson laughed loudly at this jest, and pawned his soul that the cold
+ sirloin which entered immediately after, was the best emblem of roast-beef
+ all the world over. Plentiful refreshments were offered to all the party,
+ of which both Fenella and Peveril partook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, the flageolet-player drew closer to the side of the lady
+ of the mansion&mdash;their intimacy was cemented, and their spirits set
+ afloat, by a glass of liqueur, which gave them additional confidence in
+ discussing the characters, as well of the superior attendants of the
+ Court, as of the inferior rank, to which they themselves might be supposed
+ to belong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady, indeed, during this conversation, frequently exerted her
+ complete and absolute superiority over Master Empson; in which that
+ musical gentleman humbly acquiesced whenever the circumstance was recalled
+ to his attention, whether in the way of blunt contradiction, sarcastic
+ insinuation, downright assumption of higher importance, or in any of the
+ other various modes by which such superiority is usually asserted and
+ maintained. But the lady&rsquo;s obvious love of scandal was the lure which very
+ soon brought her again down from the dignified part which for a moment she
+ assumed, and placed her once more on a gossiping level with her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their conversation was too trivial, and too much allied to petty Court
+ intrigues, with which he was totally unacquainted, to be in the least
+ interesting to Julian. As it continued for more than an hour, he soon
+ ceased to pay the least attention to a discourse consisting of nicknames,
+ patchwork, and innuendo; and employed himself in reflecting on his own
+ complicated affairs, and the probable issue of his approaching audience
+ with the King, which had been brought about by so singular an agent, and
+ by means so unexpected. He often looked to his guide, Fenella; and
+ observed that she was, for the greater part of the time, drowned in deep
+ and abstracted meditation. But three or four times&mdash;and it was when
+ the assumed airs and affected importance of the musician and their hostess
+ rose to the most extravagant excess&mdash;he observed that Fenella dealt
+ askance on them some of those bitter and almost blighting elfin looks,
+ which in the Isle of Man were held to imply contemptuous execration. There
+ was something in all her manner so extraordinary, joined to her sudden
+ appearance, and her demeanour in the King&rsquo;s presence, so oddly, yet so
+ well contrived to procure him a private audience&mdash;which he might, by
+ graver means, have sought in vain&mdash;that it almost justified the idea,
+ though he smiled at it internally, that the little mute agent was aided in
+ her machinations by the kindred imps, to whom, according to Manx
+ superstition, her genealogy was to be traced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another idea sometimes occurred to Julian, though he rejected the
+ question, as being equally wild with those doubts which referred Fenella
+ to a race different from that of mortals&mdash;&ldquo;Was she really afflicted
+ with those organical imperfections which had always seemed to sever her
+ from humanity?&mdash;If not, what could be the motives of so young a
+ creature practising so dreadful a penance for such an unremitted term of
+ years? And how formidable must be the strength of mind which could condemn
+ itself to so terrific a sacrifice&mdash;How deep and strong the purpose
+ for which it was undertaken!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a brief recollection of past events enabled him to dismiss this
+ conjecture as altogether wild and visionary. He had but to call to memory
+ the various stratagems practised by his light-hearted companion, the young
+ Earl of Derby, upon this forlorn girl&mdash;the conversations held in her
+ presence, in which the character of a creature so irritable and sensitive
+ upon all occasions, was freely, and sometimes satirically discussed,
+ without her expressing the least acquaintance with what was going forward,
+ to convince him that so deep a deception could never have been practised
+ for so many years, by a being of a turn of mind so peculiarly jealous and
+ irascible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He renounced, therefore, the idea, and turned his thoughts to his own
+ affairs, and his approaching interview with his Sovereign; in which
+ meditation we propose to leave him, until we briefly review the changes
+ which had taken place in the situation of Alice Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I fear the devil worst when gown and cassock,
+ Or, in the lack of them, old Calvin&rsquo;s cloak,
+ Conceals his cloven hoof.
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had scarce set sail for Whitehaven, when Alice Bridgenorth
+ and her governante, at the hasty command of her father, were embarked with
+ equal speed and secrecy on board of a bark bound for Liverpool. Christian
+ accompanied them on their voyage, as the friend to whose guardianship
+ Alice was to be consigned during any future separation from her father,
+ and whose amusing conversation, joined to his pleasing though cold
+ manners, as well as his near relationship, induced Alice, in her forlorn
+ situation, to consider her fate as fortunate in having such a guardian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Liverpool, as the reader already knows, Christian took the first overt
+ step in the villainy which he had contrived against the innocent girl, by
+ exposing her at a meeting-house to the unhallowed gaze of Chiffinch, in
+ order to convince him she was possessed of such uncommon beauty as might
+ well deserve the infamous promotion to which they meditated to raise her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Highly satisfied with her personal appearance, Chiffinch was no less so
+ with the sense and delicacy of her conversation, when he met her in
+ company with her uncle afterwards in London. The simplicity, and at the
+ same time the spirit of her remarks, made him regard her as his scientific
+ attendant the cook might have done a newly invented sauce, sufficiently <i>piquante</i>
+ in its qualities to awaken the jaded appetite of a cloyed and gorged
+ epicure. She was, he said and swore, the very corner-stone on which, with
+ proper management, and with his instruction, a few honest fellows might
+ build a Court fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the necessary introduction might take place, the confederates judged
+ fit she should be put under the charge of an experienced lady, whom some
+ called Mistress Chiffinch, and others Chiffinch&rsquo;s mistress&mdash;one of
+ those obliging creatures who are willing to discharge all the duties of a
+ wife, without the inconvenient and indissoluble ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was one, and not perhaps the least prejudicial consequence of the
+ license of that ill-governed time, that the bounds betwixt virtue and vice
+ were so far smoothed down and levelled, that the frail wife, or the tender
+ friend who was no wife, did not necessarily lose their place in society;
+ but, on the contrary, if they moved in the higher circles, were permitted
+ and encouraged to mingle with women whose rank was certain, and whose
+ reputation was untainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A regular <i>liaison</i>, like that of Chiffinch and his fair one,
+ inferred little scandal; and such was his influence, as prime minister of
+ his master&rsquo;s pleasures, that, as Charles himself expressed it, the lady
+ whom we introduced to our readers in the last chapter, had obtained a
+ brevet commission to rank as a married woman. And to do the gentle dame
+ justice, no wife could have been more attentive to forward his plans, or
+ more liberal in disposing of his income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She inhabited a set of apartments called Chiffinch&rsquo;s&mdash;the scene of
+ many an intrigue, both of love and politics; and where Charles often held
+ his private parties for the evening, when, as frequently happened, the
+ ill-humour of the Duchess of Portsmouth, his reigning Sultana, prevented
+ his supping with her. The hold which such an arrangement gave a man like
+ Chiffinch, used as he well knew how to use it, made him of too much
+ consequence to be slighted even by the first persons in the state, unless
+ they stood aloof from all manner of politics and Court intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the charge of Mistress Chiffinch, and of him whose name she bore,
+ Edward Christian placed the daughter of his sister, and of his confiding
+ friend, calmly contemplating her ruin as an event certain to follow; and
+ hoping to ground upon it his own chance of a more assured fortune, than a
+ life spent in intrigue had hitherto been able to procure for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The innocent Alice, without being able to discover what was wrong either
+ in the scenes of unusual luxury with which she was surrounded, or in the
+ manners of her hostess, which, both from nature and policy, were kind and
+ caressing&mdash;felt nevertheless an instinctive apprehension that all was
+ not right&mdash;a feeling in the human mind, allied, perhaps, to that
+ sense of danger which animals exhibit when placed in the vicinity of the
+ natural enemies of their race, and which makes birds cower when the hawk
+ is in the air, and beasts tremble when the tiger is abroad in the desert.
+ There was a heaviness at her heart which she could not dispel; and the few
+ hours which she had already spent at Chiffinch&rsquo;s were like those passed in
+ prison by one unconscious of the cause or event of his captivity. It was
+ the third morning after her arrival in London, that the scene took place
+ which we now recur to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impertinence and vulgarity of Empson, which was permitted to him as an
+ unrivalled performer upon his instrument, were exhausting themselves at
+ the expense of all other musical professors, and Mrs. Chiffinch was
+ listening with careless indifference, when some one was heard speaking
+ loudly, and with animation, in the inner apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, gemini and gilliflower water!&rdquo; exclaimed the damsel, startled out of
+ her fine airs into her natural vulgarity of exclamation, and running to
+ the door of communication&mdash;&ldquo;if he has not come back again after all!&mdash;and
+ if old Rowley&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tap at the farther and opposite door here arrested her attention&mdash;she
+ quitted the handle of that which she was about to open as speedily as if
+ it had burnt her fingers, and, moving back towards her couch, asked, &ldquo;Who
+ is there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Old Rowley himself, madam,&rdquo; said the King, entering the apartment with
+ his usual air of easy composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O crimini!&mdash;your Majesty!&mdash;I thought&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I was out of hearing, doubtless,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;and spoke of me as
+ folk speak of absent friends. Make no apology. I think I have heard ladies
+ say of their lace, that a rent is better than a darn.&mdash;Nay, be
+ seated.&mdash;Where is Chiffinch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is down at York House, your Majesty,&rdquo; said the dame, recovering,
+ though with no small difficulty, the calm affectation of her usual
+ demeanour. &ldquo;Shall I send your Majesty&rsquo;s commands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will wait his return,&rdquo; said the King.&mdash;&ldquo;Permit me to taste your
+ chocolate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is some fresh frothed in the office,&rdquo; said the lady; and using a
+ little silver call, or whistle, a black boy, superbly dressed, like an
+ Oriental page, with gold bracelets on his naked arms, and a gold collar
+ around his equally bare neck, attended with the favourite beverage of the
+ morning, in an apparatus of the richest china.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he sipped his cup of chocolate, the King looked round the apartment,
+ and observing Fenella, Peveril, and the musician, who remained standing
+ beside a large Indian screen, he continued, addressing Mistress Chiffinch,
+ though with polite indifference, &ldquo;I sent you the fiddles this morning&mdash;or
+ rather the flute&mdash;Empson, and a fairy elf whom I met in the Park, who
+ dances divinely. She has brought us the very newest saraband from the
+ Court of Queen Mab, and I sent her here, that you may see it at leisure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty does me by far too much honour,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, her eyes
+ properly cast down, and her accents minced into becoming humility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, little Chiffinch,&rdquo; answered the King, in a tone of as contemptuous
+ familiarity as was consistent with his good-breeding, &ldquo;it was not
+ altogether for thine own private ear, though quite deserving of all sweet
+ sounds; but I thought Nelly had been with thee this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can send Bajazet for her, your Majesty,&rdquo; answered the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I will not trouble your little heathen sultan to go so far. Still it
+ strikes me that Chiffinch said you had company&mdash;some country cousin,
+ or such a matter&mdash;Is there not such a person?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is a young person from the country,&rdquo; said Mistress Chiffinch,
+ striving to conceal a considerable portion of embarrassment; &ldquo;but she is
+ unprepared for such an honour as to be admitted into your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ presence, and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And therefore the fitter to receive it, Chiffinch. There is nothing in
+ nature so beautiful as the first blush of a little rustic between joy and
+ fear, and wonder and curiosity. It is the down on the peach&mdash;pity it
+ decays so soon!&mdash;the fruit remains, but the first high colouring and
+ exquisite flavour are gone.&mdash;Never put up thy lip for the matter,
+ Chiffinch, for it is as I tell you; so pray let us have <i>la belle
+ cousine</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mistress Chiffinch, more embarrassed than ever, again advanced towards the
+ door of communication, which she had been in the act of opening when his
+ Majesty entered. But just as she coughed pretty loudly, perhaps as a
+ signal to some one within, voices were again heard in a raised tone of
+ altercation&mdash;&mdash;the door was flung open, and Alice rushed out of
+ the inner apartment, followed to the door of it by the enterprising Duke
+ of Buckingham, who stood fixed with astonishment on finding his pursuit of
+ the flying fair one had hurried him into the presence of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice Bridgenorth appeared too much transported with anger to permit her
+ to pay attention to the rank or character of the company into which she
+ had thus suddenly entered. &ldquo;I remain no longer here, madam,&rdquo; she said to
+ Mrs. Chiffinch, in a tone of uncontrollable resolution; &ldquo;I leave instantly
+ a house where I am exposed to company which I detest, and to solicitations
+ which I despise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dismayed Mrs. Chiffinch could only implore her, in broken whispers, to
+ be silent; adding, while she pointed to Charles, who stood with his eyes
+ fixed rather on his audacious courtier than on the game which he pursued,
+ &ldquo;The King&mdash;the King!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I am in the King&rsquo;s presence,&rdquo; said Alice aloud, and in the same
+ torrent of passionate feeling, while her eye sparkled through tears of
+ resentment and insulted modesty, &ldquo;it is the better&mdash;it is his
+ Majesty&rsquo;s duty to protect me; and on his protection I throw myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words, which were spoken aloud, and boldly, at once recalled Julian
+ to himself, who had hitherto stood, as it were, bewildered. He approached
+ Alice, and, whispering in her ear that she had beside her one who would
+ defend her with his life, implored her to trust to his guardianship in
+ this emergency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clinging to his arm in all the ecstasy of gratitude and joy, the spirit
+ which had so lately invigorated Alice in her own defence, gave way in a
+ flood of tears, when she saw herself supported by him whom perhaps she
+ most wished to recognise as her protector. She permitted Peveril gently to
+ draw her back towards the screen before which he had been standing; where,
+ holding by his arm, but at the same time endeavouring to conceal herself
+ behind him, they waited the conclusion of a scene so singular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King seemed at first so much surprised at the unexpected apparition of
+ the Duke of Buckingham, as to pay little or no attention to Alice, who had
+ been the means of thus unceremoniously introducing his Grace into the
+ presence at a most unsuitable moment. In that intriguing Court, it had not
+ been the first time that the Duke had ventured to enter the lists of
+ gallantry in rivalry of his Sovereign, which made the present insult the
+ more intolerable. His purpose of lying concealed in those private
+ apartments was explained by the exclamations of Alice; and Charles,
+ notwithstanding the placidity of his disposition, and his habitual guard
+ over his passions, resented the attempt to seduce his destined mistress,
+ as an Eastern Sultan would have done the insolence of a vizier, who
+ anticipated his intended purchases of captive beauty in the slave-market.
+ The swarthy features of Charles reddened, and the strong lines on his dark
+ visage seemed to become inflated, as he said, in a voice which faltered
+ with passion, &ldquo;Buckingham, you dared not have thus insulted your equal! To
+ your master you may securely offer any affront, since his rank glues his
+ sword to the scabbard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The haughty Duke did not brook this taunt unanswered. &ldquo;My sword,&rdquo; he said,
+ with emphasis, &ldquo;was never in the scabbard, when your Majesty&rsquo;s service
+ required it should be unsheathed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace means, when its service was required for its master&rsquo;s
+ interest,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;for you could only gain the coronet of a Duke
+ by fighting for the royal crown. But it is over&mdash;I have treated you
+ as a friend&mdash;a companion&mdash;almost an equal&mdash;you have repaid
+ me with insolence and ingratitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; answered the Duke firmly, but respectfully, &ldquo;I am unhappy in your
+ displeasure; yet thus far fortunate, that while your words can confer
+ honour, they cannot impair or take it away.&mdash;It is hard,&rdquo; he added,
+ lowering his voice, so as only to be heard by the King,&mdash;&ldquo;It is hard
+ that the squall of a peevish wench should cancel the services of so many
+ years!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is harder,&rdquo; said the King, in the same subdued tone, which both
+ preserved through the rest of the conversation, &ldquo;that a wench&rsquo;s bright
+ eyes can make a nobleman forget the decencies due to his Sovereign&rsquo;s
+ privacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I presume to ask your Majesty what decencies are those?&rdquo; said the
+ Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles bit his lip to keep himself from smiling. &ldquo;Buckingham,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;this is a foolish business; and we must not forget (as we have nearly
+ done), that we have an audience to witness this scene, and should walk the
+ stage with dignity. I will show you your fault in private.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is enough that your Majesty has been displeased, and that I have
+ unhappily been the occasion,&rdquo; said the Duke, kneeling; &ldquo;although quite
+ ignorant of any purpose beyond a few words of gallantry; and I sue thus
+ low for your Majesty&rsquo;s pardon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he kneeled gracefully down. &ldquo;Thou hast it, George,&rdquo; said the
+ placable Prince. &ldquo;I believe thou wilt be sooner tired of offending than I
+ of forgiving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long may your Majesty live to give the offence, with which it is your
+ royal pleasure at present to charge my innocence,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What mean you by that, my lord?&rdquo; said Charles, the angry shade returning
+ to his brow for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Liege,&rdquo; replied the Duke, &ldquo;you are too honourable to deny your custom
+ of shooting with Cupid&rsquo;s bird-bolts in other men&rsquo;s warrens. You have ta&rsquo;en
+ the royal right of free-forestry over every man&rsquo;s park. It is hard that
+ you should be so much displeased at hearing a chance arrow whizz near your
+ own pales.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more on&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;but let us see where the dove has
+ harboured.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Helen has found a Paris while we were quarrelling,&rdquo; replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rather an Orpheus,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;and what is worse, one that is
+ already provided with a Eurydice&mdash;She is clinging to the fiddler.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is mere fright,&rdquo; said Buckingham, &ldquo;like Rochester&rsquo;s, when he crept
+ into the bass-viol to hide himself from Sir Dermot O&rsquo;Cleaver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must make the people show their talents,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;and stop
+ their mouths with money and civility, or we shall have this foolish
+ encounter over half the town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King then approached Julian, and desired him to take his instrument,
+ and cause his female companion to perform a saraband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had already the honour to inform your Majesty,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;that I
+ cannot contribute to your pleasure in the way you command me; and that
+ this young person is&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A retainer of the Lady Powis,&rdquo; said the King, upon whose mind things not
+ connected with his pleasures made a very slight impression. &ldquo;Poor lady,
+ she is in trouble about the lords in the Tower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, sir,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;she is a dependant of the Countess of
+ Derby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, true,&rdquo; answered Charles; &ldquo;it is indeed of Lady Derby, who hath also
+ her own distresses in these times. Do you know who taught the young person
+ to dance? Some of her steps mightily resemble Le Jeune&rsquo;s of Paris.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I presume she was taught abroad, sir,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;for myself, I am
+ charged with some weighty business by the Countess, which I would
+ willingly communicate to your Majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We will send you to our Secretary of State,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;But this
+ dancing envoy will oblige us once more, will she not?&mdash;Empson, now
+ that I remember, it was to your pipe that she danced&mdash;Strike up, man,
+ and put mettle into her feet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Empson began to play a well-known measure; and, as he had threatened, made
+ more than one false note, until the King, whose ear was very accurate,
+ rebuked him with, &ldquo;Sirrah, art thou drunk at this early hour, or must thou
+ too be playing thy slippery tricks with me? Thou thinkest thou art born to
+ beat time, but I will have time beat into thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hint was sufficient, and Empson took good care so to perform his air
+ as to merit his high and deserved reputation. But on Fenella it made not
+ the slightest impression. She rather leant than stood against the wall of
+ the apartment; her countenance as pale as death, her arms and hands
+ hanging down as if stiffened, and her existence only testified by the sobs
+ which agitated her bosom, and the tears which flowed from her half-closed
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A plague on it,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;some evil spirit is abroad this morning;
+ and the wenches are all bewitched, I think. Cheer up, my girl. What, in
+ the devil&rsquo;s name, has changed thee at once from a Nymph to a Niobe? If
+ thou standest there longer thou wilt grow to the very marble wall&mdash;Or&mdash;oddsfish,
+ George, have you been bird-bolting in this quarter also?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Buckingham could answer to this charge, Julian again kneeled down to
+ the King, and prayed to be heard, were it only for five minutes. &ldquo;The
+ young woman,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;had been long in attendance of the Countess of
+ Derby. She was bereaved of the faculties of speech and hearing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oddsfish, man, and dances so well?&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Nay, all Gresham
+ College shall never make me believe that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would have thought it equally impossible, but for what I to-day
+ witnessed,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;but only permit me, sir, to deliver the petition
+ of my lady the Countess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who art thou thyself, man?&rdquo; said the Sovereign; &ldquo;for though
+ everything which wears bodice and breast-knot has a right to speak to a
+ King, and be answered, I know not that they have a title to audience
+ through an envoy extraordinary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am Julian Peveril of Derbyshire,&rdquo; answered the supplicant, &ldquo;the son of
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, who&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Body of me&mdash;the old Worcester man?&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Oddsfish, I
+ remember him well&mdash;some harm has happened to him, I think&mdash;Is he
+ not dead, or very sick at least?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill at ease, and it please your Majesty, but not ill in health. He has
+ been imprisoned on account of an alleged accession to this Plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look you there,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;I knew he was in trouble; and yet how to
+ help the stout old Knight, I can hardly tell. I can scarce escape
+ suspicion of the Plot myself, though the principal object of it is to take
+ away my own life. Were I to stir to save a plotter, I should certainly be
+ brought in as an accessory.&mdash;Buckingham, thou hast some interest with
+ those who built this fine state engine, or at least who have driven it on&mdash;be
+ good-natured for once, though it is scarcely thy wont, and interfere to
+ shelter our old Worcester friend, Sir Godfrey. You have not forgot him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; answered the Duke; &ldquo;for I never heard the name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is Sir Geoffrey his Majesty would say,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if his Majesty <i>did</i> say Sir Geoffrey, Master Peveril, I cannot
+ see of what use I can be to your father,&rdquo; replied the Duke coldly. &ldquo;He is
+ accused of a heavy crime; and a British subject so accused, can have no
+ shelter either from prince or peer, but must stand to the award and
+ deliverance of God and his country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Heaven forgive thee thy hypocrisy, George,&rdquo; said the King hastily.
+ &ldquo;I would rather hear the devil preach religion than thee teach patriotism.
+ Thou knowest as well as I, that the nation is in a scarlet fever for fear
+ of the poor Catholics, who are not two men to five hundred; and that the
+ public mind is so harassed with new narrations of conspiracy, and fresh
+ horrors every day, that people have as little real sense of what is just
+ or unjust as men who talk in their sleep of what is sense or nonsense. I
+ have borne, and borne with it&mdash;I have seen blood flow on the
+ scaffold, fearing to thwart the nation in its fury&mdash;and I pray to God
+ that I or mine be not called on to answer for it. I will no longer swim
+ with the torrent, which honour and conscience call upon me to stem&mdash;I
+ will act the part of a Sovereign, and save my people from doing injustice,
+ even in their own despite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles walked hastily up and down the room as he expressed these unwonted
+ sentiments, with energy equally unwonted. After a momentary pause, the
+ Duke answered him gravely, &ldquo;Spoken like a Royal King, sir, but&mdash;pardon
+ me&mdash;not like a King of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles paused, as the Duke spoke, beside a window which looked full on
+ Whitehall, and his eye was involuntarily attracted by the fatal window of
+ the Banqueting House out of which his unhappy father was conducted to
+ execution. Charles was naturally, or, more purposely, constitutionally
+ brave; but a life of pleasure, together with the habit of governing his
+ course rather by what was expedient than by what was right, rendered him
+ unapt to dare the same scene of danger or of martyrdom, which had closed
+ his father&rsquo;s life and reign; and the thought came over his half-formed
+ resolution, like the rain upon a kindling beacon. In another man, his
+ perplexity would have seemed almost ludicrous; but Charles would not lose,
+ even under these circumstances, the dignity and grace, which were as
+ natural to him as his indifference and good humour. &ldquo;Our Council must
+ decide in this matter,&rdquo; he said, looking to the Duke; &ldquo;and be assured,
+ young man,&rdquo; he added, addressing Julian, &ldquo;your father shall not want an
+ intercessor in his King, so far as the laws will permit my interference in
+ his behalf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was about to retire, when Fenella, with a marked look, put into his
+ hand a slip of paper, on which she had hastily written, &ldquo;The packet&mdash;give
+ him the packet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, during which he reflected that Fenella was
+ the organ of the Countess&rsquo;s pleasure, Julian resolved to obey. &ldquo;Permit me,
+ then, Sire,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to place in your royal hands this packet, entrusted
+ to me by the Countess of Derby. The letters have already been once taken
+ from me; and I have little hope that I can now deliver them as they are
+ addressed. I place them, therefore, in your royal hands, certain that they
+ will evince the innocence of the writer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King shook his head as he took the packet reluctantly. &ldquo;It is no safe
+ office you have undertaken, young man. A messenger has sometimes his
+ throat cut for the sake of his despatches&mdash;But give them to me; and,
+ Chiffinch, give me wax and a taper.&rdquo; He employed himself in folding the
+ Countess&rsquo;s packet in another envelope. &ldquo;Buckingham,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you are
+ evidence that I do not read them till the Council shall see them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham approached, and offered his services in folding the parcel, but
+ Charles rejected his assistance; and having finished his task, he sealed
+ the packet with his own signet-ring. The Duke bit his lip and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, young man,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;your errand is sped, so far as it
+ can at present be forwarded.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian bowed deeply, as to take leave at these words, which he rightly
+ interpreted as a signal for his departure. Alice Bridgenorth still clung
+ to his arm, and motioned to withdraw along with him. The King and
+ Buckingham looked at each other in conscious astonishment, and yet not
+ without a desire to smile, so strange did it seem to them that a prize,
+ for which, an instant before, they had been mutually contending, should
+ thus glide out of their grasp, or rather be borne off by a third and very
+ inferior competitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mistress Chiffinch,&rdquo; said the King, with a hesitation which he could not
+ disguise, &ldquo;I hope your fair charge is not about to leave you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly not, your Majesty,&rdquo; answered Chiffinch. &ldquo;Alice, my love&mdash;you
+ mistake&mdash;that opposite door leads to your apartments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, madam,&rdquo; answered Alice; &ldquo;I have indeed mistaken my road, but
+ it was when I came hither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The errant damosel,&rdquo; said Buckingham, looking at Charles with as much
+ intelligence as etiquette permitted him to throw into his eye, and then
+ turning it towards Alice, as she still held by Julian&rsquo;s arm, &ldquo;is resolved
+ not to mistake her road a second time. She has chosen a sufficient guide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet stories tell that such guides have led maidens astray,&rdquo; said the
+ King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice blushed deeply, but instantly recovered her composure so soon as she
+ saw that her liberty was likely to depend upon the immediate exercise of
+ resolution. She quitted, from a sense of insulted delicacy, the arm of
+ Julian, to which she had hitherto clung; but as she spoke, she continued
+ to retain a slight grasp of his cloak. &ldquo;I have indeed mistaken my way,&rdquo;
+ she repeated still addressing Mrs. Chiffinch, &ldquo;but it was when I crossed
+ this threshold. The usage to which I have been exposed in your house has
+ determined me to quit it instantly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not permit that, my young mistress,&rdquo; answered Mrs. Chiffinch,
+ &ldquo;until your uncle, who placed you under my care, shall relieve me of the
+ charge of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will answer for my conduct, both to my uncle, and, what is of more
+ importance, to my father,&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;You must permit me to depart,
+ madam; I am free-born, and you have no right to detain me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon me, my young madam,&rdquo; said Mistress Chiffinch, &ldquo;I have a right, and
+ I will maintain it too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will know that before quitting this presence,&rdquo; said Alice firmly; and,
+ advancing a step or two, she dropped on her knee before the King. &ldquo;Your
+ Majesty,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;if indeed I kneel before King Charles, is the father
+ of your subjects.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of a good many of them,&rdquo; said the Duke of Buckingham apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I demand protection of you, in the name of God, and of the oath your
+ Majesty swore when you placed on your head the crown of this kingdom!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have my protection,&rdquo; said the King, a little confused by an appeal so
+ unexpected and so solemn. &ldquo;Do but remain quiet with this lady, with whom
+ your parents have placed you; neither Buckingham nor any one else shall
+ intrude on you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His Majesty,&rdquo; added Buckingham, in the same tone, and speaking from the
+ restless and mischief-making spirit of contradiction, which he never could
+ restrain, even when indulging it was most contrary, not only to propriety,
+ but to his own interest,&mdash;&ldquo;His Majesty will protect you, fair lady,
+ from all intrusion save what must not be termed such.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice darted a keen look on the Duke, as if to read his meaning; another
+ on Charles, to know whether she had guessed it rightly. There was a guilty
+ confession on the King&rsquo;s brow, which confirmed Alice&rsquo;s determination to
+ depart. &ldquo;Your Majesty will forgive me,&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;it is not here that I
+ can enjoy the advantage of your royal protection. I am resolved to leave
+ this house. If I am detained, it must be by violence, which I trust no one
+ dare offer to me in your Majesty&rsquo;s presence. This gentleman, whom I have
+ long known, will conduct me to my friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We make but an indifferent figure in this scene, methinks,&rdquo; said the
+ King, addressing the Duke of Buckingham, and speaking in a whisper; &ldquo;but
+ she must go&mdash;I neither will, nor dare, stop her from returning to her
+ father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if she does,&rdquo; swore the Duke internally, &ldquo;I would, as Sir Andrew
+ Smith saith, I might never touch fair lady&rsquo;s hand.&rdquo; And stepping back, he
+ spoke a few words with Empson the musician, who left the apartment, for a
+ few minutes, and presently returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King seemed irresolute concerning the part he should act under
+ circumstances so peculiar. To be foiled in a gallant intrigue, was to
+ subject himself to the ridicule of his gay court; to persist in it by any
+ means which approached to constraint, would have been tyrannical; and,
+ what perhaps he might judge as severe an imputation, it would have been
+ unbecoming a gentleman. &ldquo;Upon my honour, young lady,&rdquo; he said, with an
+ emphasis, &ldquo;you have nothing to fear in this house. But it is improper, for
+ your own sake, that you should leave it in this abrupt manner. If you will
+ have the goodness to wait but a quarter of an hour, Mistress Chiffinch&rsquo;s
+ coach will be placed at your command, to transport you where you will.
+ Spare yourself the ridicule, and me the pain of seeing you leave the house
+ of one of my servants, as if you were escaping from a prison.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King spoke in good-natured sincerity, and Alice was inclined for an
+ instant to listen to his advice; but recollecting that she had to search
+ for her father and uncle, or, failing them, for some suitable place of
+ secure residence, it rushed on her mind that the attendants of Mistress
+ Chiffinch were not likely to prove trusty guides or assistants in such a
+ purpose. Firmly and respectfully she announced her purpose of instant
+ departure. She needed no other escort, she said, than what this gentleman,
+ Master Julian Peveril, who was well known to her father, would willingly
+ afford her; nor did she need that farther than until she had reached her
+ father&rsquo;s residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, then, lady, a God&rsquo;s name!&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;I am sorry so much
+ beauty should be wedded to so many shrewish suspicions.&mdash;For you,
+ Master Peveril, I should have thought you had enough to do with your own
+ affairs without interfering with the humours of the fair sex. The duty of
+ conducting all strayed damsels into the right path is, as matters go in
+ this good city, rather too weighty an undertaking for your youth and
+ inexperience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, eager to conduct Alice from a place of which he began fully to
+ appreciate the perils, answered nothing to this taunt, but bowing
+ reverently, led her from the apartment. Her sudden appearance, and the
+ animated scene which followed, had entirely absorbed, for the moment, the
+ recollection of his father and of the Countess of Derby; and while the
+ dumb attendant of the latter remained in the room, a silent, and, as it
+ were, stunned spectator of all that had happened, Peveril had become, in
+ the predominating interest of Alice&rsquo;s critical situation, totally
+ forgetful of her presence. But no sooner had he left the room, without
+ noticing or attending to her, than Fenella, starting, as from a trance,
+ drew herself up, and looked wildly around, like one waking from a dream,
+ as if to assure herself that her companion was gone, and gone without
+ paying the slightest attention to her. She folded her hands together, and
+ cast her eyes upwards, with an expression of such agony as explained to
+ Charles (as he thought) what painful ideas were passing in her mind. &ldquo;This
+ Peveril is a perfect pattern of successful perfidy, carrying off this
+ Queen of the Amazons, but he has left us, I think, a disconsolate Ariadne
+ in her place.&mdash;But weep not, my princess of pretty movements,&rdquo; he
+ said, addressing himself to Fenella; &ldquo;if we cannot call in Bacchus to
+ console you, we will commit you to the care of Empson, who shall drink
+ with <i>Liber Pater</i> for a thousand pounds, and I will say done first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the King spoke these words, Fenella rushed past him with her wonted
+ rapidity of step, and, with much less courtesy than was due to the royal
+ presence, hurried downstairs, and out of the house, without attempting to
+ open any communication with the Monarch. He saw her abrupt departure with
+ more surprise than displeasure; and presently afterwards, bursting into a
+ fit of laughter, he said to the Duke, &ldquo;Oddsfish, George, this young spark
+ might teach the best of us how to manage the wenches. I have had my own
+ experience, but I could never yet contrive either to win or lose them with
+ so little ceremony.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Experience, sir,&rdquo; replied the duke, &ldquo;cannot be acquired without years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, George; and you would, I suppose, insinuate,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;that
+ the gallant who acquires it, loses as much in youth as he gains in art? I
+ defy your insinuation, George. You cannot overreach your master, old as
+ you think him, either in love or politics. You have not the secret <i>plumer
+ la poule sans la faire crier</i>, witness this morning&rsquo;s work. I will give
+ you odds at all games&mdash;ay, and at the Mall too, if thou darest accept
+ my challenge.&mdash;Chiffinch, what for dost thou convulse thy pretty
+ throat and face with sobbing and hatching tears, which seem rather
+ unwilling to make their appearance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is for fear,&rdquo; whined Chiffinch, &ldquo;that your Majesty should think&mdash;that
+ you should expect&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I should expect gratitude from a courtier, or faith from a woman?&rdquo;
+ answered the King, patting her at the same time under the chin, to make
+ her raise her face&mdash;&ldquo;Tush! chicken, I am not so superfluous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There it is now,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, continuing to sob the more bitterly, as
+ she felt herself unable to produce any tears; &ldquo;I see your Majesty is
+ determined to lay all the blame on me, when I am innocent as an unborn
+ babe&mdash;I will be judged by his Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No doubt, no doubt, Chiffie,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;His Grace and you will be
+ excellent judges in each other&rsquo;s cause, and as good witnesses in each
+ other&rsquo;s favour. But to investigate the matter impartially, we must examine
+ our evidence apart.&mdash;My Lord Duke, we meet at the Mall at noon, if
+ your Grace dare accept my challenge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Grace of Buckingham bowed, and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But when the bully with assuming pace,
+ Cocks his broad hat, edged round with tarnish&rsquo;d lace,
+ Yield not the way&mdash;defy his strutting pride,
+ And thrust him to the muddy kennel&rsquo;s side,
+ Yet rather bear the shower and toils of mud,
+ Than in the doubtful quarrel risk thy blood.
+ &mdash;GAY&rsquo;S TRIVIA.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, half-leading, half-supporting, Alice Bridgenorth, had
+ reached the middle of Saint Jame&rsquo;s Street ere the doubt occurred to him
+ which way they should bend their course. He then asked Alice whither he
+ should conduct her, and learned, to his surprise and embarrassment, that,
+ far from knowing where her father was to be found, she had no certain
+ knowledge that he was in London, and only hoped that he had arrived, from
+ the expressions which he had used at parting. She mentioned her uncle
+ Christian&rsquo;s address, but it was with doubt and hesitation, arising from
+ the hands in which he had already placed her; and her reluctance to go
+ again under his protection was strongly confirmed by her youthful guide,
+ when a few words had established to his conviction the identity of
+ Ganlesse and Christian.&mdash;What then was to be done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alice,&rdquo; said Julian, after a moment&rsquo;s reflection, &ldquo;you must seek your
+ earliest and best friend&mdash;I mean my mother. She has now no castle in
+ which to receive you&mdash;she has but a miserable lodging, so near the
+ jail in which my father is confined, that it seems almost a cell of the
+ same prison. I have not seen her since my coming hither; but thus much
+ have I learned by inquiry. We will now go to her apartment; such as it is,
+ I know she will share it with one so innocent and so unprotected as you
+ are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious Heaven!&rdquo; said the poor girl, &ldquo;am I then so totally deserted,
+ that I must throw myself on the mercy of her who, of all the world, has
+ most reason to spurn me from her?&mdash;Julian, can you advise me to this?&mdash;Is
+ there none else who will afford me a few hours&rsquo; refuge, till I can hear
+ from my father?&mdash;No other protectress but her whose ruin has, I fear,
+ been accelerated by&mdash;&mdash;Julian, I dare not appear before your
+ mother! she must hate me for my family, and despise me for my meanness. To
+ be a second time cast on her protection, when the first has been so evil
+ repaid&mdash;Julian, I dare not go with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has never ceased to love you, Alice,&rdquo; said her conductor, whose steps
+ she continued to attend, even while declaring her resolution not to go
+ with him, &ldquo;she never felt anything but kindness towards you, nay, towards
+ your father; for though his dealings with us have been harsh, she can
+ allow much for the provocation which he has received. Believe me, with her
+ you will be safe as with a mother&mdash;perhaps it may be the means of
+ reconciling the divisions by which we have suffered so much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might God grant it!&rdquo; said Alice. &ldquo;Yet how shall I face your mother? And
+ will she be able to protect me against these powerful men&mdash;against my
+ uncle Christian? Alas, that I must call him my worst enemy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has the ascendancy which honour hath over infamy, and virtue over
+ vice,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and to no human power but your father&rsquo;s will she
+ resign you, if you consent to choose her for your protectress. Come, then,
+ with me, Alice; and&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was interrupted by some one, who, laying an unceremonious hold of
+ his cloak, pulled it with so much force as compelled him to stop and lay
+ his hand on his sword. He turned at the same time, and, when he turned,
+ beheld Fenella. The cheek of the mute glowed like fire; her eyes sparkled,
+ and her lips were forcibly drawn together, as if she had difficulty to
+ repress those wild screams which usually attended her agonies of passion,
+ and which, uttered in the open street, must instantly have collected a
+ crowd. As it was, her appearance was so singular, and her emotion so
+ evident, that men gazed as they came on, and looked back after they had
+ passed, at the singular vivacity of her gestures; while, holding Peveril&rsquo;s
+ cloak with one hand, she made with the other the most eager and imperious
+ signs that he should leave Alice Bridgenorth and follow her. She touched
+ the plume in her bonnet to remind him of the Earl&mdash;pointed to her
+ heart, to imitate the Countess&mdash;raised her closed hand, as if to
+ command him in their name&mdash;and next moment folded both, as if to
+ supplicate him in her own; while pointing to Alice with an expression at
+ once of angry and scornful derision, she waved her hand repeatedly and
+ disdainfully, to intimate that Peveril ought to cast her off, as something
+ undeserving his protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frightened, she knew not why, at these wild gestures, Alice clung closer
+ to Julian&rsquo;s arm than she had at first dared to do; and this mark of
+ confidence in his protection seemed to increase the passion of Fenella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was dreadfully embarrassed; his situation was sufficiently
+ precarious, even before Fenella&rsquo;s ungovernable passions threatened to ruin
+ the only plan which he had been able to suggest. What she wanted with him&mdash;how
+ far the fate of the Earl and Countess might depend on his following her,
+ he could not even conjecture; but be the call how peremptory soever, he
+ resolved not to comply with it until he had seen Alice placed in safety.
+ In the meantime, he determined not to lose sight of Fenella; and
+ disregarding her repeated, disdainful, and impetuous rejection of the hand
+ which he offered her, he at length seemed so far to have soothed her, that
+ she seized upon his right arm, and, as if despairing of his following <i>her</i>
+ path, appeared reconciled to attend him on that which he himself should
+ choose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, with a youthful female clinging to each arm, and both remarkably
+ calculated to attract the public eye, though from very different reasons,
+ Julian resolved to make the shortest road to the water-side, and there to
+ take boat for Blackfriars, as the nearest point of landing to Newgate,
+ where he concluded that Lance had already announced his arrival in London
+ to Sir Geoffrey, then inhabiting that dismal region, and to his lady, who,
+ so far as the jailer&rsquo;s rigour permitted, shared and softened his
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian&rsquo;s embarrassment in passing Charing Cross and Northumberland House
+ was so great as to excite the attention of the passengers; for he had to
+ compose his steps so as to moderate the unequal and rapid pace of Fenella
+ to the timid and faint progress of his left-hand companion; and while it
+ would have been needless to address himself to the former, who could not
+ comprehend him, he dared not speak himself to Alice, for fear of awakening
+ into frenzy the jealousy, or at least the impatience of Fenella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many passengers looked at them with wonder, and some with smiles; but
+ Julian remarked that there were two who never lost sight of them, and to
+ whom his situation, and the demeanour of his companions, seemed to afford
+ matter of undisguised merriment. These were young men, such as may be seen
+ in the same precincts in the present day, allowing for the difference in
+ the fashion of their apparel. They abounded in periwig, and fluttered with
+ many hundred yards of ribbon, disposed in bow-knots upon their sleeves,
+ their breeches, and their waistcoats, in the very extremity of the
+ existing mode. A quantity of lace and embroidery made their habits rather
+ fine than tasteful. In a word, they were dressed in that caricature of the
+ fashion, which sometimes denotes a harebrained man of quality who has a
+ mind to be distinguished as a fop of the first order, but is much more
+ frequently in the disguise of those who desire to be esteemed men of rank
+ on account of their dress, having no other pretension to the distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two gallants passed Peveril more than once, linked arm in arm, then
+ sauntered, so as to oblige him to pass them in turn, laughing and
+ whispering during these manoeuvres&mdash;staring broadly at Peveril and
+ his female companions&mdash;and affording them, as they came into contact,
+ none of those facilities of giving place which are required on such
+ occasions by the ordinary rules of the pavé.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril did not immediately observe their impertinence; but when it was
+ too gross to escape his notice, his gall began to arise; and, in addition
+ to all the other embarrassments of his situation, he had to combat the
+ longing desire which he felt to cudgel handsomely the two coxcombs who
+ seemed thus determined on insulting him. Patience and sufferance were
+ indeed strongly imposed on him by circumstances; but at length it became
+ scarcely possible to observe their dictates any longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, for the third time, Julian found himself obliged, with his
+ companions, to pass this troublesome brace of fops, they kept walking
+ close behind him, speaking so loud as to be heard, and in a tone of
+ perfect indifference whether he listened to them or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is bumpkin&rsquo;s best luck,&rdquo; said the taller of the two (who was indeed
+ a man of remarkable size, alluding to the plainness of Peveril&rsquo;s dress,
+ which was scarce fit for the streets of London)&mdash;&ldquo;Two such fine
+ wenches, and under guard of a grey frock and an oaken riding-rod!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Puritan&rsquo;s luck rather, and more than enough of it,&rdquo; said his
+ companion. &ldquo;You may read Puritan in his pace and in his patience.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right as a pint bumper, Tom,&rdquo; said his friend&mdash;&ldquo;Isschar is an ass
+ that stoopeth between two burdens.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a mind to ease long-eared Laurence of one of his encumbrances,&rdquo;
+ said the shorter fellow. &ldquo;That black-eyed sparkler looks as if she had a
+ mind to run away from him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; answered the taller, &ldquo;and the blue-eyed trembler looks as if she
+ would fall behind into my loving arms.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words, Alice, holding still closer by Peveril&rsquo;s arm than
+ formerly, mended her pace almost to running, in order to escape from men
+ whose language was so alarming; and Fenella walked hastily forward in the
+ same manner, having perhaps caught, from the men&rsquo;s gestures and demeanour,
+ that apprehension which Alice had taken from their language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fearful of the consequences of a fray in the streets, which must
+ necessarily separate him from these unprotected females, Peveril
+ endeavoured to compound betwixt the prudence necessary for their
+ protection and his own rising resentment; and as this troublesome pair of
+ attendants endeavoured again to pass them close to Hungerford Stairs, he
+ said to them with constrained calmness, &ldquo;Gentlemen, I owe you something
+ for the attention you have bestowed on the affairs of a stranger. If you
+ have any pretension to the name I have given you, you will tell me where
+ you are to be found.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And with what purpose,&rdquo; said the taller of the two sneeringly, &ldquo;does your
+ most rustic gravity, or your most grave rusticity, require of us such
+ information?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, they both faced about, in such a manner as to make it
+ impossible for Julian to advance any farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make for the stairs, Alice,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I will be with you in an instant.&rdquo;
+ Then freeing himself with difficulty from the grasp of his companions, he
+ cast his cloak hastily round his left arm, and said, sternly, to his
+ opponents, &ldquo;Will you give me your names, sirs; or will you be pleased to
+ make way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not till we know for whom we are to give place,&rdquo; said one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For one who will else teach you what you want&mdash;good manners,&rdquo; said
+ Peveril, and advanced as if to push between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They separated, but one of them stretched forth his foot before Peveril,
+ as if he meant to trip him. The blood of his ancestors was already boiling
+ within him; he struck the man on the face with the oaken rod which he had
+ just sneered at, and throwing it from him, instantly unsheathed his sword.
+ Both the others drew, and pushed at once; but he caught the point of the
+ one rapier in his cloak, and parried the other thrust with his own weapon.
+ He must have been less lucky in the second close, but a cry arose among
+ the watermen, of &ldquo;Shame, shame! two upon one!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are men of the Duke of Buckingham&rsquo;s,&rdquo; said one fellow&mdash;&ldquo;there&rsquo;s
+ no safe meddling with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They may be the devil&rsquo;s men, if they will,&rdquo; said an ancient Triton,
+ flourishing his stretcher; &ldquo;but I say fair play, and old England for ever;
+ and, I say, knock the gold-laced puppies down, unless they will fight turn
+ about with grey jerkin, like honest fellows. One down&mdash;t&rsquo;other come
+ on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lower orders of London have in all times been remarkable for the
+ delight which they have taken in club-law, or fist-law; and for the equity
+ and impartiality with which they see it administered. The noble science of
+ defence was then so generally known, that a bout at single rapier excited
+ at that time as much interest and as little wonder as a boxing-match in
+ our own days. The bystanders experienced in such affrays, presently formed
+ a ring, within which Peveril and the taller and more forward of his
+ antagonists were soon engaged in close combat with their swords, whilst
+ the other, overawed by the spectators, was prevented from interfering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well done the tall fellow!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Well thrust, long-legs!&rsquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Huzza
+ for two ells and a quarter!&rdquo; were the sounds with which the fray was at
+ first cheered; for Peveril&rsquo;s opponent not only showed great activity and
+ skill in fence, but had also a decided advantage, from the anxiety with
+ which Julian looked out for Alice Bridgenorth; the care for whose safety
+ diverted him in the beginning of the onset from that which he ought to
+ have exclusively bestowed on the defence of his own life. A slight
+ flesh-wound in the side at once punished, and warned him of, his
+ inadvertence; when, turning his whole thoughts on the business in which he
+ was engaged, and animated with anger against his impertinent intruder, the
+ rencontre speedily began to assume another face, amidst cries of &ldquo;Well
+ done, grey jerkin!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Try the metal of his gold doublet!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Finely
+ thrust!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Curiously parried!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;There went another eyelet-hole
+ to his broidered jerkin!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Fairly pinked, by G&mdash;d!&rdquo; In
+ applause, accompanying a successful and conclusive lunge, by which Peveril
+ ran his gigantic antagonist through the body. He looked at his prostrate
+ foe for a moment; then, recovering himself, called loudly to know what had
+ become of the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never mind the lady, if you be wise,&rdquo; said one of the watermen; &ldquo;the
+ constable will be here in an instant. I&rsquo;ll give your honour a cast across
+ the water in a moment. It may be as much as your neck&rsquo;s worth. Shall only
+ charge a Jacobus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You be d&mdash;d!&rdquo; said one of his rivals in profession, &ldquo;as your father
+ was before you; for a Jacobus, I&rsquo;ll set the gentleman into Alsatia, where
+ neither bailiff nor constable dare trespass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The lady, you scoundrels, the lady!&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril&mdash;-&ldquo;Where is
+ the lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll carry your honour where you shall have enough of ladies, if that be
+ your want,&rdquo; said the old Triton; and as he spoke, the clamour amongst the
+ watermen was renewed, each hoping to cut his own profit out of the
+ emergency of Julian&rsquo;s situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A sculler will be least suspected, your honour,&rdquo; said one fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A pair of oars will carry you through the water like a wild-duck,&rdquo; said
+ another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you have got never a tilt, brother,&rdquo; said a third. &ldquo;Now I can put the
+ gentleman as snug as if he were under hatches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of the oaths and clamour attending this aquatic controversy
+ for his custom, Peveril at length made them understand that he would
+ bestow a Jacobus, not on him whose boat was first oars, but on whomsoever
+ should inform him of the fate of the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of which lady?&rdquo; said a sharp fellow: &ldquo;for, to my thought, there was a
+ pair of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of both, of both,&rdquo; answered Peveril; &ldquo;but first, of the fair-haired
+ lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay, that was she that shrieked so when gold-jacket&rsquo;s companion handed
+ her into No. 20.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&mdash;what&mdash;who dared to hand her?&rdquo; exclaimed Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, master, you have heard enough of my tale without a fee,&rdquo; said the
+ waterman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sordid rascal!&rdquo; said Peveril, giving him a gold piece, &ldquo;speak out, or
+ I&rsquo;ll run my sword through you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the matter of that, master,&rdquo; answered the fellow, &ldquo;not while I can
+ handle this trunnion&mdash;but a bargain&rsquo;s a bargain; and so I&rsquo;ll tell
+ you, for your gold piece, that the comrade of the fellow forced one of
+ your wenches, her with the fair hair, will she, nill she, into Tickling
+ Tom&rsquo;s wherry; and they are far enough up Thames by this time, with wind
+ and tide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sacred Heaven, and I stand here!&rdquo; exclaimed Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, that is because your honour will not take a boat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, my friend&mdash;a boat&mdash;a boat instantly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Follow me, then, squire.&mdash;Here, Tom, bear a hand&mdash;the gentleman
+ is our fare.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A volley of water language was exchanged betwixt the successful candidate
+ for Peveril&rsquo;s custom and his disappointed brethren, which concluded by the
+ ancient Triton&rsquo;s bellowing out, in a tone above them all, &ldquo;that the
+ gentleman was in a fair way to make a voyage to the isle of gulls, for
+ that sly Jack was only bantering him&mdash;No. 20 had rowed for York
+ Buildings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the isle of gallows,&rdquo; cried another; &ldquo;for here comes one who will mar
+ his trip up Thames, and carry him down to Execution Dock.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, as he spoke the word, a constable, with three or four of his
+ assistants, armed with the old-fashioned brown bills, which were still
+ used for arming those guardians of the peace, cut off our hero&rsquo;s farther
+ progress to the water&rsquo;s edge, by arresting him in the King&rsquo;s name. To
+ attempt resistance would have been madness, as he was surrounded on all
+ sides; so Peveril was disarmed, and carried before the nearest Justice of
+ the Peace, for examination and committal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legal sage before whom Julian was taken was a man very honest in his
+ intentions, very bounded in his talents, and rather timid in his
+ disposition. Before the general alarm given to England, and to the city of
+ London in particular, by the notable discovery of the Popish Plot, Master
+ Maulstatute had taken serene and undisturbed pride and pleasure in the
+ discharge of his duties as a Justice of the Peace, with the exercise of
+ all its honorary privileges and awful authority. But the murder of Sir
+ Edmondsbury Godfrey had made a strong, nay, an indelible impression on his
+ mind; and he walked the Courts of Themis with fear and trembling after
+ that memorable and melancholy event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having a high idea of his official importance, and rather an exalted
+ notion of his personal consequence, his honour saw nothing from that time
+ but cords and daggers before his eyes, and never stepped out of his own
+ house, which he fortified, and in some measure garrisoned, with
+ half-a-dozen tall watchmen and constables, without seeing himself watched
+ by a Papist in disguise, with a drawn sword under his cloak. It was even
+ whispered, that, in the agonies of his fears, the worshipful Master
+ Maulstatute mistook the kitchen-wench with a tinderbox, for a Jesuit with
+ a pistol; but if any one dared to laugh at such an error, he would have
+ done well to conceal his mirth, lest he fell under the heavy inculpation
+ of being a banterer and stifler of the Plot&mdash;a crime almost as deep
+ as that of being himself a plotter. In fact, the fears of the honest
+ Justice, however ridiculously exorbitant, were kept so much in countenance
+ by the outcry of the day, and the general nervous fever, which afflicted
+ every good Protestant, that Master Maulstatute was accounted the bolder
+ man and the better magistrate, while, under the terror of the air-drawn
+ dagger which fancy placed continually before his eyes, he continued to
+ dole forth Justice in the recesses of his private chamber, nay,
+ occasionally to attend Quarter-Sessions, when the hall was guarded by a
+ sufficient body of the militia. Such was the wight, at whose door, well
+ chained and doubly bolted, the constable who had Julian in custody now
+ gave his important and well-known knock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this official signal, the party was not admitted until the
+ clerk, who acted the part of high-warder, had reconnoitred them through a
+ grated wicket; for who could say whether the Papists might not have made
+ themselves master of Master Constable&rsquo;s sign, and have prepared a pseudo
+ watch to burst in and murder the Justice, under pretence of bringing in a
+ criminal before him?&mdash;Less hopeful projects had figured in the
+ Narrative of the Popish Plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All being found right, the key was turned, the bolts were drawn, and the
+ chain unhooked, so as to permit entrance to the constable, the prisoner,
+ and the assistants; and the door was then a suddenly shut against the
+ witnesses, who, as less trustworthy persons, were requested (through the
+ wicket) to remain in the yard, until they should be called in their
+ respective turns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Julian been inclined for mirth, as was far from being the case, he
+ must have smiled at the incongruity of the clerk&rsquo;s apparel, who had belted
+ over his black buckram suit a buff baldric, sustaining a broadsword, and a
+ pair of huge horse-pistols; and, instead of the low flat hat, which,
+ coming in place of the city cap, completed the dress of a scrivener, had
+ placed on his greasy locks a rusted steel-cap, which had seen
+ Marston-Moor; across which projected his well-used quill, in the guise of
+ a plume&mdash;the shape of the morion not admitting of its being stuck, as
+ usual, behind his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This whimsical figure conducted the constable, his assistants, and the
+ prisoner, into the low hall, where his principal dealt forth justice; who
+ presented an appearance still more singular than that of his dependant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sundry good Protestants, who thought so highly of themselves as to suppose
+ they were worthy to be distinguished as objects of Catholic cruelty, had
+ taken to defensive arms on the occasion. But it was quickly found that a
+ breast-plate and back-plate of proof, fastened together with iron clasps,
+ was no convenient enclosure for a man who meant to eat venison and
+ custard; and that a buff-coat or shirt of mail was scarcely more
+ accommodating to the exertions necessary on such active occasions.
+ Besides, there were other objections, as the alarming and menacing aspects
+ which such warlike habiliments gave to the Exchange, and other places,
+ where merchants most do congregate; and excoriations were bitterly
+ complained of by many, who, not belonging to the artillery company, or
+ trained bands, had no experience in bearing defensive armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To obviate these objections, and, at the same time, to secure the persons
+ of all true Protestant citizens against open force or privy assassinations
+ on the part of the Papists, some ingenious artist, belonging, we may
+ presume, to the worshipful Mercers&rsquo; Company, had contrived a species of
+ armour, of which neither the horse-armory in the Tower, nor Gwynnap&rsquo;s
+ Gothic Hall, no, nor Dr. Meyrick&rsquo;s invaluable collection of ancient arms,
+ has preserved any specimen. It was called silk-armour, being composed of a
+ doublet and breeches of quilted silk, so closely stitched, and of such
+ thickness, as to be proof against either bullet or steel; while a thick
+ bonnet of the same materials, with ear-flaps attached to it, and on the
+ whole, much resembling a nightcap, completed the equipment and ascertained
+ the security of the wearer from the head to the knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master Maulstatute, among other worthy citizens, had adopted this singular
+ panoply, which had the advantage of being soft, and warm, and flexible, as
+ well as safe. And he now sat in his judicial elbow-chair&mdash;a short,
+ rotund figure, hung round, as it were, with cushions, for such was the
+ appearance of the quilted garments; and with a nose protruded from under
+ the silken casque, the size of which, together with the unwieldiness of
+ the whole figure, gave his worship no indifferent resemblance to the sign
+ of the Hog in Armour, which was considerably improved by the defensive
+ garment being of dusty orange colour, not altogether unlike the hue of
+ those half-wild swine which are to be found in the forest of Hampshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secure in these invulnerable envelopments, his worship had rested content,
+ although severed from his own death-doing weapons, of rapier, poniard, and
+ pistols, which were placed nevertheless, at no great distance from his
+ chair. One offensive implement, indeed, he thought it prudent to keep on
+ the table beside his huge Coke upon Lyttleton. This was a sort of pocket
+ flail, consisting of a piece of strong ash, about eighteen inches long, to
+ which was attached a swinging club of <i>lignum-vitæ</i>, nearly twice as
+ long as the handle, but jointed so as to be easily folded up. This
+ instrument, which bore at that time the singular name of the Protestant
+ flail, might be concealed under the coat, until circumstances demanded its
+ public appearance. A better precaution against surprise than his arms,
+ whether offensive or defensive, was a strong iron grating, which, crossing
+ the room in front of the justice&rsquo;s table, and communicating by a grated
+ door, which was usually kept locked, effectually separated the accused
+ party from his judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice Maulstatute, such as we have described him, chose to hear the
+ accusation of the witnesses before calling on Peveril for his defence. The
+ detail of the affray was briefly given by the bystanders, and seemed
+ deeply to touch the spirit of the examinator. He shook his silken casque
+ emphatically, when he understood that, after some language betwixt the
+ parties, which the witnesses did not quite understand, the young man in
+ custody struck the first blow, and drew his sword before the wounded party
+ had unsheathed his weapon. Again he shook his crested head yet more
+ solemnly, when the result of the conflict was known; and yet again, when
+ one of the witnesses declared, that, to the best of his knowledge, the
+ sufferer in the fray was a gentleman belonging to the household of his
+ Grace the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A worthy peer,&rdquo; quoth the armed magistrate&mdash;&ldquo;a true Protestant, and
+ a friend to his country. Mercy on us, to what a height of audacity hath
+ this age arisen! We see well, and could, were we as blind as a mole, out
+ of what quiver this shaft hath been drawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then put on his spectacles, and having desired Julian to be brought
+ forward, he glared upon him awfully with those glazen eyes, from under the
+ shade of his quilted turban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So young,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and so hardened&mdash;lack-a-day!&mdash;and a
+ Papist, I&rsquo;ll warrant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril had time enough to recollect the necessity of his being at large,
+ if he could possibly obtain his freedom, and interposed here a civil
+ contradiction of his worship&rsquo;s gracious supposition. &ldquo;He was no Catholic,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;but an unworthy member of the Church of England.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps but a lukewarm Protestant, notwithstanding,&rdquo; said the sage
+ Justice; &ldquo;there are those amongst us who ride tantivy to Rome, and have
+ already made out half the journey&mdash;ahem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril disowned his being any such.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who art thou, then?&rdquo; said the Justice; &ldquo;for, friend, to tell you
+ plainly, I like not your visage&mdash;ahem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These short and emphatic coughs were accompanied each by a succinct nod,
+ intimating the perfect conviction of the speaker that he had made the
+ best, the wisest, and the most acute observation, of which the premises
+ admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, irritated by the whole circumstances of his detention, answered
+ the Justice&rsquo;s interrogation in rather a lofty tone. &ldquo;My name is Julian
+ Peveril!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Heaven be around us!&rdquo; said the terrified Justice&mdash;&ldquo;the son of
+ that black-hearted Papist and traitor, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, now in hands,
+ and on the verge of trial!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, sir!&rdquo; exclaimed Julian, forgetting his situation, and, stepping
+ forward to the grating, with a violence which made the bars clatter, he so
+ startled the appalled Justice, that, snatching his Protestant flail,
+ Master Maulstatute aimed a blow at his prisoner, to repel what he
+ apprehended was a premeditated attack. But whether it was owing to the
+ Justice&rsquo;s hurry of mind, or inexperience in managing the weapon, he not
+ only missed his aim, but brought the swinging part of the machine round
+ his own skull, with such a severe counter-buff, as completely to try the
+ efficacy of his cushioned helmet, and, in spite of its defence, to convey
+ a stunning sensation, which he rather hastily imputed to the consequence
+ of a blow received from Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His assistants did not directly confirm the opinion which the Justice had
+ so unwarrantably adopted; but all with one voice agreed that, but for
+ their own active and instantaneous interference, there was no knowing what
+ mischief might have been done by a person so dangerous as the prisoner.
+ The general opinion that he meant to proceed in the matter of his own
+ rescue, <i>par voie du fait</i>, was indeed so deeply impressed on all
+ present, that Julian saw it would be in vain to offer any defence,
+ especially being but too conscious that the alarming and probably the
+ fatal consequences of his rencontre with the bully, rendered his
+ commitment inevitable. He contented himself with asking into what prison
+ he was to be thrown; and when the formidable word Newgate was returned as
+ full answer, he had at least the satisfaction to reflect, that, stern and
+ dangerous as was the shelter of that roof, he should at least enjoy it in
+ company with his father; and that, by some means or other, they might
+ perhaps obtain the satisfaction of a melancholy meeting, under the
+ circumstances of mutual calamity, which seemed impending over their house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assuming the virtue of more patience than he actually possessed, Julian
+ gave the magistrate (to whom all the mildness of his demeanour could not,
+ however, reconcile him), the direction to the house where he lodged,
+ together with a request that his servant, Lance Outram, might be permitted
+ to send him his money and wearing apparel; adding, that all which might be
+ in his possession, either of arms or writings,&mdash;the former amounting
+ to a pair of travelling pistols, and the last to a few memoranda of little
+ consequence, he willingly consented to place at the disposal of the
+ magistrate. It was in that moment that he entertained, with sincere
+ satisfaction, the comforting reflection, that the important papers of Lady
+ Derby were already in the possession of the sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice promised attention to his requests; but reminded him, with
+ great dignity, that his present complacent and submissive behaviour ought,
+ for his own sake, to have been adopted from the beginning, instead of
+ disturbing the presence of magistracy with such atrocious marks of the
+ malignant, rebellious, and murderous spirit of Popery, as he had at first
+ exhibited. &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;as he was a goodly young man, and of
+ honourable quality, he would not suffer him to be dragged through the
+ streets as a felon, but had ordered a coach for his accommodation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His honour, Master Maulstatute, uttered the word &ldquo;coach&rdquo; with the
+ importance of one who, as Dr. Johnson saith of later date, is conscious of
+ the dignity of putting horses to his chariot. The worshipful Master
+ Maulstatute did not, however on this occasion, do Julian the honour of
+ yoking to his huge family caroche the two &ldquo;frampal jades&rdquo; (to use the term
+ of the period), which were wont to drag that ark to the meeting house of
+ pure and precious Master Howlaglass, on a Thursday&rsquo;s evening for lecture,
+ and on a Sunday for a four-hours&rsquo; sermon. He had recourse to a leathern
+ convenience, then more rare, but just introduced, with every prospect of
+ the great facility which has since been afforded by hackney coaches, to
+ all manner of communication, honest and dishonest, legal and illegal. Our
+ friend Julian, hitherto much more accustomed to the saddle than to any
+ other conveyance, soon found himself in a hackney carriage, with the
+ constable and two assistants for his companions, armed up to the teeth&mdash;the
+ port of destination being, as they had already intimated, the ancient
+ fortress of Newgate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;Tis the black ban-dog of our jail&mdash;Pray look on him,
+ But at a wary distance&mdash;rouse him not&mdash;
+ He bays not till he worries.
+ &mdash;THE BLACK DOG OF NEWGATE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The coach stopped before those tremendous gates, which resemble those of
+ Tartarus, save only that they rather more frequently permit safe and
+ honourable egress; although at the price of the same anxiety and labour
+ with which Hercules, and one or two of the demi-gods, extricated
+ themselves from the Hell of the ancient mythology, and sometimes, it is
+ said, by the assistance of the golden boughs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian stepped out of the vehicle, carefully supported on either side by
+ his companions, and also by one or two turnkeys, whom the first summons of
+ the deep bell at the gate had called to their assistance. That attention,
+ it may be guessed, was not bestowed lest he should make a false step, so
+ much as for fear of his attempting an escape, of which he had no
+ intentions. A few prentices and straggling boys of the neighbouring
+ market, which derived considerable advantage from increase of custom, in
+ consequence of the numerous committals on account of the Popish Plot, and
+ who therefore were zealous of Protestants, saluted him on his descent with
+ jubilee shouts of &ldquo;Whoop, Papist! whoop, Papist! D&mdash;&mdash;n to the
+ Pope, and all his adherents!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under such auspices, Peveril was ushered in beneath that gloomy gateway,
+ where so many bid adieu on their entrance at once to honour and to life.
+ The dark and dismal arch under which he soon found himself opened upon a
+ large courtyard, where a number of debtors were employed in playing at
+ handball, pitch-and-toss, hustle-cap, and other games, for which
+ relaxations the rigour of their creditors afforded them full leisure,
+ while it debarred them the means of pursuing the honest labour by which
+ they might have redeemed their affairs, and maintained their starving and
+ beggared families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with this careless and desperate group Julian was not to be numbered,
+ being led, or rather forced, by his conductors, into a low arched door,
+ which, carefully secured by bolts and bars, opened for his reception on
+ one side of the archway, and closed, with all its fastenings, the moment
+ after his hasty entrance. He was then conducted along two or three gloomy
+ passages, which, where they intersected each other, were guarded by as
+ many strong wickets, one of iron gates, and the others of stout oak,
+ clinched with plates, and studded with nails of the same metal. He was not
+ allowed to pause until he found himself hurried into a little round
+ vaulted room, which several of these passages opened into, and which
+ seemed, with respect to the labyrinth through part of which he had passed,
+ to resemble the central point of a spider&rsquo;s web, in which the main lines
+ of that reptile&rsquo;s curious maze are always found to terminate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The resemblance did not end here; for in this small vaulted apartment, the
+ walls of which were hung round with musketoons, pistols, cutlasses, and
+ other weapons, as well as with many sets of fetters and irons of different
+ construction, all disposed in great order, and ready for employment, a
+ person sat, who might not unaptly be compared to a huge bloated and
+ bottled spider, placed there to secure the prey which had fallen into his
+ toils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This official had originally been a very strong and square-built man, of
+ large size, but was now so overgrown, from overfeeding, perhaps, and want
+ of exercise, as to bear the same resemblance to his former self which a
+ stall-fed ox still retains to a wild bull. The look of no man is so
+ inauspicious as a fat man, upon whose features ill-nature has marked an
+ habitual stamp. He seems to have reversed the old proverb of &ldquo;laugh and be
+ fat,&rdquo; and to have thriven under the influence of the worst affections of
+ the mind. Passionate we can allow a jolly mortal to be; but it seems
+ unnatural to his goodly case to be sulky and brutal. Now this man&rsquo;s
+ features, surly and tallow-coloured; his limbs, swelled and
+ disproportioned; his huge paunch and unwieldy carcass, suggested the idea,
+ that, having once found his way into this central recess, he had there
+ fattened, like the weasel in the fable, and fed largely and foully, until
+ he had become incapable of retreating through any of the narrow paths that
+ terminated at his cell; and was thus compelled to remain, like a toad
+ under the cold stone, fattening amid the squalid airs of the dungeons by
+ which he was surrounded, which would have proved pestiferous to any other
+ than such a congenial inhabitant. Huge iron-clasped books lay before this
+ ominous specimen of pinguitude&mdash;the records of the realm of misery,
+ in which office he officiated as prime minister; and had Peveril come
+ thither as an unconcerned visitor, his heart would have sunk within him at
+ considering the mass of human wretchedness which must needs be registered
+ in these fatal volumes. But his own distresses sat too heavy on his mind
+ to permit any general reflections of this nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constable and this bulky official whispered together, after the former
+ had delivered to the latter the warrant of Julian&rsquo;s commitment. The word
+ <i>whispered</i> is not quite accurate, for their communication was
+ carried on less by words than by looks and expressive signs; by which, in
+ all such situations, men learn to supply the use of language, and to add
+ mystery to what is in itself sufficiently terrible to the captive. The
+ only words which could be heard were those of the Warden, or, as he was
+ called then, the Captain of the Jail, &ldquo;Another bird to the cage&mdash;&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who will whistle &lsquo;Pretty Pope of Rome,&rsquo; with any starling in your
+ Knight&rsquo;s ward,&rdquo; answered the constable, with a facetious air, checked,
+ however, by the due respect to the supreme presence in which he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grim Feature relaxed into something like a smile as he heard the
+ officer&rsquo;s observation; but instantly composing himself into the stern
+ solemnity which for an instant had been disturbed, he looked fiercely at
+ his new guest, and pronounced with an awful and emphatic, yet rather an
+ under-voice, the single and impressive word, &ldquo;<i>Garnish!</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril replied with assumed composure; for he had heard of the
+ customs of such places, and was resolved to comply with them, so as if
+ possible to obtain the favour of seeing his father, which he shrewdly
+ guessed must depend on his gratifying the avarice of the keeper. &ldquo;I am
+ quite ready,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to accede to the customs of the place in which I
+ unhappily find myself. You have but to name your demands, and I will
+ satisfy them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he drew out his purse, thinking himself at the same time
+ fortunate that he had retained about him a considerable sum of gold. The
+ Captain remarked its width, depth, its extension, and depression, with an
+ involuntary smile, which had scarce contorted his hanging under-lip, and
+ the wiry and greasy moustache which thatched the upper, when it was
+ checked by the recollection that there were regulations which set bounds
+ to his rapacity, and prevented him from pouncing on his prey like a kite,
+ and swooping it all off at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This chilling reflection produced the following sullen reply to Peveril:&mdash;&ldquo;There
+ were sundry rates. Gentlemen must choose for themselves. He asked nothing
+ but his fees. But civility,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;must be paid for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And shall, if I can have it for payment,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;but the price,
+ my good sir, the price?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke with some degree of scorn, which he was the less anxious to
+ repress, that he saw, even in this jail, his purse gave him an indirect
+ but powerful influence over his jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain seemed to feel the same; for, as he spoke, he plucked from his
+ head, almost involuntarily, a sort of scalded fur-cap, which served it for
+ covering. But his fingers revolting from so unusual an act of
+ complaisance, began to indemnify themselves by scratching his grizzly
+ shock-head, as he muttered, in a tone resembling the softened growling of
+ a mastiff when he has ceased to bay the intruder who shows no fear of him,&mdash;&ldquo;There
+ are different rates. There is the Little Ease, for common fees of the
+ crown&mdash;rather dark, and the common sewer runs below it; and some
+ gentlemen object to the company, who are chiefly padders and michers. Then
+ the Master&rsquo;s side&mdash;the garnish came to one piece&mdash;and none lay
+ stowed there but who were in for murder at the least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Name your highest price, sir, and take it,&rdquo; was Julian&rsquo;s concise reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three pieces for the Knight&rsquo;s ward,&rdquo; answered the governor of this
+ terrestrial Tartarus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take five, and place me with Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; was again Julian&rsquo;s answer,
+ throwing down the money upon the desk before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey?&mdash;Hum!&mdash;ay, Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the jailer, as if
+ meditating what he ought to do. &ldquo;Well, many a man has paid money to see
+ Sir Geoffrey&mdash;Scarce so much as you have, though. But then you are
+ like to see the last of him.&mdash;Ha, ha ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These broken muttered exclamations, which terminated somewhat like the
+ joyous growl of a tiger over his meal, Julian could not comprehend; and
+ only replied to by repeating his request to be placed in the same cell
+ with Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, master,&rdquo; said the jailer, &ldquo;never fear; I&rsquo;ll keep word with you, as
+ you seem to know something of what belongs to your station and mine. And
+ hark ye, Jem Clink will fetch you the darbies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Derby!&rdquo; interrupted Julian,&mdash;&ldquo;Has the Earl or Countess&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Earl or Countess!&mdash;Ha, ha, ha!&rdquo; again laughed, or rather growled,
+ the warden. &ldquo;What is your head running on? You are a high fellow belike!
+ but all is one here. The darbies are the fetlocks&mdash;the fast-keepers,
+ my boy&mdash;the bail for good behaviour, my darling; and if you are not
+ the more conforming, I can add you a steel nightcap, and a curious
+ bosom-friend, to keep you warm of a winter night. But don&rsquo;t be
+ disheartened; you have behaved genteel; and you shall not be put upon. And
+ as for this here matter, ten to one it will turn out chance-medley, or
+ manslaughter, at the worst on it; and then it is but a singed thumb
+ instead of a twisted neck&mdash;always if there be no Papistry about it,
+ for then I warrant nothing.&mdash;Take the gentleman&rsquo;s worship away,
+ Clink.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A turnkey, who was one of the party that had ushered Peveril into the
+ presence of this Cerberus, now conveyed him out in silence; and, under his
+ guidance, the prisoner was carried through a second labyrinth of passages
+ with cells opening on each side, to that which was destined for his
+ reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the road through this sad region, the turnkey more than once
+ ejaculated, &ldquo;Why, the gentleman must be stark-mad! Could have had the best
+ crown cell to himself for less than half the garnish, and must pay double
+ to pig in with Sir Geoffrey! Ha, ha!&mdash;Is Sir Geoffrey akin to you, if
+ any one may make free to ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am his son,&rdquo; answered Peveril sternly, in hopes to impose some curb on
+ the fellow&rsquo;s impertinence; but the man only laughed louder than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His son!&mdash;Why, that&rsquo;s best of all&mdash;Why, you are a strapping
+ youth&mdash;five feet ten, if you be an inch&mdash;and Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s son!&mdash;Ha,
+ ha, ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truce with your impertinence,&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;My situation gives you no
+ title to insult me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more I do,&rdquo; said the turnkey, smothering his mirth at the
+ recollection, perhaps, that the prisoner&rsquo;s purse was not exhausted. &ldquo;I
+ only laughed because you said you were Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s son. But no matter&mdash;&lsquo;tis
+ a wise child that knows his own father. And here is Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s cell;
+ so you and he may settle the fatherhood between you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he ushered his prisoner into a cell, or rather a strong room of
+ the better order, in which there were four chairs, a truckle-bed, and one
+ or two other articles of furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian looked eagerly around for his father; but to his surprise the room
+ appeared totally empty. He turned with anger on the turnkey, and charged
+ him with misleading him; but the fellow answered, &ldquo;No, no, master; I have
+ kept faith with you. Your father, if you call him so, is only tappiced in
+ some corner. A small hole will hide him; but I&rsquo;ll rouse him out presently
+ for you.&mdash;Here, hoicks!&mdash;Turn out, Sir Geoffrey!&mdash;Here is&mdash;Ha,
+ ha, ha!&mdash;your son&mdash;or your wife&rsquo;s son&mdash;for I think you have
+ but little share in him&mdash;come to wait on you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril knew not how to resent the man&rsquo;s insolence; and indeed his
+ anxiety, and apprehension of some strange mistake, mingled with, and in
+ some degree neutralised his anger. He looked again and again, around and
+ around the room; until at length he became aware of something rolled up in
+ a dark corner, which rather resembled a small bundle of crimson cloth than
+ any living creature. At the vociferation of the turnkey, however, the
+ object seemed to acquire life and motion, uncoiled itself in some degree,
+ and, after an effort or two, gained an erect posture; still covered from
+ top to toe with the crimson drapery in which it was at first wrapped.
+ Julian, at the first glance, imagined from the size that he saw a child of
+ five years old; but a shrill and peculiar tone of voice soon assured him
+ of his mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Warder,&rdquo; said this unearthly sound, &ldquo;what is the meaning of this
+ disturbance? Have you more insults to heap on the head of one who hath
+ ever been the butt of fortune&rsquo;s malice? But I have a soul that can wrestle
+ with all my misfortunes; it is as large as any of your bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Geoffrey, if this be the way you welcome your own son!&rdquo; said the
+ turnkey; &ldquo;but you quality folks know your own ways best.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son!&rdquo; exclaimed the little figure. &ldquo;Audacious&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is some strange mistake,&rdquo; said Peveril, in the same breath. &ldquo;I
+ sought Sir Geoffrey&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you have him before you, young man,&rdquo; said the pigmy tenant of the
+ cell, with an air of dignity; at the same time casting on the floor his
+ crimson cloak, and standing before them in his full dignity of three feet
+ six inches of height. &ldquo;I who was the favoured servant of three successive
+ Sovereigns of the Crown of England, am now the tenant of this dungeon, and
+ the sport of its brutal keepers. I am Sir Geoffrey Hudson.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, though he had never before seen this important personage, had no
+ difficulty in recognising, from description, the celebrated dwarf of
+ Henrietta Maria, who had survived the dangers of civil war and private
+ quarrel&mdash;the murder of his royal master, Charles I., and the exile of
+ his widow&mdash;to fall upon evil tongues and evil days, amidst the
+ unsparing accusations connected with the Popish Plot. He bowed to the
+ unhappy old man, and hastened to explain to him, and to the turnkey, that
+ it was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, of Martindale Castle in Derbyshire whose
+ prison he desired to share.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You should have said that before you parted with the gold-dust, my
+ master,&rdquo; answered the turnkey; &ldquo;for t&rsquo;other Sir Geoffrey, that is the big,
+ tall, grey-haired man, was sent to the Tower last night; and the Captain
+ will think he has kept his word well enow with you, by lodging you with
+ this here Sir Geoffrey Hudson, who is the better show of the two.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray you go to your master,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;explain the mistake; and
+ say to him I beg to be sent to the Tower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Tower!&mdash;Ha, ha, ha!&rdquo; exclaimed the fellow. &ldquo;The Tower is for
+ lords and knights, and not for squires of low degree&mdash;for high
+ treason, and not for ruffing on the streets with rapier and dagger; and
+ there must go a secretary&rsquo;s warrant to send you there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least, let me not be a burden on this gentleman,&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;There
+ can be no use in quartering us together, since we are not even acquainted.
+ Go tell your master of the mistake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, so I should,&rdquo; said Clink, still grinning, &ldquo;if I were not sure that
+ he knew it already. You paid to be sent to Sir Geoffrey, and he sent you
+ to Sir Geoffrey. You are so put down in the register, and he will blot it
+ for no man. Come, come, be comfortable, and you shall have light and easy
+ irons&mdash;that&rsquo;s all I can do for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resistance and expostulation being out of the question, Peveril submitted
+ to have a light pair of fetters secured on his ankles, which allowed him,
+ nevertheless, the power of traversing the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this operation, he reflected that the jailer, who had taken the
+ advantage of the equivoque betwixt the two Sir Geoffreys, must have acted
+ as his assistant had hinted, and cheated him from malice prepense, since
+ the warrant of committal described him as the son of Sir Geoffrey Peveril.
+ It was therefore in vain, as well as degrading, to make farther
+ application to such a man on the subject. Julian determined to submit to
+ his fate, as what could not be averted by any effort of his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the turnkey was moved in some degree by his youth, good mien, and the
+ patience with which, after the first effervescence of disappointment, the
+ new prisoner resigned himself to his situation. &ldquo;You seem a brave young
+ gentleman,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and shall at least have a good dinner, and as good a
+ pallet to sleep on, as is within the walls of Newgate.&mdash;&mdash;And,
+ Master Sir Geoffrey, you ought to make much of him, since you do not like
+ tall fellows; for I can tell you that Master Peveril is in for pinking
+ long Jack Jenkins, that was the Master of Defence&mdash;as tall a man as
+ in London, always excepting the King&rsquo;s Porter, Master Evans, that carried
+ you about in his pocket, Sir Geoffrey, as all the world heard tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Begone, fellow!&rdquo; answered the dwarf. &ldquo;Fellow, I scorn you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turnkey sneered, withdrew, and locked the door behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Degenerate youth, and not of Tydeus&rsquo; kind,
+ Whose little body lodged a mighty mind.
+ &mdash;ILIAD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Left quiet at least, if not alone, for the first time after the events of
+ this troubled and varied day, Julian threw himself on an old oaken seat,
+ beside the embers of a sea-coal fire, and began to muse on the miserable
+ situation of anxiety and danger in which he was placed; where, whether he
+ contemplated the interests of his love, his family affections, or his
+ friendships, all seemed such a prospect as that of a sailor who looks upon
+ breakers on every hand, from the deck of a vessel which no longer obeys
+ the helm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Peveril sat sunk in despondency, his companion in misfortune drew a
+ chair to the opposite side of the chimney-corner, and began to gaze at him
+ with a sort of solemn earnestness, which at length compelled him, though
+ almost in spite of himself, to pay some attention to the singular figure
+ who seemed so much engrossed with contemplating him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson (we drop occasionally the title of knighthood, which the
+ King had bestowed on him in a frolic, but which might introduce some
+ confusion into our history), although a dwarf of the least possible size,
+ had nothing positively ugly in his countenance, or actually distorted in
+ his limbs. His head, hands, and feet were indeed large, and
+ disproportioned to the height of his body, and his body itself much
+ thicker than was consistent with symmetry, but in a degree which was
+ rather ludicrous than disagreeable to look upon. His countenance, in
+ particular, had he been a little taller, would have been accounted, in
+ youth, handsome, and now, in age, striking and expressive; it was but the
+ uncommon disproportion betwixt the head and the trunk which made the
+ features seem whimsical and bizarre&mdash;an effect which was considerably
+ increased by the dwarf&rsquo;s moustaches, which it was his pleasure to wear so
+ large, that they almost twisted back amongst, and mingled with, his
+ grizzled hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dress of this singular wight announced that he was not entirely free
+ from the unhappy taste which frequently induces those whom nature has
+ marked by personal deformity, to distinguish, and at the same time to
+ render themselves ridiculous, by the use of showy colours, and garments
+ fantastically and extraordinarily fashioned. But poor Geoffrey Hudson&rsquo;s
+ laces, embroideries, and the rest of his finery, were sorely worn and
+ tarnished by the time which he had spent in jail, under the vague and
+ malicious accusation that he was somehow or other an accomplice in this
+ all-involving, all-devouring whirlpool of a Popish conspiracy&mdash;an
+ impeachment which, if pronounced by a mouth the foulest and most
+ malicious, was at that time sufficiently predominant to sully the fairest
+ reputation. It will presently appear, that in the poor man&rsquo;s manner of
+ thinking, and tone of conversation, there was something analogous to his
+ absurd fashion of apparel; for, as in the latter, good stuff and valuable
+ decorations were rendered ludicrous by the fantastic fashion in which they
+ were made up; so, such glimmerings of good sense and honourable feeling as
+ the little man often evinced, were made ridiculous by a restless desire to
+ assume certain airs of importance, and a great jealousy of being despised,
+ on account of the peculiarity of his outward form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the fellow-prisoners had looked at each other for some time in
+ silence, the dwarf, conscious of his dignity as first owner of their joint
+ apartment, thought it necessary to do the honours of it to the new-comer.
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; he said, modifying the alternate harsh and squeaking tones of his
+ voice into accents as harmonious as they could attain, &ldquo;I understand you
+ to be the son of my worthy namesake, and ancient acquaintance, the stout
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak. I promise you, I have seen your father
+ where blows have been going more plenty than gold pieces; and for a tall
+ heavy man, who lacked, as we martialists thought, some of the lightness
+ and activity of our more slightly made Cavaliers, he performed his duty as
+ a man might desire. I am happy to see you, his son; and, though by a
+ mistake, I am glad we are to share this comfortless cabin together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian bowed, and thanked his courtesy; and Geoffrey Hudson, having broken
+ the ice, preceded to question him without further ceremony. &ldquo;You are no
+ courtier, I presume, young gentleman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian replied in the negative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought so,&rdquo; continued the dwarf; &ldquo;for although I have now no official
+ duty at Court, the region in which my early years were spent, and where I
+ once held a considerable office, yet I still, when I had my liberty,
+ visited the Presence from time to time, as in duty bound for former
+ service; and am wont, from old habit, to take some note of the courtly
+ gallants, those choice spirits of the age, among whom I was once enrolled.
+ You are, not to compliment you, a marked figure, Master Peveril&mdash;though
+ something of the tallest, as was your father&rsquo;s case; I think, I could
+ scarce have seen you anywhere without remembering you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril thought he might, with great justice, have returned the
+ compliment, but contented himself with saying, &ldquo;he had scarce seen the
+ British Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tis pity,&rdquo; said Hudson; &ldquo;a gallant can hardly be formed without
+ frequenting it. But you have been perhaps in a rougher school; you have
+ served, doubtless?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Maker, I hope,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie on it, you mistake. I meant,&rdquo; said Hudson, &ldquo;<i>á la François</i>,&mdash;you
+ have served in the army?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No. I have not yet had that honour,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! neither courtier nor soldier, Master Peveril?&rdquo; said the important
+ little man: &ldquo;your father is to blame. By cock and pie he is, Master
+ Peveril! How shall a man be known, or distinguished, unless by his bearing
+ in peace and war? I tell you, sir, that at Newberry, where I charged with
+ my troop abreast with Prince Rupert, and when, as you may have heard, we
+ were both beaten off by those cuckoldly hinds the Trained Bands of London,&mdash;we
+ did what men could; and I think it was a matter of three or four minutes
+ after most of our gentlemen had been driven off, that his Highness and I
+ continued to cut at their long pikes with our swords; and I think might
+ have broken in, but that I had a tall, long-legged brute of a horse, and
+ my sword was somewhat short,&mdash;in fine, at last we were obliged to
+ make volte-face, and then, as I was going to say, the fellows were so glad
+ to get rid of us, that they set up a great jubilee cry of &lsquo;There goes
+ Prince Robin and Cock Robin!&rsquo;&mdash;Ay, ay, every scoundrel among them
+ knew me well. But those days are over.&mdash;And where were you educated,
+ young gentleman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril named the household of the Countess of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A most honourable lady, upon my word as a gentleman,&rdquo; said Hudson.&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ knew the noble Countess well when I was about the person of my royal
+ mistress, Henrietta Maria. She was then the very muster of all that was
+ noble, loyal, and lovely. She was, indeed, one of the fifteen fair ones of
+ the Court, whom I permitted to call me Piccoluomini&mdash;a foolish jest
+ on my somewhat diminutive figure, which always distinguished me from
+ ordinary beings, even when I was young&mdash;I have now lost much stature
+ by stooping; but, always the ladies had their jest at me.&mdash;Perhaps,
+ young man, I had my own amends of some of them somewhere, and somehow or
+ other&mdash;I <i>say</i> nothing if I had or no; far less do I insinuate
+ disrespect to the noble Countess. She was daughter of the Duc de la
+ Tremouille, or, more correctly, des Thouars. But certainly to serve the
+ ladies, and condescend to their humours, even when somewhat too free, or
+ too fantastic, is the true decorum of gentle blood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Depressed as his spirits were, Peveril could scarce forbear smiling when
+ he looked at the pigmy creature, who told these stories with infinite
+ complacency, and appeared disposed to proclaim, as his own herald, that he
+ had been a very model of valour and gallantry, though love and arms seemed
+ to be pursuits totally irreconcilable to his shrivelled, weather-beaten
+ countenance, and wasted limbs. Julian was, however, so careful to avoid
+ giving his companion pain, that he endeavoured to humour him, by saying,
+ that, &ldquo;unquestionably, one bred up like Sir Geoffrey Hudson, in court and
+ camps, knew exactly when to suffer personal freedoms, and when to control
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Knight, with great vivacity, though with some difficulty, began
+ to drag his seat from the side of the fire opposite to that where Julian
+ was seated, and at length succeeded in bringing it near him, in token of
+ increasing cordiality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say well, Master Peveril,&rdquo; said the dwarf; &ldquo;and I have given proofs
+ both of bearing and forbearing. Yes, sir, there was not that thing which
+ my most royal mistress, Henrietta Maria, could have required of me, that I
+ would not have complied with, sir; I was her sworn servant, both in war
+ and in festival, in battle and pageant, sir. At her Majesty&rsquo;s particular
+ request, I once condescended to become&mdash;ladies, you know, have
+ strange fancies&mdash;to become the tenant, for a time, of the interior of
+ a pie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of a pie?&rdquo; said Julian, somewhat amazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir, of a pie. I hope you find nothing risible in my complaisance?&rdquo;
+ replied his companion, something jealously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, sir,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;I have other matters than laughter in my head
+ at present.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So had I,&rdquo; said the dwarfish champion, &ldquo;when I found myself imprisoned in
+ a huge platter, of no ordinary dimensions you may be assured, since I
+ could lie at length in it, and when I was entombed, as it were, in walls
+ of standing crust, and a huge cover of pastry, the whole constituting a
+ sort of sarcophagus, of size enough to have recorded the epitaph of a
+ general officer or an archbishop on the lid. Sir, notwithstanding the
+ conveniences which were made to give me air, it was more like being buried
+ alive than aught else which I could think of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I conceive it, sir,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moreover, sir,&rdquo; continued the dwarf, &ldquo;there were few in the secret, which
+ was contrived for the Queen&rsquo;s divertisement; for advancing of which I
+ would have crept into a filbert nut, had it been possible; and few, as I
+ said, being private in the scheme, there was a risk of accidents. I
+ doubted, while in my darksome abode, whether some awkward attendant might
+ not have let me fall, as I have seen happen to a venison pasty; or whether
+ some hungry guest might not anticipate the moment of my resurrection, by
+ sticking his knife into my upper crust. And though I had my weapons about
+ me, young man, as has been my custom in every case of peril, yet, if such
+ a rash person had plunged deep into the bowels of the supposed pasty, my
+ sword and dagger could barely have served me to avenge, assuredly not to
+ prevent, either of these catastrophes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly I do so understand it,&rdquo; said Julian, who began, however, to
+ feel that the company of little Hudson, talkative as he showed himself,
+ was likely rather to aggravate than to alleviate the inconveniences of a
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; continued the little man, enlarging on his former topic, &ldquo;I had
+ other subjects of apprehension; for it pleased my Lord of Buckingham, his
+ Grace&rsquo;s father who now bears the title, in his plenitude of Court favour,
+ to command the pasty to be carried down to the office, and committed anew
+ to the oven, alleging preposterously that it was better to be eaten warm
+ than cold.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And did this, sir, not disturb your equanimity?&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My young friend,&rdquo; said Geoffrey Hudson, &ldquo;I cannot deny it.&mdash;Nature
+ will claim her rights from the best and boldest of us.&mdash;I thought of
+ Nebuchadnezzar and his fiery furnace; and I waxed warm with apprehension.&mdash;But,
+ I thank Heaven, I also thought of my sworn duty to my royal mistress; and
+ was thereby obliged and enabled to resist all temptations to make myself
+ prematurely known. Nevertheless, the Duke&mdash;if of malice, may Heaven
+ forgive him&mdash;followed down into the office himself, and urged the
+ master-cook very hard that the pasty should be heated, were it but for
+ five minutes. But the master-cook, being privy to the very different
+ intentions of my royal mistress, did most manfully resist the order; and I
+ was again reconveyed in safety to the royal table.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And in due time liberated from your confinement, I doubt not?&rdquo; said
+ Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, sir; that happy, and I may say, glorious moment, at length arrived,&rdquo;
+ continued the dwarf. &ldquo;The upper crust was removed&mdash;I started up to
+ the sound of trumpet and clarion, like the soul of a warrior when the last
+ summons shall sound&mdash;or rather (if that simile be over audacious),
+ like a spell-bound champion relieved from his enchanted state. It was then
+ that, with my buckler on my arm, and my trusty Bilboa in my hand, I
+ executed a sort of warlike dance, in which my skill and agility then
+ rendered me pre-eminent, displaying, at the same time my postures, both of
+ defence and offence, in a manner so totally inimitable, that I was almost
+ deafened with the applause of all around me, and half-drowned by the
+ scented waters with which the ladies of the Court deluged me from their
+ casting bottles. I had amends of his Grace of Buckingham also; for as I
+ tripped a hasty morris hither and thither upon the dining-table, now
+ offering my blade, now recovering it, I made a blow at his nose&mdash;a
+ sort of estramaçon&mdash;the dexterity of which consists in coming mighty
+ near to the object you seem to aim at, yet not attaining it. You may have
+ seen a barber make such a flourish with his razor. I promise you his Grace
+ sprung back a half-yard at least. He was pleased to threaten to brain me
+ with a chicken-bone, as he disdainfully expressed it; but the King said,
+ &lsquo;George, you have but a Rowland for an Oliver.&rsquo; And so I tripped on,
+ showing a bold heedlessness of his displeasure, which few dared to have
+ done at that time, albeit countenanced to the utmost like me by the smiles
+ of the brave and the fair. But, well-a-day! sir, youth, its fashions, its
+ follies, its frolics, and all its pomp and pride, are as idle and
+ transitory as the crackling of thorns under a pot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The flower that is cast into the oven were a better simile,&rdquo; thought
+ Peveril. &ldquo;Good God, that a man should live to regret not being young
+ enough to be still treated as baked meat, and served up in a pie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His companion, whose tongue had for many days been as closely imprisoned
+ as his person, seemed resolved to indemnify his loquacity, by continuing
+ to indulge it on the present occasion at his companion&rsquo;s expense. He
+ proceeded, therefore, in a solemn tone, to moralise on the adventure which
+ he had narrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young men will no doubt think one to be envied,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who was thus
+ enabled to be the darling and admiration of the Court&rdquo;&mdash;(Julian
+ internally stood self-exculpated from the suspicion)&mdash;&ldquo;and yet it is
+ better to possess fewer means of distinction, and remain free from the
+ backbiting, the slander, and the odium, which are always the share of
+ Court favour. Men who had no other cause, cast reflections upon me because
+ my size varied somewhat from the common proportion; and jests were
+ sometimes unthinkingly passed upon me by those I was bound to, who did not
+ in that case, peradventure, sufficiently consider that the wren is made by
+ the same hand which formed the bustard, and that the diamond, though small
+ in size, out-values ten thousand-fold the rude granite. Nevertheless, they
+ proceeded in the vein of humour; and as I could not in duty or gratitude
+ retort upon nobles and princes, I was compelled to cast about in my mind
+ how to vindicate my honour towards those, who, being in the same rank with
+ myself, as servants and courtiers, nevertheless bore themselves towards me
+ as if they were of a superior class in the rank of honour, as well as in
+ the accidental circumstance of stature. And as a lesson to my own pride,
+ and that of others, it so happened, that the pageant which I have but just
+ narrated&mdash;which I justly reckon the most honourable moment of my
+ life, excepting perhaps my distinguished share in the battle of
+ Round-way-down&mdash;became the cause of a most tragic event, in which I
+ acknowledge the greatest misfortune of my existence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf here paused, fetched a sigh, big at once with regret, and with
+ the importance becoming the subject of a tragic history; then proceeded as
+ follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would have thought in your simplicity, young gentleman, that the
+ pretty pageant I have mentioned could only have been quoted to my
+ advantage, as a rare masking frolic, prettily devised, and not less deftly
+ executed; and yet the malice of the courtiers, who maligned and envied me,
+ made them strain their wit, and exhaust their ingenuity, in putting false
+ and ridiculous constructions upon it. In short, my ears were so much
+ offended with allusions to pies, puff-paste, ovens, and the like, that I
+ was compelled to prohibit such subject of mirth, under penalty of my
+ instant and severe displeasure. But it happ&rsquo;d there was then a gallant
+ about the Court, a man of good quality, son to a knight baronet, and in
+ high esteem with the best in that sphere, also a familiar friend of mine
+ own, from whom, therefore, I had no reason to expect any of that species
+ of gibing which I had intimated my purpose to treat as offensive. Howbeit,
+ it pleased the Honourable Mr. Crofts, so was this youth called and
+ designed, one night, at the Groom Porter&rsquo;s being full of wine and waggery,
+ to introduce this threadbare subject, and to say something concerning a
+ goose-pie, which I could not but consider as levelled at me. Nevertheless,
+ I did but calmly and solidly pray him to choose a different subject;
+ failing which, I let him know I should be sudden in my resentment.
+ Notwithstanding, he continued in the same tone, and even aggravated the
+ offence, by speaking of a tomtit, and other unnecessary and obnoxious
+ comparisons; whereupon I was compelled to send him a cartel, and we met
+ accordingly. Now, as I really loved the youth, it was my intention only to
+ correct him by a flesh wound or two; and I would willingly that he had
+ named the sword for his weapon. Nevertheless, he made pistols his
+ election; and being on horseback, he produced by way of his own weapon, a
+ foolish engine, which children are wont, in their roguery, to use for
+ spouting water; a&mdash;a&mdash;in short, I forget the name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A squirt, doubtless,&rdquo; said Peveril, who began to recollect having heard
+ something of this adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right,&rdquo; said the dwarf; &ldquo;you have indeed the name of the little
+ engine, of which I have had experience in passing the yards at
+ Westminster.&mdash;Well, sir, this token of slight regard compelled me to
+ give the gentleman such language, as soon rendered it necessary for him to
+ make more serious arms. We fought on horseback&mdash;breaking ground, and
+ advancing by signal; and, as I never miss aim, I had the misadventure to
+ kill the Honourable Master Crofts at the first shot. I would not wish my
+ worst foe the pain which I felt, when I saw him reel on his saddle, and so
+ fall down to the earth!&mdash;and, when I perceived that the life-blood
+ was pouring fast, I could not but wish to Heaven that it had been my own
+ instead of his. Thus fell youth, hopes, and bravery, a sacrifice to a
+ silly and thoughtless jest; yet, alas! wherein had I choice, seeing that
+ honour is, as it were, the very breath in our nostrils; and that in no
+ sense can we be said to live, if we permit ourselves to be deprived of
+ it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of feeling in which the dwarfish hero concluded his story, gave
+ Julian a better opinion of his heart, and even of his understanding, than
+ he had been able to form of one who gloried in having, upon a grand
+ occasion, formed the contents of a pasty. He was indeed enabled to
+ conjecture that the little champion was seduced into such exhibitions, by
+ the necessity attached to his condition, by his own vanity, and by the
+ flattery bestowed on him by those who sought pleasure in practical jokes.
+ The fate of the unlucky Master Crofts, however, as well as various
+ exploits of this diminutive person during the Civil Wars, in which he
+ actually, and with great gallantry, commanded a troop of horse, rendered
+ most men cautious of openly rallying him; which was indeed the less
+ necessary, as, when left alone, he seldom failed voluntarily to show
+ himself on the ludicrous side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one hour after noon, the turnkey, true to his word, supplied the
+ prisoners with a very tolerable dinner and a flask of well-flavoured
+ though light claret; which the old man, who was something of a bon-vivant,
+ regretted to observe, was nearly as diminutive as himself. The evening
+ also passed away, but not without continued symptoms of garrulity on the
+ part of Geoffrey Hudson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true these were of a graver character than he had hitherto
+ exhibited, for when the flask was empty, he repeated a long Latin prayer.
+ But the religious act in which he had been engaged, only gave his
+ discourse a more serious turn than belonged to his former themes, of war,
+ lady&rsquo;s love, and courtly splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Knight harangued, at first on polemical points of divinity, and
+ diverged from this thorny path, into the neighbouring and twilight walk of
+ mysticism. He talked of secret warnings&mdash;of the predictions of
+ sad-eyed prophets&mdash;of the visits of monitory spirits, and the
+ Rosicrucian secrets of the Cabala; all which topics he treated of with
+ such apparent conviction, nay, with so many appeals to personal
+ experience, that one would have supposed him a member of the fraternity of
+ gnomes, or fairies, whom he resembled so much in point of size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, he persevered for a stricken hour in such a torrent of
+ unnecessary tattle, as determined Peveril, at all events, to endeavour to
+ procure a separate lodging. Having repeated his evening prayers in Latin,
+ as formerly (for the old gentleman was a Catholic, which was the sole
+ cause of his falling under suspicion), he set off on a new score, as they
+ were undressing, and continued to prattle until he had fairly talked both
+ himself and his companion to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Of airy tongues that syllable men&rsquo;s names.
+ &mdash;COMUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian had fallen asleep, with his brain rather filled with his own sad
+ reflections, than with the mystical lore of the little Knight; and yet it
+ seemed as if in his visions the latter had been more present to his mind
+ than the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dreamed of gliding spirits, gibbering phantoms, bloody hands, which,
+ dimly seen by twilight, seemed to beckon him forward like errant-knight on
+ sad adventure bound. More than once he started from his sleep, so lively
+ was the influence of these visions on his imagination; and he always
+ awaked under the impression that some one stood by his bedside. The
+ chillness of his ankles, the weight and clatter of the fetters, as he
+ turned himself on his pallet, reminded him on these occasions where he
+ was, and under what circumstances. The extremity to which he saw all that
+ was dear to him at present reduced, struck a deeper cold on his heart than
+ the iron upon his limbs; nor could he compose himself again to rest
+ without a mental prayer to Heaven for protection. But when he had been for
+ a third time awakened from repose by these thick-stirring fancies, his
+ distress of mind vented itself in speech, and he was unable to suppress
+ the almost despairing ejaculation, &ldquo;God have mercy upon us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo; answered a voice as sweet and &ldquo;soft as honey dew,&rdquo; which sounded
+ as if the words were spoken close by his bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural inference was, that Geoffrey Hudson, his companion in
+ calamity, had echoed the prayer which was so proper to the situation of
+ both. But the tone of voice was so different from the harsh and dissonant
+ sounds of the dwarf&rsquo;s enunciation, that Peveril was impressed with the
+ certainty it could not proceed from Hudson. He was struck with involuntary
+ terror, for which he could give no sufficient reason; and it was not
+ without an effort that he was able to utter the question, &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey,
+ did you speak?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer was returned. He repeated the question louder; and the same
+ silver-toned voice, which had formerly said &ldquo;<i>Amen</i>&rdquo; to his prayers,
+ answered to his interrogatory, &ldquo;Your companion will not awake while I am
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who are you?&mdash;What seek you?&mdash;How came you into this
+ place?&rdquo; said Peveril, huddling, eagerly, question upon question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a wretched being, but one who loves you well.&mdash;I come for your
+ good.&mdash;Concern yourself no farther.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now rushed on Julian&rsquo;s mind that he had heard of persons possessed of
+ the wonderful talent of counterfeiting sounds to such accuracy, that they
+ could impose on their hearers the belief, that they proceeded from a point
+ of the apartment entirely opposite to that which the real speaker
+ occupied. Persuaded that he had now gained the depth of the mystery, he
+ replied, &ldquo;This trifling, Sir Geoffrey, is unseasonable. Say what you have
+ to say in your own voice and manner. These apish pleasantries do not
+ become midnight in a Newgate dungeon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the being who speaks with you,&rdquo; answered the voice, &ldquo;is fitted for
+ the darkest hour, and the most melancholy haunts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatient of suspense, and determined to satisfy his curiosity, Julian
+ jumped at once from his pallet, hoping to secure the speaker, whose voice
+ indicated he was so near. But he altogether failed in his attempt, and
+ grasped nothing save thin air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a turn or two, Peveril shuffled at random about the room, with his
+ arms extended; and then at last recollected, that with the impediment of
+ his shackles, and the noise which necessarily accompanied his motions, and
+ announced where he was, it would be impossible for him to lay hands on any
+ one who might be disposed to keep out of his reach. He therefore
+ endeavoured to return to his bed; but, in groping for his way, lighted
+ first on that of his fellow-prisoner. The little captive slept deep and
+ heavy, as was evinced from his breathing; and upon listening a moment,
+ Julian became again certain, either that his companion was the most artful
+ of ventriloquists and of dissemblers, or that there was actually within
+ the precincts of that guarded chamber, some third being, whose very
+ presence there seemed to intimate that it belonged not to the ordinary
+ line of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was no ready believer in the supernatural; but that age was very
+ far from being so incredulous concerning ghostly occurrences as our own;
+ and it was no way derogatory to his good sense, that he shared the
+ prejudices of his time. His hair began to bristle, and the moisture to
+ stand on his brow, as he called on his companion to awake, for Heaven&rsquo;s
+ sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf answered&mdash;but he spoke without awaking.&mdash;&ldquo;The day may
+ dawn and be d&mdash;d. Tell the master of the horse I will not go to the
+ hunting, unless I have the little black jennet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;there is some one in the apartment. Have you
+ not a tinder-box to strike a light?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I care not how slight my horse be,&rdquo; replied the slumberer, pursuing his
+ own train of ideas, which, doubtless, carried him back to the green woods
+ of Windsor, and the royal deer-hunts which he had witnessed there. &ldquo;I am
+ not overweight&mdash;I will not ride that great Holstein brute, that I
+ must climb up to by a ladder, and then sit on his back like a pin-cushion
+ on an elephant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian at length put his hand to the sleeper&rsquo;s shoulder, and shook him, so
+ as to awake him from his dream; when, after two or three snorts and
+ groans, the dwarf asked peevishly, what the devil ailed him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The devil himself, for what I know,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;is at this very
+ moment in the room here beside us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf on this information started up, crossed himself, and began to
+ hammer a flint and steel with all despatch, until he had lighted a little
+ piece of candle, which he said was consecrated to Saint Bridget, and as
+ powerful as the herb called <i>fuga dæmonum</i>, or the liver of the fish
+ burnt by Tobit in the house of Raguel, for chasing all goblins, and evil
+ or dubious spirits, from the place of its radiance; &ldquo;if, indeed,&rdquo; as the
+ dwarf carefully guarded his proposition, &ldquo;they existed anywhere, save in
+ the imagination of his fellow-prisoner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the apartment was no sooner enlightened by this holy candle&rsquo;s
+ end, than Julian began to doubt the evidence of his own ears; for not only
+ was there no one in the room save Sir Geoffrey Hudson and himself, but all
+ the fastenings of the door were so secure, that it seemed impossible that
+ they could have been opened and again fixed, without a great deal of
+ noise, which, on the last occasion at least, could not possibly have
+ escaped his ears, seeing that he must have been on his feet, and employed
+ in searching the chamber, when the unknown, if an earthly being, was in
+ the act of retreating from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian gazed for a moment with great earnestness, and no little
+ perplexity, first on the bolted door, then on the grated window; and began
+ to accuse his own imagination of having played him an unpleasant trick. He
+ answered little to the questions of Hudson, and returning to his bed,
+ heard, in silence, a long studied oration on the merits of Saint Bridget,
+ which comprehended the greater part of her long-winded legend, and
+ concluded with the assurance, that, from all accounts preserved of her,
+ that holy saint was the least of all possible women, except those of the
+ pigmy kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time the dwarf had ceased to speak, Julian&rsquo;s desire of sleep had
+ returned; and after a few glances around the apartment, which was still
+ illuminated by the expiring beams of the holy taper, his eyes were again
+ closed in forgetfulness, and his repose was not again disturbed in the
+ course of that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning dawns on Newgate, as well as on the freest mountain-turf which
+ Welshman or wild-goat ever trode; but in so different a fashion, that the
+ very beams of heaven&rsquo;s precious sun, when they penetrate into the recesses
+ of the prison-house, have the air of being committed to jail. Still, with
+ the light of day around him, Peveril easily persuaded himself of the
+ vanity of his preceding night&rsquo;s visions; and smiled when he reflected that
+ fancies, similar to those to which his ear was often exposed in the Isle
+ of Man, had been able to arrange themselves in a manner so impressive,
+ when he heard them from the mouth of so singular a character as Hudson,
+ and in the solitude of a prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Julian had awaked, the dwarf had already quitted his bed, and was
+ seated in the chimney-corner of the apartment, where, with his own hands,
+ he had arranged a morsel of fire, partly attending to the simmering of a
+ small pot, which he had placed on the flame, partly occupied with a huge
+ folio volume which lay on the table before him, and seemed well-nigh as
+ tall and bulky as himself. He was wrapped up in the dusky crimson cloak
+ already mentioned, which served him for a morning-gown, as well as a
+ mantle against the cold, and which corresponded with a large montero-cap,
+ that enveloped his head. The singularity of his features, and of the eyes,
+ armed with spectacles, which were now cast on the subject of his studies,
+ now directed towards his little cauldron, would have tempted Rembrandt to
+ exhibit him on canvas, either in the character of an alchymist, or of a
+ necromancer, engaged in some strange experiment, under the direction of
+ one of the huge manuals which treat of the theory of these mystic arts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attention of the dwarf was bent, however, upon a more domestic object.
+ He was only preparing soup, of no unsavoury quality, for breakfast, which
+ he invited Peveril to partake with him. &ldquo;I am an old soldier,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;and, I must add, an old prisoner; and understand how to shift for myself
+ better than you can do, young man.&mdash;Confusion to the scoundrel Clink,
+ he has put the spice-box out of my reach!&mdash;Will you hand it me from
+ the mantelpiece?&mdash;I will teach you, as the French have it, <i>faire
+ la cuisine;</i> and then, if you please, we will divide, like brethren,
+ the labours of our prison house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian readily assented to the little man&rsquo;s friendly proposal, without
+ interposing any doubt as to his continuing an inmate of the same cell.
+ Truth is, that although, upon the whole, he was inclined to regard the
+ whispering voice of the preceding evening as the impression of his own
+ excited fancy, he felt, nevertheless, curiosity to see how a second night
+ was to pass over in the same cell; and the tone of the invisible intruder,
+ which at midnight had been heard by him with terror, now excited, on
+ recollection, a gentle and not unpleasing species of agitation&mdash;the
+ combined effect of awe, and of awakened curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days of captivity have little to mark them as they glide away. That which
+ followed the night which we have described afforded no circumstance of
+ note. The dwarf imparted to his youthful companion a volume similar to
+ that which formed his own studies, and which proved to be a tome of one of
+ Scuderi&rsquo;s now forgotten romances, of which Geoffrey Hudson was a great
+ admirer, and which were then very fashionable both at the French and
+ English Courts; although they contrive to unite in their immense folios
+ all the improbabilities and absurdities of the old romances of chivalry,
+ without that tone of imagination which pervades them, and all the
+ metaphysical absurdities which Cowley and the poets of the age had heaped
+ upon the passion of love, like so many load of small coal upon a slender
+ fire, which it smothers instead of aiding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Julian had no alternative, saving only to muse over the sorrows of
+ Artamenes and Mandane, or on the complicated distresses of his own
+ situation; and in these disagreeable divertisements, the morning crept
+ through as it could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noon first, and thereafter nightfall, were successively marked by a brief
+ visit from their stern turnkey, who, with noiseless step and sullen
+ demeanour, did in silence the necessary offices about the meals of the
+ prisoners, exchanging with them as few words as an official in the Spanish
+ Inquisition might have permitted himself upon a similar occasion. With the
+ same taciturn gravity, very different from the laughing humour into which
+ he had been surprised on a former occasion, he struck their fetters with a
+ small hammer, to ascertain, by the sound thus produced, whether they had
+ been tampered with by file or otherwise. He next mounted on a table, to
+ make the same experiment on the window-grating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian&rsquo;s heart throbbed; for might not one of those grates have been so
+ tampered with as to give entrance to the nocturnal visitant? But they
+ returned to the experienced ear of Master Clink, when he struck them in
+ turn with the hammer, a clear and ringing sound, which assured him of
+ their security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be difficult for any one to get in through these defences,&rdquo; said
+ Julian, giving vent in words to his own feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Few wish that,&rdquo; answered the surly groom, misconstruing what was passing
+ in Peveril&rsquo;s mind; &ldquo;and let me tell you, master, folks will find it quite
+ as difficult to get out.&rdquo; He retired, and night came on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf, who took upon himself for the day the whole duties of the
+ apartment, trundled about the room, making a most important clatter as he
+ extinguished their fire, and put aside various matters which had been in
+ use in the course of the day, talking to himself all the while in a tone
+ of no little consequence, occasionally grounded on the dexterity with
+ which an old soldier could turn his hand to anything. Then came the
+ repetition of his accustomed prayers; but his disposition to converse did
+ not, as on the former occasion, revive after his devotions. On the
+ contrary, long before Julian had closed an eye, the heavy breathing from
+ Sir Geoffrey Hudson&rsquo;s pallet declared that the dwarf was already in the
+ arms of Morpheus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the total darkness of the apartment, and with a longing desire, and
+ at the same time no small fear, for the recurrence of the mysterious
+ address of the preceding evening, Julian lay long awake without his
+ thoughts receiving any interruption save when the clock told the passing
+ hour from the neighbouring steeple of St. Sepulchre. At length he sunk
+ into slumber; but had not slept to his judgment above an hour, when he was
+ roused by the sound which his waking ear had so long expected in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you sleep?&mdash;Will you sleep?&mdash;Dare you sleep?&rdquo; were the
+ questions impressed on his ear, in the same clear, soft, and melodious
+ voice, which had addressed him on the preceding night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is it asks me the question?&rdquo; answered Julian. &ldquo;But be the questioner
+ good or evil, I reply that I am a guiltless prisoner; and that innocence
+ may wish and dare to sleep soundly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask no questions of me,&rdquo; said the voice; &ldquo;neither attempt to discover who
+ speaks to you; and be assured that folly alone can sleep, with fraud
+ around and danger before him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can you, who tell me of dangers, counsel me how to combat or how to avoid
+ them?&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My power is limited,&rdquo; said the voice; &ldquo;yet something I can do, as the
+ glow-worm can show a precipice. But you must confide in me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Confidence must beget confidence,&rdquo; answered Julian. &ldquo;I cannot repose
+ trust in I know not what or whom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not so loud,&rdquo; replied the voice, sinking almost into a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Last night you said my companion would not awake,&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-night I warrant not that he shall sleep,&rdquo; said the voice. And as it
+ spoke, the hoarse, snatching, discordant tones of the dwarf were heard,
+ demanding of Julian why he talked in his sleep&mdash;wherefore he did not
+ rest himself, and let other people rest&mdash;and, finally, whether his
+ visions of last night were returned upon him again?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say yes,&rdquo; said the voice in a whisper, so low, yet so distinct, that
+ Julian almost doubted whether it was not an echo of his own thought.&mdash;&ldquo;Say
+ but yes&mdash;and I part to return no more!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In desperate circumstances men look to strange and unusual remedies; and
+ although unable to calculate the chances of advantage which this singular
+ communication opened to him, Julian did not feel inclined to let them at
+ once escape from him. He answered the dwarf, that he had been troubled by
+ an alarming dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could have sworn it, from the sound of your voice,&rdquo; said Hudson. &ldquo;It is
+ strange, now, that you overgrown men never possess the extreme firmness of
+ nerves proper to us who are cast in a more compact mould. My own voice
+ retains its masculine sounds on all occasions. Dr. Cockerel was of
+ opinion, that there was the same allowance of nerve and sinew to men of
+ every size, and that nature spun the stock out thinner or stronger,
+ according to the extent of surface which they were to cover. Hence, the
+ least creatures are oftentimes the strongest. Place a beetle under a tall
+ candlestick, and the insect will move it by its efforts to get out; which
+ is, in point of comparative strength, as if one of us should shake his
+ Majesty&rsquo;s prison of Newgate by similar struggles. Cats also, and weasels,
+ are creatures of greater exertion or endurance than dogs or sheep. And in
+ general, you may remark, that little men dance better, and are more
+ unwearied under exertion of every kind, than those to whom their own
+ weight must necessarily be burdensome. I respect you, Master Peveril,
+ because I am told you have killed one of those gigantic fellows, who go
+ about swaggering as if their souls were taller than ours, because their
+ noses are nearer to the clouds by a cubit or two. But do not value
+ yourself on this as anything very unusual. I would have you to know it
+ hath been always thus; and that, in the history of all ages, the clean,
+ tight, dapper little fellow, hath proved an overmatch for his bulky
+ antagonist. I need only instance out of Holy Writ, the celebrated downfall
+ of Goliah, and of another lubbard, who had more fingers to his hand, and
+ more inches to his stature, than ought to belong to an honest man, and who
+ was slain by a nephew of good King David; and of many others whom I do not
+ remember; nevertheless they were all Philistines of gigantic stature. In
+ the classics, also, you have Tydeus, and other tight, compact heroes,
+ whose diminutive bodies were the abode of large minds. And indeed you may
+ observe, in sacred as well as profane history, that your giants are ever
+ heretics and blasphemers, robbers and oppressors, outragers of the female
+ sex, and scoffers at regular authority. Such were Gog and Magog, whom our
+ authentic chronicles vouch to have been slain near to Plymouth, by the
+ good little Knight Corineus, who gave name to Cornwall. Ascaparte also was
+ subdued by Bevis, and Colbrand by Guy, as Southampton and Warwick can
+ testify. Like unto these was the giant Hoel, slain in Bretagne by King
+ Arthur. And if Ryence, King of North Wales, who was done to death by the
+ same worthy champion of Christendom, be not actually termed a giant, it is
+ plain he was little better, since he required twenty-four kings&rsquo; beards,
+ which were then worn full and long, to fur his gown; whereby computing
+ each beard at eighteen inches (and you cannot allow less for a
+ beard-royal), and supposing only the front of the gown trimmed therewith,
+ as we use ermine; and that the back was mounted and lined, instead of
+ cat-skins and squirrels&rsquo; fur, with the beards of earls and dukes, and
+ other inferior dignitaries&mdash;may amount to&mdash;But I will work the
+ question to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more soporific to any (save a philosopher or moneyed man) than
+ the operation of figures; and when in bed, the effect is irresistible. Sir
+ Geoffrey fell asleep in the act of calculating King Ryence&rsquo;s height, from
+ the supposed length of his mantle. Indeed, had he not stumbled on this
+ abstruse subject of calculation, there is no guessing how long he might
+ have held forth upon the superiority of men of little stature, which was
+ so great a favourite with him, that, numerous as such narratives are, the
+ dwarf had collected almost all the instances of their victories over
+ giants, which history or romance afforded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had unequivocal signs of the dwarf&rsquo;s sound slumbers reached
+ Julian&rsquo;s ears, than he began to listen eagerly for the renewal of that
+ mysterious communication which was at once interesting and awful. Even
+ whilst Hudson was speaking, he had, instead of bestowing his attention
+ upon his eulogy on persons of low statue, kept his ears on watchful guard
+ to mark if possible, the lightest sounds of any sort which might occur in
+ the apartment; so that he thought it scarce possible that even a fly
+ should have left it withouts its motion being overheard. If, therefore,
+ his invisible monitor was indeed a creature of this world&mdash;an opinion
+ which Julian&rsquo;s sound sense rendered him unwilling to renounce&mdash;that
+ being could not have left the apartment; and he waited impatiently for a
+ renewal of their communication. He was disappointed; not the slightest
+ sound reached his ear; and the nocturnal visitor, if still in the room,
+ appeared determined on silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain that Peveril coughed, hemmed, and gave other symptoms of
+ being awake; at length, such became his impatience, that he resolved, at
+ any risk, to speak first, in hopes of renewing the communication betwixt
+ them. &ldquo;Whoever thou art,&rdquo; he said, in a voice loud enough to be heard by a
+ waking person, but not so high as to disturb his sleeping companion&mdash;&ldquo;Whoever,
+ or whatever thou art, thou hast shown some interest in the fate of such a
+ castaway as Julian Peveril, speak once more, I conjure thee; and be your
+ communication for good or evil, believe me, I am equally prepared to abide
+ the issue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer of any kind was returned to this invocation; nor did the least
+ sound intimate the presence of the being to whom it was so solemnly
+ addressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I speak in vain,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and perhaps I am but invoking that which
+ is insensible of human feeling, or which takes a malign pleasure in human
+ suffering.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a gentle and half-broken sigh from a corner of the apartment,
+ which, answering to this exclamation, seemed to contradict the imputation
+ which it conveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, naturally courageous, and familiarised by this time to his
+ situation, raised himself in bed, and stretched out his arm, to repeat his
+ adjuration, when the voice, as if alarmed at his action and energy,
+ whispered, in a tone more hurried than that which it had hitherto used,
+ &ldquo;Be still&mdash;move not&mdash;or I am mute for ever!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is then a mortal being who is present with me,&rdquo; was the natural
+ inference of Julian, &ldquo;and one who is probably afraid of being detected; I
+ have then some power over my visitor, though I must be cautious how I use
+ it.&mdash;If your intents are friendly,&rdquo; he proceeded, &ldquo;there was never a
+ time in which I lacked friends more, or would be more grateful for
+ kindness. The fate of all who are dear to me is weighed in the balance,
+ and with worlds would I buy the tidings of their safety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have said my power is limited,&rdquo; replied the voice. &ldquo;<i>You</i> I may be
+ able to preserve&mdash;the fate of your friends is beyond my control.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me at least know it,&rdquo; said Julian; &ldquo;and, be it as it may, I will not
+ shun to share it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For whom would you inquire?&rdquo; said the soft, sweet voice, not without a
+ tremulousness of accent, as if the question was put with diffident
+ reluctance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My parents,&rdquo; said Julian, after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation; &ldquo;how fare they?&mdash;What
+ will be their fate?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They fare as the fort under which the enemy has dug a deadly mine. The
+ work may have cost the labour of years, such were the impediments to the
+ engineers; but Time brings opportunity upon its wings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what will be the event?&rdquo; said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I read the future,&rdquo; answered the voice, &ldquo;save by comparison with
+ past?&mdash;Who has been hunted on these stern and unmitigable
+ accusations, but has been at last brought to bay? Did high and noble
+ birth, honoured age, and approved benevolence, save the unfortunate Lord
+ Stafford? Did learning, capacity of intrigue, or high Court favour, redeem
+ Coleman, although the confidential servant of the heir presumptive of the
+ Crown of England?&mdash;Did subtilty and genius, and exertions of a
+ numerous sect, save Fenwicke, or Whitbread, or any other of the accused
+ priests?&mdash;Were Groves, Pickering, or the other humble wretches who
+ have suffered, safe in their obscurity? There is no condition in life, no
+ degree of talent, no form of principle, which affords protection against
+ an accusation, which levels conditions, confounds characters, renders
+ men&rsquo;s virtues their sins, and rates them as dangerous in proportion as
+ they have influence, though attained in the noblest manner, and used for
+ the best purposes. Call such a one but an accessory to the Plot&mdash;let
+ him be mouthed in the evidence of Oates or Dugdale&mdash;and the blindest
+ shall foresee the issue of their trial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prophet of Evil!&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;my father has a shield invulnerable to
+ protect him. He is innocent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him plead his innocence at the bar of Heaven,&rdquo; said the voice; &ldquo;it
+ will serve him little where Scroggs presides.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Still I fear not,&rdquo; said Julian, counterfeiting more confidence than he
+ really possessed; &ldquo;my father&rsquo;s cause will be pleaded before twelve
+ Englishmen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better before twelve wild beasts,&rdquo; answered the Invisible, &ldquo;than before
+ Englishmen, influenced with party prejudice, passion, and epidemic terror
+ of an imaginary danger. They are bold in guilt in proportion to the number
+ amongst whom the crime is divided.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill-omened speaker,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;thine is indeed a voice fitted only to
+ sound with the midnight bell, and the screeching owl. Yet speak again.
+ Tell me, if thou canst&rdquo;&mdash;(He would have said of Alice Bridgenorth,
+ but the word would not leave his tongue)&mdash;&ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if the
+ noble house of Derby&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let them keep their rock like the sea-fowl in the tempest; and it may so
+ fall out,&rdquo; answered the voice, &ldquo;that their rock may be a safe refuge. But
+ there is blood on their ermine; and revenge has dogged them for many a
+ year, like a bloodhound that hath been distanced in the morning chase, but
+ may yet grapple the quarry ere the sun shall set. At present, however,
+ they are safe.&mdash;Am I now to speak farther on your own affairs, which
+ involve little short of your life and honour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;one, from whom I was violently parted yesterday;
+ if I knew but of her safety, I were little anxious for my own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One!&rdquo; returned the voice, &ldquo;only <i>one</i> from whom you were parted
+ yesterday?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But in parting from whom,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;I felt separated from all
+ happiness which the world can give me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean Alice Bridgenorth,&rdquo; said the Invisible, with some bitterness of
+ accent; &ldquo;but her you will never see more. Your own life and hers depend on
+ your forgetting each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot purchase my own life at that price,&rdquo; replied Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then DIE in your obstinacy,&rdquo; returned the Invisible; nor to all the
+ entreaties which he used was he able obtain another word in the course of
+ that remarkable night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A short hough&rsquo;d man, but full of pride.
+ &mdash;ALLAN RAMSAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The blood of Julian Peveril was so much fevered by the state in which his
+ invisible visitor left him, that he was unable, for a length of time, to
+ find repose. He swore to himself, that he would discover and expose the
+ nocturnal demon which stole on his hours of rest, only to add gall to
+ bitterness, and to pour poison into those wounds which already smarted so
+ severely. There was nothing which his power extended to, that, in his
+ rage, he did not threaten. He proposed a closer and a more rigorous survey
+ of his cell, so that he might discover the mode by which his tormentor
+ entered, were it as unnoticeable as an auger-hole. If his diligence should
+ prove unavailing, he determined to inform the jailers, to whom it could
+ not be indifferent to know, that their prison was open to such intrusions.
+ He proposed to himself, to discover from their looks whether they were
+ already privy to these visits; and if so, to denounce them to the
+ magistrates, to the judges, to the House of Commons, was the least that
+ his resentment proposed. Sleep surprised his worn-out frame in the midst
+ of his projects of discovery and vengeance, and, as frequently happens,
+ the light of the ensuing day proved favourable to calmer resolutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now reflected that he had no ground to consider the motives of his
+ visitor as positively malevolent, although he had afforded him little
+ encouragement to hope for assistance on the points he had most at heart.
+ Towards himself, there had been expressed a decided feeling, both of
+ sympathy and interest; if through means of these he could acquire his
+ liberty, he might, when possessed of freedom, turn it to the benefit of
+ those for whom he was more interested than for his own welfare. &ldquo;I have
+ behaved like a fool,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I ought to have temporised with this
+ singular being, learned the motives of its interference, and availed
+ myself of its succour, provided I could do so without any dishonourable
+ conditions. It would have been always time enough to reject such when they
+ should have been proposed to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he was forming projects for regulating his intercourse with the
+ stranger more prudently, in case their communication should be renewed,
+ when his meditations were interrupted by the peremptory summons of Sir
+ Geoffrey Hudson, that he would, in his turn, be pleased to perform those
+ domestic duties of their common habitation, which the dwarf had yesterday
+ taken upon himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no resisting a request so reasonable, and Peveril accordingly
+ rose and betook himself to the arrangement of their prison, while Sir
+ Hudson, perched upon a stool from which his legs did not by half-way reach
+ the ground, sat in a posture of elegant languor, twangling upon an old
+ broken-winded guitar, and singing songs in Spanish, Moorish, and Lingua
+ Franca, most detestably out of tune. He failed not, at the conclusion of
+ each ditty, to favour Julian with some account of what he had sung, either
+ in the way of translation, or historical anecdote, or as the lay was
+ connected with some peculiar part of his own eventful history, in the
+ course of which the poor little man had chanced to have been taken by a
+ Sallee rover, and carried captive into Morocco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This part of his life Hudson used to make the era of many strange
+ adventures; and, if he could himself be believed, he had made wild work
+ among the affections of the Emperor&rsquo;s seraglio. But, although few were in
+ a situation to cross-examine him on gallantries and intrigues of which the
+ scene was so remote, the officers of the garrison of Tangier had a report
+ current amongst them, that the only use to which the tyrannical Moors
+ could convert a slave of such slender corporeal strength, was to employ
+ him to lie a-bed all day and hatch turkey&rsquo;s eggs. The least allusion to
+ this rumour used to drive him well-nigh frantic, and the fatal termination
+ of his duel with young Crofts, which began in wanton mirth, and ended in
+ bloodshed, made men more coy than they had formerly been, of making the
+ fiery little hero the subject of their raillery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Peveril did the drudgery of the apartment, the dwarf remained much
+ at his ease, carolling in the manner we have described; but when he beheld
+ Julian attempting the task of the cook, Sir Geoffrey Hudson sprang from
+ the stool on which he sat <i>en Signor</i>, at the risk of breaking both
+ his guitar and his neck, exclaiming, &ldquo;That he would rather prepare
+ breakfast every morning betwixt this and the day of judgment, than commit
+ a task of such consequence to an inexperienced bungler like his
+ companion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man gladly resigned his task to the splenetic little Knight, and
+ only smiled at his resentment when he added, that, to be but a mortal of
+ middle stature, Julian was as stupid as a giant. Leaving the dwarf to
+ prepare the meal after his own pleasure, Peveril employed himself in
+ measuring the room with his eyes on every side, and in endeavouring to
+ discover some private entrance, such as might admit his midnight visitant,
+ and perhaps could be employed in case of need for effecting his own
+ escape. The floor next engaged a scrutiny equally minute, but more
+ successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Close by his own pallet, and dropped in such a manner that he must have
+ seen it sooner but for the hurry with which he obeyed the summons of the
+ impatient dwarf, lay a slip of paper, sealed, and directed with the
+ initial letters, J.P., which seemed to ascertain that it was addressed to
+ himself. He took the opportunity of opening it while the soup was in the
+ very moment of projection, and the full attention of his companion was
+ occupied by what he, in common with wiser and taller men, considered as
+ one of the principal occupations of life; so that, without incurring his
+ observation or awaking his curiosity, Julian had the opportunity to read
+ as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rash and infatuated as you are, there is one who would forfeit
+ much to stand betwixt you and your fate. You are to-morrow to be
+ removed to the Tower, where your life cannot be assured for a
+ single day; for, during the few hours you have been in London, you
+ have provoked a resentment which is not easily slaked. There is
+ but one chance for you,&mdash;renounce A.B.&mdash;think no more of her. If
+ that be impossible, think of her but as one whom you can never see
+ again. If your heart can resolve to give up an attachment which it
+ should never have entertained, and which it would be madness to
+ cherish longer, make your acquiescence in this condition known by
+ putting on your hat a white band, or white feather, or knot of
+ ribbon of the same colour, whichever you may most easily come by.
+ A boat will, in that case, run, as if by accident, on board of
+ that which is to convey you to the Tower. Do you in the confusion
+ jump overboard, and swim to the Southwark side of the Thames.
+ Friends will attend there to secure your escape, and you will find
+ yourself with one who will rather lose character and life, than
+ that a hair of your head should fall to the ground; but who, if
+ you reject the warning, can only think of you as of the fool who
+ perishes in his folly. May Heaven guide you to a sound judgment of
+ your condition! So prays one who would be your friend, if you
+ pleased,
+ &ldquo;UNKNOWN.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The Tower!&mdash;it was a word of terror, even more so than a civil
+ prison; for how many passages to death did that dark structure present!
+ The severe executions which it had witnessed in preceding reigns, were not
+ perhaps more numerous than the secret murders which had taken place within
+ its walls; yet Peveril did not a moment hesitate on the part which he had
+ to perform. &ldquo;I will share my father&rsquo;s fate,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I thought but of
+ him when they brought me hither; I will think of nothing else when they
+ convey me to yonder still more dreadful place of confinement; it is his,
+ and it is but meet that it should be his son&rsquo;s.&mdash;And thou, Alice
+ Bridgenorth, the day that I renounce thee, may I be held alike a traitor
+ and a dastard!&mdash;Go, false adviser, and share the fate of seducers and
+ heretical teachers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could not help uttering this last expression aloud, as he threw the
+ billet into the fire, with a vehemence which made the dwarf start with
+ surprise. &ldquo;What say you of burning heretics, young man?&rdquo; he exclaimed; &ldquo;by
+ my faith, your zeal must be warmer than mine, if you talk on such a
+ subject when the heretics are the prevailing number. May I measure six
+ feet without my shoes, but the heretics would have the best of it if we
+ came to that work. Beware of such words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too late to beware of words spoken and heard,&rdquo; said the turnkey, who,
+ opening the door with unusual precautions to avoid noise, had stolen
+ unperceived into the room; &ldquo;However, Master Peveril has behaved like a
+ gentlemen, and I am no tale-bearer, on condition he will consider I have
+ had trouble in his matters.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian had no alternative but to take the fellow&rsquo;s hint and administer a
+ bribe, with which Master Clink was so well satisfied, that he exclaimed,
+ &ldquo;It went to his heart to take leave of such a kind-natured gentleman, and
+ that he could have turned the key on him for twenty years with pleasure.
+ But the best friends must part.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am to be removed, then?&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, truly, master, the warrant is come from the Council.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To convey me to the Tower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whew!&rdquo; exclaimed the officer of the law&mdash;&ldquo;who the devil told you
+ that? But since you do know it, there is no harm to say ay. So make
+ yourself ready to move immediately; and first, hold out your dew-beaters
+ till I take off the darbies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is that usual?&rdquo; said Peveril, stretching out his feet as the fellow
+ directed, while his fetters were unlocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, ay, master, these fetters belong to the keeper; they are not a-going
+ to send them to the Lieutenant, I trow. No, no, the warders must bring
+ their own gear with them; they get none here, I promise them.
+ Nevertheless, if your honour hath a fancy to go in fetters, as thinking it
+ may move compassion of your case&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no intention to make my case seem worse than it is,&rdquo; said Julian;
+ whilst at the same time it crossed his mind that his anonymous
+ correspondent must be well acquainted both with his own personal habits,
+ since the letter proposed a plan of escape which could only be executed by
+ a bold swimmer, and with the fashions of prison, since it was foreseen
+ that he would not be ironed on his passage to the Tower. The turnkey&rsquo;s
+ next speech made him carry conjecture still farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is nothing in life I would not do for so brave a guest,&rdquo; said
+ Clink; &ldquo;I would nab one of my wife&rsquo;s ribbons for you, if your honour had
+ the fancy to mount the white flag in your beaver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To what good purpose?&rdquo; said Julian, shortly connecting, as was natural,
+ the man&rsquo;s proposed civility with the advice given and the signal
+ prescribed in the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, to no good purpose I know of,&rdquo; said the turnkey; &ldquo;only it is the
+ fashion to seem white and harmless&mdash;a sort of token of
+ not-guiltiness, as I may say, which folks desire to show the world,
+ whether they be truly guilty or not; but I cannot say that guiltiness or
+ not-guiltiness argufies much, saving they be words in the verdict.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange,&rdquo; thought Peveril, although the man seemed to speak quite
+ naturally, and without any double meaning, &ldquo;strange that all should
+ apparently combine to realise the plan of escape, could I but give my
+ consent to it! And had I not better consent? Whoever does so much for me
+ must wish me well, and a well-wisher would never enforce the unjust
+ conditions on which I am required to consent to my liberation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this misgiving of his resolution was but for a moment. He speedily
+ recollected, that whoever aided him in escaping, must be necessarily
+ exposed to great risk, and had a right to name the stipulation on which he
+ was willing to incur it. He also recollected that falsehood is equally
+ base, whether expressed in words or in dumb show; and that he should lie
+ as flatly by using the signal agreed upon in evidence of his renouncing
+ Alice Bridgenorth, as he would in direct terms if he made such
+ renunciation without the purpose of abiding by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you would oblige me,&rdquo; he said to the turnkey, &ldquo;let me have a piece of
+ black silk or crape for the purpose you mention.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of crape!&rdquo; said the fellow; &ldquo;what should that signify? Why, the bien
+ morts, who bing out to tour at you,[*] will think you a chimney-sweeper on
+ Mayday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] The smart girls, who turn out to look at you.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It will show my settled sorrow,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;as well as my determined
+ resolution.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As you will, sir,&rdquo; answered the fellow; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll provide you with a black
+ rag of some kind or other. So, now; let us be moving.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0455m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0455m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0455.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Julian intimated his readiness to attend him, and proceeded to bid
+ farewell to his late companion, the stout Geoffrey Hudson. The parting was
+ not without emotion on both sides, more particularly on that of the poor
+ little man, who had taken a particular liking to the companion of whom he
+ was now about to be deprived. &ldquo;Fare ye well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my young friend,&rdquo;
+ taking Julian&rsquo;s hand in both his own uplifted palms, in which action he
+ somewhat resembled the attitude of a sailor pulling a rope overhead,&mdash;&ldquo;Many
+ in my situation would think himself wronged, as a soldier and servant of
+ the king&rsquo;s chamber, in seeing you removed to a more honourable prison than
+ that which I am limited unto. But, I thank God, I grudge you not the
+ Tower, nor the rocks of Scilly, nor even Carisbrooke Castle, though the
+ latter was graced with the captivity of my blessed and martyred master. Go
+ where you will, I wish you all the distinction of an honourable
+ prison-house, and a safe and speedy deliverance in God&rsquo;s own time. For
+ myself, my race is near a close, and that because I fall martyr to the
+ over-tenderness of my own heart. There is a circumstance, good Master
+ Julian Peveril, which should have been yours, had Providence permitted our
+ farther intimacy, but it fits not the present hour. Go, then, my friend,
+ and bear witness in life and death, that Geoffrey Hudson scorns the
+ insults and persecutions of fortune, as he would despise, and has often
+ despised, the mischievous pranks of an overgrown schoolboy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he turned away, and hid his face with his little handkerchief,
+ while Julian felt towards him that tragi-comic sensation which makes us
+ pity the object which excites it, not the less that we are somewhat
+ inclined to laugh amid our sympathy. The jailer made him a signal, which
+ Peveril obeyed, leaving the dwarf to disconsolate solitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Julian followed the keeper through the various windings of his penal
+ labyrinth, the man observed, that &ldquo;he was a rum fellow, that little Sir
+ Geoffrey, and, for gallantry, a perfect Cock of Bantam, for as old as he
+ was. There was a certain gay wench,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that had hooked him; but
+ what she could make of him, save she carried him to Smithfield, and took
+ money for him, as for a motion of puppets, it was,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;hard to
+ gather.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Encouraged by this opening, Julian asked if his attendant knew why his
+ prison was changed. &ldquo;To teach you to become a King&rsquo;s post without
+ commission,&rdquo; answered the fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped in his tattle as they approached that formidable central point,
+ in which lay couched on his leathern elbow-chair the fat commander of the
+ fortress, stationed apparently for ever in the midst of his citadel, as
+ the huge Boa is sometimes said to lie stretched as a guard upon the
+ subterranean treasures of Eastern Rajas. This overgrown man of authority
+ eyed Julian wistfully and sullenly, as the miser the guinea which he must
+ part with, or the hungry mastiff the food which is carried to another
+ kennel. He growled to himself as he turned the leaves of his ominous
+ register, in order to make the necessary entry respecting the removal of
+ his prisoner. &ldquo;To the Tower&mdash;to the Tower&mdash;ay, ay, all must to
+ the Tower&mdash;that&rsquo;s the fashion of it&mdash;free Britons to a military
+ prison, as if we had neither bolts nor chains here!&mdash;I hope
+ Parliament will have it up, this Towering work, that&rsquo;s all.&mdash;Well,
+ the youngster will take no good by the change, and that is one comfort.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having finished at once his official act of registration, and his
+ soliloquy, he made a signal to his assistants to remove Julian, who was
+ led along the same stern passages which he had traversed upon his
+ entrance, to the gate of the prison, whence a coach, escorted by two
+ officers of justice, conveyed him to the water-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A boat here waited him, with four warders of the Tower, to whose custody
+ he was formally resigned by his late attendants. Clink, however, the
+ turnkey, with whom he was more especially acquainted, did not take leave
+ of him without furnishing him with the piece of black crape which he
+ requested. Peveril fixed it on his hat amid the whispers of his new
+ guardians. &ldquo;The gentleman is in a hurry to go into mourning,&rdquo; said one;
+ &ldquo;mayhap he had better wait till he has cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps others may wear mourning for him, ere he can mourn for any one,&rdquo;
+ answered another of these functionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet notwithstanding the tenor of these whispers, their behaviour to their
+ prisoner was more respectful than he had experienced from his former
+ keepers, and might be termed a sullen civility. The ordinary officers of
+ the law were in general rude, as having to do with felons of every
+ description; whereas these men were only employed with persons accused of
+ state crimes&mdash;men who were from birth and circumstances usually
+ entitled to expect, and able to reward, decent usage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The change of keepers passed unnoticed by Julian, as did the gay and busy
+ scene presented by the broad and beautiful river on which he was now
+ launched. A hundred boats shot past them, bearing parties intent on
+ business, or on pleasure. Julian only viewed them with the stern hope,
+ that whoever had endeavoured to bribe him from his fidelity by the hope of
+ freedom, might see, from the colour of the badge which he had assumed, how
+ determined he was to resist the temptation presented to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about high-water, and a stout wherry came up the river, with sail
+ and oar, so directly upon that in which Julian was embarked, that it
+ seemed as if likely to run her aboard. &ldquo;Get your carabines ready,&rdquo; cried
+ the principal warder to his assistants. &ldquo;What the devil can these
+ scoundrels mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the crew in the other boat seemed to have perceived their error, for
+ they suddenly altered their course, and struck off into the middle stream,
+ while a torrent of mutual abuse was exchanged betwixt them and the boat
+ whose course they had threatened to impede.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Unknown has kept his faith,&rdquo; said Julian to himself; &ldquo;I too have kept
+ mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It even seemed to him, as the boats neared each other, that he heard, from
+ the other wherry, something like a stifled scream or groan; and when the
+ momentary bustle was over, he asked the warder who sat next him, what boat
+ that was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men-of-war&rsquo;s-men, on a frolic, I suppose,&rdquo; answered the warder. &ldquo;I know
+ no one else would be so impudent as run foul of the King&rsquo;s boat; for I am
+ sure the fellow put the helm up on purpose. But mayhap you, sir, know more
+ of the matter than I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This insinuation effectually prevented Julian from putting farther
+ questions, and he remained silent until the boat came under the dusky
+ bastions of the Tower. The tide carried them up under a dark and lowering
+ arch, closed at the upper end by the well-known Traitor&rsquo;s gate,[*] formed
+ like a wicket of huge intersecting bars of wood, through which might be
+ seen a dim and imperfect view of soldiers and warders upon duty, and of
+ the steep ascending causeway which leads up from the river into the
+ interior of the fortress. By this gate,&mdash;and it is the well-known
+ circumstance which assigned its name,&mdash;those accused of state crimes
+ were usually committed to the Tower. The Thames afforded a secret and
+ silent mode of conveyance for transporting thither such whose fallen
+ fortunes might move the commiseration, or whose popular qualities might
+ excite the sympathy, of the public; and even where no cause for especial
+ secrecy existed, the peace of the city was undisturbed by the tumult
+ attending the passage of the prisoner and his guards through the most
+ frequented streets.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] See note, &ldquo;Fortunes of Nigel.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Yet this custom, however recommended by state policy, must have often
+ struck chill upon the heart of the criminal, who thus, stolen, as it were,
+ out of society, reached the place of his confinement, without encountering
+ even one glance of compassion on the road; and as, from under the dusky
+ arch, he landed on those flinty steps, worn by many a footstep anxious as
+ his own, against which the tide lapped fitfully with small successive
+ waves, and hence looked forward to the steep ascent into a Gothic state
+ prison, and backward to such part of the river as the low-brow&rsquo;d vault
+ suffered to become visible, he must often have felt that he was leaving
+ daylight, hope, and life itself, behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the warder&rsquo;s challenge was made and answered, Peveril endeavoured to
+ obtain information from his conductors where he was likely to be confined;
+ but the answer was brief and general&mdash;&ldquo;Where the Lieutenant should
+ direct.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Could he not be permitted to share the imprisonment of his father, Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril?&rdquo; He forgot not, on this occasion, to add the surname of
+ his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warder, an old man of respectable appearance, stared, as if at the
+ extravagance of the demand, and said bluntly, &ldquo;It is impossible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At least,&rdquo; said Peveril, &ldquo;show me where my father is confined, that I may
+ look upon the walls which separate us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young gentleman,&rdquo; said the senior warder, shaking his grey head, &ldquo;I am
+ sorry for you; but asking questions will do you no service. In this place
+ we know nothing of fathers and sons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet chance seemed, in a few minutes afterwards, to offer Peveril that
+ satisfaction which the rigour of his keepers was disposed to deny to him.
+ As he was conveyed up the steep passage which leads under what is called
+ the Wakefield Tower, a female voice, in a tone wherein grief and joy were
+ indescribably mixed, exclaimed, &ldquo;My son!&mdash;My dear son!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even those who guarded Julian seemed softened by a tone of such acute
+ feeling. They slackened their pace. They almost paused to permit him to
+ look up towards the casement from which the sounds of maternal agony
+ proceeded; but the aperture was so narrow, and so closely grated, that
+ nothing was visible save a white female hand, which grasped one of those
+ rusty barricadoes, as if for supporting the person within, while another
+ streamed a white handkerchief, and then let it fall. The casement was
+ instantly deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give it me,&rdquo; said Julian to the officer who lifted the handkerchief; &ldquo;it
+ is perhaps a mother&rsquo;s last gift.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old warder lifted the napkin, and looked at it with the jealous
+ minuteness of one who is accustomed to detect secret correspondence in the
+ most trifling acts of intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There may be writing on it with invisible ink,&rdquo; said one of his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is wetted, but I think it is only with tears,&rdquo; answered the senior. &ldquo;I
+ cannot keep it from the poor young gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Master Coleby,&rdquo; said his comrade, in a gentle tone of reproach, &ldquo;you
+ would have been wearing a better coat than a yeoman&rsquo;s to-day, had it not
+ been for your tender heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It signifies little,&rdquo; said old Coleby, &ldquo;while my heart is true to my
+ King, what I feel in discharging my duty, or what coat keeps my old bosom
+ from the cold weather.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, meanwhile, folded in his breast the token of his mother&rsquo;s
+ affection which chance had favoured him with; and when placed in the small
+ and solitary chamber which he was told to consider as his own during his
+ residence in the Tower, he was soothed even to weeping by this trifling
+ circumstance, which he could not help considering as an omen, that his
+ unfortunate house was not entirely deserted by Providence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the thoughts and occurrences of a prison are too uniform for a
+ narrative, and we must now convey our readers into a more bustling scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Henceforth &lsquo;tis done&mdash;Fortune and I are friends;
+ And I must live, for Buckingham commends.
+ &mdash;POPE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The spacious mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, with the demesne belonging
+ to it, originally bore the name of York House and occupied a large portion
+ of the ground adjacent to the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had been laid out by the munificence of his father, the favourite of
+ Charles the First, in a most splendid manner, so as almost to rival
+ Whitehall itself. But during the increasing rage for building new streets,
+ and the creating of almost an additional town, in order to connect London
+ and Westminster, this ground had become of very great value; and the
+ second Duke of Buckingham, who was at once fond of scheming, and needy of
+ money, had agreed to a plan laid before him by some adventurous architect,
+ for converting the extensive grounds around his palace into those streets,
+ lanes, and courts, which still perpetuate his name and titles; though
+ those who live in Buckingham Street, Duke Street, Villiers Street, or in
+ Of-alley (for even that connecting particle is locally commemorated),
+ probably think seldom of the memory of the witty, eccentric, and
+ licentious George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, whose titles are preserved
+ in the names of their residence and its neighbourhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This building-plan the Duke had entered upon with all the eagerness which
+ he usually attached to novelty. His gardens were destroyed&mdash;his
+ pavilions levelled&mdash;his splendid stables demolished&mdash;the whole
+ pomp of his suburban demesne laid waste, cumbered with ruins, and
+ intersected with the foundations of new buildings and cellars, and the
+ process of levelling different lines for the intended streets. But the
+ undertaking, although it proved afterwards both lucrative and successful,
+ met with a check at the outset, partly from want of the necessary funds,
+ partly from the impatient and mercurial temper of the Duke, which soon
+ carried him off in pursuit of some more new object. So that, though much
+ was demolished, very little, in comparison, was reared up in the stead,
+ and nothing was completed. The principal part of the ducal mansion still
+ remained uninjured; but the demesne in which it stood bore a strange
+ analogy to the irregular mind of its noble owner. Here stood a beautiful
+ group of exotic trees and shrubs, the remnant of the garden, amid yawning
+ common-sewers, and heaps of rubbish. In one place an old tower threatened
+ to fall upon the spectator; and in another he ran the risk of being
+ swallowed up by a modern vault. Grandeur of conception could be discovered
+ in the undertaking, but was almost everywhere marred by poverty or
+ negligence of execution. In short, the whole place was the true emblem of
+ an understanding and talents run to waste, and become more dangerous than
+ advantageous to society, by the want of steady principle, and the
+ improvidence of the possessor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were men who took a different view of the Duke&rsquo;s purpose in
+ permitting his mansion to be thus surrounded, and his demesne occupied by
+ modern buildings which were incomplete, and ancient which were but half
+ demolished. They alleged, that, engaged as he was in so many mysteries of
+ love and of politics, and having the character of the most daring and
+ dangerous intriguer of his time, his Grace found it convenient to surround
+ himself with this ruinous arena, into which officers of justice could not
+ penetrate without some difficulty and hazard; and which might afford, upon
+ occasion, a safe and secret shelter for such tools as were fit for
+ desperate enterprises, and a private and unobserved mode of access to
+ those whom he might have any special reason for receiving in secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving Peveril in the Tower, we must once more convey our readers to the
+ Levee of the Duke, who, on the morning of Julian&rsquo;s transference to that
+ fortress, thus addressed his minister-in-chief, and principal attendant:
+ &ldquo;I have been so pleased with your conduct in this matter, Jerningham, that
+ if Old Nick were to arise in our presence, and offer me his best imp as a
+ familiar in thy room, I would hold it but a poor compliment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A legion of imps,&rdquo; said Jerningham, bowing, &ldquo;could not have been more
+ busy than I in your Grace&rsquo;s service; but if your Grace will permit me to
+ say so, your whole plan was well-nigh marred by your not returning home
+ till last night, or rather this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why, I pray you, sage Master Jerningham,&rdquo; said his Grace, &ldquo;should I
+ have returned home an instant sooner than my pleasure and convenience
+ served?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; replied the attendant, &ldquo;I know not; only, when you
+ sent us word by Empson, in Chiffinch&rsquo;s apartment, to command us to make
+ sure of the girl at any rate, and at all risks, you said you would be here
+ so soon as you could get freed of the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freed of the King, you rascal! What sort of phrase is that?&rdquo; demanded the
+ Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was Empson who used it, my lord, as coming from your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is much very fit for my Grace to say, that misbecomes such mouths
+ as Empson&rsquo;s or yours to repeat,&rdquo; answered the Duke haughtily, but
+ instantly resumed his tone of familiarity, for his humour was as
+ capricious as his pursuits. &ldquo;But I know what thou wouldst have; first,
+ your wisdom would know what became of me since thou hadst my commands at
+ Chiffinch&rsquo;s; and next, your valour would fain sound another flourish of
+ trumpets on thine own most artificial retreat, leaving thy comrade in the
+ hands of the Philistines.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Grace,&rdquo; said Jerningham, &ldquo;I did but retreat for the
+ preservation of the baggage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! do you play at crambo with me?&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;I would have you to
+ know that the common parish fool should be whipt, were he to attempt to
+ pass pun or quodlibet as a genuine jest, even amongst ticket-porters and
+ hackney chairmen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet I have heard your Grace indulge in the <i>jeu de mots</i>,&rdquo;
+ answered the attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sirrah Jerningham,&rdquo; answered the patron, &ldquo;discard they memory, or keep it
+ under correction, else it will hamper thy rise in the world. Thou mayst
+ perchance have seen me also have a fancy to play at trap-ball, or to kiss
+ a serving wench, or to guzzle ale and eat toasted cheese in a porterly
+ whimsy; but is it fitting thou shouldst remember such follies? No more
+ on&rsquo;t.&mdash;Hark you; how came the long lubberly fool, Jenkins, being a
+ master of the noble science of defence, to suffer himself to be run
+ through the body so simply by a rustic swain like this same Peveril?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please your Grace, this same Corydon is no such novice. I saw the onset;
+ and, except in one hand, I never saw a sword managed with such life,
+ grace, and facility.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, indeed?&rdquo; said the Duke, taking his own sheathed rapier in his hand,
+ &ldquo;I could not have thought that. I am somewhat rusted, and have need of
+ breathing. Peveril is a name of note. As well go to the Barns-elms, or
+ behind Montagu House, with him as with another. His father a rumoured
+ plotter, too. The public would have noted it in me as becoming a zealous
+ Protestant. Needful I do something to maintain my good name in the city,
+ to atone for non-attendance on prayer and preaching. But your Laertes is
+ fast in the Fleet; and I suppose his blundering blockhead of an antagonist
+ is dead or dying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Recovering, my lord, on the contrary,&rdquo; replied Jerningham; &ldquo;the blade
+ fortunately avoided his vitals.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D&mdash;n his vitals!&rdquo; answered the Duke. &ldquo;Tell him to postpone his
+ recovery, or I will put him to death in earnest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will caution his surgeon,&rdquo; said Jerningham, &ldquo;which will answer equally
+ well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do so; and tell him he had better be on his own deathbed as cure his
+ patient till I send him notice.&mdash;That young fellow must be let loose
+ again at no rate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is little danger,&rdquo; said the attendant. &ldquo;I hear some of the
+ witnesses have got their net flung over him on account of some matters
+ down in the north; and that he is to be translated to the Tower for that,
+ and for some letters of the Countess of Derby, as rumour goes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To the Tower let him go, and get out as he can,&rdquo; replied the Duke; &ldquo;and
+ when you hear he is fast there, let the fencing fellow recover as fast as
+ the surgeon and he can mutually settle it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, having said this, took two or three turns in the apartment, and
+ appeared to be in deep thought. His attendant waited the issue of his
+ meditations with patience, being well aware that such moods, during which
+ his mind was strongly directed in one point, were never of so long
+ duration with his patron as to prove a severe burden to his own patience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, after the silence of seven or eight minutes, the Duke broke
+ through it, taking from the toilette a large silk purse, which seemed full
+ of gold. &ldquo;Jerningham,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou art a faithful fellow, and it would
+ be sin not to cherish thee. I beat the King at Mall on his bold defiance.
+ The honour is enough for me; and thou, my boy, shalt have the winnings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerningham pocketed the purse with due acknowledgements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jerningham,&rdquo; his Grace continued, &ldquo;I know you blame me for changing my
+ plans too often; and on my soul I have heard you so learned on the
+ subject, that I have become of your opinion, and have been vexed at myself
+ for two or three hours together, for not sticking as constantly to one
+ object, as doubtless I shall, when age (touching his forehead) shall make
+ this same weathercock too rusty to turn with the changing breeze. But as
+ yet, while I have spirit and action, let it whirl like the vane at the
+ mast-head, which teaches the pilot how to steer his course; and when I
+ shift mine, think I am bound to follow Fortune, and not to control her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can understand nothing from all this, please your Grace,&rdquo; replied
+ Jerningham, &ldquo;save that you have been pleased to change some purposed
+ measures, and think that you have profited by doing so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall judge yourself,&rdquo; replied the Duke. &ldquo;I have seen the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth.&mdash;You start. It is true, by Heaven! I have seen her, and
+ from sworn enemies we have become sworn friends. The treaty between such
+ high and mighty powers had some weighty articles; besides, I had a French
+ negotiator to deal with; so that you will allow a few hours&rsquo; absence was
+ but a necessary interval to make up our matters of diplomacy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace astonishes me,&rdquo; said Jerningham. &ldquo;Christian&rsquo;s plan of
+ supplanting the great lady is then entirely abandoned? I thought you had
+ but desired to have the fair successor here, in order to carry it on under
+ your own management.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forgot what I meant at the time,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;unless that I was
+ resolved she should not jilt me as she did the good-natured man of
+ royalty; and so I am still determined, since you put me in mind of the
+ fair Dowsabelle. But I had a contrite note from the Duchess while we were
+ at the Mall. I went to see her, and found her a perfect Niobe.&mdash;On my
+ soul, in spite of red eyes and swelled features, and dishevelled hair,
+ there are, after all, Jerningham, some women who do, as the poets say,
+ look lovely in affliction. Out came the cause; and with such humility,
+ such penitence, such throwing herself on my mercy (she the proudest devil,
+ too, in the whole Court), that I must have had heart of steel to resist it
+ all. In short, Chiffinch in a drunken fit had played the babbler, and let
+ young Saville into our intrigue. Saville plays the rogue, and informs the
+ Duchess by a messenger, who luckily came a little late into the market.
+ She learned, too, being a very devil for intelligence, that there had been
+ some jarring between the master and me about this new Phillis; and that I
+ was most likely to catch the bird,&mdash;as any one may see who looks on
+ us both. It must have been Empson who fluted all this into her Grace&rsquo;s
+ ear; and thinking she saw how her ladyship and I could hunt in couples,
+ she entreats me to break Christian&rsquo;s scheme, and keep the wench out of the
+ King&rsquo;s sight, especially if she were such a rare piece of perfection as
+ fame has reported her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your Grace has promised her your hand to uphold the influence which
+ you have so often threatened to ruin?&rdquo; said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, Jerningham; my turn was as much served when she seemed to own herself
+ in my power, and cry me mercy.&mdash;And observe, it is all one to me by
+ which ladder I climb into the King&rsquo;s cabinet. That of Portsmouth is ready
+ fixed&mdash;better ascend by it than fling it down to put up another&mdash;I
+ hate all unnecessary trouble.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And Christian?&rdquo; said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May go to the devil for a self-conceited ass. One pleasure of this twist
+ of intrigue is, to revenge me of that villain, who thought himself so
+ essential, that, by Heaven! he forced himself on my privacy, and lectured
+ me like a schoolboy. Hang the cold-blooded hypocritical vermin! If he
+ mutters, I will have his nose slit as wide as Coventry&rsquo;s.[*]&mdash;Hark
+ ye, is the Colonel come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I expect him every moment, your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The ill-usage of Sir John Coventry by some of the Life Guardsmen,
+ in revenge of something said in Parliament concerning the King&rsquo;s
+ theatrical amours, gave rise to what was called Coventry&rsquo;s Act,
+ against cutting and maiming the person.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Send him up when he arrives,&rdquo; said the Duke.&mdash;&mdash;&ldquo;Why do you
+ stand looking at me? What would you have?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace&rsquo;s direction respecting the young lady,&rdquo; said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Odd zooks,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;I had totally forgotten her.&mdash;Is she
+ very tearful?&mdash;Exceedingly afflicted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She does not take on so violently as I have seen some do,&rdquo; said
+ Jerningham; &ldquo;but for a strong, firm, concentrated indignation, I have seen
+ none to match her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, we will permit her to cool. I will not face the affliction of a
+ second fair one immediately. I am tired of snivelling, and swelled eyes,
+ and blubbered cheeks for some time; and, moreover, must husband my powers
+ of consolation. Begone, and send the Colonel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will your Grace permit me one other question?&rdquo; demanded his confidant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask what thou wilt, Jerningham, and then begone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace has determined to give up Christian,&rdquo; said the attendant. &ldquo;May
+ I ask what becomes of the kingdom of Man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgotten, as I have a Christian soul!&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;as much forgotten
+ as if I had never nourished that scheme of royal ambition.&mdash;D&mdash;n
+ it, we must knit up the ravelled skein of that intrigue.&mdash;Yet it is
+ but a miserable rock, not worth the trouble I have been bestowing on it;
+ and for a kingdom&mdash;it has a sound indeed; but, in reality, I might as
+ well stick a cock-chicken&rsquo;s feather into my hat, and call it a plume.
+ Besides, now I think upon it, it would scarce be honourable to sweep that
+ petty royalty out of Derby&rsquo;s possession. I won a thousand pieces of the
+ young Earl when he was last here, and suffered him to hang about me at
+ Court. I question if the whole revenue of his kingdom is worth twice as
+ much. Easily I could win it of him, were he here, with less trouble than
+ it would cost me to carry on these troublesome intrigues of Christian&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I may be permitted to say so, please your Grace,&rdquo; answered Jerningham,
+ &ldquo;although your Grace is perhaps somewhat liable to change your mind, no
+ man in England can afford better reasons for doing so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think so myself, Jerningham,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and it may be it is one
+ reason for my changing. One likes to vindicate his own conduct, and to
+ find out fine reasons for doing what one has a mind to.&mdash;And now,
+ once again, begone. Or, hark ye&mdash;hark ye&mdash;I shall need some
+ loose gold. You may leave the purse I gave you; and I will give you an
+ order for as much, and two years&rsquo; interest, on old Jacob Doublefee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As your Grace pleases,&rdquo; said Jerningham, his whole stock of complaisance
+ scarcely able to conceal his mortification at exchanging for a distant
+ order, of a kind which of late had not been very regularly honoured, the
+ sunny contents of the purse which had actually been in his pocket.
+ Secretly, but solemnly did he make a vow, that two years&rsquo; interest alone
+ should not be the compensation for this involuntary exchange in the form
+ of his remuneration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the discontented dependant left the apartment, he met, at the head of
+ the grand staircase, Christian himself, who, exercising the freedom of an
+ ancient friend of the house, was making his way, unannounced, to the
+ Duke&rsquo;s dressing apartment. Jerningham, conjecturing that his visit at this
+ crisis would be anything but well timed, or well taken, endeavoured to
+ avert his purpose by asserting that the Duke was indisposed, and in his
+ bedchamber; and this he said so loud that his master might hear him, and,
+ if he pleased, realise the apology which he offered in his name, by
+ retreating into the bedroom as his last sanctuary, and drawing the bolt
+ against intrusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, far from adopting a stratagem to which he had had recourse on former
+ occasions, in order to avoid those who came upon him, though at an
+ appointed hour, and upon business of importance, Buckingham called, in a
+ loud voice, from his dressing apartment, commanding his chamberlain
+ instantly to introduce his good friend Master Christian, and censuring him
+ for hesitating for an instant to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; thought Jerningham within himself, &ldquo;if Christian knew the Duke as
+ well as I do, he would sooner stand the leap of a lion, like the London
+ &lsquo;prentice bold, than venture on my master at this moment, who is even now
+ in a humour nearly as dangerous as the animal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then ushered Christian into his master&rsquo;s presence, taking care to post
+ himself within earshot of the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Speak not of niceness, when there&rsquo;s chance of wreck,&rdquo;
+ The captain said, as ladies writhed their neck
+ To see the dying dolphin flap the deck:
+ &ldquo;If we go down, on us these gentry sup;
+ We dine upon them, if we haul them up.
+ Wise men applaud us when we eat the eaters,
+ As the devil laughs when keen folks cheat the cheaters.&rdquo;
+ &mdash;THE SEA VOYAGE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing in Duke&rsquo;s manner towards Christian which could have
+ conveyed to that latter personage, experienced as he was in the worst
+ possible ways of the world, that Buckingham would, at that particular
+ moment, rather have seen the devil than himself; unless it was that
+ Buckingham&rsquo;s reception of him, being rather extraordinarily courteous
+ towards so old an acquaintance, might have excited some degree of
+ suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having escaped with some difficulty from the vague region of general
+ compliments, which bears the same relation to that of business that Milton
+ informs us the <i>Limbo Patrum</i> has to the sensible and material earth,
+ Christian asked his Grace of Buckingham, with the same blunt plainness
+ with which he usually veiled a very deep and artificial character, whether
+ he had lately seen Chiffinch or his helpmate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither of them lately,&rdquo; answered Buckingham. &ldquo;Have not you waited on
+ them yourself?&mdash;I thought you would have been more anxious about the
+ great scheme.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have called once and again,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;but I can gain no access
+ to the sight of that important couple. I begin to be afraid they are
+ paltering with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which, by the welkin and its stars, you would not be slow in avenging,
+ Master Christian. I know your puritanical principles on that point well,&rdquo;
+ said the Duke. &ldquo;Revenge may be well said to be sweet, when so many grave
+ and wise men are ready to exchange for it all the sugar-plums which
+ pleasures offer to the poor sinful people of the world, besides the
+ reversion of those which they talk of expecting in the way of <i>post obit</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You may jest, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;but still&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But still you will be revenged on Chiffinch, and his little commodious
+ companion. And yet the task may be difficult&mdash;Chiffinch has so many
+ ways of obliging his master&mdash;his little woman is such a convenient
+ pretty sort of a screen, and has such winning little ways of her own,
+ that, in faith, in your case, I would not meddle with them. What is this
+ refusing their door, man? We all do it to our best friends now and then,
+ as well as to duns and dull company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your Grace is in a humour of rambling thus wildly in your talk,&rdquo; said
+ Christian, &ldquo;you know my old faculty of patience&mdash;I can wait till it
+ be your pleasure to talk more seriously.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seriously!&rdquo; said his Grace&mdash;&ldquo;Wherefore not?&mdash;I only wait to
+ know what your serious business may be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In a word, my lord, from Chiffinch&rsquo;s refusal to see me, and some vain
+ calls which I have made at your Grace&rsquo;s mansion, I am afraid either that
+ our plan has miscarried, or that there is some intention to exclude me
+ from the farther conduct of the matter.&rdquo; Christian pronounced these words
+ with considerable emphasis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That were folly as well as treachery,&rdquo; returned the Duke, &ldquo;to exclude
+ from the spoil the very engineer who conducted the attack. But hark ye,
+ Christian&mdash;I am sorry to tell bad news without preparation; but as
+ you insist on knowing the worst, and are not ashamed to suspect your best
+ friends, out it must come&mdash;Your niece left Chiffinch&rsquo;s house the
+ morning before yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian staggered, as if he had received a severe blow; and the blood
+ ran to his face in such a current of passion, that the Duke concluded he
+ was struck with an apoplexy. But, exerting the extraordinary command which
+ he could maintain under the most trying circumstances, he said, with a
+ voice, the composure of which had an unnatural contrast with the
+ alteration of his countenance, &ldquo;Am I to conclude, that in leaving the
+ protection of the roof in which I placed her, the girl has found shelter
+ under that of your Grace?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; replied Buckingham gravely, &ldquo;the supposition does my gallantry more
+ credit than it deserves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; answered Christian, &ldquo;I am not one whom you can impose
+ on by this species of courtly jargon. I know of what your Grace is
+ capable; and that to gratify the caprice of a moment you would not
+ hesitate to disappoint even the schemes at which you yourself have
+ laboured most busily.&mdash;Suppose this jest played off. Take your laugh
+ at those simple precautions by which I intended to protect your Grace&rsquo;s
+ interest, as well as that of others. Let us know the extent of your
+ frolic, and consider how far its consequences can be repaired.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my word, Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, laughing, &ldquo;you are the most
+ obliging of uncles and of guardians. Let your niece pass through as many
+ adventures as Boccaccio&rsquo;s bride of the King of Garba, you care not. Pure
+ or soiled, she will still make the footstool of your fortune.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Indian proverb says, that the dart of contempt will even pierce through
+ the shell of the tortoise; but this is more peculiarly the case when
+ conscience tells the subject of the sarcasm that it is justly merited.
+ Christian, stung with Buckingham&rsquo;s reproach, at once assumed a haughty and
+ threatening mien, totally inconsistent with that in which sufferance
+ seemed to be as much his badge as that of Shylock. &ldquo;You are a foul-mouthed
+ and most unworthy lord,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and as such I will proclaim you, unless
+ you make reparation for the injury you have done me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what,&rdquo; said the Duke of Buckingham, &ldquo;shall I proclaim <i>you</i>,
+ that can give you the least title to notice from such as I am? What name
+ shall I bestow on the little transaction which has given rise to such
+ unexpected misunderstanding?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian was silent, either from rage or from mental conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, smiling, &ldquo;we know too much of each
+ other to make a quarrel safe. Hate each other we may&mdash;circumvent each
+ other&mdash;it is the way of Courts&mdash;but proclaim!&mdash;a fico for
+ the phrase.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I used it not,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;till your Grace drove me to extremity.
+ You know, my lord, I have fought both at home and abroad; and you should
+ not rashly think that I will endure any indignity which blood can wipe
+ away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the contrary,&rdquo; said the Duke, with the same civil and sneering manner,
+ &ldquo;I can confidently assert, that the life of half a score of your friends
+ would seem very light to you, Christian, if their existence interfered, I
+ do not say with your character, as being a thing of much less consequence,
+ but with any advantage which their existence might intercept. Fie upon it,
+ man, we have known each other long. I never thought you a coward; and am
+ only glad to see I could strike a few sparkles of heat out of your cold
+ and constant disposition. I will now, if you please, tell you at once the
+ fate of the young lady, in which I pray you to believe that I am truly
+ interested.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hear you, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian. &ldquo;The curl of your upper lip,
+ and your eyebrow, does not escape me. Your Grace knows the French proverb,
+ &lsquo;He laughs best who laughs last.&rsquo; But I hear you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank Heaven you do,&rdquo; said Buckingham; &ldquo;for your case requires haste, I
+ promise you, and involves no laughing matter. Well then, hear a simple
+ truth, on which (if it became me to offer any pledge for what I assert to
+ be such) I could pledge life, fortune, and honour. It was the morning
+ before last, when meeting with the King at Chiffinch&rsquo;s unexpectedly&mdash;in
+ fact I had looked in to fool an hour away, and to learn how your scheme
+ advanced&mdash;I saw a singular scene. Your niece terrified little
+ Chiffinch&mdash;(the hen Chiffinch, I mean)&mdash;bid the King defiance to
+ his teeth, and walked out of the presence triumphantly, under the
+ guardianship of a young fellow of little mark or likelihood, excepting a
+ tolerable personal presence, and the advantage of a most unconquerable
+ impudence. Egad, I can hardly help laughing to think how the King and I
+ were both baffled; for I will not deny, that I had tried to trifle for a
+ moment with the fair Indamora. But, egad, the young fellow swooped her off
+ from under our noses, like my own Drawcansir clearing off the banquet from
+ the two Kings of Brentford. There was a dignity in the gallant&rsquo;s
+ swaggering retreat which I must try to teach Mohun;[*] it will suit his
+ part admirably.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] Then a noted actor.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is incomprehensible, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, who by this time
+ had recovered all his usual coolness; &ldquo;you cannot expect me to believe
+ this. Who dared be so bold as to carry of my niece in such a manner, and
+ from so august a presence? And with whom, a stranger as he must have been,
+ would she, wise and cautious as I know her, have consented to depart in
+ such a manner?&mdash;My lord, I cannot believe this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One of your priests, my most devoted Christian,&rdquo; replied the Duke, &ldquo;would
+ only answer, Die, infidel, in thine unbelief; but I am only a poor
+ worldling sinner, and I will add what mite of information I can. The young
+ fellow&rsquo;s name, as I am given to understand, is Julian, son of Sir
+ Geoffrey, whom men call Peveril of the Peak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peveril of the Devil, who hath his cavern there!&rdquo; said Christian warmly;
+ &ldquo;for I know that gallant, and believe him capable of anything bold and
+ desperate. But how could he intrude himself into the royal presence?
+ Either Hell aids him, or Heaven looks nearer into mortal dealings than I
+ have yet believed. If so, may God forgive us, who deemed he thought not on
+ us at all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen, most Christian Christian,&rdquo; replied the Duke. &ldquo;I am glad to see thou
+ hast yet some touch of grace that leads thee to augur so. But Empson, the
+ hen Chiffinch, and half-a-dozen more, saw the swain&rsquo;s entrance and
+ departure. Please examine these witnesses with your own wisdom, if you
+ think your time may not be better employed in tracing the fugitives. I
+ believe he gained entrance as one of some dancing or masking party.
+ Rowley, you know, is accessible to all who will come forth to make him
+ sport. So in stole this termagant tearing gallant, like Samson among the
+ Philistines, to pull down our fine scheme about our ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;I cannot but believe you; and I
+ forgive you, since it is your nature, for making sport of what is ruin and
+ destruction. But which way did they take?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Derbyshire, I should presume, to seek her father,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;She
+ spoke of going into paternal protection, instead of yours, Master
+ Christian. Something had chanced at Chiffinch&rsquo;s, to give her cause to
+ suspect that you had not altogether provided for his daughter in the
+ manner which her father was likely to approve of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Heaven be praised,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;she knows not her father is
+ come to London! and they must be gone down either to Martindale Castle, or
+ to Moultrassie Hall; in either case they are in my power&mdash;I must
+ follow them close. I will return instantly to Derbyshire&mdash;I am undone
+ if she meet her father until these errors are amended. Adieu, my lord. I
+ forgive the part which I fear your Grace must have had in baulking our
+ enterprise&mdash;it is no time for mutual reproaches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak truth, Master Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;and I wish you all
+ success. Can I help you with men, or horses, or money?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank your Grace,&rdquo; said Christian, and hastily left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke watched his descending footsteps on the staircase, until they
+ could be heard no longer, and then exclaimed to Jerningham, who entered, &ldquo;<i>Victoria!
+ victoria! magna est veritas et prævalebit!</i>&mdash;Had I told the
+ villain a word of a lie, he is so familiar with all the regions of
+ falsehood&mdash;his whole life has been such an absolute imposture, that I
+ had stood detected in an instant; but I told him truth, and that was the
+ only means of deceiving him. Victoria! my dear Jerningham, I am prouder of
+ cheating Christian, than I should have been of circumventing a minister of
+ state.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace holds his wisdom very high,&rdquo; said the attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His cunning, at least, I do, which, in Court affairs, often takes the
+ weather-gage of wisdom,&mdash;as in Yarmouth Roads a herring-buss will
+ baffle a frigate. He shall not return to London if I can help it, until
+ all these intrigues are over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his Grace spoke, the Colonel, after whom he had repeatedly made
+ inquiry, was announced by a gentleman of his household. &ldquo;He met not
+ Christian, did he?&rdquo; said the Duke hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; returned the domestic, &ldquo;the Colonel came by the old garden
+ staircase.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I judged as much,&rdquo; replied the Duke; &ldquo;&lsquo;tis an owl that will not take wing
+ in daylight, when there is a thicket left to skulk under. Here he comes
+ from threading lane, vault, and ruinous alley, very near ominous a
+ creature as the fowl of ill augury which he resembles.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Colonel, to whom no other appellation seemed to be given, than that
+ which belonged to his military station, now entered the apartment. He was
+ tall, strongly built, and past the middle period of life, and his
+ countenance, but for the heavy cloud which dwelt upon it, might have been
+ pronounced a handsome one. While the Duke spoke to him, either from
+ humility or some other cause, his large serious eye was cast down upon the
+ ground; but he raised it when he answered, with a keen look of earnest
+ observation. His dress was very plain, and more allied to that of the
+ Puritans than of the Cavaliers of the time; a shadowy black hat, like the
+ Spanish sombrero; a large black mantle or cloak, and a long rapier, gave
+ him something the air of a Castilione, to which his gravity and stiffness
+ of demeanour added considerable strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Colonel,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;we have been long strangers&mdash;how
+ have matters gone with you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As with other men of action in quiet times,&rdquo; answered the colonel, &ldquo;or as
+ a good war-caper[*] that lies high and dry in a muddy creek, till seams
+ and planks are rent and riven.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] A privateer.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Colonel,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;I have used your valour before now, and I
+ may again; so that I shall speedily see that the vessel is careened, and
+ undergoes a thorough repair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I conjecture, then,&rdquo; said the Colonel, &ldquo;that your Grace has some voyage
+ in hand?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, but there is one which I want to interrupt,&rdquo; replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tis but another stave of the same tune.&mdash;Well, my lord, I listen,&rdquo;
+ answered the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;it is but a trifling matter after all.&mdash;You
+ know Ned Christian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, surely, my lord,&rdquo; replied the Colonel, &ldquo;we have been long known to
+ each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is about to go down to Derbyshire to seek a certain niece of his, whom
+ he will scarcely find there. Now, I trust to your tried friendship to
+ interrupt his return to London. Go with him, or meet him, cajole him, or
+ assail him, or do what thou wilt with him&mdash;only keep him from London
+ for a fortnight at least, and then I care little how soon he comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For by that time, I suppose,&rdquo; replied the Colonel, &ldquo;any one may find the
+ wench that thinks her worth the looking for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou mayst think her worth the looking for thyself, Colonel,&rdquo; rejoined
+ the Duke; &ldquo;I promise you she hath many a thousand stitched to her
+ petticoat; such a wife would save thee from skeldering on the public.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord, I sell my blood and my sword, but not my honour,&rdquo; answered the
+ man sullenly; &ldquo;if I marry, my bed may be a poor, but it shall be an honest
+ one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thy wife will be the only honest matter in thy possession, Colonel&mdash;at
+ least since I have known you,&rdquo; replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, truly, your Grace may speak your pleasure on that point. It is
+ chiefly your business which I have done of late; and if it were less
+ strictly honest than I could have wished, the employer was to blame as
+ well as the agent. But for marrying a cast-off mistress, the man (saving
+ your Grace, to whom I am bound) lives not who dares propose it to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke laughed loudly. &ldquo;Why, this is mine Ancient Pistol&rsquo;s vein,&rdquo; he
+ replied.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;&ldquo;Shall I Sir Pandarus of Troy become,
+ And by my side wear steel?&mdash;then Lucifer take all!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My breeding is too plain to understand ends of playhouse verse, my lord,&rdquo;
+ said the Colonel suddenly. &ldquo;Has your Grace no other service to command
+ me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None&mdash;only I am told you have published a Narrative concerning the
+ Plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What should ail me, my lord?&rdquo; said the Colonel; &ldquo;I hope I am a witness as
+ competent as any that has yet appeared?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly, I think so to the full,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and it would have been
+ hard, when so much profitable mischief was going, if so excellent a
+ Protestant as yourself had not come in for a share.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I came to take your Grace&rsquo;s commands, not to be the object of your wit,&rdquo;
+ said the Colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gallantly spoken, most resolute and most immaculate Colonel! As you are
+ to be on full pay in my service for a month to come, I pray your
+ acceptance of this purse, for contingents and equipments, and you shall
+ have my instructions from time to time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They shall be punctually obeyed, my lord,&rdquo; said the Colonel; &ldquo;I know the
+ duty of a subaltern officer. I wish your Grace a good morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he pocketed the purse, without either affecting hesitation, or
+ expressing gratitude, but merely as a part of a transaction in the regular
+ way of business, and stalked from the apartment with the same sullen
+ gravity which marked his entrance. &ldquo;Now, there goes a scoundrel after my
+ own heart,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;a robber from his cradle, a murderer since he
+ could hold a knife, a profound hypocrite in religion, and a worse and
+ deeper hypocrite in honour,&mdash;would sell his soul to the devil to
+ accomplish any villainy, and would cut the throat of his brother, did he
+ dare to give the villainy he had so acted its right name.&mdash;Now, why
+ stand you amazed, good Master Jerningham, and look on me as you would on
+ some monster of Ind, when you had paid your shilling to see it, and were
+ staring out your pennyworth with your eyes as round as a pair of
+ spectacles? Wink, man, and save them, and then let thy tongue untie the
+ mystery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my word, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; answered Jerningham, &ldquo;since I am compelled to
+ speak, I can only say, that the longer I live with your Grace, I am the
+ more at a loss to fathom your motives of action. Others lay plans, either
+ to attain profit or pleasure by their execution; but your Grace&rsquo;s delight
+ is to counteract your own schemes, when in the very act of performance;
+ like a child&mdash;forgive me&mdash;that breaks its favourite toy, or a
+ man who should set fire to the house he has half built.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why not, if he wanted to warm his hands at the blaze?&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, my lord,&rdquo; replied his dependent; &ldquo;but what if, in doing so, he should
+ burn his fingers?&mdash;My lord, it is one of your noblest qualities, that
+ you will sometimes listen to the truth without taking offence; but were it
+ otherwise, I could not, at this moment, help speaking out at every risk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, say on, I can bear it,&rdquo; said the Duke, throwing himself into an
+ easy-chair, and using his toothpick with graceful indifference and
+ equanimity; &ldquo;I love to hear what such potsherds as thou art, think of the
+ proceeding of us who are of the pure porcelain clay of the earth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of Heaven, my lord, let me then ask you,&rdquo; said Jerningham,
+ &ldquo;what merit you claim, or what advantage you expect, from having embroiled
+ everything in which you are concerned to a degree which equals the chaos
+ of the blind old Roundhead&rsquo;s poem which your Grace is so fond of? To begin
+ with the King. In spite of good-humour, he will be incensed at your
+ repeated rivalry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His Majesty defied me to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have lost all hopes of the Isle, by quarrelling with Christian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have ceased to care a farthing about it,&rdquo; replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In Christian himself, whom you have insulted, and to whose family you
+ intend dishonour, you have lost a sagacious, artful, and cool-headed
+ instrument and adherent,&rdquo; said the monitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor Jerningham!&rdquo; answered the Duke; &ldquo;Christian would say as much for
+ thee, I doubt not, wert thou discarded tomorrow. It is the common error of
+ such tools as you and he to think themselves indispensable. As to his
+ family, what was never honourable cannot be dishonoured by any connection
+ with my house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say nothing of Chiffinch,&rdquo; said Jerningham, &ldquo;offended as he will be
+ when he learns why, and by whom, his scheme has been ruined, and the lady
+ spirited away&mdash;He and his wife, I say nothing of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You need not,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;for were they even fit persons to speak to
+ me about, the Duchess of Portsmouth has bargained for their disgrace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then this bloodhound of a Colonel, as he calls himself, your Grace cannot
+ even lay <i>him</i> on a quest which is to do you service, but you must do
+ him such indignity at the same time, as he will not fail to remember, and
+ be sure to fly at your throat should he ever have an opportunity of
+ turning on you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will take care he has none,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and yours, Jerningham, is
+ a low-lived apprehension. Beat your spaniel heartily if you would have him
+ under command. Ever let your agents see you know what they are, and prize
+ them accordingly. A rogue, who must needs be treated as a man of honour,
+ is apt to get above his work. Enough, therefore, of your advice and
+ censure, Jerningham; we differ in every particular. Were we both
+ engineers, you would spend your life in watching some old woman&rsquo;s wheel,
+ which spins flax by the ounce; I must be in the midst of the most varied
+ and counteracting machinery, regulating checks and counter-checks,
+ balancing weights, proving springs and wheels, directing and controlling a
+ hundred combined powers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And your fortune, in the meanwhile?&rdquo; said Jerningham; &ldquo;pardon this last
+ hint, my lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My fortune,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;is too vast to be hurt by a petty wound; and
+ I have, as thou knowest, a thousand salves in store for the scratches and
+ scars which it sometimes receives in greasing my machinery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace does not mean Dr. Wilderhead&rsquo;s powder of projection?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw! he is a quacksalver, and mountebank, and beggar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or Solicitor Drowndland&rsquo;s plan for draining the fens?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a cheat,&mdash;<i>videlicet</i>, an attorney.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or the Laird of Lackpelf&rsquo;s sale of Highland woods?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a Scotsman,&rdquo; said the Duke,&mdash;&ldquo;<i>videlicet</i>, both cheat and
+ beggar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These streets here, upon the site of your noble mansion-house?&rdquo; said
+ Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The architect&rsquo;s a bite, and the plan&rsquo;s a bubble. I am sick of the sight
+ of this rubbish, and I will soon replace our old alcoves, alleys, and
+ flower-pots by an Italian garden and a new palace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That, my lord, would be to waste, not to improve your fortune,&rdquo; said his
+ domestic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clodpate, and muddy spirit that thou art, thou hast forgot the most
+ hopeful scheme of all&mdash;the South Sea Fisheries&mdash;their stock is
+ up 50 per cent. already. Post down to the Alley, and tell old Mansses to
+ buy £20,000 for me.&mdash;Forgive me, Plutus, I forgot to lay my sacrifice
+ on thy shrine, and yet expected thy favours!&mdash;Fly post-haste,
+ Jerningham&mdash;for thy life, for thy life, for thy life!&rdquo;[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Stock-jobbing, as it is called, that is, dealing in shares of
+ monopolies, patent, and joint-stock companies of every
+ description, was at least as common in Charles II.&lsquo;s time as our
+ own; and as the exercise of ingenuity in this way promised a road
+ to wealth without the necessity of industry, it was then much
+ pursued by dissolute courtiers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With hands and eyes uplifted, Jerningham left the apartment; and the Duke,
+ without thinking a moment farther on old or new intrigues&mdash;on the
+ friendship he had formed, or the enmity he had provoked&mdash;on the
+ beauty whom he had carried off from her natural protectors, as well as
+ from her lover&mdash;or on the monarch against whom he had placed himself
+ in rivalship,&mdash;sat down to calculate chances with all the zeal of
+ Demoivre, tired of the drudgery in half-an-hour, and refused to see the
+ zealous agent whom he had employed in the city, because he was busily
+ engaged in writing a new lampoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ah! changeful head, and fickle heart!
+ &mdash;PROGRESS OF DISCONTENT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ No event is more ordinary in narratives of this nature, than the abduction
+ of the female on whose fate the interest is supposed to turn; but that of
+ Alice Bridgenorth was thus far particular, that she was spirited away by
+ the Duke of Buckingham, more in contradiction than in the rivalry of
+ passion; and that, as he made his first addresses to her at Chiffinch&rsquo;s,
+ rather in the spirit of rivalry to this Sovereign, than from any strong
+ impression which her beauty had made on his affections, so he had formed
+ the sudden plan of spiriting her away by means of his dependents, rather
+ to perplex Christian, the King, Chiffinch, and all concerned, than because
+ he had any particular desire for her society at his own mansion. Indeed,
+ so far was this from being the case, that his Grace was rather surprised
+ than delighted with the success of the enterprise which had made her an
+ inmate there, although it is probable he might have thrown himself into an
+ uncontrollable passion, had he learned its miscarriage instead of its
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-four hours had passed over since he had returned to his own roof,
+ before, notwithstanding sundry hints from Jerningham, he could even
+ determine on the exertion necessary to pay his fair captive a visit; and
+ then it was with the internal reluctance of one who can only be stirred
+ from indolence by novelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what made me plague myself about this wench,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and doom
+ myself to encounter all the hysterical rhapsodies of a country Phillis,
+ with her head stuffed with her grandmother&rsquo;s lessons about virtue and the
+ Bible-book, when the finest and best-bred women in town may be had upon
+ more easy terms. It is a pity one cannot mount the victor&rsquo;s car of triumph
+ without having a victory to boast of; yet, faith, it is what most of our
+ modern gallants do, though it would not become Buckingham.&mdash;Well, I
+ must see her,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;though it were but to rid the house of her.
+ The Portsmouth will not hear of her being set at liberty near Charles, so
+ much is she afraid of a new fair seducing the old sinner from his
+ allegiance. So how the girl is to be disposed of&mdash;for I shall have
+ little fancy to keep her here, and she is too wealthy to be sent down to
+ Cliefden as a housekeeper&mdash;is a matter to be thought on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then called for such a dress as might set off his natural good mien&mdash;a
+ compliment which he considered as due to his own merit; for as to anything
+ farther, he went to pay his respects to his fair prisoner with almost as
+ little zeal in the cause, as a gallant to fight a duel in which he has no
+ warmer interest than the maintenance of his reputation as man of honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The set of apartments consecrated to the use of those favourites who
+ occasionally made Buckingham&rsquo;s mansion their place of abode, and who were,
+ so far as liberty was concerned, often required to observe the regulations
+ of a convent, were separated from the rest of the Duke&rsquo;s extensive
+ mansion. He lived in the age when what was called gallantry warranted the
+ most atrocious actions of deceit and violence; as may be best illustrated
+ by the catastrophe of an unfortunate actress, whose beauty attracted the
+ attention of the last De Vere, Earl of Oxford. While her virtue defied his
+ seductions, he ruined her under colour of a mock marriage, and was
+ rewarded for a success which occasioned the death of his victim, by the
+ general applause of the men of wit and gallantry who filled the
+ drawing-room of Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham had made provision in the interior of his ducal mansion for
+ exploits of a similar nature; and the set of apartments which he now
+ visited were alternately used to confine the reluctant, and to accommodate
+ the willing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being now destined for the former purpose, the key was delivered to the
+ Duke by a hooded and spectacled old lady, who sat reading a devout book in
+ the outer hall which divided these apartments (usually called the Nunnery)
+ from the rest of the house. This experienced dowager acted as mistress of
+ the ceremonies on such occasions, and was the trusty depositary of more
+ intrigues than were known to any dozen of her worshipful calling besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As sweet a linnet,&rdquo; she said, as she undid the outward door, &ldquo;as ever
+ sung in a cage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was afraid she might have been more for moping than for singing,
+ Dowlas,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Till yesterday she was so, please your Grace,&rdquo; answered Dowlas; &ldquo;or, to
+ speak sooth, till early this morning, we heard of nothing but Lachrymæ.
+ But the air of your noble Grace&rsquo;s house is favourable to singing-birds;
+ and to-day matters have been a-much mended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tis sudden, dame,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and &lsquo;tis something strange,
+ considering that I have never visited her, that the pretty trembler should
+ have been so soon reconciled to her fate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, your Grace has such magic, that it communicates itself to your very
+ walls; as wholesome Scripture says, Exodus, first and seventh, &lsquo;It
+ cleaveth to the walls and the doorposts.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are too partial, Dame Dowlas,&rdquo; said the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a word but truth,&rdquo; said the dame; &ldquo;and I wish I may be an outcast
+ from the fold of the lambs, but I think this damsel&rsquo;s very frame has
+ changed since she was under your Grace&rsquo;s roof. Methinks she hath a lighter
+ form, a finer step, a more displayed ankle&mdash;I cannot tell, but I
+ think there is a change. But, lack-a-day, your Grace knows I am as old as
+ I am trusty, and that my eyes wax something uncertain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Especially when you wash them with a cup of canary, Dame Dowlas,&rdquo;
+ answered the Duke, who was aware that temperance was not amongst the
+ cardinal virtues which were most familiar to the old lady&rsquo;s practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was it canary, your Grace said?&mdash;Was it indeed with canary, that
+ your Grace should have supposed me to have washed my eyes?&rdquo; said the
+ offended matron. &ldquo;I am sorry that your Grace should know me no better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave your pardon, dame,&rdquo; said the Duke, shaking aside, fastidiously,
+ the grasp which, in the earnestness of her exculpation, Madam Dowlas had
+ clutched upon his sleeve. &ldquo;I crave your pardon. Your nearer approach has
+ convinced me of my erroneous imputation&mdash;I should have said nantz&mdash;not
+ canary.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he walked forward into the inner apartments, which were fitted
+ up with an air of voluptuous magnificence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dame said true, however,&rdquo; said the proud deviser and proprietor of
+ the splendid mansion&mdash;&ldquo;A country Phillis might well reconcile herself
+ to such a prison as this, even without a skilful bird-fancier to touch a
+ bird-call. But I wonder where she can be, this rural Phidele. Is it
+ possible she can have retreated, like a despairing commandant, into her
+ bedchamber, the very citadel of the place, without even an attempt to
+ defend the outworks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he made this reflection, he passed through an antechamber and little
+ eating parlour, exquisitely furnished, and hung with excellent paintings
+ of the Venetian school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond these lay a withdrawing-room, fitted up in a style of still more
+ studied elegance. The windows were darkened with painted glass, of such a
+ deep and rich colour, as made the midday beams, which found their way into
+ the apartment, imitate the rich colours of sunset; and, in the celebrated
+ expression of the poet, &ldquo;taught light to counterfeit a gloom.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham&rsquo;s feelings and taste had been too much, and too often, and too
+ readily gratified, to permit him, in the general case, to be easily
+ accessible, even to those pleasures which it had been the business of his
+ life to pursue. The hackneyed voluptuary is like the jaded epicure, the
+ mere listlessness of whose appetite becomes at length a sufficient penalty
+ for having made it the principal object of his enjoyment and cultivation.
+ Yet novelty has always some charms, and uncertainty has more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doubt how he was to be received&mdash;the change of mood which his
+ prisoner was said to have evinced&mdash;the curiosity to know how such a
+ creature as Alice Bridgenorth had been described, was likely to bear
+ herself under the circumstances in which she was so unexpectedly placed,
+ had upon Buckingham the effect of exciting unusual interest. On his own
+ part, he had none of those feelings of anxiety with which a man, even of
+ the most vulgar mind, comes to the presence of the female whom he wishes
+ to please, far less the more refined sentiments of love, respect, desire,
+ and awe, with which the more refined lover approaches the beloved object.
+ He had been, to use an expressive French phrase, too completely <i>blasé</i>
+ even from his earliest youth, to permit him now to experience the animal
+ eagerness of the one, far less the more sentimental pleasure of the other.
+ It is no small aggravation of this jaded and uncomfortable state of mind,
+ that the voluptuary cannot renounce the pursuits with which he is
+ satiated, but must continue, for his character&rsquo;s sake, or from the mere
+ force of habit, to take all the toil, fatigue, and danger of the chase,
+ while he has so little real interest in the termination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham, therefore, felt it due to his reputation as a successful hero
+ of intrigue, to pay his addresses to Alice Bridgenorth with dissembled
+ eagerness; and, as he opened the door of the inner apartment, he paused to
+ consider, whether the tone of gallantry, or that of passion, was fittest
+ to use on the occasion. This delay enabled him to hear a few notes of a
+ lute touched with exquisite skill, and accompanied by the still sweeter
+ strains of a female voice, which, without executing any complete melody,
+ seemed to sport itself in rivalship of the silver sound of the instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A creature so well educated,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;with the sense she is said
+ to possess, would, rustic as she is, laugh at the assumed rants of
+ Oroondates. It is the vein of Dorimont&mdash;once, Buckingham, thine own&mdash;that
+ must here do the feat, besides that the part is easier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So thinking, he entered the room with that easy grace which characterised
+ the gay courtiers among whom he flourished, and approached the fair
+ tenant, whom he found seated near a table covered with books and music,
+ and having on her left hand the large half-open casement, dim with stained
+ glass, admitting only a doubtful light into this lordly retiring-room,
+ which, hung with the richest tapestry of the Gobelines, and ornamented
+ with piles if china and splendid mirrors, seemed like a bower built for a
+ prince to receive his bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The splendid dress of the inmate corresponded with the taste of the
+ apartment which she occupied and partook of the Oriental costume which the
+ much-admired Roxalana had the brought into fashion. A slender foot and
+ ankle, which escaped from the wide trowser of richly ornamented and
+ embroidered blue satin, was the only part of her person distinctly seen;
+ the rest was enveloped, from head to foot, in a long veil of silver gauze,
+ which, like a feathery and light mist on a beautiful landscape, suffered
+ you to perceive that what it concealed was rarely lovely, yet induced the
+ imagination even to enhance the charms it shaded. Such part of the dress
+ as could be discovered was, like the veil and the trowsers, in the
+ Oriental taste; a rich turban, and splendid caftan, were rather indicated
+ than distinguished through the folds of the former. The whole attire
+ argued at least coquetry on the part of the fair one, who must have
+ expected, from her situation, a visitor of some pretension; and induced
+ Buckingham to smile internally at Christian&rsquo;s account of the extreme
+ simplicity and purity of his niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He approached the lady <i>en cavalier</i>, and addressed her with the air
+ of being conscious, while he acknowledged his offences, that his
+ condescending to do so formed a sufficient apology for them. &ldquo;Fair
+ Mistress Alice,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am sensible how deeply I ought to sue for
+ pardon for the mistaken zeal of my servants, who, seeing you deserted and
+ exposed without protection during an unlucky affray, took it upon them to
+ bring you under the roof of one who would expose his life rather than
+ suffer you to sustain a moment&rsquo;s anxiety. Was it my fault that those
+ around me should have judged it necessary to interfere for your
+ preservation; or that, aware of the interest I must take in you, they have
+ detained you till I could myself, in personal attendance, receive your
+ commands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That attendance has not been speedily rendered, my lord,&rdquo; answered the
+ lady. &ldquo;I have been a prisoner for two days&mdash;neglected, and left to
+ the charge of menials.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How say you, lady?&mdash;Neglected!&rdquo; exclaimed the Duke. &ldquo;By Heaven, if
+ the best in my household has failed in his duty, I will discard him on the
+ instant!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I complain of no lack of courtesy from your servants, my lord,&rdquo; she
+ replied; &ldquo;but methinks it had been but complaisant in the Duke himself to
+ explain to me earlier wherefore he has had the boldness to detain me as a
+ state prisoner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And can the divine Alice doubt,&rdquo; said Buckingham, &ldquo;that, had time and
+ space, those cruel enemies to the flight of passion, given permission, the
+ instant in which you crossed your vassal&rsquo;s threshold had seen its devoted
+ master at your feet, who hath thought, since he saw you, of nothing but
+ the charms which that fatal morning placed before him at Chiffinch&rsquo;s?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand, then, my lord,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;that you have been absent,
+ and have had no part in the restraint which has been exercised upon me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Absent on the King&rsquo;s command, lady, and employed in the discharge of his
+ duty,&rdquo; answered Buckingham without hesitation. &ldquo;What could I do?&mdash;The
+ moment you left Chiffinch&rsquo;s, his Majesty commanded me to the saddle in
+ such haste, that I had no time to change my satin buskins for
+ riding-boots.[*] If my absence has occasioned you a moment of
+ inconvenience, blame the inconsiderate zeal of those who, seeing me depart
+ from London, half distracted at my separation from you, were willing to
+ contribute their unmannered, though well-meant exertions, to preserve
+ their master from despair, by retaining the fair Alice within his reach.
+ To whom, indeed, could they have restored you? He whom you selected as
+ your champion is in prison, or fled&mdash;your father absent from town&mdash;your
+ uncle in the north. To Chiffinch&rsquo;s house you had expressed your
+ well-founded aversion; and what fitter asylum remained than that of your
+ devoted slave, where you must ever reign a queen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] This case is not without precedent. Among the jealousies and fears
+ expressed by the Long Parliament, they insisted much upon an agent
+ for the King departing for the continent so abruptly, that he had
+ not time to change his court dress&mdash;white buskins, to wit, and
+ black silk pantaloons&mdash;for an equipment more suitable to travel
+ with.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An imprisoned one,&rdquo; said the lady. &ldquo;I desire not royalty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas! how wilfully you misconstrue me!&rdquo; said the Duke, kneeling on one
+ knee; &ldquo;and what right can you have to complain of a few hours&rsquo; gentle
+ restraint&mdash;you, who destine so many to hopeless captivity? Be
+ merciful for once, and withdraw that envious veil; for the divinities are
+ ever most cruel when they deliver their oracles from such clouded
+ recesses. Suffer at least my rash hand&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will save your Grace that unworthy trouble,&rdquo; said the lady haughtily;
+ and rising up, she flung back over her shoulders the veil which shrouded
+ her, saying, at the same time, &ldquo;Look on me, my Lord Duke, and see if these
+ be indeed the charms which have made on your Grace an impression so
+ powerful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham did look; and the effect produced on him by surprise was so
+ strong, that he rose hastily from his knee, and remained for a few seconds
+ as if he had been petrified. The figure that stood before him had neither
+ the height nor the rich shape of Alice Bridgenorth; and, though perfectly
+ well made, was so slightly formed, as to seem almost infantine. Her dress
+ was three or four short vests of embroidered satin, disposed one over the
+ other, of different colours, or rather different shades of similar
+ colours; for strong contrast was carefully avoided. These opened in front,
+ so as to show part of the throat and neck, partially obscured by an inner
+ covering of the finest lace; over the uppermost vest was worn a sort of
+ mantle, or coat of rich fur. A small but magnificent turban was carelessly
+ placed on her head, from under which flowed a profusion of coal-black
+ tresses, which Cleopatra might have envied. The taste and splendour of the
+ Eastern dress corresponded with the complexion of the lady&rsquo;s face, which
+ was brunette, of a shade so dark as might almost have served an Indian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst a set of features, in which rapid and keen expression made amends
+ for the want of regular beauty, the essential points of eyes as bright as
+ diamonds, and teeth as white as pearls, did not escape the Duke of
+ Buckingham, a professed connoisseur in female charms. In a word, the
+ fanciful and singular female who thus unexpectedly produced herself before
+ him, had one of those faces which are never seen without making an
+ impression; which, when removed, are long after remembered; and for which,
+ in our idleness, we are tempted to invent a hundred histories, that we may
+ please our fancy by supposing the features under the influence of
+ different kinds of emotion. Every one must have in recollection
+ countenances of this kind, which, from a captivating and stimulating
+ originality of expression, abide longer in the memory, and are more
+ seductive to the imagination, than ever regular beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;it seems the lifting of my veil has done
+ the work of magic upon your Grace. Alas, for the captive princess, whose
+ nod was to command a vassal so costly as your Grace! She runs, methinks,
+ no slight chance of being turned out of doors, like a second Cinderella,
+ to seek her fortune among lackeys and lightermen.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am astonished!&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;That villain, Jerningham&mdash;I will
+ have the scoundrel&rsquo;s blood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, never abuse Jerningham for the matter,&rdquo; said the Unknown; &ldquo;but
+ lament your own unhappy engagements. While you, my Lord Duke, were posting
+ northward, in white satin buskins, to toil in the King&rsquo;s affairs, the
+ right and lawful princess sat weeping in sables in the uncheered solitude
+ to which your absence condemned her. Two days she was disconsolate in
+ vain; on the third came an African enchantress to change the scene for
+ her, and the person for your Grace. Methinks, my lord, this adventure will
+ tell but ill, when some faithful squire shall recount or record the
+ gallant adventures of the second Duke of Buckingham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairly bit and bantered to boot,&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;the monkey has a
+ turn for satire, too, by all that is <i>piquante</i>.&mdash;Hark ye, fair
+ Princess, how dared you adventure on such a trick as you have been
+ accomplice to?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dare, my lord,&rdquo; answered the stranger; &ldquo;put the question to others, not
+ to one who fears nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith, I believe so; for thy front is bronzed by nature.&mdash;Hark
+ ye, once more, mistress&mdash;What is your name and condition?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My condition I have told you&mdash;I am a Mauritanian sorceress by
+ profession, and my name is Zarah,&rdquo; replied the Eastern maiden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But methinks that face, shape, and eyes&rdquo;&mdash;said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;when
+ didst thou pass for a dancing fairy?&mdash;Some such imp thou wert not
+ many days since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sister you may have seen&mdash;my twin sister; but not me, my lord,&rdquo;
+ answered Zarah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;that duplicate of thine, if it was not thy very
+ self, was possessed with a dumb spirit, as thou with a talking one. I am
+ still in the mind that you are the same; and that Satan, always so
+ powerful with your sex, had art enough on our former meeting, to make thee
+ hold thy tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Believe what you will of it, my lord,&rdquo; replied Zarah, &ldquo;it cannot change
+ the truth.&mdash;And now, my lord, I bid you farewell. Have you any
+ commands to Mauritania?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tarry a little, my Princess,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and remember, that you have
+ voluntarily entered yourself as pledge for another; and are justly
+ subjected to any penalty which it is my pleasure to exact. None must brave
+ Buckingham with impunity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am in no hurry to depart, if your Grace hath any commands for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! are you neither afraid of my resentment, nor of my love, fair
+ Zarah?&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of neither, by this glove,&rdquo; answered the lady. &ldquo;Your resentment must be a
+ pretty passion indeed, if it could stoop to such a helpless object as I
+ am; and for your love&mdash;good lack! good lack!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why good lack with such a tone of contempt, lady?&rdquo; said the Duke,
+ piqued in spite of himself. &ldquo;Think you Buckingham cannot love, or has
+ never been beloved in return?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may have thought himself beloved,&rdquo; said the maiden; &ldquo;but by what
+ slight creatures!&mdash;things whose heads could be rendered giddy by a
+ playhouse rant&mdash;whose brains were only filled with red-heeled shoes
+ and satin buskins&mdash;and who run altogether mad on the argument of a
+ George and a star.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And are there no such frail fair ones in your climate, most scornful
+ Princess?&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are,&rdquo; said the lady; &ldquo;but men rate them as parrots and monkeys&mdash;things
+ without either sense or soul, head or heart. The nearness we bear to the
+ sun has purified, while it strengthens, our passions. The icicles of your
+ frozen climate shall as soon hammer hot bars into ploughshares, as shall
+ the foppery and folly of your pretended gallantry make an instant&rsquo;s
+ impression on a breast like mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak like one who knows what passion is,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Sit down,
+ fair lady, and grieve not that I detain you. Who can consent to part with
+ a tongue of so much melody, or an eye of such expressive eloquence!&mdash;You
+ have known then what it is to love?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know&mdash;no matter if by experience, or through the report of others&mdash;but
+ I do know, that to love, as I would love, would be to yield not an iota to
+ avarice, not one inch to vanity, not to sacrifice the slightest feeling to
+ interest or to ambition; but to give up all to fidelity of heart and
+ reciprocal affection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how many women, think you, are capable of feeling such disinterested
+ passion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;More, by thousands, than there are men who merit it,&rdquo; answered Zarah.
+ &ldquo;Alas! how often do you see the female, pale, and wretched, and degraded,
+ still following with patient constancy the footsteps of some predominating
+ tyrant, and submitting to all his injustice with the endurance of a
+ faithful and misused spaniel, which prizes a look from his master, though
+ the surliest groom that ever disgraced humanity, more than all the
+ pleasure which the world besides can furnish him? Think what such would be
+ to one who merited and repaid her devotion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perhaps the very reverse,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and for your simile, I can see
+ little resemblance. I cannot charge my spaniel with any perfidy; but for
+ my mistresses&mdash;to confess truth, I must always be in a cursed hurry
+ if I would have the credit of changing them before they leave me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And they serve you but rightly, my lord,&rdquo; answered the lady; &ldquo;for what
+ are you?&mdash;Nay, frown not; for you must hear the truth for once.
+ Nature has done its part, and made a fair outside, and courtly education
+ hath added its share. You are noble, it is the accident of birth&mdash;handsome,
+ it is the caprice of Nature&mdash;generous, because to give is more easy
+ than to refuse&mdash;well-apparelled, it is to the credit of your tailor&mdash;well-natured
+ in the main, because you have youth and health&mdash;brave, because to be
+ otherwise were to be degraded&mdash;and witty, because you cannot help
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke darted a glance on one of the large mirrors. &ldquo;Noble, and
+ handsome, and court-like, generous, well-attired, good-humoured, brave,
+ and witty!&mdash;You allow me more, madam, than I have the slightest
+ pretension to, and surely enough to make my way, at some point at least,
+ to female favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have neither allowed you a heart nor a head,&rdquo; said Zarah calmly.&mdash;&ldquo;Nay,
+ never redden as if you would fly at me. I say not but nature may have
+ given you both; but folly has confounded the one, and selfishness
+ perverted the other. The man whom I call deserving the name is one whose
+ thoughts and exertions are for others, rather than himself,&mdash;whose
+ high purpose is adopted on just principles, and never abandoned while
+ heaven or earth affords means of accomplishing it. He is one who will
+ neither seek an indirect advantage by a specious road, nor take an evil
+ path to gain a real good purpose. Such a man were one for whom a woman&rsquo;s
+ heart should beat constant while he breathes, and break when he dies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She spoke with so much energy that the water sparkled in her eyes, and her
+ cheek coloured with the vehemence of her feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You speak,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;as if you had yourself a heart which could
+ pay the full tribute to the merit which you describe so warmly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And have I not?&rdquo; said she, laying her hand on her bosom. &ldquo;Here beats one
+ that would bear me out in what I have said, whether in life or in death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were it in my power,&rdquo; said the Duke, who began to get farther interested
+ in his visitor than he could at first have thought possible&mdash;&ldquo;Were it
+ in my power to deserve such faithful attachment, methinks it should be my
+ care to requite it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your wealth, your titles, your reputation as a gallant&mdash;all you
+ possess, were too little to merit such sincere affection.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, fair lady,&rdquo; said the Duke, a good deal piqued, &ldquo;do not be quite so
+ disdainful. Bethink you, that if your love be as pure as coined gold,
+ still a poor fellow like myself may offer you an equivalent in silver&mdash;The
+ quantity of my affection must make up for its quality.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am not carrying my affection to market, my lord; and therefore I
+ need none of the base coin you offer in change for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How do I know that, my fairest?&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;This is the realm of
+ Paphos&mdash;You have invaded it, with what purpose you best know; but I
+ think with none consistent with your present assumption of cruelty. Come,
+ come&mdash;eyes that are so intelligent can laugh with delight, as well as
+ gleam with scorn and anger. You are here a waif on Cupid&rsquo;s manor, and I
+ must seize on you in name of the deity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do not think of touching me, my lord,&rdquo; said the lady. &ldquo;Approach me not,
+ if you would hope to learn the purpose of my being here. Your Grace may
+ suppose yourself a Solomon if you please, but I am no travelling princess,
+ come from distant climes, either to flatter your pride, or wonder at your
+ glory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A defiance, by Jupiter!&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mistake the signal,&rdquo; said the &lsquo;dark ladye&rsquo;; &ldquo;I came not here without
+ taking sufficient precautions for my retreat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mouth it bravely,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;but never fortress so boasted its
+ resources but the garrison had some thoughts of surrender. Thus I open the
+ first parallel.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had been hitherto divided from each other by a long narrow table,
+ which, placed in the recess of the large casement we have mentioned, had
+ formed a sort of barrier on the lady&rsquo;s side, against the adventurous
+ gallant. The Duke went hastily to remove it as he spoke; but, attentive to
+ all his motions, his visitor instantly darted through the half-open
+ window. Buckingham uttered a cry of horror and surprise, having no doubt,
+ at first, that she had precipitated herself from a height of at least
+ fourteen feet; for so far the window was distant from the ground. But when
+ he sprung to the spot, he perceived, to his astonishment, that she had
+ effected her descent with equal agility and safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outside of this stately mansion was decorated with a quantity of
+ carving, in the mixed state, betwixt the Gothic and Grecian styles, which
+ marks the age of Elizabeth and her successor; and though the feat seemed a
+ surprising one, the projections of these ornaments were sufficient to
+ afford footing to a creature so light and active, even in her hasty
+ descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inflamed alike by mortification and curiosity, Buckingham at first
+ entertained some thought of following her by the same dangerous route, and
+ had actually got upon the sill of the window for that purpose; and was
+ contemplating what might be his next safe movement, when, from a
+ neighbouring thicket of shrubs, amongst which his visitor had disappeared,
+ he heard her chant a verse of a comic song, then much in fashion,
+ concerning a despairing lover who had recourse to a precipice&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;But when he came near,
+ Beholding how steep
+ The sides did appear,
+ And the bottom how deep;
+ Though his suit was rejected,
+ He sadly reflected,
+ That a lover forsaken
+ A new love may get;
+ But a neck that&rsquo;s once broken
+ Can never be set.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The Duke could not help laughing, though much against his will, at the
+ resemblance which the verses bore to his own absurd situation, and,
+ stepping back into the apartment, desisted from an attempt which might
+ have proved dangerous as well as ridiculous. He called his attendants, and
+ contented himself with watching the little thicket, unwilling to think
+ that a female, who had thrown herself in a great measure into his way,
+ meant absolutely to mortify him by a retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That question was determined in an instant. A form, wrapped in a mantle,
+ with a slouched hat and shadowy plume, issued from the bushes, and was
+ lost in a moment amongst the ruins of ancient and of modern buildings,
+ with which, as we have already stated, the demesne formerly termed York
+ House, was now encumbered in all directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke&rsquo;s servants, who had obeyed his impatient summons, were hastily
+ directed to search for this tantalising siren in every direction. Their
+ master, in the meantime, eager and vehement in every new pursuit, but
+ especially when his vanity was piqued, encouraged their diligence by
+ bribes, and threats, and commands. All was in vain. They found nothing of
+ the Mauritanian Princess, as she called herself, but the turban and the
+ veil; both of which she had left in the thicket, together with her satin
+ slippers; which articles, doubtless, she had thrown aside as she exchanged
+ them for others less remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding all his search in vain, the Duke of Buckingham, after the example
+ of spoiled children of all ages and stations, gave a loose to the frantic
+ vehemence of passion; and fiercely he swore vengeance on his late visitor,
+ whom he termed by a thousand opprobrious epithets, of which the elegant
+ phrase &ldquo;Jilt&rdquo; was most frequently repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Jerningham, who knew the depths and the shallows of his master&rsquo;s
+ mood, and was bold to fathom them at almost every state of his passions,
+ kept out of his way on the present occasion; and, cabineted with the pious
+ old housekeeper, declared to her, over a bottle of ratafia, that, in his
+ apprehension, if his Grace did not learn to put some control on his
+ temper, chains, darkness, straw, and Bedlam, would be the final doom of
+ the gifted and admired Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XL
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;Contentious fierce,
+ Ardent, and dire, spring from no petty cause.
+ &mdash;ALBION.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The quarrels between man and wife are proverbial; but let not these honest
+ folks think that connections of a less permanent nature are free from
+ similar jars. The frolic of the Duke of Buckingham, and the subsequent
+ escape of Alice Bridgenorth, had kindled fierce dissension in Chiffinch&rsquo;s
+ family, when, on his arrival in town, he learned these two stunning
+ events: &ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; he said to his obliging helpmate, who seemed but
+ little moved by all that he could say on the subject, &ldquo;that your d&mdash;d
+ carelessness has ruined the work of years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think it is the twentieth time you have said so,&rdquo; replied the dame;
+ &ldquo;and without such frequent assurance, I was quite ready to believe that a
+ very trifling matter would overset any scheme of yours, however long
+ thought of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How on earth could you have the folly to let the Duke into the house when
+ you expected the King?&rdquo; said the irritated courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, Chiffinch,&rdquo; answered the lady, &ldquo;ought not you to ask the porter
+ rather than me, that sort of question?&mdash;I was putting on my cap to
+ receive his Majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With the address of a madge-howlet,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, &ldquo;and in the
+ meanwhile you gave the cat the cream to keep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, Chiffinch,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;these jaunts to the country do render
+ you excessively vulgar! there is a brutality about your very boots! nay,
+ your muslin ruffles, being somewhat soiled, give to your knuckles a sort
+ of rural rusticity, as I may call it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It were a good deed,&rdquo; muttered Chiffinch, &ldquo;to make both boots and
+ knuckles bang the folly and affectation out of thee.&rdquo; Then speaking aloud,
+ he added, like a man who would fain break off an argument, by extorting
+ from his adversary a confession that he has reason on his side, &ldquo;I am
+ sure, Kate, you must be sensible that our all depends on his Majesty&rsquo;s
+ pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave that to me,&rdquo; said she; &ldquo;I know how to pleasure his Majesty better
+ than you can teach me. Do you think his Majesty is booby enough to cry
+ like a schoolboy because his sparrow has flown away? His Majesty has
+ better taste. I am surprised at you, Chiffinch,&rdquo; she added, drawing
+ herself up, &ldquo;who were once thought to know the points of a fine woman,
+ that you should have made such a roaring about this country wench. Why,
+ she has not even the country quality of being plump as a barn-door fowl,
+ but is more like a Dunstable lark, that one must crack bones and all if
+ you would make a mouthful of it. What signifies whence she came, or where
+ she goes? There will be those behind that are much more worthy of his
+ Majesty&rsquo;s condescending attention, even when the Duchess of Portsmouth
+ takes the frumps.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mean your neighbour, Mistress Nelly,&rdquo; said her worthy helpmate; &ldquo;but
+ Kate, her date is out. Wit she has, let her keep herself warm with it in
+ worse company, for the cant of a gang of strollers is not language for a
+ prince&rsquo;s chamber.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] In Evelyn&rsquo;s Memoirs is the following curious passage respecting
+ Nell Gwyn, who is hinted at in the text:&mdash;&ldquo;I walked with him [King
+ Charles II.] through Saint James Park to the garden, where I both
+ saw and heard a very familiar discourse between... [<i>the King</i>]
+ and Mrs. Nelly, as they called her, an intimate comedian, she
+ looking out of her garden on a terrace at the top of the wall, and
+ [<i>the King</i>] standing on the green walk under it. I was heartily
+ sorry at this scene.&rdquo;&mdash;EVELYN&rsquo;S <i>Memoirs</i>, vol. i. p.413.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no matter what I mean, or whom I mean,&rdquo; said Mrs. Chiffinch; &ldquo;but I
+ tell you, Tom Chiffinch, that you will find your master quite consoled for
+ loss of the piece of prudish puritanism that you would need saddle him
+ with; as if the good man were not plagued enough with them in Parliament,
+ but you must, forsooth, bring them into his very bedchamber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Kate,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, &ldquo;if a man were to speak all the sense of the
+ seven wise masters, a woman would find nonsense enough to overwhelm him
+ with; so I shall say no more, but that I would to Heaven I may find the
+ King in no worse humour than you describe him. I am commanded to attend
+ him down the river to the Tower to-day, where he is to make some survey of
+ arms and stores. They are clever fellows who contrive to keep Rowley from
+ engaging in business, for, by my word, he has a turn for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I warrant you,&rdquo; said Chiffinch the female, nodding, but rather to her own
+ figure, reflected from a mirror, than to her politic husband,&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ warrant you we will find means of occupying him that will sufficiently
+ fill up his time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my honour, Kate,&rdquo; said the male Chiffinch, &ldquo;I find you strangely
+ altered, and, to speak truth, grown most extremely opinionative. I shall
+ be happy if you have good reason for your confidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dame smiled superciliously, but deigned no other answer, unless this
+ were one,&mdash;&ldquo;I shall order a boat to go upon the Thames to-day with
+ the royal party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take care what you do, Kate; there are none dare presume so far but women
+ of the first rank. Duchess of Bolton&mdash;of Buckingham&mdash;of&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who cares for a list of names? why may not I be as forward as the
+ greatest B. amongst your string of them?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, faith, thou mayest match the greatest B. in Court already,&rdquo; answered
+ Chiffinch; &ldquo;so e&rsquo;en take thy own course of it. But do not let Chaubert
+ forget to get some collation ready, and a <i>souper au petit couvert</i>,
+ in case it should be commanded for the evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, there your boasted knowledge of Court matters begins and ends.&mdash;Chiffinch,
+ Chaubert, and Company;&mdash;dissolve that partnership, and you break Tom
+ Chiffinch for a courtier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amen, Kate,&rdquo; replied Chiffinch; &ldquo;and let me tell you it is as safe to
+ rely on another person&rsquo;s fingers as on our own wit. But I must give orders
+ for the water.&mdash;If you will take the pinnace, there are the
+ cloth-of-gold cushions in the chapel may serve to cover the benches for
+ the day. They are never wanted where they lie, so you may make free with
+ them too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madam Chiffinch accordingly mingled with the flotilla which attended the
+ King on his voyage down the Thames, amongst whom was the Queen, attended
+ by some of the principal ladies of the Court. The little plump Cleopatra,
+ dressed to as much advantage as her taste could devise, and seated upon
+ her embroidered cushions like Venus in her shell, neglected nothing that
+ effrontery and minauderie could perform to draw upon herself some portion
+ of the King&rsquo;s observation; but Charles was not in the vein, and did not
+ even pay her the slightest passing attention of any kind, until her
+ boatmen having ventured to approach nearer to the Queen&rsquo;s barge than
+ etiquette permitted, received a peremptory order to back their oars, and
+ fall out of the royal procession. Madam Chiffinch cried for spite, and
+ transgressed Solomon&rsquo;s warning, by cursing the King in her heart; but had
+ no better course than to return to Westminster, and direct Chaubert&rsquo;s
+ preparations for the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the royal barge paused at the Tower; and, accompanied by a
+ laughing train of ladies and of courtiers, the gay Monarch made the echoes
+ of the old prison-towers ring with the unwonted sounds of mirth and
+ revelry. As they ascended from the river-side to the centre of the
+ building, where the fine old keep of William the Conqueror, called the
+ White Tower, predominates over the exterior defences, Heaven only knows
+ how many gallant jests, good or bad, were run on the comparison of his
+ Majesty&rsquo;s state-prison to that of Cupid, and what killing similes were
+ drawn between the ladies&rsquo; eyes and the guns of the fortress, which, spoken
+ with a fashionable congée, and listened to with a smile from a fair lady,
+ formed the fine conversations of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gay swarm of flutterers did not, however, attend close on the King&rsquo;s
+ person, though they had accompanied him upon his party on the river.
+ Charles, who often formed manly and sensible resolutions, though he was
+ too easily diverted from them by indolence or pleasure, had some desire to
+ make himself personally acquainted with the state of the military stores,
+ arms, &amp;c. of which the Tower was then, as now, the magazine; and,
+ although he had brought with him the usual number of his courtiers, only
+ three or four attended him on the scrutiny which he intended. Whilst,
+ therefore, the rest of the train amused themselves as they might in other
+ parts of the Tower, the King, accompanied by the Dukes of Buckingham,
+ Ormond, and one or two others, walked through the well-known hall, in
+ which is preserved the most splendid magazine of arms in the world, and
+ which, though far from exhibiting its present extraordinary state of
+ perfection, was even then an arsenal worthy of the great nation to which
+ it belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Ormond, well known for his services during the Great Civil
+ War, was, as we have elsewhere noticed, at present rather on cold terms
+ with his Sovereign, who nevertheless asked his advice on many occasions,
+ and who required it on the present amongst others, when it was not a
+ little feared that the Parliament, in their zeal for the Protestant
+ religion, might desire to take the magazines of arms and ammunition under
+ their own exclusive orders. While Charles sadly hinted at such a
+ termination of the popular jealousies of the period, and discussed with
+ Ormond the means of resisting, or evading it, Buckingham, falling a little
+ behind, amused himself with ridiculing the antiquated appearance and
+ embarrassed demeanour of the old warder who attended on the occasion, and
+ who chanced to be the very same who escorted Julian Peveril to his present
+ place of confinement. The Duke prosecuted his raillery with the greater
+ activity, that he found the old man, though restrained by the place and
+ presence, was rather upon the whole testy, and disposed to afford what
+ sportsmen call <i>play</i> to his persecutor. The various pieces of
+ ancient armour, with which the wall was covered, afforded the principal
+ source of the Duke&rsquo;s wit, as he insisted upon knowing from the old man,
+ who, he said, could best remember matters from the days of King Arthur
+ downwards at the least, the history of the different warlike weapons, and
+ anecdotes of the battles in which they had been wielded. The old man
+ obviously suffered, when he was obliged, by repeated questions, to tell
+ the legends (often sufficiently absurd) which the tradition of the place
+ had assigned to particular relics. Far from flourishing his partisan, and
+ augmenting the emphasis of his voice, as was and is the prevailing fashion
+ of these warlike Ciceroni, it was scarcely possible to extort from him a
+ single word concerning those topics on which their information is usually
+ overflowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you know, my friend,&rdquo; said the Duke to him at last, &ldquo;I begin to change
+ my mind respecting you. I supposed you must have served as a Yeoman of the
+ Guard since bluff King Henry&rsquo;s time, and expected to hear something from
+ you about the Field of the Cloth of Gold,&mdash;and I thought of asking
+ you the colour of Anne Bullen&rsquo;s breastknot, which cost the Pope three
+ kingdoms; but I am afraid you are but a novice in such recollections of
+ love and chivalry. Art sure thou didst not creep into thy warlike office
+ from some dark shop in Tower-Hamlets, and that thou hast not converted an
+ unlawful measuring-yard into that glorious halberd?&mdash;I warrant thou
+ canst not even tell you whom this piece of antique panoply pertained to?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke pointed at random to a cuirass which hung amongst others, but was
+ rather remarkable from being better cleansed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should know that piece of iron,&rdquo; said the warder bluntly, yet with some
+ change in his voice; &ldquo;for I have known a man within side of it who would
+ not have endured half the impertinence I have heard spoken to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of the old man, as well as the words, attracted the attention of
+ Charles and the Duke of Ormond, who were only two steps before the
+ speaker. They both stopped, and turned round; the former saying at the
+ same time,&mdash;&ldquo;how now, sirrah!&mdash;what answers are these?&mdash;What
+ man do you speak of?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of one who is none now,&rdquo; said the warder, &ldquo;whatever he may have been.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The old man surely speaks of himself,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, closely
+ examining the countenance of the warder, which he in vain endeavoured to
+ turn away. &ldquo;I am sure I remember these features&mdash;Are not you my old
+ friend, Major Coleby?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish your Grace&rsquo;s memory had been less accurate,&rdquo; said the old man,
+ colouring deeply, and fixing his eyes on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was greatly shocked.&mdash;&ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the gallant
+ Major Coleby, who joined us with his four sons and a hundred and fifty men
+ at Warrington!&mdash;And is this all we could do for an old Worcester
+ friend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears rushed thick into the old man&rsquo;s eyes as he said in broken
+ accents, &ldquo;Never mind me, sire; I am well enough here&mdash;a worn-out
+ soldier rusting among old armour. Where one old Cavalier is better, there
+ are twenty worse.&mdash;I am sorry your Majesty should know anything of
+ it, since it grieves you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that kindness, which was a redeeming point of his character, Charles,
+ while the old man was speaking, took the partisan from him with his own
+ hand, and put it into that of Buckingham, saying, &ldquo;What Coleby&rsquo;s hand has
+ borne, can disgrace neither yours nor mine,&mdash;and you owe him this
+ atonement. Time has been with him, that, for less provocation, he would
+ have laid it about your ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke bowed deeply, but coloured with resentment, and took an immediate
+ opportunity to place the weapon carelessly against a pile of arms. The
+ King did not observe a contemptuous motion, which, perhaps, would not have
+ pleased him, being at the moment occupied with the veteran, whom he
+ exhorted to lean upon him, as he conveyed him to a seat, permitting no
+ other person to assist him. &ldquo;Rest there,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my brave old friend;
+ and Charles Stewart must be poor indeed, if you wear that dress an hour
+ longer.&mdash;You look very pale, my good Coleby, to have had so much
+ colour a few minutes since. Be not vexed at what Buckingham says; no one
+ minds his folly.&mdash;You look worse and worse. Come, come, you are too
+ much hurried by this meeting. Sit still&mdash;do not rise&mdash;do not
+ attempt to kneel. I command you to repose yourself till I have made the
+ round of these apartments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Cavalier stooped his head in token of acquiescence in the command
+ of his Sovereign, but he raised it not again. The tumultuous agitation of
+ the moment had been too much for spirits which had been long in a state of
+ depression, and health which was much decayed. When the King and his
+ attendants, after half-an-hour&rsquo;s absence, returned to the spot where they
+ had left the veteran, they found him dead, and already cold, in the
+ attitude of one who has fallen easily asleep. The King was dreadfully
+ shocked; and it was with a low and faltering voice that he directed the
+ body, in due time, to be honourably buried in the chapel of the Tower.[*]
+ He was then silent, until he attained the steps in front of the arsenal,
+ where the party in attendance upon his person began to assemble at his
+ approach, along with some other persons of respectable appearance, whom
+ curiosity had attracted.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A story of this nature is current in the legends of the Tower. The
+ affecting circumstances are, I believe, recorded in one of the
+ little manuals which are put into the hands of visitors, but are
+ not to be found in the later editions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is dreadful,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;We must find some means of relieving
+ the distresses, and rewarding the fidelity of our suffering followers, or
+ posterity will cry fie upon our memory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty has had often such plans agitated in your Council,&rdquo; said
+ Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, George,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;I can safely say it is not my fault. I
+ have thought of it for years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It cannot be too well considered,&rdquo; said Buckingham; &ldquo;besides, every year
+ makes the task of relief easier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, &ldquo;by diminishing the number of sufferers.
+ Here is poor old Coleby will no longer be a burden to the Crown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are too severe, my Lord of Ormond,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;and should
+ respect the feelings you trespass on. You cannot suppose that we would
+ have permitted this poor man to hold such a situation, had we known of the
+ circumstances?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, then, sire,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, &ldquo;turn your eyes,
+ which have just rested on the corpse of one old friend, upon the
+ distresses of others. Here is the valiant old Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the
+ Peak, who fought through the whole war, wherever blows were going, and was
+ the last man, I believe, in England, who laid down his arms&mdash;Here is
+ his son, of whom I have the highest accounts, as a gallant of spirit,
+ accomplishments, and courage&mdash;Here is the unfortunate House of Derby&mdash;for
+ pity&rsquo;s sake, interfere in behalf of these victims, whom the folds of this
+ hydra-plot have entangled, in order to crush them to death&mdash;rebuke
+ the fiends that are seeking to devour their lives, and disappoint the
+ harpies that are gaping for their property. This very day seven-night the
+ unfortunate family, father and son, are to be brought upon trial for
+ crimes of which they are as guiltless, I boldly pronounce, as any who
+ stand in this presence. For God&rsquo;s sake, sire, let us hope that, should the
+ prejudices of the people condemn them, as it has done others, you will at
+ last step in between the blood-hunters and their prey.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked, as he really was, exceedingly perplexed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham, between whom and Ormond there existed a constant and almost
+ mortal quarrel, interfered to effect a diversion in Charles&rsquo;s favour.
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty&rsquo;s royal benevolence,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;needs never want exercise,
+ while the Duke of Ormond is near your person. He has his sleeve cut in the
+ old and ample fashion, that he may always have store of ruined cavaliers
+ stowed in it to produce at demand, rare old raw-boned boys, with Malmsey
+ noses, bald heads, spindle shanks, and merciless histories of Edgehill and
+ Naseby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My sleeve is, I dare say, of an antique cut,&rdquo; said Ormond, looking full
+ at the Duke; &ldquo;but I pin neither bravoes nor ruffians upon it, my Lord of
+ Buckingham, as I see fastened to coats of the new mode.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is a little too sharp for our presence, my lord,&rdquo; said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if I make my words good,&rdquo; said Ormond.&mdash;&ldquo;My Lord of Buckingham,
+ will you name the man you spoke to as you left the boat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I spoke to no one,&rdquo; said the Duke hastily&mdash;&ldquo;nay, I mistake, I
+ remember a fellow whispered in my ear, that one, who I thought had left
+ London was still lingering in town. A person whom I had business with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was yon the messenger?&rdquo; said Ormond, singling out from the crowd who
+ stood in the court-yard a tall dark-looking man, muffled in a large cloak,
+ wearing a broad shadowy black beaver hat, with a long sword of the Spanish
+ fashion&mdash;the very Colonel, in short, whom Buckingham had despatched
+ in quest of Christian, with the intention of detaining him in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Buckingham&rsquo;s eyes had followed the direction of Ormond&rsquo;s finger, he
+ could not help blushing so deeply as to attract the King&rsquo;s attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What new frolic is this, George?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Gentlemen, bring that fellow
+ forward. On my life, a truculent-looking caitiff&mdash;Hark ye, friend,
+ who are you? If an honest man, Nature has forgot to label it upon your
+ countenance.&mdash;Does none here know him?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;With every symptom of a knave complete,
+ If he be honest, he&rsquo;s a devilish cheat.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is well known to many, sire,&rdquo; replied Ormond; &ldquo;and that he walks in
+ this area with his neck safe, and his limbs unshackled, is an instance,
+ amongst many, that we live under the sway of the most merciful Prince of
+ Europe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oddsfish! who is the man, my Lord Duke?&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Your Grace talks
+ mysteries&mdash;Buckingham blushes&mdash;and the rogue himself is dumb.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That honest gentleman, please your Majesty,&rdquo; replied the Duke of Ormond,
+ &ldquo;whose modesty makes him mute, though it cannot make him blush, is the
+ notorious Colonel Blood, as he calls himself, whose attempt to possess
+ himself of your Majesty&rsquo;s royal crown took place at no very distant date,
+ in this very Tower of London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That exploit is not easily forgotten,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;but that the
+ fellow lives, shows your Grace&rsquo;s clemency as well as mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I cannot deny that I was in his hands, sire,&rdquo; said Ormond, &ldquo;and had
+ certainly been murdered by him, had he chosen to take my life on the spot,
+ instead of destining me&mdash;I thank him for the honour&mdash;to be
+ hanged at Tyburn. I had certainly been sped, if he had thought me worth
+ knife or pistol, or anything short of the cord.&mdash;Look at him sire! If
+ the rascal dared, he would say at this moment, like Caliban in the play,
+ &lsquo;Ho, ho, I would I had done it!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, oddsfish!&rdquo; answered the King, &ldquo;he hath a villainous sneer, my lord,
+ which seems to say as much; but, my Lord Duke, we have pardoned him, and
+ so has your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would ill have become me,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, &ldquo;to have been
+ severe in prosecuting an attempt on my poor life, when your Majesty was
+ pleased to remit his more outrageous and insolent attempt upon your royal
+ crown. But I must conceive it as a piece of supreme insolence on the part
+ of this bloodthirsty bully, by whomsoever he may be now backed, to appear
+ in the Tower, which was the theatre of one of his villainies, or before
+ me, who was well-nigh the victim of another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be amended in future,&rdquo; said the King.&mdash;&ldquo;Hark ye, sirrah
+ Blood, if you again presume to thrust yourself in the way you have done
+ but now, I will have the hangman&rsquo;s knife and your knavish ears made
+ acquainted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blood bowed, and with a coolness of impudence which did his nerves great
+ honour, he said he had only come to the Tower accidentally, to communicate
+ with a particular friend on business of importance. &ldquo;My Lord Duke of
+ Buckingham,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;knew he had no other intentions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get you gone, you scoundrelly cut-throat,&rdquo; said the Duke, as much
+ impatient of Colonel Blood&rsquo;s claim of acquaintance, as a town-rake of the
+ low and blackguard companions of his midnight rambles, when they accost
+ him in daylight amidst better company; &ldquo;if you dare to quote my name
+ again, I will have you thrown into the Thames.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blood, thus repulsed, turned round with the most insolent composure, and
+ walked away down from the parade, all men looking at him, as at some
+ strange and monstrous prodigy, so much was he renowned for daring and
+ desperate villainy. Some even followed him, to have a better survey of the
+ notorious Colonel Blood, like the smaller tribe of birds which keep
+ fluttering round an owl when he appears in the light of the sun. But as,
+ in the latter case, these thoughtless flutterers are careful to keep out
+ of reach of the beak and claws of the bird of Minerva, so none of those
+ who followed and gazed on Blood as something ominous, cared to bandy looks
+ with him, or to endure and return the lowering and deadly glances, which
+ he shot from time to time on those who pressed nearest to him. He stalked
+ on in this manner, like a daunted, yet sullen wolf, afraid to stop, yet
+ unwilling to fly, until he reached the Traitor&rsquo;s Gate, and getting on
+ board a sculler which waited for him, he disappeared from their eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles would fain have obliterated all recollection of his appearance, by
+ the observation, &ldquo;It were a shame that such a reprobate scoundrel should
+ be the subject of discord between two noblemen of distinction;&rdquo; and he
+ recommended to the Dukes of Buckingham and Ormond to join hands, and
+ forget a misunderstanding which rose on so unworthy a subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham answered carelessly, &ldquo;That the Duke of Ormond&rsquo;s honoured white
+ hairs were a sufficient apology for his making the first overtures to a
+ reconciliation,&rdquo; and he held out his hand accordingly. But Ormond only
+ bowed in return, and said, &ldquo;The King had no cause to expect that the Court
+ would be disturbed by his personal resentments, since time would not yield
+ him back twenty years, nor the grave restore his gallant son Ossory. As to
+ the ruffian who had intruded himself there, he was obliged to him, since,
+ by showing that his Majesty&rsquo;s clemency extended even to the very worst of
+ criminals, he strengthened his hopes of obtaining the King&rsquo;s favour for
+ such of his innocent friends as were now in prison, and in danger, from
+ the odious charges brought against them on the score of the Popish Plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King made no other answer to this insinuation, than by directing that
+ the company should embark for their return to Whitehall; and thus took
+ leave of the officers of the Tower who were in attendance, with one of
+ those well-turned compliments to their discharge of duty, which no man
+ knew better how to express; and issued at the same time strict and anxious
+ orders for protection and defence of the important fortress confided to
+ them, and all which it contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he parted with Ormond on their arrival at Whitehall, he turned
+ round to him, as one who has made up his resolution, and said, &ldquo;Be
+ satisfied, my Lord Duke&mdash;our friends&rsquo; case shall be looked to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same evening the Attorney-General, and North, Lord Chief Justice of
+ the Common Pleas, had orders with all secrecy, to meet his Majesty that
+ evening on especial matters of state, at the apartments of Chiffinch, the
+ centre of all affairs, whether of gallantry or business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yet, Corah, thou shalt from oblivion pass;
+ Erect thyself, thou monumental brass,
+ High as the serpent of thy metal made,
+ While nations stand secure beneath thy shade.
+ &mdash;ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The morning which Charles had spent in visiting the Tower, had been very
+ differently employed by those unhappy individuals, whom their bad fate,
+ and the singular temper of the times, had made the innocent tenants of
+ that state prison, and who had received official notice that they were to
+ stand their trial in the Court of Queen&rsquo;s Bench at Westminster, on the
+ seventh succeeding day. The stout old Cavalier at first only railed at the
+ officer for spoiling his breakfast with the news, but evinced great
+ feeling when he was told that Julian was to be put under the same
+ indictment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We intend to dwell only very generally on the nature of their trial, which
+ corresponded, in the outline, with almost all those which took place
+ during the prevalence of the Popish Plot. That is, one or two infamous and
+ perjured evidences, whose profession of common informers had become
+ frightfully lucrative, made oath to the prisoners having expressed
+ themselves interested in the great confederacy of the Catholics. A number
+ of others brought forward facts or suspicions, affecting the character of
+ the parties as honest Protestants and good subjects; and betwixt the
+ direct and presumptive evidence, enough was usually extracted for
+ justifying, to a corrupted court and perjured jury, the fatal verdict of
+ Guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fury of the people had, however, now begun to pass away, exhausted
+ even by its own violence. The English nation differ from all others,
+ indeed even from those of the sister kingdoms, in being very easily sated
+ with punishment, even when they suppose it most merited. Other nations are
+ like the tamed tiger, which, when once its native appetite for slaughter
+ is indulged in one instance, rushes on in promiscuous ravages. But the
+ English public have always rather resembled what is told of the
+ sleuth-dog, which, eager, fierce, and clamorous in pursuit of his prey,
+ desists from it so soon as blood is sprinkled upon his path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men&rsquo;s minds were now beginning to cool&mdash;the character of the
+ witnesses was more closely sifted&mdash;their testimonies did not in all
+ cases tally&mdash;and a wholesome suspicion began to be entertained of
+ men, who would never say they had made a full discovery of all they knew,
+ but avowedly reserved some points of evidence to bear on future trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King also, who had lain passive during the first burst of popular
+ fury, was now beginning to bestir himself, which produced a marked effect
+ on the conduct of the Crown Counsel, and even the Judges. Sir George
+ Wakeman had been acquitted in spite of Oates&rsquo;s direct testimony; and
+ public attention was strongly excited concerning the event of the next
+ trial; which chanced to be that of the Peverils, father and son, with
+ whom, I know not from what concatenation, little Hudson the dwarf was
+ placed at the bar of the Court of King&rsquo;s Bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a piteous sight to behold a father and son, who had been so long
+ separated, meet under circumstances so melancholy; and many tears were
+ shed, when the majestic old man&mdash;for such he was, though now broken
+ with years&mdash;folded his son to his bosom, with a mixture of joy,
+ affection, and a bitter anticipation of the event of the impending trial.
+ There was a feeling in the Court that for a moment overcame every
+ prejudice and party feeling. Many spectators shed tears; and there was
+ even a low moaning, as of those who weep aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as felt themselves sufficiently at ease to remark the conduct of poor
+ little Geoffrey Hudson, who was scarcely observed amid the preponderating
+ interest created by his companions in misfortune, could not but notice a
+ strong degree of mortification on the part of that diminutive gentleman.
+ He had soothed his great mind by the thoughts of playing the character
+ which he was called on to sustain, in a manner which should be long
+ remembered in that place; and on his entrance, had saluted the numerous
+ spectators, as well as the Court, with a cavalier air, which he meant
+ should express grace, high-breeding, perfect coolness, with a noble
+ disregard to the issue of their proceedings. But his little person was so
+ obscured and jostled aside, on the meeting of the father and son, who had
+ been brought in different boats from the Tower, and placed at the bar at
+ the same moment, that his distress and his dignity were alike thrown into
+ the background, and attracted neither sympathy nor admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf&rsquo;s wisest way to attract attention would have been to remain
+ quiet, when so remarkable an exterior would certainly have received in its
+ turn the share of public notice which he so eagerly coveted. But when did
+ personal vanity listen to the suggestions of prudence?&mdash;Our impatient
+ friend scrambled, with some difficulty, on the top of the bench intended
+ for his seat; and there, &ldquo;paining himself to stand a-tiptoe,&rdquo; like
+ Chaucer&rsquo;s gallant Sir Chaunticlere, he challenged the notice of the
+ audience as he stood bowing and claiming acquaintance of his namesake Sir
+ Geoffrey the larger, with whose shoulders, notwithstanding his elevated
+ situation, he was scarcely yet upon a level.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The taller Knight, whose mind was occupied in a very different manner,
+ took no notice of these advances upon the dwarf&rsquo;s part, but sat down with
+ the determination rather to die on the spot than evince any symptoms of
+ weakness before Roundheads and Presbyterians; under which obnoxious
+ epithets, being too old-fashioned to find out party designations of newer
+ date, he comprehended all persons concerned in his present trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By Sir Geoffrey the larger&rsquo;s change of position, his face was thus brought
+ on a level with that of Sir Geoffrey the less, who had an opportunity of
+ pulling him by the cloak. He of Martindale Castle, rather mechanically
+ than consciously, turned his head towards the large wrinkled visage,
+ which, struggling between an assumed air of easy importance, and an
+ anxious desire to be noticed, was grimacing within a yard of him. But
+ neither the singular physiognomy, the nods and smiles of greeting and
+ recognition into which it was wreathed, nor the strange little form by
+ which it was supported, had at that moment the power of exciting any
+ recollections in the old Knight&rsquo;s mind; and having stared for a moment at
+ the poor little man, his bulky namesake turned away his head without
+ farther notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, the dwarf&rsquo;s more recent acquaintance, had, even amid his
+ own anxious feelings, room for sympathy with those of his little
+ fellow-sufferer. As soon as he discovered that he was at the same terrible
+ bar with himself, although he could not conceive how their causes came to
+ be conjoined, he acknowledged him by a hearty shake of the hand, which the
+ old man returned with affected dignity and real gratitude. &ldquo;Worthy youth,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;thy presence is restorative, like the nepenthe of Homer even in
+ this syncopé of our mutual fate. I am concerned to see that your father
+ hath not the same alacrity of soul as that of ours, which are lodged
+ within smaller compass; and that he hath forgotten an ancient comrade and
+ fellow-soldier, who now stands beside him to perform, perhaps, their last
+ campaign.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian briefly replied, that his father had much to occupy him. But the
+ little man&mdash;who, to do him justice, cared no more (in his own phrase)
+ for imminent danger or death, than he did for the puncture of a flea&rsquo;s
+ proboscis&mdash;did not so easily renounce the secret object of his
+ ambition, which was to acquire the notice of the large and lofty Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril, who, being at least three inches taller than his son,
+ was in so far possessed of that superior excellence, which the poor dwarf,
+ in his secret soul, valued before all other distinctions, although in his
+ conversation, he was constantly depreciating it. &ldquo;Good comrade and
+ namesake,&rdquo; he proceeded, stretching out his hand, so as to again to reach
+ the elder Peveril&rsquo;s cloak, &ldquo;I forgive your want of reminiscence, seeing it
+ is long since I saw you at Naseby, fighting as if you had as many arms as
+ the fabled Briareus.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of Martindale, who had again turned his head towards the little
+ man, and had listened, as if endeavouring to make something out of his
+ discourse, here interrupted him with a peevish, &ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pshaw!&rdquo; repeated Sir Geoffrey the less; &ldquo;<i>Pshaw</i> is an expression of
+ slight esteem,&mdash;nay, of contempt,&mdash;in all languages; and were
+ this a befitting place&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Judges had now taken their places, the criers called silence, and
+ the stern voice of the Lord Chief Justice (the notorious Scroggs) demanded
+ what the officers meant by permitting the accused to communicate together
+ in open court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may here be observed, that this celebrated personage was, upon the
+ present occasion, at a great loss how to proceed. A calm, dignified,
+ judicial demeanour, was at no time the characteristic of his official
+ conduct. He always ranted and roared either on the one side or the other;
+ and of late, he had been much unsettled which side to take, being totally
+ incapable of anything resembling impartiality. At the first trials for the
+ Plot, when the whole stream of popularity ran against the accused, no one
+ had been so loud as Scroggs; to attempt to the character of Oates or
+ Bedloe, or any other leading witnesses, he treated as a crime more heinous
+ than it would have been to blaspheme the Gospel on which they had been
+ sworn&mdash;it was a stifling of the Plot, or discrediting of the King&rsquo;s
+ witnesses&mdash;a crime not greatly, if at all, short of high treason
+ against the King himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, of late, a new light had begun to glimmer upon the understanding of
+ this interpreter of the laws. Sagacious in the signs of the times, he
+ began to see that the tide was turning; and that Court favour at least,
+ and probably popular opinion also, were likely, in a short time, to
+ declare against the witnesses, and in favour of the accused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opinion which Scroggs had hitherto entertained of the high respect in
+ which Shaftesbury, the patron of the Plot, was held by Charles, had been
+ definitely shaken by a whisper from his brother North to the following
+ effect: &ldquo;His Lordship has no more interest at Court than your footman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This notice, from a sure hand, and received but that morning, had put the
+ Judge to a sore dilemma; for, however indifferent to actual consistency,
+ he was most anxious to save appearances. He could not but recollect how
+ violent he had been on former occasions in favour of these prosecutions;
+ and being sensible at the same time that the credit of the witnesses,
+ though shaken in the opinion of the more judicious, was, amongst the bulk
+ of the people out of doors, as strong as ever, he had a difficult part to
+ play. His conduct, therefore, during the whole trial, resembled the
+ appearance of a vessel about to go upon another tack, when her sails are
+ shivering in the wind, ere they have yet caught the impulse which is to
+ send her forth in a new direction. In a word, he was so uncertain which
+ side it was his interest to favour, that he might be said on that occasion
+ to have come nearer a state of total impartiality than he was ever capable
+ of attaining, whether before or afterwards. This was shown by his bullying
+ now the accused, and now the witnesses, like a mastiff too much irritated
+ to lie still without baying, but uncertain whom he shall first bite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indictment was then read; and Sir Geoffrey Peveril heard, with some
+ composure, the first part of it, which stated him to have placed his son
+ in the household of the Countess of Derby, a recusant Papist, for the
+ purpose of aiding the horrible and bloodthirsty Popish Plot&mdash;with
+ having had arms and ammunition concealed in his house&mdash;and with
+ receiving a blank commission from the Lord Stafford, who had suffered
+ death on account of the Plot. But when the charge went on to state that he
+ had communicated for the same purpose with Geoffrey Hudson, sometimes
+ called Sir Geoffrey Hudson, now, or formerly in the domestic service of
+ the Queen Dowager, he looked at his companion as if he suddenly recalled
+ him to remembrance, and broke out impatiently, &ldquo;These lies are too gross
+ to require a moment&rsquo;s consideration. I might have had enough of
+ intercourse, though in nothing but what was loyal and innocent, with my
+ noble kinsman, the late Lord Stafford&mdash;I will call him so in spite of
+ his misfortunes&mdash;and with my wife&rsquo;s relation, the Honourable Countess
+ of Derby. But what likelihood can there be that I should have colleagued
+ with a decrepit buffoon, with whom I never had an instant&rsquo;s communication,
+ save once at an Easter feast, when I whistled a hornpipe, as he danced on
+ a trencher to amuse the company?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rage of the poor dwarf brought tears in his eyes, while, with an
+ affected laugh, he said, that instead of those juvenile and festive
+ passages, Sir Geoffrey Peveril might have remembered his charging along
+ with him at Wiggan Lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On my word,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, after a moment&rsquo;s recollection, &ldquo;I will do
+ you justice, Master Hudson&mdash;I believe you were there&mdash;I think I
+ heard you did good service. But you will allow you might have been near
+ one without his seeing you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sort of titter ran through the Court at the simplicity of the larger Sir
+ Geoffrey&rsquo;s testimony, which the dwarf endeavoured to control, by standing
+ on his tiptoes, and looking fiercely around, as if to admonish the
+ laughers that they indulged their mirth at their own peril. But perceiving
+ that this only excited farther scorn, he composed himself into a semblance
+ of careless contempt, observing, with a smile, that no one feared the
+ glance of a chained lion; a magnificent simile, which rather increased
+ than diminished the mirth of those who heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against Julian Peveril there failed not to be charged the aggravated fact,
+ that he had been bearer of letters between the Countess of Derby and other
+ Papists and priests, engaged in the universal treasonable conspiracy of
+ the Catholics; and the attack of the house at Moultrassie Hall,&mdash;with
+ his skirmish with Chiffinch, and his assault, as it was termed, on the
+ person of John Jenkins, servant to the Duke of Buckingham, were all
+ narrated at length, as so many open and overt acts of treasonable import.
+ To this charge Peveril contented himself with pleading&mdash;Not Guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His little companion was not satisfied with so simple a plea; for when he
+ heard it read, as a part of the charge applying to him, that he had
+ received from an agent of the Plot a blank commission as Colonel of a
+ regiment of grenadiers, he replied, in wrath and scorn, that if Goliath of
+ Gath had come to him with such a proposal, and proffered him the command
+ of the whole sons of Anak in a body, he should never have had occasion or
+ opportunity to repeat the temptation to another. &ldquo;I would have slain him,&rdquo;
+ said the little man of loyalty, &ldquo;even where he stood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charge was stated anew by the Counsel for the Crown; and forth came
+ the notorious Doctor Oates, rustling in the full silken canonicals of
+ priesthood, for it was a time when he affected no small dignity of
+ exterior decoration and deportment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular man, who, aided by the obscure intrigues of the Catholics
+ themselves, and the fortuitous circumstance of Godfrey&rsquo;s murder, had been
+ able to cram down the public throat such a mass of absurdity as his
+ evidence amounts to, had no other talent for imposture than an impudence
+ which set conviction and shame alike at defiance. A man of sense or
+ reflection, by trying to give his plot an appearance of more probability,
+ would most likely have failed, as wise men often to do in addressing the
+ multitude, from not daring to calculate upon the prodigious extent of
+ their credulity, especially where the figments presented to them involve
+ the fearful and the terrible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates was by nature choleric; and the credit he had acquired made him
+ insolent and conceited. Even his exterior was portentous. A fleece of
+ white periwig showed a most uncouth visage, of great length, having the
+ mouth, as the organ by use of which he was to rise to eminence, placed in
+ the very centre of the countenance, and exhibiting to the astonished
+ spectator as much chin below as there was nose and brow above the
+ aperture. His pronunciation, too, was after a conceited fashion of his
+ own, in which he accented the vowels in a manner altogether peculiar to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This notorious personage, such as we have described him, stood forth on
+ the present trial, and delivered his astonishing testimony concerning the
+ existence of a Catholic Plot for the subversion of the government and
+ murder of the King, in the same general outline in which it may be found
+ in every English history. But as the doctor always had in reserve some
+ special piece of evidence affecting those immediately on trial, he was
+ pleased, on the present occasion, deeply to inculpate the Countess of
+ Derby. &ldquo;He had seen,&rdquo; as he said, &ldquo;that honourable lady when he was at the
+ Jesuits&rsquo; College at Saint Omer&rsquo;s. She had sent for him to an inn, or <i>auberge</i>,
+ as it was there termed&mdash;the sign of the Golden Lamb; and had ordered
+ him to breakfast in the same room with her ladyship; and afterwards told
+ him, that, knowing he was trusted by the Fathers of the Society, she was
+ determined that he should have a share of her secrets also; and
+ therewithal, that she drew from her bosom a broad sharp-pointed knife,
+ such as butchers kill sheep with, and demanded of him what he thought of
+ it for <i>the purpose</i>; and when he, the witness, said for what purpose
+ she rapt him on the fingers with her fan, called him a dull fellow, and
+ said it was designed to kill the King with.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Geoffrey Peveril could no longer refrain his indignation and
+ surprise. &ldquo;Mercy of Heaven!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;did ever one hear of ladies of
+ quality carrying butchering knives about them, and telling every scurvy
+ companion she meant to kill the King with them?&mdash;Gentleman of the
+ Jury, do but think if this is reasonable&mdash;though, if the villain
+ could prove by any honest evidence, that my Lady of Derby ever let such a
+ scum as himself come to speech of her, I would believe all he can say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;rest you quiet&mdash;You must not fly out&mdash;passion
+ helps you not here&mdash;the Doctor must be suffered to proceed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Oates went on to state how the lady complained of the wrongs the
+ House of Derby had sustained from the King and the oppression of her
+ religion, and boasted of the schemes of the Jesuits and seminary priests;
+ and how they would be farthered by her noble kinsman of the House of
+ Stanley. He finally averred that both the Countess and the Fathers of the
+ seminary abroad, founded much upon the talents and courage of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril and his son&mdash;the latter of whom was a member of her family.
+ Of Hudson, he only recollected of having heard one of the Fathers say,
+ that although but a dwarf in stature, he would prove a giant in the cause
+ of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had ended his evidence, there was a pause, until the Judge, as if
+ the thought had suddenly occurred to him, demanded of Dr. Oates, whether
+ he had ever mentioned the names of the Countess of Derby in any of the
+ previous informations which he had lodged before the Privy Council, and
+ elsewhere, upon this affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates seemed rather surprised at the question, and coloured with anger, as
+ he answered, in his peculiar mode of pronunciation, &ldquo;Whoy, no, maay
+ laard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And pray, Doctor,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;how came so great a revealer of
+ mysteries as you have lately proved, to have suffered so material a
+ circumstance as the accession of this powerful family to the Plot to have
+ remained undiscovered?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maay laard,&rdquo; said Oates, with much effrontery, &ldquo;aye do not come here to
+ have my evidence questioned as touching the Plaat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not question your evidence, Doctor,&rdquo; said Scroggs, for the time was
+ not arrived that he dared treat him roughly; &ldquo;nor do I doubt the existence
+ of the <i>Plaat</i>, since it is your pleasure to swear to it. I would
+ only have you, for your own sake, and the satisfaction of all good
+ Protestants, to explain why you have kept back such a weighty point of
+ information from the King and country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maay laard,&rdquo; said Oates, &ldquo;I will tell you a pretty fable.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; answered the Judge, &ldquo;it may be the first and last which you
+ shall tell in this place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Maay laard,&rdquo; continued Oates, &ldquo;there was once a faux, who having to carry
+ a goose over a frazen river, and being afraid the aice would not bear him
+ and his booty, did caarry aaver a staane, my laard, in the first instance,
+ to prove the strength of the aice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So your former evidence was but the stone, and now, for the first time,
+ you have brought us the goose?&rdquo; said Sir William Scroggs; &ldquo;to tell us
+ this, Doctor, is to make geese of the Court and Jury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I desoire your laardship&rsquo;s honest construction,&rdquo; said Oates, who saw the
+ current changing against him, but was determined to pay the score with
+ effrontery. &ldquo;All men knaw at what coast and praice I have given my
+ evidence, which has been always, under Gaad, the means of awakening this
+ poor naation to the dangerous state in which it staunds. Many here knaw
+ that I have been obliged to faartify my ladging at Whitehall against the
+ bloody Papists. It was not to be thought that I should have brought all
+ the story out at aance. I think your wisdome would have advised me
+ otherwise.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] It was on such terms that Dr. Oates was pleased to claim the
+ extraordinary privilege of dealing out the information which he
+ chose to communicate to a court of justice. The only sense in
+ which his story of the fox, stone, and goose could be applicable,
+ is by supposing that he was determined to ascertain the extent of
+ his countrymen&rsquo;s credulity before supplying it with a full meal.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Doctor,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;it is not for me to direct you in this
+ affair; and it is for the Jury to believe you or not; and as for myself, I
+ sit here to do justice to both&mdash;the Jury have heard your answer to my
+ question.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Oates retired from the witness-box reddening like a turkey-cock, as
+ one totally unused to have such accounts questioned as he chose to lay
+ before the courts of justice; and there was, perhaps, for the first time,
+ amongst the counsel and solicitors, as well as the templars and students
+ of law there present, a murmur, distinct and audible, unfavourable to the
+ character of the great father of the Popish Plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everett and Dangerfield, with whom the reader is already acquainted, were
+ then called in succession to sustain the accusation. They were subordinate
+ informers&mdash;a sort of under-spur-leathers, as the cant term went&mdash;who
+ followed the path of Oates, with all deference to his superior genius and
+ invention, and made their own fictions chime in and harmonise with his, as
+ well as their talents could devise. But as their evidence had at no time
+ received the full credence into which the impudence of Oates had cajoled
+ the public, so they now began to fall into discredit rather more hastily
+ than their prototype, as the super-added turrets of an ill-constructed
+ building are naturally the first to give way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain that Everett, with the precision of a hypocrite, and
+ Dangerfield, with the audacity of a bully, narrated, with added
+ circumstances of suspicion and criminality, their meeting with Julian
+ Peveril in Liverpool, and again at Martindale Castle. It was in vain they
+ described the arms and accoutrements which they pretended to have
+ discovered in old Sir Geoffrey&rsquo;s possession; and that they gave a most
+ dreadful account of the escape of the younger Peveril from Moultrassie
+ Hall, by means of an armed force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jury listened coldly, and it was visible that they were but little
+ moved by the accusation; especially as the Judge, always professing his
+ belief in the Plot, and his zeal for the Protestant religion, was ever and
+ anon reminding them that presumptions were no proofs&mdash;that hearsay
+ was no evidence&mdash;that those who made a trade of discovery were likely
+ to aid their researches by invention&mdash;and that without doubting the
+ guilt of the unfortunate persons at the bar, he would gladly hear some
+ evidence brought against them of a different nature. &ldquo;Here we are told of
+ a riot, and an escape achieved by the younger Peveril, at the house of a
+ grave and worthy magistrate, known, I think, to most of us. Why, Master
+ Attorney, bring ye not Master Bridgenorth himself to prove the fact, or
+ all his household, if it be necessary?&mdash;A rising in arms is an affair
+ over public to be left on the hearsay tale of these two men&mdash;though
+ Heaven forbid that I should suppose they speak one word more than they
+ believe! They are the witnesses for the King&mdash;and, what is equally
+ dear to us, the Protestant religion&mdash;and witnesses against a most
+ foul and heathenish Plot. On the other hand, here is a worshipful old
+ knight, for such I must suppose him to be, since he has bled often in
+ battle for the King,&mdash;such, I must say, I suppose him to be, until he
+ is proved otherwise. And here is his son, a hopeful young gentleman&mdash;we
+ must see that they have right, Master Attorney.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unquestionably, my lord,&rdquo; answered the Attorney. &ldquo;God forbid else! But we
+ will make out these matters against these unhappy gentlemen in a manner
+ more close, if your lordship will permit us to bring in our evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on, Master Attorney,&rdquo; said the Judge, throwing himself back in his
+ seat. &ldquo;Heaven forbid I hinder proving the King&rsquo;s accusation! I only say,
+ what you know as well as I, that <i>de non apparentibus et non
+ existentibus eadem est ratio</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall then call Master Bridgenorth, as your lordship advised, who I
+ think is in waiting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; answered a voice from the crowd, apparently that of a female; &ldquo;he is
+ too wise and too honest to be here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice was distinct as that of Lady Fairfax, when she expressed herself
+ to a similar effect on the trial of Charles the First; but the researches
+ which were made on the present occasion to discover the speaker were
+ unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the slight confusion occasioned by this circumstance was abated, the
+ Attorney, who had been talking aside with the conductors of the
+ prosecution, said, &ldquo;Whoever favoured us with that information, my lord,
+ had good reason for what they said. Master Bridgenorth has become, I am
+ told, suddenly invisible since this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look you there now, Master Attorney,&rdquo; said the Judge&mdash;&ldquo;This comes of
+ not keeping the crown witnesses together and in readiness&mdash;I am sure
+ I cannot help the consequences.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor I either, my lord,&rdquo; said the Attorney pettishly. &ldquo;I could have proved
+ by this worshipful gentleman, Master Justice Bridgenorth, the ancient
+ friendship betwixt this party, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, and the Countess of
+ Derby, of whose doings and intentions Dr. Oates has given such a
+ deliberate evidence. I could have proved his having sheltered her in his
+ Castle against a process of law, and rescued her, by force of arms, from
+ this very Justice Bridgenorth, not without actual violence. Moreover, I
+ could have proved against young Peveril the whole affray charged upon him
+ by the same worshipful evidence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Judge stuck his thumbs into his girdle, which was a favourite
+ attitude of his on such occasions, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Pshaw, pshaw, Master
+ Attorney!&mdash;Tell me not that you <i>could</i> have proved that, or
+ that, or this&mdash;Prove what you will, but let it be through the mouths
+ of your evidence. Men are not to be licked out of their lives by the rough
+ side of a lawyer&rsquo;s tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor is a foul Plot to be smothered,&rdquo; said the Attorney, &ldquo;for all the
+ haste your lordship is in. I cannot call Master Chiffinch neither, as he
+ is employed on the King&rsquo;s especial affairs, as I am this instant
+ certiorated from the Court at Whitehall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Produce the papers, then, Master Attorney, of which this young man is
+ said to be the bearer,&rdquo; said the Judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are before the Privy Council, my lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then why do you found on them here?&rdquo; said the Judge&mdash;&ldquo;This is
+ something like trifling with the Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since your lordship gives it that name,&rdquo; said the Attorney, sitting down
+ in a huff, &ldquo;you may manage the cause as you will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you do not bring more evidence, I pray you to charge the Jury,&rdquo; said
+ the Judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall not take the trouble to do so,&rdquo; said the Crown Counsel. &ldquo;I see
+ plainly how the matter is to go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but be better advised,&rdquo; said Scroggs. &ldquo;Consider, your case is but
+ half proved respecting the two Peverils, and doth not pinch on the little
+ man at all, saving that Doctor Oates said that he was in a certain case to
+ prove a giant, which seems no very probable Popish miracle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sally occasioned a laugh in the Court, which the Attorney-General
+ seemed to take in great dudgeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Attorney,&rdquo; said Oates, who always interfered in the management of
+ these law-suits, &ldquo;this is a plain an absolute giving away of the cause&mdash;I
+ must needs say it, a mere stoifling of the Plaat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then the devil who bred it may blow wind into it again, if he lists,&rdquo;
+ answered the Attorney-General; and, flinging down his brief, he left the
+ Court, as if in a huff with all who were concerned in the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Judge having obtained silence,&mdash;for a murmur arose in the Court
+ when the Counsel for the prosecution threw up his brief,&mdash;began to
+ charge the Jury, balancing, as he had done throughout the whole day, the
+ different opinions by which he seemed alternately swayed. He protested on
+ his salvation that he had no more doubt of the existence of the horrid and
+ damnable conspiracy called the Popish Plot, than he had of the treachery
+ of Judas Iscariot; and that he considered Oates as the instrument under
+ Providence of preserving the nation from all the miseries of his Majesty&rsquo;s
+ assassination, and of a second Saint Bartholomew, acted in the streets of
+ London. But then he stated it was the candid construction of the law of
+ England, that the worse the crime, the more strong should be the evidence.
+ Here was the case of accessories tried, whilst their principal&mdash;for
+ such he should call the Countess of Derby&mdash;was unconvicted and at
+ large; and for Doctor Oates, he had but spoke of matters which personally
+ applied to that noble lady, whose words, if she used such in passion,
+ touching aid which she expected in some treasonable matters from these
+ Peverils, and from her kinsmen, or her son&rsquo;s kinsmen, of the House of
+ Stanley, may have been but a burst of female resentment&mdash;<i>dulcis
+ Amaryllidis ira</i>, as the poet hath it. Who knoweth but Doctor Oates did
+ mistake&mdash;he being a gentleman of a comely countenance and easy
+ demeanour&mdash;this same rap with the fan as a chastisement for lack of
+ courage in the Catholic cause, when, peradventure, it was otherwise meant,
+ as Popish ladies will put, it is said, such neophytes and youthful
+ candidates for orders, to many severe trials. &ldquo;I speak these things
+ jocularly,&rdquo; said the Judge, &ldquo;having no wish to stain the reputation either
+ of the Honourable Countess or the Reverend Doctor; only I think the
+ bearing between them may have related to something short of high treason.
+ As for what the Attorney-General hath set forth of rescues and force, and
+ I wot not what, sure I am, that in a civil country, when such things
+ happen such things may be proved; and that you and I, gentlemen, are not
+ to take them for granted gratuitously. Touching this other prisoner, this
+ <i>Galfridus minimus</i>, he must needs say,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;he could not
+ discover even a shadow of suspicion against him. Was it to be thought so
+ abortive a creature would thrust himself into depths of policy, far less
+ into stratagems of war? They had but to look at him to conclude the
+ contrary&mdash;the creature was, from his age, fitter for the grave than a
+ conspiracy&mdash;and by his size and appearance, for the inside of a
+ raree-show, than the mysteries of a plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf here broke in upon the Judge by force of screaming, to assure
+ him that he had been, simple as he sat there, engaged in seven plots in
+ Cromwell&rsquo;s time; and, as he proudly added, with some of the tallest men of
+ England. The matchless look and air with which Sir Geoffrey made this
+ vaunt, set all a-laughing, and increased the ridicule with which the whole
+ trial began to be received; so that it was amidst shaking sides and watery
+ eyes that a general verdict of Not Guilty was pronounced, and the
+ prisoners dismissed from the bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a warmer sentiment awakened among those who saw the father and son
+ throw themselves into each other&rsquo;s arms, and, after a hearty embrace,
+ extend their hands to their poor little companion in peril, who, like a
+ dog, when present at a similar scene, had at last succeeded, by stretching
+ himself up to them and whimpering at the same time, to secure to himself a
+ portion of their sympathy and gratulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the singular termination of this trial. Charles himself was
+ desirous to have taken considerable credit with the Duke of Ormond for the
+ evasion of the law, which had been thus effected by his private
+ connivance; and was both surprised and mortified at the coldness with
+ which his Grace replied, that he was rejoiced at the poor gentleman&rsquo;s
+ safety, but would rather have had the King redeem them like a prince, by
+ his royal prerogative of mercy, than that his Judge should convey them out
+ of the power of the law, like a juggler with his cups and balls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;On fair ground
+ I could beat forty of them!
+ &mdash;CORIOLANUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It doubtless occurred to many that were present at the trial we have
+ described, that it was managed in a singular manner, and that the quarrel,
+ which had the appearance of having taken place between the Court and the
+ Crown Counsel, might proceed from some private understanding betwixt them,
+ the object of which was the miscarriage of the accusation. Yet though such
+ underhand dealing was much suspected, the greater part of the audience,
+ being well educated and intelligent, had already suspected the bubble of
+ the Popish Plot, and were glad to see that accusations, founded on what
+ had already cost so much blood, could be evaded in any way. But the crowd,
+ who waited in the Court of Requests, and in the hall, and without doors,
+ viewed in a very different light the combination, as they interpreted it,
+ between the Judge and the Attorney-General, for the escape of the
+ prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates, whom less provocation than he had that day received often induced
+ to behave like one frantic with passion, threw himself amongst the crowd,
+ and repeated till he was hoarse, &ldquo;Theay are stoifling the Plaat!&mdash;theay
+ are straangling the Plaat!&mdash;My Laard Justice and Maaster Attarney are
+ in league to secure the escape of the plaaters and Paapists!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the device of the Papist whore of Portsmouth,&rdquo; said one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of old Rowley himself,&rdquo; said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he could be murdered by himself, why hang those that would hinder it!&rdquo;
+ exclaimed a third.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He should be tried,&rdquo; said a fourth, &ldquo;for conspiring his own death, and
+ hanged <i>in terrorem</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, Sir Geoffrey, his son, and their little companion, left
+ the hall, intending to go to Lady Peveril&rsquo;s lodgings, which had been
+ removed to Fleet Street. She had been relieved from considerable
+ inconvenience, as Sir Geoffrey gave Julian hastily to understand, by an
+ angel, in the shape of a young friend, and she now expected them doubtless
+ with impatience. Humanity, and some indistinct idea of having
+ unintentionally hurt the feelings of the poor dwarf, induced the honest
+ Cavalier to ask this unprotected being to go with them. &ldquo;He knew Lady
+ Peveril&rsquo;s lodgings were but small,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but it would be strange, if
+ there was not some cupboard large enough to accommodate the little
+ gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf registered this well-meant remark in his mind, to be the subject
+ of a proper explanation, along with the unhappy reminiscence of the
+ trencher-hornpipe, whenever time should permit an argument of such nicety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus they sallied from the hall, attracting general observation, both
+ from the circumstances in which they had stood so lately, and from their
+ resemblance, as a wag of the Inner Temple expressed it, to the three
+ degrees of comparison, Large, Lesser, Least. But they had not passed far
+ along the street, when Julian perceived that more malevolent passions than
+ mere curiosity began to actuate the crowd which followed, and, as it were,
+ dogged their motions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There go the Papist cut-throats, tantivy for Rome!&rdquo; said one fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tantivy to Whitehall, you mean!&rdquo; said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! the bloodthirsty villains!&rdquo; cried a woman: &ldquo;Shame, one of them should
+ be suffered to live, after poor Sir Edmondsbury&rsquo;s cruel murder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out upon the mealy-mouthed Jury, that turned out the bloodhounds on an
+ innocent town!&rdquo; cried a fourth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the tumult thickened, and the word began to pass among the more
+ desperate, &ldquo;Lambe them, lads; lambe them!&rdquo;&mdash;a cant phrase of the
+ time, derived from the fate of Dr. Lambe, an astrologer and quack, who was
+ knocked on the head by the rabble in Charles the First&rsquo;s time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian began to be much alarmed at these symptoms of violence, and
+ regretted that they had not gone down to the city by water. It was now too
+ late to think of that mode of retreating, and he therefore requested his
+ father in a whisper, to walk steadily forward towards Charing Cross,
+ taking no notice of the insults which might be cast upon them, while the
+ steadiness of their pace and appearance might prevent the rabble from
+ resorting to actual violence. The execution of this prudent resolution was
+ prevented after they had passed the palace, by the hasty disposition of
+ the elder Sir Geoffrey, and the no less choleric temper of Galfridus
+ Minimus, who had a soul which spurned all odds, as well of numbers as of
+ size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now a murrain take the knaves, with their hollowing and whooping,&rdquo; said
+ the large knight; &ldquo;by this day, if I could but light on a weapon, I would
+ cudgel reason and loyalty into some of their carcasses!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I also,&rdquo; said the dwarf, who was toiling to keep up with the longer
+ strides of his companions, and therefore spoke in a very phthisical tone.&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ also will cudgel the plebeian knaves beyond measure&mdash;he!&mdash;hem!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the crowd who thronged around them, impeded, and did all but assault
+ them, was a mischievous shoemaker&rsquo;s apprentice, who, hearing this unlucky
+ vaunt of the valorous dwarf, repaid it by flapping him on the head with a
+ boot which he was carrying home to the owner, so as to knock the little
+ gentleman&rsquo;s hat over his eyes. The dwarf, thus rendered unable to discover
+ the urchin that had given him the offence, flew with instinctive ambition
+ against the biggest fellow in the crowd, who received the onset with a
+ kick on the stomach, which made the poor little champion reel back to his
+ companions. They were now assaulted on all sides; but fortune complying
+ with the wish of Sir Geoffrey the larger, ordained that the scuffle should
+ happen near the booth of a cutler, from amongst whose wares, as they stood
+ exposed to the public, Sir Geoffrey Peveril snatched a broadsword, which
+ he brandished with the formidable address of one who had for many a day
+ been in the familiar practice of using such a weapon. Julian, while at the
+ same time he called loudly for a peace-officer, and reminded the
+ assailants that they were attacking inoffensive passengers, saw nothing
+ better for it than to imitate his father&rsquo;s example, and seized also one of
+ the weapons thus opportunely offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they displayed these demonstrations of defence, the rush which the
+ rabble at first made towards them was so great as to throw down the
+ unfortunate dwarf, who would have been trampled to death in the scuffle,
+ had not his stout old namesake cleared the rascal crowd from about him
+ with a few flourishes of his weapon, and seizing on the fallen champion,
+ put him out of danger (except from missiles), by suddenly placing him on
+ the bulk-head, that is to say, the flat wooden roof of the cutler&rsquo;s
+ projecting booth. From the rusty ironware, which was displayed there, the
+ dwarf instantly snatched an old rapier and target, and covering himself
+ with the one, stood making passes with the other, at the faces and eyes of
+ the people in the street; so much delighted with his post of vantage, that
+ he called loudly to his friends who were skirmishing with the riotous on
+ more equal terms as to position, to lose no time in putting themselves
+ under his protection. But far from being in a situation to need his
+ assistance, the father and son might easily have extricated themselves
+ from the rabble by their own exertions, could they have thought of leaving
+ the mannikin in the forlorn situation, in which, to every eye but his own,
+ he stood like a diminutive puppet, tricked out with sword and target as a
+ fencing-master&rsquo;s sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stones and sticks began now to fly very thick, and the crowd,
+ notwithstanding the exertions of the Peverils to disperse them with as
+ little harm as possible, seemed determined on mischief, when some
+ gentlemen who had been at the trial, understanding that the prisoners who
+ had been just acquitted were in danger of being murdered by the populace,
+ drew their swords, and made forward to effect their rescue, which was
+ completed by a small party of the King&rsquo;s Life Guards, who had been
+ despatched from their ordinary post of alarm, upon intelligence of what
+ was passing. When this unexpected reinforcement arrived, the old jolly
+ Knight at once recognised, amidst the cries of those who then entered upon
+ action, some of the sounds which had animated his more active years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where be these cuckoldly Roundheads,&rdquo; cried some.&mdash;&ldquo;Down with the
+ sneaking knaves!&rdquo; cried others.&mdash;&ldquo;The King and his friends, and the
+ devil a one else!&rdquo; exclaimed a third set, with more oaths and d&mdash;n
+ me&rsquo;s, than, in the present more correct age, it is necessary to commit to
+ paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old soldier, pricking up his ears like an ancient hunter at the cry of
+ the hounds, would gladly have scoured the Strand, with the charitable
+ purpose, now he saw himself so well supported, of knocking the London
+ knaves, who had insulted him, into twiggen bottles; but he was withheld by
+ the prudence of Julian, who, though himself extremely irritated by the
+ unprovoked ill-usage which they had received, saw himself in a situation
+ in which it was necessary to exercise more caution than vengeance. He
+ prayed and pressed his father to seek some temporary place of retreat from
+ the fury of the populace, while that prudent measure was yet in their
+ power. The subaltern officer, who commanded the party of the Life Guards,
+ exhorted the old Cavalier eagerly to the same sage counsel, using, as a
+ spice of compulsion, the name of the King; while Julian strongly urged
+ that of his mother. The old Knight looked at his blade, crimsoned with
+ cross-cuts and slashes which he had given to the most forward of the
+ assailants, with the eye of one not half sufficed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would I had pinked one of the knaves at least&mdash;but I know not how
+ it was, when I looked on their broad round English faces, I shunned to use
+ my point, and only sliced the rogues a little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the King&rsquo;s pleasure,&rdquo; said the officer, &ldquo;is, that no tumult be
+ prosecuted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My mother,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;will die with fright, if the rumour of this
+ scuffle reaches her ere we see her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; said the Knight, &ldquo;the King&rsquo;s Majesty and my good dame&mdash;well,
+ their pleasure be done, that&rsquo;s all I can say&mdash;Kings and ladies must
+ be obeyed. But which way to retreat, since retreat we must?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian would have been at some loss to advise what course to take, for
+ everybody in the vicinity had shut up their shops, and chained their
+ doors, upon observing the confusion become so formidable. The poor cutler,
+ however, with whose goods they made so free, offered them an asylum on the
+ part of his landlord, whose house served as a rest for his shop, and only
+ intimated gently, he hoped the gentleman would consider him for the use of
+ his weapons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was hastily revolving whether they ought, in prudence, to accept
+ this man&rsquo;s invitation, aware, by experience, how many trepans, as they
+ were then termed, were used betwixt two contending factions, each too
+ inveterate to be very scrupulous of the character of fair play to an
+ enemy, when the dwarf, exerting his cracked voice to the uttermost, and
+ shrieking like an exhausted herald, from the exalted station which he
+ still occupied on the bulk-head, exhorted them to accept the offer of the
+ worthy man of the mansion. &ldquo;He himself,&rdquo; he said, as he reposed himself
+ after the glorious conquest in which he had some share, &ldquo;had been favoured
+ with a beatific vision, too splendid to be described to common and mere
+ mortal ears, but which had commanded him, in a voice to which his heart
+ had bounded as to a trumpet sound, to take refuge with the worthy person
+ of the house, and cause his friends to do so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vision!&rdquo; said the Knight of the Peak,&mdash;&ldquo;sound of a trumpet!&mdash;the
+ little man is stark mad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the cutler, in great haste, intimated to them that their little friend
+ had received an intimation from a gentlewoman of his acquaintance, who
+ spoke to him from the window, while he stood on the bulk-head, that they
+ would find a safe retreat in his landlord&rsquo;s; and desiring them to attend
+ to two or three deep though distant huzzas, made them aware that the
+ rabble were up still, and would soon be upon them with renewed violence,
+ and increased numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father and son, therefore, hastily thanked the officer and his party,
+ as well as the other gentlemen who had volunteered in their assistance,
+ lifted little Sir Geoffrey Hudson from the conspicuous post which he had
+ so creditably occupied during the skirmish, and followed the footsteps of
+ the tenant of the booth, who conducted them down a blind alley and through
+ one or two courts, in case, as he said, any one might have watched where
+ they burrowed, and so into a back-door. This entrance admitted them to a
+ staircase carefully hung with straw mats to exclude damp, from the upper
+ step of which they entered upon a tolerably large withdrawing-room, hung
+ with coarse green serge edged with gilded leather, which the poorer or
+ more economical citizens at that time use instead of tapestry or
+ wainscoting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the poor cutler received from Julian such a gratuity for the loan of
+ the swords, that he generously abandoned the property to the gentlemen who
+ had used them so well; &ldquo;the rather,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that he saw, by the way
+ they handed their weapons, that they were men of mettle, and tall
+ fellows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the dwarf smiled on him courteously, and bowed, thrusting at the same
+ time, his hand into his pocket, which however, he withdrew carelessly
+ probably because he found he had not the means of making the small
+ donation which he had meditated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler proceeded to say, as he bowed and was about to withdraw, that
+ he saw there would be merry days yet in Old England, and that Bilboa
+ blades would fetch as good a price as ever. &ldquo;I remember,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;gentlemen, though I was then but a &lsquo;prentice, the demand for weapons in
+ the years forty-one and forty-two; sword blades were more in request than
+ toothpicks, and Old Ironsides, my master, took more for rascally Provant
+ rapiers, than I dare ask nowadays for a Toledo. But, to be sure, a man&rsquo;s
+ life then rested on the blade he carried; the Cavaliers and Roundheads
+ fought every day at the gates of Whitehall, as it is like, gentlemen, by
+ your good example, they may do again, when I shall be enabled to leave my
+ pitiful booth, and open a shop of better quality. I hope you will
+ recommend me, gentlemen, to your friends. I am always provided with ware
+ which a gentleman may risk his life on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you, good friend,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;I prithee begone. I trust we shall
+ need thy ware no more for some time at least.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler retired, while the dwarf hollowed after him downstairs, that he
+ would call on him soon, and equip himself with a longer blade, and one
+ more proper for action; although, he said, the little weapon he had did
+ well enough for a walking-sword, or in a skirmish with such <i>canaille</i>
+ as they had been engaged with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler returned at this summons, and agreed to pleasure the little man
+ with a weapon more suitable to his magnanimity; then, as if the thought
+ had suddenly occurred to him, he said, &ldquo;But, gentlemen, it will be wild
+ work to walk with your naked swords through the Strand, and it can scarce
+ fail to raise the rabble again. If you please, while you repose yourselves
+ here, I can fit the blades with sheaths.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proposal seemed so reasonable, that Julian and his father gave up
+ their weapons to the friendly cutler, an example which the dwarf followed,
+ after a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, not caring, as he magnificently expressed it,
+ to part so soon with the trusty friend which fortune had but the moment
+ before restored to his hand. The man retired with the weapons under his
+ arm; and, in shutting the door behind him, they heard him turn the key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you hear that?&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey to his son&mdash;&ldquo;and we are
+ disarmed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, without reply, examined the door, which was fast secured; and then
+ looked at the casements, which were at a storey&rsquo;s height from the ground,
+ and grated besides with iron. &ldquo;I cannot think,&rdquo; he said, after a moment&rsquo;s
+ pause, &ldquo;that the fellow means to trepan us; and, in any event, I trust we
+ should have no difficulty in forcing the door, or otherwise making escape.
+ But, before resorting to such violent measures, I think it is better to
+ give the rabble leisure to disperse, by waiting this man&rsquo;s return with our
+ weapons within a reasonable time, when, if he does not appear, I trust we
+ shall find little difficulty in extricating ourselves.&rdquo; As he spoke thus,
+ the hangings were pulled aside, and from a small door which was concealed
+ behind them, Major Bridgenorth entered the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He came amongst them like a new raised spirit
+ To speak of dreadful judgments that impend,
+ And of the wrath to come.
+ &mdash;THE REFORMER.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The astonishment of Julian at the unexpected apparition of Bridgenorth,
+ was instantly succeeded by apprehension of his father&rsquo;s violence, which he
+ had every reason to believe would break forth against one, whom he himself
+ could not but reverence on account of his own merits, as well as because
+ he was the father of Alice. The appearance of Bridgenorth was not however,
+ such as to awaken resentment. His countenance was calm, his step slow and
+ composed, his eye not without the indication of some deep-seated anxiety,
+ but without any expression either of anger or of triumph. &ldquo;You are
+ welcome,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey Peveril, to the shelter and hospitality
+ of this house; as welcome as you would have been in other days, when we
+ called each other neighbours and friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Odzooks,&rdquo; said the old Cavalier; &ldquo;and had I known it was thy house, man,
+ I would sooner had my heart&rsquo;s blood run down the kennel, than my foot
+ should have crossed your threshold&mdash;in the way of seeking safety,
+ that is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I forgive your inveteracy,&rdquo; said Major Bridgenorth, &ldquo;on account of your
+ prejudices.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep your forgiveness,&rdquo; answered the Cavalier, &ldquo;until you are pardoned
+ yourself. By Saint George I have sworn, if ever I got my heels out of yon
+ rascally prison, whither I was sent much through your means, Master
+ Bridgenorth,&mdash;that you should pay the reckoning for my bad lodging.&mdash;I
+ will strike no man in his own house; but if you will cause the fellow to
+ bring back my weapon, and take a turn in that blind court there below,
+ along with me, you shall soon see what chance a traitor hath with a true
+ man, and a kennel-blooded Puritan with Peveril of the Peak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth smiled with much composure. &ldquo;When I was younger and more
+ warm-blooded,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;I refused your challenge, Sir Geoffrey; it is
+ not likely I should now accept it, when each is within a stride of the
+ grave. I have not spared, and will not spare, my blood, when my country
+ wants it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is when there is any chance of treason against the King,&rdquo; said Sir
+ Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my father,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;let us hear Master Bridgenorth! We have
+ been sheltered in his house; and although we now see him in London, we
+ should remember that he did not appear against us this day, when perhaps
+ his evidence might have given a fatal turn to our situation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are right, young man,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;and it should be some
+ pledge of my sincere goodwill, that I was this day absent from
+ Westminster, when a few words from my mouth had ended the long line of
+ Peveril of the Peak: it needed but ten minutes to walk to Westminster
+ Hall, to have ensured your condemnation. But could I have done this,
+ knowing, as I now know, that to thee, Julian Peveril, I owe the
+ extrication of my daughter&mdash;of my dearest Alice&mdash;the memory of
+ her departed mother&mdash;from the snares which hell and profligacy had
+ opened around her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is, I trust safe,&rdquo; said Peveril eagerly, and almost forgetting his
+ father&rsquo;s presence; &ldquo;she is, I trust, safe, and in your own wardship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in mine,&rdquo; said the dejected father; &ldquo;but in that of one in whose
+ protection, next to that of Heaven, I can most fully confide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you sure&mdash;are you very sure of that?&rdquo; repeated Julian eagerly.
+ &ldquo;I found her under the charge of one to whom she had been trusted, and who
+ yet&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who yet was the basest of women,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth; &ldquo;but he who
+ selected her for the charge was deceived in her character.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say rather you were deceived in his; remember that when we parted in
+ Moultrassie, I warned you of that Ganlesse&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know your meaning,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;nor did you err in describing
+ him as a worldly-wise man. But he has atoned for his error by recovering
+ Alice from the dangers into which she has plunged when separated from you;
+ and besides, I have not thought meet again to entrust him with the charge
+ that is dearest to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank God your eyes are thus far opened!&rdquo; said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This day will open them wide, or close them for ever,&rdquo; answered
+ Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this dialogue, which the speakers hurried through without attending
+ to the others who were present, Sir Geoffrey listened with surprise and
+ eagerness, endeavouring to catch something which should render their
+ conversation intelligible; but as he totally failed in gaining any such
+ key to their meaning, he broke in with,&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;Sblood and thunder,
+ Julian, what unprofitable gossip is this? What hast thou to do with this
+ fellow, more than to bastinado him, if you should think it worth while to
+ beat so old a rogue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dearest father,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;you know not this gentleman&mdash;I am
+ certain you do him injustice. My own obligations to him are many; and I am
+ sure when you come to know them&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope I shall die ere that moment come,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey; and
+ continued with increasing violence, &ldquo;I hope in the mercy of Heaven, that I
+ shall be in the grave of my ancestors, ere I learn that my son&mdash;my
+ only son&mdash;the last hope of my ancient house&mdash;the last remnant of
+ the name of Peveril&mdash;hath consented to receive obligations from the
+ man on earth I am most bound to hate, were I not still more bound to
+ contemn him!&mdash;Degenerate dog-whelp!&rdquo; he repeated with great
+ vehemence, &ldquo;you colour without replying! Speak, and disown such disgrace;
+ or, by the God of my fathers&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf suddenly stepped forward and called out, &ldquo;Forbear!&rdquo; with a voice
+ at once so discordant and commanding, that it sounded supernatural. &ldquo;Man
+ of sin and pride,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;forbear; and call not the name of a holy God
+ to witness thine unhallowed resentments.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebuke so boldly and decidedly given, and the moral enthusiasm with
+ which he spoke, gave the despised dwarf an ascendancy for the moment over
+ the fiery spirit of his gigantic namesake. Sir Geoffrey Peveril eyed him
+ for an instant askance and shyly, as he might have done a supernatural
+ apparition, and then muttered, &ldquo;What knowest thou of my cause of wrath?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said the dwarf;&mdash;&ldquo;nothing but this&mdash;that no cause can
+ warrant the oath thou wert about to swear. Ungrateful man! thou wert
+ to-day rescued from the devouring wrath of the wicked, by a marvellous
+ conjunction of circumstances&mdash;Is this a day, thinkest thou, on which
+ to indulge thine own hasty resentments?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I stand rebuked,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;and by a singular monitor&mdash;the
+ grasshopper, as the prayer-book saith, hath become a burden to me.&mdash;Julian,
+ I will speak to thee of these matters hereafter;&mdash;and for you, Master
+ Bridgenorth, I desire to have no farther communication with you, either in
+ peace or in anger. Our time passes fast, and I would fain return to my
+ family. Cause our weapons to be restored; unbar the doors, and let us part
+ without farther altercation, which can but disturb and aggravate our
+ spirits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey Peveril,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;I have no desire to vex your
+ spirit or my own; but, for thus soon dismissing you, that may hardly be,
+ it being a course inconsistent with the work which I have on hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, sir! Do you mean that we should abide here, whether with or against
+ our inclinations?&rdquo; said the dwarf. &ldquo;Were it not that I am laid under
+ charge to remain here, by one who hath the best right to command this poor
+ microcosm, I would show thee that bolts and bars are unavailing restraints
+ on such as I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;I think, upon an emergency, the little man
+ might make his escape through the keyhole.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth&rsquo;s face was moved into something like a smile at the swaggering
+ speech of the pigmy hero, and the contemptuous commentary of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril; but such an expression never dwelt on his features for two
+ seconds together, and he replied in these words:&mdash;&ldquo;Gentlemen, each
+ and all of you must be fain to content yourselves. Believe me, no hurt is
+ intended towards you; on the contrary, your remaining here will be a means
+ of securing your safety, which would be otherwise deeply endangered. It
+ will be your own fault if a hair of your head is hurt. But the stronger
+ force is on my side; and, whatever harm you may meet with should you
+ attempt to break forth by violence, the blame must rest with yourselves.
+ It you will not believe me, I will permit Master Julian Peveril to
+ accompany me, where he shall see that I am provided fully with the means
+ of repressing violence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason!&mdash;treason!&rdquo; exclaimed the old Knight&mdash;&ldquo;Treason against
+ God and King Charles!&mdash;Oh, for one half-hour of the broadsword which
+ I parted with like an ass!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, my father, I conjure you!&rdquo; said Julian. &ldquo;I will go with Master
+ Bridgenorth, since he requests it. I will satisfy myself whether there be
+ danger, and of what nature. It is possible I may prevail on him to desist
+ from some desperate measure, if such be indeed in agitation. Should it be
+ necessary, fear not that your son will behave as he ought to do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do your pleasure, Julian,&rdquo; said his father; &ldquo;I will confide in thee. But
+ if you betray my confidence, a father&rsquo;s curse shall cleave to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth now motioned to Peveril to follow him, and they passed through
+ the small door by which he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passage led to a vestibule or anteroom, in which several other doors
+ and passages seemed to centre. Through one of these Julian was conducted
+ by Bridgenorth, walking with silence and precaution, in obedience to a
+ signal made by his guide to that effect. As they advanced, he heard
+ sounds, like those of the human voice, engaged in urgent and emphatic
+ declamation. With slow and light steps Bridgenorth conducted him through a
+ door which terminated this passage; and as he entered a little gallery,
+ having a curtain in front, the sound of the preacher&rsquo;s voice&mdash;for
+ such it now seemed&mdash;became distinct and audible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian now doubted not that he was in one of those conventicles, which,
+ though contrary to the existing laws, still continued to be regularly held
+ in different parts of London and the suburbs. Many of these, as frequented
+ by persons of moderate political principles, though dissenters from the
+ Church for conscience&rsquo; sake, were connived at by the prudence or timidity
+ of the government. But some of them, in which assembled the fiercer and
+ more exalted sects of Independents, Anabaptists, Fifth-Monarchy men, and
+ other sectaries, whose stern enthusiasm had contributed so greatly to
+ effect the overthrow of the late King&rsquo;s throne, were sought after,
+ suppressed, and dispersed, whenever they could be discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was soon satisfied that the meeting into which he was thus secretly
+ introduced was one of the latter class; and, to judge by the violence of
+ the preacher, of the most desperate character. He was still more
+ effectually convinced of this, when, at a sign from Bridgenorth, he
+ cautiously unclosed a part of the curtain which hung before the gallery,
+ and thus, unseen himself, looked down on the audience, and obtained a view
+ of the preacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two hundred persons were assembled beneath, in an area filled up
+ with benches, as if for the exercise of worship; and they were all of the
+ male sex, and well armed with pikes and muskets, as well as swords and
+ pistols. Most of them had the appearance of veteran soldiers, now past the
+ middle of life, yet retaining such an appearance of strength as might well
+ supply the loss of youthful agility. They stood, or sat, in various
+ attitudes of stern attention; and, resting on their spears and muskets,
+ kept their eyes firmly fixed on the preacher, who ended the violence of
+ his declamation by displaying from the pulpit a banner, on which was
+ represented a lion, with the motto, &ldquo;<i>Vicit Leo ex tribu Judæ.</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The torrent of mystical yet animating eloquence of the preacher&mdash;an
+ old grey-haired man, whom zeal seemed to supply with the powers of voice
+ and action, of which years had deprived him&mdash;was suited to the taste
+ of his audience, but could not be transferred to these pages without
+ scandal and impropriety. He menaced the rulers of England with all the
+ judgments denounced on those of Moab and Assyria&mdash;he called upon the
+ saints to be strong, to be up and doing; and promised those miracles
+ which, in the campaigns of Joshua, and his successors, the valiant Judges
+ of Israel, supplied all odds against the Amorites, Midianites, and
+ Philistines. He sounded trumpets, opened vials, broke seals, and denounced
+ approaching judgments under all the mystical signs of the Apocalypse. The
+ end of the world was announced, accompanied with all its preliminary
+ terrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, with deep anxiety, soon heard enough to make him aware that the
+ meeting was likely to terminate in open insurrection, like that of the
+ Fifth-Monarchy men, under Venner, at an earlier period of Charles&rsquo;s reign;
+ and he was not a little concerned at the probability of Bridgenorth being
+ implicated in so criminal and desperate an undertaking. If he had retained
+ any doubts of the issue of the meeting, they must have been removed when
+ the preacher called on his hearers to renounce all expectation which had
+ hitherto been entertained of safety to the nation, from the execution of
+ the ordinary laws of the land. This, he said, was at best but a carnal
+ seeking after earthly aid&mdash;a going down to Egypt for help, which the
+ jealousy of their Divine Leader would resent as a fleeing to another rock,
+ and a different banner, from that which was this day displayed over them.&mdash;And
+ here he solemnly swung the bannered lion over their heads, as the only
+ sign under which they ought to seek for life and safety. He then proceeded
+ to insist, that recourse to ordinary justice was vain as well as sinful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The event of that day at Westminster,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;might teach them that
+ the man at Whitehall was even as the man his father;&rdquo; and closed a long
+ tirade against the vices of the Court, with assurance &ldquo;that Tophet was
+ ordained of old&mdash;for the King it was made hot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the preacher entered on a description of the approaching theocracy,
+ which he dared to prophesy, Bridgenorth, who appeared for a time to have
+ forgotten the presence of Julian, whilst with stern and fixed attention he
+ drunk in the words of the preacher, seemed suddenly to collect himself,
+ and, taking Julian by the hand, led him out of the gallery, of which he
+ carefully closed the door, into an apartment at no great distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they arrived there, he anticipated the expostulations of Julian, by
+ asking him, in a tone of severe triumph, whether these men he had seen
+ were likely to do their work negligently, or whether it would not be
+ perilous to attempt to force their way from a house, when all the avenues
+ were guarded by such as he had now seen&mdash;men of war from their
+ childhood upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of Heaven,&rdquo; said Julian, without replying to Bridgenorth&rsquo;s
+ question, &ldquo;for what desperate purpose have you assembled so many desperate
+ men? I am well aware that your sentiments of religion are peculiar; but
+ beware how you deceive yourself&mdash;No views of religion can sanction
+ rebellion and murder; and such are the natural and necessary consequences
+ of the doctrine we have just heard poured into the ears of fanatical and
+ violent enthusiasts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My son,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth calmly, &ldquo;in the days of my non-age, I thought
+ as you do. I deemed it sufficient to pay my tithes of cummin and aniseed&mdash;my
+ poor petty moral observances of the old law; and I thought I was heaping
+ up precious things, when they were in value no more than the husks of the
+ swine-trough. Praised be Heaven, the scales are fallen from mine eyes; and
+ after forty years&rsquo; wandering in the desert of Sinai, I am at length
+ arrived in the Land of Promise&mdash;My corrupt human nature has left me&mdash;I
+ have cast my slough, and can now with some conscience put my hand to the
+ plough, certain that there is no weakness left in me where-through I may
+ look back. The furrows,&rdquo; he added, bending his brows, while a gloomy fire
+ filled his large eyes, &ldquo;must be drawn long and deep, and watered by the
+ blood of the mighty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a change in Bridgenorth&rsquo;s tone and manner, when he used these
+ singular expressions, which convinced Julian that his mind, which had
+ wavered for so many years between his natural good sense and the insane
+ enthusiasm of the time, had finally given way to the latter; and, sensible
+ of the danger in which the unhappy man himself, the innocent and beautiful
+ Alice, and his own father, were likely to be placed&mdash;to say nothing
+ of the general risk of the community by a sudden insurrection, he at the
+ same time felt that there was no chance of reasoning effectually with one,
+ who would oppose spiritual conviction to all arguments which reason could
+ urge against his wild schemes. To touch his feeling seemed a more probable
+ resource; and Julian therefore conjured Bridgenorth to think how much his
+ daughter&rsquo;s honour and safety were concerned in his abstaining from the
+ dangerous course which he meditated. &ldquo;If you fall,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;must she not
+ pass under the power and guardianship of her uncle, whom you allow to have
+ shown himself capable of the grossest mistake in the choice of her female
+ protectress; and whom I believe, upon good grounds, to have made that
+ infamous choice with his eyes open?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young man,&rdquo; answered Bridgenorth, &ldquo;you make me feel like the poor bird,
+ around whose wing some wanton boy has fixed a line, to pull the struggling
+ wretch to earth at his pleasure. Know, since thou wilt play this cruel
+ part, and drag me down from higher contemplations, that she with whom
+ Alice is placed, and who hath in future full power to guide her motions,
+ and decide her fate, despite of Christian and every one else, is&mdash;I
+ will not tell thee who she is&mdash;Enough&mdash;no one&mdash;thou least
+ of all, needs to fear for her safety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a side-door opened, and Christian himself came into the
+ apartment. He started and coloured when he saw Julian Peveril; then
+ turning to Bridgenorth with an assumed air of indifference, asked, &ldquo;Is
+ Saul among the prophets?&mdash;Is a Peveril among the saints?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, brother,&rdquo; replied Bridgenorth, &ldquo;his time is not come more than thine
+ own&mdash;thou art too deep in the ambitious intrigues of manhood, and he
+ in the giddy passions of youth, to hear the still calm voice&mdash;You
+ will both hear it, as I trust and pray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Ganlesse, or Christian, or by whatever name you are called,&rdquo; said
+ Julian, &ldquo;by whatever reasons you guide yourself in this most perilous
+ matter, <i>you</i> at least are not influenced by any idea of an immediate
+ divine command for commencing hostilities against the state. Leaving,
+ therefore, for the present, whatever subjects of discussion may be between
+ us, I implore you, as a man of shrewdness and sense, to join with me in
+ dissuading Master Bridgenorth from the fatal enterprise which he now
+ meditates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Young gentleman,&rdquo; said Christian, with great composure, &ldquo;when we met in
+ the west, I was willing to have made a friend of you, but you rejected the
+ overture. You might, however, even then have seen enough of me to be
+ assured, that I am not likely to rush too rashly on any desperate
+ undertaking. As to this which lies before us, my brother Bridgenorth
+ brings to it the simplicity, though not the harmlessness of the dove, and
+ I the subtilty of the serpent. He hath the leading of saints who are moved
+ by the spirit; and I can add to their efforts a powerful body, who have
+ for their instigators the world, the devil, and the flesh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And can you,&rdquo; said Julian, looking at Bridgenorth, &ldquo;accede to such an
+ unworthy union?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I unite not with them,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;but I may not, without guilt,
+ reject the aid which Providence sends to assist His servants. We are
+ ourselves few, though determined&mdash;Those whose swords come to help the
+ cutting down of the harvest, must be welcome&mdash;When their work is
+ wrought, they will be converted or scattered.&mdash;Have you been at York
+ Place, brother, with that unstable epicure? We must have his last
+ resolution, and that within an hour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian looked at Julian, as if his presence prevented him from
+ returning an answer; upon which Bridgenorth arose, and taking the young
+ man by the arm, led him out of the apartment, into that in which they had
+ left his father; assuring him by the way, that determined and vigilant
+ guards were placed in every different quarter by which escape could be
+ effected, and that he would do well to persuade his father to remain a
+ quiet prisoner for a few hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian returned him no answer, and Bridgenorth presently retired, leaving
+ him alone with his father and Hudson. To their questions he could only
+ briefly reply, that he feared they were trepanned, since they were in the
+ house with at least two hundred fanatics, completely armed, and apparently
+ prepared for desperate enterprise. Their own want of arms precluded the
+ possibility of open violence; and however unpleasant it might be to remain
+ in such a condition, it seemed difficult, from the strength of the
+ fastenings at doors and windows, to attempt any secret escape without
+ instantaneous detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valiant dwarf alone nursed hopes, with which he in vain endeavoured to
+ inspire his companions in affliction. &ldquo;The fair one, whose eyes,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;were like the twin stars of Leda&rdquo;&mdash;for the little man was a great
+ admirer of lofty language&mdash;&ldquo;had not invited him, the most devoted,
+ and, it might be, not the least favoured of her servants, into this place
+ as a harbour, in order that he might therein suffer shipwreck; and he
+ generously assured his friends, that in his safety they also should be
+ safe.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, little cheered by this intimation, expressed his despair at
+ not being able to get the length of Whitehall, where he trusted to find as
+ many jolly Cavaliers as would help him to stifle the whole nest of wasps
+ in their hive; while Julian was of opinion that the best service he could
+ now render Bridgenorth, would be timeously to disclose his plot, and, if
+ possible, to send him at the same time warning to save his person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we must leave them to meditate over their plans at leisure; no one of
+ which, as they all depended on their previous escape from confinement,
+ seemed in any great chance of being executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And some for safety took the dreadful leap;
+ Some for the voice of Heaven seem&rsquo;d calling on them;
+ Some for advancement, or for lucre&rsquo;s sake&mdash;
+ I leap&rsquo;d in frolic.
+ &mdash;THE DREAM.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After a private conversation with Bridgenorth, Christian hastened to the
+ Duke of Buckingham&rsquo;s hotel, taking at the same time such a route as to
+ avoid meeting with any acquaintance. He was ushered into the apartment of
+ the Duke, whom he found cracking and eating filberts, with a flask of
+ excellent white wine at his elbow. &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; said his Grace, &ldquo;come help
+ me to laugh&mdash;I have bit Sir Charles Sedley&mdash;flung him for a
+ thousand, by the gods!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am glad at your luck, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; replied Christian; &ldquo;but I am come
+ here on serious business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Serious?&mdash;why, I shall hardly be serious in my life again&mdash;ha,
+ ha, ha!&mdash;and for luck, it was no such thing&mdash;sheer wit, and
+ excellent contrivance; and but that I don&rsquo;t care to affront Fortune, like
+ the old Greek general, I might tell her to her face&mdash;In this thou
+ hadst no share. You have heard, Ned Christian, that Mother Cresswell is
+ dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I did hear that the devil hath got his due,&rdquo; answered Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;you are ungrateful; for I know you have been
+ obliged to her, as well as others. Before George, a most benevolent and
+ helpful old lady; and that she might not sleep in an unblest grave, I
+ betted&mdash;do you mark me&mdash;with Sedley, that I would write her
+ funeral sermon; that it should be every word in praise of her life and
+ conversation, that it should be all true, and yet that the diocesan should
+ be unable to lay his thumb on Quodling, my little chaplain, who should
+ preach it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I perfectly see the difficulty, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian, who well knew
+ that if he wished to secure attention from this volatile nobleman, he must
+ first suffer, nay, encourage him, to exhaust the topic, whatever it might
+ be, that had got temporary possession of his pineal gland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;I had caused my little Quodling to go through his
+ oration thus&mdash;&lsquo;That whatever evil reports had passed current during
+ the lifetime of the worthy matron whom they had restored to dust that day,
+ malice herself could not deny that she was born well, married well, lived
+ well, and died well; since she was born in Shadwell, married to Cresswell,
+ lived in Camberwell, and died in Bridewell.&rsquo; Here ended the oration, and
+ with it Sedley&rsquo;s ambitious hopes of overreaching Buckingham&mdash;ha, ha,
+ ha!&mdash;And now, Master Christian, what are your commands for me
+ to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First, to thank your Grace for being so attentive as to send so
+ formidable a person as Colonel Blood, to wait upon your poor friend and
+ servant. Faith, he took such an interest in my leaving town, that he
+ wanted to compel me to do it at point of fox, so I was obliged to spill a
+ little of his malapert blood. Your Grace&rsquo;s swordsmen have had ill luck of
+ late; and it is hard, since you always choose the best hands, and such
+ scrupleless knaves too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come now, Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;do not thus exult over me; a great
+ man, if I may so call myself, is never greater than amid miscarriage. I
+ only played this little trick on you, Christian, to impress on you a
+ wholesome idea of the interest I take in your motions. The scoundrel&rsquo;s
+ having dared to draw upon you, is a thing not to be forgiven.&mdash;What!
+ injure my old friend Christian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why not,&rdquo; said Christian coolly, &ldquo;if your old friend was so stubborn
+ as not to go out of town, like a good boy, when your Grace required him to
+ do so, for the civil purpose of entertaining his niece in his absence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;what!&mdash;how do you mean by <i>my</i> entertaining your
+ niece, Master Christian?&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;She was a personage far beyond
+ my poor attentions, being destined, if I recollect aright, to something
+ like royal favour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was her fate, however, to be the guest of your Grace&rsquo;s convent for a
+ brace of days, or so. Marry, my lord, the father confessor was not at
+ home, and&mdash;for convents have been scaled of late&mdash;returned not
+ till the bird was flown.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christian, thou art an old reynard&mdash;I see there is no doubling with
+ thee. It was thou, then, that stole away my pretty prize, but left me
+ something so much prettier in my mind, that, had it not made itself wings
+ to fly away with, I would have placed it in a cage of gold. Never be
+ downcast, man; I forgive thee&mdash;I forgive thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace is of a most merciful disposition, especially considering it
+ is I who have had the wrong; and sages have said, that he who doth the
+ injury is less apt to forgive than he who only sustains it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, true, Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;which, as you say, is something
+ quite new, and places my clemency in a striking point of view. Well, then,
+ thou forgiven man, when shall I see my Mauritanian Princess again?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherever I am certain that a quibble, and a carwhichit, for a play or a
+ sermon, will not banish her from your Grace&rsquo;s memory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not all the wit of South, or of Etherege,&rdquo; said Buckingham hastily, &ldquo;to
+ say nothing of my own, shall in future make me oblivious of what I owe the
+ Morisco Princess.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet, to leave the fair lady out of thought for a little while&mdash;a
+ very little while,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;since I swear that in due time your
+ Grace shall see her, and know in her the most extraordinary woman that the
+ age has produced&mdash;to leave her, I say out of sight for a little
+ while, has your Grace had late notice of your Duchess&rsquo;s health?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Health,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Umph&mdash;no&mdash;nothing particular. She has
+ been ill&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is no longer so,&rdquo; subjoined Christian; &ldquo;she died in Yorkshire
+ forty-eight hours since.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou must deal with the devil,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would ill become one of my name to do so,&rdquo; replied Christian. &ldquo;But in
+ the brief interval, since your Grace hath known of an event which hath not
+ yet reached the public ear, you have, I believe, made proposals to the
+ King for the hand of the Lady Anne, second daughter of the Duke of York,
+ and your Grace&rsquo;s proposals have been rejected.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fiends and firebrands, villain!&rdquo; said the Duke, starting up and seizing
+ Christian by the collar; &ldquo;who hath told thee that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take your hand from my cloak, my Lord Duke, and I may answer you,&rdquo; said
+ Christian. &ldquo;I have a scurvy touch of old puritanical humour about me. I
+ abide not the imposition of hands&mdash;take off your grasp from my cloak,
+ or I will find means to make you unloose it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, who had kept his right hand on his dagger-hilt while he held
+ Christian&rsquo;s collar with his left, unloosed it as he spoke, but slowly, and
+ as one who rather suspends than abandons the execution of some hasty
+ impulse; while Christian, adjusting his cloak with perfect composure,
+ said, &ldquo;Soh&mdash;my cloak being at liberty, we speak on equal terms. I
+ come not to insult your Grace, but to offer you vengeance for the insult
+ you have received.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vengeance!&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;It is the dearest proffer man can
+ present to me in my present mood. I hunger for vengeance&mdash;thirst for
+ vengeance&mdash;could die to ensure vengeance!&mdash;-&rsquo;Sdeath!&rdquo; he
+ continued, walking up and down the large apartment with the most
+ unrestrained and violent agitation; &ldquo;I have chased this repulse out of my
+ brain with ten thousand trifles, because I thought no one knew it. But it
+ is known, and to thee, the very common-sewer of Court-secrets&mdash;the
+ honour of Villiers is in thy keeping, Ned Christian! Speak, thou man of
+ wiles and of intrigue&mdash;on whom dost thou promise the vengeance?
+ Speak! and if thy answers meet my desires, I will make a bargain with thee
+ as willingly as with thy master, Satan himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will not be,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;so unreasonable in my terms as stories
+ tell of the old apostate; I will offer your Grace, as he might do,
+ temporal prosperity and revenge, which is his frequent recruiting money,
+ but I leave it to yourself to provide, as you may be pleased, for your
+ future salvation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, gazing upon him fixedly and sadly, replied, &ldquo;I would to God,
+ Christian, that I could read what purpose of damnable villainy thou hast
+ to propose to me in thy countenance, without the necessity of thy using
+ words!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace can but try a guess,&rdquo; said Christian, calmly smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the Duke, after gazing at him again for the space of a
+ minute; &ldquo;thou art so deeply dyed a hypocrite, that thy mean features, and
+ clear grey eye, are as likely to conceal treason, as any petty scheme of
+ theft or larceny more corresponding to your degree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason, my lord!&rdquo; echoed Christian; &ldquo;you may have guessed more nearly
+ than you were aware of. I honour your Grace&rsquo;s penetration.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason?&rdquo; echoed the Duke. &ldquo;Who dare name such a crime to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If a name startles your Grace, you may call it vengeance&mdash;vengeance
+ on the cabal of councillors, who have ever countermined you, in spite of
+ your wit and your interest with the King.&mdash;Vengeance on Arlington,
+ Ormond&mdash;on Charles himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, by Heaven,&rdquo; said the Duke, resuming his disordered walk through the
+ apartment&mdash;&ldquo;Vengeance on these rats of the Privy Council,&mdash;come
+ at it as you will. But the King!&mdash;never&mdash;never. I have provoked
+ him a hundred times, where he has stirred me once. I have crossed his path
+ in state intrigue&mdash;rivalled him in love&mdash;had the advantage in
+ both,&mdash;and, d&mdash;n it, he has forgiven me! If treason would put me
+ in his throne, I have no apology for it&mdash;it were worse than bestial
+ ingratitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nobly spoken, my lord,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and consistent alike with the
+ obligations under which your Grace lies to Charles Stewart, and the sense
+ you have ever shown of them.&mdash;But it signifies not. If your Grace
+ patronise not our enterprise, there is Shaftesbury&mdash;there is Monmouth&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Scoundrel!&rdquo; exclaimed the Duke, even more vehemently agitated than
+ before, &ldquo;think you that you shall carry on with others an enterprise which
+ I have refused?&mdash;No, by every heathen and every Christian god!&mdash;Hark
+ ye, Christian, I will arrest you on the spot&mdash;I will, by gods and
+ devils, and carry you to unravel your plot at Whitehall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where the first words I speak,&rdquo; answered the imperturbable Christian,
+ &ldquo;will be to inform the Privy Council in what place they may find certain
+ letters, wherewith your Grace has honoured your poor vassal, containing,
+ as I think, particulars which his Majesty will read with more surprise
+ than pleasure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Sdeath, villain!&rdquo; said the Duke, once more laying his hand on his
+ poniard-hilt, &ldquo;thou hast me again at advantage. I know not why I forbear
+ to poniard you where you stand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might fall, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, slightly colouring, and
+ putting his right hand into his bosom, &ldquo;though not, I think, unavenged&mdash;for
+ I have not put my person into this peril altogether without means of
+ defence. I might fall, but, alas! your Grace&rsquo;s correspondence is in hands,
+ which, by that very act, would be rendered sufficiently active in handing
+ them to the King and the Privy Council. What say you to the Moorish
+ Princess, my Lord Duke? What if I have left her executrix of my will, with
+ certain instructions how to proceed if I return not unharmed from York
+ Place? Oh, my lord, though my head is in the wolf&rsquo;s mouth, I was not goose
+ enough to place it there without settling how many carabines should be
+ fired on the wolf, so soon as my dying cackle was heard.&mdash;Pshaw, my
+ Lord Duke! you deal with a man of sense and courage, yet you speak to him
+ as a child and a coward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke threw himself into a chair, fixed his eyes on the ground, and
+ spoke without raising them. &ldquo;I am about to call Jerningham,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;but
+ fear nothing&mdash;it is only for a draught of wine&mdash;That stuff on
+ the table may be a vehicle of filberts, and walnuts, but not for such
+ communications as yours.&mdash;Bring me champagne,&rdquo; he said to the
+ attendant who answered to his summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic returned, and brought a flask of champagne, with two large
+ silver cups. One of them he filled for Buckingham, who, contrary to the
+ usual etiquette, was always served first at home, and then offered the
+ other to Christian, who declined to receive it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke drank off the large goblet which was presented to him, and for a
+ moment covered his forehead with the palm of his hand; then instantly
+ withdrew it, and said, &ldquo;Christian, speak your errand plainly. We know each
+ other. If my reputation be in some degree in your hands, you are well
+ aware that your life is in mine. Sit down,&rdquo; he said, taking a pistol from
+ his bosom and laying it on the table&mdash;&ldquo;Sit down, and let me hear your
+ proposal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said Christian, smiling, &ldquo;I shall produce no such ultimate
+ argument on my part, though possibly, in time of need, I may not be found
+ destitute of them. But my defence is in the situation of things, and in
+ the composed view which, doubtless, your Majesty will take of them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Majesty!&rdquo; repeated the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;My good friend Christian, you have
+ kept company with the Puritans so long, that you confuse the ordinary
+ titles of the Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not how to apologise,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;unless your Grace will
+ suppose that I spoke by prophecy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such as the devil delivered to Macbeth,&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;again paced
+ the chamber, and again seated himself, and said, &ldquo;Be plain, Christian&mdash;speak
+ out at once, and manfully, what is it you intend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i>,&rdquo; said Christian&mdash;&ldquo;What should I do?&mdash;I can do nothing
+ in such a matter; but I thought it right that your Grace should know that
+ the godly of this city&rdquo;&mdash;(he spoke the word with a kind of ironical
+ grin)&mdash;&ldquo;are impatient of inactivity, and must needs be up and doing.
+ My brother Bridgenorth is at the head of all old Weiver&rsquo;s congregation;
+ for you must know, that, after floundering from one faith to another, he
+ hath now got beyond ordinances, and is become a Fifth-Monarchy man. He has
+ nigh two hundred of Weiver&rsquo;s people, fully equipped, and ready to fall on;
+ and, with slight aid from your Grace&rsquo;s people, they must carry Whitehall,
+ and make prisoners of all within it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rascal!&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;and is it to a Peer of England you make this
+ communication?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Christian, &ldquo;I admit it would be extreme folly in your
+ Grace to appear until all is over. But let me give Blood and the others a
+ hint on your part. There are the four Germans also&mdash;right
+ Knipperdolings and Anabaptists&mdash;will be specially useful. You are
+ wise, my lord, and know the value of a corps of domestic gladiators, as
+ well as did Octavius, Lepidus, and Anthony, when, by such family forces,
+ they divided the world by indenture tripartite.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, stay,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Even if these bloodhounds were to join with
+ you&mdash;not that I would permit it without the most positive assurances
+ for the King&rsquo;s personal safety&mdash;but say the villains were to join,
+ what hope have you of carrying the Court?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bully Tom Armstrong,[*] my lord, hath promised his interest with the Life
+ Guards. Then there are my Lord Shaftesbury&rsquo;s brisk boys in the city&mdash;thirty
+ thousand on the holding up a finger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Thomas, or Sir Thomas Armstrong, a person who had distinguished
+ himself in youth by duels and drunken exploits. He was
+ particularly connected with the Duke of Monmouth, and was said to
+ be concerned in the Rye-House Plot, for which he suffered capital
+ punishment, 20th June 1684.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let him hold up both hands, and if he count a hundred for each finger,&rdquo;
+ said the Duke, &ldquo;it will be more than I expect. You have not spoken to
+ him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely not till your Grace&rsquo;s pleasure was known. But, if he is not
+ applied to, there is the Dutch train, Hans Snorehout&rsquo;s congregation, in
+ the Strand&mdash;there are the French Protestants in Piccadilly&mdash;there
+ are the family of Levi in Lewkenor&rsquo;s Lane&mdash;the Muggletonians in
+ Thames Street&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, faugh!&mdash;Out upon them&mdash;out upon them!&mdash;How the knaves
+ will stink of cheese and tobacco when they come upon action!&mdash;they
+ will drown all the perfumes in Whitehall. Spare me the detail; and let me
+ know, my dearest Ned, the sum total of thy most odoriferous forces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fifteen hundred men, well armed,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;besides the rabble
+ that will rise to a certainty&mdash;they have already nearly torn to
+ pieces the prisoners who were this day acquitted on account of the Plot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All, then, I understand.&mdash;And now, hark ye, most Christian
+ Christian,&rdquo; said he, wheeling his chair full in front of that on which his
+ agent was seated, &ldquo;you have told me many things to-day&mdash;Shall I be
+ equally communicative? Shall I show you that my accuracy of information
+ matches yours? Shall I tell you, in a word, why you have at once resolved
+ to push every one, from the Puritan to the free-thinker, upon a general
+ attack of the Palace of Whitehall, without allowing me, a peer of the
+ realm, time either to pause upon or to prepare for a step so desperate?
+ Shall I tell you why you would lead or drive, seduce or compel me, into
+ countenancing your measures?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord, if you please to form a guess,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;I will answer
+ with all sincerity, if you have assigned the right cause.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Countess of Derby is this day arrived, and attends the Court this
+ evening, with hopes of the kindest reception. She may be surprised amid
+ the mêlée?&mdash;Ha! said I not right, Master Christian? You, who pretend
+ to offer me revenge, know yourself its exquisite sweetness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would not presume,&rdquo; said Christian, half smiling, &ldquo;to offer your Grace
+ a dish without acting as your taster as well as purveyor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s honestly said,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Away then, my friend. Give Blood
+ this ring&mdash;he knows it, and knows how to obey him who bears it. Let
+ him assemble my gladiators, as thou dost most wittily term my <i>coup
+ jarrets</i>. The old scheme of the German music may be resorted to, for I
+ think thou hast the instruments ready. But take notice, I know nothing
+ on&rsquo;t; and Rowley&rsquo;s person must be safe&mdash;I will hang and burn on all
+ hands if a hair of his black periwig[*] be but singed.&mdash;Then what is
+ to follow&mdash;a Lord Protector of the realm&mdash;or stay&mdash;Cromwell
+ has made the word somewhat slovenly and unpopular&mdash;a Lord Lieutenant
+ of the Kingdom?&mdash;The patriots who take it on themselves to avenge the
+ injustice done to the country, and to remove evil counsellors from before
+ the King&rsquo;s throne, that it may be henceforward established in
+ righteousness&mdash;so I think the rubric runs&mdash;cannot fail to make a
+ fitting choice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Charles, to suit his dark complexion, always wore a black peruke.
+ He used to say of the players, that if they wished to represent a
+ villain on the stage, &ldquo;Oddsfish, they always clapp&rsquo;d on him a
+ black periwig, whereas the greatest rogue in England [meaning,
+ probably, Dr. Oates] wears a white one.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>See CIBBER&rsquo;s Apology</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They cannot, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;since there is but one man
+ in the three kingdoms on whom that choice can possibly fall.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thank you Christian,&rdquo; said his Grace; &ldquo;and I trust you. Away, and make
+ all ready. Be assured your services shall not be forgot. We will have you
+ near to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;you bind me doubly to you. But remember
+ that as your Grace is spared any obnoxious proceedings which may befall in
+ the way of military execution, or otherwise, so it will be advisable that
+ you hold yourself in preparation, upon a moment&rsquo;s notice, to put yourself
+ at the head of a band of honourable friends and allies, and come presently
+ to the palace, where you will be received by the victors as a commander,
+ and by the vanquished as a preserver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I conceive you&mdash;I conceive you. I will be in prompt readiness,&rdquo; said
+ the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, my lord,&rdquo; continued Christian; &ldquo;and for Heaven&rsquo;s sake, let none of
+ those toys, which are the very Delilahs of your imagination, come across
+ your Grace this evening, and interfere with the execution of this sublime
+ scheme.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Christian, dost think me mad?&rdquo; was his Grace&rsquo;s emphatic reply. &ldquo;It
+ is you who linger, when all should be ordered for a deed so daring. Go
+ then.&mdash;But hark ye, Ned; ere you go, tell me when I shall again see
+ yonder thing of fire and air&mdash;yon Eastern Peri, that glides into
+ apartments by the keyhole, and leaves them through the casement&mdash;yon
+ black-eyed houri of the Mahometan paradise&mdash;when, I say, shall I see
+ her once more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When your Grace has the truncheon of Lord Lieutenant of the Kingdom,&rdquo;
+ said Christian, and left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham stood fixed in contemplation for a moment after he was gone.
+ &ldquo;Should I have done this?&rdquo; he said, arguing the matter with himself; &ldquo;or
+ had I the choice rather of doing aught else? Should I not hasten to the
+ Court, and make Charles aware of the treason which besets him? I will, by
+ Heaven?&mdash;Here, Jerningham, my coach, with the despatch of light!&mdash;I
+ will throw myself at his feet, and tell him of all the follies which I
+ have dreamed of with this Christian.&mdash;And then he will laugh at me,
+ and spurn me.&mdash;No, I have kneeled to him to-day already, and my
+ repulse was nothing gentle. To be spurned once in the sun&rsquo;s daily round is
+ enough for Buckingham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having made this reflection, he seated himself, and began hastily to mark
+ down the young nobles and gentlemen of quality, and others, their very
+ ignoble companions, who he supposed might be likely to assume him for
+ their leader in any popular disturbance. He had nearly completed it, when
+ Jerningham entered, to say the coach would be ready in an instant, and to
+ bring his master&rsquo;s sword, hat, and cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let the coachman draw off,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;but be in readiness. And send
+ to the gentlemen thou wilt find named in this list; say I am but ill at
+ ease, and wish their company to a light collation. Let instant expedition
+ be made, and care not for expense; you will find most of them at the Club
+ House in Fuller&rsquo;s Rents.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The place of meeting of the Green Ribbon Club. &ldquo;Their place of
+ meeting,&rdquo; says Roger North, &ldquo;was in a sort of Carrefour at
+ Chancery Lance, in a centre of business and company most proper
+ for such anglers of fools. The house was double balconied in
+ front, as may yet be seen, for the clubbers to issue forth <i>in
+ fresco</i>, with hats and no perukes, pipes in their mouths, merry
+ faces, and dilated throats for vocal encouragement of the
+ canaglia below on usual and unusual occasions.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The preparations for festivity were speedily made, and the intended
+ guests, most of them persons who were at leisure for any call that
+ promised pleasure, though sometimes more deaf to those of duty, began
+ speedily to assemble. There were many youths of the highest rank, and with
+ them, as is usual in those circles, many of a different class, whom
+ talents, or impudence, or wit, or a turn for gambling, had reared up into
+ companions for the great and the gay. The Duke of Buckingham was a general
+ patron of persons of this description; and a numerous attendance took
+ place on the present occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The festivity was pursued with the usual appliances of wine, music, and
+ games of hazard; with which, however, there mingled in that period much
+ more wit, and a good deal more gross profligacy of conversation, than the
+ talents of the present generation can supply, or their taste would permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke himself proved the complete command which he possessed over his
+ versatile character, by maintaining the frolic, the laugh, and the jest,
+ while his ear caught up, and with eagerness, the most distant sounds, as
+ intimating the commencement of Christian&rsquo;s revolutionary project. Such
+ sounds were heard from time to time, and from time to time they died away,
+ without any of those consequences which Buckingham expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, and when it was late in the evening, Jerningham announced
+ Master Chiffinch from the Court; and that worthy personage followed the
+ annunciation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Strange things have happened, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;your presence at
+ Court is instantly required by his Majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You alarm me,&rdquo; said Buckingham, standing up. &ldquo;I hope nothing has happened&mdash;I
+ hope there is nothing wrong&mdash;I hope his Majesty is well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perfectly well,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; &ldquo;and desirous to see your Grace without
+ a moment&rsquo;s delay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is sudden,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;You see I have had merry fellows about
+ me, and am scarce in case to appear, Chiffinch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace seems to be in very handsome plight,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; &ldquo;and you
+ know his Majesty is gracious enough to make allowances.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said the Duke, not a little anxious in his mind, touching the
+ cause of this unexpected summons&mdash;&ldquo;True&mdash;his Majesty is most
+ gracious&mdash;I will order my coach.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine is below,&rdquo; replied the royal messenger; &ldquo;it will save time, if your
+ Grace will condescend to use it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forced from every evasion, Buckingham took a goblet from the table, and
+ requested his friends to remain at his palace so long as they could find
+ the means of amusement there. He expected, he said, to return almost
+ immediately; if not, he would take farewell of them with his usual toast,
+ &ldquo;May all of us that are not hanged in the interval, meet together again
+ here on the first Monday of next month.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This standing toast of the Duke bore reference to the character of several
+ of his guests; but he did not drink it on the present occasion without
+ some anticipation concerning his own fate, in case Christian had betrayed
+ him. He hastily made some addition to his dress, and attended Chiffinch in
+ the chariot to Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ High feasting was there there&mdash;the gilded roofs
+ Rung to the wassail-health&mdash;the dancer&rsquo;s step
+ Sprung to the chord responsive&mdash;the gay gamester
+ To fate&rsquo;s disposal flung his heap of gold,
+ And laugh&rsquo;d alike when it increased or lessen&rsquo;d:
+ Such virtue hath court-air to teach us patience
+ Which schoolmen preach in vain.
+ &mdash;WHY COME YE NOT TO COURT?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Upon the afternoon of this eventful day, Charles held his Court in the
+ Queen&rsquo;s apartments, which were opened at a particular hour to invited
+ guests of a certain lower degree, but accessible without restriction to
+ the higher classes of nobility who had from birth, and to the courtiers
+ who held by office the privilege of the <i>entrée</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was one part of Charles&rsquo;s character, which unquestionably rendered him
+ personally popular, and postponed to a subsequent reign the precipitation
+ of his family from the throne, that he banished from his Court many of the
+ formal restrictions with which it was in other reigns surrounded. He was
+ conscious of the good-natured grace of his manners, and trusted to it,
+ often not in vain, to remove evil impressions arising from actions, which
+ he was sensible could not be justified on the grounds of liberal or
+ national policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the daytime the King was commonly seen in the public walks alone, or
+ only attended by one or two persons; and his answer to the remonstrance of
+ his brother, on the risk of thus exposing his person, is well known:&mdash;&ldquo;Believe
+ me, James,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;no one will murder <i>me</i>, to make <i>you</i>
+ King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same manner, Charles&rsquo;s evenings, unless such as were destined to
+ more secret pleasures, were frequently spent amongst all who had any
+ pretence to approach a courtly circle; and thus it was upon the night
+ which we are treating of. Queen Catherine, reconciled or humbled to her
+ fate, had long ceased to express any feelings of jealousy, nay, seemed so
+ absolutely dead to such a passion, that she received at her drawing-room,
+ without scruple, and even with encouragement, the Duchesses of Portsmouth
+ and Cleveland, and others, who enjoyed, though in a less avowed character,
+ the credit of having been royal favourites. Constraint of every kind was
+ banished from a circle so composed, and which was frequented at the same
+ time, if not by the wisest, at least by the wittiest courtiers, who ever
+ assembled round a monarch, and who, as many of them had shared the wants,
+ and shifts, and frolics of his exile, had then acquired a sort of
+ prescriptive licence, which the good-natured prince, when he attained his
+ period of prosperity, could hardly have restrained had it suited his
+ temper to do so. This, however, was the least of Charles&rsquo;s thoughts. His
+ manners were such as secured him from indelicate obtrusion; and he sought
+ no other protection from over-familiarity, than what these and his ready
+ wit afforded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the present occasion, he was peculiarly disposed to enjoy the scene of
+ pleasure which had been prepared. The singular death of Major Coleby,
+ which, taking place in his own presence, had proclaimed, with the voice of
+ a passing bell, the ungrateful neglect of the Prince for whom he had
+ sacrificed everything, had given Charles much pain. But, in his own
+ opinion at least, he had completely atoned for this negligence by the
+ trouble which he had taken for Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son, whose
+ liberation he looked upon not only as an excellent good deed in itself,
+ but, in spite of the grave rebuke of Ormond, as achieved in a very
+ pardonable manner, considering the difficulties with which he was
+ surrounded. He even felt a degree of satisfaction on receiving
+ intelligence from the city that there had been disturbances in the
+ streets, and that some of the more violent fanatics had betaken themselves
+ to their meeting-houses, upon sudden summons, to inquire, as their
+ preachers phrased it, into the causes of Heaven&rsquo;s wrath, and into the
+ backsliding of the Court, lawyers, and jury, by whom the false and bloody
+ favourers of the Popish Plot were screened and cloaked from deserved
+ punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, we repeat, seemed to hear these accounts with pleasure, even
+ when he was reminded of the dangerous and susceptible character of those
+ with whom such suspicions originated. &ldquo;Will any one now assert,&rdquo; he said,
+ with self-complacence, &ldquo;that I am so utterly negligent of the interest of
+ friends?&mdash;You see the peril in which I place myself, and even the
+ risk to which I have exposed the public peace, to rescue a man whom I have
+ scarce seen for twenty years, and then only in his buff-coat and
+ bandoleers, with other Train-Band officers who kissed hands upon the
+ Restoration. They say Kings have long hands&mdash;I think they have as
+ much occasion for long memories, since they are expected to watch over and
+ reward every man in England, who hath but shown his goodwill by crying
+ &lsquo;God save the King!&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, the rogues are even more unreasonable still,&rdquo; said Sedley; &ldquo;for
+ every knave of them thinks himself entitled to your Majesty&rsquo;s protection
+ in a good cause, whether he has cried God save the King or no.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King smiled, and turned to another part of the stately hall, where
+ everything was assembled which could, according to the taste of the age,
+ make the time glide pleasantly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one place, a group of the young nobility, and of the ladies of the
+ Court, listened to the reader&rsquo;s acquaintance Empson, who was accompanying
+ with his unrivalled breathings on the flute, a young siren, who, while her
+ bosom palpitated with pride and with fear, warbled to the courtly and
+ august presence the beautiful air beginning&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Young I am, and yet unskill&rsquo;d,
+ How to make a lover yield,&rdquo; &amp;c.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ She performed her task in a manner so corresponding with the strains of
+ the amatory poet, and the voluptuous air with which the words had been
+ invested by the celebrated Purcel, that the men crowded around in
+ ecstasies, while most of the ladies thought it proper either to look
+ extremely indifferent to the words she sung, or to withdraw from the
+ circle as quietly as possible. To the song succeeded a concerto, performed
+ by a select band of most admirable musicians, which the King, whose taste
+ was indisputable, had himself selected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At other tables in the apartment, the elder courtiers worshipped Fortune,
+ at the various fashionable games of ombre, quadrille, hazard, and the
+ like; while heaps of gold which lay before the players, augmented or
+ dwindled with every turn of a card or cast of a die. Many a year&rsquo;s rent of
+ fair estates was ventured upon the main or the odds; which, spent in the
+ old deserted manor-house, had repaired the ravages of Cromwell upon its
+ walls, and replaced the sources of good housekeeping and hospitality,
+ that, exhausted in the last age by fine and sequestration, were now in a
+ fair way of being annihilated by careless prodigality. Elsewhere, under
+ cover of observing the gamester, or listening to the music, the
+ gallantries of that all-licensed age were practised among the gay and
+ fair, closely watched the whilst by the ugly or the old, who promised
+ themselves at least the pleasure of observing, and it may be that of
+ proclaiming, intrigues in which they could not be sharers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From one table to another glided the merry Monarch, exchanging now a
+ glance with a Court beauty, now a jest with a Court wit, now beating time
+ to the music, and anon losing or winning a few pieces of gold on the
+ chance of the game to which he stood nearest;&mdash;the most amiable of
+ voluptuaries&mdash;the gayest and best-natured of companions&mdash;the man
+ that would, of all others, have best sustained his character, had life
+ been a continued banquet, and its only end to enjoy the passing hour, and
+ send it away as pleasantly as might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kings are least of all exempted from the ordinary lot of humanity; and
+ Seged of Ethiopia is, amongst monarchs, no solitary example of the vanity
+ of reckoning on a day or an hour of undisturbed serenity. An attendant on
+ the Court announced suddenly to their Majesties that a lady, who would
+ only announce herself as a Peeress of England, desired to be admitted into
+ the presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen said, hastily, it was <i>impossible</i>. No peeress, without
+ announcing her title, was entitled to the privilege of her rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could be sworn,&rdquo; said a nobleman in attendance, &ldquo;that it is some whim
+ of the Duchess of Newcastle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attendant who brought the message, said that he did indeed believe it
+ to be the Duchess, both from the singularity of the message, and that the
+ lady spoke with somewhat a foreign accent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of madness, then,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;let us admit her. Her
+ Grace is an entire raree-show in her own person&mdash;a universal
+ masquerade&mdash;indeed a sort of private Bedlam-hospital, her whole ideas
+ being like so many patients crazed upon the subjects of love and
+ literature, who act nothing in their vagaries, save Minerva, Venus, and
+ the nine Muses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty&rsquo;s pleasure must always supersede mine,&rdquo; said the Queen. &ldquo;I
+ only hope I shall not be expected to entertain so fantastic a personage.
+ The last time she came to Court, Isabella&rdquo;&mdash;(she spoke to one of her
+ Portuguese ladies of honour)&mdash;&ldquo;you had not returned from our lovely
+ Lisbon!&mdash;her Grace had the assurance to assume a right to bring a
+ train-bearer into my apartment; and when this was not allowed, what then,
+ think you, she did?&mdash;even caused her train to be made so long, that
+ three mortal yards of satin and silver remained in the antechamber,
+ supported by four wenches, while the other end was attached to her Grace&rsquo;s
+ person, as she paid her duty at the upper end of the presence-room. Full
+ thirty yards of the most beautiful silk did her Grace&rsquo;s madness employ in
+ this manner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And most beautiful damsels they were who bore this portentous train,&rdquo;
+ said the King&mdash;&ldquo;a train never equalled save by that of the great
+ comet in sixty-six. Sedley and Etherege told us wonders of them; for it is
+ one advantage of this new fashion brought up by the Duchess, that a matron
+ may be totally unconscious of the coquetry of her train and its
+ attendants.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I to understand, then, your Majesty&rsquo;s pleasure is, that the lady is to
+ be admitted?&rdquo; said the usher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;that is, if the incognita be really entitled
+ to the honour.&mdash;It may be as well to inquire her title&mdash;there
+ are more madwomen abroad than the Duchess of Newcastle. I will walk into
+ the anteroom myself, and receive your answer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere Charles had reached the lower end of the apartment in his progress
+ to the anteroom, the usher surprised the assembly by announcing a name
+ which had not for many a year been heard in these courtly halls&mdash;&ldquo;the
+ Countess of Derby!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stately and tall, and still, at an advanced period of life, having a
+ person unbroken by years, the noble lady advanced towards her Sovereign,
+ with a step resembling that with which she might have met an equal. There
+ was indeed nothing in her manner that indicated either haughtiness or
+ assumption unbecoming that presence; but her consciousness of wrongs,
+ sustained from the administration of Charles, and of the superiority of
+ the injured party over those from whom, or in whose name, the injury had
+ been offered, gave her look dignity, and her step firmness. She was
+ dressed in widow&rsquo;s weeds, of the same fashion which were worn at the time
+ her husband was brought to the scaffold; and which, in the thirty years
+ subsequent to that event, she had never permitted her tirewoman to alter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surprise was no pleasing one to the King; and cursing in his heart the
+ rashness which had allowed the lady entrance on the gay scene in which
+ they were engaged, he saw at the same time the necessity of receiving her
+ in a manner suitable to his own character, and her rank in the British
+ Court. He approached her with an air of welcome, into which he threw all
+ his natural grace, while he began, &ldquo;<i>Chère Comtesse de Derby, puissante
+ Reine de Man, notre très auguste soeur&mdash;&mdash;</i>&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak English, sire, if I may presume to ask such a favour,&rdquo; said the
+ Countess. &ldquo;I am a Peeress of this nation&mdash;mother to one English Earl,
+ and widow, alas, to another! In England I have spent my brief days of
+ happiness, my long years of widowhood and sorrow. France and its language
+ are but to me the dreams of an uninteresting childhood. I know no tongue
+ save that of my husband and my son. Permit me, as the widow and mother of
+ Derby, thus to render my homage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would have kneeled, but the King gracefully prevented her, and,
+ saluting her cheek, according to the form, led her towards the Queen, and
+ himself performed the ceremony of introduction. &ldquo;Your Majesty,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;must be informed that the Countess has imposed a restriction on French&mdash;the
+ language of gallantry and compliment. I trust your Majesty will, though a
+ foreigner, like herself, find enough of honest English to assure the
+ Countess of Derby with what pleasure we see her at Court, after the
+ absence of so many years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will endeavour to do so, at least,&rdquo; said the Queen, on whom the
+ appearance of the Countess of Derby made a more favourable impression than
+ that of many strangers, whom, at the King&rsquo;s request, she was in the habit
+ of receiving with courtesy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles himself again spoke. &ldquo;To any other lady of the same rank I might
+ put the question, why she was so long absent from the circle? I fear I can
+ only ask the Countess of Derby, what fortunate cause produces the pleasure
+ of seeing her here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No fortunate cause, my liege, though one most strong and urgent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King augured nothing agreeable from this commencement; and in truth,
+ from the Countess&rsquo;s first entrance, he had anticipated some unpleasant
+ explanation, which he therefore hastened to parry, having first composed
+ his features into an expression of sympathy and interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the cause is of a nature in which we can render
+ assistance, we cannot expect your ladyship should enter upon it at the
+ present time; but a memorial addressed to our secretary, or, if it is more
+ satisfactory, to ourselves directly, will receive our immediate, and I
+ trust I need not add, our favourable construction.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess bowed with some state, and answered, &ldquo;My business, sire, is
+ indeed important; but so brief, that it need not for more than a few
+ minutes withdraw your ear from what is more pleasing;&mdash;yet it is so
+ urgent, that I am afraid to postpone it even for a moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is unusual,&rdquo; said Charles. &ldquo;But you, Countess of Derby, are an
+ unwonted guest, and must command my time. Does the matter require my
+ private ear?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;the whole Court might listen; but you
+ Majesty may prefer hearing me in the presence of one or two of your
+ counsellors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ormond,&rdquo; said the King, looking around, &ldquo;attend us for an instant&mdash;and
+ do you, Arlington, do the same.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King led the way into an adjoining cabinet, and, seating himself,
+ requested the Countess would also take a chair. &ldquo;It needs not, sire,&rdquo; she
+ replied; then pausing for a moment, as if to collect her spirits, she
+ proceeded with firmness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty well said that no light cause had drawn me from my lonely
+ habitation. I came not hither when the property of my son&mdash;that
+ property which descended to him from a father who died for your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ rights&mdash;was conjured away from him under pretext of justice, that it
+ might first feed the avarice of the rebel Fairfax, and then supply the
+ prodigality of his son-in-law, Buckingham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These are over harsh terms, lady,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;A legal penalty was,
+ as we remember, incurred by an act of irregular violence&mdash;so our
+ courts and our laws term it, though personally I have no objection to call
+ it, with you, an honourable revenge. But admit it were such, in
+ prosecution of the laws of honour, bitter legal consequences are often
+ necessarily incurred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I come not to argue for my son&rsquo;s wasted and forfeited inheritance, sire,&rdquo;
+ said the Countess; &ldquo;I only take credit for my patience, under that
+ afflicting dispensation. I now come to redeem the honour of the House of
+ Derby, more dear to me than all the treasures and lands which ever
+ belonged to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And by whom is the honour of the House of Derby impeached?&rdquo; said the
+ King; &ldquo;for on my word you bring me the first news of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has there one Narrative, as these wild fictions are termed, been printed
+ with regard to the Popish Plot&mdash;this pretended Plot as I will call it&mdash;in
+ which the honour of our house has not been touched and tainted? And are
+ there not two noble gentlemen, father and son, allies of the House of
+ Stanley, about to be placed in jeopardy of their lives, on account of
+ matters in which we are the parties first impeached?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked around, and smiled to Arlington and Ormond. &ldquo;The
+ Countess&rsquo;s courage, methinks, shames ours. What lips dared have called the
+ immaculate Plot <i>pretended</i>, or the Narrative of the witnesses, our
+ preservers from Popish knives, a wild fiction?&mdash;But, madam,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;though I admire the generosity of your interference in behalf of the two
+ Peverils, I must acquaint you, that your interference is unnecessary&mdash;they
+ are this morning acquitted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now may God be praised!&rdquo; said the Countess, folding her hands. &ldquo;I have
+ scarce slept since I heard the news of their impeachment; and have arrived
+ here to surrender myself to your Majesty&rsquo;s justice, or to the prejudices
+ of the nation, in hopes, by so doing, I might at least save the lives of
+ my noble and generous friends, enveloped in suspicion only, or chiefly, by
+ their connection with us.&mdash;Are they indeed acquitted?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They are, by my honour,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;I marvel you heard it not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I arrived but last night, and remained in the strictest seclusion,&rdquo; said
+ the Countess, &ldquo;afraid to make any inquiries that might occasion discovery
+ ere I saw your Majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now that we <i>have</i> met,&rdquo; said the King, taking her hand kindly&mdash;&ldquo;a
+ meeting which gives me the greatest pleasure&mdash;may I recommend to you
+ speedily to return to your royal island with as little <i>éclat</i> as you
+ came thither? The world, my dear Countess, has changed since we were
+ young. Men fought in the Civil War with good swords and muskets; but now
+ we fight with indictments and oaths, and such like legal weapons. You are
+ no adept in such warfare; and though I am well aware you know how to hold
+ out a castle, I doubt much if you have the art to parry off an
+ impeachment. This Plot has come upon us like a land storm&mdash;there is
+ no steering the vessel in the teeth of the tempest&mdash;we must run for
+ the nearest haven, and happy if we can reach one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is cowardice, my liege,&rdquo; said the Countess&mdash;&ldquo;Forgive the word!&mdash;it
+ is but a woman who speaks it. Call your noble friends around you, and make
+ a stand like your royal father. There is but one right and one wrong&mdash;one
+ honourable and forward course; and all others which deviate are oblique
+ and unworthy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your language, my venerated friend,&rdquo; said Ormond, who saw the necessity
+ of interfering betwixt the dignity of the actual Sovereign and the freedom
+ of the Countess, who was generally accustomed to receive, not to pay
+ observance,&mdash;&ldquo;your language is strong and decided, but it applies not
+ to the times. It might occasion a renewal of the Civil War, and of all its
+ miseries, but could hardly be attended with the effects you sanguinely
+ anticipate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are too rash, my Lady Countess,&rdquo; said Arlington, &ldquo;not only to rush
+ upon this danger yourself, but to desire to involve his Majesty. Let me
+ say plainly, that, in this jealous time, you have done but ill to exchange
+ the security of Castle Rushin for the chance of a lodging in the Tower of
+ London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And were I to kiss the block there,&rdquo; said the Countess, &ldquo;as did my
+ husband at Bolton-on-the-Moors, I would do so willingly, rather than
+ forsake a friend!&mdash;and one, too, whom, as in the case of the younger
+ Peveril, I have thrust upon danger.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But have I not assured you that both of the Peverils, elder and younger,
+ are freed from peril?&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;and, my dear Countess, what can
+ else tempt you to thrust <i>yourself</i> on danger, from which, doubtless,
+ you expect to be relieved by my intervention? Methinks a lady of your
+ judgment should not voluntarily throw herself into a river, merely that
+ her friends might have the risk and merit of dragging her out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess reiterated her intention to claim a fair trial.&mdash;The two
+ counsellors again pressed their advice that she should withdraw, though
+ under the charge of absconding from justice, and remain in her own feudal
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, seeing no termination to the debate, gently reminded the
+ Countess that her Majesty would be jealous if he detained her ladyship
+ longer, and offered her his hand to conduct her back to the company. This
+ she was under the necessity of accepting, and returned accordingly to the
+ apartments of state, where an event occurred immediately afterwards, which
+ must be transferred to the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Here stand I tight and trim,
+ Quick of eye, though little of limb;
+ He who denieth the word I have spoken,
+ Betwixt him and me shall lances be broken.
+ &mdash;LAY OF THE LITTLE JOHN DE SAINTRE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Charles had reconducted the Countess of Derby into the
+ presence-chamber, before he parted with her, he entreated her, in a
+ whisper, to be governed by good counsel, and to regard her own safety; and
+ then turned easily from her, as if to distribute his attentions equally
+ among the other guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were a good deal circumscribed at the instant, by the arrival of a
+ party of five or six musicians; one of whom, a German, under the patronage
+ of the Duke of Buckingham, was particularly renowned for his performance
+ on the violoncello, but had been detained in inactivity in the antechamber
+ by the non-arrival of his instrument, which had now at length made its
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic who placed it before the owner, shrouded as it was within its
+ wooden case, seemed heartily glad to be rid of his load, and lingered for
+ a moment, as if interested in discovering what sort of instrument was to
+ be produced that could weigh so heavily. His curiosity was satisfied, and
+ in a most extraordinary manner; for, while the musician was fumbling with
+ the key, the case being for his greater convenience placed upright against
+ the wall, the case and instrument itself at once flew open, and out
+ started the dwarf, Geoffrey Hudson,&mdash;at sight of whose unearthly
+ appearance, thus suddenly introduced, the ladies shrieked, and ran
+ backwards; the gentlemen started, and the poor German, on seeing the
+ portentous delivery of his fiddle-case, tumbled on the floor in an agony,
+ supposing, it might be, that his instrument was metamorphosed into the
+ strange figure which supplied its place. So soon, however, as he
+ recovered, he glided out of the apartment, and was followed by most of his
+ companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hudson!&rdquo; said the King&mdash;&ldquo;My little old friend, I am not sorry to see
+ you; though Buckingham, who I suppose is the purveyor of this jest, hath
+ served us up but a stale one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will your Majesty honour me with one moment&rsquo;s attention?&rdquo; said Hudson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly, my good friend,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Old acquaintances are
+ springing up in every quarter to-night; and our leisure can hardly be
+ better employed than in listening to them.&mdash;It was an idle trick of
+ Buckingham,&rdquo; he added, in a whisper to Ormond, &ldquo;to send the poor thing
+ hither, especially as he was to-day tried for the affair of the plot. At
+ any rate he comes not to ask protection from us, having had the rare
+ fortune to come off <i>Plot-free</i>. He is but fishing, I suppose, for
+ some little present or pension.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man, precise in Court etiquette, yet impatient of the King&rsquo;s
+ delaying to attend to him, stood in the midst of the floor, most
+ valorously pawing and prancing, like a Scots pony assuming the airs of a
+ war-horse, waving meanwhile his little hat with the tarnished feather, and
+ bowing from time to time, as if impatient to be heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak on, then, my friend,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;if thou hast some poetical
+ address penned for thee, out with it, that thou mayst have time to repose
+ these flourishing little limbs of thine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No poetical speech have I, most mighty Sovereign,&rdquo; answered the dwarf;
+ &ldquo;but, in plain and most loyal prose, I do accuse, before this company, the
+ once noble Duke of Buckingham of high treason!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well spoken, and manfully&mdash;Get on, man,&rdquo; said the King, who never
+ doubted that this was the introduction to something burlesque or witty,
+ not conceiving that the charge was made in solemn earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great laugh took place among such courtiers as heard, and among many who
+ did not hear, what was uttered by the dwarf; the former entertained by the
+ extravagant emphasis and gesticulation of the little champion, and the
+ others laughing not the less loud that they laughed for example&rsquo;s sake,
+ and upon trust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What matter is there for all this mirth?&rdquo; said he, very indignantly&mdash;&ldquo;Is
+ it fit subject for laughing, that I, Geoffrey Hudson, Knight, do, before
+ King and nobles, impeach George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, of high
+ treason?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No subject of mirth, certainly,&rdquo; said Charles, composing his features;
+ &ldquo;but great matter of wonder.&mdash;Come, cease this mouthing, and
+ prancing, and mummery.&mdash;If there be a jest, come out with it, man;
+ and if not, even get thee to the beaffet, and drink a cup of wine to
+ refresh thee after thy close lodging.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I tell you, my liege,&rdquo; said Hudson impatiently, yet in a whisper,
+ intended only to be audible by the King, &ldquo;that if you spend overmuch time
+ in trifling, you will be convinced by dire experience of Buckingham&rsquo;s
+ treason. I tell you,&mdash;I asseverate to your Majesty,&mdash;two hundred
+ armed fanatics will be here within the hour, to surprise the guards.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand back, ladies,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;or you may hear more than you will
+ care to listen to. My Lord of Buckingham&rsquo;s jests are not always, you know,
+ quite fitted for female ears; besides, we want a few words in private with
+ our little friend. You, my Lord of Ormond&mdash;you, Arlington&rdquo; (and he
+ named one or two others), &ldquo;may remain with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gay crowd bore back, and dispersed through the apartment&mdash;the men
+ to conjecture what the end of this mummery, as they supposed it, was
+ likely to prove; and what jest, as Sedley said, the bass-fiddle had been
+ brought to bed of&mdash;and the ladies to admire and criticise the antique
+ dress, and richly embroidered ruff and hood of the Countess of Derby, to
+ whom the Queen was showing particular attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, in the name of Heaven, and amongst friends,&rdquo; said the King to
+ the dwarf, &ldquo;what means all this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason, my lord the King!&mdash;Treason to his Majesty of England!&mdash;When
+ I was chambered in yonder instrument, my lord, the High-Dutch fellows who
+ bore me, carried me into a certain chapel, to see, as they said to each
+ other, that all was ready. Sire, I went where bass-fiddle never went
+ before, even into a conventicle of Fifth-Monarchists; and when they
+ brought me away, the preacher was concluding his sermon, and was within a
+ &lsquo;Now to apply&rsquo; of setting off like the bell-wether at the head of his
+ flock, to surprise your Majesty in your royal Court! I heard him through
+ the sound-holes of my instrument, when the fellow set me down for a moment
+ to profit by this precious doctrine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It would be singular,&rdquo; said Lord Arlington, &ldquo;were there some reality at
+ the bottom of this buffoonery; for we know these wild men have been
+ consulting together to-day, and five conventicles have held a solemn
+ fast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;if that be the case, they are certainly determined
+ on some villainy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might I advise,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, &ldquo;I would summon the Duke of
+ Buckingham to this presence. His connections with the fanatics are well
+ known, though he affects to conceal them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You would not, my lord, do his Grace the injustice to treat him as a
+ criminal on such a charge as this?&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;However,&rdquo; he added,
+ after a moment&rsquo;s consideration, &ldquo;Buckingham is accessible to every sort of
+ temptation, from the flightiness of his genius. I should not be surprised
+ if he nourished hopes of an aspiring kind&mdash;I think we had some proof
+ of it lately.&mdash;Hark ye, Chiffinch; go to him instantly, and bring him
+ here on any fair pretext thou canst devise. I would fain save him from
+ what lawyers call an overt act. The Court would be dull as a dead horse
+ were Buckingham to miscarry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will not your Majesty order the Horse Guards to turn out?&rdquo; said young
+ Selby, who was present, and an officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Selby,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;I like not horse-play. But let them be
+ prepared; and let the High Bailiff collect his civil officers, and command
+ the Sheriffs to summon their worshipful attendants from javelin-men to
+ hangmen, and have them in readiness, in case of any sudden tumult&mdash;double
+ the sentinels on the doors of the palace&mdash;and see no strangers get
+ in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or <i>out</i>,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond. &ldquo;Where are the foreign fellows
+ who brought in the dwarf?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were sought for, but they were not to be found. They had retreated,
+ leaving their instruments&mdash;a circumstance which seemed to bear hard
+ on the Duke of Buckingham, their patron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hasty preparations were made to provide resistance to any effort of
+ despair which the supposed conspirators might be driven to; and in the
+ meanwhile, the King, withdrawing with Arlington, Ormond, and a few other
+ counsellors, into the cabinet where the Countess of Derby had had her
+ audience, resumed the examination of the little discoverer. His
+ declaration, though singular, was quite coherent; the strain of romance
+ intermingled with it, being in fact a part of his character, which often
+ gained him the fate of being laughed at, when he would otherwise have been
+ pitied, or even esteemed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He commenced with a flourish about his sufferings for the Plot, which the
+ impatience of Ormond would have cut short, had not the King reminded his
+ Grace, that a top, when it is not flogged, must needs go down of itself at
+ the end of a definite time, while the application of the whip may keep it
+ up for hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson was, therefore, allowed to exhaust himself on the subject
+ of his prison-house, which he informed the King was not without a beam of
+ light&mdash;an emanation of loveliness&mdash;a mortal angel&mdash;quick of
+ step and beautiful of eye, who had more than once visited his confinement
+ with words of cheering and comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;they fare better in Newgate than I was
+ aware of. Who would have thought of the little gentleman being solaced
+ with female society in such a place?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray your Majesty,&rdquo; said the dwarf, after the manner of a solemn
+ protest, &ldquo;to understand nothing amiss. My devotion to this fair creature
+ is rather like what we poor Catholics pay to the blessed saints, than
+ mixed with any grosser quality. Indeed, she seems rather a sylphid of the
+ Rosicrucian system, than aught more carnal; being slighter, lighter, and
+ less than the females of common life, who have something of that
+ coarseness of make which is doubtless derived from the sinful and gigantic
+ race of the antediluvians.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, say on, man,&rdquo; quoth Charles. &ldquo;Didst thou not discover this sylph to
+ be a mere mortal wench after all?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who?&mdash;I, my liege?&mdash;Oh, fie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, little gentleman, do not be so particularly scandalised,&rdquo; said the
+ King; &ldquo;I promise you I suspect you of no audacity of gallantry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Time wears fast,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond impatiently, and looking at his
+ watch. &ldquo;Chiffinch hath been gone ten minutes, and ten minutes will bring
+ him back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Charles gravely. &ldquo;Come to the point, Hudson; and tell us what
+ this female has to do with your coming hither in this extraordinary
+ manner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything, my lord,&rdquo; said little Hudson. &ldquo;I saw her twice during my
+ confinement in Newgate, and, in my thought, she is the very angel who
+ guards my life and welfare; for, after my acquittal, as I walked towards
+ the city with two tall gentlemen, who had been in trouble along with me,
+ and just while we stood to our defence against a rascally mob, and just as
+ I had taken possession of an elevated situation, to have some vantage
+ against the great odds of numbers, I heard a heavenly voice sound, as it
+ were, from a window behind me, counselling me to take refuge in a certain
+ house; to which measure I readily persuaded my gallant friends the
+ Peverils, who have always shown themselves willing to be counselled by
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Showing therein their wisdom at once and modesty,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;But
+ what chanced next? Be brief&mdash;be like thyself, man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a time, sire,&rdquo; said the dwarf, &ldquo;it seemed as if I were not the
+ principal object of attention. First, the younger Peveril was withdrawn
+ from us by a gentleman of venerable appearance, though something smacking
+ of a Puritan, having boots of neat&rsquo;s leather, and wearing his weapon
+ without a sword-knot. When Master Julian returned, he informed us, for the
+ first time, that we were in the power of a body of armed fanatics who
+ were, as the poet says, prompt for direful act. And your Majesty will
+ remark, that both father and son were in some measure desperate, and
+ disregardful from that moment of the assurances which I gave them, that
+ the star which I was bound to worship, would, in her own time, shine forth
+ in signal of our safety. May it please your Majesty, in answer to my
+ hilarious exhortations to confidence, the father did but say <i>tush</i>,
+ and the son <i>pshaw</i>, which showed how men&rsquo;s prudence and manners are
+ disturbed by affliction. Nevertheless, these two gentlemen, the Peverils,
+ forming a strong opinion of the necessity there was to break forth, were
+ it only to convey a knowledge of these dangerous passages to your Majesty,
+ commenced an assault on the door of the apartment, I also assisting with
+ the strength which Heaven hath given, and some threescore years have left
+ me. We could not, as it unhappily proved, manage our attempt so silently,
+ but that our guards overheard us, and, entering in numbers, separated us
+ from each other, and compelled my companions, at point of pike and
+ poniard, to go to some other and more distant apartment, thus separating
+ our fair society. I was again enclosed in the now solitary chamber, and I
+ will own that I felt a certain depression of soul. But when bale is at
+ highest, as the poet singeth, boot is at nighest, for a door of hope was
+ suddenly opened&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of God, my liege,&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond, &ldquo;let this poor
+ creature&rsquo;s story be translated into the language of common sense by some
+ of the scribblers of romances about Court, and we may be able to make
+ meaning of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson looked with a frowning countenance of reproof upon the
+ impatient old Irish nobleman, and said, with a very dignified air, &ldquo;That
+ one Duke upon a poor gentleman&rsquo;s hand was enough at a time, and that, but
+ for his present engagement and dependency with the Duke of Buckingham, he
+ would have endured no such terms from the Duke of Ormond.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Abate your valour, and diminish your choler, at our request, most
+ puissant Sir Geoffrey Hudson,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;and forgive the Duke of
+ Ormond for my sake; but at all events go on with your story.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson laid his hand on his bosom, and bowed in proud and
+ dignified submission to his Sovereign; then waved his forgiveness
+ gracefully to Ormond, accompanied with a horrible grin, which he designed
+ for a smile of gracious forgiveness and conciliation. &ldquo;Under the Duke&rsquo;s
+ favour, then,&rdquo; he proceeded, &ldquo;when I said a door of hope was opened to me,
+ I meant a door behind the tapestry, from whence issued that fair vision&mdash;yet
+ not so fair as lustrously dark, like the beauty of a continental night,
+ where the cloudless azure sky shrouds us in a veil more lovely than that
+ of day!&mdash;but I note your Majesty&rsquo;s impatience;&mdash;enough. I
+ followed my beautiful guide into an apartment, where there lay, strangely
+ intermingled, warlike arms and musical instruments. Amongst these I saw my
+ own late place of temporary obscurity&mdash;a violoncello. To my
+ astonishment, she turned around the instrument, and opening it behind the
+ pressure of a spring, showed that it was filled with pistols, daggers, and
+ ammunition made up in bandoleers. &lsquo;These,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;are this night
+ destined to surprise the Court of the unwary Charles&rsquo;&mdash;your Majesty
+ must pardon my using her own words; &lsquo;but if thou darest go in their stead,
+ thou mayst be the saviour of king and kingdoms; if thou art afraid, keep
+ secret, I will myself try the adventure.&rsquo; Now may Heaven forbid, that
+ Geoffrey Hudson were craven enough, said I, to let thee run such a risk!
+ You know not&mdash;you cannot know, what belongs to such ambuscades and
+ concealments&mdash;I am accustomed to them&mdash;have lurked in the pocket
+ of a giant, and have formed the contents of a pasty. &lsquo;Get in then,&rsquo; she
+ said, &lsquo;and lose no time.&rsquo; Nevertheless, while I prepared to obey, I will
+ not deny that some cold apprehensions came over my hot valour, and I
+ confessed to her, if it might be so, I would rather find my way to the
+ palace on my own feet. But she would not listen to me, saying hastily, &lsquo;I
+ would be intercepted, or refused admittance, and that I must embrace the
+ means she offered me of introduction into the presence, and when there,
+ tell the King to be on his guard&mdash;little more is necessary; for once
+ the scheme is known, it becomes desperate.&rsquo; Rashly and boldly, I bid adieu
+ to the daylight which was then fading away. She withdrew the contents of
+ the instrument destined for my concealment, and having put them behind the
+ chimney-board, introduced me in their room. As she clasped me in, I
+ implored her to warn the men who were to be entrusted with me, to take
+ heed and keep the neck of the violoncello uppermost; but ere I had
+ completed my request, I found I was left alone, and in darkness,
+ Presently, two or three fellows entered, whom, by their language, which I
+ in some sort understood, I perceived to be Germans, and under the
+ influence of the Duke of Buckingham. I heard them receive from the leader
+ a charge how they were to deport themselves, when they should assume the
+ concealed arms&mdash;and&mdash;for I will do the Duke no wrong&mdash;I
+ understood their orders were precise, not only to spare the person of the
+ King, but also those of the courtiers, and to protect all who might be in
+ the presence against an irruption of the fanatics. In other respects, they
+ had charge to disarm the Gentlemen-pensioners in the guard-room, and, in
+ fine, to obtain the command of the Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked disconcerted and thoughtful at this communication, and
+ bade Lord Arlington see that Selby quietly made search into the contents
+ of the other cases which had been brought as containing musical
+ instruments. He then signed to the dwarf to proceed in his story, asking
+ him again and again, and very solemnly, whether he was sure that he heard
+ the Duke&rsquo;s name mentioned, as commanding or approving this action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf answered in the affirmative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;is carrying the frolic somewhat far.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf proceeded to state, that he was carried after his metamorphosis
+ into the chapel, where he heard the preacher seemingly about the close of
+ his harangue, the tenor of which he also mentioned. Words, he said, could
+ not express the agony which he felt when he found that his bearer, in
+ placing the instrument in a corner, was about to invert its position, in
+ which case, he said, human frailty might have proved too great for love,
+ for loyalty, for true obedience, nay, for the fear of death, which was
+ like to ensue on discovery; and he concluded, that he greatly doubted he
+ could not have stood on his head for many minutes without screaming aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I could not have blamed you,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;placed in such a posture in
+ the royal oak, I must needs have roared myself.&mdash;Is this all you have
+ to tell us of this strange conspiracy?&rdquo; Sir Geoffrey Hudson replied in the
+ affirmative, and the King presently subjoined&mdash;&ldquo;Go, my little friend,
+ your services shall not be forgotten. Since thou hast crept into the
+ bowels of a fiddle for our service, we are bound, in duty and conscience,
+ to find you a more roomy dwelling in future.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was a violoncello, if your Majesty is pleased to remember,&rdquo; said the
+ little jealous man, &ldquo;not a common fiddle; though, for your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ service, I would have crept even into a kit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whatever of that nature could have been performed by any subject of ours,
+ thou wouldst have enacted in our behalf&mdash;of that we hold ourselves
+ certain. Withdraw for a little; and hark ye, for the present, beware what
+ you say about this matter. Let your appearance be considered&mdash;do you
+ mark me&mdash;as a frolic of the Duke of Buckingham; and not a word of
+ conspiracy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Were it not better to put him under some restraint, sire?&rdquo; said the Duke
+ of Ormond, when Hudson had left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is unnecessary,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;I remember the little wretch of old.
+ Fortune, to make him the model of absurdity, has closed a most lofty soul
+ within that little miserable carcass. For wielding his sword and keeping
+ his word, he is a perfect Don Quixote in decimo-octavo. He shall be taken
+ care of.&mdash;But, oddsfish, my lords, is not this freak of Buckingham
+ too villainous and ungrateful?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He had not had the means of being so, had your Majesty,&rdquo; said the Duke of
+ Ormond, &ldquo;been less lenient on other occasions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord, my lord,&rdquo; said Charles hastily&mdash;&ldquo;your lordship is
+ Buckingham&rsquo;s known enemy&mdash;we will take other and more impartial
+ counsel&mdash;Arlington, what think you of all this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Majesty,&rdquo; said Arlington, &ldquo;I think the thing is
+ absolutely impossible, unless the Duke has had some quarrel with your
+ Majesty, of which we know nothing. His Grace is very flighty, doubtless,
+ but this seems actual insanity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, faith,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;some words passed betwixt us this morning&mdash;his
+ Duchess it seems is dead&mdash;and to lose no time, his Grace had cast his
+ eyes about for means of repairing the loss, and had the assurance to ask
+ our consent to woo my niece Lady Anne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which your Majesty of course rejected?&rdquo; said the statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And not without rebuking his assurance,&rdquo; added the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In private, sire, or before any witnesses?&rdquo; said the Duke of Ormond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before no one,&rdquo; said the King,&mdash;&ldquo;excepting, indeed, little
+ Chiffinch; and he, you know, is no one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>Hinc illæ lachrymæ</i>,&rdquo; said Ormond. &ldquo;I know his Grace well. While
+ the rebuke of his aspiring petulance was a matter betwixt your Majesty and
+ him, he might have let it pass by; but a check before a fellow from whom
+ it was likely enough to travel through the Court, was a matter to be
+ revenged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Selby came hastily from the other room, to say, that his Grace of
+ Buckingham had just entered the presence-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King rose. &ldquo;Let a boat be in readiness, with a party of the yeomen,&rdquo;
+ said he. &ldquo;It may be necessary to attach him of treason, and send him to
+ the Tower.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Should not a Secretary of State&rsquo;s warrant be prepared?&rdquo; said Ormond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, my Lord Duke,&rdquo; said the King sharply. &ldquo;I still hope that the
+ necessity may be avoided.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect.
+ &mdash;RICHARD III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before giving the reader an account of the meeting betwixt Buckingham and
+ his injured Sovereign, we may mention a trifling circumstance or two which
+ took place betwixt his Grace and Chiffinch, in the short drive betwixt
+ York Place and Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the outset, the Duke endeavoured to learn from the courtier the special
+ cause of his being summoned so hastily to the Court. Chiffinch answered,
+ cautiously, that he believed there were some gambols going forward, at
+ which the King desired the Duke&rsquo;s presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This did not quite satisfy Buckingham, for, conscious of his own rash
+ purpose, he could not but apprehend discovery. After a moment&rsquo;s silence,
+ &ldquo;Chiffinch,&rdquo; he said abruptly, &ldquo;did you mention to any one what the King
+ said to me this morning touching the Lady Anne?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke,&rdquo; said Chiffinch, hesitantly, &ldquo;surely my duty to the King&mdash;my
+ respect to your Grace&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You mentioned it to no one, then?&rdquo; said the Duke sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To no one,&rdquo; replied Chiffinch faintly, for he was intimidated by the
+ Duke&rsquo;s increasing severity of manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye lie, like a scoundrel!&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;You told Christian!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Grace,&rdquo; said Chiffinch&mdash;&ldquo;your Grace&mdash;your Grace ought to
+ remember that I told you Christian&rsquo;s secret; that the Countess of Derby
+ was come up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you think the one point of treachery may balance for the other? But
+ no. I must have a better atonement. Be assured I will blow your brains
+ out, ere you leave this carriage, unless you tell me the truth of this
+ message from Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Chiffinch hesitated what reply to make, a man, who, by the blaze of the
+ torches, then always borne, as well by the lackeys who hung behind the
+ carriage, as by the footmen who ran by the side, might easily see who sat
+ in the coach, approached, and sung in a deep manly voice, the burden of an
+ old French song on the battle of Marignan, in which is imitated the German
+ French of the defeated Swiss.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;<i>Tout est verlore
+ La tintelore,
+ Tout est verlore</i>
+ Bei Got.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am betrayed,&rdquo; said the Duke, who instantly conceived that this chorus,
+ expressing &ldquo;all is lost,&rdquo; was sung by one of his faithful agents, as a
+ hint to him that their machinations were discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He attempted to throw himself from the carriage, but Chiffinch held him
+ with a firm, though respectful grasp. &ldquo;Do not destroy yourself, my lord,&rdquo;
+ he said, in a tone of deep humility&mdash;&ldquo;there are soldiers and officers
+ of the peace around the carriage, to enforce your Grace&rsquo;s coming to
+ Whitehall, and to prevent your escape. To attempt it would be to confess
+ guilt; and I advise you strongly against that&mdash;the King is your
+ friend&mdash;be your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, after a moment&rsquo;s consideration, said sullenly, &ldquo;I believe you
+ are right. Why should I fly, when I am guilty of nothing but sending some
+ fireworks to entertain the Court, instead of a concert of music?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the dwarf, who came so unexpectedly out of the bass-viol&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was a masking device of my own, Chiffinch,&rdquo; said the Duke, though the
+ circumstance was then first known to him. &ldquo;Chiffinch, you will bind me for
+ ever, if you will permit me to have a minute&rsquo;s conversation with
+ Christian.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With Christian, my lord?&mdash;Where could you find him?&mdash;You are
+ aware we must go straight to the Court.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;but I think I cannot miss finding him; and you,
+ Master Chiffinch, are no officer, and have no warrant either to detain me
+ prisoner, or prevent my speaking to whom I please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch replied, &ldquo;My Lord Duke, your genius is so great, and your
+ escapes so numerous, that it will be from no wish of my own if I am forced
+ to hurt a man so skilful and so popular.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, there is life in it yet,&rdquo; said the Duke, and whistled; when,
+ from beside the little cutler&rsquo;s booth, with which the reader is
+ acquainted, appeared, suddenly, Master Christian, and was in a moment at
+ the side of the coach. &ldquo;<i>Ganz ist verloren</i>,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and all our godly friends are dispersed upon
+ the news. Luckily the Colonel and these German rascals gave a hint. All is
+ safe&mdash;You go to Court&mdash;Hark ye, I will follow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You, Christian? that would be more friendly than wise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, what is there against me?&rdquo; said Christian. &ldquo;I am innocent as the
+ child unborn&mdash;so is your Grace. There is but one creature who can
+ bear witness to our guilt; but I trust to bring her on the stage in our
+ favour&mdash;besides, if I were not, I should presently be sent for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The familiar of whom I have heard you speak, I warrant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark in your ear again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I understand,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;and will delay Master Chiffinch,&mdash;for
+ he, you must know, is my conductor,&mdash;no longer.&mdash;Well,
+ Chiffinch, let them drive on.&mdash;<i>Vogue la Galère!</i>&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+ as the carriage went onward; &ldquo;I have sailed through worse perils than this
+ yet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is not for me to judge,&rdquo; said Chiffinch; &ldquo;your Grace is a bold
+ commander; and Christian hath the cunning of the devil for a pilot; but&mdash;&mdash;However,
+ I remain your Grace&rsquo;s poor friend, and will heartily rejoice in your
+ extrication.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me a proof of your friendship,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;Tell me what you
+ know of Christian&rsquo;s familiar, as he calls her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe it to be the same dancing wench who came with Empson to my
+ house on the morning that Mistress Alice made her escape from us. But you
+ have seen her, my lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I?&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;when did I see her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She was employed by Christian, I believe, to set his niece at liberty,
+ when he found himself obliged to gratify his fanatical brother-in-law, by
+ restoring his child; besides being prompted by a private desire, as I
+ think, of bantering your Grace.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Umph! I suspected so much. I will repay it,&rdquo; said the Duke. &ldquo;But first to
+ get out of this dilemma.&mdash;That little Numidian witch, then, was his
+ familiar; and she joined in the plot to tantalise me?&mdash;But here we
+ reach Whitehall.&mdash;Now, Chiffinch, be no worse than thy word, and&mdash;now,
+ Buckingham, be thyself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere we follow Buckingham into the presence, where he had so difficult
+ a part to sustain, it may not be amiss to follow Christian after his brief
+ conversation with him. On re-entering the house, which he did by a
+ circuitous passage, leading from a distant alley, and through several
+ courts, Christian hastened to a low matted apartment, in which Bridgenorth
+ sat alone, reading the Bible by the light of a small brazen lamp, with the
+ utmost serenity of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you dismissed the Peverils?&rdquo; said Christian hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said the Major.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And upon what pledge&mdash;that they will not carry information against
+ you to Whitehall?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They gave me their promise voluntarily, when I showed them our armed
+ friends were dismissed. To-morrow, I believe, it is their purpose to lodge
+ informations.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why not to-night, I pray you?&rdquo; said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because they allow us that time for escape.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, do you not avail yourself of it? Wherefore are you here?&rdquo; said
+ Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, rather, why do <i>you</i> not fly?&rdquo; said Bridgenorth. &ldquo;Of a surety,
+ you are as deeply engaged as I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brother Bridgenorth, I am the fox, who knows a hundred modes of deceiving
+ the hounds; you are the deer, whose sole resource is in hasty flight.
+ Therefore lose no time&mdash;begone to the country&mdash;or rather,
+ Zedekiah Fish&rsquo;s vessel, the <i>Good Hope</i>, lies in the river, bound for
+ Massachusetts&mdash;take the wings of the morning, and begone&mdash;she
+ can fall down to Gravesend with the tide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And leave to thee, brother Christian,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth, &ldquo;the charge of
+ my fortune and my daughter? No, brother; my opinion of your good faith
+ must be re-established ere I again trust thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go thy ways, then, for a suspicious fool,&rdquo; said Christian, suppressing
+ his strong desire to use language more offensive; &ldquo;or rather stay where
+ thou art, and take thy chance of the gallows!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is appointed to all men to die once,&rdquo; said Bridgenorth; &ldquo;my life hath
+ been a living death. My fairest boughs have been stripped by the axe of
+ the forester&mdash;that which survives must, if it shall blossom, be
+ grafted elsewhere, and at a distance from my aged trunk. The sooner, then,
+ the root feels the axe, the stroke is more welcome. I had been pleased,
+ indeed, had I been called to bringing yonder licentious Court to a purer
+ character, and relieving the yoke of the suffering people of God. That
+ youth too&mdash;son to that precious woman, to whom I owe the last tie
+ that feebly links my wearied spirit to humanity&mdash;could I have
+ travailed with <i>him</i> in the good cause!&mdash;But that, with all my
+ other hopes is broken for ever; and since I am not worthy to be an
+ instrument in so great a work, I have little desire to abide longer in
+ this vale of sorrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Farewell, then, desponding fool!&rdquo; said Christian, unable, with all his
+ calmness, any longer to suppress his contempt for the resigned and
+ hopeless predestinarian. &ldquo;That fate should have clogged me with such
+ confederates!&rdquo; he muttered, as he left the apartment&mdash;&ldquo;this bigoted
+ fool is now nearly irreclaimable&mdash;I must to Zarah; for she, or no
+ one, must carry us through these straits. If I can but soothe her sullen
+ temper, and excite her vanity to action,&mdash;betwixt her address, the
+ King&rsquo;s partiality for the Duke, Buckingham&rsquo;s matchless effrontery, and my
+ own hand upon the helm, we may yet weather the tempest that darkens around
+ us. But what we do must be hastily done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another apartment he found the person he sought&mdash;the same who
+ visited the Duke of Buckingham&rsquo;s harem, and, having relieved Alice
+ Bridgenorth from her confinement there, had occupied her place as has been
+ already narrated, or rather intimated. She was now much more plainly
+ attired than when she had tantalised the Duke with her presence; but her
+ dress had still something of the Oriental character, which corresponded
+ with the dark complexion and quick eye of the wearer. She had the kerchief
+ at her eyes as Christian entered the apartment, but suddenly withdrew it,
+ and, flashing on him a glance of scorn and indignation, asked him what he
+ meant by intruding where his company was alike unsought for and undesired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A proper question,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;from a slave to her master!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rather, say, a proper question, and of all questions the most proper,
+ from a mistress to her slave! Know you not, that from the hour in which
+ you discovered your ineffable baseness, you have made me mistress of your
+ lot? While you seemed but a demon of vengeance, you commanded terror, and
+ to good purpose; but such a foul fiend as thou hast of late shown thyself&mdash;such
+ a very worthless, base trickster of the devil&mdash;such a sordid
+ grovelling imp of perdition, can gain nothing but scorn from a soul like
+ mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gallantly mouthed,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;and with good emphasis.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Zarah, &ldquo;I can speak&mdash;sometimes&mdash;I can also be
+ mute; and that no one knows better than thou.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art a spoiled child, Zarah, and dost but abuse the indulgence I
+ entertain for your freakish humour,&rdquo; replied Christian; &ldquo;thy wits have
+ been disturbed since ever you landed in England, and all for the sake of
+ one who cares for thee no more than for the most worthless object who
+ walks the streets, amongst whom he left you to engage in a brawl for one
+ he loved better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is no matter,&rdquo; said Zarah, obviously repressing very bitter emotion;
+ &ldquo;it signifies not that he loves another better; there is none&mdash;no,
+ none&mdash;that ever did, or can, love him so well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pity you, Zarah!&rdquo; said Christian, with some scorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I deserve your pity,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;were your pity worth my accepting.
+ Whom have I to thank for my wretchedness but you?&mdash;You bred me up in
+ thirst of vengeance, ere I knew that good and evil were anything better
+ than names;&mdash;to gain your applause, and to gratify the vanity you had
+ excited, I have for years undergone a penance, from which a thousand would
+ have shrunk.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A thousand, Zarah!&rdquo; answered Christian; &ldquo;ay, a hundred thousand, and a
+ million to boot; the creature is not on earth, being mere mortal woman,
+ that would have undergone the thirtieth part of thy self-denial.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe it,&rdquo; said Zarah, drawing up her slight but elegant figure; &ldquo;I
+ believe it&mdash;I have gone through a trial that few indeed could have
+ sustained. I have renounced the dear intercourse of my kind; compelled my
+ tongue only to utter, like that of a spy, the knowledge which my ear had
+ only collected as a base eavesdropper. This I have done for years&mdash;for
+ years&mdash;and all for the sake of your private applause&mdash;and the
+ hope of vengeance on a woman, who, if she did ill in murdering my father,
+ has been bitterly repaid by nourishing a serpent in her bosom, that had
+ the tooth, but not the deafened ear, of the adder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;well&mdash;well,&rdquo; reiterated Christian; &ldquo;and had you not your
+ reward in my approbation&mdash;in the consequences of your own unequalled
+ dexterity&mdash;by which, superior to anything of thy sex that history has
+ ever known, you endured what woman never before endured, insolence without
+ notice, admiration without answer, and sarcasm without reply?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not without reply!&rdquo; said Zarah fiercely. &ldquo;Gave not Nature to my feelings
+ a course of expression more impressive than words? and did not those
+ tremble at my shrieks, who would have little minded my entreaties or my
+ complaints? And my proud lady, who sauced her charities with the taunts
+ she thought I heard not&mdash;she was justly paid by the passing her
+ dearest and most secret concerns into the hands of her mortal enemy; and
+ the vain Earl&mdash;yet he was a thing as insignificant as the plume that
+ nodded in his cap;&mdash;and the maidens and ladies who taunted me&mdash;I
+ had, or can easily have, my revenge upon them. But there is <i>one</i>,&rdquo;
+ she added, looking upward, &ldquo;who never taunted me; one whose generous
+ feelings could treat the poor dumb girl even as his sister; who never
+ spoke word of her but was to excuse or defend&mdash;and you tell me I must
+ not love him, and that it is madness to love him!&mdash;I <i>will</i> be
+ mad then, for I will love till the latest breath of my life!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think but an instant, silly girl&mdash;silly but in one respect, since in
+ all others thou mayest brave the world of women. Think what I have
+ proposed to thee, for the loss of this hopeless affection, a career so
+ brilliant!&mdash;Think only that it rests with thyself to be the wife&mdash;the
+ wedded wife&mdash;of the princely Buckingham! With my talents&mdash;with
+ thy wit and beauty&mdash;with his passionate love of these attributes&mdash;a
+ short space might rank you among England&rsquo;s princesses.&mdash;Be but guided
+ by me&mdash;he is now at deadly pass&mdash;needs every assistance to
+ retrieve his fortunes&mdash;above all, that which we alone can render him.
+ Put yourself under my conduct, and not fate itself shall prevent your
+ wearing a Duchess&rsquo;s coronet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A coronet of thistle-down, entwined with thistle-leaves,&rdquo; said Zarah.&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ know not a slighter thing than your Buckingham! I saw him at your request&mdash;saw
+ him when, as a man, he should have shown himself generous and noble&mdash;I
+ stood the proof at your desire, for I laugh at those dangers from which
+ the poor blushing wailers of my sex shrink and withdraw themselves. What
+ did I find him?&mdash;a poor wavering voluptuary&mdash;his nearest attempt
+ to passion like the fire on a wretched stubble-field, that may singe,
+ indeed, or smoke, but can neither warm nor devour. Christian! were his
+ coronet at my feet this moment, I would sooner take up a crown of gilded
+ gingerbread, than extend my hand to raise it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are mad, Zarah&mdash;with all your taste and talent, you are utterly
+ mad! But let Buckingham pass&mdash;Do you owe <i>me</i> nothing on this
+ emergency?&mdash;Nothing to one who rescued you from the cruelty of your
+ owner, the posture-master, to place you in ease and affluence?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;I owe you much. Had I not felt I did so, I
+ would, as I have been often tempted to do, have denounced thee to the
+ fierce Countess, who would have gibbeted you on her feudal walls of Castle
+ Rushin, and bid your family seek redress from the eagles, that would long
+ since have thatched their nest with your hair, and fed their young ospreys
+ with your flesh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am truly glad you have had so much forbearance for me,&rdquo; answered
+ Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have it, in truth and in sincerity,&rdquo; replied Zarah&mdash;&ldquo;Not for your
+ benefits to me&mdash;such as they were, they were every one interested,
+ and conferred from the most selfish considerations. I have overpaid them a
+ thousand times by the devotion to your will, which I have displayed at the
+ greatest personal risk. But till of late I respected your powers of mind&mdash;your
+ inimitable command of passion&mdash;the force of intellect which I have
+ ever seen you exercise over all others, from the bigot Bridgenorth to the
+ debauched Buckingham&mdash;in that, indeed, I have recognised my master.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And those powers,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;are unlimited as ever; and with thy
+ assistance, thou shalt see the strongest meshes that the laws of civil
+ society ever wove to limit the natural dignity of man, broke asunder like
+ a spider&rsquo;s web.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused and answered, &ldquo;While a noble motive fired thee&mdash;ay, a
+ noble motive, though irregular&mdash;for I was born to gaze on the sun
+ which the pale daughters of Europe shrink from&mdash;I could serve thee&mdash;I
+ could have followed, while revenge or ambition had guided thee&mdash;but
+ love of <i>wealth</i>, and by what means acquired!&mdash;What sympathy can
+ I hold with that?&mdash;Wouldst thou not have pandered to the lust of the
+ King, though the object was thine own orphan niece?&mdash;You smile?&mdash;Smile
+ again when I ask you whether you meant not my own prostitution, when you
+ charged me to remain in the house of that wretched Buckingham?&mdash;Smile
+ at that question, and by Heaven, I stab you to the heart!&rdquo; And she thrust
+ her hand into her bosom, and partly showed the hilt of a small poniard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I smile,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;it is but in scorn of so odious an
+ accusation. Girl, I will not tell thee the reason, but there exists not on
+ earth the living thing over whose safety and honour I would keep watch as
+ over thine. Buckingham&rsquo;s wife, indeed, I wished thee; and through thy own
+ beauty and thy wit, I doubted not to bring the match to pass.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vain flatterer,&rdquo; said Zarah, yet seeming soothed even by the flattery
+ which she scoffed at, &ldquo;you would persuade me that it was honourable love
+ which you expected the Duke was to have offered me. How durst you urge a
+ gross a deception, to which time, place, and circumstance gave the lie?&mdash;How
+ dare you now again mention it, when you well know, that at the time you
+ mention, the Duchess was still in life?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In life, but on her deathbed,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and for time, place, and
+ circumstance, had your virtue, my Zarah, depended on these, how couldst
+ thou have been the creature thou art? I knew thee all-sufficient to bid
+ him defiance&mdash;else&mdash;for thou art dearer to me than thou thinkest&mdash;I
+ had not risked thee to win the Duke of Buckingham; ay, and the kingdom of
+ England to boot. So now, wilt thou be ruled and go on with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zarah, or Fenella, for our readers must have been long aware of the
+ identity of these two personages, cast down her eyes, and was silent for a
+ long time. &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; she said at last, in a solemn voice, &ldquo;if my ideas
+ of right and of wrong be wild and incoherent, I owe it, first, to the wild
+ fever which my native sun communicated to my veins; next, to my childhood,
+ trained amidst the shifts, tricks, and feats of jugglers and mountebanks;
+ and then, to a youth of fraud and deception, through the course thou didst
+ prescribe me, in which I might, indeed, hear everything, but communicate
+ with no one. The last cause of my wild errors, if such they are,
+ originates, O Christian, with you alone; by whose intrigues I was placed
+ with yonder lady, and who taught me, that to revenge my father&rsquo;s death,
+ was my first great duty on earth, and that I was bound by nature to hate
+ and injure her by whom I was fed and fostered, though as she would have
+ fed and caressed a dog, or any other mute animal. I also think&mdash;for I
+ will deal fairly with you&mdash;that you had not so easily detected your
+ niece, in the child whose surprising agility was making yonder brutal
+ mountebank&rsquo;s fortune; nor so readily induced him to part with his
+ bond-slave, had you not, for your own purposes, placed me under his
+ charge, and reserved the privilege of claiming me when you pleased. I
+ could not, under any other tuition, have identified myself with the
+ personage of a mute, which it has been your desire that I should perform
+ through life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You do me injustice, Zarah,&rdquo; said Christian&mdash;&ldquo;I found you capable of
+ the avenging of your father&rsquo;s death&mdash;I consecrated you to it, as I
+ consecrated my own life and hopes; and you held the duty sacred, till
+ these mad feeling towards a youth who loves your cousin&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who&mdash;loves&mdash;my&mdash;cousin,&rdquo; repeated Zarah (for we will
+ continue to call her by her real name) slowly, and as if the words dropped
+ unconsciously from her lips. &ldquo;Well&mdash;be it so!&mdash;Man of many
+ wiles, I will follow thy course for a little, a very little farther; but
+ take heed&mdash;tease me not with remonstrances against the treasure of my
+ secret thoughts&mdash;I mean my most hopeless affection to Julian Peveril&mdash;and
+ bring me not as an assistant to any snare which you may design to cast
+ around him. You and your Duke shall rue the hour most bitterly, in which
+ you provoke me. You may suppose you have me in your power; but remember,
+ the snakes of my burning climate are never so fatal as when you grasp
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I care not for these Peverils,&rdquo; said Christian&mdash;&ldquo;I care not for
+ their fate a poor straw, unless where it bears on that of the destined
+ woman, whose hands are red in your father&rsquo;s blood. Believe me, I can
+ divide her fate and theirs. I will explain to you how. And for the Duke,
+ he may pass among men of the town for wit, and among soldiers for valour,
+ among courtiers for manners and for form; and why, with his high rank and
+ immense fortune, you should throw away an opportunity, which, as I could
+ now improve it&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak not of it,&rdquo; said Zarah, &ldquo;if thou wouldst have our truce&mdash;remember
+ it is no peace&mdash;if, I say, thou wouldst have our truce grow to be an
+ hour old!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This, then,&rdquo; said Christian, with a last effort to work upon the vanity
+ of this singular being, &ldquo;is she who pretended such superiority to human
+ passion, that she could walk indifferently and unmoved through the halls
+ of the prosperous, and the prison cells of the captive, unknowing and
+ unknown, sympathising neither with the pleasures of the one, nor the woes
+ of the other, but advancing with sure, though silent steps, her own plans,
+ in despite and regardless of either!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My own plans!&rdquo; said Zarah&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Thy</i> plans, Christian&mdash;thy
+ plans of extorting from the surprised prisoners, means whereby to convict
+ them&mdash;thine own plans, formed with those more powerful than thyself,
+ to sound men&rsquo;s secrets, and, by using them as a matter of accusation, to
+ keep up the great delusion of the nation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such access was indeed given you as my agent,&rdquo; said Christian, &ldquo;and for
+ advancing a great national change. But how did you use it?&mdash;to
+ advance your insane passion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Insane!&rdquo; said Zarah&mdash;&ldquo;Had he been less than insane whom I addressed,
+ he and I had ere now been far from the toils which you have pitched for us
+ both. I had means prepared for everything; and ere this, the shores of
+ Britain had been lost to our sight for ever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The dwarf, too,&rdquo; said Christian&mdash;&ldquo;Was it worthy of you to delude
+ that poor creature with flattering visions&mdash;lull him asleep with
+ drugs! Was <i>that</i> my doing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was my destined tool,&rdquo; said Zarah haughtily. &ldquo;I remembered your
+ lessons too well not to use him as such. Yet scorn him not too much. I
+ tell you, that yon very miserable dwarf, whom I made my sport in the
+ prison&mdash;yon wretched abortion of nature, I would select for a
+ husband, ere I would marry your Buckingham;&mdash;the vain and imbecile
+ pigmy has yet the warm heart and noble feelings, that a man should hold
+ his highest honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In God&rsquo;s name, then, take your own way,&rdquo; said Christian; &ldquo;and, for my
+ sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her tongue,
+ since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the privilege of
+ her own will. Who would have thought it? But the colt has slipped the
+ bridle, and I must needs follow, since I cannot guide her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our narrative returns to the Court of King Charles at Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0048" id="link2HCH0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;But oh!
+ What shall I say to thee, Lord Scroop; thou cruel,
+ Ingrateful, savage, and inhuman creature!
+ Thou that didst bear the key of all my counsels,
+ That knew&rsquo;st the very bottom of my soul,
+ That almost mightst have coined me into gold,
+ Wouldst thou have practised on me for thy use?
+ &mdash;HENRY V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At no period of his life, not even when that life was in imminent danger,
+ did the constitutional gaiety of Charles seem more overclouded, than when
+ waiting for the return of Chiffinch with the Duke of Buckingham. His mind
+ revolted at the idea, that the person to whom he had been so particularly
+ indulgent, and whom he had selected as the friend of his lighter hours and
+ amusements, should prove capable of having tampered with a plot apparently
+ directed against his liberty and life. He more than once examined the
+ dwarf anew, but could extract nothing more than his first narrative
+ contained. The apparition of the female to him in the cell of Newgate, he
+ described in such fanciful and romantic colours, that the King could not
+ help thinking the poor man&rsquo;s head a little turned; and, as nothing was
+ found in the kettledrum, and other musical instruments brought for the use
+ of the Duke&rsquo;s band of foreigners, he nourished some slight hope that the
+ whole plan might be either a mere jest, or that the idea of an actual
+ conspiracy was founded in mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The persons who had been despatched to watch the motions of Mr. Weiver&rsquo;s
+ congregation, brought back word that they had quietly dispersed. It was
+ known, at the same time, that they had met in arms, but this augured no
+ particular design of aggression, at a time when all true Protestants
+ conceived themselves in danger of immediate massacre; when the fathers of
+ the city had repeatedly called out the Train-Bands, and alarmed the
+ citizens of London, under the idea of an instant insurrection of the
+ Catholics; and when, to sum the whole up, in the emphatic words of an
+ alderman of the day, there was a general belief that they would all waken
+ some unhappy morning with their throats cut. Who was to do these dire
+ deeds, it was more difficult to suppose; but all admitted the possibility
+ that they might be achieved, since one Justice of the Peace was already
+ murdered. There was, therefore, no inference of hostile intentions against
+ the State, to be decidedly derived from a congregation of Protestants <i>par
+ excellence</i>, military from old associations, bringing their arms with
+ them to a place of worship, in the midst of a panic so universal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither did the violent language of the minister, supposing that to be
+ proved, absolutely infer meditated violence. The favourite parables of the
+ preachers, and the metaphors and ornaments which they selected, were at
+ all times of a military cast; and the taking the kingdom of heaven by
+ storm, a strong and beautiful metaphor, when used generally as in
+ Scripture, was detailed in their sermons in all the technical language of
+ the attack and defence of a fortified place. The danger, in short,
+ whatever might have been its actual degree, had disappeared as suddenly as
+ a bubble upon the water, when broken by a casual touch, and had left as
+ little trace behind it. It became, therefore, matter of much doubt,
+ whether it had ever actually existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While various reports were making from without, and while their tenor was
+ discussed by the King, and such nobles and statesmen as he thought proper
+ to consult on the occasion, a gradual sadness and anxiety mingled with,
+ and finally silenced, the mirth of the evening. All became sensible that
+ something unusual was going forward; and the unwonted distance which
+ Charles maintained from his guests, while it added greatly to the dulness
+ that began to predominate in the presence-chamber, gave intimation that
+ something unusual was labouring in the King&rsquo;s mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus play was neglected&mdash;the music was silent, or played without
+ being heard&mdash;gallants ceased to make compliments, and ladies to
+ expect them; and a sort of apprehensive curiosity pervaded the circle.
+ Each asked the others why they were grave; and no answer was returned, any
+ more than could have been rendered by a herd of cattle instinctively
+ disturbed by the approach of a thunderstorm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To add to the general apprehension, it began to be whispered, that one or
+ two of the guests, who were desirous of leaving the palace, had been
+ informed no one could be permitted to retire until the general hour of
+ dismissal. And these, gliding back into the hall, communicated in whispers
+ that the sentinels at the gates were doubled, and that there was a troop
+ of the Horse Guards drawn up in the court&mdash;circumstances so unusual,
+ as to excite the most anxious curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the state of the Court, when wheels were heard without, and the
+ bustle which took place denoted the arrival of some person of consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here comes Chiffinch,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;with his prey in his clutch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was indeed the Duke of Buckingham; nor did he approach the royal
+ presence without emotion. On entering the court, the flambeaux which were
+ borne around the carriage gleamed on the scarlet coats, laced hats, and
+ drawn broadswords of the Horse Guards&mdash;a sight unusual, and
+ calculated to strike terror into a conscience which was none of the
+ clearest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke alighted from the carriage, and only said to the officer, whom he
+ saw upon duty, &ldquo;You are late under arms to-night, Captain Carleton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such are our orders, sir,&rdquo; answered Carleton, with military brevity; and
+ then commanded the four dismounted sentinels at the under gate to make way
+ for the Duke of Buckingham. His Grace had no sooner entered, than he heard
+ behind him the command, &ldquo;Move close up, sentinels&mdash;closer yet to the
+ gate.&rdquo; And he felt as if all chance of rescue were excluded by the sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he advanced up the grand staircase, there were other symptoms of alarm
+ and precaution. The Yeomen of the Guard were mustered in unusual numbers,
+ and carried carabines instead of their halberds; and the
+ Gentlemen-pensioners, with their partisans, appeared also in proportional
+ force. In short, all that sort of defence which the royal household
+ possesses within itself, seemed, for some hasty and urgent reason, to have
+ been placed under arms, and upon duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham ascended the royal staircase with an eye attentive to these
+ preparations, and a step steady and slow, as if he counted each step on
+ which he trode. &ldquo;Who,&rdquo; he asked himself, &ldquo;shall ensure Christian&rsquo;s
+ fidelity? Let him but stand fast, and we are secure. Otherwise&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he shaped the alternative, he entered the presence-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King stood in the midst of the apartment, surrounded by the personages
+ with whom he had been consulting. The rest of the brilliant assembly,
+ scattered into groups, looked on at some distance. All were silent when
+ Buckingham entered, in hopes of receiving some explanation of the
+ mysteries of the evening. All bent forward, though etiquette forbade them
+ to advance, to catch, if possible, something of what was about to pass
+ betwixt the King and his intriguing statesman. At the same time, those
+ counsellors who stood around Charles, drew back on either side, so as to
+ permit the Duke to pay his respects to his Majesty in the usual form. He
+ went through the ceremonial with his accustomed grace, but was received by
+ Charles with much unwonted gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have waited for you some time, my Lord Duke. It is long since
+ Chiffinch left us, to request your attendance here. I see you are
+ elaborately dressed. Your toilette was needless on the present occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Needless to the splendour of your Majesty&rsquo;s Court,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;but
+ not needless on my part. This chanced to be Black Monday at York Place,
+ and my club of <i>Pendables</i> were in full glee when your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ summons arrived. I could not be in the company of Ogle, Maniduc, Dawson,
+ and so forth, but what I must needs make some preparation, and some
+ ablution, ere entering the circle here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust the purification will be complete,&rdquo; said the King, without any
+ tendency to the smile which always softened features, that, ungilded by
+ its influence, were dark, harsh, and even severe. &ldquo;We wished to ask your
+ Grace concerning the import of a sort of musical mask which you designed
+ us here, but which miscarried, as we are given to understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must have been a great miscarriage indeed,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;since your
+ Majesty looks so serious on it. I thought to have done your Majesty
+ pleasure (as I have seen you condescend to be pleased with such passages),
+ by sending the contents of that bass-viol; but I fear the jest has been
+ unacceptable&mdash;I fear the fireworks may have done mischief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not the mischief they were designed for, perhaps,&rdquo; said the King gravely;
+ &ldquo;you see, my lord, we are all alive, and unsinged.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long may your Majesty remain so,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;yet I see there is
+ something misconstrued on my part&mdash;it must be a matter unpardonable,
+ however little intended, since it hath displeased so indulgent a master.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Too indulgent a master, indeed, Buckingham,&rdquo; replied the King; &ldquo;and the
+ fruit of my indulgence has been to change loyal men into traitors.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Majesty, I cannot understand this,&rdquo; said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Follow us, my lord,&rdquo; answered Charles, &ldquo;and we will endeavour to explain
+ our meaning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attended by the same lords who stood around him, and followed by the Duke
+ of Buckingham, on whom all eyes were fixed, Charles retired into the same
+ cabinet which had been the scene of repeated consultations in the course
+ of the evening. There, leaning with his arms crossed on the back of an
+ easy-chair, Charles proceeded to interrogate the suspected nobleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let us be plain with each other. Speak out, Buckingham. What, in one
+ word, was to have been the regale intended for us this evening?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A petty mask, my lord. I had destined a little dancing-girl to come out
+ of that instrument, who, I thought, would have performed to your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ liking&mdash;a few Chinese fireworks there were, thinking the
+ entertainment was to have taken place in the marble hall, might, I hoped,
+ have been discharged with good effect, and without the slightest alarm, at
+ the first appearance of my little sorceress, and were designed to have
+ masked, as it were, her entrance upon the stage. I hope there have been no
+ perukes singed&mdash;no ladies frightened&mdash;no hopes of noble descent
+ interrupted by my ill-fancied jest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have seen no such fireworks, my lord; and your female dancer, of whom
+ we now hear for the first time, came forth in the form of our old
+ acquaintance Geoffrey Hudson, whose dancing days are surely ended.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty surprises me! I beseech you, let Christian be sent for&mdash;Edward
+ Christian&mdash;he will be found lodging in a large old house near Sharper
+ the cutler&rsquo;s, in the Strand. As I live by bread, sire, I trusted him with
+ the arrangement of this matter, as indeed the dancing-girl was his
+ property. If he has done aught to dishonour my concert, or disparage my
+ character, he shall die under the baton.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is singular,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;and I have often observed it, that this
+ fellow Christian bears the blame of all men&rsquo;s enormities&mdash;he performs
+ the part which, in a great family, is usually assigned to that
+ mischief-doing personage, Nobody. When Chiffinch blunders, he always
+ quotes Christian. When Sheffield writes a lampoon, I am sure to hear of
+ Christian having corrected, or copied, or dispersed it&mdash;he is the <i>ame
+ damnée</i> of every one about my Court&mdash;the scapegoat, who is to
+ carry away all their iniquities; and he will have a cruel load to bear
+ into the wilderness. But for Buckingham&rsquo;s sins, in particular, he is the
+ regular and uniform sponsor; and I am convinced his Grace expects
+ Christian should suffer every penalty he has incurred, in this world or
+ the next.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; with the deepest reverence replied the Duke. &ldquo;I have no hope of
+ being either hanged or damned by proxy; but it is clear some one hath
+ tampered with and altered my device. If I am accused of aught, let me at
+ least hear the charge, and see my accuser.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is but fair,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;Bring our little friend from behind
+ the chimney-board. [Hudson being accordingly produced, he continued.]
+ There stands the Duke of Buckingham. Repeat before him the tale you told
+ us. Let him hear what were those contents of the bass-viol which were
+ removed that you might enter it. Be not afraid of any one, but speak the
+ truth boldly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Majesty,&rdquo; said Hudson, &ldquo;fear is a thing unknown to
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;His body has no room to hold such a passion; or there is too little of it
+ to be worth fearing for,&rdquo; said Buckingham.&mdash;&ldquo;But let him speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Hudson had completed his tale, Buckingham interrupted him by
+ exclaiming, &ldquo;Is it possible that I can be suspected by your Majesty on the
+ word of this pitiful variety of the baboon tribe?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain-Lord, I appeal thee to the combat!&rdquo; said the little man, highly
+ offended at the appellation thus bestowed on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;La you there now!&rdquo; said the Duke&mdash;&ldquo;The little animal is quite
+ crazed, and defies a man who need ask no other weapon than a corking-pin
+ to run him through the lungs, and whose single kick could hoist him from
+ Dover to Calais without yacht or wherry. And what can you expect from an
+ idiot, who is <i>engoué</i> of a common rope-dancing girl, that capered on
+ a pack-thread at Ghent in Flanders, unless they were to club their talents
+ to set up a booth at Bartholomew Fair?&mdash;Is it not plain, that
+ supposing the little animal is not malicious, as indeed his whole kind
+ bear a general and most cankered malice against those who have the
+ ordinary proportions of humanity&mdash;Grant, I say, that this were not a
+ malicious falsehood of his, why, what does it amount to?&mdash;That he has
+ mistaken squibs and Chinese crackers for arms! He says not he himself
+ touched or handled them; and judging by the sight alone, I question if the
+ infirm old creature, when any whim or preconception hath possession of his
+ noddle, can distinguish betwixt a blunderbuss and a black-pudding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horrible clamour which the dwarf made so soon as he heard this
+ disparagement of his military skill&mdash;the haste with which he
+ blundered out a detail of this warlike experiences&mdash;and the absurd
+ grimaces which he made in order to enforce his story, provoked not only
+ the risibility of Charles, but even of the statesmen around him, and added
+ absurdity to the motley complexion of the scene. The King terminated this
+ dispute, by commanding the dwarf to withdraw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more regular discussion of his evidence was then resumed, and Ormond was
+ the first who pointed out, that it went farther than had been noticed,
+ since the little man had mentioned a certain extraordinary and treasonable
+ conversation held by the Duke&rsquo;s dependents, by whom he had been conveyed
+ to the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am sure not to lack my lord of Ormond&rsquo;s good word,&rdquo; said the Duke
+ scornfully; &ldquo;but I defy him alike, and all my other enemies, and shall
+ find it easy to show that this alleged conspiracy, if any grounds for it
+ at all exist, in a mere sham-plot, got up to turn the odium justly
+ attached to the Papists upon the Protestants. Here is a half-hanged
+ creature, who, on the very day he escapes from the gallows, which many
+ believe was his most deserved destiny, comes to take away the reputation
+ of a Protestant Peer&mdash;and on what?&mdash;on the treasonable
+ conversation of three or four German fiddlers, heard through the
+ sound-holes of a violoncello, and that, too, when the creature was incased
+ in it, and mounted on a man&rsquo;s shoulders! The urchin, too, in repeating
+ their language, shows he understands German as little as my horse does;
+ and if he did rightly hear, truly comprehend, and accurately report what
+ they said, still, is my honour to be touched by the language held by such
+ persons as these are, with whom I have never communicated, otherwise than
+ men of my rank do with those of their calling and capacity?&mdash;Pardon
+ me, sire, if I presume to say, that the profound statesmen who endeavoured
+ to stifle the Popish conspiracy by the pretended Meal-tub Plot, will take
+ little more credit by their figments about fiddles and concertos.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The assistant counsellors looked at each other; and Charles turned on his
+ heel, and walked through the room with long steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this period the Peverils, father and son, were announced to have
+ reached the palace, and were ordered into the royal presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These gentlemen had received the royal mandate at a moment of great
+ interest. After being dismissed from their confinement by the elder
+ Bridgenorth, in the manner and upon the terms which the reader must have
+ gathered from the conversation of the latter with Christian, they reached
+ the lodgings of Lady Peveril, who awaited them with joy, mingled with
+ terror and uncertainty. The news of the acquittal had reached her by the
+ exertions of the faithful Lance Outram, but her mind had been since
+ harassed by the long delay of their appearance, and rumours of
+ disturbances which had taken place in Fleet Street and in the Strand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the first rapturous meeting was over, Lady Peveril, with an anxious
+ look towards her son, as if recommending caution, said she was now about
+ to present to him the daughter of an old friend, whom he had <i>never</i>
+ (there was an emphasis on the word) seen before. &ldquo;This young lady,&rdquo; she
+ continued, &ldquo;was the only child of Colonel Mitford, in North Wales, who had
+ sent her to remain under her guardianship for an interval, finding himself
+ unequal to attempt the task of her education.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;Dick Mitford must be old now&mdash;beyond
+ the threescore and ten, I think. He was no chicken, though a cock of the
+ game, when he joined the Marquis of Hertford at Namptwich with two hundred
+ wild Welshmen.&mdash;Before George, Julian, I love that girl as if she was
+ my own flesh and blood! Lady Peveril would never have got through this
+ work without her; and Dick Mitford sent me a thousand pieces, too, in
+ excellent time, when there was scarce a cross to keep the devil from
+ dancing in our pockets, much more for these law-doings. I used it without
+ scruple, for there is wood ready to be cut at Martindale when we get down
+ there, and Dick Mitford knows I would have done the like for him. Strange
+ that he should have been the only one of my friends to reflect I might
+ want a few pieces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Sir Geoffrey thus run on, the meeting betwixt Alice and Julian
+ Peveril was accomplished, without any particular notice on his side,
+ except to say, &ldquo;Kiss her, Julian&mdash;kiss her. What the devil! is that
+ the way you learned to accost a lady at the Isle of Man, as if her lips
+ were a red-hot horseshoe?&mdash;And do not you be offended, my pretty one;
+ Julian is naturally bashful, and has been bred by an old lady, but you
+ will find him, by-and-by, as gallant as thou hast found me, my princess.&mdash;And
+ now, Dame Peveril, to dinner, to dinner! the old fox must have his
+ belly-timber, though the hounds have been after him the whole day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance, whose joyous congratulations were next to be undergone, had the
+ consideration to cut them short, in order to provide a plain but hearty
+ meal from the next cook&rsquo;s shop, at which Julian sat, like one enchanted,
+ betwixt his mistress and his mother. He easily conceived that the last was
+ the confidential friend to whom Bridgenorth had finally committed the
+ charge of his daughter, and his only anxiety now was, to anticipate the
+ confusion that was likely to arise when her real parentage was made known
+ to his father. Wisely, however, he suffered not these anticipations to
+ interfere with the delight of his present situation, in the course of
+ which many slight but delightful tokens of recognition were exchanged,
+ without censure, under the eye of Lady Peveril, under cover of the
+ boisterous mirth of the old Baronet, who spoke for two, ate for four, and
+ drank wine for half-a-dozen. His progress in the latter exercise might
+ have proceeded rather too far, had he not been interrupted by a gentleman
+ bearing the King&rsquo;s orders, that he should instantly attend upon the
+ presence at Whitehall, and bring his son along with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was alarmed, and Alice grew pale with sympathetic anxiety;
+ but the old Knight, who never saw more than what lay straight before him,
+ set it down to the King&rsquo;s hasty anxiety to congratulate him on his escape;
+ an interest on his Majesty&rsquo;s part which he considered by no means
+ extravagant, conscious that it was reciprocal on his own side. It came
+ upon him, indeed, with the more joyful surprise that he had received a
+ previous hint, ere he left the court of justice, that it would be prudent
+ in him to go down to Martindale before presenting himself at Court&mdash;a
+ restriction which he supposed as repugnant to his Majesty&rsquo;s feelings as it
+ was to his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he consulted with Lance Outram about cleaning his buff-belt and
+ sword-hilt, as well as time admitted, Lady Peveril had the means to give
+ Julian more distinct information, that Alice was under her protection by
+ her father&rsquo;s authority, and with his consent to their union, if it could
+ be accomplished. She added that it was her determination to employ the
+ mediation of the Countess of Derby, to overcome the obstacles which might
+ be foreseen on the part of Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0049" id="link2HCH0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In the King&rsquo;s name,
+ Let fall your swords and daggers!
+ &mdash;CRITIC.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the father and son entered the cabinet of audience, it was easily
+ visible that Sir Geoffrey had obeyed the summons as he would have done the
+ trumpet&rsquo;s call to horse; and his dishevelled grey locks and half-arranged
+ dress, though they showed zeal and haste, such as he would have used when
+ Charles I. called him to attend a council of war, seemed rather indecorous
+ in a pacific drawing-room. He paused at the door of the cabinet, but when
+ the King called on him to advance, came hastily forward, with every
+ feeling of his earlier and later life afloat, and contending in his
+ memory, threw himself on his knees before the King, seized his hand, and,
+ without even an effort to speak, wept aloud. Charles, who generally felt
+ deeply so long as an impressive object was before his eyes, indulged for a
+ moment the old man&rsquo;s rapture.&mdash;&ldquo;My good Sir Geoffrey,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you
+ have had some hard measure; we owe you amends, and will find time to pay
+ our debt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No suffering&mdash;no debt,&rdquo; said the old man; &ldquo;I cared not what the
+ rogues said of me&mdash;I knew they could never get twelve honest fellows
+ to believe a word of their most damnable lies. I did long to beat them
+ when they called me traitor to your Majesty&mdash;that I confess&mdash;But
+ to have such an early opportunity of paying my duty to your Majesty,
+ overpays it all. The villains would have persuaded me I ought not to come
+ to Court&mdash;aha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Ormond perceived that the King coloured much; for in truth it
+ was from the Court that the private intimation had been given to Sir
+ Geoffrey to go down to the country, without appearing at Whitehall; and
+ he, moreover, suspected that the jolly old Knight had not risen from his
+ dinner altogether dry-lipped, after the fatigues of a day so agitating.&mdash;&ldquo;My
+ old friend,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;you forget that your son is to be presented&mdash;permit
+ me to have that honour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave your Grace&rsquo;s pardon humbly,&rdquo; said Sir Geoffrey, &ldquo;but it is an
+ honour I design for myself, as I apprehend no one can so utterly surrender
+ and deliver him up to his Majesty&rsquo;s service as the father that begot him
+ is entitled to do.&mdash;Julian, come forward, and kneel.&mdash;Here he
+ is, please your Majesty&mdash;Julian Peveril&mdash;a chip of the old block&mdash;as
+ stout, though scarce so tall a tree, as the old trunk, when at the
+ freshest. Take him to you, sir, for a faithful servant, <i>à pendre</i>,
+ as the French say; if he fears fire or steel, axe or gallows, in your
+ Majesty&rsquo;s service, I renounce him&mdash;he is no son of mine&mdash;I
+ disown him, and he may go to the Isle of Man, the Isle of Dogs, or the
+ Isle of Devils, for what I care.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles winked to Ormond, and having, with his wonted courtesy, expressed
+ his thorough conviction that Julian would imitate the loyalty of his
+ ancestors, and especially of his father, added, that he believed his Grace
+ of Ormond had something to communicate which was of consequence to his
+ service. Sir Geoffrey made his military reverence at this hint, and
+ marched off in the rear of the Duke, who proceeded to inquire of him
+ concerning the events of the day. Charles, in the meanwhile, having in the
+ first place, ascertained that the son was not in the same genial condition
+ with the father, demanded and received from him a precise account of all
+ the proceedings subsequent to the trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, with the plainness and precision which such a subject demanded,
+ when treated in such a presence, narrated all that happened down to the
+ entrance of Bridgenorth; and his Majesty was so much pleased with his
+ manner, that he congratulated Arlington on their having gained the
+ evidence of at least one man of sense to these dark and mysterious events.
+ But when Bridgenorth was brought upon the scene, Julian hesitated to
+ bestow a name upon him; and although he mentioned the chapel which he had
+ seen filled with men in arms, and the violent language of the preacher, he
+ added, with earnestness, that notwithstanding all this, the men departed
+ without coming to any extremity, and had all left the place before his
+ father and he were set at liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you retired quietly to your dinner in Fleet Street, young man,&rdquo; said
+ the King severely, &ldquo;without giving a magistrate notice of the dangerous
+ meeting which was held in the vicinity of our palace, and who did not
+ conceal their intention of proceeding to extremities?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril blushed, and was silent. The King frowned, and stepped aside to
+ communicate with Ormond, who reported that the father seemed to have known
+ nothing of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the son, I am sorry to say,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;seems more unwilling to
+ speak the truth than I should have expected. We have all variety of
+ evidence in this singular investigation&mdash;a mad witness like the
+ dwarf, a drunken witness like the father, and now a dumb witness.&mdash;Young
+ man,&rdquo; he continued, addressing Julian, &ldquo;your behaviour is less frank than
+ I expected from your father&rsquo;s son. I must know who this person is with
+ whom you held such familiar intercourse&mdash;you know him, I presume?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian acknowledged that he did, but, kneeling on one knee, entreated his
+ Majesty&rsquo;s forgiveness for concealing his name; &ldquo;he had been freed,&rdquo; he
+ said, &ldquo;from his confinement, on promising to that effect.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a promise made, by your own account, under compulsion,&rdquo; answered
+ the King, &ldquo;and I cannot authorise your keeping it; it is your duty to
+ speak the truth&mdash;if you are afraid of Buckingham, the Duke shall
+ withdraw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no reason to fear the Duke of Buckingham,&rdquo; said Peveril; &ldquo;that I
+ had an affair with one of his household, was the man&rsquo;s own fault and not
+ mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oddsfish!&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;the light begins to break in on me&mdash;I
+ thought I remembered thy physiognomy. Wert thou not the very fellow whom I
+ met at Chiffinch&rsquo;s yonder morning?&mdash;The matter escaped me since; but
+ now I recollect thou saidst then, that thou wert the son of that jolly old
+ three-bottle Baronet yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is true,&rdquo; said Julian, &ldquo;that I met your Majesty at Master Chiffinch&rsquo;s,
+ and I am afraid had the misfortune to displease you; but&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No more of that, young man&mdash;no more of that&mdash;But I recollect
+ you had with you that beautiful dancing siren.&mdash;Buckingham, I will
+ hold you gold to silver, that she was the intended tenant of that
+ bass-fiddle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty has rightly guessed it,&rdquo; said the Duke; &ldquo;and I suspect she
+ has put a trick upon me, by substituting the dwarf in her place; for
+ Christian thinks&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn Christian!&rdquo; said the King hastily&mdash;&ldquo;I wish they would bring him
+ hither, that universal referee.&rdquo;&mdash;And as the wish was uttered,
+ Christian&rsquo;s arrival was announced. &ldquo;Let him attend,&rdquo; said the King: &ldquo;But
+ hark&mdash;a thought strikes me.&mdash;Here, Master Peveril&mdash;yonder
+ dancing maiden that introduced you to us by the singular agility of her
+ performance, is she not, by your account, a dependent of the Countess of
+ Derby?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have known her such for years,&rdquo; answered Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then will we call the Countess hither,&rdquo; said the King: &ldquo;It is fit we
+ should learn who this little fairy really is; and if she be now so
+ absolutely at the beck of Buckingham, and this Master Christian of his&mdash;why
+ I think it would be but charity to let her ladyship know so much, since I
+ question if she will wish, in that case, to retain her in her service.
+ Besides,&rdquo; he continued, speaking apart, &ldquo;this Julian, to whom suspicion
+ attaches in these matters from his obstinate silence, is also of the
+ Countess&rsquo;s household. We will sift this matter to the bottom, and do
+ justice to all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby, hastily summoned, entered the royal closet at one
+ door, just as Christian and Zarah, or Fenella, were ushered in by the
+ other. The old Knight of Martindale, who had ere this returned to the
+ presence, was scarce controlled, even by the signs which she made, so much
+ was he desirous of greeting his old friend; but as Ormond laid a kind
+ restraining hand upon his arm, he was prevailed on to sit still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, after a deep reverence to the King, acknowledged the rest of
+ the nobility present by a slighter reverence, smiled to Julian Peveril,
+ and looked with surprise at the unexpected apparition of Fenella.
+ Buckingham bit his lip, for he saw the introduction of Lady Derby was
+ likely to confuse and embroil every preparation which he had arranged for
+ his defence; and he stole a glance at Christian, whose eye, when fixed on
+ the Countess, assumed the deadly sharpness which sparkles in the adder&rsquo;s,
+ while his cheek grew almost black under the influence of strong emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is there any one in this presence whom your ladyship recognises,&rdquo; said
+ the King graciously, &ldquo;besides your old friends of Ormond and Arlington?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see, my liege, two worthy friends of my husband&rsquo;s house,&rdquo; replied the
+ Countess; &ldquo;Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son&mdash;the latter a
+ distinguished member of my son&rsquo;s household.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Any one else?&rdquo; continued the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An unfortunate female of my family, who disappeared from the Island of
+ Man at the same time when Julian Peveril left it upon business of
+ importance. She was thought to have fallen from the cliff into the sea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Had your ladyship any reason to suspect&mdash;pardon me,&rdquo; said the King,
+ &ldquo;for putting such a question&mdash;any improper intimacy between Master
+ Peveril and this same female attendant?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My liege,&rdquo; said the Countess, colouring indignantly, &ldquo;my household is of
+ reputation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lady, be not angry,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;I did but ask&mdash;such
+ things will befall in the best regulated families.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in mine, sire,&rdquo; said the Countess. &ldquo;Besides that, in common pride and
+ in common honesty, Julian Peveril is incapable of intriguing with an
+ unhappy creature, removed by her misfortune almost beyond the limits of
+ humanity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zarah looked at her, and compressed her lips, as if to keep in the words
+ that would fain break from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know how it is,&rdquo; said the King&mdash;&ldquo;What your ladyship says may be
+ true in the main, yet men&rsquo;s tastes have strange vagaries. This girl is
+ lost in Man as soon as the youth leaves it, and is found in Saint Jame&rsquo;s
+ Park, bouncing and dancing like a fairy, so soon as he appears in London.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; said the Countess; &ldquo;she cannot dance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;she can do more feats than your ladyship
+ either suspects or would approve of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess drew up, and was indignantly silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King proceeded&mdash;&ldquo;No sooner is Peveril in Newgate, than, by the
+ account of the venerable little gentleman, this merry maiden is even there
+ also for company. Now, without inquiring how she got in, I think
+ charitably that she had better taste than to come there on the dwarf&rsquo;s
+ account.&mdash;Ah ha! I think Master Julian is touched in conscience!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did indeed start as the King spoke, for it reminded him of the
+ midnight visit in his cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked fixedly at him, and then proceeded&mdash;&ldquo;Well, gentlemen,
+ Peveril is carried to his trial, and is no sooner at liberty, than we find
+ him in the house where the Duke of Buckingham was arranging what he calls
+ a musical mask.&mdash;Egad, I hold it next to certain, that this wench put
+ the change on his Grace, and popt the poor dwarf into the bass-viol,
+ reserving her own more precious hours to be spent with Master Julian
+ Peveril.&mdash;Think you not so, Sir Christian, you, the universal
+ referee? Is there any truth in this conjecture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian stole a glance at Zarah, and read that in her eye which
+ embarrassed him. &ldquo;He did not know,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;he had indeed engaged this
+ unrivalled performer to take the proposed part in the mask; and she was to
+ have come forth in the midst of a shower of lambent fire, very
+ artificially prepared with perfumes, to overcome the smell of the powder;
+ but he knew not why&mdash;excepting that she was wilful and capricious,
+ like all great geniuses&mdash;she had certainly spoiled the concert by
+ cramming in that more bulky dwarf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should like,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;to see this little maiden stand forth,
+ and bear witness, in such manner as she can express herself, on this
+ mysterious matter. Can any one here understand her mode of communication?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian said, he knew something of it since he had become acquainted
+ with her in London. The Countess spoke not till the King asked her, and
+ then owned dryly, that she had necessarily some habitual means of
+ intercourse with one who had been immediately about her person for so many
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should think,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;that this same Master Peveril has the
+ more direct key to her language, after all we have heard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked first at Peveril, who blushed like a maiden at the
+ inference which the King&rsquo;s remark implied, and then suddenly turned his
+ eyes on the supposed mute, on whose cheek a faint colour was dying away. A
+ moment afterwards, at a signal from the Countess, Fenella, or Zarah,
+ stepped forward, and having kissed her lady&rsquo;s hand, stood with her arms
+ folded on her breast, with a humble air, as different from that which she
+ wore in the harem of the Duke of Buckingham, as that of a Magdalene from a
+ Judith. Yet this was the least show of her talent of versatility, for so
+ well did she play the part of the dumb girl, that Buckingham, sharp as his
+ discernment was, remained undecided whether the creature which stood
+ before him could possibly be the same with her, who had, in a different
+ dress, made such an impression on his imagination, or indeed was the
+ imperfect creature she now represented. She had at once all that could
+ mark the imperfection of hearing, and all that could show the wonderful
+ address by which nature so often makes up of the deficiency. There was the
+ lip that trembles not at any sound&mdash;the seeming insensibility to the
+ conversation that passed around; while, on the other hand, was the quick
+ and vivid glance; that seemed anxious to devour the meaning of those
+ sounds, which she could gather no otherwise than by the motion of the
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examined after her own fashion, Zarah confirmed the tale of Christian in
+ all its points, and admitted that she had deranged the project laid for a
+ mask, by placing the dwarf in her own stead; the cause of her doing so she
+ declined to assign, and the Countess pressed her no farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Everything tells to exculpate my Lord of Buckingham,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;from
+ so absurd an accusation: the dwarf&rsquo;s testimony is too fantastic, that of
+ the two Peverils does not in the least affect the Duke; that of the dumb
+ damsel completely contradicts the possibility of his guilt. Methinks, my
+ lords, we should acquaint him that he stands acquitted of a complaint, too
+ ridiculous to have been subjected to a more serious scrutiny than we have
+ hastily made upon this occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arlington bowed in acquiescence, but Ormond spoke plainly.&mdash;&ldquo;I should
+ suffer, sire, in the opinion of the Duke of Buckingham, brilliant as his
+ talents are known to be, should I say that I am satisfied in my own mind
+ on this occasion. But I subscribe to the spirit of the times; and I agree
+ it would be highly dangerous, on such accusations as we have been able to
+ collect, to impeach the character of a zealous Protestant like his Grace&mdash;Had
+ he been a Catholic, under such circumstances of suspicion, the Tower had
+ been too good a prison for him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham bowed to the Duke of Ormond, with a meaning which even his
+ triumph could not disguise.&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Tu me la pagherai!</i>&rdquo; he muttered,
+ in a tone of deep and abiding resentment; but the stout old Irishman, who
+ had long since braved his utmost wrath, cared little for this expression
+ of his displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King then, signing to the other nobles to pass into the public
+ apartments, stopped Buckingham as he was about to follow them; and when
+ they were alone, asked, with a significant tone, which brought all the
+ blood in the Duke&rsquo;s veins into his countenance, &ldquo;When was it, George, that
+ your useful friend Colonel Blood became a musician?&mdash;You are silent,&rdquo;
+ he said; &ldquo;do not deny the charge, for yonder villain, once seen, is
+ remembered for ever. Down, down on your knees, George, and acknowledge
+ that you have abused my easy temper.&mdash;Seek for no apology&mdash;none
+ will serve your turn. I saw the man myself, among your Germans as you call
+ them; and you know what I must needs believe from such a circumstance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Believe that I have been guilty&mdash;most guilty, my liege and King,&rdquo;
+ said the Duke, conscience-stricken, and kneeling down;&mdash;&ldquo;believe that
+ I was misguided&mdash;that I was mad&mdash;Believe anything but that I was
+ capable of harming, or being accessory to harm, your person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not believe it,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;I think of you, Villiers, as the
+ companion of my dangers and my exile, and am so far from supposing you
+ mean worse than you say, that I am convinced you acknowledge more than
+ ever you meant to attempt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By all that is sacred,&rdquo; said the Duke, still kneeling, &ldquo;had I not been
+ involved to the extent of life and fortune with the villain Christian&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, if you bring Christian on the stage again,&rdquo; said the King, smiling,
+ &ldquo;it is time for me to withdraw. Come, Villiers, rise&mdash;I forgive thee,
+ and only recommend one act of penance&mdash;the curse you yourself
+ bestowed on the dog who bit you&mdash;marriage, and retirement to your
+ country-seat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke rose abashed, and followed the King into the circle, which
+ Charles entered, leaning on the shoulder of his repentant peer; to whom he
+ showed so much countenance, as led the most acute observers present, to
+ doubt the possibility of there existing any real cause for the surmises to
+ the Duke&rsquo;s prejudice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby had in the meanwhile consulted with the Duke of
+ Ormond, with the Peverils, and with her other friends; and, by their
+ unanimous advice, though with considerable difficulty, became satisfied,
+ that to have thus shown herself at Court, was sufficient to vindicate the
+ honour of her house; and that it was her wisest course, after having done
+ so, to retire to her insular dominions, without farther provoking the
+ resentment of a powerful faction. She took farewell of the King in form,
+ and demanded his permission to carry back with her the helpless creature
+ who had so strangely escaped from her protection, into a world where her
+ condition rendered her so subject to every species of misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will your ladyship forgive me?&rdquo; said Charles. &ldquo;I have studied your sex
+ long&mdash;I am mistaken if your little maiden is not as capable of caring
+ for herself as any of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Impossible!&rdquo; said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Possible, and most true,&rdquo; whispered the King. &ldquo;I will instantly convince
+ you of the fact, though the experiment is too delicate to be made by any
+ but your ladyship. Yonder she stands, looking as if she heard no more than
+ the marble pillar against which she leans. Now, if Lady Derby will
+ contrive either to place her hand near the region of the damsel&rsquo;s heart,
+ or at least on her arm, so that she can feel the sensation of the blood
+ when the pulse increases, then do you, my Lord of Ormond, beckon Julian
+ Peveril out of sight&mdash;I will show you in a moment that it can stir at
+ sounds spoken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, much surprised, afraid of some embarrassing pleasantry on
+ the part of Charles, yet unable to repress her curiosity, placed herself
+ near Fenella, as she called her little mute; and, while making signs to
+ her, contrived to place her hand on her wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the King, passing near them, said, &ldquo;This is a horrid deed&mdash;the
+ villain Christian has stabbed young Peveril!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mute evidence of the pulse, which bounded as if a cannon had been
+ discharged close by the poor girl&rsquo;s ear, was accompanied by such a loud
+ scream of agony, as distressed, while it startled, the good-natured
+ monarch himself. &ldquo;I did but jest,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;Julian is well, my pretty
+ maiden. I only used the wand of a certain blind deity, called Cupid, to
+ bring a deaf and dumb vassal of his to the exercise of her faculties.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am betrayed!&rdquo; she said, with her eyes fixed on the ground&mdash;&ldquo;I am
+ betrayed!&mdash;and it is fit that she, whose life has been spent in
+ practising treason on others, should be caught in her own snare. But where
+ is my tutor in iniquity?&mdash;where is Christian, who taught me to play
+ the part of spy on this unsuspicious lady, until I had well-nigh delivered
+ her into his bloody hands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;craves more secret examination. Let all leave the
+ apartment who are not immediately connected with these proceedings, and
+ let this Christian be again brought before us.&mdash;Wretched man,&rdquo; he
+ continued, addressing Christian, &ldquo;what wiles are these you have practised,
+ and by what extraordinary means?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has betrayed me, then!&rdquo; said Christian&mdash;&ldquo;Betrayed me to bonds
+ and death, merely for an idle passion, which can never be successful!&mdash;But
+ know, Zarah,&rdquo; he added, addressing her sternly, &ldquo;when my life is forfeited
+ through thy evidence, the daughter has murdered the father!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unfortunate girl stared on him in astonishment. &ldquo;You said,&rdquo; at length
+ she stammered forth, &ldquo;that I was the daughter of your slaughtered
+ brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was partly to reconcile thee to the part thou wert to play in my
+ destined drama of vengeance&mdash;partly to hide what men call the infamy
+ of thy birth. But <i>my</i> daughter thou art! and from the eastern clime,
+ in which thy mother was born, you derive that fierce torrent of passion
+ which I laboured to train to my purposes, but which, turned into another
+ channel, has become the cause of your father&rsquo;s destruction.&mdash;My
+ destiny is the Tower, I suppose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke these words with great composure, and scarce seemed to regard the
+ agonies of his daughter, who, throwing herself at his feet, sobbed and
+ wept most bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This must not be,&rdquo; said the King, moved with compassion at this scene of
+ misery. &ldquo;If you consent, Christian, to leave this country, there is a
+ vessel in the river bound for New England&mdash;Go, carry your dark
+ intrigues to other lands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might dispute the sentence,&rdquo; said Christian boldly; &ldquo;and if I submit to
+ it, it is a matter of my own choice.&mdash;One half-hour had made me even
+ with that proud woman, but fortune hath cast the balance against me.&mdash;Rise,
+ Zarah, Fenella no more! Tell the Lady of Derby, that, if the daughter of
+ Edward Christian, the niece of her murdered victim, served her as a
+ menial, it was but for the purpose of vengeance&mdash;miserably, miserably
+ frustrated!&mdash;Thou seest thy folly now&mdash;thou wouldst follow
+ yonder ungrateful stripling&mdash;thou wouldst forsake all other thoughts
+ to gain his slightest notice; and now thou art a forlorn outcast,
+ ridiculed and insulted by those on whose necks you might have trod, had
+ you governed yourself with more wisdom!&mdash;But come, thou art still my
+ daughter&mdash;there are other skies than that which canopies Britain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stop him,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;we must know by what means this maiden found
+ access to those confined in our prisons.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I refer your Majesty to your most Protestant jailer, and to the most
+ Protestant Peers, who, in order to obtain perfect knowledge of the depth
+ of the Popish Plot, have contrived these ingenious apertures for visiting
+ them in their cells by night or day. His Grace of Buckingham can assist
+ your Majesty, if you are inclined to make the inquiry.&rdquo; [*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] It was said that very unfair means were used to compel the
+ prisoners, committed on account of the Popish Plot, to make
+ disclosures, and that several of them were privately put to the
+ torture.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;thou art the most barefaced villain who ever
+ breathed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of a commoner, I may,&rdquo; answered Christian, and led his daughter out of
+ the presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See after him, Selby,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;lose not sight of him till the
+ ship sail; if he dare return to Britain, it shall be at his peril. Would
+ to God we had as good riddance of others as dangerous! And I would also,&rdquo;
+ he added, after a moment&rsquo;s pause, &ldquo;that all our political intrigues and
+ feverish alarms could terminate as harmlessly as now. Here is a plot
+ without a drop of blood; and all the elements of a romance, without its
+ conclusion. Here we have a wandering island princess (I pray my Lady of
+ Derby&rsquo;s pardon), a dwarf, a Moorish sorceress, an impenitent rogue, and a
+ repentant man of rank, and yet all ends without either hanging or
+ marriage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not altogether without the latter,&rdquo; said the Countess, who had an
+ opportunity, during the evening, of much private conversation with Julian
+ Peveril. &ldquo;There is a certain Major Bridgenorth, who, since your Majesty
+ relinquishes farther inquiry into these proceedings, which he had
+ otherwise intended to abide, designs, as we are informed, to leave England
+ for ever. Now, this Bridgenorth, by dint of law, hath acquired strong
+ possession over the domains of Peveril, which he is desirous to restore to
+ the ancient owners, with much fair land besides, conditionally, that our
+ young Julian will receive them as the dowry of his only child and heir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith,&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;she must be a foul-favoured wench, indeed,
+ if Julian requires to be pressed to accept her on such fair conditions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They love each other like lovers of the last age,&rdquo; said the Countess;
+ &ldquo;but the stout old Knight likes not the round-headed alliance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Our royal recommendation shall put that to rights,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril has not suffered hardship so often at our command, that
+ he will refuse our recommendation when it comes to make him amends for all
+ his losses.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be supposed the King did not speak without being fully aware of the
+ unlimited ascendancy which he possessed over the old Tory; for within four
+ weeks afterwards, the bells of Martindale-Moultrassie were ringing for the
+ union of the families, from whose estates it takes its compound name, and
+ the beacon-light of the Castle blazed high over hill and dale, and
+ summoned all to rejoice who were within twenty miles of its gleam.
+ </p>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0097m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0097m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0097.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0129m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0129m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0129.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0165m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0165m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0165.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0208m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0208m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0208.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:60%;">
+ <img src="images/0402m.jpg" style="width:100%;" alt="0402m" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0402.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ span.dropcap { float: left; margin: 0 0.1em 0 0; line-height: 1 }
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+ -->
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott
+
+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: Peveril of the Peak
+
+Author: Sir Walter Scott
+
+Release Date: May 1, 2009 [EBook #5959]
+Last Updated: July 25, 2014
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PEVERIL OF THE PEAK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Emma Wong Shee, John Bickers, Dagny, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
+ </h2>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0001m.jpg" alt="0001m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0001.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0013m.jpg" alt="0013m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0013.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0581m.jpg" alt="0581m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0581.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0006m.jpg" alt="0006m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0006.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0012m.jpg" alt="0012m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0012.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0011m.jpg" alt="0011m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0011.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <big><b>PEVERIL OF THE PEAK</b></big>
+ </a><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0038"> CHAPTER XXXVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0039"> CHAPTER XXXIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0040"> CHAPTER XL </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0041"> CHAPTER XLI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0042"> CHAPTER XLII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0043"> CHAPTER XLIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0044"> CHAPTER XLIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0045"> CHAPTER XLV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0046"> CHAPTER XLVI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0047"> CHAPTER XLVII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0048"> CHAPTER XLVIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0049"> CHAPTER XLIX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ When civil dudgeon first grew high,
+ And men fell out, they knew not why;
+ When foul words, jealousies, and fears,
+ Set folk together by the ears&mdash;
+ &mdash;BUTLER.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ William, the Conqueror of England, was, or supposed himself to be, the
+ father of a certain William Peveril, who attended him to the battle of
+ Hastings, and there distinguished himself. The liberal-minded monarch, who
+ assumed in his charters the veritable title of Gulielmus Bastardus, was
+ not likely to let his son's illegitimacy be any bar to the course of his
+ royal favour, when the laws of England were issued from the mouth of the
+ Norman victor, and the lands of the Saxons were at his unlimited disposal.
+ William Peveril obtained a liberal grant of property and lordships in
+ Derbyshire, and became the erecter of that Gothic fortress, which, hanging
+ over the mouth of the Devil's Cavern, so well known to tourists, gives the
+ name of Castleton to the adjacent village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this feudal Baron, who chose his nest upon the principles on which an
+ eagle selects her eyry, and built it in such a fashion as if he had
+ intended it, as an Irishman said of the Martello towers, for the sole
+ purpose of puzzling posterity, there was, or conceived themselves to be,
+ descended (for their pedigree was rather hypothetical) an opulent family
+ of knightly rank, in the same county of Derby. The great fief of
+ Castleton, with its adjacent wastes and forests, and all the wonders which
+ they contain, had been forfeited in King John's stormy days, by one
+ William Peveril, and had been granted anew to the Lord Ferrers of that
+ day. Yet this William's descendants, though no longer possessed of what
+ they alleged to have been their original property, were long distinguished
+ by the proud title of Peverils of the Peak, which served to mark their
+ high descent and lofty pretensions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Charles the Second's time, the representative of this ancient family
+ was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, a man who had many of the ordinary attributes of
+ an old-fashioned country gentleman, and very few individual traits to
+ distinguish him from the general portrait of that worthy class of mankind.
+ He was proud of small advantages, angry at small disappointments,
+ incapable of forming any resolution or opinion abstracted from his own
+ prejudices&mdash;he was proud of his birth, lavish in his housekeeping,
+ convivial with those kindred and acquaintances, who would allow his
+ superiority in rank&mdash;contentious and quarrelsome with all that
+ crossed his pretensions&mdash;kind to the poor, except when they plundered
+ his game&mdash;a Royalist in his political opinions, and one who detested
+ alike a Roundhead, a poacher, and a Presbyterian. In religion Sir Geoffrey
+ was a high-churchman, of so exalted a strain that many thought he still
+ nourished in private the Roman Catholic tenets, which his family had only
+ renounced in his father's time, and that he had a dispensation for
+ conforming in outward observances to the Protestant faith. There was at
+ least such a scandal amongst the Puritans, and the influence which Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril certainly appeared to possess amongst the Catholic
+ gentlemen of Derbyshire and Cheshire, seemed to give countenance to the
+ rumour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Sir Geoffrey, who might have passed to his grave without further
+ distinction than a brass-plate in the chancel, had he not lived in times
+ which forced the most inactive spirits into exertion, as a tempest
+ influences the sluggish waters of the deadest mere. When the Civil Wars
+ broke out, Peveril of the Peak, proud from pedigree, and brave by
+ constitution, raised a regiment for the King, and showed upon several
+ occasions more capacity for command than men had heretofore given him
+ credit for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in the midst of the civil turmoil, he fell in love with, and married,
+ a beautiful and amiable young lady of the noble house of Stanley; and from
+ that time had the more merit in his loyalty, as it divorced him from her
+ society, unless at very brief intervals, when his duty permitted an
+ occasional visit to his home. Scorning to be allured from his military
+ duty by domestic inducements, Peveril of the Peak fought on for several
+ rough years of civil war, and performed his part with sufficient
+ gallantry, until his regiment was surprised and cut to pieces by Poyntz,
+ Cromwell's enterprising and successful general of cavalry. The defeated
+ Cavalier escaped from the field of battle, and, like a true descendant of
+ William the Conqueror, disdaining submission, threw himself into his own
+ castellated mansion, which was attacked and defended in a siege of that
+ irregular kind which caused the destruction of so many baronial residences
+ during the course of those unhappy wars. Martindale Castle, after having
+ suffered severely from the cannon which Cromwell himself brought against
+ it, was at length surrendered when in the last extremity. Sir Geoffrey
+ himself became a prisoner, and while his liberty was only restored upon a
+ promise of remaining a peaceful subject to the Commonwealth in future, his
+ former delinquencies, as they were termed by the ruling party, were
+ severely punished by fine and sequestration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither his forced promise, nor the fear of farther unpleasant
+ consequences to his person or property, could prevent Peveril of the Peak
+ from joining the gallant Earl of Derby the night before the fatal
+ engagement in Wiggan Lane, where the Earl's forces were dispersed. Sir
+ Geoffrey having had his share in that action, escaped with the relics of
+ the Royalists after the defeat, to join Charles II. He witnessed also the
+ final defeat of Worcester, where he was a second time made prisoner; and
+ as, in the opinion of Cromwell and the language of the times, he was
+ regarded as an obstinate malignant, he was in great danger of having
+ shared with the Earl of Derby his execution at Bolton-le-Moor, having
+ partaken with him the dangers of two actions. But Sir Geoffrey's life was
+ preserved by the interest of a friend, who possessed influence in the
+ councils of Oliver.&mdash;This was a Mr. Bridgenorth, a gentleman of
+ middling quality, whose father had been successful in some commercial
+ adventure during the peaceful reign of James I.; and who had bequeathed
+ his son a considerable sum of money, in addition to the moderate patrimony
+ which he inherited from his father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The substantial, though small-sized, brick building of Moultrassie Hall,
+ was but two miles distant from Martindale Castle, and the young
+ Bridgenorth attended the same school with the heir of the Peverils. A sort
+ of companionship, if not intimacy, took place betwixt them, which
+ continued during their youthful sports&mdash;the rather that Bridgenorth,
+ though he did not at heart admit Sir Geoffrey's claims of superiority to
+ the extent which the other's vanity would have exacted, paid deference in
+ a reasonable degree to the representative of a family so much more ancient
+ and important than his own, without conceiving that he in any respect
+ degraded himself by doing so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bridgenorth did not, however, carry his complaisance so far as to
+ embrace Sir Geoffrey's side during the Civil War. On the contrary, as an
+ active Justice of the Peace, he rendered much assistance in arraying the
+ militia in the cause of the Parliament, and for some time held a military
+ commission in that service. This was partly owing to his religious
+ principles, for he was a zealous Presbyterian, partly to his political
+ ideas, which, without being absolutely democratical, favoured the popular
+ side of the great national question. Besides, he was a moneyed man, and to
+ a certain extent had a shrewd eye to his worldly interest. He understood
+ how to improve the opportunities which civil war afforded, of advancing
+ his fortune, by a dexterous use of his capital; and he was not at a loss
+ to perceive that these were likely to be obtained in joining the
+ Parliament; while the King's cause, as it was managed, held out nothing to
+ the wealthy but a course of exaction and compulsory loans. For these
+ reasons, Bridgenorth became a decided Roundhead, and all friendly
+ communication betwixt his neighbour and him was abruptly broken asunder.
+ This was done with the less acrimony, that, during the Civil War, Sir
+ Geoffrey was almost constantly in the field, following the vacillating and
+ unhappy fortunes of his master; while Major Bridgenorth, who soon
+ renounced active military service, resided chiefly in London, and only
+ occasionally visited the Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon these visits, it was with great pleasure he received the
+ intelligence, that Lady Peveril had shown much kindness to Mrs.
+ Bridgenorth, and had actually given her and her family shelter in
+ Martindale Castle, when Moultrassie Hall was threatened with pillage by a
+ body of Prince Rupert's ill-disciplined Cavaliers. This acquaintance had
+ been matured by frequent walks together, which the vicinity of their
+ places of residence suffered the Lady Peveril to have with Mrs.
+ Bridgenorth, who deemed herself much honoured in being thus admitted into
+ the society of so distinguished a lady. Major Bridgenorth heard of this
+ growing intimacy with great pleasure, and he determined to repay the
+ obligation, as far as he could without much hurt to himself, by
+ interfering with all his influence, in behalf of her unfortunate husband.
+ It was chiefly owing to Major Bridgenorth's mediation, that Sir Geoffrey's
+ life was saved after the battle of Worcester. He obtained him permission
+ to compound for his estate on easier terms than many who had been less
+ obstinate in malignancy; and, finally, when, in order to raise the money
+ to the composition, the Knight was obliged to sell a considerable portion
+ of his patrimony, Major Bridgenorth became the purchaser, and that at a
+ larger price than had been paid to any Cavalier under such circumstances,
+ by a member of the Committee for Sequestrations. It is true, the prudent
+ committeeman did not, by any means, lose sight of his own interest in the
+ transaction, for the price was, after all, very moderate, and the property
+ lay adjacent to Moultrassie Hall, the value of which was at least trebled
+ by the acquisition. But then it was also true, that the unfortunate owner
+ must have submitted to much worse conditions, had the committeeman used,
+ as others did, the full advantages which his situation gave him; and
+ Bridgenorth took credit to himself, and received it from others, for
+ having, on this occasion, fairly sacrificed his interest to his
+ liberality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril was of the same opinion, and the rather that Mr.
+ Bridgenorth seemed to bear his exaltation with great moderation, and was
+ disposed to show him personally the same deference in his present sunshine
+ of prosperity, which he had exhibited formerly in their early
+ acquaintance. It is but justice to Major Bridgenorth to observe, that in
+ this conduct he paid respect as much to the misfortunes as to the
+ pretensions of his far-descended neighbour, and that, with the frank
+ generosity of a blunt Englishman, he conceded points of ceremony, about
+ which he himself was indifferent, merely because he saw that his doing so
+ gave pleasure to Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril of the Peak did justice to his neighbour's delicacy, in
+ consideration of which he forgot many things. He forgot that Major
+ Bridgenorth was already in possession of a fair third of his estate, and
+ had various pecuniary claims affecting the remainder, to the extent of
+ one-third more. He endeavoured even to forget, what it was still more
+ difficult not to remember, the altered situation in which they and their
+ mansions now stood to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the Civil War, the superb battlements and turrets of Martindale
+ Castle looked down on the red brick-built Hall, as it stole out from the
+ green plantations, just as an oak in Martindale Chase would have looked
+ beside one of the stunted and formal young beech-trees with which
+ Bridgenorth had graced his avenue; but after the siege which we have
+ commemorated, the enlarged and augmented Hall was as much predominant in
+ the landscape over the shattered and blackened ruins of the Castle, of
+ which only one wing was left habitable, as the youthful beech, in all its
+ vigour of shoot and bud, would appear to the same aged oak stripped of its
+ boughs, and rifted by lightning, one-half laid in shivers on the ground,
+ and the other remaining a blackened and ungraceful trunk, rent and
+ splintered, and without either life or leaves. Sir Geoffrey could not but
+ feel, that the situation and prospects were exchanged as disadvantageously
+ for himself as the appearance of their mansions; and that though the
+ authority of the man in office under the Parliament, the sequestrator, and
+ the committeeman, had been only exerted for the protection of the Cavalier
+ and the malignant, they would have been as effectual if applied to procure
+ his utter ruin; and that he was become a client, while his neighbour was
+ elevated into a patron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two considerations, besides the necessity of the case and the
+ constant advice of his lady, which enabled Peveril of the Peak to endure,
+ with some patience, this state of degradation. The first was, that the
+ politics of Major Bridgenorth began, on many points, to assimilate
+ themselves to his own. As a Presbyterian, he was not an utter enemy to
+ monarchy, and had been considerably shocked at the unexpected trial and
+ execution of the King; as a civilian and a man of property, he feared the
+ domination of the military; and though he wished not to see Charles
+ restored by force of arms, yet he arrived at the conclusion, that to bring
+ back the heir of the royal family on such terms of composition as might
+ ensure the protection of those popular immunities and privileges for which
+ the Long Parliament had at first contended, would be the surest and most
+ desirable termination to the mutations in state affairs which had agitated
+ Britain. Indeed, the Major's ideas on this point approached so nearly
+ those of his neighbour, that he had well-nigh suffered Sir Geoffrey, who
+ had a finger in almost all the conspiracies of the Royalists, to involve
+ him in the unfortunate rising of Penruddock and Groves, in the west, in
+ which many of the Presbyterian interest, as well as the Cavalier party,
+ were engaged. And though his habitual prudence eventually kept him out of
+ this and other dangers, Major Bridgenorth was considered during the last
+ years of Cromwell's domination, and the interregnum which succeeded, as a
+ disaffected person to the Commonwealth, and a favourer of Charles Stewart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But besides this approximation to the same political opinions, another
+ bond of intimacy united the families of the Castle and the Hall. Major
+ Bridgenorth, fortunate, and eminently so, in all his worldly transactions,
+ was visited by severe and reiterated misfortunes in his family, and
+ became, in this particular, an object of compassion to his poorer and more
+ decayed neighbour. Betwixt the breaking out of the Civil War and the
+ Restoration, he lost successively a family of no less than six children,
+ apparently through a delicacy of constitution, which cut off the little
+ prattlers at the early age when they most wind themselves round the heart
+ of the parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the beginning of the year 1658, Major Bridgenorth was childless; ere it
+ ended, he had a daughter, indeed, but her birth was purchased by the death
+ of an affectionate wife, whose constitution had been exhausted by maternal
+ grief, and by the anxious and harrowing reflection, that from her the
+ children they had lost derived that delicacy of health, which proved
+ unable to undergo the tear and wear of existence. The same voice which
+ told Bridgenorth that he was the father of a living child (it was the
+ friendly voice of Lady Peveril), communicated to him the melancholy
+ intelligence that he was no longer a husband. The feelings of Major
+ Bridgenorth were strong and deep, rather than hasty and vehement; and his
+ grief assumed the form of a sullen stupor, from which neither the friendly
+ remonstrances of Sir Geoffrey, who did not fail to be with his neighbour
+ at this distressing conjuncture, even though he knew he must meet the
+ Presbyterian pastor, nor the ghastly exhortations of this latter person,
+ were able to rouse the unfortunate widower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Lady Peveril, with the ready invention of a female sharped by
+ the sight of distress and the feelings of sympathy, tried on the sufferer
+ one of those experiments by which grief is often awakened from despondency
+ into tears. She placed in Bridgenorth's arms the infant whose birth had
+ cost him so dear, and conjured him to remember that his Alice was not yet
+ dead, since she survived in the helpless child she had left to his
+ paternal care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take her away&mdash;take her away!" said the unhappy man, and they were
+ the first words he had spoken; "let me not look on her&mdash;it is but
+ another blossom that has bloomed to fade, and the tree that bore it will
+ never flourish more!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He almost threw the child into Lady Peveril's arms, placed his hands
+ before his face, and wept aloud. Lady Peveril did not say "be comforted,"
+ but she ventured to promise that the blossom should ripen to fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never, never!" said Bridgenorth; "take the unhappy child away, and let me
+ only know when I shall wear black for her&mdash;Wear black!" he exclaimed,
+ interrupting himself, "what other colour shall I wear during the remainder
+ of my life?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will take the child for a season," said Lady Peveril, "since the sight
+ of her is so painful to you; and the little Alice shall share the nursery
+ of our Julian, until it shall be pleasure and not pain for you to look on
+ her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That hour will never come," said the unhappy father; "her doom is written&mdash;she
+ will follow the rest&mdash;God's will be done.&mdash;Lady, I thank you&mdash;I
+ trust her to your care; and I thank God that my eye shall not see her
+ dying agonies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without detaining the reader's attention longer on this painful theme, it
+ is enough to say that the Lady Peveril did undertake the duties of a
+ mother to the little orphan; and perhaps it was owing, in a great measure,
+ to her judicious treatment of the infant, that its feeble hold of life was
+ preserved, since the glimmering spark might probably have been altogether
+ smothered, had it, like the Major's former children, undergone the
+ over-care and over-nursing of a mother rendered nervously cautious and
+ anxious by so many successive losses. The lady was the more ready to
+ undertake this charge, that she herself had lost two infant children; and
+ that she attributed the preservation of the third, now a fine healthy
+ child of three years old, to Julian's being subjected to rather a
+ different course of diet and treatment than was then generally practised.
+ She resolved to follow the same regiment with the little orphan, which she
+ had observed in the case of her own boy; and it was equally successful. By
+ a more sparing use of medicine, by a bolder admission of fresh air, by a
+ firm, yet cautious attention to encourage rather than to supersede the
+ exertions of nature, the puny infant, under the care of an excellent
+ nurse, gradually improved in strength and in liveliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, like most men of his frank and good-natured disposition, was
+ naturally fond of children, and so much compassionated the sorrows of his
+ neighbour, that he entirely forgot his being a Presbyterian, until it
+ became necessary that the infant should be christened by a teacher of that
+ persuasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a trying case&mdash;the father seemed incapable of giving
+ direction; and that the threshold of Martindale Castle should be violated
+ by the heretical step of a dissenting clergyman, was matter of horror to
+ its orthodox owner. He had seen the famous Hugh Peters, with a Bible in
+ one hand and a pistol in the other, ride in triumph through the court-door
+ when Martindale was surrendered; and the bitterness of that hour had
+ entered like iron into his soul. Yet such was Lady Peveril's influence
+ over the prejudices of her husband, that he was induced to connive at the
+ ceremony taking place in a remote garden house, which was not properly
+ within the precincts of the Castle-wall. The lady even dared to be present
+ while the ceremony was performed by the Reverend Master Solsgrace, who had
+ once preached a sermon of three hours' length before the House of Commons,
+ upon a thanksgiving occasion after the relief of Exeter. Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril took care to be absent the whole day from the Castle, and it was
+ only from the great interest which he took in the washing, perfuming, and
+ as it were purification of the summer-house, that it could have been
+ guessed he knew anything of what had taken place in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, whatever prejudices the good Knight might entertain against his
+ neighbour's form of religion, they did not in any way influence his
+ feelings towards him as a sufferer under severe affliction. The mode in
+ which he showed his sympathy was rather singular, but exactly suited the
+ character of both, and the terms on which they stood with each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning after morning the good Baronet made Moultrassie Hall the
+ termination of his walk or ride, and said a single word of kindness as he
+ passed. Sometimes he entered the old parlour where the proprietor sat in
+ solitary wretchedness and despondency; but more frequently (for Sir
+ Geoffrey did not pretend to great talents of conversation), he paused on
+ the terrace, and stopping or halting his horse by the latticed window,
+ said aloud to the melancholy inmate, "How is it with you, Master
+ Bridgenorth?" (the Knight would never acknowledge his neighbour's military
+ rank of Major); "I just looked in to bid you keep a good heart, man, and
+ to tell you that Julian is well, and little Alice is well, and all are
+ well at Martindale Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep sigh, sometimes coupled with "I thank you, Sir Geoffrey; my
+ grateful duty waits on Lady Peveril," was generally Bridgenorth's only
+ answer. But the news was received on the one part with the kindness which
+ was designed upon the other; it gradually became less painful and more
+ interesting; the lattice window was never closed, nor was the leathern
+ easy-chair which stood next to it ever empty, when the usual hour of the
+ Baronet's momentary visit approached. At length the expectation of that
+ passing minute became the pivot upon which the thoughts of poor
+ Bridgenorth turned during all the rest of the day. Most men have known the
+ influence of such brief but ruling moments at some period of their lives.
+ The moment when a lover passes the window of his mistress&mdash;the moment
+ when the epicure hears the dinner-bell,&mdash;is that into which is
+ crowded the whole interest of the day; the hours which precede it are
+ spent in anticipation; the hours which follow, in reflection on what has
+ passed; and fancy dwelling on each brief circumstance, gives to seconds
+ the duration of minutes, to minutes that of hours. Thus seated in his
+ lonely chair, Bridgenorth could catch at a distance the stately step of
+ Sir Geoffrey, or the heavy tramp of his war-horse, Black Hastings, which
+ had borne him in many an action; he could hear the hum of "The King shall
+ enjoy his own again," or the habitual whistle of "Cuckolds and
+ Roundheads," die unto reverential silence, as the Knight approached the
+ mansion of affliction; and then came the strong hale voice of the huntsman
+ soldier with its usual greeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By degrees the communication became something more protracted, as Major
+ Bridgenorth's grief, like all human feelings, lost its overwhelming
+ violence, and permitted him to attend, in some degree, to what passed
+ around him, to discharge various duties which pressed upon him, and to
+ give a share of attention to the situation of the country, distracted as
+ it was by the contending factions, whose strife only terminated in the
+ Restoration. Still, however, though slowly recovering from the effects of
+ the shock which he had sustained, Major Bridgenorth felt himself as yet
+ unable to make up his mind to the effort necessary to see his infant; and
+ though separated by so short a distance from the being in whose existence
+ he was more interested than in anything the world afforded, he only made
+ himself acquainted with the windows of the apartment where little Alice
+ was lodged, and was often observed to watch them from the terrace, as they
+ brightened in the evening under the influence of the setting sun. In
+ truth, though a strong-minded man in most respects, he was unable to lay
+ aside the gloomy impression that this remaining pledge of affection was
+ soon to be conveyed to that grave which had already devoured all besides
+ that was dear to him; and he awaited in miserable suspense the moment when
+ he should hear that symptoms of the fatal malady had begun to show
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice of Peveril continued to be that of a comforter until the month
+ of April 1660, when it suddenly assumed a new and different tone. "The
+ King shall enjoy his own again," far from ceasing, as the hasty tread of
+ Black Hastings came up the avenue, bore burden to the clatter of his hoofs
+ on the paved courtyard, as Sir Geoffrey sprang from his great war-saddle,
+ now once more garnished with pistols of two feet in length, and, armed
+ with steel-cap, back and breast, and a truncheon in his hand, he rushed
+ into the apartment of the astonished Major, with his eyes sparkling, and
+ his cheek inflamed, while he called out, "Up! up, neighbour! No time now
+ to mope in the chimney-corner! Where is your buff-coat and broadsword,
+ man? Take the true side once in your life, and mend past mistakes. The
+ King is all lenity, man&mdash;all royal nature and mercy. I will get your
+ full pardon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What means all this?" said Bridgenorth&mdash;"Is all well with you&mdash;all
+ well at Martindale Castle, Sir Geoffrey?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well as you could wish them, Alice, and Julian, and all. But I have news
+ worth twenty of that&mdash;Monk has declared at London against those
+ stinking scoundrels the Rump. Fairfax is up in Yorkshire&mdash;for the
+ King&mdash;for the King, man! Churchmen, Presbyterians, and all, are in
+ buff and bandoleer for King Charles. I have a letter from Fairfax to
+ secure Derby and Chesterfield with all the men I can make. D&mdash;n him,
+ fine that I should take orders from him! But never mind that&mdash;all are
+ friends now, and you and I, good neighbour, will charge abreast, as good
+ neighbours should. See there! read&mdash;read&mdash;read&mdash;and then
+ boot and saddle in an instant.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Hey for cavaliers&mdash;ho for cavaliers,
+ Pray for cavaliers,
+ Dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub,
+ Have at old Beelzebub,
+ Oliver shakes in his bier!'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After thundering forth this elegant effusion of loyal enthusiasm, the
+ sturdy Cavalier's heart became too full. He threw himself on a seat, and
+ exclaiming, "Did ever I think to live to see this happy day!" he wept, to
+ his own surprise, as much as to that of Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon considering the crisis in which the country was placed, it appeared
+ to Major Bridgenorth, as it had done to Fairfax, and other leaders of the
+ Presbyterian party, that their frank embracing of the royal interest was
+ the wisest and most patriotic measure which they could adopt in the
+ circumstances, when all ranks and classes of men were seeking refuge from
+ the uncertainty and varied oppression attending the repeated contests
+ between the factions of Westminster Hall and of Wallingford House.
+ Accordingly he joined with Sir Geoffrey, with less enthusiasm indeed, but
+ with equal sincerity, taking such measures as seemed proper to secure
+ their part of the country on the King's behalf, which was done as
+ effectually and peaceably as in other parts of England. The neighbours
+ were both at Chesterfield, when news arrived that the King had landed in
+ England; and Sir Geoffrey instantly announced his purpose of waiting upon
+ his Majesty, even before his return to the Castle of Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who knows, neighbour," he said, "whether Sir Geoffrey Peveril will ever
+ return to Martindale? Titles must be going amongst them yonder, and I have
+ deserved something among the rest.&mdash;Lord Peveril would sound well&mdash;or
+ stay, Earl of Martindale&mdash;no, not of Martindale&mdash;Earl of the
+ Peak.&mdash;Meanwhile, trust your affairs to me&mdash;I will see you
+ secured&mdash;I would you had been no Presbyterian, neighbour&mdash;a
+ knighthood,&mdash;I mean a knight-bachelor, not a knight-baronet,&mdash;would
+ have served your turn well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I leave these things to my betters, Sir Geoffrey," said the Major, "and
+ desire nothing so earnestly as to find all well at Martindale when I
+ return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will&mdash;you will find them all well," said the Baronet; "Julian,
+ Alice, Lady Peveril, and all of them&mdash;Bear my commendations to them,
+ and kiss them all, neighbour, Lady Peveril and all&mdash;you may kiss a
+ Countess when I come back; all will go well with you now you are turned
+ honest man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I always meant to be so, Sir Geoffrey," said Bridgenorth calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well, well&mdash;no offence meant," said the Knight, "all is well
+ now&mdash;so you to Moultrassie Hall, and I to Whitehall. Said I well,
+ aha! So ho, mine host, a stoup of Canary to the King's health ere we get
+ to horse&mdash;I forgot, neighbour&mdash;you drink no healths."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish the King's health as sincerely as if I drank a gallon to it,"
+ replied the Major; "and I wish you, Sir Geoffrey, all success on your
+ journey, and a safe return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Why, then, we will have bellowing of beeves,
+ Broaching of barrels, brandishing of spigots;
+ Blood shall flow freely, but it shall be gore
+ Of herds and flocks, and venison and poultry,
+ Join'd to the brave heart's-blood of John-a-Barleycorn!
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whatever rewards Charles might have condescended to bestow in
+ acknowledgement of the sufferings and loyalty of Peveril of the Peak, he
+ had none in his disposal equal to the pleasure which Providence had
+ reserved for Bridgenorth on his return to Derbyshire. The exertion to
+ which he had been summoned, had had the usual effect of restoring to a
+ certain extent the activity and energy of his character, and he felt it
+ would be unbecoming to relapse into the state of lethargic melancholy from
+ which it had roused him. Time also had its usual effect in mitigating the
+ subjects of his regret; and when he had passed one day at the Hall in
+ regretting that he could not expect the indirect news of his daughter's
+ health, which Sir Geoffrey used to communicate in his almost daily call,
+ he reflected that it would be in every respect becoming that he should pay
+ a personal visit at Martindale Castle, carry thither the remembrances of
+ the Knight to his lady, assure her of his health, and satisfy himself
+ respecting that of his daughter. He armed himself for the worst&mdash;he
+ called to recollection the thin cheeks, faded eye, wasted hand, pallid
+ lip, which had marked the decaying health of all his former infants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall see," he said, "these signs of mortality once more&mdash;I shall
+ once more see a beloved being to whom I have given birth, gliding to the
+ grave which ought to enclose me long before her. No matter&mdash;it is
+ unmanly so long to shrink from that which must be&mdash;God's will be
+ done!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went accordingly, on the subsequent morning, to Martindale Castle, and
+ gave the lady the welcome assurances of her husband's safety, and of his
+ hopes of preferment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the first, may Almighty God be praised!" said the Lady Peveril; "and
+ be the other as our gracious and restored Sovereign may will it. We are
+ great enough for our means, and have means sufficient for contentment,
+ though not for splendour. And now I see, good Master Bridgenorth, the
+ folly of putting faith in idle presentiments of evil. So often had Sir
+ Geoffrey's repeated attempts in favour of the Stewarts led him into new
+ misfortunes, that when, the other morning, I saw him once more dressed in
+ his fatal armour, and heard the sound of his trumpet, which had been so
+ long silent, it seemed to me as if I saw his shroud, and heard his
+ death-knell. I say this to you, good neighbour, the rather because I fear
+ your own mind has been harassed with anticipations of impending calamity,
+ which it may please God to avert in your case as it has done in mine; and
+ here comes a sight which bears good assurance of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of the apartment opened as she spoke, and two lovely children
+ entered. The eldest, Julian Peveril, a fine boy betwixt four and five
+ years old, led in his hand, with an air of dignified support and
+ attention, a little girl of eighteen months, who rolled and tottered
+ along, keeping herself with difficulty upright by the assistance of her
+ elder, stronger, and masculine companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth cast a hasty and fearful glance upon the countenance of his
+ daughter, and, even in that glimpse, perceived, with exquisite delight,
+ that his fears were unfounded. He caught her in his arms, pressed her to
+ his heart, and the child, though at first alarmed at the vehemence of his
+ caresses, presently, as if prompted by Nature, smiled in reply to them.
+ Again he held her at some distance from him, and examined her more
+ attentively; he satisfied himself that the complexion of the young cherub
+ he had in his arms was not the hectic tinge of disease, but the clear hue
+ of ruddy health; and that though her little frame was slight, it was firm
+ and springy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not think that it could have been thus," he said, looking to Lady
+ Peveril, who had sat observing the scene with great pleasure; "but praise
+ be to God in the first instance, and next, thanks to you, madam, who have
+ been His instrument."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Julian must lose his playfellow now, I suppose?" said the lady; "but the
+ Hall is not distant, and I will see my little charge often. Dame Martha,
+ the housekeeper at Moultrassie, has sense, and is careful. I will tell her
+ the rules I have observed with little Alice, and&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God forbid my girl should ever come to Moultrassie," said Major
+ Bridgenorth hastily; "it has been the grave of her race. The air of the
+ low grounds suited them not&mdash;or there is perhaps a fate connected
+ with the mansion. I will seek for her some other place of abode."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That you shall not, under your favour be it spoken, Major Bridgenorth,"
+ answered the lady. "If you do so, we must suppose that you are
+ undervaluing my qualities as a nurse. If she goes not to her father's
+ house, she shall not quit mine. I will keep the little lady as a pledge of
+ her safety and my own skill; and since you are afraid of the damp of the
+ low grounds, I hope you will come here frequently to visit her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a proposal which went to the heart of Major Bridgenorth. It was
+ precisely the point which he would have given worlds to arrive at, but
+ which he saw no chance of attaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is too well known, that those whose families are long pursued by such a
+ fatal disease as existed in his, become, it may be said, superstitious
+ respecting its fatal effects, and ascribe to place, circumstance, and
+ individual care, much more perhaps than these can in any case contribute
+ to avert the fatality of constitutional distemper. Lady Peveril was aware
+ that this was peculiarly the impression of her neighbour; that the
+ depression of his spirits, the excess of his care, the feverishness of his
+ apprehensions, the restraint and gloom of the solitude in which he dwelt,
+ were really calculated to produce the evil which most of all he dreaded.
+ She pitied him, she felt for him, she was grateful for former protection
+ received at his hands&mdash;she had become interested in the child itself.
+ What female fails to feel such interest in the helpless creature she has
+ tended? And to sum the whole up, the dame had a share of human vanity; and
+ being a sort of Lady Bountiful in her way (for the character was not then
+ confined to the old and the foolish), she was proud of the skill by which
+ she had averted the probable attacks of hereditary malady, so inveterate
+ in the family of Bridgenorth. It needed not, perhaps, in other cases, that
+ so many reasons should be assigned for an act of neighbourly humanity; but
+ civil war had so lately torn the country asunder, and broken all the usual
+ ties of vicinage and good neighbourhood, that it was unusual to see them
+ preserved among persons of different political opinions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth himself felt this; and while the tear of joy in his eye
+ showed how gladly he would accept Lady Peveril's proposal, he could not
+ help stating the obvious inconveniences attendant upon her scheme, though
+ it was in the tone of one who would gladly hear them overruled. "Madam,"
+ he said, "your kindness makes me the happiest and most thankful of men;
+ but can it be consistent with your own convenience? Sir Geoffrey has his
+ opinions on many points, which have differed, and probably do still
+ differ, from mine. He is high-born, and I of middling parentage only. He
+ uses the Church Service, and I the Catechism of the Assembly of Divines at
+ Westminster&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope you will find prescribed in neither of them," said the Lady
+ Peveril, "that I may not be a mother to your motherless child. I trust,
+ Master Bridgenorth, the joyful Restoration of his Majesty, a work wrought
+ by the direct hand of Providence, may be the means of closing and healing
+ all civil and religious dissensions among us, and that, instead of showing
+ the superior purity of our faith, by persecuting those who think otherwise
+ from ourselves on doctrinal points, we shall endeavour to show its real
+ Christian tendency, by emulating each other in actions of good-will
+ towards man, as the best way of showing our love to God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your ladyship speaks what your own kind heart dictates," answered
+ Bridgenorth, who had his own share of the narrow-mindedness of the time;
+ "and sure am I, that if all who call themselves loyalists and Cavaliers,
+ thought like you&mdash;and like my friend Sir Geoffrey"&mdash;(this he
+ added after a moment's pause, being perhaps rather complimentary than
+ sincere)&mdash;"we, who thought it our duty in time past to take arms for
+ freedom of conscience, and against arbitrary power, might now sit down in
+ peace and contentment. But I wot not how it may fall. You have sharp and
+ hot spirits amongst you; I will not say our power was always moderately
+ used, and revenge is sweet to the race of fallen Adam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril gaily, "those evil
+ omenings do but point out conclusions, which, unless they were so
+ anticipated, are most unlikely to come to pass. You know what Shakespeare
+ says&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'To fly the boar before the boar pursues,
+ Were to incense the boar to follow us,
+ And make pursuit when he did mean no chase.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "But I crave your pardon&mdash;it is so long since we have met, that I
+ forgot you love no play-books."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With reverence to your ladyship," said Bridgenorth, "I were much to blame
+ did I need the idle words of a Warwickshire stroller, to teach me my
+ grateful duty to your ladyship on this occasion, which appoints me to be
+ directed by you in all things which my conscience will permit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since you permit me such influence, then," replied the Lady Peveril, "I
+ shall be moderate in exercising it, in order that I may, in my domination
+ at least, give you a favourable impression of the new order of things. So,
+ if you will be a subject of mine for one day, neighbour, I am going, at my
+ lord and husband's command, to issue out my warrants to invite the whole
+ neighbourhood to a solemn feast at the Castle, on Thursday next; and I not
+ only pray you to be personally present yourself, but to prevail on your
+ worthy pastor, and such neighbours and friends, high and low, as may think
+ in your own way, to meet with the rest of the neighbourhood, to rejoice on
+ this joyful occasion of the King's Restoration, and thereby to show that
+ we are to be henceforward a united people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parliamentarian Major was considerably embarrassed by this proposal.
+ He looked upward, and downward, and around, cast his eye first to the
+ oak-carved ceiling, and anon fixed it upon the floor; then threw it around
+ the room till it lighted on his child, the sight of whom suggested another
+ and a better train of reflections than ceiling and floor had been able to
+ supply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," he said, "I have long been a stranger to festivity, perhaps from
+ constitutional melancholy, perhaps from the depression which is natural to
+ a desolate and deprived man, in whose ear mirth is marred, like a pleasant
+ air when performed on a mistuned instrument. But though neither my
+ thoughts nor temperament are Jovial or Mercurial, it becomes me to be
+ grateful to Heaven for the good He has sent me by the means of your
+ ladyship. David, the man after God's own heart, did wash and eat bread
+ when his beloved child was removed&mdash;mine is restored to me, and shall
+ I not show gratitude under a blessing, when he showed resignation under an
+ affliction? Madam, I will wait on your gracious invitation with
+ acceptance; and such of my friends with whom I may possess influence, and
+ whose presence your ladyship may desire, shall accompany me to the
+ festivity, that our Israel may be as one people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spoken these words with an aspect which belonged more to a martyr
+ than to a guest bidden to a festival, and having kissed, and solemnly
+ blessed his little girl, Major Bridgenorth took his departure for
+ Moultrassie Hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Here's neither want of appetite nor mouths;
+ Pray Heaven we be not scant of meat or mirth!
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Even upon ordinary occasions, and where means were ample, a great
+ entertainment in those days was not such a sinecure as in modern times,
+ when the lady who presides has but to intimate to her menials the day and
+ hour when she wills it to take place. At that simple period, the lady was
+ expected to enter deeply into the arrangement and provision of the whole
+ affair; and from a little gallery, which communicated with her own private
+ apartment, and looked down upon the kitchen, her shrill voice was to be
+ heard, from time to time, like that of the warning spirit in a tempest,
+ rising above the clash of pots and stewpans&mdash;the creaking spits&mdash;the
+ clattering of marrowbones and cleavers&mdash;the scolding of cooks&mdash;and
+ all the other various kinds of din which form an accompaniment to dressing
+ a large dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this toil and anxiety was more than doubled in the case of the
+ approaching feast at Martindale Castle, where the presiding Genius of the
+ festivity was scarce provided with adequate means to carry her hospitable
+ purpose into effect. The tyrannical conduct of husbands, in such cases, is
+ universal; and I scarce know one householder of my acquaintance who has
+ not, on some ill-omened and most inconvenient season, announced suddenly
+ to his innocent helpmate, that he had invited
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Some odious Major Rock,
+ To drop in at six o'clock."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ to the great discomposure of the lady, and the discredit, perhaps, of her
+ domestic arrangements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril of the Peak was still more thoughtless; for he had directed his
+ lady to invite the whole honest men of the neighbourhood to make good
+ cheer at Martindale Castle, in honour of the blessed Restoration of his
+ most sacred Majesty, without precisely explaining where the provisions
+ were to come from. The deer-park had lain waste ever since the siege; the
+ dovecot could do little to furnish forth such an entertainment; the
+ fishponds, it is true, were well provided (which the neighbouring
+ Presbyterians noted as a suspicious circumstance); and game was to be had
+ for the shooting, upon the extensive heaths and hills of Derbyshire. But
+ these were but the secondary parts of a banquet; and the house-steward and
+ bailiff, Lady Peveril's only coadjutors and counsellors, could not agree
+ how the butcher-meat&mdash;the most substantial part, or, as it were, the
+ main body of the entertainment&mdash;was to be supplied. The house-steward
+ threatened the sacrifice of a fine yoke of young bullocks, which the
+ bailiff, who pleaded the necessity of their agricultural services,
+ tenaciously resisted; and Lady Peveril's good and dutiful nature did not
+ prevent her from making some impatient reflections on the want of
+ consideration of her absent Knight, who had thus thoughtlessly placed her
+ in so embarrassing a situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These reflections were scarcely just, if a man is only responsible for
+ such resolutions as he adopts when he is fully master of himself. Sir
+ Geoffrey's loyalty, like that of many persons in his situation, had, by
+ dint of hopes and fears, victories and defeats, struggles and sufferings,
+ all arising out of the same moving cause, and turning, as it were, on the
+ same pivot, acquired the character of an intense and enthusiastic passion;
+ and the singular and surprising change of fortune, by which his highest
+ wishes were not only gratified, but far exceeded, occasioned for some time
+ a kind of intoxication of loyal rapture which seemed to pervade the whole
+ kingdom. Sir Geoffrey had seen Charles and his brothers, and had been
+ received by the merry monarch with that graceful, and at the same time
+ frank urbanity, by which he conciliated all who approached him; the
+ Knight's services and merits had been fully acknowledged, and recompense
+ had been hinted at, if not expressly promised. Was it for Peveril of the
+ Peak, in the jubilee of his spirits, to consider how his wife was to find
+ beef and mutton to feast his neighbours?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luckily, however, for the embarrassed lady, there existed some one who had
+ composure of mind sufficient to foresee this difficulty. Just as she had
+ made up her mind, very reluctantly, to become debtor to Major Bridgenorth
+ for the sum necessary to carry her husband's commands into effect, and
+ whilst she was bitterly regretting this departure from the strictness of
+ her usual economy, the steward, who, by-the-bye, had not been absolutely
+ sober since the news of the King's landing at Dover, burst into the
+ apartment, snapping his fingers, and showing more marks of delight than
+ was quite consistent with the dignity of my lady's large parlour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What means this, Whitaker?" said the lady, somewhat peevishly; for she
+ was interrupted in the commencement of a letter to her neighbour on the
+ unpleasant business of the proposed loan,&mdash;"Is it to be always thus
+ with you?&mdash;Are you dreaming?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A vision of good omen, I trust," said the steward, with a triumphant
+ flourish of the hand; "far better than Pharaoh's, though, like his, it be
+ of fat kine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I prithee be plain, man," said the lady, "or fetch some one who can speak
+ to purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, odds-my-life, madam," said the steward, "mine errand can speak for
+ itself. Do you not hear them low? Do you not hear them bleat? A yoke of
+ fat oxen, and half a score prime wethers. The Castle is victualled for
+ this bout, let them storm when they will; and Gatherill may have his d&mdash;d
+ mains ploughed to the boot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady, without farther questioning her elated domestic, rose and went
+ to the window, where she certainly beheld the oxen and sheep which had
+ given rise to Whitaker's exultation. "Whence come they?" said she, in some
+ surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let them construe that who can," answered Whitaker; "the fellow who drove
+ them was a west-country man, and only said they came from a friend to help
+ to furnish out your ladyship's entertainment; the man would not stay to
+ drink&mdash;I am sorry he would not stay to drink&mdash;I crave your
+ ladyship's pardon for not keeping him by the ears to drink&mdash;it was
+ not my fault."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I'll be sworn it was not," said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, madam, by G&mdash;, I assure you it was not," said the zealous
+ steward; "for, rather than the Castle should lose credit, I drank his
+ health myself in double ale, though I had had my morning draught already.
+ I tell you the naked truth, my lady, by G&mdash;!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was no great compulsion, I suppose," said the lady; "but, Whitaker,
+ suppose you should show your joy on such occasions, by drinking and
+ swearing a little less, rather than a little more, would it not be as
+ well, think you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I crave your ladyship's pardon," said Whitaker, with much reverence; "I
+ hope I know my place. I am your ladyship's poor servant; and I know it
+ does not become me to drink and swear like your ladyship&mdash;that is,
+ like his honour, Sir Geoffrey, I would say. But I pray you, if I am not to
+ drink and swear after my degree, how are men to know Peveril of the Peak's
+ steward,&mdash;and I may say butler too, since I have had the keys of the
+ cellar ever since old Spigots was shot dead on the northwest turret, with
+ a black jack in his hand,&mdash;I say, how is an old Cavalier like me to
+ be known from those cuckoldly Roundheads that do nothing but fast and
+ pray, if we are not to drink and swear according to our degree?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady was silent, for she well knew speech availed nothing; and, after
+ a moment's pause, proceeded to intimate to the steward that she would have
+ the persons, whose names were marked in a written paper, which she
+ delivered to him, invited to the approaching banquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker, instead of receiving the list with the mute acquiescence of a
+ modern Major Domo, carried it into the recess of one of the windows, and,
+ adjusting his spectacles, began to read it to himself. The first names,
+ being those of distinguished Cavalier families in the neighbourhood, he
+ muttered over in a tone of approbation&mdash;paused and pshawed at that of
+ Bridgenorth&mdash;yet acquiesced, with the observation, "But he is a good
+ neighbour, so it may pass for once." But when he read the name and surname
+ of Nehemiah Solsgrace, the Presbyterian parson, Whitaker's patience
+ altogether forsook him; and he declared he would as soon throw himself
+ into Eldon-hole,[*] as consent that the intrusive old puritan howlet, who
+ had usurped the pulpit of a sound orthodox divine, should ever darken the
+ gates of Martindale Castle by any message or mediation of his.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A chasm in the earth supposed to be unfathomable, one of the
+ wonders of the Peak.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "The false crop-eared hypocrites," cried he, with a hearty oath, "have had
+ their turn of the good weather. The sun is on our side of the hedge now,
+ and we will pay off old scores, as sure as my name is Richard Whitaker."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You presume on your long services, Whitaker, and on your master's
+ absence, or you had not dared to use me thus," said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unwonted agitation of her voice attracted the attention of the
+ refractory steward, notwithstanding his present state of elevation; but he
+ no sooner saw that her eye glistened, and her cheek reddened, than his
+ obstinacy was at once subdued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A murrain on me," he said, "but I have made my lady angry in good
+ earnest! and that is an unwonted sight for to see.&mdash;I crave your
+ pardon, my lady! It was not poor Dick Whitaker disputed your honourable
+ commands, but only that second draught of double ale. We have put a double
+ stroke of malt to it, as your ladyship well knows, ever since the happy
+ Restoration. To be sure I hate a fanatic as I do the cloven foot of Satan;
+ but then your honourable ladyship hath a right to invite Satan himself,
+ cloven foot and all, to Martindale Castle; and to send me to hell's gate
+ with a billet of invitation&mdash;and so your will shall be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invitations were sent round accordingly, in all due form; and one of
+ the bullocks was sent down to be roasted whole at the market-place of a
+ little village called Martindale-Moultrassie, which stood considerably to
+ the eastward both of the Castle and Hall, from which it took its double
+ name, at about an equal distance from both; so that, suppose a line drawn
+ from the one manor-house to the other, to be the base of a triangle, the
+ village would have occupied the salient angle. As the said village, since
+ the late transference of a part of Peveril's property, belonged to Sir
+ Geoffrey and to Bridgenorth in nearly equal portions, the lady judged it
+ not proper to dispute the right of the latter to add some hogsheads of
+ beer to the popular festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, she could not but suspect the Major of being the unknown
+ friend who had relieved her from the dilemma arising from the want of
+ provisions; and she esteemed herself happy when a visit from him, on the
+ day preceding the proposed entertainment, gave her, as she thought, an
+ opportunity of expressing her gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ No, sir&mdash;I will not pledge&mdash;I'm one of those
+ Who think good wine needs neither bush nor preface
+ To make it welcome. If you doubt my word,
+ Fill the quart-cup, and see if I will choke on't.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was a serious gravity of expression in the disclamation with which
+ Major Bridgenorth replied to the thanks tendered to him by Lady Peveril,
+ for the supply of provisions which had reached her Castle so opportunely.
+ He seemed first not to be aware what she alluded to; and, when she
+ explained the circumstance, he protested so seriously that he had no share
+ in the benefit conferred, that Lady Peveril was compelled to believe him,
+ the rather that, being a man of plain downright character, affecting no
+ refined delicacy of sentiment, and practising almost a quaker-like
+ sincerity of expression, it would have been much contrary to his general
+ character to have made such a disavowal, unless it were founded in truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My present visit to you, madam," said he, "had indeed some reference to
+ the festivity of to-morrow." Lady Peveril listened, but as her visitor
+ seemed to find some difficulty in expressing himself, she was compelled to
+ ask an explanation. "Madam," said the Major, "you are not perhaps entirely
+ ignorant that the more tender-conscienced among us have scruples at
+ certain practices, so general amongst your people at times of rejoicing,
+ that you may be said to insist upon them as articles of faith, or at least
+ greatly to resent their omission."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, not fully
+ comprehending the drift of his discourse, "that we shall, as your
+ entertainers, carefully avoid all allusions or reproaches founded on past
+ misunderstanding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We would expect no less, madam, from your candour and courtesy," said
+ Bridgenorth; "but I perceive you do not fully understand me. To be plain,
+ then, I allude to the fashion of drinking healths, and pledging each other
+ in draughts of strong liquor, which most among us consider as a
+ superfluous and sinful provoking of each other to debauchery, and the
+ excessive use of strong drink; and which, besides, if derived, as learned
+ divines have supposed, from the custom of the blinded Pagans, who made
+ libations and invoked idols when they drank, may be justly said to have
+ something in it heathenish, and allied to demon-worship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady had already hastily considered all the topics which were likely
+ to introduce discord into the proposed festivity; but this very
+ ridiculous, yet fatal discrepancy, betwixt the manners of the parties on
+ convivial occasions, had entirely escaped her. She endeavoured to soothe
+ the objecting party, whose brows were knit like one who had fixed an
+ opinion by which he was determined to abide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I grant," she said, "my good neighbour, that this custom is at least
+ idle, and may be prejudicial if it leads to excess in the use of liquor,
+ which is apt enough to take place without such conversation. But I think,
+ when it hath not this consequence, it is a thing indifferent, affords a
+ unanimous mode of expressing our good wishes to our friends, and our loyal
+ duty to our sovereign; and, without meaning to put any force upon the
+ inclination of those who believe otherwise, I cannot see how I can deny my
+ guests and friends the privilege of drinking a health to the King, or to
+ my husband, after the old English fashion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lady," said the Major, "if the age of fashion were to command it,
+ Popery is one of the oldest English fashions that I have heard of; but it
+ is our happiness that we are not benighted like our fathers, and therefore
+ we must act according to the light that is in us, and not after their
+ darkness. I had myself the honour to attend the Lord-Keeper Whitelocke,
+ when, at the table of the Chamberlain of the kingdom of Sweden, he did
+ positively refuse to pledge the health of his Queen, Christina, thereby
+ giving great offence, and putting in peril the whole purpose of that
+ voyage; which it is not to be thought so wise a man would have done, but
+ that he held such compliance a thing not merely indifferent, but rather
+ sinful and damnable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With all respect to Whitelocke," said the Lady Peveril, "I continue of my
+ own opinion, though, Heaven knows, I am no friend to riot or wassail. I
+ would fain accommodate myself to your scruples, and will discourage all
+ other pledges; but surely those of the King and of Peveril of the Peak may
+ be permitted?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dare not," answered Bridgenorth, "lay even the ninety-ninth part of a
+ grain of incense upon an altar erected to Satan."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, sir!" said the lady; "do you bring Satan into comparison with our
+ master King Charles, and with my noble lord and husband?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, madam," answered Bridgenorth, "I have no such thoughts&mdash;indeed
+ they would ill become me. I do wish the King's health and Sir Geoffrey's
+ devoutly, and I will pray for both. But I see not what good it should do
+ their health if I should prejudice my own by quaffing pledges out of quart
+ flagons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since we cannot agree upon this matter," said Lady Peveril, "we must find
+ some resource by which to offend those of neither party. Suppose you
+ winked at our friends drinking these pledges, and we should connive at
+ your sitting still?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But neither would this composition satisfy Bridgenorth, who was of
+ opinion, as he expressed himself, that it would be holding a candle to
+ Beelzebub. In fact, his temper, naturally stubborn, was at present
+ rendered much more so by a previous conference with his preacher, who,
+ though a very good man in the main, was particularly and illiberally
+ tenacious of the petty distinctions which his sect adopted; and while he
+ thought with considerable apprehension on the accession of power which
+ Popery, Prelacy, and Peveril of the Peak, were like to acquire by the late
+ Revolution, became naturally anxious to put his flock on their guard, and
+ prevent their being kidnapped by the wolf. He disliked extremely that
+ Major Bridgenorth, indisputably the head of the Presbyterian interest in
+ that neighbourhood, should have given his only daughter to be, as he
+ termed it, nursed by a Canaanitish woman; and he told him plainly that he
+ liked not this going to feast in the high places with the uncircumcised in
+ heart, and looked on the whole conviviality only as a making-merry in the
+ house of Tirzah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon receiving this rebuke from his pastor, Bridgenorth began to suspect
+ he might have been partly wrong in the readiness which, in his first
+ ardour of gratitude, he had shown to enter into intimate intercourse with
+ the Castle of Martindale; but he was too proud to avow this to the
+ preacher, and it was not till after a considerable debate betwixt them,
+ that it was mutually agreed their presence at the entertainment should
+ depend upon the condition, that no healths or pledges should be given in
+ their presence. Bridgenorth, therefore, as the delegate and representative
+ of his party, was bound to stand firm against all entreaty, and the lady
+ became greatly embarrassed. She now regretted sincerely that her
+ well-intended invitation had ever been given, for she foresaw that its
+ rejection was to awaken all former subjects of quarrel, and perhaps to
+ lead to new violences amongst people who had not many years since been
+ engaged in civil war. To yield up the disputed point to the Presbyterians,
+ would have been to offend the Cavalier party, and Sir Geoffrey in
+ particular, in the most mortal degree; for they made it as firm a point of
+ honour to give healths, and compel others to pledge them, as the Puritans
+ made it a deep article of religion to refuse both. At length the lady
+ changed the discourse, introduced that of Major Bridgenorth's child,
+ caused it to be sent for, and put into his arms. The mother's stratagem
+ took effect; for, though the parliamentary major stood firm, the father,
+ as in the case of the Governor of Tilbury, was softened, and he agreed
+ that his friends should accept a compromise. This was, that the major
+ himself, the reverend divine, and such of their friends as held strict
+ Puritan tenets, should form a separate party in the Large Parlour, while
+ the Hall should be occupied by the jovial Cavaliers; and that each party
+ should regulate their potations after their own conscience, or after their
+ own fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth himself seemed greatly relieved after this important
+ matter had been settled. He had held it matter of conscience to be
+ stubborn in maintaining his own opinion, but was heartily glad when he
+ escaped from the apparently inevitable necessity of affronting Lady
+ Peveril by the refusal of her invitation. He remained longer than usual,
+ and spoke and smiled more than was his custom. His first care on his
+ return was to announce to the clergyman and his congregation the
+ compromise which he had made, and this not as a matter for deliberation,
+ but one upon which he had already resolved; and such was his authority
+ among them, that though the preacher longed to pronounce a separation of
+ the parties, and to exclaim&mdash;"To your tents, O Israel!" he did not
+ see the chance of being seconded by so many, as would make it worth while
+ to disturb the unanimous acquiescence in their delegate's proposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, each party being put upon the alert by the consequences of
+ Major Bridgenorth's embassy, so many points of doubt and delicate
+ discussion were started in succession, that the Lady Peveril, the only
+ person, perhaps, who was desirous of achieving an effectual reconciliation
+ between them, incurred, in reward for her good intentions, the censure of
+ both factions, and had much reason to regret her well-meant project of
+ bringing the Capulets and Montagues of Derbyshire together on the same
+ occasion of public festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it was now settled that the guests were to form two different parties,
+ it became not only a subject of dispute betwixt themselves, which should
+ be first admitted within the Castle of Martindale, but matter of serious
+ apprehension to Lady Peveril and Major Bridgenorth, lest, if they were to
+ approach by the same avenue and entrance, a quarrel might take place
+ betwixt them, and proceed to extremities, even before they reached the
+ place of entertainment. The lady believed she had discovered an admirable
+ expedient for preventing the possibility of such interference, by
+ directing that the Cavaliers should be admitted by the principal entrance,
+ while the Roundheads should enter the Castle through a great breach which
+ had been made in the course of the siege, and across which there had been
+ made a sort of by-path to drive the cattle down to their pasture in the
+ wood. By this contrivance the Lady Peveril imagined she had altogether
+ avoided the various risks which might occur from two such parties
+ encountering each other, and disputing for precedence. Several other
+ circumstances of less importance were adjusted at the same time, and
+ apparently so much to the satisfaction of the Presbyterian teacher, that,
+ in a long lecture on the subject of the Marriage Garment, he was at the
+ pains to explain to his hearers, that outward apparel was not alone meant
+ by that scriptural expression, but also a suitable frame of mind for
+ enjoyment of peaceful festivity; and therefore he exhorted the brethren,
+ that whatever might be the errors of the poor blinded malignants, with
+ whom they were in some sort to eat and drink upon the morrow they ought
+ not on this occasion to show any evil will against them, lest they should
+ therein become troublers of the peace of Israel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honest Doctor Dummerar, the elected Episcopal Vicar of Martindale <i>cum</i>
+ Moultrassie, preached to the Cavaliers on the same subject. He had served
+ the cure before the breaking out of the rebellion, and was in high favour
+ with Sir Geoffrey, not merely on account of his sound orthodoxy and deep
+ learning, but his exquisite skill in playing at bowls, and his facetious
+ conversation over a pipe and tankard of October. For these latter
+ accomplishments, the Doctor had the honour to be recorded by old Century
+ White amongst the roll of lewd, incompetent, profligate clergymen of the
+ Church of England, whom he denounced to God and man, on account chiefly of
+ the heinous sin of playing at games of skill and chance, and of
+ occasionally joining in the social meetings of their parishioners. When
+ the King's party began to lose ground, Doctor Dummerar left his vicarage,
+ and, betaking himself to the camp, showed upon several occasions, when
+ acting as chaplain to Sir Geoffrey Peveril's regiment, that his portly
+ bodily presence included a stout and masculine heart. When all was lost,
+ and he himself, with most other loyal divines, was deprived of his living,
+ he made such shift as he could; now lurking in the garrets of old friends
+ in the University, who shared with him, and such as him, the slender means
+ of livelihood which the evil times had left them; and now lying hid in the
+ houses of the oppressed and sequestered gentry, who respected at once his
+ character and sufferings. When the Restoration took place, Doctor Dummerar
+ emerged from some one of his hiding-places, and hied him to Martindale
+ Castle, to enjoy the triumph inseparable from this happy change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His appearance at the Castle in his full clerical dress, and the warm
+ reception which he received from the neighbouring gentry, added not a
+ little to the alarm which was gradually extending itself through the party
+ which were so lately the uppermost. It is true, Doctor Dummerar framed
+ (honest worthy man) no extravagant views of elevation or preferment; but
+ the probability of his being replaced in the living, from which he had
+ been expelled under very flimsy pretences, inferred a severe blow to the
+ Presbyterian divine, who could not be considered otherwise than as an
+ intruder. The interest of the two preachers, therefore, as well as the
+ sentiments of their flocks, were at direct variance; and here was another
+ fatal objection in the way of Lady Peveril's scheme of a general and
+ comprehensive healing ordinance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, as we have already hinted, Doctor Dummerar behaved as
+ handsomely upon the occasion as the Presbyterian incumbent had done. It is
+ true, that in a sermon which he preached in the Castle hall to several of
+ the most distinguished Cavalier families, besides a world of boys from the
+ village, who went to see the novel circumstance of a parson in a cassock
+ and surplice, he went at great length into the foulness of the various
+ crimes committed by the rebellious party during the late evil times, and
+ greatly magnified the merciful and peaceful nature of the honourable Lady
+ of the Manor, who condescended to look upon, or receive into her house in
+ the way of friendship and hospitality, men holding the principles which
+ had led to the murder of the King&mdash;the slaying and despoiling his
+ loyal subjects&mdash;and the plundering and breaking down of the Church of
+ God. But then he wiped all this handsomely up again, with the observation,
+ that since it was the will of their gracious and newly-restored Sovereign,
+ and the pleasure of the worshipful Lady Peveril, that this contumacious
+ and rebellious race should be, for a time, forborne by their faithful
+ subjects, it would be highly proper that all the loyal liegemen should,
+ for the present, eschew subjects of dissension or quarrel with these sons
+ of Shimei; which lesson of patience he enforced by the comfortable
+ assurance, that they could not long abstain from their old rebellious
+ practices; in which case, the Royalists would stand exculpated before God
+ and man, in extirpating them from the face of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The close observers of the remarkable passages of the times from which we
+ draw the events of our history, have left it upon record, that these two
+ several sermons, much contrary, doubtless, to the intention of the worthy
+ divines by whom they were delivered, had a greater effect in exasperating,
+ than in composing, the disputes betwixt the two factions. Under such evil
+ auspices, and with corresponding forebodings on the mind of Lady Peveril,
+ the day of festivity at length arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By different routes, and forming each a sort of procession, as if the
+ adherents of each party were desirous of exhibiting its strength and
+ numbers, the two several factions approached Martindale Castle; and so
+ distinct did they appear in dress, aspect, and manners, that it seemed as
+ if the revellers of a bridal party, and the sad attendants upon a funeral
+ solemnity, were moving towards the same point from different quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The puritanical party was by far the fewer in numbers, for which two
+ excellent reasons might be given. In the first place, they had enjoyed
+ power for several years, and, of course, became unpopular among the common
+ people, never at any time attached to those, who, being in the immediate
+ possession of authority, are often obliged to employ it in controlling
+ their humours. Besides, the country people of England had, and still have,
+ an animated attachment to field sports, and a natural unrestrained
+ joviality of disposition, which rendered them impatient under the severe
+ discipline of the fanatical preachers; while they were not less naturally
+ discontented with the military despotism of Cromwell's Major-Generals.
+ Secondly, the people were fickle as usual, and the return of the King had
+ novelty in it, and was therefore popular. The side of the Puritans was
+ also deserted at this period by a numerous class of more thinking and
+ prudential persons, who never forsook them till they became unfortunate.
+ These sagacious personages were called in that age the Waiters upon
+ Providence, and deemed it a high delinquency towards Heaven if they
+ afforded countenance to any cause longer than it was favoured by fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though thus forsaken by the fickle and the selfish, a solemn
+ enthusiasm, a stern and determined depth of principle, a confidence in the
+ sincerity of their own motives, and the manly English pride which inclined
+ them to cling to their former opinions, like the traveller in the fable to
+ his cloak, the more strongly that the tempest blew around them, detained
+ in the ranks of the Puritans many, who, if no longer formidable from
+ numbers, were still so from their character. They consisted chiefly of the
+ middling gentry, with others whom industry or successful speculations in
+ commerce or in mining had raised into eminence&mdash;the persons who feel
+ most umbrage from the overshadowing aristocracy, and are usually the most
+ vehement in defence of what they hold to be their rights. Their dress was
+ in general studiously simple and unostentatious, or only remarkable by the
+ contradictory affectation of extreme simplicity or carelessness. The dark
+ colour of their cloaks, varying from absolute black to what was called
+ sad-coloured&mdash;their steeple-crowned hats, with their broad shadowy
+ brims&mdash;their long swords, suspended by a simple strap around the
+ loins, without shoulder-belt, sword-knot, plate, buckles, or any of the
+ other decorations with which the Cavaliers loved to adorn their trusty
+ rapiers,&mdash;the shortness of their hair, which made their ears appear
+ of disproportioned size,&mdash;above all, the stern and gloomy gravity of
+ their looks, announced their belonging to that class of enthusiasts, who,
+ resolute and undismayed, had cast down the former fabric of government,
+ and who now regarded with somewhat more than suspicion, that which had
+ been so unexpectedly substituted in its stead. There was gloom in their
+ countenances; but it was not that of dejection, far less of despair. They
+ looked like veterans after a defeat, which may have checked their career
+ and wounded their pride, but has left their courage undiminished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The melancholy, now become habitual, which overcast Major Bridgenorth's
+ countenance, well qualified him to act as the chief of the group who now
+ advanced from the village. When they reached the point by which they were
+ first to turn aside into the wood which surrounded the Castle, they felt a
+ momentary impression of degradation, as if they were yielding the high
+ road to their old and oft-defeated enemies the Cavaliers. When they began
+ to ascend the winding path, which had been the daily passage of the
+ cattle, the opening of the wooded glade gave them a view of the Castle
+ ditch, half choked with the rubbish of the breach, and of the breach
+ itself, which was made at the angle of a large square flanking-tower,
+ one-half of which had been battered into ruins, while the other fragment
+ remained in a state strangely shattered and precarious, and seemed to be
+ tottering above the huge aperture in the wall. A stern still smile was
+ exchanged among the Puritans, as the sight reminded them of the victories
+ of former days. Holdfast Clegg, a millwright of Derby, who had been
+ himself active at the siege, pointed to the breach, and said, with a grim
+ smile to Mr. Solsgrace, "I little thought, that when my own hand helped to
+ level the cannon which Oliver pointed against yon tower, we should have
+ been obliged to climb like foxes up the very walls which we won by our bow
+ and by our spear. Methought these malignants had then enough of shutting
+ their gates and making high their horn against us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be patient, my brother," said Solsgrace; "be patient, and let not thy
+ soul be disquieted. We enter not this high place dishonourably, seeing we
+ ascend by the gate which the Lord opened to the godly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words of the pastor were like a spark to gunpowder. The countenances
+ of the mournful retinue suddenly expanded, and, accepting what had fallen
+ from him as an omen and a light from heaven how they were to interpret
+ their present situation, they uplifted, with one consent, one of the
+ triumphant songs in which the Israelites celebrated the victories which
+ had been vouchsafed to them over the heathen inhabitants of the Promised
+ Land:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Let God arise, and then His foes
+ Shall turn themselves to flight,
+ His enemies for fear shall run,
+ And scatter out of sight;
+
+ And as wax melts before the fire,
+ And wind blows smoke away,
+ So in the presence of the Lord,
+ The wicked shall decay.
+
+ God's army twenty thousand is,
+ Of angels bright and strong,
+ The Lord also in Sinai
+ Is present them among.
+
+ Thou didst, O Lord, ascend on high,
+ And captive led'st them all,
+ Who, in times past, Thy chosen flock
+ In bondage did enthral."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These sounds of devotional triumph reached the joyous band of the
+ Cavaliers, who, decked in whatever pomp their repeated misfortunes and
+ impoverishment had left them, were moving towards the same point, though
+ by a different road, and were filling the principal avenue to the Castle,
+ with tiptoe mirth and revelry. The two parties were strongly contrasted;
+ for, during that period of civil dissension, the manners of the different
+ factions distinguished them as completely as separate uniforms might have
+ done. If the Puritan was affectedly plain in his dress, and ridiculously
+ precise in his manners, the Cavalier often carried his love of ornament
+ into tawdry finery, and his contempt of hypocrisy into licentious
+ profligacy. Gay gallant fellows, young and old, thronged together towards
+ the ancient Castle, with general and joyous manifestation of those
+ spirits, which, as they had been buoyant enough to support their owners
+ during the worst of times, as they termed Oliver's usurpation, were now so
+ inflated as to transport them nearly beyond the reach of sober reason.
+ Feathers waved, lace glittered, spears jingled, steeds caracoled; and here
+ and there a petronel, or pistol, was fired off by some one, who found his
+ own natural talents for making a noise inadequate to the dignity of the
+ occasion. Boys&mdash;for, as we said before, the rabble were with the
+ uppermost party, as usual&mdash;halloo'd and whooped, "Down with the
+ Rump," and "Fie upon Oliver!" Musical instruments, of as many different
+ fashions as were then in use, played all at once, and without any regard
+ to each other's tune; and the glee of the occasion, while it reconciled
+ the pride of the high-born of the party to fraternise with the general
+ rout, derived an additional zest from the conscious triumph, that their
+ exultation was heard by their neighbours, the crestfallen Roundheads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the loud and sonorous swell of the psalm-tune, multiplied by all the
+ echoes of the cliffs and ruinous halls, came full upon their ear, as if to
+ warn them how little they were to reckon upon the depression of their
+ adversaries, at first it was answered with a scornful laugh, raised to as
+ much height as the scoffers' lungs would permit, in order that it might
+ carry to the psalmodists the contempt of their auditors; but this was a
+ forced exertion of party spleen. There is something in melancholy feelings
+ more natural to an imperfect and suffering state than in those of gaiety,
+ and when they are brought into collision, the former seldom fail to
+ triumph. If a funeral-train and wedding-procession were to meet
+ unexpectedly, it will readily be allowed that the mirth of the last would
+ be speedily merged in the gloom of the others. But the Cavaliers,
+ moreover, had sympathies of a different kind. The psalm-tune, which now
+ came rolling on their ear, had been heard too often, and upon too many
+ occasions had preceded victory gained over the malignants, to permit them,
+ even in their triumph, to hear it without emotion. There was a sort of
+ pause, of which the party themselves seemed rather ashamed, until the
+ silence was broken by the stout old knight, Sir Jasper Cranbourne, whose
+ gallantry was so universally acknowledged, that he could afford, if we may
+ use such an expression, to confess emotions, which men whose courage was
+ in any respect liable to suspicion, would have thought it imprudent to
+ acknowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Adad," said the old Knight, "may I never taste claret again, if that is
+ not the very tune with which the prick-eared villains began their onset at
+ Wiggan Lane, where they trowled us down like so many ninepins! Faith,
+ neighbours, to say truth, and shame the devil, I did not like the sound of
+ it above half."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I thought the round-headed rogues did it in scorn of us," said Dick
+ Wildblood of the Dale, "I would cudgel their psalmody out of their
+ peasantly throats with this very truncheon;" a motion which, being
+ seconded by old Roger Raine, the drunken tapster of the Peveril Arms in
+ the village, might have brought on a general battle, but that Sir Jasper
+ forbade the feud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll have no ranting, Dick," said the old Knight to the young Franklin;
+ "adad, man, we'll have none, for three reasons: first, because it would be
+ ungentle to Lady Peveril; then, because it is against the King's peace;
+ and, lastly, Dick, because if we did set on the psalm-singing knaves, thou
+ mightest come by the worst, my boy, as has chanced to thee before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who, I! Sir Jasper?" answered Dick&mdash;"I come by the worst!&mdash;I'll
+ be d&mdash;d if it ever happened but in that accursed lane, where we had
+ no more flank, front, or rear, than if we had been so many herrings in a
+ barrel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was the reason, I fancy," answered Sir Jasper, "that you, to mend
+ the matter, scrambled into the hedge, and stuck there, horse and man, till
+ I beat thee through it with my leading-staff; and then, instead of
+ charging to the front, you went right-about, and away as fast as your feet
+ would carry you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This reminiscence produced a laugh at Dick's expense, who was known, or at
+ least suspected, to have more tongue in his head than mettle in his bosom.
+ And this sort of rallying on the part of the Knight having fortunately
+ abated the resentment which had begun to awaken in the breasts of the
+ royalist cavalcade, farther cause for offence was removed, by the sudden
+ ceasing of the sounds which they had been disposed to interpret into those
+ of premeditated insult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was owing to the arrival of the Puritans at the bottom of the large
+ and wide breach, which had been formerly made in the wall of the Castle by
+ their victorious cannon. The sight of its gaping heaps of rubbish, and
+ disjointed masses of building, up which slowly winded a narrow and steep
+ path, such as is made amongst ancient ruins by the rare passage of those
+ who occasionally visit them, was calculated, when contrasted with the grey
+ and solid massiveness of the towers and curtains which yet stood
+ uninjured, to remind them of their victory over the stronghold of their
+ enemies, and how they had bound nobles and princes with fetters of iron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But feelings more suitable to the purpose of their visit to Martindale
+ Castle, were awakened in the bosoms even of these stern sectaries, when
+ the Lady of the Castle, still in the very prime of beauty and of
+ womanhood, appeared at the top of the breach with her principal female
+ attendants, to receive her guests with the honour and courtesy becoming
+ her invitation. She had laid aside the black dress which had been her sole
+ attire for several years, and was arrayed with a splendour not unbecoming
+ her high descent and quality. Jewels, indeed, she had none; but her long
+ and dark hair was surmounted with a chaplet made of oak leaves,
+ interspersed with lilies; the former being the emblem of the King's
+ preservation in the Royal Oak, and the latter of his happy Restoration.
+ What rendered her presence still more interesting to those who looked on
+ her, was the presence of the two children whom she held in either hand;
+ one of whom was well known to them all to be the child of their leader,
+ Major Bridgenorth, who had been restored to life and health by the almost
+ maternal care of the Lady Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If even the inferior persons of the party felt the healing influence of
+ her presence, thus accompanied, poor Bridgenorth was almost overwhelmed
+ with it. The strictness of his cast and manners permitted him not to sink
+ on his knee, and kiss the hand which held his little orphan; but the
+ deepness of his obeisance&mdash;the faltering tremor of his voice&mdash;and
+ the glistening of his eye, showed a grateful respect for the lady whom he
+ addressed, deeper and more reverential than could have been expressed even
+ by Persian prostration. A few courteous and mild words, expressive of the
+ pleasure she found in once more seeing her neighbours as her friends&mdash;a
+ few kind inquiries, addressed to the principal individuals among her
+ guests, concerning their families and connections, completed her triumph
+ over angry thoughts and dangerous recollections, and disposed men's bosoms
+ to sympathise with the purposes of the meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Solsgrace himself, although imagining himself bound by his office and
+ duty to watch over and counteract the wiles of the "Amalekitish woman,"
+ did not escape the sympathetic infection; being so much struck with the
+ marks of peace and good-will exhibited by Lady Peveril, that he
+ immediately raised the psalm&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "O what a happy thing it is,
+ And joyful, for to see
+ Brethren to dwell together in
+ Friendship and unity!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Accepting this salutation as a mark of courtesy repaid, the Lady Peveril
+ marshalled in person this party of her guests to the apartment, where
+ ample good cheer was provided for them; and had even the patience to
+ remain while Master Nehemiah Solsgrace pronounced a benediction of
+ portentous length, as an introduction to the banquet. Her presence was in
+ some measure a restraint on the worthy divine, whose prolusion lasted the
+ longer, and was the more intricate and embarrassed, that he felt himself
+ debarred from rounding it off by his usual alliterative petition for
+ deliverance from Popery, Prelacy, and Peveril of the Peak, which had
+ become so habitual to him, that, after various attempts to conclude with
+ some other form of words, he found himself at last obliged to pronounce
+ the first words of his usual <i>formula</i> aloud, and mutter the rest in
+ such a manner as not to be intelligible even by those who stood nearest to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister's silence was followed by all the various sounds which
+ announce the onset of a hungry company on a well-furnished table; and at
+ the same time gave the lady an opportunity to leave the apartment, and
+ look to the accommodation of her other company. She felt, indeed, that it
+ was high time to do so; and that the royalist guests might be disposed to
+ misapprehend, or even to resent, the prior attentions which she had
+ thought it prudent to offer to the Puritans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These apprehensions were not altogether ill-founded. It was in vain that
+ the steward had displayed the royal standard, with its proud motto of <i>Tandem
+ Triumphans</i>, on one of the great towers which flanked the main entrance
+ of the Castle; while, from the other, floated the banner of Peveril of the
+ Peak, under which many of those who now approached had fought during all
+ the vicissitudes of civil war. It was in vain he repeated his clamorous
+ "Welcome, noble Cavaliers! welcome, generous gentlemen!" There was a
+ slight murmur amongst them, that their welcome ought to have come from the
+ mouth of the Colonel's lady&mdash;not from that of a menial. Sir Jasper
+ Cranbourne, who had sense as well as spirit and courage, and who was aware
+ of his fair cousin's motives, having been indeed consulted by her upon all
+ the arrangements which she had adopted, saw matters were in such a state
+ that no time ought to be lost in conducting the guests to the banqueting
+ apartment, where a fortunate diversion from all these topics of rising
+ discontent might be made, at the expense of the good cheer of all sorts,
+ which the lady's care had so liberally provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stratagem of the old soldier succeeded in its utmost extent. He
+ assumed the great oaken-chair usually occupied by the steward at his
+ audits; and Dr. Dummerar having pronounced a brief Latin benediction
+ (which was not the less esteemed by the hearers that none of them
+ understood it), Sir Jasper exhorted the company to wet their appetites to
+ the dinner by a brimming cup to his Majesty's health, filled as high and
+ as deep as their goblets would permit. In a moment all was bustle, with
+ the clank of wine-cups and of flagons. In another moment the guests were
+ on their feet like so many statues, all hushed as death, but with eyes
+ glancing with expectation, and hands outstretched, which displayed their
+ loyal brimmers. The voice of Sir Jasper, clear, sonorous, and emphatic, as
+ the sound of his war-trumpet, announced the health of the restored
+ Monarch, hastily echoed back by the assemblage, impatient to render it due
+ homage. Another brief pause was filled by the draining of their cups, and
+ the mustering breath to join in a shout so loud, that not only the rafters
+ of the old hall trembled while they echoed it back, but the garlands of
+ oaken boughs and flowers with which they were decorated, waved wildly, and
+ rustled as if agitated by a sudden whirlwind. This rite observed, the
+ company proceeded to assail the good cheer with which the table groaned,
+ animated as they were to the attack both by mirth and melody, for they
+ were attended by all the minstrels of the district, who, like the
+ Episcopal clergy, had been put to silence during the reign of the
+ self-entitled saints of the Commonwealth. The social occupation of good
+ eating and drinking, the exchange of pledges betwixt old neighbours who
+ had been fellow-soldiers in the moment of resistance&mdash;fellow-sufferers
+ in the time of depression and subjugation, and were now partners in the
+ same general subject of congratulation, soon wiped from their memory the
+ trifling cause of complaint, which in the minds of some had darkened the
+ festivity of the day; so that when the Lady Peveril walked into the hall,
+ accompanied as before with the children and her female attendants, she was
+ welcomed with the acclamations due to the mistress of the banquet and of
+ the Castle&mdash;the dame of the noble Knight, who had led most of them to
+ battle with an undaunted and persevering valour, which was worthy of
+ better success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her address to them was brief and matronly, yet spoken with so much
+ feeling as found its way to every bosom. She apologised for the lateness
+ of her personal welcome, by reminding them that there were then present in
+ Martindale Castle that day, persons whom recent happy events had converted
+ from enemies into friends, but on whom the latter character was so
+ recently imposed, that she dared not neglect with them any point of
+ ceremonial. But those whom she now addressed, were the best, the dearest
+ the most faithful friends of her husband's house, to whom and to their
+ valour Peveril had not only owed those successes, which had given them and
+ him fame during the late unhappy times, but to whose courage she in
+ particular had owed the preservation of their leader's life, even when it
+ could not avert defeat. A word or two of heartfelt authority, completed
+ all which she had boldness to add, and, bowing gracefully round her, she
+ lifted a cup to her lips as if to welcome her guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There still remained, and especially amongst the old Cavaliers of the
+ period, some glimmering of that spirit which inspired Froissart, when he
+ declares that a knight hath double courage at need, when animated by the
+ looks and words of a beautiful and virtuous woman. It was not until the
+ reign which was commencing at the moment we are treating of, that the
+ unbounded licence of the age, introducing a general course of profligacy,
+ degraded the female sex into mere servants of pleasure, and, in so doing,
+ deprived society of that noble tone of feeling towards the sex, which,
+ considered as a spur to "raise the clear spirit," is superior to every
+ other impulse, save those of religion and of patriotism. The beams of the
+ ancient hall of Martindale Castle instantly rang with a shout louder and
+ shriller than that at which they had so lately trembled, and the names of
+ the Knight of the Peak and his lady were proclaimed amid waving of caps
+ and hats, and universal wishes for their health and happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under these auspices the Lady Peveril glided from the hall, and left free
+ space for the revelry of the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That of the Cavaliers may be easily conceived, since it had the usual
+ accompaniments of singing, jesting, quaffing of healths, and playing of
+ tunes, which have in almost every age and quarter of the world been the
+ accompaniments of festive cheer. The enjoyments of the Puritans were of a
+ different and less noisy character. They neither sung, jested, heard
+ music, nor drank healths; and yet they seemed not the less, in their own
+ phrase, to enjoy the creature-comforts, which the frailty of humanity
+ rendered grateful to their outward man. Old Whitaker even protested, that,
+ though much the smaller party in point of numbers, they discussed nearly
+ as much sack and claret as his own more jovial associates. But those who
+ considered the steward's prejudices, were inclined to think, that, in
+ order to produce such a result, he must have thrown in his own
+ by-drinkings&mdash;no inconsiderable item&mdash;to the sum total of the
+ Presbyterian potations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without adopting such a partial and scandalous report, we shall only say,
+ that on this occasion, as on most others, the rareness of indulgence
+ promoted the sense of enjoyment, and that those who made abstinence, or at
+ least moderation, a point of religious principle, enjoyed their social
+ meeting the better that such opportunities rarely presented themselves. If
+ they did not actually drink each other's healths, they at least showed, by
+ looking and nodding to each other as they raised their glasses, that they
+ all were sharing the same festive gratification of the appetite, and felt
+ it enhanced, because it was at the same time enjoyed by their friends and
+ neighbours. Religion, as it was the principal topic of their thoughts,
+ became also the chief subject of their conversation, and as they sat
+ together in small separate knots, they discussed doctrinal and
+ metaphysical points of belief, balanced the merits of various preachers,
+ compared the creeds of contending sects, and fortified by scriptural
+ quotations those which they favoured. Some contests arose in the course of
+ these debates, which might have proceeded farther than was seemly, but for
+ the cautious interference of Major Bridgenorth. He suppressed also, in the
+ very bud, a dispute betwixt Gaffer Hodgeson of Charnelycot and the
+ Reverend Mr. Solsgrace, upon the tender subject of lay-preaching and
+ lay-ministering; nor did he think it altogether prudent or decent to
+ indulge the wishes of some of the warmer enthusiasts of the party, who
+ felt disposed to make the rest partakers of their gifts in extemporaneous
+ prayer and exposition. These were absurdities that belonged to the time,
+ which, however, the Major had sense enough to perceive were unfitted,
+ whether the offspring of hypocrisy or enthusiasm, for the present time and
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major was also instrumental in breaking up the party at an early and
+ decorous hour, so that they left the Castle long before their rivals, the
+ Cavaliers, had reached the springtide of their merriment; an arrangement
+ which afforded the greatest satisfaction to the lady, who dreaded the
+ consequences which might not improbably have taken place, had both parties
+ met at the same period and point of retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was near midnight ere the greater part of the Cavaliers, meaning such
+ as were able to effect their departure without assistance, withdrew to the
+ village of Martindale Moultrassie, with the benefit of the broad moon to
+ prevent the chance of accidents. Their shouts, and the burden of their
+ roaring chorus of&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The King shall enjoy his own again!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ were heard with no small pleasure by the lady, heartily glad that the riot
+ of the day was over without the occurrence of any unpleasing accident. The
+ rejoicing was not, however, entirely ended; for the elevated Cavaliers,
+ finding some of the villagers still on foot around a bonfire on the
+ street, struck merrily in with them&mdash;sent to Roger Raine of the
+ Peveril Arms, the loyal publican whom we have already mentioned, for two
+ tubs of merry stingo (as it was termed), and lent their own powerful
+ assistance at the <i>dusting</i> it off to the health of the King and the
+ loyal General Monk. Their shouts for a long time disturbed, and even
+ alarmed, the little village; but no enthusiasm is able to withstand for
+ ever the natural consequences of late hours, and potations pottle-deep.
+ The tumult of the exulting Royalists at last sunk into silence, and the
+ moon and the owl were left in undisturbed sovereignty over the old tower
+ of the village church, which, rising white above a circle of knotty oaks,
+ was tenanted by the bird, and silvered by the planet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Twas when they raised, 'mid sap and siege,
+ The banners of their rightful liege,
+ At their she-captain's call,
+ Who, miracle of womankind!
+ Lent mettle to the meanest hind
+ That mann'd her castle wall.
+ &mdash;WILLIAM S. ROSE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the morning succeeding the feast, the Lady Peveril, fatigued with the
+ exertions and the apprehensions of the former day, kept her apartment for
+ two or three hours later than her own active habits, and the matutinal
+ custom of the time, rendered usual. Meanwhile, Mistress Ellesmere, a
+ person of great trust in the family, and who assumed much authority in her
+ mistress's absence, laid her orders upon Deborah, the governante,
+ immediately to carry the children to their airing in the park, and not to
+ let any one enter the gilded chamber, which was usually their
+ sporting-place. Deborah, who often rebelled, and sometimes successfully,
+ against the deputed authority of Ellesmere, privately resolved that it was
+ about to rain, and that the gilded chamber was a more suitable place for
+ the children's exercise than the wet grass of the park on a raw morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a woman's brain is sometimes as inconstant as a popular assembly; and
+ presently after she had voted the morning was like to be rainy, and that
+ the gilded chamber was the fittest play-room for the children, Mistress
+ Deborah came to the somewhat inconsistent resolution, that the park was
+ the fittest place for her own morning walk. It is certain, that during the
+ unrestrained joviality of the preceding evening, she had danced till
+ midnight with Lance Outram the park-keeper; but how far the seeing him
+ just pass the window in his woodland trim, with a feather in his hat, and
+ a crossbow under his arm, influenced the discrepancy of the opinions
+ Mistress Deborah formed concerning the weather, we are far from presuming
+ to guess. It is enough for us, that, so soon as Mistress Ellesmere's back
+ was turned, Mistress Deborah carried the children into the gilded chamber,
+ not without a strict charge (for we must do her justice) to Master Julian
+ to take care of his little wife, Mistress Alice; and then, having taken so
+ satisfactory a precaution, she herself glided into the park by the
+ glass-door of the still-room, which was nearly opposite to the great
+ breach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gilded chamber in which the children were, by this arrangement, left
+ to amuse themselves, without better guardianship than what Julian's
+ manhood afforded, was a large apartment, hung with stamped Spanish
+ leather, curiously gilded, representing, in a manner now obsolete, but far
+ from unpleasing, a series of tilts and combats betwixt the Saracens of
+ Grenada, and the Spaniards under the command of King Ferdinand and Queen
+ Isabella, during that memorable siege, which was terminated by the
+ overthrow of the last fragments of the Moorish empire in Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Julian was careering about the room for the amusement of his
+ infant friend, as well as his own, mimicking with a reed the menacing
+ attitude of the Abencerrages and Zegris engaged in the Eastern sport of
+ hurling the JERID, or javelin; and at times sitting down beside her, and
+ caressing her into silence and good humour, when the petulant or timid
+ child chose to become tired of remaining an inactive spectator of his
+ boisterous sport; when, on a sudden, he observed one of the panelled
+ compartments of the leather hangings slide apart, so as to show a fair
+ hand, with its fingers resting upon its edge, prepared, it would seem, to
+ push it still farther back. Julian was much surprised, and somewhat
+ frightened, at what he witnessed, for the tales of the nursery had
+ strongly impressed on his mind the terrors of the invisible world. Yet,
+ naturally bold and high-spirited, the little champion placed himself
+ beside his defenceless sister, continuing to brandish his weapon in her
+ defence, as boldly as he had himself been an Abencerrage of Grenada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The panel, on which his eye was fixed, gradually continued to slide back,
+ and display more and more the form to which the hand appertained, until,
+ in the dark aperture which was disclosed, the children saw the figure of a
+ lady in a mourning dress, past the meridian of life, but whose countenance
+ still retained traces of great beauty, although the predominant character
+ both of her features and person was an air of almost royal dignity. After
+ pausing a moment on the threshold of the portal which she had thus
+ unexpectedly disclosed, and looking with some surprise at the children,
+ whom she had not probably observed while engaged with the management of
+ the panel, the stranger stepped into the apartment, and the panel, upon a
+ touch of a spring, closed behind her so suddenly, that Julian almost
+ doubted it had ever been open, and began to apprehend that the whole
+ apparition had been a delusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stately lady, however, advanced to him, and said, "Are not you the
+ little Peveril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said the boy, reddening, not altogether without a juvenile feeling
+ of that rule of chivalry which forbade any one to disown his name,
+ whatever danger might be annexed to the avowal of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then," said the stately stranger, "go to your mother's room, and tell her
+ to come instantly to speak with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wo'not," said the little Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How?" said the lady,&mdash;"so young and so disobedient?&mdash;but you do
+ but follow the fashion of the time. Why will you not go, my pretty boy,
+ when I ask it of you as a favour?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would go, madam," said the boy, "but"&mdash;and he stopped short, still
+ drawing back as the lady advanced on him, but still holding by the hand
+ Alice Bridgenorth, who, too young to understand the nature of the
+ dialogue, clung, trembling, to her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger saw his embarrassment, smiled, and remained standing fast,
+ while she asked the child once more, "What are you afraid of, my brave boy&mdash;and
+ why should you not go to your mother on my errand?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because," answered Julian firmly, "if I go, little Alice must stay alone
+ with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are a gallant fellow," said the lady, "and will not disgrace your
+ blood, which never left the weak without protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy understood her not, and still gazed with anxious apprehension,
+ first on her who addressed him, and then upon his little companion, whose
+ eyes, with the vacant glance of infancy, wandered from the figure of the
+ lady to that of her companion and protector, and at length, infected by a
+ portion of the fear which the latter's magnanimous efforts could not
+ entirely conceal, she flew into Julian's arms, and, clinging to him,
+ greatly augmented his alarm, and by screaming aloud, rendered it very
+ difficult for him to avoid the sympathetic fear which impelled him to do
+ the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in the manner and bearing of this unexpected inmate
+ which might justify awe at least, if not fear, when joined to the singular
+ and mysterious mode in which she had made her appearance. Her dress was
+ not remarkable, being the hood and female riding attire of the time, such
+ as was worn by the inferior class of gentlewomen; but her black hair was
+ very long, and, several locks having escaped from under her hood, hung
+ down dishevelled on her neck and shoulders. Her eyes were deep black,
+ keen, and piercing, and her features had something of a foreign
+ expression. When she spoke, her language was marked by a slight foreign
+ accent, although, in construction, it was pure English. Her slightest tone
+ and gesture had the air of one accustomed to command and to be obeyed; the
+ recollection of which probably suggested to Julian the apology he
+ afterwards made for being frightened, that he took the stranger for an
+ "enchanted queen."
+ </p>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0153m.jpg" alt="0153m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0153.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ While the stranger lady and the children thus confronted each other, two
+ persons entered almost at the same instant, but from different doors,
+ whose haste showed that they had been alarmed by the screams of the
+ latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first was Major Bridgenorth, whose ears had been alarmed with the
+ cries of his child, as he entered the hall, which corresponded with what
+ was called the gilded chamber. His intention had been to remain in the
+ more public apartment, until the Lady Peveril should make her appearance,
+ with the good-natured purpose of assuring her that the preceding day of
+ tumult had passed in every respect agreeably to his friends, and without
+ any of those alarming consequences which might have been apprehended from
+ a collision betwixt the parties. But when it is considered how severely he
+ had been agitated by apprehensions for his child's safety and health, too
+ well justified by the fate of those who had preceded her, it will not be
+ thought surprising that the infantine screams of Alice induced him to
+ break through the barriers of form, and intrude farther into the interior
+ of the house than a sense of strict propriety might have warranted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He burst into the gilded chamber, therefore, by a side-door and narrow
+ passage, which communicated betwixt that apartment and the hall, and,
+ snatching the child up in his arms, endeavoured, by a thousand caresses,
+ to stifle the screams which burst yet more violently from the little girl,
+ on beholding herself in the arms of one to whose voice and manner she was,
+ but for one brief interview, an entire stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, Alice's shrieks were redoubled, and seconded by those of Julian
+ Peveril, who, on the appearance of this second intruder, was frightened
+ into resignation of every more manly idea of rescue than that which
+ consisted in invoking assistance at the very top of his lungs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alarmed by this noise, which in half a minute became very clamorous, Lady
+ Peveril, with whose apartment the gilded chamber was connected by a
+ private door of communication opening into her wardrobe, entered on the
+ scene. The instant she appeared, the little Alice, extricating herself
+ from the grasp of her father, ran towards <i>her</i> protectress, and when
+ she had once taken hold of her skirts, not only became silent, but turned
+ her large blue eyes, in which the tears were still glistening, with a look
+ of wonder rather than alarm, towards the strange lady. Julian manfully
+ brandished his reed, a weapon which he had never parted with during the
+ whole alarm, and stood prepared to assist his mother if there should be
+ danger in the encounter betwixt her and the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, it might have puzzled an older person to account for the sudden
+ and confused pause which the Lady Peveril made, as she gazed on her
+ unexpected guest, as if dubious whether she did, or did not recognise, in
+ her still beautiful though wasted and emaciated features, a countenance
+ which she had known well under far different circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger seemed to understand the cause of hesitation, for she said in
+ that heart-thrilling voice which was peculiarly her own&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Time and misfortune have changed me much, Margaret&mdash;that every
+ mirror tells me&mdash;yet methinks, Margaret Stanley might still have
+ known Charlotte de la Tremouille."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Peveril was little in the custom of giving way to sudden emotion,
+ but in the present case she threw herself on her knees in a rapture of
+ mingled joy and grief, and, half embracing those of the stranger,
+ exclaimed, in broken language&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My kind, my noble benefactress&mdash;the princely Countess of Derby&mdash;the
+ royal queen in Man&mdash;could I doubt your voice, your features, for a
+ moment&mdash;Oh, forgive, forgive me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess raised the suppliant kinswoman of her husband's house, with
+ all the grace of one accustomed from early birth to receive homage and to
+ grant protection. She kissed the Lady Peveril's forehead, and passed her
+ hand in a caressing manner over her face as she said&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You too are changed, my fair cousin, but it is a change becomes you, from
+ a pretty and timid maiden to a sage and comely matron. But my own memory,
+ which I once held a good one, has failed me strangely, if this gentleman
+ be Sir Geoffrey Peveril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A kind and good neighbour only, madam," said Lady Peveril; "Sir Geoffrey
+ is at Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understood so much," said the Countess of Derby, "when I arrived here
+ last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, madam!" said Lady Peveril&mdash;"Did you arrive at Martindale Castle&mdash;at
+ the house of Margaret Stanley, where you have such right to command, and
+ did not announce your presence to her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, I know you are a dutiful subject, Margaret," answered the Countess,
+ "though it be in these days a rare character&mdash;but it was our
+ pleasure," she added, with a smile, "to travel incognito&mdash;and finding
+ you engaged in general hospitality, we desired not to disturb you with our
+ royal presence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how and where were you lodged, madam?" said Lady Peveril; "or why
+ should you have kept secret a visit which would, if made, have augmented
+ tenfold the happiness of every true heart that rejoiced here yesterday?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lodging was well cared for by Ellesmere&mdash;your Ellesmere now, as
+ she was formerly mine&mdash;she has acted as quartermaster ere now, you
+ know, and on a broader scale; you must excuse her&mdash;she had my
+ positive order to lodge me in the most secret part of your Castle"&mdash;(here
+ she pointed to the sliding panel)&mdash;"she obeyed orders in that, and I
+ suppose also in sending you now hither."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed I have not yet seen her," said the lady, "and therefore was
+ totally ignorant of a visit so joyful, so surprising."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I," said the Countess, "was equally surprised to find none but these
+ beautiful children in the apartment where I thought I heard you moving.
+ Our Ellesmere has become silly&mdash;your good-nature has spoiled her&mdash;she
+ has forgotten the discipline she learned under me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw her run through the wood," said the Lady Peveril, after a moment's
+ recollection, "undoubtedly to seek the person who has charge of the
+ children, in order to remove them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your own darlings, I doubt not," said the Countess, looking at the
+ children. "Margaret, Providence has blessed you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is my son," said the Lady Peveril, pointing to Julian, who stood
+ devouring their discourse with greedy ear; "the little girl&mdash;I may
+ call mine too." Major Bridgenorth, who had in the meantime again taken up
+ his infant, and was engaged in caressing it, set it down as the Countess
+ of Derby spoke, sighed deeply, and walked towards the oriel window. He was
+ well aware that the ordinary rules of courtesy would have rendered it
+ proper that he should withdraw entirely, or at least offer to do so; but
+ he was not a man of ceremonious politeness, and he had a particular
+ interest in the subjects on which the Countess's discourse was likely to
+ turn, which induced him to dispense with ceremony. The ladies seemed
+ indeed scarce to notice his presence. The Countess had now assumed a
+ chair, and motioned to the Lady Peveril to sit upon a stool which was
+ placed by her side. "We will have old times once more, though there are
+ here no roaring of rebel guns to drive you to take refuge at my side, and
+ almost in my pocket."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a gun, madam," said little Julian, "and the park-keeper is to
+ teach me how to fire it next year."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will list you for my soldier, then," said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ladies have no soldiers," said the boy, looking wistfully at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has the true masculine contempt of our frail sex, I see," said the
+ Countess; "it is born with the insolent varlets of mankind, and shows
+ itself so soon as they are out of their long clothes.&mdash;Did Ellesmere
+ never tell you of Latham House and Charlotte of Derby, my little master?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand thousand times," said the boy, colouring; "and how the Queen
+ of Man defended it six weeks against three thousand Roundheads, under
+ Rogue Harrison the butcher."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was your mother defended Latham House," said the Countess, "not I, my
+ little soldier&mdash;Hadst thou been there, thou hadst been the best
+ captain of the three."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not say so, madam," said the boy, "for mamma would not touch a gun for
+ all the universe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I, indeed, Julian," said his mother; "there I was for certain, but as
+ useless a part of the garrison&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You forget," said the Countess, "you nursed our hospital, and made lint
+ for the soldiers' wounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But did not papa come to help you?" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Papa came at last," said the Countess, "and so did Prince Rupert&mdash;but
+ not, I think, till they were both heartily wished for.&mdash;Do you
+ remember that morning, Margaret, when the round-headed knaves, that kept
+ us pent up so long, retreated without bag or baggage, at the first glance
+ of the Prince's standards appearing on the hill&mdash;and how you took
+ every high-crested captain you saw for Peveril of the Peak, that had been
+ your partner three months before at the Queen's mask? Nay, never blush for
+ the thought of it&mdash;it was an honest affection&mdash;and though it was
+ the music of trumpets that accompanied you both to the old chapel, which
+ was almost entirely ruined by the enemy's bullets; and though Prince
+ Rupert, when he gave you away at the altar, was clad in buff and
+ bandoleer, with pistols in his belt, yet I trust these warlike signs were
+ no type of future discord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heaven has been kind to me," said the Lady Peveril, "in blessing me with
+ an affectionate husband."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And in preserving him to you," said the Countess, with a deep sigh;
+ "while mine, alas! sealed with his blood his devotion to his king[*]&mdash;Oh,
+ had he lived to see this day!"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The Earl of Derby and King in Man was beheaded at Bolton-on-the-
+ Moors, after having been made prisoner in a previous skirmish in
+ Wiggan Lane.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! alas! that he was not permitted!" answered Lady Peveril; "how had
+ that brave and noble Earl rejoiced in the unhoped-for redemption of our
+ captivity!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess looked on Lady Peveril with an air of surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou hast not then heard, cousin, how it stands with our house?&mdash;How
+ indeed had my noble lord wondered, had he been told that the very monarch
+ for whom he had laid down his noble life on the scaffold at
+ Bolton-le-Moor, should make it his first act of restored monarchy to
+ complete the destruction of our property, already well-nigh ruined in the
+ royal cause, and to persecute me his widow!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You astonish me, madam!" said the Lady Peveril. "It cannot be, that you&mdash;that
+ you, the wife of the gallant, the faithful, the murdered Earl&mdash;you,
+ Countess of Derby, and Queen in Man&mdash;you, who took on you even the
+ character of a soldier, and seemed a man when so many men proved women&mdash;that
+ you should sustain evil from the event which has fulfilled&mdash;exceeded&mdash;the
+ hopes of every faithful subject&mdash;it cannot be!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art as simple, I see, in this world's knowledge as ever, my fair
+ cousin," answered the Countess. "This restoration, which has given others
+ security, has placed me in danger&mdash;this change which relieved other
+ Royalists, scarce less zealous, I presume to think, than I&mdash;has sent
+ me here a fugitive, and in concealment, to beg shelter and assistance from
+ you, fair cousin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From me," answered the Lady Peveril&mdash;"from me, whose youth your
+ kindness sheltered&mdash;from the wife of Peveril, your gallant Lord's
+ companion in arms&mdash;you have a right to command everything; but, alas!
+ that you should need such assistance as I can render&mdash;forgive me, but
+ it seems like some ill-omened vision of the night&mdash;I listen to your
+ words as if I hoped to be relieved from their painful import by awaking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is indeed a dream&mdash;a vision," said the Countess of Derby; "but it
+ needs no seer to read it&mdash;the explanation hath been long since given&mdash;Put
+ not your faith in princes. I can soon remove your surprise.&mdash;This
+ gentleman, your friend, is doubtless <i>honest?</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady Peveril well knew that the Cavaliers, like other factions,
+ usurped to themselves the exclusive denomination of the <i>honest</i>
+ party, and she felt some difficulty in explaining that her visitor was not
+ honest in that sense of the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had we not better retire, madam?" she said to the Countess, rising, as if
+ in order to attend her. But the Countess retained her seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was but a question of habit," she said; "the gentleman's principles
+ are nothing to me, for what I have to tell you is widely blazed, and I
+ care not who hears my share of it. You remember&mdash;you must have heard,
+ for I think Margaret Stanley would not be indifferent to my fate&mdash;that
+ after my husband's murder at Bolton, I took up the standard which he never
+ dropped until his death, and displayed it with my own hand in our
+ Sovereignty of Man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did indeed hear so, madam," said the Lady Peveril; "and that you had
+ bidden a bold defiance to the rebel government, even after all other parts
+ of Britain had submitted to them. My husband, Sir Geoffrey, designed at
+ one time to have gone to your assistance with some few followers; but we
+ learned that the island was rendered to the Parliament party, and that
+ you, dearest lady, were thrown into prison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you heard not," said the Countess, "how that disaster befell me.&mdash;Margaret,
+ I would have held out that island against the knaves as long as the sea
+ continued to flow around it. Till the shoals which surround it had become
+ safe anchorage&mdash;till its precipices had melted beneath the sunshine&mdash;till
+ of all its strong abodes and castles not one stone remained upon another,&mdash;would
+ I have defended against these villainous hypocritical rebels, my dear
+ husband's hereditary dominion. The little kingdom of Man should have been
+ yielded only when not an arm was left to wield a sword, not a finger to
+ draw a trigger in its defence. But treachery did what force could never
+ have done. When we had foiled various attempts upon the island by open
+ force&mdash;treason accomplished what Blake and Lawson, with their
+ floating castles, had found too hazardous an enterprise&mdash;a base
+ rebel, whom we had nursed in our own bosoms, betrayed us to the enemy.
+ This wretch was named Christian&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth started and turned towards the speaker, but instantly
+ seemed to recollect himself, and again averted his face. The Countess
+ proceeded, without noticing the interruption, which, however, rather
+ surprised Lady Peveril, who was acquainted with her neighbour's general
+ habits of indifference and apathy, and therefore the more surprised at his
+ testifying such sudden symptoms of interest. She would once again have
+ moved the Countess to retire to another apartment, but Lady Derby
+ proceeded with too much vehemence to endure interruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This Christian," she said, "had eaten of my lord his sovereign's bread,
+ and drunk of his cup, even from childhood&mdash;for his fathers had been
+ faithful servants to the House of Man and Derby. He himself had fought
+ bravely by my husband's side, and enjoyed all his confidence; and when my
+ princely Earl was martyred by the rebels, he recommended to me, amongst
+ other instructions communicated in the last message I received from him,
+ to continue my confidence in Christian's fidelity. I obeyed, although I
+ never loved the man. He was cold and phlegmatic, and utterly devoid of
+ that sacred fire which is the incentive to noble deeds, suspected, too, of
+ leaning to the cold metaphysics of Calvinistic subtlety. But he was brave,
+ wise, and experienced, and, as the event proved, possessed but too much
+ interest with the islanders. When these rude people saw themselves without
+ hope of relief, and pressed by a blockade, which brought want and disease
+ into their island, they began to fall off from the faith which they had
+ hitherto shown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" said the Lady Peveril, "could they forget what was due to the
+ widow of their benefactor&mdash;she who had shared with the generous Derby
+ the task of bettering their condition?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not blame them," said the Countess; "the rude herd acted but according
+ to their kind&mdash;in present distress they forgot former benefits, and,
+ nursed in their earthen hovels, with spirits suited to their dwellings,
+ they were incapable of feeling the glory which is attached to constancy in
+ suffering. But that Christian should have headed their revolt&mdash;that
+ he, born a gentleman, and bred under my murdered Derby's own care in all
+ that was chivalrous and noble&mdash;that <i>he</i> should have forgot a
+ hundred benefits&mdash;why do I talk of benefits?&mdash;that he should
+ have forgotten that kindly intercourse which binds man to man far more
+ than the reciprocity of obligation&mdash;that he should have headed the
+ ruffians who broke suddenly into my apartment&mdash;immured me with my
+ infants in one of my own castles, and assumed or usurped the tyranny of
+ the island&mdash;that this should have been done by William Christian, my
+ vassal, my servant, my friend, was a deed of ungrateful treachery, which
+ even this age of treason will scarcely parallel!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you were then imprisoned," said the Lady Peveril, "and in your own
+ sovereignty?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For more than seven years I have endured strict captivity," said the
+ Countess. "I was indeed offered my liberty, and even some means of
+ support, if I would have consented to leave the island, and pledge my word
+ that I would not endeavour to repossess my son in his father's rights. But
+ they little knew the princely house from which I spring&mdash;and as
+ little the royal house of Stanley which I uphold, who hoped to humble
+ Charlotte of Tremouille into so base a composition. I would rather have
+ starved in the darkest and lowest vault of Rushin Castle, than have
+ consented to aught which might diminish in one hair's-breadth the right of
+ my son over his father's sovereignty!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And could not your firmness, in a case where hope seemed lost, induce
+ them to be generous and dismiss you without conditions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They knew me better than thou dost, wench," answered the Countess; "once
+ at liberty, I had not been long without the means of disturbing their
+ usurpation, and Christian would have as soon encaged a lioness to combat
+ with, as have given me the slightest power of returning to the struggle
+ with him. But time had liberty and revenge in store&mdash;I had still
+ friends and partisans in the island, though they were compelled to give
+ way to the storm. Even among the islanders at large, most had been
+ disappointed in the effects which they expected from the change of power.
+ They were loaded with exactions by their new masters, their privileges
+ were abridged, and their immunities abolished, under the pretext of
+ reducing them to the same condition with the other subjects of the
+ pretended republic. When the news arrived of the changes which were
+ current in Britain, these sentiments were privately communicated to me.
+ Calcott and others acted with great zeal and fidelity; and a rising,
+ effected as suddenly and effectually as that which had made me a captive,
+ placed me at liberty and in possession of the sovereignty of Man, as
+ Regent for my son, the youthful Earl of Derby. Do you think I enjoyed that
+ sovereignty long without doing justice on that traitor Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, madam," said Lady Peveril, who, though she knew the high and
+ ambitious spirit of the Countess, scarce anticipated the extremities to
+ which it was capable of hurrying her&mdash;"have you imprisoned
+ Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, wench&mdash;in that sure prison which felon never breaks from,"
+ answered the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth, who had insensibly approached them, and was listening with an
+ agony of interest which he was unable any longer to suppress, broke in
+ with the stern exclamation&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lady, I trust you have not dared&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess interrupted him in her turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not who you are who question&mdash;and you know not me when you
+ speak to me of that which I dare, or dare not do. But you seem interested
+ in the fate of this Christian, and you shall hear it.&mdash;I was no
+ sooner placed in possession of my rightful power, than I ordered the
+ Dempster of the island to hold upon the traitor a High Court of Justice,
+ with all the formalities of the isle, as prescribed in its oldest records.
+ The Court was held in the open air, before the Dempster and the Keys of
+ the island, assembled under the vaulted cope of heaven, and seated on the
+ terrace of the Zonwald Hill, where of old Druid and Scald held their
+ courts of judgment. The criminal was heard at length in his own defence,
+ which amounted to little more than those specious allegations of public
+ consideration, which are ever used to colour the ugly front of treason. He
+ was fully convicted of his crime, and he received the doom of a traitor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But which, I trust, is not yet executed?" said Lady Peveril, not without
+ an involuntary shudder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are a fool, Margaret," said the Countess sharply; "think you I
+ delayed such an act of justice, until some wretched intrigues of the new
+ English Court might have prompted their interference? No, wench&mdash;he
+ passed from the judgment-seat to the place of execution, with no farther
+ delay than might be necessary for his soul's sake. He was shot to death by
+ a file of musketeers in the common place of execution called Hango Hill."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth clasped his hands together, wrung them, and groaned bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you seem interested for this criminal," added the Countess, addressing
+ Bridgenorth, "I do him but justice in repeating to you, that his death was
+ firm and manly, becoming the general tenor of his life, which, but for
+ that gross act of traitorous ingratitude, had been fair and honourable.
+ But what of that? The hypocrite is a saint, and the false traitor a man of
+ honour, till opportunity, that faithful touchstone, proves their metal to
+ be base."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is false, woman&mdash;it is false!" said Bridgenorth, no longer
+ suppressing his indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What means this bearing, Master Bridgenorth?" said Lady Peveril, much
+ surprised. "What is this Christian to you, that you should insult the
+ Countess of Derby under my roof?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak not to me of countesses and of ceremonies," said Bridgenorth;
+ "grief and anger leave me no leisure for idle observances to humour the
+ vanity of overgrown children.&mdash;O Christian&mdash;worthy, well worthy,
+ of the name thou didst bear! My friend&mdash;my brother&mdash;the brother
+ of my blessed Alice&mdash;the only friend of my desolate estate! art thou
+ then cruelly murdered by a female fury, who, but for thee, had deservedly
+ paid with her own blood that of God's saints, which she, as well as her
+ tyrant husband, had spilled like water!&mdash;Yes, cruel murderess!" he
+ continued, addressing the Countess, "he whom thou hast butchered in thy
+ insane vengeance, sacrificed for many a year the dictates of his own
+ conscience to the interest of thy family, and did not desert it till thy
+ frantic zeal for royalty had well-nigh brought to utter perdition the
+ little community in which he was born. Even in confining thee, he acted
+ but as the friends of the madman, who bind him with iron for his own
+ preservation; and for thee, as I can bear witness, he was the only barrier
+ between thee and the wrath of the Commons of England; and but for his
+ earnest remonstrances, thou hadst suffered the penalty of thy malignancy,
+ even like the wicked wife of Ahab."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, "I will allow for your
+ impatience upon hearing these unpleasing tidings; but there is neither use
+ nor propriety in farther urging this question. If in your grief you forget
+ other restraints, I pray you to remember that the Countess is my guest and
+ kinswoman, and is under such protection as I can afford her. I beseech
+ you, in simple courtesy, to withdraw, as what must needs be the best and
+ most becoming course in these trying circumstances."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, let him remain," said the Countess, regarding him with composure,
+ not unmingled with triumph; "I would not have it otherwise; I would not
+ that my revenge should be summed up in the stinted gratification which
+ Christian's death hath afforded. This man's rude and clamorous grief only
+ proves that the retribution I have dealt has been more widely felt than by
+ the wretched sufferer himself. I would I knew that it had but made sore as
+ many rebel hearts, as there were loyal breasts afflicted by the death of
+ my princely Derby!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So please you, madam," said Lady Peveril, "since Master Bridgenorth hath
+ not the manners to leave us upon my request, we will, if your ladyship
+ lists, leave him, and retire to my apartment.&mdash;Farewell, Master
+ Bridgenorth; we will meet hereafter on better terms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, madam," said the Major, who had been striding hastily through
+ the room, but now stood fast, and drew himself up, as one who has taken a
+ resolution;&mdash;"to yourself I have nothing to say but what is
+ respectful; but to this woman I must speak as a magistrate. She has
+ confessed a murder in my presence&mdash;the murder too of my
+ brother-in-law&mdash;as a man, and as a magistrate, I cannot permit her to
+ pass from hence, excepting under such custody as may prevent her farther
+ flight. She has already confessed that she is a fugitive, and in search of
+ a place of concealment, until she should be able to escape into foreign
+ parts.&mdash;Charlotte, Countess of Derby, I attach thee of the crime of
+ which thou hast but now made thy boast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not obey your arrest," said the Countess composedly; "I was born
+ to give, but not to receive such orders. What have your English laws to do
+ with my acts of justice and of government, within my son's hereditary
+ kingdom? Am I not Queen in Man, as well as Countess of Derby? A feudatory
+ Sovereign indeed; but yet independent so long as my dues of homage are
+ duly discharged. What right can you assert over me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That given by the precepts of Scripture," answered Bridgenorth&mdash;"'Whoso
+ spilleth man's blood, by man shall his blood be spilled.' Think not the
+ barbarous privileges of ancient feudal customs will avail to screen you
+ from the punishment due for an Englishman murdered upon pretexts
+ inconsistent with the act of indemnity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, "if by fair terms you desist
+ not from your present purpose, I tell you that I neither dare, nor will,
+ permit any violence against this honourable lady within the walls of my
+ husband's castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will find yourself unable to prevent me from executing my duty,
+ madam," said Bridgenorth, whose native obstinacy now came in aid of his
+ grief and desire of revenge; "I am a magistrate, and act by authority."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not that," said Lady Peveril. "That you <i>were</i> a magistrate,
+ Master Bridgenorth, under the late usurping powers, I know well; but till
+ I hear of your having a commission in the name of the King, I now hesitate
+ to obey you as such."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall stand on small ceremony," said Bridgenorth. "Were I no
+ magistrate, every man has title to arrest for murder against the terms of
+ the indemnities held out by the King's proclamations, and I will make my
+ point good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What indemnities? What proclamations?" said the Countess of Derby
+ indignantly. "Charles Stuart may, if he pleases (and it doth seem to
+ please him), consort with those whose hands have been red with the blood,
+ and blackened with the plunder, of his father and of his loyal subjects.
+ He may forgive them if he will, and count their deeds good service. What
+ has that to do with this Christian's offence against me and mine? Born a
+ Mankesman&mdash;bred and nursed in the island&mdash;he broke the laws
+ under which he lived, and died for the breach of them, after the fair
+ trial which they allowed.&mdash;Methinks, Margaret, we have enough of this
+ peevish and foolish magistrate&mdash;I attend you to your apartment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth placed himself betwixt them and the door, in a manner
+ which showed him determined to interrupt their passage; when the Lady
+ Peveril, who thought she already showed more deference to him in this
+ matter than her husband was likely to approve of, raised her voice, and
+ called loudly on her steward, Whitaker. That alert person, who had heard
+ high talking, and a female voice with which he was unacquainted, had
+ remained for several minutes stationed in the anteroom, much afflicted
+ with the anxiety of his own curiosity. Of course he entered in an instant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let three of the men instantly take arms," said the lady; "bring them
+ into the anteroom, and wait my farther orders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ You shall have no worse prison than my chamber,
+ Nor jailer than myself.
+ &mdash;THE CAPTAIN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The command which Lady Peveril laid on her domestics to arm themselves,
+ was so unlike the usual gentle acquiescence of her manners, that Major
+ Bridgenorth was astonished. "How mean you, madam?" said he; "I thought
+ myself under a friendly roof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you are so, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, without
+ departing from the natural calmness of her voice and manner; "but it is a
+ roof which must not be violated by the outrage of one friend against
+ another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is well, madam," said Bridgenorth, turning to the door of the
+ apartment. "The worthy Master Solsgrace has already foretold, that the
+ time was returned when high houses and proud names should be once more an
+ excuse for the crimes of those who inhabit the one and bear the other. I
+ believed him not, but now see he is wiser than I. Yet think not I will
+ endure this tamely. The blood of my brother&mdash;of the friend of my
+ bosom&mdash;shall not long call from the altar, 'How long, O Lord, how
+ long!' If there is one spark of justice left in this unhappy England, that
+ proud woman and I shall meet where she can have no partial friend to
+ protect her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he was about to leave the apartment, when Lady Peveril said,
+ "You depart not from this place, Master Bridgenorth, unless you give me
+ your word to renounce all purpose against the noble Countess's liberty
+ upon the present occasion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would sooner," answered he, "subscribe to my own dishonour, madam,
+ written down in express words, than to any such composition. If any man
+ offers to interrupt me, his blood be on his own head!" As Major
+ Bridgenorth spoke, Whitaker threw open the door, and showed that, with the
+ alertness of an old soldier, who was not displeased to see things tend
+ once more towards a state of warfare, he had got with him four stout
+ fellows in the Knight of the Peak's livery, well armed with swords and
+ carabines, buff-coats, and pistols at their girdles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will see," said Major Bridgenorth, "if any of these men be so desperate
+ as to stop me, a freeborn Englishman, and a magistrate in the discharge of
+ my duty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he advanced upon Whitaker and his armed assistants, with his
+ hand on the hilt of his sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not be so desperate, Master Bridgenorth," exclaimed Lady Peveril; and
+ added, in the same moment, "Lay hold upon, and disarm him, Whitaker; but
+ do him no injury."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her commands were obeyed. Bridgenorth, though a man of moral resolution,
+ was not one of those who undertook to cope in person with odds of a
+ description so formidable. He half drew his sword, and offered such show
+ of resistance as made it necessary to secure him by actual force; but then
+ yielded up his weapon, and declared that, submitting to force which one
+ man was unable to resist, he made those who commanded, and who employed
+ it, responsible for assailing his liberty without a legal warrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind a warrant on a pinch, Master Bridgenorth," said old Whitaker;
+ "sure enough you have often acted upon a worse yourself. My lady's word is
+ as good as a warrant, sure, as Old Noll's commission; and you bore that
+ many a day, Master Bridgenorth, and, moreover, you laid me in the stocks
+ for drinking the King's health, Master Bridgenorth, and never cared a
+ farthing about the laws of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold your saucy tongue, Whitaker," said the Lady Peveril; "and do you,
+ Master Bridgenorth, not take it to heart that you are detained prisoner
+ for a few hours, until the Countess of Derby can have nothing to fear from
+ your pursuit. I could easily send an escort with her that might bid
+ defiance to any force you could muster; but I wish, Heaven knows, to bury
+ the remembrance of old civil dissensions, not to awaken new. Once more,
+ will you think better of it&mdash;assume your sword again, and forget whom
+ you have now seen at Martindale Castle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never," said Bridgenorth. "The crime of this cruel woman will be the last
+ of human injuries which I can forget. The last thought of earthly kind
+ which will leave me, will be the desire that justice shall be done on
+ her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If such be your sentiments," said Lady Peveril, "though they are more
+ allied to revenge than to justice, I must provide for my friend's safety,
+ by putting restraint upon your person. In this room you will be supplied
+ with every necessary of life, and every convenience; and a message shall
+ relieve your domestics of the anxiety which your absence from the Hall is
+ not unlikely to occasion. When a few hours, at most two days, are over, I
+ will myself relieve you from confinement, and demand your pardon for now
+ acting as your obstinacy compels me to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major made no answer, but that he was in her hands, and must submit to
+ her pleasure; and then turned sullenly to the window, as if desirous to be
+ rid of their presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess and the Lady Peveril left the apartment arm in arm; and the
+ lady issued forth her directions to Whitaker concerning the mode in which
+ she was desirous that Bridgenorth should be guarded and treated during his
+ temporary confinement; at the same time explaining to him, that the safety
+ of the Countess of Derby required that he should be closely watched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all proposals for the prisoner's security, such as the regular relief
+ of guards, and the like, Whitaker joyfully acquiesced, and undertook, body
+ for body, that he should be detained in captivity for the necessary
+ period. But the old steward was not half so docile when it came to be
+ considered how the captive's bedding and table should be supplied; and he
+ thought Lady Peveril displayed a very undue degree of attention to her
+ prisoner's comforts. "I warrant," he said, "that the cuckoldly Roundhead
+ ate enough of our fat beef yesterday to serve him for a month; and a
+ little fasting will do his health good. Marry, for drink, he shall have
+ plenty of cold water to cool his hot liver, which I will be bound is still
+ hissing with the strong liquors of yesterday. And as for bedding, there
+ are the fine dry board&mdash;more wholesome than the wet straw I lay upon
+ when I was in the stocks, I trow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whitaker," said the lady peremptorily, "I desire you to provide Master
+ Bridgenorth's bedding and food in the way I have signified to you; and to
+ behave yourself towards him in all civility."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lack-a-day! yes, my lady," said Whitaker; "you shall have all your
+ directions punctually obeyed; but as an old servant, I cannot but speak my
+ mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ladies retired after this conference with the steward in the
+ antechamber, and were soon seated in another apartment, which was
+ peculiarly dedicated to the use of the mistress of the mansion&mdash;having,
+ on the one side, access to the family bedroom; and, on the other, to the
+ still-room which communicated with the garden. There was also a small door
+ which, ascending a few steps, led to that balcony, already mentioned, that
+ overhung the kitchen; and the same passage, by a separate door, admitted
+ to the principal gallery in the chapel; so that the spiritual and temporal
+ affairs of the Castle were placed almost at once within the reach of the
+ same regulating and directing eye.[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] This peculiar collocation of apartments may be seen at Haddon
+ Hall, Derbyshire, once a seat of the Vernons, where, in the lady's
+ pew in the chapel, there is a sort of scuttle, which opens into
+ the kitchen, so that the good lady could ever and anon, without
+ much interruption of her religious duties, give an eye that the
+ roast-meat was not permitted to burn, and that the turn-broche did
+ his duty.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the tapestried room, from which issued these various sally-ports, the
+ Countess and Lady Peveril were speedily seated; and the former, smiling
+ upon the latter, said, as she took her hand, "Two things have happened
+ to-day, which might have surprised me, if anything ought to surprise me in
+ such times:&mdash;the first is, that yonder roundheaded fellow should have
+ dared to use such insolence in the house of Peveril of the Peak. If your
+ husband is yet the same honest and downright Cavalier whom I once knew,
+ and had chanced to be at home, he would have thrown the knave out of
+ window. But what I wonder at still more, Margaret, is your generalship. I
+ hardly thought you had courage sufficient to have taken such decided
+ measures, after keeping on terms with the man so long. When he spoke of
+ justices and warrants, you looked so overawed that I thought I felt the
+ clutch of the parish-beadles on my shoulder, to drag me to prison as a
+ vagrant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We owe Master Bridgenorth some deference, my dearest lady," answered the
+ Lady Peveril; "he has served us often and kindly, in these late times; but
+ neither he, nor any one else, shall insult the Countess of Derby in the
+ house of Margaret Stanley."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art become a perfect heroine, Margaret," replied the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two sieges, and alarms innumerable," said Lady Peveril, "may have taught
+ me presence of mind. My courage is, I believe, as slender as ever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Presence of mind <i>is</i> courage," answered the Countess. "Real valour
+ consists not in being insensible to danger, but in being prompt to
+ confront and disarm it;&mdash;and we may have present occasion for all
+ that we possess," she added, with some slight emotion, "for I hear the
+ trampling of horses' steps on the pavement of the court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one moment, the boy Julian, breathless with joy, came flying into the
+ room, to say that papa was returned, with Lamington and Sam Brewer; and
+ that he was himself to ride Black Hastings to the stable. In the second
+ the tramp of the honest Knight's heavy jack-boots was heard, as, in his
+ haste to see his lady, he ascended the staircase by two steps at a time.
+ He burst into the room; his manly countenance and disordered dress showing
+ marks that he had been riding fast; and without looking to any one else,
+ caught his good lady in his arms, and kissed her a dozen of times.&mdash;Blushing,
+ and with some difficulty, Lady Peveril extricated herself from Sir
+ Geoffrey's arms; and in a voice of bashful and gentle rebuke, bid him, for
+ shame, observe who was in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One," said the Countess, advancing to him, "who is right glad to see that
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril, though turned courtier and favourite, still values
+ the treasure which she had some share in bestowing upon him. You cannot
+ have forgot the raising of the leaguer of Latham House!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The noble Countess of Derby!" said Sir Geoffrey, doffing his plumed hat
+ with an air of deep deference, and kissing with much reverence the hand
+ which she held out to him; "I am as glad to see your ladyship in my poor
+ house, as I would be to hear that they had found a vein of lead in the
+ Brown Tor. I rode hard, in the hope of being your escort through the
+ country. I feared you might have fallen into bad hands, hearing there was
+ a knave sent out with a warrant from the Council."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When heard you so? and from whom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was from Cholmondley of Vale Royal," said Sir Geoffrey; "he is come
+ down to make provision for your safety through Cheshire; and I promised to
+ bring you there in safety. Prince Rupert, Ormond, and other friends, do
+ not doubt the matter will be driven to a fine; but they say the
+ Chancellor, and Harry Bennet, and some others of the over-sea counsellors,
+ are furious at what they call a breach of the King's proclamation. Hang
+ them, say I!&mdash;They left us to bear all the beating; and now they are
+ incensed that we should wish to clear scores with those who rode us like
+ nightmares!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What did they talk of for my chastisement?" said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wot not," said Sir Geoffrey; "some friends, as I said, from our kind
+ Cheshire, and others, tried to bring it to a fine; but some, again, spoke
+ of nothing but the Tower, and a long imprisonment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have suffered imprisonment long enough for King Charles's sake," said
+ the Countess; "and have no mind to undergo it at his hand. Besides, if I
+ am removed from the personal superintendence of my son's dominions in Man,
+ I know not what new usurpation may be attempted there. I must be obliged
+ to you, cousin, to contrive that I may get in security to Vale Royal, and
+ from thence I know I shall be guarded safely to Liverpool."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may rely on my guidance and protection, noble lady," answered her
+ host, "though you had come here at midnight, and with the rogue's head in
+ your apron, like Judith in the Holy Apocrypha, which I joy to hear once
+ more read in churches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do the gentry resort much to the Court?" said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, madam," replied Sir Geoffrey; "and according to our saying, when
+ miners do begin to bore in these parts, it is <i>for the grace of God, and
+ what they there may find</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meet the old Cavaliers with much countenance?" continued the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Faith, madam, to speak truth," replied the Knight, "the King hath so
+ gracious a manner, that it makes every man's hopes blossom, though we have
+ seen but few that have ripened into fruit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not, yourself, my cousin," answered the Countess, "had room to
+ complain of ingratitude, I trust? Few have less deserved it at the King's
+ hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey was unwilling, like most prudent persons, to own the
+ existence of expectations which had proved fallacious, yet had too little
+ art in his character to conceal his disappointment entirely. "Who, I,
+ madam?" he said; "Alas! what should a poor country knight expect from the
+ King, besides the pleasure of seeing him in Whitehall once more, and
+ enjoying his own again? And his Majesty was very gracious when I was
+ presented, and spoke to me of Worcester, and of my horse, Black Hastings&mdash;he
+ had forgot his name, though&mdash;faith, and mine, too, I believe, had not
+ Prince Rupert whispered it to him. And I saw some old friends, such as his
+ Grace of Ormond, Sir Marmaduke Langdale, Sir Philip Musgrave, and so
+ forth; and had a jolly rouse or two, to the tune of old times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should have thought so many wounds received&mdash;so many dangers
+ risked&mdash;such considerable losses&mdash;merited something more than a
+ few smooth words," said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my lady, there were other friends of mine who had the same thought,"
+ answered Peveril. "Some were of opinion that the loss of so many hundred
+ acres of fair land was worth some reward of honour at least; and there
+ were who thought my descent from William the Conqueror&mdash;craving your
+ ladyship's pardon for boasting it in your presence&mdash;would not have
+ become a higher rank or title worse than the pedigree of some who have
+ been promoted. But what said the witty Duke of Buckingham, forsooth?
+ (whose grandsire was a Lei'stershire Knight&mdash;rather poorer, and
+ scarcely so well-born as myself)&mdash;Why, he said, that if all of my
+ degree who deserved well of the King in the late times were to be made
+ peers, the House of Lords must meet upon Salisbury Plain!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that bad jest passed for a good argument!" said the Countess; "and
+ well it might, where good arguments pass for bad jests. But here comes one
+ I must be acquainted with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was little Julian, who now re-entered the hall, leading his little
+ sister, as if he had brought her to bear witness to the boastful tale
+ which he told his father, of his having manfully ridden Black Hastings to
+ the stable-yard, alone in the saddle; and that Saunders though he walked
+ by the horse's head, did not once put his hand upon the rein, and Brewer,
+ though he stood beside him, scarce held him by the knee. The father kissed
+ the boy heartily; and the Countess, calling him to her so soon as Sir
+ Geoffrey had set him down, kissed his forehead also, and then surveyed all
+ his features with a keen and penetrating eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a true Peveril," said she, "mixed as he should be with some touch
+ of the Stanley. Cousin, you must grant me my boon, and when I am safely
+ established, and have my present affair arranged, you must let me have
+ this little Julian of yours some time hence, to be nurtured in my house,
+ held as my page, and the playfellow of the little Derby. I trust in
+ Heaven, they will be such friends as their fathers have been, and may God
+ send them more fortunate times!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marry, and I thank you for the proposal with all my heart, madam," said
+ the Knight. "There are so many noble houses decayed, and so many more in
+ which the exercise and discipline for the training of noble youths is
+ given up and neglected, that I have often feared I must have kept Gil to
+ be young master at home; and I have had too little nurture myself to teach
+ him much, and so he would have been a mere hunting hawking knight of
+ Derbyshire. But in your ladyship's household, and with the noble young
+ Earl, he will have all, and more than all, the education which I could
+ desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There shall be no distinction betwixt them, cousin," said the Countess;
+ "Margaret Stanley's son shall be as much the object of care to me as my
+ own, since you are kindly disposed to entrust him to my charge.&mdash;You
+ look pale, Margaret," she continued, "and the tear stands in your eye? Do
+ not be so foolish, my love&mdash;what I ask is better than you can desire
+ for your boy; for the house of my father, the Duke de la Tremouille, was
+ the most famous school of chivalry in France; nor have I degenerated from
+ him, or suffered any relaxation in that noble discipline which trained
+ young gentlemen to do honour to their race. You can promise your Julian no
+ such advantages, if you train him up a mere home-bred youth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I acknowledge the importance of the favour, madam," said Lady Peveril,
+ "and must acquiesce in what your ladyship honours us by proposing, and Sir
+ Geoffrey approves of; but Julian is an only child, and&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An only son," said the Countess, "but surely not an only child. You pay
+ too high deference to our masters, the male sex, if you allow Julian to
+ engross all your affection, and spare none for this beautiful girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, she set down Julian, and, taking Alice Bridgenorth on her lap,
+ began to caress her; and there was, notwithstanding her masculine
+ character, something so sweet in the tone of her voice and in the cast of
+ her features, that the child immediately smiled, and replied to her marks
+ of fondness. This mistake embarrassed Lady Peveril exceedingly. Knowing
+ the blunt impetuosity of her husband's character, his devotion to the
+ memory of the deceased Earl of Derby, and his corresponding veneration for
+ his widow, she was alarmed for the consequences of his hearing the conduct
+ of Bridgenorth that morning, and was particularly desirous that he should
+ not learn it save from herself in private, and after due preparation. But
+ the Countess's error led to a more precipitate disclosure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That pretty girl, madam," answered Sir Geoffrey, "is none of ours&mdash;I
+ wish she were. She belongs to a neighbour hard by&mdash;a good man, and,
+ to say truth, a good neighbour&mdash;though he was carried off from his
+ allegiance in the late times by a d&mdash;d Presbyterian scoundrel, who
+ calls himself a parson, and whom I hope to fetch down from his perch
+ presently, with a wannion to him! He has been cock of the roost long
+ enough.&mdash;There are rods in pickle to switch the Geneva cloak with, I
+ can tell the sour-faced rogues that much. But this child is the daughter
+ of Bridgenorth&mdash;neighbour Bridgenorth, of Moultrassie Hall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bridgenorth?" said the Countess; "I thought I had known all the
+ honourable names in Derbyshire&mdash;I remember nothing of Bridgenorth.&mdash;But
+ stay&mdash;was there not a sequestrator and committeeman of that name?
+ Sure, it cannot be he?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril took some shame to himself, as he replied, "It is the very man
+ whom your ladyship means, and you may conceive the reluctance with which I
+ submitted to receive good offices from one of his kidney; but had I not
+ done so, I should have scarce known how to find a roof to cover Dame
+ Margaret's head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, as he spoke, raised the child gently from her lap, and
+ placed it upon the carpet, though little Alice showed a disinclination to
+ the change of place, which the lady of Derby and Man would certainly have
+ indulged in a child of patrician descent and loyal parentage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I blame you not," she said; "no one knows what temptation will bring us
+ down to. Yet I <i>did</i> think Peveril of the Peak would have resided in
+ its deepest cavern, sooner than owed an obligation to a regicide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, madam," answered the Knight, "my neighbour is bad enough, but not so
+ bad as you would make him; he is but a Presbyterian&mdash;that I must
+ confess&mdash;but not an Independent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A variety of the same monster," said the Countess, "who hallooed while
+ the others hunted, and bound the victim whom the Independents massacred.
+ Betwixt such sects I prefer the Independents. They are at least bold,
+ bare-faced, merciless villains, have more of the tiger in them, and less
+ of the crocodile. I have no doubt it was that worthy gentleman who took it
+ upon him this morning&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped short, for she saw Lady Peveril was vexed and embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am," she said, "the most luckless of beings. I have said something, I
+ know not what, to distress you, Margaret&mdash;Mystery is a bad thing, and
+ betwixt us there should be none."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is none, madam," said Lady Peveril, something impatiently; "I
+ waited but an opportunity to tell my husband what had happened&mdash;Sir
+ Geoffrey, Master Bridgenorth was unfortunately here when the Lady Derby
+ and I met; and he thought it part of his duty to speak of&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To speak of what?" said the Knight, bending his brows. "You were ever
+ something too fond, dame, of giving way to the usurpation of such people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I only mean," said Lady Peveril, "that as the person&mdash;he to whom
+ Lord Derby's story related&mdash;was the brother of his late lady, he
+ threatened&mdash;but I cannot think that he was serious."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Threaten?&mdash;threaten the Lady of Derby and Man in my house!&mdash;the
+ widow of my friend&mdash;the noble Charlotte of Latham House!&mdash;by
+ Heaven, the prick-eared slave shall answer it! How comes it that my knaves
+ threw him not out of the window?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! Sir Geoffrey, you forget how much we owe him," said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Owe him!" said the Knight, still more indignant; for in his singleness of
+ apprehension he conceived that his wife alluded to pecuniary obligations,&mdash;"if
+ I do owe him some money, hath he not security for it? and must he have the
+ right, over and above, to domineer and play the magistrate in Martindale
+ Castle?&mdash;Where is he?&mdash;what have you made of him? I will&mdash;I
+ must speak with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be patient, Sir Geoffrey," said the Countess, who now discerned the cause
+ of her kinswoman's apprehension; "and be assured I did not need your
+ chivalry to defend me against this discourteous faitour, as <i>Morte
+ d'Arthur</i> would have called him. I promise you my kinswoman hath fully
+ righted my wrong; and I am so pleased to owe my deliverance entirely to
+ her gallantry, that I charge and command you, as a true knight, not to
+ mingle in the adventure of another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, who knew her husband's blunt and impatient temper, and
+ perceived that he was becoming angry, now took up the story, and plainly
+ and simply pointed out the cause of Master Bridgenorth's interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry for it," said the Knight; "I thought he had more sense; and
+ that this happy change might have done some good upon him. But you should
+ have told me this instantly&mdash;It consists not with my honour that he
+ should be kept prisoner in this house, as if I feared anything he could do
+ to annoy the noble Countess, while she is under my roof, or within twenty
+ miles of this Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and bowing to the Countess, he went straight to the gilded
+ chamber, leaving Lady Peveril in great anxiety for the event of an angry
+ meeting between a temper hasty as that of her husband, and stubborn like
+ that of Bridgenorth. Her apprehensions were, however, unnecessary; for the
+ meeting was not fated to take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Sir Geoffrey Peveril, having dismissed Whitaker and his sentinels,
+ entered the gilded chamber, in which he expected to find his captive, the
+ prisoner had escaped, and it was easy to see in what manner. The sliding
+ panel had, in the hurry of the moment, escaped the memory of Lady Peveril,
+ and of Whitaker, the only persons who knew anything of it. It was probable
+ that a chink had remained open, sufficient to indicate its existence to
+ Bridgenorth; who withdrawing it altogether, had found his way into the
+ secret apartment with which it communicated, and from thence to the
+ postern of the Castle by another secret passage, which had been formed in
+ the thickness of the wall, as is not uncommon in ancient mansions; the
+ lords of which were liable to so many mutations of fortune, that they
+ usually contrived to secure some lurking place and secret mode of retreat
+ from their fortresses. That Bridgenorth had discovered and availed himself
+ of this secret mode of retreat was evident; because the private doors
+ communicating with the postern and the sliding panel in the gilded chamber
+ were both left open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey returned to the ladies with looks of perplexity. While he
+ deemed Bridgenorth within his reach, he was apprehensive of nothing he
+ could do; for he felt himself his superior in personal strength, and in
+ that species of courage which induces a man to rush, without hesitation,
+ upon personal danger. But when at a distance, he had been for many years
+ accustomed to consider Bridgenorth's power and influence as something
+ formidable; and notwithstanding the late change of affairs, his ideas so
+ naturally reverted to his neighbour as a powerful friend or dangerous
+ enemy, that he felt more apprehension on the Countess's score, than he was
+ willing to acknowledge even to himself. The Countess observed his downcast
+ and anxious brow, and requested to know if her stay there was likely to
+ involve him in any trouble, or in any danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The trouble should be welcome," said Sir Geoffrey, "and more welcome the
+ danger, which should come on such an account. My plan was, that your
+ ladyship should have honoured Martindale with a few days' residence, which
+ might have been kept private until the search after you was ended. Had I
+ seen this fellow Bridgenorth, I have no doubt I could have compelled him
+ to act discreetly; but he is now at liberty, and will keep out of my
+ reach; and, what is worse, he has the secret of the priest's chamber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Knight paused, and seemed much embarrassed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can, then, neither conceal nor protect me?" said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon, my honoured lady," answered the Knight, "and let me say out my
+ say. The plain truth is, that this man hath many friends among the
+ Presbyterians here, who are more numerous than I would wish them; and if
+ he falls in with the pursuivant fellow who carries the warrant of the
+ Privy Council, it is likely he will back him with force sufficient to try
+ to execute it. And I doubt whether any of our friends can be summoned
+ together in haste, sufficient to resist such a power as they are like to
+ bring together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor would I wish any friends to take arms, in my name, against the King's
+ warrant, Sir Geoffrey," said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, for that matter," replied the Knight, "an his Majesty will grant
+ warrants against his best friends, he must look to have them resisted. But
+ the best I can think of in this emergence is&mdash;though the proposal be
+ something inhospitable&mdash;that your ladyship should take presently to
+ horse, if your fatigue will permit. I will mount also, with some brisk
+ fellows, who will lodge you safe at Vale Royal, though the Sheriff stopped
+ the way with a whole <i>posse comitatus</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby willingly acquiesced in this proposal. She had
+ enjoyed a night's sound repose in the private chamber, to which Ellesmere
+ had guided her on the preceding evening, and was quite ready to resume her
+ route, or flight&mdash;"she scarce knew," she said, "which of the two she
+ should term it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril wept at the necessity which seemed to hurry her earliest
+ friend and protectress from under her roof, at the instant when the clouds
+ of adversity were gathering around her; but she saw no alternative equally
+ safe. Nay, however strong her attachment to Lady Derby, she could not but
+ be more readily reconciled to her hasty departure, when she considered the
+ inconvenience, and even danger, in which her presence, at such a time, and
+ in such circumstances, was likely to involve a man so bold and
+ hot-tempered as her husband Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Lady Peveril, therefore, made every arrangement which time permitted
+ and circumstances required, for the Countess prosecuting her journey, her
+ husband, whose spirits always rose with the prospect of action, issued his
+ orders to Whitaker to get together a few stout fellows, with back and
+ breast pieces, and steel-caps. "There are the two lackeys, and Outram and
+ Saunders, besides the other groom fellow, and Roger Raine, and his son;
+ but bid Roger not come drunk again;&mdash;thyself, young Dick of the Dale
+ and his servant, and a file or two of the tenants,&mdash;we shall be
+ enough for any force they can make. All these are fellows that will strike
+ hard, and ask no question why&mdash;their hands are ever readier than
+ their tongues, and their mouths are more made for drinking than speaking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker, apprised of the necessity of the case, asked if he should not
+ warn Sir Jasper Cranbourne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a word to him, as you live," said the Knight; "this may be an
+ outlawry, as they call it, for what I know; and therefore I will bring no
+ lands or tenements into peril, saving mine own. Sir Jasper hath had a
+ troublesome time of it for many a year. By my will, he shall sit quiet for
+ the rest of's days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Fang.</i>&mdash;A rescue! a rescue!
+ <i>Mrs. Quickly.</i>&mdash;Good people, bring a rescue or two.
+ &mdash;Henry IV. <i>Part I.</i>
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The followers of Peveril were so well accustomed to the sound of "Boot and
+ Saddle," that they were soon mounted and in order; and in all the form,
+ and with some of the dignity of danger, proceeded to escort the Countess
+ of Derby through the hilly and desert tract of country which connects the
+ frontier of the shire with the neighbouring county of Cheshire. The
+ cavalcade moved with considerable precaution, which they had been taught
+ by the discipline of the Civil Wars. One wary and well-mounted trooper
+ rode about two hundred yards in advance; followed, at about half that
+ distance, by two more, with their carabines advanced, as if ready for
+ action. About one hundred yards behind the advance, came the main body;
+ where the Countess of Derby, mounted on Lady Peveril's ambling palfrey
+ (for her own had been exhausted by the journey from London to Martindale
+ Castle), accompanied by one groom, of approved fidelity, and one
+ waiting-maid, was attended and guarded by the Knight of the Peak, and
+ three files of good and practised horsemen. In the rear came Whitaker,
+ with Lance Outram, as men of especial trust, to whom the covering the
+ retreat was confided. They rode, as the Spanish proverb expresses it,
+ "with the beard on the shoulder," looking around, that is, from time to
+ time, and using every precaution to have the speediest knowledge of any
+ pursuit which might take place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, however wise in discipline, Peveril and his followers were somewhat
+ remiss in civil policy. The Knight had communicated to Whitaker, though
+ without any apparent necessity, the precise nature of their present
+ expedition; and Whitaker was equally communicative to his comrade Lance,
+ the keeper. "It is strange enough, Master Whitaker," said the latter, when
+ he had heard the case, "and I wish you, being a wise man, would expound
+ it;&mdash;why, when we have been wishing for the King&mdash;and praying
+ for the King&mdash;and fighting for the King&mdash;and dying for the King,
+ for these twenty years, the first thing we find to do on his return, is to
+ get into harness to resist his warrant?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pooh! you silly fellow," said Whitaker, "that is all you know of the true
+ bottom of our quarrel! Why, man, we fought for the King's person against
+ his warrant, all along from the very beginning; for I remember the rogues'
+ proclamations, and so forth, always ran in the name of the King and
+ Parliament."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay! was it even so?" replied Lance. "Nay, then, if they begin the old
+ game so soon again, and send out warrants in the King's name against his
+ loyal subjects, well fare our stout Knight, say I, who is ready to take
+ them down in their stocking-soles. And if Bridgenorth takes the chase
+ after us, I shall not be sorry to have a knock at him for one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, the man, bating he is a pestilent Roundhead and Puritan," said
+ Whitaker, "is no bad neighbour. What has he done to thee, man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has poached on the manor," answered the keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil he has!" replied Whitaker. "Thou must be jesting, Lance.
+ Bridgenorth is neither hunter nor hawker; he hath not so much of honesty
+ in him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, but he runs after game you little think of, with his sour, melancholy
+ face, that would scare babes and curdle milk," answered Lance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou canst not mean the wenches?" said Whitaker; "why, he hath been
+ melancholy mad with moping for the death of his wife. Thou knowest our
+ lady took the child, for fear he should strangle it for putting him in
+ mind of its mother, in some of his tantrums. Under her favour, and among
+ friends, there are many poor Cavaliers' children, that care would be
+ better bestowed upon&mdash;But to thy tale."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, thus it runs," said Lance. "I think you may have noticed, Master
+ Whitaker, that a certain Mistress Deborah hath manifested a certain favour
+ for a certain person in a certain household."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For thyself, to wit," answered Whitaker; "Lance Outram, thou art the
+ vainest coxcomb&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Coxcomb?" said Lance; "why, 'twas but last night the whole family saw
+ her, as one would say, fling herself at my head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would she had been a brickbat then, to have broken it, for thy
+ impertinence and conceit," said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, but do but hearken. The next morning&mdash;that is, this very
+ blessed morning&mdash;I thought of going to lodge a buck in the park,
+ judging a bit of venison might be wanted in the larder, after yesterday's
+ wassail; and, as I passed under the nursery window, I did but just look up
+ to see what madam governante was about; and so I saw her, through the
+ casement, whip on her hood and scarf as soon as she had a glimpse of me.
+ Immediately after I saw the still-room door open, and made sure she was
+ coming through the garden, and so over the breach and down to the park;
+ and so, thought I, 'Aha, Mistress Deb, if you are so ready to dance after
+ my pipe and tabor, I will give you a couranto before you shall come up
+ with me.' And so I went down Ivy-tod Dingle, where the copse is tangled,
+ and the ground swampy, and round by Haxley-bottom, thinking all the while
+ she was following, and laughing in my sleeve at the round I was giving
+ her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You deserved to be ducked for it," said Whitaker, "for a weather-headed
+ puppy; but what is all this Jack-a-lantern story to Bridgenorth?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, it was all along of he, man," continued Lance, "that is, of
+ Bridgenorth, that she did not follow me&mdash;Gad, I first walked slow,
+ and then stopped, and then turned back a little, and then began to wonder
+ what she had made of herself, and to think I had borne myself something
+ like a jackass in the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I deny," said Whitaker, "never jackass but would have borne him
+ better&mdash;but go on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, turning my face towards the Castle, I went back as if I had my nose
+ bleeding, when just by the Copely thorn, which stands, you know, a
+ flight-short from the postern-gate, I saw Madam Deb in close conference
+ with the enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What enemy?" said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What enemy! why, who but Bridgenorth? They kept out of sight, and among
+ the copse; but, thought I, it is hard if I cannot stalk you, that have
+ stalked so many bucks. If so, I had better give my shafts to be pudding
+ pins. So I cast round the thicket, to watch their waters; and may I never
+ bend crossbow again, if I did not see him give her gold, and squeeze her
+ by the hand!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And was that all you saw pass between them?" said the steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Faith, and it was enough to dismount me from my hobby," said Lance.
+ "What! when I thought I had the prettiest girl in the Castle dancing after
+ my whistle, to find that she gave me the bag to hold, and was smuggling in
+ a corner with a rich old Puritan!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Credit me, Lance, it is not as thou thinkest," said Whitaker.
+ "Bridgenorth cares not for these amorous toys, and thou thinkest of
+ nothing else. But it is fitting our Knight should know that he has met
+ with Deborah in secret, and given her gold; for never Puritan gave gold
+ yet, but it was earnest for some devil's work done, or to be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but," said Lance, "I would not be such a dog-bolt as to go and
+ betray the girl to our master. She hath a right to follow her fancy, as
+ the dame said who kissed her cow&mdash;only I do not much approve her
+ choice, that is all. He cannot be six years short of fifty; and a verjuice
+ countenance, under the penthouse of a slouched beaver, and bag of meagre
+ dried bones, swaddled up in a black cloak, is no such temptation,
+ methinks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you once more," said Whitaker, "you are mistaken; and that there
+ neither is, nor can be, any matter of love between them, but only some
+ intrigue, concerning, perhaps, this same noble Countess of Derby. I tell
+ thee, it behoves my master to know it, and I will presently tell it to
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and in spite of all the remonstrances which Lance continued to
+ make on behalf of Mistress Deborah, the steward rode up to the main body
+ of their little party, and mentioned to the Knight, and the Countess of
+ Derby, what he had just heard from the keeper, adding at the same time his
+ own suspicions, that Master Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall was desirous
+ to keep up some system of espial in the Castle of Martindale, either in
+ order to secure his menaced vengeance on the Countess of Derby, as
+ authoress of his brother-in-law's death, or for some unknown, but probably
+ sinister purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of the Peak was filled with high resentment at Whitaker's
+ communication. According to his prejudices, those of the opposite faction
+ were supposed to make up by wit and intrigue what they wanted in open
+ force; and he now hastily conceived that his neighbour, whose prudence he
+ always respected, and sometimes even dreaded, was maintaining for his
+ private purposes, a clandestine correspondence with a member of his
+ family. If this was for the betrayal of his noble guest, it argued at once
+ treachery and presumption; or, viewing the whole as Lance had done, a
+ criminal intrigue with a woman so near the person of Lady Peveril, was in
+ itself, he deemed, a piece of sovereign impertinence and disrespect on the
+ part of such a person as Bridgenorth, against whom Sir Geoffrey's anger
+ was kindled accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whitaker had scarce regained his post in the rear, when he again quitted
+ it, and galloped to the main body with more speed than before, with the
+ unpleasing tidings that they were pursued by half a score of horseman, and
+ better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ride on briskly to Hartley-nick," said the Knight, "and there, with God
+ to help, we will bide the knaves.&mdash;Countess of Derby&mdash;one word
+ and a short one&mdash;Farewell!&mdash;you must ride forward with Whitaker
+ and another careful fellow, and let me alone to see that no one treads on
+ your skirts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will abide with you and stand them," said the Countess; "you know of
+ old, I fear not to look on man's work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You <i>must</i> ride on, madam," said the Knight, "for the sake of the
+ young Earl, and the rest of my noble friends' family. There is no manly
+ work which can be worth your looking upon; it is but child's play that
+ these fellows bring with them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she yielded a reluctant consent to continue her flight, they reached
+ the bottom of Hartley-nick, a pass very steep and craggy, and where the
+ road, or rather path, which had hitherto passed over more open ground,
+ became pent up and confined betwixt copsewood on the one side, and, on the
+ other, the precipitous bank of a mountain stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby, after an affectionate adieu to Sir Geoffrey, and
+ having requested him to convey her kind commendations to her little
+ page-elect and his mother, proceeded up the pass at a round pace, and with
+ her attendants and escort, was soon out of sight. Immediately after she
+ had disappeared, the pursuers came up with Sir Geoffrey Peveril, who had
+ divided and drawn up his party so as completely to occupy the road at
+ three different points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opposite party was led, as Sir Geoffrey had expected, by Major
+ Bridgenorth. At his side was a person in black, with a silver greyhound on
+ his arm; and he was followed by about eight or ten inhabitants of the
+ village of Martindale Moultrassie, two or three of whom were officers of
+ the peace, and others were personally known to Sir Geoffrey as favourers
+ of the subverted government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the party rode briskly up, Sir Geoffrey called to them to halt; and as
+ they continued advancing, he ordered his own people to present their
+ pistols and carabines; and after assuming that menacing attitude, he
+ repeated, with a voice of thunder, "Halt, or we fire!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other party halted accordingly, and Major Bridgenorth advanced, as if
+ to parley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, how now, neighbour," said Sir Geoffrey, as if he had at that moment
+ recognised him for the first time,&mdash;"what makes you ride so sharp
+ this morning? Are you not afraid to harm your horse, or spoil your spurs?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey," said the Major, "I have not time for jesting&mdash;I'm on
+ the King's affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure it is not upon Old Noll's, neighbour? You used to hold his
+ the better errand," said the Knight, with a smile which gave occasion to a
+ horse-laugh among his followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Show him your warrant," said Bridgenorth to the man in black formerly
+ mentioned, who was a pursuivant. Then taking the warrant from the officer,
+ he gave it to Sir Geoffrey&mdash;"To this, at least, you will pay regard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The same regard which you would have paid to it a month back or so," said
+ the Knight, tearing the warrant to shreds.&mdash;"What a plague do you
+ stare at? Do you think you have a monopoly of rebellion, and that we have
+ not a right to show a trick of disobedience in our turn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make way, Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "or you will compel me
+ to do that I may be sorry for. I am in this matter the avenger of the
+ blood of one of the Lord's saints, and I will follow the chase while
+ Heaven grants me an arm to make my way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall make no way here but at your peril," said Sir Geoffrey; "this
+ is my ground&mdash;I have been harassed enough for these twenty years by
+ saints, as you call yourselves. I tell you, master, you shall neither
+ violate the security of my house, nor pursue my friends over the grounds,
+ nor tamper, as you have done, amongst my servants, with impunity. I have
+ had you in respect for certain kind doings, which I will not either forget
+ or deny, and you will find it difficult to make me draw a sword or bend a
+ pistol against you; but offer any hostile movement, or presume to advance
+ a foot, and I will make sure of you presently. And for those rascals, who
+ come hither to annoy a noble lady on my bounds, unless you draw them off,
+ I will presently send some of them to the devil before their time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make room at your proper peril," said Major Bridgenorth; and he put his
+ right hand on his holster-pistol. Sir Geoffrey closed with him instantly,
+ seized him by the collar, and spurred Black Hastings, checking him at the
+ same time, so that the horse made a courbette, and brought the full weight
+ of his chest against the counter of the other. A ready soldier might, in
+ Bridgenorth's situation, have rid himself of his adversary with a bullet.
+ But Bridgenorth's courage, notwithstanding his having served some time
+ with the Parliament army, was rather of a civil than a military character;
+ and he was inferior to his adversary, not only in strength and
+ horsemanship, but also and especially in the daring and decisive
+ resolution which made Sir Geoffrey thrust himself readily into personal
+ contest. While, therefore, they tugged and grappled together upon terms
+ which bore such little accordance with their long acquaintance and close
+ neighbourhood, it was no wonder that Bridgenorth should be unhorsed with
+ much violence. While Sir Geoffrey sprung from the saddle, the party of
+ Bridgenorth advanced to rescue their leader, and that of the Knight to
+ oppose them. Swords were unsheathed, and pistols presented; but Sir
+ Geoffrey, with the voice of a herald, commanded both parties to stand
+ back, and to keep the peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pursuivant took the hint, and easily found a reason for not
+ prosecuting a dangerous duty. "The warrant," he said, "was destroyed. They
+ that did it must be answerable to the Council; for his part, he could
+ proceed no farther without his commission."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well said, and like a peaceable fellow!" said Sir Geoffrey.&mdash;"Let
+ him have refreshment at the Castle&mdash;his nag is sorely out of
+ condition.&mdash;Come, neighbour Bridgenorth, get up, man&mdash;I trust
+ you have had no hurt in this mad affray? I was loath to lay hand on you,
+ man, till you plucked out your petronel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke thus, he aided the Major to rise. The pursuivant, meanwhile,
+ drew aside; and with him the constable and head-borough, who were not
+ without some tacit suspicion, that though Peveril was interrupting the
+ direct course of law in this matter, yet he was likely to have his offence
+ considered by favourable judges; and therefore it might be as much for
+ their interest and safety to give way as to oppose him. But the rest of
+ the party, friends of Bridgenorth, and of his principles, kept their
+ ground notwithstanding this defection, and seemed, from their looks,
+ sternly determined to rule their conduct by that of their leader, whatever
+ it might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was evident that Bridgenorth did not intend to renew the struggle.
+ He shook himself rather roughly free from the hands of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril; but it was not to draw his sword. On the contrary, he mounted his
+ horse with a sullen and dejected air; and, making a sign to his followers,
+ turned back the same road which he had come. Sir Geoffrey looked after him
+ for some minutes. "Now, there goes a man," said he, "who would have been a
+ right honest fellow had he not been a Presbyterian. But there is no
+ heartiness about them&mdash;they can never forgive a fair fall upon the
+ sod&mdash;they bear malice, and that I hate as I do a black cloak, or a
+ Geneva skull-cap, and a pair of long ears rising on each side on't, like
+ two chimneys at the gable ends of a thatched cottage. They are as sly as
+ the devil to boot; and, therefore, Lance Outram, take two with you, and
+ keep after them, that they may not turn our flank, and get on the track of
+ the Countess again after all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had as soon they should course my lady's white tame doe," answered
+ Lance, in the spirit of his calling. He proceeded to execute his master's
+ orders by dogging Major Bridgenorth at a distance, and observing his
+ course from such heights as commanded the country. But it was soon evident
+ that no manoeuvre was intended, and that the Major was taking the direct
+ road homeward. When this was ascertained, Sir Geoffrey dismissed most of
+ his followers; and retaining only his own domestics, rode hastily forward
+ to overtake the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only necessary to say farther, that he completed his purpose of
+ escorting the Countess of Derby to Vale Royal, without meeting any further
+ hindrance by the way. The lord of the mansion readily undertook to conduct
+ the high-minded lady to Liverpool, and the task of seeing her safely
+ embarked for her son's hereditary dominions, where there was no doubt of
+ her remaining in personal safety until the accusation against her for
+ breach of the Royal Indemnity, by the execution of Christian, could be
+ brought to some compromise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a length of time this was no easy matter. Clarendon, then at the head
+ of Charles's administration, considered her rash action, though dictated
+ by motives which the human breast must, in some respects, sympathise with,
+ as calculated to shake the restored tranquillity of England, by exciting
+ the doubts and jealousies of those who had to apprehend the consequences
+ of what is called, in our own time, a <i>reaction</i>. At the same time,
+ the high services of this distinguished family&mdash;the merits of the
+ Countess herself&mdash;the memory of her gallant husband&mdash;and the
+ very peculiar circumstances of jurisdiction which took the case out of all
+ common rules, pleaded strongly in her favour; and the death of Christian
+ was at length only punished by the imposition of a heavy fine, amounting,
+ we believe, to many thousand pounds; which was levied, with great
+ difficulty, out of the shattered estates of the young Earl of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My native land, good night!
+ &mdash;BYRON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril remained in no small anxiety for several hours after her
+ husband and the Countess had departed from Martindale Castle; more
+ especially when she learned that Major Bridgenorth, concerning whose
+ motions she made private inquiry, had taken horse with a party, and was
+ gone to the westward in the same direction with Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length her immediate uneasiness in regard to the safety of her husband
+ and the Countess was removed, by the arrival of Whitaker, with her
+ husband's commendations, and an account of the scuffle betwixt himself and
+ Major Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril shuddered to see how nearly they had approached to renewal of
+ the scenes of civil discord; and while she was thankful to Heaven for her
+ husband's immediate preservation, she could not help feeling both regret
+ and apprehension for the consequences of his quarrel with Major
+ Bridgenorth. They had now lost an old friend, who had showed himself such
+ under those circumstances of adversity by which friendship is most
+ severely tried; and she could not disguise from herself that Bridgenorth,
+ thus irritated, might be a troublesome, if not a dangerous enemy. His
+ rights as a creditor, he had hitherto used with gentleness; but if he
+ should employ rigour, Lady Peveril, whose attention to domestic economy
+ had made her much better acquainted with her husband's affairs than he was
+ himself, foresaw considerable inconvenience from the measures which the
+ law put in his power. She comforted herself with the recollection,
+ however, that she had still a strong hold on Bridgenorth, through his
+ paternal affection, and from the fixed opinion which he had hitherto
+ manifested, that his daughter's health could only flourish while under her
+ charge. But any expectations of reconciliation which Lady Peveril might
+ probably have founded on this circumstance, were frustrated by an incident
+ which took place in the course of the following morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The governante, Mistress Deborah, who has been already mentioned, went
+ forth, as usual, with the children, to take their morning exercise in the
+ Park, attended by Rachael, a girl who acted occasionally as her assistant
+ in attending upon them. But not as usual did she return. It was near the
+ hour of breakfast, when Ellesmere, with an unwonted degree of primness in
+ her mouth and manner, came to acquaint her lady that Mistress Deborah had
+ not thought proper to come back from the Park, though the breakfast hour
+ approached so near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She will come, then, presently," said Lady Peveril with indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ellesmere gave a short and doubtful cough, and then proceeded to say, that
+ Rachael had been sent home with little Master Julian, and that Mistress
+ Deborah had been pleased to say, she would walk on with Miss Bridgenorth
+ as far as Moultrassie Holt; which was a point at which the property of the
+ Major, as matters now stood, bounded that of Sir Geoffrey Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the wench turned silly," exclaimed the lady, something angrily, "that
+ she does not obey my orders, and return at regular hours?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She may be turning silly," said Ellesmere mysteriously; "or she may be
+ turning too sly; and I think it were as well your ladyship looked to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Looked to what, Ellesmere?" said the lady impatiently. "You are strangely
+ oracular this morning. If you know anything to the prejudice of this young
+ woman, I pray you speak it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I prejudice!" said Ellesmere; "I scorn to prejudice man, woman, or child,
+ in the way of a fellow-servant; only I wish your ladyship to look about
+ you, and use your own eyes&mdash;that is all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You bid me use my own eyes, Ellesmere; but I suspect," answered the lady,
+ "you would be better pleased were I contented to see through your
+ spectacles. I charge you&mdash;and you know I will be obeyed&mdash;I
+ charge you to tell me what you know or suspect about this girl, Deborah
+ Debbitch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see through spectacles!" exclaimed the indignant Abigail; "your
+ ladyship will pardon me in that, for I never use them, unless a pair that
+ belonged to my poor mother, which I put on when your ladyship wants your
+ pinners curiously wrought. No woman above sixteen ever did white-seam
+ without barnacles. And then as to suspecting, I suspect nothing; for as
+ your ladyship hath taken Mistress Deborah Debbitch from under my hand, to
+ be sure it is neither bread nor butter of mine. Only" (here she began to
+ speak with her lips shut, so as scarce to permit a sound to issue, and
+ mincing her words as if she pinched off the ends of them before she
+ suffered them to escape),&mdash;"only, madam, if Mistress Deborah goes so
+ often of a morning to Moultrassie Holt, why, I should not be surprised if
+ she should never find the way back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Once more, what do you mean, Ellesmere? You were wont to have some sense&mdash;let
+ me know distinctly what the matter is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only, madam," pursued the Abigail, "that since Bridgenorth came back from
+ Chesterfield, and saw you at the Castle Hall, Mistress Deborah has been
+ pleased to carry the children every morning to that place; and it has so
+ happened that she has often met the Major, as they call him, there in his
+ walks; for he can walk about now like other folks; and I warrant you she
+ hath not been the worse of the meeting&mdash;one way at least, for she
+ hath bought a new hood might serve yourself, madam; but whether she hath
+ had anything in hand besides a piece of money, no doubt your ladyship is
+ best judge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, who readily adopted the more good-natured construction of
+ the governante's motives, could not help laughing at the idea of a man of
+ Bridgenorth's precise appearance, strict principles, and reserved habits,
+ being suspected of a design of gallantry; and readily concluded, that
+ Mistress Deborah had found her advantage in gratifying his parental
+ affection by a frequent sight of his daughter during the few days which
+ intervened betwixt his first seeing little Alice at the Castle, and the
+ events which had followed. But she was somewhat surprised, when, an hour
+ after the usual breakfast hour, during which neither the child nor
+ Mistress Deborah appeared, Major Bridgenorth's only man-servant arrived at
+ the Castle on horseback, dressed as for a journey; and having delivered a
+ letter addressed to herself, and another to Mistress Ellesmere, rode away
+ without waiting any answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There would have been nothing remarkable in this, had any other person
+ been concerned; but Major Bridgenorth was so very quiet and orderly in all
+ his proceedings&mdash;so little liable to act hastily or by impulse, that
+ the least appearance of bustle where he was concerned, excited surprise
+ and curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril broke her letter hastily open, and found that it contained
+ the following lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "<i>For the Hands of the Honourable and Honoured Lady Peveril&mdash;
+ These:</i>
+
+ "Madam&mdash;Please it your Ladyship,&mdash;I write more to excuse myself to
+ your ladyship, than to accuse either you or others, in respect
+ that I am sensible it becomes our frail nature better to confess
+ our own imperfections, than to complain of those of others.
+ Neither do I mean to speak of past times, particularly in respect
+ of your worthy ladyship, being sensible that if I have served you
+ in that period when our Israel might be called triumphant, you
+ have more than requited me, in giving to my arms a child,
+ redeemed, as it were, from the vale of the shadow of death. And
+ therefore, as I heartily forgive to your ladyship the unkind and
+ violent measure which you dealt to me at our last meeting (seeing
+ that the woman who was the cause of strife is accounted one of
+ your kindred people), I do entreat you, in like manner, to pardon
+ my enticing away from your service the young woman called Deborah
+ Debbitch, whose direction, is, it may be, indispensable to the
+ health of my dearest child. I had purposed, madam, with your
+ gracious permission, that Alice should have remained at Martindale
+ Castle, under your kind charge, until she could so far discern
+ betwixt good and evil, that it should be matter of conscience to
+ teach her the way in which she should go. For it is not unknown to
+ your ladyship, and in no way do I speak it reproachfully, but
+ rather sorrowfully, that a person so excellently gifted as
+ yourself&mdash;I mean touching natural qualities&mdash;has not yet received
+ that true light, which is a lamp to the paths, but are contented
+ to stumble in darkness, and among the graves of dead men. It has
+ been my prayer in the watches of the night, that your ladyship
+ should cease from the doctrine which causeth to err; but I grieve
+ to say, that our candlestick being about to be removed, the land
+ will most likely be involved in deeper darkness than ever; and the
+ return of the King, to which I and many looked forward as a
+ manifestation of divine favour, seems to prove little else than a
+ permitted triumph of the Prince of the Air, who setteth about to
+ restore his Vanity-fair of bishops, deans, and such like,
+ extruding the peaceful ministers of the word, whose labours have
+ proved faithful to many hungry souls. So, hearing from a sure
+ hand, that commission has gone forth to restore these dumb dogs,
+ the followers of Laud and of Williams, who were cast forth by the
+ late Parliament, and that an Act of Conformity, or rather of
+ deformity, of worship, was to be expected, it is my purpose to
+ flee from the wrath to come, and to seek some corner where I may
+ dwell in peace, and enjoy liberty of conscience. For who would
+ abide in the Sanctuary, after the carved work thereof is broken
+ down, and when it hath been made a place for owls, and satyrs of
+ the wilderness?&mdash;And herein I blame myself, madam, that I went in
+ the singleness of my heart too readily into that carousing in the
+ house of feasting, wherein my love of union, and my desire to show
+ respect to your ladyship, were made a snare to me. But I trust it
+ will be an atonement, that I am now about to absent myself from
+ the place of my birth, and the house of my fathers, as well as
+ from the place which holdeth the dust of those pledges of my
+ affection. I have also to remember, that in this land my honour
+ (after the worldly estimation) hath been abated, and my utility
+ circumscribed, by your husband, Sir Geoffrey Peveril; and that
+ without any chance of my obtaining reparation at his hand, whereby
+ I may say the hand of a kinsman was lifted up against my credit
+ and my life. These things are bitter to the taste of the old Adam;
+ wherefore to prevent farther bickerings, and, it may be,
+ bloodshed, it is better that I leave this land for a time. The
+ affairs which remain to be settled between Sir Geoffrey and
+ myself, I shall place in the hand of the righteous Master Joachim
+ Win-the-Fight, an attorney in Chester, who will arrange them with
+ such attention to Sir Geoffrey's convenience, as justice, and the
+ due exercise of the law, will permit; for, as I trust I shall
+ have grace to resist the temptation to make the weapons of carnal
+ warfare the instruments of my revenge, so I scorn to effect it
+ through the means of Mammon. Wishing, madam, that the Lord may
+ grant you every blessing, and, in especial, that which is over all
+ others, namely, the true knowledge of His way, I remain, your
+ devoted servant to command, RALPH BRIDGENORTH.
+
+ "<i>Written at Moultrassie Hall, this tenth
+ day of July, 1660.</i>"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So soon as Lady Peveril had perused this long and singular homily, in
+ which it seemed to her that her neighbour showed more spirit of religious
+ fanaticism than she could have supposed him possessed of, she looked up
+ and beheld Ellesmere,&mdash;with a countenance in which mortification, and
+ an affected air of contempt, seemed to struggle together,&mdash;who, tired
+ with watching the expression of her mistress's countenance, applied for
+ confirmation of her suspicions in plain terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose, madam," said the waiting-woman, "the fanatic fool intends to
+ marry the wench? They say he goes to shift the country. Truly it's time,
+ indeed; for, besides that the whole neighbourhood would laugh him to
+ scorn, I should not be surprised if Lance Outram, the keeper, gave him a
+ buck's head to bear; for that is all in the way of his office."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no great occasion for your spite at present, Ellesmere," replied
+ her lady. "My letter says nothing of marriage; but it would appear that
+ Master Bridgenorth, being to leave this country, has engaged Deborah to
+ take care of his child; and I am sure I am heartily glad of it, for the
+ infant's sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I am glad of it for my own," said Ellesmere; "and, indeed, for the
+ sake of the whole house.&mdash;And your ladyship thinks she is not like to
+ be married to him? Troth, I could never see how he should be such an
+ idiot; but perhaps she is going to do worse; for she speaks here of coming
+ to high preferment, and that scarce comes by honest servitude nowadays;
+ then she writes me about sending her things, as if I were mistress of the
+ wardrobe to her ladyship&mdash;ay, and recommends Master Julian to the
+ care of my age and experience, forsooth, as if she needed to recommend the
+ dear little jewel to me; and then, to speak of my age&mdash;But I will
+ bundle away her rags to the Hall, with a witness!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do it with all civility," said the lady, "and let Whitaker send her the
+ wages for which she has served, and a broad-piece over and above; for
+ though a light-headed young woman, she was kind to the children."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know who is kind to their servants, madam, and would spoil the best
+ ever pinned a gown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I spoiled a good one, Ellesmere, when I spoiled thee," said the lady;
+ "but tell Mistress Deborah to kiss the little Alice for me, and to offer
+ my good wishes to Major Bridgenorth, for his temporal and future
+ happiness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She permitted no observation or reply, but dismissed her attendant,
+ without entering into farther particulars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ellesmere had withdrawn, Lady Peveril began to reflect, with much
+ feeling of compassion, on the letter of Major Bridgenorth; a person in
+ whom there were certainly many excellent qualities, but whom a series of
+ domestic misfortunes, and the increasing gloom of a sincere, yet stern
+ feeling of devotion, rendered lonely and unhappy; and she had more than
+ one anxious thought for the happiness of the little Alice, brought up, as
+ she was likely to be, under such a father. Still the removal of
+ Bridgenorth was, on the whole, a desirable event; for while he remained at
+ the Hall, it was but too likely that some accidental collision with Sir
+ Geoffrey might give rise to a rencontre betwixt them, more fatal than the
+ last had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, she could not help expressing to Doctor Dummerar her
+ surprise and sorrow, that all which she had done and attempted, to
+ establish peace and unanimity betwixt the contending factions, had been
+ perversely fated to turn out the very reverse of what she had aimed at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But for my unhappy invitation," she said, "Bridgenorth would not have
+ been at the Castle on the morning which succeeded the feast, would not
+ have seen the Countess, and would not have incurred the resentment and
+ opposition of my husband. And but for the King's return, an event which
+ was so anxiously expected as the termination of all our calamities,
+ neither the noble lady nor ourselves had been engaged in this new path of
+ difficulty and danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Honoured madam," said Doctor Dummerar, "were the affairs of this world to
+ be guided implicitly by human wisdom, or were they uniformly to fall out
+ according to the conjectures of human foresight, events would no longer be
+ under the domination of that time and chance, which happen unto all men,
+ since we should, in the one case, work out our own purposes to a
+ certainty, by our own skill, and in the other, regulate our conduct
+ according to the views of unerring prescience. But man is, while in this
+ vale of tears, like an uninstructed bowler, so to speak, who thinks to
+ attain the jack, by delivering his bowl straight forward upon it, being
+ ignorant that there is a concealed bias within the spheroid, which will
+ make it, in all probability, swerve away, and lose the cast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having spoken this with a sententious air, the Doctor took his
+ shovel-shaped hat, and went down to the Castle green, to conclude a match
+ of bowls with Whitaker, which had probably suggested this notable
+ illustration of the uncertain course of human events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards, Sir Geoffrey arrived. He had waited at Vale Royal
+ till he heard of the Countess's being safely embarked for Man, and then
+ had posted homeward to his Castle and Dame Margaret. On his way, he
+ learned from some of his attendants, the mode in which his lady had
+ conducted the entertainment which she had given to the neighbourhood at
+ his order; and notwithstanding the great deference he usually showed in
+ cases where Lady Peveril was concerned, he heard of her liberality towards
+ the Presbyterian party with great indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could have admitted Bridgenorth," he said, "for he always bore him in
+ neighbourly and kindly fashion till this last career&mdash;I could have
+ endured him, so he would have drunk the King's health, like a true man&mdash;but
+ to bring that snuffling scoundrel Solsgrace, with all his beggarly,
+ long-eared congregation, to hold a conventicle in my father's house&mdash;to
+ let them domineer it as they listed&mdash;why, I would not have permitted
+ them such liberty, when they held their head the highest! They never, in
+ the worst of times, found any way into Martindale Castle but what Noll's
+ cannon made for them; and that they should come and cant there, when good
+ King Charles is returned&mdash;By my hand, Dame Margaret shall hear of
+ it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, notwithstanding these ireful resolutions, resentment altogether
+ subsided in the honest Knight's breast, when he saw the fair features of
+ his lady lightened with affectionate joy at his return in safety. As he
+ took her in his arms and kissed her, he forgave her ere he mentioned her
+ offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou hast played the knave with me, Meg," he said, shaking his head, and
+ smiling at the same time, "and thou knowest in what manner; but I think
+ thou art true church-woman, and didst only act from silly womanish fancy
+ of keeping fair with these roguish Roundheads. But let me have no more of
+ this. I had rather Martindale Castle were again rent by their bullets,
+ than receive any of the knaves in the way of friendship&mdash;I always
+ except Ralph Bridgenorth of the Hall, if he should come to his senses
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was here under the necessity of explaining what she had heard
+ of Master Bridgenorth&mdash;the disappearance of the governante with his
+ daughter, and placed Bridgenorth's letter in his hand. Sir Geoffrey shook
+ his head at first, and then laughed extremely at the idea that there was
+ some little love-intrigue between Bridgenorth and Mistress Deborah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the true end of a dissenter," he said, "to marry his own
+ maid-servant, or some other person's. Deborah is a good likely wench, and
+ on the merrier side of thirty, as I should think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, nay," said the Lady Peveril, "you are as uncharitable as Ellesmere&mdash;I
+ believe it but to be affection to his child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw! pshaw!" answered the Knight, "women are eternally thinking of
+ children; but among men, dame, many one carresses the infant that he may
+ kiss the child's maid; and where's the wonder or the harm either, if
+ Bridgenorth should marry the wench? Her father is a substantial yeoman;
+ his family has had the same farm since Bosworthfield&mdash;as good a
+ pedigree as that of the great-grandson of a Chesterfield brewer, I trow.
+ But let us hear what he says for himself&mdash;I shall spell it out if
+ there is any roguery in the letter about love and liking, though it might
+ escape your innocence, Dame Margaret."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of the Peak began to peruse the letter accordingly, but was
+ much embarrassed by the peculiar language in which it was couched. "What
+ he means by moving of candlesticks, and breaking down of carved work in
+ the church, I cannot guess; unless he means to bring back the large silver
+ candlesticks which my grandsire gave to be placed on the altar at
+ Martindale Moultrassie; and which his crop-eared friends, like
+ sacrilegious villains as they are, stole and melted down. And in like
+ manner, the only breaking I know of, was when they pulled down the rails
+ of the communion table (for which some of their fingers are hot enough by
+ this time), and when the brass ornaments were torn down from Peveril
+ monuments; and that was breaking and removing with a vengeance. However,
+ dame, the upshot is, that poor Bridgenorth is going to leave the
+ neighbourhood. I am truly sorry for it, though I never saw him oftener
+ than once a day, and never spoke to him above two words. But I see how it
+ is&mdash;that little shake by the shoulder sticks in his stomach; and yet,
+ Meg, I did but lift him out of the saddle as I might have lifted thee into
+ it, Margaret&mdash;I was careful not to hurt him; and I did not think him
+ so tender in point of honour as to mind such a thing much; but I see
+ plainly where his sore lies; and I warrant you I will manage that he stays
+ at the Hall, and that you get back Julian's little companion. Faith, I am
+ sorry myself at the thought of losing the baby, and of having to choose
+ another ride when it is not hunting weather, than round by the Hall, with
+ a word at the window."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should be very glad, Sir Geoffrey," said the Lady Peveril, "that you
+ could come to a reconciliation with this worthy man, for such I must hold
+ Master Bridgenorth to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But for his dissenting principles, as good a neighbour as ever lived,"
+ said Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I scarce see," continued the lady, "any possibility of bringing about
+ a conclusion so desirable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tush, dame," answered the Knight, "thou knowest little of such matters. I
+ know the foot he halts upon, and you shall see him go as sound as ever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril had, from her sincere affection and sound sense, as good a
+ right to claim the full confidence of her husband, as any woman in
+ Derbyshire; and, upon this occasion, to confess the truth, she had more
+ anxiety to know his purpose than her sense of their mutual and separate
+ duties permitted her in general to entertain. She could not imagine what
+ mode of reconciliation with his neighbour, Sir Geoffrey (no very acute
+ judge of mankind or their peculiarities) could have devised, which might
+ not be disclosed to her; and she felt some secret anxiety lest the means
+ resorted to might be so ill chosen as to render the breach rather wider.
+ But Sir Geoffrey would give no opening for farther inquiry. He had been
+ long enough colonel of a regiment abroad, to value himself on the right of
+ absolute command at home; and to all the hints which his lady's ingenuity
+ could devise and throw out, he only answered, "Patience, Dame Margaret,
+ patience. This is no case for thy handling. Thou shalt know enough on't
+ by-and-by, dame.&mdash;Go, look to Julian. Will the boy never have done
+ crying for lack of that little sprout of a Roundhead? But we will have
+ little Alice back with us in two or three days, and all will be well
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the good Knight spoke these words, a post winded his horn in the court,
+ and a large packet was brought in, addressed to the worshipful Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril, Justice of the Peace, and so forth; for he had been
+ placed in authority as soon as the King's Restoration was put upon a
+ settled basis. Upon opening the packet, which he did with no small feeling
+ of importance, he found that it contained the warrant which he had
+ solicited for replacing Doctor Dummerar in the parish, from which he had
+ been forcibly ejected during the usurpation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few incidents could have given more delight to Sir Geoffrey. He could
+ forgive a stout able-bodied sectary or nonconformist, who enforced his
+ doctrines in the field by downright blows on the casques and cuirasses of
+ himself and other Cavaliers. But he remembered with most vindictive
+ accuracy, the triumphant entrance of Hugh Peters through the breach of his
+ Castle; and for his sake, without nicely distinguishing betwixt sects or
+ their teachers, he held all who mounted a pulpit without warrant from the
+ Church of England&mdash;perhaps he might also in private except that of
+ Rome&mdash;to be disturbers of the public tranquillity&mdash;seducers of
+ the congregation from their lawful preachers&mdash;instigators of the late
+ Civil War&mdash;and men well disposed to risk the fate of a new one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, on the other hand, besides gratifying his dislike to Solsgrace, he
+ saw much satisfaction in the task of replacing his old friend and
+ associate in sport and in danger, the worthy Doctor Dummerar, in his
+ legitimate rights and in the ease and comforts of his vicarage. He
+ communicated the contents of the packet, with great triumph, to the lady,
+ who now perceived the sense of the mysterious paragraph in Major
+ Bridgenorth's letter, concerning the removal of the candlestick, and the
+ extinction of light and doctrine in the land. She pointed this out to Sir
+ Geoffrey, and endeavoured to persuade him that a door was now opened to
+ reconciliation with his neighbour, by executing the commission which he
+ had received in an easy and moderate manner, after due delay, and with all
+ respect to the feelings both of Solsgrace and his congregation, which
+ circumstances admitted of. This, the lady argued, would be doing no injury
+ whatever to Doctor Dummerar;&mdash;nay, might be the means of reconciling
+ many to his ministry, who might otherwise be disgusted with it for ever,
+ by the premature expulsion of a favourite preacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was much wisdom, as well as moderation, in this advice; and, at
+ another time, Sir Geoffrey would have sense enough to have adopted it. But
+ who can act composedly or prudently in the hour of triumph? The ejection
+ of Mr. Solsgrace was so hastily executed, as to give it some appearance of
+ persecution; though, more justly considered, it was the restoring of his
+ predecessor to his legal rights. Solsgrace himself seemed to be desirous
+ to make his sufferings as manifest as possible. He held out to the last;
+ and on the Sabbath after he had received intimation of his ejection,
+ attempted to make his way to the pulpit, as usual, supported by Master
+ Bridgenorth's attorney, Win-the-Fight, and a few zealous followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as their party came into the churchyard on the one side, Doctor
+ Dummerar, dressed in full pontificals, in a sort of triumphal procession
+ accompanied by Peveril of the Peak, Sir Jasper Cranbourne, and other
+ Cavaliers of distinction, entered at the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To prevent an actual struggle in the church, the parish officers were sent
+ to prevent the farther approach of the Presbyterian minister; which was
+ effected without farther damage than a broken head, inflicted by Roger
+ Raine, the drunken innkeeper of the Peveril Arms, upon the Presbyterian
+ attorney of Chesterfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unsubdued in spirit, though compelled to retreat by superior force, the
+ undaunted Mr. Solsgrace retired to the vicarage; where under some legal
+ pretext which had been started by Mr. Win-the-Fight (in that day unaptly
+ named), he attempted to maintain himself&mdash;bolted gates&mdash;barred
+ windows&mdash;and, as report said (though falsely), made provision of
+ fire-arms to resist the officers. A scene of clamour and scandal
+ accordingly took place, which being reported to Sir Geoffrey, he came in
+ person, with some of his attendants carrying arms&mdash;forced the
+ outer-gate and inner-doors of the house; and proceeding to the study,
+ found no other garrison save the Presbyterian parson, with the attorney,
+ who gave up possession of the premises, after making protestation against
+ the violence that had been used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rabble of the village being by this time all in motion, Sir Geoffrey,
+ both in prudence and good-nature, saw the propriety of escorting his
+ prisoners, for so they might be termed, safely through the tumult; and
+ accordingly conveyed them in person, through much noise and clamour, as
+ far as the avenue of Moultrassie Hall, which they chose for the place of
+ their retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the absence of Sir Geoffrey gave the rein to some disorders, which, if
+ present, he would assuredly have restrained. Some of the minister's books
+ were torn and flung about as treasonable and seditious trash, by the
+ zealous parish-officers or their assistants. A quantity of his ale was
+ drunk up in healths to the King and Peveril of the Peak. And, finally, the
+ boys, who bore the ex-parson no good-will for his tyrannical interference
+ with their games at skittles, foot-ball, and so forth, and, moreover,
+ remembered the unmerciful length of his sermons, dressed up an effigy with
+ his Geneva gown and band, and his steeple-crowned hat, which they paraded
+ through the village, and burned on the spot whilom occupied by a stately
+ Maypole, which Solsgrace had formerly hewed down with his own reverend
+ hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey was vexed at all this and sent to Mr. Solsgrace, offering
+ satisfaction for the goods which he had lost; but the Calvinistical divine
+ replied, "From a thread to a shoe-latchet, I will not take anything that
+ is thine. Let the shame of the work of thy hands abide with thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considerable scandal, indeed, arose against Sir Geoffrey Peveril as having
+ proceeded with indecent severity and haste upon this occasion; and rumour
+ took care to make the usual additions to the reality. It was currently
+ reported, that the desperate Cavalier, Peveril of the Peak, had fallen on
+ a Presbyterian congregation, while engaged in the peaceable exercise of
+ religion, with a band of armed men&mdash;had slain some, desperately
+ wounded many more, and finally pursued the preacher to his vicarage which
+ he burned to the ground. Some alleged the clergyman had perished in the
+ flames; and the most mitigated report bore, that he had only been able to
+ escape by disposing his gown, cap, and band, near a window, in such a
+ manner as to deceive them with the idea of his person being still
+ surrounded by flames, while he himself fled by the back part of the house.
+ And although few people believed in the extent of the atrocities thus
+ imputed to our honest Cavalier, yet still enough of obloquy attached to
+ him to infer very serious consequences, as the reader will learn at a
+ future period of our history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Bessus</i>.&mdash;'Tis a challenge, sir, is it not?
+ <i>Gentleman</i>.&mdash;'Tis an inviting to the field.
+ &mdash;King and No King.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For a day or two after this forcible expulsion from the vicarage, Mr.
+ Solsgrace continued his residence at Moultrassie Hall, where the natural
+ melancholy attendant on his situation added to the gloom of the owner of
+ the mansion. In the morning, the ejected divine made excursions to
+ different families in the neighbourhood, to whom his ministry had been
+ acceptable in the days of his prosperity, and from whose grateful
+ recollections of that period he now found sympathy and consolation. He did
+ not require to be condoled with, because he was deprived of an easy and
+ competent maintenance, and thrust out upon the common of life, after he
+ had reason to suppose he would be no longer liable to such mutations of
+ fortune. The piety of Mr. Solsgrace was sincere; and if he had many of the
+ uncharitable prejudices against other sects, which polemical controversy
+ had generated, and the Civil War brought to a head, he had also that deep
+ sense of duty, by which enthusiasm is so often dignified, and held his
+ very life little, if called upon to lay it down in attestation of the
+ doctrines in which he believed. But he was soon to prepare for leaving the
+ district which Heaven, he conceived, had assigned to him as his corner of
+ the vineyard; he was to abandon his flock to the wolf&mdash;was to forsake
+ those with whom he had held sweet counsel in religious communion&mdash;was
+ to leave the recently converted to relapse into false doctrines, and
+ forsake the wavering, whom his continued cares might have directed into
+ the right path,&mdash;these were of themselves deep causes of sorrow, and
+ were aggravated, doubtless, by those natural feelings with which all men,
+ especially those whose duties or habits have confined them to a limited
+ circle, regard the separation from wonted scenes, and their accustomed
+ haunts of solitary musing, or social intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, indeed, a plan of placing Mr. Solsgrace at the head of a
+ nonconforming congregation in his present parish, which his followers
+ would have readily consented to endow with a sufficient revenue. But
+ although the act for universal conformity was not yet passed, such a
+ measure was understood to be impending, and there existed a general
+ opinion among the Presbyterians, that in no hands was it likely to be more
+ strictly enforced, than in those of Peveril of the Peak. Solsgrace himself
+ considered not only his personal danger as being considerable,&mdash;for,
+ assuming perhaps more consequence than was actually attached to him or his
+ productions, he conceived the honest Knight to be his mortal and
+ determined enemy,&mdash;but he also conceived that he should serve the
+ cause of his Church by absenting himself from Derbyshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Less known pastors," he said, "though perhaps more worthy of the name,
+ may be permitted to assemble the scattered flocks in caverns or in secret
+ wilds, and to them shall the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim be better
+ than the vintage of Abiezer. But I, that have so often carried the banner
+ forth against the mighty&mdash;I, whose tongue hath testified, morning and
+ evening, like the watchman upon the tower, against Popery, Prelacy, and
+ the tyrant of the Peak&mdash;for me to abide here, were but to bring the
+ sword of bloody vengeance amongst you, that the shepherd might be smitten,
+ and the sheep scattered. The shedders of blood have already assailed me,
+ even within that ground which they themselves call consecrated; and
+ yourselves have seen the scalp of the righteous broken, as he defended my
+ cause. Therefore, I will put on my sandals, and gird my loins, and depart
+ to a far country, and there do as my duty shall call upon me, whether it
+ be to act or to suffer&mdash;to bear testimony at the stake or in the
+ pulpit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the sentiments which Mr. Solsgrace expressed to his desponding
+ friends, and which he expatiated upon at more length with Major
+ Bridgenorth; not failing, with friendly zeal, to rebuke the haste which
+ the latter had shown to thrust out the hand of fellowship to the Amalekite
+ woman, whereby he reminded him, "He had been rendered her slave and
+ bondsman for a season, like Samson, betrayed by Delilah, and might have
+ remained longer in the house of Dagon, had not Heaven pointed to him a way
+ out of the snare. Also, it sprung originally from the Major's going up to
+ feast in the high place of Baal, that he who was the champion of the truth
+ was stricken down, and put to shame by the enemy, even in the presence of
+ the host."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These objurgations seeming to give some offence to Major Bridgenorth, who
+ liked, no better than any other man, to hear of his own mishaps, and at
+ the same time to have them imputed to his own misconduct, the worthy
+ divine proceeded to take shame to himself for his own sinful compliance in
+ that matter; for to the vengeance justly due for that unhappy dinner at
+ Martindale Castle (which was, he said, a crying of peace when there was no
+ peace, and a dwelling in the tents of sin), he imputed his ejection from
+ his living, with the destruction of some of his most pithy and highly
+ prized volumes of divinity, with the loss of his cap, gown, and band, and
+ a double hogshead of choice Derby ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mind of Major Bridgenorth was strongly tinged with devotional feeling,
+ which his late misfortunes had rendered more deep and solemn; and it is
+ therefore no wonder, that, when he heard these arguments urged again and
+ again, by a pastor whom he so much respected, and who was now a confessor
+ in the cause of their joint faith, he began to look back with disapproval
+ on his own conduct, and to suspect that he had permitted himself to be
+ seduced by gratitude towards Lady Peveril, and by her special arguments in
+ favour of a mutual and tolerating liberality of sentiments, into an action
+ which had a tendency to compromise his religious and political principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning, as Major Bridgenorth had wearied himself with several details
+ respecting the arrangement of his affairs, he was reposing in the leathern
+ easy-chair, beside the latticed window, a posture which, by natural
+ association, recalled to him the memory of former times, and the feelings
+ with which he was wont to expect the recurring visit of Sir Geoffrey, who
+ brought him news of his child's welfare,&mdash;"Surely," he said,
+ thinking, as it were, aloud, "there was no sin in the kindness with which
+ I then regarded that man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Solsgrace, who was in the apartment, and guessed what passed through his
+ friend's mind, acquainted as he was with every point of his history,
+ replied&mdash;"When God caused Elijah to be fed by ravens, while hiding at
+ the brook Cherith, we hear not of his fondling the unclean birds, whom,
+ contrary to their ravening nature, a miracle compelled to minister to
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be so," answered Bridgenorth, "yet the flap of their wings must
+ have been gracious in the ear of the famished prophet, like the tread of
+ his horse in mine. The ravens, doubtless, resumed their nature when the
+ season was passed, and even so it has fared with him.&mdash;Hark!" he
+ exclaimed, starting, "I hear his horse's hoof tramp even now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was seldom that the echoes of that silent house and courtyard were
+ awakened by the trampling of horses, but such was now the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Bridgenorth and Solsgrace were surprised at the sound, and even
+ disposed to anticipate some farther oppression on the part of the
+ government, when the Major's old servant introduced, with little ceremony
+ (for his manners were nearly as plain as his master's), a tall gentleman
+ on the farther side of middle life, whose vest and cloak, long hair,
+ slouched hat and drooping feather, announced him as a Cavalier. He bowed
+ formally, but courteously, to both gentlemen, and said, that he was "Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne, charged with an especial message to Master Ralph
+ Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall, by his honourable friend Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril of the Peak, and that he requested to know whether Master
+ Bridgenorth would be pleased to receive his acquittal of commission here
+ or elsewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anything which Sir Geoffrey Peveril can have to say to me," said Major
+ Bridgenorth, "may be told instantly, and before my friend, from whom I
+ have no secrets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The presence of any other friend were, instead of being objectionable,
+ the thing in the world most to be desired," said Sir Jasper, after a
+ moment's hesitation, and looking at Mr. Solsgrace; "but this gentleman
+ seems to be a sort of clergyman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not conscious of any secrets," answered Bridgenorth, "nor do I
+ desire to have any, in which a clergyman is unfitting confidant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At your pleasure," replied Sir Jasper. "The confidence, for aught I know,
+ may be well enough chosen, for your divines (always under your favour)
+ have proved no enemies to such matters as I am to treat with you upon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Proceed, sir," answered Mr. Bridgenorth gravely; "and I pray you to be
+ seated, unless it is rather your pleasure to stand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must, in the first place, deliver myself of my small commission,"
+ answered Sir Jasper, drawing himself up; "and it will be after I have seen
+ the reception thereof, that I shall know whether I am, or am not, to sit
+ down at Moultrassie Hall.&mdash;Sir Geoffrey Peveril, Master Bridgenorth,
+ hath carefully considered with himself the unhappy circumstances which at
+ present separate you as neighbours. And he remembers many passages in
+ former times&mdash;I speak his very words&mdash;which incline him to do
+ all that can possibly consist with his honour, to wipe out unkindness
+ between you; and for this desirable object, he is willing to condescend in
+ a degree, which, as you could not have expected, it will no doubt give you
+ great pleasure to learn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Allow me to say, Sir Jasper," said Bridgenorth, "that this is
+ unnecessary. I have made no complaints of Sir Geoffrey&mdash;I have
+ required no submission from him&mdash;I am about to leave this country;
+ and what affairs we may have together, can be as well settled by others as
+ by ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a word," said the divine, "the worthy Major Bridgenorth hath had
+ enough of trafficking with the ungodly, and will no longer, on any terms,
+ consort with them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gentleman both," said Sir Jasper, with imperturbable politeness, bowing,
+ "you greatly mistake the tenor of my commission, which you will do as well
+ to hear out, before making any reply to it.&mdash;I think, Master
+ Bridgenorth, you cannot but remember your letter to the Lady Peveril, of
+ which I have here a rough copy, in which you complain of the hard measure
+ which you have received at Sir Geoffrey's hand, and, in particular, when
+ he pulled you from your horse at or near Hartley-nick. Now, Sir Geoffrey
+ thinks so well of you, as to believe, that, were it not for the wide
+ difference betwixt his descent and rank and your own, you would have
+ sought to bring this matter to a gentleman-like arbitrament, as the only
+ mode whereby your stain may be honourably wiped away. Wherefore, in this
+ slight note, he gives you, in his generosity, the offer of what you, in
+ your modesty (for to nothing else does he impute your acquiescence), have
+ declined to demand of him. And withal, I bring you the measure of his
+ weapon; and when you have accepted the cartel which I now offer you, I
+ shall be ready to settle the time, place, and other circumstances of your
+ meeting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I," said Solsgrace, with a solemn voice, "should the Author of Evil
+ tempt my friend to accept of so bloodthirsty a proposal, would be the
+ first to pronounce against him sentence of the greater excommunication."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not you whom I address, reverend sir," replied the envoy; "your
+ interest, not unnaturally, may determine you to be more anxious about your
+ patron's life than about his honour. I must know, from himself, to which
+ <i>he</i> is disposed to give the preference."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and with a graceful bow, he again tendered the challenge to
+ Major Bridgenorth. There was obviously a struggle in that gentleman's
+ bosom, between the suggestions of human honour and those of religious
+ principle; but the latter prevailed. He calmly waived receiving the paper
+ which Sir Jasper offered to him, and spoke to the following purpose:&mdash;"It
+ may not be known to you, Sir Jasper, that since the general pouring out of
+ Christian light upon this kingdom, many solid men have been led to doubt
+ whether the shedding human blood by the hand of a fellow-creature be in <i>any</i>
+ respect justifiable. And although this rule appears to me to be scarcely
+ applicable to our state in this stage of trial, seeing that such
+ non-resistance, if general, would surrender our civil and religious rights
+ into the hands of whatsoever daring tyrants might usurp the same; yet I
+ am, and have been, inclined to limit the use of carnal arms to the case of
+ necessary self-defence, whether such regards our own person, or the
+ protection of our country against invasion; or of our rights of property,
+ and the freedom of our laws and of our conscience, against usurping power.
+ And as I have never shown myself unwilling to draw my sword in any of the
+ latter causes, so you shall excuse my suffering it now to remain in the
+ scabbard, when, having sustained a grievous injury, the man who inflicted
+ it summons me to combat, either upon an idle punctilio, or, as is more
+ likely, in mere bravado."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard you with patience," said Sir Jasper; "and now, Master
+ Bridgenorth, take it not amiss, if I beseech you to bethink yourself
+ better on this matter. I vow to Heaven, sir, that your honour lies
+ a-bleeding; and that in condescending to afford you this fair meeting, and
+ thereby giving you some chance to stop its wounds, Sir Geoffrey has been
+ moved by a tender sense of your condition, and an earnest wish to redeem
+ your dishonour. And it will be but the crossing of your blade with his
+ honoured sword for the space of some few minutes, and you will either live
+ or die a noble and honoured gentleman. Besides, that the Knight's
+ exquisite skill of fence may enable him, as his good-nature will incline
+ him, to disarm you with some flesh wound, little to the damage of your
+ person, and greatly to the benefit of your reputation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The tender mercies of the wicked," said Master Solsgrace emphatically, by
+ way of commenting on this speech, which Sir Jasper had uttered very
+ pathetically, "are cruel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray to have no farther interruption from your reverence," said Sir
+ Jasper; "especially as I think this affair very little concerns you; and I
+ entreat that you permit me to discharge myself regularly of my commission
+ from my worthy friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he took his sheathed rapier from his belt, and passing the
+ point through the silk thread which secured the letter, he once more, and
+ literally at sword point, gracefully tendered it to Major Bridgenorth who
+ again waved it aside, though colouring deeply at the same time, as if he
+ was putting a marked constraint upon himself&mdash;drew back, and made Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne a deep bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since it is to be thus," said Sir Jasper, "I must myself do violence to
+ the seal of Sir Geoffrey's letter, and read it to you, that I may fully
+ acquit myself of the charge entrusted to me, and make you, Master
+ Bridgenorth, equally aware of the generous intentions of Sir Geoffrey on
+ your behalf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said Major Bridgenorth, "the contents of the letter be to no other
+ purpose than you have intimated, methinks farther ceremony is unnecessary
+ on this occasion, as I have already taken my course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nevertheless," said Sir Jasper, breaking open the letter, "it is fitting
+ that I read to you the letter of my worshipful friend." And he read
+ accordingly as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "<i>For the worthy hands of Ralph Bridgenorth, Esquire, of
+ Moultrassie Hall&mdash;These:</i>
+
+ "By the honoured conveyance of the Worshipful Sir Jasper
+ Cranbourne, Knight, of Long-Mallington.
+
+ "Master Bridgenorth,&mdash;We have been given to understand by your
+ letter to our loving wife, Dame Margaret Peveril, that you hold
+ hard construction of certain passages betwixt you and I, of a late
+ date, as if your honour should have been, in some sort, prejudiced
+ by what then took place. And although you have not thought it fit
+ to have direct recourse to me, to request such satisfaction as is
+ due from one gentleman of condition to another, yet I am fully
+ minded that this proceeds only from modesty, arising out of the
+ distinction of our degree, and from no lack of that courage which
+ you have heretofore displayed, I would I could say in a good
+ cause. Wherefore I am purposed to give you, by my friend, Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne, a meeting, for the sake of doing that which
+ doubtless you entirely long for. Sir Jasper will deliver you the
+ length of my weapon, and appoint circumstances and an hour for our
+ meeting; which, whether early or late&mdash;on foot or horseback&mdash;with
+ rapier or backsword&mdash;I refer to yourself, with all the other
+ privileges of a challenged person; only desiring, that if you
+ decline to match my weapon, you will send me forthwith the length
+ and breadth of your own. And nothing doubting that the issue of
+ this meeting must needs be to end, in one way or other, all
+ unkindness betwixt two near neighbours,&mdash;I remain, your humble
+ servant to command,
+ "Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak."
+
+ "Given from my poor house of Martindale Castle, this same ____ of
+ ____, sixteen hundred and sixty."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Bear back my respects to Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Major Bridgenorth.
+ "According to his light, his meaning may be fair towards me; but tell him
+ that our quarrel had its rise in his own wilful aggression towards me; and
+ that though I wish to be in charity with all mankind, I am not so wedded
+ to his friendship as to break the laws of God, and run the risk of
+ suffering or committing murder, in order to regain it. And for you, sir,
+ methinks your advanced years and past misfortunes might teach you the
+ folly of coming on such idle errands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall do your message, Master Ralph Bridgenorth," said Sir Jasper; "and
+ shall then endeavour to forget your name, as a sound unfit to be
+ pronounced, or even remembered, by a man of honour. In the meanwhile, in
+ return for your uncivil advice, be pleased to accept of mine; namely, that
+ as your religion prevents your giving a gentleman satisfaction, it ought
+ to make you very cautious of offering him provocation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and with a look of haughty scorn, first at the Major, and then
+ at the divine, the envoy of Sir Geoffrey put his hat on his head, replaced
+ his rapier in its belt, and left the apartment. In a few minutes
+ afterwards, the tread of his horse died away at a considerable distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth had held his hand upon his brow ever since his departure, and
+ a tear of anger and shame was on his face as he raised it when the sound
+ was heard no more. "He carries this answer to Martindale Castle," he said.
+ "Men will hereafter think of me as a whipped, beaten, dishonourable
+ fellow, whom every one may baffle and insult at their pleasure. It is well
+ I am leaving the house of my father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master Solsgrace approached his friend with much sympathy, and grasped him
+ by the hand. "Noble brother," he said, with unwonted kindness of manner,
+ "though a man of peace, I can judge what this sacrifice hath cost to thy
+ manly spirit. But God will not have from us an imperfect obedience. We
+ must not, like Ananias and Sapphira, reserve behind some darling lust,
+ some favourite sin, while we pretend to make sacrifice of our worldly
+ affections. What avails it to say that we have but secreted a little
+ matter, if the slightest remnant of the accursed thing remain hidden in
+ our tent? Would it be a defence in thy prayers to say, I have not murdered
+ this man for the lucre of gain, like a robber&mdash;nor for the
+ acquisition of power, like a tyrant,&mdash;nor for the gratification of
+ revenge, like a darkened savage; but because the imperious voice of
+ worldly honour said, 'Go forth&mdash;kill or be killed&mdash;is it not I
+ that have sent thee?' Bethink thee, my worthy friend, how thou couldst
+ frame such a vindication in thy prayers; and if thou art forced to tremble
+ at the blasphemy of such an excuse, remember in thy prayers the thanks due
+ to Heaven, which enabled thee to resist the strong temptation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Reverend and dear friend," answered Bridgenorth, "I feel that you speak
+ the truth. Bitterer, indeed, and harder, to the old Adam, is the text
+ which ordains him to suffer shame, than that which bids him to do
+ valiantly for the truth. But happy am I that my path through the
+ wilderness of this world will, for some space at least, be along with one,
+ whose zeal and friendship are so active to support me when I am fainting
+ in the way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall thus communicated together upon
+ the purport of Sir Jasper Cranbourne's visit, that worthy knight greatly
+ excited the surprise of Sir Geoffrey Peveril, by reporting the manner in
+ which his embassy had been received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I took him for a man of other metal," said Sir Geoffrey;&mdash;"nay, I
+ would have sworn it, had any one asked my testimony. But there is no
+ making a silken purse out of a sow's ear. I have done a folly for him that
+ I will never do for another: and that is, to think a Presbyterian would
+ fight without his preacher's permission. Give them a two hours' sermon,
+ and let them howl a psalm to a tune that is worse than the cries of a
+ flogged hound, and the villains will lay on like threshers; but for a
+ calm, cool, gentleman-like turn upon the sod, hand to hand, in a
+ neighbourly way, they have not honour enough to undertake it. But enough
+ of our crop-eared cur of a neighbour.&mdash;Sir Jasper, you will tarry
+ with us to dine, and see how Dame Margaret's kitchen smokes; and after
+ dinner I will show you a long-winged falcon fly. She is not mine, but the
+ Countess's, who brought her from London on her fist almost the whole way,
+ for all the haste she was in, and left her with me to keep the perch for a
+ season."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This match was soon arranged, and Dame Margaret overheard the good
+ Knight's resentment mutter itself off, with those feelings with which we
+ listen to the last growling of the thunderstorm; which, as the black cloud
+ sinks beneath the hill, at once assures us that there has been danger, and
+ that the peril is over. She could not, indeed, but marvel in her own mind
+ at the singular path of reconciliation with his neighbour which her
+ husband had, with so much confidence, and in the actual sincerity of his
+ goodwill to Mr. Bridgenorth, attempted to open; and she blessed God
+ internally that it had not terminated in bloodshed. But these reflections
+ she locked carefully within her own bosom, well knowing that they referred
+ to subjects in which the Knight of the Peak would neither permit his
+ sagacity to be called in question, nor his will to be controlled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The progress of the history hath hitherto been slow; but after this period
+ so little matter worth of mark occurred at Martindale, that we must hurry
+ over hastily the transactions of several years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Cleopatra.</i>&mdash;Give me to drink mandragora,
+ That I may sleep away this gap of time.
+ &mdash;Antony and Cleopatra.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There passed, as we hinted at the conclusion of the last chapter, four or
+ five years after the period we have dilated upon; the events of which
+ scarcely require to be discussed, so far as our present purpose is
+ concerned, in as many lines. The Knight and his Lady continued to reside
+ at their Castle&mdash;she, with prudence and with patience, endeavouring
+ to repair the damages which the Civil Wars had inflicted upon their
+ fortune; and murmuring a little when her plans of economy were interrupted
+ by the liberal hospitality, which was her husband's principal expense, and
+ to which he was attached, not only from his own English heartiness of
+ disposition, but from ideas of maintaining the dignity of his ancestry&mdash;no
+ less remarkable, according to the tradition of their buttery, kitchen, and
+ cellar, for the fat beeves which they roasted, and the mighty ale which
+ they brewed, than for their extensive estates, and the number of their
+ retainers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world, however, upon the whole, went happily and easily with the
+ worthy couple. Sir Geoffrey's debt to his neighbour Bridgenorth continued,
+ it is true, unabated; but he was the only creditor upon the Martindale
+ estate&mdash;all others being paid off. It would have been most desirable
+ that this encumbrance also should be cleared, and it was the great object
+ of Dame Margaret's economy to effect the discharge; for although interest
+ was regularly settled with Master Win-the-Fight, the Chesterfield
+ attorney, yet the principal sum, which was a large one, might be called
+ for at an inconvenient time. The man, too, was gloomy, important, and
+ mysterious, and always seemed as if he was thinking upon his broken head
+ in the churchyard of Martindale-cum-Moultrassie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Margaret sometimes transacted the necessary business with him in
+ person; and when he came to the Castle on these occasions, she thought she
+ saw a malicious and disobliging expression in his manner and countenance.
+ Yet his actual conduct was not only fair, but liberal; for indulgence was
+ given, in the way of delay of payment, whenever circumstances rendered it
+ necessary to the debtor to require it. It seemed to Lady Peveril that the
+ agent, in such cases, was acting under the strict orders of his absent
+ employer, concerning whose welfare she could not help feeling a certain
+ anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after the failure of the singular negotiation for attaining peace
+ by combat, which Peveril had attempted to open with Major Bridgenorth,
+ that gentleman left his seat of Moultrassie Hall in the care of his old
+ housekeeper, and departed, no one knew whither, having in company with him
+ his daughter Alice and Mrs. Deborah Debbitch, now formally installed in
+ all the duties of a governante; to these was added the Reverend Master
+ Solsgrace. For some time public rumour persisted in asserting, that Major
+ Bridgenorth had only retreated to a distant part of the country for a
+ season, to achieve his supposed purpose of marrying Mrs. Deborah, and of
+ letting the news be cold, and the laugh of the neighbourhood be ended, ere
+ he brought her down as mistress of Moultrassie Hall. This rumour died
+ away; and it was then affirmed, that he had removed to foreign parts, to
+ ensure the continuance of health in so delicate a constitution as that of
+ little Alice. But when the Major's dread of Popery was remembered,
+ together with the still deeper antipathies of worthy Master Nehemiah
+ Solsgrace, it was resolved unanimously, that nothing less than what they
+ might deem a fair chance of converting the Pope would have induced the
+ parties to trust themselves within Catholic dominions. The most prevailing
+ opinion was, that they had gone to New England, the refuge then of many
+ whom too intimate concern with the affairs of the late times, or the
+ desire of enjoying uncontrolled freedom of conscience, had induced to
+ emigrate from Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril could not help entertaining a vague idea, that Bridgenorth
+ was not so distant. The extreme order in which everything was maintained
+ at Moultrassie Hall, seemed&mdash;no disparagement to the care of Dame
+ Dickens the housekeeper, and the other persons engaged&mdash;to argue,
+ that the master's eye was not so very far off, but that its occasional
+ inspection might be apprehended. It is true, that neither the domestics
+ nor the attorney answered any questions respecting the residence of Master
+ Bridgenorth; but there was an air of mystery about them when interrogated,
+ that seemed to argue more than met the ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About five years after Master Bridgenorth had left the country, a singular
+ incident took place. Sir Geoffrey was absent at the Chesterfield races,
+ and Lady Peveril, who was in the habit of walking around every part of the
+ neighbourhood unattended, or only accompanied by Ellesmere, or her little
+ boy, had gone down one evening upon a charitable errand to a solitary hut,
+ whose inhabitant lay sick of a fever, which was supposed to be infectious.
+ Lady Peveril never allowed apprehensions of this kind to stop "devoted
+ charitable deeds;" but she did not choose to expose either her son or her
+ attendant to the risk which she herself, in some confidence that she knew
+ precautions for escaping the danger, did not hesitate to incur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril had set out at a late hour in the evening, and the way proved
+ longer than she expected&mdash;several circumstances also occurred to
+ detain her at the hut of her patient. It was a broad autumn moonlight,
+ when she prepared to return homeward through the broken glades and upland
+ which divided her from the Castle. This she considered as a matter of very
+ little importance, in so quiet and sequestered a country, where the road
+ lay chiefly through her own domains, especially as she had a lad about
+ fifteen years old, the son of her patient, to escort her on the way. The
+ distance was better than two miles, but might be considerably abridged by
+ passing through an avenue belonging to the estate of Moultrassie Hall,
+ which she had avoided as she came, not from the ridiculous rumours which
+ pronounced it to be haunted, but because her husband was much displeased
+ when any attempt was made to render the walks of the Castle and Hall
+ common to the inhabitants of both. The good lady, in consideration,
+ perhaps, of extensive latitude allowed to her in the more important
+ concerns of the family, made a point of never interfering with her
+ husband's whims or prejudices; and it is a compromise which we would
+ heartily recommend to all managing matrons of our acquaintance; for it is
+ surprising how much real power will be cheerfully resigned to the fair
+ sex, for the pleasure of being allowed to ride one's hobby in peace and
+ quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the present occasion, however, although the Dobby's Walk[*] was
+ within the inhabited domains of the Hall, the Lady Peveril determined to
+ avail herself of it, for the purpose of shortening her road home, and she
+ directed her steps accordingly. But when the peasant-boy, her companion,
+ who had hitherto followed her, whistling cheerily, with a hedge-bill in
+ his hand, and his hat on one side, perceived that she turned to the stile
+ which entered to the Dobby's Walk, he showed symptoms of great fear, and
+ at length coming to the lady's side, petitioned her, in a whimpering tone,&mdash;"Don't
+ ye now&mdash;don't ye now, my lady, don't ye go yonder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Dobby, an old English name for goblin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril, observing that his teeth chattered in his head, and that his
+ whole person exhibited great signs of terror, began to recollect the
+ report, that the first Squire of Moultrassie, the brewer of Chesterfield,
+ who had brought the estate, and then died of melancholy for lack of
+ something to do (and, as was said, not without suspicions of suicide), was
+ supposed to walk in this sequestered avenue, accompanied by a large
+ headless mastiff, which, when he was alive, was a particular favourite of
+ the ex-brewer. To have expected any protection from her escort, in the
+ condition to which superstitious fear had reduced him, would have been
+ truly a hopeless trust; and Lady Peveril, who was not apprehensive of any
+ danger, thought there would be great cruelty in dragging the cowardly boy
+ into a scene which he regarded with so much apprehension. She gave him,
+ therefore, a silver piece, and permitted him to return. The latter boon
+ seemed even more acceptable than the first; for ere she could return the
+ purse into her pocket, she heard the wooden clogs of her bold convoy in
+ full retreat, by the way from whence they came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smiling within herself at the fear she esteemed so ludicrous, Lady Peveril
+ ascended the stile, and was soon hidden from the broad light of the
+ moonbeams, by the numerous and entangled boughs of the huge elms, which,
+ meeting from either side, totally overarched the old avenue. The scene was
+ calculated to excite solemn thoughts; and the distant glimmer of a light
+ from one of the numerous casements in the front of Moultrassie Hall, which
+ lay at some distance, was calculated to make them even melancholy. She
+ thought of the fate of that family&mdash;of the deceased Mrs. Bridgenorth,
+ with whom she had often walked in this very avenue, and who, though a
+ woman of no high parts or accomplishments, had always testified the
+ deepest respect, and the most earnest gratitude, for such notice as she
+ had shown to her. She thought of her blighted hopes&mdash;her premature
+ death&mdash;the despair of her self-banished husband&mdash;the uncertain
+ fate of their orphan child, for whom she felt, even at this distance of
+ time, some touch of a mother's affection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon such sad subjects her thoughts were turned, when, just as she
+ attained the middle of the avenue, the imperfect and checkered light which
+ found its way through the silvan archway, showed her something which
+ resembled the figure of a man. Lady Peveril paused a moment, but instantly
+ advanced;&mdash;her bosom, perhaps, gave one startled throb, as a debt to
+ the superstitious belief of the times, but she instantly repelled the
+ thought of supernatural appearances. From those that were merely mortal,
+ she had nothing to fear. A marauder on the game was the worst character
+ whom she was likely to encounter; and he would be sure to hide himself
+ from her observation. She advanced, accordingly, steadily; and, as she did
+ so, had the satisfaction to observe that the figure, as she expected, gave
+ place to her, and glided away amongst the trees on the left-hand side of
+ the avenue. As she passed the spot on which the form had been so lately
+ visible, and bethought herself that this wanderer of the night might, nay
+ must, be in her vicinity, her resolution could not prevent her mending her
+ pace, and that with so little precaution, that, stumbling over the limb of
+ a tree, which, twisted off by a late tempest, still lay in the avenue, she
+ fell, and, as she fell, screamed aloud. A strong hand in a moment
+ afterwards added to her fears by assisting her to rise, and a voice, to
+ whose accents she was not a stranger, though they had been long unheard,
+ said, "Is it not you, Lady Peveril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is I," said she, commanding her astonishment and fear; "and if my ear
+ deceive me not, I speak to Master Bridgenorth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was that man," said he, "while oppression left me a name."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke nothing more, but continued to walk beside her for a minute or
+ two in silence. She felt her situation embarrassing; and to divest it of
+ that feeling, as well as out of real interest in the question, she asked
+ him, "How her god-daughter Alice now was?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of god-daughter, madam," answered Major Bridgenorth, "I know nothing;
+ that being one of the names which have been introduced, to the corruption
+ and pollution of God's ordinances. The infant who owed to your ladyship
+ (so called) her escape from disease and death, is a healthy and thriving
+ girl, as I am given to understand by those in whose charge she is lodged,
+ for I have not lately seen her. And it is even the recollection of these
+ passages, which in a manner impelled me, alarmed also by your fall, to
+ offer myself to you at this time and mode, which in other respects is no
+ way consistent with my present safety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With your safety, Master Bridgenorth?" said the Lady Peveril; "surely, I
+ could never have thought that it was in danger!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have some news, then, yet to learn, madam," said Major Bridgenorth;
+ "but you will hear in the course of tomorrow, reasons why I dare not
+ appear openly in the neighbourhood of my own property, and wherefore there
+ is small judgment in committing the knowledge of my present residence to
+ any one connected with Martindale Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said the lady, "you were in former times prudent and
+ cautious&mdash;I hope you have been misled by no hasty impression&mdash;by
+ no rash scheme&mdash;I hope&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon my interrupting you, madam," said Bridgenorth. "I have indeed been
+ changed&mdash;ay, my very heart within me hath been changed. In the times
+ to which your ladyship (so called) thinks proper to refer, I was a man of
+ this world&mdash;bestowing on it all my thoughts&mdash;all my actions,
+ save formal observances&mdash;little deeming what was the duty of a
+ Christian man, and how far his self-denial ought to extend&mdash;even unto
+ his giving all as if he gave nothing. Hence I thought chiefly on carnal
+ things&mdash;on the adding of field to field, and wealth to wealth&mdash;of
+ balancing between party and party&mdash;securing a friend here, without
+ losing a friend there&mdash;But Heaven smote me for my apostasy, the
+ rather that I abused the name of religion, as a self-seeker, and a most
+ blinded and carnal will-worshipper&mdash;But I thank Him who hath at
+ length brought me out of Egypt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our day&mdash;although we have many instances of enthusiasm among us&mdash;we
+ might still suspect one who avowed it thus suddenly and broadly of
+ hypocrisy, or of insanity; but according to the fashion of the times, such
+ opinions as those which Bridgenorth expressed were openly pleaded, as the
+ ruling motives of men's actions. The sagacious Vane&mdash;the brave and
+ skilful Harrison&mdash;were men who acted avowedly under the influence of
+ such. Lady Peveril, therefore, was more grieved than surprised at the
+ language she heard Major Bridgenorth use, and reasonably concluded that
+ the society and circumstances in which he might lately have been engaged,
+ had blown into a flame the spark of eccentricity which always smouldered
+ in his bosom. This was the more probable, considering that he was
+ melancholy by constitution and descent&mdash;that he had been unfortunate
+ in several particulars&mdash;and that no passion is more easily nursed by
+ indulgence, than the species of enthusiasm of which he now showed tokens.
+ She therefore answered him by calmly hoping, "That the expression of his
+ sentiments had not involved him in suspicion or in danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In suspicion, madam?" answered the Major;&mdash;"for I cannot forbear
+ giving to you, such is the strength of habit, one of those idle titles by
+ which we poor potsherds are wont, in our pride, to denominate each other&mdash;I
+ walk not only in suspicion, but in that degree of danger, that, were your
+ husband to meet me at this instant&mdash;me, a native Englishman, treading
+ on my own lands&mdash;I have no doubt he would do his best to offer me to
+ the Moloch of Roman superstition, who now rages abroad for victims among
+ God's people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You surprise me by your language, Major Bridgenorth," said the lady, who
+ now felt rather anxious to be relieved from his company, and with that
+ purpose walked on somewhat hastily. He mended his pace, however, and kept
+ close by her side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Know you not," said he, "that Satan hath come down upon earth with great
+ wrath, because his time is short? The next heir to the crown is an avowed
+ Papist; and who dare assert, save sycophants and time-servers, that he who
+ wears it is not equally ready to stoop to Rome, were he not kept in awe by
+ a few noble spirits in the Commons' House? You believe not this&mdash;yet
+ in my solitary and midnight walks, when I thought on your kindness to the
+ dead and to the living, it was my prayer that I might have the means
+ granted to warn you&mdash;and lo! Heaven hath heard me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What I was while in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity,
+ it signifies not to recall," answered he. "I was then like to Gallio, who
+ cared for none of these things. I doted on creature comforts&mdash;I clung
+ to worldly honour and repute&mdash;my thoughts were earthward&mdash;or
+ those I turned to Heaven were cold, formal, pharisaical meditations&mdash;I
+ brought nothing to the altar save straw and stubble. Heaven saw need to
+ chastise me in love&mdash;I was stript of all I clung to on earth&mdash;my
+ worldly honour was torn from me&mdash;I went forth an exile from the home
+ of my fathers, a deprived and desolate man&mdash;a baffled, and beaten,
+ and dishonoured man. But who shall find out the ways of Providence? Such
+ were the means by which I was chosen forth as a champion for the truth&mdash;holding
+ my life as nothing, if thereby that may be advanced. But this was not what
+ I wished to speak of. Thou hast saved the earthly life of my child&mdash;let
+ me save the eternal welfare of yours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was silent. They were now approaching the point where the
+ avenue terminated in a communication with a public road, or rather
+ pathway, running through an unenclosed common field; this the lady had to
+ prosecute for a little way, until a turn of the path gave her admittance
+ into the Park of Martindale. She now felt sincerely anxious to be in the
+ open moonshine, and avoided reply to Bridgenorth that she might make the
+ more haste. But as they reached the junction of the avenue and the public
+ road, he laid his hand on her arm, and commanded rather than requested her
+ to stop. She obeyed. He pointed to a huge oak, of the largest size, which
+ grew on the summit of a knoll in the open ground which terminated the
+ avenue, and was exactly so placed as to serve for a termination to the
+ vista. The moonshine without the avenue was so strong, that, amidst the
+ flood of light which it poured on the venerable tree, they could easily
+ discover, from the shattered state of the boughs on one side, that it had
+ suffered damage from lightning. "Remember you," he said, "when we last
+ looked together on that tree? I had ridden from London, and brought with
+ me a protection from the committee for your husband; and as I passed the
+ spot&mdash;here on this spot where we now stand, you stood with my lost
+ Alice&mdash;two&mdash;the last two of my beloved infants gambolled before
+ you. I leaped from my horse&mdash;to her I was a husband&mdash;to those a
+ father&mdash;to you a welcome and revered protector&mdash;What am I now to
+ any one?" He pressed his hand on his brow, and groaned in agony of spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not in the Lady Peveril's nature to hear sorrow without an attempt
+ at consolation. "Master Bridgenorth," she said, "I blame no man's creed,
+ while I believe and follow my own; and I rejoice that in yours you have
+ sought consolation for temporal afflictions. But does not every Christian
+ creed teach us alike, that affliction should soften our heart?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, woman," said Bridgenorth sternly, "as the lightning which shattered
+ yonder oak hath softened its trunk. No; the seared wood is the fitter for
+ the use of the workmen&mdash;the hardened and the dried-up heart is that
+ which can best bear the task imposed by these dismal times. God and man
+ will no longer endure the unbridled profligacy of the dissolute&mdash;the
+ scoffing of the profane&mdash;the contempt of the divine laws&mdash;the
+ infraction of human rights. The times demand righters and avengers, and
+ there will be no want of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I deny not the existence of much evil," said Lady Peveril, compelling
+ herself to answer, and beginning at the same time to walk forward; "and
+ from hearsay, though not, I thank Heaven, from observation, I am convinced
+ of the wild debauchery of the times. But let us trust it may be corrected
+ without such violent remedies as you hint at. Surely the ruin of a second
+ civil war&mdash;though I trust your thoughts go not that dreadful length&mdash;were
+ at best a desperate alternative."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sharp, but sure," replied Bridgenorth. "The blood of the Paschal lamb
+ chased away the destroying angel&mdash;the sacrifices offered on the
+ threshing-floor of Araunah, stayed the pestilence. Fire and sword are
+ severe remedies, but they pure and purify."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! Major Bridgenorth," said the lady, "wise and moderate in your
+ youth, can you have adopted in your advanced life the thoughts and
+ language of those whom you yourself beheld drive themselves and the nation
+ to the brink of ruin?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not what I then was&mdash;you know not what I now am," he replied,
+ and suddenly broke off; for they even then came forth into the open light,
+ and it seemed as if, feeling himself under the lady's eye, he was disposed
+ to soften his tone and his language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first distinct view which she had of his person, she was aware that
+ he was armed with a short sword, a poniard, and pistols at his belt&mdash;precautions
+ very unusual for a man who formerly had seldom, and only on days of
+ ceremony, carried a walking rapier, though such was the habitual and
+ constant practice of gentlemen of his station in life. There seemed also
+ something of more stern determination than usual in his air, which indeed
+ had always been rather sullen than affable; and ere she could repress the
+ sentiment, she could not help saying, "Master Bridgenorth, you are indeed
+ changed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see but the outward man," he replied; "the change within is yet
+ deeper. But it was not of myself that I desired to talk&mdash;I have
+ already said, that as you have preserved my child from the darkness of the
+ grave, I would willingly preserve yours from that more utter darkness,
+ which, I fear, hath involved the path and walks of his father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must not hear this of Sir Geoffrey," said the Lady Peveril; "I must bid
+ you farewell for the present; and when we again meet at a more suitable
+ time, I will at least listen to your advice concerning Julian, although I
+ should not perhaps incline to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That more suitable time may never come," replied Bridgenorth. "Time
+ wanes, eternity draws nigh. Hearken! it is said to be your purpose to send
+ the young Julian to be bred up in yonder bloody island, under the hand of
+ your kinswoman, that cruel murderess, by whom was done to death a man more
+ worthy of vital existence than any that she can boast among her vaunted
+ ancestry. These are current tidings&mdash;Are they true?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not blame you, Master Bridgenorth, for thinking harshly of my cousin
+ of Derby," said Lady Peveril; "nor do I altogether vindicate the rash
+ action of which she hath been guilty. Nevertheless, in her habitation, it
+ is my husband's opinion and my own, that Julian may be trained in the
+ studies and accomplishments becoming his rank, along with the young Earl
+ of Derby."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Under the curse of God, and the blessing of the Pope of Rome," said
+ Bridgenorth. "You, lady, so quick-sighted in matters of earthly prudence,
+ are you blind to the gigantic pace at which Rome is moving to regain this
+ country, once the richest gem in her usurped tiara? The old are seduced by
+ gold&mdash;the youth by pleasure&mdash;the weak by flattery&mdash;cowards
+ by fear&mdash;and the courageous by ambition. A thousand baits for each
+ taste, and each bait concealing the same deadly hook."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am well aware, Master Bridgenorth," said Lady Peveril, "that my
+ kinswoman is a Catholic;[*] but her son is educated in the Church of
+ England's principles, agreeably to the command of her deceased husband."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] I have elsewhere noticed that this is a deviation from
+ the truth Charlotte, Countess of Derby, was a Huguenot.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Is it likely," answered Bridgenorth, "that she, who fears not shedding
+ the blood of the righteous, whether on the field or scaffold, will regard
+ the sanction of her promise when her religion bids her break it? Or, if
+ she does, what shall your son be the better, if he remain in the mire of
+ his father? What are your Episcopal tenets but mere Popery? save that ye
+ have chosen a temporal tyrant for your Pope, and substitute a mangled mass
+ in English for that which your predecessors pronounced in Latin.&mdash;But
+ why speak I of these things to one who hath ears, indeed, and eyes, yet
+ cannot see, listen to, or understand what is alone worthy to be heard,
+ seen, and known? Pity that what hath been wrought so fair and exquisite in
+ form and disposition, should be yet blind, deaf, and ignorant, like the
+ things which perish!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall not agree on these subjects, Master Bridgenorth," said the lady,
+ anxious still to escape from this strange conference, though scarce
+ knowing what to apprehend; "once more, I must bid you farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stay yet an instant," he said, again laying his hand on her arm; "I would
+ stop you if I saw you rushing on the brink of an actual precipice&mdash;let
+ me prevent you from a danger still greater. How shall I work upon your
+ unbelieving mind? Shall I tell you that the debt of bloodshed yet remains
+ a debt to be paid by the bloody house of Derby? And wilt thou send thy son
+ to be among those from whom it shall be exacted?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You wish to alarm me in vain, Master Bridgenorth," answered the lady;
+ "what penalty can be exacted from the Countess, for an action, which I
+ have already called a rash one, has been long since levied."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You deceive yourself," retorted he sternly. "Think you a paltry sum of
+ money, given to be wasted on the debaucheries of Charles, can atone for
+ the death of such a man as Christian&mdash;a man precious alike to heaven
+ and to earth? Not on such terms is the blood of the righteous to be poured
+ forth! Every hour's delay is numbered down as adding interest to the
+ grievous debt, which will one day be required from that blood-thirsty
+ woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the distant tread of horses was heard on the road on which
+ they held this singular dialogue. Bridgenorth listened a moment, and then
+ said, "Forget that you have seen me&mdash;name not my name to your nearest
+ or dearest&mdash;lock my counsel in your breast&mdash;profit by it, and it
+ shall be well with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he turned from her, and plunging through a gap in the fence,
+ regained the cover of his own wood, along which the path still led.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise of horses advancing at full trot now came nearer; and Lady
+ Peveril was aware of several riders, whose forms rose indistinctly on the
+ summit of the rising ground behind her. She became also visible to them;
+ and one or two of the foremost made towards her at increased speed,
+ challenging her as they advanced with the cry of "Stand! Who goes there?"
+ The foremost who came up, however, exclaimed, "Mercy on us, if it be not
+ my lady!" and Lady Peveril, at the same moment, recognised one of her own
+ servants. Her husband rode up immediately afterwards, with, "How now, Dame
+ Margaret? What makes you abroad so far from home and at an hour so late?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril mentioned her visit at the cottage, but did not think it
+ necessary to say aught of having seen Major Bridgenorth; afraid, it may
+ be, that her husband might be displeased with that incident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Charity is a fine thing and a fair," answered Sir Geoffrey; "but I must
+ tell you, you do ill, dame, to wander about the country like a
+ quacksalver, at the call of every old woman who has a colic-fit; and at
+ this time of night especially, and when the land is so unsettled besides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to hear that it so," said the lady. "I had heard no such
+ news."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "News?" repeated Sir Geoffrey, "why, here has a new plot broken out among
+ the Roundheads, worse than Venner's by a butt's length;[*] and who should
+ be so deep in it as our old neighbour Bridgenorth? There is search for him
+ everywhere; and I promise you if he is found, he is like to pay old
+ scores."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The celebrated insurrection of the Anabaptists and Fifth Monarchy
+ men in London, in the year 1661.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Then I am sure, I trust he will not be found," said Lady Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you so?" replied Sir Geoffrey. "Now I, on my part hope that he will;
+ and it shall not be my fault if he be not; for which effect I will
+ presently ride down to Moultrassie, and make strict search, according to
+ my duty; there shall neither rebel nor traitor earth so near Martindale
+ Castle, that I will assure them. And you, my lady, be pleased for once to
+ dispense with a pillion, and get up, as you have done before, behind
+ Saunders, who shall convey you safe home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lady obeyed in silence; indeed she did not dare to trust her voice in
+ an attempt to reply, so much was she disconcerted with the intelligence
+ she had just heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She rode behind the groom to the Castle, where she awaited in great
+ anxiety the return of her husband. He came back at length; but to her
+ great relief, without any prisoner. He then explained more fully than his
+ haste had before permitted, that an express had come down to Chesterfield,
+ with news from Court of a proposed insurrection amongst the old
+ Commonwealth men, especially those who had served in the army; and that
+ Bridgenorth, said to be lurking in Derbyshire, was one of the principal
+ conspirators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After some time, this report of a conspiracy seemed to die away like many
+ others of that period. The warrants were recalled, but nothing more was
+ seen or heard of Major Bridgenorth; although it is probable he might
+ safely enough have shown himself as openly as many did who lay under the
+ same circumstances of suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time also, Lady Peveril, with many tears, took a temporary
+ leave of her son Julian, who was sent, as had long been intended, for the
+ purpose of sharing the education of the young Earl of Derby. Although the
+ boding words of Bridgenorth sometimes occurred to Lady Peveril's mind, she
+ did not suffer them to weigh with her in opposition to the advantages
+ which the patronage of the Countess of Derby secured to her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plan seemed to be in every respect successful; and when, from time to
+ time, Julian visited the house of his father, Lady Peveril had the
+ satisfaction to see him, on every occasion, improved in person and in
+ manner, as well as ardent in the pursuit of more solid acquirements. In
+ process of time he became a gallant and accomplished youth, and travelled
+ for some time upon the continent with the young Earl. This was the more
+ especially necessary for the enlarging of their acquaintance with the
+ world; because the Countess had never appeared in London, or at the Court
+ of King Charles, since her flight to the Isle of Man in 1660; but had
+ resided in solitary and aristocratic state, alternately on her estates in
+ England and in that island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had given to the education of both the young men, otherwise as
+ excellent as the best teachers could render it, something of a narrow and
+ restricted character; but though the disposition of the young Earl was
+ lighter and more volatile than that of Julian, both the one and the other
+ had profited, in a considerable degree, by the opportunities afforded
+ them. It was Lady Derby's strict injunction to her son, now returning from
+ the continent, that he should not appear at the Court of Charles. But
+ having been for some time of age, he did not think it absolutely necessary
+ to obey her in this particular; and had remained for some time in London,
+ partaking the pleasures of the gay Court there, with all the ardour of a
+ young man bred up in comparative seclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to reconcile the Countess to this transgression of her authority
+ (for he continued to entertain for her the profound respect in which he
+ had been educated), Lord Derby agreed to make a long sojourn with her in
+ her favourite island, which he abandoned almost entirely to her
+ management.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had spent at Martindale Castle a good deal of the time
+ which his friend had bestowed in London; and at the period to which,
+ passing over many years, our story has arrived, as it were, <i>per saltum</i>,
+ they were both living as the Countess's guests, in the Castle of Rushin,
+ in the venerable kingdom of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Mona&mdash;long hid from those who roam the main.
+ &mdash;COLLINS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Isle of Man, in the middle of the seventeenth century, was very
+ different, as a place of residence, from what it is now. Men had not then
+ discovered its merit as a place of occasional refuge from the storms of
+ life, and the society to be there met with was of a very uniform tenor.
+ There were no smart fellows, whom fortune had tumbled from the seat of
+ their barouches&mdash;no plucked pigeons or winged rooks&mdash;no
+ disappointed speculators&mdash;no ruined miners&mdash;in short, no one
+ worth talking to. The society of the island was limited to the natives
+ themselves, and a few merchants, who lived by contraband trade. The
+ amusements were rare and monotonous, and the mercurial young Earl was soon
+ heartily tired of his dominions. The islanders, also, become too wise for
+ happiness, had lost relish for the harmless and somewhat childish sports
+ in which their simple ancestors had indulged themselves. May was no longer
+ ushered in by the imaginary contest between the Queen of returning winter
+ and advancing spring; the listeners no longer sympathised with the lively
+ music of the followers of the one, or the discordant sounds with which the
+ other asserted a more noisy claim to attention. Christmas, too, closed,
+ and the steeples no longer jangled forth a dissonant peal. The wren, to
+ seek for which used to be the sport dedicated to the holytide, was left
+ unpursued and unslain. Party spirit had come among these simple people,
+ and destroyed their good humour, while it left them their ignorance. Even
+ the races, a sport generally interesting to people of all ranks, were no
+ longer performed, because they were no longer interesting. The gentlemen
+ were divided by feuds hitherto unknown, and each seemed to hold it scorn
+ to be pleased with the same diversions that amused those of the opposite
+ faction. The hearts of both parties revolted from the recollection of
+ former days, when all was peace among them, when the Earl of Derby, now
+ slaughtered, used to bestow the prize, and Christian, since so
+ vindictively executed, started horses to add to the amusement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was seated in the deep recess which led to a latticed window of the
+ old Castle; and, with his arms crossed, and an air of profound
+ contemplation, was surveying the long perspective of ocean, which rolled
+ its successive waves up to the foot of the rock on which the ancient pile
+ is founded. The Earl was suffering under the infliction of ennui&mdash;now
+ looking into a volume of Homer&mdash;now whistling&mdash;now swinging on
+ his chair&mdash;now traversing the room&mdash;till, at length, his
+ attention became swallowed up in admiration of the tranquillity of his
+ companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "King of Men!" he said, repeating the favourite epithet by which Homer
+ describes Agamemnon,&mdash;"I trust, for the old Greek's sake, he had a
+ merrier office than being King of Man&mdash;Most philosophical Julian,
+ will nothing rouse thee&mdash;not even a bad pun on my own royal dignity?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish you would be a little more the King in Man," said Julian, starting
+ from his reverie, "and then you would find more amusement in your
+ dominions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! dethrone that royal Semiramis my mother," said the young lord, "who
+ has as much pleasure in playing Queen as if she were a real Sovereign?&mdash;I
+ wonder you can give me such counsel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your mother, as you well know, my dear Derby, would be delighted, did you
+ take any interest in the affairs of the island."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, truly, she would permit me to be King; but she would choose to remain
+ Viceroy over me. Why, she would only gain a subject the more, by my
+ converting my spare time, which is so very valuable to me, to the cares of
+ royalty. No, no, Julian, she thinks it power, to direct all the affairs of
+ these poor Manxmen; and, thinking it power, she finds it pleasure. I shall
+ not interfere, unless she hold a high court of justice again. I cannot
+ afford to pay another fine to my brother, King Charles&mdash;But I forget&mdash;this
+ is a sore point with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the Countess, at least," replied Julian; "and I wonder you will
+ speak of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, I bear no malice against the poor man's memory any more than
+ yourself, though I have not the same reasons for holding it in
+ veneration," replied the Earl of Derby; "and yet I have some respect for
+ it too. I remember their bringing him out to die&mdash;It was the first
+ holiday I ever had in my life, and I heartily wish it had been on some
+ other account."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather hear you speak of anything else, my lord," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, there it goes," answered the Earl; "whenever I talk of anything that
+ puts you on your mettle, and warms your blood, that runs as cold as a
+ merman's&mdash;to use a simile of this happy island&mdash;hey pass! you
+ press me to change the subject.&mdash;Well, what shall we talk of?&mdash;O
+ Julian, if you had not gone down to earth yourself among the castles and
+ caverns of Derbyshire, we should have had enough of delicious topics&mdash;the
+ play-houses, Julian&mdash;Both the King's house and the Duke's&mdash;Louis's
+ establishment is a jest to them;&mdash;and the Ring in the Park, which
+ beats the Corso at Naples&mdash;and the beauties, who beat the whole
+ world!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am very willing to hear you speak on the subject, my lord," answered
+ Julian; "the less I have seen of London world myself, the more I am likely
+ to be amused by your account of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, my friend&mdash;but where to begin?&mdash;with the wit of Buckingham,
+ and Sedley, and Etherege, or with the grace of Harry Jermyn&mdash;the
+ courtesy of the Duke of Monmouth, or with the loveliness of La Belle
+ Hamilton&mdash;of the Duchess of Richmond&mdash;of Lady &mdash;&mdash;,
+ the person of Roxalana, the smart humour of Mrs. Nelly&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or what say you to the bewitching sorceries of Lady Cynthia?" demanded
+ his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Faith, I would have kept these to myself," said the Earl, "to follow your
+ prudent example. But since you ask me, I fairly own I cannot tell what to
+ say of them; only I think of them twenty times as often as all the
+ beauties I have spoken of. And yet she is neither the twentieth part so
+ beautiful as the plainest of these Court beauties, nor so witty as the
+ dullest I have named, nor so modish&mdash;that is the great matter&mdash;as
+ the most obscure. I cannot tell what makes me dote on her, except that she
+ is a capricious as her whole sex put together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I should think a small recommendation," answered his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Small, do you term it," replied the Earl, "and write yourself a brother
+ of the angle? Why, which like you best? to pull a dead strain on a
+ miserable gudgeon, which you draw ashore by main force, as the fellows
+ here tow in their fishing-boats&mdash;or a lively salmon, that makes your
+ rod crack, and your line whistle&mdash;plays you ten thousand mischievous
+ pranks&mdash;wearies your heart out with hopes and fears&mdash;and is only
+ laid panting on the bank, after you have shown the most unmatchable
+ display of skill, patience, and dexterity?&mdash;But I see you have a mind
+ to go on angling after your own old fashion. Off laced coat, and on brown
+ jerkin;&mdash;lively colours scare fish in the sober waters of the Isle of
+ Man;&mdash;faith, in London you will catch few, unless the bait glistens a
+ little. But you <i>are</i> going?&mdash;Well, good luck to you. I will
+ take to the barge;&mdash;the sea and wind are less inconstant than the
+ tide you have embarked on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have learned to say all these smart things in London, my lord,"
+ answered Julian; "but we shall have you a penitent for them, if Lady
+ Cynthia be of my mind. Adieu, and pleasure till we meet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young men parted accordingly; and while the Earl betook him to his
+ pleasure voyage, Julian, as his friend had prophesied, assumed the dress
+ of one who means to amuse himself with angling. The hat and feather were
+ exchanged for a cap of grey cloth; the deeply-laced cloak and doublet for
+ a simple jacket of the same colour, with hose conforming; and finally,
+ with rod in hand, and pannier at his back, mounted upon a handsome Manx
+ pony, young Peveril rode briskly over the country which divided him from
+ one of those beautiful streams that descend to the sea from the
+ Kirk-Merlagh mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having reached the spot where he meant to commence his day's sport, Julian
+ let his little steed graze, which, accustomed to the situation, followed
+ him like a dog; and now and then, when tired of picking herbage in the
+ valley through which the stream winded, came near her master's side, and,
+ as if she had been a curious amateur of the sport, gazed on the trouts as
+ Julian brought them struggling to the shore. But Fairy's master showed, on
+ that day, little of the patience of a real angler, and took no heed to old
+ Isaac Walton's recommendation, to fish the streams inch by inch. He chose,
+ indeed, with an angler's eye, the most promising casts, which the stream
+ broke sparkling over a stone, affording the wonted shelter to a trout; or
+ where, gliding away from a rippling current to a still eddy it streamed
+ under the projecting bank, or dashed from the pool of some low cascade. By
+ this judicious selection of spots whereon to employ his art, the
+ sportsman's basket was soon sufficiently heavy, to show that his
+ occupation was not a mere pretext; and so soon as this was the case, he
+ walked briskly up the glen, only making a cast from time to time, in case
+ of his being observed from any of the neighbouring heights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a little green and rocky valley through which the brook strayed,
+ very lonely, although the slight track of an unformed road showed that it
+ was occasionally traversed, and that it was not altogether void of
+ inhabitants. As Peveril advanced still farther, the right bank reached to
+ some distance from the stream, leaving a piece of meadow ground, the lower
+ part of which, being close to the brook, was entirely covered with rich
+ herbage, being possibly occasionally irrigated by its overflow. The higher
+ part of the level ground afforded a stance for an old house, of singular
+ structure, with a terraced garden, and a cultivated field or two beside
+ it. In former times, a Danish or Norwegian fastness had stood here, called
+ the Black Fort, from the colour of a huge healthy hill, which, rising
+ behind the building, appeared to be the boundary of the valley, and to
+ afford the source of the brook. But the original structure had been long
+ demolished, as, indeed, it probably only consisted of dry stones, and its
+ materials had been applied to the construction of the present mansion&mdash;the
+ work of some churchman during the sixteenth century, as was evident from
+ the huge stone-work of its windows, which scarce left room for light to
+ pass through, as well as from two or three heavy buttresses, which
+ projected from the front of the house, and exhibited on their surface
+ little niches for images. These had been carefully destroyed, and pots of
+ flowers were placed in the niches in their stead, besides their being
+ ornamented by creeping plants of various kinds, fancifully twined around
+ them. The garden was also in good order; and though the spot was extremely
+ solitary, there was about it altogether an air of comfort, accommodation,
+ and even elegance, by no means generally characteristic of the habitations
+ of the island at the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much circumspection, Julian Peveril approached the low Gothic porch,
+ which defended the entrance of the mansion from the tempests incident to
+ its situation, and was, like the buttresses, overrun with ivy and other
+ creeping plants. An iron ring, contrived so as when drawn up and down to
+ rattle against the bar of notched iron through which it was suspended,
+ served the purpose of a knocker; and to this he applied himself, though
+ with the greatest precaution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received no answer for some time, and indeed it seemed as if the house
+ was totally uninhabited; when, at length, his impatience getting the upper
+ hand, he tried to open the door, and, as it was only upon the latch, very
+ easily succeeded. He passed through a little low-arched hall, the upper
+ end of which was occupied by a staircase, and turning to the left, opened
+ the door of a summer parlour, wainscoted with black oak, and very simply
+ furnished with chairs and tables of the same materials; the former
+ cushioned with the leather. The apartment was gloomy&mdash;one of those
+ stone-shafted windows which we have mentioned, with its small latticed
+ panes, and thick garland of foliage, admitting but an imperfect light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over the chimneypiece (which was of the same massive materials with the
+ panelling of the apartment) was the only ornament of the room; a painting,
+ namely, representing an officer in the military dress of the Civil Wars.
+ It was a green jerkin, then the national and peculiar wear of the Manxmen;
+ his short band which hung down on the cuirass&mdash;the orange-coloured
+ scarf, but, above all, the shortness of his close-cut hair, showing
+ evidently to which of the great parties he had belonged. His right hand
+ rested on the hilt of his sword; and in the left he held a small Bible,
+ bearing the inscription, "<i>In hoc signo</i>." The countenance was of a
+ light complexion, with fair and almost effeminate blue eyes, and an oval
+ form of face&mdash;one of those physiognomies, to which, though not
+ otherwise unpleasing, we naturally attach the idea of melancholy and of
+ misfortune.[*] Apparently it was well known to Julian Peveril; for after
+ having looked at it for a long time, he could not forbear muttering aloud,
+ "What would I give that that man had never been born, or that he still
+ lived!"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] I am told that a portrait of the unfortunate William Christian is
+ still preserved in the family of Waterson of Ballnabow of Kirk
+ Church, Rushin. William Dhône is dressed in a green coat without
+ collar or cape, after the fashion of those puritanic times, with
+ the head in a close cropt wig, resembling the bishop's peruke of
+ the present day. The countenance is youthful and well-looking,
+ very unlike the expression of foreboding melancholy. I have so far
+ taken advantage of this criticism, as to bring my ideal portrait
+ in the present edition, nearer to the complexion at least of the
+ fair-haired William Dhône.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "How now&mdash;how is this?" said a female, who entered the room as he
+ uttered this reflection. "<i>You</i> here, Master Peveril, in spite of all
+ the warnings you have had! You here in the possession of folk's house when
+ they are abroad, and talking to yourself, as I shall warrant!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, Mistress Deborah," said Peveril, "I am here once more, as you see,
+ against every prohibition, and in defiance of all danger.&mdash;Where is
+ Alice?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where you will never see her, Master Julian&mdash;you may satisfy
+ yourself of that," answered Mistress Deborah, for it was that respectable
+ governante; and sinking down at the same time upon one of the large
+ leathern chairs, she began to fan herself with her handkerchief, and
+ complain of the heat in a most ladylike fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, Mistress Debbitch, while her exterior intimated a considerable
+ change of condition for the better, and her countenance showed the less
+ favourable effects of the twenty years which had passed over her head, was
+ in mind and manners very much what she had been when she battled the
+ opinions of Madam Ellesmere at Martindale Castle. In a word, she was
+ self-willed, obstinate, and coquettish as ever, otherwise no ill-disposed
+ person. Her present appearance was that of a woman of the better rank.
+ From the sobriety of the fashion of her dress, and the uniformity of its
+ colours, it was plain she belonged to some sect which condemned
+ superfluous gaiety in attire; but no rules, not those of a nunnery or of a
+ quaker's society, can prevent a little coquetry in that particular, where
+ a woman is desirous of being supposed to retain some claim to personal
+ attention. All Mistress Deborah's garments were so arranged as might best
+ set off a good-looking woman, whose countenance indicated ease and good
+ cheer&mdash;who called herself five-and-thirty, and was well entitled, if
+ she had a mind, to call herself twelve or fifteen years older.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was under the necessity of enduring all her tiresome and fantastic
+ airs, and awaiting with patience till she had "prinked herself and pinned
+ herself"&mdash;flung her hoods back, and drawn them forward&mdash;snuffed
+ at a little bottle of essences&mdash;closed her eyes like a dying fowl&mdash;turned
+ them up like duck in a thunderstorm; when at length, having exhausted her
+ round of <i>minauderies</i>, she condescended to open the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These walks will be the death of me," she said, "and all on your account,
+ Master Julian Peveril; for if Dame Christian should learn that you have
+ chosen to make your visits to her niece, I promise you Mistress Alice
+ would be soon obliged to find other quarters, and so should I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come now, Mistress Deborah, be good-humoured," said Julian; "consider,
+ was not all this intimacy of ours of your own making? Did you not make
+ yourself known to me the very first time I strolled up this glen with my
+ fishing-rod, and tell me that you were my former keeper, and that Alice
+ had been my little playfellow? And what could there be more natural, than
+ that I should come back and see two such agreeable persons as often as I
+ could?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said Dame Deborah; "but I did not bid you fall in love with us,
+ though, or propose such a matter as marriage either to Alice or myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To do you justice, you never did, Deborah," answered the youth; "but what
+ of that? Such things will come out before one is aware. I am sure you must
+ have heard such proposals fifty times when you least expected them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fie, fie, fie, Master Julian Peveril," said the governante; "I would have
+ you to know that I have always so behaved myself, that the best of the
+ land would have thought twice of it, and have very well considered both
+ what he was going to say, and how he was going to say it, before he came
+ out with such proposals to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, true, Mistress Deborah," continued Julian; "but all the world hath
+ not your discretion. Then Alice Bridgenorth is a child&mdash;a mere child;
+ and one always asks a baby to be one's little wife, you know. Come, I know
+ you will forgive me. Thou wert ever the best-natured, kindest woman in the
+ world; and you know you have said twenty times we were made for each
+ other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh no, Master Julian Peveril; no, no, no!" ejaculated Deborah. "I may
+ indeed have said your estates were born to be united; and to be sure it is
+ natural for me, that come of the old stock of the yeomanry of Peveril of
+ the Peak's estate, to wish that it was all within the ring fence again;
+ which sure enough it might be, were you to marry Alice Bridgenorth. But
+ then there is the knight your father, and my lady your mother; and there
+ is her father, that is half crazy with his religion; and her aunt that
+ wears eternal black grogram for that unlucky Colonel Christian; and there
+ is the Countess of Derby, that would serve us all with the same sauce if
+ we were thinking of anything that would displease her. And besides all
+ that, you have broke your word with Mistress Alice, and everything is over
+ between you; and I am of opinion it is quite right it should be all over.
+ And perhaps it may be, Master Julian, that I should have thought so a long
+ time ago, before a child like Alice put it into my head; but I am so
+ good-natured."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No flatterer like a lover, who wishes to carry his point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are the best-natured, kindest creature in the world, Deborah.&mdash;But
+ you have never seen the ring I bought for you at Paris. Nay, I will put it
+ on your finger myself;&mdash;what! your foster-son, whom you loved so
+ well, and took such care of?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He easily succeeded in putting a pretty ring of gold, with a humorous
+ affectation of gallantry, on the fat finger of Mistress Deborah Debbitch.
+ Hers was a soul of a kind often to be met with, both among the lower and
+ higher vulgar, who, without being, on a broad scale, accessible to bribes
+ or corruption, are nevertheless much attached to perquisites, and
+ considerably biassed in their line of duty, though perhaps insensibly, by
+ the love of petty observances, petty presents, and trivial compliments.
+ Mistress Debbitch turned the ring round, and round, and round, and at
+ length said, in a whisper, "Well, Master Julian Peveril, it signifies
+ nothing denying anything to such a young gentleman as you, for young
+ gentlemen are always so obstinate! and so I may as well tell you, that
+ Mistress Alice walked back from the Kirk-Truagh along with me, just now,
+ and entered the house at the same time with myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why did you not tell me so before?" said Julian, starting up; "where&mdash;where
+ is she?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better ask why I tell you so <i>now</i>, Master Julian," said
+ Dame Deborah; "for, I promise you, it is against her express commands; and
+ I would not have told you, had you not looked so pitiful;&mdash;but as for
+ seeing you, that she will not&mdash;and she is in her own bedroom, with a
+ good oak door shut and bolted upon her&mdash;that is one comfort.&mdash;And
+ so, as for any breach of trust on my part&mdash;I promise you the little
+ saucy minx gives it no less name&mdash;it is quite impossible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not say so, Deborah&mdash;only go&mdash;only try&mdash;tell her to
+ hear me&mdash;tell her I have a hundred excuses for disobeying her
+ commands&mdash;tell her I have no doubt to get over all obstacles at
+ Martindale Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, I tell you it is all in vain," replied the Dame. "When I saw your
+ cap and rod lying in the hall, I did but say, 'There he is again,' and she
+ ran up the stairs like a young deer; and I heard key turned, and bolt
+ shot, ere I could say a single word to stop her&mdash;I marvel you heard
+ her not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was because I am, as I ever was, an owl&mdash;a dreaming fool, who let
+ all those golden minutes pass, which my luckless life holds out to me so
+ rarely.&mdash;Well&mdash;tell her I go&mdash;go for ever&mdash;go where
+ she will hear no more of me&mdash;where no one shall hear more of me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, the Father!" said the dame, "hear how he talks!&mdash;What will
+ become of Sir Geoffrey, and your mother, and of me, and of the Countess,
+ if you were to go so far as you talk of? And what would become of poor
+ Alice too? for I will be sworn she likes you better than she says, and I
+ know she used to sit and look the way that you used to come up the stream,
+ and now and then ask me if the morning were good for fishing. And all the
+ while you were on the continent, as they call it, she scarcely smiled
+ once, unless it was when she got two beautiful long letters about foreign
+ parts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friendship, Dame Deborah&mdash;only friendship&mdash;cold and calm
+ remembrance of one who, by your kind permission, stole in on your solitude
+ now and then, with news from the living world without&mdash;Once, indeed,
+ I thought&mdash;but it is all over&mdash;farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he covered his face with one hand, and extended the other, in
+ the act of bidding adieu to Dame Debbitch, whose kind heart became unable
+ to withstand the sight of his affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, do not be in such haste," she said; "I will go up again, and tell
+ her how it stands with you, and bring her down, if it is in woman's power
+ to do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so saying, she left the apartment, and ran upstairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, meanwhile, paced the apartment in great agitation, waiting
+ the success of Deborah's intercession; and she remained long enough absent
+ to give us time to explain, in a short retrospect, the circumstances which
+ had led to his present situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ah me! for aught that ever I could read,
+ Could ever hear by tale or history,
+ The course of true love never did run smooth!
+ &mdash;Midsummer Night's Dream.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The celebrated passage which we have prefixed to this chapter has, like
+ most observations of the same author, its foundation in real experience.
+ The period at which love is formed for the first time, and felt most
+ strongly, is seldom that at which there is much prospect of its being
+ brought to a happy issue. The state of artificial society opposes many
+ complicated obstructions to early marriages; and the chance is very great,
+ that such obstacles prove insurmountable. In fine, there are few men who
+ do not look back in secret to some period of their youth, at which a
+ sincere and early affection was repulsed, or betrayed, or become abortive
+ from opposing circumstances. It is these little passages of secret
+ history, which leave a tinge of romance in every bosom, scarce permitting
+ us, even in the most busy or the most advanced period of life, to listen
+ with total indifference to a tale of true love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had so fixed his affections, as to insure the fullest share
+ of that opposition which early attachments are so apt to encounter. Yet
+ nothing so natural as that he should have done so. In early youth, Dame
+ Debbitch had accidentally met with the son of her first patroness, and who
+ had himself been her earliest charge, fishing in the little brook already
+ noticed, which watered the valley in which she resided with Alice
+ Bridgenorth. The dame's curiosity easily discovered who he was; and
+ besides the interest which persons in her condition usually take in the
+ young people who have been under their charge, she was delighted with the
+ opportunity to talk about former times&mdash;about Martindale Castle, and
+ friends there&mdash;about Sir Geoffrey and his good lady&mdash;and, now
+ and then, about Lance Outram the park-keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mere pleasure of gratifying her inquiries, would scarce have had power
+ enough to induce Julian to repeat his visits to the lonely glen; but
+ Deborah had a companion&mdash;a lovely girl&mdash;bred in solitude, and in
+ the quiet and unpretending tastes which solitude encourages&mdash;spirited,
+ also, and inquisitive, and listening, with laughing cheek, and an eager
+ eye, to every tale which the young angler brought from the town and
+ castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visits of Julian to the Black Fort were only occasional&mdash;so far
+ Dame Deborah showed common-sense&mdash;which was, perhaps, inspired by the
+ apprehension of losing her place, in case of discovery. She had, indeed,
+ great confidence in the strong and rooted belief&mdash;amounting almost to
+ superstition&mdash;which Major Bridgenorth entertained, that his
+ daughter's continued health could only be insured by her continuing under
+ the charge of one who had acquired Lady Peveril's supposed skill in
+ treating those subject to such ailments. This belief Dame Deborah had
+ improved to the utmost of her simple cunning,&mdash;always speaking in
+ something of an oracular tone, upon the subject of her charge's health,
+ and hinting at certain mysterious rules necessary to maintain it in the
+ present favourable state. She had availed herself of this artifice, to
+ procure for herself and Alice a separate establishment at the Black Fort;
+ for it was originally Major Bridgenorth's resolution, that his daughter
+ and her governante should remain under the same roof with the
+ sister-in-law of his deceased wife, the widow of the unfortunate Colonel
+ Christian. But this lady was broken down with premature age, brought on by
+ sorrow; and, in a short visit which Major Bridgenorth made to the island,
+ he was easily prevailed on to consider her house at Kirk-Truagh, as a very
+ cheerless residence for his daughter. Dame Deborah, who longed for
+ domestic independence, was careful to increase this impression by alarming
+ her patron's fears on account of Alice's health. The mansion of
+ Kirk-Truagh stood, she said, much exposed to the Scottish winds, which
+ could not but be cold, as they came from a country where, as she was
+ assured, there was ice and snow at midsummer. In short, she prevailed, and
+ was put into full possession of the Black Fort, a house which, as well as
+ Kirk-Truagh, belonged formerly to Christian, and now to his widow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, however, it was enjoined on the governante and her charge, to visit
+ Kirk-Truagh from time to time, and to consider themselves as under the
+ management and guardianship of Mistress Christian&mdash;a state of
+ subjection, the sense of which Deborah endeavoured to lessen, by assuming
+ as much freedom of conduct as she possibly dared, under the influence,
+ doubtless, of the same feelings of independence, which induced her, at
+ Martindale Hall, to spurn the advice of Mistress Ellesmere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was this generous disposition to defy control which induced her to
+ procure for Alice, secretly, some means of education, which the stern
+ genius of puritanism would have proscribed. She ventured to have her
+ charge taught music&mdash;nay, even dancing; and the picture of the stern
+ Colonel Christian trembled on the wainscot where it was suspended, while
+ the sylph-like form of Alice, and the substantial person of Dame Deborah,
+ executed French <i>chaussées</i> and <i>borrées</i>, to the sound of a
+ small kit, which screamed under the bow of Monsieur De Pigal, half
+ smuggler, half dancing-master. This abomination reached the ears of the
+ Colonel's widow, and by her was communicated to Bridgenorth, whose sudden
+ appearance in the island showed the importance he attached to the
+ communication. Had she been faithless to her own cause, that had been the
+ latest hour of Mrs. Deborah's administration. But she retreated into her
+ stronghold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dancing," she said, "was exercise, regulated and timed by music; and it
+ stood to reason, that it must be the best of all exercise for a delicate
+ person, especially as it could be taken within doors, and in all states of
+ the weather."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth listened, with a clouded and thoughtful brow, when, in
+ exemplification of her doctrine, Mistress Deborah, who was no contemptible
+ performer on the viol, began to jangle Sellenger's Round, and desired
+ Alice to dance an old English measure to the tune. As the half-bashful,
+ half-smiling girl, about fourteen&mdash;for such was her age&mdash;moved
+ gracefully to the music, the father's eye unavoidably followed the light
+ spring of her step, and marked with joy the rising colour in her cheek.
+ When the dance was over, he folded her in his arms, smoothed her somewhat
+ disordered locks with a father's affectionate hand, smiled, kissed her
+ brow, and took his leave, without one single word farther interdicting the
+ exercise of dancing. He did not himself communicate the result of his
+ visit at the Black Fort to Mrs. Christian, but she was not long of
+ learning it, by the triumph of Dame Deborah on her next visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is well," said the stern old lady; "my brother Bridgenorth hath
+ permitted you to make a Herodias of Alice, and teach her dancing. You have
+ only now to find her a partner for life&mdash;I shall neither meddle nor
+ make more in their affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, the triumph of Dame Deborah, or rather of Dame Nature, on this
+ occasion, had more important effects than the former had ventured to
+ anticipate; for Mrs. Christian, though she received with all formality the
+ formal visits of the governante and her charge, seemed thenceforth so
+ pettish with the issue of her remonstrance, upon the enormity of her niece
+ dancing to a little fiddle, that she appeared to give up interference in
+ her affairs, and left Dame Debbitch and Alice to manage both education and
+ housekeeping&mdash;in which she had hitherto greatly concerned herself&mdash;much
+ after their own pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in this independent state that they lived, when Julian first
+ visited their habitation; and he was the rather encouraged to do so by
+ Dame Deborah, that she believed him to be one of the last persons in the
+ world with whom Mistress Christian would have desired her niece to be
+ acquainted&mdash;the happy spirit of contradiction superseding, with Dame
+ Deborah, on this, as on other occasions, all consideration of the fitness
+ of things. She did not act altogether without precaution neither. She was
+ aware she had to guard not only against any reviving interest or curiosity
+ on the part of Mistress Christian, but against the sudden arrival of Major
+ Bridgenorth, who never failed once in the year to make his appearance at
+ the Black Fort when least expected, and to remain there for a few days.
+ Dame Debbitch, therefore, exacted of Julian, that his visits should be few
+ and far between; that he should condescend to pass for a relation of her
+ own, in the eyes of two ignorant Manx girls and a lad, who formed her
+ establishment; and that he should always appear in his angler's dress made
+ of the simple <i>Loughtan</i>, or buff-coloured wool of the island, which
+ is not subjected to dyeing. By these cautions, she thought his intimacy at
+ the Black Fort would be entirely unnoticed, or considered as immaterial,
+ while, in the meantime, it furnished much amusement to her charge and
+ herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was accordingly the case during the earlier part of their
+ intercourse, while Julian was a lad, and Alice a girl two or three years
+ younger. But as the lad shot up to youth, and the girl to womanhood, even
+ Dame Deborah Debbitch's judgment saw danger in their continued intimacy.
+ She took an opportunity to communicate to Julian who Miss Bridgenorth
+ actually was, and the peculiar circumstances which placed discord between
+ their fathers. He heard the story of their quarrel with interest and
+ surprise, for he had only resided occasionally at Martindale Castle, and
+ the subject of Bridgenorth's quarrel with his father had never been
+ mentioned in his presence. His imagination caught fire at the sparks
+ afforded by this singular story; and, far from complying with the prudent
+ remonstrance of Dame Deborah, and gradually estranging himself from the
+ Black Fort and its fair inmate, he frankly declared, he considered his
+ intimacy there, so casually commenced, as intimating the will of Heaven,
+ that Alice and he were designed for each other, in spite of every obstacle
+ which passion or prejudice could raise up betwixt them. They had been
+ companions in infancy; and a little exertion of memory enabled him to
+ recall his childish grief for the unexpected and sudden disappearance of
+ his little companion, whom he was destined again to meet with in the early
+ bloom of opening beauty, in a country which was foreign to them both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Deborah was confounded at the consequences of her communication,
+ which had thus blown into a flame the passion which she hoped it would
+ have either prevented or extinguished. She had not the sort of head which
+ resists the masculine and energetic remonstrances of passionate
+ attachment, whether addressed to her on her own account, or on behalf of
+ another. She lamented, and wondered, and ended her feeble opposition, by
+ weeping, and sympathising, and consenting to allow the continuance of
+ Julian's visits, provided he should only address himself to Alice as a
+ friend; to gain the world, she would consent to nothing more. She was not,
+ however, so simple, but that she also had her forebodings of the designs
+ of Providence on this youthful couple; for certainly they could not be
+ more formed to be united than the good estates of Martindale and
+ Moultrassie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came a long sequence of reflections. Martindale Castle wanted but
+ some repairs to be almost equal to Chatsworth. The Hall might be allowed
+ to go to ruin; or, what would be better, when Sir Geoffrey's time came
+ (for the good knight had seen service, and must be breaking now), the Hall
+ would be a good dowery-house, to which my lady and Ellesmere might
+ retreat; while (empress of the still-room, and queen of the pantry)
+ Mistress Deborah Debbitch should reign housekeeper at the Castle, and
+ extend, perhaps, the crown-matrimonial to Lance Outram, provided he was
+ not become too old, too fat, or too fond of ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the soothing visions under the influence of which the dame
+ connived at an attachment, which lulled also to pleasing dreams, though of
+ a character so different, her charge and her visitant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visits of the young angler became more and more frequent; and the
+ embarrassed Deborah, though foreseeing all the dangers of discovery, and
+ the additional risk of an explanation betwixt Alice and Julian, which must
+ necessarily render their relative situation so much more delicate, felt
+ completely overborne by the enthusiasm of the young lover, and was
+ compelled to let matters take their course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The departure of Julian for the continent interrupted the course of his
+ intimacy at the Black Fort, and while it relieved the elder of its inmates
+ from much internal apprehension, spread an air of languor and dejection
+ over the countenance of the younger, which, at Bridgenorth's next visit to
+ the Isle of Man, renewed all his terrors for his daughter's constitutional
+ malady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deborah promised faithfully she should look better the next morning, and
+ she kept her word. She had retained in her possession for some time a
+ letter which Julian had, by some private conveyance, sent to her charge,
+ for his youthful friend. Deborah had dreaded the consequences of
+ delivering it as a billet-doux, but, as in the case of the dance, she
+ thought there could be no harm in administering it as a remedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had complete effect; and next day the cheeks of the maiden had a tinge
+ of the rose, which so much delighted her father, that, as he mounted his
+ horse, he flung his purse into Deborah's hand, with the desire she should
+ spare nothing that could make herself and his daughter happy, and the
+ assurance that she had his full confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This expression of liberality and confidence from a man of Major
+ Bridgenorth's reserved and cautious disposition, gave full plumage to
+ Mistress Deborah's hopes; and emboldened her not only to deliver another
+ letter of Julian's to the young lady, but to encourage more boldly and
+ freely than formerly the intercourse of the lovers when Peveril returned
+ from abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, in spite of all Julian's precaution, the young Earl became
+ suspicious of his frequent solitary fishing parties; and he himself, now
+ better acquainted with the world than formerly, became aware that his
+ repeated visits and solitary walks with a person so young and beautiful as
+ Alice, might not only betray prematurely the secret of his attachment, but
+ be of essential prejudice to her who was its object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of this conviction, he abstained, for an unusual
+ period, from visiting the Black Fort. But when he next indulged himself
+ with spending an hour in the place where he would gladly have abode for
+ ever, the altered manner of Alice&mdash;the tone in which she seemed to
+ upbraid his neglect, penetrated his heart, and deprived him of that power
+ of self-command, which he had hitherto exercised in their interviews. It
+ required but a few energetic words to explain to Alice at once his
+ feelings, and to make her sensible of the real nature of her own. She wept
+ plentifully, but her tears were not all of bitterness. She sat passively
+ still, and without reply, while he explained to her, with many an
+ interjection, the circumstances which had placed discord between their
+ families; for hitherto, all that she had known was, that Master Peveril,
+ belonging to the household of the great Countess or Lady of Man, must
+ observe some precautions in visiting a relative of the unhappy Colonel
+ Christian. But, when Julian concluded his tale with the warmest
+ protestations of eternal love, "My poor father!" she burst forth, "and was
+ this to be the end of all thy precautions?&mdash;This, that the son of him
+ that disgraced and banished thee, should hold such language to your
+ daughter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You err, Alice, you err," cried Julian eagerly. "That I hold this
+ language&mdash;that the son of Peveril addresses thus the daughter of your
+ father&mdash;that he thus kneels to you for forgiveness of injuries which
+ passed when we were both infants, shows the will of Heaven, that in our
+ affection should be quenched the discord of our parents. What else could
+ lead those who parted infants on the hills of Derbyshire, to meet thus in
+ the valleys of Man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice, however new such a scene, and, above all, her own emotions, might
+ be, was highly endowed with that exquisite delicacy which is imprinted in
+ the female heart, to give warning of the slightest approach to impropriety
+ in a situation like hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rise, rise, Master Peveril," she said; "do not do yourself and me this
+ injustice&mdash;we have done both wrong&mdash;very wrong; but my fault was
+ done in ignorance. O God! my poor father, who needs comfort so much&mdash;is
+ it for me to add to his misfortunes? Rise!" she added more firmly; "if you
+ retain this unbecoming posture any longer, I will leave the room and you
+ shall never see me more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commanding tone of Alice overawed the impetuosity of her lover, who
+ took in silence a seat removed to some distance from hers, and was again
+ about to speak. "Julian," said she in a milder tone, "you have spoken
+ enough, and more than enough. Would you had left me in the pleasing dream
+ in which I could have listened to you for ever! but the hour of wakening
+ is arrived." Peveril waited the prosecution of her speech as a criminal
+ while he waits his doom; for he was sufficiently sensible that an answer,
+ delivered not certainly without emotion, but with firmness and resolution,
+ was not to be interrupted. "We have done wrong," she repeated, "very
+ wrong; and if we now separate for ever, the pain we may feel will be but a
+ just penalty for our error. We should never have met: meeting, we should
+ part as soon as possible. Our farther intercourse can but double our pain
+ at parting. Farewell, Julian; and forget we ever have seen each other!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forget!" said Julian; "never, never. To <i>you</i>, it is easy to speak
+ the word&mdash;to think the thought. To <i>me</i>, an approach to either
+ can only be by utter destruction. Why should you doubt that the feud of
+ our fathers, like so many of which we have heard, might be appeased by our
+ friendship? You are my only friend. I am the only one whom Heaven has
+ assigned to you. Why should we separate for the fault of others, which
+ befell when we were but children?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak in vain, Julian," said Alice; "I pity you&mdash;perhaps I pity
+ myself&mdash;indeed, I should pity myself, perhaps, the most of the two;
+ for you will go forth to new scenes and new faces, and will soon forget
+ me; but, I, remaining in this solitude, how shall <i>I</i> forget?&mdash;that,
+ however, is not now the question&mdash;I can bear my lot, and it commands
+ us to part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hear me yet a moment," said Peveril; "this evil is not, cannot be
+ remediless. I will go to my father,&mdash;I will use the intercession of
+ my mother, to whom he can refuse nothing&mdash;I will gain their consent&mdash;they
+ have no other child&mdash;and they must consent, or lose him for ever.
+ Say, Alice, if I come to you with my parents' consent to my suit, will you
+ again say, with that tone so touching and so sad, yet so incredibly
+ determined&mdash;Julian, we must part?" Alice was silent. "Cruel girl,
+ will you not even deign to answer me?" said her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would refer you to my father," said Alice, blushing and casting her
+ eyes down; but instantly raising them again, she repeated, in a firmer and
+ a sadder tone, "Yes, Julian, I would refer you to my father; and you would
+ find that your pilot, Hope, had deceived you; and that you had but escaped
+ the quicksands to fall upon the rocks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would that could be tried!" said Julian. "Methinks I could persuade
+ your father that in ordinary eyes our alliance is not undesirable. My
+ family have fortune, rank, long descent&mdash;all that fathers look for
+ when they bestow a daughter's hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All this would avail you nothing," said Alice. "The spirit of my father
+ is bent upon the things of another world; and if he listened to hear you
+ out, it would be but to tell you that he spurned your offers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know not&mdash;you know not, Alice," said Julian. "Fire can soften
+ iron&mdash;thy father's heart cannot be so hard, or his prejudices so
+ strong, but I shall find some means to melt him. Forbid me not&mdash;Oh,
+ forbid me not at least the experiment!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can but advise," said Alice; "I can forbid you nothing; for, to forbid,
+ implies power to command obedience. But if you will be wise, and listen to
+ me&mdash;Here, and on this spot, we part for ever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, by Heaven!" said Julian, whose bold and sanguine temper scarce
+ saw difficulty in attaining aught which he desired. "We now part, indeed,
+ but it is that I may return armed with my parents' consent. They desire
+ that I should marry&mdash;in their last letters they pressed it more
+ openly&mdash;they shall have their desire; and such a bride as I will
+ present to them has not graced their house since the Conqueror gave it
+ origin. Farewell, Alice! Farewell, for a brief space!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She replied, "Farewell, Julian! Farewell for ever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, within a week of this interview, was at Martindale Castle, with
+ the view of communicating his purpose. But the task which seems easy at a
+ distance, proves as difficult, upon a nearer approach, as the fording of a
+ river, which from afar appeared only a brook. There lacked not
+ opportunities of entering upon the subject; for in the first ride which he
+ took with his father, the Knight resumed the subject of his son's
+ marriage, and liberally left the lady to his choice; but under the strict
+ proviso, that she was of a loyal and an honourable family;&mdash;if she
+ had fortune, it was good and well, or rather, it was better than well; but
+ if she was poor, why, "there is still some picking," said Sir Geoffrey,
+ "on the bones of the old estate; and Dame Margaret and I will be content
+ with the less, that you young folks may have your share of it. I am turned
+ frugal already, Julian. You see what a north-country shambling bit of a
+ Galloway nag I ride upon&mdash;a different beast, I wot, from my own old
+ Black Hastings, who had but one fault, and that was his wish to turn down
+ Moultrassie avenue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was that so great a fault?" said Julian, affecting indifference, while
+ his heart was trembling, as it seemed to him, almost in his very throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It used to remind me of that base, dishonourable Presbyterian fellow,
+ Bridgenorth," said Sir Geoffrey; "and I would as lief think of a toad:&mdash;they
+ say he has turned Independent, to accomplish the full degree of rascality.&mdash;I
+ tell you, Gill, I turned off the cow-boy, for gathering nuts in his woods&mdash;I
+ would hang a dog that would so much as kill a hare there.&mdash;But what
+ is the matter with you? You look pale."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian made some indifferent answer, but too well understood, from the
+ language and tone which his father used, that his prejudices against
+ Alice's father were both deep and envenomed, as those of country gentlemen
+ often become, who, having little to do or think of, are but too apt to
+ spend their time in nursing and cherishing petty causes of wrath against
+ their next neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the same day, he mentioned the Bridgenorth to his mother,
+ as if in a casual manner. But the Lady Peveril instantly conjured him
+ never to mention the name, especially in his father's presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was that Major Bridgenorth, of whom I have heard the name mentioned,"
+ said Julian, "so very bad a neighbour?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not say so," said Lady Peveril; "nay, we were more than once obliged
+ to him, in the former unhappy times; but your father and he took some
+ passages so ill at each other's hands, that the least allusion to him
+ disturbs Sir Geoffrey's temper, in a manner quite unusual, and which, now
+ that his health is somewhat impaired, is sometimes alarming to me. For
+ Heaven's sake, then, my dear Julian, avoid upon all occasions the
+ slightest allusion to Moultrassie, or any of its inhabitants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This warning was so seriously given, that Julian himself saw that
+ mentioning his secret purpose would be the sure way to render it abortive,
+ and therefore he returned disconsolate to the Isle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril had the boldness, however, to make the best he could of what had
+ happened, by requesting an interview with Alice, in order to inform her
+ what had passed betwixt his parents and him on her account. It was with
+ great difficulty that this boon was obtained; and Alice Bridgenorth showed
+ no slight degree of displeasure, when she discovered, after much
+ circumlocution, and many efforts to give an air of importance to what he
+ had to communicate, that all amounted but to this, that Lady Peveril
+ continued to retain a favourable opinion of her father, Major Bridgenorth,
+ which Julian would fain have represented as an omen of their future more
+ perfect reconciliation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not think you would thus have trifled with me, Master Peveril,"
+ said Alice, assuming an air of dignity; "but I will take care to avoid
+ such intrusion in future&mdash;I request you will not again visit the
+ Black Fort; and I entreat of you, good Mistress Debbitch, that you will no
+ longer either encourage or permit this gentleman's visits, as the result
+ of such persecution will be to compel me to appeal to my aunt and father
+ for another place of residence, and perhaps also for another and more
+ prudent companion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last hint struck Mistress Deborah with so much terror, that she
+ joined her ward in requiring and demanding Julian's instant absence, and
+ he was obliged to comply with their request. But the courage of a youthful
+ lover is not easily subdued; and Julian, after having gone through the
+ usual round of trying to forget his ungrateful mistress, and entertaining
+ his passion with augmented violence, ended by the visit to the Black Fort,
+ the beginning of which we narrated in the last chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We then left him anxious for, yet almost fearful of, an interview with
+ Alice, which he prevailed upon Deborah to solicit; and such was the tumult
+ of his mind, that, while he traversed the parlour, it seemed to him that
+ the dark melancholy eyes of the slaughtered Christian's portrait followed
+ him wherever he went, with the fixed, chill, and ominous glance, which
+ announced to the enemy of his race mishap and misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of the apartment opened at length, and these visions were
+ dissipated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Parents have flinty hearts! No tears can move them.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Alice Bridgenorth at length entered the parlour where her anxious
+ lover had so long expected her, it was with a slow step, and a composed
+ manner. Her dress was arranged with an accurate attention to form, which
+ at once enhanced the appearance of its puritanic simplicity, and struck
+ Julian as a bad omen; for although the time bestowed upon the toilet may,
+ in many cases, intimate the wish to appear advantageously at such an
+ interview, yet a ceremonious arrangement of attire is very much allied
+ with formality, and a preconceived determination to treat a lover with
+ cold politeness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sad-coloured gown&mdash;the pinched and plaited cap, which carefully
+ obscured the profusion of long dark-brown hair&mdash;the small ruff, and
+ the long sleeves, would have appeared to great disadvantage on a shape
+ less graceful than Alice Bridgenorth's; but an exquisite form, though not,
+ as yet, sufficiently rounded in the outlines to produce the perfection of
+ female beauty, was able to sustain and give grace even to this unbecoming
+ dress. Her countenance, fair and delicate, with eyes of hazel, and a brow
+ of alabaster, had, notwithstanding, less regular beauty than her form, and
+ might have been justly subjected to criticism. There was, however, a life
+ and spirit in her gaiety, and a depth of sentiment in her gravity, which
+ made Alice, in conversation with the very few persons with whom she
+ associated, so fascinating in her manners and expression, whether of
+ language or countenance&mdash;so touching, also, in her simplicity and
+ purity of thought, that brighter beauties might have been overlooked in
+ her company. It was no wonder, therefore, that an ardent character like
+ Julian, influenced by these charms, as well as by the secrecy and mystery
+ attending his intercourse with Alice, should prefer the recluse of the
+ Black Fort to all others with whom he had become acquainted in general
+ society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart beat high as she came into the apartment, and it was almost
+ without an attempt to speak that his profound obeisance acknowledged her
+ entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a mockery, Master Peveril," said Alice, with an effort to speak
+ firmly, which yet was disconcerted by a slightly tremulous inflection of
+ voice&mdash;"a mockery, and a cruel one. You come to this lone place,
+ inhabited only by two women, too simple to command your absence&mdash;too
+ weak to enforce it&mdash;you come, in spite of my earnest request&mdash;to
+ the neglect of your own time&mdash;to the prejudice, I may fear, of my
+ character&mdash;you abuse the influence you possess over the simple person
+ to whom I am entrusted&mdash;All this you do, and think to make up by low
+ reverences and constrained courtesy! Is this honourable, or is it fair?&mdash;Is
+ it," she added, after a moment's hesitation&mdash;"is it kind?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tremulous accent fell especially on the last word she uttered, and it
+ was spoken in a low tone of gentle reproach, which went to Julian's heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said he, "there was a mode by which, at the peril of my life, Alice,
+ I could show my regard&mdash;my respect&mdash;my devoted tenderness&mdash;the
+ danger would be dearer to me than ever was pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have said such things often," said Alice, "and they are such as I
+ ought not to hear, and do not desire to hear. I have no tasks to impose on
+ you&mdash;no enemies to be destroyed&mdash;no need or desire of protection&mdash;no
+ wish, Heaven knows, to expose you to danger&mdash;It is your visits here
+ alone to which danger attaches. You have but to rule your own wilful
+ temper&mdash;to turn your thoughts and your cares elsewhere, and I can
+ have nothing to ask&mdash;nothing to wish for. Use your own reason&mdash;consider
+ the injury you do yourself&mdash;the injustice you do us&mdash;and let me,
+ once more, in fair terms, entreat you to absent yourself from this place&mdash;till&mdash;till&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused, and Julian eagerly interrupted her.&mdash;"Till when, Alice?&mdash;till
+ when?&mdash;impose on me any length of absence which your severity can
+ inflict, short of a final separation&mdash;Say, Begone for years, but
+ return when these years are over; and, slow and wearily as they must pass
+ away, still the thought that they must at length have their period, will
+ enable me to live through them. Let me, then, conjure thee, Alice, to name
+ a date&mdash;to fix a term&mdash;to say till <i>when!</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Till you can bear to think of me only as a friend and sister."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a sentence of eternal banishment indeed!" said Julian; "it is
+ seeming, no doubt, to fix a term of exile, but attaching to it an
+ impossible condition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why impossible, Julian?" said Alice, in a tone of persuasion; "were
+ we not happier ere you threw the mask from your own countenance, and tore
+ the veil from my foolish eyes? Did we not meet with joy, spend our time
+ happily, and part cheerily, because we transgressed no duty, and incurred
+ no self-reproach? Bring back that state of happy ignorance, and you shall
+ have no reason to call me unkind. But while you form schemes which I know
+ to be visionary, and use language of such violence and passion, you shall
+ excuse me if I now, and once for all, declare, that since Deborah shows
+ herself unfit for the trust reposed in her, and must needs expose me to
+ persecutions of this nature, I will write to my father, that he may fix me
+ another place of residence; and in the meanwhile I will take shelter with
+ my aunt at Kirk-Truagh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hear me, unpitying girl," said Peveril, "hear me, and you shall see how
+ devoted I am to obedience, in all that I can do to oblige you! You say you
+ were happy when we spoke not on such topics&mdash;well&mdash;at all
+ expense of my own suppressed feelings, that happy period shall return. I
+ will meet you&mdash;walk with you&mdash;read with you&mdash;but only as a
+ brother would with his sister, or a friend with his friend; the thoughts I
+ may nourish, be they of hope or of despair, my tongue shall not give birth
+ to, and therefore I cannot offend; Deborah shall be ever by your side, and
+ her presence shall prevent my even hinting at what might displease you&mdash;only
+ do not make a crime to me of those thoughts which are the dearest part of
+ my existence; for believe me it were better and kinder to rob me of
+ existence itself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the mere ecstasy of passion, Julian," answered Alice Bridgenorth;
+ "that which is unpleasant, our selfish and stubborn will represents as
+ impossible. I have no confidence in the plan you propose&mdash;no
+ confidence in your resolution, and less than none in the protection of
+ Deborah. Till you can renounce, honestly and explicitly, the wishes you
+ have lately expressed, we must be strangers;&mdash;and could you renounce
+ them even at this moment, it were better that we should part for a long
+ time; and, for Heaven's sake, let it be as soon as possible&mdash;perhaps
+ it is even now too late to prevent some unpleasant accident&mdash;I
+ thought I heard a noise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was Deborah," answered Julian. "Be not afraid, Alice; we are secure
+ against surprise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not," said Alice, "what you mean by such security&mdash;I have
+ nothing to hide. I sought not this interview; on the contrary, averted it
+ as long as I could&mdash;and am now most desirous to break it off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And wherefore, Alice, since you say it must be our last? Why should you
+ shake the sand which is passing so fast? the very executioner hurries not
+ the prayers of the wretches upon the scaffold.&mdash;And see you not&mdash;I
+ will argue as coldly as you can desire&mdash;see you not that you are
+ breaking your own word, and recalling the hope which yourself held out to
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What hope have I suggested? What word have I given, Julian?" answered
+ Alice. "You yourself build wild hopes in the air, and accuse me of
+ destroying what had never any earthly foundation. Spare yourself, Julian&mdash;spare
+ me&mdash;and in mercy to us both depart, and return not again till you can
+ be more reasonable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Reasonable?" replied Julian; "it is you, Alice, who will deprive me
+ altogether of reason. Did you not say, that if our parents could be
+ brought to consent to our union, you would no longer oppose my suit?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No&mdash;no&mdash;no," said Alice eagerly, and blushing deeply,&mdash;"I
+ did not say so, Julian&mdash;it was your own wild imagination which put
+ construction on my silence and my confusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do <i>not</i> say so, then?" answered Julian; "and if all other
+ obstacles were removed, I should find one in the cold flinty bosom of her
+ who repays the most devoted and sincere affection with contempt and
+ dislike?&mdash;Is that," he added, in a deep tone of feeling&mdash;"is
+ that what Alice Bridgenorth says to Julian Peveril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed&mdash;indeed, Julian," said the almost weeping girl, "I do not say
+ so&mdash;I say nothing, and I ought not to say anything concerning what I
+ might do, in a state of things which can never take place. Indeed, Julian,
+ you ought not thus to press me. Unprotected as I am&mdash;wishing you well&mdash;very
+ well&mdash;why should you urge me to say or do what would lessen me in my
+ own eyes? to own affection for one from whom fate has separated me for
+ ever? It is ungenerous&mdash;it is cruel&mdash;it is seeking a momentary
+ and selfish gratification to yourself, at the expense of every feeling
+ which I ought to entertain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have said enough, Alice," said Julian, with sparkling eyes; "you have
+ said enough in deprecating my urgency, and I will press you no farther.
+ But you overrate the impediments which lie betwixt us&mdash;they must and
+ shall give way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So you said before," answered Alice, "and with what probability, your own
+ account may show. You dared not to mention the subject to your own father&mdash;how
+ should you venture to mention it to mine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I will soon enable you to decide upon. Major Bridgenorth, by my
+ mother's account, is a worthy and an estimable man. I will remind him,
+ that to my mother's care he owes the dearest treasure and comfort of his
+ life; and I will ask him if it is a just retribution to make that mother
+ childless. Let me but know where to find him, Alice, and you shall soon
+ hear if I have feared to plead my cause with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas!" answered Alice, "you well know my uncertainty as to my dear
+ father's residence. How often has it been my earnest request to him that
+ he would let me share his solitary abode, or his obscure wanderings! But
+ the short and infrequent visits which he makes to this house are all that
+ he permits me of his society. Something I might surely do, however little,
+ to alleviate the melancholy by which he is oppressed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Something we might both do," said Peveril. "How willingly would I aid you
+ in so pleasing a task! All old griefs should be forgotten&mdash;all old
+ friendships revived. My father's prejudices are those of an Englishman&mdash;strong,
+ indeed, but not insurmountable by reason. Tell me, then, where Major
+ Bridgenorth is, and leave the rest to me; or let me but know by what
+ address your letters reach him, and I will forthwith essay to discover his
+ dwelling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not attempt it, I charge you," said Alice. "He is already a man of
+ sorrows; and what would he think were I capable of entertaining a suit so
+ likely to add to them? Besides, I could not tell you, if I would, where he
+ is now to be found. My letters reach him from time to time, by means of my
+ aunt Christian; but of his address I am entirely ignorant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, by Heaven," answered Julian, "I will watch his arrival in this
+ island, and in this house; and ere he has locked thee in his arms, he
+ shall answer to me on the subject of my suit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then demand that answer now," said a voice from without the door, which
+ was at the same time slowly opened&mdash;"Demand that answer now, for here
+ stands Ralph Bridgenorth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he entered the apartment with his usual slow and sedate step&mdash;raised
+ his flapp'd and steeple-crowned hat from his brows, and, standing in the
+ midst of the room, eyed alternately his daughter and Julian Peveril with a
+ fixed and penetrating glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father!" said Alice, utterly astonished, and terrified besides, by his
+ sudden appearance at such a conjuncture,&mdash;"Father, I am not to
+ blame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of that anon, Alice," said Bridgenorth; "meantime retire to your
+ apartment&mdash;I have that to say to this youth which will not endure
+ your presence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed&mdash;indeed, father," said Alice, alarmed at what she supposed
+ these words indicated, "Julian is as little to be blamed as I! It was
+ chance, it was fortune, which caused our meeting together." Then suddenly
+ rushing forward, she threw her arms around her father, saying, "Oh, do him
+ no injury&mdash;he meant no wrong! Father, you were wont to be a man of
+ reason and religious peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And wherefore should I not be so now, Alice?" said Bridgenorth, raising
+ his daughter from the ground, on which she had almost sunk in the
+ earnestness of her supplication. "Dost thou know aught, maiden, which
+ should inflame my anger against this young man, more than reason or
+ religion may bridle? Go&mdash;go to thy chamber. Compose thine own
+ passions&mdash;learn to rule these&mdash;and leave it to me to deal with
+ this stubborn young man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice arose, and, with her eyes fixed on the ground, retired slowly from
+ the apartment. Julian followed her steps with his eyes till the last wave
+ of her garment was visible at the closing door; then turned his looks to
+ Major Bridgenorth, and then sunk them on the ground. The Major continued
+ to regard him in profound silence; his looks were melancholy and even
+ austere; but there was nothing which indicated either agitation or keen
+ resentment. He motioned to Julian to take a seat, and assumed one himself.
+ After which he opened the conversation in the following manner:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You seemed but now, young gentleman, anxious to learn where I was to be
+ found. Such I at least conjectured, from the few expressions which I
+ chanced to overhear; for I made bold, though it may be contrary to the
+ code of modern courtesy, to listen a moment or two, in order to gather
+ upon what subject so young a man as you entertained so young a woman as
+ Alice, in a private interview."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust, sir," said Julian, rallying spirits in what he felt to be a case
+ of extremity, "you have heard nothing on my part which has given offence
+ to a gentleman, whom, though unknown, I am bound to respect so highly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the contrary," said Bridgenorth, with the same formal gravity, "I am
+ pleased to find that your business is, or appears to be, with me, rather
+ than with my daughter. I only think you had done better to have entrusted
+ it to me in the first instance, as my sole concern."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The utmost sharpness of attention which Julian applied, could not discover
+ if Bridgenorth spoke seriously or ironically to the above purpose. He was,
+ however, quick-witted beyond his experience, and was internally determined
+ to endeavour to discover something of the character and the temper of him
+ with whom he spoke. For that purpose, regulating his reply in the same
+ tone with Bridgenorth's observation, he said, that not having the
+ advantage to know his place of residence, he had applied for information
+ to his daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is now known to you for the first time?" said Bridgenorth. "Am I so
+ to understand you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," answered Julian, looking down; "I have been known to your
+ daughter for many years; and what I wished to say, respects both her
+ happiness and my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I must understand you," said Bridgenorth, "even as carnal men understand
+ each other on the matters of this world. You are attached to my daughter
+ by the cords of love; I have long known this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You, Master Bridgenorth?" exclaimed Peveril&mdash;"<i>You</i> have long
+ known it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, young man. Think you, that as the father of an only child, I could
+ have suffered Alice Bridgenorth&mdash;the only living pledge of her who is
+ now an angel in heaven&mdash;to have remained in this seclusion without
+ the surest knowledge of all her material actions? I have, in person, seen
+ more, both of her and of you, than you could be aware of; and when absent
+ in the body, I had the means of maintaining the same superintendence.
+ Young man, they say that such love as you entertain for my daughter
+ teaches much subtilty; but believe not that it can overreach the affection
+ which a widowed father bears to an only child."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said Julian, his heart beating thick and joyfully, "if you have
+ known this intercourse so long, may I not hope that it has not met your
+ disapprobation?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Major paused for an instant, and then answered, "In some respects,
+ certainly not. Had it done so&mdash;had there seemed aught on your side,
+ or on my daughter's, to have rendered your visits here dangerous to her,
+ or displeasing to me, she had not been long the inhabitant of this
+ solitude, or of this island. But be not so hasty as to presume, that all
+ which you may desire in this matter can be either easily or speedily
+ accomplished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I foresee, indeed, difficulties," answered Julian; "but with your kind
+ acquiescence, they are such as I trust to remove. My father is generous&mdash;my
+ mother is candid and liberal. They loved you once; I trust they will love
+ you again. I will be the mediator betwixt you&mdash;peace and harmony
+ shall once more inhabit our neighbourhood, and&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth interrupted him with a grim smile; for such it seemed, as it
+ passed over a face of deep melancholy. "My daughter well said, but short
+ while past, that you were a dreamer of dreams&mdash;an architect of plans
+ and hopes fantastic as the visions of the night. It is a great thing you
+ ask of me;&mdash;the hand of my only child&mdash;the sum of my worldly
+ substance, though that is but dross in comparison. You ask the key of the
+ only fountain from which I may yet hope to drink one pleasant draught; you
+ ask to be the sole and absolute keeper of my earthly happiness&mdash;and
+ what have you offered, or what have you to offer in return, for the
+ surrender you require of me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am but too sensible," said Peveril, abashed at his own hasty
+ conclusions, "how difficult it may be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but interrupt me not," replied Bridgenorth, "till I show you the
+ amount of what you offer me in exchange for a boon, which, whatever may be
+ its intrinsic value, is earnestly desired by you, and comprehends all that
+ is valuable on earth which I have it in my power to bestow. You may have
+ heard that in the late times I was the antagonist of your father's
+ principles and his profane faction, but not the enemy of his person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have ever heard," replied Julian, "much the contrary; and it was but
+ now that I reminded you that you had been his friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay. When he was in affliction and I in prosperity, I was neither
+ unwilling, nor altogether unable, to show myself such. Well, the tables
+ are turned&mdash;the times are changed. A peaceful and unoffending man
+ might have expected from a neighbour, now powerful in his turn, such
+ protection, when walking in the paths of the law, as all men, subjects of
+ the same realm, have a right to expect even from perfect strangers. What
+ chances? I pursue, with the warrant of the King and law, a murderess,
+ bearing on her hand the blood of my near connection, and I had, in such a
+ case, a right to call on every liege subject to render assistance to the
+ execution. My late friendly neighbour, bound, as a man and a magistrate,
+ to give ready assistance to a legal action&mdash;bound, as a grateful and
+ obliged friend, to respect my rights and my person&mdash;thrusts himself
+ betwixt me&mdash;me, the avenger of blood&mdash;and my lawful captive;
+ beats me to the earth, at once endangering my life, and, in mere human
+ eyes, sullying mine honour; and under his protection, the Midianitish
+ woman reaches, like a sea-eagle, the nest which she hath made in the
+ wave-surrounded rocks, and remains there till gold, duly administered at
+ Court, wipes out all memory of her crime, and baffles the vengeance due to
+ the memory of the best and bravest of men.&mdash;But," he added,
+ apostrophising the portrait of Christian, "thou art not yet forgotten, my
+ fair-haired William! The vengeance which dogs thy murderess is slow,&mdash;but
+ it is sure!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause of some moments, which Julian Peveril, willing to hear
+ to what conclusion Major Bridgenorth was finally to arrive, did not care
+ to interrupt. Accordingly, in a few minutes, the latter proceeded.&mdash;"These
+ things," he said, "I recall not in bitterness, so far as they are personal
+ to me&mdash;I recall them not in spite of heart, though they have been the
+ means of banishing me from my place of residence, where my fathers dwelt,
+ and where my earthly comforts lie interred. But the public cause sets
+ further strife betwixt your father and me. Who so active as he to execute
+ the fatal edict of black St. Bartholomew's day, when so many hundreds of
+ gospel-preachers were expelled from house and home&mdash;from hearth and
+ altar&mdash;from church and parish, to make room for belly-gods and
+ thieves? Who, when a devoted few of the Lord's people were united to lift
+ the fallen standard, and once more advance the good cause, was the
+ readiest to break their purpose&mdash;to search for, persecute, and
+ apprehend them? Whose breath did I feel warm on my neck&mdash;whose naked
+ sword was thrust within a foot of my body, whilst I lurked darkling, like
+ a thief in concealment, in the house of my fathers?&mdash;It was Geoffrey
+ Peveril's&mdash;it was your father's!&mdash;What can you answer to all
+ this, or how can you reconcile it with your present wishes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These things I point out to you, Julian, that I may show you how
+ impossible, in the eyes of a merely worldly man, would be the union which
+ you are desirous of. But Heaven hath at times opened a door, where man
+ beholds no means of issue. Julian, your mother, for one to whom the truth
+ is unknown, is, after the fashion of the world, one of the best, and one
+ of the wisest of women; and Providence, which gave her so fair a form, and
+ tenanted that form with a mind as pure as the original frailty of our vile
+ nature will permit, means not, I trust, that she shall continue to the end
+ to be a vessel of wrath and perdition. Of your father I say nothing&mdash;he
+ is what the times and example of others, and the counsels of his lordly
+ priest, have made him; and of him, once more, I say nothing, save that I
+ have power over him, which ere now he might have felt, but that there is
+ one within his chambers, who might have suffered in his suffering. Nor do
+ I wish to root up your ancient family. If I prize not your boast of family
+ honours and pedigree, I would not willingly destroy them; more than I
+ would pull down a moss-grown tower, or hew to the ground an ancient oak,
+ save for the straightening of the common path, and advantage of the
+ public. I have, therefore, no resentment against the humbled House of
+ Peveril&mdash;nay, I have regard to it in its depression."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He here made a second pause, as if he expected Julian to say something.
+ But notwithstanding the ardour with which the young man had pressed his
+ suit, he was too much trained in ideas of the importance of his family,
+ and in the better habit of respect for his parents, to hear, without
+ displeasure, some part of Bridgenorth's discourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The House of Peveril," he replied, "was never humbled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had you said the sons of that House had never been <i>humble</i>,"
+ answered Bridgenorth, "you would have come nearer the truth.&mdash;Are <i>you</i>
+ not humbled? Live you not here, the lackey of a haughty woman, the
+ play-companion of an empty youth? If you leave this Isle, and go to the
+ Court of England, see what regard will there be paid to the old pedigree
+ that deduces your descent from kings and conquerors. A scurril or obscene
+ jest, an impudent carriage, a laced cloak, a handful of gold, and the
+ readiness to wager it on a card, or a die, will better advance you at the
+ Court of Charles, than your father's ancient name, and slavish devotion of
+ blood and fortune to the cause of <i>his</i> father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is, indeed, but too probable," said Peveril; "but the Court shall be
+ no element of mine. I will live like my fathers, among my people, care for
+ their comforts, decide their differences&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Build Maypoles, and dance around them," said Bridgenorth, with another of
+ those grim smiles which passed over his features like the light of a
+ sexton's torch, as it glares and is reflected by the window of the church,
+ when he comes from locking a funeral vault. "No, Julian, these are not
+ times in which, by the dreaming drudgery of a country magistrate, and the
+ petty cares of a country proprietor, a man can serve his unhappy country.
+ There are mighty designs afloat, and men are called to make their choice
+ betwixt God and Baal. The ancient superstition&mdash;the abomination of
+ our fathers&mdash;is raising its head, and flinging abroad its snares,
+ under the protection of the princes of the earth; but she raises not her
+ head unmarked or unwatched; the true English hearts are as thousands,
+ which wait but a signal to arise as one man, and show the kings of the
+ earth that they have combined in vain! We will cast their cords from us&mdash;the
+ cup of their abominations we will not taste."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak in darkness, Master Bridgenorth," said Peveril. "Knowing so
+ much of me, you may, perhaps, also be aware, that I at least have seen too
+ much of the delusions of Rome, to desire that they should be propagated at
+ home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Else, wherefore do I speak to thee friendly and so free?" said
+ Bridgenorth. "Do I not know, with what readiness of early wit you baffled
+ the wily attempts of the woman's priest, to seduce thee from the
+ Protestant faith? Do I not know, how thou wast beset when abroad, and that
+ thou didst both hold thine own faith, and secure the wavering belief of
+ thy friend? Said I not, this was done like the son of Margaret Peveril?
+ Said I not, he holdeth, as yet, but the dead letter&mdash;but the seed
+ which is sown shall one day sprout and quicken?&mdash;Enough, however, of
+ this. For to-day this is thy habitation. I will see in thee neither the
+ servant of the daughter of Eshbaal, nor the son of him who pursued my
+ life, and blemished my honours; but thou shalt be to me, for this day, as
+ the child of her, without whom my house had been extinct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he stretched out his thin, bony hand, and grasped that of
+ Julian Peveril; but there was such a look of mourning in his welcome, that
+ whatever delight the youth anticipated, spending so long a time in the
+ neighbourhood of Alice Bridgenorth, perhaps in her society, or however
+ strongly he felt the prudence of conciliating her father's good-will, he
+ could not help feeling as if his heart was chilled in his company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This day at least is friendship's&mdash;on the morrow
+ Let strife come an she will.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Deborah Debbitch, summoned by her master, now made her appearance, with
+ her handkerchief at her eyes, and an appearance of great mental trouble.
+ "It was not my fault, Major Bridgenorth," she said; "how could I help it?
+ like will to like&mdash;the boy would come&mdash;the girl would see him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peace, foolish woman," said Bridgenorth, "and hear what I have got to
+ say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know what your honour has to say well enough," said Deborah. "Service,
+ I wot, is no inheritance nowadays&mdash;some are wiser than other some&mdash;if
+ I had not been wheedled away from Martindale, I might have had a house of
+ mine own by this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peace, idiot!" said Bridgenorth; but so intent was Deborah on her
+ vindication, that he could but thrust the interjection, as it were
+ edgewise, between her exclamations, which followed as thick as is usual in
+ cases, where folks endeavour to avert deserved censure by a clamorous
+ justification ere the charge be brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No wonder she was cheated," she said, "out of sight of her own interest,
+ when it was to wait on pretty Miss Alice. All your honour's gold should
+ never have tempted me, but that I knew she was but a dead castaway, poor
+ innocent, if she were taken away from my lady or me.&mdash;And so this is
+ the end on't!&mdash;up early, and down late&mdash;and this is all my
+ thanks!&mdash;But your honour had better take care what you do&mdash;she
+ has the short cough yet sometimes&mdash;and should take physic, spring and
+ fall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peace, chattering fool!" said her master, so soon as her failing breath
+ gave him an opportunity to strike in, "thinkest thou I knew not of this
+ young gentleman's visits to the Black Fort, and that, if they had
+ displeased me, I would not have known how to stop them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I know that your honour knew of his visits!" exclaimed Deborah, in a
+ triumphant tone,&mdash;for, like most of her condition, she never sought
+ farther for her defence than a lie, however inconsistent and improbable&mdash;"<i>Did</i>
+ I know that your honour knew of it!&mdash;Why, how should I have permitted
+ his visits else? I wonder what your honour takes me for! Had I not been
+ sure it was the thing in this world that your honour most desired would I
+ have presumed to lend it a hand forward? I trust I know my duty better.
+ Hear if I ever asked another youngster into the house, save himself&mdash;for
+ I knew your honour was wise, and quarrels cannot last for ever, and love
+ begins where hatred ends; and, to be sure, they love as if they were born
+ one for the other&mdash;and then, the estates of Moultrassie and
+ Martindale suit each other like sheath and knife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Parrot of a woman, hold your tongue!" said Bridgenorth, his patience
+ almost completely exhausted; "or, if you will prate, let it be to your
+ playfellows in the kitchen, and bid them get ready some dinner presently,
+ for Master Peveril is far from home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I will, and with all my heart," said Deborah; "and if there are a
+ pair of fatter fowls in Man than shall clap their wings on the table
+ presently, your honour shall call me goose as well as parrot." She then
+ left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is to such a woman as that," said Bridgenorth, looking after her
+ significantly, "that you conceived me to have abandoned the charge of my
+ only child! But enough of this subject&mdash;we will walk abroad, if you
+ will, while she is engaged in a province fitter for her understanding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he left the house, accompanied by Julian Peveril, and they were
+ soon walking side by side, as if they had been old acquaintances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may have happened to many of our readers, as it has done to ourselves,
+ to be thrown by accident into society with some individual whose claims to
+ what is called a <i>serious</i> character stand considerably higher than
+ our own, and with whom, therefore, we have conceived ourselves likely to
+ spend our time in a very stiff and constrained manner; while, on the other
+ hand, our destined companion may have apprehended some disgust from the
+ supposed levity and thoughtless gaiety of a disposition that when we, with
+ that urbanity and good-humour which is our principal characteristic, have
+ accommodated ourself to our companion, by throwing as much seriousness
+ into our conversation as our habits will admit, he, on the other hand,
+ moved by our liberal example, hath divested his manners of part of their
+ austerity; and our conversation has, in consequence, been of that pleasant
+ texture, betwixt the useful and agreeable, which best resembles "the
+ fairy-web of night and day," usually called in prose the twilight. It is
+ probable both parties may, on such occasions, have been the better for
+ their encounter, even if it went no farther than to establish for the time
+ a community of feeling between men, who, separated more perhaps by temper
+ than by principle, are too apt to charge each other with profane frivolity
+ on the one hand, or fanaticism on the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It fared thus in Peveril's walk with Bridgenorth, and in the conversation
+ which he held with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carefully avoiding the subject on which he had already spoken, Major
+ Bridgenorth turned his conversation chiefly on foreign travel, and on the
+ wonders he had seen in distant countries, and which he appeared to have
+ marked with a curious and observant eye. This discourse made the time fly
+ light away; for although the anecdotes and observations thus communicated
+ were all tinged with the serious and almost gloomy spirit of the narrator,
+ they yet contained traits of interest and of wonder, such as are usually
+ interesting to a youthful ear, and were particularly so to Julian, who
+ had, in his disposition, some cast of the romantic and adventurous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It appeared that Bridgenorth knew the south of France, and could tell many
+ stories of the French Huguenots, who already began to sustain those
+ vexations which a few years afterwards were summed up by the revocation of
+ the Edict of Nantz. He had even been in Hungary, for he spoke as from
+ personal knowledge of the character of several of the heads of the great
+ Protestant insurrection, which at this time had taken place under the
+ celebrated Tekeli; and laid down solid reasons why they were entitled to
+ make common cause with the Great Turk, rather than submit to the Pope of
+ Rome. He talked also of Savoy, where those of the reformed religion still
+ suffered a cruel persecution; and he mentioned with a swelling spirit, the
+ protection which Oliver had afforded to the oppressed Protestant Churches;
+ "therein showing himself," he added, "more fit to wield the supreme power,
+ than those who, claiming it by right of inheritance, use it only for their
+ own vain and voluptuous pursuits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not expect," said Peveril modestly, "to have heard Oliver's
+ panegyric from you, Master Bridgenorth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not panegyrise him," answered Bridgenorth; "I speak but truth of
+ that extraordinary man, now being dead, whom, when alive, I feared not to
+ withstand to his face. It is the fault of the present unhappy King, if he
+ make us look back with regret to the days when the nation was respected
+ abroad, and when devotion and sobriety were practised at home.&mdash;But I
+ mean not to vex your spirit by controversy. You have lived amongst those
+ who find it more easy and more pleasant to be the pensioners of France
+ than her controllers&mdash;to spend the money which she doles out to
+ themselves, than to check the tyranny with which she oppresses our poor
+ brethren of the religion. When the scales shall fall from thine eyes, all
+ this thou shalt see; and seeing, shalt learn to detest and despise it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time they had completed their walk, and were returned to the Black
+ Fort, by a different path from that which had led them up the valley. The
+ exercise and the general tone of conversation had removed, in some degree,
+ the shyness and embarrassment which Peveril originally felt in
+ Bridgenorth's presence and which the tenor of his first remarks had rather
+ increased than diminished. Deborah's promised banquet was soon on the
+ board; and in simplicity as well as neatness and good order, answered the
+ character she had claimed for it. In one respect alone, there seemed some
+ inconsistency, perhaps a little affectation. Most of the dishes were of
+ silver, and the plates were of the same metal; instead of the trenchers
+ and pewter which Peveril had usually seen employed on similar occasions at
+ the Black Fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, with the feeling of one who walks in a pleasant dream from
+ which he fears to awake, and whose delight is mingled with wonder and with
+ uncertainty, Julian Peveril found himself seated between Alice Bridgenorth
+ and her father&mdash;the being he most loved on earth, and the person whom
+ he had ever considered as the great obstacle to their intercourse. The
+ confusion of his mind was such, that he could scarcely reply to the
+ importunate civilities of Dame Deborah; who, seated with them at table in
+ her quality of governante, now dispensed the good things which had been
+ prepared under her own eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Alice she seemed to have found a resolution to play the mute; for
+ she answered not, excepting briefly, to the questions of Dame Debbitch;
+ nay, even when her father, which happened once or twice, attempted to
+ bring her forward in the conversation, she made no further reply than
+ respect for him rendered absolutely necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Bridgenorth himself, then, devolved the task of entertaining the
+ company; and contrary to his ordinary habits, he did not seem to shrink
+ from it. His discourse was not only easy, but almost cheerful, though ever
+ and anon crossed by some expressions indicative of natural and habitual
+ melancholy, or prophetic of future misfortune and woe. Flashes of
+ enthusiasm, too, shot along his conversation, gleaming like the
+ sheet-lightening of an autumn eve, which throws a strong, though momentary
+ illumination, across the sober twilight, and all the surrounding objects,
+ which, touched by it, assume a wilder and more striking character. In
+ general, however, Bridgenorth's remarks were plain and sensible; and as he
+ aimed at no graces of language, any ornament which they received arose out
+ of the interest with which they were impressed on his hearers. For
+ example, when Deborah, in the pride and vulgarity of her heart, called
+ Julian's attention to the plate from which they had been eating,
+ Bridgenorth seemed to think an apology necessary for such superfluous
+ expense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a symptom," he said, "of approaching danger, when such men, as
+ were not usually influenced by the vanities of life employed much money in
+ ornaments composed of the precious metals. It was a sign that the merchant
+ could not obtain a profit for the capital, which, for the sake of
+ security, he invested in this inert form. It was a proof that the noblemen
+ or gentlemen feared the rapacity of power, when they put their wealth into
+ forms the most portable and the most capable of being hidden; and it
+ showed the uncertainty of credit, when a man of judgment preferred the
+ actual possession of a mass of a silver to the convenience of a
+ goldsmith's or a banker's receipt. While a shadow of liberty remained," he
+ said, "domestic rights were last invaded; and, therefore, men disposed
+ upon their cupboards and tables the wealth which in these places would
+ remain longest, though not perhaps finally, sacred from the grasp of a
+ tyrannical government. But let there be a demand for capital to support a
+ profitable commerce, and the mass is at once consigned to the furnace,
+ and, ceasing to be a vain and cumbrous ornament of the banquet, becomes a
+ potent and active agent for furthering the prosperity of the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In war, too," said Peveril, "plate has been found a ready resource."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But too much so," answered Bridgenorth. "In the late times, the plate of
+ the nobles and gentry, with that of the colleges, and the sale of the
+ crown-jewels, enabled the King to make his unhappy stand, which prevented
+ matters returning to a state of peace and good order, until the sword had
+ attained an undue superiority both over King and Parliament."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at Julian as he spoke, much as he who proves a horse offers some
+ object suddenly to his eyes, then watches to see if he starts or blenches
+ from it. But Julian's thoughts were too much bent on other topics to
+ manifest any alarm. His answer referred to a previous part of
+ Bridgenorth's discourse, and was not returned till after a brief pause.
+ "War, then," he said, "war, the grand impoverisher, is also a creator of
+ wealth which it wastes and devours?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," replied Bridgenorth, "even as the sluice brings into action the
+ sleeping waters of the lake, which it finally drains. Necessity invents
+ arts and discovers means; and what necessity is sterner than that of civil
+ war? Therefore, even war is not in itself unmixed evil, being the creator
+ of impulses and energies which could not otherwise have existed in
+ society."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men should go to war, then," said Peveril, "that they may send their
+ silver plate to the mint, and eat from pewter dishes and wooden plates?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, my son," said Bridgenorth. Then checking himself as he observed
+ the deep crimson in Julian's cheek and brow, he added, "I crave your
+ pardon for such familiarity; but I meant not to limit what I said even now
+ to such trifling consequences, although it may be something salutary to
+ tear men from their pomps and luxuries, and teach those to be Romans who
+ would otherwise be Sybarites. But I would say, that times of public
+ danger, as they call into circulation the miser's hoard and the proud
+ man's bullion, and so add to the circulating wealth of the country, do
+ also call into action many a brave and noble spirit, which would otherwise
+ lie torpid, give no example to the living, and bequeath no name to future
+ ages. Society knows not, and cannot know, the mental treasures which
+ slumber in her bosom, till necessity and opportunity call forth the
+ statesman and the soldier from the shades of lowly life to the parts they
+ are designed by Providence to perform, and the stations which nature had
+ qualified them to hold. So rose Oliver&mdash;so rose Milton&mdash;so rose
+ many another name which cannot be forgotten&mdash;even as the tempest
+ summons forth and displays the address of the mariner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak," said Peveril, "as if national calamity might be, in some
+ sort, an advantage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if it were not so," replied Bridgenorth, "it had not existed in this
+ state of trial, where all temporal evil is alleviated by something good in
+ its progress or result, and where all that is good is close coupled with
+ that which is in itself evil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must be a noble sight," said Julian, "to behold the slumbering
+ energies of a great mind awakened into energy, and to see it assume the
+ authority which is its due over spirits more meanly endowed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I once witnessed," said Bridgenorth, "something to the same effect; and
+ as the tale is brief, I will tell it you, if you will:&mdash;Amongst my
+ wanderings, the Transatlantic settlements have not escaped me; more
+ especially the country of New England, into which our native land has
+ shaken from her lap, as a drunkard flings from him his treasures, so much
+ that is precious in the eyes of God and of His children. There thousands
+ of our best and most godly men&mdash;such whose righteousness might come
+ of cities&mdash;are content to be the inhabitants of the desert, rather
+ encountering the unenlightened savages, than stooping to extinguish, under
+ the oppression practised in Britain, the light that is within their own
+ minds. There I remained for a time, during the wars which the colony
+ maintained with Philip, a great Indian Chief, or Sachem, as they were
+ called, who seemed a messenger sent from Satan to buffet them. His cruelty
+ was great&mdash;his dissimulation profound; and the skill and promptitude
+ with which he maintained a destructive and desultory warfare, inflicted
+ many dreadful calamities on the settlement. I was, by chance, at a small
+ village in the woods, more than thirty miles from Boston, and in its
+ situation exceedingly lonely, and surrounded with thickets. Nevertheless,
+ there was no idea of any danger from the Indians at that time, for men
+ trusted to the protection of a considerable body of troops who had taken
+ the field for protection of the frontiers, and who lay, or were supposed
+ to lie, betwixt the hamlet and the enemy's country. But they had to do
+ with a foe, whom the devil himself had inspired at once with cunning and
+ cruelty. It was on a Sabbath morning, when we had assembled to take sweet
+ counsel together in the Lord's house. Our temple was but constructed of
+ wooden logs; but when shall the chant of trained hirelings, or the
+ sounding of tin and brass tubes amid the aisles of a minster, arise so
+ sweetly to Heaven, as did the psalm in which we united at once our voices
+ and our hearts! An excellent worthy, who now sleeps in the Lord, Nehemia
+ Solsgrace, long the companion of my pilgrimage, had just begun to wrestle
+ in prayer, when a woman, with disordered looks and dishevelled hair,
+ entered our chapel in a distracted manner, screaming incessantly, 'The
+ Indians! The Indians!'&mdash;In that land no man dares separate himself
+ from his means of defence; and whether in the city or in the field, in the
+ ploughed land or the forest, men keep beside them their weapons, as did
+ the Jews at the rebuilding of the Temple. So we sallied forth with our
+ guns and pikes, and heard the whoop of these incarnate devils, already in
+ possession of a part of the town, and exercising their cruelty on the few
+ whom weighty causes or indisposition had withheld from public worship; and
+ it was remarked as a judgment, that, upon that bloody Sabbath, Adrian
+ Hanson, a Dutchman, a man well enough disposed towards man, but whose mind
+ was altogether given to worldly gain, was shot and scalped as he was
+ summing his weekly gains in his warehouse. In fine, there was much damage
+ done; and although our arrival and entrance into combat did in some sort
+ put them back, yet being surprised and confused, and having no appointed
+ leader of our band, the devilish enemy shot hard at us and had some
+ advantage. It was pitiful to hear the screams of women and children amid
+ the report of guns and the whistling of bullets, mixed with the ferocious
+ yells of these savages, which they term their war-whoop. Several houses in
+ the upper part of the village were soon on fire; and the roaring of the
+ flames, and crackling of the great beams as they blazed, added to the
+ horrible confusion; while the smoke which the wind drove against us gave
+ farther advantage to the enemy, who fought as it were, invisible, and
+ under cover, whilst we fell fast by their unerring fire. In this state of
+ confusion, and while we were about to adopt the desperate project of
+ evacuating the village, and, placing the women and children in the centre,
+ of attempting a retreat to the nearest settlement, it pleased Heaven to
+ send us unexpected assistance. A tall man, of a reverend appearance, whom
+ no one of us had ever seen before, suddenly was in the midst of us, as we
+ hastily agitated the resolution of retreating. His garments were of the
+ skin of the elk, and he wore sword and carried gun; I never saw anything
+ more august than his features, overshadowed by locks of grey hair, which
+ mingled with a long beard of the same colour. 'Men and brethren,' he said,
+ in a voice like that which turns back the flight, 'why sink your hearts?
+ and why are you thus disquieted? Fear ye that the God we serve will give
+ you up to yonder heathen dogs? Follow me, and you shall see this day that
+ there is a captain in Israel!' He uttered a few brief but distinct orders,
+ in a tone of one who was accustomed to command; and such was the influence
+ of his appearance, his mien, his language, and his presence of mind, that
+ he was implicitly obeyed by men who had never seen him until that moment.
+ We were hastily divided, by his orders, into two bodies; one of which
+ maintained the defence of the village with more courage than ever,
+ convinced that the Unknown was sent by God to our rescue. At his command
+ they assumed the best and most sheltered positions for exchanging their
+ deadly fire with the Indians; while, under cover of the smoke, the
+ stranger sallied from the town, at the head of the other division of the
+ New England men, and, fetching a circuit, attacked the Red Warriors in the
+ rear. The surprise, as is usual amongst savages, had complete effect; for
+ they doubted not that they were assailed in their turn, and placed betwixt
+ two hostile parties by the return of a detachment from the provincial
+ army. The heathens fled in confusion, abandoning the half-won village, and
+ leaving behind them such a number of their warriors, that the tribe hath
+ never recovered its loss. Never shall I forget the figure of our venerable
+ leader, when our men, and not they only, but the women and children of the
+ village, rescued from the tomahawk and scalping-knife, stood crowded
+ around him, yet scarce venturing to approach his person, and more minded,
+ perhaps, to worship him as a descended angel, than to thank him as a
+ fellow-mortal. 'Not unto me be the glory,' he said; 'I am but an
+ implement, frail as yourselves, in the hand of Him who is strong to
+ deliver. Bring me a cup of water, that I may allay my parched throat, ere
+ I essay the task of offering thanks where they are most due.' I was
+ nearest to him as he spoke, and I gave into his hand the water he
+ requested. At that moment we exchanged glances, and it seemed to me that I
+ recognised a noble friend whom I had long since deemed in glory; but he
+ gave me no time to speak, had speech been prudent. Sinking on his knees,
+ and signing us to obey him, he poured forth a strong and energetic
+ thanksgiving for the turning back of the battle, which, pronounced with a
+ voice loud and clear as a war-trumpet, thrilled through the joints and
+ marrow of the hearers. I have heard many an act of devotion in my life,
+ had Heaven vouchsafed me grace to profit by them; but such a prayer as
+ this, uttered amid the dead and the dying, with a rich tone of mingled
+ triumph and adoration, was beyond them all&mdash;it was like the song of
+ the inspired prophetess who dwelt beneath the palm-tree between Ramah and
+ Bethel. He was silent; and for a brief space we remained with our faces
+ bent to the earth&mdash;no man daring to lift his head. At length we
+ looked up, but our deliverer was no longer amongst us; nor was he ever
+ again seen in the land which he had rescued."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Bridgenorth, who had told this singular story with an eloquence and
+ vivacity of detail very contrary to the usual dryness of his conversation,
+ paused for an instant, and then resumed&mdash;"Thou seest, young man, that
+ men of valour and of discretion are called forth to command in
+ circumstances of national exigence, though their very existence is unknown
+ in the land which they are predestined to deliver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what thought the people of the mysterious stranger?" said Julian, who
+ had listened with eagerness, for the story was of a kind interesting to
+ the youthful and the brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many things," answered Bridgenorth, "and, as usual, little to the
+ purpose. The prevailing opinion was, notwithstanding his own disclamation,
+ that the stranger was really a supernatural being; others believed him an
+ inspired champion, transported in the body from some distant climate, to
+ show us the way to safety; others, again, concluded that he was a recluse,
+ who, either from motives of piety, or other cogent reasons, had become a
+ dweller in the wilderness, and shunned the face of man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And, if I may presume to ask," said Julian, "to which of these opinions
+ were you disposed to adhere?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The last suited best with the transient though close view with which I
+ had perused the stranger's features," replied Bridgenorth; "for although I
+ dispute not that it may please Heaven, on high occasions, even to raise
+ one from the dead in defence of his country, yet I doubted not then, as I
+ doubt not now, that I looked on the living form of one, who had indeed
+ powerful reasons to conceal him in the cleft of the rock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are these reasons a secret?" said Julian Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not properly a secret," replied Bridgenorth; "for I fear not thy
+ betraying what I might tell thee in private discourse; and besides, wert
+ thou so base, the prey lies too distant for any hunters to whom thou
+ couldst point out its traces. But the name of this worthy will sound harsh
+ in thy ear, on account of one action of his life&mdash;being his accession
+ to a great measure, which made the extreme isles of the earth to tremble.
+ Have you never heard of Richard Whalley?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of the regicide?" exclaimed Peveril, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Call his act what thou wilt," said Bridgenorth; "he was not less the
+ rescuer of that devoted village, that, with other leading spirits of the
+ age, he sat in the judgment-seat when Charles Stewart was arraigned at the
+ bar, and subscribed the sentence that went forth upon him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have ever heard," said Julian, in an altered voice, and colouring
+ deeply, "that you, Master Bridgenorth, with other Presbyterians, were
+ totally averse to that detestable crime, and were ready to have made
+ joint-cause with the Cavaliers in preventing so horrible a parricide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it were so," said Bridgenorth, "we have been richly rewarded by his
+ successor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rewarded!" exclaimed Julian; "does the distinction of good and evil, and
+ our obligation to do the one and forbear the other, depend on the reward
+ which may attach to our actions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God forbid," answered Bridgenorth; "yet those who view the havoc which
+ this house of Stewart have made in the Church and State&mdash;the tyranny
+ which they exercise over men's persons and consciences&mdash;may well
+ doubt whether it be lawful to use weapons in their defence. Yet you hear
+ me not praise, or even vindicate the death of the King, though so far
+ deserved, as he was false to his oath as a Prince and Magistrate. I only
+ tell you what you desired to know, that Richard Whalley, one of the late
+ King's judges, was he of whom I have just been speaking. I knew his lofty
+ brow, though time had made it balder and higher; his grey eye retained all
+ its lustre; and though the grizzled beard covered the lower part of his
+ face, it prevented me not from recognising him. The scent was hot after
+ him for his blood; but by the assistance of those friends whom Heaven had
+ raised up for his preservation, he was concealed carefully, and emerged
+ only to do the will of Providence in the matter of that battle. Perhaps
+ his voice may be heard in the field once more, should England need one of
+ her noblest hearts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, God forbid!" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen," returned Bridgenorth. "May God avert civil war, and pardon those
+ whose madness would bring it on us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a long pause, during which Julian, who had scarce lifted his
+ eyes towards Alice, stole a glance in that direction, and was struck by
+ the deep cast of melancholy which had stolen over features, to which a
+ cheerful, if not gay expression, was most natural. So soon as she caught
+ his eye, she remarked, and, as Julian thought, with significance, that the
+ shadows were lengthening, and evening coming on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard; and although satisfied that she hinted at his departure, he
+ could not, upon the instant, find resolution to break the spell which
+ detained him. The language which Bridgenorth held was not only new and
+ alarming, but so contrary to the maxims in which he was brought up, that,
+ as a son of Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak, he would, in another case,
+ have thought himself called upon to dispute its conclusions, even at the
+ sword's point. But Bridgenorth's opinions were delivered with so much
+ calmness&mdash;seemed so much the result of conviction&mdash;that they
+ excited in Julian rather a spirit of wonder, than of angry controversy.
+ There was a character of sober decision, and sedate melancholy, in all
+ that he said, which, even had he not been the father of Alice (and perhaps
+ Julian was not himself aware how much he was influenced by that
+ circumstance), would have rendered it difficult to take personal offence.
+ His language and sentiments were of that quiet, yet decided kind, upon
+ which it is difficult either to fix controversy, or quarrel, although it
+ be impossible to acquiesce in the conclusions to which they lead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Julian remained, as if spell-bound to his chair, scarce more
+ surprised at the company in which he found himself, than at the opinions
+ to which he was listening, another circumstance reminded him that the
+ proper time of his stay at Black Fort had been expended. Little Fairy, the
+ Manx pony, which, well accustomed to the vicinity of Black Fort, used to
+ feed near the house while her master made his visits there, began to find
+ his present stay rather too long. She had been the gift of the Countess to
+ Julian, whilst a youth, and came of a high-spirited mountain breed,
+ remarkable alike for hardiness, for longevity, and for a degree of
+ sagacity approaching to that of the dog. Fairy showed the latter quality,
+ by the way in which she chose to express her impatience to be moving
+ homewards. At least such seemed the purpose of the shrill neigh with which
+ she startled the female inmates of the parlour, who, the moment
+ afterwards, could not forbear smiling to see the nose of the pony advanced
+ through the opened casement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fairy reminds me," said Julian, looking to Alice, and rising, "that the
+ term of my stay here is exhausted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak with me yet one moment," said Bridgenorth, withdrawing him into a
+ Gothic recess of the old-fashioned apartment, and speaking so low that he
+ could not be overheard by Alice and her governante, who, in the meantime,
+ caressed, and fed with fragments of bread the intruder Fairy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not, after all," said Bridgenorth, "told me the cause of your
+ coming hither." He stopped, as if to enjoy his embarrassment, and then
+ added, "And indeed it were most unnecessary that you should do so. I have
+ not so far forgotten the days of my youth, or those affections which bind
+ poor frail humanity but too much to the things of this world. Will you
+ find no words to ask of me the great boon which you seek, and which,
+ peradventure, you would not have hesitated to have made your own, without
+ my knowledge, and against my consent?&mdash;Nay, never vindicate thyself,
+ but mark me farther. The patriarch bought his beloved by fourteen years'
+ hard service to her father Laban, and they seemed to him but as a few
+ days. But he that would wed my daughter must serve, in comparison, but a
+ few days; though in matters of such mighty import, that they shall seem as
+ the service of many years. Reply not to me now, but go, and peace be with
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He retired so quickly, after speaking, that Peveril had literally not an
+ instant to reply. He cast his eyes around the apartment, but Deborah and
+ her charge had also disappeared. His gaze rested for a moment on the
+ portrait of Christian, and his imagination suggested that his dark
+ features were illuminated by a smile of haughty triumph. He stared, and
+ looked more attentively&mdash;it was but the effect of the evening beam,
+ which touched the picture at the instant. The effect was gone, and there
+ remained but the fixed, grave, inflexible features of the republican
+ soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian left the apartment as one who walks in a dream; he mounted Fairy,
+ and, agitated by a variety of thoughts, which he was unable to reduce to
+ order, he returned to Castle Rushin before the night sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he found all in movement. The Countess, with her son, had, upon some
+ news received, or resolution formed, during his absence, removed, with a
+ principal part of their family, to the yet stronger Castle of Holm-Peel,
+ about eight miles' distance across the island; and which had been suffered
+ to fall into a much more dilapidated condition than that of Castletown, so
+ far as it could be considered as a place of residence. But as a fortress,
+ Holm-Peel was stronger than Castletown; nay, unless assailed regularly,
+ was almost impregnable; and was always held by a garrison belonging to the
+ Lords of Man. Here Peveril arrived at nightfall. He was told in the
+ fishing-village, that the night-bell of the Castle had been rung earlier
+ than usual, and the watch set with circumstances of unusual and jealous
+ repetition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resolving, therefore, not to disturb the garrison by entering at that late
+ hour, he obtained an indifferent lodging in the town for the night, and
+ determined to go to the Castle early on the succeeding morning. He was not
+ sorry thus to gain a few hours of solitude, to think over the agitating
+ events of the preceding day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;What seem'd its head,
+ The likeness of a kingly crown had on.
+ &mdash;PARADISE LOST.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sodor, or Holm-Peel, so is named the castle to which our Julian directed
+ his course early on the following morning, is one of those extraordinary
+ monuments of antiquity with which this singular and interesting island
+ abounds. It occupies the whole of a high rocky peninsula, or rather an
+ island, for it is surrounded by the sea at high-water, and scarcely
+ accessible even when the tide is out, although a stone causeway, of great
+ solidity, erected for the express purpose, connects the island with the
+ mainland. The whole space is surrounded by double walls of great strength
+ and thickness; and the access to the interior, at the time which we treat
+ of, was only by two flights of steep and narrow steps, divided from each
+ other by a strong tower and guard-house; under the former of which, there
+ is an entrance-arch. The open space within the walls extends to two acres,
+ and contains many objects worthy of antiquarian curiosity. There were
+ besides the castle itself, two cathedral churches, dedicated, the earlier
+ to St. Patrick, the latter to St. Germain; besides two smaller churches;
+ all of which had become, even in that day, more or less ruinous. Their
+ decayed walls, exhibiting the rude and massive architecture of the most
+ remote period, were composed of a ragged grey-stone, which formed a
+ singular contrast with the bright red freestone of which the window-cases,
+ corner-stones, arches, and other ornamental parts of the building, were
+ composed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these four ruinous churches, the space of ground enclosed by the
+ massive exterior walls of Holm-Peel exhibited many other vestiges of the
+ olden time. There was a square mound of earth, facing, with its angles to
+ the points of the compass, one of those motes, as they were called, on
+ which, in ancient times, the northern tribes elected or recognised their
+ chiefs, and held their solemn popular assemblies, or <i>comitia</i>. There
+ was also one of those singular towers, so common in Ireland as to have
+ proved the favourite theme of her antiquaries; but of which the real use
+ and meaning seems yet to be hidden in the mist of ages. This of Holm-Peel
+ had been converted to the purpose of a watch-tower. There were, besides,
+ Runic monuments, of which legends could not be deciphered; and later
+ inscriptions to the memory of champions, of whom the names only were
+ preserved from oblivion. But tradition and superstitious eld, still most
+ busy where real history is silent, had filled up the long blank of
+ accurate information with tales of Sea-kings and Pirates, Hebridean Chiefs
+ and Norwegian Resolutes, who had formerly warred against, and in defence
+ of, this famous castle. Superstition, too, had her tales of fairies,
+ ghosts, and spectres&mdash;her legions of saints and demons, of fairies
+ and of familiar spirits, which in no corner of the British empire are told
+ and received with more absolute credulity than in the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst all these ruins of an older time arose the Castle itself,&mdash;now
+ ruinous&mdash;but in Charles II.'s reign well garrisoned, and, in a
+ military point of view, kept in complete order. It was a venerable and
+ very ancient building, containing several apartments of sufficient size
+ and height to be termed noble. But in the surrender of the island by
+ Christian, the furniture had been, in a great measure, plundered or
+ destroyed by the republican soldiers; so that, as we have before hinted,
+ its present state was ill adapted for the residence of the noble
+ proprietor. Yet it had been often the abode, not only of the Lords of Man,
+ but of those state prisoners whom the Kings of Britain sometimes committed
+ to their charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this Castle of Holm-Peel the great king-maker, Richard, Earl of
+ Warwick, was confined, during one period of his eventful life, to ruminate
+ at leisure on his farther schemes of ambition. And here, too, Eleanor, the
+ haughty wife of the good Duke of Gloucester, pined out in seclusion the
+ last days of her banishment. The sentinels pretended that her discontented
+ spectre was often visible at night, traversing the battlements of the
+ external walls, or standing motionless beside a particular solitary turret
+ of one of the watch-towers with which they are flanked; but dissolving
+ into air at cock-crow, or when the bell tolled from the yet remaining
+ tower of St. Germain's church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Holm-Peel, as records inform us, till towards the end of the
+ seventeenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in one of the lofty but almost unfurnished apartments of this
+ ancient Castle that Julian Peveril found his friend the Earl of Derby, who
+ had that moment sat down to a breakfast composed of various sorts of fish.
+ "Welcome, most imperial Julian," he said; "welcome to our royal fortress;
+ in which, as yet, we are not like to be starved with hunger, though
+ well-nigh dead for cold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian answered by inquiring the meaning of this sudden movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon my word," replied the Earl, "you know nearly as much of it as I do.
+ My mother has told me nothing about it; supposing I believe, that I shall
+ at length be tempted to inquire; but she will find herself much mistaken.
+ I shall give her credit for full wisdom in her proceedings, rather than
+ put her to the trouble to render a reason, though no woman can render one
+ better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come; this is affectation, my good friend," said Julian. "You
+ should inquire into these matters a little more curiously."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To what purpose?" said the Earl. "To hear old stories about the Tinwald
+ laws, and the contending rights of the lords and the clergy, and all the
+ rest of that Celtic barbarism, which, like Burgesse's thorough-paced
+ doctrine enters at one ear, paces through, and goes out at the other?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, my lord," said Julian, "you are not so indifferent as you would
+ represent yourself&mdash;you are dying of curiosity to know what this
+ hurry is about; only you think it the courtly humour to appear careless
+ about your own affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, what should it be about," said the young Earl "unless some factious
+ dispute between our Majesty's minister, Governor Nowel, and our vassals?
+ or perhaps some dispute betwixt our Majesty and the ecclesiastical
+ jurisdictions? for all which our Majesty cares as little as any king in
+ Christendom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I rather suppose there is intelligence from England," said Julian. "I
+ heard last night in Peel-town, that Greenhalgh is come over with
+ unpleasant news."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He brought me nothing that was pleasant, I wot well," said the Earl. "I
+ expected something from St. Evremond or Hamilton&mdash;some new plays by
+ Dryden or Lee, and some waggery or lampoons from the Rose Coffee-house;
+ and the fellow has brought me nothing but a parcel of tracts about
+ Protestants and Papists, and a folio play-book, one of the conceptions, as
+ she calls them, of that old mad-woman the Duchess of Newcastle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush, my lord, for Heaven's sake," said Peveril; "here comes the
+ Countess; and you know she takes fire at the least slight to her ancient
+ friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let her read her ancient friend's works herself, then," said the Earl,
+ "and think her as wise as she can; but I would not give one of Waller's
+ songs, or Denham's satires, for a whole cart-load of her Grace's trash.&mdash;But
+ here comes our mother with care on her brow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby entered the apartment accordingly, holding in her
+ hand a number of papers. Her dress was a mourning habit, with a deep train
+ of black velvet, which was borne by a little favourite attendant, a deaf
+ and dumb girl, whom, in compassion to her misfortune, the Countess had
+ educated about her person for some years. Upon this unfortunate being,
+ with the touch of romance which marked many of her proceedings, Lady Derby
+ had conferred the name of Fenella, after some ancient princess of the
+ island. The Countess herself was not much changed since we last presented
+ her to our readers. Age had rendered her step more slow, but not less
+ majestic; and while it traced some wrinkles on her brow, had failed to
+ quench the sedate fire of her dark eye. The young men rose to receive her
+ with the formal reverence which they knew she loved, and were greeted by
+ her with equal kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cousin Peveril," she said (for so she always called Julian, in respect of
+ his mother being a kinswoman of her husband), "you were ill abroad last
+ night, when we much needed your counsel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian answered with a blush which he could not prevent, "That he had
+ followed his sport among the mountains too far&mdash;had returned late&mdash;and
+ finding her ladyship was removed from Castletown, had instantly followed
+ the family hither; but as the night-bell was rung, and the watch set, he
+ had deemed it more respectful to lodge for the night in the town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is well," said the Countess; "and, to do you justice, Julian, you are
+ seldom a truant neglecter of appointed hours, though, like the rest of the
+ youth of this age, you sometimes suffer your sports to consume too much of
+ time that should be spent otherwise. But for your friend Philip, he is an
+ avowed contemner of good order, and seems to find pleasure in wasting
+ time, even when he does not enjoy it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been enjoying my time just now at least," said the Earl, rising
+ from table, and picking his teeth carelessly. "These fresh mullets are
+ delicious, and so is the Lachrymæ Christi. I pray you to sit down to
+ breakfast, Julian, and partake the goods my royal foresight has provided.
+ Never was King of Man nearer being left to the mercy of the execrable
+ brandy of his dominions. Old Griffiths would never, in the midst of our
+ speedy retreat of last night, have had sense enough to secure a few
+ flasks, had I not given him a hint on that important subject. But presence
+ of mind amid danger and tumult, is a jewel I have always possessed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish, then, Philip, you would exert it to better purpose," said the
+ Countess, half smiling, half displeased; for she doated upon her son with
+ all a mother's fondness, even when she was most angry with him for being
+ deficient in the peculiar and chivalrous disposition which had
+ distinguished his father, and which was so analogous to her own romantic
+ and high-minded character. "Lend me your signet," she added with a sigh;
+ "for it were, I fear, vain to ask you to read over these despatches from
+ England, and execute the warrants which I have thought necessary to
+ prepare in consequence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My signet you shall command with all my heart, madam," said Earl Philip;
+ "but spare me the revision of what you are much more capable to decide
+ upon. I am, you know, a most complete <i>Roi fainéant</i>, and never once
+ interfered with my <i>Maire de palais</i> in her proceedings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess made signs to her little train-bearer, who immediately went
+ to seek for wax and a light, with which she presently returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile the Countess continued, addressing Peveril. "Philip does
+ himself less than justice. When you were absent, Julian (for if you had
+ been here I would have given you the credit of prompting your friend), he
+ had a spirited controversy with the Bishop, for an attempt to enforce
+ spiritual censures against a poor wretch, by confining her in the vault
+ under the chapel."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Beneath the only one of the four churches in Castle Rushin, which
+ is or was kept a little in repair, is a prison or dungeon, for
+ ecclesiastical offenders. "This," says Waldron, "is certainly one
+ of the most dreadful places that imagination can form; the sea
+ runs under it through the hollows of the rock with such a
+ continual roar, that you would think it were every moment breaking
+ in upon you, and over it are the vaults for burying the dead. The
+ stairs descending to this place of terrors are not above thirty,
+ but so steep and narrow, that they are very difficult to go down,
+ a child of eight or nine years not being able to pass them but
+ sideways."&mdash;WALDRON'S <i>Description of the Isle of Man, in his
+ Works</i>, p. 105, folio.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Do not think better of me than I deserve," said the Earl to Peveril; "my
+ mother has omitted to tell you the culprit was pretty Peggy of Ramsey, and
+ her crime what in Cupid's courts would have been called a peccadillo."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not make yourself worse than you are," replied Peveril, who observed
+ the Countess's cheek redden,&mdash;"you know you would have done as much
+ for the oldest and poorest cripple in the island. Why, the vault is under
+ the burial-ground of the chapel, and, for aught I know, under the ocean
+ itself, such a roaring do the waves make in its vicinity. I think no one
+ could remain there long, and retain his reason."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is an infernal hole," answered the Earl, "and I will have it built up
+ one day&mdash;that is full certain.&mdash;But hold&mdash;hold&mdash;for
+ God's sake, madam&mdash;what are you going to do?&mdash;Look at the seal
+ before you put it to the warrant&mdash;you will see it is a choice antique
+ cameo Cupid, riding on a flying fish&mdash;I had it for twenty zechins,
+ from Signor Furabosco at Rome&mdash;a most curious matter for an
+ antiquary, but which will add little faith to a Manx warrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My signet&mdash;my signet&mdash;Oh! you mean that with the three
+ monstrous legs, which I supposed was devised as the most preposterous
+ device, to represent our most absurd Majesty of Man.&mdash;The signet&mdash;I
+ have not seen it since I gave it to Gibbon, my monkey, to play with.&mdash;He
+ did whine for it most piteously&mdash;I hope he has not gemmed the green
+ breast of ocean with my symbol of sovereignty!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, by Heaven," said the Countess, trembling, and colouring deeply with
+ anger, "it was your father's signet! the last pledge which he sent, with
+ his love to me, and his blessing to thee, the night before they murdered
+ him at Bolton!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mother, dearest mother," said the Earl, startled out of his apathy, and
+ taking her hand, which he kissed tenderly, "I did but jest&mdash;the
+ signet is safe&mdash;Peveril knows that it is so.&mdash;Go fetch it,
+ Julian, for Heaven's sake&mdash;here are my keys&mdash;it is in the
+ left-hand drawer of my travelling cabinet&mdash;Nay, mother, forgive me&mdash;it
+ was but a <i>mauvaise plaisanterie</i>; only an ill-imagined jest,
+ ungracious, and in bad taste, I allow&mdash;but only one of Philip's
+ follies. Look at me, dearest mother, and forgive me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess turned her eyes towards him, from which the tears were fast
+ falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Philip," she said, "you try me too unkindly, and too severely. If times
+ are changed, as I have heard you allege&mdash;if the dignity of rank, and
+ the high feelings of honour and duty, are now drowned in giddy jests and
+ trifling pursuits, let <i>me</i> at least, who live secluded from all
+ others, die without perceiving the change which has happened, and, above
+ all, without perceiving it in mine own son. Let me not learn the general
+ prevalence of this levity, which laughs at every sense of dignity or duty,
+ through your personal disrespect&mdash;Let me not think that when I die&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak nothing of it, mother," said the Earl, interrupting her
+ affectionately. "It is true, I cannot promise to be all my father and his
+ fathers were; for we wear silk vests for their steel coats, and feathered
+ beavers for their crested helmets. But believe me, though to be an
+ absolute Palmerin of England is not in my nature, no son ever loved a
+ mother more dearly, or would do more to oblige her. And that you may own
+ this, I will forthwith not only seal the warrants, to the great
+ endangerment of my precious fingers, but also read the same from end to
+ end, as well as the despatches thereunto appertaining."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mother is easily appeased, even when most offended; and it was with an
+ expanding heart that the Countess saw her son's very handsome features,
+ while reading these papers, settle into an expression of deep seriousness,
+ such as they seldom wore. It seemed to her as if the family likeness to
+ his gallant but unfortunate father increased, when the expression of their
+ countenances became similar in gravity. The Earl had no sooner perused the
+ despatches, which he did with great attention, than he rose and said,
+ "Julian, come with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess looked surprised. "I was wont to share your father's
+ counsels, my son," she said; "but do not think that I wish to intrude
+ myself upon yours. I am too well pleased to see you assume the power and
+ the duty of thinking for yourself, which is what I have so long urged you
+ to do. Nevertheless, my experience, who have been so long administrator of
+ your authority in Man, might not, I think, be superfluous to the matter in
+ hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold me excused, dearest mother," said the Earl gravely. "The
+ interference was none of my seeking; had you taken your own course,
+ without consulting me, it had been well; but since I have entered on the
+ affair&mdash;and it appears sufficiently important&mdash;I must transact
+ it to the best of my own ability."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go, then, my son," said the Countess, "and may Heaven enlighten thee with
+ its counsel, since thou wilt have none of mine.&mdash;I trust that you,
+ Master Peveril, will remind him of what is fit for his own honour; and
+ that only a coward abandons his rights, and only a fool trusts his
+ enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl answered not, but, taking Peveril by the arm, led him up a
+ winding stair to his own apartment, and from thence into a projecting
+ turret, where, amidst the roar of waves and sea-mews' clang, he held with
+ him the following conversation:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peveril, it is well I looked into these warrants. My mother queens it at
+ such a rate as may cost me not only my crown, which I care little for, but
+ perhaps my head, which, though others may think little of, I would feel it
+ an inconvenience to be deprived of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What on earth is the matter?" said Peveril, with considerable anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems," said the Earl of Derby, "that old England who takes a
+ frolicsome brain-fever once every two or three years, for the benefit of
+ her doctors, and the purification of the torpid lethargy brought on by
+ peace and prosperity, is now gone stark staring mad on the subject of a
+ real or supposed Popish plot. I read one programme on the subject, by a
+ fellow called Oates, and thought it the most absurd foolery I ever
+ perused. But that cunning fellow Shaftesbury, and some others amongst the
+ great ones, having taken it up, and are driving on at such a rate as makes
+ harness crack, and horses smoke for it. The King, who has sworn never to
+ kiss the pillow his father went to sleep on, temporises, and gives way to
+ the current; the Duke of York, suspected and hated on account of his
+ religion, is about to be driven to the continent; several principal
+ Catholic nobles are in the Tower already; and the nation, like a bull at
+ Tutbury-running, is persecuted with so many inflammatory rumours and
+ pestilent pamphlets, that she has cocked her tail, flung up her heels,
+ taken the bit betwixt her teeth and is as furiously unmanageable as in the
+ year 1642."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All this you must have known already," said Peveril; "I wonder you told
+ me not of news so important."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would have taken long to tell," said the Earl; "moreover, I desired to
+ have you <i>solus</i>; thirdly, I was about to speak when my mother
+ entered; and, to conclude, it was no business of mine. But these
+ despatches of my politic mother's private correspondent put a new face on
+ the whole matter; for it seems some of the informers&mdash;a trade which,
+ having become a thriving one, is now pursued by many&mdash;have dared to
+ glance at the Countess herself as an agent in this same plot&mdash;ay, and
+ have found those that are willing enough to believe their report."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On mine honour," said Peveril, "you both take it with great coolness. I
+ think the Countess the more composed of the two; for, except her movement
+ hither, she exhibited no mark of alarm, and, moreover, seemed no way more
+ anxious to communicate the matter to your lordship than decency rendered
+ necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My good mother," said the Earl, "loves power, though it has cost her
+ dear. I wish I could truly say that my neglect of business is entirely
+ assumed in order to leave it in her hands, but that better motive combines
+ with natural indolence. But she seems to have feared I should not think
+ exactly like her in this emergency, and she was right in supposing so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How comes the emergency upon you?" said Julian; "and what form does the
+ danger assume?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Marry, thus it is," said the Earl: "I need not bid you remember the
+ affair of Colonel Christian. That man, besides his widow, who is possessed
+ of large property&mdash;Dame Christian of Kirk Truagh, whom you have often
+ heard of, and perhaps seen&mdash;left a brother called Edward Christian,
+ whom you never saw at all. Now this brother&mdash;but I dare say you know
+ all about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I, on my honour," said Peveril; "you know the Countess seldom or
+ never alludes to the subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," replied the Earl, "I believe in her heart she is something ashamed
+ of that gallant act of royalty and supreme jurisdiction, the consequences
+ of which maimed my estate so cruelly.&mdash;Well, cousin, this same Edward
+ Christian was one of the dempsters at the time, and, naturally enough, was
+ unwilling to concur in the sentence which adjudged his <i>aîné</i> to be
+ shot like a dog. My mother, who was then in high force, and not to be
+ controlled by any one, would have served the dempster with the same sauce
+ with which she dressed his brother, had he not been wise enough to fly
+ from the island. Since that time, the thing has slept on all hands; and
+ though we knew that Dempster Christian made occasionally secret visits to
+ his friends in the island, along with two or three other Puritans of the
+ same stamp, and particularly a prick-eared rogue, called Bridgenorth,
+ brother-in-law to the deceased, yet my mother, thank Heaven, has hitherto
+ had the sense to connive at them, though, for some reason or other, she
+ holds this Bridgenorth in especial disfavour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why," said Peveril, forcing himself to speak, in order to conceal the
+ very unpleasant surprise which he felt, "why does the Countess now depart
+ from so prudent a line of conduct?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must know the case is now different. The rogues are not satisfied
+ with toleration&mdash;they would have supremacy. They have found friends
+ in the present heat of the popular mind. My mother's name, and especially
+ that of her confessor, Aldrick the Jesuit, have been mentioned in this
+ beautiful maze of a plot, which if any such at all exists, she knows as
+ little of as you or I. However, she is a Catholic, and that is enough; and
+ I have little doubt, that if the fellows could seize on our scrap of a
+ kingdom here, and cut all our throats, they would have the thanks of the
+ present House of Commons, as willingly as old Christian had those of the
+ Rump, for a similar service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From whence did you receive all this information?" said Peveril, again
+ speaking, though by the same effort which a man makes who talks in his
+ sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aldrick has seen the Duke of York in secret, and his Royal Highness, who
+ wept while he confessed his want of power to protect his friends&mdash;and
+ it is no trifle will wring tears from him&mdash;told him to send us
+ information that we should look to our safety, for that Dempster Christian
+ and Bridgenorth were in the island, with secret and severe orders; that
+ they had formed a considerable party there, and were likely to be owned
+ and protected in anything they might undertake against us. The people of
+ Ramsey and Castletown are unluckily discontented about some new regulation
+ of the imposts; and to tell you the truth, though I thought yesterday's
+ sudden remove a whim of my mother's, I am almost satisfied they would have
+ blockaded us in Rushin Castle, where we could not have held out for lack
+ of provisions. Here we are better supplied, and, as we are on our guard,
+ it is likely the intended rising will not take place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is to be done in this emergency?" said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the very question, my gentle coz," answered the Earl. "My mother
+ sees but one way of going to work, and that is by royal authority. Here
+ are the warrants she had prepared, to search for, take, and apprehend the
+ bodies of Edward Christian and Robert&mdash;no, Ralph Bridgenorth, and
+ bring them to instant trial. No doubt, she would soon have had them in the
+ Castle court, with a dozen of the old matchlocks levelled against them&mdash;that
+ is her way of solving all sudden difficulties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in which, I trust, you do not acquiesce, my lord," answered Peveril,
+ whose thoughts instantly reverted to Alice, if they could ever be said to
+ be absent from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Truly I acquiesce in no such matter," said the Earl. "William Christian's
+ death cost me a fair half of my inheritance. I have no fancy to fall under
+ the displeasure of my royal brother, King Charles, for a new escapade of
+ the same kind. But how to pacify my mother, I know not. I wish the
+ insurrection would take place, and then, as we are better provided than
+ they can be, we might knock the knaves on the head; and yet, since they
+ began the fray, we should keep the law on our side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were it not better," said Peveril, "if by any means these men could be
+ induced to quit the island?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely," replied the Earl; "but that will be no easy matter&mdash;they
+ are stubborn on principle, and empty threats will not move them. This
+ stormblast in London is wind in their sails, and they will run their
+ length, you may depend on it. I have sent orders, however, to clap up the
+ Manxmen upon whose assistance they depended, and if I can find the two
+ worthies themselves, here are sloops enough in the harbour&mdash;I will
+ take the freedom to send them on a pretty distant voyage, and I hope
+ matters will be settled before they return to give an account of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a soldier belonging to the garrison approached the two
+ young men, with many bows and tokens of respect. "How now, friend?" said
+ the Earl to him. "Leave off thy courtesies, and tell thy business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man, who was a native islander, answered in Manx, that he had a letter
+ for his honour, Master Julian Peveril. Julian snatched the billet hastily,
+ and asked whence it came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was delivered to him by a young woman," the soldier replied, "who had
+ given him a piece of money to deliver it into Master Peveril's own hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art a lucky fellow, Julian," said the Earl. "With that grave brow of
+ thine, and thy character for sobriety and early wisdom, you set the girls
+ a-wooing, without waiting till they are asked; whilst I, their drudge and
+ vassal, waste both language and leisure, without getting a kind word or
+ look, far less a billet-doux."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This the young Earl said with a smile of conscious triumph, as in fact he
+ valued himself not a little upon the interest which he supposed himself to
+ possess with the fair sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the letter impressed on Peveril a different train of thoughts
+ from what his companion apprehended. It was in Alice's hand, and contained
+ these few words:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I fear what I am going to do is wrong; but I must see you. Meet me
+ at noon at Goddard Crovan's Stone, with as much secrecy as you
+ may."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The letter was signed only with the initials A. B.; but Julian had no
+ difficulty in recognising the handwriting, which he had often seen, and
+ which was remarkably beautiful. He stood suspended, for he saw the
+ difficulty and impropriety of withdrawing himself from the Countess and
+ his friend at this moment of impending danger; and yet, to neglect this
+ invitation was not to be thought of. He paused in the utmost perplexity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shall I read your riddle?" said the Earl. "Go where love calls you&mdash;I
+ will make an excuse to my mother&mdash;only, most grave anchorite, be
+ hereafter more indulgent to the failings of others than you have been
+ hitherto, and blaspheme not the power of the little deity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but, Cousin Derby&mdash;" said Peveril, and stopped short, for he
+ really knew not what to say. Secured himself by a virtuous passion from
+ the contagious influence of the time, he had seen with regret his noble
+ kinsman mingle more in its irregularities than he approved of, and had
+ sometimes played the part of a monitor. Circumstances seemed at present to
+ give the Earl a right of retaliation. He kept his eye fixed on his friend,
+ as if he waited till he should complete his sentence, and at length
+ exclaimed, "What! cousin, quite <i>à-la-mort!</i> Oh, most judicious
+ Julian! Oh, most precise Peveril! have you bestowed so much wisdom on me
+ that you have none left for yourself? Come, be frank&mdash;tell me name
+ and place&mdash;or say but the colour of the eyes of the most emphatic she&mdash;or
+ do but let me have the pleasure to hear thee say, 'I love!'&mdash;confess
+ one touch of human frailty&mdash;conjugate the verb <i>amo</i>, and I will
+ be a gentle schoolmaster, and you shall have, as father Richards used to
+ say, when we were under his ferule, '<i>licentia exeundi</i>.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Enjoy your pleasant humour at my expense, my lord," said Peveril; "I
+ fairly will confess thus much, that I would fain, if it consisted with my
+ honour and your safety, have two hours at my own disposal; the more
+ especially as the manner in which I shall employ them may much concern the
+ safety of the island."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very likely, I dare say," answered the Earl, still laughing. "No doubt
+ you are summoned out by some Lady Politic Wouldbe of the isle, to talk
+ over some of the breast-laws: but never mind&mdash;go, and go speedily,
+ that you may return as quickly as possible. I expect no immediate
+ explosion of this grand conspiracy. When the rogues see us on our guard,
+ they will be cautious how they break out. Only, once more make haste."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril thought this last advice was not to be neglected; and, glad to
+ extricate himself from the raillery of his cousin, walked down towards the
+ gate of the Castle, meaning to cross over to the village, and there take
+ horse at the Earl's stables, for the place of rendezvous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ <i>Acasto.</i>&mdash;Can she not speak?
+ <i>Oswald.</i>&mdash;If speech be only in accented sounds,
+ Framed by the tongue and lips, the maiden's dumb;
+ But if by quick and apprehensive look,
+ By motion, sign, and glance, to give each meaning,
+ Express as clothed in language, be term'd speech,
+ She hath that wondrous faculty; for her eyes,
+ Like the bright stars of heaven, can hold discourse,
+ Though it be mute and soundless.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the head of the first flight of steps which descended towards the
+ difficult and well-defended entrance of the Castle of Holm-Peel, Peveril
+ was met and stopped by the Countess's train-bearer. This little creature&mdash;for
+ she was of the least and slightest size of womankind&mdash;was exquisitely
+ well formed in all her limbs, which the dress she usually wore (a green
+ silk tunic, of a peculiar form) set off to the best advantage. Her face
+ was darker than the usual hue of Europeans; and the profusion of long and
+ silken hair, which, when she undid the braids in which she commonly wore
+ it, fell down almost to her ankles, was also rather a foreign attribute.
+ Her countenance resembled a most beautiful miniature; and there was a
+ quickness, decision, and fire, in Fenella's look, and especially in her
+ eyes, which was probably rendered yet more alert and acute, because,
+ through the imperfection of her other organs, it was only by sight that
+ she could obtain information of what passed around her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pretty mute was mistress of many little accomplishments, which the
+ Countess had caused to be taught to her in compassion for her forlorn
+ situation, and which she learned with the most surprising quickness. Thus,
+ for example, she was exquisite in the use of the needle, and so ready and
+ ingenious a draughtswoman, that, like the ancient Mexicans, she sometimes
+ made a hasty sketch with her pencil the means of conveying her ideas,
+ either by direct or emblematical representation. Above all, in the art of
+ ornamental writing, much studied at that period, Fenella was so great a
+ proficient, as to rival the fame of Messrs. Snow, Shelley, and other
+ masters of the pen, whose copybooks, preserved in the libraries of the
+ curious, still show the artists smiling on the frontispiece in all the
+ honours of flowing gowns and full-bottomed wigs, to the eternal glory of
+ caligraphy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little maiden had, besides these accomplishments, much ready wit and
+ acuteness of intellect. With Lady Derby, and with the two young gentlemen,
+ she was a great favourite, and used much freedom in conversing with them,
+ by means of a system of signs which had been gradually established amongst
+ them, and which served all ordinary purposes of communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though happy in the indulgence and favour of her mistress, from whom
+ indeed she was seldom separate, Fenella was by no means a favourite with
+ the rest of the household. In fact, it seemed that her temper, exasperated
+ perhaps by a sense of her misfortune, was by no means equal to her
+ abilities. She was very haughty in her demeanour, even towards the upper
+ domestics, who in that establishment were of a much higher rank and better
+ birth than in the families of the nobility in general. These often
+ complained, not only of her pride and reserve, but of her high and
+ irascible temper and vindictive disposition. Her passionate propensity had
+ been indeed idly encouraged by the young men, and particularly by the
+ Earl, who sometimes amused himself with teasing her, that he might enjoy
+ the various singular motions and murmurs by which she expressed her
+ resentment. Towards him, these were of course only petulant and whimsical
+ indications of pettish anger. But when she was angry with others of
+ inferior degree&mdash;before whom she did not control herself&mdash;the
+ expression of her passion, unable to display itself in language, had
+ something even frightful, so singular were the tones, contortions, and
+ gestures, to which she had recourse. The lower domestics, to whom she was
+ liberal almost beyond her apparent means, observed her with much deference
+ and respect, but much more from fear than from any real attachment; for
+ the caprices of her temper displayed themselves even in her gifts; and
+ those who most frequently shared her bounty, seemed by no means assured of
+ the benevolence of the motives which dictated her liberality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these peculiarities led to a conclusion consonant with Manx
+ superstition. Devout believers in all the legends of fairies so dear to
+ the Celtic tribes, the Manx people held it for certainty that the elves
+ were in the habit of carrying off mortal children before baptism, and
+ leaving in the cradle of the new born babe one of their own brood, which
+ was almost always imperfect in some one or other of the organs proper to
+ humanity. Such a being they conceived Fenella to be; and the smallness of
+ her size, her dark complexion, her long locks of silken hair, the
+ singularity of her manners and tones, as well as the caprices of her
+ temper, were to their thinking all attributes of the irritable, fickle,
+ and dangerous race from which they supposed her to be sprung. And it
+ seemed, that although no jest appeared to offend her more than when Lord
+ Derby called her in sport the Elfin Queen, or otherwise alluded to her
+ supposed connection with "the pigmy folk," yet still her perpetually
+ affecting to wear the colour of green, proper to the fairies, as well as
+ some other peculiarities, seemed voluntarily assumed by her, in order to
+ countenance the superstition, perhaps because it gave her more authority
+ among the lower orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many were the tales circulated respecting the Countess's <i>Elf</i>, as
+ Fenella was currently called in the island; and the malcontents of the
+ stricter persuasion were convinced, that no one but a Papist and a
+ malignant would have kept near her person a creature of such doubtful
+ origin. They conceived that Fenella's deafness and dumbness were only
+ towards those of this world, and that she had been heard talking, and
+ singing, and laughing most elvishly, with the invisibles of her own race.
+ They alleged, also, that she had a <i>Double</i>, a sort of apparition
+ resembling her, which slept in the Countess's ante-room, or bore her
+ train, or wrought in her cabinet, while the real Fenella joined the song
+ of the mermaids on the moonlight sands, or the dance of the fairies in the
+ haunted valley of Glenmoy, or on the heights of Snawfell and Barool. The
+ sentinels, too, would have sworn they had seen the little maiden trip past
+ them in their solitary night walks, without their having it in their power
+ to challenge her, any more than if they had been as mute as herself. To
+ all this mass of absurdities the better informed paid no more attention
+ than to the usual idle exaggerations of the vulgar, which so frequently
+ connect that which is unusual with what is supernatural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in form and habits, was the little female, who, holding in her hand
+ a small old-fashioned ebony rod, which might have passed for a divining
+ wand, confronted Julian on the top of the flight of steps which led down
+ the rock from the Castle court. We ought to observe, that as Julian's
+ manner to the unfortunate girl had been always gentle, and free from those
+ teasing jests in which his gay friend indulged, with less regard to the
+ peculiarity of her situation and feelings; so Fenella, on her part, had
+ usually shown much greater deference to him than to any of the household,
+ her mistress, the Countess, always excepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the present occasion, planting herself in the very midst of the narrow
+ descent, so as to make it impossible for Peveril to pass by her, she
+ proceeded to put him to the question by a series of gestures, which we
+ will endeavour to describe. She commenced by extending her hand slightly,
+ accompanied with the sharp inquisitive look which served her as a note of
+ interrogation. This was meant as an inquiry whether he was going to a
+ distance. Julian, in reply, extended his arm more than half, to intimate
+ that the distance was considerable. Fenella looked grave, shook her head,
+ and pointed to the Countess's window, which was visible from the spot
+ where they stood. Peveril smiled, and nodded, to intimate there was no
+ danger in quitting her mistress for a short space. The little maiden next
+ touched an eagle's feather which she wore in her hair, a sign which she
+ usually employed to designate the Earl, and then looked inquisitively at
+ Julian once more, as if to say, "Goes he with you?" Peveril shook his
+ head, and, somewhat wearied by these interrogatories, smiled, and made an
+ effort to pass. Fenella frowned, struck the end of her ebony rod
+ perpendicularly on the ground, and again shook her head, as if opposing
+ his departure. But finding that Julian persevered in his purpose, she
+ suddenly assumed another and milder mood, held him by the skirt of his
+ cloak with one hand, and raised the other in an imploring attitude, whilst
+ every feature of her lively countenance was composed into the like
+ expression of supplication; and the fire of the large dark eyes, which
+ seemed in general so keen and piercing as almost to over-animate the
+ little sphere to which they belonged, seemed quenched, for the moment, in
+ the large drops which hung on her long eyelashes, but without falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril was far from being void of sympathy towards the poor girl,
+ whose motives in opposing his departure appeared to be her affectionate
+ apprehension for her mistress's safety. He endeavoured to reassure by
+ smiles, and, at the same time, by such signs as he could devise, to
+ intimate that there was no danger, and that he would return presently; and
+ having succeeded in extricating his cloak from her grasp, and in passing
+ her on the stair, he began to descend the steps as speedily as he could,
+ in order to avoid farther importunity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with activity much greater than his, the dumb maiden hastened to
+ intercept him, and succeeded by throwing herself, at the imminent risk of
+ life and limb, a second time into the pass which he was descending, so as
+ to interrupt his purpose. In order to achieve this, she was obliged to let
+ herself drop a considerable height from the wall of a small flanking
+ battery, where two patereroes were placed to scour the pass, in case any
+ enemy could have mounted so high. Julian had scarce time to shudder at her
+ purpose, as he beheld her about to spring from the parapet, ere, like a
+ thing of gossamer, she stood light and uninjured on the rocky platform
+ below. He endeavoured, by the gravity of his look and gesture, to make her
+ understand how much he blamed her rashness; but the reproof, though
+ obviously quite intelligible, was entirely thrown away. A hasty wave of
+ her hand intimated how she contemned the danger and the remonstrance;
+ while, at the same time, she instantly resumed, with more eagerness than
+ before, the earnest and impressive gestures by which she endeavoured to
+ detain him in the fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was somewhat staggered by her pertinacity. "Is it possible," he
+ thought, "that any danger can approach the Countess, of which this poor
+ maiden has, by the extreme acuteness of her observation, obtained
+ knowledge which has escaped others?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He signed to Fenella hastily to give him the tablets and the pencil which
+ she usually carried with her, and wrote on them the question, "Is there
+ danger near to your mistress, that you thus stop me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is danger around the Countess," was the answer instantly written
+ down; "but there is much more in your own purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How?&mdash;what?&mdash;what know you of my purpose?" said Julian,
+ forgetting, in his surprise, that the party he addressed had neither ear
+ to comprehend, nor voice to reply to uttered language. She had regained
+ her book in the meantime, and sketched, with a rapid pencil, on one of the
+ leaves, a scene which she showed to Julian. To his infinite surprise he
+ recognised Goddard Crovan's Stone, a remarkable monument, of which she had
+ given the outline with sufficient accuracy; together with a male and
+ female figure, which, though only indicated by a few slight touches of the
+ pencil, bore yet, he thought, some resemblance to himself and Alice
+ Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had gazed on the sketch for an instant with surprise, Fenella took
+ the book from his hand, laid her finger upon the drawing, and slowly and
+ sternly shook her head, with a frown which seemed to prohibit the meeting
+ which was there represented. Julian, however, though disconcerted, was in
+ no shape disposed to submit to the authority of his monitress. By whatever
+ means she, who so seldom stirred from the Countess's apartment, had become
+ acquainted with a secret which he thought entirely his own, he esteemed it
+ the more necessary to keep the appointed rendezvous, that he might learn
+ from Alice, if possible, how the secret had transpired. He had also formed
+ the intention of seeking out Bridgenorth; entertaining an idea that a
+ person so reasonable and calm as he had shown himself in their late
+ conference, might be persuaded, when he understood that the Countess was
+ aware of his intrigues, to put an end to her danger and his own, by
+ withdrawing from the island. And could he succeed in this point, he should
+ at once, he thought, render a material benefit to the father of his
+ beloved Alice&mdash;remove the Earl from his state of anxiety&mdash;save
+ the Countess from a second time putting her feudal jurisdiction in
+ opposition to that of the Crown of England&mdash;and secure quiet
+ possession of the island to her and her family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this scheme of mediation on his mind, Peveril determined to rid
+ himself of the opposition of Fenella to his departure, with less ceremony
+ than he had hitherto observed towards her; and suddenly lifting up the
+ damsel in his arms before she was aware of his purpose, he turned about,
+ set her down on the steps above him, and began to descend the pass himself
+ as speedily as possible. It was then that the dumb maiden gave full course
+ to the vehemence of her disposition; and clapping her hands repeatedly,
+ expressed her displeasure in sound, or rather a shriek, so extremely
+ dissonant, that it resembled more the cry of a wild creature, than
+ anything which could have been uttered by female organs. Peveril was so
+ astounded at the scream as it rung through the living rocks, that he could
+ not help stopping and looking back in alarm, to satisfy himself that she
+ had not sustained some injury. He saw her, however, perfectly safe, though
+ her face seemed inflamed and distorted with passion. She stamped at him
+ with her foot, shook her clenched hand, and turning her back upon him,
+ without further adieu, ran up the rude steps as lightly as a kid could
+ have tripped up that rugged ascent, and paused for a moment at the summit
+ of the first flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian could feel nothing but wonder and compassion for the impotent
+ passion of a being so unfortunately circumstanced, cut off, as it were,
+ from the rest of mankind, and incapable of receiving in childhood that
+ moral discipline which teaches us mastery of our wayward passions, ere yet
+ they have attained their meridian strength and violence. He waved his hand
+ to her, in token of amicable farewell; but she only replied by once more
+ menacing him with her little hand clenched; and then ascending the rocky
+ staircase with almost preternatural speed, was soon out of sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, on his part, gave no farther consideration to her conduct or its
+ motives, but hastening to the village on the mainland, where the stables
+ of the Castle were situated, he again took his palfrey from the stall, and
+ was soon mounted and on his way to the appointed place of rendezvous, much
+ marvelling, as he ambled forward with speed far greater than was promised
+ by the diminutive size of the animal he was mounted on, what could have
+ happened to produce so great a change in Alice's conduct towards him, that
+ in place of enjoining his absence as usual, or recommending his departure
+ from the island, she should now voluntarily invite him to a meeting. Under
+ impression of the various doubts which succeeded each other in his
+ imagination, he sometimes pressed Fairy's sides with his legs; sometimes
+ laid his holly rod lightly on her neck; sometimes incited her by his
+ voice, for the mettled animal needed neither whip nor spur, and achieved
+ the distance betwixt the Castle of Holm-Peel and the stone at Goddard
+ Crovan, at the rate of twelve miles within the hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The monumental stone, designed to commemorate some feat of an ancient King
+ of Man, which had been long forgotten, was erected on the side of a narrow
+ lonely valley, or rather glen, secluded from observation by the steepness
+ of its banks, upon a projection of which stood the tall, shapeless,
+ solitary rock, frowning, like a shrouded giant, over the brawling of the
+ small rivulet which watered the ravine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ This a love-meeting? See the maiden mourns,
+ And the sad suitor bends his looks on earth.
+ There's more hath pass'd between them than belongs
+ To Love's sweet sorrows.
+ &mdash;OLD PLAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As he approached the monument of Goddard Crovan, Julian cast many an
+ anxious glance to see whether any object visible beside the huge grey
+ stone should apprise him, whether he was anticipated, at the appointed
+ place of rendezvous, by her who had named it. Nor was it long before the
+ flutter of a mantle, which the breeze slightly waved, and the motion
+ necessary to replace it upon the wearer's shoulders, made him aware that
+ Alice had already reached their place of meeting. One instant set the
+ palfrey at liberty, with slackened girths and loosened reins, to pick its
+ own way through the dell at will; another placed Julian Peveril by the
+ side of Alice Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Alice should extend her hand to her lover, as with the ardour of a
+ young greyhound he bounded over the obstacles of the rugged path, was as
+ natural as that Julian, seizing on the hand so kindly stretched out,
+ should devour it with kisses, and, for a moment or two, without
+ reprehension; while the other hand, which should have aided in the
+ liberation of its fellow, served to hide the blushes of the fair owner.
+ But Alice, young as she was, and attached to Julian by such long habits of
+ kindly intimacy, still knew well how to subdue the tendency of her own
+ treacherous affections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is not right," she said, extricating her hand from Julian's grasp,
+ "this is not right, Julian. If I have been too rash in admitting such a
+ meeting as the present, it is not you that should make me sensible of my
+ folly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril's mind had been early illuminated with that touch of
+ romantic fire which deprives passion of selfishness, and confers on it the
+ high and refined tone of generous and disinterested devotion. He let go
+ the hand of Alice with as much respect as he could have paid to that of a
+ princess; and when she seated herself upon a rocky fragment, over which
+ nature had stretched a cushion of moss and lichen, interspersed with wild
+ flowers, backed with a bush of copsewood, he took his place beside her,
+ indeed, but at such distance as to intimate the duty of an attendant, who
+ was there only to hear and to obey. Alice Bridgenorth became more assured
+ as she observed the power which she possessed over her lover; and the
+ self-command which Peveril exhibited, which other damsels in her situation
+ might have judged inconsistent with intensity of passion, she appreciated
+ more justly, as a proof of his respectful and disinterested sincerity. She
+ recovered, in addressing him, the tone of confidence which rather belonged
+ to the scenes of their early acquaintance, than to those which had passed
+ betwixt them since Peveril had disclosed his affection, and thereby had
+ brought restraint upon their intercourse.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0093m.jpg" alt="0093m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0093.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ "Julian," she said, "your visit of yesterday&mdash;your most ill-timed
+ visit, has distressed me much. It has misled my father&mdash;it has
+ endangered you. At all risks, I resolved that you should know this, and
+ blame me not if I have taken a bold and imprudent step in desiring this
+ solitary interview, since you are aware how little poor Deborah is to be
+ trusted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you fear misconstruction from me, Alice?" replied Peveril warmly;
+ "from me, whom you have thus highly favoured&mdash;thus deeply obliged?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cease your protestations, Julian," answered the maiden; "they do but make
+ me the more sensible that I have acted over boldly. But I did for the
+ best.&mdash;I could not see you whom I have known so long&mdash;you, who
+ say you regard me with partiality&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Say</i> that I regard you with partiality!" interrupted Peveril in his
+ turn. "Ah, Alice, with a cold and doubtful phrase you have used to express
+ the most devoted, the most sincere affection!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then," said Alice sadly, "we will not quarrel about words; but do
+ not again interrupt me.&mdash;I could not, I say, see you, who, I believe,
+ regard me with sincere though vain and fruitless attachment, rush
+ blindfold into a snare, deceived and seduced by those very feelings
+ towards me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand you not, Alice," said Peveril; "nor can I see any danger to
+ which I am at present exposed. The sentiments which your father has
+ expressed towards me, are of a nature irreconcilable with hostile
+ purposes. If he is not offended with the bold wishes I may have formed,&mdash;and
+ his whole behaviour shows the contrary,&mdash;I know not a man on earth
+ from whom I have less cause to apprehend any danger or ill-will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father," said Alice, "means well by his country, and well by you; yet
+ I sometimes fear he may rather injure than serve his good cause; and still
+ more do I dread, that in attempting to engage you as an auxiliary, he may
+ forget those ties which ought to bind you, and I am sure which will bind
+ you, to a different line of conduct from his own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You lead me into still deeper darkness, Alice," answered Peveril. "That
+ your father's especial line of politics differs widely from mine, I know
+ well; but how many instances have occurred, even during the bloody scenes
+ of civil warfare, of good and worthy men laying the prejudice of party
+ affections aside, and regarding each other with respect, and even with
+ friendly attachment, without being false to principle on either side?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be so," said Alice; "but such is not the league which my father
+ desires to form with you, and that to which he hopes your misplaced
+ partiality towards his daughter may afford a motive for your forming with
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is it," said Peveril, "which I would refuse, with such a
+ prospect before me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treachery and dishonour!" replied Alice; "whatever would render you
+ unworthy of the poor boon at which you aim&mdash;ay, were it more
+ worthless than I confess it to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would your father," said Peveril, as he unwillingly received the
+ impression which Alice designed to convey,&mdash;"would he, whose views of
+ duty are so strict and severe&mdash;would he wish to involve me in aught,
+ to which such harsh epithets as treachery and dishonour can be applied
+ with the lightest shadow of truth?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not mistake me, Julian," replied the maiden; "my father is incapable
+ of requesting aught of you that is not to his thinking just and
+ honourable; nay, he conceives that he only claims from you a debt, which
+ is due as a creature to the Creator, and as a man to your fellow-men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So guarded, where can be the danger of our intercourse?" replied Julian.
+ "If he be resolved to require, and I determined to accede to, nothing save
+ what flows from conviction, what have I to fear, Alice? And how is my
+ intercourse with your father dangerous? Believe not so; his speech has
+ already made impression on me in some particulars, and he listened with
+ candour and patience to the objections which I made occasionally. You do
+ Master Bridgenorth less than justice in confounding him with the
+ unreasonable bigots in policy and religion, who can listen to no argument
+ but what favours their own prepossessions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Julian," replied Alice; "it is you who misjudge my father's powers, and
+ his purpose with respect to you, and who overrate your own powers of
+ resistance. I am but a girl, but I have been taught by circumstances to
+ think for myself, and to consider the character of those around me. My
+ father's views in ecclesiastical and civil policy are as dear to him as
+ the life which he cherishes only to advance them. They have been, with
+ little alteration, his companions through life. They brought him at one
+ period into prosperity, and when they suited not the times, he suffered
+ for having held them. They have become not only a part, but the very
+ dearest part, of his existence. If he shows them not to you at first, in
+ the flexible strength which they have acquired over his mind, do not
+ believe that they are the less powerful. He who desires to make converts,
+ must begin by degrees. But that he should sacrifice to an inexperienced
+ young man, whose ruling motive he will term a childish passion, any part
+ of those treasured principles which he has maintained through good repute
+ and bad repute&mdash;Oh, do not dream of such an impossibility! If you
+ meet at all, you must be the wax, he the seal&mdash;you must receive, he
+ must bestow, an absolute impression."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That," said Peveril, "were unreasonable. I will frankly avow to you,
+ Alice, that I am not a sworn bigot to the opinions entertained by my
+ father, much as I respect his person. I could wish that our Cavaliers, or
+ whatsoever they are pleased to call themselves, would have some more
+ charity towards those who differ from them in Church and State. But to
+ hope that I would surrender the principles in which I have lived, were to
+ suppose me capable of deserting my benefactress, and breaking the hearts
+ of my parents."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Even so I judged of you," answered Alice; "and therefore I asked this
+ interview, to conjure that you will break off all intercourse with our
+ family&mdash;return to your parents&mdash;or, what will be much safer,
+ visit the continent once more, and abide till God send better days to
+ England, for these are black with many a storm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And can you bid me go, Alice?" said the young man, taking her unresisting
+ hand; "can you bid me go, and yet own an interest in my fate?&mdash;Can
+ you bid me, for fear of dangers, which, as a man, as a gentleman, and a
+ loyal one, I am bound to show my face to, meanly abandon my parents, my
+ friends, my country&mdash;suffer the existence of evils which I might aid
+ to prevent&mdash;forego the prospect of doing such little good as might be
+ in my power&mdash;fall from an active and honourable station, into the
+ condition of a fugitive and time-server&mdash;Can you bid me do all this,
+ Alice? Can you bid me do all this, and, in the same breath, bid farewell
+ for ever to you and happiness?&mdash;It is impossible&mdash;I cannot
+ surrender at once my love and my honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no remedy," said Alice, but she could not suppress a sigh while
+ she said so&mdash;"there is no remedy&mdash;none whatever. What we might
+ have been to each other, placed in more favourable circumstances, it
+ avails not to think of now; and, circumstanced as we are, with open war
+ about to break out betwixt our parents and friends, we can be but
+ well-wishers&mdash;cold and distant well-wishers, who must part on this
+ spot, and at this hour, never meet again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, by Heaven!" said Peveril, animated at the same time by his own
+ feelings, and by the sight of the emotions which his companion in vain
+ endeavoured to suppress,&mdash;"No, by Heaven!" he exclaimed, "we part not&mdash;Alice,
+ we part not. If I am to leave my native land, you shall be my companion in
+ my exile. What have you to lose?&mdash;Whom have you to abandon?&mdash;Your
+ father?&mdash;The good old cause, as it is termed, is dearer to him than a
+ thousand daughters; and setting him aside, what tie is there between you
+ and this barren isle&mdash;between my Alice and any spot of the British
+ dominions, where her Julian does not sit by her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O Julian," answered the maiden, "why make my duty more painful by
+ visionary projects, which you ought not to name, or I to listen to? Your
+ parents&mdash;my father&mdash;it cannot be!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fear not for my parents, Alice," replied Julian, and pressing close to
+ his companion's side, he ventured to throw his arm around her; "they love
+ me, and they will soon learn to love, in Alice, the only being on earth
+ who could have rendered their son happy. And for your own father, when
+ State and Church intrigues allow him to bestow a thought upon you, will he
+ not think that your happiness, your security, is better cared for when you
+ are my wife, than were you to continue under the mercenary charge of
+ yonder foolish woman? What could his pride desire better for you, than the
+ establishment which will one day be mine? Come then, Alice, and since you
+ condemn me to banishment&mdash;since you deny me a share in those stirring
+ achievements which are about to agitate England&mdash;come! do you&mdash;for
+ you only can&mdash;do you reconcile me to exile and inaction, and give
+ happiness to one, who, for your sake, is willing to resign honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It cannot&mdash;it cannot be," said Alice, faltering as she uttered her
+ negative. "And yet," she said, "how many in my place&mdash;left alone and
+ unprotected, as I am&mdash;But I must not&mdash;I must not&mdash;for your
+ sake, Julian, I must not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say not for my sake you must not, Alice," said Peveril eagerly; "this is
+ adding insult to cruelty. If you will do aught for my sake, you will say
+ yes; or you will suffer this dear head to drop on my shoulder&mdash;the
+ slightest sign&mdash;the moving of an eyelid, shall signify consent. All
+ shall be prepared within an hour; within another the priest shall unite
+ us; and within a third, we leave the isle behind us, and seek our fortunes
+ on the continent." But while he spoke, in joyful anticipation of the
+ consent which he implored, Alice found means to collect together her
+ resolution, which, staggered by the eagerness of her lover, the impulse of
+ her own affections, and the singularity of her situation,&mdash;seeming,
+ in her case, to justify what would have been most blamable in another,&mdash;had
+ more than half abandoned her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of a moment's deliberation was fatal to Julian's proposal. She
+ extricated herself from the arm which had pressed her to his side&mdash;arose,
+ and repelling his attempts to approach or detain her, said, with a
+ simplicity not unmingled with dignity, "Julian, I always knew I risked
+ much in inviting you to this meeting; but I did not guess that I could
+ have been so cruel to both to you and to myself, as to suffer you to
+ discover what you have to-day seen too plainly&mdash;that I love you
+ better than you love me. But since you do know it, I will show you that
+ Alice's love is disinterested&mdash;She will not bring an ignoble name
+ into your ancient house. If hereafter, in your line, there should arise
+ some who may think the claims of the hierarchy too exorbitant, the powers
+ of the crown too extensive, men shall not say these ideas were derived
+ from Alice Bridgenorth, their whig granddame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you speak thus, Alice?" said her lover. "Can you use such
+ expressions? and are you not sensible that they show plainly it is your
+ own pride, not regard for me, that makes you resist the happiness of
+ both?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, Julian; not so," answered Alice, with tears in her eyes; "it is
+ the command of duty to us both&mdash;of duty, which we cannot transgress,
+ without risking our happiness here and hereafter. Think what I, the cause
+ of all, should feel, when your father frowns, your mother weeps, your
+ noble friends stand aloof, and you, even you yourself, shall have made the
+ painful discovery, that you have incurred the contempt and resentment of
+ all to satisfy a boyish passion; and that the poor beauty, once sufficient
+ to mislead you, is gradually declining under the influence of grief and
+ vexation. This I will not risk. I see distinctly it is best we should here
+ break off and part; and I thank God, who gives me light enough to
+ perceive, and strength enough to withstand, your folly as well as my own.
+ Farewell, then, Julian; but first take the solemn advice which I called
+ you hither to impart to you:&mdash;Shun my father&mdash;you cannot walk in
+ his paths, and be true to gratitude and to honour. What he doth from pure
+ and honourable motives, you cannot aid him in, except upon the suggestion
+ of a silly and interested passion, at variance with all the engagements
+ you have formed at coming into life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Once more, Alice," answered Julian, "I understand you not. If a course of
+ action is good, it needs no vindication from the actor's motives&mdash;if
+ bad, it can derive none."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You cannot blind me with your sophistry, Julian," replied Alice
+ Bridgenorth, "any more than you can overpower me with your passion. Had
+ the patriarch destined his son to death upon any less ground than faith
+ and humble obedience to a divine commandment, he had meditated a murder
+ and not a sacrifice. In our late bloody and lamentable wars, how many drew
+ swords on either side, from the purest and most honourable motives? How
+ many from the culpable suggestions of ambition, self-seeking, and love of
+ plunder? Yet while they marched in the same ranks, and spurred their
+ horses at the same trumpet-sound, the memory of the former is dear to us
+ as patriots or loyalists&mdash;that of those who acted on mean or unworthy
+ promptings, is either execrated or forgotten. Once more, I warn you, avoid
+ my father&mdash;leave this island, which will be soon agitated by strange
+ incidents&mdash;while you stay, be on your guard&mdash;distrust everything&mdash;be
+ jealous of every one, even of those to whom it may seem almost impossible,
+ from circumstances, to attach a shadow of suspicion&mdash;trust not the
+ very stones of the most secret apartment in Holm-Peel, for that which hath
+ wings shall carry the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Alice broke off suddenly, and with a faint shriek; for, stepping from
+ behind the stunted copse which had concealed him, her father stood
+ unexpectedly before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader cannot have forgotten that this was the second time in which
+ the stolen interviews of the lovers had been interrupted by the unexpected
+ apparition of Major Bridgenorth. On this second occasion his countenance
+ exhibited anger mixed with solemnity, like that of the spirit to a
+ ghost-seer, whom he upbraids with having neglected a charge imposed at
+ their first meeting. Even his anger, however, produced no more violent
+ emotion than a cold sternness of manner in his speech and action. "I thank
+ you, Alice," he said to his daughter, "for the pains you have taken to
+ traverse my designs towards this young man, and towards yourself. I thank
+ you for the hints you have thrown out before my appearance, the suddenness
+ of which alone has prevented you from carrying your confidence to a pitch
+ which would have placed my life and that of others at the discretion of a
+ boy, who, when the cause of God and his country is laid before him, has
+ not leisure to think of them, so much is he occupied with such a baby-face
+ as thine." Alice, pale as death, continued motionless, with her eyes fixed
+ on the ground, without attempting the slightest reply to the ironical
+ reproaches of her father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you," continued Major Bridgenorth, turning from his daughter to her
+ lover,&mdash;"you sir, have well repaid the liberal confidence which I
+ placed in you with so little reserve. You I have to thank also for some
+ lessons, which may teach me to rest satisfied with the churl's blood which
+ nature has poured into my veins, and with the rude nurture which my father
+ allotted to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand you not, sir," replied Julian Peveril, who, feeling the
+ necessity of saying something, could not, at the moment, find anything
+ more fitting to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir, I thank you," said Major Bridgenorth, in the same cold
+ sarcastic tone, "for having shown me that breach of hospitality,
+ infringement of good faith, and such like peccadilloes, are not utterly
+ foreign to the mind and conduct of the heir of a knightly house of twenty
+ descents. It is a great lesson to me, sir: for hitherto I had thought with
+ the vulgar, that gentle manners went with gentle blood. But perhaps
+ courtesy is too chivalrous a quality to be wasted in intercourse with a
+ round-headed fanatic like myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Major Bridgenorth," said Julian, "whatever has happened in this interview
+ which may have displeased you, has been the result of feelings suddenly
+ and strongly animated by the crisis of the moment&mdash;nothing was
+ premeditated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not even your meeting, I suppose?" replied Bridgenorth, in the same cold
+ tone. "You, sir, wandered hither from Holm-Peel&mdash;my daughter strolled
+ forth from the Black Fort; and chance, doubtless, assigned you a meeting
+ by the stone of Goddard Crovan?&mdash;Young man, disgrace yourself by no
+ more apologies&mdash;they are worse than useless.&mdash;And you, maiden,
+ who, in your fear of losing your lover, could verge on betraying what
+ might have cost a father his life&mdash;begone to your home. I will talk
+ with you at more leisure, and teach you practically those duties which you
+ seem to have forgotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my honour, sir," said Julian, "your daughter is guiltless of all that
+ can offend you; she resisted every offer which the headstrong violence of
+ my passion urged me to press upon her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And, in brief," said Bridgenorth, "I am not to believe that you met in
+ this remote place of rendezvous by Alice's special appointment?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril knew not what to reply, and Bridgenorth again signed with his hand
+ to his daughter to withdraw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I obey you, father," said Alice, who had by this time recovered from the
+ extremity of her surprise,&mdash;"I obey you; but Heaven is my witness
+ that you do me more than injustice in suspecting me capable of betraying
+ your secrets, even had it been necessary to save my own life or that of
+ Julian. That you are walking in a dangerous path I well know; but you do
+ it with your eyes open, and are actuated by motives of which you can
+ estimate the worth and value. My sole wish was, that this young man should
+ not enter blindfold on the same perils; and I had a right to warn him,
+ since the feelings by which he is hoodwinked had a direct reference to
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis well, minion," said Bridgenorth, "you have spoken your say. Retire,
+ and let me complete the conference which you have so considerately
+ commenced."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I go, sir," said Alice.&mdash;"Julian, to you my last words are, and I
+ would speak them with my last breath&mdash;Farewell, and caution!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned from them, disappeared among the underwood, and was seen no
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A true specimen of womankind," said her father, looking after her, "who
+ would give the cause of nations up, rather than endanger a hair of her
+ lover's head.&mdash;You, Master Peveril, doubtless, hold her opinion, that
+ the best love is a safe love!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were danger alone in my way," said Peveril, much surprised at the
+ softened tone in which Bridgenorth made this observation, "there are few
+ things which I would not face to&mdash;to&mdash;deserve your good
+ opinion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or rather to win my daughter's hand," said Bridgenorth. "Well, young man,
+ one thing has pleased me in your conduct, though of much I have my reasons
+ to complain&mdash;one thing <i>has</i> pleased me. You have surmounted
+ that bounding wall of aristocratical pride, in which your father, and, I
+ suppose, his fathers, remained imprisoned, as in the precincts of a feudal
+ fortress&mdash;you have leaped over this barrier, and shown yourself not
+ unwilling to ally yourself with a family whom your father spurns as
+ low-born and ignoble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However favourable this speech sounded towards success in his suit, it so
+ broadly stated the consequences of that success so far as his parents were
+ concerned, that Julian felt it in the last degree difficult to reply. At
+ length, perceiving that Major Bridgenorth seemed resolved quietly to await
+ his answer, he mustered up courage to say, "The feelings which I entertain
+ towards your daughter, Master Bridgenorth, are of a nature to supersede
+ many other considerations, to which in any other case, I should feel it my
+ duty to give the most reverential attention. I will not disguise from you,
+ that my father's prejudices against such a match would be very strong; but
+ I devoutly believe they would disappear when he came to know the merit of
+ Alice Bridgenorth, and to be sensible that she only could make his son
+ happy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the meanwhile, you are desirous to complete the union which you
+ propose without the knowledge of your parents, and take the chance of
+ their being hereafter reconciled to it? So I understand, from the proposal
+ which you made but lately to my daughter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turns of human nature, and of human passion, are so irregular and
+ uncertain, that although Julian had but a few minutes before urged to
+ Alice a private marriage, and an elopement to the continent, as a measure
+ upon which the whole happiness of his life depended, the proposal seemed
+ not to him half so delightful when stated by the calm, cold, dictatorial
+ accents of her father. It sounded no longer like the dictates of ardent
+ passion, throwing all other considerations aside, but as a distinct
+ surrender of the dignity of his house to one who seemed to consider their
+ relative situation as the triumph of Bridgenorth over Peveril. He was mute
+ for a moment, in the vain attempt to shape his answer so as at once to
+ intimate acquiescence in what Bridgenorth stated, and a vindication of his
+ own regard for his parents, and for the honour of his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This delay gave rise to suspicion, and Bridgenorth's eye gleamed, and his
+ lip quivered while he gave vent to it. "Hark ye, young man&mdash;deal
+ openly with me in this matter, if you would not have me think you the
+ execrable villain who would have seduced an unhappy girl, under promises
+ which he never designed to fulfil. Let me but suspect this, and you shall
+ see, on the spot, how far your pride and your pedigree will preserve you
+ against the just vengeance of a father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do me wrong," said Peveril&mdash;"you do me infinite wrong, Major
+ Bridgenorth, I am incapable of the infamy which you allude to. The
+ proposal I made to your daughter was as sincere as ever was offered by man
+ to woman. I only hesitated, because you think it necessary to examine me
+ so very closely; and to possess yourself of all my purposes and
+ sentiments, in their fullest extent, without explaining to me the tendency
+ of your own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your proposal, then, shapes itself thus," said Bridgenorth:&mdash;"You
+ are willing to lead my only child into exile from her native country, to
+ give her a claim to kindness and protection from your family, which you
+ know will be disregarded, on condition I consent to bestow her hand on
+ you, with a fortune sufficient to have matched your ancestors, when they
+ had most reason to boast of their wealth. This, young man, seems no equal
+ bargain. And yet," he continued, after a momentary pause, "so little do I
+ value the goods of this world, that it might not be utterly beyond thy
+ power to reconcile me to the match which you have proposed to me, however
+ unequal it may appear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Show me but the means which can propitiate your favour, Major
+ Bridgenorth," said Peveril,&mdash;"for I will not doubt that they will be
+ consistent with my honour and duty&mdash;and you shall soon see how
+ eagerly I will obey your directions, or submit to your conditions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are summed in few words," answered Bridgenorth. "Be an honest man,
+ and the friend of your country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No one has ever doubted," replied Peveril, "that I am both."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me," replied the Major; "no one has, as yet, seen you show
+ yourself either. Interrupt me not&mdash;I question not your will to be
+ both; but you have hitherto neither had the light nor the opportunity
+ necessary for the display of your principles, or the service of your
+ country. You have lived when an apathy of mind, succeeding to the
+ agitations of the Civil War, had made men indifferent to state affairs,
+ and more willing to cultivate their own ease, than to stand in the gap
+ when the Lord was pleading with Israel. But we are Englishmen; and with us
+ such unnatural lethargy cannot continue long. Already, many of those who
+ most desired the return of Charles Stewart, regard him as a King whom
+ Heaven, importuned by our entreaties, gave to us in His anger. His
+ unlimited licence&mdash;and example so readily followed by the young and
+ the gay around him&mdash;has disgusted the minds of all sober and thinking
+ men. I had not now held conference with you in this intimate fashion, were
+ I not aware that you, Master Julian, were free from such stain of the
+ times. Heaven, that rendered the King's course of license fruitful, had
+ denied issue to his bed of wedlock; and in the gloomy and stern character
+ of his bigoted successor, we already see what sort of monarch shall
+ succeed to the crown of England. This is a critical period, at which it
+ necessarily becomes the duty of all men to step forward, each in his
+ degree, and aid in rescuing the country which gave us birth." Peveril
+ remembered the warning which he had received from Alice, and bent his eyes
+ on the ground, without returning any reply. "How is it, young man,"
+ continued Bridgenorth, after a pause&mdash;"so young as thou art, and
+ bound by no ties of kindred profligacy with the enemies of your country,
+ you can be already hardened to the claims she may form on you at this
+ crisis?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It were easy to answer you generally, Major Bridgenorth," replied Peveril&mdash;"It
+ were easy to say that my country cannot make a claim on me which I will
+ not promptly answer at the risk of lands and life. But in dealing thus
+ generally, we should but deceive each other. What is the nature of this
+ call? By whom is it to be sounded? And what are to be the results? for I
+ think you have already seen enough of the evils of civil war, to be wary
+ of again awakening its terrors in a peaceful and happy country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They that are drenched with poisonous narcotics," said the Major, "must
+ be awakened by their physicians, though it were with the sound of the
+ trumpet. Better that men should die bravely, with their arms in their
+ hands, like free-born Englishmen, than that they should slide into the
+ bloodless but dishonoured grave which slavery opens for its vassals&mdash;But
+ it is not of war that I was about to speak," he added, assuming a milder
+ tone. "The evils of which England now complains, are such as can be
+ remedied by the wholesome administration of her own laws, even in the
+ state in which they are still suffered to exist. Have these laws not a
+ right to the support of every individual who lives under them? Have they
+ not a right to yours?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he seemed to pause for an answer, Peveril replied, "I have to learn,
+ Major Bridgenorth, how the laws of England have become so far weakened as
+ to require such support as mine. When that is made plain to me, no man
+ will more willingly discharge the duty of a faithful liegeman to the law
+ as well as the King. But the laws of England are under the guardianship of
+ upright and learned judges, and of a gracious monarch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And of a House of Commons," interrupted Bridgenorth, "no longer doting
+ upon restored monarchy, but awakened, as with a peal of thunder, to the
+ perilous state of our religion, and of our freedom. I appeal to your own
+ conscience, Julian Peveril, whether this awakening hath not been in time,
+ since you yourself know, and none better than you, the secret but rapid
+ strides which Rome has made to erect her Dagon of idolatry within our
+ Protestant land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Julian seeing, or thinking he saw, the drift of Bridgenorth's
+ suspicions, hastened to exculpate himself from the thought of favouring
+ the Roman Catholic religion. "It is true," he said, "I have been educated
+ in a family where that faith is professed by one honoured individual, and
+ that I have since travelled in Popish countries; but even for these very
+ reasons I have seen Popery too closely to be friendly to its tenets. The
+ bigotry of the laymen&mdash;the persevering arts of the priesthood&mdash;the
+ perpetual intrigue for the extension of the forms without the spirit of
+ religion&mdash;the usurpation of that Church over the consciences of men&mdash;and
+ her impious pretensions to infallibility, are as inconsistent to my mind
+ as they can seem to yours, with common-sense, rational liberty, freedom of
+ conscience, and pure religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spoken like the son of your excellent mother," said Bridgenorth, grasping
+ his hand; "for whose sake I have consented to endure so much from your
+ house unrequited, even when the means of requital were in my own hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was indeed from the instructions of that excellent parent," said
+ Peveril, "that I was enabled, in my early youth, to resist and repel the
+ insidious attacks made upon my religious faith by the Catholic priests
+ into whose company I was necessarily thrown. Like her, I trust to live and
+ die in the faith of the reformed Church of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Church of England!" said Bridgenorth, dropping his young friend's
+ hand, but presently resuming it&mdash;"Alas! that Church, as now
+ constituted, usurps scarcely less than Rome herself upon men's consciences
+ and liberties; yet, out of the weakness of this half-reformed Church, may
+ God be pleased to work out deliverance to England, and praise to Himself.
+ I must not forget, that one whose services have been in the cause
+ incalculable, wears the garb of an English priest, and hath had Episcopal
+ ordination. It is not for us to challenge the instrument, so that our
+ escape is achieved from the net of the fowler. Enough, that I find thee
+ not as yet enlightened with the purer doctrine, but prepared to profit by
+ it when the spark shall reach thee. Enough, in especial, that I find thee
+ willing to uplift thy testimony to cry aloud and spare not, against the
+ errors and arts of the Church of Rome. But remember, what thou hast now
+ said, thou wilt soon be called upon to justify, in a manner the most
+ solemn&mdash;the most awful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What I have said," replied Julian Peveril, "being the unbiassed
+ sentiments of my heart, shall, upon no proper occasion, want the support
+ of my open avowal; and I think it strange you should doubt me so far."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I doubt thee not, my young friend," said Bridgenorth; "and I trust to see
+ that name rank high amongst those by whom the prey shall be rent from the
+ mighty. At present, thy prejudices occupy thy mind like the strong keeper
+ of the house mentioned in Scripture. But there shall come a stronger than
+ he, and make forcible entry, displaying on the battlements that sign of
+ faith in which alone there is found salvation.&mdash;Watch, hope, and
+ pray, that the hour may come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause in the conversation, which was first broken by Peveril.
+ "You have spoken to me in riddles, Major Bridgenorth; and I have asked you
+ for no explanation. Listen to a caution on my part, given with the most
+ sincere good-will. Take a hint from me, and believe it, though it is
+ darkly expressed. You are here&mdash;at least are believed to be here&mdash;on
+ an errand dangerous to the Lord of the island. That danger will be
+ retorted on yourself, if you make Man long your place of residence. Be
+ warned, and depart in time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And leave my daughter to the guardianship of Julian Peveril! Runs not
+ your counsel so, young man?" answered Bridgenorth. "Trust my safety,
+ Julian, to my own prudence. I have been accustomed to guide myself through
+ worse dangers than now environ me. But I thank you for your caution, which
+ I am willing to believe was at least partly disinterested."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do not, then, part in anger?" said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not in anger, my son," said Bridgenorth, "but in love and strong
+ affection. For my daughter, thou must forbear every thought of seeing her,
+ save through me. I accept not thy suit, neither do I reject it; only this
+ I intimate to you, that he who would be my son, must first show himself
+ the true and loving child of his oppressed and deluded country. Farewell;
+ do not answer me now, thou art yet in the gall of bitterness, and it may
+ be that strife (which I desire not) should fall between us. Thou shalt
+ hear of me sooner than thou thinkest for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shook Peveril heartily by the hand, and again bid him farewell, leaving
+ him under the confused and mingled impression of pleasure, doubt, and
+ wonder. Not a little surprised to find himself so far in the good graces
+ of Alice's father, that his suit was even favoured with a sort of negative
+ encouragement, he could not help suspecting, as well from the language of
+ the daughter as of the father, that Bridgenorth was desirous, as the price
+ of his favour, that he should adopt some line of conduct inconsistent with
+ the principles in which he had been educated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You need not fear, Alice," he said in his heart; "not even your hand
+ would I purchase by aught which resembled unworthy or truckling compliance
+ with tenets which my heart disowns; and well I know, were I mean enough to
+ do so, even the authority of thy father were insufficient to compel thee
+ to the ratification of so mean a bargain. But let me hope better things.
+ Bridgenorth, though strong-minded and sagacious, is haunted by the fears
+ of Popery, which are the bugbears of his sect. My residence in the family
+ of the Countess of Derby is more than enough to inspire him with
+ suspicions of my faith, from which, thank Heaven, I can vindicate myself
+ with truth and a good conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So thinking, he again adjusted the girths of his palfrey, replaced the bit
+ which he had slipped out of its mouth, that it might feed at liberty, and
+ mounting, pursued his way back to the Castle of Holm-Peel, where he could
+ not help fearing that something extraordinary might have happened in his
+ absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the old pile soon rose before him, serene, and sternly still, amid the
+ sleeping ocean. The banner, which indicated that the Lord of Man held
+ residence within its ruinous precincts, hung motionless by the
+ ensign-staff. The sentinels walked to and fro on their posts, and hummed
+ or whistled their Manx airs. Leaving his faithful companion, Fairy, in the
+ village as before, Julian entered the Castle, and found all within in the
+ same state of quietness and good order which external appearances had
+ announced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now rede me, rede me, brother dear,
+ Throughout Merry England,
+ Where will I find a messenger,
+ Betwixt us two to send.
+ &mdash;BALLAD OF KING ESTMERE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian's first encounter, after re-entering the Castle, was with its young
+ Lord, who received him with his usual kindness and lightness of humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thrice welcome, Sir Knight of Dames," said the Earl; "here you rove
+ gallantly, and at free will, through our dominions, fulfilling of
+ appointments, and achieving amorous adventures; while we are condemned to
+ sit in our royal halls, as dull and as immovable as if our Majesty was
+ carved on the stern of some Manx smuggling dogger, and christened the King
+ Arthur of Ramsey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, in that case you would take the sea," said Julian, "and so enjoy
+ travel and adventure enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, but suppose me wind-bound, or detained in harbour by a revenue pink,
+ or ashore, if you like it, and lying high and dry upon the sand. Imagine
+ the royal image in the dullest of all predicaments, and you have not
+ equalled mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am happy to hear, at least, that you have had no disagreeable
+ employment," said Julian; "the morning's alarm has blown over, I suppose?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In faith it has, Julian; and our close inquiries cannot find any cause
+ for the apprehended insurrection. That Bridgenorth is in the island seems
+ certain; but private affairs of consequence are alleged as the cause of
+ his visit; and I am not desirous to have him arrested unless I could prove
+ some malpractices against him and his companions. In fact, it would seem
+ we had taken the alarm too soon. My mother speaks of consulting you on the
+ subject, Julian; and I will not anticipate her solemn communication. It
+ will be partly apologetical, I suppose; for we begin to think our retreat
+ rather unroyal, and that, like the wicked, we have fled when no man
+ pursued. This idea afflicts my mother, who, as a Queen-Dowager, a
+ Queen-Regent, a heroine, and a woman in general, would be extremely
+ mortified to think that her precipitate retreat hither had exposed her to
+ the ridicule of the islanders; and she is disconcerted and out of humour
+ accordingly. In the meanwhile, my sole amusement has been the grimaces and
+ fantastic gestures of that ape Fenella, who is more out of humour, and
+ more absurd, in consequence, than you ever saw her. Morris says, it is
+ because you pushed her downstairs, Julian&mdash;how is that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Morris has misreported me," answered Julian; "I did but lift her <i>up</i>
+ stairs to be rid of her importunity; for she chose, in her way, to contest
+ my going abroad in such an obstinate manner, that I had no other mode of
+ getting rid of her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She must have supposed your departure, at a moment so critical, was
+ dangerous to the state of our garrison," answered the Earl; "it shows how
+ dearly she esteems my mother's safety, how highly she rates your prowess.
+ But, thank Heaven, there sounds the dinner-bell. I would the philosophers,
+ who find a sin and waste of time in good cheer, could devise us any
+ pastime half so agreeable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meal which the young Earl had thus longed for, as a means of consuming
+ a portion of the time which hung heavy on his hands, was soon over; as
+ soon, at least, as the habitual and stately formality of the Countess's
+ household permitted. She herself, accompanied by her gentlewomen and
+ attendants, retired early after the tables were drawn; and the young
+ gentlemen were left to their own company. Wine had, for the moment, no
+ charms for either; for the Earl was out of spirits from ennui, and
+ impatience of his monotonous and solitary course of life; and the events
+ of the day had given Peveril too much matter for reflection, to permit his
+ starting amusing or interesting topics of conversation. After having
+ passed the flask in silence betwixt them once or twice, they withdrew each
+ to a separate embrasure of the windows of the dining apartment, which,
+ such was the extreme thickness of the wall, were deep enough to afford a
+ solitary recess, separated, as it were, from the chamber itself. In one of
+ these sat the Earl of Derby, busied in looking over some of the new
+ publications which had been forwarded from London; and at intervals
+ confessing how little power or interest these had for him, by yawning
+ fearfully as he looked out on the solitary expanse of waters, which, save
+ from the flight of a flock of sea-gulls, or a solitary cormorant, offered
+ so little of variety to engage his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, on his part, held a pamphlet also in his hand, without giving, or
+ affecting to give it, even his occasional attention. His whole soul turned
+ upon the interview which he had had that day with Alice Bridgenorth, and
+ with her father; while he in vain endeavoured to form any hypothesis which
+ could explain to him why the daughter, to whom he had no reason to think
+ himself indifferent, should have been so suddenly desirous of their
+ eternal separation, while her father, whose opposition he so much dreaded,
+ seemed to be at least tolerant of his addresses. He could only suppose, in
+ explanation, that Major Bridgenorth had some plan in prospect, which it
+ was in his own power to farther or to impede; while, from the demeanour,
+ and indeed the language, of Alice, he had but too much reason to apprehend
+ that her father's favour could only be conciliated by something, on his
+ own part, approaching to dereliction of principle. But by no conjecture
+ which he could form, could he make the least guess concerning the nature
+ of that compliance, of which Bridgenorth seemed desirous. He could not
+ imagine, notwithstanding Alice had spoken of treachery, that her father
+ would dare to propose to him uniting in any plan by which the safety of
+ the Countess, or the security of her little kingdom of Man, was to be
+ endangered. This carried such indelible disgrace in the front, that he
+ could not suppose the scheme proposed to him by any who was not prepared
+ to defend with his sword, upon the spot, so flagrant an insult offered to
+ his honour. And such a proceeding was totally inconsistent with the
+ conduct of Major Bridgenorth in every other respect, besides his being too
+ calm and cold-blooded to permit of his putting a mortal affront upon the
+ son of his old neighbour, to whose mother he confessed so much of
+ obligation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Peveril in vain endeavoured to extract something like a probable
+ theory out of the hints thrown out by the father and by the daughter&mdash;not
+ without the additional and lover-like labour of endeavouring to reconcile
+ his passion to his honour and conscience&mdash;he felt something gently
+ pull him by the cloak. He unclasped his arms, which, in meditation, had
+ been folded on his bosom; and withdrawing his eyes from the vacant
+ prospect of sea-coast and sea which they perused, without much
+ consciousness upon what they rested, he beheld beside him the little dumb
+ maiden, the elfin Fenella. She was seated on a low cushion or stool, with
+ which she had nestled close to Peveril's side, and had remained there for
+ a short space of time, expecting, no doubt, he would become conscious of
+ her presence; until, tired of remaining unnoticed, she at length solicited
+ his attention in the manner which we have described. Startled out of his
+ reverie by this intimation of her presence, he looked down, and could not,
+ without interest, behold this singular and helpless being.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0231m.jpg" alt="0231m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0231.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Her hair was unloosened, and streamed over her shoulders in such length,
+ that much of it lay upon the ground, and in such quantity, that it formed
+ a dark veil, or shadow, not only around her face, but over her whole
+ slender and minute form. From the profusion of her tresses looked forth
+ her small and dark, but well-formed features, together with the large and
+ brilliant black eyes; and her whole countenance was composed into the
+ imploring look of one who is doubtful of the reception she is about to
+ meet with from a valued friend, while she confesses a fault, pleads an
+ apology, or solicits a reconciliation. In short, the whole face was so
+ much alive with expression, that Julian, though her aspect was so familiar
+ to him, could hardly persuade himself but that her countenance was
+ entirely new. The wild, fantastic, elvish vivacity of the features, seemed
+ totally vanished, and had given place to a sorrowful, tender, and pathetic
+ cast of countenance, aided by the expression of the large dark eyes,
+ which, as they were turned up towards Julian, glistened with moisture,
+ that, nevertheless, did not overflow the eyelids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conceiving that her unwonted manner arose from a recollection of the
+ dispute which had taken place betwixt them in the morning, Peveril was
+ anxious to restore the little maiden's gaiety, by making her sensible that
+ there dwelt on his mind no unpleasing recollection of their quarrel. He
+ smiled kindly, and shook her hand in one of his; while, with the
+ familiarity of one who had known her from childhood, he stroked down her
+ long dark tresses with the other. She stooped her head, as if ashamed,
+ and, at the same time, gratified with his caresses&mdash;and he was thus
+ induced to continue them, until, under the veil of her rich and abundant
+ locks, he suddenly felt his other hand, which she still held in hers,
+ slightly touched with her lips, and, at the same time, moistened with a
+ tear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once, and for the first time in his life, the danger of being
+ misinterpreted in his familiarity with a creature to whom the usual modes
+ of explanation were a blank, occurred to Julian's mind; and, hastily
+ withdrawing his hand, and changing his posture, he asked her, by a sign
+ which custom had rendered familiar, whether she brought any message to him
+ from the Countess. She started up, and arranged herself in her seat with
+ the rapidity of lightning; and, at the same moment, with one turn of her
+ hand, braided her length of locks into a natural head-dress of the most
+ beautiful kind. There was, indeed, when she looked up, a blush still
+ visible on her dark features; but their melancholy and languid expression
+ had given place to that of wild and restless vivacity, which was most
+ common to them. Her eyes gleamed with more than their wonted fire, and her
+ glances were more piercingly wild and unsettled than usual. To Julian's
+ inquiry, she answered, by laying her hand on her heart&mdash;a motion by
+ which she always indicated the Countess&mdash;and rising, and taking the
+ direction of her apartment, she made a sign to Julian to follow her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distance was not great betwixt the dining apartment and that to which
+ Peveril now followed his mute guide; yet, in going thither, he had time
+ enough to suffer cruelly from the sudden suspicion, that this unhappy girl
+ had misinterpreted the uniform kindness with which he had treated her, and
+ hence come to regard him with feelings more tender than those which belong
+ to friendship. The misery which such a passion was likely to occasion to a
+ creature in her helpless situation, and actuated by such lively feelings,
+ was great enough to make him refuse credit to the suspicion which pressed
+ itself upon his mind; while, at the same time, he formed the internal
+ resolution so to conduct himself towards Fenella, as to check such
+ misplaced sentiments, if indeed she unhappily entertained them towards
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they reached the Countess's apartment, they found her with writing
+ implements, and many sealed letters before her. She received Julian with
+ her usual kindness; and having caused him to be seated, beckoned to the
+ mute to resume her needle. In an instant Fenella was seated at an
+ embroidering-frame; where, but for the movement of her dexterous fingers,
+ she might have seemed a statue, so little did she move from her work
+ either head or eye. As her infirmity rendered her presence no bar to the
+ most confidential conversation, the Countess proceeded to address Peveril
+ as if they had been literally alone together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Julian," she said, "I am not now about to complain to you of the
+ sentiments and conduct of Derby. He is your friend&mdash;he is my son. He
+ has kindness of heart and vivacity of talent; and yet&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dearest lady," said Peveril, "why will you distress yourself with fixing
+ your eye on deficiencies which arise rather from a change of times and
+ manners, than any degeneracy of my noble friend? Let him be once engaged
+ in his duty, whether in peace or war, and let me pay the penalty if he
+ acquits not himself becoming his high station."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," replied the Countess; "but when will the call of duty prove superior
+ to that of the most idle or trivial indulgence which can serve to drive
+ over the lazy hour? His father was of another mould; and how often was it
+ my lot to entreat that he would spare, from the rigid discharge of those
+ duties which his high station imposed, the relaxation absolutely necessary
+ to recruit his health and his spirits!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still, my dearest lady," said Peveril, "you must allow, that the duties
+ to which the times summoned your late honoured lord, were of a more
+ stirring, as well as a more peremptory cast, than those which await your
+ son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not that," said the Countess. "The wheel appears to be again
+ revolving; and the present period is not unlikely to bring back such
+ scenes as my young years witnessed.&mdash;Well, be it so; they will not
+ find Charlotte de la Tremouille broken in spirit, though depressed by
+ years. It was even on this subject I would speak with you, my young
+ friend. Since our first early acquaintance&mdash;when I saw your gallant
+ behaviour as I issued forth to your childish eye, like an apparition, from
+ my place of concealment in your father's castle&mdash;it has pleased me to
+ think you a true son of Stanley and Peveril. I trust your nurture in this
+ family has been ever suited to the esteem in which I hold you.&mdash;Nay,
+ I desire no thanks.&mdash;I have to require of you, in return, a piece of
+ service, not perhaps entirely safe to yourself, but which, as times are
+ circumstanced, no person is so well able to render to my house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have been ever my good and noble lady," answered Peveril, "as well as
+ my kind, and I may say maternal, protectress. You have a right to command
+ the blood of Stanley in the veins of every one&mdash;You have a thousand
+ rights to command it in mine."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The reader cannot have forgotten that the Earl of Derby was head
+ of the great house of Stanley.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "My advices from England," said the Countess, "resemble more the dreams of
+ a sick man, than the regular information which I might have expected from
+ such correspondents as mine;&mdash;their expressions are like those of men
+ who walk in their sleep, and speak by snatches of what passes in their
+ dreams. It is said, a plot, real or fictitious, has been detected among
+ the Catholics, which has spread far wider and more uncontrollable terror
+ than that of the fifth of November. Its outlines seem utterly incredible,
+ and are only supported by the evidence of wretches, the meanest and most
+ worthless in the creation; yet it is received by the credulous people of
+ England with the most undoubting belief."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a singular delusion, to rise without some real ground," answered
+ Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am no bigot, cousin, though a Catholic," replied the Countess. "I have
+ long feared that the well-meant zeal of our priests for increasing
+ converts, would draw on them the suspicion of the English nation. These
+ efforts have been renewed with double energy since the Duke of York
+ conformed to the Catholic faith; and the same event has doubled the hate
+ and jealousy of the Protestants. So far, I fear, there may be just cause
+ of suspicion, that the Duke is a better Catholic than an Englishman, and
+ that bigotry has involved him, as avarice, or the needy greed of a
+ prodigal, has engaged his brother, in relations with France, whereof
+ England may have too much reason to complain. But the gross, thick, and
+ palpable fabrications of conspiracy and murder, blood and fire&mdash;the
+ imaginary armies&mdash;the intended massacres&mdash;form a collection of
+ falsehoods, that one would have thought indigestible, even by the coarse
+ appetite of the vulgar for the marvellous and horrible; but which are,
+ nevertheless, received as truth by both Houses of Parliament, and
+ questioned by no one who is desirous to escape the odious appellation of
+ friend to the bloody Papists, and favourer of their infernal schemes of
+ cruelty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what say those who are most likely to be affected by these wild
+ reports?" said Julian. "What say the English Catholics themselves?&mdash;a
+ numerous and wealthy body, comprising so many noble names?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their hearts are dead within them," said the Countess. "They are like
+ sheep penned up in the shambles, that the butcher may take his choice
+ among them. In the obscure and brief communications which I have had by a
+ secure hand, they do but anticipate their own utter ruin, and ours&mdash;so
+ general is the depression, so universal the despair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the King," said Peveril,&mdash;"the King and the Protestant Royalists&mdash;what
+ say they to this growing tempest?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Charles," replied the Countess, "with his usual selfish prudence,
+ truckles to the storm; and will let cord and axe do their work on the most
+ innocent men in his dominions, rather than lose an hour of pleasure in
+ attempting their rescue. And, for the Royalists, either they have caught
+ the general delirium which has seized on Protestants in general, or they
+ stand aloof and neutral, afraid to show any interest in the unhappy
+ Catholics, lest they be judged altogether such as themselves, and abettors
+ of the fearful conspiracy in which they are alleged to be engaged. In
+ fact, I cannot blame them. It is hard to expect that mere compassion for a
+ persecuted sect&mdash;or, what is yet more rare, an abstract love of
+ justice&mdash;should be powerful enough to engage men to expose themselves
+ to the awakened fury of a whole people; for, in the present state of
+ general agitation, whoever disbelieves the least tittle of the enormous
+ improbabilities which have been accumulated by these wretched reformers,
+ is instantly hunted down, as one who would smother the discovery of the
+ Plot. It is indeed an awful tempest; and, remote as we lie from its
+ sphere, we must expect soon to feel its effects."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lord Derby already told me something of this," said Julian; "and that
+ there were agents in this island whose object was to excite insurrection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," answered the Countess, and her eye flashed fire as she spoke; "and
+ had my advice been listened to, they had been apprehended in the very
+ fact; and so dealt with, as to be a warning to all others how they sought
+ this independent principality on such an errand. But my son, who is
+ generally so culpably negligent of his own affairs, was pleased to assume
+ the management of them upon this crisis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am happy to learn, madam," answered Peveril, "that the measures of
+ precaution which my kinsman has adopted, have had the complete effect of
+ disconcerting the conspiracy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the present, Julian; but they should have been such as would have
+ made the boldest tremble to think of such infringement of our rights in
+ future. But Derby's present plan is fraught with greater danger; and yet
+ there is something in it of gallantry, which has my sympathy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it, madam?" inquired Julian anxiously; "and in what can I aid it,
+ or avert its dangers?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He purposes," said the Countess, "instantly to set forth for London. He
+ is, he says, not merely the feudal chief of a small island, but one of the
+ noble Peers of England, who must not remain in the security of an obscure
+ and distant castle, when his name, or that of his mother, is slandered
+ before his Prince and people. He will take his place, he says, in the
+ House of Lords, and publicly demand justice for the insult thrown on his
+ house, by perjured and interested witnesses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a generous resolution, and worthy of my friend," said Julian
+ Peveril. "I will go with him and share his fate, be it what it may."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas, foolish boy!" answered the Countess, "as well may you ask a hungry
+ lion to feel compassion, as a prejudiced and furious people to do justice.
+ They are like the madman at the height of frenzy, who murders without
+ compunction his best and dearest friend; and only wonders and wails over
+ his own cruelty, when he is recovered from his delirium."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, dearest lady," said Julian, "this cannot be. The noble and
+ generous people of England cannot be thus strangely misled. Whatever
+ prepossessions may be current among the more vulgar, the House of
+ Legislature cannot be deeply infected by them&mdash;they will remember
+ their own dignity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! cousin," answered the Countess, "when did Englishmen, even of the
+ highest degree, remember anything, when hurried away by the violence of
+ party feeling? Even those who have too much sense to believe in the
+ incredible fictions which gull the multitude, will beware how they expose
+ them, if their own political party can gain a momentary advantage by their
+ being accredited. It is amongst such, too, that your kinsman has found
+ friends and associates. Neglecting the old friends of his house, as too
+ grave and formal companions for the humour of the times, his intercourse
+ has been with the versatile Shaftesbury&mdash;the mercurial Buckingham&mdash;men
+ who would not hesitate to sacrifice to the popular Moloch of the day,
+ whatsoever or whomsoever, whose ruin could propitiate the deity.&mdash;Forgive
+ a mother's tears, kinsman; but I see the scaffold at Bolton again erected.
+ If Derby goes to London while these bloodhounds are in full cry, obnoxious
+ as he is, and I have made him by my religious faith, and my conduct in
+ this island, he dies his father's death. And yet upon what other course to
+ resolve!&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me go to London, madam," said Peveril, much moved by the distress of
+ his patroness; "your ladyship was wont to rely something on my judgment. I
+ will act for the best&mdash;will communicate with those whom you point out
+ to me, and only with them; and I trust soon to send you information that
+ this delusion, however strong it may now be, is in the course of passing
+ away; at the worst, I can apprise you of the danger, should it menace the
+ Earl or yourself; and may be able also to point out the means by which it
+ may be eluded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess listened with a countenance in which the anxiety of maternal
+ affection, which prompted her to embrace Peveril's generous offer,
+ struggled with her native disinterested and generous disposition. "Think
+ what you ask of me, Julian," she replied with a sigh. "Would you have me
+ expose the life of my friend's son to those perils to which I refuse my
+ own?&mdash;No, never!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but madam," replied Julian, "I do not run the same risk&mdash;my
+ person is not known in London&mdash;my situation, though not obscure in my
+ own country, is too little known to be noticed in that huge assemblage of
+ all that is noble and wealthy. No whisper, I presume, however indirect,
+ has connected my name with the alleged conspiracy. I am a Protestant,
+ above all; and can be accused of no intercourse, direct or indirect, with
+ the Church of Rome. My connections also lie amongst those, who, if they do
+ not, or cannot, befriend me, cannot, at least, be dangerous to me. In a
+ word, I run no danger where the Earl might incur great peril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas!" said the Countess of Derby, "all this generous reasoning may be
+ true; but it could only be listened to by a widowed mother. Selfish as I
+ am, I cannot but reflect that my kinswoman has, in all events, the support
+ of an affectionate husband&mdash;such is the interested reasoning to which
+ we are not ashamed to subject our better feelings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not call it so, madam," answered Peveril; "think of me as the younger
+ brother of my kinsman. You have ever done by me the duties of a mother;
+ and have a right to my filial service, were it at a risk ten times greater
+ than a journey to London, to inquire into the temper of the times. I will
+ instantly go and announce my departure to the Earl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stay, Julian," said the Countess; "if you must make this journey in our
+ behalf,&mdash;and, alas! I have not generosity enough to refuse your noble
+ proffer,&mdash;you must go alone, and without communication with Derby. I
+ know him well; his lightness of mind is free from selfish baseness; and
+ for the world, would he not suffer you to leave Man without his company.
+ And if he went with you, your noble and disinterested kindness would be of
+ no avail&mdash;you would but share his ruin, as the swimmer who attempts
+ to save a drowning man is involved in his fate, if he permit the sufferer
+ to grapple with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It shall be as you please, madam," said Peveril. "I am ready to depart
+ upon half-an-hour's notice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This night, then," said the Countess, after a moment's pause&mdash;"this
+ night I will arrange the most secret means of carrying your generous
+ project into effect; for I would not excite that prejudice against you,
+ which will instantly arise, were it known you had so lately left this
+ island, and its Popish lady. You will do well, perhaps, to use a feigned
+ name in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, madam," said Julian; "I will do nothing that can draw on me
+ unnecessary attention; but to bear a feigned name, or affect any disguise
+ beyond living with extreme privacy, would, I think, be unwise as well as
+ unworthy; and what, if challenged, I might find some difficulty in
+ assigning a reason for, consistent with perfect fairness of intentions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe you are right," answered the Countess, after a moment's
+ consideration; and then added, "You propose, doubtless, to pass through
+ Derbyshire, and visit Martindale Castle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should wish it, madam, certainly," replied Peveril, "did time permit,
+ and circumstances render it advisable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of that," said the Countess, "you must yourself judge. Despatch is,
+ doubtless, desirable; on the other hand, arriving from your own
+ family-seat, you will be less an object of doubt and suspicion, than if
+ you posted up from hence, without even visiting your parents. You must be
+ guided in this,&mdash;in all,&mdash;by your own prudence. Go, my dearest
+ son&mdash;for to me you should be dear as a son&mdash;go, and prepare for
+ your journey. I will get ready some despatches, and a supply of money&mdash;Nay,
+ do not object. Am I not your mother; and are you not discharging a son's
+ duty? Dispute not my right of defraying your expenses. Nor is this all;
+ for, as I must trust your zeal and prudence to act in our behalf when
+ occasion shall demand, I will furnish you with effectual recommendations
+ to our friends and kindred, entreating and enjoining them to render
+ whatever aid you may require, either for your own protection, or the
+ advancement of what you may propose in our favour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril made no farther opposition to an arrangement, which in truth the
+ moderate state of his own finances rendered almost indispensable, unless
+ with his father's assistance; and the Countess put into his hand bills of
+ exchange to the amount of two hundred pounds, upon a merchant in the city.
+ She then dismissed Julian for the space of an hour; after which, she said,
+ she must again require his presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preparations for his journey were not of a nature to divert the
+ thoughts which speedily pressed on him. He found that half-an-hour's
+ conversation had once more completely changed his immediate prospects and
+ plans for the future. He had offered to the Countess of Derby a service,
+ which her uniform kindness had well deserved at his hand; but, by her
+ accepting it, he was upon the point of being separated from Alice
+ Bridgenorth, at a time when she was become dearer to him than ever, by her
+ avowal of mutual passion. Her image rose before him, such as he had that
+ day pressed her to his bosom&mdash;her voice was in his ear, and seemed to
+ ask whether he could desert her in the crisis which everything seemed to
+ announce as impending. But Julian Peveril, his youth considered, was
+ strict in judging his duty, and severely resolved in executing it. He
+ trusted not his imagination to pursue the vision which presented itself;
+ but resolutely seizing his pen, wrote to Alice the following letter,
+ explaining his situation, as far as justice to the Countess permitted him
+ to do so:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "I leave you, dearest Alice," thus ran the letter.&mdash;"I leave you;
+ and though, in doing so, I but obey the command you have laid on
+ me, yet I can claim little merit for my compliance, since, without
+ additional and most forcible reasons in aid of your orders, I fear
+ I should have been unable to comply with them. But family affairs
+ of importance compel me to absent myself from this island, for, I
+ fear, more than one week. My thoughts, hopes, and wishes will be
+ on the moment that shall restore me to the Black Fort, and its
+ lovely valley. Let me hope that yours will sometimes rest on the
+ lonely exile, whom nothing could render such, but the command of
+ honour and duty. Do not fear that I mean to involve you in a
+ private correspondence, and let not your father fear it. I could
+ not love you so much, but for the openness and candour of your
+ nature; and I would not that you concealed from Major Bridgenorth
+ one syllable of what I now avow. Respecting other matters, he
+ himself cannot desire the welfare of our common country with more
+ zeal than I do. Differences may occur concerning the mode in which
+ that is to be obtained; but, in the principle, I am convinced
+ there can be only one mind between us; nor can I refuse to listen
+ to his experience and wisdom, even where they may ultimately fail
+ to convince me. Farewell&mdash;Alice, farewell! Much might be added to
+ that melancholy word, but nothing that could express the
+ bitterness with which it is written. Yet I could transcribe it
+ again and again, rather than conclude the last communication which
+ I can have with you for some time. My sole comfort is, that my
+ stay will scarce be so long as to permit you to forget one who
+ never can forget you."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He held the paper in his hand for a minute after he had folded, but before
+ he had sealed it, while he hurriedly debated in his own mind whether he
+ had not expressed himself towards Major Bridgenorth in so conciliating a
+ manner as might excite hopes of proselytism, which his conscience told him
+ he could not realise with honour. Yet, on the other hand, he had no right,
+ from what Bridgenorth had said, to conclude that their principles were
+ diametrically irreconcilable; for though the son of a high Cavalier, and
+ educated in the family of the Countess of Derby, he was himself, upon
+ principle, an enemy of prerogative, and a friend to the liberty of the
+ subject. And with such considerations, he silenced all internal objections
+ on the point of honour; although his conscience secretly whispered that
+ these conciliatory expressions towards the father were chiefly dictated by
+ the fear, that during his absence Major Bridgenorth might be tempted to
+ change the residence of his daughter, and perhaps to convey her altogether
+ out of his reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having sealed his letter, Julian called his servant, and directed him to
+ carry it under cover of one addressed to Mrs. Debbitch, to a house in the
+ town of Rushin, where packets and messages intended for the family at
+ Black Fort were usually deposited; and for that purpose to take horse
+ immediately. He thus got rid of an attendant, who might have been in some
+ degree a spy on his motions. He then exchanged the dress he usually wore
+ for one more suited to travelling; and, having put a change or two of
+ linen into a small cloak-bag, selected as arms a strong double-edged sword
+ and an excellent pair of pistols, which last he carefully loaded with
+ double bullets. Thus appointed, and with twenty pieces in his purse, and
+ the bills we have mentioned secured in a private pocket-book, he was in
+ readiness to depart as soon as he should receive the Countess's commands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The buoyant spirit of youth and hope, which had, for a moment, been
+ chilled by the painful and dubious circumstances in which he was placed,
+ as well as the deprivation which he was about to undergo, now revived in
+ full vigour. Fancy, turning from more painful anticipations, suggested to
+ him that he was now entering upon life, at a crisis when resolution and
+ talents were almost certain to make the fortune of their possessor. How
+ could he make a more honourable entry on the bustling scene, than sent by,
+ and acting in behalf of, one of the noblest houses in England; and should
+ he perform what his charge might render incumbent with the resolution and
+ the prudence necessary to secure success, how many occurrences might take
+ place to render his mediation necessary to Bridgenorth; and thus enable
+ him, on the most equal and honourable terms, to establish a claim to his
+ gratitude and to his daughter's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst he was dwelling on such pleasing, though imaginary prospects, he
+ could not help exclaiming aloud&mdash;"Yes, Alice, I will win thee nobly!"
+ The words had scarce escaped his lips, when he heard at the door of his
+ apartment, which the servant had left ajar, a sound like a deep sigh,
+ which was instantly succeeded by a gentle tap&mdash;"Come in," replied
+ Julian, somewhat ashamed of his exclamation, and not a little afraid that
+ it had been caught up by some eavesdropper&mdash;"Come in," he again
+ repeated; but his command was not obeyed; on the contrary, the knock was
+ repeated somewhat louder. He opened the door, and Fenella stood before
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With eyes that seemed red with recent tears, and with a look of the
+ deepest dejection, the little mute, first touching her bosom, and
+ beckoning with her finger, made to him the usual sign that the Countess
+ desired to see him&mdash;then turned, as if to usher him to her apartment.
+ As he followed her through the long gloomy vaulted passages which afforded
+ communication betwixt the various apartments of the castle, he could not
+ but observe that her usual light trip was exchanged for a tardy and
+ mournful step, which she accompanied with low inarticulate moaning (which
+ she was probably the less able to suppress, because she could not judge
+ how far it was audible), and also with wringing of the hands, and other
+ marks of extreme affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a thought came across Peveril's mind, which, in spite of
+ his better reason, made him shudder involuntarily. As a Peaksman, and a
+ long resident in the Isle of Man, he was well acquainted with many a
+ superstitious legend, and particularly with a belief, which attached to
+ the powerful family of the Stanleys, for their peculiar demon, a Banshie,
+ or female spirit, who was wont to shriek "foreboding evil times;" and who
+ was generally seen weeping and bemoaning herself before the death of any
+ person of distinction belonging to the family. For an instant, Julian
+ could scarcely divest himself of the belief that the wailing, jibbering
+ form, which glided before him, with a lamp in her hand, was a genius of
+ his mother's race, come to announce to him as an analogous reflection,
+ that if the suspicion which had crossed his mind concerning Fenella was a
+ just one, her ill-fated attachment to him, like that of the prophetic
+ spirit to his family, could bode nothing but disaster, and lamentation,
+ and woe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now, hoist the anchor, mates&mdash;and let the sails
+ Give their broad bosom to the buxom wind,
+ Like lass that woos a lover.
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The presence of the Countess dispelled the superstitious feeling, which,
+ for an instant, had encroached on Julian's imagination, and compelled him
+ to give attention to the matters of ordinary life. "Here are your
+ credentials," she said, giving him a small packet, carefully packed up in
+ a sealskin cover; "you had better not open them till you come to London.
+ You must not be surprised to find that there are one or two addressed to
+ men of my own persuasion. These, for all our sakes, you will observe
+ caution in delivering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I go your messenger, madam," said Peveril; "and whatever you desire me to
+ charge myself with, of that I undertake the care. Yet allow me to doubt
+ whether an intercourse with Catholics will at this moment forward the
+ purposes of my mission."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have caught the general suspicion of this wicked sect already," said
+ the Countess, smiling, "and are the fitter to go amongst Englishmen in
+ their present mood. But, my cautious friend, these letters are so
+ addressed, and the persons to whom they are addressed so disguised, that
+ you will run no danger in conversing with them. Without their aid, indeed,
+ you will not be able to obtain the accurate information you go in search
+ of. None can tell so exactly how the wind sets, as the pilot whose vessel
+ is exposed to the storm. Besides, though you Protestants deny our
+ priesthood the harmlessness of the dove, you are ready enough to allow us
+ a full share of the wisdom of the serpent; in plain terms, their means of
+ information are extensive, and they are not deficient in the power of
+ applying it. I therefore wish you to have the benefit of their
+ intelligence and advice, if possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whatever you impose upon me as a part of my duty, madam, rely on its
+ being discharged punctually," answered Peveril. "And, now, as there is
+ little use in deferring the execution of a purpose when once fixed, let me
+ know your ladyship's wishes concerning my departure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must be sudden and secret," said the Countess; "the island is full of
+ spies; and I would not wish that any of them should have notice that an
+ envoy of mine was about to leave Man for London. Can you be ready to go on
+ board to-morrow?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-night&mdash;this instant if you will," said Julian,&mdash;"my little
+ preparations are complete."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be ready, then, in your chamber, at two hours after midnight. I will send
+ one to summon you, for our secret must be communicated, for the present,
+ to as few as possible. A foreign sloop is engaged to carry you over; then
+ make the best of your way to London, by Martindale Castle, or otherwise,
+ as you find most advisable. When it is necessary to announce your absence,
+ I will say you are gone to see your parents. But stay&mdash;your journey
+ will be on horseback, of course, from Whitehaven. You have bills of
+ exchange, it is true; but are you provided with ready money to furnish
+ yourself with a good horse?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sufficiently rich, madam," answered Julian; "and good nags are
+ plenty in Cumberland. There are those among them who know how to come by
+ them good and cheap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Trust not to that," said the Countess. "Here is what will purchase for
+ you the best horse on the Borders.&mdash;Can you be simple enough to
+ refuse it?" she added, as she pressed on him a heavy purse, which he saw
+ himself obliged to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A good horse, Julian," continued the Countess, "and a good sword, next to
+ a good heart and head, are the accomplishments of a cavalier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I kiss your hands, then, madam," said Peveril, "and humbly beg you to
+ believe, that whatever may fail in my present undertaking, my purpose to
+ serve you, my noble kinswoman and benefactress, can at least never swerve
+ or falter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know it, my son, I know it; and may God forgive me if my anxiety for
+ your friend has sent you on dangers which should have been his! Go&mdash;go&mdash;May
+ saints and angels bless you! Fenella shall acquaint him that you sup in
+ your own apartment. So indeed will I; for to-night I should be unable to
+ face my son's looks. Little will he thank me for sending you on his
+ errand; and there will be many to ask, whether it was like the Lady of
+ Latham to trust her friend's son on the danger which should have been
+ braved by her own. But oh! Julian, I am now a forlorn widow, whom sorrow
+ has made selfish!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tush, madam," answered Peveril; "it is more unlike the Lady of Latham to
+ anticipate dangers which may not exist at all, and to which, if they do
+ indeed occur, I am less obnoxious than my noble kinsman. Farewell!&mdash;All
+ blessings attend you, madam. Commend me to Derby, and make him my excuses.
+ I shall expect a summons at two hours after midnight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They took an affectionate leave of each other; the more affectionate,
+ indeed, on the part of the Countess, that she could not entirely reconcile
+ her generous mind to exposing Peveril to danger on her son's behalf; and
+ Julian betook himself to his solitary apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His servant soon afterwards brought him wine and refreshments; to which,
+ notwithstanding the various matters he had to occupy his mind, he
+ contrived to do reasonable justice. But when this needful occupation was
+ finished, his thoughts began to stream in upon him like a troubled tide&mdash;at
+ once recalling the past, and anticipating the future. It was in vain that
+ he wrapped himself in his riding cloak, and, lying down on his bed,
+ endeavoured to compose himself to sleep. The uncertainty of the prospect
+ before him&mdash;the doubt how Bridgenorth might dispose of his daughter
+ during his absence&mdash;the fear that the Major himself might fall into
+ the power of the vindictive Countess, besides a numerous train of vague
+ and half-formed apprehensions, agitated his blood, and rendered slumber
+ impossible. Alternately to recline in the old oaken easy-chair, and listen
+ to the dashing of the waves under the windows, mingled, as the sound was,
+ with the scream of the sea-birds; or traverse the apartment with long and
+ slow steps, pausing occasionally to look out on the sea, slumbering under
+ the influence of a full moon, which tipped each wave with silver&mdash;such
+ were the only pastimes he could invent, until midnight had passed for one
+ hour; the next was wasted in anxious expectation of the summons of
+ departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length it arrived&mdash;a tap at his door was followed by a low murmur,
+ which made him suspect that the Countess had again employed her mute
+ attendant as the most secure minister of her pleasure on this occasion. He
+ felt something like impropriety in this selection; and it was with a
+ feeling of impatience alien to the natural generosity of his temper, that,
+ when he opened the door, he beheld the dumb maiden standing before him.
+ The lamp which he held in his hand showed his features distinctly, and
+ probably made Fenella aware of the expression which animated them. She
+ cast her large dark eyes mournfully on the ground; and, without again
+ looking him in the face, made him a signal to follow her. He delayed no
+ longer than was necessary to secure his pistols in his belt, wrap his
+ cloak closer around him, and take his small portmanteau under his arm.
+ Thus accoutred, he followed her out of the Keep, or inhabited part of the
+ Castle, by a series of obscure passages leading to a postern gate, which
+ she unlocked with a key, selected from a bundle which she carried at her
+ girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They now stood in the castle-yard, in the open moonlight, which glimmered
+ white and ghastly on the variety of strange and ruinous objects to which
+ we have formerly alluded, and which gave the scene rather the appearance
+ of some ancient cemetery, than of the interior of a fortification. The
+ round and elevated tower&mdash;the ancient mount, with its quadrangular
+ sides facing the ruinous edifices which once boasted the name of Cathedral&mdash;seemed
+ of yet more antique and anomalous form, when seen by the pale light which
+ now displayed them. To one of these churches Fenella took the direct
+ course, and was followed by Julian; although he at once divined, and was
+ superstitious enough to dislike, the path which she was about to adopt. It
+ was by a secret passage through this church that in former times the
+ guard-room of the garrison, situated at the lower and external defences,
+ communicated with the Keep of the Castle; and through this passage were
+ the keys of the Castle every night carried to the Governor's apartment, so
+ soon as the gates were locked, and the watch set. The custom was given up
+ in James the First's time, and the passage abandoned, on account of the
+ well-known legend of the <i>Mauthe Dog</i>&mdash;a fiend, or demon, in the
+ shape of a large, shaggy, black mastiff, by which the church was said to
+ be haunted. It was devoutly believed, that in former times this spectre
+ became so familiar with mankind, as to appear nightly in the guard-room,
+ issuing from the passage which we have mentioned at night, and retiring to
+ it at daybreak. The soldiers became partly familiarised to its presence;
+ yet not so much so as to use any licence of language while the apparition
+ was visible; until one fellow, rendered daring by intoxication, swore he
+ would know whether it was dog or devil, and, with his drawn sword,
+ followed the spectre when it retreated by the usual passage. The man
+ returned in a few minutes, sobered by terror, his mouth gaping, and his
+ hair standing on end, under which horror he died; but, unhappily for the
+ lovers of the marvellous, altogether unable to disclose the horrors which
+ he had seen. Under the evil repute arising from this tale of wonder, the
+ guard-room was abandoned, and a new one constructed. In like manner, the
+ guards after that period held another and more circuitous communication
+ with the Governor or Seneschal of the Castle; and that which lay through
+ the ruinous church was entirely abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In defiance of the legendary terrors which tradition had attached to the
+ original communication, Fenella, followed by Peveril, now boldly traversed
+ the ruinous vaults through which it lay&mdash;sometimes only guided over
+ heaps of ruins by the precarious light of the lamp borne by the dumb
+ maiden&mdash;sometimes having the advantage of a gleam of moonlight,
+ darting into the dreary abyss through the shafted windows, or through
+ breaches made by time. As the path was by no means a straight one, Peveril
+ could not but admire the intimate acquaintance with the mazes which his
+ singular companion displayed, as well as the boldness with which she
+ traversed them. He himself was not so utterly void of the prejudices of
+ the times, but that he contemplated, with some apprehension, the
+ possibility of their intruding on the lair of the phantom hound, of which
+ he had heard so often; and in every remote sight of the breeze among the
+ ruins, he thought he heard him baying at the mortal footsteps which
+ disturbed his gloomy realm. No such terrors, however, interrupted their
+ journey; and in the course of a few minutes, they attained the deserted
+ and now ruinous guard-house. The broken walls of the little edifice served
+ to conceal them from the sentinels, one of whom was keeping a drowsy watch
+ at the lower gate of the Castle; whilst another, seated on the stone steps
+ which communicated with the parapet of the bounding and exterior wall, was
+ slumbering, in full security, with his musket peacefully grounded by his
+ side. Fenella made a sign to Peveril to move with silence and caution, and
+ then showed him, to his surprise, from the window of the deserted
+ guard-room, a boat, for it was now high water, with four rowers, lurking
+ under the cliff on which the castle was built; and made him farther
+ sensible that he was to have access to it by a ladder of considerable
+ height placed at the window of the ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was both displeased and alarmed by the security and carelessness of
+ the sentinels, who had suffered such preparations to be made without
+ observation or alarm given; and he hesitated whether he should not call
+ the officer of the guard, upbraid him with negligence, and show him how
+ easily Holm-Peel, in spite of its natural strength, and although reported
+ impregnable, might be surprised by a few resolute men. Fenella seemed to
+ guess his thoughts with that extreme acuteness of observation which her
+ deprivations had occasioned her acquiring. She laid one hand on his arm,
+ and a finger of the other on her own lips, as if to enjoin forbearance;
+ and Julian, knowing that she acted by the direct authority of the
+ Countess, obeyed her accordingly; but with the internal resolution to lose
+ no time in communicating his sentiments to the Earl, concerning the danger
+ to which the Castle was exposed on this point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, he descended the ladder with some precaution, for the
+ steps were unequal, broken, wet, and slippery; and having placed himself
+ in the stern of the boat, made a signal to the men to push off, and turned
+ to take farewell of his guide. To his utter astonishment, Fenella rather
+ slid down, than descended regularly, the perilous ladder, and, the boat
+ being already pushed off, made a spring from the last step of it with
+ incredible agility, and seated herself beside Peveril, ere he could
+ express either remonstrance or surprise. He commanded the men once more to
+ pull in to the precarious landing-place; and throwing into his countenance
+ a part of the displeasure which he really felt, endeavoured to make her
+ comprehend the necessity of returning to her mistress. Fenella folded her
+ arms, and looked at him with a haughty smile, which completely expressed
+ the determination of her purpose. Peveril was extremely embarrassed; he
+ was afraid of offending the Countess, and interfering with her plan, by
+ giving alarm, which otherwise he was much tempted to have done. On
+ Fenella, it was evident, no species of argument which he could employ was
+ likely to make the least impression; and the question remained, how, if
+ she went on with him, he was to rid himself of so singular and
+ inconvenient a companion, and provide, at the same time, sufficiently for
+ her personal security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boatmen brought the matter to a decision; for, after lying on their
+ oars for a minute, and whispering among themselves in Low Dutch or German,
+ they began to pull stoutly, and were soon at some distance from the
+ Castle. The possibility of the sentinels sending a musket-ball, or even a
+ cannon-shot, after them, was one of the contingencies which gave Peveril
+ momentary anxiety; but they left the fortress, as they must have
+ approached it, unnoticed, or at least unchallenged&mdash;a carelessness on
+ the part of the garrison, which, notwithstanding that the oars were
+ muffled, and that the men spoke little, and in whispers, argued, in
+ Peveril's opinion, great negligence on the part of the sentinels. When
+ they were a little way from the Castle, the men began to row briskly
+ towards a small vessel which lay at some distance. Peveril had, in the
+ meantime, leisure to remark, that the boatmen spoke to each other
+ doubtfully, and bent anxious looks on Fenella, as if uncertain whether
+ they had acted properly in bringing her off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After about a quarter of an hour's rowing, they reached the little sloop,
+ where Peveril was received by the skipper, or captain, on the
+ quarter-deck, with an offer of spirits or refreshments. A word or two
+ among the seamen withdrew the captain from his hospitable cares, and he
+ flew to the ship's side, apparently to prevent Fenella from entering the
+ vessel. The men and he talked eagerly in Dutch, looking anxiously at
+ Fenella as they spoke together; and Peveril hoped the result would be,
+ that the poor woman should be sent ashore again. But she baffled whatever
+ opposition could be offered to her; and when the accommodation-ladder, as
+ it is called, was withdrawn, she snatched the end of a rope, and climbed
+ on board with the dexterity of a sailor, leaving them no means of
+ preventing her entrance, save by actual violence, to which apparently they
+ did not choose to have recourse. Once on deck, she took the captain by the
+ sleeve, and led him to the head of the vessel, where they seemed to hold
+ intercourse in a manner intelligible to both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril soon forgot the presence of the mute, as he began to muse upon his
+ own situation, and the probability that he was separated for some
+ considerable time from the object of his affections. "Constancy," he
+ repeated to himself,&mdash;"Constancy." And, as if in coincidence with the
+ theme of his reflections, he fixed his eyes on the polar star, which that
+ night twinkled with more than ordinary brilliancy. Emblem of pure passion
+ and steady purpose&mdash;the thoughts which arose as he viewed its clear
+ and unchanging light, were disinterested and noble. To seek his country's
+ welfare, and secure the blessings of domestic peace&mdash;to discharge a
+ bold and perilous duty to his friend and patron&mdash;to regard his
+ passion for Alice Bridgenorth, as the loadstar which was to guide him to
+ noble deeds&mdash;were the resolutions which thronged upon his mind, and
+ which exalted his spirits to that state of romantic melancholy, which
+ perhaps is ill exchanged even for feelings of joyful rapture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was recalled from those contemplations by something which nestled
+ itself softly and closely to his side&mdash;a woman's sigh sounded so near
+ him, as to disturb his reverie; and as he turned his head, he saw Fenella
+ seated beside him, with her eyes fixed on the same star which had just
+ occupied his own. His first emotion was that of displeasure; but it was
+ impossible to persevere in it towards a being so helpless in many
+ respects, so interesting in others; whose large dark eyes were filled with
+ dew, which glistened in the moonlight; and the source of whose emotions
+ seemed to be in a partiality which might well claim indulgence, at least
+ from him who was the object of it. At the same time, Julian resolved to
+ seize the present opportunity, for such expostulations with Fenella on the
+ strangeness of her conduct, as the poor maiden might be able to
+ comprehend. He took her hand with great kindness, but at the same time
+ with much gravity, pointed to the boat, and to the Castle, whose towers
+ and extended walls were now scarce visible in the distance; and thus
+ intimated to her the necessity of her return to Holm-Peel. She looked
+ down, and shook her head, as if negativing his proposal with obstinate
+ decision. Julian renewed his expostulation by look and gesture&mdash;pointed
+ to his own heart, to intimate the Countess&mdash;and bent his brows, to
+ show the displeasure which she must entertain. To all which the maiden
+ only answered by her tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, as if driven to explanation by his continued remonstrances, she
+ suddenly seized him by the arm, to arrest his attention&mdash;cast her eye
+ hastily around, as if to see whether she was watched by any one&mdash;then
+ drew the other hand, edge-wise, across her slender throat&mdash;pointed to
+ the boat, and to the Castle, and nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this series of signs, Peveril could put no interpretation, excepting
+ that he was menaced with some personal danger, from which Fenella seemed
+ to conceive that her presence was a protection. Whatever was her meaning,
+ her purpose seemed unalterably adopted; at least it was plain he had no
+ power to shake it. He must therefore wait till the end of their short
+ voyage, to disembarrass himself of his companion; and, in the meanwhile,
+ acting on the idea of her having harboured a misplaced attachment to him,
+ he thought he should best consult her interest, and his own character, in
+ keeping at as great a distance from her as circumstances admitted. With
+ this purpose, he made the sign she used for going to sleep, by leaning his
+ head on his palm; and having thus recommended to her to go to rest, he
+ himself desired to be conducted to his berth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain readily showed him a hammock, in the after-cabin, into which
+ he threw himself, to seek that repose which the exercise and agitation of
+ the preceding day, as well as the lateness of the hour, made him now feel
+ desirable. Sleep, deep and heavy, sunk down on him in a few minutes, but
+ it did not endure long. In his sleep he was disturbed by female cries; and
+ at length, as he thought, distinctly heard the voice of Alice Bridgenorth
+ call on his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He awoke, and starting up to quit his bed, became sensible, from the
+ motion of the vessel, and the swinging of the hammock, that his dream had
+ deceived him. He was still startled by its extreme vivacity and
+ liveliness. "Julian Peveril, help! Julian Peveril!" The sounds still rung
+ in his ears&mdash;the accents were those of Alice&mdash;and he could
+ scarce persuade himself that his imagination had deceived him. Could she
+ be in the same vessel? The thought was not altogether inconsistent with
+ her father's character, and the intrigues in which he was engaged; but
+ then, if so, to what peril was she exposed, that she invoked his name so
+ loudly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determined to make instant inquiry, he jumped out of his hammock,
+ half-dressed as he was, and stumbling about the little cabin, which was as
+ dark as pitch, at length, with considerable difficulty, reached the door.
+ The door, however, he was altogether unable to open; and was obliged to
+ call loudly to the watch upon deck. The skipper, or captain, as he was
+ called, being the only person aboard who could speak English, answered to
+ the summons, and replied to Peveril's demand, what noise that was?&mdash;that
+ a boat was going off with the young woman&mdash;that she whimpered a
+ little as she left the vessel&mdash;and "dat vaas all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His dream was thus fully explained. Fancy had caught up the inarticulate
+ and vehement cries with which Fenella was wont to express resistance or
+ displeasure&mdash;had coined them into language, and given them the
+ accents of Alice Bridgenorth. Our imagination plays wilder tricks with us
+ almost every night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain now undid the door, and appeared with a lantern; without the
+ aid of which Peveril could scarce have regained his couch, where he now
+ slumbered secure and sound, until day was far advanced, and the invitation
+ of the captain called him up to breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now, what is this that haunts me like my shadow,
+ Frisking and mumming like an elf in moonlight!
+ &mdash;BEN JONSON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Peveril found the master of the vessel rather less rude than those in his
+ station of life usually are, and received from him full satisfaction
+ concerning the fate of Fenella, upon whom the captain bestowed a hearty
+ curse, for obliging him to lay-to until he had sent his boat ashore, and
+ had her back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope," said Peveril, "no violence was necessary to reconcile her to go
+ ashore? I trust she offered no foolish resistance?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Resist! mein Gott," said the captain, "she did resist like a troop of
+ horse&mdash;she did cry, you might hear her at Whitehaven&mdash;she did go
+ up the rigging like a cat up a chimney; but dat vas ein trick of her old
+ trade."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What trade do you mean?" said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh," said the seaman, "I vas know more about her than you, Meinheer. I
+ vas know that she vas a little, very little girl, and prentice to one
+ seiltanzer, when my lady yonder had the good luck to buy her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A seiltanzer!" said Peveril; "what do you mean by that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mean a rope-danzer, a mountebank, a Hans pickel-harring. I vas know
+ Adrian Brackel vell&mdash;he sell de powders dat empty men's stomach, and
+ fill him's own purse. Not know Adrian Brackel, mein Gott! I have smoked
+ many a pound of tabak with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril now remembered that Fenella had been brought into the family when
+ he and the young Earl were in England, and while the Countess was absent
+ on an expedition to the continent. Where the Countess found her, she never
+ communicated to the young men; but only intimated, that she had received
+ her out of compassion, in order to relieve her from a situation of extreme
+ distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He hinted so much to the communicative seaman, who replied, "that for
+ distress he knew nocht's on't; only, that Adrian Brackel beat her when she
+ would not dance on the rope, and starved her when she did, to prevent her
+ growth." The bargain between the countess and the mountebank, he said, he
+ had made himself; because the Countess had hired his brig upon her
+ expedition to the continent. None else knew where she came from. The
+ Countess had seen her on a public stage at Ostend&mdash;compassionated her
+ helpless situation, and the severe treatment she received&mdash;and had
+ employed him to purchase the poor creature from her master, and charged
+ him with silence towards all her retinue.&mdash;"And so I do keep
+ silence," continued the faithful confidant, "van I am in the havens of
+ Man; but when I am on the broad seas, den my tongue is mine own, you know.
+ Die foolish beoples in the island, they say she is a wechsel-balg&mdash;what
+ you call a fairy-elf changeling. My faith, they do not never have seen ein
+ wechsel-balg; for I saw one myself at Cologne, and it was twice as big as
+ yonder girl, and did break the poor people, with eating them up, like de
+ great big cuckoo in the sparrow's nest; but this Venella eat no more than
+ other girls&mdash;it was no wechsel-balg in the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By a different train of reasoning, Julian had arrived at the same
+ conclusion; in which, therefore, he heartily acquiesced. During the
+ seaman's prosing, he was reflecting within himself, how much of the
+ singular flexibility of her limbs and movements the unfortunate girl must
+ have derived from the discipline and instructions of Adrian Brackel; and
+ also how far the germs of her wilful and capricious passions might have
+ been sown during her wandering and adventurous childhood. Aristocratic,
+ also, as his education had been, these anecdotes respecting Fenella's
+ original situation and education, rather increased his pleasure of having
+ shaken off her company; and yet he still felt desirous to know any farther
+ particulars which the seaman could communicate on the same subject. But he
+ had already told all he knew. Of her parents he knew nothing, except that
+ "her father must have been a damned hundsfoot, and a schelm, for selling
+ his own flesh and blood to Adrian Brackel;" for by such a transaction had
+ the mountebank become possessed of his pupil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conversation tended to remove any passing doubts which might have
+ crept on Peveril's mind concerning the fidelity of the master of the
+ vessel, who appeared from thence to have been a former acquaintance of the
+ Countess, and to have enjoyed some share of her confidence. The
+ threatening motion used by Fenella, he no longer considered as worthy of
+ any notice, excepting as a new mark of the irritability of her temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He amused himself with walking the deck, and musing on his past and future
+ prospects, until his attention was forcibly arrested by the wind, which
+ began to rise in gusts from the north-west, in a manner so unfavourable to
+ the course they intended to hold, that the master, after many efforts to
+ beat against it, declared his bark, which was by no means an excellent
+ sea-boat, was unequal to making Whitehaven; and that he was compelled to
+ make a fair wind of it, and run for Liverpool. To this course Peveril did
+ not object. It saved him some land journey, in case he visited his
+ father's castle; and the Countess's commission would be discharged as
+ effectually the one way as the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The vessel was put, accordingly, before the wind, and ran with great
+ steadiness and velocity. The captain, notwithstanding, pleading some
+ nautical hazards, chose to lie off, and did not attempt the mouth of the
+ Mersey until morning, when Peveril had at length the satisfaction of being
+ landed upon the quay of Liverpool, which even then showed symptoms of the
+ commercial prosperity that has since been carried to such a height.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The master, who was well acquainted with the port, pointed out to Julian a
+ decent place of entertainment, chiefly frequented by seafaring people;
+ for, although he had been in the town formerly, he did not think it proper
+ to go anywhere at present where he might have been unnecessarily
+ recognised. Here he took leave of the seaman, after pressing upon him with
+ difficulty a small present for his crew. As for his passage, the captain
+ declined any recompense whatever; and they parted upon the most civil
+ terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inn to which he was recommended was full of strangers, seamen, and
+ mercantile people, all intent upon their own affairs, and discussing them
+ with noise and eagerness, peculiar to the business of a thriving seaport.
+ But although the general clamour of the public room, in which the guests
+ mixed with each other, related chiefly to their own commercial dealings,
+ there was a general theme mingling with them, which was alike common and
+ interesting to all; so that, amidst disputes about freight, tonnage,
+ demurrage, and such like, were heard the emphatic sounds of "Deep,
+ damnable, accursed plot,"&mdash;"Bloody Papist villains,"&mdash;"The King
+ in danger&mdash;the gallows too good for them," and so forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fermentation excited in London had plainly reached even this remote
+ seaport, and was received by the inhabitants with the peculiar stormy
+ energy which invests men in their situation with the character of the
+ winds and waves with which they are chiefly conversant. The commercial and
+ nautical interests of England were indeed particularly anti-Catholic;
+ although it is not, perhaps, easy to give any distinct reason why they
+ should be so, since theological disputes in general could scarce be
+ considered as interesting to them. But zeal, amongst the lower orders at
+ least, is often in an inverse ratio to knowledge; and sailors were not
+ probably the less earnest and devoted Protestants, that they did not
+ understand the controversy between the Churches. As for the merchants,
+ they were almost necessarily inimical to the gentry of Lancashire and
+ Cheshire; many of whom still retained the faith of Rome, which was
+ rendered ten times more odious to the men of commerce, as the badge of
+ their haughty aristocratic neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the little which Peveril heard of the sentiments of the people of
+ Liverpool, he imagined he should act most prudently in leaving the place
+ as soon as possible, and before any suspicion should arise of his having
+ any connection with the party which appeared to have become so obnoxious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to accomplish his journey, it was first necessary that he should
+ purchase a horse; and for this purpose he resolved to have recourse to the
+ stables of a dealer well known at the time, and who dwelt in the outskirts
+ of the place; and having obtained directions to his dwelling, he went
+ thither to provide himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joe Bridlesley's stables exhibited a large choice of good horses; for that
+ trade was in former days more active than at present. It was an ordinary
+ thing for a stranger to buy a horse for the purpose of a single journey,
+ and to sell him, as well as he could, when he had reached the point of his
+ destination; and hence there was a constant demand, and a corresponding
+ supply; upon both of which, Bridlesley, and those of his trade, contrived,
+ doubtless, to make handsome profits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, who was no despicable horse-jockey, selected for his purpose a
+ strong well-made horse, about sixteen hands high, and had him led into the
+ yard, to see whether the paces corresponded with his appearance. As these
+ also gave perfect satisfaction to the customer, it remained only to settle
+ the price with Bridlesley; who of course swore his customer had pitched
+ upon the best horse ever darkened the stable-door, since he had dealt that
+ way; that no such horses were to be had nowadays, for that the mares were
+ dead that foaled them; and having named a corresponding price, the usual
+ haggling commenced betwixt the seller and purchaser, for adjustment of
+ what the French dealers call <i>le prix juste</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader, if he be at all acquainted with this sort of traffic, well
+ knows it is generally a keen encounter of wits, and attracts the notice of
+ all the idlers within hearing, who are usually very ready to offer their
+ opinions, or their evidence. Amongst these, upon the present occasion, was
+ a thin man, rather less than the ordinary size, and meanly dressed; but
+ whose interference was in a confident tone, and such as showed himself
+ master of the subject on which he spoke. The price of the horse being
+ settled to about fifteen pounds, which was very high for the period, that
+ of the saddle and bridle had next to be adjusted, and the thin
+ mean-looking person before-mentioned, found nearly as much to say on this
+ subject as on the other. As his remarks had a conciliating and obliging
+ tendency towards the stranger, Peveril concluded he was one of those idle
+ persons, who, unable or unwilling to supply themselves with the means of
+ indulgence at their own cost, do not scruple to deserve them at the hands
+ of others, by a little officious complaisance; and considering that he
+ might acquire some useful information from such a person, was just about
+ to offer him the courtesy of a morning draught, when he observed he had
+ suddenly left the yard. He had scarce remarked this circumstance, before a
+ party of customers entered the place, whose haughty assumption of
+ importance claimed the instant attention of Bridlesley, and all his
+ militia of grooms and stable-boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three good horses," said the leader of the party, a tall bulky man, whose
+ breath was drawn full and high, under a consciousness of fat, and of
+ importance&mdash;"three good and able-bodied horses, for the service of
+ the Commons of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridlesley said he had some horses which might serve the Speaker himself
+ at need; but that, to speak Christian truth, he had just sold the best in
+ his stable to that gentleman present, who, doubtless, would give up the
+ bargain if the horse was needed for the service of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak well, friend," said the important personage; and advancing to
+ Julian, demanded, in a very haughty tone, the surrender of the purchase
+ which he had just made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, with some difficulty, subdued the strong desire which he felt to
+ return a round refusal to so unreasonable a request, but fortunately,
+ recollecting that the situation in which he at present stood, required, on
+ his part, much circumspection, he replied simply, that upon showing him
+ any warrant to seize upon horses for the public service, he must of course
+ submit to resign his purchase.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man, with an air of extreme dignity, pulled from his pocket, and
+ thrust into Peveril's hand, a warrant, subscribed by the Speaker of the
+ House of Commons, empowering Charles Topham, their officer of the Black
+ Rod, to pursue and seize upon the persons of certain individuals named in
+ the warrant; and of all other persons who are, or should be, accused by
+ competent witnesses, of being accessory to, or favourers of, the hellish
+ and damnable Popish Plot, at present carried on within the bowels of the
+ kingdom; and charging all men, as they loved their allegiance, to render
+ the said Charles Topham their readiest and most effective assistance, in
+ execution of the duty entrusted to his care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On perusing a document of such weighty import, Julian had no hesitation to
+ give up his horse to this formidable functionary; whom somebody compared
+ to a lion, which, as the House of Commons was pleased to maintain such an
+ animal, they were under the necessity of providing for by frequent
+ commitments; until "<i>Take him, Topham</i>," became a proverb, and a
+ formidable one, in the mouth of the public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The acquiescence of Peveril procured him some grace in the sight of the
+ emissary; who, before selecting two horses for his attendants, gave
+ permission to the stranger to purchase a grey horse, much inferior,
+ indeed, to that which he had resigned, both in form and in action, but
+ very little lower in price, as Mr. Bridlesley, immediately on learning the
+ demand for horses upon the part of the Commons of England, had passed a
+ private resolution in his own mind, augmenting the price of his whole
+ stud, by an imposition of at least twenty per cent., <i>ad valorem</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril adjusted and paid the price with much less argument than on the
+ former occasion; for, to be plain with the reader, he had noticed in the
+ warrant of Mr. Topham, the name of his father, Sir Geoffrey Peveril of
+ Martindale Castle, engrossed at full length, as one of those subjected to
+ arrest by that officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When aware of this material fact, it became Julian's business to leave
+ Liverpool directly, and carry the alarm to Derbyshire, if, indeed, Mr.
+ Topham had not already executed his charge in that county, which he
+ thought unlikely, as it was probable they would commence by securing those
+ who lived nearest to the seaports. A word or two which he overheard
+ strengthened his hopes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And hark ye, friend," said Mr. Topham; "you will have the horses at the
+ door of Mr. Shortell, the mercer, in two hours, as we shall refresh
+ ourselves there with a cool tankard, and learn what folks live in the
+ neighbourhood that may be concerned in my way. And you will please to have
+ that saddle padded, for I am told the Derbyshire roads are rough.&mdash;And
+ you, Captain Dangerfield, and Master Everett, you must put on your
+ Protestant spectacles, and show me where there is the shadow of a priest,
+ or of a priest's favourer; for I am come down with a broom in my cap to
+ sweep this north country of such like cattle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the persons he thus addressed, who wore the garb of a broken-down
+ citizen, only answered, "Ay, truly, Master Topham, it is time to purge the
+ garner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other, who had a formidable pair of whiskers, a red nose, and a
+ tarnished laced coat, together with a hat of Pistol's dimensions, was more
+ loquacious. "I take it on my damnation," said this zealous Protestant
+ witness, "that I will discover the marks of the beast on every one of them
+ betwixt sixteen and seventy, as plainly as if they had crossed themselves
+ with ink, instead of holy water. Since we have a King willing to do
+ justice, and a House of Commons to uphold prosecutions, why, damn me, the
+ cause must not stand still for lack of evidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stick to that, noble captain," answered the officer; "but, prithee,
+ reserve thy oaths for the court of justice; it is but sheer waste to throw
+ them away, as you do in your ordinary conversation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fear you nothing, Master Topham," answered Dangerfield; "it is right to
+ keep a man's gifts in use; and were I altogether to renounce oaths in my
+ private discourse, how should I know how to use one when I needed it? But
+ you hear me use none of your Papist abjurations. I swear not by the mass,
+ or before George, or by anything that belongs to idolatry; but such
+ downright oaths as may serve a poor Protestant gentleman, who would fain
+ serve Heaven and the King."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bravely spoken, most noble Festus," said his yoke-fellow. "But do not
+ suppose, that although I am not in the habit of garnishing my words with
+ oaths out of season, I shall be wanting, when called upon, to declare the
+ height and the depth, the width and the length, of this hellish plot
+ against the King and the Protestant faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dizzy, and almost sick, with listening to the undisguised brutality of
+ these fellows, Peveril, having with difficulty prevailed on Bridlesley to
+ settle his purchase, at length led forth his grey steed; but was scarce
+ out of the yard, when he heard the following alarming conversation pass,
+ of which he seemed himself the object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is that youth?" said the slow soft voice of the more precise of the
+ two witnesses. "Methinks I have seen him somewhere before. Is he from
+ these parts?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not that I know of," said Bridlesley; who, like all the other inhabitants
+ of England at the time, answered the interrogatories of these fellows with
+ the deference which is paid in Spain to the questions of an inquisitor. "A
+ stranger&mdash;entirely a stranger&mdash;never saw him before&mdash;a wild
+ young colt, I warrant him; and knows a horse's mouth as well as I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I begin to bethink me I saw such a face as his at the Jesuits' consult,
+ in the White Horse Tavern," answered Everett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I think I recollect," said Captain Dangerfield&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, master and captain," said the authoritative voice of Topham,
+ "we will have none of your recollections at present. We all know what
+ these are likely to end in. But I will have you know, you are not to run
+ till the leash is slipped. The young man is a well-looking lad, and gave
+ up his horse handsomely for the service of the House of Commons. He knows
+ how to behave himself to his betters, I warrant you; and I scarce think he
+ has enough in his purse to pay the fees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech concluded the dialogue, which Peveril, finding himself so much
+ concerned in the issue, thought it best to hear to an end. Now, when it
+ ceased, to get out of the town unobserved, and take the nearest way to his
+ father's castle, seemed his wisest plan. He had settled his reckoning at
+ the inn, and brought with him to Bridlesley's the small portmanteau which
+ contained his few necessaries, so that he had no occasion to return
+ thither. He resolved, therefore, to ride some miles before he stopped,
+ even for the purpose of feeding his horse; and being pretty well
+ acquainted with the country, he hoped to be able to push forward to
+ Martindale Castle sooner than the worshipful Master Topham; whose saddle
+ was, in the first place, to be padded, and who, when mounted, would, in
+ all probability, ride with the precaution of those who require such
+ security against the effects of a hard trot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of these feelings, Julian pushed for Warrington, a
+ place with which he was well acquainted; but, without halting in the town,
+ he crossed the Mersey, by the bridge built by an ancestor of his friend
+ the Earl of Derby, and continued his route towards Dishley, on the borders
+ of Derbyshire. He might have reached this latter village easily, had his
+ horse been fitter for a forced march; but in the course of the journey, he
+ had occasion, more than once, to curse the official dignity of the person
+ who had robbed him of his better steed, while taking the best direction he
+ could through a country with which he was only generally acquainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, near Altringham, a halt became unavoidable; and Peveril had
+ only to look for some quiet and sequestered place of refreshment. This
+ presented itself, in the form of a small cluster of cottages; the best of
+ which united the characters of an alehouse and a mill, where the sign of
+ the Cat (the landlord's faithful ally in defence of his meal-sacks),
+ booted as high as Grimalkin in the fairy tale, and playing on the fiddle
+ for the more grace, announced that John Whitecraft united the two honest
+ occupations of landlord and miller; and, doubtless, took toll from the
+ public in both capacities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a place promised a traveller, who journeyed incognito, safer, if not
+ better accommodation, than he was like to meet with in more frequented
+ inns; and at the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian halted accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In these distracted times, when each man dreads
+ The bloody stratagems of busy hands.
+ &mdash;OTWAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian received the usual attention
+ paid to the customers of an inferior house of entertainment. His horse was
+ carried by a ragged lad, who acted as hostler, into a paltry stable;
+ where, however, the nag was tolerably supplied with food and litter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having seen the animal on which his comfort, perhaps his safety, depended,
+ properly provided for, Peveril entered the kitchen, which indeed was also
+ the parlour and hall of the little hostelry, to try what refreshment he
+ could obtain for himself. Much to his satisfaction, he found there was
+ only one guest in the house besides himself; but he was less pleased when
+ he found that he must either go without dinner, or share with that single
+ guest the only provisions which chanced to be in the house, namely, a dish
+ of trouts and eels, which their host, the miller, had brought in from his
+ mill-stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the particular request of Julian, the landlady undertook to add a
+ substantial dish of eggs and bacon, which perhaps she would not have
+ undertaken for, had not the sharp eye of Peveril discovered the flitch
+ hanging in its smoky retreat, when, as its presence could not be denied,
+ the hostess was compelled to bring it forward as a part of her supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a buxom dame about thirty, whose comely and cheerful countenance
+ did honour to the choice of the jolly miller, her loving mate; and was now
+ stationed under the shade of an old-fashioned huge projecting chimney,
+ within which it was her province to "work i' the fire," and provide for
+ the wearied wayfaring man, the good things which were to send him
+ rejoicing on his course. Although, at first, the honest woman seemed
+ little disposed to give herself much additional trouble on Julian's
+ account, yet the good looks, handsome figure, and easy civility of her new
+ guest, soon bespoke the principal part of her attention; and while busy in
+ his service, she regarded him, from time to time, with looks, where
+ something like pity mingled with complacency. The rich smoke of the
+ rasher, and the eggs with which it was flanked, already spread itself
+ through the apartment; and the hissing of these savoury viands bore chorus
+ to the simmering of the pan, in which the fish were undergoing a slower
+ decoction. The table was covered with a clean huck-aback napkin, and all
+ was in preparation for the meal, which Julian began to expect with a good
+ deal of impatience, when the companion, who was destined to share it with
+ him, entered the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first glance Julian recognised, to his surprise, the same
+ indifferently dressed, thin-looking person, who, during the first bargain
+ which he had made with Bridlesley, had officiously interfered with his
+ advice and opinion. Displeased at having the company of any stranger
+ forced upon him, Peveril was still less satisfied to find one who might
+ make some claim of acquaintance with him, however slender, since the
+ circumstances in which he stood compelled him to be as reserved as
+ possible. He therefore turned his back upon his destined messmate, and
+ pretended to amuse himself by looking out of the window, determined to
+ avoid all intercourse until it should be inevitably forced upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, the other stranger went straight up to the landlady,
+ where she toiled on household cares intent, and demanded of her, what she
+ meant by preparing bacon and eggs, when he had positively charged her to
+ get nothing ready but the fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good woman, important as every cook in the discharge of her duty,
+ deigned not for some time so much as to acknowledge that she heard the
+ reproof of her guest; and when she did so, it was only to repel it in a
+ magisterial and authoritative tone.&mdash;"If he did not like bacon&mdash;(bacon
+ from their own hutch, well fed on pease and bran)&mdash;if he did not like
+ bacon and eggs&mdash;(new-laid eggs, which she had brought in from the
+ hen-roost with her own hands)&mdash;why so put case&mdash;it was the worse
+ for his honour, and the better for those who did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The better for those who like them?" answered the guest; "that is as much
+ as to say I am to have a companion, good woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not good woman me, sir," replied the miller's wife, "till I call you
+ good man; and, I promise you, many would scruple to do that to one who
+ does not love eggs and bacon of a Friday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my good lady," said her guest, "do not fix any misconstruction upon
+ me&mdash;I dare say the eggs and the bacon are excellent; only they are
+ rather a dish too heavy for my stomach."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, or your conscience perhaps, sir," answered the hostess. "And now, I
+ bethink me, you must needs have your fish fried with oil, instead of the
+ good drippings I was going to put to them. I would I could spell the
+ meaning of all this now; but I warrant John Bigstaff, the constable, could
+ conjure something out of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause here; but Julian, somewhat alarmed at the tone which the
+ conversation assumed, became interested in watching the dumb show which
+ succeeded. By bringing his head a little towards the left, but without
+ turning round, or quitting the projecting latticed window where he had
+ taken his station, he could observe that the stranger, secured, as he
+ seemed to think himself, from observation, had sidled close up to the
+ landlady, and, as he conceived, had put a piece of money into her hand.
+ The altered tone of the miller's moiety corresponded very much with this
+ supposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, indeed, and forsooth," she said, "her house was Liberty Hall; and so
+ should every publican's be. What was it to her what gentlefolks ate or
+ drank, providing they paid for it honestly? There were many honest
+ gentlemen, whose stomachs could not abide bacon, grease, or dripping,
+ especially on a Friday; and what was that to her, or any one in her line,
+ so gentlefolks paid honestly for the trouble? Only, she would say, that
+ her bacon and eggs could not be mended betwixt this and Liverpool, and
+ that she would live and die upon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall hardly dispute it," said the stranger; and turning towards
+ Julian, he added, "I wish this gentleman, who I suppose is my
+ trencher-companion, much joy of the dainties which I cannot assist him in
+ consuming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I assure you, sir," answered Peveril, who now felt himself compelled to
+ turn about, and reply with civility, "that it was with difficulty I could
+ prevail on my landlady to add my cover to yours, though she seems now such
+ a zealot for the consumption of eggs and bacon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am zealous for nothing," said the landlady, "save that men would eat
+ their victuals, and pay their score; and if there be enough in one dish to
+ serve two guests, I see little purpose in dressing them two; however, they
+ are ready now, and done to a nicety.&mdash;Here, Alice! Alice!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sound of that well-known name made Julian start; but the Alice who
+ replied to the call ill resembled the vision which his imagination
+ connected with the accents, being a dowdy slipshod wench, the drudge of
+ the low inn which afforded him shelter. She assisted her mistress in
+ putting on the table the dishes which the latter had prepared; and a
+ foaming jug of home-brewed ale being placed betwixt them, was warranted by
+ Dame Whitecraft as excellent; "for," said she, "we know by practice that
+ too much water drowns the miller, and we spare it on our malt as we would
+ in our mill-dam."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I drink to your health in it, dame," said the elder stranger; "and a cup
+ of thanks for these excellent fish; and to the drowning of all unkindness
+ between us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you, sir," said the dame, "and wish you the like; but I dare not
+ pledge you, for our Gaffer says that ale is brewed too strong for women;
+ so I only drink a glass of canary at a time with a gossip, or any
+ gentleman guest that is so minded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall drink one with me, then, dame," said Peveril, "so you will let
+ me have a flagon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That you shall, sir, and as good as ever was broached; but I must to the
+ mill, to get the key from the goodman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and tucking her clean gown through the pocket-holes, that her
+ steps might be the more alert, and her dress escape dust, off she tripped
+ to the mill, which lay close adjoining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A dainty dame, and dangerous, is the miller's wife," said the stranger,
+ looking at Peveril. "Is not that old Chaucer's phrase?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I&mdash;I believe so," said Peveril, not much read in Chaucer, who was
+ then even more neglected than at present; and much surprised at a literary
+ quotation from one of the mean appearance exhibited by the person before
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," answered the stranger, "I see that you, like other young gentlemen
+ of the time, are better acquainted with Cowley and Waller, than with the
+ 'well of English undefiled.' I cannot help differing. There are touches of
+ nature about the old bard of Woodstock, that, to me, are worth all the
+ turns of laborious wit in Cowley, and all the ornate and artificial
+ simplicity of his courtly competitor. The description, for instance, of
+ his country coquette&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Wincing she was, as is a wanton colt,
+ Sweet as a flower, and upright as a bolt.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then, again, for pathos, where will you mend the dying scene of Arcite?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Alas, my heart's queen! alas, my wife!
+ Giver at once, and ender of my life.
+ What is this world?&mdash;What axen men to have?
+ Now with his love&mdash;now in his cold grave
+ Alone, withouten other company.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But I tire you, sir; and do injustice to the poet, whom I remember but by
+ halves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the contrary, sir," replied Peveril, "you make him more intelligible
+ to me in your recitation, than I have found him when I have tried to
+ peruse him myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You were only frightened by the antiquated spelling, and 'the letters
+ black,'" said his companion. "It is many a scholar's case, who mistakes a
+ nut, which he could crack with a little exertion, for a bullet, which he
+ must needs break his teeth on; but yours are better employed.&mdash;Shall
+ I offer you some of this fish?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, sir," replied Julian, willing to show himself a man of reading in
+ his turn; "I hold with old Caius, and profess to fear judgment, to fight
+ where I cannot choose, and to eat no fish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger cast a startled look around him at this observation, which
+ Julian had thrown out, on purpose to ascertain, if possible, the quality
+ of his companion, whose present language was so different from the
+ character he had assumed at Bridlesley's. His countenance, too, although
+ the features were of an ordinary, not to say mean cast, had that character
+ of intelligence which education gives to the most homely face; and his
+ manners were so easy and disembarrassed, as plainly showed a complete
+ acquaintance with society, as well as the habit of mingling with it in the
+ higher stages. The alarm which he had evidently shown at Peveril's answer,
+ was but momentary; for he almost instantly replied, with a smile, "I
+ promise you, sir, that you are in no dangerous company; for
+ notwithstanding my fish dinner, I am much disposed to trifle with some of
+ your savoury mess, if you will indulge me so far."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril accordingly reinforced the stranger's trencher with what remained
+ of the bacon and eggs, and saw him swallow a mouthful or two with apparent
+ relish; but presently after began to dally with his knife and fork, like
+ one whose appetite was satiated; and then took a long draught of the black
+ jack, and handed his platter to the large mastiff dog, who, attracted by
+ the smell of the dinner, had sat down before him for some time, licking
+ his chops, and following with his eye every morsel which the guest raised
+ to his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, my poor fellow," said he, "thou hast had no fish, and needest this
+ supernumerary trencher-load more than I do. I cannot withstand thy mute
+ supplication any longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dog answered these courtesies by a civil shake of the tail, while he
+ gobbled up what was assigned him by the stranger's benevolence, in the
+ greater haste, that he heard his mistress's voice at the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is the canary, gentlemen," said the landlady; "and the goodman has
+ set off the mill, to come to wait on you himself. He always does so, when
+ company drink wine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That he may come in for the host's, that is, for the lion's share," said
+ the stranger, looking at Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The shot is mine," said Julian; "and if mine host will share it, I will
+ willingly bestow another quart on him, and on you, sir. I never break old
+ customs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These sounds caught the ear of Gaffer Whitecraft, who had entered the
+ room, a strapping specimen of his robust trade, prepared to play the
+ civil, or the surly host, as his company should be acceptable or
+ otherwise. At Julian's invitation, he doffed his dusty bonnet&mdash;brushed
+ from his sleeve the looser particles of his professional dust&mdash;and
+ sitting down on the end of a bench, about a yard from the table, filled a
+ glass of canary, and drank to his guests, and "especially to this noble
+ gentleman," indicating Peveril, who had ordered the canary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian returned the courtesy by drinking his health, and asking what news
+ were about in the country?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nought, sir, I hears on nought, except this Plot, as they call it, that
+ they are pursuing the Papishers about; but it brings water to my mill, as
+ the saying is. Between expresses hurrying hither and thither, and guards
+ and prisoners riding to and again, and the custom of the neighbours, that
+ come to speak over the news of an evening, nightly, I may say, instead of
+ once a week, why, the spigot is in use, gentlemen, and your land thrives;
+ and then I, serving as constable, and being a known Protestant, I have
+ tapped, I may venture to say, it may be ten stands of ale extraordinary,
+ besides a reasonable sale of wine for a country corner. Heaven make us
+ thankful, and keep all good Protestants from Plot and Popery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can easily conceive, my friend," said Julian, "that curiosity is a
+ passion which runs naturally to the alehouse; and that anger, and
+ jealousy, and fear, are all of them thirsty passions, and great consumers
+ of home-brewed. But I am a perfect stranger in these parts; and I would
+ willingly learn, from a sensible man like you, a little of this same Plot,
+ of which men speak so much, and appear to know so little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Learn a little of it?&mdash;Why, it is the most horrible&mdash;the most
+ damnable, bloodthirsty beast of a Plot&mdash;But hold, hold, my good
+ master; I hope, in the first place, you believe there is a Plot; for,
+ otherwise, the Justice must have a word with you, as sure as my name is
+ John Whitecraft."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It shall not need," said Peveril; "for I assure you, mine host, I believe
+ in the Plot as freely and fully as a man can believe in anything he cannot
+ understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God forbid that anybody should pretend to understand it," said the
+ implicit constable; "for his worship the Justice says it is a mile beyond
+ him; and he be as deep as most of them. But men may believe, though they
+ do not understand; and that is what the Romanists say themselves. But this
+ I am sure of, it makes a rare stirring time for justices, and witnesses,
+ and constables.&mdash;So here's to your health again, gentlemen, in a cup
+ of neat canary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, John Whitecraft," said the wife, "do not you demean yourself
+ by naming witnesses along with justices and constables. All the world
+ knows how they come by their money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, but all the world knows that they <i>do</i> come by it, dame; and
+ that is a great comfort. They rustle in their canonical silks, and swagger
+ in their buff and scarlet, who but they?&mdash;Ay, ay, the cursed fox
+ thrives&mdash;and not so cursed neither. Is there not Doctor Titus Oates,
+ the saviour of the nation&mdash;does he not live at Whitehall, and eat off
+ plate, and have a pension of thousands a year, for what I know? and is he
+ not to be Bishop of Litchfield, so soon as Dr. Doddrum dies?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I hope Dr. Doddrum's reverence will live these twenty years; and I
+ dare say I am the first that ever wished such a wish," said the hostess.
+ "I do not understand these doings, not I; and if a hundred Jesuits came to
+ hold a consult at my house, as they did at the White Horse Tavern, I
+ should think it quite out of the line of business to bear witness against
+ them, provided they drank well, and paid their score."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very true, dame," said her elder guest; "that is what I call keeping a
+ good publican conscience; and so I will pay my score presently, and be
+ jogging on my way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, on his part, also demanded a reckoning, and discharged it so
+ liberally, that the miller flourished his hat as he bowed, and the hostess
+ courtesied down to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horses of both guests were brought forth; and they mounted, in order
+ to depart in company. The host and hostess stood in the doorway, to see
+ them depart. The landlord proffered a stirrup-cup to the elder guest,
+ while the landlady offered Peveril a glass from her own peculiar bottle.
+ For this purpose, she mounted on the horse-block, with flask and glass in
+ hand; so that it was easy for the departing guest, although on horse-back,
+ to return the courtesy in the most approved manner, namely, by throwing
+ his arm over his landlady's shoulder, and saluting her at parting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Whitecraft did not decline this familiarity; for there is no room for
+ traversing upon a horse-block, and the hands which might have served her
+ for resistance, were occupied with glass and bottle&mdash;matters too
+ precious to be thrown away in such a struggle. Apparently, however, she
+ had something else in her head; for as, after a brief affectation of
+ reluctance, she permitted Peveril's face to approach hers, she whispered
+ in his ear, "Beware of trepans!"&mdash;an awful intimation, which, in
+ those days of distrust, suspicion, and treachery, was as effectual in
+ interdicting free and social intercourse, as the advertisement of
+ "man-traps and spring-guns," to protect an orchard. Pressing her hand, in
+ intimation that he comprehended her hint, she shook his warmly in return,
+ and bade God speed him. There was a cloud on John Whitecraft's brow; nor
+ did his final farewell sound half so cordial as that which had been spoken
+ within doors. But then Peveril reflected, that the same guest is not
+ always equally acceptable to landlord and landlady; and unconscious of
+ having done anything to excite the miller's displeasure, he pursued his
+ journey without thinking farther of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was a little surprised, and not altogether pleased, to find that
+ his new acquaintance held the same road with him. He had many reasons for
+ wishing to travel alone; and the hostess's caution still rung in his ears.
+ If this man, possessed of so much shrewdness as his countenance and
+ conversation intimated, versatile, as he had occasion to remark, and
+ disguised beneath his condition, should prove, as was likely, to be a
+ concealed Jesuit or seminary-priest, travelling upon their great task of
+ the conversion of England, and rooting out of the Northern heresy,&mdash;a
+ more dangerous companion, for a person in his own circumstances, could
+ hardly be imagined; since keeping society with him might seem to authorise
+ whatever reports had been spread concerning the attachment of his family
+ to the Catholic cause. At the same time, it was very difficult, without
+ actual rudeness, to shake off the company of one who seemed so determined,
+ whether spoken to or not, to remain alongside of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril tried the experiment of riding slow; but his companion, determined
+ not to drop him, slackened his pace, so as to keep close by him. Julian
+ then spurred his horse to a full trot; and was soon satisfied, that the
+ stranger, notwithstanding the meanness of his appearance, was so much
+ better mounted than himself, as to render vain any thought of outriding
+ him. He pulled up his horse to a more reasonable pace, therefore, in a
+ sort of despair. Upon his doing so, his companion, who had been hitherto
+ silent, observed, that Peveril was not so well qualified to try speed upon
+ the road, as he would have been had he abode by his first bargain of
+ horse-flesh that morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril assented dryly, but observed, that the animal would serve his
+ immediate purpose, though he feared it would render him indifferent
+ company for a person better mounted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," answered his civil companion; "I am one of those who have
+ travelled so much, as to be accustomed to make my journey at any rate of
+ motion which may be most agreeable to my company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril made no reply to this polite intimation, being too sincere to
+ tender the thanks which, in courtesy, were the proper answer.&mdash;A
+ second pause ensued, which was broken by Julian asking the stranger
+ whether their roads were likely to lie long together in the same
+ direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot tell," said the stranger, smiling, "unless I knew which way you
+ were travelling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am uncertain how far I shall go to-night," said Julian, willingly
+ misunderstanding the purport of the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so am I," replied the stranger; "but though my horse goes better than
+ yours, I think it will be wise to spare him; and in case our road
+ continues to lie the same way, we are likely to sup, as we have dined
+ together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian made no answer whatever to this round intimation, but continued to
+ ride on, turning, in his own mind, whether it would not be wisest to come
+ to a distinct understanding with his pertinacious attendant, and to
+ explain, in so many words, that it was his pleasure to travel alone. But,
+ besides that the sort of acquaintance which they had formed during dinner,
+ rendered him unwilling to be directly uncivil towards a person of
+ gentleman-like manners, he had also to consider that he might very
+ possibly be mistaken in this man's character and purpose; in which case,
+ the cynically refusing the society of a sound Protestant, would afford as
+ pregnant matter of suspicion, as travelling in company with a disguised
+ Jesuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After brief reflection, therefore, he resolved to endure the encumbrance
+ of the stranger's society, until a fair opportunity should occur to rid
+ himself of it; and, in the meantime, to act with as much caution as he
+ possibly could, in any communication that might take place between them;
+ for Dame Whitecraft's parting caution still rang anxiously in his ears,
+ and the consequences of his own arrest upon suspicion, must deprive him of
+ every opportunity of serving his father, or the countess, or Major
+ Bridgenorth, upon whose interest, also, he had promised himself to keep an
+ eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he revolved these things in his mind, they had journeyed several
+ miles without speaking; and now entered upon a more waste country, and
+ worse roads, than they had hitherto found, being, in fact, approaching the
+ more hilly district of Derbyshire. In travelling on a very stony and
+ uneven lane, Julian's horse repeatedly stumbled; and, had he not been
+ supported by the rider's judicious use of the bridle, must at length
+ certainly have fallen under him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are times which crave wary riding, sir," said his companion; "and
+ by your seat in the saddle, and your hand on the rein, you seem to
+ understand it to be so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been long a horseman, sir," answered Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And long a traveller, too, sir, I should suppose; since by the great
+ caution you observe, you seem to think the human tongue requires a curb,
+ as well as the horse's jaws."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wiser men than I have been of opinion," answered Peveril, "that it were a
+ part of prudence to be silent, when men have little or nothing to say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot approve of their opinion," answered the stranger. "All knowledge
+ is gained by communication, either with the dead, through books, or, more
+ pleasingly, through the conversation of the living. The <i>deaf and dumb</i>,
+ alone, are excluded from improvement; and surely their situation is not so
+ enviable that we should imitate them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this illustration, which awakened a startling echo in Peveril's bosom,
+ the young man looked hard at his companion; but in the composed
+ countenance, and calm blue eye, he read no consciousness of a farther
+ meaning than the words immediately and directly implied. He paused a
+ moment, and then answered, "You seem to be a person, sir, of shrewd
+ apprehension; and I should have thought it might have occurred to you,
+ that in the present suspicious times, men may, without censure, avoid
+ communication with strangers. You know not me; and to me you are totally
+ unknown. There is not room for much discourse between us, without
+ trespassing on the general topics of the day, which carry in them seeds of
+ quarrel between friends, much more betwixt strangers. At any other time,
+ the society of an intelligent companion would have been most acceptable
+ upon my solitary ride; but at present&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At present!" said the other, interrupting him. "You are like the old
+ Romans, who held that <i>hostis</i> meant both a stranger and an enemy. I
+ will therefore be no longer a stranger. My name is Ganlesse&mdash;by
+ profession I am a Roman Catholic priest&mdash;I am travelling here in
+ dread of my life&mdash;and I am very glad to have you for a companion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you for the information with all my heart," said Peveril; "and to
+ avail myself of it to the uttermost, I must beg you to ride forward, or
+ lag behind, or take a side-path, at your own pleasure; for as I am no
+ Catholic, and travel upon business of high concernment, I am exposed both
+ to risk and delay, and even to danger, by keeping such suspicious company.
+ And so, Master Ganlesse, keep your own pace, and I will keep the contrary;
+ for I beg leave to forbear your company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Peveril spoke thus, he pulled up his horse, and made a full stop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger burst out a-laughing. "What!" he said, "you forbear my
+ company for a trifle of danger? Saint Anthony! How the warm blood of the
+ Cavaliers is chilled in the young men of the present day! This young
+ gallant, now, has a father, I warrant, who has endured as many adventures
+ for hunting priests, as a knight-errant for distressed damsels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This raillery avails nothing, sir," said Peveril. "I must request you
+ will keep your own way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My way is yours," said the pertinacious Master Ganlesse, as he called
+ himself; "and we will both travel the safer, that we journey in company. I
+ have the receipt of fern-seed, man, and walk invisible. Besides, you would
+ not have me quit you in this lane, where there is no turn to right or
+ left?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril moved on, desirous to avoid open violence&mdash;for which the
+ indifferent tone of the traveller, indeed, afforded no apt pretext&mdash;yet
+ highly disliking his company, and determined to take the first opportunity
+ to rid himself of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger proceeded at the same pace with him, keeping cautiously on
+ his bridle hand, as if to secure that advantage in case of a struggle. But
+ his language did not intimate the least apprehension. "You do me wrong,"
+ he said to Peveril, "and you equally wrong yourself. You are uncertain
+ where to lodge to-night&mdash;trust to my guidance. Here is an ancient
+ hall, within four miles, with an old knightly Pantaloon for its lord&mdash;an
+ all-be-ruffed Dame Barbara for the lady gay&mdash;a Jesuit, in a butler's
+ habit, to say grace&mdash;an old tale of Edgehill and Worster fights to
+ relish a cold venison pasty, and a flask of claret mantled with cobwebs&mdash;a
+ bed for you in the priest's hiding-hole&mdash;and, for aught I know,
+ pretty Mistress Betty, the dairy-maid, to make it ready."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This has no charms for me, sir," said Peveril, who, in spite of himself,
+ could not but be amused with the ready sketch which the stranger gave of
+ many an old mansion in Cheshire and Derbyshire, where the owners retained
+ the ancient faith of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I see I cannot charm you in this way," continued his companion; "I
+ must strike another key. I am no longer Ganlesse, the seminary priest, but
+ (changing his tone, and snuffling in the nose) Simon Canter, a poor
+ preacher of the Word, who travels this way to call sinners to repentance;
+ and to strengthen, and to edify, and to fructify among the scattered
+ remnant who hold fast the truth.&mdash;What say you to this, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I admire your versatility, sir, and could be entertained with it at
+ another time. At present sincerity is more in request."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sincerity!" said the stranger;&mdash;"a child's whistle, with but two
+ notes in it&mdash;yea, yea, and nay, nay. Why, man, the very Quakers have
+ renounced it, and have got in its stead a gallant recorder, called
+ Hypocrisy, that is somewhat like Sincerity in form, but of much greater
+ compass, and combines the whole gamut. Come, be ruled&mdash;be a disciple
+ of Simon Canter for the evening, and we will leave the old tumble-down
+ castle of the knight aforesaid, on the left hand, for a new brick-built
+ mansion, erected by an eminent salt-boiler from Namptwich, who expects the
+ said Simon to make a strong spiritual pickle for the preservation of a
+ soul somewhat corrupted by the evil communications of this wicked world.
+ What say you? He has two daughters&mdash;brighter eyes never beamed under
+ a pinched hood; and for myself, I think there is more fire in those who
+ live only to love and to devotion, than in your court beauties, whose
+ hearts are running on twenty follies besides. You know not the pleasure of
+ being conscience-keeper to a pretty precisian, who in one breath repeats
+ her foibles, and in the next confesses her passion. Perhaps, though, you
+ may have known such in your day? Come, sir, it grows too dark to see your
+ blushes; but I am sure they are burning on your cheek."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You take great freedom, sir," said Peveril, as they now approached the
+ end of the lane, where it opened on a broad common; "and you seem rather
+ to count more on my forbearance, than you have room to do with safety. We
+ are now nearly free of the lane which has made us companions for this late
+ half hour. To avoid your farther company, I will take the turn to the
+ left, upon that common; and if you follow me, it shall be at your peril.
+ Observe, I am well armed; and you will fight at odds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not at odds," returned the provoking stranger, "while I have my brown
+ jennet, with which I can ride round and round you at pleasure; and this
+ text, of a handful in length (showing a pistol which he drew from his
+ bosom), which discharges very convincing doctrine on the pressure of a
+ forefinger, and is apt to equalise all odds, as you call them, of youth
+ and strength. Let there be no strife between us, however&mdash;the moor
+ lies before us&mdash;choose your path on it&mdash;I take the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish you good night, sir," said Peveril to the stranger. "I ask your
+ forgiveness, if I have misconstrued you in anything; but the times are
+ perilous, and a man's life may depend on the society in which he travels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True," said the stranger; "but in your case, the danger is already
+ undergone, and you should seek to counteract it. You have travelled in my
+ company long enough to devise a handsome branch of the Popish Plot. How
+ will you look, when you see come forth, in comely folio form, The
+ Narrative of Simon Canter, otherwise called Richard Ganlesse, concerning
+ the horrid Popish Conspiracy for the Murder of the King, and Massacre of
+ all Protestants, as given on oath to the Honourable House of Commons;
+ setting forth, how far Julian Peveril, younger of Martindale Castle, is
+ concerned in carrying on the same&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, sir? What mean you?" said Peveril, much startled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, sir," replied his companion, "do not interrupt my title-page. Now
+ that Oates and Bedloe have drawn the great prizes, the subordinate
+ discoverers get little but by the sale of their Narrative; and Janeway,
+ Newman, Simmons, and every bookseller of them, will tell you that the
+ title is half the narrative. Mine shall therefore set forth the various
+ schemes you have communicated to me, of landing ten thousand soldiers from
+ the Isle of Man upon the coast of Lancashire; and marching into Wales, to
+ join the ten thousand pilgrims who are to be shipped from Spain; and so
+ completing the destruction of the Protestant religion, and of the devoted
+ city of London. Truly, I think such a Narrative, well spiced with a few
+ horrors, and published <i>cum privilegio parliamenti</i>, might, though
+ the market be somewhat overstocked, be still worth some twenty or thirty
+ pieces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You seem to know me, sir," said Peveril; "and if so, I think I may fairly
+ ask you your purpose in thus bearing me company, and the meaning of all
+ this rhapsody. If it be mere banter, I can endure it within proper limit;
+ although it is uncivil on the part of a stranger. If you have any farther
+ purpose, speak it out; I am not to be trifled with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good, now," said the stranger, laughing, "into what an unprofitable chafe
+ you have put yourself! An Italian <i>fuoruscito</i>, when he desires a
+ parley with you, takes aim from behind a wall, with his long gun, and
+ prefaces his conference with <i>Posso tirare</i>. So does your man-of-war
+ fire a gun across the bows of a Hansmogan Indiaman, just to bring her to;
+ and so do I show Master Julian Peveril, that, if I were one of the
+ honourable society of witnesses and informers, with whom his imagination
+ has associated me for these two hours past, he is as much within my danger
+ now, as what he is ever likely to be." Then, suddenly changing his tone to
+ serious, which was in general ironical, he added, "Young man, when the
+ pestilence is diffused through the air of a city, it is in vain men would
+ avoid the disease, by seeking solitude, and shunning the company of their
+ fellow-sufferers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In what, then, consists their safety?" said Peveril, willing to
+ ascertain, if possible, the drift of his companion's purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In following the counsels of wise physicians;" such was the stranger's
+ answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And as such," said Peveril, "you offer me your advice?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, young man," said the stranger haughtily, "I see no reason I
+ should do so.&mdash;I am not," he added, in his former tone, "your fee'd
+ physician&mdash;I offer no advice&mdash;I only say it would be wise that
+ you sought it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And from whom, or where, can I obtain it?" said Peveril. "I wander in
+ this country like one in a dream; so much a few months have changed it.
+ Men who formerly occupied themselves with their own affairs, are now
+ swallowed up in matters of state policy; and those tremble under the
+ apprehension of some strange and sudden convulsion of empire, who were
+ formerly only occupied by the fear of going to bed supperless. And to sum
+ up the matter, I meet a stranger apparently well acquainted with my name
+ and concerns, who first attaches himself to me, whether I will or no; and
+ then refuses me an explanation of his business, while he menaces me with
+ the strangest accusations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had I meant such infamy," said the stranger, "believe me, I had not given
+ you the thread of my intrigue. But be wise, and come one with me. There
+ is, hard by, a small inn, where, if you can take a stranger's warrant for
+ it, we shall sleep in perfect security."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yet, you yourself," said Peveril, "but now were anxious to avoid
+ observation; and in that case, how can you protect me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw! I did but silence that tattling landlady, in the way in which such
+ people are most readily hushed; and for Topham, and his brace of night
+ owls, they must hawk at other and lesser game than I should prove."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril could not help admiring the easy and confident indifference with
+ which the stranger seemed to assume a superiority to all the circumstances
+ of danger around him; and after hastily considering the matter with
+ himself, came to the resolution to keep company with him for this night at
+ least; and to learn, if possible, who he really was, and to what party in
+ the estate he was attached. The boldness and freedom of his talk seemed
+ almost inconsistent with his following the perilous, though at that time
+ the gainful trade of an informer. No doubt, such persons assumed every
+ appearance which could insinuate them into the confidence of their
+ destined victims; but Julian thought he discovered in this man's manner, a
+ wild and reckless frankness, which he could not but connect with the idea
+ of sincerity in the present case. He therefore answered, after a moment's
+ recollection, "I embrace your proposal, sir; although, by doing so, I am
+ reposing a sudden, and perhaps an unwary, confidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what am I, then, reposing in you?" said the stranger. "Is not our
+ confidence mutual?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; much the contrary. I know nothing of you whatever&mdash;you have
+ named me; and, knowing me to be Julian Peveril, know you may travel with
+ me in perfect security."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil I do!" answered his companion. "I travel in the same security
+ as with a lighted petard, which I may expect to explode every moment. Are
+ you not the son of Peveril of the Peak, with whose name Prelacy and Popery
+ are so closely allied, that no old woman of either sex in Derbyshire
+ concludes her prayer without a petition to be freed from all three? And do
+ you not come from the Popish Countess of Derby, bringing, for aught I
+ know, a whole army of Manxmen in your pocket, with full complement of
+ arms, ammunition, baggage, and a train of field artillery?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not very likely I should be so poorly mounted," said Julian,
+ laughing, "if I had such a weight to carry. But lead on, sir. I see I must
+ wait for your confidence, till you think proper to confer it; for you are
+ already so well acquainted with my affairs, that I have nothing to offer
+ you in exchange for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Allons</i>, then," said his companion; "give your horse the spur, and
+ raise the curb rein, lest he measure the ground with his nose instead of
+ his paces. We are not now more than a furlong or two from the place of
+ entertainment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They mended their pace accordingly, and soon arrived at the small solitary
+ inn which the traveller had mentioned. When its light began to twinkle
+ before them, the stranger, as if recollecting something he had forgotten,
+ "By the way, you must have a name to pass by; for it may be ill travelling
+ under your own, as the fellow who keeps this house is an old Cromwellian.
+ What will you call yourself?&mdash;My name is&mdash;for the present&mdash;Ganlesse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no occasion to assume a name at all," answered Julian. "I do not
+ incline to use a borrowed one, especially as I may meet with some one who
+ knows my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will call you Julian, then," said Master Ganlesse; "for Peveril will
+ smell, in the nostrils of mine host, of idolatry, conspiracy, Smithfield
+ faggots, fish on Fridays, the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey, and the
+ fire of purgatory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke thus, they alighted under the great broad-branched oak tree,
+ that served to canopy the ale-bench, which, at an earlier hour, had
+ groaned under the weight of a frequent conclave of rustic politicians.
+ Ganlesse, as he dismounted, whistled in a particularly shrill note, and
+ was answered from within the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He was a fellow in a peasant's garb;
+ Yet one could censure you a woodcock's carving.
+ Like any courtier at the ordinary.
+ &mdash;THE ORDINARY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The person who appeared at the door of the little inn to receive Ganlesse,
+ as we mentioned in our last chapter, sung, as he came forward, this scrap
+ of an old ballad,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Good even to you, Diccon;
+ And how have you sped;
+ Bring you the bonny bride
+ To banquet and bed?"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To which Ganlesse answered, in the same tone and tune,&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Content thee, kind Robin;
+ He need little care,
+ Who brings home a fat buck
+ Instead of a hare."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "You have missed your blow, then?" said the other, in reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you I have not," answered Ganlesse; "but you will think of nought
+ but your own thriving occupation&mdash;May the plague that belongs to it
+ stick to it! though it hath been the making of thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A man must live, Diccon Ganlesse," said the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well," said Ganlesse, "bid my friend welcome, for my sake. Hast
+ thou got any supper?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Reeking like a sacrifice&mdash;Chaubert has done his best. That fellow is
+ a treasure! give him a farthing candle, and he will cook a good supper out
+ of it.&mdash;Come in, sir. My friend's friend is welcome, as we say in my
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must have our horses looked to first," said Peveril, who began to be
+ considerably uncertain about the character of his companions&mdash;"that
+ done, I am for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ganlesse gave a second whistle; a groom appeared, who took charge of both
+ their horses, and they themselves entered the inn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ordinary room of a poor inn seemed to have undergone some alterations,
+ to render it fit for company of a higher description. There were a
+ beaufet, a couch, and one or two other pieces of furniture, of a style
+ inconsistent with the appearance of the place. The tablecloth, which was
+ already laid, was of the finest damask; and the spoons, forks, &amp;c.,
+ were of silver. Peveril looked at this apparatus with some surprise; and
+ again turning his eyes attentively upon his travelling companion,
+ Ganlesse, he could not help discovering (by the aid of imagination,
+ perhaps), that though insignificant in person, plain in features, and
+ dressed like one in indigence, there lurked still about his person and
+ manners, that indefinable ease of manner which belongs only to men of
+ birth and quality, or to those who are in the constant habit of
+ frequenting the best company. His companion, whom he called Will Smith,
+ although tall and rather good-looking, besides being much better dressed,
+ had not, nevertheless, exactly the same ease of demeanour; and was obliged
+ to make up for the want, by an additional proportion of assurance. Who
+ these two persons could be, Peveril could not attempt even to form a
+ guess. There was nothing for it but to watch their manner and
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After speaking a moment in whispers, Smith said to his companion, "We must
+ go look after our nags for ten minutes, and allow Chaubert to do his
+ office."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will not he appear, and minister before us, then?" said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! he?&mdash;he shift a trencher&mdash;he hand a cup?&mdash;No, you
+ forget whom you speak of. Such an order were enough to make him fall on
+ his own sword&mdash;he is already on the borders of despair, because no
+ craw-fish are to be had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alack-a day!" replied Ganlesse. "Heaven forbid I should add to such a
+ calamity! To stable, then, and see we how our steeds eat their provender,
+ while ours is getting ready."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They adjourned to the stable accordingly, which, though a poor one, had
+ been hastily supplied with whatever was necessary for the accommodation of
+ four excellent horses; one of which, that from which Ganlesse was just
+ dismounted, the groom we have mentioned was cleaning and dressing by the
+ light of a huge wax-candle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am still so far Catholic," said Ganlesse, laughing, as he saw that
+ Peveril noticed this piece of extravagance. "My horse is my saint, and I
+ dedicate a candle to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Without asking so great a favour for mine, which I see standing behind
+ yonder old hen-coop," replied Peveril, "I will at least relieve him of his
+ saddle and bridle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Leave him to the lad of the inn," said Smith; "he is not worthy of any
+ other person's handling; and I promise you, if you slip a single buckle,
+ you will so flavour of that stable duty, that you might as well eat
+ roast-beef as ragouts, for any relish you will have of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I love roast-beef as well as ragouts, at any time," said Peveril,
+ adjusting himself to a task which every young man should know how to
+ perform when need is; "and my horse, though it be but a sorry jade, will
+ champ better on hay and corn, than on an iron bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was unsaddling his horse, and shaking down some litter for the
+ poor wearied animal, he heard Smith observe to Ganlesse,&mdash;"By my
+ faith, Dick, thou hast fallen into poor Slender's blunder; missed Anne
+ Page, and brought us a great lubberly post-master's boy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush, he will hear thee," answered Ganlesse; "there are reasons for all
+ things&mdash;it is well as it is. But, prithee, tell thy fellow to help
+ the youngster."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" replied Smith, "d'ye think I am mad?&mdash;Ask Tom Beacon&mdash;Tom
+ of Newmarket&mdash;Tom of ten thousand, to touch such a four-legged brute
+ as that?&mdash;Why, he would turn me away on the spot&mdash;discard me,
+ i'faith. It was all he would do to take in hand your own, my good friend;
+ and if you consider him not the better, you are like to stand groom to him
+ yourself to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Will," answered Ganlesse, "I will say that for thee, thou hast a
+ set of the most useless, scoundrelly, insolent vermin about thee, that
+ ever ate up a poor gentleman's revenues."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Useless? I deny it," replied Smith. "Every one of my fellows does
+ something or other so exquisitely, that it were sin to make him do
+ anything else&mdash;it is your jacks-of-all-trades who are masters of
+ none.&mdash;But hark to Chaubert's signal. The coxcomb is twangling it on
+ the lute, to the tune of <i>Eveillez-vous, belle endormie</i>.&mdash;Come,
+ Master What d'ye call (addressing Peveril),&mdash;get ye some water, and
+ wash this filthy witness from your hand, as Betterton says in the play;
+ for Chaubert's cookery is like Friar Bacon's Head&mdash;time is&mdash;time
+ was&mdash;time will soon be no more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and scarce allowing Julian time to dip his hands in a bucket,
+ and dry them on a horse-cloth, he hurried him from the stable back to the
+ supper-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here all was prepared for their meal, with an epicurean delicacy, which
+ rather belonged to the saloon of a palace, than the cabin in which it was
+ displayed. Four dishes of silver, with covers of the same metal, smoked on
+ the table; and three seats were placed for the company. Beside the lower
+ end of the board, was a small side-table, to answer the purpose of what is
+ now called a dumb waiter; on which several flasks reared their tall,
+ stately, and swan-like crests, above glasses and rummers. Clean covers
+ were also placed within reach; and a small travelling-case of morocco,
+ hooped with silver, displayed a number of bottles, containing the most
+ approved sauces that culinary ingenuity had then invented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smith, who occupied the lower seat, and seemed to act as president of the
+ feast, motioned the two travellers to take their places and begin. "I
+ would not stay a grace-time," he said, "to save a whole nation from
+ perdition. We could bring no chauffettes with any convenience; and even
+ Chaubert is nothing, unless his dishes are tasted in the very moment of
+ projection. Come, uncover, and let us see what he has done for us.&mdash;Hum!&mdash;ha!&mdash;ay&mdash;squab-pigeons&mdash;wildfowl&mdash;young
+ chickens&mdash;venison cutlets&mdash;and a space in the centre, wet, alas!
+ by a gentle tear from Chaubert's eye, where should have been the <i>soupe
+ aux écrevisses</i>. The zeal of that poor fellow is ill repaid by his
+ paltry ten louis per month."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A mere trifle," said Ganlesse; "but, like yourself, Will, he serves a
+ generous master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repast now commenced; and Julian, though he had seen his young friend
+ the Earl of Derby, and other gallants, affect a considerable degree of
+ interest and skill in the science of the kitchen, and was not himself
+ either an enemy or a stranger to the pleasures of a good table, found
+ that, on the present occasion, he was a mere novice. Both his companions,
+ but Smith in especial, seemed to consider that they were now engaged in
+ the only true business of life; and weighed all its minutiæ with a
+ proportional degree of accuracy. To carve the morsel in the most delicate
+ manner&mdash;and to apportion the proper seasoning with the accuracy of
+ the chemist,&mdash;to be aware, exactly, of the order in which one dish
+ should succeed another, and to do plentiful justice to all&mdash;was a
+ minuteness of science to which Julian had hitherto been a stranger. Smith
+ accordingly treated him as a mere novice in epicurism, cautioning him to
+ eat his soup before the bouilli, and to forget the Manx custom of bolting
+ the boiled meat before the broth, as if Cutlar MacCulloch and all his
+ whingers were at the door. Peveril took the hint in good part, and the
+ entertainment proceeded with animation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Ganlesse paused, and declared the supper exquisite. "But, my
+ friend Smith," he added, "are your wines curious? When you brought all
+ that trash of plates and trumpery into Derbyshire, I hope you did not
+ leave us at the mercy of the strong ale of the shire, as thick and muddy
+ as the squires who drink it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I not know that <i>you</i> were to meet me, Dick Ganlesse?" answered
+ their host. "And can you suspect me of such an omission? It is true, you
+ must make champagne and claret serve, for my burgundy would not bear
+ travelling. But if you have a fancy for sherry, or Vin de Cahors, I have a
+ notion Chaubert and Tom Beacon have brought some for their own drinking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps the gentlemen would not care to impart," said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, fie!&mdash;anything in the way of civility," replied Smith. "They
+ are, in truth, the best-natured lads alive, when treated respectfully; so
+ that if you would prefer&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," said Ganlesse&mdash;"a glass of champagne will serve in a
+ scarcity of better."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The cork shall start obsequious to my thumb."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ said Smith; and as he spoke, he untwisted the wire, and the cork struck
+ the roof of the cabin. Each guest took a large rummer glass of the
+ sparkling beverage, which Peveril had judgment and experience enough to
+ pronounce exquisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me your hand, sir," said Smith; "it is the first word of sense you
+ have spoken this evening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wisdom, sir," replied Peveril, "is like the best ware in the pedlar's
+ pack, which he never produces till he knows his customer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sharp as mustard," returned the <i>bon vivant</i>; "but be wise, most
+ noble pedlar, and take another rummer of this same flask, which you see I
+ have held in an oblique position for your service&mdash;not permitting it
+ to retrograde to the perpendicular. Nay, take it off before the bubble
+ bursts on the rim, and the zest is gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do me honour, sir," said Peveril, taking the second glass. "I wish
+ you a better office than that of my cup-bearer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You cannot wish Will Smith one more congenial to his nature," said
+ Ganlesse. "Others have a selfish delight in the objects of sense, Will
+ thrives, and is happy by imparting them to his friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Better help men to pleasures than to pains, Master Ganlesse," answered
+ Smith, somewhat angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, wrath thee not, Will," said Ganlesse; "and speak no words in haste,
+ lest you may have cause to repent at leisure. Do I blame thy social
+ concern for the pleasures of others? Why, man, thou dost therein most
+ philosophically multiply thine own. A man has but one throat, and can but
+ eat, with his best efforts, some five or six times a day; but thou dinest
+ with every friend that cuts a capon, and art quaffing wine in other men's
+ gullets, from morning to night&mdash;<i>et sic de cæteris</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Friend Ganlesse," returned Smith, "I prithee beware&mdash;thou knowest I
+ can cut gullets as well as tickle them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, Will," answered Ganlesse carelessly; "I think I have seen thee wave
+ thy whinyard at the throat of a Hogan-Mogan&mdash;a Netherlandish weasand,
+ which expanded only on thy natural and mortal objects of aversion,&mdash;Dutch
+ cheese, rye-bread, pickled herring, onion, and Geneva."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For pity's sake, forbear the description!" said Smith; "thy words
+ overpower the perfumes, and flavour the apartment like a dish of
+ salmagundi!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But for an epiglottis like mine," continued Ganlesse, "down which the
+ most delicate morsels are washed by such claret as thou art now pouring
+ out, thou couldst not, in thy bitterest mood, wish a worse fate than to be
+ necklaced somewhat tight by a pair of white arms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By a tenpenny cord," answered Smith; "but not till you were dead; that
+ thereafter you be presently embowelled, you being yet alive; that your
+ head be then severed from your body, and your body divided into quarters,
+ to be disposed of at his Majesty's pleasure.&mdash;How like you that,
+ Master Richard Ganlesse?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "E'en as you like the thoughts of dining on bran-bread and milk-porridge&mdash;an
+ extremity which you trust never to be reduced to. But all this shall not
+ prevent me from pledging you in a cup of sound claret."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the claret circulated, the glee of the company increased; and Smith
+ placing the dishes which had been made use of upon the side-table, stamped
+ with his foot on the floor, and the table sinking down a trap, again rose,
+ loaded with olives, sliced neat's tongue, caviare, and other provocatives
+ for the circulation of the bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Will," said Ganlesse, "thou art a more complete mechanist than I
+ suspected; thou hast brought thy scene-shifting inventions to Derbyshire
+ in marvellously short time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A rope and pullies can be easily come by," answered Will; "and with a saw
+ and a plane, I can manage that business in half a day. I love the knack of
+ clean and secret conveyance&mdash;thou knowest it was the foundation of my
+ fortunes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be the wreck of them too, Will," replied his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, Diccon," answered Will; "but, <i>dum vivimus, vivamus</i>,&mdash;that
+ is my motto; and therewith I present you a brimmer to the health of the
+ fair lady you wot of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let it come, Will," replied his friend; and the flask circulated briskly
+ from hand to hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did not think it prudent to seem a check on their festivity, as he
+ hoped in its progress something might occur to enable him to judge of the
+ character and purposes of his companions. But he watched them in vain.
+ Their conversation was animated and lively, and often bore reference to
+ the literature of the period, in which the elder seemed particularly well
+ skilled. They also talked freely of the Court, and of that numerous class
+ of gallants who were then described as "men of wit and pleasure about
+ town;" and to which it seemed probable they themselves appertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length the universal topic of the Popish Plot was started; upon which
+ Ganlesse and Smith seemed to entertain the most opposite opinions.
+ Ganlesse, if he did not maintain the authority of Oates in its utmost
+ extent, contended, that at least it was confirmed in a great measure by
+ the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey, and the letters written by Coleman
+ to the confessor of the French King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much more noise, and less power of reasoning, Will Smith hesitated
+ not to ridicule and run down the whole discovery, as one of the wildest
+ and most causeless alarms which had ever been sounded in the ears of a
+ credulous public. "I shall never forget," he said, "Sir Godfrey's most
+ original funeral. Two bouncing parsons, well armed with sword and pistol,
+ mounted the pulpit, to secure the third fellow who preached from being
+ murdered in the face of the congregation. Three parsons in one pulpit&mdash;three
+ suns in one hemisphere&mdash;no wonder men stood aghast at such a
+ prodigy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What then, Will," answered his companion, "you are one of those who think
+ the good knight murdered himself, in order to give credit to the Plot?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my faith, not I," said the other; "but some true blue Protestant might
+ do the job for him, in order to give the thing a better colour.&mdash;I
+ will be judged by our silent friend, whether that be not the most feasible
+ solution of the whole."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray you, pardon me, gentlemen," said Julian; "I am but just landed in
+ England, and am a stranger to the particular circumstances which have
+ thrown the nation into such a ferment. It would be the highest degree of
+ assurance in me to give my opinion betwixt gentlemen who argue the matter
+ so ably; besides, to say truth, I confess weariness&mdash;your wine is
+ more potent than I expected, or I have drunk more of it than I meant to
+ do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, if an hour's nap will refresh you," said the elder of the strangers,
+ "make no ceremony with us. Your bed&mdash;all we can offer as such&mdash;is
+ that old-fashioned Dutch-built sofa, as the last new phrase calls it. We
+ shall be early stirrers tomorrow morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that we may be so," said Smith, "I propose that we do sit up all this
+ night&mdash;I hate lying rough, and detest a pallet-bed. So have at
+ another flask, and the newest lampoon to help it out&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Now a plague of their votes
+ Upon Papists and Plots,
+ And be d&mdash;d Doctor Oates.
+ Tol de rol.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but our Puritanic host," said Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have him in my pocket, man&mdash;his eyes, ears, nose, and tongue,"
+ answered his boon companion, "are all in my possession."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In that case, when you give him back his eyes and nose, I pray you keep
+ his ears and tongue," answered Ganlesse. "Seeing and smelling are organs
+ sufficient for such a knave&mdash;to hear and tell are things he should
+ have no manner of pretensions to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I grant you it were well done," answered Smith; "but it were a robbing of
+ the hangman and the pillory; and I am an honest fellow, who would give
+ Dun[*] and the devil his due. So,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'All joy to great Cæsar,
+ Long life, love, and pleasure;
+ May the King live for ever,
+ 'Tis no matter for us, boys.'"
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Dun was the hangman of the day at Tyburn. He was successor of
+ Gregory Brunden, who was by many believed to be the same who
+ dropped the axe upon Charles I., though others were suspected of
+ being the actual regicide.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While this Bacchanalian scene proceeded, Julian had wrapt himself closely
+ in his cloak, and stretched himself on the couch which they had shown him.
+ He looked towards the table he had left&mdash;the tapers seemed to become
+ hazy and dim as he gazed&mdash;he heard the sound of voices, but they
+ ceased to convey any impression to his understanding; and in a few
+ minutes, he was faster asleep than he had ever been in the whole course of
+ his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Gordon then his bugle blew,
+ And said, awa, awa;
+ The House of Rhodes is all on flame,
+ I hauld it time to ga'.
+ &mdash;OLD BALLAD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Julian awaked the next morning, all was still and vacant in the
+ apartment. The rising sun, which shone through the half-closed shutters,
+ showed some relics of the last night's banquet, which his confused and
+ throbbing head assured him had been carried into a debauch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without being much of a boon companion, Julian, like other young men of
+ the time, was not in the habit of shunning wine, which was then used in
+ considerable quantities; and he could not help being surprised, that the
+ few cups he had drunk over night had produced on his frame the effects of
+ excess. He rose up, adjusted his dress, and sought in the apartment for
+ water to perform his morning ablutions, but without success. Wine there
+ was on the table; and beside it one stool stood, and another lay, as if
+ thrown down in the heedless riot of the evening. "Surely," he thought to
+ himself, "the wine must have been very powerful, which rendered me
+ insensible to the noise my companions must have made ere they finished
+ their carouse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With momentary suspicion he examined his weapons, and the packet which he
+ had received from the Countess, and kept in a secret pocket of his upper
+ coat, bound close about his person. All was safe; and the very operation
+ reminded him of the duties which lay before him. He left the apartment
+ where they had supped, and went into another, wretched enough, where, in a
+ truckle-bed, were stretched two bodies, covered with a rug, the heads
+ belonging to which were amicably deposited upon the same truss of hay. The
+ one was the black shock-head of the groom; the other, graced with a long
+ thrum nightcap, showed a grizzled pate, and a grave caricatured
+ countenance, which the hook-nose and lantern-jaws proclaimed to belong to
+ the Gallic minister of good cheer, whose praises he had heard sung forth
+ on the preceding evening. These worthies seemed to have slumbered in the
+ arms of Bacchus as well as of Morpheus, for there were broken flasks on
+ the floor; and their deep snoring alone showed that they were alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bent upon resuming his journey, as duty and expedience alike dictated,
+ Julian next descended the trap-stair, and essayed a door at the bottom of
+ the steps. It was fastened within. He called&mdash;no answer was returned.
+ It must be, he thought, the apartment of the revellers, now probably
+ sleeping as soundly as their dependants still slumbered, and as he himself
+ had done a few minutes before. Should he awake them?&mdash;To what
+ purpose? They were men with whom accident had involved him against his own
+ will; and situated as he was, he thought it wise to take the earliest
+ opportunity of breaking off from society which was suspicious, and might
+ be perilous. Ruminating thus, he essayed another door, which admitted him
+ to a bedroom, where lay another harmonious slumberer. The mean utensils,
+ pewter measures, empty cans and casks, with which this room was lumbered,
+ proclaimed it that of the host, who slept surrounded by his professional
+ implements of hospitality and stock-in-trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This discovery relieved Peveril from some delicate embarrassment which he
+ had formerly entertained. He put upon the table a piece of money,
+ sufficient, as he judged, to pay his share of the preceding night's
+ reckoning; not caring to be indebted for his entertainment to the
+ strangers, whom he was leaving without the formality of an adieu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His conscience cleared of this gentleman-like scruple, Peveril proceeded
+ with a light heart, though somewhat a dizzy head, to the stable, which he
+ easily recognised among a few other paltry outhouses. His horse, refreshed
+ with rest, and perhaps not unmindful of his services the evening before,
+ neighed as his master entered the stable; and Peveril accepted the sound
+ as an omen of a prosperous journey. He paid the augury with a sieveful of
+ corn; and, while his palfrey profited by his attention, walked into the
+ fresh air to cool his heated blood, and consider what course he should
+ pursue in order to reach the Castle of Martindale before sunset. His
+ acquaintance with the country in general gave him confidence that he could
+ not have greatly deviated from the nearest road; and with his horse in
+ good condition, he conceived he might easily reach Martindale before
+ nightfall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having adjusted his route in his mind, he returned into the stable to
+ prepare his steed for the journey, and soon led him into the ruinous
+ courtyard of the inn, bridled, saddled, and ready to be mounted. But as
+ Peveril's hand was upon the mane, and his left foot in the stirrup, a hand
+ touched his cloak, and the voice of Ganlesse said, "What, Master Peveril,
+ is this your foreign breeding? or have you learned in France to take
+ French leave of your friends?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian started like a guilty thing, although a moment's reflection assured
+ him that he was neither wrong nor in danger. "I cared not to disturb you,"
+ he said, "although I did come as far as the door of your chamber. I
+ supposed your friend and you might require, after our last night's revel,
+ rather sleep than ceremony. I left my own bed, though a rough one, with
+ more reluctance than usual; and as my occasions oblige me to be an early
+ traveller, I thought it best to depart without leave-taking. I have left a
+ token for mine host on the table of his apartment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was unnecessary," said Ganlesse; "the rascal is already overpaid.&mdash;But
+ are you not rather premature in your purpose of departing? My mind tells
+ me that Master Julian Peveril had better proceed with me to London, than
+ turn aside for any purpose whatever. You may see already that I am no
+ ordinary person, but a master-spirit of the time. For the cuckoo I travel
+ with, and whom I indulge in his prodigal follies, he also has his uses.
+ But you are a different cast; and I not only would serve you, but even
+ wish you, to be my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian gazed on this singular person when he spoke. We have already said
+ his figure was mean and slight, with very ordinary and unmarked features,
+ unless we were to distinguish the lightnings of a keen grey eye, which
+ corresponded in its careless and prideful glance, with the haughty
+ superiority which the stranger assumed in his conversation. It was not
+ till after a momentary pause that Julian replied, "Can you wonder, sir,
+ that in my circumstances&mdash;if they are indeed known to you so well as
+ they seem&mdash;I should decline unnecessary confidence on the affairs of
+ moment which have called me hither, or refuse the company of a stranger,
+ who assigns no reason for desiring mine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be it as you list, young man," answered Ganlesse; "only remember
+ hereafter, you had a fair offer&mdash;it is not every one to whom I would
+ have made it. If we should meet hereafter, on other, and on worse terms,
+ impute it to yourself and not to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand not your threat," answered Peveril, "If a threat be indeed
+ implied. I have done no evil&mdash;I feel no apprehension&mdash;and I
+ cannot, in common sense, conceive why I should suffer for refusing my
+ confidence to a stranger, who seems to require that I should submit me
+ blindfold to his guidance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Farewell, then, Sir Julian of the Peak,&mdash;that may soon be," said the
+ stranger, removing the hand which he had as yet left carelessly on the
+ horse's bridle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How mean you by that phrase?" said Julian; "and why apply such a title to
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger smiled, and only answered, "Here our conference ends. The way
+ is before you. You will find it longer and rougher than that by which I
+ would have guided you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Ganlesse turned his back and walked toward the house. On the
+ threshold he turned about once more, and seeing that Peveril had not yet
+ moved from the spot, he again smiled and beckoned to him; but Julian,
+ recalled by that sign to recollection, spurred his horse and set forward
+ on his journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long ere his local acquaintance with the country enabled him to
+ regain the road to Martindale, from which he had diverged on the preceding
+ evening for about two miles. But the roads, or rather the paths, of this
+ wild country, so much satirised by their native poet, Cotton, were so
+ complicated in some places, so difficult to be traced in others, and so
+ unfit for hasty travelling in almost all, that in spite of Julian's utmost
+ exertions, and though he made no longer delay upon the journey than was
+ necessary to bait his horse at a small hamlet through which he passed at
+ noon, it was nightfall ere he reached an eminence, from which, an hour
+ sooner, the battlements of Martindale Castle would have been visible; and
+ where, when they were hid in night, their situation was indicated by a
+ light constantly maintained in a lofty tower, called the Warder's Turret;
+ and which domestic beacon had acquired, through all the neighbourhood, the
+ name of Peveril's Polestar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was regularly kindled at curfew toll, and supplied with as much wood
+ and charcoal as maintained the light till sunrise; and at no period was
+ the ceremonial omitted, saving during the space intervening between the
+ death of a Lord of the Castle and his interment. When this last event had
+ taken place, the nightly beacon was rekindled with some ceremony, and
+ continued till fate called the successor to sleep with his fathers. It is
+ not known from which circumstance the practice of maintaining this light
+ originally sprung. Tradition spoke of it doubtfully. Some thought it was
+ the signal of general hospitality, which, in ancient times, guided the
+ wandering knight, or the weary pilgrim, to rest and refreshment. Others
+ spoke of it as a "love-lighted watchfire," by which the provident anxiety
+ of a former lady of Martindale guided her husband homeward through the
+ terrors of a midnight storm. The less favourable construction of
+ unfriendly neighbours of the dissenting persuasion, ascribed the origin
+ and continuance of this practice to the assuming pride of the family of
+ Peveril, who thereby chose to intimate their ancient <i>suzerainté</i>
+ over the whole country, in the manner of the admiral who carries the
+ lantern in the poop, for the guidance of the fleet. And in the former
+ times, our old friend, Master Solsgrace, dealt from the pulpit many a hard
+ hit against Sir Geoffrey, as he that had raised his horn, and set up his
+ candlestick on high. Certain it is, that all the Peverils, from father to
+ son, had been especially attentive to the maintenance of this custom, as
+ something intimately connected with the dignity of their family; and in
+ the hands of Sir Geoffrey, the observance was not likely to be omitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the polar-star of Peveril had continued to beam more or less
+ brightly during all the vicissitudes of the Civil War; and glimmered,
+ however faintly, during the subsequent period of Sir Geoffrey's
+ depression. But he was often heard to say, and sometimes to swear, that
+ while there was a perch of woodland left to the estate, the old
+ beacon-grate should not lack replenishing. All this his son Julian well
+ knew; and therefore it was with no ordinary feelings of surprise and
+ anxiety, that, looking in the direction of the Castle, he perceived that
+ the light was not visible. He halted&mdash;rubbed his eyes&mdash;shifted
+ his position&mdash;and endeavoured, in vain, to persuade himself that he
+ had mistaken the point from which the polar-star of his house was visible,
+ or that some newly intervening obstacle, the growth of a plantation,
+ perhaps, or the erection of some building, intercepted the light of the
+ beacon. But a moment's reflection assured him, that from the high and free
+ situation which Martindale Castle bore in reference to the surrounding
+ country, this could not have taken place; and the inference necessarily
+ forced itself upon his mind, that Sir Geoffrey, his father, was either
+ deceased, or that the family must have been disturbed by some strange
+ calamity, under the pressure of which, their wonted custom and solemn
+ usage had been neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the influence of undefinable apprehension, young Peveril now struck
+ the spurs into his jaded steed, and forcing him down the broken and steep
+ path, at a pace which set safety at defiance, he arrived at the village of
+ Martindale-Moultrassie, eagerly desirous to ascertain the cause of this
+ ominous eclipse. The street, through which his tired horse paced slow and
+ reluctantly, was now deserted and empty; and scarcely a candle twinkled
+ from a casement, except from the latticed window of the little inn, called
+ the Peveril Arms, from which a broad light shone, and several voices were
+ heard in rude festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the door of this inn, the jaded palfrey, guided by the instinct or
+ experience which makes a hackney well acquainted with the outside of a
+ house of entertainment, made so sudden and determined a pause, that,
+ notwithstanding his haste, the rider thought it best to dismount,
+ expecting to be readily supplied with a fresh horse by Roger Raine, the
+ landlord, the ancient dependant of his family. He also wished to relive
+ his anxiety, by inquiring concerning the state of things at the Castle,
+ when he was surprised to hear, bursting from the taproom of the loyal old
+ host, a well-known song of the Commonwealth time, which some puritanical
+ wag had written in reprehension of the Cavaliers, and their dissolute
+ courses, and in which his father came in for a lash of the satirist.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Ye thought in the world there was no power to tame ye,
+ So you tippled and drabb'd till the saints overcame ye;
+ 'Forsooth,' and 'Ne'er stir,' sir, have vanquish'd 'G&mdash; d&mdash;n me,'
+ Which nobody can deny.
+
+ There was bluff old Sir Geoffrey loved brandy and mum well,
+ And to see a beer-glass turned over the thumb well;
+ But he fled like the wind, before Fairfax and Cromwell,
+ Which nobody can deny."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Some strange revolution, Julian was aware, must have taken place, both in
+ the village and in the Castle, ere these sounds of unseemly insult could
+ have been poured forth in the very inn which was decorated with the
+ armorial bearings of his family; and not knowing how far it might be
+ advisable to intrude on these unfriendly revellers, without the power of
+ repelling or chastising their insolence, he led his horse to a back-door,
+ which as he recollected, communicated with the landlord's apartment,
+ having determined to make private inquiry of him concerning the state of
+ matters at the Castle. He knocked repeatedly, and as often called on Roger
+ Raine with an earnest but stifled voice. At length a female voice replied
+ by the usual inquiry, "Who is there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is I, Dame Raine&mdash;I, Julian Peveril&mdash;tell your husband to
+ come to me presently."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alack, and a well-a-day, Master Julian, if it be really you&mdash;you are
+ to know my poor goodman has gone where he can come to no one; but,
+ doubtless, we shall all go to him, as Matthew Chamberlain says."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is dead, then?" said Julian. "I am extremely sorry&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dead six months and more, Master Julian; and let me tell you, it is a
+ long time for a lone woman, as Matt Chamberlain says."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, do you or your chamberlain undo the door. I want a fresh horse; and
+ I want to know how things are at the Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Castle&mdash;lack-a-day!&mdash;Chamberlain&mdash;Matthew Chamberlain&mdash;I
+ say, Matt!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matt Chamberlain apparently was at no great distance, for he presently
+ answered her call; and Peveril, as he stood close to the door, could hear
+ them whispering to each other, and distinguish in a great measure what
+ they said. And here it may be noticed, that Dame Raine, accustomed to
+ submit to the authority of old Roger, who vindicated as well the husband's
+ domestic prerogative, as that of the monarch in the state, had, when left
+ a buxom widow, been so far incommoded by the exercise of her newly
+ acquired independence, that she had recourse, upon all occasions, to the
+ advice of Matt Chamberlain; and as Matt began no longer to go slipshod,
+ and in a red nightcap, but wore Spanish shoes, and a high-crowned beaver
+ (at least of a Sunday), and moreover was called Master Matthew by his
+ fellow-servants, the neighbours in the village argued a speedy change of
+ the name of the sign-post; nay, perhaps, of the very sign itself, for
+ Matthew was a bit of a Puritan, and no friend to Peveril of the Peak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now counsel me, an you be a man, Matt Chamberlain," said Widow Raine;
+ "for never stir, if here be not Master Julian's own self, and he wants a
+ horse, and what not, and all as if things were as they wont to be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, dame, an ye will walk by my counsel," said the Chamberlain, "e'en
+ shake him off&mdash;let him be jogging while his boots are green. This is
+ no world for folks to scald their fingers in other folks' broth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that is well spoken, truly," answered Dame Raine; "but then look you,
+ Matt, we have eaten their bread, and, as my poor goodman used to say&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, nay, dame, they that walk by the counsel of the dead, shall have
+ none of the living; and so you may do as you list; but if you will walk by
+ mine, drop latch, and draw bolt, and bid him seek quarters farther&mdash;that
+ is my counsel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I desire nothing of you, sirrah," said Peveril, "save but to know how Sir
+ Geoffrey and his lady do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lack-a-day!&mdash;lack-a-day!" in a tone of sympathy, was the only answer
+ he received from the landlady; and the conversation betwixt her and her
+ chamberlain was resumed, but in a tone too low to be overheard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length Matt Chamberlain spoke aloud, and with a tone of authority: "We
+ undo no doors at this time of night, for it is against the Justices'
+ orders, and might cost us our licence; and for the Castle, the road up to
+ it lies before you, and I think you know it as well as we do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I know you," said Peveril, remounting his wearied horse, "for an
+ ungrateful churl, whom, on the first opportunity, I will assuredly cudgel
+ to a mummy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this menace Matthew made no reply, and Peveril presently heard him
+ leave the apartment, after a few earnest words betwixt him and his
+ mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatient at this delay, and at the evil omen implied in these people's
+ conversation and deportment, Peveril, after some vain spurring of his
+ horse, which positively refused to move a step farther, dismounted once
+ more, and was about to pursue his journey on foot, notwithstanding the
+ extreme disadvantage under which the high riding-boots of the period laid
+ those who attempted to walk with such encumbrances, when he was stopped by
+ a gentle call from the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her counsellor was no sooner gone, than the good-nature and habitual
+ veneration of the dame for the house of Peveril, and perhaps some fear for
+ her counsellor's bones, induced her to open the casement, and cry, but in
+ a low and timid tone, "Hist! hist! Master Julian&mdash;be you gone?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not yet, dame," said Julian; "though it seems my stay is unwelcome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but good young master, it is because men counsel so differently; for
+ here was my poor old Roger Raine would have thought the chimney corner too
+ cold for you; and here is Matt Chamberlain thinks the cold courtyard is
+ warm enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind that, dame," said Julian; "do but only tell me what has
+ happened at Martindale Castle? I see the beacon is extinguished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it in troth?&mdash;ay, like enough&mdash;then good Sir Geoffrey has
+ gone to heaven with my old Roger Raine!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sacred Heaven!" exclaimed Peveril; "when was my father taken ill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never as I knows of," said the dame; "but, about three hours since,
+ arrived a party at the Castle, with buff-coats and bandoleers, and one of
+ the Parliament's folks, like in Oliver's time. My old Roger Raine would
+ have shut the gates of the inn against them, but he is in the churchyard,
+ and Matt says it is against law; and so they came in and refreshed men and
+ horses, and sent for Master Bridgenorth, that is at Moultrassie Hall even
+ now; and so they went up to the Castle, and there was a fray, it is like,
+ as the old Knight was no man to take napping, as poor Roger Raine used to
+ say. Always the officers had the best on't; and reason there is, since
+ they had the law of their side, as our Matthew says. But since the
+ pole-star of the Castle is out, as your honour says, why, doubtless, the
+ old gentleman is dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious Heaven!&mdash;Dear dame, for love or gold, let me have a horse
+ to make for the Castle!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Castle?" said the dame; "the Roundheads, as my poor Roger called
+ them, will kill you as they have killed your father! Better creep into the
+ woodhouse, and I will send Bett with a blanket and some supper&mdash;Or
+ stay&mdash;my old Dobbin stands in the little stable beside the hencoop&mdash;e'en
+ take him, and make the best of your way out of the country, for there is
+ no safety here for you. Hear what songs some of them are singing at the
+ tap!&mdash;so take Dobbin, and do not forget to leave your own horse
+ instead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril waited to hear no farther, only, that just as he turned to go off
+ to the stable, the compassionate female was heard to exclaim&mdash;"O
+ Lord! what will Matthew Chamberlain say!" but instantly added, "Let him
+ say what he will, I may dispose of what's my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the haste of a double-fee'd hostler did Julian exchange the
+ equipments of his jaded brute with poor Dobbin, who stood quietly tugging
+ at his rackful of hay, without dreaming of the business which was that
+ night destined for him. Notwithstanding the darkness of the place, Julian
+ succeeded marvellous quickly in preparing for his journey; and leaving his
+ own horse to find its way to Dobbin's rack by instinct, he leaped upon his
+ new acquisition, and spurred him sharply against the hill, which rises
+ steeply from the village to the Castle. Dobbin, little accustomed to such
+ exertions, snorted, panted, and trotted as briskly as he could, until at
+ length he brought his rider before the entrance-gate of his father's
+ ancient seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moon was now rising, but the portal was hidden from its beams, being
+ situated, as we have mentioned elsewhere, in a deep recess betwixt two
+ large flanking towers. Peveril dismounted, turned his horse loose, and
+ advanced to the gate, which, contrary to his expectation, he found open.
+ He entered the large courtyard; and could then perceive that lights yet
+ twinkled in the lower part of the building, although he had not before
+ observed them, owing to the height of the outward walls. The main door, or
+ great hall-gate, as it was called, was, since the partially decayed state
+ of the family, seldom opened, save on occasions of particular ceremony. A
+ smaller postern door served the purpose of ordinary entrance; and to that
+ Julian now repaired. This also was open&mdash;a circumstance which would
+ of itself have alarmed him, had he not already had so many causes for
+ apprehension. His heart sunk within him as he turned to the left, through
+ a small outward hall, towards the great parlour, which the family usually
+ occupied as a sitting apartment; and his alarm became still greater, when,
+ on a nearer approach, he heard proceeding from thence the murmur of
+ several voices. He threw the door of the apartment wide; and the sight
+ which was thus displayed, warranted all the evil bodings which he had
+ entertained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of him stood the old Knight, whose arms were strongly secured,
+ over the elbows, by a leathern belt drawn tight round them, and made fast
+ behind; two ruffianly-looking men, apparently his guards, had hold of his
+ doublet. The scabbard-less sword which lay on the floor, and the empty
+ sheath which hung by Sir Geoffrey's side, showed the stout old Cavalier
+ had not been reduced to this state of bondage without an attempt at
+ resistance. Two or three persons, having their backs turned towards
+ Julian, sat round a table, and appeared engaged in writing&mdash;the
+ voices which he had heard were theirs, as they murmured to each other.
+ Lady Peveril&mdash;the emblem of death, so pallid was her countenance&mdash;stood
+ at the distance of a yard or two from her husband, upon whom her eyes were
+ fixed with an intenseness of gaze, like that of one who looks her last on
+ the object which she loves the best. She was the first to perceive Julian;
+ and she exclaimed, "Merciful Heaven!&mdash;my son!&mdash;the misery of our
+ house is complete!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My son!" echoed Sir Geoffrey, starting from the sullen state of
+ dejection, and swearing a deep oath&mdash;"thou art come in the right
+ time, Julian. Strike me one good blow&mdash;cleave me that traitorous
+ thief from the crown to the brisket! and that done, I care not what comes
+ next."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight of his father's situation made the son forget the inequality of
+ the contest which he was about to provoke.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0497m.jpg" alt="0497m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0497.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ "Villains," he said, "unhand him!" and rushing on the guards with his
+ drawn sword, compelled them to let go Sir Geoffrey, and stand on their own
+ defence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, thus far liberated, shouted to his lady. "Undo the belt,
+ dame, and we will have three good blows for it yet&mdash;they must fight
+ well that beat both father and son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one of those men who had started up from the writing-table when the
+ fray commenced, prevented Lady Peveril from rendering her husband this
+ assistance; while another easily mastered the hampered Knight, though not
+ without receiving several severe kicks from his heavy boots&mdash;his
+ condition permitting him no other mode of defence. A third, who saw that
+ Julian, young, active, and animated with the fury of a son who fights for
+ his parents, was compelling the two guards to give ground, seized on his
+ collar, and attempted to master his sword. Suddenly dropping that weapon,
+ and snatching one of his pistols, Julian fired it at the head of the
+ person by whom he was thus assailed. He did not drop, but, staggering back
+ as if he had received a severe blow, showed Peveril, as he sunk into a
+ chair, the features of old Bridgenorth, blackened with the explosion,
+ which had even set fire to a part of his grey hair. A cry of astonishment
+ escaped from Julian; and in the alarm and horror of the moment, he was
+ easily secured and disarmed by those with whom he had been at first
+ engaged.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0299m.jpg" alt="0299m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0299.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ "Heed it not, Julian," said Sir Geoffrey; "heed it not, my brave boy&mdash;that
+ shot has balanced all accounts!&mdash;but how&mdash;what the devil&mdash;he
+ lives!&mdash;Was your pistol loaded with chaff? or has the foul fiend
+ given him proof against lead?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was some reason for Sir Geoffrey's surprise, since, as he spoke,
+ Major Bridgenorth collected himself&mdash;sat up in the chair as one who
+ recovers from a stunning blow&mdash;then rose, and wiping with his
+ handkerchief the marks of the explosion from his face, he approached
+ Julian, and said, in the same cold unaltered tone in which he usually
+ expressed himself, "Young man, you have reason to bless God, who has this
+ day saved you from the commission of a great crime."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bless the devil, ye crop-eared knave!" exclaimed Sir Geoffrey; "for
+ nothing less than the father of all fanatics saved your brains from being
+ blown about like the rinsings of Beelzebub's porridge pot!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey," said Major Bridgenorth, "I have already told you, that
+ with you I will hold no argument; for to you I am not accountable for any
+ of my actions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said the lady, making a strong effort to speak, and
+ to speak with calmness, "whatever revenge your Christian state of
+ conscience may permit you to take on my husband&mdash;I&mdash;I, who have
+ some right to experience compassion at your hand, for most sincerely did I
+ compassionate you when the hand of Heaven was heavy on you&mdash;I implore
+ you not to involve my son in our common ruin!&mdash;Let the destruction of
+ the father and mother, with the ruin of our ancient house, satisfy your
+ resentment for any wrong which you have ever received at my husband's
+ hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold your peace, housewife," said the Knight, "you speak like a fool, and
+ meddle with what concerns you not.&mdash;Wrong at <i>my</i> hand? The
+ cowardly knave has ever had but even too much right. Had I cudgelled the
+ cur soundly when he first bayed at me, the cowardly mongrel had been now
+ crouching at my feet, instead of flying at my throat. But if I get through
+ this action, as I have got through worse weather, I will pay off old
+ scores, as far as tough crab-tree and cold iron will bear me out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey," replied Bridgenorth, "if the birth you boast of has made
+ you blind to better principles, it might have at least taught you
+ civility. What do you complain of? I am a magistrate; and I execute a
+ warrant, addressed to me by the first authority in that state. I am a
+ creditor also of yours; and law arms me with powers to recover my own
+ property from the hands of an improvident debtor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You a magistrate!" said the Knight; "much such a magistrate as Noll was a
+ monarch. Your heart is up, I warrant, because you have the King's pardon;
+ and are replaced on the bench, forsooth, to persecute the poor Papist.
+ There was never turmoil in the state, but knaves had their vantage by it&mdash;never
+ pot boiled, but the scum was cast uppermost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For God's sake, my dearest husband," said Lady Peveril, "cease this wild
+ talk! It can but incense Master Bridgenorth, who might otherwise consider,
+ that in common charity&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Incense him!" said Sir Geoffrey, impatiently interrupting her;
+ "God's-death, madam, you will drive me mad! Have you lived so long in this
+ world, and yet expect consideration and charity from an old starved wolf
+ like that? And if he had it, do you think that I, or you, madam, as my
+ wife, are subjects for his charity?&mdash;Julian, my poor fellow, I am
+ sorry thou hast come so unluckily, since thy petronel was not better
+ loaded&mdash;but thy credit is lost for ever as a marksman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This angry colloquy passed so rapidly on all sides, that Julian, scarce
+ recovered from the extremity of astonishment with which he was overwhelmed
+ at finding himself suddenly plunged into a situation of such extremity,
+ had no time to consider in what way he could most effectually act for the
+ succour of his parents. To speak to Bridgenorth fair seemed the more
+ prudent course; but to this his pride could hardly stoop; yet he forced
+ himself to say, with as much calmness as he could assume,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth, since you act as a magistrate, I desire to be treated
+ according to the laws of England; and demand to know of what we are
+ accused, and by whose authority we are arrested?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is another howlet for ye!" exclaimed the impetuous old Knight; "his
+ mother speaks to a Puritan of charity; and thou must talk of law to a
+ round-headed rebel, with a wannion to you! What warrant hath he, think ye,
+ beyond the Parliament's or the devil's?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who speaks of the Parliament?" said a person entering, whom Peveril
+ recognised as the official person whom he had before seen at the
+ horse-dealer's, and who now bustled in with all the conscious dignity of
+ plenary authority,&mdash;"Who talks of the Parliament?" he exclaimed. "I
+ promise you, enough has been found in this house to convict twenty
+ plotters&mdash;Here be arms, and that good store. Bring them in, Captain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The very same," exclaimed the Captain, approaching, "which I mention in
+ my printed Narrative of Information, lodged before the Honourable House of
+ Commons; they were commissioned from old Vander Huys of Rotterdam, by
+ orders of Don John of Austria, for the service of the Jesuits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, by this light," said Sir Geoffrey, "they are the pikes, musketoons,
+ and pistols, that have been hidden in the garret ever since Naseby fight!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And here," said the Captain's yoke-fellow, Everett, "are proper priest's
+ trappings&mdash;antiphoners, and missals, and copes, I warrant you&mdash;ay,
+ and proper pictures, too, for Papists to mutter and bow over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now plague on thy snuffling whine," said Sir Geoffrey; "here is a rascal
+ will swear my grandmother's old farthingale to be priest's vestments, and
+ the story book of Owlenspiegel a Popish missal!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how's this, Master Bridgenorth?" said Topham, addressing the
+ magistrate; "your honour has been as busy as we have; and you have caught
+ another knave while we recovered these toys."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think, sir," said Julian, "if you look into your warrant, which, if I
+ mistake not, names the persons whom you are directed to arrest, you will
+ find you have not title to apprehend me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir," said the officer, puffing with importance, "I do not know who you
+ are; but I would you were the best man in England, that I might teach you
+ the respect due to the warrant of the House. Sir, there steps not the man
+ within the British seas, but I will arrest him on authority of this bit of
+ parchment; and I do arrest you accordingly.&mdash;What do you accuse him
+ of, gentlemen?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dangerfield swaggered forward, and peeping under Julian's hat, "Stop my
+ vital breath," he exclaimed, "but I have seen you before, my friend, an I
+ could but think where; but my memory is not worth a bean, since I have
+ been obliged to use it so much of late, in the behalf of the poor state.
+ But I do know the fellow; and I have seen him amongst the Papists&mdash;,
+ I'll take that on my assured damnation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Captain Dangerfield," said the Captain's smoother, but more
+ dangerous associate,&mdash;"verily, it is the same youth whom we saw at
+ the horse-merchant's yesterday; and we had matter against him then, only
+ Master Topham did not desire us to bring it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ye may bring out what ye will against him now," said Topham, "for he hath
+ blasphemed the warrant of the House. I think ye said ye saw him
+ somewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, verily," said Everett, "I have seen him amongst the seminary pupils
+ at Saint Omer's&mdash;he was who but he with the regents there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Master Everett, collect yourself," said Topham; "for as I think, you
+ said you saw him at a consult of the Jesuits in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was I said so, Master Topham," said the undaunted Dangerfield; "and
+ mine is the tongue that will swear it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good Master Topham," said Bridgenorth, "you may suspend farther inquiry
+ at present, as it doth but fatigue and perplex the memory of the King's
+ witnesses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are wrong, Master Bridgenorth&mdash;clearly wrong. It doth but keep
+ them in wind&mdash;only breathes them like greyhounds before a coursing
+ match."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be it so," said Bridgenorth, with his usual indifference of manner; "but
+ at present this youth must stand committed upon a warrant, which I will
+ presently sign, of having assaulted me while in discharge of my duty as a
+ magistrate, for the rescue of a person legally attached. Did you not hear
+ the report of a pistol?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will swear to it," said Everett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I," said Dangerfield. "While we were making search in the cellar, I
+ heard something very like a pistol-shot; but I conceived it to be the
+ drawing of a long-corked bottle of sack, to see whether there were any
+ Popish relics in the inside on't."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A pistol-shot!" exclaimed Topham; "here might have been a second Sir
+ Edmondsbury Godfrey's matter.&mdash;Oh, thou real spawn of the red old
+ dragon! for he too would have resisted the House's warrant, had we not
+ taken him something at unawares.&mdash;Master Bridgenorth, you are a
+ judicious magistrate, and a worthy servant of the state&mdash;I would we
+ had many such sound Protestant justices. Shall I have this young fellow
+ away with his parents&mdash;what think you?&mdash;or will you keep him for
+ re-examination?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said Lady Peveril, in spite of her husband's efforts
+ to interrupt her, "for God's sake, if ever you knew what it was to love
+ one of the many children you have lost, or her who is now left to you, do
+ not pursue your vengeance to the blood of my poor boy! I will forgive you
+ all the rest&mdash;all the distress you have wrought&mdash;all the yet
+ greater misery with which you threaten us; but do not be extreme with one
+ who never can have offended you! Believe, that if your ears are shut
+ against the cry of a despairing mother, those which are open to the
+ complaint of all who sorrow, will hear my petition and your answer!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agony of mind and of voice with which Lady Peveril uttered these
+ words, seemed to thrill through all present, though most of them were but
+ too much inured to such scenes. Every one was silent, when, ceasing to
+ speak, she fixed on Bridgenorth her eyes, glistening with tears, with the
+ eager anxiety of one whose life or death seemed to depend upon the answer
+ to be returned. Even Bridgenorth's inflexibility seemed to be shaken; and
+ his voice was tremulous, as he answered, "Madam, I would to God I had the
+ present means of relieving your great distress, otherwise than by
+ recommending to you a reliance upon Providence; and that you take heed to
+ your spirit, that it murmur not under this crook in your lot. For me, I am
+ but as a rod in the hand of the strong man, which smites not of itself,
+ but because it is wielded by the arm of him who holds the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Even as I and my black rod are guided by the Commons of England," said
+ Master Topham, who seemed marvellously pleased with the illustration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian now thought it time to say something in his own behalf; and he
+ endeavoured to temper it with as much composure as it was possible for him
+ to assume. "Master Bridgenorth," he said, "I neither dispute your
+ authority, nor this gentleman's warrant&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do not?" said Topham. "Oh, ho, master youngster, I thought we should
+ bring you to your senses presently!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, if you so will it, Master Topham," said Bridgenorth, "thus it shall
+ be. You shall set out with early day, taking you, towards London, the
+ persons of Sir Geoffrey and Lady Peveril; and that they may travel
+ according to their quality, you will allow them their coach, sufficiently
+ guarded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will travel with them myself," said Topham; "for these rough Derbyshire
+ roads are no easy riding; and my very eyes are weary with looking on these
+ bleak hills. In the coach I can sleep as sound as if I were in the House,
+ and Master Bodderbrains on his legs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will become you so to take your ease, Master Topham," answered
+ Bridgenorth. "For this youth, I will take him under my charge, and bring
+ him up myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I may not be answerable for that, worthy Master Bridgenorth," said
+ Topham, "since he comes within the warrant of the House."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but," said Bridgenorth, "he is only under custody for an assault,
+ with the purpose of a rescue; and I counsel you against meddling with him,
+ unless you have stronger guard. Sir Geoffrey is now old and broken, but
+ this young fellow is in the flower of his youth, and hath at his beck all
+ the debauched young Cavaliers of the neighbourhood&mdash;You will scarce
+ cross the country without a rescue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Topham eyed Julian wistfully, as a spider may be supposed to look upon a
+ stray wasp which has got into his web, and which he longs to secure,
+ though he fears the consequences of attempting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian himself replied, "I know not if this separation be well or ill
+ meant on your part, Master Bridgenorth; but on mine, I am only desirous to
+ share the fate of my parents; and therefore I will give my word of honour
+ to attempt neither rescue nor escape, on condition you do not separate me
+ from them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not say so, Julian," said his mother; "abide with Master Bridgenorth&mdash;my
+ mind tells me he cannot mean so ill by us as his rough conduct would now
+ lead us to infer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I," said Sir Geoffrey, "know, that between the doors of my father's
+ house and the gates of hell, there steps not such a villain on the ground!
+ And if I wish my hands ever to be unbound again, it is because I hope for
+ one downright blow at a grey head, that has hatched more treason than the
+ whole Long Parliament."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Away with thee," said the zealous officer; "is Parliament a word for so
+ foul a mouth as thine?&mdash;Gentlemen," he added, turning to Everett and
+ Dangerfield, "you will bear witness to this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To his having reviled the House of Commons&mdash;by G&mdash;d, that I
+ will!" said Dangerfield; "I will take it on my damnation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And verily," said Everett, "as he spoke of Parliament generally, he hath
+ contemned the House of Lords also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, ye poor insignificant wretches," said Sir Geoffrey, "whose very life
+ is a lie&mdash;and whose bread is perjury&mdash;would you pervert my
+ innocent words almost as soon as they have quitted my lips? I tell you the
+ country is well weary of you; and should Englishmen come to their senses,
+ the jail, the pillory, the whipping-post, and the gibbet, will be too good
+ preferment for such base blood-suckers.&mdash;And now, Master Bridgenorth,
+ you and they may do your worst; for I will not open my mouth to utter a
+ single word while I am in the company of such knaves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps, Sir Geoffrey," answered Bridgenorth, "you would better have
+ consulted your own safety in adopting that resolution a little sooner&mdash;the
+ tongue is a little member, but it causes much strife.&mdash;You, Master
+ Julian, will please to follow me, and without remonstrance or resistance;
+ for you must be aware that I have the means of compelling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was, indeed, but too sensible, that he had no other course but that
+ of submission to superior force; but ere he left the apartment, he kneeled
+ down to receive his father's blessing, which the old man bestowed not
+ without a tear in his eye, and in the emphatic words, "God bless thee, my
+ boy; and keep thee good and true to Church and King, whatever wind shall
+ bring foul weather!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His mother was only able to pass her hand over his head, and to implore
+ him, in a low tone of voice, not to be rash or violent in any attempt to
+ render them assistance. "We are innocent," she said, "my son&mdash;we are
+ innocent&mdash;and we are in God's hands. Be the thought our best comfort
+ and protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth now signed to Julian to follow him, which he did, accompanied,
+ or rather conducted, by the two guards who had first disarmed him. When
+ they had passed from the apartment, and were at the door of the outward
+ hall, Bridgenorth asked Julian whether he should consider him as under
+ parole; in which case, he said, he would dispense with all other security
+ but his own promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, who could not help hoping somewhat from the favourable and
+ unresentful manner in which he was treated by one whose life he had so
+ recently attempted, replied, without hesitation, that he would give his
+ parole for twenty-four hours, neither to attempt to escape by force nor by
+ flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is wisely said," replied Bridgenorth; "for though you might cause
+ bloodshed, be assured that your utmost efforts could do no service to your
+ parents.&mdash;Horses there&mdash;horses to the courtyard!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trampling of horses was soon heard; and in obedience to Bridgenorth's
+ signal, and in compliance with his promise, Julian mounted one which was
+ presented to him, and prepared to leave the house of his fathers, in which
+ his parents were now prisoners, and to go, he knew not whither, under the
+ custody of one known to be the ancient enemy of his family. He was rather
+ surprised at observing, that Bridgenorth and he were about to travel
+ without any other attendants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were mounted, and as they rode slowly towards the outer gate of
+ the courtyard, Bridgenorth said to him, "it is not every one who would
+ thus unreservedly commit his safety by travelling at night, and unaided,
+ with the hot-brained youth who so lately attempted his life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," said Julian, "I might tell you truly, that I knew
+ you not at the time when I directed my weapon against you; but I must also
+ add, that the cause in which I used it, might have rendered me, even had I
+ known you, a slight respecter of your person. At present, I do know you;
+ and have neither malice against your person, nor the liberty of a parent
+ to fight for. Besides, you have my word; and when was a Peveril known to
+ break it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," replied his companion, "a Peveril&mdash;a Peveril of the Peak!&mdash;a
+ name which has long sounded like a war-trumpet in the land; but which has
+ now perhaps sounded its last loud note. Look back, young man, on the
+ darksome turrets of your father's house, which uplift themselves above the
+ sons of their people. Think upon your father, a captive&mdash;yourself in
+ some sort a fugitive&mdash;your light quenched&mdash;your glory abased&mdash;your
+ estate wrecked and impoverished. Think that Providence has subjected the
+ destinies of the race of Peveril to one, whom, in their aristocratic
+ pride, they held as a plebeian upstart. Think of this; and when you again
+ boast of your ancestry, remember, that he who raiseth the lowly can also
+ abase the high in heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did indeed gaze for an instant, with a swelling heart, upon the
+ dimly seen turrets of his paternal mansion, on which poured the moonlight,
+ mixed with long shadows of the towers and trees. But while he sadly
+ acknowledged the truth of Bridgenorth's observation, he felt indignant at
+ his ill-timed triumph. "If fortune had followed worth," he said, "the
+ Castle of Martindale, and the name of Peveril, had afforded no room for
+ their enemy's vainglorious boast. But those who have stood high on
+ Fortune's wheel, must abide by the consequence of its revolutions. This
+ much I will at least say for my father's house, that it has not stood
+ unhonoured; nor will it fall&mdash;if it is to fall&mdash;unlamented.
+ Forbear, then, if you are indeed the Christian you call yourself, to exult
+ in the misfortunes of others, or to confide in your own prosperity. If the
+ light of our house be now quenched, God can rekindle it in His own good
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril broke off in extreme surprise; for as he spake the last words, the
+ bright red beams of the family beacon began again to glimmer from its
+ wonted watch-tower, checkering the pale moonbeam with a ruddier glow.
+ Bridgenorth also gazed on this unexpected illumination with surprise, and
+ not, as it seemed, without disquietude. "Young man," he resumed, "it can
+ scarcely be but that Heaven intends to work great things by your hand, so
+ singularly has that augury followed on your words."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he put his horse once more in motion; and looking back, from
+ time to time, as if to assure himself that the beacon of the Castle was
+ actually rekindled, he led the way through the well-known paths and
+ alleys, to his own house of Moultrassie, followed by Peveril, who although
+ sensible that the light might be altogether accidental, could not but
+ receive as a good omen an event so intimately connected with the
+ traditions and usages of his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They alighted at the hall-door, which was hastily opened by a female; and
+ while the deep tone of Bridgenorth called on the groom to take their
+ horses, the well-known voice of his daughter Alice was heard to exclaim in
+ thanksgiving to God, who had restored her father in safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ We meet, as men see phantoms in a dream,
+ Which glide, and sigh, and sign, and move their lips,
+ But make no sound; or, if they utter voice,
+ 'Tis but a low and undistinguish'd moaning,
+ Which has nor word nor sense of utter'd sound.
+ &mdash;THE CHIEFTAIN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We said, at the conclusion of the last chapter, that a female form
+ appeared at the door of Moultrassie Hall; and that the well-known accents
+ of Alice Bridgenorth were heard to hail the return of her father, from
+ what she naturally dreaded as a perilous visit to the Castle of
+ Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, who followed his conductor with a throbbing heart into the lighted
+ hall, was therefore prepared to see her whom he best loved, with her arms
+ thrown around her father. The instant she had quitted his paternal
+ embrace, she was aware of the unexpected guest who had returned in his
+ company. A deep blush, rapidly succeeded by a deadly paleness, and again
+ by a slighter suffusion, showed plainly to her lover that his sudden
+ appearance was anything but indifferent to her. He bowed profoundly&mdash;a
+ courtesy which she returned with equal formality, but did not venture to
+ approach more nearly, feeling at once the delicacy of his own situation
+ and of hers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth turned his cold, fixed, grey, melancholy glance, first
+ on the one of them and then on the other. "Some," he said gravely, "would,
+ in my case, have avoided this meeting; but I have confidence in you both,
+ although you are young, and beset with the snares incidental to your age.
+ There are those within who should not know that ye have been acquainted.
+ Wherefore, be wise, and be as strangers to each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian and Alice exchanged glances as her father turned from them, and
+ lifting a lamp which stood in the entrance-hall, led the way to the
+ interior apartment. There was little of consolation in this exchange of
+ looks; for the sadness of Alice's glance was mingled with fear, and that
+ of Julian clouded by an anxious sense of doubt. The look also was but
+ momentary; for Alice, springing to her father, took the light out of his
+ hand, and stepping before him, acted as the usher of both into the large
+ oaken parlour, which has been already mentioned as the apartment in which
+ Bridgenorth had spent the hours of dejection which followed the death of
+ his consort and family. It was now lighted up as for the reception of
+ company; and five or six persons sat in it, in the plain, black, stiff
+ dress, which was affected by the formal Puritans of the time, in evidence
+ of their contempt of the manners of the luxurious Court of Charles the
+ Second; amongst whom, excess of extravagance in apparel, like excess of
+ every other kind, was highly fashionable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian at first glanced his eyes but slightly along the range of grave and
+ severe faces which composed this society&mdash;men sincere, perhaps, in
+ their pretensions to a superior purity of conduct and morals, but in whom
+ that high praise was somewhat chastened by an affected austerity in dress
+ and manners, allied to those Pharisees of old, who made broad their
+ phylacteries, and would be seen of man to fast, and to discharge with
+ rigid punctuality the observances of the law. Their dress was almost
+ uniformly a black cloak and doublet, cut straight and close, and
+ undecorated with lace or embroidery of any kind, black Flemish breeches
+ and hose, square-toed shoes, with large roses made of serge ribbon. Two or
+ three had large loose boots of calf-leather, and almost every one was
+ begirt with a long rapier, which was suspended by leathern thongs, to a
+ plain belt of buff, or of black leather. One or two of the elder guests,
+ whose hair had been thinned by time, had their heads covered with a
+ skull-cap of black silk or velvet, which, being drawn down betwixt the
+ ears and the skull, and permitting no hair to escape, occasioned the
+ former to project in the ungraceful manner which may be remarked in old
+ pictures, and which procured for the Puritans the term of "prickeared
+ Roundheads," so unceremoniously applied to them by their contemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These worthies were ranged against the wall, each in his ancient
+ high-backed, long-legged chair; neither looking towards, nor apparently
+ discoursing with each other; but plunged in their own reflections, or
+ awaiting, like an assembly of Quakers, the quickening power of divine
+ inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth glided along this formal society with noiseless step,
+ and a composed severity of manner, resembling their own. He paused before
+ each in succession, and apparently communicated, as he passed, the
+ transactions of the evening, and the circumstances under which the heir of
+ Martindale Castle was now a guest at Moultrassie Hall. Each seemed to stir
+ at his brief detail, like a range of statues in an enchanted hall,
+ starting into something like life, as a talisman is applied to them
+ successively. Most of them, as they heard the narrative of their host,
+ cast upon Julian a look of curiosity, blended with haughty scorn and the
+ consciousness of spiritual superiority; though, in one or two instances,
+ the milder influences of compassion were sufficiently visible.&mdash;Peveril
+ would have undergone this gantlet of eyes with more impatience, had not
+ his own been for the time engaged in following the motions of Alice, who
+ glided through the apartment; and only speaking very briefly, and in
+ whispers, to one or two of the company who addressed her, took her place
+ beside a treble-hooded old lady, the only female of the party, and
+ addressed herself to her in such earnest conversation, as might dispense
+ with her raising her head, or looking at any others in the company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her father put a question, to which she was obliged to return an answer&mdash;"Where
+ was Mistress Debbitch?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She has gone out," Alice replied, "early after sunset, to visit some old
+ acquaintances in the neighbourhood, and she was not yet returned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Major Bridgenorth made a gesture indicative of displeasure; and, not
+ content with that, expressed his determined resolution that Dame Deborah
+ should no longer remain a member of his family. "I will have those," he
+ said aloud, and without regarding the presence of his guests, "and those
+ only, around me, who know to keep within the sober and modest bounds of a
+ Christian family. Who pretends to more freedom, must go out from among us,
+ as not being of us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deep and emphatic humming noise, which was at that time the mode in
+ which the Puritans signified their applause, as well of the doctrines
+ expressed by a favourite divine in the pulpit, as of those delivered in
+ private society, ratified the approbation of the assessors, and seemed to
+ secure the dismission of the unfortunate governante, who stood thus
+ detected of having strayed out of bounds. Even Peveril, although he had
+ reaped considerable advantages, in his early acquaintance with Alice, from
+ the mercenary and gossiping disposition of her governess, could not hear
+ of her dismissal without approbation, so much was he desirous, that, in
+ the hour of difficulty which might soon approach, Alice might have the
+ benefit of countenance and advice from one of her own sex of better
+ manners, and less suspicious probity, than Mistress Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost immediately after this communication had taken place, a servant in
+ mourning showed his thin, pinched, and wrinkled visage in the apartment,
+ announcing, with a voice more like a passing bell than the herald of a
+ banquet, that refreshments were provided in an adjoining apartment.
+ Gravely leading the way, with his daughter on one side, and the
+ puritanical female whom we have distinguished on the other, Bridgenorth
+ himself ushered his company, who followed, with little attention to order
+ or ceremony, into the eating-room, where a substantial supper was
+ provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner, Peveril, although entitled according to ordinary
+ ceremonial, to some degree of precedence&mdash;a matter at that time
+ considered of much importance, although now little regarded&mdash;was left
+ among the last of those who quitted the parlour; and might indeed have
+ brought up the rear of all, had not one of the company, who was himself
+ late in the retreat, bowed and resigned to Julian the rank in the company
+ which had been usurped by others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This act of politeness naturally induced Julian to examine the features of
+ the person who had offered him this civility; and he started to observe,
+ under the pinched velvet cap, and above the short band-strings, the
+ countenance of Ganlesse, as he called himself&mdash;his companion on the
+ preceding evening. He looked again and again, especially when all were
+ placed at the supper board, and when, consequently, he had frequent
+ opportunities of observing this person fixedly without any breach of good
+ manners. At first he wavered in his belief, and was much inclined to doubt
+ the reality of his recollection; for the difference of dress was such as
+ to effect a considerable change of appearance; and the countenance itself,
+ far from exhibiting anything marked or memorable, was one of those
+ ordinary visages which we see almost without remarking them, and which
+ leave our memory so soon as the object is withdrawn from our eyes. But the
+ impression upon his mind returned, and became stronger, until it induced
+ him to watch with peculiar attention the manners of the individual who had
+ thus attracted his notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the time of a very prolonged grace before meat, which was delivered
+ by one of the company&mdash;who, from his Geneva band and serge doublet,
+ presided, as Julian supposed, over some dissenting congregation&mdash;he
+ noticed that this man kept the same demure and severe cast of countenance
+ usually affected by the Puritans, and which rather caricatured the
+ reverence unquestionably due upon such occasions. His eyes were turned
+ upward, and his huge penthouse hat, with a high crown and broad brim, held
+ in both hands before him, rose and fell with the cadences of the speaker's
+ voice; thus marking time, as it were, to the periods of the benediction.
+ Yet when the slight bustle took place which attends the adjusting of
+ chairs, &amp;c., as men sit down to table, Julian's eye encountered that
+ of the stranger; and as their looks met, there glanced from those of the
+ latter an expression of satirical humour and scorn, which seemed to
+ intimate internal ridicule of the gravity of his present demeanour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian again sought to fix his eye, in order to ascertain that he had not
+ mistaken the tendency of this transient expression, but the stranger did
+ not allow him another opportunity. He might have been discovered by the
+ tone of his voice; but the individual in question spoke little, and in
+ whispers, which was indeed the fashion of the whole company, whose
+ demeanour at table resembled that of mourners at a funeral feast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entertainment itself was coarse, though plentiful; and must, according
+ to Julian's opinion, be distasteful to one so exquisitely skilled in good
+ cheer, and so capable of enjoying, critically and scientifically, the
+ genial preparations of his companion Smith, as Ganlesse had shown himself
+ on the preceding evening. Accordingly, upon close observation, he remarked
+ that the food which he took upon his plate remained there unconsumed; and
+ that his actual supper consisted only of a crust of bread, with a glass of
+ wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repast was hurried over with the haste of those who think it shame, if
+ not sin, to make mere animal enjoyments the means of consuming time, or of
+ receiving pleasure; and when men wiped their mouths and moustaches, Julian
+ remarked that the object of his curiosity used a handkerchief of the
+ finest cambric&mdash;an article rather inconsistent with the exterior
+ plainness, not to say coarseness, of his appearance. He used also several
+ of the more minute refinements, then only observed at tables of the higher
+ rank; and Julian thought he could discern, at every turn, something of
+ courtly manners and gestures, under the precise and rustic simplicity of
+ the character which he had assumed.[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A Scottish gentleman <i>in hiding</i>, as it was emphatically termed,
+ for some concern in a Jacobite insurrection or plot, was
+ discovered among a number of ordinary persons, by the use of his
+ toothpick.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But if this were indeed that same Ganlesse with whom Julian had met on the
+ preceding evening, and who had boasted the facility with which he could
+ assume any character which he pleased to represent for the time, what
+ could be the purpose of this present disguise? He was, if his own words
+ could be credited, a person of some importance, who dared to defy the
+ danger of those officers and informers, before whom all ranks at that time
+ trembled; nor was he likely, as Julian conceived, without some strong
+ purpose, to subject himself to such a masquerade as the present, which
+ could not be otherwise than irksome to one whose conversation proclaimed
+ him of light life and free opinions. Was his appearance here for good or
+ for evil? Did it respect his father's house, or his own person, or the
+ family of Bridgenorth? Was the real character of Ganlesse known to the
+ master of the house, inflexible as he was in all which concerned morals as
+ well as religion? If not, might not the machinations of a brain so subtile
+ affect the peace and happiness of Alice Bridgenorth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were questions which no reflection could enable Peveril to answer.
+ His eyes glanced from Alice to the stranger; and new fears, and undefined
+ suspicions, in which the safety of that beloved and lovely girl was
+ implicated, mingled with the deep anxiety which already occupied his mind,
+ on account of his father and his father's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was in this tumult of mind, when after a thanksgiving as long as the
+ grace, the company arose from table, and were instantly summoned to the
+ exercise of family worship. A train of domestics, grave, sad, and
+ melancholy as their superiors, glided in to assist at this act of
+ devotion, and ranged themselves at the lower end of the apartment. Most of
+ these men were armed with long tucks, as the straight stabbing swords,
+ much used by Cromwell's soldiery, were then called. Several had large
+ pistols also; and the corselets or cuirasses of some were heard to clank,
+ as they seated themselves to partake in this act of devotion. The ministry
+ of him whom Julian had supposed a preacher was not used on this occasion.
+ Major Bridgenorth himself read and expounded a chapter of Scripture, with
+ much strength and manliness of expression, although so as not to escape
+ the charge of fanaticism. The nineteenth chapter of Jeremiah was the
+ portion of Scripture which he selected; in which, under the type of
+ breaking a potter's vessel, the prophet presages the desolation of the
+ Jews. The lecturer was not naturally eloquent; but a strong, deep, and
+ sincere conviction of the truth of what he said supplied him with language
+ of energy and fire, as he drew parallel between the abominations of the
+ worship of Baal, and the corruptions of the Church of Rome&mdash;so
+ favourite a topic with the Puritans of that period; and denounced against
+ the Catholics, and those who favoured them, that hissing and desolation
+ which the prophet directed against the city of Jerusalem. His hearers made
+ a yet closer application than the lecturer himself suggested; and many a
+ dark proud eye intimated, by a glance on Julian, that on his father's
+ house were already, in some part, realised those dreadful maledictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lecture finished, Bridgenorth summoned them to unite with him in
+ prayer; and on a slight change of arrangements amongst the company, which
+ took place as they were about to kneel down, Julian found his place next
+ to the single-minded and beautiful object of his affection, as she knelt,
+ in her loveliness, to adore her Creator. A short time was permitted for
+ mental devotion; during which Peveril could hear her half-breathed
+ petition for the promised blessings of peace on earth, and good-will
+ towards the children of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prayer which ensued was in a different tone. It was poured forth by
+ the same person who had officiated as chaplain at the table; and was in
+ the tone of a Boanerges, or Son of Thunder&mdash;a denouncer of crimes&mdash;an
+ invoker of judgments&mdash;almost a prophet of evil and of destruction.
+ The testimonies and the sins of the day were not forgotten&mdash;the
+ mysterious murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey was insisted upon&mdash;and
+ thanks and praise were offered, that the very night on which they were
+ assembled, had not seen another offering of a Protestant magistrate, to
+ the bloodthirsty fury of revengeful Catholics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had Julian found it more difficult, during an act of devotion, to
+ maintain his mind in a frame befitting the posture and the occasion; and
+ when he heard the speaker return thanks for the downfall and devastation
+ of his family, he was strongly tempted to have started upon his feet, and
+ charged him with offering a tribute, stained with falsehood and calumny,
+ at the throne of truth itself. He resisted, however, an impulse which it
+ would have been insanity to have yielded to, and his patience was not
+ without its reward; for when his fair neighbour arose from her knees, the
+ lengthened and prolonged prayer being at last concluded, he observed that
+ her eyes were streaming with tears; and one glance with which she looked
+ at him in that moment, showed more of affectionate interest for him in his
+ fallen fortunes and precarious condition, than he had been able to obtain
+ from her when his worldly estate seemed so much the more exalted of the
+ two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cheered and fortified with the conviction that one bosom in the company,
+ and that in which he most eagerly longed to secure an interest,
+ sympathised with his distress, he felt strong to endure whatever was to
+ follow, and shrunk not from the stern still smile with which, one by one,
+ the meeting regarded him, as, gliding to their several places of repose,
+ they indulged themselves at parting with a look of triumph on one whom
+ they considered as their captive enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice also passed by her lover, her eyes fixed on the ground, and answered
+ his low obeisance without raising them. The room was now empty, but for
+ Bridgenorth and his guest, or prisoner; for it is difficult to say in
+ which capacity Peveril ought to regard himself. He took an old brazen lamp
+ from the table, and, leading the way, said at the same time, "I must be
+ the uncourtly chamberlain, who am to usher you to a place of repose, more
+ rude, perhaps, than you have been accustomed to occupy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian followed him, in silence, up an old-fashioned winding staircase,
+ within a turret. At the landing-place on the top was a small apartment,
+ where an ordinary pallet bed, two chairs, and a small stone table, were
+ the only furniture. "Your bed," continued Bridgenorth, as if desirous to
+ prolong their interview, "is not of the softest; but innocence sleeps as
+ sound upon straw as on down."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sorrow, Major Bridgenorth, finds little rest on either," replied Julian.
+ "Tell me, for you seem to await some question from me, what is to be the
+ fate of my parents, and why you separate me from them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth, for answer, indicated with his finger the mark which his
+ countenance still showed from the explosion of Julian's pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That," replied Julian, "is not the real cause of your proceedings against
+ me. It cannot be, that you, who have been a soldier, and are a man, can be
+ surprised or displeased by my interference in the defence of my father.
+ Above all, you cannot, and I must needs say you do not, believe that I
+ would have raised my hand against you personally, had there been a
+ moment's time for recognition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I may grant all this," said Bridgenorth; "but what the better are you for
+ my good opinion, or for the ease with which I can forgive you the injury
+ which you aimed at me? You are in my custody as a magistrate, accused of
+ abetting the foul, bloody, and heathenish plot, for the establishment of
+ Popery, the murder of the King, and the general massacre of all true
+ Protestants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And on what grounds, either of fact or suspicion, dare any one accuse me
+ of such a crime?" said Julian. "I have hardly heard of the plot, save by
+ the mouth of common rumour, which, while it speaks of nothing else, takes
+ care to say nothing distinctly even on that subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be enough for me to tell you," replied Bridgenorth, "and perhaps
+ it is a word too much&mdash;that you are a discovered intriguer&mdash;a
+ spied spy&mdash;who carries tokens and messages betwixt the Popish
+ Countess of Derby and the Catholic party in London. You have not conducted
+ your matters with such discretion, but that this is well known, and can be
+ sufficiently proved. To this charge, which you are well aware you cannot
+ deny, these men, Everett and Dangerfield, are not unwilling to add, from
+ the recollection of your face, other passages, which will certainly cost
+ you your life when you come before a Protestant jury."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They lie like villains," said Peveril, "who hold me accessory to any plot
+ either against the King, the nation, or the state of religion; and for the
+ Countess, her loyalty has been too long, and too highly proved, to permit
+ her being implicated in such injurious suspicions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What she has already done," said Bridgenorth, his face darkening as he
+ spoke, "against the faithful champions of pure religion, hath sufficiently
+ shown of what she is capable. She hath betaken herself to her rock, and
+ sits, as she thinks, in security, like the eagle reposing after his bloody
+ banquet. But the arrow of the fowler may yet reach her&mdash;the shaft is
+ whetted&mdash;the bow is bended&mdash;and it will be soon seen whether
+ Amalek or Israel shall prevail. But for thee, Julian Peveril&mdash;why
+ should I conceal it from thee?&mdash;my heart yearns for thee as a woman's
+ for her first-born. To thee I will give, at the expense of my own
+ reputation&mdash;perhaps at the risk of personal suspicion&mdash;for who,
+ in these days of doubt, shall be exempted from it&mdash;to thee, I say, I
+ will give means of escape, which else were impossible to thee. The
+ staircase of this turret descends to the gardens&mdash;the postern-gate is
+ unlatched&mdash;on the right hand lie the stables, where you will find
+ your own horse&mdash;take it, and make for Liverpool&mdash;I will give you
+ credit with a friend under the name of Simon Simonson, one persecuted by
+ the prelates; and he will expedite your passage from the kingdom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Major Bridgenorth," said Julian, "I will not deceive you. Were I to
+ accept your offer of freedom, it would be to attend to a higher call than
+ that of mere self-preservation. My father is in danger&mdash;my mother in
+ sorrow&mdash;the voices of religion and nature call me to their side. I am
+ their only child&mdash;their only hope&mdash;I will aid them, or perish
+ with them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art mad," said Bridgenorth&mdash;"aid them thou canst not&mdash;perish
+ with them thou mayst, and even accelerate their ruin; for, in addition to
+ the charges with which thy unhappy father is loaded, it would be no slight
+ aggravation, that while he meditated arming and calling together the
+ Catholics and High Churchmen of Cheshire and Derbyshire, his son should
+ prove to be the confidential agent of the Countess of Derby, who aided her
+ in making good her stronghold against the Protestant commissioners, and
+ was despatched by her to open secret communication with the Popish
+ interest in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have twice stated me as such an agent," said Peveril, resolved that
+ his silence should not be construed into an admission of the charge,
+ though he felt it was in some degree well founded&mdash;"What reason have
+ you for such an allegation?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will it suffice for a proof of my intimate acquaintance with your
+ mystery," replied Bridgenorth, "if I should repeat to you the last words
+ which the Countess used to you when you left the Castle of that
+ Amalekitish woman? Thus she spoke: 'I am now a forlorn widow,' she said,
+ 'whom sorrow has made selfish.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril started, for these were the very words the Countess had used; but
+ he instantly recovered himself, and replied, "Be your information of what
+ nature it will, I deny, and I defy it, so far as it attaches aught like
+ guilt to me. There lives not a man more innocent of a disloyal thought, or
+ of a traitorous purpose. What I say for myself, I will, to the best of my
+ knowledge, say and maintain on account of the noble Countess, to whom I am
+ indebted for nurture."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perish, then, in thy obstinacy!" said Bridgenorth; and turning hastily
+ from him, he left the room, and Julian heard him hasten down the narrow
+ staircase, as if distrusting his own resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a heavy heart, yet with that confidence in an overruling Providence
+ which never forsakes a good and brave man, Peveril betook himself to his
+ lowly place of repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The course of human life is changeful still,
+ As is the fickle wind and wandering rill;
+ Or, like the light dance which the wild-breeze weaves
+ Amidst the fated race of fallen leaves;
+ Which now its breath bears down, now tosses high,
+ Beats to the earth, or wafts to middle sky.
+ Such, and so varied, the precarious play
+ Of fate with man, frail tenant of a day!
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst, overcome with fatigue, and worn out by anxiety, Julian Peveril
+ slumbered as a prisoner in the house of his hereditary enemy, Fortune was
+ preparing his release by one of those sudden frolics with which she loves
+ to confound the calculations and expectancies of humanity; and as she
+ fixes on strange agents for such purposes, she condescended to employ on
+ the present occasion, no less a personage than Mistress Deborah Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instigated, doubtless, by the pristine reminiscences of former times, no
+ sooner had that most prudent and considerate dame found herself in the
+ vicinity of the scenes of her earlier days, than she bethought herself of
+ a visit to the ancient house-keeper of Martindale Castle, Dame Ellesmere
+ by name, who, long retired from active service, resided at the keeper's
+ lodge, in the west thicket, with her nephew, Lance Outram, subsisting upon
+ the savings of her better days, and on a small pension allowed by Sir
+ Geoffrey to her age and faithful services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Dame Ellesmere and Mistress Deborah had not by any means been formerly
+ on so friendly a footing, as this haste to visit her might be supposed to
+ intimate. But years had taught Deborah to forget and forgive; or perhaps
+ she had no special objection, under cover of a visit to Dame Ellesmere, to
+ take the chance of seeing what changes time had made on her old admirer
+ the keeper. Both inhabitants were in the cottage when, after having seen
+ her master set forth on his expedition to the Castle, Mistress Debbitch,
+ dressed in her very best gown, footed it through gutter, and over stile,
+ and by pathway green, to knock at their door, and to lift the hatch at the
+ hospitable invitation which bade her come in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dame Ellesmere's eyes were so often dim, that, even with the aid of
+ spectacles, she failed to recognise, in the portly and mature personage
+ who entered their cottage, the tight well-made lass, who, presuming on her
+ good looks and flippant tongue, had so often provoked her by
+ insubordination; and her former lover, the redoubted Lance, not being
+ conscious that ale had given rotundity to his own figure, which was
+ formerly so slight and active, and that brandy had transferred to his nose
+ the colour which had once occupied his cheeks, was unable to discover that
+ Deborah's French cap, composed of sarsenet and Brussels lace, shaded the
+ features which had so often procured him a rebuke from Dr. Dummerar, for
+ suffering his eyes, during the time of prayers, to wander to the
+ maid-servants' bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the blushing visitor was compelled to make herself known; and
+ when known, was received by aunt and nephew with the most sincere
+ cordiality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The home-brewed was produced; and, in lieu of more vulgar food, a few
+ slices of venison presently hissed in the frying pan, giving strong room
+ for inference that Lance Outram, in his capacity of keeper, neglected not
+ his own cottage when he supplied the larder at the Castle. A modest sip of
+ the excellent Derbyshire ale, and a taste of the highly-seasoned hash,
+ soon placed Deborah entirely at home with her old acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having put all necessary questions, and received all suitable answers,
+ respecting the state of the neighbourhood, and such of her own friends as
+ continued to reside there, the conversation began rather to flag, until
+ Deborah found the art of again re-newing its interest, by communicating to
+ her friends the dismal intelligence that they must soon look for deadly
+ bad news from the Castle; for that her present master, Major Bridgenorth,
+ had been summoned, by some great people from London, to assist in taking
+ her old master, Sir Geoffrey; and that all Master Bridgenorth's servants,
+ and several other persons whom she named, friends and adherents of the
+ same interest, had assembled a force to surprise the Castle; and that as
+ Sir Geoffrey was now so old, and gouty withal, it could not be expected he
+ should make the defence he was wont; and then he was known to be so
+ stout-hearted, that it was not to be supposed that he would yield up
+ without stroke of sword; and then if he was killed, as he was like to be,
+ amongst them that liked never a bone of his body, and now had him at their
+ mercy, why, in that case, she, Dame Deborah, would look upon Lady Peveril
+ as little better than a dead woman; and undoubtedly there would be a
+ general mourning through all that country, where they had such great kin;
+ and silks were likely to rise on it, as Master Lutestring, the mercer of
+ Chesterfield, was like to feel in his purse bottom. But for her part, let
+ matters wag how they would, an if Master Julian Peveril was to come to his
+ own, she could give as near a guess as e'er another who was likely to be
+ Lady at Martindale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The text of this lecture, or, in other words, the fact that Bridgenorth
+ was gone with a party to attack Sir Geoffrey Peveril in his own Castle of
+ Martindale, sounded so stunningly strange in the ears of those old
+ retainers of his family, that they had no power either to attend to
+ Mistress Deborah's inferences, or to interrupt the velocity of speech with
+ which she poured them forth. And when at length she made a breathless
+ pause, all that poor Dame Ellesmere could reply, was the emphatic
+ question, "Bridgenorth brave Peveril of the Peak!&mdash;Is the woman mad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, dame," said Deborah, "woman me no more than I woman you. I
+ have not been called Mistress at the head of the table for so many years,
+ to be woman'd here by you. And for the news, it is as true as that you are
+ sitting there in a white hood, who will wear a black one ere long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lance Outram," said the old woman, "make out, if thou be'st a man, and
+ listen about if aught stirs up at the Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If there should," said Outram, "I am even too long here;" and he caught
+ up his crossbow, and one or two arrows, and rushed out of the cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well-a-day!" said Mistress Deborah, "see if my news have not frightened
+ away Lance Outram too, whom they used to say nothing could start. But do
+ not take on so, dame; for I dare say if the Castle and the lands pass to
+ my new master, Major Bridgenorth, as it is like they will&mdash;for I have
+ heard that he has powerful debts over the estate&mdash;you shall have my
+ good word with him, and I promise you he is no bad man; something precise
+ about preaching and praying, and about the dress which one should wear,
+ which, I must own, beseems not a gentleman, as, to be sure, every woman
+ knows best what becomes her. But for you, dame, that wear a prayer-book at
+ your girdle, with your housewife-case, and never change the fashion of
+ your white hood, I dare say he will not grudge you the little matter you
+ need, and are not able to win."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Out, sordid jade!" exclaimed Dame Ellesmere, her very flesh quivering
+ betwixt apprehension and anger, "and hold your peace this instant, or I
+ will find those that shall flay the very hide from thee with dog-whips.
+ Hast thou ate thy noble master's bread, not only to betray his trust, and
+ fly from his service, but wouldst thou come here, like an ill-omened bird
+ as thou art, to triumph over his downfall?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, dame," said Deborah, over whom the violence of the old woman had
+ obtained a certain predominance; "it is not I that say it&mdash;only the
+ warrant of the Parliament folks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought we had done with their warrants ever since the blessed
+ twenty-ninth of May," said the old housekeeper of Martindale Castle; "but
+ this I tell thee, sweetheart, that I have seen such warrants crammed, at
+ the sword's point, down the throats of them that brought them; and so
+ shall this be, if there is one true man left to drink of the Dove."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As she spoke, Lance Outram re-entered the cottage. "Naunt," he said in
+ dismay, "I doubt it is true what she says. The beacon tower is as black as
+ my belt. No Pole-star of Peveril. What does that betoken?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Death, ruin, and captivity," exclaimed old Ellesmere. "Make for the
+ Castle, thou knave. Thrust in thy great body. Strike for the house that
+ bred thee and fed thee; and if thou art buried under the ruins, thou diest
+ a man's death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, naunt, I shall not be slack," answered Outram. "But here come folks
+ that I warrant can tell us more on't."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One or two of the female servants, who had fled from the Castle during the
+ alarm, now rushed in with various reports of the case; but all agreeing
+ that a body of armed men were in possession of the Castle, and that Major
+ Bridgenorth had taken young Master Julian prisoner, and conveyed him down
+ to Moultrassie Hall, with his feet tied under the belly of the nag&mdash;a
+ shameful sight to be seen&mdash;and he so well born and so handsome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance scratched his head; and though feeling the duty incumbent upon him
+ as a faithful servant, which was indeed specially dinned into him by the
+ cries and exclamations of his aunt, he seemed not a little dubious how to
+ conduct himself. "I would to God, naunt," he said at last, "that old
+ Whitaker were alive now, with his long stories about Marston Moor and Edge
+ Hill, that made us all yawn our jaws off their hinges, in spite of broiled
+ rashers and double beer! When a man is missed, he is moaned, as they say;
+ and I would rather than a broad piece he had been here to have sorted this
+ matter, for it is clean out of my way as a woodsman, that have no skill of
+ war. But dang it, if old Sir Geoffrey go to the wall without a knock for
+ it!&mdash;Here you, Nell"&mdash;(speaking to one of the fugitive maidens
+ from the Castle)&mdash;"but, no&mdash;you have not the heart of a cat, and
+ are afraid of your own shadow by moonlight&mdash;But, Cis, you are a
+ stout-hearted wench, and know a buck from a bullfinch. Hark thee, Cis, as
+ you would wish to be married, get up to the Castle again, and get thee in&mdash;thou
+ best knowest where&mdash;for thou hast oft gotten out of postern to a
+ dance or junketing, to my knowledge&mdash;Get thee back to the Castle, as
+ ye hope to be married&mdash;See my lady&mdash;they cannot hinder thee of
+ that&mdash;my lady has a head worth twenty of ours&mdash;If I am to gather
+ force, light up the beacon for a signal; and spare not a tar barrel on't.
+ Thou mayst do it safe enough. I warrant the Roundheads busy with drink and
+ plunder.&mdash;And, hark thee, say to my lady I am gone down to the
+ miners' houses at Bonadventure. The rogues were mutinying for their wages
+ but yesterday; they will be all ready for good or bad. Let her send orders
+ down to me; or do you come yourself, your legs are long enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whether they are or not, Master Lance (and you know nothing of the
+ matter), they shall do your errand to-night, for love of the old knight
+ and his lady."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Cisly Sellok, a kind of Derbyshire Camilla, who had won the smock at
+ the foot-race at Ashbourne, sprung forward towards the Castle with a speed
+ which few could have equalled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There goes a mettled wench," said Lance; "and now, naunt, give me the old
+ broadsword&mdash;it is above the bed-head&mdash;and my wood-knife; and I
+ shall do well enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is to become of me?" bleated the unfortunate Mistress Deborah
+ Debbitch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must remain here with my aunt, Mistress Deb; and, for old
+ acquaintance' sake, she will take care no harm befalls you; but take heed
+ how you attempt to break bounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, and pondering in his own mind the task which he had undertaken,
+ the hardy forester strode down the moonlight glade, scarcely hearing the
+ blessings and cautions which Dame Ellesmere kept showering after him. His
+ thoughts were not altogether warlike. "What a tight ankle the jade hath!&mdash;she
+ trips it like a doe in summer over dew. Well, but here are the huts&mdash;Let
+ us to this gear.&mdash;Are ye all asleep, you dammers, sinkers, and
+ drift-drivers? turn out, ye subterranean badgers. Here is your master, Sir
+ Geoffrey, dead, for aught ye know or care. Do not you see the beacon is
+ unlit, and you sit there like so many asses?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," answered one of the miners, who now began to come out of their huts&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "An he be dead,
+ He will eat no more bread."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "And you are like to eat none neither," said Lance; "for the works will be
+ presently stopped, and all of you turned off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, and what of it, Master Lance? As good play for nought as work for
+ nought. Here is four weeks we have scarce seen the colour of Sir
+ Geoffrey's coin; and you ask us to care whether he be dead or in life? For
+ you, that goes about, trotting upon your horse, and doing for work what
+ all men do for pleasure, it may be well enough; but it is another matter
+ to be leaving God's light, and burrowing all day and night in darkness,
+ like a toad in a hole&mdash;that's not to be done for nought, I trow; and
+ if Sir Geoffrey is dead, his soul will suffer for't; and if he's alive,
+ we'll have him in the Barmoot Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark ye, gaffer," said Lance, "and take notice, my mates, all of you,"
+ for a considerable number of these rude and subterranean people had now
+ assembled to hear the discussion&mdash;"Has Sir Geoffrey, think you, ever
+ put a penny in his pouch out of this same Bonadventure mine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot say as I think he has," answered old Ditchley, the party who
+ maintained the controversy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Answer on your conscience, though it be but a leaden one. Do not you know
+ that he hath lost a good penny?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, I believe he may," said Gaffer Ditchley. "What then!&mdash;lose
+ to-day, win to-morrow&mdash;the miner must eat in the meantime."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True; but what will you eat when Master Bridgenorth gets the land, that
+ will not hear of a mine being wrought on his own ground? Will he work on
+ at dead loss, think ye?" demanded trusty Lance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bridgenorth?&mdash;he of Moultrassie Hall, that stopped the great
+ Felicity Work, on which his father laid out, some say, ten thousand
+ pounds, and never got in a penny? Why, what has he to do with Sir
+ Geoffrey's property down here at Bonadventure? It was never his, I trow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, what do I know?" answered Lance, who saw the impression he had made.
+ "Law and debt will give him half Derbyshire, I think, unless you stand by
+ old Sir Geoffrey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if Sir Geoffrey be dead," said Ditchley cautiously, "what good will
+ our standing by do to him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did not say he was dead, but only as bad as dead; in the hands of the
+ Roundheads&mdash;a prisoner up yonder, at his own Castle," said Lance;
+ "and will have his head cut off, like the good Earl of Derby's at
+ Bolton-le-Moors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, then, comrades," said Gaffer Ditchley, "an it be as Master Lance
+ says, I think we should bear a hand for stout old Sir Geoffrey, against a
+ low-born mean-spirited fellow like Bridgenorth, who shut up a shaft had
+ cost thousands, without getting a penny profit on't. So hurra for Sir
+ Geoffrey, and down with the Rump! But hold ye a blink&mdash;hold"&mdash;(and
+ the waving of his hand stopped the commencing cheer)&mdash;"Hark ye,
+ Master Lance, it must be all over, for the beacon is as black as night;
+ and you know yourself that marks the Lord's death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will kindle again in an instant," said Lance; internally adding, "I
+ pray to God it may!&mdash;It will kindle in an instant&mdash;lack of fuel,
+ and the confusion of the family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, like enow, like enow," said Ditchley; "but I winna budge till I see
+ it blazing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why then, there a-goes!" said Lance. "Thank thee, Cis&mdash;thank thee,
+ my good wench.&mdash;Believe your own eyes, my lads, if you will not
+ believe me; and now hurra for Peveril of the Peak&mdash;the King and his
+ friends&mdash;and down with Rumps and Roundheads!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sudden rekindling of the beacon had all the effect which Lance could
+ have desired upon the minds of his rude and ignorant hearers, who, in
+ their superstitious humour, had strongly associated the Polar-star of
+ Peveril with the fortunes of the family. Once moved, according to the
+ national character of their countrymen, they soon became enthusiastic; and
+ Lance found himself at the head of thirty stout fellows and upwards, armed
+ with their pick-axes, and ready to execute whatever task he should impose
+ on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trusting to enter the Castle by the postern, which had served to
+ accommodate himself and other domestics upon an emergency, his only
+ anxiety was to keep his march silent; and he earnestly recommended to his
+ followers to reserve their shouts for the moment of the attack. They had
+ not advanced far on their road to the Castle, when Cisly Sellok met them
+ so breathless with haste, that the poor girl was obliged to throw herself
+ into Master Lance's arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stand up, my mettled wench," said he, giving her a sly kiss at the same
+ time, "and let us know what is going on up at the Castle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lady bids you, as you would serve God and your master, not to come up
+ to the Castle, which can but make bloodshed; for she says Sir Geoffrey is
+ lawfully in hand, and that he must bide the issue; and that he is innocent
+ of what he is charged with, and is going up to speak for himself before
+ King and Council, and she goes up with him. And besides, they have found
+ out the postern, the Roundhead rogues; for two of them saw me when I went
+ out of door, and chased me; but I showed them a fair pair of heels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As ever dashed dew from the cowslip," said Lance. "But what the foul
+ fiend is to be done? for if they have secured the postern, I know not how
+ the dickens we can get in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All is fastened with bolt and staple, and guarded with gun and pistol, at
+ the Castle," quoth Cisly; "and so sharp are they, that they nigh caught me
+ coming with my lady's message, as I told you. But my lady says, if you
+ could deliver her son, Master Julian, from Bridgenorth, that she would
+ hold it good service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" said Lance, "is young master at the Castle? I taught him to shoot
+ his first shaft. But how to get in!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was at the Castle in the midst of the ruffle, but old Bridgenorth has
+ carried him down prisoner to the hall," answered Cisly. "There was never
+ faith nor courtesy in an old Puritan who never had pipe and tabor in his
+ house since it was built."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or who stopped a promising mine," said Ditchley, "to save a few thousand
+ pounds, when he might have made himself as rich as Lord of Chatsworth, and
+ fed a hundred good fellows all the whilst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then," said Lance, "since you are all of a mind, we will go draw the
+ cover for the old badger; and I promise you that the Hall is not like one
+ of your real houses of quality where the walls are as thick as
+ whinstone-dikes, but foolish brick-work, that your pick-axes will work
+ through as if it were cheese. Huzza once more for Peveril of the Peak!
+ down with Bridgenorth, and all upstart cuckoldly Roundheads!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having indulged the throats of his followers with one buxom huzza, Lance
+ commanded them to cease their clamours, and proceeded to conduct them, by
+ such paths as seemed the least likely to be watched, to the courtyard of
+ Moultrassie Hall. On the road they were joined by several stout yeoman
+ farmers, either followers of the Peveril family, or friends to the High
+ Church and Cavalier party; most of whom, alarmed by the news which began
+ to fly fast through the neighbourhood, were armed with sword and pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance Outram halted his party, at the distance, as he himself described
+ it, of a flight-shot from the house, and advanced, alone, and in silence,
+ to reconnoitre; and having previously commanded Ditchley and his
+ subterranean allies to come to his assistance whenever he should whistle,
+ he crept cautiously forward, and soon found that those whom he came to
+ surprise, true to the discipline which had gained their party such decided
+ superiority during the Civil War, had posted a sentinel, who paced through
+ the courtyard, piously chanting a psalm-tune, while his arms, crossed on
+ his bosom, supported a gun of formidable length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, a true solder," said Lance Outram to himself, "would put a stop to
+ thy snivelling ditty, by making a broad arrow quiver in your heart, and no
+ great alarm given. But, dang it, I have not the right spirit for a soldier&mdash;I
+ cannot fight a man till my blood's up; and for shooting him from behind a
+ wall it is cruelly like to stalking a deer. I'll e'en face him, and try
+ what to make of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this doughty resolution, and taking no farther care to conceal
+ himself, he entered the courtyard boldly, and was making forward to the
+ front door of the hall, as a matter of course. But the old Cromwellian,
+ who was on guard, had not so learned his duty. "Who goes there?&mdash;Stand,
+ friend&mdash;stand; or, verily, I will shoot thee to death!" were
+ challenges which followed each other quick, the last being enforced by the
+ levelling and presenting the said long-barrelled gun with which he was
+ armed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, what a murrain!" answered Lance. "Is it your fashion to go
+ a-shooting at this time o' night? Why, this is but a time for
+ bat-fowling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but hark thee, friend," said the experienced sentinel, "I am none of
+ those who do this work negligently. Thou canst not snare me with thy
+ crafty speech, though thou wouldst make it to sound simple in mine ear. Of
+ a verity I will shoot, unless thou tell thy name and business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Name!" said Lance; "why, what a dickens should it be but Robin Round&mdash;honest
+ Robin of Redham; and for business, an you must needs know, I come on a
+ message from some Parliament man, up yonder at the Castle, with letters
+ for worshipful Master Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall; and this be the
+ place, as I think; though why ye be marching up and down at his door, like
+ the sign of a Red Man, with your old firelock there, I cannot so well
+ guess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me the letters, my friend," said the sentinel, to whom this
+ explanation seemed very natural and probable, "and I will cause them
+ forthwith to be delivered into his worship's own hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rummaging in his pockets, as if to pull out the letters which never
+ existed, Master Lance approached within the sentinel's piece, and, before
+ he was aware, suddenly seized him by the collar, whistled sharp and
+ shrill, and exerting his skill as a wrestler, for which he had been
+ distinguished in his youth, he stretched his antagonist on his back&mdash;the
+ musket for which they struggled going off in the fall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miners rushed into the courtyard at Lance's signal; and hopeless any
+ longer of prosecuting his design in silence, Lance commanded two of them
+ to secure the prisoner, and the rest to cheer loudly, and attack the door
+ of the house. Instantly the courtyard of the mansion rang with the cry of
+ "Peveril of the Peak for ever!" with all the abuse which the Royalists had
+ invented to cast upon the Roundheads, during so many years of contention;
+ and at the same time, while some assailed the door with their mining
+ implements, others directed their attack against the angle, where a kind
+ of porch joined to the main front of the building; and there, in some
+ degree protected by the projection of the wall, and of a balcony which
+ overhung the porch, wrought in more security, as well as with more effect,
+ than the others; for the doors being of oak, thickly studded with nails,
+ offered a more effectual resistance to violence than the brick-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noise of this hubbub on the outside, soon excited wild alarm and
+ tumult within. Lights flew from window to window, and voices were heard
+ demanding the cause of the attack; to which the party cries of those who
+ were in the courtyard afforded a sufficient, or at least the only answer,
+ which was vouchsafed. At length the window of a projecting staircase
+ opened, and the voice of Bridgenorth himself demanded authoritatively what
+ the tumult meant, and commanded the rioters to desist, upon their own
+ proper and immediate peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We want our young master, you canting old thief," was the reply; "and if
+ we have him not instantly, the topmost stone of your house shall lie as
+ low as the foundation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall try that presently," said Bridgenorth; "for if there is another
+ blow struck against the walls of my peaceful house, I will fire my
+ carabine among you, and your blood be upon your own head. I have a score
+ of friends, well armed with musket and pistol, to defend my house; and we
+ have both the means and heart, with Heaven's assistance, to repay any
+ violence you can offer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Bridgenorth," replied Lance, who, though no soldier, was sportsman
+ enough to comprehend the advantage which those under cover, and using
+ firearms, must necessarily have over his party, exposed to their aim, in a
+ great measure, and without means of answering their fire,&mdash;"Master
+ Bridgenorth, let us crave parley with you, and fair conditions. We desire
+ to do you no evil, but will have back our young master; it is enough that
+ you have got our old one and his lady. It is foul chasing to kill hart,
+ hind, and fawn; and we will give you some light on the subject in an
+ instant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This speech was followed by a great crash amongst the lower windows of the
+ house, according to a new species of attack which had been suggested by
+ some of the assailants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would take the honest fellow's word, and let young Peveril go," said
+ one of the garrison, who, carelessly yawning, approached on the inside of
+ the post at which Bridgenorth had stationed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you mad?" said Bridgenorth; "or do you think me poor enough in spirit
+ to give up the advantages I now possess over the family of Peveril, for
+ the awe of a parcel of boors, whom the first discharge will scatter like
+ chaff before the whirlwind?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," answered the speaker, who was the same individual that had struck
+ Julian by his resemblance to the man who called himself Ganlesse, "I love
+ a dire revenge, but we shall buy it somewhat too dear if these rascals set
+ the house on fire, as they are like to do, while you are parleying from
+ the window. They have thrown torches or firebrands into the hall; and it
+ is all our friends can do to keep the flame from catching the wainscoting,
+ which is old and dry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, may Heaven judge thee for thy lightness of spirit," answered
+ Bridgenorth; "one would think mischief was so properly thy element, that
+ to thee it was indifferent whether friend or foe was the sufferer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he ran hastily downstairs towards the hall, into which, through
+ broken casements, and betwixt the iron bars, which prevented human
+ entrance, the assailants had thrust lighted straw, sufficient to excite
+ much smoke and some fire, and to throw the defenders of the house into
+ great confusion; insomuch, that of several shots fired hastily from the
+ windows, little or no damage followed to the besiegers, who, getting warm
+ on the onset, answered the hostile charges with loud shouts of "Peveril
+ for ever!" and had already made a practicable breach through the
+ brick-wall of the tenement, through which Lance, Ditchley, and several of
+ the most adventurous among their followers, made their way into the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The complete capture of the house remained, however, as far off as ever.
+ The defenders mixed with much coolness and skill that solemn and deep
+ spirit of enthusiasm which sets life at less than nothing, in comparison
+ to real or supposed duty. From the half-open doors which led into the
+ hall, they maintained a fire which began to grow fatal. One miner was shot
+ dead; three or four were wounded; and Lance scarce knew whether he should
+ draw his forces from the house, and leave it a prey to the flames, or,
+ making a desperate attack on the posts occupied by the defenders, try to
+ obtain unmolested possession of the place. At this moment, his course of
+ conduct was determined by an unexpected occurrence, of which it is
+ necessary to trace the cause.
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0545m.jpg" alt="0545m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0545.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had been, like other inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall on
+ that momentous night, awakened by the report of the sentinel's musket,
+ followed by the shouts of his father's vassals and followers; of which he
+ collected enough to guess that Bridgenorth's house was attacked with a
+ view to his liberation. Very doubtful of the issue of such an attempt,
+ dizzy with the slumber from which he had been so suddenly awakened, and
+ confounded with the rapid succession of events to which he had been lately
+ a witness, he speedily put on a part of his clothes, and hastened to the
+ window of his apartment. From this he could see nothing to relieve his
+ anxiety, for it looked towards a quarter different from that on which the
+ attack was made. He attempted his door; it was locked on the outside; and
+ his perplexity and anxiety became extreme, when suddenly the lock was
+ turned, and in an underdress, hastily assumed in the moment of alarm, her
+ hair streaming on her shoulders, her eyes gleaming betwixt fear and
+ resolution, Alice Bridgenorth rushed into his apartment, and seized his
+ hand with the fervent exclamation, "Julian, save my father!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The light which she bore in her hand served to show those features which
+ could rarely have been viewed by any one without emotion, but which bore
+ an expression irresistible to a lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alice," he said, "what means this? What is the danger? Where is your
+ father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not stay to question," she answered; "but if you would save him,
+ follow me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time she led the way, with great speed, half-way down the
+ turret stair case which led to his room, thence turning through a side
+ door, along a long gallery, to a larger and wider stair, at the bottom of
+ which stood her father, surrounded by four or five of his friends, scarce
+ discernible through the smoke of the fire which began to take hold in the
+ hall, as well as that which arose from the repeated discharge of their own
+ firearms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian saw there was not a moment to be lost, if he meant to be a
+ successful mediator. He rushed through Bridgenorth's party ere they were
+ aware of his approach, and throwing himself amongst the assailants who
+ occupied the hall in considerable numbers, he assured them of his personal
+ safety, and conjured them to depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not without a few more slices at the Rump, master," answered Lance. "I am
+ principally glad to see you safe and well; but here is Joe Rimegap shot as
+ dead as a buck in season, and more of us are hurt; and we'll have revenge,
+ and roast the Puritans like apples for lambswool!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you shall roast me along with them," said Julian; "for I vow to God,
+ I will not leave the hall, being bound by parole of honour to abide with
+ Major Bridgenorth till lawfully dismissed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now out on you, an you were ten times a Peveril!" said Ditchley; "to give
+ so many honest fellows loss and labour on your behalf, and to show them no
+ kinder countenance.&mdash;I say, beat up the fire, and burn all together!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, nay; but peace, my masters, and hearken to reason," said Julian; "we
+ are all here in evil condition, and you will only make it worse by
+ contention. Do you help to put out this same fire, which will else cost us
+ all dear. Keep yourselves under arms. Let Master Bridgenorth and me settle
+ some grounds of accommodation, and I trust all will be favourably made up
+ on both sides; and if not, you shall have my consent and countenance to
+ fight it out; and come on it what will, I will never forget this night's
+ good service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then drew Ditchley and Lance Outram aside, while the rest stood
+ suspended at his appearance and words, and expressing the utmost thanks
+ and gratitude for what they had already done, urged them, as the greatest
+ favour which they could do towards him and his father's house, to permit
+ him to negotiate the terms of his emancipation from thraldom; at the same
+ time forcing on Ditchley five or six gold pieces, that the brave lads of
+ Bonadventure might drink his health; whilst to Lance he expressed the
+ warmest sense of his active kindness, but protested he could only consider
+ it as good service to his house, if he was allowed to manage the matter
+ after his own fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," answered Lance, "I am well out on it, Master Julian; for it is
+ matter beyond my mastery. All that I stand to is, that I will see you safe
+ out of this same Moultrassie Hall; for our old Naunt Ellesmere will else
+ give me but cold comfort when I come home. Truth is, I began unwillingly;
+ but when I saw the poor fellow Joe shot beside me, why, I thought we
+ should have some amends. But I put it all in your Honour's hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this colloquy both parties had been amicably employed in
+ extinguishing the fire, which might otherwise have been fatal to all. It
+ required a general effort to get it under; and both parties agreed on the
+ necessary labour, with as much unanimity, as if the water they brought in
+ leathern buckets from the well to throw upon the fire, had some effect in
+ slaking their mutual hostility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Necessity&mdash;thou best of peacemakers,
+ As well as surest prompter of invention&mdash;
+ Help us to composition!
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While the fire continued, the two parties laboured in active union, like
+ the jarring factions of the Jews during the siege of Jerusalem, when
+ compelled to unite in resisting an assault of the besiegers. But when the
+ last bucket of water had hissed on the few embers that continued to
+ glimmer&mdash;when the sense of mutual hostility, hitherto suspended by a
+ feeling of common danger, was in its turn rekindled&mdash;the parties,
+ mingled as they had hitherto been in one common exertion, drew off from
+ each other, and began to arrange themselves at opposite sides of the hall,
+ and handle their weapons, as if for a renewal of the fight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth interrupted any farther progress of this menaced hostility.
+ "Julian Peveril," he said, "thou art free to walk thine own path, since
+ thou wilt not walk with me that road which is more safe, as well as more
+ honourable. But if you do by my counsel, you will get soon beyond the
+ British seas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ralph Bridgenorth," said one of his friends, "this is but evil and feeble
+ conduct on thine own part. Wilt thou withhold thy hand from the battle, to
+ defend, from these sons of Belial, the captive of thy bow and of thy
+ spear? Surely we are enow to deal with them in the security of the old
+ serpent, until we essay whether the Lord will not give us victory
+ therein."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hum of stern assent followed; and had not Ganlesse now interfered, the
+ combat would probably have been renewed. He took the advocate for war
+ apart into one of the window recesses, and apparently satisfied his
+ objections; for as he returned to his companions, he said to them, "Our
+ friend hath so well argued this matter, that, verily, since he is of the
+ same mind with the worthy Major Bridgenorth, I think the youth may be set
+ at liberty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As no farther objection was offered, it only remained with Julian to thank
+ and reward those who had been active in his assistance. Having first
+ obtained from Bridgenorth a promise of indemnity to them for the riot they
+ had committed, a few kind words conveyed his sense of their services; and
+ some broad pieces, thrust into the hand of Lance Outram, furnished the
+ means for affording them a holiday. They would have remained to protect
+ him, but, fearful of farther disorder, and relying entirely on the good
+ faith of Major Bridgenorth, he dismissed them all except Lance, whom he
+ detained to attend upon him for a few minutes, till he should depart from
+ Moultrassie. But ere leaving the Hall, he could not repress his desire to
+ speak with Bridgenorth in secret; and advancing towards him, he expressed
+ such a desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tacitly granting what was asked of him, Bridgenorth led the way to a small
+ summer saloon adjoining to the Hall, where, with his usual gravity and
+ indifference of manner, he seemed to await in silence what Peveril had to
+ communicate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian found it difficult, where so little opening was afforded him, to
+ find a tone in which to open the subjects he had at heart, that should be
+ at once dignified and conciliating. "Major Bridgenorth," he said at
+ length, "you have been a son, and an affectionate one&mdash;You may
+ conceive my present anxiety&mdash;My father!&mdash;What has been designed
+ for him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What the law will," answered Bridgenorth. "Had he walked by the counsels
+ which I procured to be given to him, he might have dwelt safely in the
+ house of his ancestors. His fate is now beyond my control&mdash;far beyond
+ yours. It must be with him as his country decide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And my mother?" said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will consult, as she has ever done, her own duty; and create her own
+ happiness by doing so," replied Bridgenorth. "Believe, my designs towards
+ your family are better than they may seem through the mist which adversity
+ has spread around your house. I may triumph as a man; but as a man I must
+ also remember, in my hour, that mine enemies have had theirs.&mdash;Have
+ you aught else to say?" he added, after a momentary pause. "You have
+ rejected once, yea, and again, the hand I stretched out to you. Methinks
+ little more remains between us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words, which seemed to cut short farther discussion, were calmly
+ spoken; so that though they appeared to discourage farther question, they
+ could not interrupt that which still trembled on Julian's tongue. He made
+ a step or two towards the door; then suddenly returned. "Your daughter?"
+ he said&mdash;"Major Bridgenorth&mdash;I should ask&mdash;I <i>do</i> ask
+ forgiveness for mentioning her name&mdash;but may I not inquire after her?&mdash;May
+ I not express my wishes for her future happiness?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your interest in her is but too flattering," said Bridgenorth; "but you
+ have already chosen your part; and you must be, in future, strangers to
+ each other. I may have wished it otherwise, but the hour of grace is
+ passed, during which your compliance with my advice might&mdash;I will
+ speak it plainly&mdash;have led to your union. For her happiness&mdash;if
+ such a word belongs to mortal pilgrimage&mdash;I shall care for it
+ sufficiently. She leaves this place to-day, under the guardianship of a
+ sure friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not of&mdash;&mdash;?" exclaimed Peveril, and stopped short; for he felt
+ he had no right to pronounce the name which came to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why do you pause?" said Bridgenorth; "a sudden thought is often a wise,
+ almost always an honest one. With whom did you suppose I meant to entrust
+ my child, that the idea called forth so anxious an expression?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Again I should ask your forgiveness," said Julian, "for meddling where I
+ have little right to interfere. But I saw a face here that is known to me&mdash;the
+ person calls himself Ganlesse&mdash;Is it with him that you mean to
+ entrust your daughter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Even to the person who call himself Ganlesse," said Bridgenorth, without
+ expressing either anger or surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And do you know to whom you commit a charge so precious to all who know
+ her, and so dear to yourself?" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do <i>you</i> know, who ask me the question?" answered Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I own I do not," answered Julian; "but I have seen him in a character so
+ different from that he now wears, that I feel it my duty to warn you, how
+ you entrust the charge of your child to one who can alternately play the
+ profligate or the hypocrite, as it suits his own interest or humour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth smiled contemptuously. "I might be angry," he said, "with the
+ officious zeal which supposes that its green conceptions can instruct my
+ grey hairs; but, good Julian, I do but only ask from you the liberal
+ construction, that I, who have had much converse with mankind, know with
+ whom I trust what is dearest to me. He of whom thou speakest hath one
+ visage to his friends, though he may have others to the world, living
+ amongst those before whom honest features should be concealed under a
+ grotesque vizard; even as in the sinful sports of the day, called maskings
+ and mummeries, where the wise, if he show himself at all, must be
+ contented to play the apish and fantastic fool."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would only pray your wisdom to beware," said Julian, "of one, who, as
+ he has a vizard for others, may also have one which can disguise his real
+ features from you yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is being over careful, young man," replied Bridgenorth, more shortly
+ than he had hitherto spoken; "if you would walk by my counsel, you will
+ attend to your own affairs, which, credit me, deserve all your care, and
+ leave others to the management of theirs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was too plain to be misunderstood; and Peveril was compelled to take
+ his leave of Bridgenorth, and of Moultrassie Hall, without farther parley
+ or explanation. The reader may imagine how oft he looked back, and tried
+ to guess, amongst the lights which continued to twinkle in various parts
+ of the building, which sparkle it was that gleamed from the bower of
+ Alice. When the road turned into another direction, he sunk into deep
+ reverie, from which he was at length roused by the voice of Lance, who
+ demanded where he intended to quarter for the night. He was unprepared to
+ answer the question, but the honest keeper himself prompted a solution of
+ the problem, by requesting that he would occupy a spare bed in the Lodge;
+ to which Julian willingly agreed. The rest of the inhabitants had retired
+ to rest when they entered; but Dame Ellesmere, apprised by a messenger of
+ her nephew's hospitable intent, had everything in the best readiness she
+ could, for the son of her ancient patron. Peveril betook himself to rest;
+ and, notwithstanding so many subjects of anxiety, slept soundly till the
+ morning was far advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His slumbers were first broken by Lance, who had been long up, and already
+ active in his service. He informed him, that his horse, arms, and small
+ cloak-bag had been sent from the Castle by one of Major Bridgenorth's
+ servants, who brought a letter, discharging from the Major's service the
+ unfortunate Deborah Debbitch, and prohibiting her return to the Hall. The
+ officer of the House of Commons, escorted by a strong guard, had left
+ Martindale Castle that morning early, travelling in Sir Geoffrey's
+ carriage&mdash;his lady being also permitted to attend on him. To this he
+ had to add, that the property at the Castle was taken possession of by
+ Master Win-the-fight, the attorney, from Chesterfield, with other officers
+ of law, in name of Major Bridgenorth, a large creditor of the unfortunate
+ knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having told these Job's tidings, Lance paused; and, after a moment's
+ hesitation, declared he was resolved to quit the country, and go up to
+ London along with his young master. Julian argued the point with him; and
+ insisted he had better stay to take charge of his aunt, in case she should
+ be disturbed by these strangers. Lance replied, "She would have one with
+ her, who would protect her well enough; for there was wherewithal to buy
+ protection amongst them. But for himself, he was resolved to follow Master
+ Julian to the death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian heartily thanked him for his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, it is not altogether out of love neither," said Lance, "though I am
+ as loving as another; but it is, as it were, partly out of fear, lest I be
+ called over the coals for last night's matter; for as for the miners, they
+ will never trouble them, as the creatures only act after their kind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will write in your behalf to Major Bridgenorth, who is bound to afford
+ you protection, if you have such fear," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, for that matter, it is not altogether fear, more than altogether
+ love," answered the enigmatical keeper, "although it hath a tasting of
+ both in it. And, to speak plain truth, thus it is&mdash;Dame Debbitch and
+ Naunt Ellesmere have resolved to set up their horses together, and have
+ made up all their quarrels. And of all ghosts in the world, the worst is,
+ when an old true-love comes back to haunt a poor fellow like me. Mistress
+ Deborah, though distressed enow for the loss of her place, has been
+ already speaking of a broken sixpence, or some such token, as if a man
+ could remember such things for so many years, even if she had not gone
+ over seas, like woodcock, in the meanwhile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian could scarce forbear laughing. "I thought you too much of a man,
+ Lance, to fear a woman marrying you whether you would or no."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has been many an honest man's luck, for all that," said Lance; "and a
+ woman in the very house has so many deuced opportunities. And then there
+ would be two upon one; for Naunt, though high enough when any of <i>your</i>
+ folks are concerned, hath some look to the main chance; and it seems
+ Mistress Deb is as rich as a Jew."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you, Lance," said Julian, "have no mind to marry for cake and
+ pudding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, truly, master," answered Lance, "unless I knew of what dough they
+ were baked. How the devil do I know how the jade came by so much? And then
+ if she speaks of tokens and love-passages, let her be the same tight lass
+ I broke the sixpence with, and I will be the same true lad to her. But I
+ never heard of true love lasting ten years; and hers, if it lives at all,
+ must be nearer twenty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then, Lance," said Julian, "since you are resolved on the thing, we
+ will go to London together; where, if I cannot retain you in my service,
+ and if my father recovers not these misfortunes, I will endeavour to
+ promote you elsewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, nay," said Lance, "I trust to be back to bonny Martindale before it
+ is long, and to keep the greenwood, as I have been wont to do; for, as to
+ Dame Debbitch, when they have not me for their common butt, Naunt and she
+ will soon bend bows on each other. So here comes old Dame Ellesmere with
+ your breakfast. I will but give some directions about the deer to Rough
+ Ralph, my helper, and saddle my forest pony, and your honour's horse,
+ which is no prime one, and we will be ready to trot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was not sorry for this addition to his establishment; for Lance had
+ shown himself, on the preceding evening, a shrewd and bold fellow, and
+ attached to his master. He therefore set himself to reconcile his aunt to
+ parting with her nephew for some time. Her unlimited devotion for "the
+ family," readily induced the old lady to acquiesce in his proposal, though
+ not without a gentle sigh over the ruins of a castle in the air, which was
+ founded on the well-saved purse of Mistress Deborah Debbitch. "At any
+ rate," she thought, "it was as well that Lance should be out of the way of
+ that bold, long-legged, beggarly trollop, Cis Sellok." But to poor Deb
+ herself, the expatriation of Lance, whom she had looked to as a sailor to
+ a port under his lee, for which he can run, if weather becomes foul, was a
+ second severe blow, following close on her dismissal from the profitable
+ service of Major Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian visited the disconsolate damsel, in hopes of gaining some light
+ upon Bridgenorth's projects regarding his daughter&mdash;the character of
+ this Ganlesse&mdash;and other matters, with which her residence in the
+ family might have made her acquainted; but he found her by far too much
+ troubled in mind to afford him the least information. The name of Ganlesse
+ she did not seem to recollect&mdash;that of Alice rendered her hysterical&mdash;that
+ of Bridgenorth, furious. She numbered up the various services she had
+ rendered in the family&mdash;and denounced the plague of swartness to the
+ linen&mdash;of leanness to the poultry&mdash;of dearth and dishonour to
+ the housekeeping&mdash;and of lingering sickness and early death to Alice;&mdash;all
+ which evils, she averred, had only been kept off by her continued,
+ watchful, and incessant cares.&mdash;Then again turning to the subject of
+ the fugitive Lance, she expressed such a total contempt of that
+ mean-spirited fellow, in a tone between laughing and crying, as satisfied
+ Julian it was not a topic likely to act as a sedative; and that,
+ therefore, unless he made a longer stay than the urgent state of his
+ affairs permitted, he was not likely to find Mistress Deborah in such a
+ state of composure as might enable him to obtain from her any rational or
+ useful information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance, who good-naturedly took upon himself the whole burden of Dame
+ Debbitch's mental alienation, or "taking on," as such fits of <i>passio
+ hysterica</i> are usually termed in the country, had too much feeling to
+ present himself before the victim of her own sensibility, and of his
+ obduracy. He therefore intimated to Julian, by his assistant Ralph, that
+ the horses stood saddled behind the Lodge, and that all was ready for
+ their departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian took the hint, and they were soon mounted, and clearing the road,
+ at a rapid trot, in the direction of London; but not by the most usual
+ route. Julian calculated that the carriage in which his father was
+ transported would travel slowly; and it was his purpose, if possible, to
+ get to London before it should arrive there, in order to have time to
+ consult, with the friends of his family, what measures should be taken in
+ his father's behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner they advanced a day's journey towards London; at the
+ conclusion of which, Julian found his resting-place in a small inn upon
+ the road. No one came, at the first call, to attend upon the guests and
+ their horses, although the house was well lighted up; and there was a
+ prodigious chattering in the kitchen, such as can only be produced by a
+ French cook when his mystery is in the very moment of projection. It
+ instantly occurred to Julian&mdash;so rare was the ministry of these
+ Gallic artists at that time&mdash;that the clamour he heard must
+ necessarily be produced by the Sieur Chaubert, on whose <i>plats</i> he
+ had lately feasted, along with Smith and Ganlesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One, or both of these, were therefore probably in the little inn; and if
+ so, he might have some opportunity to discover their real purpose and
+ character. How to avail himself of such a meeting he knew not; but chance
+ favoured him more than he could have expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can scarce receive you, gentlefolks," said the landlord, who at length
+ appeared at the door; "here be a sort of quality in my house to-night,
+ whom less than all will not satisfy; nor all neither, for that matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are but plain fellows, landlord," said Julian; "we are bound for
+ Moseley-market, and can get no farther to-night. Any hole will serve us,
+ no matter what."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," said the honest host, "if that be the case, I must e'en put one of
+ you behind the bar, though the gentlemen have desired to be private; the
+ other must take heart of grace and help me at the tap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The tap for me," said Lance, without waiting his master's decision. "It
+ is an element which I could live and die in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The bar, then, for me," said Peveril; and stepping back, whispered to
+ Lance to exchange cloaks with him, desirous, if possible, to avoid being
+ recognised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The exchange was made in an instant; and presently afterwards the landlord
+ brought a light; and as he guided Julian into his hostelry, cautioned him
+ to sit quiet in the place where he should stow him; and if he was
+ discovered, to say that he was one of the house, and leave him to make it
+ good. "You will hear what the gallants say," he added; "but I think thou
+ wilt carry away but little on it; for when it is not French, it is Court
+ gibberish; and that is as hard to construe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bar, into which our hero was inducted on these conditions, seemed
+ formed, with respect to the public room, upon the principle of a citadel,
+ intended to observe and bridle a rebellious capital. Here sat the host on
+ the Saturday evenings, screened from the observation of his guests, yet
+ with the power of observing both their wants and their behaviour, and also
+ that of overhearing their conversation&mdash;a practice which he was much
+ addicted to, being one of that numerous class of philanthropists, to whom
+ their neighbours' business is of as much consequence, or rather more, than
+ their own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he planted his new guest, with a repeated caution not to disturb the
+ gentlemen by speech or motion; and a promise that he should be speedily
+ accommodated with a cold buttock of beef, and a tankard of home-brewed.
+ And here he left him with no other light than that which glimmered from
+ the well-illuminated apartment within, through a sort of shuttle which
+ accommodated the landlord with a view into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This situation, inconvenient enough in itself, was, on the present
+ occasion, precisely what Julian would have selected. He wrapped himself in
+ the weather-beaten cloak of Lance Outram, which had been stained, by age
+ and weather, into a thousand variations from its original Lincoln green;
+ and with as little noise as he could, set himself to observe the two
+ inmates, who had engrossed to themselves the whole of the apartment, which
+ was usually open to the public. They sat by a table well covered with such
+ costly rarities, as could only have been procured by much forecast, and
+ prepared by the exquisite Mons. Chaubert; to which both seemed to do much
+ justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian had little difficulty in ascertaining, that one of the travellers
+ was, as he had anticipated, the master of the said Chaubert, or, as he was
+ called by Ganlesse, Smith; the other, who faced him, he had never seen
+ before. This last was dressed like a gallant of the first order. His
+ periwig, indeed, as he travelled on horseback, did not much exceed in size
+ the bar-wig of a modern lawyer; but then the essence which he shook from
+ it with every motion, impregnated a whole apartment, which was usually
+ only perfumed by that vulgar herb, tobacco. His riding-coat was laced in
+ the newest and most courtly style; and Grammont himself might have envied
+ the embroidery of his waistcoat, and the peculiar cut of his breeches,
+ which buttoned above the knee, permitting the shape of a very handsome leg
+ to be completely seen. This, by the proprietor thereof, had been stretched
+ out upon a stool, and he contemplated its proportions, from time to time,
+ with infinite satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conversation between these worthies was so interesting, that we
+ propose to assign to it another chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;This is some creature of the elements,
+ Most like your sea-gull. He can wheel and whistle
+ His screaming song, e'en when the storm is loudest&mdash;
+ Take for his sheeted couch the restless foam
+ Of the wild wave-crest&mdash;slumber in the calm,
+ And daily with the storm. Yet 'tis a gull,
+ An arrant gull, with all this.
+ &mdash;THE CHAMPION.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "And here is to thee," said the fashionable gallant whom we have
+ described, "honest Tom; and a cup of welcome to thee out of Looby-land.
+ Why, thou hast been so long in the country, that thou hast got a bumpkinly
+ clod-compelling sort of look thyself. That greasy doublet fits thee as if
+ it were thy reserved Sunday's apparel; and the points seem as if they were
+ stay-laces bought for thy true-love Marjory. I marvel thou canst still
+ relish a ragout. Methinks now, to a stomach bound in such a jacket, eggs
+ and bacon were a diet more conforming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rally away, my good lord, while wit lasts," answered his companion;
+ "yours is not the sort of ammunition which will bear much expenditure. Or
+ rather, tell me news from Court, since we have met so opportunely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would have asked me these an hour ago," said the lord, "had not your
+ very soul been under Chaubert's covered dishes. You remembered King's
+ affairs will keep cool, and <i>entre-mets</i> must be eaten hot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, my lord; I only kept common talk whilst that eavesdropping rascal
+ of a landlord was in the room; so that, now the coast is clear once more,
+ I pray you for news from Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Plot is nonsuited," answered the courtier&mdash;"Sir George Wakeman
+ acquitted&mdash;the witnesses discredited by the jury&mdash;Scroggs, who
+ ranted on one side, is now ranting on t'other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rat the Plot, Wakeman, witnesses, Papists, and Protestants, all together!
+ Do you think I care for such trash as that?&mdash;Till the Plot comes up
+ the Palace backstair, and gets possession of old Rowley's own imagination,
+ I care not a farthing who believes or disbelieves. I hang by him will bear
+ me out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then," said the lord, "the next news is Rochester's disgrace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Disgraced!&mdash;How, and for what? The morning I came off he stood as
+ fair as any one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's over&mdash;the epitaph[*] has broken his neck&mdash;and now he may
+ write one for his own Court favour, for it is dead and buried."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The epitaph alluded to is the celebrated epigram made by Rochester
+ on Charles II. It was composed at the King's request, who
+ nevertheless resented its poignancy.
+
+ The lines are well known:&mdash;
+
+ "Here lies our sovereign lord the King,
+ Whose word no man relies on,
+ Who never said a foolish thing,
+ And never did a wise one."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "The epitaph!" exclaimed Tom; "why, I was by when it was made; and it
+ passed for an excellent good jest with him whom it was made upon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, so it did amongst ourselves," answered his companion; "but it got
+ abroad, and had a run like a mill-race. It was in every coffee-house, and
+ in half the diurnals. Grammont translated it into French too; and there is
+ no laughing at so sharp a jest, when it is dinned into your ears on all
+ sides. So disgraced is the author; and but for his Grace of Buckingham,
+ the Court would be as dull as my Lord Chancellor's wig."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or as the head it covers.&mdash;Well, my lord, the fewer at Court, there
+ is the more room for those that can bustle there. But there are two
+ mainstrings of Shaftesbury's fiddle broken&mdash;the Popish Plot fallen
+ into discredit&mdash;and Rochester disgraced. Changeful times&mdash;but
+ here is to the little man who shall mend them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I apprehend you," replied his lordship; "and meet your health with my
+ love. Trust me, my lord loves you, and longs for you.&mdash;Nay, I have
+ done you reason.&mdash;By your leave, the cup is with me. Here is to his
+ buxom Grace of Bucks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As blithe a peer," said Smith, "as ever turned night to day. Nay, it
+ shall be an overflowing bumper, an you will; and I will drink it <i>super
+ naculum</i>.&mdash;And how stands the great Madam?"[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The Duchess of Portsmouth, Charles II.'s favourite mistress; very
+ unpopular at the time of the Popish Plot, as well from her
+ religion as her country, being a Frenchwoman and a Catholic.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Stoutly against all change," answered the lord&mdash;"Little Anthony[*]
+ can make nought of her."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, the politician and
+ intriguer of the period.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Then he shall bring her influence to nought. Hark in thine ear. Thou
+ knowest&mdash;&mdash;" (Here he whispered so low that Julian could not
+ catch the sound.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Know him?" answered the other&mdash;"Know Ned of the Island?&mdash;To be
+ sure I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is the man that shall knot the great fiddle-strings that have snapped.
+ Say I told you so; and thereupon I give thee his health."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And thereupon I pledge thee," said the young nobleman, "which on any
+ other argument I were loath to do&mdash;thinking of Ned as somewhat the
+ cut of a villain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Granted, man&mdash;granted," said the other,&mdash;"a very thorough-paced
+ rascal; but able, my lord, able and necessary; and, in this plan,
+ indispensable.&mdash;Pshaw!&mdash;This champagne turns stronger as it gets
+ older, I think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark, mine honest fellow," said the courtier; "I would thou wouldst give
+ me some item of all this mystery. Thou hast it, I know; for whom do men
+ entrust but trusty Chiffinch?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is your pleasure to say so, my lord," answered Smith (whom we shall
+ hereafter call by his real name of Chiffinch) with such drunken gravity,
+ for his speech had become a little altered by his copious libations in the
+ course of the evening,&mdash;"few men know more, or say less, than I do;
+ and it well becomes my station. <i>Conticuere omnes</i>, as the grammar
+ hath it&mdash;all men should learn to hold their tongue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Except with a friend, Tom&mdash;except with a friend. Thou wilt never be
+ such a dogbolt as to refuse a hint to a friend? Come, you get too wise and
+ statesman-like for your office.&mdash;The ligatures of thy most peasantly
+ jacket there are like to burst with thy secret. Come, undo a button, man;
+ it is for the health of thy constitution&mdash;Let out a reef; and let thy
+ chosen friend know what is meditating. Thou knowest I am as true as
+ thyself to little Anthony, if he can but get uppermost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>If</i>, thou lordly infidel!" said Chiffinch&mdash;"talk'st thou to me
+ of <i>ifs?</i>&mdash;There is neither <i>if</i> nor <i>and</i> in the
+ matter. The great Madam shall be pulled a peg down&mdash;the great Plot
+ screwed a peg or two up. Thou knowest Ned?&mdash;Honest Ned had a
+ brother's death to revenge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard so," said the nobleman; "and that his persevering resentment
+ of that injury was one of the few points which seemed to be a sort of
+ heathenish virtue in him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," continued Chiffinch, "in manoeuvring to bring about this revenge,
+ which he hath laboured at many a day, he hath discovered a treasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!&mdash;In the Isle of Man?" said his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Assure yourself of it.&mdash;She is a creature so lovely, that she needs
+ but be seen to put down every one of the favourites, from Portsmouth and
+ Cleveland down to that threepenny baggage, Mistress Nelly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my word, Chiffinch," said my lord, "that is a reinforcement after the
+ fashion of thine own best tactics. But bethink thee, man! To make such a
+ conquest, there wants more than a cherry-cheek and a bright eye&mdash;there
+ must be wit&mdash;wit, man, and manners, and a little sense besides, to
+ keep influence when it is gotten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw! will you tell me what goes to this vocation?" said Chiffinch.
+ "Here, pledge me her health in a brimmer.&mdash;Nay, you shall do it on
+ knees, too.&mdash;Never such a triumphant beauty was seen&mdash;I went to
+ church on purpose, for the first time these ten years&mdash;Yet I lie, it
+ was not to church neither&mdash;it was to chapel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To chapel!&mdash;What the devil, is she a Puritan?" exclaimed the other
+ courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To be sure she is. Do you think I would be accessory to bringing a Papist
+ into favour in these times, when, as my good Lord said in the House, there
+ should not be a Popish manservant, nor a Popish maid-servant, not so much
+ as dog or cat, left to bark or mew about the King!"[*]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [*] Such was the extravagance of Shaftesbury's eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But consider, Chiffie, the dislikelihood of her pleasing," said the noble
+ courtier.&mdash;"What! old Rowley, with his wit, and love of wit&mdash;his
+ wildness, and love of wildness&mdash;he form a league with a silly,
+ scrupulous, unidea'd Puritan!&mdash;Not if she were Venus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou knowest nought of the matter," answered Chiffinch. "I tell thee, the
+ fine contrast between the seeming saint and falling sinner will give zest
+ to the old gentleman's inclination. If I do not know him, who does?&mdash;Her
+ health, my lord, on your bare knee, as you would live to be of the
+ bedchamber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pledge you most devoutly," answered his friend. "But you have not told
+ me how the acquaintance is to be made; for you cannot, I think, carry her
+ to Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aha, my dear lord, you would have the whole secret! but that I cannot
+ afford&mdash;I can spare a friend a peep at my ends, but no one must look
+ on the means by which they are achieved."&mdash;So saying, he shook his
+ drunken head most wisely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The villainous design which this discourse implied, and which his heart
+ told him was designed against Alice Bridgenorth, stirred Julian so
+ extremely, that he involuntarily shifted his posture, and laid his hand on
+ his sword hilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch heard a rustling, and broke off, exclaiming, "Hark!&mdash;Zounds,
+ something moved&mdash;I trust I have told the tale to no ears but thine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will cut off any which have drunk in but a syllable of thy words," said
+ the nobleman; and raising a candle, he took a hasty survey of the
+ apartment. Seeing nothing that could incur his menaced resentment, he
+ replaced the light and continued:&mdash;"Well, suppose the Belle Louise de
+ Querouaille[*] shoots from her high station in the firmament, how will you
+ rear up the downfallen Plot again&mdash;for without that same Plot, think
+ of it as thou wilt, we have no change of hands&mdash;and matters remain as
+ they were, with a Protestant courtezan instead of a Papist&mdash;Little
+ Anthony can but little speed without that Plot of his&mdash;I believe, in
+ my conscience, he begot it himself."[+]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Charles's principal mistress <i>en titre</i>. She was created Duchess
+ of Portsmouth.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[+] Shaftesbury himself is supposed to have said that he knew not who
+ was the inventor of the Plot, but that he himself had all the
+ advantage of the discovery.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Whoever begot it," said Chiffinch, "he hath adopted it; and a thriving
+ babe it has been to him. Well, then, though it lies out of my way, I will
+ play Saint Peter again&mdash;up with t'other key, and unlock t'other
+ mystery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now thou speakest like a good fellow; and I will, with my own hands,
+ unwire this fresh flask, to begin a brimmer to the success of thy
+ achievement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then," continued the communicative Chiffinch, "thou knowest that
+ they have long had a nibbling at the old Countess of Derby.&mdash;So Ned
+ was sent down&mdash;he owes her an old accompt, thou knowest&mdash;with
+ private instructions to possess himself of the island, if he could, by
+ help of some of his old friends. He hath ever kept up spies upon her; and
+ happy man was he, to think his hour of vengeance was come so nigh. But he
+ missed his blow; and the old girl being placed on her guard, was soon in a
+ condition to make Ned smoke for it. Out of the island he came with little
+ advantage for having entered it; when, by some means&mdash;for the devil,
+ I think, stands ever his friend&mdash;he obtained information concerning a
+ messenger, whom her old Majesty of Man had sent to London to make party in
+ her behalf. Ned stuck himself to this fellow&mdash;a raw, half-bred lad,
+ son of an old blundering Cavalier of the old stamp, down in Derbyshire&mdash;and
+ so managed the swain, that he brought him to the place where I was
+ waiting, in anxious expectation of the pretty one I told you of. By Saint
+ Anthony, for I will swear by no meaner oath, I stared when I saw this
+ great lout&mdash;not that the fellow is so ill-looked neither&mdash;I
+ stared like&mdash;like&mdash;good now, help me to a simile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Like Saint Anthony's pig, an it were sleek," said the young lord; "your
+ eyes, Chiffie, have the very blink of one. But what hath all this to do
+ with the Plot? Hold, I have had wine enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall not balk me," said Chiffinch; and a jingling was heard, as if
+ he were filling his comrade's glass with a very unsteady hand. "Hey&mdash;What
+ the devil is the matter?&mdash;I used to carry my glass steady&mdash;very
+ steady."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, but this stranger?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, he swept at game and ragout as he would at spring beef or summer
+ mutton. Never saw so unnurtured a cub&mdash;Knew no more what he ate than
+ an infidel&mdash;I cursed him by my gods when I saw Chaubert's <i>chef-d'
+ oeuvres</i> glutted down so indifferent a throat. We took the freedom to
+ spice his goblet a little, and ease him of his packet of letters; and the
+ fool went on his way the next morning with a budget artificially filled
+ with grey paper. Ned would have kept him, in hopes to have made a witness
+ of him, but the boy was not of that mettle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How will you prove your letters?" said the courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "La you there, my lord," said Chiffinch; "one may see with half an eye,
+ for all your laced doublet, that you have been of the family of
+ Furnival's, before your brother's death sent you to Court. How prove the
+ letters?&mdash;Why, we have but let the sparrow fly with a string round
+ his foot.&mdash;We have him again so soon as we list."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, thou art turned a very Machiavel, Chiffinch," said his friend. "But
+ how if the youth proved restive?&mdash;I have heard these Peak men have
+ hot heads and hard hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Trouble not yourself&mdash;that was cared for, my lord," said Chiffinch&mdash;"his
+ pistols might bark, but they could not bite."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most exquisite Chiffinch, thou art turned micher as well as padder&mdash;Canst
+ both rob a man and kidnap him!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Micher and padder&mdash;what terms be these?" said Chiffinch. "Methinks
+ these are sounds to lug out upon. You will have me angry to the degree of
+ falling foul&mdash;robber and kidnapper!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mistake verb for noun-substantive," replied his lordship; "I said <i>rob</i>
+ and <i>kidnap</i>&mdash;a man may do either once and away without being
+ professional."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But not without spilling a little foolish noble blood, or some such
+ red-coloured gear," said Chiffinch, starting up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh yes," said his lordship; "all this may be without these dire
+ consequences, and as you will find to-morrow, when you return to England;
+ for at present you are in the land of Champagne, Chiffie; and that you may
+ continue so, I drink thee this parting cup to line thy nightcap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not refuse your pledge," said Chiffinch; "but I drink to thee in
+ dudgeon and in hostility&mdash;It is cup of wrath, and a gage of battle.
+ To-morrow, by dawn, I will have thee at point of fox, wert thou the last
+ of the Savilles.&mdash;What the devil! think you I fear you because you
+ are a lord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so, Chiffinch," answered his companion. "I know thou fearest nothing
+ but beans and bacon, washed down with bumpkin-like beer.&mdash;Adieu,
+ sweet Chiffinch&mdash;to bed&mdash;Chiffinch&mdash;to bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he lifted a candle, and left the apartment. And Chiffinch, whom
+ the last draught had nearly overpowered, had just strength enough left to
+ do the same, muttering, as he staggered out, "Yes, he shall answer it.&mdash;Dawn
+ of day? D&mdash;n me&mdash;It is come already&mdash;Yonder's the dawn&mdash;No,
+ d&mdash;n me, 'tis the fire glancing on the cursed red lattice&mdash;It is
+ the smell of the brandy in this cursed room&mdash;It could not be the wine&mdash;Well,
+ old Rowley shall send me no more errands to the country again&mdash;Steady,
+ steady."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he reeled out of the apartment, leaving Peveril to think over
+ the extraordinary conversation he had just heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of Chiffinch, the well-known minister of Charles's pleasures, was
+ nearly allied to the part which he seemed about to play in the present
+ intrigue; but that Christian, whom he had always supposed a Puritan as
+ strict as his brother-in-law, Bridgenorth, should be associated with him
+ in a plot so infamous, seemed alike unnatural and monstrous. The near
+ relationship might blind Bridgenorth, and warrant him in confiding his
+ daughter to such a man's charge; but what a wretch he must be, that could
+ coolly meditate such an ignominious abuse of his trust! In doubt whether
+ he could credit for a moment the tale which Chiffinch had revealed, he
+ hastily examined his packet, and found that the sealskin case in which it
+ had been wrapt up, now only contained an equal quantity of waste paper. If
+ he had wanted farther confirmation, the failure of the shot which he fired
+ at Bridgenorth, and of which the wadding only struck him, showed that his
+ arms had been tampered with. He examined the pistol which still remained
+ charged, and found that the ball had been drawn. "May I perish," said he
+ to himself, "amid these villainous intrigues, but thou shalt be more
+ surely loaded, and to better purpose! The contents of these papers may
+ undo my benefactress&mdash;their having been found on me, may ruin my
+ father&mdash;that I have been the bearer of them, may cost, in these fiery
+ times, my own life&mdash;that I care least for&mdash;they form a branch of
+ the scheme laid against the honour and happiness of a creature so
+ innocent, that it is almost sin to think of her within the neighbourhood
+ of such infamous knaves. I will recover the letters at all risks&mdash;But
+ how?&mdash;that is to be thought on.&mdash;Lance is stout and trusty; and
+ when a bold deed is once resolved upon, there never yet lacked the means
+ of executing it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His host now entered, with an apology for his long absence; and after
+ providing Peveril with some refreshments, invited him to accept, for his
+ night-quarters, the accommodation of a remote hayloft, which he was to
+ share with his comrade; professing, at the same time, he could hardly have
+ afforded them this courtesy, but out of deference to the exquisite talents
+ of Lance Outram, as assistant at the tap; where, indeed, it seems probable
+ that he, as well as the admiring landlord, did that evening contrive to
+ drink nearly as much liquor as they drew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lance was a seasoned vessel, on whom liquor made no lasting
+ impression; so that when Peveril awaked that trusty follower at dawn, he
+ found him cool enough to comprehend and enter into the design which he
+ expressed, of recovering the letters which had been abstracted from his
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having considered the whole matter with much attention, Lance shrugged,
+ grinned, and scratched his head; and at length manfully expressed his
+ resolution. "Well, my naunt speaks truth in her old saw&mdash;&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'He that serves Peveril maunna be slack,
+ Neither for weather, nor yet for wrack.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And then again, my good dame was wont to say, that whenever Peveril was in
+ a broil, Outram was in a stew; so I will never bear a base mind, but even
+ hold a part with you as my fathers have done with yours, for four
+ generations, whatever more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spoken like a most gallant Outram," said Julian; "and were we but rid of
+ that puppy lord and his retinue, we two could easily deal with the other
+ three."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Two Londoners and a Frenchman?" said Lance,&mdash;"I would take them in
+ mine own hand. And as for my Lord Saville, as they call him, I heard word
+ last night that he and all his men of gilded gingerbread&mdash;that looked
+ at an honest fellow like me, as if they were the ore and I the dross&mdash;are
+ all to be off this morning to some races, or such-like junketings, about
+ Tutbury. It was that brought him down here, where he met this other
+ civet-cat by accident."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, even as Lance spoke, a trampling was heard of horses in the
+ yard; and from the hatch of their hayloft they beheld Lord Saville's
+ attendants mustered, and ready to set out as soon as he could make his
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So ho, Master Jeremy," said one of the fellows, to a sort of principal
+ attendant, who just came out of the house, "methinks the wine has proved a
+ sleeping cup to my lord this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," answered Jeremy, "he hath been up before light writing letters for
+ London; and to punish thy irreverence, thou, Jonathan, shalt be the man to
+ ride back with them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so to miss the race?" said Jonathan sulkily; "I thank you for this
+ good turn, good Master Jeremy; and hang me if I forget it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther discussion was cut short by the appearance of the young nobleman,
+ who, as he came out of the inn, said to Jeremy, "These be the letters. Let
+ one of the knaves ride to London for life and death, and deliver them as
+ directed; and the rest of them get to horse and follow me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jeremy gave Jonathan the packet with a malicious smile; and the
+ disappointed groom turned his horse's head sullenly towards London, while
+ Lord Saville, and the rest of his retinue, rode briskly off in an opposite
+ direction, pursued by the benedictions of the host and his family, who
+ stood bowing and courtesying at the door, in gratitude, doubtless, for the
+ receipt of an unconscionable reckoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was full three hours after their departure, that Chiffinch lounged into
+ the room in which they had supped, in a brocade nightgown, and green
+ velvet cap, turned up with the most costly Brussels lace. He seemed but
+ half awake; and it was with drowsy voice that he called for a cup of cold
+ small beer. His manner and appearance were those of a man who had wrestled
+ hard with Bacchus on the preceding evening, and had scarce recovered the
+ effects of his contest with the jolly god. Lance, instructed by his master
+ to watch the motions of the courtier, officiously attended with the
+ cooling beverage he called for, pleading, as an excuse to the landlord,
+ his wish to see a Londoner in his morning-gown and cap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had Chiffinch taken his morning draught, than he inquired after
+ Lord Saville.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His lordship was mounted and away by peep of dawn," was Lance's reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What the devil!" exclaimed Chiffinch; "why, this is scarce civil.&mdash;What!
+ off for the races with his whole retinue?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All but one," replied Lance, "whom his lordship sent back to London with
+ letters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To London with letters!" said Chiffinch. "Why, I am for London, and could
+ have saved his express a labour.&mdash;But stop&mdash;hold&mdash;I begin
+ to recollect&mdash;d&mdash;&mdash;n, can I have blabbed?&mdash;I have&mdash;I
+ have&mdash;I remember it all now&mdash;I have blabbed; and to the very
+ weasel of the Court, who sucks the yelk out of every man's secret. Furies
+ and fire&mdash;that my afternoons should ruin my mornings thus!&mdash;I
+ must turn boon companion and good fellow in my cups&mdash;and have my
+ confidences and my quarrels&mdash;my friends and my enemies, with a plague
+ to me, as if any one could do a man much good or harm but his own self.
+ His messenger must be stopped, though&mdash;I will put a spoke in his
+ wheel.&mdash;Hark ye, drawer-fellow&mdash;call my groom hither&mdash;call
+ Tom Beacon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance obeyed; but failed not, when he had introduced the domestic, to
+ remain in the apartment, in order to hear what should pass betwixt him and
+ his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark ye, Tom," said Chiffinch, "here are five pieces for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's to be done now, I trow?" said Tom, without even the ceremony of
+ returning thanks, which he was probably well aware would not be received
+ even in part payment of the debt he was incurring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mount your fleet nag, Tom&mdash;ride like the devil&mdash;overtake the
+ groom whom Lord Saville despatched to London this morning&mdash;lame his
+ horse&mdash;break his bones&mdash;fill him as drunk as the Baltic sea; or
+ do whatever may best and most effectively stop his journey.&mdash;Why does
+ the lout stand there without answering me? Dost understand me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, ay, Master Chiffinch," said Tom; "and so I am thinking doth this
+ honest man here, who need not have heard quite so much of your counsel, an
+ it had been your will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am bewitched this morning," said Chiffinch to himself, "or else the
+ champagne runs in my head still. My brain has become the very lowlands of
+ Holland&mdash;a gill-cup would inundate it&mdash;Hark thee, fellow," he
+ added, addressing Lance, "keep my counsel&mdash;there is a wager betwixt
+ Lord Saville and me, which of us shall first have a letter in London. Here
+ is to drink my health, and bring luck on my side. Say nothing of it; but
+ help Tom to his nag.&mdash;Tom, ere thou startest come for thy credentials&mdash;I
+ will give thee a letter to the Duke of Bucks, that may be evidence thou
+ wert first in town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Beacon ducked and exited; and Lance, after having made some show of
+ helping him to horse, ran back to tell his master the joyful intelligence,
+ that a lucky accident had abated Chiffinch's party to their own number.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril immediately ordered his horses to be got ready; and, so soon as
+ Tom Beacon was despatched towards London, on a rapid trot, had the
+ satisfaction to observe Chiffinch, with his favourite Chaubert, mount to
+ pursue the same journey, though at a more moderate rate. He permitted them
+ to attain such a distance, that they might be dogged without suspicion;
+ then paid his reckoning, mounted his horse, and followed, keeping his men
+ carefully in view, until he should come to a place proper for the
+ enterprise which he meditated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been Peveril's intention, that when they came to some solitary part
+ of the road, they should gradually mend their pace, until they overtook
+ Chaubert&mdash;that Lance Outram should then drop behind, in order to
+ assail the man of spits and stoves, while he himself, spurring onwards,
+ should grapple with Chiffinch. But this scheme presupposed that the master
+ and servant should travel in the usual manner&mdash;the latter riding a
+ few yards behind the former. Whereas, such and so interesting were the
+ subjects of discussion betwixt Chiffinch and the French cook, that,
+ without heeding the rules of etiquette, they rode on together, amicably
+ abreast, carrying on a conversation on the mysteries of the table, which
+ the ancient Comus, or a modern gastronome, might have listened to with
+ pleasure. It was therefore necessary to venture on them both at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this purpose, when they saw a long tract of road before them, unvaried
+ by the least appearance of man, beast, or human habitation, they began to
+ mend their pace, that they might come up to Chiffinch, without giving him
+ any alarm, by a sudden and suspicious increase of haste. In this manner
+ they lessened the distance which separated them till they were within
+ about twenty yards, when Peveril, afraid that Chiffinch might recognise
+ him at a nearer approach, and so trust to his horse's heels, made Lance
+ the signal to charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sudden increase of their speed, and the noise with which it was
+ necessarily attended, Chiffinch looked around, but had time to do no more,
+ for Lance, who had pricked his pony (which was much more speedy than
+ Julian's horse) into full gallop, pushed, without ceremony, betwixt the
+ courtier and his attendant; and ere Chaubert had time for more than one
+ exclamation, he upset both horse and Frenchman,&mdash;<i>morbleu!</i>
+ thrilling from his tongue as he rolled on the ground amongst the various
+ articles of his occupation, which, escaping from the budget in which he
+ bore them, lay tumbled upon the highway in strange disorder; while Lance,
+ springing from his palfrey, commanded his foeman to be still, under no
+ less a penalty than that of death, if he attempted to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Chiffinch could avenge his trusty follower's downfall, his own
+ bridle was seized by Julian, who presented a pistol with the other hand,
+ and commanded him to stand or die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch, though effeminate, was no coward. He stood still as commanded,
+ and said, with firmness, "Rogue, you have taken me at surprise. If you are
+ highwaymen, there is my purse. Do us no bodily harm, and spare the budget
+ of spices and sauces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look you, Master Chiffinch," said Peveril, "this is no time for dallying.
+ I am no highwayman, but a man of honour. Give me back that packet which
+ you stole from me the other night; or, by all that is good, I will send a
+ brace of balls through you, and search for it at leisure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What night?&mdash;What packet?" answered Chiffinch, confused; yet willing
+ to protract the time for the chance of assistance, or to put Peveril off
+ his guard. "I know nothing of what you mean. If you are a man of honour,
+ let me draw my sword, and I will do you right, as a gentleman should do to
+ another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dishonourable rascal!" said Peveril, "you escape not in this manner. You
+ plundered me when you had me at odds; and I am not the fool to let my
+ advantage escape, now that my turn is come. Yield up the packet; and then,
+ if you will, I will fight you on equal terms. But first," he reiterated,
+ "yield up the packet, or I will instantly send you where the tenor of your
+ life will be hard to answer for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of Peveril's voice, the fierceness of his eye, and the manner in
+ which he held the loaded weapon, within a hand's-breadth of Chiffinch's
+ head, convinced the last there was neither room for compromise, nor time
+ for trifling. He thrust his hand into a side pocket of his cloak, and with
+ visible reluctance, produced those papers and despatches with which Julian
+ had been entrusted by the Countess of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are five in number," said Julian; "and you have given me only four.
+ Your life depends on full restitution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It escaped from my hand," said Chiffinch, producing the missing document&mdash;"There
+ it is. Now, sir, your pleasure is fulfilled, unless," he added sulkily,
+ "you design either murder or farther robbery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Base wretch!" said Peveril, withdrawing his pistol, yet keeping a
+ watchful eye on Chiffinch's motions, "thou art unworthy any honest man's
+ sword; and yet, if you dare draw your own, as you proposed but now, I am
+ willing to give you a chance upon fair equality of terms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Equality!" said Chiffinch sneeringly; "yes, a proper equality&mdash;sword
+ and pistol against single rapier, and two men upon one, for Chaubert is no
+ fighter. No sir; I shall seek amends upon some more fitting occasion, and
+ with more equal weapons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By backbiting, or by poison, base pander!" said Julian; "these are thy
+ means of vengeance. But mark me&mdash;I know your vile purpose respecting
+ a lady who is too worthy that her name should be uttered in such a
+ worthless ear. Thou hast done me one injury, and thou see'st I have repaid
+ it. But prosecute this farther villainy, and be assured I will put thee to
+ death like a foul reptile, whose very slaver is fatal to humanity. Rely
+ upon this, as if Machiavel had sworn it; for so surely as you keep your
+ purpose, so surely will I prosecute my revenge.&mdash;Follow me, Lance,
+ and leave him to think on what I have told him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance had, after the first shock, sustained a very easy part in this
+ recontre; for all he had to do, was to point the butt of his whip, in the
+ manner of a gun, at the intimidated Frenchman, who, lying on his back, and
+ gazing at random on the skies, had as little the power or purpose of
+ resistance, as any pig which had ever come under his own slaughter-knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Summoned by his master from the easy duty of guarding such an unresisting
+ prisoner, Lance remounted his horse, and they both rode off, leaving their
+ discomfited antagonists to console themselves for their misadventure as
+ they best could. But consolation was hard to come by in the circumstances.
+ The French artist had to lament the dispersion of his spices, and the
+ destruction of his magazine of sauces&mdash;an enchanter despoiled of his
+ magic wand and talisman, could scarce have been in more desperate
+ extremity. Chiffinch had to mourn the downfall of his intrigue, and its
+ premature discovery. "To this fellow, at least," he thought, "I can have
+ bragged none&mdash;here my evil genius alone has betrayed me. With this
+ infernal discovery, which may cost me so dear on all hands, champagne had
+ nought to do. If there be a flask left unbroken, I will drink it after
+ dinner, and try if it may not even yet suggest some scheme of redemption
+ and of revenge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this manly resolution, he prosecuted his journey to London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A man so various, that he seem'd to be
+ Not one, but all mankind's epitome;
+ Stiff in opinions&mdash;always in the wrong&mdash;
+ Was everything by starts, but nothing long;
+ Who, in the course of one revolving moon,
+ Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon;
+ Then, all for women, painting, fiddling, drinking;
+ Besides a thousand freaks that died in thinking.
+ &mdash;DRYDEN.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We must now transport the reader to the magnificent hotel in &mdash;&mdash;Street,
+ inhabited at this time by the celebrated George Villiers, Duke of
+ Buckingham, whom Dryden has doomed to a painful immortality by the few
+ lines which we have prefixed to this chapter. Amid the gay and licentious
+ of the laughing Court of Charles, the Duke was the most licentious and
+ most gay; yet, while expending a princely fortune, a strong constitution,
+ and excellent talents, in pursuit of frivolous pleasures, he nevertheless
+ nourished deeper and more extensive designs; in which he only failed from
+ want of that fixed purpose and regulated perseverance essential to all
+ important enterprises, but particularly in politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was long past noon; and the usual hour of the Duke's levee&mdash;if
+ anything could be termed usual where all was irregular&mdash;had been long
+ past. His hall was filled with lackeys and footmen, in the most splendid
+ liveries; the interior apartments, with the gentlemen and pages of his
+ household, arrayed as persons of the first quality, and, in that respect,
+ rather exceeding than falling short of the Duke in personal splendour. But
+ his antechamber, in particular, might be compared to a gathering of eagles
+ to the slaughter, were not the simile too dignified to express that vile
+ race, who, by a hundred devices all tending to one common end, live upon
+ the wants of needy greatness, or administer to the pleasures of
+ summer-teeming luxury, or stimulate the wild wishes of lavish and wasteful
+ extravagance, by devising new modes and fresh motives of profusion. There
+ stood the projector, with his mysterious brow, promising unbounded wealth
+ to whomsoever might choose to furnish the small preliminary sum necessary
+ to change egg-shells into the great <i>arcanum</i>. There was Captain
+ Seagull, undertaker for a foreign settlement, with the map under his arm
+ of Indian or American kingdoms, beautiful as the primitive Eden, waiting
+ the bold occupants, for whom a generous patron should equip two
+ brigantines and a fly-boat. Thither came, fast and frequent, the
+ gamesters, in their different forms and calling. This, light, young, gay
+ in appearance, the thoughtless youth of wit and pleasure&mdash;the pigeon
+ rather than the rook&mdash;but at heart the same sly, shrewd, cold-blooded
+ calculator, as yonder old hard-featured professor of the same science,
+ whose eyes are grown dim with watching of the dice at midnight; and whose
+ fingers are even now assisting his mental computation of chances and of
+ odds. The fine arts, too&mdash;I would it were otherwise&mdash;have their
+ professors amongst this sordid train. The poor poet, half ashamed, in
+ spite of habit, of the part which he is about to perform, and abashed by
+ consciousness at once of his base motive and his shabby black coat, lurks
+ in yonder corner for the favourable moment to offer his dedication. Much
+ better attired, the architect presents his splendid vision of front and
+ wings, and designs a palace, the expense of which may transfer his
+ employer to a jail. But uppermost of all, the favourite musician, or
+ singer, who waits on my lord to receive, in solid gold, the value of the
+ dulcet sounds which solaced the banquet of the preceding evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, and many such like, were the morning attendants of the Duke of
+ Buckingham&mdash;all genuine descendants of the daughter of the
+ horse-leech, whose cry is "Give, give."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the levee of his Grace contained other and very different characters;
+ and was indeed as various as his own opinions and pursuits. Besides many
+ of the young nobility and wealthy gentry of England, who made his Grace
+ the glass at which they dressed themselves for the day, and who learned
+ from him how to travel, with the newest and best grace, the general Road
+ to Ruin; there were others of a graver character&mdash;discarded
+ statesmen, political spies, opposition orators, servile tools of
+ administration, men who met not elsewhere, but who regarded the Duke's
+ mansion as a sort of neutral ground; sure, that if he was not of their
+ opinion to-day, this very circumstance rendered it most likely he should
+ think with them to-morrow. The Puritans themselves did not shun
+ intercourse with a man whose talents must have rendered him formidable,
+ even if they had not been united with high rank and an immense fortune.
+ Several grave personages, with black suits, short cloaks, and band-strings
+ of a formal cut, were mingled, as we see their portraits in a gallery of
+ paintings, among the gallants who ruffled in silk and embroidery. It is
+ true, they escaped the scandal of being thought intimates of the Duke, by
+ their business being supposed to refer to money matters. Whether these
+ grave and professing citizens mixed politics with money lending, was not
+ known; but it had been long observed, that the Jews, who in general
+ confine themselves to the latter department, had become for some time
+ faithful attendants at the Duke's levee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was high-tide in the antechamber, and had been so for more than an
+ hour, ere the Duke's gentleman-in-ordinary ventured into his bedchamber,
+ carefully darkened, so as to make midnight at noonday, to know his Grace's
+ pleasure. His soft and serene whisper, in which he asked whether it were
+ his Grace's pleasure to rise, was briefly and sharply answered by the
+ counter questions, "Who waits?&mdash;What's o'clock?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is Jerningham, your Grace," said the attendant. "It is one, afternoon;
+ and your Grace appointed some of the people without at eleven."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who are they?&mdash;What do they want?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A message from Whitehall, your Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw! it will keep cold. Those who make all others wait, will be the
+ better of waiting in their turn. Were I to be guilty of ill-breeding, it
+ should rather be to a king than a beggar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The gentlemen from the city."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am tired of them&mdash;tired of their all cant, and no religion&mdash;all
+ Protestantism, and no charity. Tell them to go to Shaftesbury&mdash;to
+ Aldersgate Street with them&mdash;that's the best market for their wares."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jockey, my lord, from Newmarket."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let him ride to the devil&mdash;he has horse of mine, and spurs of his
+ own. Any more?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The whole antechamber is full, my lord&mdash;knights and squires, doctors
+ and dicers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The dicers, with their doctors[*] in their pockets, I presume."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] Doctor, a cant name for false dice.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Counts, captains, and clergymen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are alliterative, Jerningham," said the Duke; "and that is a proof
+ you are poetical. Hand me my writing things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Getting half out of bed&mdash;thrusting one arm into a brocade nightgown,
+ deeply furred with sables, and one foot into a velvet slipper, while the
+ other pressed in primitive nudity the rich carpet&mdash;his Grace, without
+ thinking farther on the assembly without, began to pen a few lines of a
+ satirical poem; then suddenly stopped&mdash;threw the pen into the chimney&mdash;exclaimed
+ that the humour was past&mdash;and asked his attendant if there were any
+ letters. Jerningham produced a huge packet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What the devil!" said his Grace, "do you think I will read all these? I
+ am like Clarence, who asked a cup of wine, and was soused into a butt of
+ sack. I mean, is there anything which presses?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This letter, your Grace," said Jerningham, "concerning the Yorkshire
+ mortgage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I not bid thee carry it to old Gatheral, my steward?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did, my lord," answered the other; "but Gatheral says there are
+ difficulties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let the usurers foreclose, then&mdash;there is no difficulty in that; and
+ out of a hundred manors I shall scarce miss one," answered the Duke. "And
+ hark ye, bring me my chocolate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my lord, Gatheral does not say it is impossible&mdash;only
+ difficult."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is the use of him, if he cannot make it easy? But you are all
+ born to make difficulties," replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, if your Grace approves the terms in this schedule, and pleases to
+ sign it, Gatheral will undertake for the matter," answered Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And could you not have said so at first, you blockhead?" said the Duke,
+ signing the paper without looking at the contents&mdash;"What other
+ letters? And remember, I must be plagued with no more business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Billets-doux, my lord&mdash;five or six of them. This left at the
+ porter's lodge by a vizard mask."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw!" answered the Duke, tossing them over, while his attendant
+ assisted in dressing him&mdash;"an acquaintance of a quarter's standing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This given to one of the pages by my Lady &mdash;&mdash;'s
+ waiting-woman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Plague on it&mdash;a Jeremiade on the subject of perjury and treachery,
+ and not a single new line to the old tune," said the Duke, glancing over
+ the billet. "Here is the old cant&mdash;<i>cruel man&mdash;broken vows&mdash;Heaven's
+ just revenge</i>. Why, the woman is thinking of murder&mdash;not of love.
+ No one should pretend to write upon so threadbare a topic without having
+ at least some novelty of expression. <i>The despairing Araminta</i>&mdash;Lie
+ there, fair desperate. And this&mdash;how comes it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Flung into the window of the hall, by a fellow who ran off at full
+ speed," answered Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a better text," said the Duke; "and yet it is an old one too&mdash;three
+ weeks old at least&mdash;The little Countess with the jealous lord&mdash;I
+ should not care a farthing for her, save for that same jealous lord&mdash;Plague
+ on't, and he's gone down to the country&mdash;<i>this evening&mdash;in
+ silence and safety&mdash;written with a quill pulled from the wing of
+ Cupid</i>&mdash;Your ladyship has left him pen-feathers enough to fly away
+ with&mdash;better clipped his wings when you had caught him, my lady&mdash;And
+ <i>so confident of her Buckingham's faith</i>,&mdash;I hate confidence in
+ a young person. She must be taught better&mdash;I will not go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You Grace will not be so cruel!" said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art a compassionate fellow, Jerningham; but conceit must be
+ punished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if your lordship should resume your fancy for her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then, you must swear the billet-doux miscarried," answered the Duke.
+ "And stay, a thought strikes me&mdash;it shall miscarry in great style.
+ Hark ye&mdash;Is&mdash;what is the fellow's name&mdash;the poet&mdash;is
+ he yonder?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are six gentlemen, sir, who, from the reams of paper in their
+ pocket, and the threadbare seams at their elbows, appear to wear the
+ livery of the Muses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poetical once more, Jerningham. He, I mean, who wrote the last lampoon,"
+ said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To whom your Grace said you owed five pieces and a beating!" replied
+ Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The money for his satire, and the cudgel for his praise&mdash;Good&mdash;find
+ him&mdash;give him the five pieces, and thrust the Countess's billet-doux&mdash;Hold&mdash;take
+ Araminta's and the rest of them&mdash;thrust them all into his portfolio&mdash;All
+ will come out at the Wit's Coffee-house; and if the promulgator be not
+ cudgelled into all the colours of the rainbow, there is no spite in woman,
+ no faith in crabtree, or pith in heart of oak&mdash;Araminta's wrath alone
+ would overburden one pair of mortal shoulders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, my Lord Duke," said his attendant, "this Settle[*] is so dull a
+ rascal, that nothing he can write will take."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Elkana Settle, the unworthy scribbler whom the envy of Rochester
+ and others tried to raise to public estimation, as a rival to
+ Dryden; a circumstance which has been the means of elevating him
+ to a very painful species of immortality.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Then as we have given him steel to head the arrow," said the Duke, "we
+ will give him wings to waft it with&mdash;wood, he has enough of his own
+ to make a shaft or bolt of. Hand me my own unfinished lampoon&mdash;give
+ it to him with the letters&mdash;let him make what he can of them all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Duke&mdash;I crave pardon&mdash;but your Grace's style will be
+ discovered; and though the ladies' names are not at the letters, yet they
+ will be traced."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would have it so, you blockhead. Have you lived with me so long, and
+ cannot discover that the éclat of an intrigue is, with me, worth all the
+ rest of it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the danger, my Lord Duke?" replied Jerningham. "There are husbands,
+ brothers, friends, whose revenge may be awakened."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And beaten to sleep again," said Buckingham haughtily. "I have Black Will
+ and his cudgel for plebeian grumblers; and those of quality I can deal
+ with myself. I lack breathing and exercise of late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But yet your Grace&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold your peace, fool! I tell you that your poor dwarfish spirit cannot
+ measure the scope of mine. I tell thee I would have the course of my life
+ a torrent&mdash;I am weary of easy achievements, and wish for obstacles,
+ that I can sweep before my irresistible course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another gentleman now entered the apartment. "I humbly crave your Grace's
+ pardon," he said; "but Master Christian is so importunate for admission
+ instantly, that I am obliged to take your Grace's pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell him to call three hours hence. Damn his politic pate, that would
+ make all men dance after his pipe!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank thee for the compliment, my Lord Duke," said Christian, entering
+ the apartment in somewhat a more courtly garb, but with the same
+ unpretending and undistinguished mien, and in the same placid and
+ indifferent manner with which he had accosted Julian Peveril upon
+ different occasions during his journey to London. "It is precisely my
+ present object to pipe to you; and you may dance to your own profit, if
+ you will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my word, Master Christian," said the Duke haughtily, "the affair
+ should be weighty, that removes ceremony so entirely from betwixt us. If
+ it relates to the subject of our last conversation, I must request our
+ interview be postponed to some farther opportunity. I am engaged in an
+ affair of some weight." Then turning his back on Christian, he went on
+ with his conversation with Jerningham. "Find the person you wot of, and
+ give him the papers; and hark ye, give him this gold to pay for the shaft
+ of his arrow&mdash;the steel-head and peacock's wing we have already
+ provided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is all well, my lord," said Christian calmly, and taking his seat at
+ the same time in an easy-chair at some distance; "but your Grace's levity
+ is no match for my equanimity. It is necessary I should speak with you;
+ and I will await your Grace's leisure in the apartment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Very well</i>, sir," said the Duke peevishly; "if an evil is to be
+ undergone, the sooner it is over the better&mdash;I can take measures to
+ prevent its being renewed. So let me hear your errand without farther
+ delay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will wait till your Grace's toilette is completed," said Christian,
+ with the indifferent tone which was natural to him. "What I have to say
+ must be between ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Begone, Jerningham; and remain without till I call. Leave my doublet on
+ the couch.&mdash;How now, I have worn this cloth of silver a hundred
+ times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Only twice, if it please your Grace," replied Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As well twenty times&mdash;keep it for yourself, or give it to my valet,
+ if you are too proud of your gentility."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace has made better men than me wear your cast clothes," said
+ Jerningham submissively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art sharp, Jerningham," said the Duke&mdash;"in one sense I have,
+ and I may again. So now, that pearl-coloured will do with the ribbon and
+ George. Get away with thee.&mdash;And now that he is gone, Master
+ Christian, may I once more crave your pleasure?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Duke," said Christian, "you are a worshipper of difficulties in
+ state affairs, as in love matters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust you have been no eavesdropper, Master Christian," replied the
+ Duke; "it scarce argues the respect due to me, or to my roof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not what you mean, my lord," replied Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, I care not if the whole world heard what I said but now to
+ Jerningham. But to the matter," replied the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace is so much occupied with conquests over the fair and over the
+ witty, that you have perhaps forgotten what a stake you have in the little
+ Island of Man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a whit, Master Christian. I remember well enough that my roundheaded
+ father-in-law, Fairfax, had the island from the Long Parliament; and was
+ ass enough to quit hold of it at the Restoration, when, if he had closed
+ his clutches, and held fast, like a true bird of prey, as he should have
+ done, he might have kept it for him and his. It had been a rare thing to
+ have had a little kingdom&mdash;made laws of my own&mdash;had my
+ Chamberlain with his white staff&mdash;I would have taught Jerningham, in
+ half a day, to look as wise, walk as stiffly, and speak as silly, as Harry
+ Bennet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You might have done this, and more, if it had pleased your Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, and if it had pleased my Grace, thou, Ned Christian, shouldst have
+ been the Jack Ketch of my dominions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>I</i> your Jack Ketch, my lord?" said Christian, more in a tone of
+ surprise than of displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, ay; thou hast been perpetually intriguing against the life of yonder
+ poor old woman. It were a kingdom to thee to gratify thy spleen with thy
+ own hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I only seek justice against the Countess," said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the end of justice is always a gibbet," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be it so," answered Christian. "Well, the Countess is in the Plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil confound the Plot, as I believe he first invented it!" said the
+ Duke of Buckingham; "I have heard of nothing else for months. If one must
+ go to hell, I would it were by some new road, and in gentlemen's company.
+ I should not like to travel with Oates, Bedloe, and the rest of that
+ famous cloud of witnesses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace is then resolved to forego all the advantages which may arise?
+ If the House of Derby fall under forfeiture, the grant to Fairfax, now
+ worthily represented by your Duchess, revives, and you become the Lord and
+ Sovereign of Man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In right of a woman," said the Duke; "but, in troth, my godly dame owes
+ me some advantage for having lived the first year of our marriage with her
+ and old Black Tom, her grim, fighting, puritanic father. A man might as
+ well have married the Devil's daughter, and set up housekeeping with his
+ father-in-law."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Mary, daughter of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, was wedded to the Duke of
+ Buckingham, whose versatility made him capable of rendering
+ himself for a time as agreeable to his father-in-law, though a
+ rigid Presbyterian, as to the gay Charles II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "I understand you are willing, then, to join your interest for a heave at
+ the House of Derby, my Lord Duke?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As they are unlawfully possessed of my wife's kingdom, they certainly can
+ expect no favour at my hand. But thou knowest there is an interest at
+ Whitehall predominant over mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is only by your Grace's sufferance," said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no; I tell thee a hundred times, no," said the Duke, rousing himself
+ to anger at the recollection. "I tell thee that base courtezan, the
+ Duchess of Portsmouth, hath impudently set herself to thwart and
+ contradict me; and Charles has given me both cloudy looks and hard words
+ before the Court. I would he could but guess what is the offence between
+ her and me! I would he knew but that! But I will have her plumes picked,
+ or my name is not Villiers. A worthless French fille-de-joie to brave me
+ thus!&mdash;Christian, thou art right; there is no passion so
+ spirit-stirring as revenge. I will patronise the Plot, if it be but to
+ spite her, and make it impossible for the King to uphold her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Duke spoke, he gradually wrought himself into a passion, and
+ traversed the apartment with as much vehemence as if the only object he
+ had on earth was to deprive the Duchess of her power and favour with the
+ King. Christian smiled internally to see him approach the state of mind in
+ which he was most easily worked upon, and judiciously kept silence, until
+ the Duke called out to him, in a pet, "Well, Sir Oracle, you that have
+ laid so many schemes to supplant this she-wolf of Gaul, where are all your
+ contrivances now?&mdash;Where is the exquisite beauty who was to catch the
+ Sovereign's eye at the first glance?&mdash;Chiffinch, hath he seen her?&mdash;and
+ what does he say, that exquisite critic in beauty and blank-mange, women
+ and wine?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has <i>seen</i> and approves, but has not yet heard her; and her
+ speech answers to all the rest. We came here yesterday; and to-day I
+ intend to introduce Chiffinch to her, the instant he arrives from the
+ country; and I expect him every hour. I am but afraid of the damsel's
+ peevish virtue, for she hath been brought up after the fashion of our
+ grandmothers&mdash;our mothers had better sense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! so fair, so young, so quick-witted, and so difficult?" said the
+ Duke. "By your leave, you shall introduce me as well as Chiffinch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That your Grace may cure her of her intractable modesty?" said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," replied the Duke, "it will but teach her to stand in her own light.
+ Kings do not love to court and sue; they should have their game run down
+ for them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Under your Grace's favour," said Christian, "this cannot be&mdash;<i>Non
+ omnibus dormio</i>&mdash;Your Grace knows the classic allusion. If this
+ maiden become a Prince's favourite, rank gilds the shame and the sin. But
+ to any under Majesty, she must not vail topsail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, thou suspicious fool, I was but in jest," said the Duke. "Do you
+ think I would interfere to spoil a plan so much to my own advantage as
+ that which you have laid before me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian smiled and shook his head. "My lord," he said, "I know your
+ Grace as well, or better, perhaps, than you know yourself. To spoil a
+ well-concerted intrigue by some cross stroke of your own, would give you
+ more pleasure, than to bring it to a successful termination according to
+ the plans of others. But Shaftesbury, and all concerned, have determined
+ that our scheme shall at least have fair play. We reckon, therefore, on
+ your help; and&mdash;forgive me when I say so&mdash;we will not permit
+ ourselves to be impeded by your levity and fickleness of purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who?&mdash;I light and fickle of purpose?" said the Duke. "You see me
+ here as resolved as any of you, to dispossess the mistress, and to carry
+ on the plot; these are the only two things I live for in this world. No
+ one can play the man of business like me, when I please, to the very
+ filing and labelling of my letters. I am regular as a scrivener."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have Chiffinch's letter from the country; he told me he had written
+ to you about some passages betwixt him and the young Lord Saville."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He did so&mdash;he did so," said the Duke, looking among his letters;
+ "but I see not his letter just now&mdash;I scarcely noted the contents&mdash;I
+ was busy when it came&mdash;but I have it safely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You should have acted on it," answered Christian. "The fool suffered
+ himself to be choused out of his secret, and prayed you to see that my
+ lord's messenger got not to the Duchess with some despatches which he sent
+ up from Derbyshire, betraying our mystery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke was now alarmed, and rang the bell hastily. Jerningham appeared.
+ "Where is the letter I had from Master Chiffinch some hours since?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it be not amongst those your Grace has before you, I know nothing of
+ it," said Jerningham. "I saw none such arrive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You lie, you rascal," said Buckingham; "have you a right to remember
+ better than I do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If your Grace will forgive me reminding you, you have scarce opened a
+ letter this week," said his gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you ever hear such a provoking rascal?" said the Duke. "He might be a
+ witness in the Plot. He has knocked my character for regularity entirely
+ on the head with his damned counter-evidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace's talent and capacity will at least remain unimpeached," said
+ Christian; "and it is those that must serve yourself and your friends. If
+ I might advise, you will hasten to Court, and lay some foundation for the
+ impression we wish to make. If your Grace can take the first word, and
+ throw out a hint to crossbite Saville, it will be well. But above all,
+ keep the King's ear employed, which no one can do so well as you. Leave
+ Chiffinch to fill his heart with a proper object. Another thing is, there
+ is a blockhead of an old Cavalier, who must needs be a bustler in the
+ Countess of Derby's behalf&mdash;he is fast in hold, with the whole tribe
+ of witnesses at his haunches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, then, take him, Topham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Topham has taken him already, my lord," said Christian; "and there is,
+ besides, a young gallant, a son of the said Knight, who was bred in the
+ household of the Countess of Derby, and who has brought letters from her
+ to the Provincial of the Jesuits, and others in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are their names?" said the Duke dryly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, in Derbyshire, and his son
+ Julian."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! Peveril of the Peak?" said the Duke,&mdash;"a stout old Cavalier as
+ ever swore an oath.&mdash;A Worcester-man, too&mdash;and, in truth, a man
+ of all work, when blows were going. I will not consent to his ruin,
+ Christian. These fellows must be flogged of such false scents&mdash;flogged
+ in every sense, they must, and will be, when the nation comes to its
+ eyesight again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is of more than the last importance, in the meantime, to the
+ furtherance of our plan," said Christian, "that your Grace should stand
+ for a space between them and the King's favour. The youth hath influence
+ with the maiden, which we should find scarce favourable to our views;
+ besides, her father holds him as high as he can any one who is no such
+ puritanic fool as himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, most Christian Christian," said the Duke, "I have heard your
+ commands at length. I will endeavour to stop the earths under the throne,
+ that neither the lord, knight, nor squire in question, shall find it
+ possible to burrow there. For the fair one, I must leave Chiffinch and you
+ to manage her introduction to her high destinies, since I am not to be
+ trusted. Adieu, most Christian Christian."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fixed his eyes on him, and then exclaimed, as he shut the door of the
+ apartment,&mdash;"Most profligate and damnable villain! And what provokes
+ me most of all, is the knave's composed insolence. Your Grace will do this&mdash;and
+ your Grace will condescend to do that&mdash;A pretty puppet I should be,
+ to play the second part, or rather the third, in such a scheme! No, they
+ shall all walk according to my purpose, or I will cross them. I will find
+ this girl out in spite of them, and judge if their scheme is likely to be
+ successful. If so, she shall be mine&mdash;mine entirely, before she
+ becomes the King's; and I will command her who is to guide Charles.&mdash;Jerningham"
+ (his gentleman entered), "cause Christian to be dogged where-ever he goes,
+ for the next four-and-twenty hours, and find out where he visits a female
+ newly come to town.&mdash;You smile, you knave?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did but suspect a fresh rival to Araminta and the little Countess,"
+ said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Away to your business, knave," said the Duke, "and let me think of mine.&mdash;To
+ subdue a Puritan in Esse&mdash;a King's favourite in Posse&mdash;the very
+ muster of western beauties&mdash;that is point first. The impudence of
+ this Manx mongrel to be corrected&mdash;the pride of Madame la Duchesse to
+ be pulled down&mdash;and important state intrigue to be farthered, or
+ baffled, as circumstances render most to my own honour and glory&mdash;I
+ wished for business but now, and I have got enough of it. But Buckingham
+ will keep his own steerage-way through shoal and through weather."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;Mark you this, Bassanio&mdash;
+ The devil can quote Scripture for his purpose.
+ &mdash;MERCHANT OF VENICE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After leaving the proud mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, Christian, full
+ of the deep and treacherous schemes which he meditated, hastened to the
+ city, where, in a decent inn, kept by a person of his own persuasion, he
+ had been unexpectedly summoned to meet with Ralph Bridgenorth of
+ Moultrassie. He was not disappointed&mdash;the Major had arrived that
+ morning, and anxiously expected him. The usual gloom of his countenance
+ was darkened into a yet deeper shade of anxiety, which was scarcely
+ relieved, even while, in answer to his inquiry after his daughter,
+ Christian gave the most favourable account of her health and spirits,
+ naturally and unaffectedly intermingled with such praises of her beauty
+ and her disposition, as were likely to be most grateful to a father's ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Christian had too much cunning to expatiate on this theme, however
+ soothing. He stopped short exactly at the point where, as an affectionate
+ relative, he might be supposed to have said enough. "The lady," he said,
+ "with whom he had placed Alice, was delighted with her aspect and manners,
+ and undertook to be responsible for her health and happiness. He had not,
+ he said, deserved so little confidence at the hand of his brother,
+ Bridgenorth, as that the Major should, contrary to his purpose, and to the
+ plan which they had adjusted together, have hurried up from the country,
+ as if his own presence were necessary for Alice's protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brother Christian," said Bridgenorth in reply, "I must see my child&mdash;I
+ must see this person with whom she is entrusted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To what purpose?" answered Christian. "Have you not often confessed that
+ the over excess of the carnal affection which you have entertained for
+ your daughter, hath been a snare to you?&mdash;Have you not, more than
+ once, been on the point of resigning those great designs which should
+ place righteousness as a counsellor beside the throne, because you desired
+ to gratify your daughter's girlish passion for this descendant of your old
+ persecutor&mdash;this Julian Peveril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I own it," said Bridgenorth; "and worlds would I have given, and would
+ yet give, to clasp that youth to my bosom, and call him my son. The spirit
+ of his mother looks from his eye, and his stately step is as that of his
+ father, when he daily spoke comfort to me in my distress, and said, 'The
+ child liveth.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the youth walks," said Christian, "after his own lights, and mistakes
+ the meteor of the marsh for the Polar star. Ralph Bridgenorth, I will
+ speak to thee in friendly sincerity. Thou must not think to serve both the
+ good cause and Baal. Obey, if thou wilt, thine own carnal affections,
+ summon this Julian Peveril to thy house, and let him wed thy daughter&mdash;But
+ mark the reception she will meet with from the proud old knight, whose
+ spirit is now, even now, as little broken with his chains, as after the
+ sword of the Saints had prevailed at Worcester. Thou wilt see thy daughter
+ spurned from his feet like an outcast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christian," said Bridgenorth, interrupting him, "thou dost urge me hard;
+ but thou dost it in love, my brother, and I forgive thee&mdash;Alice shall
+ never be spurned.&mdash;But this friend of thine&mdash;this lady&mdash;thou
+ art my child's uncle; and after me, thou art next to her in love and
+ affection&mdash;Still, thou art not her father&mdash;hast not her father's
+ fears. Art thou sure of the character of this woman to whom my child is
+ entrusted?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Am I sure of my own?&mdash;Am I sure that my name is Christian&mdash;yours
+ Bridgenorth?&mdash;Is it a thing I am likely to be insecure in?&mdash;Have
+ I not dwelt for many years in this city?&mdash;Do I not know this Court?&mdash;And
+ am I likely to be imposed upon? For I will not think you can fear my
+ imposing upon you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art my brother," said Bridgenorth&mdash;"the blood and bone of my
+ departed Saint&mdash;and I am determined that I will trust thee in this
+ matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou dost well," said Christian; "and who knows what reward may be in
+ store for thee?&mdash;I cannot look upon Alice, but it is strongly borne
+ in on my mind, that there will be work for a creature so excellent beyond
+ ordinary women. Courageous Judith freed Bethulia by her valour, and the
+ comely features of Esther made her a safeguard and a defence to her people
+ in the land of captivity, when she found favour in the sight of King
+ Ahasuerus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be it with her as Heaven wills," said Bridgenorth; "and now tell me what
+ progress there is in the great work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The people are weary of the iniquity of this Court," said Christian; "and
+ if this man will continue to reign, it must be by calling to his councils
+ men of another stamp. The alarm excited by the damnable practices of the
+ Papists has called up men's souls, and awakened their eyes to the dangers
+ of their state.&mdash;He himself&mdash;for he will give up brother and
+ wife to save himself&mdash;is not averse to a change of measures; and
+ though we cannot at first see the Court purged as with a winnowing fan,
+ yet there will be enough of the good to control the bad&mdash;enough of
+ the sober party to compel the grant of that universal toleration, for
+ which we have sighed so long, as a maiden for her beloved. Time and
+ opportunity will lead the way to more thorough reformation; and that will
+ be done without stroke of sword, which our friends failed to establish on
+ a sure foundation, even when their victorious blades were in their hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May God grant it!" said Bridgenorth; "for I fear me I should scruple to
+ do aught which should once more unsheath the civil sword; but welcome all
+ that comes in a peaceful and parliamentary way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," said Christian, "and which will bring with it the bitter amends,
+ which our enemies have so long merited at our hands. How long hath our
+ brother's blood cried for vengeance from the altar!&mdash;Now shall that
+ cruel Frenchwoman find that neither lapse of years, nor her powerful
+ friends, nor the name of Stanley, nor the Sovereignty of Man, shall stop
+ the stern course of the pursuer of blood. Her name shall be struck from
+ the noble, and her heritage shall another take."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, "art thou not over eager
+ in pursuing this thing?&mdash;It is thy duty as a Christian to forgive
+ thine enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, but not the enemies of Heaven&mdash;not those who shed the blood of
+ the saints," said Christian, his eyes kindling that vehement and fiery
+ expression which at times gave to his uninteresting countenance the only
+ character of passion which it ever exhibited. "No, Bridgenorth," he
+ continued, "I esteem this purpose of revenge holy&mdash;I account it a
+ propitiatory sacrifice for what may have been evil in my life. I have
+ submitted to be spurned by the haughty&mdash;I have humbled myself to be
+ as a servant; but in my breast was the proud thought, I who do this&mdash;do
+ it that I may avenge my brother's blood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still, my brother," said Bridgenorth, "although I participate thy
+ purpose, and have aided thee against this Moabitish woman, I cannot but
+ think thy revenge is more after the law of Moses than after the law of
+ love."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This comes well from thee, Ralph Bridgenorth," answered Christian; "from
+ thee, who has just smiled over the downfall of thine own enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you mean Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "I smile not on his
+ ruin. It is well he is abased; but if it lies with me, I may humble his
+ pride, but will never ruin his house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know your purpose best," said Christian; "and I do justice, brother
+ Bridgenorth, to the purity of your principles; but men who see with but
+ worldly eyes, would discern little purpose of mercy in the strict
+ magistrate and severe creditor&mdash;and such have you been to Peveril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, his colour rising as he spoke,
+ "neither do I doubt your purpose, nor deny the surprising address with
+ which you have procured such perfect information concerning the purposes
+ of yonder woman of Ammon. But it is free to me to think, that in your
+ intercourse with the Court, and with courtiers, you may, in your carnal
+ and worldly policy, sink the value of those spiritual gifts, for which you
+ were once so much celebrated among the brethren."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not apprehend it," said Christian, recovering his temper, which had
+ been a little ruffled by the previous discussion. "Let us but work
+ together as heretofore; and I trust each of us shall be found doing the
+ work of a faithful servant to that good old cause for which we have
+ heretofore drawn the sword."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he took his hat, and bidding Bridgenorth farewell, declared his
+ intention of returning in the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fare thee well!" said Bridgenorth; "to that cause wilt thou find me ever
+ a true and devoted adherent. I will act by that counsel of thine, and will
+ not even ask thee&mdash;though it may grieve my heart as a parent&mdash;with
+ whom, or where, thou hast entrusted my child. I will try to cut off, and
+ cast from me, even my right hand, and my right eye; but for thee,
+ Christian, if thou dost deal otherwise than prudently and honestly in this
+ matter, it is what God and man will require at thy hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fear not me," said Christian hastily, and left the place, agitated by
+ reflections of no pleasant kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I ought to have persuaded him to return," he said, as he stepped out into
+ the street. "Even his hovering in this neighbourhood may spoil the plan on
+ which depends the rise of my fortunes&mdash;ay, and of his child's. Will
+ men say I have ruined her, when I shall have raised her to the dazzling
+ height of the Duchess of Portsmouth, and perhaps made her a mother to a
+ long line of princes? Chiffinch hath vouched for opportunity; and the
+ voluptuary's fortune depends upon his gratifying the taste of his master
+ for variety. If she makes an impression, it must be a deep one; and once
+ seated in his affections, I fear not her being supplanted.&mdash;What will
+ her father say? Will he, like a prudent man, put his shame in his pocket,
+ because it is well gilded? or will he think it fitting to make a display
+ of moral wrath and parental frenzy? I fear the latter&mdash;He has ever
+ kept too strict a course to admit his conniving at such licence. But what
+ will his anger avail?&mdash;I need not be seen in the matter&mdash;those
+ who are will care little for the resentment of a country Puritan. And
+ after all, what I am labouring to bring about is best for himself, the
+ wench, and above all, for me, Edward Christian."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such base opiates did this unhappy wretch stifle his own conscience,
+ while anticipating the disgrace of his friend's family, and the ruin of a
+ near relative, committed in confidence to his charge. The character of
+ this man was of no common description; nor was it by an ordinary road that
+ he had arrived at the present climax of unfeeling and infamous
+ selfishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Christian, as the reader is aware, was the brother of that William
+ Christian, who was the principal instrument in delivering up the Isle of
+ Man to the Republic, and who became the victim of the Countess of Derby's
+ revenge on that account. Both had been educated as Puritans, but William
+ was a soldier, which somewhat modified the strictness of his religious
+ opinions; Edward, a civilian, seemed to entertain these principles in the
+ utmost rigour. But it was only seeming. The exactness of deportment, which
+ procured him great honour and influence among the <i>sober party</i>, as
+ they were wont to term themselves, covered a voluptuous disposition, the
+ gratification of which was sweet to him as stolen waters, and pleasant as
+ bread eaten in secret. While, therefore, his seeming godliness brought him
+ worldly gain, his secret pleasures compensated for his outward austerity;
+ until the Restoration, and the Countess's violent proceedings against his
+ brother interrupted the course of both. He then fled from his native
+ island, burning with the desire of revenging his brother's death&mdash;the
+ only passion foreign to his own gratification which he was ever known to
+ cherish, and which was also, at least, partly selfish, since it concerned
+ the restoration of his own fortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found easy access to Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, who, in right of his
+ Duchess, claimed such of the Derby estate as had been bestowed by the
+ Parliament on his celebrated father-in-law, Lord Fairfax. His influence at
+ the Court of Charles, where a jest was a better plea than a long claim of
+ faithful service, was so successfully exerted, as to contribute greatly to
+ the depression of that loyal and ill-rewarded family. But Buckingham was
+ incapable, even for his own interest, of pursuing the steady course which
+ Christian suggested to him; and his vacillation probably saved the remnant
+ of the large estates of the Earl of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, Christian was too useful a follower to be dismissed. From
+ Buckingham, and others of that stamp, he did not affect to conceal the
+ laxity of his morals; but towards the numerous and powerful party to which
+ he belonged, he was able to disguise them by a seeming gravity of
+ exterior, which he never laid aside. Indeed, so wide and absolute was then
+ the distinction betwixt the Court and the city, that a man might have for
+ some time played two several parts, as in two different spheres, without
+ its being discovered in the one that he exhibited himself in a different
+ light in the other. Besides, when a man of talent shows himself an able
+ and useful partisan, his party will continue to protect and accredit him,
+ in spite of conduct the most contradictory to their own principles. Some
+ facts are, in such cases, denied&mdash;some are glossed over&mdash;and
+ party zeal is permitted to cover at least as many defects as ever doth
+ charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Christian had often need of the partial indulgence of his friends;
+ but he experienced it, for he was eminently useful. Buckingham, and other
+ courtiers of the same class, however dissolute in their lives, were
+ desirous of keeping some connection with the Dissenting or Puritanic
+ party, as it was termed; thereby to strengthen themselves against their
+ opponents at Court. In such intrigues, Christian was a notable agent; and
+ at one time had nearly procured an absolute union between a class which
+ professed the most rigid principles of religion and morality, and the
+ latitudinarian courtiers, who set all principle at defiance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst the vicissitudes of a life of intrigue, during which Buckingham's
+ ambitious schemes, and his own, repeatedly sent him across the Atlantic,
+ it was Edward Christian's boast that he never lost sight of his principal
+ object,&mdash;revenge on the Countess of Derby. He maintained a close and
+ intimate correspondence with his native island, so as to be perfectly
+ informed of whatever took place there; and he stimulated, on every
+ favourable opportunity, the cupidity of Buckingham to possess himself of
+ this petty kingdom, by procuring the forfeiture of its present Lord. It
+ was not difficult to keep his patron's wild wishes alive on this topic,
+ for his own mercurial imagination attached particular charms to the idea
+ of becoming a sort of sovereign even in this little island; and he was,
+ like Catiline, as covetous of the property of others, as he was profuse of
+ his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not until the pretended discovery of the Papist Plot that the
+ schemes of Christian could be brought to ripen; and then, so odious were
+ the Catholics in the eyes of the credulous people of England, that, upon
+ the accusation of the most infamous of mankind, common informers, the
+ scourings of jails, and the refuse of the whipping-post, the most
+ atrocious charges against persons of the highest rank and fairest
+ character were readily received and credited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a period which Christian did not fail to improve. He drew close
+ his intimacy with Bridgenorth, which had indeed never been interrupted,
+ and readily engaged him in his schemes, which, in the eyes of his
+ brother-in-law, were alike honourable and patriotic. But, while he
+ flattered Bridgenorth with the achieving a complete reformation in the
+ state&mdash;checking the profligacy of the Court&mdash;relieving the
+ consciences of the Dissenters from the pressures of the penal laws&mdash;amending,
+ in fine, the crying grievances of the time&mdash;while he showed him also,
+ in prospect, revenge upon the Countess of Derby, and a humbling
+ dispensation on the house of Peveril, from whom Bridgenorth had suffered
+ such indignity, Christian did not neglect, in the meanwhile, to consider
+ how he could best benefit himself by the confidence reposed in him by his
+ unsuspicious relation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extreme beauty of Alice Bridgenorth&mdash;the great wealth which time
+ and economy had accumulated on her father&mdash;pointed her out as a most
+ desirable match to repair the wasted fortunes of some of the followers of
+ the Court; and he flattered himself that he could conduct such a
+ negotiation so as to be in a high degree conducive to his own advantage.
+ He found there would be little difficulty in prevailing on Major
+ Bridgenorth to entrust him with the guardianship of his daughter. That
+ unfortunate gentleman had accustomed himself, from the very period of her
+ birth, to regard the presence of his child as a worldly indulgence too
+ great to be allowed to him; and Christian had little trouble in convincing
+ him that the strong inclination which he felt to bestow her on Julian
+ Peveril, provided he could be brought over to his own political opinions,
+ was a blameable compromise with his more severe principles. Late
+ circumstances had taught him the incapacity and unfitness of Dame Debbitch
+ for the sole charge of so dear a pledge; and he readily and thankfully
+ embraced the kind offer of her maternal uncle, Christian, to place Alice
+ under the protection of a lady of rank in London, whilst he himself was to
+ be engaged in the scenes of bustle and blood, which, in common with all
+ good Protestants, he expected was speedily to take place on a general
+ rising of the Papists, unless prevented by the active and energetic
+ measures of the good people of England. He even confessed his fears, that
+ his partial regard for Alice's happiness might enervate his efforts in
+ behalf of his country; and Christian had little trouble in eliciting from
+ him a promise, that he would forbear to inquire after her for some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus certain of being the temporary guardian of his niece for a space long
+ enough, he flattered himself, for the execution of his purpose, Christian
+ endeavoured to pave the way by consulting Chiffinch, whose known skill in
+ Court policy qualified him best as an adviser on this occasion. But this
+ worthy person, being, in fact, a purveyor for his Majesty's pleasures, and
+ on that account high in his good graces, thought it fell within the line
+ of his duty to suggest another scheme than that on which Christian
+ consulted him. A woman of such exquisite beauty as Alice was described, he
+ deemed more worthy to be a partaker of the affections of the merry
+ Monarch, whose taste in female beauty was so exquisite, than to be made
+ the wife of some worn-out prodigal of quality. And then, doing perfect
+ justice to his own character, he felt it would not be one whit impaired,
+ while his fortune would be, in every respect, greatly amended, if, after
+ sharing the short reign of the Gwyns, the Davises, the Robertses, and so
+ forth, Alice Bridgenorth should retire from the state of a royal
+ favourite, into the humble condition of Mrs. Chiffinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After cautiously sounding Christian, and finding that the near prospect of
+ interest to himself effectually prevented his starting at this iniquitous
+ scheme, Chiffinch detailed it to him fully, carefully keeping the final
+ termination out of sight, and talking of the favour to be acquired by the
+ fair Alice as no passing caprice, but the commencement of a reign as long
+ and absolute as that of the Duchess of Portsmouth, of whose avarice and
+ domineering temper Charles was now understood to be much tired, though the
+ force of habit rendered him unequal to free himself of her yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus chalked out, the scene prepared was no longer the intrigue of a Court
+ pander, and a villainous resolution for the ruin of an innocent girl, but
+ became a state intrigue, for the removal of an obnoxious favourite, and
+ the subsequent change of the King's sentiments upon various material
+ points, in which he was at present influenced by the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth. In this light it was exhibited to the Duke of Buckingham, who,
+ either to sustain his character for daring gallantry, or in order to
+ gratify some capricious fancy, had at one time made love to the reigning
+ favourite, and experienced a repulse which he had never forgiven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one scheme was too little to occupy the active and enterprising spirit
+ of the Duke. An appendix of the Popish Plot was easily so contrived as to
+ involve the Countess of Derby, who, from character and religion, was
+ precisely the person whom the credulous part of the public were inclined
+ to suppose the likely accomplice of such a conspiracy. Christian and
+ Bridgenorth undertook the perilous commission of attacking her even in her
+ own little kingdom of Man, and had commissions for this purpose, which
+ were only to be produced in case of their scheme taking effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It miscarried, as the reader is aware, from the Countess's alert
+ preparations for defence; and neither Christian nor Bridgenorth held it
+ sound policy to practise openly, even under parliamentary authority,
+ against a lady so little liable to hesitate upon the measures most likely
+ to secure her feudal sovereignty; wisely considering that even the
+ omnipotence, as it has been somewhat too largely styled, of Parliament,
+ might fail to relieve them from the personal consequences of a failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the continent of Britain, however, no opposition was to be feared; and
+ so well was Christian acquainted with all the motions in the interior of
+ the Countess's little court, or household, that Peveril would have been
+ arrested the instant he set foot on shore, but for the gale of wind which
+ obliged the vessel, in which he was a passenger, to run for Liverpool.
+ Here Christian, under the name of Ganlesse, unexpectedly met with him, and
+ preserved him from the fangs of the well-breathed witnesses of the Plot,
+ with the purpose of securing his despatches, or, if necessary, his person
+ also, in such a manner as to place him at his own discretion&mdash;a
+ narrow and perilous game, which he thought it better, however, to
+ undertake, than to permit these subordinate agents, who were always ready
+ to mutiny against all in league with them, to obtain the credit which they
+ must have done by the seizure of the Countess of Derby's despatches. It
+ was, besides, essential to Buckingham's schemes that these should not pass
+ into the hands of a public officer like Topham, who, however pompous and
+ stupid, was upright and well-intentioned, until they had undergone the
+ revisal of a private committee, where something might have probably been
+ suppressed, even supposing that nothing had been added. In short,
+ Christian, in carrying on his own separate and peculiar intrigue, by the
+ agency of the Great Popish Plot, as it was called, acted just like an
+ engineer, who derives the principle of motion which turns his machinery,
+ by means of a steam-engine, or large water-wheel, constructed to drive a
+ separate and larger engine. Accordingly, he was determined that, while he
+ took all the advantage he could from their supposed discoveries, no one
+ should be admitted to tamper or interfere with his own plans of profit and
+ revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch, who, desirous of satisfying himself with his own eyes of that
+ excellent beauty which had been so highly extolled, had gone down to
+ Derbyshire on purpose, was infinitely delighted, when, during the course
+ of a two hours' sermon at the dissenting chapel in Liverpool, which
+ afforded him ample leisure for a deliberate survey, he arrived at the
+ conclusion that he had never seen a form or face more captivating. His
+ eyes having confirmed what was told him, he hurried back to the little inn
+ which formed their place of rendezvous, and there awaited Christian and
+ his niece, with a degree of confidence in the success of their project
+ which he had not before entertained; and with an apparatus of luxury,
+ calculated, as he thought, to make a favourable impression on the mind of
+ a rustic girl. He was somewhat surprised, when, instead of Alice
+ Bridgenorth, to whom he expected that night to have been introduced, he
+ found that Christian was accompanied by Julian Peveril. It was indeed a
+ severe disappointment, for he had prevailed on his own indolence to
+ venture this far from the Court, in order that he might judge, with his
+ own paramount taste, whether Alice was really the prodigy which her
+ uncle's praises had bespoken her, and, as such, a victim worthy of the
+ fate to which she was destined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few words betwixt the worthy confederates determined them on the plan of
+ stripping Peveril of the Countess's despatches; Chiffinch absolutely
+ refusing to take any share in arresting him, as a matter of which his
+ Master's approbation might be very uncertain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian had also his own reasons for abstaining from so decisive a step.
+ It was by no means likely to be agreeable to Bridgenorth, whom it was
+ necessary to keep in good humour;&mdash;it was not necessary, for the
+ Countess's despatches were of far more importance than the person of
+ Julian. Lastly, it was superfluous in this respect also, that Julian was
+ on the road to his father's castle, where it was likely he would be
+ seized, as a matter of course, along with the other suspicious persons who
+ fell under Topham's warrant, and the denunciations of his infamous
+ companions. He, therefore, far from using any violence to Peveril, assumed
+ towards him such a friendly tone, as might seem to warn him against
+ receiving damage from others, and vindicate himself from having any share
+ in depriving him of his charge. This last manoeuvre was achieved by an
+ infusion of a strong narcotic into Julian's wine; under the influence of
+ which he slumbered so soundly, that the confederates were easily able to
+ accomplish their inhospitable purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The events of the succeeding days are already known to the reader.
+ Chiffinch set forward to return to London, with the packet, which it was
+ desirable should be in Buckingham's hands as soon as possible; while
+ Christian went to Moultrassie, to receive Alice from her father, and
+ convey her safely to London&mdash;his accomplice agreeing to defer his
+ curiosity to see more of her until they should have arrived in that city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before parting with Bridgenorth, Christian had exerted his utmost address
+ to prevail on him to remain at Moultrassie; he had even overstepped the
+ bounds of prudence, and, by his urgency, awakened some suspicions of an
+ indefinite nature, which he found it difficult to allay. Bridgenorth,
+ therefore, followed his brother-in-law to London; and the reader has
+ already been made acquainted with the arts which Christian used to prevent
+ his farther interference with the destinies of his daughter, or the
+ unhallowed schemes of her ill-chosen guardian. Still Christian, as he
+ strode along the street in profound reflection, saw that his undertaking
+ was attended with a thousand perils; and the drops stood like beads on his
+ brow when he thought of the presumptuous levity and fickle temper of
+ Buckingham&mdash;the frivolity and intemperance of Chiffinch&mdash;the
+ suspicions of the melancholy and bigoted, yet sagacious and honest
+ Bridgenorth. "Had I," he thought, "but tools fitted, each to their portion
+ of the work, how easily could I heave asunder and disjoint the strength
+ that opposes me! But with these frail and insufficient implements, I am in
+ daily, hourly, momentary danger, that one lever or other gives way, and
+ that the whole ruin recoils on my own head. And yet, were it not for those
+ failings I complain of, how were it possible for me to have acquired that
+ power over them all which constitutes them my passive tools, even when
+ they seem most to exert their own free will? Yes, the bigots have some
+ right when they affirm that all is for the best."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may seem strange, that, amidst the various subjects of Christian's
+ apprehension, he was never visited by any long or permanent doubt that the
+ virtue of his niece might prove the shoal on which his voyage should be
+ wrecked. But he was an arrant rogue, as well as a hardened libertine; and,
+ in both characters, a professed disbeliever in the virtue of the fair sex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ As for John Dryden's Charles, I own that King
+ Was never any very mighty thing;
+ And yet he was a devilish honest fellow&mdash;
+ Enjoy'd his friend and bottle, and got mellow.
+ &mdash;DR. WOLOOT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ London, the grand central point of intrigues of every description, had now
+ attracted within its dark and shadowy region the greater number of the
+ personages whom we have had occasion to mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, amongst others of the <i>dramatis personæ</i>, had
+ arrived, and taken up his abode in a remote inn in the suburbs. His
+ business, he conceived, was to remain incognito until he should have
+ communicated in private with the friends who were most likely to lend
+ assistance to his parents, as well as to his patroness, in their present
+ situation of doubt and danger. Amongst these, the most powerful was the
+ Duke of Ormond, whose faithful services, high rank, and acknowledged worth
+ and virtue, still preserved an ascendancy in that very Court, where, in
+ general, he was regarded as out of favour. Indeed, so much consciousness
+ did Charles display in his demeanour towards that celebrated noble, and
+ servant of his father, that Buckingham once took the freedom to ask the
+ King whether the Duke of Ormond had lost his Majesty's favour, or his
+ Majesty the Duke's? since, whenever they chanced to meet, the King
+ appeared the more embarrassed of the two. But it was not Peveril's good
+ fortune to obtain the advice or countenance of this distinguished person.
+ His Grace of Ormond was not at that time in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter, about the delivery of which the Countess had seemed most
+ anxious after that to the Duke of Ormond, was addressed to Captain Barstow
+ (a Jesuit, whose real name was Fenwicke), to be found, or at least to be
+ heard of, in the house of one Martin Christal in the Savoy. To this place
+ hastened Peveril, upon learning the absence of the Duke of Ormond. He was
+ not ignorant of the danger which he personally incurred, by thus becoming
+ a medium of communication betwixt a Popish priest and a suspected
+ Catholic. But when he undertook the perilous commission of his patroness,
+ he had done so frankly, and with the unreserved resolution of serving her
+ in the manner in which she most desired her affairs to be conducted. Yet
+ he could not forbear some secret apprehension, when he felt himself
+ engaged in the labyrinth of passages and galleries, which led to different
+ obscure sets of apartments in the ancient building termed the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This antiquated and almost ruinous pile occupied a part of the site of the
+ public offices in the Strand, commonly called Somerset House. The Savoy
+ had been formerly a palace, and took its name from an Earl of Savoy, by
+ whom it was founded. It had been the habitation of John of Gaunt, and
+ various persons of distinction&mdash;had become a convent, an hospital,
+ and finally, in Charles II.'s time, a waste of dilapidated buildings and
+ ruinous apartments, inhabited chiefly by those who had some connection
+ with, or dependence upon, the neighbouring palace of Somerset House,
+ which, more fortunate than the Savoy, had still retained its royal title,
+ and was the abode of a part of the Court, and occasionally of the King
+ himself, who had apartments there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not without several inquiries, and more than one mistake, that, at
+ the end of a long and dusky passage, composed of boards so wasted by time
+ that they threatened to give way under his feet, Julian at length found
+ the name of Martin Christal, broker and appraiser, upon a shattered door.
+ He was about to knock, when some one pulled his cloak; and looking round,
+ to his great astonishment, which indeed almost amounted to fear, he saw
+ the little mute damsel, who had accompanied him for a part of the way on
+ his voyage from the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fenella!" he exclaimed, forgetting that she could neither hear nor reply,&mdash;"Fenella!
+ Can this be you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenella, assuming the air of warning and authority, which she had
+ heretofore endeavoured to adopt towards him, interposed betwixt Julian and
+ the door at which he was about to knock&mdash;pointed with her finger
+ towards it in a prohibiting manner, and at the same time bent her brows,
+ and shook her head sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment's consideration, Julian could place but one interpretation
+ upon Fenella's appearance and conduct, and that was, by supposing her lady
+ had come up to London, and had despatched this mute attendant, as a
+ confidential person, to apprise him of some change of her intended
+ operations, which might render the delivery of her letters to Barstow, <i>alias</i>
+ Fenwicke, superfluous, or perhaps dangerous. He made signs to Fenella,
+ demanding to know whether she had any commission from the Countess. She
+ nodded. "Had she any letter?" he continued, by the same mode of inquiry.
+ She shook her head impatiently, and, walking hastily along the passage,
+ made a signal to him to follow. He did so, having little doubt that he was
+ about to be conducted into the Countess's presence; but his surprise, at
+ first excited by Fenella's appearance, was increased by the rapidity and
+ ease with which she seemed to track the dusky and decayed mazes of the
+ dilapidated Savoy, equal to that with which he had seen her formerly lead
+ the way through the gloomy vaults of Castle Rushin, in the Isle of Man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he recollected, however, that Fenella had accompanied the Countess on
+ a long visit to London, it appeared not improbable that she might then
+ have acquired this local knowledge which seemed so accurate. Many
+ foreigners, dependent on Queen or Queen Dowager, had apartments in the
+ Savoy. Many Catholic priests also found refuge in its recesses, under
+ various disguises, and in defiance of the severity of the laws against
+ Popery. What was more likely than that the Countess of Derby, a Catholic
+ and a Frenchwoman, should have had secret commissions amongst such people;
+ and that the execution of such should be entrusted, at least occasionally,
+ to Fenella?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus reflecting, Julian continued to follow her light and active footsteps
+ as she glided from the Strand to Spring-Garden, and thence into the Park.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was still early in the morning, and the Mall was untenanted, save by a
+ few walkers, who frequented these shades for the wholesome purposes of air
+ and exercise. Splendour, gaiety, and display, did not come forth, at that
+ period, until noon was approaching. All readers have heard that the whole
+ space where the Horse Guards are now built, made, in the time of Charles
+ II., a part of St. James's Park; and that the old building, now called the
+ Treasury, was a part of the ancient Palace of Whitehall, which was thus
+ immediately connected with the Park. The canal had been constructed, by
+ the celebrated Le Notre, for the purpose of draining the Park; and it
+ communicated with the Thames by a decoy, stocked with a quantity of the
+ rarer waterfowl. It was towards this decoy that Fenella bent her way with
+ unabated speed; and they were approaching a group of two or three
+ gentlemen, who sauntered by its banks, when, on looking closely at him who
+ appeared to be the chief of the party, Julian felt his heart beat
+ uncommonly thick, as if conscious of approaching some one of the highest
+ consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The person whom he looked upon was past the middle age of life, of a dark
+ complexion, corresponding with the long, black, full-bottomed periwig,
+ which he wore instead of his own hair. His dress was plain black velvet,
+ with a diamond star, however, on his cloak, which hung carelessly over one
+ shoulder. His features, strongly lined, even to harshness, had yet an
+ expression of dignified good-humour; he was well and strongly built,
+ walked upright and yet easily, and had upon the whole the air of a person
+ of the highest consideration. He kept rather in advance of his companions,
+ but turned and spoke to them, from time to time, with much affability, and
+ probably with some liveliness, judging by the smiles, and sometimes the
+ scarce restrained laughter, by which some of his sallies were received by
+ his attendants. They also wore only morning dresses; but their looks and
+ manner were those of men of rank, in presence of one in station still more
+ elevated. They shared the attention of their principal in common with
+ seven or eight little black curly-haired spaniels, or rather, as they are
+ now called, cockers, which attended their master as closely, and perhaps
+ with as deep sentiments of attachment, as the bipeds of the group; and
+ whose gambols, which seemed to afford him much amusement, he sometimes
+ checked, and sometimes encouraged. In addition to this pastime, a lackey,
+ or groom, was also in attendance, with one or two little baskets and bags,
+ from which the gentleman we have described took, from time to time, a
+ handful of seeds, and amused himself with throwing them to the waterfowl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This the King's favourite occupation, together with his remarkable
+ countenance, and the deportment of the rest of the company towards him,
+ satisfied Julian Peveril that he was approaching, perhaps indecorously,
+ near the person of Charles Stewart, the second of that unhappy name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he hesitated to follow his dumb guide any nearer, and felt the
+ embarrassment of being unable to communicate to her his repugnance to
+ further intrusion, a person in the royal retinue touched a light and
+ lively air on the flageolet, at a signal from the King, who desired to
+ have some tune repeated which had struck him in the theatre on the
+ preceding evening. While the good-natured monarch marked time with his
+ foot, and with the motion of his hand, Fenella continued to approach him,
+ and threw into her manner the appearance of one who was attracted, as it
+ were in spite of herself, by the sounds of the instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anxious to know how this was to end, and astonished to see the dumb girl
+ imitate so accurately the manner of one who actually heard the musical
+ notes, Peveril also drew near, though at somewhat greater distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked good-humouredly at both, as if he admitted their musical
+ enthusiasm as an excuse for their intrusion; but his eyes became riveted
+ on Fenella, whose face and appearance, although rather singular than
+ beautiful, had something in them wild, fantastic, and, as being so, even
+ captivating, to an eye which had been gratified perhaps to satiety with
+ the ordinary forms of female beauty. She did not appear to notice how
+ closely she was observed; but, as if acting under an irresistible impulse,
+ derived from the sounds to which she seemed to listen, she undid the
+ bodkin round which her long tresses were winded, and flinging them
+ suddenly over her slender person, as if using them as a natural veil, she
+ began to dance, with infinite grace and agility, to the tune which the
+ flageolet played.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril lost almost his sense of the King's presence, when he observed
+ with what wonderful grace and agility Fenella kept time to notes, which
+ could only be known to her by the motions of the musician's fingers. He
+ had heard, indeed, among other prodigies, of a person in Fenella's unhappy
+ situation acquiring, by some unaccountable and mysterious tact, the power
+ of acting as an instrumental musician, nay, becoming so accurate a
+ performer as to be capable of leading a musical band; and he also heard of
+ deaf and dumb persons dancing with sufficient accuracy, by observing the
+ motions of their partner. But Fenella's performance seemed more wonderful
+ than either, since the musician was guided by his written notes, and the
+ dancer by the motions of the others; whereas Fenella had no intimation,
+ save what she seemed to gather, with infinite accuracy, by observing the
+ motion of the artist's fingers on his small instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the King, who was ignorant of the particular circumstances which
+ rendered Fenella's performance almost marvellous, he was contented, at her
+ first commencement, to authorise what seemed to him the frolic of this
+ singular-looking damsel, by a good-natured smile, but when he perceived
+ the exquisite truth and justice, as well as the wonderful combination of
+ grace and agility, with which she executed to this favourite air a dance
+ which was perfectly new to him, Charles turned his mere acquiescence into
+ something like enthusiastic applause. He bore time to her motions with the
+ movement of his foot&mdash;applauded with head and with hand&mdash;and
+ seemed, like herself, carried away by the enthusiasm of the gestic art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a rapid yet graceful succession of <i>entrechats</i>, Fenella
+ introduced a slow movement, which terminated the dance; then dropping a
+ profound courtesy, she continued to stand motionless before the King, her
+ arms folded on her bosom, her head stooped, and her eyes cast down, after
+ the manner of an Oriental slave; while through the misty veil of her
+ shadowy locks, it might be observed, that the colour which exercise had
+ called to her cheeks was dying fast away, and resigning them to their
+ native dusky hue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my honour," exclaimed the King, "she is like a fairy who trips it in
+ moonlight. There must be more of air and fire than of earth in her
+ composition. It is well poor Nelly Gwyn saw her not, or she would have
+ died of grief and envy. Come, gentlemen, which of you contrived this
+ pretty piece of morning pastime?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The courtiers looked at each other, but none of them felt authorised to
+ claim the merit of a service so agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must ask the quick-eyed nymph herself then," said the King; and,
+ looking at Fenella, he added, "Tell us, my pretty one, to whom we owe the
+ pleasure of seeing you?&mdash;I suspect the Duke of Buckingham; for this
+ is exactly a <i>tour de son métier</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fenella, on observing that the King addressed her, bowed low, and shook
+ her head, in signal that she did not understand what he said. "Oddsfish,
+ that is true," said the King; "she must perforce be a foreigner&mdash;her
+ complexion and agility speak it. France or Italy has had the moulding of
+ those elastic limbs, dark cheek, and eye of fire." He then put to her in
+ French, and again in Italian, the question, "By whom she had been sent
+ hither?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the second repetition, Fenella threw back her veiling tresses, so as to
+ show the melancholy which sat on her brow; while she sadly shook her head,
+ and intimated by imperfect muttering, but of the softest and most
+ plaintive kind, her organic deficiency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it possible Nature can have made such a fault?" said Charles. "Can she
+ have left so curious a piece as thou art without the melody of voice,
+ whilst she has made thee so exquisitely sensible to the beauty of sound?&mdash;Stay:
+ what means this? and what young fellow are you bringing up there? Oh, the
+ master of the show, I suppose.&mdash;Friend," he added, addressing himself
+ to Peveril, who, on the signal of Fenella, stepped forward almost
+ instinctively, and kneeled down, "we thank thee for the pleasure of this
+ morning.&mdash;My Lord Marquis, you rooked me at piquet last night; for
+ which disloyal deed thou shalt now atone, by giving a couple of pieces to
+ this honest youth, and five to the girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the nobleman drew out his purse and came forward to perform the King's
+ generous commission, Julian felt some embarrassment ere he was able to
+ explain, that he had not title to be benefited by the young person's
+ performance, and that his Majesty had mistaken his character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who art thou, then, my friend?" said Charles; "but, above all, and
+ particularly, who is this dancing nymph, whom thou standest waiting on
+ like an attendant fawn?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The young person is a retainer of the Countess-Dowager of Derby, so
+ please your Majesty," said Peveril, in a low tone of voice; "and I am&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold, hold," said the King; "this is a dance to another tune, and not fit
+ for a place so public. Hark thee, friend; do thou and the young woman
+ follow Empson where he will conduct thee.&mdash;Empson, carry them&mdash;hark
+ in thy ear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May it please your Majesty, I ought to say," said Peveril, "that I am
+ guiltless of any purpose of intrusion&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now a plague on him who can take no hint," said the King, cutting short
+ his apology. "Oddsfish, man, there are times when civility is the greatest
+ impertinence in the world. Do thou follow Empson, and amuse thyself for a
+ half-hour's space with the fairy's company, till we shall send for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles spoke this not without casting an anxious eye around, and in a
+ tone which intimated apprehension of being overheard. Julian could only
+ bow obedience, and follow Empson, who was the same person that played so
+ rarely on the flageolet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were out of sight of the King and his party, the musician wished
+ to enter into conversation with his companions, and addressed himself
+ first to Fenella with a broad compliment of, "By the mass, ye dance rarely&mdash;ne'er
+ a slut on the boards shows such a shank! I would be content to play to you
+ till my throat were as dry as my whistle. Come, be a little free&mdash;old
+ Rowley will not quit the Park till nine. I will carry you to
+ Spring-Garden, and bestow sweet-cakes and a quart of Rhenish on both of
+ you; and we'll be cameradoes,&mdash;What the devil? no answer?&mdash;How's
+ this, brother?&mdash;Is this neat wench of yours deaf or dumb or both? I
+ should laugh at that, and she trip it so well to the flageolet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To rid himself of this fellow's discourse, Peveril answered him in French,
+ that he was a foreigner, and spoke no English; glad to escape, though at
+ the expense of a fiction, from the additional embarrassment of a fool, who
+ was likely to ask more questions than his own wisdom might have enabled
+ him to answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Étranger</i>&mdash;that means stranger," muttered their guide; "more
+ French dogs and jades come to lick the good English butter of our bread,
+ or perhaps an Italian puppet-show. Well if it were not that they have a
+ mortal enmity to the whole <i>gamut</i>, this were enough to make any
+ honest fellow turn Puritan. But if I am to play to her at the Duchess's,
+ I'll be d&mdash;d but I put her out in the tune, just to teach her to have
+ the impudence to come to England, and to speak no English."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having muttered to himself this truly British resolution, the musician
+ walked briskly on towards a large house near the bottom of St. James's
+ Street, and entered the court, by a grated door from the Park, of which
+ the mansion commanded an extensive prospect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril finding himself in front of a handsome portico, under which opened
+ a stately pair of folding-doors, was about to ascend the steps that led to
+ the main entrance, when his guide seized him by the arm, exclaiming.
+ "Hold, Mounseer! What! you'll lose nothing, I see, for want of courage;
+ but you must keep the back way, for all your fine doublet. Here it is not,
+ knock, and it shall be opened; but may be instead, knock and you shall be
+ knocked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suffering himself to be guided by Empson, Julian deviated from the
+ principal door, to one which opened, with less ostentation, in an angle of
+ the courtyard. On a modest tap from the flute-player, admittance was
+ afforded him and his companions by a footman, who conducted them through a
+ variety of stone passages, to a very handsome summer parlour, where a
+ lady, or something resembling one, dressed in a style of extra elegance,
+ was trifling with a play-book while she finished her chocolate. It would
+ not be easy to describe her, but by weighing her natural good qualities
+ against the affectations which counterbalanced them. She would have been
+ handsome, but for rouge and <i>minauderie</i>&mdash;would have been civil,
+ but for overstrained airs of patronage and condescension&mdash;would have
+ had an agreeable voice, had she spoken in her natural tone&mdash;and fine
+ eyes, had she not made such desperate hard use of them. She could only
+ spoil a pretty ankle by too liberal display; but her shape, though she
+ could not yet be thirty years old, had the embon-point which might have
+ suited better with ten years more advanced. She pointed Empson to a seat
+ with the air of a Duchess, and asked him, languidly, how he did this age,
+ that she had not seen him? and what folks these were he had brought with
+ him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Foreigners, madam; d&mdash;d foreigners," answered Empson; "starving
+ beggars, that our old friend has picked up in the Park this morning&mdash;the
+ wench dances, and the fellow plays on the Jew's trump, I believe. On my
+ life, madam, I begin to be ashamed of old Rowley; I must discard him,
+ unless he keeps better company in future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fie, Empson," said the lady; "consider it is our duty to countenance him,
+ and keep him afloat; and indeed I always make a principle of it. Hark ye,
+ he comes not hither this morning?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He will be here," answered Empson, "in the walking of a minuet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God!" exclaimed the lady, with unaffected alarm; and starting up with
+ utter neglect of her usual and graceful languor, she tripped as swiftly as
+ a milk-maid into an adjoining apartment, where they heard presently a few
+ words of eager and animated discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Something to be put out of the way, I suppose," said Empson. "Well for
+ madam I gave her the hint. There he goes, the happy swain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was so situated, that he could, from the same casement through
+ which Empson was peeping, observe a man in a laced roquelaure, and
+ carrying his rapier under his arm, glide from the door by which he had
+ himself entered, and out of the court, keeping as much as possible under
+ the shade of the buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady re-entered at this moment, and observing how Empson's eyes were
+ directed, said with a slight appearance of hurry, "A gentleman of the
+ Duchess of Portsmouth's with a billet; and so tiresomely pressing for an
+ answer, that I was obliged to write without my diamond pen. I have daubed
+ my fingers, I dare say," she added, looking at a very pretty hand, and
+ presently after dipping her fingers in a little silver vase of rose-water.
+ "But that little exotic monster of yours, Empson, I hope she really
+ understands no English?&mdash;On my life she coloured.&mdash;Is she such a
+ rare dancer?&mdash;I must see her dance, and hear him play on the Jew's
+ harp."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dance!" replied Empson; "she danced well enough when <i>I</i> played to
+ her. I can make anything dance. Old Counsellor Clubfoot danced when he had
+ a fit of the gout; you have seen no such <i>pas seul</i> in the theatre. I
+ would engage to make the Archbishop of Canterbury dance the hays like a
+ Frenchman. There is nothing in dancing; it all lies in the music. Rowley
+ does not know that now. He saw this poor wench dance; and thought so much
+ on't, when it was all along of me. I would have defied her to sit still.
+ And Rowley gives her the credit of it, and five pieces to boot; and I have
+ only two for my morning's work!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, Master Empson," said the lady; "but you are of the family, though
+ in a lower station; and you ought to consider&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By G&mdash;, madam," answered Empson, "all I consider is, that I play the
+ best flageolet in England; and that they can no more supply my place, if
+ they were to discard me, than they could fill Thames from Fleet-Ditch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Master Empson, I do not dispute but you are a man of talents,"
+ replied the lady; "still, I say, mind the main chance&mdash;you please the
+ ear to-day&mdash;another has the advantage of you to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never, mistress, while ears have the heavenly power of distinguishing one
+ note from another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heavenly power, say you, Master Empson?" said the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, madam, heavenly; for some very neat verses which we had at our
+ festival say,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'What know we of the blest above,
+ But that they sing and that they love?'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is Master Waller wrote them, as I think; who, upon my word, ought to be
+ encouraged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so should you, my dear Empson," said the dame, yawning, "were it only
+ for the honour you do to your own profession. But in the meantime, will
+ you ask these people to have some refreshment?&mdash;and will you take
+ some yourself?&mdash;the chocolate is that which the Ambassador Portuguese
+ fellow brought over to the Queen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it be genuine," said the musician.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, sir?" said the fair one, half rising from her pile of cushions&mdash;"Not
+ genuine, and in this house!&mdash;Let me understand you, Master Empson&mdash;I
+ think, when I first saw you, you scarce knew chocolate from coffee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By G&mdash;, madam," answered the flageolet-player, "you are perfectly
+ right. And how can I show better how much I have profited by your
+ ladyship's excellent cheer, except by being critical?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You stand excused, Master Empson," said the <i>petite maitresse</i>,
+ sinking gently back on the downy couch, from which a momentary irritation
+ had startled her&mdash;"I think the chocolate will please you, though
+ scarce equal to what we had from the Spanish resident Mendoza.&mdash;But
+ we must offer these strange people something. Will you ask them if they
+ would have coffee and chocolate, or cold wild-fowl, fruit, and wine? They
+ must be treated, so as to show them where they are, since here they are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unquestionably, madam," said Empson; "but I have just at this instant
+ forgot the French for chocolate, hot bread, coffee, game, and drinkables."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is odd," said the lady; "and I have forgot my French and Italian at
+ the same moment. But it signifies little&mdash;I will order the things to
+ be brought, and they will remember the names of them themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Empson laughed loudly at this jest, and pawned his soul that the cold
+ sirloin which entered immediately after, was the best emblem of roast-beef
+ all the world over. Plentiful refreshments were offered to all the party,
+ of which both Fenella and Peveril partook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, the flageolet-player drew closer to the side of the lady
+ of the mansion&mdash;their intimacy was cemented, and their spirits set
+ afloat, by a glass of liqueur, which gave them additional confidence in
+ discussing the characters, as well of the superior attendants of the
+ Court, as of the inferior rank, to which they themselves might be supposed
+ to belong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady, indeed, during this conversation, frequently exerted her
+ complete and absolute superiority over Master Empson; in which that
+ musical gentleman humbly acquiesced whenever the circumstance was recalled
+ to his attention, whether in the way of blunt contradiction, sarcastic
+ insinuation, downright assumption of higher importance, or in any of the
+ other various modes by which such superiority is usually asserted and
+ maintained. But the lady's obvious love of scandal was the lure which very
+ soon brought her again down from the dignified part which for a moment she
+ assumed, and placed her once more on a gossiping level with her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their conversation was too trivial, and too much allied to petty Court
+ intrigues, with which he was totally unacquainted, to be in the least
+ interesting to Julian. As it continued for more than an hour, he soon
+ ceased to pay the least attention to a discourse consisting of nicknames,
+ patchwork, and innuendo; and employed himself in reflecting on his own
+ complicated affairs, and the probable issue of his approaching audience
+ with the King, which had been brought about by so singular an agent, and
+ by means so unexpected. He often looked to his guide, Fenella; and
+ observed that she was, for the greater part of the time, drowned in deep
+ and abstracted meditation. But three or four times&mdash;and it was when
+ the assumed airs and affected importance of the musician and their hostess
+ rose to the most extravagant excess&mdash;he observed that Fenella dealt
+ askance on them some of those bitter and almost blighting elfin looks,
+ which in the Isle of Man were held to imply contemptuous execration. There
+ was something in all her manner so extraordinary, joined to her sudden
+ appearance, and her demeanour in the King's presence, so oddly, yet so
+ well contrived to procure him a private audience&mdash;which he might, by
+ graver means, have sought in vain&mdash;that it almost justified the idea,
+ though he smiled at it internally, that the little mute agent was aided in
+ her machinations by the kindred imps, to whom, according to Manx
+ superstition, her genealogy was to be traced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another idea sometimes occurred to Julian, though he rejected the
+ question, as being equally wild with those doubts which referred Fenella
+ to a race different from that of mortals&mdash;"Was she really afflicted
+ with those organical imperfections which had always seemed to sever her
+ from humanity?&mdash;If not, what could be the motives of so young a
+ creature practising so dreadful a penance for such an unremitted term of
+ years? And how formidable must be the strength of mind which could condemn
+ itself to so terrific a sacrifice&mdash;How deep and strong the purpose
+ for which it was undertaken!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a brief recollection of past events enabled him to dismiss this
+ conjecture as altogether wild and visionary. He had but to call to memory
+ the various stratagems practised by his light-hearted companion, the young
+ Earl of Derby, upon this forlorn girl&mdash;the conversations held in her
+ presence, in which the character of a creature so irritable and sensitive
+ upon all occasions, was freely, and sometimes satirically discussed,
+ without her expressing the least acquaintance with what was going forward,
+ to convince him that so deep a deception could never have been practised
+ for so many years, by a being of a turn of mind so peculiarly jealous and
+ irascible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He renounced, therefore, the idea, and turned his thoughts to his own
+ affairs, and his approaching interview with his Sovereign; in which
+ meditation we propose to leave him, until we briefly review the changes
+ which had taken place in the situation of Alice Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I fear the devil worst when gown and cassock,
+ Or, in the lack of them, old Calvin's cloak,
+ Conceals his cloven hoof.
+ &mdash;ANONYMOUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril had scarce set sail for Whitehaven, when Alice Bridgenorth
+ and her governante, at the hasty command of her father, were embarked with
+ equal speed and secrecy on board of a bark bound for Liverpool. Christian
+ accompanied them on their voyage, as the friend to whose guardianship
+ Alice was to be consigned during any future separation from her father,
+ and whose amusing conversation, joined to his pleasing though cold
+ manners, as well as his near relationship, induced Alice, in her forlorn
+ situation, to consider her fate as fortunate in having such a guardian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Liverpool, as the reader already knows, Christian took the first overt
+ step in the villainy which he had contrived against the innocent girl, by
+ exposing her at a meeting-house to the unhallowed gaze of Chiffinch, in
+ order to convince him she was possessed of such uncommon beauty as might
+ well deserve the infamous promotion to which they meditated to raise her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Highly satisfied with her personal appearance, Chiffinch was no less so
+ with the sense and delicacy of her conversation, when he met her in
+ company with her uncle afterwards in London. The simplicity, and at the
+ same time the spirit of her remarks, made him regard her as his scientific
+ attendant the cook might have done a newly invented sauce, sufficiently <i>piquante</i>
+ in its qualities to awaken the jaded appetite of a cloyed and gorged
+ epicure. She was, he said and swore, the very corner-stone on which, with
+ proper management, and with his instruction, a few honest fellows might
+ build a Court fortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the necessary introduction might take place, the confederates judged
+ fit she should be put under the charge of an experienced lady, whom some
+ called Mistress Chiffinch, and others Chiffinch's mistress&mdash;one of
+ those obliging creatures who are willing to discharge all the duties of a
+ wife, without the inconvenient and indissoluble ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was one, and not perhaps the least prejudicial consequence of the
+ license of that ill-governed time, that the bounds betwixt virtue and vice
+ were so far smoothed down and levelled, that the frail wife, or the tender
+ friend who was no wife, did not necessarily lose their place in society;
+ but, on the contrary, if they moved in the higher circles, were permitted
+ and encouraged to mingle with women whose rank was certain, and whose
+ reputation was untainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A regular <i>liaison</i>, like that of Chiffinch and his fair one,
+ inferred little scandal; and such was his influence, as prime minister of
+ his master's pleasures, that, as Charles himself expressed it, the lady
+ whom we introduced to our readers in the last chapter, had obtained a
+ brevet commission to rank as a married woman. And to do the gentle dame
+ justice, no wife could have been more attentive to forward his plans, or
+ more liberal in disposing of his income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She inhabited a set of apartments called Chiffinch's&mdash;the scene of
+ many an intrigue, both of love and politics; and where Charles often held
+ his private parties for the evening, when, as frequently happened, the
+ ill-humour of the Duchess of Portsmouth, his reigning Sultana, prevented
+ his supping with her. The hold which such an arrangement gave a man like
+ Chiffinch, used as he well knew how to use it, made him of too much
+ consequence to be slighted even by the first persons in the state, unless
+ they stood aloof from all manner of politics and Court intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the charge of Mistress Chiffinch, and of him whose name she bore,
+ Edward Christian placed the daughter of his sister, and of his confiding
+ friend, calmly contemplating her ruin as an event certain to follow; and
+ hoping to ground upon it his own chance of a more assured fortune, than a
+ life spent in intrigue had hitherto been able to procure for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The innocent Alice, without being able to discover what was wrong either
+ in the scenes of unusual luxury with which she was surrounded, or in the
+ manners of her hostess, which, both from nature and policy, were kind and
+ caressing&mdash;felt nevertheless an instinctive apprehension that all was
+ not right&mdash;a feeling in the human mind, allied, perhaps, to that
+ sense of danger which animals exhibit when placed in the vicinity of the
+ natural enemies of their race, and which makes birds cower when the hawk
+ is in the air, and beasts tremble when the tiger is abroad in the desert.
+ There was a heaviness at her heart which she could not dispel; and the few
+ hours which she had already spent at Chiffinch's were like those passed in
+ prison by one unconscious of the cause or event of his captivity. It was
+ the third morning after her arrival in London, that the scene took place
+ which we now recur to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impertinence and vulgarity of Empson, which was permitted to him as an
+ unrivalled performer upon his instrument, were exhausting themselves at
+ the expense of all other musical professors, and Mrs. Chiffinch was
+ listening with careless indifference, when some one was heard speaking
+ loudly, and with animation, in the inner apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, gemini and gilliflower water!" exclaimed the damsel, startled out of
+ her fine airs into her natural vulgarity of exclamation, and running to
+ the door of communication&mdash;"if he has not come back again after all!&mdash;and
+ if old Rowley&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tap at the farther and opposite door here arrested her attention&mdash;she
+ quitted the handle of that which she was about to open as speedily as if
+ it had burnt her fingers, and, moving back towards her couch, asked, "Who
+ is there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old Rowley himself, madam," said the King, entering the apartment with
+ his usual air of easy composure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O crimini!&mdash;your Majesty!&mdash;I thought&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I was out of hearing, doubtless," said the King; "and spoke of me as
+ folk speak of absent friends. Make no apology. I think I have heard ladies
+ say of their lace, that a rent is better than a darn.&mdash;Nay, be
+ seated.&mdash;Where is Chiffinch?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is down at York House, your Majesty," said the dame, recovering,
+ though with no small difficulty, the calm affectation of her usual
+ demeanour. "Shall I send your Majesty's commands?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will wait his return," said the King.&mdash;"Permit me to taste your
+ chocolate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is some fresh frothed in the office," said the lady; and using a
+ little silver call, or whistle, a black boy, superbly dressed, like an
+ Oriental page, with gold bracelets on his naked arms, and a gold collar
+ around his equally bare neck, attended with the favourite beverage of the
+ morning, in an apparatus of the richest china.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he sipped his cup of chocolate, the King looked round the apartment,
+ and observing Fenella, Peveril, and the musician, who remained standing
+ beside a large Indian screen, he continued, addressing Mistress Chiffinch,
+ though with polite indifference, "I sent you the fiddles this morning&mdash;or
+ rather the flute&mdash;Empson, and a fairy elf whom I met in the Park, who
+ dances divinely. She has brought us the very newest saraband from the
+ Court of Queen Mab, and I sent her here, that you may see it at leisure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty does me by far too much honour," said Chiffinch, her eyes
+ properly cast down, and her accents minced into becoming humility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, little Chiffinch," answered the King, in a tone of as contemptuous
+ familiarity as was consistent with his good-breeding, "it was not
+ altogether for thine own private ear, though quite deserving of all sweet
+ sounds; but I thought Nelly had been with thee this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can send Bajazet for her, your Majesty," answered the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, I will not trouble your little heathen sultan to go so far. Still it
+ strikes me that Chiffinch said you had company&mdash;some country cousin,
+ or such a matter&mdash;Is there not such a person?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a young person from the country," said Mistress Chiffinch,
+ striving to conceal a considerable portion of embarrassment; "but she is
+ unprepared for such an honour as to be admitted into your Majesty's
+ presence, and&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And therefore the fitter to receive it, Chiffinch. There is nothing in
+ nature so beautiful as the first blush of a little rustic between joy and
+ fear, and wonder and curiosity. It is the down on the peach&mdash;pity it
+ decays so soon!&mdash;the fruit remains, but the first high colouring and
+ exquisite flavour are gone.&mdash;Never put up thy lip for the matter,
+ Chiffinch, for it is as I tell you; so pray let us have <i>la belle
+ cousine</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mistress Chiffinch, more embarrassed than ever, again advanced towards the
+ door of communication, which she had been in the act of opening when his
+ Majesty entered. But just as she coughed pretty loudly, perhaps as a
+ signal to some one within, voices were again heard in a raised tone of
+ altercation&mdash;&mdash;the door was flung open, and Alice rushed out of
+ the inner apartment, followed to the door of it by the enterprising Duke
+ of Buckingham, who stood fixed with astonishment on finding his pursuit of
+ the flying fair one had hurried him into the presence of the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice Bridgenorth appeared too much transported with anger to permit her
+ to pay attention to the rank or character of the company into which she
+ had thus suddenly entered. "I remain no longer here, madam," she said to
+ Mrs. Chiffinch, in a tone of uncontrollable resolution; "I leave instantly
+ a house where I am exposed to company which I detest, and to solicitations
+ which I despise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dismayed Mrs. Chiffinch could only implore her, in broken whispers, to
+ be silent; adding, while she pointed to Charles, who stood with his eyes
+ fixed rather on his audacious courtier than on the game which he pursued,
+ "The King&mdash;the King!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I am in the King's presence," said Alice aloud, and in the same
+ torrent of passionate feeling, while her eye sparkled through tears of
+ resentment and insulted modesty, "it is the better&mdash;it is his
+ Majesty's duty to protect me; and on his protection I throw myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words, which were spoken aloud, and boldly, at once recalled Julian
+ to himself, who had hitherto stood, as it were, bewildered. He approached
+ Alice, and, whispering in her ear that she had beside her one who would
+ defend her with his life, implored her to trust to his guardianship in
+ this emergency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clinging to his arm in all the ecstasy of gratitude and joy, the spirit
+ which had so lately invigorated Alice in her own defence, gave way in a
+ flood of tears, when she saw herself supported by him whom perhaps she
+ most wished to recognise as her protector. She permitted Peveril gently to
+ draw her back towards the screen before which he had been standing; where,
+ holding by his arm, but at the same time endeavouring to conceal herself
+ behind him, they waited the conclusion of a scene so singular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King seemed at first so much surprised at the unexpected apparition of
+ the Duke of Buckingham, as to pay little or no attention to Alice, who had
+ been the means of thus unceremoniously introducing his Grace into the
+ presence at a most unsuitable moment. In that intriguing Court, it had not
+ been the first time that the Duke had ventured to enter the lists of
+ gallantry in rivalry of his Sovereign, which made the present insult the
+ more intolerable. His purpose of lying concealed in those private
+ apartments was explained by the exclamations of Alice; and Charles,
+ notwithstanding the placidity of his disposition, and his habitual guard
+ over his passions, resented the attempt to seduce his destined mistress,
+ as an Eastern Sultan would have done the insolence of a vizier, who
+ anticipated his intended purchases of captive beauty in the slave-market.
+ The swarthy features of Charles reddened, and the strong lines on his dark
+ visage seemed to become inflated, as he said, in a voice which faltered
+ with passion, "Buckingham, you dared not have thus insulted your equal! To
+ your master you may securely offer any affront, since his rank glues his
+ sword to the scabbard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The haughty Duke did not brook this taunt unanswered. "My sword," he said,
+ with emphasis, "was never in the scabbard, when your Majesty's service
+ required it should be unsheathed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace means, when its service was required for its master's
+ interest," said the King; "for you could only gain the coronet of a Duke
+ by fighting for the royal crown. But it is over&mdash;I have treated you
+ as a friend&mdash;a companion&mdash;almost an equal&mdash;you have repaid
+ me with insolence and ingratitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sire," answered the Duke firmly, but respectfully, "I am unhappy in your
+ displeasure; yet thus far fortunate, that while your words can confer
+ honour, they cannot impair or take it away.&mdash;It is hard," he added,
+ lowering his voice, so as only to be heard by the King,&mdash;"It is hard
+ that the squall of a peevish wench should cancel the services of so many
+ years!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is harder," said the King, in the same subdued tone, which both
+ preserved through the rest of the conversation, "that a wench's bright
+ eyes can make a nobleman forget the decencies due to his Sovereign's
+ privacy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May I presume to ask your Majesty what decencies are those?" said the
+ Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles bit his lip to keep himself from smiling. "Buckingham," he said,
+ "this is a foolish business; and we must not forget (as we have nearly
+ done), that we have an audience to witness this scene, and should walk the
+ stage with dignity. I will show you your fault in private."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is enough that your Majesty has been displeased, and that I have
+ unhappily been the occasion," said the Duke, kneeling; "although quite
+ ignorant of any purpose beyond a few words of gallantry; and I sue thus
+ low for your Majesty's pardon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he kneeled gracefully down. "Thou hast it, George," said the
+ placable Prince. "I believe thou wilt be sooner tired of offending than I
+ of forgiving."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Long may your Majesty live to give the offence, with which it is your
+ royal pleasure at present to charge my innocence," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What mean you by that, my lord?" said Charles, the angry shade returning
+ to his brow for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Liege," replied the Duke, "you are too honourable to deny your custom
+ of shooting with Cupid's bird-bolts in other men's warrens. You have ta'en
+ the royal right of free-forestry over every man's park. It is hard that
+ you should be so much displeased at hearing a chance arrow whizz near your
+ own pales."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more on't," said the King; "but let us see where the dove has
+ harboured."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Helen has found a Paris while we were quarrelling," replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rather an Orpheus," said the King; "and what is worse, one that is
+ already provided with a Eurydice&mdash;She is clinging to the fiddler."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is mere fright," said Buckingham, "like Rochester's, when he crept
+ into the bass-viol to hide himself from Sir Dermot O'Cleaver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must make the people show their talents," said the King, "and stop
+ their mouths with money and civility, or we shall have this foolish
+ encounter over half the town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King then approached Julian, and desired him to take his instrument,
+ and cause his female companion to perform a saraband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had already the honour to inform your Majesty," said Julian, "that I
+ cannot contribute to your pleasure in the way you command me; and that
+ this young person is&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A retainer of the Lady Powis," said the King, upon whose mind things not
+ connected with his pleasures made a very slight impression. "Poor lady,
+ she is in trouble about the lords in the Tower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, sir," said Julian, "she is a dependant of the Countess of
+ Derby."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, true," answered Charles; "it is indeed of Lady Derby, who hath also
+ her own distresses in these times. Do you know who taught the young person
+ to dance? Some of her steps mightily resemble Le Jeune's of Paris."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I presume she was taught abroad, sir," said Julian; "for myself, I am
+ charged with some weighty business by the Countess, which I would
+ willingly communicate to your Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We will send you to our Secretary of State," said the King. "But this
+ dancing envoy will oblige us once more, will she not?&mdash;Empson, now
+ that I remember, it was to your pipe that she danced&mdash;Strike up, man,
+ and put mettle into her feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Empson began to play a well-known measure; and, as he had threatened, made
+ more than one false note, until the King, whose ear was very accurate,
+ rebuked him with, "Sirrah, art thou drunk at this early hour, or must thou
+ too be playing thy slippery tricks with me? Thou thinkest thou art born to
+ beat time, but I will have time beat into thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hint was sufficient, and Empson took good care so to perform his air
+ as to merit his high and deserved reputation. But on Fenella it made not
+ the slightest impression. She rather leant than stood against the wall of
+ the apartment; her countenance as pale as death, her arms and hands
+ hanging down as if stiffened, and her existence only testified by the sobs
+ which agitated her bosom, and the tears which flowed from her half-closed
+ eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A plague on it," said the King, "some evil spirit is abroad this morning;
+ and the wenches are all bewitched, I think. Cheer up, my girl. What, in
+ the devil's name, has changed thee at once from a Nymph to a Niobe? If
+ thou standest there longer thou wilt grow to the very marble wall&mdash;Or&mdash;oddsfish,
+ George, have you been bird-bolting in this quarter also?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Buckingham could answer to this charge, Julian again kneeled down to
+ the King, and prayed to be heard, were it only for five minutes. "The
+ young woman," he said, "had been long in attendance of the Countess of
+ Derby. She was bereaved of the faculties of speech and hearing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oddsfish, man, and dances so well?" said the King. "Nay, all Gresham
+ College shall never make me believe that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would have thought it equally impossible, but for what I to-day
+ witnessed," said Julian; "but only permit me, sir, to deliver the petition
+ of my lady the Countess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who art thou thyself, man?" said the Sovereign; "for though
+ everything which wears bodice and breast-knot has a right to speak to a
+ King, and be answered, I know not that they have a title to audience
+ through an envoy extraordinary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am Julian Peveril of Derbyshire," answered the supplicant, "the son of
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, who&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Body of me&mdash;the old Worcester man?" said the King. "Oddsfish, I
+ remember him well&mdash;some harm has happened to him, I think&mdash;Is he
+ not dead, or very sick at least?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ill at ease, and it please your Majesty, but not ill in health. He has
+ been imprisoned on account of an alleged accession to this Plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look you there," said the King; "I knew he was in trouble; and yet how to
+ help the stout old Knight, I can hardly tell. I can scarce escape
+ suspicion of the Plot myself, though the principal object of it is to take
+ away my own life. Were I to stir to save a plotter, I should certainly be
+ brought in as an accessory.&mdash;Buckingham, thou hast some interest with
+ those who built this fine state engine, or at least who have driven it on&mdash;be
+ good-natured for once, though it is scarcely thy wont, and interfere to
+ shelter our old Worcester friend, Sir Godfrey. You have not forgot him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir," answered the Duke; "for I never heard the name."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is Sir Geoffrey his Majesty would say," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if his Majesty <i>did</i> say Sir Geoffrey, Master Peveril, I cannot
+ see of what use I can be to your father," replied the Duke coldly. "He is
+ accused of a heavy crime; and a British subject so accused, can have no
+ shelter either from prince or peer, but must stand to the award and
+ deliverance of God and his country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Heaven forgive thee thy hypocrisy, George," said the King hastily.
+ "I would rather hear the devil preach religion than thee teach patriotism.
+ Thou knowest as well as I, that the nation is in a scarlet fever for fear
+ of the poor Catholics, who are not two men to five hundred; and that the
+ public mind is so harassed with new narrations of conspiracy, and fresh
+ horrors every day, that people have as little real sense of what is just
+ or unjust as men who talk in their sleep of what is sense or nonsense. I
+ have borne, and borne with it&mdash;I have seen blood flow on the
+ scaffold, fearing to thwart the nation in its fury&mdash;and I pray to God
+ that I or mine be not called on to answer for it. I will no longer swim
+ with the torrent, which honour and conscience call upon me to stem&mdash;I
+ will act the part of a Sovereign, and save my people from doing injustice,
+ even in their own despite."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles walked hastily up and down the room as he expressed these unwonted
+ sentiments, with energy equally unwonted. After a momentary pause, the
+ Duke answered him gravely, "Spoken like a Royal King, sir, but&mdash;pardon
+ me&mdash;not like a King of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles paused, as the Duke spoke, beside a window which looked full on
+ Whitehall, and his eye was involuntarily attracted by the fatal window of
+ the Banqueting House out of which his unhappy father was conducted to
+ execution. Charles was naturally, or, more purposely, constitutionally
+ brave; but a life of pleasure, together with the habit of governing his
+ course rather by what was expedient than by what was right, rendered him
+ unapt to dare the same scene of danger or of martyrdom, which had closed
+ his father's life and reign; and the thought came over his half-formed
+ resolution, like the rain upon a kindling beacon. In another man, his
+ perplexity would have seemed almost ludicrous; but Charles would not lose,
+ even under these circumstances, the dignity and grace, which were as
+ natural to him as his indifference and good humour. "Our Council must
+ decide in this matter," he said, looking to the Duke; "and be assured,
+ young man," he added, addressing Julian, "your father shall not want an
+ intercessor in his King, so far as the laws will permit my interference in
+ his behalf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was about to retire, when Fenella, with a marked look, put into his
+ hand a slip of paper, on which she had hastily written, "The packet&mdash;give
+ him the packet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment's hesitation, during which he reflected that Fenella was
+ the organ of the Countess's pleasure, Julian resolved to obey. "Permit me,
+ then, Sire," he said, "to place in your royal hands this packet, entrusted
+ to me by the Countess of Derby. The letters have already been once taken
+ from me; and I have little hope that I can now deliver them as they are
+ addressed. I place them, therefore, in your royal hands, certain that they
+ will evince the innocence of the writer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King shook his head as he took the packet reluctantly. "It is no safe
+ office you have undertaken, young man. A messenger has sometimes his
+ throat cut for the sake of his despatches&mdash;But give them to me; and,
+ Chiffinch, give me wax and a taper." He employed himself in folding the
+ Countess's packet in another envelope. "Buckingham," he said, "you are
+ evidence that I do not read them till the Council shall see them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham approached, and offered his services in folding the parcel, but
+ Charles rejected his assistance; and having finished his task, he sealed
+ the packet with his own signet-ring. The Duke bit his lip and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now, young man," said the King, "your errand is sped, so far as it
+ can at present be forwarded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian bowed deeply, as to take leave at these words, which he rightly
+ interpreted as a signal for his departure. Alice Bridgenorth still clung
+ to his arm, and motioned to withdraw along with him. The King and
+ Buckingham looked at each other in conscious astonishment, and yet not
+ without a desire to smile, so strange did it seem to them that a prize,
+ for which, an instant before, they had been mutually contending, should
+ thus glide out of their grasp, or rather be borne off by a third and very
+ inferior competitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mistress Chiffinch," said the King, with a hesitation which he could not
+ disguise, "I hope your fair charge is not about to leave you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly not, your Majesty," answered Chiffinch. "Alice, my love&mdash;you
+ mistake&mdash;that opposite door leads to your apartments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, madam," answered Alice; "I have indeed mistaken my road, but
+ it was when I came hither."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The errant damosel," said Buckingham, looking at Charles with as much
+ intelligence as etiquette permitted him to throw into his eye, and then
+ turning it towards Alice, as she still held by Julian's arm, "is resolved
+ not to mistake her road a second time. She has chosen a sufficient guide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet stories tell that such guides have led maidens astray," said the
+ King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice blushed deeply, but instantly recovered her composure so soon as she
+ saw that her liberty was likely to depend upon the immediate exercise of
+ resolution. She quitted, from a sense of insulted delicacy, the arm of
+ Julian, to which she had hitherto clung; but as she spoke, she continued
+ to retain a slight grasp of his cloak. "I have indeed mistaken my way,"
+ she repeated still addressing Mrs. Chiffinch, "but it was when I crossed
+ this threshold. The usage to which I have been exposed in your house has
+ determined me to quit it instantly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will not permit that, my young mistress," answered Mrs. Chiffinch,
+ "until your uncle, who placed you under my care, shall relieve me of the
+ charge of you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will answer for my conduct, both to my uncle, and, what is of more
+ importance, to my father," said Alice. "You must permit me to depart,
+ madam; I am free-born, and you have no right to detain me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, my young madam," said Mistress Chiffinch, "I have a right, and
+ I will maintain it too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will know that before quitting this presence," said Alice firmly; and,
+ advancing a step or two, she dropped on her knee before the King. "Your
+ Majesty," said she, "if indeed I kneel before King Charles, is the father
+ of your subjects."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of a good many of them," said the Duke of Buckingham apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I demand protection of you, in the name of God, and of the oath your
+ Majesty swore when you placed on your head the crown of this kingdom!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have my protection," said the King, a little confused by an appeal so
+ unexpected and so solemn. "Do but remain quiet with this lady, with whom
+ your parents have placed you; neither Buckingham nor any one else shall
+ intrude on you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty," added Buckingham, in the same tone, and speaking from the
+ restless and mischief-making spirit of contradiction, which he never could
+ restrain, even when indulging it was most contrary, not only to propriety,
+ but to his own interest,&mdash;"His Majesty will protect you, fair lady,
+ from all intrusion save what must not be termed such."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alice darted a keen look on the Duke, as if to read his meaning; another
+ on Charles, to know whether she had guessed it rightly. There was a guilty
+ confession on the King's brow, which confirmed Alice's determination to
+ depart. "Your Majesty will forgive me," she said; "it is not here that I
+ can enjoy the advantage of your royal protection. I am resolved to leave
+ this house. If I am detained, it must be by violence, which I trust no one
+ dare offer to me in your Majesty's presence. This gentleman, whom I have
+ long known, will conduct me to my friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We make but an indifferent figure in this scene, methinks," said the
+ King, addressing the Duke of Buckingham, and speaking in a whisper; "but
+ she must go&mdash;I neither will, nor dare, stop her from returning to her
+ father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if she does," swore the Duke internally, "I would, as Sir Andrew
+ Smith saith, I might never touch fair lady's hand." And stepping back, he
+ spoke a few words with Empson the musician, who left the apartment, for a
+ few minutes, and presently returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King seemed irresolute concerning the part he should act under
+ circumstances so peculiar. To be foiled in a gallant intrigue, was to
+ subject himself to the ridicule of his gay court; to persist in it by any
+ means which approached to constraint, would have been tyrannical; and,
+ what perhaps he might judge as severe an imputation, it would have been
+ unbecoming a gentleman. "Upon my honour, young lady," he said, with an
+ emphasis, "you have nothing to fear in this house. But it is improper, for
+ your own sake, that you should leave it in this abrupt manner. If you will
+ have the goodness to wait but a quarter of an hour, Mistress Chiffinch's
+ coach will be placed at your command, to transport you where you will.
+ Spare yourself the ridicule, and me the pain of seeing you leave the house
+ of one of my servants, as if you were escaping from a prison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King spoke in good-natured sincerity, and Alice was inclined for an
+ instant to listen to his advice; but recollecting that she had to search
+ for her father and uncle, or, failing them, for some suitable place of
+ secure residence, it rushed on her mind that the attendants of Mistress
+ Chiffinch were not likely to prove trusty guides or assistants in such a
+ purpose. Firmly and respectfully she announced her purpose of instant
+ departure. She needed no other escort, she said, than what this gentleman,
+ Master Julian Peveril, who was well known to her father, would willingly
+ afford her; nor did she need that farther than until she had reached her
+ father's residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Farewell, then, lady, a God's name!" said the King; "I am sorry so much
+ beauty should be wedded to so many shrewish suspicions.&mdash;For you,
+ Master Peveril, I should have thought you had enough to do with your own
+ affairs without interfering with the humours of the fair sex. The duty of
+ conducting all strayed damsels into the right path is, as matters go in
+ this good city, rather too weighty an undertaking for your youth and
+ inexperience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, eager to conduct Alice from a place of which he began fully to
+ appreciate the perils, answered nothing to this taunt, but bowing
+ reverently, led her from the apartment. Her sudden appearance, and the
+ animated scene which followed, had entirely absorbed, for the moment, the
+ recollection of his father and of the Countess of Derby; and while the
+ dumb attendant of the latter remained in the room, a silent, and, as it
+ were, stunned spectator of all that had happened, Peveril had become, in
+ the predominating interest of Alice's critical situation, totally
+ forgetful of her presence. But no sooner had he left the room, without
+ noticing or attending to her, than Fenella, starting, as from a trance,
+ drew herself up, and looked wildly around, like one waking from a dream,
+ as if to assure herself that her companion was gone, and gone without
+ paying the slightest attention to her. She folded her hands together, and
+ cast her eyes upwards, with an expression of such agony as explained to
+ Charles (as he thought) what painful ideas were passing in her mind. "This
+ Peveril is a perfect pattern of successful perfidy, carrying off this
+ Queen of the Amazons, but he has left us, I think, a disconsolate Ariadne
+ in her place.&mdash;But weep not, my princess of pretty movements," he
+ said, addressing himself to Fenella; "if we cannot call in Bacchus to
+ console you, we will commit you to the care of Empson, who shall drink
+ with <i>Liber Pater</i> for a thousand pounds, and I will say done first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the King spoke these words, Fenella rushed past him with her wonted
+ rapidity of step, and, with much less courtesy than was due to the royal
+ presence, hurried downstairs, and out of the house, without attempting to
+ open any communication with the Monarch. He saw her abrupt departure with
+ more surprise than displeasure; and presently afterwards, bursting into a
+ fit of laughter, he said to the Duke, "Oddsfish, George, this young spark
+ might teach the best of us how to manage the wenches. I have had my own
+ experience, but I could never yet contrive either to win or lose them with
+ so little ceremony."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Experience, sir," replied the duke, "cannot be acquired without years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, George; and you would, I suppose, insinuate," said Charles, "that
+ the gallant who acquires it, loses as much in youth as he gains in art? I
+ defy your insinuation, George. You cannot overreach your master, old as
+ you think him, either in love or politics. You have not the secret <i>plumer
+ la poule sans la faire crier</i>, witness this morning's work. I will give
+ you odds at all games&mdash;ay, and at the Mall too, if thou darest accept
+ my challenge.&mdash;Chiffinch, what for dost thou convulse thy pretty
+ throat and face with sobbing and hatching tears, which seem rather
+ unwilling to make their appearance!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is for fear," whined Chiffinch, "that your Majesty should think&mdash;that
+ you should expect&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I should expect gratitude from a courtier, or faith from a woman?"
+ answered the King, patting her at the same time under the chin, to make
+ her raise her face&mdash;"Tush! chicken, I am not so superfluous."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There it is now," said Chiffinch, continuing to sob the more bitterly, as
+ she felt herself unable to produce any tears; "I see your Majesty is
+ determined to lay all the blame on me, when I am innocent as an unborn
+ babe&mdash;I will be judged by his Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt, no doubt, Chiffie," said the King. "His Grace and you will be
+ excellent judges in each other's cause, and as good witnesses in each
+ other's favour. But to investigate the matter impartially, we must examine
+ our evidence apart.&mdash;My Lord Duke, we meet at the Mall at noon, if
+ your Grace dare accept my challenge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Grace of Buckingham bowed, and retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But when the bully with assuming pace,
+ Cocks his broad hat, edged round with tarnish'd lace,
+ Yield not the way&mdash;defy his strutting pride,
+ And thrust him to the muddy kennel's side,
+ Yet rather bear the shower and toils of mud,
+ Than in the doubtful quarrel risk thy blood.
+ &mdash;GAY'S TRIVIA.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, half-leading, half-supporting, Alice Bridgenorth, had
+ reached the middle of Saint Jame's Street ere the doubt occurred to him
+ which way they should bend their course. He then asked Alice whither he
+ should conduct her, and learned, to his surprise and embarrassment, that,
+ far from knowing where her father was to be found, she had no certain
+ knowledge that he was in London, and only hoped that he had arrived, from
+ the expressions which he had used at parting. She mentioned her uncle
+ Christian's address, but it was with doubt and hesitation, arising from
+ the hands in which he had already placed her; and her reluctance to go
+ again under his protection was strongly confirmed by her youthful guide,
+ when a few words had established to his conviction the identity of
+ Ganlesse and Christian.&mdash;What then was to be done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alice," said Julian, after a moment's reflection, "you must seek your
+ earliest and best friend&mdash;I mean my mother. She has now no castle in
+ which to receive you&mdash;she has but a miserable lodging, so near the
+ jail in which my father is confined, that it seems almost a cell of the
+ same prison. I have not seen her since my coming hither; but thus much
+ have I learned by inquiry. We will now go to her apartment; such as it is,
+ I know she will share it with one so innocent and so unprotected as you
+ are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious Heaven!" said the poor girl, "am I then so totally deserted,
+ that I must throw myself on the mercy of her who, of all the world, has
+ most reason to spurn me from her?&mdash;Julian, can you advise me to this?&mdash;Is
+ there none else who will afford me a few hours' refuge, till I can hear
+ from my father?&mdash;No other protectress but her whose ruin has, I fear,
+ been accelerated by&mdash;&mdash;Julian, I dare not appear before your
+ mother! she must hate me for my family, and despise me for my meanness. To
+ be a second time cast on her protection, when the first has been so evil
+ repaid&mdash;Julian, I dare not go with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She has never ceased to love you, Alice," said her conductor, whose steps
+ she continued to attend, even while declaring her resolution not to go
+ with him, "she never felt anything but kindness towards you, nay, towards
+ your father; for though his dealings with us have been harsh, she can
+ allow much for the provocation which he has received. Believe me, with her
+ you will be safe as with a mother&mdash;perhaps it may be the means of
+ reconciling the divisions by which we have suffered so much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Might God grant it!" said Alice. "Yet how shall I face your mother? And
+ will she be able to protect me against these powerful men&mdash;against my
+ uncle Christian? Alas, that I must call him my worst enemy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She has the ascendancy which honour hath over infamy, and virtue over
+ vice," said Julian; "and to no human power but your father's will she
+ resign you, if you consent to choose her for your protectress. Come, then,
+ with me, Alice; and&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was interrupted by some one, who, laying an unceremonious hold of
+ his cloak, pulled it with so much force as compelled him to stop and lay
+ his hand on his sword. He turned at the same time, and, when he turned,
+ beheld Fenella. The cheek of the mute glowed like fire; her eyes sparkled,
+ and her lips were forcibly drawn together, as if she had difficulty to
+ repress those wild screams which usually attended her agonies of passion,
+ and which, uttered in the open street, must instantly have collected a
+ crowd. As it was, her appearance was so singular, and her emotion so
+ evident, that men gazed as they came on, and looked back after they had
+ passed, at the singular vivacity of her gestures; while, holding Peveril's
+ cloak with one hand, she made with the other the most eager and imperious
+ signs that he should leave Alice Bridgenorth and follow her. She touched
+ the plume in her bonnet to remind him of the Earl&mdash;pointed to her
+ heart, to imitate the Countess&mdash;raised her closed hand, as if to
+ command him in their name&mdash;and next moment folded both, as if to
+ supplicate him in her own; while pointing to Alice with an expression at
+ once of angry and scornful derision, she waved her hand repeatedly and
+ disdainfully, to intimate that Peveril ought to cast her off, as something
+ undeserving his protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frightened, she knew not why, at these wild gestures, Alice clung closer
+ to Julian's arm than she had at first dared to do; and this mark of
+ confidence in his protection seemed to increase the passion of Fenella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was dreadfully embarrassed; his situation was sufficiently
+ precarious, even before Fenella's ungovernable passions threatened to ruin
+ the only plan which he had been able to suggest. What she wanted with him&mdash;how
+ far the fate of the Earl and Countess might depend on his following her,
+ he could not even conjecture; but be the call how peremptory soever, he
+ resolved not to comply with it until he had seen Alice placed in safety.
+ In the meantime, he determined not to lose sight of Fenella; and
+ disregarding her repeated, disdainful, and impetuous rejection of the hand
+ which he offered her, he at length seemed so far to have soothed her, that
+ she seized upon his right arm, and, as if despairing of his following <i>her</i>
+ path, appeared reconciled to attend him on that which he himself should
+ choose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, with a youthful female clinging to each arm, and both remarkably
+ calculated to attract the public eye, though from very different reasons,
+ Julian resolved to make the shortest road to the water-side, and there to
+ take boat for Blackfriars, as the nearest point of landing to Newgate,
+ where he concluded that Lance had already announced his arrival in London
+ to Sir Geoffrey, then inhabiting that dismal region, and to his lady, who,
+ so far as the jailer's rigour permitted, shared and softened his
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian's embarrassment in passing Charing Cross and Northumberland House
+ was so great as to excite the attention of the passengers; for he had to
+ compose his steps so as to moderate the unequal and rapid pace of Fenella
+ to the timid and faint progress of his left-hand companion; and while it
+ would have been needless to address himself to the former, who could not
+ comprehend him, he dared not speak himself to Alice, for fear of awakening
+ into frenzy the jealousy, or at least the impatience of Fenella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many passengers looked at them with wonder, and some with smiles; but
+ Julian remarked that there were two who never lost sight of them, and to
+ whom his situation, and the demeanour of his companions, seemed to afford
+ matter of undisguised merriment. These were young men, such as may be seen
+ in the same precincts in the present day, allowing for the difference in
+ the fashion of their apparel. They abounded in periwig, and fluttered with
+ many hundred yards of ribbon, disposed in bow-knots upon their sleeves,
+ their breeches, and their waistcoats, in the very extremity of the
+ existing mode. A quantity of lace and embroidery made their habits rather
+ fine than tasteful. In a word, they were dressed in that caricature of the
+ fashion, which sometimes denotes a harebrained man of quality who has a
+ mind to be distinguished as a fop of the first order, but is much more
+ frequently in the disguise of those who desire to be esteemed men of rank
+ on account of their dress, having no other pretension to the distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These two gallants passed Peveril more than once, linked arm in arm, then
+ sauntered, so as to oblige him to pass them in turn, laughing and
+ whispering during these manoeuvres&mdash;staring broadly at Peveril and
+ his female companions&mdash;and affording them, as they came into contact,
+ none of those facilities of giving place which are required on such
+ occasions by the ordinary rules of the pavé.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril did not immediately observe their impertinence; but when it was
+ too gross to escape his notice, his gall began to arise; and, in addition
+ to all the other embarrassments of his situation, he had to combat the
+ longing desire which he felt to cudgel handsomely the two coxcombs who
+ seemed thus determined on insulting him. Patience and sufferance were
+ indeed strongly imposed on him by circumstances; but at length it became
+ scarcely possible to observe their dictates any longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, for the third time, Julian found himself obliged, with his
+ companions, to pass this troublesome brace of fops, they kept walking
+ close behind him, speaking so loud as to be heard, and in a tone of
+ perfect indifference whether he listened to them or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is bumpkin's best luck," said the taller of the two (who was indeed
+ a man of remarkable size, alluding to the plainness of Peveril's dress,
+ which was scarce fit for the streets of London)&mdash;"Two such fine
+ wenches, and under guard of a grey frock and an oaken riding-rod!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Puritan's luck rather, and more than enough of it," said his
+ companion. "You may read Puritan in his pace and in his patience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Right as a pint bumper, Tom," said his friend&mdash;"Isschar is an ass
+ that stoopeth between two burdens."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a mind to ease long-eared Laurence of one of his encumbrances,"
+ said the shorter fellow. "That black-eyed sparkler looks as if she had a
+ mind to run away from him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay," answered the taller, "and the blue-eyed trembler looks as if she
+ would fall behind into my loving arms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At these words, Alice, holding still closer by Peveril's arm than
+ formerly, mended her pace almost to running, in order to escape from men
+ whose language was so alarming; and Fenella walked hastily forward in the
+ same manner, having perhaps caught, from the men's gestures and demeanour,
+ that apprehension which Alice had taken from their language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fearful of the consequences of a fray in the streets, which must
+ necessarily separate him from these unprotected females, Peveril
+ endeavoured to compound betwixt the prudence necessary for their
+ protection and his own rising resentment; and as this troublesome pair of
+ attendants endeavoured again to pass them close to Hungerford Stairs, he
+ said to them with constrained calmness, "Gentlemen, I owe you something
+ for the attention you have bestowed on the affairs of a stranger. If you
+ have any pretension to the name I have given you, you will tell me where
+ you are to be found."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And with what purpose," said the taller of the two sneeringly, "does your
+ most rustic gravity, or your most grave rusticity, require of us such
+ information?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, they both faced about, in such a manner as to make it
+ impossible for Julian to advance any farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make for the stairs, Alice," he said; "I will be with you in an instant."
+ Then freeing himself with difficulty from the grasp of his companions, he
+ cast his cloak hastily round his left arm, and said, sternly, to his
+ opponents, "Will you give me your names, sirs; or will you be pleased to
+ make way?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not till we know for whom we are to give place," said one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For one who will else teach you what you want&mdash;good manners," said
+ Peveril, and advanced as if to push between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They separated, but one of them stretched forth his foot before Peveril,
+ as if he meant to trip him. The blood of his ancestors was already boiling
+ within him; he struck the man on the face with the oaken rod which he had
+ just sneered at, and throwing it from him, instantly unsheathed his sword.
+ Both the others drew, and pushed at once; but he caught the point of the
+ one rapier in his cloak, and parried the other thrust with his own weapon.
+ He must have been less lucky in the second close, but a cry arose among
+ the watermen, of "Shame, shame! two upon one!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are men of the Duke of Buckingham's," said one fellow&mdash;"there's
+ no safe meddling with them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They may be the devil's men, if they will," said an ancient Triton,
+ flourishing his stretcher; "but I say fair play, and old England for ever;
+ and, I say, knock the gold-laced puppies down, unless they will fight turn
+ about with grey jerkin, like honest fellows. One down&mdash;t'other come
+ on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lower orders of London have in all times been remarkable for the
+ delight which they have taken in club-law, or fist-law; and for the equity
+ and impartiality with which they see it administered. The noble science of
+ defence was then so generally known, that a bout at single rapier excited
+ at that time as much interest and as little wonder as a boxing-match in
+ our own days. The bystanders experienced in such affrays, presently formed
+ a ring, within which Peveril and the taller and more forward of his
+ antagonists were soon engaged in close combat with their swords, whilst
+ the other, overawed by the spectators, was prevented from interfering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well done the tall fellow!"&mdash;"Well thrust, long-legs!'&mdash;"Huzza
+ for two ells and a quarter!" were the sounds with which the fray was at
+ first cheered; for Peveril's opponent not only showed great activity and
+ skill in fence, but had also a decided advantage, from the anxiety with
+ which Julian looked out for Alice Bridgenorth; the care for whose safety
+ diverted him in the beginning of the onset from that which he ought to
+ have exclusively bestowed on the defence of his own life. A slight
+ flesh-wound in the side at once punished, and warned him of, his
+ inadvertence; when, turning his whole thoughts on the business in which he
+ was engaged, and animated with anger against his impertinent intruder, the
+ rencontre speedily began to assume another face, amidst cries of "Well
+ done, grey jerkin!"&mdash;"Try the metal of his gold doublet!"&mdash;"Finely
+ thrust!"&mdash;"Curiously parried!"&mdash;"There went another eyelet-hole
+ to his broidered jerkin!"&mdash;"Fairly pinked, by G&mdash;d!" In
+ applause, accompanying a successful and conclusive lunge, by which Peveril
+ ran his gigantic antagonist through the body. He looked at his prostrate
+ foe for a moment; then, recovering himself, called loudly to know what had
+ become of the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind the lady, if you be wise," said one of the watermen; "the
+ constable will be here in an instant. I'll give your honour a cast across
+ the water in a moment. It may be as much as your neck's worth. Shall only
+ charge a Jacobus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You be d&mdash;d!" said one of his rivals in profession, "as your father
+ was before you; for a Jacobus, I'll set the gentleman into Alsatia, where
+ neither bailiff nor constable dare trespass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The lady, you scoundrels, the lady!" exclaimed Peveril&mdash;-"Where is
+ the lady?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll carry your honour where you shall have enough of ladies, if that be
+ your want," said the old Triton; and as he spoke, the clamour amongst the
+ watermen was renewed, each hoping to cut his own profit out of the
+ emergency of Julian's situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A sculler will be least suspected, your honour," said one fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A pair of oars will carry you through the water like a wild-duck," said
+ another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you have got never a tilt, brother," said a third. "Now I can put the
+ gentleman as snug as if he were under hatches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of the oaths and clamour attending this aquatic controversy
+ for his custom, Peveril at length made them understand that he would
+ bestow a Jacobus, not on him whose boat was first oars, but on whomsoever
+ should inform him of the fate of the lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of which lady?" said a sharp fellow: "for, to my thought, there was a
+ pair of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of both, of both," answered Peveril; "but first, of the fair-haired
+ lady?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay, that was she that shrieked so when gold-jacket's companion handed
+ her into No. 20."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who&mdash;what&mdash;who dared to hand her?" exclaimed Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, master, you have heard enough of my tale without a fee," said the
+ waterman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sordid rascal!" said Peveril, giving him a gold piece, "speak out, or
+ I'll run my sword through you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the matter of that, master," answered the fellow, "not while I can
+ handle this trunnion&mdash;but a bargain's a bargain; and so I'll tell
+ you, for your gold piece, that the comrade of the fellow forced one of
+ your wenches, her with the fair hair, will she, nill she, into Tickling
+ Tom's wherry; and they are far enough up Thames by this time, with wind
+ and tide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sacred Heaven, and I stand here!" exclaimed Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, that is because your honour will not take a boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right, my friend&mdash;a boat&mdash;a boat instantly!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Follow me, then, squire.&mdash;Here, Tom, bear a hand&mdash;the gentleman
+ is our fare."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A volley of water language was exchanged betwixt the successful candidate
+ for Peveril's custom and his disappointed brethren, which concluded by the
+ ancient Triton's bellowing out, in a tone above them all, "that the
+ gentleman was in a fair way to make a voyage to the isle of gulls, for
+ that sly Jack was only bantering him&mdash;No. 20 had rowed for York
+ Buildings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the isle of gallows," cried another; "for here comes one who will mar
+ his trip up Thames, and carry him down to Execution Dock."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In fact, as he spoke the word, a constable, with three or four of his
+ assistants, armed with the old-fashioned brown bills, which were still
+ used for arming those guardians of the peace, cut off our hero's farther
+ progress to the water's edge, by arresting him in the King's name. To
+ attempt resistance would have been madness, as he was surrounded on all
+ sides; so Peveril was disarmed, and carried before the nearest Justice of
+ the Peace, for examination and committal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The legal sage before whom Julian was taken was a man very honest in his
+ intentions, very bounded in his talents, and rather timid in his
+ disposition. Before the general alarm given to England, and to the city of
+ London in particular, by the notable discovery of the Popish Plot, Master
+ Maulstatute had taken serene and undisturbed pride and pleasure in the
+ discharge of his duties as a Justice of the Peace, with the exercise of
+ all its honorary privileges and awful authority. But the murder of Sir
+ Edmondsbury Godfrey had made a strong, nay, an indelible impression on his
+ mind; and he walked the Courts of Themis with fear and trembling after
+ that memorable and melancholy event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having a high idea of his official importance, and rather an exalted
+ notion of his personal consequence, his honour saw nothing from that time
+ but cords and daggers before his eyes, and never stepped out of his own
+ house, which he fortified, and in some measure garrisoned, with
+ half-a-dozen tall watchmen and constables, without seeing himself watched
+ by a Papist in disguise, with a drawn sword under his cloak. It was even
+ whispered, that, in the agonies of his fears, the worshipful Master
+ Maulstatute mistook the kitchen-wench with a tinderbox, for a Jesuit with
+ a pistol; but if any one dared to laugh at such an error, he would have
+ done well to conceal his mirth, lest he fell under the heavy inculpation
+ of being a banterer and stifler of the Plot&mdash;a crime almost as deep
+ as that of being himself a plotter. In fact, the fears of the honest
+ Justice, however ridiculously exorbitant, were kept so much in countenance
+ by the outcry of the day, and the general nervous fever, which afflicted
+ every good Protestant, that Master Maulstatute was accounted the bolder
+ man and the better magistrate, while, under the terror of the air-drawn
+ dagger which fancy placed continually before his eyes, he continued to
+ dole forth Justice in the recesses of his private chamber, nay,
+ occasionally to attend Quarter-Sessions, when the hall was guarded by a
+ sufficient body of the militia. Such was the wight, at whose door, well
+ chained and doubly bolted, the constable who had Julian in custody now
+ gave his important and well-known knock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this official signal, the party was not admitted until the
+ clerk, who acted the part of high-warder, had reconnoitred them through a
+ grated wicket; for who could say whether the Papists might not have made
+ themselves master of Master Constable's sign, and have prepared a pseudo
+ watch to burst in and murder the Justice, under pretence of bringing in a
+ criminal before him?&mdash;Less hopeful projects had figured in the
+ Narrative of the Popish Plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All being found right, the key was turned, the bolts were drawn, and the
+ chain unhooked, so as to permit entrance to the constable, the prisoner,
+ and the assistants; and the door was then a suddenly shut against the
+ witnesses, who, as less trustworthy persons, were requested (through the
+ wicket) to remain in the yard, until they should be called in their
+ respective turns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Julian been inclined for mirth, as was far from being the case, he
+ must have smiled at the incongruity of the clerk's apparel, who had belted
+ over his black buckram suit a buff baldric, sustaining a broadsword, and a
+ pair of huge horse-pistols; and, instead of the low flat hat, which,
+ coming in place of the city cap, completed the dress of a scrivener, had
+ placed on his greasy locks a rusted steel-cap, which had seen
+ Marston-Moor; across which projected his well-used quill, in the guise of
+ a plume&mdash;the shape of the morion not admitting of its being stuck, as
+ usual, behind his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This whimsical figure conducted the constable, his assistants, and the
+ prisoner, into the low hall, where his principal dealt forth justice; who
+ presented an appearance still more singular than that of his dependant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sundry good Protestants, who thought so highly of themselves as to suppose
+ they were worthy to be distinguished as objects of Catholic cruelty, had
+ taken to defensive arms on the occasion. But it was quickly found that a
+ breast-plate and back-plate of proof, fastened together with iron clasps,
+ was no convenient enclosure for a man who meant to eat venison and
+ custard; and that a buff-coat or shirt of mail was scarcely more
+ accommodating to the exertions necessary on such active occasions.
+ Besides, there were other objections, as the alarming and menacing aspects
+ which such warlike habiliments gave to the Exchange, and other places,
+ where merchants most do congregate; and excoriations were bitterly
+ complained of by many, who, not belonging to the artillery company, or
+ trained bands, had no experience in bearing defensive armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To obviate these objections, and, at the same time, to secure the persons
+ of all true Protestant citizens against open force or privy assassinations
+ on the part of the Papists, some ingenious artist, belonging, we may
+ presume, to the worshipful Mercers' Company, had contrived a species of
+ armour, of which neither the horse-armory in the Tower, nor Gwynnap's
+ Gothic Hall, no, nor Dr. Meyrick's invaluable collection of ancient arms,
+ has preserved any specimen. It was called silk-armour, being composed of a
+ doublet and breeches of quilted silk, so closely stitched, and of such
+ thickness, as to be proof against either bullet or steel; while a thick
+ bonnet of the same materials, with ear-flaps attached to it, and on the
+ whole, much resembling a nightcap, completed the equipment and ascertained
+ the security of the wearer from the head to the knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Master Maulstatute, among other worthy citizens, had adopted this singular
+ panoply, which had the advantage of being soft, and warm, and flexible, as
+ well as safe. And he now sat in his judicial elbow-chair&mdash;a short,
+ rotund figure, hung round, as it were, with cushions, for such was the
+ appearance of the quilted garments; and with a nose protruded from under
+ the silken casque, the size of which, together with the unwieldiness of
+ the whole figure, gave his worship no indifferent resemblance to the sign
+ of the Hog in Armour, which was considerably improved by the defensive
+ garment being of dusty orange colour, not altogether unlike the hue of
+ those half-wild swine which are to be found in the forest of Hampshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secure in these invulnerable envelopments, his worship had rested content,
+ although severed from his own death-doing weapons, of rapier, poniard, and
+ pistols, which were placed nevertheless, at no great distance from his
+ chair. One offensive implement, indeed, he thought it prudent to keep on
+ the table beside his huge Coke upon Lyttleton. This was a sort of pocket
+ flail, consisting of a piece of strong ash, about eighteen inches long, to
+ which was attached a swinging club of <i>lignum-vitæ</i>, nearly twice as
+ long as the handle, but jointed so as to be easily folded up. This
+ instrument, which bore at that time the singular name of the Protestant
+ flail, might be concealed under the coat, until circumstances demanded its
+ public appearance. A better precaution against surprise than his arms,
+ whether offensive or defensive, was a strong iron grating, which, crossing
+ the room in front of the justice's table, and communicating by a grated
+ door, which was usually kept locked, effectually separated the accused
+ party from his judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice Maulstatute, such as we have described him, chose to hear the
+ accusation of the witnesses before calling on Peveril for his defence. The
+ detail of the affray was briefly given by the bystanders, and seemed
+ deeply to touch the spirit of the examinator. He shook his silken casque
+ emphatically, when he understood that, after some language betwixt the
+ parties, which the witnesses did not quite understand, the young man in
+ custody struck the first blow, and drew his sword before the wounded party
+ had unsheathed his weapon. Again he shook his crested head yet more
+ solemnly, when the result of the conflict was known; and yet again, when
+ one of the witnesses declared, that, to the best of his knowledge, the
+ sufferer in the fray was a gentleman belonging to the household of his
+ Grace the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A worthy peer," quoth the armed magistrate&mdash;"a true Protestant, and
+ a friend to his country. Mercy on us, to what a height of audacity hath
+ this age arisen! We see well, and could, were we as blind as a mole, out
+ of what quiver this shaft hath been drawn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then put on his spectacles, and having desired Julian to be brought
+ forward, he glared upon him awfully with those glazen eyes, from under the
+ shade of his quilted turban.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So young," he said, "and so hardened&mdash;lack-a-day!&mdash;and a
+ Papist, I'll warrant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril had time enough to recollect the necessity of his being at large,
+ if he could possibly obtain his freedom, and interposed here a civil
+ contradiction of his worship's gracious supposition. "He was no Catholic,"
+ he said, "but an unworthy member of the Church of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps but a lukewarm Protestant, notwithstanding," said the sage
+ Justice; "there are those amongst us who ride tantivy to Rome, and have
+ already made out half the journey&mdash;ahem!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril disowned his being any such.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who art thou, then?" said the Justice; "for, friend, to tell you
+ plainly, I like not your visage&mdash;ahem!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These short and emphatic coughs were accompanied each by a succinct nod,
+ intimating the perfect conviction of the speaker that he had made the
+ best, the wisest, and the most acute observation, of which the premises
+ admitted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, irritated by the whole circumstances of his detention, answered
+ the Justice's interrogation in rather a lofty tone. "My name is Julian
+ Peveril!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Heaven be around us!" said the terrified Justice&mdash;"the son of
+ that black-hearted Papist and traitor, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, now in hands,
+ and on the verge of trial!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, sir!" exclaimed Julian, forgetting his situation, and, stepping
+ forward to the grating, with a violence which made the bars clatter, he so
+ startled the appalled Justice, that, snatching his Protestant flail,
+ Master Maulstatute aimed a blow at his prisoner, to repel what he
+ apprehended was a premeditated attack. But whether it was owing to the
+ Justice's hurry of mind, or inexperience in managing the weapon, he not
+ only missed his aim, but brought the swinging part of the machine round
+ his own skull, with such a severe counter-buff, as completely to try the
+ efficacy of his cushioned helmet, and, in spite of its defence, to convey
+ a stunning sensation, which he rather hastily imputed to the consequence
+ of a blow received from Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His assistants did not directly confirm the opinion which the Justice had
+ so unwarrantably adopted; but all with one voice agreed that, but for
+ their own active and instantaneous interference, there was no knowing what
+ mischief might have been done by a person so dangerous as the prisoner.
+ The general opinion that he meant to proceed in the matter of his own
+ rescue, <i>par voie du fait</i>, was indeed so deeply impressed on all
+ present, that Julian saw it would be in vain to offer any defence,
+ especially being but too conscious that the alarming and probably the
+ fatal consequences of his rencontre with the bully, rendered his
+ commitment inevitable. He contented himself with asking into what prison
+ he was to be thrown; and when the formidable word Newgate was returned as
+ full answer, he had at least the satisfaction to reflect, that, stern and
+ dangerous as was the shelter of that roof, he should at least enjoy it in
+ company with his father; and that, by some means or other, they might
+ perhaps obtain the satisfaction of a melancholy meeting, under the
+ circumstances of mutual calamity, which seemed impending over their house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assuming the virtue of more patience than he actually possessed, Julian
+ gave the magistrate (to whom all the mildness of his demeanour could not,
+ however, reconcile him), the direction to the house where he lodged,
+ together with a request that his servant, Lance Outram, might be permitted
+ to send him his money and wearing apparel; adding, that all which might be
+ in his possession, either of arms or writings,&mdash;the former amounting
+ to a pair of travelling pistols, and the last to a few memoranda of little
+ consequence, he willingly consented to place at the disposal of the
+ magistrate. It was in that moment that he entertained, with sincere
+ satisfaction, the comforting reflection, that the important papers of Lady
+ Derby were already in the possession of the sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Justice promised attention to his requests; but reminded him, with
+ great dignity, that his present complacent and submissive behaviour ought,
+ for his own sake, to have been adopted from the beginning, instead of
+ disturbing the presence of magistracy with such atrocious marks of the
+ malignant, rebellious, and murderous spirit of Popery, as he had at first
+ exhibited. "Yet," he said, "as he was a goodly young man, and of
+ honourable quality, he would not suffer him to be dragged through the
+ streets as a felon, but had ordered a coach for his accommodation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His honour, Master Maulstatute, uttered the word "coach" with the
+ importance of one who, as Dr. Johnson saith of later date, is conscious of
+ the dignity of putting horses to his chariot. The worshipful Master
+ Maulstatute did not, however on this occasion, do Julian the honour of
+ yoking to his huge family caroche the two "frampal jades" (to use the term
+ of the period), which were wont to drag that ark to the meeting house of
+ pure and precious Master Howlaglass, on a Thursday's evening for lecture,
+ and on a Sunday for a four-hours' sermon. He had recourse to a leathern
+ convenience, then more rare, but just introduced, with every prospect of
+ the great facility which has since been afforded by hackney coaches, to
+ all manner of communication, honest and dishonest, legal and illegal. Our
+ friend Julian, hitherto much more accustomed to the saddle than to any
+ other conveyance, soon found himself in a hackney carriage, with the
+ constable and two assistants for his companions, armed up to the teeth&mdash;the
+ port of destination being, as they had already intimated, the ancient
+ fortress of Newgate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Tis the black ban-dog of our jail&mdash;Pray look on him,
+ But at a wary distance&mdash;rouse him not&mdash;
+ He bays not till he worries.
+ &mdash;THE BLACK DOG OF NEWGATE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The coach stopped before those tremendous gates, which resemble those of
+ Tartarus, save only that they rather more frequently permit safe and
+ honourable egress; although at the price of the same anxiety and labour
+ with which Hercules, and one or two of the demi-gods, extricated
+ themselves from the Hell of the ancient mythology, and sometimes, it is
+ said, by the assistance of the golden boughs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian stepped out of the vehicle, carefully supported on either side by
+ his companions, and also by one or two turnkeys, whom the first summons of
+ the deep bell at the gate had called to their assistance. That attention,
+ it may be guessed, was not bestowed lest he should make a false step, so
+ much as for fear of his attempting an escape, of which he had no
+ intentions. A few prentices and straggling boys of the neighbouring
+ market, which derived considerable advantage from increase of custom, in
+ consequence of the numerous committals on account of the Popish Plot, and
+ who therefore were zealous of Protestants, saluted him on his descent with
+ jubilee shouts of "Whoop, Papist! whoop, Papist! D&mdash;&mdash;n to the
+ Pope, and all his adherents!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under such auspices, Peveril was ushered in beneath that gloomy gateway,
+ where so many bid adieu on their entrance at once to honour and to life.
+ The dark and dismal arch under which he soon found himself opened upon a
+ large courtyard, where a number of debtors were employed in playing at
+ handball, pitch-and-toss, hustle-cap, and other games, for which
+ relaxations the rigour of their creditors afforded them full leisure,
+ while it debarred them the means of pursuing the honest labour by which
+ they might have redeemed their affairs, and maintained their starving and
+ beggared families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But with this careless and desperate group Julian was not to be numbered,
+ being led, or rather forced, by his conductors, into a low arched door,
+ which, carefully secured by bolts and bars, opened for his reception on
+ one side of the archway, and closed, with all its fastenings, the moment
+ after his hasty entrance. He was then conducted along two or three gloomy
+ passages, which, where they intersected each other, were guarded by as
+ many strong wickets, one of iron gates, and the others of stout oak,
+ clinched with plates, and studded with nails of the same metal. He was not
+ allowed to pause until he found himself hurried into a little round
+ vaulted room, which several of these passages opened into, and which
+ seemed, with respect to the labyrinth through part of which he had passed,
+ to resemble the central point of a spider's web, in which the main lines
+ of that reptile's curious maze are always found to terminate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The resemblance did not end here; for in this small vaulted apartment, the
+ walls of which were hung round with musketoons, pistols, cutlasses, and
+ other weapons, as well as with many sets of fetters and irons of different
+ construction, all disposed in great order, and ready for employment, a
+ person sat, who might not unaptly be compared to a huge bloated and
+ bottled spider, placed there to secure the prey which had fallen into his
+ toils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This official had originally been a very strong and square-built man, of
+ large size, but was now so overgrown, from overfeeding, perhaps, and want
+ of exercise, as to bear the same resemblance to his former self which a
+ stall-fed ox still retains to a wild bull. The look of no man is so
+ inauspicious as a fat man, upon whose features ill-nature has marked an
+ habitual stamp. He seems to have reversed the old proverb of "laugh and be
+ fat," and to have thriven under the influence of the worst affections of
+ the mind. Passionate we can allow a jolly mortal to be; but it seems
+ unnatural to his goodly case to be sulky and brutal. Now this man's
+ features, surly and tallow-coloured; his limbs, swelled and
+ disproportioned; his huge paunch and unwieldy carcass, suggested the idea,
+ that, having once found his way into this central recess, he had there
+ fattened, like the weasel in the fable, and fed largely and foully, until
+ he had become incapable of retreating through any of the narrow paths that
+ terminated at his cell; and was thus compelled to remain, like a toad
+ under the cold stone, fattening amid the squalid airs of the dungeons by
+ which he was surrounded, which would have proved pestiferous to any other
+ than such a congenial inhabitant. Huge iron-clasped books lay before this
+ ominous specimen of pinguitude&mdash;the records of the realm of misery,
+ in which office he officiated as prime minister; and had Peveril come
+ thither as an unconcerned visitor, his heart would have sunk within him at
+ considering the mass of human wretchedness which must needs be registered
+ in these fatal volumes. But his own distresses sat too heavy on his mind
+ to permit any general reflections of this nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The constable and this bulky official whispered together, after the former
+ had delivered to the latter the warrant of Julian's commitment. The word
+ <i>whispered</i> is not quite accurate, for their communication was
+ carried on less by words than by looks and expressive signs; by which, in
+ all such situations, men learn to supply the use of language, and to add
+ mystery to what is in itself sufficiently terrible to the captive. The
+ only words which could be heard were those of the Warden, or, as he was
+ called then, the Captain of the Jail, "Another bird to the cage&mdash;&mdash;?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who will whistle 'Pretty Pope of Rome,' with any starling in your
+ Knight's ward," answered the constable, with a facetious air, checked,
+ however, by the due respect to the supreme presence in which he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Grim Feature relaxed into something like a smile as he heard the
+ officer's observation; but instantly composing himself into the stern
+ solemnity which for an instant had been disturbed, he looked fiercely at
+ his new guest, and pronounced with an awful and emphatic, yet rather an
+ under-voice, the single and impressive word, "<i>Garnish!</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril replied with assumed composure; for he had heard of the
+ customs of such places, and was resolved to comply with them, so as if
+ possible to obtain the favour of seeing his father, which he shrewdly
+ guessed must depend on his gratifying the avarice of the keeper. "I am
+ quite ready," he said, "to accede to the customs of the place in which I
+ unhappily find myself. You have but to name your demands, and I will
+ satisfy them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he drew out his purse, thinking himself at the same time
+ fortunate that he had retained about him a considerable sum of gold. The
+ Captain remarked its width, depth, its extension, and depression, with an
+ involuntary smile, which had scarce contorted his hanging under-lip, and
+ the wiry and greasy moustache which thatched the upper, when it was
+ checked by the recollection that there were regulations which set bounds
+ to his rapacity, and prevented him from pouncing on his prey like a kite,
+ and swooping it all off at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This chilling reflection produced the following sullen reply to Peveril:&mdash;"There
+ were sundry rates. Gentlemen must choose for themselves. He asked nothing
+ but his fees. But civility," he muttered, "must be paid for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And shall, if I can have it for payment," said Peveril; "but the price,
+ my good sir, the price?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke with some degree of scorn, which he was the less anxious to
+ repress, that he saw, even in this jail, his purse gave him an indirect
+ but powerful influence over his jailer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain seemed to feel the same; for, as he spoke, he plucked from his
+ head, almost involuntarily, a sort of scalded fur-cap, which served it for
+ covering. But his fingers revolting from so unusual an act of
+ complaisance, began to indemnify themselves by scratching his grizzly
+ shock-head, as he muttered, in a tone resembling the softened growling of
+ a mastiff when he has ceased to bay the intruder who shows no fear of him,&mdash;"There
+ are different rates. There is the Little Ease, for common fees of the
+ crown&mdash;rather dark, and the common sewer runs below it; and some
+ gentlemen object to the company, who are chiefly padders and michers. Then
+ the Master's side&mdash;the garnish came to one piece&mdash;and none lay
+ stowed there but who were in for murder at the least."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Name your highest price, sir, and take it," was Julian's concise reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three pieces for the Knight's ward," answered the governor of this
+ terrestrial Tartarus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take five, and place me with Sir Geoffrey," was again Julian's answer,
+ throwing down the money upon the desk before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey?&mdash;Hum!&mdash;ay, Sir Geoffrey," said the jailer, as if
+ meditating what he ought to do. "Well, many a man has paid money to see
+ Sir Geoffrey&mdash;Scarce so much as you have, though. But then you are
+ like to see the last of him.&mdash;Ha, ha ha!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These broken muttered exclamations, which terminated somewhat like the
+ joyous growl of a tiger over his meal, Julian could not comprehend; and
+ only replied to by repeating his request to be placed in the same cell
+ with Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, master," said the jailer, "never fear; I'll keep word with you, as
+ you seem to know something of what belongs to your station and mine. And
+ hark ye, Jem Clink will fetch you the darbies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Derby!" interrupted Julian,&mdash;"Has the Earl or Countess&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Earl or Countess!&mdash;Ha, ha, ha!" again laughed, or rather growled,
+ the warden. "What is your head running on? You are a high fellow belike!
+ but all is one here. The darbies are the fetlocks&mdash;the fast-keepers,
+ my boy&mdash;the bail for good behaviour, my darling; and if you are not
+ the more conforming, I can add you a steel nightcap, and a curious
+ bosom-friend, to keep you warm of a winter night. But don't be
+ disheartened; you have behaved genteel; and you shall not be put upon. And
+ as for this here matter, ten to one it will turn out chance-medley, or
+ manslaughter, at the worst on it; and then it is but a singed thumb
+ instead of a twisted neck&mdash;always if there be no Papistry about it,
+ for then I warrant nothing.&mdash;Take the gentleman's worship away,
+ Clink."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A turnkey, who was one of the party that had ushered Peveril into the
+ presence of this Cerberus, now conveyed him out in silence; and, under his
+ guidance, the prisoner was carried through a second labyrinth of passages
+ with cells opening on each side, to that which was destined for his
+ reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the road through this sad region, the turnkey more than once
+ ejaculated, "Why, the gentleman must be stark-mad! Could have had the best
+ crown cell to himself for less than half the garnish, and must pay double
+ to pig in with Sir Geoffrey! Ha, ha!&mdash;Is Sir Geoffrey akin to you, if
+ any one may make free to ask?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am his son," answered Peveril sternly, in hopes to impose some curb on
+ the fellow's impertinence; but the man only laughed louder than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His son!&mdash;Why, that's best of all&mdash;Why, you are a strapping
+ youth&mdash;five feet ten, if you be an inch&mdash;and Sir Geoffrey's son!&mdash;Ha,
+ ha, ha!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Truce with your impertinence," said Julian. "My situation gives you no
+ title to insult me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more I do," said the turnkey, smothering his mirth at the
+ recollection, perhaps, that the prisoner's purse was not exhausted. "I
+ only laughed because you said you were Sir Geoffrey's son. But no matter&mdash;'tis
+ a wise child that knows his own father. And here is Sir Geoffrey's cell;
+ so you and he may settle the fatherhood between you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he ushered his prisoner into a cell, or rather a strong room of
+ the better order, in which there were four chairs, a truckle-bed, and one
+ or two other articles of furniture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian looked eagerly around for his father; but to his surprise the room
+ appeared totally empty. He turned with anger on the turnkey, and charged
+ him with misleading him; but the fellow answered, "No, no, master; I have
+ kept faith with you. Your father, if you call him so, is only tappiced in
+ some corner. A small hole will hide him; but I'll rouse him out presently
+ for you.&mdash;Here, hoicks!&mdash;Turn out, Sir Geoffrey!&mdash;Here is&mdash;Ha,
+ ha, ha!&mdash;your son&mdash;or your wife's son&mdash;for I think you have
+ but little share in him&mdash;come to wait on you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril knew not how to resent the man's insolence; and indeed his
+ anxiety, and apprehension of some strange mistake, mingled with, and in
+ some degree neutralised his anger. He looked again and again, around and
+ around the room; until at length he became aware of something rolled up in
+ a dark corner, which rather resembled a small bundle of crimson cloth than
+ any living creature. At the vociferation of the turnkey, however, the
+ object seemed to acquire life and motion, uncoiled itself in some degree,
+ and, after an effort or two, gained an erect posture; still covered from
+ top to toe with the crimson drapery in which it was at first wrapped.
+ Julian, at the first glance, imagined from the size that he saw a child of
+ five years old; but a shrill and peculiar tone of voice soon assured him
+ of his mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Warder," said this unearthly sound, "what is the meaning of this
+ disturbance? Have you more insults to heap on the head of one who hath
+ ever been the butt of fortune's malice? But I have a soul that can wrestle
+ with all my misfortunes; it is as large as any of your bodies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Sir Geoffrey, if this be the way you welcome your own son!" said the
+ turnkey; "but you quality folks know your own ways best."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My son!" exclaimed the little figure. "Audacious&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is some strange mistake," said Peveril, in the same breath. "I
+ sought Sir Geoffrey&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you have him before you, young man," said the pigmy tenant of the
+ cell, with an air of dignity; at the same time casting on the floor his
+ crimson cloak, and standing before them in his full dignity of three feet
+ six inches of height. "I who was the favoured servant of three successive
+ Sovereigns of the Crown of England, am now the tenant of this dungeon, and
+ the sport of its brutal keepers. I am Sir Geoffrey Hudson."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, though he had never before seen this important personage, had no
+ difficulty in recognising, from description, the celebrated dwarf of
+ Henrietta Maria, who had survived the dangers of civil war and private
+ quarrel&mdash;the murder of his royal master, Charles I., and the exile of
+ his widow&mdash;to fall upon evil tongues and evil days, amidst the
+ unsparing accusations connected with the Popish Plot. He bowed to the
+ unhappy old man, and hastened to explain to him, and to the turnkey, that
+ it was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, of Martindale Castle in Derbyshire whose
+ prison he desired to share.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You should have said that before you parted with the gold-dust, my
+ master," answered the turnkey; "for t'other Sir Geoffrey, that is the big,
+ tall, grey-haired man, was sent to the Tower last night; and the Captain
+ will think he has kept his word well enow with you, by lodging you with
+ this here Sir Geoffrey Hudson, who is the better show of the two."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray you go to your master," said Peveril; "explain the mistake; and
+ say to him I beg to be sent to the Tower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Tower!&mdash;Ha, ha, ha!" exclaimed the fellow. "The Tower is for
+ lords and knights, and not for squires of low degree&mdash;for high
+ treason, and not for ruffing on the streets with rapier and dagger; and
+ there must go a secretary's warrant to send you there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At least, let me not be a burden on this gentleman," said Julian. "There
+ can be no use in quartering us together, since we are not even acquainted.
+ Go tell your master of the mistake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, so I should," said Clink, still grinning, "if I were not sure that
+ he knew it already. You paid to be sent to Sir Geoffrey, and he sent you
+ to Sir Geoffrey. You are so put down in the register, and he will blot it
+ for no man. Come, come, be comfortable, and you shall have light and easy
+ irons&mdash;that's all I can do for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resistance and expostulation being out of the question, Peveril submitted
+ to have a light pair of fetters secured on his ankles, which allowed him,
+ nevertheless, the power of traversing the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this operation, he reflected that the jailer, who had taken the
+ advantage of the equivoque betwixt the two Sir Geoffreys, must have acted
+ as his assistant had hinted, and cheated him from malice prepense, since
+ the warrant of committal described him as the son of Sir Geoffrey Peveril.
+ It was therefore in vain, as well as degrading, to make farther
+ application to such a man on the subject. Julian determined to submit to
+ his fate, as what could not be averted by any effort of his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the turnkey was moved in some degree by his youth, good mien, and the
+ patience with which, after the first effervescence of disappointment, the
+ new prisoner resigned himself to his situation. "You seem a brave young
+ gentleman," he said; "and shall at least have a good dinner, and as good a
+ pallet to sleep on, as is within the walls of Newgate.&mdash;&mdash;And,
+ Master Sir Geoffrey, you ought to make much of him, since you do not like
+ tall fellows; for I can tell you that Master Peveril is in for pinking
+ long Jack Jenkins, that was the Master of Defence&mdash;as tall a man as
+ in London, always excepting the King's Porter, Master Evans, that carried
+ you about in his pocket, Sir Geoffrey, as all the world heard tell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Begone, fellow!" answered the dwarf. "Fellow, I scorn you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The turnkey sneered, withdrew, and locked the door behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Degenerate youth, and not of Tydeus' kind,
+ Whose little body lodged a mighty mind.
+ &mdash;ILIAD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Left quiet at least, if not alone, for the first time after the events of
+ this troubled and varied day, Julian threw himself on an old oaken seat,
+ beside the embers of a sea-coal fire, and began to muse on the miserable
+ situation of anxiety and danger in which he was placed; where, whether he
+ contemplated the interests of his love, his family affections, or his
+ friendships, all seemed such a prospect as that of a sailor who looks upon
+ breakers on every hand, from the deck of a vessel which no longer obeys
+ the helm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Peveril sat sunk in despondency, his companion in misfortune drew a
+ chair to the opposite side of the chimney-corner, and began to gaze at him
+ with a sort of solemn earnestness, which at length compelled him, though
+ almost in spite of himself, to pay some attention to the singular figure
+ who seemed so much engrossed with contemplating him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson (we drop occasionally the title of knighthood, which the
+ King had bestowed on him in a frolic, but which might introduce some
+ confusion into our history), although a dwarf of the least possible size,
+ had nothing positively ugly in his countenance, or actually distorted in
+ his limbs. His head, hands, and feet were indeed large, and
+ disproportioned to the height of his body, and his body itself much
+ thicker than was consistent with symmetry, but in a degree which was
+ rather ludicrous than disagreeable to look upon. His countenance, in
+ particular, had he been a little taller, would have been accounted, in
+ youth, handsome, and now, in age, striking and expressive; it was but the
+ uncommon disproportion betwixt the head and the trunk which made the
+ features seem whimsical and bizarre&mdash;an effect which was considerably
+ increased by the dwarf's moustaches, which it was his pleasure to wear so
+ large, that they almost twisted back amongst, and mingled with, his
+ grizzled hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dress of this singular wight announced that he was not entirely free
+ from the unhappy taste which frequently induces those whom nature has
+ marked by personal deformity, to distinguish, and at the same time to
+ render themselves ridiculous, by the use of showy colours, and garments
+ fantastically and extraordinarily fashioned. But poor Geoffrey Hudson's
+ laces, embroideries, and the rest of his finery, were sorely worn and
+ tarnished by the time which he had spent in jail, under the vague and
+ malicious accusation that he was somehow or other an accomplice in this
+ all-involving, all-devouring whirlpool of a Popish conspiracy&mdash;an
+ impeachment which, if pronounced by a mouth the foulest and most
+ malicious, was at that time sufficiently predominant to sully the fairest
+ reputation. It will presently appear, that in the poor man's manner of
+ thinking, and tone of conversation, there was something analogous to his
+ absurd fashion of apparel; for, as in the latter, good stuff and valuable
+ decorations were rendered ludicrous by the fantastic fashion in which they
+ were made up; so, such glimmerings of good sense and honourable feeling as
+ the little man often evinced, were made ridiculous by a restless desire to
+ assume certain airs of importance, and a great jealousy of being despised,
+ on account of the peculiarity of his outward form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the fellow-prisoners had looked at each other for some time in
+ silence, the dwarf, conscious of his dignity as first owner of their joint
+ apartment, thought it necessary to do the honours of it to the new-comer.
+ "Sir," he said, modifying the alternate harsh and squeaking tones of his
+ voice into accents as harmonious as they could attain, "I understand you
+ to be the son of my worthy namesake, and ancient acquaintance, the stout
+ Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak. I promise you, I have seen your father
+ where blows have been going more plenty than gold pieces; and for a tall
+ heavy man, who lacked, as we martialists thought, some of the lightness
+ and activity of our more slightly made Cavaliers, he performed his duty as
+ a man might desire. I am happy to see you, his son; and, though by a
+ mistake, I am glad we are to share this comfortless cabin together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian bowed, and thanked his courtesy; and Geoffrey Hudson, having broken
+ the ice, preceded to question him without further ceremony. "You are no
+ courtier, I presume, young gentleman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian replied in the negative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought so," continued the dwarf; "for although I have now no official
+ duty at Court, the region in which my early years were spent, and where I
+ once held a considerable office, yet I still, when I had my liberty,
+ visited the Presence from time to time, as in duty bound for former
+ service; and am wont, from old habit, to take some note of the courtly
+ gallants, those choice spirits of the age, among whom I was once enrolled.
+ You are, not to compliment you, a marked figure, Master Peveril&mdash;though
+ something of the tallest, as was your father's case; I think, I could
+ scarce have seen you anywhere without remembering you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril thought he might, with great justice, have returned the
+ compliment, but contented himself with saying, "he had scarce seen the
+ British Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tis pity," said Hudson; "a gallant can hardly be formed without
+ frequenting it. But you have been perhaps in a rougher school; you have
+ served, doubtless?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Maker, I hope," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fie on it, you mistake. I meant," said Hudson, "<i>á la François</i>,&mdash;you
+ have served in the army?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No. I have not yet had that honour," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! neither courtier nor soldier, Master Peveril?" said the important
+ little man: "your father is to blame. By cock and pie he is, Master
+ Peveril! How shall a man be known, or distinguished, unless by his bearing
+ in peace and war? I tell you, sir, that at Newberry, where I charged with
+ my troop abreast with Prince Rupert, and when, as you may have heard, we
+ were both beaten off by those cuckoldly hinds the Trained Bands of London,&mdash;we
+ did what men could; and I think it was a matter of three or four minutes
+ after most of our gentlemen had been driven off, that his Highness and I
+ continued to cut at their long pikes with our swords; and I think might
+ have broken in, but that I had a tall, long-legged brute of a horse, and
+ my sword was somewhat short,&mdash;in fine, at last we were obliged to
+ make volte-face, and then, as I was going to say, the fellows were so glad
+ to get rid of us, that they set up a great jubilee cry of 'There goes
+ Prince Robin and Cock Robin!'&mdash;Ay, ay, every scoundrel among them
+ knew me well. But those days are over.&mdash;And where were you educated,
+ young gentleman?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril named the household of the Countess of Derby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A most honourable lady, upon my word as a gentleman," said Hudson.&mdash;"I
+ knew the noble Countess well when I was about the person of my royal
+ mistress, Henrietta Maria. She was then the very muster of all that was
+ noble, loyal, and lovely. She was, indeed, one of the fifteen fair ones of
+ the Court, whom I permitted to call me Piccoluomini&mdash;a foolish jest
+ on my somewhat diminutive figure, which always distinguished me from
+ ordinary beings, even when I was young&mdash;I have now lost much stature
+ by stooping; but, always the ladies had their jest at me.&mdash;Perhaps,
+ young man, I had my own amends of some of them somewhere, and somehow or
+ other&mdash;I <i>say</i> nothing if I had or no; far less do I insinuate
+ disrespect to the noble Countess. She was daughter of the Duc de la
+ Tremouille, or, more correctly, des Thouars. But certainly to serve the
+ ladies, and condescend to their humours, even when somewhat too free, or
+ too fantastic, is the true decorum of gentle blood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Depressed as his spirits were, Peveril could scarce forbear smiling when
+ he looked at the pigmy creature, who told these stories with infinite
+ complacency, and appeared disposed to proclaim, as his own herald, that he
+ had been a very model of valour and gallantry, though love and arms seemed
+ to be pursuits totally irreconcilable to his shrivelled, weather-beaten
+ countenance, and wasted limbs. Julian was, however, so careful to avoid
+ giving his companion pain, that he endeavoured to humour him, by saying,
+ that, "unquestionably, one bred up like Sir Geoffrey Hudson, in court and
+ camps, knew exactly when to suffer personal freedoms, and when to control
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Knight, with great vivacity, though with some difficulty, began
+ to drag his seat from the side of the fire opposite to that where Julian
+ was seated, and at length succeeded in bringing it near him, in token of
+ increasing cordiality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You say well, Master Peveril," said the dwarf; "and I have given proofs
+ both of bearing and forbearing. Yes, sir, there was not that thing which
+ my most royal mistress, Henrietta Maria, could have required of me, that I
+ would not have complied with, sir; I was her sworn servant, both in war
+ and in festival, in battle and pageant, sir. At her Majesty's particular
+ request, I once condescended to become&mdash;ladies, you know, have
+ strange fancies&mdash;to become the tenant, for a time, of the interior of
+ a pie."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of a pie?" said Julian, somewhat amazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir, of a pie. I hope you find nothing risible in my complaisance?"
+ replied his companion, something jealously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not I, sir," said Peveril; "I have other matters than laughter in my head
+ at present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So had I," said the dwarfish champion, "when I found myself imprisoned in
+ a huge platter, of no ordinary dimensions you may be assured, since I
+ could lie at length in it, and when I was entombed, as it were, in walls
+ of standing crust, and a huge cover of pastry, the whole constituting a
+ sort of sarcophagus, of size enough to have recorded the epitaph of a
+ general officer or an archbishop on the lid. Sir, notwithstanding the
+ conveniences which were made to give me air, it was more like being buried
+ alive than aught else which I could think of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I conceive it, sir," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover, sir," continued the dwarf, "there were few in the secret, which
+ was contrived for the Queen's divertisement; for advancing of which I
+ would have crept into a filbert nut, had it been possible; and few, as I
+ said, being private in the scheme, there was a risk of accidents. I
+ doubted, while in my darksome abode, whether some awkward attendant might
+ not have let me fall, as I have seen happen to a venison pasty; or whether
+ some hungry guest might not anticipate the moment of my resurrection, by
+ sticking his knife into my upper crust. And though I had my weapons about
+ me, young man, as has been my custom in every case of peril, yet, if such
+ a rash person had plunged deep into the bowels of the supposed pasty, my
+ sword and dagger could barely have served me to avenge, assuredly not to
+ prevent, either of these catastrophes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly I do so understand it," said Julian, who began, however, to
+ feel that the company of little Hudson, talkative as he showed himself,
+ was likely rather to aggravate than to alleviate the inconveniences of a
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," continued the little man, enlarging on his former topic, "I had
+ other subjects of apprehension; for it pleased my Lord of Buckingham, his
+ Grace's father who now bears the title, in his plenitude of Court favour,
+ to command the pasty to be carried down to the office, and committed anew
+ to the oven, alleging preposterously that it was better to be eaten warm
+ than cold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And did this, sir, not disturb your equanimity?" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My young friend," said Geoffrey Hudson, "I cannot deny it.&mdash;Nature
+ will claim her rights from the best and boldest of us.&mdash;I thought of
+ Nebuchadnezzar and his fiery furnace; and I waxed warm with apprehension.&mdash;But,
+ I thank Heaven, I also thought of my sworn duty to my royal mistress; and
+ was thereby obliged and enabled to resist all temptations to make myself
+ prematurely known. Nevertheless, the Duke&mdash;if of malice, may Heaven
+ forgive him&mdash;followed down into the office himself, and urged the
+ master-cook very hard that the pasty should be heated, were it but for
+ five minutes. But the master-cook, being privy to the very different
+ intentions of my royal mistress, did most manfully resist the order; and I
+ was again reconveyed in safety to the royal table."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And in due time liberated from your confinement, I doubt not?" said
+ Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir; that happy, and I may say, glorious moment, at length arrived,"
+ continued the dwarf. "The upper crust was removed&mdash;I started up to
+ the sound of trumpet and clarion, like the soul of a warrior when the last
+ summons shall sound&mdash;or rather (if that simile be over audacious),
+ like a spell-bound champion relieved from his enchanted state. It was then
+ that, with my buckler on my arm, and my trusty Bilboa in my hand, I
+ executed a sort of warlike dance, in which my skill and agility then
+ rendered me pre-eminent, displaying, at the same time my postures, both of
+ defence and offence, in a manner so totally inimitable, that I was almost
+ deafened with the applause of all around me, and half-drowned by the
+ scented waters with which the ladies of the Court deluged me from their
+ casting bottles. I had amends of his Grace of Buckingham also; for as I
+ tripped a hasty morris hither and thither upon the dining-table, now
+ offering my blade, now recovering it, I made a blow at his nose&mdash;a
+ sort of estramaçon&mdash;the dexterity of which consists in coming mighty
+ near to the object you seem to aim at, yet not attaining it. You may have
+ seen a barber make such a flourish with his razor. I promise you his Grace
+ sprung back a half-yard at least. He was pleased to threaten to brain me
+ with a chicken-bone, as he disdainfully expressed it; but the King said,
+ 'George, you have but a Rowland for an Oliver.' And so I tripped on,
+ showing a bold heedlessness of his displeasure, which few dared to have
+ done at that time, albeit countenanced to the utmost like me by the smiles
+ of the brave and the fair. But, well-a-day! sir, youth, its fashions, its
+ follies, its frolics, and all its pomp and pride, are as idle and
+ transitory as the crackling of thorns under a pot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The flower that is cast into the oven were a better simile," thought
+ Peveril. "Good God, that a man should live to regret not being young
+ enough to be still treated as baked meat, and served up in a pie!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His companion, whose tongue had for many days been as closely imprisoned
+ as his person, seemed resolved to indemnify his loquacity, by continuing
+ to indulge it on the present occasion at his companion's expense. He
+ proceeded, therefore, in a solemn tone, to moralise on the adventure which
+ he had narrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young men will no doubt think one to be envied," he said, "who was thus
+ enabled to be the darling and admiration of the Court"&mdash;(Julian
+ internally stood self-exculpated from the suspicion)&mdash;"and yet it is
+ better to possess fewer means of distinction, and remain free from the
+ backbiting, the slander, and the odium, which are always the share of
+ Court favour. Men who had no other cause, cast reflections upon me because
+ my size varied somewhat from the common proportion; and jests were
+ sometimes unthinkingly passed upon me by those I was bound to, who did not
+ in that case, peradventure, sufficiently consider that the wren is made by
+ the same hand which formed the bustard, and that the diamond, though small
+ in size, out-values ten thousand-fold the rude granite. Nevertheless, they
+ proceeded in the vein of humour; and as I could not in duty or gratitude
+ retort upon nobles and princes, I was compelled to cast about in my mind
+ how to vindicate my honour towards those, who, being in the same rank with
+ myself, as servants and courtiers, nevertheless bore themselves towards me
+ as if they were of a superior class in the rank of honour, as well as in
+ the accidental circumstance of stature. And as a lesson to my own pride,
+ and that of others, it so happened, that the pageant which I have but just
+ narrated&mdash;which I justly reckon the most honourable moment of my
+ life, excepting perhaps my distinguished share in the battle of
+ Round-way-down&mdash;became the cause of a most tragic event, in which I
+ acknowledge the greatest misfortune of my existence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf here paused, fetched a sigh, big at once with regret, and with
+ the importance becoming the subject of a tragic history; then proceeded as
+ follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would have thought in your simplicity, young gentleman, that the
+ pretty pageant I have mentioned could only have been quoted to my
+ advantage, as a rare masking frolic, prettily devised, and not less deftly
+ executed; and yet the malice of the courtiers, who maligned and envied me,
+ made them strain their wit, and exhaust their ingenuity, in putting false
+ and ridiculous constructions upon it. In short, my ears were so much
+ offended with allusions to pies, puff-paste, ovens, and the like, that I
+ was compelled to prohibit such subject of mirth, under penalty of my
+ instant and severe displeasure. But it happ'd there was then a gallant
+ about the Court, a man of good quality, son to a knight baronet, and in
+ high esteem with the best in that sphere, also a familiar friend of mine
+ own, from whom, therefore, I had no reason to expect any of that species
+ of gibing which I had intimated my purpose to treat as offensive. Howbeit,
+ it pleased the Honourable Mr. Crofts, so was this youth called and
+ designed, one night, at the Groom Porter's being full of wine and waggery,
+ to introduce this threadbare subject, and to say something concerning a
+ goose-pie, which I could not but consider as levelled at me. Nevertheless,
+ I did but calmly and solidly pray him to choose a different subject;
+ failing which, I let him know I should be sudden in my resentment.
+ Notwithstanding, he continued in the same tone, and even aggravated the
+ offence, by speaking of a tomtit, and other unnecessary and obnoxious
+ comparisons; whereupon I was compelled to send him a cartel, and we met
+ accordingly. Now, as I really loved the youth, it was my intention only to
+ correct him by a flesh wound or two; and I would willingly that he had
+ named the sword for his weapon. Nevertheless, he made pistols his
+ election; and being on horseback, he produced by way of his own weapon, a
+ foolish engine, which children are wont, in their roguery, to use for
+ spouting water; a&mdash;a&mdash;in short, I forget the name."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A squirt, doubtless," said Peveril, who began to recollect having heard
+ something of this adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right," said the dwarf; "you have indeed the name of the little
+ engine, of which I have had experience in passing the yards at
+ Westminster.&mdash;Well, sir, this token of slight regard compelled me to
+ give the gentleman such language, as soon rendered it necessary for him to
+ make more serious arms. We fought on horseback&mdash;breaking ground, and
+ advancing by signal; and, as I never miss aim, I had the misadventure to
+ kill the Honourable Master Crofts at the first shot. I would not wish my
+ worst foe the pain which I felt, when I saw him reel on his saddle, and so
+ fall down to the earth!&mdash;and, when I perceived that the life-blood
+ was pouring fast, I could not but wish to Heaven that it had been my own
+ instead of his. Thus fell youth, hopes, and bravery, a sacrifice to a
+ silly and thoughtless jest; yet, alas! wherein had I choice, seeing that
+ honour is, as it were, the very breath in our nostrils; and that in no
+ sense can we be said to live, if we permit ourselves to be deprived of
+ it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of feeling in which the dwarfish hero concluded his story, gave
+ Julian a better opinion of his heart, and even of his understanding, than
+ he had been able to form of one who gloried in having, upon a grand
+ occasion, formed the contents of a pasty. He was indeed enabled to
+ conjecture that the little champion was seduced into such exhibitions, by
+ the necessity attached to his condition, by his own vanity, and by the
+ flattery bestowed on him by those who sought pleasure in practical jokes.
+ The fate of the unlucky Master Crofts, however, as well as various
+ exploits of this diminutive person during the Civil Wars, in which he
+ actually, and with great gallantry, commanded a troop of horse, rendered
+ most men cautious of openly rallying him; which was indeed the less
+ necessary, as, when left alone, he seldom failed voluntarily to show
+ himself on the ludicrous side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At one hour after noon, the turnkey, true to his word, supplied the
+ prisoners with a very tolerable dinner and a flask of well-flavoured
+ though light claret; which the old man, who was something of a bon-vivant,
+ regretted to observe, was nearly as diminutive as himself. The evening
+ also passed away, but not without continued symptoms of garrulity on the
+ part of Geoffrey Hudson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true these were of a graver character than he had hitherto
+ exhibited, for when the flask was empty, he repeated a long Latin prayer.
+ But the religious act in which he had been engaged, only gave his
+ discourse a more serious turn than belonged to his former themes, of war,
+ lady's love, and courtly splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little Knight harangued, at first on polemical points of divinity, and
+ diverged from this thorny path, into the neighbouring and twilight walk of
+ mysticism. He talked of secret warnings&mdash;of the predictions of
+ sad-eyed prophets&mdash;of the visits of monitory spirits, and the
+ Rosicrucian secrets of the Cabala; all which topics he treated of with
+ such apparent conviction, nay, with so many appeals to personal
+ experience, that one would have supposed him a member of the fraternity of
+ gnomes, or fairies, whom he resembled so much in point of size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, he persevered for a stricken hour in such a torrent of
+ unnecessary tattle, as determined Peveril, at all events, to endeavour to
+ procure a separate lodging. Having repeated his evening prayers in Latin,
+ as formerly (for the old gentleman was a Catholic, which was the sole
+ cause of his falling under suspicion), he set off on a new score, as they
+ were undressing, and continued to prattle until he had fairly talked both
+ himself and his companion to sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Of airy tongues that syllable men's names.
+ &mdash;COMUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Julian had fallen asleep, with his brain rather filled with his own sad
+ reflections, than with the mystical lore of the little Knight; and yet it
+ seemed as if in his visions the latter had been more present to his mind
+ than the former.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dreamed of gliding spirits, gibbering phantoms, bloody hands, which,
+ dimly seen by twilight, seemed to beckon him forward like errant-knight on
+ sad adventure bound. More than once he started from his sleep, so lively
+ was the influence of these visions on his imagination; and he always
+ awaked under the impression that some one stood by his bedside. The
+ chillness of his ankles, the weight and clatter of the fetters, as he
+ turned himself on his pallet, reminded him on these occasions where he
+ was, and under what circumstances. The extremity to which he saw all that
+ was dear to him at present reduced, struck a deeper cold on his heart than
+ the iron upon his limbs; nor could he compose himself again to rest
+ without a mental prayer to Heaven for protection. But when he had been for
+ a third time awakened from repose by these thick-stirring fancies, his
+ distress of mind vented itself in speech, and he was unable to suppress
+ the almost despairing ejaculation, "God have mercy upon us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen!" answered a voice as sweet and "soft as honey dew," which sounded
+ as if the words were spoken close by his bedside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natural inference was, that Geoffrey Hudson, his companion in
+ calamity, had echoed the prayer which was so proper to the situation of
+ both. But the tone of voice was so different from the harsh and dissonant
+ sounds of the dwarf's enunciation, that Peveril was impressed with the
+ certainty it could not proceed from Hudson. He was struck with involuntary
+ terror, for which he could give no sufficient reason; and it was not
+ without an effort that he was able to utter the question, "Sir Geoffrey,
+ did you speak?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer was returned. He repeated the question louder; and the same
+ silver-toned voice, which had formerly said "<i>Amen</i>" to his prayers,
+ answered to his interrogatory, "Your companion will not awake while I am
+ here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who are you?&mdash;What seek you?&mdash;How came you into this
+ place?" said Peveril, huddling, eagerly, question upon question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a wretched being, but one who loves you well.&mdash;I come for your
+ good.&mdash;Concern yourself no farther."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now rushed on Julian's mind that he had heard of persons possessed of
+ the wonderful talent of counterfeiting sounds to such accuracy, that they
+ could impose on their hearers the belief, that they proceeded from a point
+ of the apartment entirely opposite to that which the real speaker
+ occupied. Persuaded that he had now gained the depth of the mystery, he
+ replied, "This trifling, Sir Geoffrey, is unseasonable. Say what you have
+ to say in your own voice and manner. These apish pleasantries do not
+ become midnight in a Newgate dungeon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the being who speaks with you," answered the voice, "is fitted for
+ the darkest hour, and the most melancholy haunts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impatient of suspense, and determined to satisfy his curiosity, Julian
+ jumped at once from his pallet, hoping to secure the speaker, whose voice
+ indicated he was so near. But he altogether failed in his attempt, and
+ grasped nothing save thin air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a turn or two, Peveril shuffled at random about the room, with his
+ arms extended; and then at last recollected, that with the impediment of
+ his shackles, and the noise which necessarily accompanied his motions, and
+ announced where he was, it would be impossible for him to lay hands on any
+ one who might be disposed to keep out of his reach. He therefore
+ endeavoured to return to his bed; but, in groping for his way, lighted
+ first on that of his fellow-prisoner. The little captive slept deep and
+ heavy, as was evinced from his breathing; and upon listening a moment,
+ Julian became again certain, either that his companion was the most artful
+ of ventriloquists and of dissemblers, or that there was actually within
+ the precincts of that guarded chamber, some third being, whose very
+ presence there seemed to intimate that it belonged not to the ordinary
+ line of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was no ready believer in the supernatural; but that age was very
+ far from being so incredulous concerning ghostly occurrences as our own;
+ and it was no way derogatory to his good sense, that he shared the
+ prejudices of his time. His hair began to bristle, and the moisture to
+ stand on his brow, as he called on his companion to awake, for Heaven's
+ sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf answered&mdash;but he spoke without awaking.&mdash;"The day may
+ dawn and be d&mdash;d. Tell the master of the horse I will not go to the
+ hunting, unless I have the little black jennet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you," said Julian, "there is some one in the apartment. Have you
+ not a tinder-box to strike a light?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I care not how slight my horse be," replied the slumberer, pursuing his
+ own train of ideas, which, doubtless, carried him back to the green woods
+ of Windsor, and the royal deer-hunts which he had witnessed there. "I am
+ not overweight&mdash;I will not ride that great Holstein brute, that I
+ must climb up to by a ladder, and then sit on his back like a pin-cushion
+ on an elephant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian at length put his hand to the sleeper's shoulder, and shook him, so
+ as to awake him from his dream; when, after two or three snorts and
+ groans, the dwarf asked peevishly, what the devil ailed him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devil himself, for what I know," said Peveril, "is at this very
+ moment in the room here beside us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf on this information started up, crossed himself, and began to
+ hammer a flint and steel with all despatch, until he had lighted a little
+ piece of candle, which he said was consecrated to Saint Bridget, and as
+ powerful as the herb called <i>fuga dæmonum</i>, or the liver of the fish
+ burnt by Tobit in the house of Raguel, for chasing all goblins, and evil
+ or dubious spirits, from the place of its radiance; "if, indeed," as the
+ dwarf carefully guarded his proposition, "they existed anywhere, save in
+ the imagination of his fellow-prisoner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the apartment was no sooner enlightened by this holy candle's
+ end, than Julian began to doubt the evidence of his own ears; for not only
+ was there no one in the room save Sir Geoffrey Hudson and himself, but all
+ the fastenings of the door were so secure, that it seemed impossible that
+ they could have been opened and again fixed, without a great deal of
+ noise, which, on the last occasion at least, could not possibly have
+ escaped his ears, seeing that he must have been on his feet, and employed
+ in searching the chamber, when the unknown, if an earthly being, was in
+ the act of retreating from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian gazed for a moment with great earnestness, and no little
+ perplexity, first on the bolted door, then on the grated window; and began
+ to accuse his own imagination of having played him an unpleasant trick. He
+ answered little to the questions of Hudson, and returning to his bed,
+ heard, in silence, a long studied oration on the merits of Saint Bridget,
+ which comprehended the greater part of her long-winded legend, and
+ concluded with the assurance, that, from all accounts preserved of her,
+ that holy saint was the least of all possible women, except those of the
+ pigmy kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the time the dwarf had ceased to speak, Julian's desire of sleep had
+ returned; and after a few glances around the apartment, which was still
+ illuminated by the expiring beams of the holy taper, his eyes were again
+ closed in forgetfulness, and his repose was not again disturbed in the
+ course of that night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning dawns on Newgate, as well as on the freest mountain-turf which
+ Welshman or wild-goat ever trode; but in so different a fashion, that the
+ very beams of heaven's precious sun, when they penetrate into the recesses
+ of the prison-house, have the air of being committed to jail. Still, with
+ the light of day around him, Peveril easily persuaded himself of the
+ vanity of his preceding night's visions; and smiled when he reflected that
+ fancies, similar to those to which his ear was often exposed in the Isle
+ of Man, had been able to arrange themselves in a manner so impressive,
+ when he heard them from the mouth of so singular a character as Hudson,
+ and in the solitude of a prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Julian had awaked, the dwarf had already quitted his bed, and was
+ seated in the chimney-corner of the apartment, where, with his own hands,
+ he had arranged a morsel of fire, partly attending to the simmering of a
+ small pot, which he had placed on the flame, partly occupied with a huge
+ folio volume which lay on the table before him, and seemed well-nigh as
+ tall and bulky as himself. He was wrapped up in the dusky crimson cloak
+ already mentioned, which served him for a morning-gown, as well as a
+ mantle against the cold, and which corresponded with a large montero-cap,
+ that enveloped his head. The singularity of his features, and of the eyes,
+ armed with spectacles, which were now cast on the subject of his studies,
+ now directed towards his little cauldron, would have tempted Rembrandt to
+ exhibit him on canvas, either in the character of an alchymist, or of a
+ necromancer, engaged in some strange experiment, under the direction of
+ one of the huge manuals which treat of the theory of these mystic arts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attention of the dwarf was bent, however, upon a more domestic object.
+ He was only preparing soup, of no unsavoury quality, for breakfast, which
+ he invited Peveril to partake with him. "I am an old soldier," he said,
+ "and, I must add, an old prisoner; and understand how to shift for myself
+ better than you can do, young man.&mdash;Confusion to the scoundrel Clink,
+ he has put the spice-box out of my reach!&mdash;Will you hand it me from
+ the mantelpiece?&mdash;I will teach you, as the French have it, <i>faire
+ la cuisine;</i> and then, if you please, we will divide, like brethren,
+ the labours of our prison house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian readily assented to the little man's friendly proposal, without
+ interposing any doubt as to his continuing an inmate of the same cell.
+ Truth is, that although, upon the whole, he was inclined to regard the
+ whispering voice of the preceding evening as the impression of his own
+ excited fancy, he felt, nevertheless, curiosity to see how a second night
+ was to pass over in the same cell; and the tone of the invisible intruder,
+ which at midnight had been heard by him with terror, now excited, on
+ recollection, a gentle and not unpleasing species of agitation&mdash;the
+ combined effect of awe, and of awakened curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days of captivity have little to mark them as they glide away. That which
+ followed the night which we have described afforded no circumstance of
+ note. The dwarf imparted to his youthful companion a volume similar to
+ that which formed his own studies, and which proved to be a tome of one of
+ Scuderi's now forgotten romances, of which Geoffrey Hudson was a great
+ admirer, and which were then very fashionable both at the French and
+ English Courts; although they contrive to unite in their immense folios
+ all the improbabilities and absurdities of the old romances of chivalry,
+ without that tone of imagination which pervades them, and all the
+ metaphysical absurdities which Cowley and the poets of the age had heaped
+ upon the passion of love, like so many load of small coal upon a slender
+ fire, which it smothers instead of aiding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Julian had no alternative, saving only to muse over the sorrows of
+ Artamenes and Mandane, or on the complicated distresses of his own
+ situation; and in these disagreeable divertisements, the morning crept
+ through as it could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noon first, and thereafter nightfall, were successively marked by a brief
+ visit from their stern turnkey, who, with noiseless step and sullen
+ demeanour, did in silence the necessary offices about the meals of the
+ prisoners, exchanging with them as few words as an official in the Spanish
+ Inquisition might have permitted himself upon a similar occasion. With the
+ same taciturn gravity, very different from the laughing humour into which
+ he had been surprised on a former occasion, he struck their fetters with a
+ small hammer, to ascertain, by the sound thus produced, whether they had
+ been tampered with by file or otherwise. He next mounted on a table, to
+ make the same experiment on the window-grating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian's heart throbbed; for might not one of those grates have been so
+ tampered with as to give entrance to the nocturnal visitant? But they
+ returned to the experienced ear of Master Clink, when he struck them in
+ turn with the hammer, a clear and ringing sound, which assured him of
+ their security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be difficult for any one to get in through these defences," said
+ Julian, giving vent in words to his own feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Few wish that," answered the surly groom, misconstruing what was passing
+ in Peveril's mind; "and let me tell you, master, folks will find it quite
+ as difficult to get out." He retired, and night came on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf, who took upon himself for the day the whole duties of the
+ apartment, trundled about the room, making a most important clatter as he
+ extinguished their fire, and put aside various matters which had been in
+ use in the course of the day, talking to himself all the while in a tone
+ of no little consequence, occasionally grounded on the dexterity with
+ which an old soldier could turn his hand to anything. Then came the
+ repetition of his accustomed prayers; but his disposition to converse did
+ not, as on the former occasion, revive after his devotions. On the
+ contrary, long before Julian had closed an eye, the heavy breathing from
+ Sir Geoffrey Hudson's pallet declared that the dwarf was already in the
+ arms of Morpheus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amid the total darkness of the apartment, and with a longing desire, and
+ at the same time no small fear, for the recurrence of the mysterious
+ address of the preceding evening, Julian lay long awake without his
+ thoughts receiving any interruption save when the clock told the passing
+ hour from the neighbouring steeple of St. Sepulchre. At length he sunk
+ into slumber; but had not slept to his judgment above an hour, when he was
+ roused by the sound which his waking ear had so long expected in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you sleep?&mdash;Will you sleep?&mdash;Dare you sleep?" were the
+ questions impressed on his ear, in the same clear, soft, and melodious
+ voice, which had addressed him on the preceding night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who is it asks me the question?" answered Julian. "But be the questioner
+ good or evil, I reply that I am a guiltless prisoner; and that innocence
+ may wish and dare to sleep soundly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ask no questions of me," said the voice; "neither attempt to discover who
+ speaks to you; and be assured that folly alone can sleep, with fraud
+ around and danger before him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you, who tell me of dangers, counsel me how to combat or how to avoid
+ them?" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My power is limited," said the voice; "yet something I can do, as the
+ glow-worm can show a precipice. But you must confide in me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Confidence must beget confidence," answered Julian. "I cannot repose
+ trust in I know not what or whom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak not so loud," replied the voice, sinking almost into a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Last night you said my companion would not awake," said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-night I warrant not that he shall sleep," said the voice. And as it
+ spoke, the hoarse, snatching, discordant tones of the dwarf were heard,
+ demanding of Julian why he talked in his sleep&mdash;wherefore he did not
+ rest himself, and let other people rest&mdash;and, finally, whether his
+ visions of last night were returned upon him again?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say yes," said the voice in a whisper, so low, yet so distinct, that
+ Julian almost doubted whether it was not an echo of his own thought.&mdash;"Say
+ but yes&mdash;and I part to return no more!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In desperate circumstances men look to strange and unusual remedies; and
+ although unable to calculate the chances of advantage which this singular
+ communication opened to him, Julian did not feel inclined to let them at
+ once escape from him. He answered the dwarf, that he had been troubled by
+ an alarming dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could have sworn it, from the sound of your voice," said Hudson. "It is
+ strange, now, that you overgrown men never possess the extreme firmness of
+ nerves proper to us who are cast in a more compact mould. My own voice
+ retains its masculine sounds on all occasions. Dr. Cockerel was of
+ opinion, that there was the same allowance of nerve and sinew to men of
+ every size, and that nature spun the stock out thinner or stronger,
+ according to the extent of surface which they were to cover. Hence, the
+ least creatures are oftentimes the strongest. Place a beetle under a tall
+ candlestick, and the insect will move it by its efforts to get out; which
+ is, in point of comparative strength, as if one of us should shake his
+ Majesty's prison of Newgate by similar struggles. Cats also, and weasels,
+ are creatures of greater exertion or endurance than dogs or sheep. And in
+ general, you may remark, that little men dance better, and are more
+ unwearied under exertion of every kind, than those to whom their own
+ weight must necessarily be burdensome. I respect you, Master Peveril,
+ because I am told you have killed one of those gigantic fellows, who go
+ about swaggering as if their souls were taller than ours, because their
+ noses are nearer to the clouds by a cubit or two. But do not value
+ yourself on this as anything very unusual. I would have you to know it
+ hath been always thus; and that, in the history of all ages, the clean,
+ tight, dapper little fellow, hath proved an overmatch for his bulky
+ antagonist. I need only instance out of Holy Writ, the celebrated downfall
+ of Goliah, and of another lubbard, who had more fingers to his hand, and
+ more inches to his stature, than ought to belong to an honest man, and who
+ was slain by a nephew of good King David; and of many others whom I do not
+ remember; nevertheless they were all Philistines of gigantic stature. In
+ the classics, also, you have Tydeus, and other tight, compact heroes,
+ whose diminutive bodies were the abode of large minds. And indeed you may
+ observe, in sacred as well as profane history, that your giants are ever
+ heretics and blasphemers, robbers and oppressors, outragers of the female
+ sex, and scoffers at regular authority. Such were Gog and Magog, whom our
+ authentic chronicles vouch to have been slain near to Plymouth, by the
+ good little Knight Corineus, who gave name to Cornwall. Ascaparte also was
+ subdued by Bevis, and Colbrand by Guy, as Southampton and Warwick can
+ testify. Like unto these was the giant Hoel, slain in Bretagne by King
+ Arthur. And if Ryence, King of North Wales, who was done to death by the
+ same worthy champion of Christendom, be not actually termed a giant, it is
+ plain he was little better, since he required twenty-four kings' beards,
+ which were then worn full and long, to fur his gown; whereby computing
+ each beard at eighteen inches (and you cannot allow less for a
+ beard-royal), and supposing only the front of the gown trimmed therewith,
+ as we use ermine; and that the back was mounted and lined, instead of
+ cat-skins and squirrels' fur, with the beards of earls and dukes, and
+ other inferior dignitaries&mdash;may amount to&mdash;But I will work the
+ question to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing is more soporific to any (save a philosopher or moneyed man) than
+ the operation of figures; and when in bed, the effect is irresistible. Sir
+ Geoffrey fell asleep in the act of calculating King Ryence's height, from
+ the supposed length of his mantle. Indeed, had he not stumbled on this
+ abstruse subject of calculation, there is no guessing how long he might
+ have held forth upon the superiority of men of little stature, which was
+ so great a favourite with him, that, numerous as such narratives are, the
+ dwarf had collected almost all the instances of their victories over
+ giants, which history or romance afforded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had unequivocal signs of the dwarf's sound slumbers reached
+ Julian's ears, than he began to listen eagerly for the renewal of that
+ mysterious communication which was at once interesting and awful. Even
+ whilst Hudson was speaking, he had, instead of bestowing his attention
+ upon his eulogy on persons of low statue, kept his ears on watchful guard
+ to mark if possible, the lightest sounds of any sort which might occur in
+ the apartment; so that he thought it scarce possible that even a fly
+ should have left it withouts its motion being overheard. If, therefore,
+ his invisible monitor was indeed a creature of this world&mdash;an opinion
+ which Julian's sound sense rendered him unwilling to renounce&mdash;that
+ being could not have left the apartment; and he waited impatiently for a
+ renewal of their communication. He was disappointed; not the slightest
+ sound reached his ear; and the nocturnal visitor, if still in the room,
+ appeared determined on silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain that Peveril coughed, hemmed, and gave other symptoms of
+ being awake; at length, such became his impatience, that he resolved, at
+ any risk, to speak first, in hopes of renewing the communication betwixt
+ them. "Whoever thou art," he said, in a voice loud enough to be heard by a
+ waking person, but not so high as to disturb his sleeping companion&mdash;"Whoever,
+ or whatever thou art, thou hast shown some interest in the fate of such a
+ castaway as Julian Peveril, speak once more, I conjure thee; and be your
+ communication for good or evil, believe me, I am equally prepared to abide
+ the issue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer of any kind was returned to this invocation; nor did the least
+ sound intimate the presence of the being to whom it was so solemnly
+ addressed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I speak in vain," said Julian; "and perhaps I am but invoking that which
+ is insensible of human feeling, or which takes a malign pleasure in human
+ suffering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a gentle and half-broken sigh from a corner of the apartment,
+ which, answering to this exclamation, seemed to contradict the imputation
+ which it conveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, naturally courageous, and familiarised by this time to his
+ situation, raised himself in bed, and stretched out his arm, to repeat his
+ adjuration, when the voice, as if alarmed at his action and energy,
+ whispered, in a tone more hurried than that which it had hitherto used,
+ "Be still&mdash;move not&mdash;or I am mute for ever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is then a mortal being who is present with me," was the natural
+ inference of Julian, "and one who is probably afraid of being detected; I
+ have then some power over my visitor, though I must be cautious how I use
+ it.&mdash;If your intents are friendly," he proceeded, "there was never a
+ time in which I lacked friends more, or would be more grateful for
+ kindness. The fate of all who are dear to me is weighed in the balance,
+ and with worlds would I buy the tidings of their safety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have said my power is limited," replied the voice. "<i>You</i> I may be
+ able to preserve&mdash;the fate of your friends is beyond my control."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me at least know it," said Julian; "and, be it as it may, I will not
+ shun to share it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For whom would you inquire?" said the soft, sweet voice, not without a
+ tremulousness of accent, as if the question was put with diffident
+ reluctance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My parents," said Julian, after a moment's hesitation; "how fare they?&mdash;What
+ will be their fate?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They fare as the fort under which the enemy has dug a deadly mine. The
+ work may have cost the labour of years, such were the impediments to the
+ engineers; but Time brings opportunity upon its wings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what will be the event?" said Peveril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can I read the future," answered the voice, "save by comparison with
+ past?&mdash;Who has been hunted on these stern and unmitigable
+ accusations, but has been at last brought to bay? Did high and noble
+ birth, honoured age, and approved benevolence, save the unfortunate Lord
+ Stafford? Did learning, capacity of intrigue, or high Court favour, redeem
+ Coleman, although the confidential servant of the heir presumptive of the
+ Crown of England?&mdash;Did subtilty and genius, and exertions of a
+ numerous sect, save Fenwicke, or Whitbread, or any other of the accused
+ priests?&mdash;Were Groves, Pickering, or the other humble wretches who
+ have suffered, safe in their obscurity? There is no condition in life, no
+ degree of talent, no form of principle, which affords protection against
+ an accusation, which levels conditions, confounds characters, renders
+ men's virtues their sins, and rates them as dangerous in proportion as
+ they have influence, though attained in the noblest manner, and used for
+ the best purposes. Call such a one but an accessory to the Plot&mdash;let
+ him be mouthed in the evidence of Oates or Dugdale&mdash;and the blindest
+ shall foresee the issue of their trial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Prophet of Evil!" said Julian, "my father has a shield invulnerable to
+ protect him. He is innocent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let him plead his innocence at the bar of Heaven," said the voice; "it
+ will serve him little where Scroggs presides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still I fear not," said Julian, counterfeiting more confidence than he
+ really possessed; "my father's cause will be pleaded before twelve
+ Englishmen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Better before twelve wild beasts," answered the Invisible, "than before
+ Englishmen, influenced with party prejudice, passion, and epidemic terror
+ of an imaginary danger. They are bold in guilt in proportion to the number
+ amongst whom the crime is divided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ill-omened speaker," said Julian, "thine is indeed a voice fitted only to
+ sound with the midnight bell, and the screeching owl. Yet speak again.
+ Tell me, if thou canst"&mdash;(He would have said of Alice Bridgenorth,
+ but the word would not leave his tongue)&mdash;"Tell me," he said, "if the
+ noble house of Derby&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let them keep their rock like the sea-fowl in the tempest; and it may so
+ fall out," answered the voice, "that their rock may be a safe refuge. But
+ there is blood on their ermine; and revenge has dogged them for many a
+ year, like a bloodhound that hath been distanced in the morning chase, but
+ may yet grapple the quarry ere the sun shall set. At present, however,
+ they are safe.&mdash;Am I now to speak farther on your own affairs, which
+ involve little short of your life and honour?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is," said Julian, "one, from whom I was violently parted yesterday;
+ if I knew but of her safety, I were little anxious for my own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One!" returned the voice, "only <i>one</i> from whom you were parted
+ yesterday?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in parting from whom," said Julian, "I felt separated from all
+ happiness which the world can give me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean Alice Bridgenorth," said the Invisible, with some bitterness of
+ accent; "but her you will never see more. Your own life and hers depend on
+ your forgetting each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot purchase my own life at that price," replied Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then DIE in your obstinacy," returned the Invisible; nor to all the
+ entreaties which he used was he able obtain another word in the course of
+ that remarkable night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A short hough'd man, but full of pride.
+ &mdash;ALLAN RAMSAY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The blood of Julian Peveril was so much fevered by the state in which his
+ invisible visitor left him, that he was unable, for a length of time, to
+ find repose. He swore to himself, that he would discover and expose the
+ nocturnal demon which stole on his hours of rest, only to add gall to
+ bitterness, and to pour poison into those wounds which already smarted so
+ severely. There was nothing which his power extended to, that, in his
+ rage, he did not threaten. He proposed a closer and a more rigorous survey
+ of his cell, so that he might discover the mode by which his tormentor
+ entered, were it as unnoticeable as an auger-hole. If his diligence should
+ prove unavailing, he determined to inform the jailers, to whom it could
+ not be indifferent to know, that their prison was open to such intrusions.
+ He proposed to himself, to discover from their looks whether they were
+ already privy to these visits; and if so, to denounce them to the
+ magistrates, to the judges, to the House of Commons, was the least that
+ his resentment proposed. Sleep surprised his worn-out frame in the midst
+ of his projects of discovery and vengeance, and, as frequently happens,
+ the light of the ensuing day proved favourable to calmer resolutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now reflected that he had no ground to consider the motives of his
+ visitor as positively malevolent, although he had afforded him little
+ encouragement to hope for assistance on the points he had most at heart.
+ Towards himself, there had been expressed a decided feeling, both of
+ sympathy and interest; if through means of these he could acquire his
+ liberty, he might, when possessed of freedom, turn it to the benefit of
+ those for whom he was more interested than for his own welfare. "I have
+ behaved like a fool," he said; "I ought to have temporised with this
+ singular being, learned the motives of its interference, and availed
+ myself of its succour, provided I could do so without any dishonourable
+ conditions. It would have been always time enough to reject such when they
+ should have been proposed to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he was forming projects for regulating his intercourse with the
+ stranger more prudently, in case their communication should be renewed,
+ when his meditations were interrupted by the peremptory summons of Sir
+ Geoffrey Hudson, that he would, in his turn, be pleased to perform those
+ domestic duties of their common habitation, which the dwarf had yesterday
+ taken upon himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no resisting a request so reasonable, and Peveril accordingly
+ rose and betook himself to the arrangement of their prison, while Sir
+ Hudson, perched upon a stool from which his legs did not by half-way reach
+ the ground, sat in a posture of elegant languor, twangling upon an old
+ broken-winded guitar, and singing songs in Spanish, Moorish, and Lingua
+ Franca, most detestably out of tune. He failed not, at the conclusion of
+ each ditty, to favour Julian with some account of what he had sung, either
+ in the way of translation, or historical anecdote, or as the lay was
+ connected with some peculiar part of his own eventful history, in the
+ course of which the poor little man had chanced to have been taken by a
+ Sallee rover, and carried captive into Morocco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This part of his life Hudson used to make the era of many strange
+ adventures; and, if he could himself be believed, he had made wild work
+ among the affections of the Emperor's seraglio. But, although few were in
+ a situation to cross-examine him on gallantries and intrigues of which the
+ scene was so remote, the officers of the garrison of Tangier had a report
+ current amongst them, that the only use to which the tyrannical Moors
+ could convert a slave of such slender corporeal strength, was to employ
+ him to lie a-bed all day and hatch turkey's eggs. The least allusion to
+ this rumour used to drive him well-nigh frantic, and the fatal termination
+ of his duel with young Crofts, which began in wanton mirth, and ended in
+ bloodshed, made men more coy than they had formerly been, of making the
+ fiery little hero the subject of their raillery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Peveril did the drudgery of the apartment, the dwarf remained much
+ at his ease, carolling in the manner we have described; but when he beheld
+ Julian attempting the task of the cook, Sir Geoffrey Hudson sprang from
+ the stool on which he sat <i>en Signor</i>, at the risk of breaking both
+ his guitar and his neck, exclaiming, "That he would rather prepare
+ breakfast every morning betwixt this and the day of judgment, than commit
+ a task of such consequence to an inexperienced bungler like his
+ companion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man gladly resigned his task to the splenetic little Knight, and
+ only smiled at his resentment when he added, that, to be but a mortal of
+ middle stature, Julian was as stupid as a giant. Leaving the dwarf to
+ prepare the meal after his own pleasure, Peveril employed himself in
+ measuring the room with his eyes on every side, and in endeavouring to
+ discover some private entrance, such as might admit his midnight visitant,
+ and perhaps could be employed in case of need for effecting his own
+ escape. The floor next engaged a scrutiny equally minute, but more
+ successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Close by his own pallet, and dropped in such a manner that he must have
+ seen it sooner but for the hurry with which he obeyed the summons of the
+ impatient dwarf, lay a slip of paper, sealed, and directed with the
+ initial letters, J.P., which seemed to ascertain that it was addressed to
+ himself. He took the opportunity of opening it while the soup was in the
+ very moment of projection, and the full attention of his companion was
+ occupied by what he, in common with wiser and taller men, considered as
+ one of the principal occupations of life; so that, without incurring his
+ observation or awaking his curiosity, Julian had the opportunity to read
+ as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Rash and infatuated as you are, there is one who would forfeit
+ much to stand betwixt you and your fate. You are to-morrow to be
+ removed to the Tower, where your life cannot be assured for a
+ single day; for, during the few hours you have been in London, you
+ have provoked a resentment which is not easily slaked. There is
+ but one chance for you,&mdash;renounce A.B.&mdash;think no more of her. If
+ that be impossible, think of her but as one whom you can never see
+ again. If your heart can resolve to give up an attachment which it
+ should never have entertained, and which it would be madness to
+ cherish longer, make your acquiescence in this condition known by
+ putting on your hat a white band, or white feather, or knot of
+ ribbon of the same colour, whichever you may most easily come by.
+ A boat will, in that case, run, as if by accident, on board of
+ that which is to convey you to the Tower. Do you in the confusion
+ jump overboard, and swim to the Southwark side of the Thames.
+ Friends will attend there to secure your escape, and you will find
+ yourself with one who will rather lose character and life, than
+ that a hair of your head should fall to the ground; but who, if
+ you reject the warning, can only think of you as of the fool who
+ perishes in his folly. May Heaven guide you to a sound judgment of
+ your condition! So prays one who would be your friend, if you
+ pleased,
+ "UNKNOWN."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Tower!&mdash;it was a word of terror, even more so than a civil
+ prison; for how many passages to death did that dark structure present!
+ The severe executions which it had witnessed in preceding reigns, were not
+ perhaps more numerous than the secret murders which had taken place within
+ its walls; yet Peveril did not a moment hesitate on the part which he had
+ to perform. "I will share my father's fate," he said; "I thought but of
+ him when they brought me hither; I will think of nothing else when they
+ convey me to yonder still more dreadful place of confinement; it is his,
+ and it is but meet that it should be his son's.&mdash;And thou, Alice
+ Bridgenorth, the day that I renounce thee, may I be held alike a traitor
+ and a dastard!&mdash;Go, false adviser, and share the fate of seducers and
+ heretical teachers!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could not help uttering this last expression aloud, as he threw the
+ billet into the fire, with a vehemence which made the dwarf start with
+ surprise. "What say you of burning heretics, young man?" he exclaimed; "by
+ my faith, your zeal must be warmer than mine, if you talk on such a
+ subject when the heretics are the prevailing number. May I measure six
+ feet without my shoes, but the heretics would have the best of it if we
+ came to that work. Beware of such words."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too late to beware of words spoken and heard," said the turnkey, who,
+ opening the door with unusual precautions to avoid noise, had stolen
+ unperceived into the room; "However, Master Peveril has behaved like a
+ gentlemen, and I am no tale-bearer, on condition he will consider I have
+ had trouble in his matters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian had no alternative but to take the fellow's hint and administer a
+ bribe, with which Master Clink was so well satisfied, that he exclaimed,
+ "It went to his heart to take leave of such a kind-natured gentleman, and
+ that he could have turned the key on him for twenty years with pleasure.
+ But the best friends must part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am to be removed, then?" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, truly, master, the warrant is come from the Council."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To convey me to the Tower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whew!" exclaimed the officer of the law&mdash;"who the devil told you
+ that? But since you do know it, there is no harm to say ay. So make
+ yourself ready to move immediately; and first, hold out your dew-beaters
+ till I take off the darbies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is that usual?" said Peveril, stretching out his feet as the fellow
+ directed, while his fetters were unlocked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, ay, master, these fetters belong to the keeper; they are not a-going
+ to send them to the Lieutenant, I trow. No, no, the warders must bring
+ their own gear with them; they get none here, I promise them.
+ Nevertheless, if your honour hath a fancy to go in fetters, as thinking it
+ may move compassion of your case&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no intention to make my case seem worse than it is," said Julian;
+ whilst at the same time it crossed his mind that his anonymous
+ correspondent must be well acquainted both with his own personal habits,
+ since the letter proposed a plan of escape which could only be executed by
+ a bold swimmer, and with the fashions of prison, since it was foreseen
+ that he would not be ironed on his passage to the Tower. The turnkey's
+ next speech made him carry conjecture still farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is nothing in life I would not do for so brave a guest," said
+ Clink; "I would nab one of my wife's ribbons for you, if your honour had
+ the fancy to mount the white flag in your beaver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To what good purpose?" said Julian, shortly connecting, as was natural,
+ the man's proposed civility with the advice given and the signal
+ prescribed in the letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, to no good purpose I know of," said the turnkey; "only it is the
+ fashion to seem white and harmless&mdash;a sort of token of
+ not-guiltiness, as I may say, which folks desire to show the world,
+ whether they be truly guilty or not; but I cannot say that guiltiness or
+ not-guiltiness argufies much, saving they be words in the verdict."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Strange," thought Peveril, although the man seemed to speak quite
+ naturally, and without any double meaning, "strange that all should
+ apparently combine to realise the plan of escape, could I but give my
+ consent to it! And had I not better consent? Whoever does so much for me
+ must wish me well, and a well-wisher would never enforce the unjust
+ conditions on which I am required to consent to my liberation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this misgiving of his resolution was but for a moment. He speedily
+ recollected, that whoever aided him in escaping, must be necessarily
+ exposed to great risk, and had a right to name the stipulation on which he
+ was willing to incur it. He also recollected that falsehood is equally
+ base, whether expressed in words or in dumb show; and that he should lie
+ as flatly by using the signal agreed upon in evidence of his renouncing
+ Alice Bridgenorth, as he would in direct terms if he made such
+ renunciation without the purpose of abiding by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you would oblige me," he said to the turnkey, "let me have a piece of
+ black silk or crape for the purpose you mention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of crape!" said the fellow; "what should that signify? Why, the bien
+ morts, who bing out to tour at you,[*] will think you a chimney-sweeper on
+ Mayday."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] The smart girls, who turn out to look at you.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "It will show my settled sorrow," said Julian, "as well as my determined
+ resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you will, sir," answered the fellow; "I'll provide you with a black
+ rag of some kind or other. So, now; let us be moving."
+ </p>
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0455m.jpg" alt="0455m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0455.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ Julian intimated his readiness to attend him, and proceeded to bid
+ farewell to his late companion, the stout Geoffrey Hudson. The parting was
+ not without emotion on both sides, more particularly on that of the poor
+ little man, who had taken a particular liking to the companion of whom he
+ was now about to be deprived. "Fare ye well," he said, "my young friend,"
+ taking Julian's hand in both his own uplifted palms, in which action he
+ somewhat resembled the attitude of a sailor pulling a rope overhead,&mdash;"Many
+ in my situation would think himself wronged, as a soldier and servant of
+ the king's chamber, in seeing you removed to a more honourable prison than
+ that which I am limited unto. But, I thank God, I grudge you not the
+ Tower, nor the rocks of Scilly, nor even Carisbrooke Castle, though the
+ latter was graced with the captivity of my blessed and martyred master. Go
+ where you will, I wish you all the distinction of an honourable
+ prison-house, and a safe and speedy deliverance in God's own time. For
+ myself, my race is near a close, and that because I fall martyr to the
+ over-tenderness of my own heart. There is a circumstance, good Master
+ Julian Peveril, which should have been yours, had Providence permitted our
+ farther intimacy, but it fits not the present hour. Go, then, my friend,
+ and bear witness in life and death, that Geoffrey Hudson scorns the
+ insults and persecutions of fortune, as he would despise, and has often
+ despised, the mischievous pranks of an overgrown schoolboy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he turned away, and hid his face with his little handkerchief,
+ while Julian felt towards him that tragi-comic sensation which makes us
+ pity the object which excites it, not the less that we are somewhat
+ inclined to laugh amid our sympathy. The jailer made him a signal, which
+ Peveril obeyed, leaving the dwarf to disconsolate solitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Julian followed the keeper through the various windings of his penal
+ labyrinth, the man observed, that "he was a rum fellow, that little Sir
+ Geoffrey, and, for gallantry, a perfect Cock of Bantam, for as old as he
+ was. There was a certain gay wench," he said, "that had hooked him; but
+ what she could make of him, save she carried him to Smithfield, and took
+ money for him, as for a motion of puppets, it was," he said, "hard to
+ gather."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Encouraged by this opening, Julian asked if his attendant knew why his
+ prison was changed. "To teach you to become a King's post without
+ commission," answered the fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stopped in his tattle as they approached that formidable central point,
+ in which lay couched on his leathern elbow-chair the fat commander of the
+ fortress, stationed apparently for ever in the midst of his citadel, as
+ the huge Boa is sometimes said to lie stretched as a guard upon the
+ subterranean treasures of Eastern Rajas. This overgrown man of authority
+ eyed Julian wistfully and sullenly, as the miser the guinea which he must
+ part with, or the hungry mastiff the food which is carried to another
+ kennel. He growled to himself as he turned the leaves of his ominous
+ register, in order to make the necessary entry respecting the removal of
+ his prisoner. "To the Tower&mdash;to the Tower&mdash;ay, ay, all must to
+ the Tower&mdash;that's the fashion of it&mdash;free Britons to a military
+ prison, as if we had neither bolts nor chains here!&mdash;I hope
+ Parliament will have it up, this Towering work, that's all.&mdash;Well,
+ the youngster will take no good by the change, and that is one comfort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having finished at once his official act of registration, and his
+ soliloquy, he made a signal to his assistants to remove Julian, who was
+ led along the same stern passages which he had traversed upon his
+ entrance, to the gate of the prison, whence a coach, escorted by two
+ officers of justice, conveyed him to the water-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A boat here waited him, with four warders of the Tower, to whose custody
+ he was formally resigned by his late attendants. Clink, however, the
+ turnkey, with whom he was more especially acquainted, did not take leave
+ of him without furnishing him with the piece of black crape which he
+ requested. Peveril fixed it on his hat amid the whispers of his new
+ guardians. "The gentleman is in a hurry to go into mourning," said one;
+ "mayhap he had better wait till he has cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps others may wear mourning for him, ere he can mourn for any one,"
+ answered another of these functionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet notwithstanding the tenor of these whispers, their behaviour to their
+ prisoner was more respectful than he had experienced from his former
+ keepers, and might be termed a sullen civility. The ordinary officers of
+ the law were in general rude, as having to do with felons of every
+ description; whereas these men were only employed with persons accused of
+ state crimes&mdash;men who were from birth and circumstances usually
+ entitled to expect, and able to reward, decent usage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The change of keepers passed unnoticed by Julian, as did the gay and busy
+ scene presented by the broad and beautiful river on which he was now
+ launched. A hundred boats shot past them, bearing parties intent on
+ business, or on pleasure. Julian only viewed them with the stern hope,
+ that whoever had endeavoured to bribe him from his fidelity by the hope of
+ freedom, might see, from the colour of the badge which he had assumed, how
+ determined he was to resist the temptation presented to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about high-water, and a stout wherry came up the river, with sail
+ and oar, so directly upon that in which Julian was embarked, that it
+ seemed as if likely to run her aboard. "Get your carabines ready," cried
+ the principal warder to his assistants. "What the devil can these
+ scoundrels mean?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the crew in the other boat seemed to have perceived their error, for
+ they suddenly altered their course, and struck off into the middle stream,
+ while a torrent of mutual abuse was exchanged betwixt them and the boat
+ whose course they had threatened to impede.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Unknown has kept his faith," said Julian to himself; "I too have kept
+ mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It even seemed to him, as the boats neared each other, that he heard, from
+ the other wherry, something like a stifled scream or groan; and when the
+ momentary bustle was over, he asked the warder who sat next him, what boat
+ that was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men-of-war's-men, on a frolic, I suppose," answered the warder. "I know
+ no one else would be so impudent as run foul of the King's boat; for I am
+ sure the fellow put the helm up on purpose. But mayhap you, sir, know more
+ of the matter than I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This insinuation effectually prevented Julian from putting farther
+ questions, and he remained silent until the boat came under the dusky
+ bastions of the Tower. The tide carried them up under a dark and lowering
+ arch, closed at the upper end by the well-known Traitor's gate,[*] formed
+ like a wicket of huge intersecting bars of wood, through which might be
+ seen a dim and imperfect view of soldiers and warders upon duty, and of
+ the steep ascending causeway which leads up from the river into the
+ interior of the fortress. By this gate,&mdash;and it is the well-known
+ circumstance which assigned its name,&mdash;those accused of state crimes
+ were usually committed to the Tower. The Thames afforded a secret and
+ silent mode of conveyance for transporting thither such whose fallen
+ fortunes might move the commiseration, or whose popular qualities might
+ excite the sympathy, of the public; and even where no cause for especial
+ secrecy existed, the peace of the city was undisturbed by the tumult
+ attending the passage of the prisoner and his guards through the most
+ frequented streets.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] See note, "Fortunes of Nigel."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Yet this custom, however recommended by state policy, must have often
+ struck chill upon the heart of the criminal, who thus, stolen, as it were,
+ out of society, reached the place of his confinement, without encountering
+ even one glance of compassion on the road; and as, from under the dusky
+ arch, he landed on those flinty steps, worn by many a footstep anxious as
+ his own, against which the tide lapped fitfully with small successive
+ waves, and hence looked forward to the steep ascent into a Gothic state
+ prison, and backward to such part of the river as the low-brow'd vault
+ suffered to become visible, he must often have felt that he was leaving
+ daylight, hope, and life itself, behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the warder's challenge was made and answered, Peveril endeavoured to
+ obtain information from his conductors where he was likely to be confined;
+ but the answer was brief and general&mdash;"Where the Lieutenant should
+ direct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Could he not be permitted to share the imprisonment of his father, Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril?" He forgot not, on this occasion, to add the surname of
+ his house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warder, an old man of respectable appearance, stared, as if at the
+ extravagance of the demand, and said bluntly, "It is impossible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At least," said Peveril, "show me where my father is confined, that I may
+ look upon the walls which separate us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young gentleman," said the senior warder, shaking his grey head, "I am
+ sorry for you; but asking questions will do you no service. In this place
+ we know nothing of fathers and sons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet chance seemed, in a few minutes afterwards, to offer Peveril that
+ satisfaction which the rigour of his keepers was disposed to deny to him.
+ As he was conveyed up the steep passage which leads under what is called
+ the Wakefield Tower, a female voice, in a tone wherein grief and joy were
+ indescribably mixed, exclaimed, "My son!&mdash;My dear son!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even those who guarded Julian seemed softened by a tone of such acute
+ feeling. They slackened their pace. They almost paused to permit him to
+ look up towards the casement from which the sounds of maternal agony
+ proceeded; but the aperture was so narrow, and so closely grated, that
+ nothing was visible save a white female hand, which grasped one of those
+ rusty barricadoes, as if for supporting the person within, while another
+ streamed a white handkerchief, and then let it fall. The casement was
+ instantly deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give it me," said Julian to the officer who lifted the handkerchief; "it
+ is perhaps a mother's last gift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old warder lifted the napkin, and looked at it with the jealous
+ minuteness of one who is accustomed to detect secret correspondence in the
+ most trifling acts of intercourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There may be writing on it with invisible ink," said one of his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is wetted, but I think it is only with tears," answered the senior. "I
+ cannot keep it from the poor young gentleman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, Master Coleby," said his comrade, in a gentle tone of reproach, "you
+ would have been wearing a better coat than a yeoman's to-day, had it not
+ been for your tender heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It signifies little," said old Coleby, "while my heart is true to my
+ King, what I feel in discharging my duty, or what coat keeps my old bosom
+ from the cold weather."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril, meanwhile, folded in his breast the token of his mother's
+ affection which chance had favoured him with; and when placed in the small
+ and solitary chamber which he was told to consider as his own during his
+ residence in the Tower, he was soothed even to weeping by this trifling
+ circumstance, which he could not help considering as an omen, that his
+ unfortunate house was not entirely deserted by Providence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the thoughts and occurrences of a prison are too uniform for a
+ narrative, and we must now convey our readers into a more bustling scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Henceforth 'tis done&mdash;Fortune and I are friends;
+ And I must live, for Buckingham commends.
+ &mdash;POPE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The spacious mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, with the demesne belonging
+ to it, originally bore the name of York House and occupied a large portion
+ of the ground adjacent to the Savoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This had been laid out by the munificence of his father, the favourite of
+ Charles the First, in a most splendid manner, so as almost to rival
+ Whitehall itself. But during the increasing rage for building new streets,
+ and the creating of almost an additional town, in order to connect London
+ and Westminster, this ground had become of very great value; and the
+ second Duke of Buckingham, who was at once fond of scheming, and needy of
+ money, had agreed to a plan laid before him by some adventurous architect,
+ for converting the extensive grounds around his palace into those streets,
+ lanes, and courts, which still perpetuate his name and titles; though
+ those who live in Buckingham Street, Duke Street, Villiers Street, or in
+ Of-alley (for even that connecting particle is locally commemorated),
+ probably think seldom of the memory of the witty, eccentric, and
+ licentious George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, whose titles are preserved
+ in the names of their residence and its neighbourhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This building-plan the Duke had entered upon with all the eagerness which
+ he usually attached to novelty. His gardens were destroyed&mdash;his
+ pavilions levelled&mdash;his splendid stables demolished&mdash;the whole
+ pomp of his suburban demesne laid waste, cumbered with ruins, and
+ intersected with the foundations of new buildings and cellars, and the
+ process of levelling different lines for the intended streets. But the
+ undertaking, although it proved afterwards both lucrative and successful,
+ met with a check at the outset, partly from want of the necessary funds,
+ partly from the impatient and mercurial temper of the Duke, which soon
+ carried him off in pursuit of some more new object. So that, though much
+ was demolished, very little, in comparison, was reared up in the stead,
+ and nothing was completed. The principal part of the ducal mansion still
+ remained uninjured; but the demesne in which it stood bore a strange
+ analogy to the irregular mind of its noble owner. Here stood a beautiful
+ group of exotic trees and shrubs, the remnant of the garden, amid yawning
+ common-sewers, and heaps of rubbish. In one place an old tower threatened
+ to fall upon the spectator; and in another he ran the risk of being
+ swallowed up by a modern vault. Grandeur of conception could be discovered
+ in the undertaking, but was almost everywhere marred by poverty or
+ negligence of execution. In short, the whole place was the true emblem of
+ an understanding and talents run to waste, and become more dangerous than
+ advantageous to society, by the want of steady principle, and the
+ improvidence of the possessor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were men who took a different view of the Duke's purpose in
+ permitting his mansion to be thus surrounded, and his demesne occupied by
+ modern buildings which were incomplete, and ancient which were but half
+ demolished. They alleged, that, engaged as he was in so many mysteries of
+ love and of politics, and having the character of the most daring and
+ dangerous intriguer of his time, his Grace found it convenient to surround
+ himself with this ruinous arena, into which officers of justice could not
+ penetrate without some difficulty and hazard; and which might afford, upon
+ occasion, a safe and secret shelter for such tools as were fit for
+ desperate enterprises, and a private and unobserved mode of access to
+ those whom he might have any special reason for receiving in secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leaving Peveril in the Tower, we must once more convey our readers to the
+ Levee of the Duke, who, on the morning of Julian's transference to that
+ fortress, thus addressed his minister-in-chief, and principal attendant:
+ "I have been so pleased with your conduct in this matter, Jerningham, that
+ if Old Nick were to arise in our presence, and offer me his best imp as a
+ familiar in thy room, I would hold it but a poor compliment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A legion of imps," said Jerningham, bowing, "could not have been more
+ busy than I in your Grace's service; but if your Grace will permit me to
+ say so, your whole plan was well-nigh marred by your not returning home
+ till last night, or rather this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why, I pray you, sage Master Jerningham," said his Grace, "should I
+ have returned home an instant sooner than my pleasure and convenience
+ served?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my Lord Duke," replied the attendant, "I know not; only, when you
+ sent us word by Empson, in Chiffinch's apartment, to command us to make
+ sure of the girl at any rate, and at all risks, you said you would be here
+ so soon as you could get freed of the King."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Freed of the King, you rascal! What sort of phrase is that?" demanded the
+ Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was Empson who used it, my lord, as coming from your Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is much very fit for my Grace to say, that misbecomes such mouths
+ as Empson's or yours to repeat," answered the Duke haughtily, but
+ instantly resumed his tone of familiarity, for his humour was as
+ capricious as his pursuits. "But I know what thou wouldst have; first,
+ your wisdom would know what became of me since thou hadst my commands at
+ Chiffinch's; and next, your valour would fain sound another flourish of
+ trumpets on thine own most artificial retreat, leaving thy comrade in the
+ hands of the Philistines."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May it please your Grace," said Jerningham, "I did but retreat for the
+ preservation of the baggage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! do you play at crambo with me?" said the Duke. "I would have you to
+ know that the common parish fool should be whipt, were he to attempt to
+ pass pun or quodlibet as a genuine jest, even amongst ticket-porters and
+ hackney chairmen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And yet I have heard your Grace indulge in the <i>jeu de mots</i>,"
+ answered the attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sirrah Jerningham," answered the patron, "discard they memory, or keep it
+ under correction, else it will hamper thy rise in the world. Thou mayst
+ perchance have seen me also have a fancy to play at trap-ball, or to kiss
+ a serving wench, or to guzzle ale and eat toasted cheese in a porterly
+ whimsy; but is it fitting thou shouldst remember such follies? No more
+ on't.&mdash;Hark you; how came the long lubberly fool, Jenkins, being a
+ master of the noble science of defence, to suffer himself to be run
+ through the body so simply by a rustic swain like this same Peveril?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Please your Grace, this same Corydon is no such novice. I saw the onset;
+ and, except in one hand, I never saw a sword managed with such life,
+ grace, and facility."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, indeed?" said the Duke, taking his own sheathed rapier in his hand,
+ "I could not have thought that. I am somewhat rusted, and have need of
+ breathing. Peveril is a name of note. As well go to the Barns-elms, or
+ behind Montagu House, with him as with another. His father a rumoured
+ plotter, too. The public would have noted it in me as becoming a zealous
+ Protestant. Needful I do something to maintain my good name in the city,
+ to atone for non-attendance on prayer and preaching. But your Laertes is
+ fast in the Fleet; and I suppose his blundering blockhead of an antagonist
+ is dead or dying."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Recovering, my lord, on the contrary," replied Jerningham; "the blade
+ fortunately avoided his vitals."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "D&mdash;n his vitals!" answered the Duke. "Tell him to postpone his
+ recovery, or I will put him to death in earnest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will caution his surgeon," said Jerningham, "which will answer equally
+ well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do so; and tell him he had better be on his own deathbed as cure his
+ patient till I send him notice.&mdash;That young fellow must be let loose
+ again at no rate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is little danger," said the attendant. "I hear some of the
+ witnesses have got their net flung over him on account of some matters
+ down in the north; and that he is to be translated to the Tower for that,
+ and for some letters of the Countess of Derby, as rumour goes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the Tower let him go, and get out as he can," replied the Duke; "and
+ when you hear he is fast there, let the fencing fellow recover as fast as
+ the surgeon and he can mutually settle it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, having said this, took two or three turns in the apartment, and
+ appeared to be in deep thought. His attendant waited the issue of his
+ meditations with patience, being well aware that such moods, during which
+ his mind was strongly directed in one point, were never of so long
+ duration with his patron as to prove a severe burden to his own patience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, after the silence of seven or eight minutes, the Duke broke
+ through it, taking from the toilette a large silk purse, which seemed full
+ of gold. "Jerningham," he said, "thou art a faithful fellow, and it would
+ be sin not to cherish thee. I beat the King at Mall on his bold defiance.
+ The honour is enough for me; and thou, my boy, shalt have the winnings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerningham pocketed the purse with due acknowledgements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jerningham," his Grace continued, "I know you blame me for changing my
+ plans too often; and on my soul I have heard you so learned on the
+ subject, that I have become of your opinion, and have been vexed at myself
+ for two or three hours together, for not sticking as constantly to one
+ object, as doubtless I shall, when age (touching his forehead) shall make
+ this same weathercock too rusty to turn with the changing breeze. But as
+ yet, while I have spirit and action, let it whirl like the vane at the
+ mast-head, which teaches the pilot how to steer his course; and when I
+ shift mine, think I am bound to follow Fortune, and not to control her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can understand nothing from all this, please your Grace," replied
+ Jerningham, "save that you have been pleased to change some purposed
+ measures, and think that you have profited by doing so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall judge yourself," replied the Duke. "I have seen the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth.&mdash;You start. It is true, by Heaven! I have seen her, and
+ from sworn enemies we have become sworn friends. The treaty between such
+ high and mighty powers had some weighty articles; besides, I had a French
+ negotiator to deal with; so that you will allow a few hours' absence was
+ but a necessary interval to make up our matters of diplomacy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace astonishes me," said Jerningham. "Christian's plan of
+ supplanting the great lady is then entirely abandoned? I thought you had
+ but desired to have the fair successor here, in order to carry it on under
+ your own management."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I forgot what I meant at the time," said the Duke; "unless that I was
+ resolved she should not jilt me as she did the good-natured man of
+ royalty; and so I am still determined, since you put me in mind of the
+ fair Dowsabelle. But I had a contrite note from the Duchess while we were
+ at the Mall. I went to see her, and found her a perfect Niobe.&mdash;On my
+ soul, in spite of red eyes and swelled features, and dishevelled hair,
+ there are, after all, Jerningham, some women who do, as the poets say,
+ look lovely in affliction. Out came the cause; and with such humility,
+ such penitence, such throwing herself on my mercy (she the proudest devil,
+ too, in the whole Court), that I must have had heart of steel to resist it
+ all. In short, Chiffinch in a drunken fit had played the babbler, and let
+ young Saville into our intrigue. Saville plays the rogue, and informs the
+ Duchess by a messenger, who luckily came a little late into the market.
+ She learned, too, being a very devil for intelligence, that there had been
+ some jarring between the master and me about this new Phillis; and that I
+ was most likely to catch the bird,&mdash;as any one may see who looks on
+ us both. It must have been Empson who fluted all this into her Grace's
+ ear; and thinking she saw how her ladyship and I could hunt in couples,
+ she entreats me to break Christian's scheme, and keep the wench out of the
+ King's sight, especially if she were such a rare piece of perfection as
+ fame has reported her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And your Grace has promised her your hand to uphold the influence which
+ you have so often threatened to ruin?" said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, Jerningham; my turn was as much served when she seemed to own herself
+ in my power, and cry me mercy.&mdash;And observe, it is all one to me by
+ which ladder I climb into the King's cabinet. That of Portsmouth is ready
+ fixed&mdash;better ascend by it than fling it down to put up another&mdash;I
+ hate all unnecessary trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And Christian?" said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May go to the devil for a self-conceited ass. One pleasure of this twist
+ of intrigue is, to revenge me of that villain, who thought himself so
+ essential, that, by Heaven! he forced himself on my privacy, and lectured
+ me like a schoolboy. Hang the cold-blooded hypocritical vermin! If he
+ mutters, I will have his nose slit as wide as Coventry's.[*]&mdash;Hark
+ ye, is the Colonel come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I expect him every moment, your Grace."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The ill-usage of Sir John Coventry by some of the Life Guardsmen,
+ in revenge of something said in Parliament concerning the King's
+ theatrical amours, gave rise to what was called Coventry's Act,
+ against cutting and maiming the person.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Send him up when he arrives," said the Duke.&mdash;&mdash;"Why do you
+ stand looking at me? What would you have?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace's direction respecting the young lady," said Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Odd zooks," said the Duke, "I had totally forgotten her.&mdash;Is she
+ very tearful?&mdash;Exceedingly afflicted?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She does not take on so violently as I have seen some do," said
+ Jerningham; "but for a strong, firm, concentrated indignation, I have seen
+ none to match her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, we will permit her to cool. I will not face the affliction of a
+ second fair one immediately. I am tired of snivelling, and swelled eyes,
+ and blubbered cheeks for some time; and, moreover, must husband my powers
+ of consolation. Begone, and send the Colonel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will your Grace permit me one other question?" demanded his confidant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ask what thou wilt, Jerningham, and then begone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace has determined to give up Christian," said the attendant. "May
+ I ask what becomes of the kingdom of Man?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forgotten, as I have a Christian soul!" said the Duke; "as much forgotten
+ as if I had never nourished that scheme of royal ambition.&mdash;D&mdash;n
+ it, we must knit up the ravelled skein of that intrigue.&mdash;Yet it is
+ but a miserable rock, not worth the trouble I have been bestowing on it;
+ and for a kingdom&mdash;it has a sound indeed; but, in reality, I might as
+ well stick a cock-chicken's feather into my hat, and call it a plume.
+ Besides, now I think upon it, it would scarce be honourable to sweep that
+ petty royalty out of Derby's possession. I won a thousand pieces of the
+ young Earl when he was last here, and suffered him to hang about me at
+ Court. I question if the whole revenue of his kingdom is worth twice as
+ much. Easily I could win it of him, were he here, with less trouble than
+ it would cost me to carry on these troublesome intrigues of Christian's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I may be permitted to say so, please your Grace," answered Jerningham,
+ "although your Grace is perhaps somewhat liable to change your mind, no
+ man in England can afford better reasons for doing so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think so myself, Jerningham," said the Duke; "and it may be it is one
+ reason for my changing. One likes to vindicate his own conduct, and to
+ find out fine reasons for doing what one has a mind to.&mdash;And now,
+ once again, begone. Or, hark ye&mdash;hark ye&mdash;I shall need some
+ loose gold. You may leave the purse I gave you; and I will give you an
+ order for as much, and two years' interest, on old Jacob Doublefee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As your Grace pleases," said Jerningham, his whole stock of complaisance
+ scarcely able to conceal his mortification at exchanging for a distant
+ order, of a kind which of late had not been very regularly honoured, the
+ sunny contents of the purse which had actually been in his pocket.
+ Secretly, but solemnly did he make a vow, that two years' interest alone
+ should not be the compensation for this involuntary exchange in the form
+ of his remuneration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the discontented dependant left the apartment, he met, at the head of
+ the grand staircase, Christian himself, who, exercising the freedom of an
+ ancient friend of the house, was making his way, unannounced, to the
+ Duke's dressing apartment. Jerningham, conjecturing that his visit at this
+ crisis would be anything but well timed, or well taken, endeavoured to
+ avert his purpose by asserting that the Duke was indisposed, and in his
+ bedchamber; and this he said so loud that his master might hear him, and,
+ if he pleased, realise the apology which he offered in his name, by
+ retreating into the bedroom as his last sanctuary, and drawing the bolt
+ against intrusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, far from adopting a stratagem to which he had had recourse on former
+ occasions, in order to avoid those who came upon him, though at an
+ appointed hour, and upon business of importance, Buckingham called, in a
+ loud voice, from his dressing apartment, commanding his chamberlain
+ instantly to introduce his good friend Master Christian, and censuring him
+ for hesitating for an instant to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," thought Jerningham within himself, "if Christian knew the Duke as
+ well as I do, he would sooner stand the leap of a lion, like the London
+ 'prentice bold, than venture on my master at this moment, who is even now
+ in a humour nearly as dangerous as the animal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then ushered Christian into his master's presence, taking care to post
+ himself within earshot of the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Speak not of niceness, when there's chance of wreck,"
+ The captain said, as ladies writhed their neck
+ To see the dying dolphin flap the deck:
+ "If we go down, on us these gentry sup;
+ We dine upon them, if we haul them up.
+ Wise men applaud us when we eat the eaters,
+ As the devil laughs when keen folks cheat the cheaters."
+ &mdash;THE SEA VOYAGE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing in Duke's manner towards Christian which could have
+ conveyed to that latter personage, experienced as he was in the worst
+ possible ways of the world, that Buckingham would, at that particular
+ moment, rather have seen the devil than himself; unless it was that
+ Buckingham's reception of him, being rather extraordinarily courteous
+ towards so old an acquaintance, might have excited some degree of
+ suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having escaped with some difficulty from the vague region of general
+ compliments, which bears the same relation to that of business that Milton
+ informs us the <i>Limbo Patrum</i> has to the sensible and material earth,
+ Christian asked his Grace of Buckingham, with the same blunt plainness
+ with which he usually veiled a very deep and artificial character, whether
+ he had lately seen Chiffinch or his helpmate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neither of them lately," answered Buckingham. "Have not you waited on
+ them yourself?&mdash;I thought you would have been more anxious about the
+ great scheme."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have called once and again," said Christian, "but I can gain no access
+ to the sight of that important couple. I begin to be afraid they are
+ paltering with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which, by the welkin and its stars, you would not be slow in avenging,
+ Master Christian. I know your puritanical principles on that point well,"
+ said the Duke. "Revenge may be well said to be sweet, when so many grave
+ and wise men are ready to exchange for it all the sugar-plums which
+ pleasures offer to the poor sinful people of the world, besides the
+ reversion of those which they talk of expecting in the way of <i>post obit</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You may jest, my lord," said Christian, "but still&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But still you will be revenged on Chiffinch, and his little commodious
+ companion. And yet the task may be difficult&mdash;Chiffinch has so many
+ ways of obliging his master&mdash;his little woman is such a convenient
+ pretty sort of a screen, and has such winning little ways of her own,
+ that, in faith, in your case, I would not meddle with them. What is this
+ refusing their door, man? We all do it to our best friends now and then,
+ as well as to duns and dull company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If your Grace is in a humour of rambling thus wildly in your talk," said
+ Christian, "you know my old faculty of patience&mdash;I can wait till it
+ be your pleasure to talk more seriously."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seriously!" said his Grace&mdash;"Wherefore not?&mdash;I only wait to
+ know what your serious business may be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In a word, my lord, from Chiffinch's refusal to see me, and some vain
+ calls which I have made at your Grace's mansion, I am afraid either that
+ our plan has miscarried, or that there is some intention to exclude me
+ from the farther conduct of the matter." Christian pronounced these words
+ with considerable emphasis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That were folly as well as treachery," returned the Duke, "to exclude
+ from the spoil the very engineer who conducted the attack. But hark ye,
+ Christian&mdash;I am sorry to tell bad news without preparation; but as
+ you insist on knowing the worst, and are not ashamed to suspect your best
+ friends, out it must come&mdash;Your niece left Chiffinch's house the
+ morning before yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian staggered, as if he had received a severe blow; and the blood
+ ran to his face in such a current of passion, that the Duke concluded he
+ was struck with an apoplexy. But, exerting the extraordinary command which
+ he could maintain under the most trying circumstances, he said, with a
+ voice, the composure of which had an unnatural contrast with the
+ alteration of his countenance, "Am I to conclude, that in leaving the
+ protection of the roof in which I placed her, the girl has found shelter
+ under that of your Grace?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir," replied Buckingham gravely, "the supposition does my gallantry more
+ credit than it deserves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, my Lord Duke," answered Christian, "I am not one whom you can impose
+ on by this species of courtly jargon. I know of what your Grace is
+ capable; and that to gratify the caprice of a moment you would not
+ hesitate to disappoint even the schemes at which you yourself have
+ laboured most busily.&mdash;Suppose this jest played off. Take your laugh
+ at those simple precautions by which I intended to protect your Grace's
+ interest, as well as that of others. Let us know the extent of your
+ frolic, and consider how far its consequences can be repaired."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my word, Christian," said the Duke, laughing, "you are the most
+ obliging of uncles and of guardians. Let your niece pass through as many
+ adventures as Boccaccio's bride of the King of Garba, you care not. Pure
+ or soiled, she will still make the footstool of your fortune."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An Indian proverb says, that the dart of contempt will even pierce through
+ the shell of the tortoise; but this is more peculiarly the case when
+ conscience tells the subject of the sarcasm that it is justly merited.
+ Christian, stung with Buckingham's reproach, at once assumed a haughty and
+ threatening mien, totally inconsistent with that in which sufferance
+ seemed to be as much his badge as that of Shylock. "You are a foul-mouthed
+ and most unworthy lord," he said; "and as such I will proclaim you, unless
+ you make reparation for the injury you have done me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what," said the Duke of Buckingham, "shall I proclaim <i>you</i>,
+ that can give you the least title to notice from such as I am? What name
+ shall I bestow on the little transaction which has given rise to such
+ unexpected misunderstanding?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian was silent, either from rage or from mental conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, come, Christian," said the Duke, smiling, "we know too much of each
+ other to make a quarrel safe. Hate each other we may&mdash;circumvent each
+ other&mdash;it is the way of Courts&mdash;but proclaim!&mdash;a fico for
+ the phrase."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I used it not," said Christian, "till your Grace drove me to extremity.
+ You know, my lord, I have fought both at home and abroad; and you should
+ not rashly think that I will endure any indignity which blood can wipe
+ away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the contrary," said the Duke, with the same civil and sneering manner,
+ "I can confidently assert, that the life of half a score of your friends
+ would seem very light to you, Christian, if their existence interfered, I
+ do not say with your character, as being a thing of much less consequence,
+ but with any advantage which their existence might intercept. Fie upon it,
+ man, we have known each other long. I never thought you a coward; and am
+ only glad to see I could strike a few sparkles of heat out of your cold
+ and constant disposition. I will now, if you please, tell you at once the
+ fate of the young lady, in which I pray you to believe that I am truly
+ interested."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hear you, my Lord Duke," said Christian. "The curl of your upper lip,
+ and your eyebrow, does not escape me. Your Grace knows the French proverb,
+ 'He laughs best who laughs last.' But I hear you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank Heaven you do," said Buckingham; "for your case requires haste, I
+ promise you, and involves no laughing matter. Well then, hear a simple
+ truth, on which (if it became me to offer any pledge for what I assert to
+ be such) I could pledge life, fortune, and honour. It was the morning
+ before last, when meeting with the King at Chiffinch's unexpectedly&mdash;in
+ fact I had looked in to fool an hour away, and to learn how your scheme
+ advanced&mdash;I saw a singular scene. Your niece terrified little
+ Chiffinch&mdash;(the hen Chiffinch, I mean)&mdash;bid the King defiance to
+ his teeth, and walked out of the presence triumphantly, under the
+ guardianship of a young fellow of little mark or likelihood, excepting a
+ tolerable personal presence, and the advantage of a most unconquerable
+ impudence. Egad, I can hardly help laughing to think how the King and I
+ were both baffled; for I will not deny, that I had tried to trifle for a
+ moment with the fair Indamora. But, egad, the young fellow swooped her off
+ from under our noses, like my own Drawcansir clearing off the banquet from
+ the two Kings of Brentford. There was a dignity in the gallant's
+ swaggering retreat which I must try to teach Mohun;[*] it will suit his
+ part admirably."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] Then a noted actor.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "This is incomprehensible, my Lord Duke," said Christian, who by this time
+ had recovered all his usual coolness; "you cannot expect me to believe
+ this. Who dared be so bold as to carry of my niece in such a manner, and
+ from so august a presence? And with whom, a stranger as he must have been,
+ would she, wise and cautious as I know her, have consented to depart in
+ such a manner?&mdash;My lord, I cannot believe this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of your priests, my most devoted Christian," replied the Duke, "would
+ only answer, Die, infidel, in thine unbelief; but I am only a poor
+ worldling sinner, and I will add what mite of information I can. The young
+ fellow's name, as I am given to understand, is Julian, son of Sir
+ Geoffrey, whom men call Peveril of the Peak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Peveril of the Devil, who hath his cavern there!" said Christian warmly;
+ "for I know that gallant, and believe him capable of anything bold and
+ desperate. But how could he intrude himself into the royal presence?
+ Either Hell aids him, or Heaven looks nearer into mortal dealings than I
+ have yet believed. If so, may God forgive us, who deemed he thought not on
+ us at all!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen, most Christian Christian," replied the Duke. "I am glad to see thou
+ hast yet some touch of grace that leads thee to augur so. But Empson, the
+ hen Chiffinch, and half-a-dozen more, saw the swain's entrance and
+ departure. Please examine these witnesses with your own wisdom, if you
+ think your time may not be better employed in tracing the fugitives. I
+ believe he gained entrance as one of some dancing or masking party.
+ Rowley, you know, is accessible to all who will come forth to make him
+ sport. So in stole this termagant tearing gallant, like Samson among the
+ Philistines, to pull down our fine scheme about our ears."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe you, my lord," said Christian; "I cannot but believe you; and I
+ forgive you, since it is your nature, for making sport of what is ruin and
+ destruction. But which way did they take?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To Derbyshire, I should presume, to seek her father," said the Duke. "She
+ spoke of going into paternal protection, instead of yours, Master
+ Christian. Something had chanced at Chiffinch's, to give her cause to
+ suspect that you had not altogether provided for his daughter in the
+ manner which her father was likely to approve of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Heaven be praised," said Christian, "she knows not her father is
+ come to London! and they must be gone down either to Martindale Castle, or
+ to Moultrassie Hall; in either case they are in my power&mdash;I must
+ follow them close. I will return instantly to Derbyshire&mdash;I am undone
+ if she meet her father until these errors are amended. Adieu, my lord. I
+ forgive the part which I fear your Grace must have had in baulking our
+ enterprise&mdash;it is no time for mutual reproaches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak truth, Master Christian," said the Duke, "and I wish you all
+ success. Can I help you with men, or horses, or money?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank your Grace," said Christian, and hastily left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke watched his descending footsteps on the staircase, until they
+ could be heard no longer, and then exclaimed to Jerningham, who entered, "<i>Victoria!
+ victoria! magna est veritas et prævalebit!</i>&mdash;Had I told the
+ villain a word of a lie, he is so familiar with all the regions of
+ falsehood&mdash;his whole life has been such an absolute imposture, that I
+ had stood detected in an instant; but I told him truth, and that was the
+ only means of deceiving him. Victoria! my dear Jerningham, I am prouder of
+ cheating Christian, than I should have been of circumventing a minister of
+ state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace holds his wisdom very high," said the attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His cunning, at least, I do, which, in Court affairs, often takes the
+ weather-gage of wisdom,&mdash;as in Yarmouth Roads a herring-buss will
+ baffle a frigate. He shall not return to London if I can help it, until
+ all these intrigues are over."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his Grace spoke, the Colonel, after whom he had repeatedly made
+ inquiry, was announced by a gentleman of his household. "He met not
+ Christian, did he?" said the Duke hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, my lord," returned the domestic, "the Colonel came by the old garden
+ staircase."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I judged as much," replied the Duke; "'tis an owl that will not take wing
+ in daylight, when there is a thicket left to skulk under. Here he comes
+ from threading lane, vault, and ruinous alley, very near ominous a
+ creature as the fowl of ill augury which he resembles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Colonel, to whom no other appellation seemed to be given, than that
+ which belonged to his military station, now entered the apartment. He was
+ tall, strongly built, and past the middle period of life, and his
+ countenance, but for the heavy cloud which dwelt upon it, might have been
+ pronounced a handsome one. While the Duke spoke to him, either from
+ humility or some other cause, his large serious eye was cast down upon the
+ ground; but he raised it when he answered, with a keen look of earnest
+ observation. His dress was very plain, and more allied to that of the
+ Puritans than of the Cavaliers of the time; a shadowy black hat, like the
+ Spanish sombrero; a large black mantle or cloak, and a long rapier, gave
+ him something the air of a Castilione, to which his gravity and stiffness
+ of demeanour added considerable strength.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Colonel," said the Duke, "we have been long strangers&mdash;how
+ have matters gone with you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As with other men of action in quiet times," answered the colonel, "or as
+ a good war-caper[*] that lies high and dry in a muddy creek, till seams
+ and planks are rent and riven."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [*] A privateer.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Colonel," said the Duke, "I have used your valour before now, and I
+ may again; so that I shall speedily see that the vessel is careened, and
+ undergoes a thorough repair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I conjecture, then," said the Colonel, "that your Grace has some voyage
+ in hand?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, but there is one which I want to interrupt," replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tis but another stave of the same tune.&mdash;Well, my lord, I listen,"
+ answered the stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," said the Duke, "it is but a trifling matter after all.&mdash;You
+ know Ned Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, surely, my lord," replied the Colonel, "we have been long known to
+ each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is about to go down to Derbyshire to seek a certain niece of his, whom
+ he will scarcely find there. Now, I trust to your tried friendship to
+ interrupt his return to London. Go with him, or meet him, cajole him, or
+ assail him, or do what thou wilt with him&mdash;only keep him from London
+ for a fortnight at least, and then I care little how soon he comes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For by that time, I suppose," replied the Colonel, "any one may find the
+ wench that thinks her worth the looking for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou mayst think her worth the looking for thyself, Colonel," rejoined
+ the Duke; "I promise you she hath many a thousand stitched to her
+ petticoat; such a wife would save thee from skeldering on the public."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord, I sell my blood and my sword, but not my honour," answered the
+ man sullenly; "if I marry, my bed may be a poor, but it shall be an honest
+ one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then thy wife will be the only honest matter in thy possession, Colonel&mdash;at
+ least since I have known you," replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, truly, your Grace may speak your pleasure on that point. It is
+ chiefly your business which I have done of late; and if it were less
+ strictly honest than I could have wished, the employer was to blame as
+ well as the agent. But for marrying a cast-off mistress, the man (saving
+ your Grace, to whom I am bound) lives not who dares propose it to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke laughed loudly. "Why, this is mine Ancient Pistol's vein," he
+ replied.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;"Shall I Sir Pandarus of Troy become,
+ And by my side wear steel?&mdash;then Lucifer take all!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "My breeding is too plain to understand ends of playhouse verse, my lord,"
+ said the Colonel suddenly. "Has your Grace no other service to command
+ me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None&mdash;only I am told you have published a Narrative concerning the
+ Plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What should ail me, my lord?" said the Colonel; "I hope I am a witness as
+ competent as any that has yet appeared?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Truly, I think so to the full," said the Duke; "and it would have been
+ hard, when so much profitable mischief was going, if so excellent a
+ Protestant as yourself had not come in for a share."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I came to take your Grace's commands, not to be the object of your wit,"
+ said the Colonel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gallantly spoken, most resolute and most immaculate Colonel! As you are
+ to be on full pay in my service for a month to come, I pray your
+ acceptance of this purse, for contingents and equipments, and you shall
+ have my instructions from time to time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They shall be punctually obeyed, my lord," said the Colonel; "I know the
+ duty of a subaltern officer. I wish your Grace a good morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he pocketed the purse, without either affecting hesitation, or
+ expressing gratitude, but merely as a part of a transaction in the regular
+ way of business, and stalked from the apartment with the same sullen
+ gravity which marked his entrance. "Now, there goes a scoundrel after my
+ own heart," said the Duke; "a robber from his cradle, a murderer since he
+ could hold a knife, a profound hypocrite in religion, and a worse and
+ deeper hypocrite in honour,&mdash;would sell his soul to the devil to
+ accomplish any villainy, and would cut the throat of his brother, did he
+ dare to give the villainy he had so acted its right name.&mdash;Now, why
+ stand you amazed, good Master Jerningham, and look on me as you would on
+ some monster of Ind, when you had paid your shilling to see it, and were
+ staring out your pennyworth with your eyes as round as a pair of
+ spectacles? Wink, man, and save them, and then let thy tongue untie the
+ mystery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my word, my Lord Duke," answered Jerningham, "since I am compelled to
+ speak, I can only say, that the longer I live with your Grace, I am the
+ more at a loss to fathom your motives of action. Others lay plans, either
+ to attain profit or pleasure by their execution; but your Grace's delight
+ is to counteract your own schemes, when in the very act of performance;
+ like a child&mdash;forgive me&mdash;that breaks its favourite toy, or a
+ man who should set fire to the house he has half built."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why not, if he wanted to warm his hands at the blaze?" said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, my lord," replied his dependent; "but what if, in doing so, he should
+ burn his fingers?&mdash;My lord, it is one of your noblest qualities, that
+ you will sometimes listen to the truth without taking offence; but were it
+ otherwise, I could not, at this moment, help speaking out at every risk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, say on, I can bear it," said the Duke, throwing himself into an
+ easy-chair, and using his toothpick with graceful indifference and
+ equanimity; "I love to hear what such potsherds as thou art, think of the
+ proceeding of us who are of the pure porcelain clay of the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the name of Heaven, my lord, let me then ask you," said Jerningham,
+ "what merit you claim, or what advantage you expect, from having embroiled
+ everything in which you are concerned to a degree which equals the chaos
+ of the blind old Roundhead's poem which your Grace is so fond of? To begin
+ with the King. In spite of good-humour, he will be incensed at your
+ repeated rivalry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty defied me to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have lost all hopes of the Isle, by quarrelling with Christian."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have ceased to care a farthing about it," replied the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In Christian himself, whom you have insulted, and to whose family you
+ intend dishonour, you have lost a sagacious, artful, and cool-headed
+ instrument and adherent," said the monitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Poor Jerningham!" answered the Duke; "Christian would say as much for
+ thee, I doubt not, wert thou discarded tomorrow. It is the common error of
+ such tools as you and he to think themselves indispensable. As to his
+ family, what was never honourable cannot be dishonoured by any connection
+ with my house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I say nothing of Chiffinch," said Jerningham, "offended as he will be
+ when he learns why, and by whom, his scheme has been ruined, and the lady
+ spirited away&mdash;He and his wife, I say nothing of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You need not," said the Duke; "for were they even fit persons to speak to
+ me about, the Duchess of Portsmouth has bargained for their disgrace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then this bloodhound of a Colonel, as he calls himself, your Grace cannot
+ even lay <i>him</i> on a quest which is to do you service, but you must do
+ him such indignity at the same time, as he will not fail to remember, and
+ be sure to fly at your throat should he ever have an opportunity of
+ turning on you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will take care he has none," said the Duke; "and yours, Jerningham, is
+ a low-lived apprehension. Beat your spaniel heartily if you would have him
+ under command. Ever let your agents see you know what they are, and prize
+ them accordingly. A rogue, who must needs be treated as a man of honour,
+ is apt to get above his work. Enough, therefore, of your advice and
+ censure, Jerningham; we differ in every particular. Were we both
+ engineers, you would spend your life in watching some old woman's wheel,
+ which spins flax by the ounce; I must be in the midst of the most varied
+ and counteracting machinery, regulating checks and counter-checks,
+ balancing weights, proving springs and wheels, directing and controlling a
+ hundred combined powers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And your fortune, in the meanwhile?" said Jerningham; "pardon this last
+ hint, my lord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My fortune," said the Duke, "is too vast to be hurt by a petty wound; and
+ I have, as thou knowest, a thousand salves in store for the scratches and
+ scars which it sometimes receives in greasing my machinery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace does not mean Dr. Wilderhead's powder of projection?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw! he is a quacksalver, and mountebank, and beggar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or Solicitor Drowndland's plan for draining the fens?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a cheat,&mdash;<i>videlicet</i>, an attorney."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or the Laird of Lackpelf's sale of Highland woods?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is a Scotsman," said the Duke,&mdash;"<i>videlicet</i>, both cheat and
+ beggar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These streets here, upon the site of your noble mansion-house?" said
+ Jerningham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The architect's a bite, and the plan's a bubble. I am sick of the sight
+ of this rubbish, and I will soon replace our old alcoves, alleys, and
+ flower-pots by an Italian garden and a new palace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That, my lord, would be to waste, not to improve your fortune," said his
+ domestic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Clodpate, and muddy spirit that thou art, thou hast forgot the most
+ hopeful scheme of all&mdash;the South Sea Fisheries&mdash;their stock is
+ up 50 per cent. already. Post down to the Alley, and tell old Mansses to
+ buy £20,000 for me.&mdash;Forgive me, Plutus, I forgot to lay my sacrifice
+ on thy shrine, and yet expected thy favours!&mdash;Fly post-haste,
+ Jerningham&mdash;for thy life, for thy life, for thy life!"[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Stock-jobbing, as it is called, that is, dealing in shares of
+ monopolies, patent, and joint-stock companies of every
+ description, was at least as common in Charles II.'s time as our
+ own; and as the exercise of ingenuity in this way promised a road
+ to wealth without the necessity of industry, it was then much
+ pursued by dissolute courtiers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With hands and eyes uplifted, Jerningham left the apartment; and the Duke,
+ without thinking a moment farther on old or new intrigues&mdash;on the
+ friendship he had formed, or the enmity he had provoked&mdash;on the
+ beauty whom he had carried off from her natural protectors, as well as
+ from her lover&mdash;or on the monarch against whom he had placed himself
+ in rivalship,&mdash;sat down to calculate chances with all the zeal of
+ Demoivre, tired of the drudgery in half-an-hour, and refused to see the
+ zealous agent whom he had employed in the city, because he was busily
+ engaged in writing a new lampoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ah! changeful head, and fickle heart!
+ &mdash;PROGRESS OF DISCONTENT.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ No event is more ordinary in narratives of this nature, than the abduction
+ of the female on whose fate the interest is supposed to turn; but that of
+ Alice Bridgenorth was thus far particular, that she was spirited away by
+ the Duke of Buckingham, more in contradiction than in the rivalry of
+ passion; and that, as he made his first addresses to her at Chiffinch's,
+ rather in the spirit of rivalry to this Sovereign, than from any strong
+ impression which her beauty had made on his affections, so he had formed
+ the sudden plan of spiriting her away by means of his dependents, rather
+ to perplex Christian, the King, Chiffinch, and all concerned, than because
+ he had any particular desire for her society at his own mansion. Indeed,
+ so far was this from being the case, that his Grace was rather surprised
+ than delighted with the success of the enterprise which had made her an
+ inmate there, although it is probable he might have thrown himself into an
+ uncontrollable passion, had he learned its miscarriage instead of its
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-four hours had passed over since he had returned to his own roof,
+ before, notwithstanding sundry hints from Jerningham, he could even
+ determine on the exertion necessary to pay his fair captive a visit; and
+ then it was with the internal reluctance of one who can only be stirred
+ from indolence by novelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder what made me plague myself about this wench," said he, "and doom
+ myself to encounter all the hysterical rhapsodies of a country Phillis,
+ with her head stuffed with her grandmother's lessons about virtue and the
+ Bible-book, when the finest and best-bred women in town may be had upon
+ more easy terms. It is a pity one cannot mount the victor's car of triumph
+ without having a victory to boast of; yet, faith, it is what most of our
+ modern gallants do, though it would not become Buckingham.&mdash;Well, I
+ must see her," he concluded, "though it were but to rid the house of her.
+ The Portsmouth will not hear of her being set at liberty near Charles, so
+ much is she afraid of a new fair seducing the old sinner from his
+ allegiance. So how the girl is to be disposed of&mdash;for I shall have
+ little fancy to keep her here, and she is too wealthy to be sent down to
+ Cliefden as a housekeeper&mdash;is a matter to be thought on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then called for such a dress as might set off his natural good mien&mdash;a
+ compliment which he considered as due to his own merit; for as to anything
+ farther, he went to pay his respects to his fair prisoner with almost as
+ little zeal in the cause, as a gallant to fight a duel in which he has no
+ warmer interest than the maintenance of his reputation as man of honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The set of apartments consecrated to the use of those favourites who
+ occasionally made Buckingham's mansion their place of abode, and who were,
+ so far as liberty was concerned, often required to observe the regulations
+ of a convent, were separated from the rest of the Duke's extensive
+ mansion. He lived in the age when what was called gallantry warranted the
+ most atrocious actions of deceit and violence; as may be best illustrated
+ by the catastrophe of an unfortunate actress, whose beauty attracted the
+ attention of the last De Vere, Earl of Oxford. While her virtue defied his
+ seductions, he ruined her under colour of a mock marriage, and was
+ rewarded for a success which occasioned the death of his victim, by the
+ general applause of the men of wit and gallantry who filled the
+ drawing-room of Charles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham had made provision in the interior of his ducal mansion for
+ exploits of a similar nature; and the set of apartments which he now
+ visited were alternately used to confine the reluctant, and to accommodate
+ the willing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being now destined for the former purpose, the key was delivered to the
+ Duke by a hooded and spectacled old lady, who sat reading a devout book in
+ the outer hall which divided these apartments (usually called the Nunnery)
+ from the rest of the house. This experienced dowager acted as mistress of
+ the ceremonies on such occasions, and was the trusty depositary of more
+ intrigues than were known to any dozen of her worshipful calling besides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As sweet a linnet," she said, as she undid the outward door, "as ever
+ sung in a cage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was afraid she might have been more for moping than for singing,
+ Dowlas," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Till yesterday she was so, please your Grace," answered Dowlas; "or, to
+ speak sooth, till early this morning, we heard of nothing but Lachrymæ.
+ But the air of your noble Grace's house is favourable to singing-birds;
+ and to-day matters have been a-much mended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tis sudden, dame," said the Duke; "and 'tis something strange,
+ considering that I have never visited her, that the pretty trembler should
+ have been so soon reconciled to her fate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, your Grace has such magic, that it communicates itself to your very
+ walls; as wholesome Scripture says, Exodus, first and seventh, 'It
+ cleaveth to the walls and the doorposts.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are too partial, Dame Dowlas," said the Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not a word but truth," said the dame; "and I wish I may be an outcast
+ from the fold of the lambs, but I think this damsel's very frame has
+ changed since she was under your Grace's roof. Methinks she hath a lighter
+ form, a finer step, a more displayed ankle&mdash;I cannot tell, but I
+ think there is a change. But, lack-a-day, your Grace knows I am as old as
+ I am trusty, and that my eyes wax something uncertain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Especially when you wash them with a cup of canary, Dame Dowlas,"
+ answered the Duke, who was aware that temperance was not amongst the
+ cardinal virtues which were most familiar to the old lady's practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was it canary, your Grace said?&mdash;Was it indeed with canary, that
+ your Grace should have supposed me to have washed my eyes?" said the
+ offended matron. "I am sorry that your Grace should know me no better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I crave your pardon, dame," said the Duke, shaking aside, fastidiously,
+ the grasp which, in the earnestness of her exculpation, Madam Dowlas had
+ clutched upon his sleeve. "I crave your pardon. Your nearer approach has
+ convinced me of my erroneous imputation&mdash;I should have said nantz&mdash;not
+ canary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, he walked forward into the inner apartments, which were fitted
+ up with an air of voluptuous magnificence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The dame said true, however," said the proud deviser and proprietor of
+ the splendid mansion&mdash;"A country Phillis might well reconcile herself
+ to such a prison as this, even without a skilful bird-fancier to touch a
+ bird-call. But I wonder where she can be, this rural Phidele. Is it
+ possible she can have retreated, like a despairing commandant, into her
+ bedchamber, the very citadel of the place, without even an attempt to
+ defend the outworks?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he made this reflection, he passed through an antechamber and little
+ eating parlour, exquisitely furnished, and hung with excellent paintings
+ of the Venetian school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond these lay a withdrawing-room, fitted up in a style of still more
+ studied elegance. The windows were darkened with painted glass, of such a
+ deep and rich colour, as made the midday beams, which found their way into
+ the apartment, imitate the rich colours of sunset; and, in the celebrated
+ expression of the poet, "taught light to counterfeit a gloom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham's feelings and taste had been too much, and too often, and too
+ readily gratified, to permit him, in the general case, to be easily
+ accessible, even to those pleasures which it had been the business of his
+ life to pursue. The hackneyed voluptuary is like the jaded epicure, the
+ mere listlessness of whose appetite becomes at length a sufficient penalty
+ for having made it the principal object of his enjoyment and cultivation.
+ Yet novelty has always some charms, and uncertainty has more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doubt how he was to be received&mdash;the change of mood which his
+ prisoner was said to have evinced&mdash;the curiosity to know how such a
+ creature as Alice Bridgenorth had been described, was likely to bear
+ herself under the circumstances in which she was so unexpectedly placed,
+ had upon Buckingham the effect of exciting unusual interest. On his own
+ part, he had none of those feelings of anxiety with which a man, even of
+ the most vulgar mind, comes to the presence of the female whom he wishes
+ to please, far less the more refined sentiments of love, respect, desire,
+ and awe, with which the more refined lover approaches the beloved object.
+ He had been, to use an expressive French phrase, too completely <i>blasé</i>
+ even from his earliest youth, to permit him now to experience the animal
+ eagerness of the one, far less the more sentimental pleasure of the other.
+ It is no small aggravation of this jaded and uncomfortable state of mind,
+ that the voluptuary cannot renounce the pursuits with which he is
+ satiated, but must continue, for his character's sake, or from the mere
+ force of habit, to take all the toil, fatigue, and danger of the chase,
+ while he has so little real interest in the termination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham, therefore, felt it due to his reputation as a successful hero
+ of intrigue, to pay his addresses to Alice Bridgenorth with dissembled
+ eagerness; and, as he opened the door of the inner apartment, he paused to
+ consider, whether the tone of gallantry, or that of passion, was fittest
+ to use on the occasion. This delay enabled him to hear a few notes of a
+ lute touched with exquisite skill, and accompanied by the still sweeter
+ strains of a female voice, which, without executing any complete melody,
+ seemed to sport itself in rivalship of the silver sound of the instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A creature so well educated," said the Duke, "with the sense she is said
+ to possess, would, rustic as she is, laugh at the assumed rants of
+ Oroondates. It is the vein of Dorimont&mdash;once, Buckingham, thine own&mdash;that
+ must here do the feat, besides that the part is easier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So thinking, he entered the room with that easy grace which characterised
+ the gay courtiers among whom he flourished, and approached the fair
+ tenant, whom he found seated near a table covered with books and music,
+ and having on her left hand the large half-open casement, dim with stained
+ glass, admitting only a doubtful light into this lordly retiring-room,
+ which, hung with the richest tapestry of the Gobelines, and ornamented
+ with piles if china and splendid mirrors, seemed like a bower built for a
+ prince to receive his bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The splendid dress of the inmate corresponded with the taste of the
+ apartment which she occupied and partook of the Oriental costume which the
+ much-admired Roxalana had the brought into fashion. A slender foot and
+ ankle, which escaped from the wide trowser of richly ornamented and
+ embroidered blue satin, was the only part of her person distinctly seen;
+ the rest was enveloped, from head to foot, in a long veil of silver gauze,
+ which, like a feathery and light mist on a beautiful landscape, suffered
+ you to perceive that what it concealed was rarely lovely, yet induced the
+ imagination even to enhance the charms it shaded. Such part of the dress
+ as could be discovered was, like the veil and the trowsers, in the
+ Oriental taste; a rich turban, and splendid caftan, were rather indicated
+ than distinguished through the folds of the former. The whole attire
+ argued at least coquetry on the part of the fair one, who must have
+ expected, from her situation, a visitor of some pretension; and induced
+ Buckingham to smile internally at Christian's account of the extreme
+ simplicity and purity of his niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He approached the lady <i>en cavalier</i>, and addressed her with the air
+ of being conscious, while he acknowledged his offences, that his
+ condescending to do so formed a sufficient apology for them. "Fair
+ Mistress Alice," he said, "I am sensible how deeply I ought to sue for
+ pardon for the mistaken zeal of my servants, who, seeing you deserted and
+ exposed without protection during an unlucky affray, took it upon them to
+ bring you under the roof of one who would expose his life rather than
+ suffer you to sustain a moment's anxiety. Was it my fault that those
+ around me should have judged it necessary to interfere for your
+ preservation; or that, aware of the interest I must take in you, they have
+ detained you till I could myself, in personal attendance, receive your
+ commands?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That attendance has not been speedily rendered, my lord," answered the
+ lady. "I have been a prisoner for two days&mdash;neglected, and left to
+ the charge of menials."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How say you, lady?&mdash;Neglected!" exclaimed the Duke. "By Heaven, if
+ the best in my household has failed in his duty, I will discard him on the
+ instant!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I complain of no lack of courtesy from your servants, my lord," she
+ replied; "but methinks it had been but complaisant in the Duke himself to
+ explain to me earlier wherefore he has had the boldness to detain me as a
+ state prisoner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And can the divine Alice doubt," said Buckingham, "that, had time and
+ space, those cruel enemies to the flight of passion, given permission, the
+ instant in which you crossed your vassal's threshold had seen its devoted
+ master at your feet, who hath thought, since he saw you, of nothing but
+ the charms which that fatal morning placed before him at Chiffinch's?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand, then, my lord," said the lady, "that you have been absent,
+ and have had no part in the restraint which has been exercised upon me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Absent on the King's command, lady, and employed in the discharge of his
+ duty," answered Buckingham without hesitation. "What could I do?&mdash;The
+ moment you left Chiffinch's, his Majesty commanded me to the saddle in
+ such haste, that I had no time to change my satin buskins for
+ riding-boots.[*] If my absence has occasioned you a moment of
+ inconvenience, blame the inconsiderate zeal of those who, seeing me depart
+ from London, half distracted at my separation from you, were willing to
+ contribute their unmannered, though well-meant exertions, to preserve
+ their master from despair, by retaining the fair Alice within his reach.
+ To whom, indeed, could they have restored you? He whom you selected as
+ your champion is in prison, or fled&mdash;your father absent from town&mdash;your
+ uncle in the north. To Chiffinch's house you had expressed your
+ well-founded aversion; and what fitter asylum remained than that of your
+ devoted slave, where you must ever reign a queen?"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] This case is not without precedent. Among the jealousies and fears
+ expressed by the Long Parliament, they insisted much upon an agent
+ for the King departing for the continent so abruptly, that he had
+ not time to change his court dress&mdash;white buskins, to wit, and
+ black silk pantaloons&mdash;for an equipment more suitable to travel
+ with.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "An imprisoned one," said the lady. "I desire not royalty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! how wilfully you misconstrue me!" said the Duke, kneeling on one
+ knee; "and what right can you have to complain of a few hours' gentle
+ restraint&mdash;you, who destine so many to hopeless captivity? Be
+ merciful for once, and withdraw that envious veil; for the divinities are
+ ever most cruel when they deliver their oracles from such clouded
+ recesses. Suffer at least my rash hand&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will save your Grace that unworthy trouble," said the lady haughtily;
+ and rising up, she flung back over her shoulders the veil which shrouded
+ her, saying, at the same time, "Look on me, my Lord Duke, and see if these
+ be indeed the charms which have made on your Grace an impression so
+ powerful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham did look; and the effect produced on him by surprise was so
+ strong, that he rose hastily from his knee, and remained for a few seconds
+ as if he had been petrified. The figure that stood before him had neither
+ the height nor the rich shape of Alice Bridgenorth; and, though perfectly
+ well made, was so slightly formed, as to seem almost infantine. Her dress
+ was three or four short vests of embroidered satin, disposed one over the
+ other, of different colours, or rather different shades of similar
+ colours; for strong contrast was carefully avoided. These opened in front,
+ so as to show part of the throat and neck, partially obscured by an inner
+ covering of the finest lace; over the uppermost vest was worn a sort of
+ mantle, or coat of rich fur. A small but magnificent turban was carelessly
+ placed on her head, from under which flowed a profusion of coal-black
+ tresses, which Cleopatra might have envied. The taste and splendour of the
+ Eastern dress corresponded with the complexion of the lady's face, which
+ was brunette, of a shade so dark as might almost have served an Indian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amidst a set of features, in which rapid and keen expression made amends
+ for the want of regular beauty, the essential points of eyes as bright as
+ diamonds, and teeth as white as pearls, did not escape the Duke of
+ Buckingham, a professed connoisseur in female charms. In a word, the
+ fanciful and singular female who thus unexpectedly produced herself before
+ him, had one of those faces which are never seen without making an
+ impression; which, when removed, are long after remembered; and for which,
+ in our idleness, we are tempted to invent a hundred histories, that we may
+ please our fancy by supposing the features under the influence of
+ different kinds of emotion. Every one must have in recollection
+ countenances of this kind, which, from a captivating and stimulating
+ originality of expression, abide longer in the memory, and are more
+ seductive to the imagination, than ever regular beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Duke," said the lady, "it seems the lifting of my veil has done
+ the work of magic upon your Grace. Alas, for the captive princess, whose
+ nod was to command a vassal so costly as your Grace! She runs, methinks,
+ no slight chance of being turned out of doors, like a second Cinderella,
+ to seek her fortune among lackeys and lightermen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am astonished!" said the Duke. "That villain, Jerningham&mdash;I will
+ have the scoundrel's blood!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, never abuse Jerningham for the matter," said the Unknown; "but
+ lament your own unhappy engagements. While you, my Lord Duke, were posting
+ northward, in white satin buskins, to toil in the King's affairs, the
+ right and lawful princess sat weeping in sables in the uncheered solitude
+ to which your absence condemned her. Two days she was disconsolate in
+ vain; on the third came an African enchantress to change the scene for
+ her, and the person for your Grace. Methinks, my lord, this adventure will
+ tell but ill, when some faithful squire shall recount or record the
+ gallant adventures of the second Duke of Buckingham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fairly bit and bantered to boot," said the Duke&mdash;"the monkey has a
+ turn for satire, too, by all that is <i>piquante</i>.&mdash;Hark ye, fair
+ Princess, how dared you adventure on such a trick as you have been
+ accomplice to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dare, my lord," answered the stranger; "put the question to others, not
+ to one who fears nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my faith, I believe so; for thy front is bronzed by nature.&mdash;Hark
+ ye, once more, mistress&mdash;What is your name and condition?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My condition I have told you&mdash;I am a Mauritanian sorceress by
+ profession, and my name is Zarah," replied the Eastern maiden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But methinks that face, shape, and eyes"&mdash;said the Duke&mdash;"when
+ didst thou pass for a dancing fairy?&mdash;Some such imp thou wert not
+ many days since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My sister you may have seen&mdash;my twin sister; but not me, my lord,"
+ answered Zarah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed," said the Duke, "that duplicate of thine, if it was not thy very
+ self, was possessed with a dumb spirit, as thou with a talking one. I am
+ still in the mind that you are the same; and that Satan, always so
+ powerful with your sex, had art enough on our former meeting, to make thee
+ hold thy tongue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Believe what you will of it, my lord," replied Zarah, "it cannot change
+ the truth.&mdash;And now, my lord, I bid you farewell. Have you any
+ commands to Mauritania?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tarry a little, my Princess," said the Duke; "and remember, that you have
+ voluntarily entered yourself as pledge for another; and are justly
+ subjected to any penalty which it is my pleasure to exact. None must brave
+ Buckingham with impunity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am in no hurry to depart, if your Grace hath any commands for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What! are you neither afraid of my resentment, nor of my love, fair
+ Zarah?" said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of neither, by this glove," answered the lady. "Your resentment must be a
+ pretty passion indeed, if it could stoop to such a helpless object as I
+ am; and for your love&mdash;good lack! good lack!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why good lack with such a tone of contempt, lady?" said the Duke,
+ piqued in spite of himself. "Think you Buckingham cannot love, or has
+ never been beloved in return?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He may have thought himself beloved," said the maiden; "but by what
+ slight creatures!&mdash;things whose heads could be rendered giddy by a
+ playhouse rant&mdash;whose brains were only filled with red-heeled shoes
+ and satin buskins&mdash;and who run altogether mad on the argument of a
+ George and a star."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And are there no such frail fair ones in your climate, most scornful
+ Princess?" said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are," said the lady; "but men rate them as parrots and monkeys&mdash;things
+ without either sense or soul, head or heart. The nearness we bear to the
+ sun has purified, while it strengthens, our passions. The icicles of your
+ frozen climate shall as soon hammer hot bars into ploughshares, as shall
+ the foppery and folly of your pretended gallantry make an instant's
+ impression on a breast like mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak like one who knows what passion is," said the Duke. "Sit down,
+ fair lady, and grieve not that I detain you. Who can consent to part with
+ a tongue of so much melody, or an eye of such expressive eloquence!&mdash;You
+ have known then what it is to love?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know&mdash;no matter if by experience, or through the report of others&mdash;but
+ I do know, that to love, as I would love, would be to yield not an iota to
+ avarice, not one inch to vanity, not to sacrifice the slightest feeling to
+ interest or to ambition; but to give up all to fidelity of heart and
+ reciprocal affection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And how many women, think you, are capable of feeling such disinterested
+ passion?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "More, by thousands, than there are men who merit it," answered Zarah.
+ "Alas! how often do you see the female, pale, and wretched, and degraded,
+ still following with patient constancy the footsteps of some predominating
+ tyrant, and submitting to all his injustice with the endurance of a
+ faithful and misused spaniel, which prizes a look from his master, though
+ the surliest groom that ever disgraced humanity, more than all the
+ pleasure which the world besides can furnish him? Think what such would be
+ to one who merited and repaid her devotion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perhaps the very reverse," said the Duke; "and for your simile, I can see
+ little resemblance. I cannot charge my spaniel with any perfidy; but for
+ my mistresses&mdash;to confess truth, I must always be in a cursed hurry
+ if I would have the credit of changing them before they leave me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And they serve you but rightly, my lord," answered the lady; "for what
+ are you?&mdash;Nay, frown not; for you must hear the truth for once.
+ Nature has done its part, and made a fair outside, and courtly education
+ hath added its share. You are noble, it is the accident of birth&mdash;handsome,
+ it is the caprice of Nature&mdash;generous, because to give is more easy
+ than to refuse&mdash;well-apparelled, it is to the credit of your tailor&mdash;well-natured
+ in the main, because you have youth and health&mdash;brave, because to be
+ otherwise were to be degraded&mdash;and witty, because you cannot help
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke darted a glance on one of the large mirrors. "Noble, and
+ handsome, and court-like, generous, well-attired, good-humoured, brave,
+ and witty!&mdash;You allow me more, madam, than I have the slightest
+ pretension to, and surely enough to make my way, at some point at least,
+ to female favour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have neither allowed you a heart nor a head," said Zarah calmly.&mdash;"Nay,
+ never redden as if you would fly at me. I say not but nature may have
+ given you both; but folly has confounded the one, and selfishness
+ perverted the other. The man whom I call deserving the name is one whose
+ thoughts and exertions are for others, rather than himself,&mdash;whose
+ high purpose is adopted on just principles, and never abandoned while
+ heaven or earth affords means of accomplishing it. He is one who will
+ neither seek an indirect advantage by a specious road, nor take an evil
+ path to gain a real good purpose. Such a man were one for whom a woman's
+ heart should beat constant while he breathes, and break when he dies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She spoke with so much energy that the water sparkled in her eyes, and her
+ cheek coloured with the vehemence of her feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You speak," said the Duke, "as if you had yourself a heart which could
+ pay the full tribute to the merit which you describe so warmly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And have I not?" said she, laying her hand on her bosom. "Here beats one
+ that would bear me out in what I have said, whether in life or in death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were it in my power," said the Duke, who began to get farther interested
+ in his visitor than he could at first have thought possible&mdash;"Were it
+ in my power to deserve such faithful attachment, methinks it should be my
+ care to requite it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your wealth, your titles, your reputation as a gallant&mdash;all you
+ possess, were too little to merit such sincere affection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, fair lady," said the Duke, a good deal piqued, "do not be quite so
+ disdainful. Bethink you, that if your love be as pure as coined gold,
+ still a poor fellow like myself may offer you an equivalent in silver&mdash;The
+ quantity of my affection must make up for its quality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I am not carrying my affection to market, my lord; and therefore I
+ need none of the base coin you offer in change for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How do I know that, my fairest?" said the Duke. "This is the realm of
+ Paphos&mdash;You have invaded it, with what purpose you best know; but I
+ think with none consistent with your present assumption of cruelty. Come,
+ come&mdash;eyes that are so intelligent can laugh with delight, as well as
+ gleam with scorn and anger. You are here a waif on Cupid's manor, and I
+ must seize on you in name of the deity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not think of touching me, my lord," said the lady. "Approach me not,
+ if you would hope to learn the purpose of my being here. Your Grace may
+ suppose yourself a Solomon if you please, but I am no travelling princess,
+ come from distant climes, either to flatter your pride, or wonder at your
+ glory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A defiance, by Jupiter!" said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mistake the signal," said the 'dark ladye'; "I came not here without
+ taking sufficient precautions for my retreat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mouth it bravely," said the Duke; "but never fortress so boasted its
+ resources but the garrison had some thoughts of surrender. Thus I open the
+ first parallel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had been hitherto divided from each other by a long narrow table,
+ which, placed in the recess of the large casement we have mentioned, had
+ formed a sort of barrier on the lady's side, against the adventurous
+ gallant. The Duke went hastily to remove it as he spoke; but, attentive to
+ all his motions, his visitor instantly darted through the half-open
+ window. Buckingham uttered a cry of horror and surprise, having no doubt,
+ at first, that she had precipitated herself from a height of at least
+ fourteen feet; for so far the window was distant from the ground. But when
+ he sprung to the spot, he perceived, to his astonishment, that she had
+ effected her descent with equal agility and safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outside of this stately mansion was decorated with a quantity of
+ carving, in the mixed state, betwixt the Gothic and Grecian styles, which
+ marks the age of Elizabeth and her successor; and though the feat seemed a
+ surprising one, the projections of these ornaments were sufficient to
+ afford footing to a creature so light and active, even in her hasty
+ descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inflamed alike by mortification and curiosity, Buckingham at first
+ entertained some thought of following her by the same dangerous route, and
+ had actually got upon the sill of the window for that purpose; and was
+ contemplating what might be his next safe movement, when, from a
+ neighbouring thicket of shrubs, amongst which his visitor had disappeared,
+ he heard her chant a verse of a comic song, then much in fashion,
+ concerning a despairing lover who had recourse to a precipice&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "But when he came near,
+ Beholding how steep
+ The sides did appear,
+ And the bottom how deep;
+ Though his suit was rejected,
+ He sadly reflected,
+ That a lover forsaken
+ A new love may get;
+ But a neck that's once broken
+ Can never be set."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Duke could not help laughing, though much against his will, at the
+ resemblance which the verses bore to his own absurd situation, and,
+ stepping back into the apartment, desisted from an attempt which might
+ have proved dangerous as well as ridiculous. He called his attendants, and
+ contented himself with watching the little thicket, unwilling to think
+ that a female, who had thrown herself in a great measure into his way,
+ meant absolutely to mortify him by a retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That question was determined in an instant. A form, wrapped in a mantle,
+ with a slouched hat and shadowy plume, issued from the bushes, and was
+ lost in a moment amongst the ruins of ancient and of modern buildings,
+ with which, as we have already stated, the demesne formerly termed York
+ House, was now encumbered in all directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke's servants, who had obeyed his impatient summons, were hastily
+ directed to search for this tantalising siren in every direction. Their
+ master, in the meantime, eager and vehement in every new pursuit, but
+ especially when his vanity was piqued, encouraged their diligence by
+ bribes, and threats, and commands. All was in vain. They found nothing of
+ the Mauritanian Princess, as she called herself, but the turban and the
+ veil; both of which she had left in the thicket, together with her satin
+ slippers; which articles, doubtless, she had thrown aside as she exchanged
+ them for others less remarkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding all his search in vain, the Duke of Buckingham, after the example
+ of spoiled children of all ages and stations, gave a loose to the frantic
+ vehemence of passion; and fiercely he swore vengeance on his late visitor,
+ whom he termed by a thousand opprobrious epithets, of which the elegant
+ phrase "Jilt" was most frequently repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Jerningham, who knew the depths and the shallows of his master's
+ mood, and was bold to fathom them at almost every state of his passions,
+ kept out of his way on the present occasion; and, cabineted with the pious
+ old housekeeper, declared to her, over a bottle of ratafia, that, in his
+ apprehension, if his Grace did not learn to put some control on his
+ temper, chains, darkness, straw, and Bedlam, would be the final doom of
+ the gifted and admired Duke of Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0040" id="link2HCH0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XL
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;Contentious fierce,
+ Ardent, and dire, spring from no petty cause.
+ &mdash;ALBION.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The quarrels between man and wife are proverbial; but let not these honest
+ folks think that connections of a less permanent nature are free from
+ similar jars. The frolic of the Duke of Buckingham, and the subsequent
+ escape of Alice Bridgenorth, had kindled fierce dissension in Chiffinch's
+ family, when, on his arrival in town, he learned these two stunning
+ events: "I tell you," he said to his obliging helpmate, who seemed but
+ little moved by all that he could say on the subject, "that your d&mdash;d
+ carelessness has ruined the work of years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think it is the twentieth time you have said so," replied the dame;
+ "and without such frequent assurance, I was quite ready to believe that a
+ very trifling matter would overset any scheme of yours, however long
+ thought of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How on earth could you have the folly to let the Duke into the house when
+ you expected the King?" said the irritated courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lord, Chiffinch," answered the lady, "ought not you to ask the porter
+ rather than me, that sort of question?&mdash;I was putting on my cap to
+ receive his Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With the address of a madge-howlet," said Chiffinch, "and in the
+ meanwhile you gave the cat the cream to keep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, Chiffinch," said the lady, "these jaunts to the country do render
+ you excessively vulgar! there is a brutality about your very boots! nay,
+ your muslin ruffles, being somewhat soiled, give to your knuckles a sort
+ of rural rusticity, as I may call it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It were a good deed," muttered Chiffinch, "to make both boots and
+ knuckles bang the folly and affectation out of thee." Then speaking aloud,
+ he added, like a man who would fain break off an argument, by extorting
+ from his adversary a confession that he has reason on his side, "I am
+ sure, Kate, you must be sensible that our all depends on his Majesty's
+ pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Leave that to me," said she; "I know how to pleasure his Majesty better
+ than you can teach me. Do you think his Majesty is booby enough to cry
+ like a schoolboy because his sparrow has flown away? His Majesty has
+ better taste. I am surprised at you, Chiffinch," she added, drawing
+ herself up, "who were once thought to know the points of a fine woman,
+ that you should have made such a roaring about this country wench. Why,
+ she has not even the country quality of being plump as a barn-door fowl,
+ but is more like a Dunstable lark, that one must crack bones and all if
+ you would make a mouthful of it. What signifies whence she came, or where
+ she goes? There will be those behind that are much more worthy of his
+ Majesty's condescending attention, even when the Duchess of Portsmouth
+ takes the frumps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean your neighbour, Mistress Nelly," said her worthy helpmate; "but
+ Kate, her date is out. Wit she has, let her keep herself warm with it in
+ worse company, for the cant of a gang of strollers is not language for a
+ prince's chamber."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] In Evelyn's Memoirs is the following curious passage respecting
+ Nell Gwyn, who is hinted at in the text:&mdash;"I walked with him [King
+ Charles II.] through Saint James Park to the garden, where I both
+ saw and heard a very familiar discourse between... [<i>the King</i>]
+ and Mrs. Nelly, as they called her, an intimate comedian, she
+ looking out of her garden on a terrace at the top of the wall, and
+ [<i>the King</i>] standing on the green walk under it. I was heartily
+ sorry at this scene."&mdash;EVELYN'S <i>Memoirs</i>, vol. i. p.413.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "It is no matter what I mean, or whom I mean," said Mrs. Chiffinch; "but I
+ tell you, Tom Chiffinch, that you will find your master quite consoled for
+ loss of the piece of prudish puritanism that you would need saddle him
+ with; as if the good man were not plagued enough with them in Parliament,
+ but you must, forsooth, bring them into his very bedchamber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Kate," said Chiffinch, "if a man were to speak all the sense of the
+ seven wise masters, a woman would find nonsense enough to overwhelm him
+ with; so I shall say no more, but that I would to Heaven I may find the
+ King in no worse humour than you describe him. I am commanded to attend
+ him down the river to the Tower to-day, where he is to make some survey of
+ arms and stores. They are clever fellows who contrive to keep Rowley from
+ engaging in business, for, by my word, he has a turn for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I warrant you," said Chiffinch the female, nodding, but rather to her own
+ figure, reflected from a mirror, than to her politic husband,&mdash;"I
+ warrant you we will find means of occupying him that will sufficiently
+ fill up his time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my honour, Kate," said the male Chiffinch, "I find you strangely
+ altered, and, to speak truth, grown most extremely opinionative. I shall
+ be happy if you have good reason for your confidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dame smiled superciliously, but deigned no other answer, unless this
+ were one,&mdash;"I shall order a boat to go upon the Thames to-day with
+ the royal party."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take care what you do, Kate; there are none dare presume so far but women
+ of the first rank. Duchess of Bolton&mdash;of Buckingham&mdash;of&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who cares for a list of names? why may not I be as forward as the
+ greatest B. amongst your string of them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, faith, thou mayest match the greatest B. in Court already," answered
+ Chiffinch; "so e'en take thy own course of it. But do not let Chaubert
+ forget to get some collation ready, and a <i>souper au petit couvert</i>,
+ in case it should be commanded for the evening."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, there your boasted knowledge of Court matters begins and ends.&mdash;Chiffinch,
+ Chaubert, and Company;&mdash;dissolve that partnership, and you break Tom
+ Chiffinch for a courtier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Amen, Kate," replied Chiffinch; "and let me tell you it is as safe to
+ rely on another person's fingers as on our own wit. But I must give orders
+ for the water.&mdash;If you will take the pinnace, there are the
+ cloth-of-gold cushions in the chapel may serve to cover the benches for
+ the day. They are never wanted where they lie, so you may make free with
+ them too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madam Chiffinch accordingly mingled with the flotilla which attended the
+ King on his voyage down the Thames, amongst whom was the Queen, attended
+ by some of the principal ladies of the Court. The little plump Cleopatra,
+ dressed to as much advantage as her taste could devise, and seated upon
+ her embroidered cushions like Venus in her shell, neglected nothing that
+ effrontery and minauderie could perform to draw upon herself some portion
+ of the King's observation; but Charles was not in the vein, and did not
+ even pay her the slightest passing attention of any kind, until her
+ boatmen having ventured to approach nearer to the Queen's barge than
+ etiquette permitted, received a peremptory order to back their oars, and
+ fall out of the royal procession. Madam Chiffinch cried for spite, and
+ transgressed Solomon's warning, by cursing the King in her heart; but had
+ no better course than to return to Westminster, and direct Chaubert's
+ preparations for the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the royal barge paused at the Tower; and, accompanied by a
+ laughing train of ladies and of courtiers, the gay Monarch made the echoes
+ of the old prison-towers ring with the unwonted sounds of mirth and
+ revelry. As they ascended from the river-side to the centre of the
+ building, where the fine old keep of William the Conqueror, called the
+ White Tower, predominates over the exterior defences, Heaven only knows
+ how many gallant jests, good or bad, were run on the comparison of his
+ Majesty's state-prison to that of Cupid, and what killing similes were
+ drawn between the ladies' eyes and the guns of the fortress, which, spoken
+ with a fashionable congée, and listened to with a smile from a fair lady,
+ formed the fine conversations of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gay swarm of flutterers did not, however, attend close on the King's
+ person, though they had accompanied him upon his party on the river.
+ Charles, who often formed manly and sensible resolutions, though he was
+ too easily diverted from them by indolence or pleasure, had some desire to
+ make himself personally acquainted with the state of the military stores,
+ arms, &amp;c. of which the Tower was then, as now, the magazine; and,
+ although he had brought with him the usual number of his courtiers, only
+ three or four attended him on the scrutiny which he intended. Whilst,
+ therefore, the rest of the train amused themselves as they might in other
+ parts of the Tower, the King, accompanied by the Dukes of Buckingham,
+ Ormond, and one or two others, walked through the well-known hall, in
+ which is preserved the most splendid magazine of arms in the world, and
+ which, though far from exhibiting its present extraordinary state of
+ perfection, was even then an arsenal worthy of the great nation to which
+ it belonged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Ormond, well known for his services during the Great Civil
+ War, was, as we have elsewhere noticed, at present rather on cold terms
+ with his Sovereign, who nevertheless asked his advice on many occasions,
+ and who required it on the present amongst others, when it was not a
+ little feared that the Parliament, in their zeal for the Protestant
+ religion, might desire to take the magazines of arms and ammunition under
+ their own exclusive orders. While Charles sadly hinted at such a
+ termination of the popular jealousies of the period, and discussed with
+ Ormond the means of resisting, or evading it, Buckingham, falling a little
+ behind, amused himself with ridiculing the antiquated appearance and
+ embarrassed demeanour of the old warder who attended on the occasion, and
+ who chanced to be the very same who escorted Julian Peveril to his present
+ place of confinement. The Duke prosecuted his raillery with the greater
+ activity, that he found the old man, though restrained by the place and
+ presence, was rather upon the whole testy, and disposed to afford what
+ sportsmen call <i>play</i> to his persecutor. The various pieces of
+ ancient armour, with which the wall was covered, afforded the principal
+ source of the Duke's wit, as he insisted upon knowing from the old man,
+ who, he said, could best remember matters from the days of King Arthur
+ downwards at the least, the history of the different warlike weapons, and
+ anecdotes of the battles in which they had been wielded. The old man
+ obviously suffered, when he was obliged, by repeated questions, to tell
+ the legends (often sufficiently absurd) which the tradition of the place
+ had assigned to particular relics. Far from flourishing his partisan, and
+ augmenting the emphasis of his voice, as was and is the prevailing fashion
+ of these warlike Ciceroni, it was scarcely possible to extort from him a
+ single word concerning those topics on which their information is usually
+ overflowing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know, my friend," said the Duke to him at last, "I begin to change
+ my mind respecting you. I supposed you must have served as a Yeoman of the
+ Guard since bluff King Henry's time, and expected to hear something from
+ you about the Field of the Cloth of Gold,&mdash;and I thought of asking
+ you the colour of Anne Bullen's breastknot, which cost the Pope three
+ kingdoms; but I am afraid you are but a novice in such recollections of
+ love and chivalry. Art sure thou didst not creep into thy warlike office
+ from some dark shop in Tower-Hamlets, and that thou hast not converted an
+ unlawful measuring-yard into that glorious halberd?&mdash;I warrant thou
+ canst not even tell you whom this piece of antique panoply pertained to?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke pointed at random to a cuirass which hung amongst others, but was
+ rather remarkable from being better cleansed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should know that piece of iron," said the warder bluntly, yet with some
+ change in his voice; "for I have known a man within side of it who would
+ not have endured half the impertinence I have heard spoken to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone of the old man, as well as the words, attracted the attention of
+ Charles and the Duke of Ormond, who were only two steps before the
+ speaker. They both stopped, and turned round; the former saying at the
+ same time,&mdash;"how now, sirrah!&mdash;what answers are these?&mdash;What
+ man do you speak of?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of one who is none now," said the warder, "whatever he may have been."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The old man surely speaks of himself," said the Duke of Ormond, closely
+ examining the countenance of the warder, which he in vain endeavoured to
+ turn away. "I am sure I remember these features&mdash;Are not you my old
+ friend, Major Coleby?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish your Grace's memory had been less accurate," said the old man,
+ colouring deeply, and fixing his eyes on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was greatly shocked.&mdash;"Good God!" he said, "the gallant
+ Major Coleby, who joined us with his four sons and a hundred and fifty men
+ at Warrington!&mdash;And is this all we could do for an old Worcester
+ friend?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears rushed thick into the old man's eyes as he said in broken
+ accents, "Never mind me, sire; I am well enough here&mdash;a worn-out
+ soldier rusting among old armour. Where one old Cavalier is better, there
+ are twenty worse.&mdash;I am sorry your Majesty should know anything of
+ it, since it grieves you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that kindness, which was a redeeming point of his character, Charles,
+ while the old man was speaking, took the partisan from him with his own
+ hand, and put it into that of Buckingham, saying, "What Coleby's hand has
+ borne, can disgrace neither yours nor mine,&mdash;and you owe him this
+ atonement. Time has been with him, that, for less provocation, he would
+ have laid it about your ears."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke bowed deeply, but coloured with resentment, and took an immediate
+ opportunity to place the weapon carelessly against a pile of arms. The
+ King did not observe a contemptuous motion, which, perhaps, would not have
+ pleased him, being at the moment occupied with the veteran, whom he
+ exhorted to lean upon him, as he conveyed him to a seat, permitting no
+ other person to assist him. "Rest there," he said, "my brave old friend;
+ and Charles Stewart must be poor indeed, if you wear that dress an hour
+ longer.&mdash;You look very pale, my good Coleby, to have had so much
+ colour a few minutes since. Be not vexed at what Buckingham says; no one
+ minds his folly.&mdash;You look worse and worse. Come, come, you are too
+ much hurried by this meeting. Sit still&mdash;do not rise&mdash;do not
+ attempt to kneel. I command you to repose yourself till I have made the
+ round of these apartments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Cavalier stooped his head in token of acquiescence in the command
+ of his Sovereign, but he raised it not again. The tumultuous agitation of
+ the moment had been too much for spirits which had been long in a state of
+ depression, and health which was much decayed. When the King and his
+ attendants, after half-an-hour's absence, returned to the spot where they
+ had left the veteran, they found him dead, and already cold, in the
+ attitude of one who has fallen easily asleep. The King was dreadfully
+ shocked; and it was with a low and faltering voice that he directed the
+ body, in due time, to be honourably buried in the chapel of the Tower.[*]
+ He was then silent, until he attained the steps in front of the arsenal,
+ where the party in attendance upon his person began to assemble at his
+ approach, along with some other persons of respectable appearance, whom
+ curiosity had attracted.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] A story of this nature is current in the legends of the Tower. The
+ affecting circumstances are, I believe, recorded in one of the
+ little manuals which are put into the hands of visitors, but are
+ not to be found in the later editions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "This is dreadful," said the King. "We must find some means of relieving
+ the distresses, and rewarding the fidelity of our suffering followers, or
+ posterity will cry fie upon our memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty has had often such plans agitated in your Council," said
+ Buckingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, George," said the King. "I can safely say it is not my fault. I
+ have thought of it for years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It cannot be too well considered," said Buckingham; "besides, every year
+ makes the task of relief easier."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True," said the Duke of Ormond, "by diminishing the number of sufferers.
+ Here is poor old Coleby will no longer be a burden to the Crown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are too severe, my Lord of Ormond," said the King, "and should
+ respect the feelings you trespass on. You cannot suppose that we would
+ have permitted this poor man to hold such a situation, had we known of the
+ circumstances?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For God's sake, then, sire," said the Duke of Ormond, "turn your eyes,
+ which have just rested on the corpse of one old friend, upon the
+ distresses of others. Here is the valiant old Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the
+ Peak, who fought through the whole war, wherever blows were going, and was
+ the last man, I believe, in England, who laid down his arms&mdash;Here is
+ his son, of whom I have the highest accounts, as a gallant of spirit,
+ accomplishments, and courage&mdash;Here is the unfortunate House of Derby&mdash;for
+ pity's sake, interfere in behalf of these victims, whom the folds of this
+ hydra-plot have entangled, in order to crush them to death&mdash;rebuke
+ the fiends that are seeking to devour their lives, and disappoint the
+ harpies that are gaping for their property. This very day seven-night the
+ unfortunate family, father and son, are to be brought upon trial for
+ crimes of which they are as guiltless, I boldly pronounce, as any who
+ stand in this presence. For God's sake, sire, let us hope that, should the
+ prejudices of the people condemn them, as it has done others, you will at
+ last step in between the blood-hunters and their prey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked, as he really was, exceedingly perplexed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham, between whom and Ormond there existed a constant and almost
+ mortal quarrel, interfered to effect a diversion in Charles's favour.
+ "Your Majesty's royal benevolence," he said, "needs never want exercise,
+ while the Duke of Ormond is near your person. He has his sleeve cut in the
+ old and ample fashion, that he may always have store of ruined cavaliers
+ stowed in it to produce at demand, rare old raw-boned boys, with Malmsey
+ noses, bald heads, spindle shanks, and merciless histories of Edgehill and
+ Naseby."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My sleeve is, I dare say, of an antique cut," said Ormond, looking full
+ at the Duke; "but I pin neither bravoes nor ruffians upon it, my Lord of
+ Buckingham, as I see fastened to coats of the new mode."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is a little too sharp for our presence, my lord," said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not if I make my words good," said Ormond.&mdash;"My Lord of Buckingham,
+ will you name the man you spoke to as you left the boat?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I spoke to no one," said the Duke hastily&mdash;"nay, I mistake, I
+ remember a fellow whispered in my ear, that one, who I thought had left
+ London was still lingering in town. A person whom I had business with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was yon the messenger?" said Ormond, singling out from the crowd who
+ stood in the court-yard a tall dark-looking man, muffled in a large cloak,
+ wearing a broad shadowy black beaver hat, with a long sword of the Spanish
+ fashion&mdash;the very Colonel, in short, whom Buckingham had despatched
+ in quest of Christian, with the intention of detaining him in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Buckingham's eyes had followed the direction of Ormond's finger, he
+ could not help blushing so deeply as to attract the King's attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What new frolic is this, George?" he said. "Gentlemen, bring that fellow
+ forward. On my life, a truculent-looking caitiff&mdash;Hark ye, friend,
+ who are you? If an honest man, Nature has forgot to label it upon your
+ countenance.&mdash;Does none here know him?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'With every symptom of a knave complete,
+ If he be honest, he's a devilish cheat.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "He is well known to many, sire," replied Ormond; "and that he walks in
+ this area with his neck safe, and his limbs unshackled, is an instance,
+ amongst many, that we live under the sway of the most merciful Prince of
+ Europe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oddsfish! who is the man, my Lord Duke?" said the King. "Your Grace talks
+ mysteries&mdash;Buckingham blushes&mdash;and the rogue himself is dumb."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That honest gentleman, please your Majesty," replied the Duke of Ormond,
+ "whose modesty makes him mute, though it cannot make him blush, is the
+ notorious Colonel Blood, as he calls himself, whose attempt to possess
+ himself of your Majesty's royal crown took place at no very distant date,
+ in this very Tower of London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That exploit is not easily forgotten," said the King; "but that the
+ fellow lives, shows your Grace's clemency as well as mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot deny that I was in his hands, sire," said Ormond, "and had
+ certainly been murdered by him, had he chosen to take my life on the spot,
+ instead of destining me&mdash;I thank him for the honour&mdash;to be
+ hanged at Tyburn. I had certainly been sped, if he had thought me worth
+ knife or pistol, or anything short of the cord.&mdash;Look at him sire! If
+ the rascal dared, he would say at this moment, like Caliban in the play,
+ 'Ho, ho, I would I had done it!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, oddsfish!" answered the King, "he hath a villainous sneer, my lord,
+ which seems to say as much; but, my Lord Duke, we have pardoned him, and
+ so has your Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would ill have become me," said the Duke of Ormond, "to have been
+ severe in prosecuting an attempt on my poor life, when your Majesty was
+ pleased to remit his more outrageous and insolent attempt upon your royal
+ crown. But I must conceive it as a piece of supreme insolence on the part
+ of this bloodthirsty bully, by whomsoever he may be now backed, to appear
+ in the Tower, which was the theatre of one of his villainies, or before
+ me, who was well-nigh the victim of another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It shall be amended in future," said the King.&mdash;"Hark ye, sirrah
+ Blood, if you again presume to thrust yourself in the way you have done
+ but now, I will have the hangman's knife and your knavish ears made
+ acquainted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blood bowed, and with a coolness of impudence which did his nerves great
+ honour, he said he had only come to the Tower accidentally, to communicate
+ with a particular friend on business of importance. "My Lord Duke of
+ Buckingham," he said, "knew he had no other intentions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Get you gone, you scoundrelly cut-throat," said the Duke, as much
+ impatient of Colonel Blood's claim of acquaintance, as a town-rake of the
+ low and blackguard companions of his midnight rambles, when they accost
+ him in daylight amidst better company; "if you dare to quote my name
+ again, I will have you thrown into the Thames."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blood, thus repulsed, turned round with the most insolent composure, and
+ walked away down from the parade, all men looking at him, as at some
+ strange and monstrous prodigy, so much was he renowned for daring and
+ desperate villainy. Some even followed him, to have a better survey of the
+ notorious Colonel Blood, like the smaller tribe of birds which keep
+ fluttering round an owl when he appears in the light of the sun. But as,
+ in the latter case, these thoughtless flutterers are careful to keep out
+ of reach of the beak and claws of the bird of Minerva, so none of those
+ who followed and gazed on Blood as something ominous, cared to bandy looks
+ with him, or to endure and return the lowering and deadly glances, which
+ he shot from time to time on those who pressed nearest to him. He stalked
+ on in this manner, like a daunted, yet sullen wolf, afraid to stop, yet
+ unwilling to fly, until he reached the Traitor's Gate, and getting on
+ board a sculler which waited for him, he disappeared from their eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles would fain have obliterated all recollection of his appearance, by
+ the observation, "It were a shame that such a reprobate scoundrel should
+ be the subject of discord between two noblemen of distinction;" and he
+ recommended to the Dukes of Buckingham and Ormond to join hands, and
+ forget a misunderstanding which rose on so unworthy a subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham answered carelessly, "That the Duke of Ormond's honoured white
+ hairs were a sufficient apology for his making the first overtures to a
+ reconciliation," and he held out his hand accordingly. But Ormond only
+ bowed in return, and said, "The King had no cause to expect that the Court
+ would be disturbed by his personal resentments, since time would not yield
+ him back twenty years, nor the grave restore his gallant son Ossory. As to
+ the ruffian who had intruded himself there, he was obliged to him, since,
+ by showing that his Majesty's clemency extended even to the very worst of
+ criminals, he strengthened his hopes of obtaining the King's favour for
+ such of his innocent friends as were now in prison, and in danger, from
+ the odious charges brought against them on the score of the Popish Plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King made no other answer to this insinuation, than by directing that
+ the company should embark for their return to Whitehall; and thus took
+ leave of the officers of the Tower who were in attendance, with one of
+ those well-turned compliments to their discharge of duty, which no man
+ knew better how to express; and issued at the same time strict and anxious
+ orders for protection and defence of the important fortress confided to
+ them, and all which it contained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he parted with Ormond on their arrival at Whitehall, he turned
+ round to him, as one who has made up his resolution, and said, "Be
+ satisfied, my Lord Duke&mdash;our friends' case shall be looked to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same evening the Attorney-General, and North, Lord Chief Justice of
+ the Common Pleas, had orders with all secrecy, to meet his Majesty that
+ evening on especial matters of state, at the apartments of Chiffinch, the
+ centre of all affairs, whether of gallantry or business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yet, Corah, thou shalt from oblivion pass;
+ Erect thyself, thou monumental brass,
+ High as the serpent of thy metal made,
+ While nations stand secure beneath thy shade.
+ &mdash;ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The morning which Charles had spent in visiting the Tower, had been very
+ differently employed by those unhappy individuals, whom their bad fate,
+ and the singular temper of the times, had made the innocent tenants of
+ that state prison, and who had received official notice that they were to
+ stand their trial in the Court of Queen's Bench at Westminster, on the
+ seventh succeeding day. The stout old Cavalier at first only railed at the
+ officer for spoiling his breakfast with the news, but evinced great
+ feeling when he was told that Julian was to be put under the same
+ indictment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We intend to dwell only very generally on the nature of their trial, which
+ corresponded, in the outline, with almost all those which took place
+ during the prevalence of the Popish Plot. That is, one or two infamous and
+ perjured evidences, whose profession of common informers had become
+ frightfully lucrative, made oath to the prisoners having expressed
+ themselves interested in the great confederacy of the Catholics. A number
+ of others brought forward facts or suspicions, affecting the character of
+ the parties as honest Protestants and good subjects; and betwixt the
+ direct and presumptive evidence, enough was usually extracted for
+ justifying, to a corrupted court and perjured jury, the fatal verdict of
+ Guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fury of the people had, however, now begun to pass away, exhausted
+ even by its own violence. The English nation differ from all others,
+ indeed even from those of the sister kingdoms, in being very easily sated
+ with punishment, even when they suppose it most merited. Other nations are
+ like the tamed tiger, which, when once its native appetite for slaughter
+ is indulged in one instance, rushes on in promiscuous ravages. But the
+ English public have always rather resembled what is told of the
+ sleuth-dog, which, eager, fierce, and clamorous in pursuit of his prey,
+ desists from it so soon as blood is sprinkled upon his path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men's minds were now beginning to cool&mdash;the character of the
+ witnesses was more closely sifted&mdash;their testimonies did not in all
+ cases tally&mdash;and a wholesome suspicion began to be entertained of
+ men, who would never say they had made a full discovery of all they knew,
+ but avowedly reserved some points of evidence to bear on future trials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King also, who had lain passive during the first burst of popular
+ fury, was now beginning to bestir himself, which produced a marked effect
+ on the conduct of the Crown Counsel, and even the Judges. Sir George
+ Wakeman had been acquitted in spite of Oates's direct testimony; and
+ public attention was strongly excited concerning the event of the next
+ trial; which chanced to be that of the Peverils, father and son, with
+ whom, I know not from what concatenation, little Hudson the dwarf was
+ placed at the bar of the Court of King's Bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a piteous sight to behold a father and son, who had been so long
+ separated, meet under circumstances so melancholy; and many tears were
+ shed, when the majestic old man&mdash;for such he was, though now broken
+ with years&mdash;folded his son to his bosom, with a mixture of joy,
+ affection, and a bitter anticipation of the event of the impending trial.
+ There was a feeling in the Court that for a moment overcame every
+ prejudice and party feeling. Many spectators shed tears; and there was
+ even a low moaning, as of those who weep aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such as felt themselves sufficiently at ease to remark the conduct of poor
+ little Geoffrey Hudson, who was scarcely observed amid the preponderating
+ interest created by his companions in misfortune, could not but notice a
+ strong degree of mortification on the part of that diminutive gentleman.
+ He had soothed his great mind by the thoughts of playing the character
+ which he was called on to sustain, in a manner which should be long
+ remembered in that place; and on his entrance, had saluted the numerous
+ spectators, as well as the Court, with a cavalier air, which he meant
+ should express grace, high-breeding, perfect coolness, with a noble
+ disregard to the issue of their proceedings. But his little person was so
+ obscured and jostled aside, on the meeting of the father and son, who had
+ been brought in different boats from the Tower, and placed at the bar at
+ the same moment, that his distress and his dignity were alike thrown into
+ the background, and attracted neither sympathy nor admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf's wisest way to attract attention would have been to remain
+ quiet, when so remarkable an exterior would certainly have received in its
+ turn the share of public notice which he so eagerly coveted. But when did
+ personal vanity listen to the suggestions of prudence?&mdash;Our impatient
+ friend scrambled, with some difficulty, on the top of the bench intended
+ for his seat; and there, "paining himself to stand a-tiptoe," like
+ Chaucer's gallant Sir Chaunticlere, he challenged the notice of the
+ audience as he stood bowing and claiming acquaintance of his namesake Sir
+ Geoffrey the larger, with whose shoulders, notwithstanding his elevated
+ situation, he was scarcely yet upon a level.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The taller Knight, whose mind was occupied in a very different manner,
+ took no notice of these advances upon the dwarf's part, but sat down with
+ the determination rather to die on the spot than evince any symptoms of
+ weakness before Roundheads and Presbyterians; under which obnoxious
+ epithets, being too old-fashioned to find out party designations of newer
+ date, he comprehended all persons concerned in his present trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By Sir Geoffrey the larger's change of position, his face was thus brought
+ on a level with that of Sir Geoffrey the less, who had an opportunity of
+ pulling him by the cloak. He of Martindale Castle, rather mechanically
+ than consciously, turned his head towards the large wrinkled visage,
+ which, struggling between an assumed air of easy importance, and an
+ anxious desire to be noticed, was grimacing within a yard of him. But
+ neither the singular physiognomy, the nods and smiles of greeting and
+ recognition into which it was wreathed, nor the strange little form by
+ which it was supported, had at that moment the power of exciting any
+ recollections in the old Knight's mind; and having stared for a moment at
+ the poor little man, his bulky namesake turned away his head without
+ farther notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Peveril, the dwarf's more recent acquaintance, had, even amid his
+ own anxious feelings, room for sympathy with those of his little
+ fellow-sufferer. As soon as he discovered that he was at the same terrible
+ bar with himself, although he could not conceive how their causes came to
+ be conjoined, he acknowledged him by a hearty shake of the hand, which the
+ old man returned with affected dignity and real gratitude. "Worthy youth,"
+ he said, "thy presence is restorative, like the nepenthe of Homer even in
+ this syncopé of our mutual fate. I am concerned to see that your father
+ hath not the same alacrity of soul as that of ours, which are lodged
+ within smaller compass; and that he hath forgotten an ancient comrade and
+ fellow-soldier, who now stands beside him to perform, perhaps, their last
+ campaign."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian briefly replied, that his father had much to occupy him. But the
+ little man&mdash;who, to do him justice, cared no more (in his own phrase)
+ for imminent danger or death, than he did for the puncture of a flea's
+ proboscis&mdash;did not so easily renounce the secret object of his
+ ambition, which was to acquire the notice of the large and lofty Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril, who, being at least three inches taller than his son,
+ was in so far possessed of that superior excellence, which the poor dwarf,
+ in his secret soul, valued before all other distinctions, although in his
+ conversation, he was constantly depreciating it. "Good comrade and
+ namesake," he proceeded, stretching out his hand, so as to again to reach
+ the elder Peveril's cloak, "I forgive your want of reminiscence, seeing it
+ is long since I saw you at Naseby, fighting as if you had as many arms as
+ the fabled Briareus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight of Martindale, who had again turned his head towards the little
+ man, and had listened, as if endeavouring to make something out of his
+ discourse, here interrupted him with a peevish, "Pshaw!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pshaw!" repeated Sir Geoffrey the less; "<i>Pshaw</i> is an expression of
+ slight esteem,&mdash;nay, of contempt,&mdash;in all languages; and were
+ this a befitting place&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Judges had now taken their places, the criers called silence, and
+ the stern voice of the Lord Chief Justice (the notorious Scroggs) demanded
+ what the officers meant by permitting the accused to communicate together
+ in open court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may here be observed, that this celebrated personage was, upon the
+ present occasion, at a great loss how to proceed. A calm, dignified,
+ judicial demeanour, was at no time the characteristic of his official
+ conduct. He always ranted and roared either on the one side or the other;
+ and of late, he had been much unsettled which side to take, being totally
+ incapable of anything resembling impartiality. At the first trials for the
+ Plot, when the whole stream of popularity ran against the accused, no one
+ had been so loud as Scroggs; to attempt to the character of Oates or
+ Bedloe, or any other leading witnesses, he treated as a crime more heinous
+ than it would have been to blaspheme the Gospel on which they had been
+ sworn&mdash;it was a stifling of the Plot, or discrediting of the King's
+ witnesses&mdash;a crime not greatly, if at all, short of high treason
+ against the King himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, of late, a new light had begun to glimmer upon the understanding of
+ this interpreter of the laws. Sagacious in the signs of the times, he
+ began to see that the tide was turning; and that Court favour at least,
+ and probably popular opinion also, were likely, in a short time, to
+ declare against the witnesses, and in favour of the accused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opinion which Scroggs had hitherto entertained of the high respect in
+ which Shaftesbury, the patron of the Plot, was held by Charles, had been
+ definitely shaken by a whisper from his brother North to the following
+ effect: "His Lordship has no more interest at Court than your footman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This notice, from a sure hand, and received but that morning, had put the
+ Judge to a sore dilemma; for, however indifferent to actual consistency,
+ he was most anxious to save appearances. He could not but recollect how
+ violent he had been on former occasions in favour of these prosecutions;
+ and being sensible at the same time that the credit of the witnesses,
+ though shaken in the opinion of the more judicious, was, amongst the bulk
+ of the people out of doors, as strong as ever, he had a difficult part to
+ play. His conduct, therefore, during the whole trial, resembled the
+ appearance of a vessel about to go upon another tack, when her sails are
+ shivering in the wind, ere they have yet caught the impulse which is to
+ send her forth in a new direction. In a word, he was so uncertain which
+ side it was his interest to favour, that he might be said on that occasion
+ to have come nearer a state of total impartiality than he was ever capable
+ of attaining, whether before or afterwards. This was shown by his bullying
+ now the accused, and now the witnesses, like a mastiff too much irritated
+ to lie still without baying, but uncertain whom he shall first bite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indictment was then read; and Sir Geoffrey Peveril heard, with some
+ composure, the first part of it, which stated him to have placed his son
+ in the household of the Countess of Derby, a recusant Papist, for the
+ purpose of aiding the horrible and bloodthirsty Popish Plot&mdash;with
+ having had arms and ammunition concealed in his house&mdash;and with
+ receiving a blank commission from the Lord Stafford, who had suffered
+ death on account of the Plot. But when the charge went on to state that he
+ had communicated for the same purpose with Geoffrey Hudson, sometimes
+ called Sir Geoffrey Hudson, now, or formerly in the domestic service of
+ the Queen Dowager, he looked at his companion as if he suddenly recalled
+ him to remembrance, and broke out impatiently, "These lies are too gross
+ to require a moment's consideration. I might have had enough of
+ intercourse, though in nothing but what was loyal and innocent, with my
+ noble kinsman, the late Lord Stafford&mdash;I will call him so in spite of
+ his misfortunes&mdash;and with my wife's relation, the Honourable Countess
+ of Derby. But what likelihood can there be that I should have colleagued
+ with a decrepit buffoon, with whom I never had an instant's communication,
+ save once at an Easter feast, when I whistled a hornpipe, as he danced on
+ a trencher to amuse the company?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rage of the poor dwarf brought tears in his eyes, while, with an
+ affected laugh, he said, that instead of those juvenile and festive
+ passages, Sir Geoffrey Peveril might have remembered his charging along
+ with him at Wiggan Lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On my word," said Sir Geoffrey, after a moment's recollection, "I will do
+ you justice, Master Hudson&mdash;I believe you were there&mdash;I think I
+ heard you did good service. But you will allow you might have been near
+ one without his seeing you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sort of titter ran through the Court at the simplicity of the larger Sir
+ Geoffrey's testimony, which the dwarf endeavoured to control, by standing
+ on his tiptoes, and looking fiercely around, as if to admonish the
+ laughers that they indulged their mirth at their own peril. But perceiving
+ that this only excited farther scorn, he composed himself into a semblance
+ of careless contempt, observing, with a smile, that no one feared the
+ glance of a chained lion; a magnificent simile, which rather increased
+ than diminished the mirth of those who heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against Julian Peveril there failed not to be charged the aggravated fact,
+ that he had been bearer of letters between the Countess of Derby and other
+ Papists and priests, engaged in the universal treasonable conspiracy of
+ the Catholics; and the attack of the house at Moultrassie Hall,&mdash;with
+ his skirmish with Chiffinch, and his assault, as it was termed, on the
+ person of John Jenkins, servant to the Duke of Buckingham, were all
+ narrated at length, as so many open and overt acts of treasonable import.
+ To this charge Peveril contented himself with pleading&mdash;Not Guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His little companion was not satisfied with so simple a plea; for when he
+ heard it read, as a part of the charge applying to him, that he had
+ received from an agent of the Plot a blank commission as Colonel of a
+ regiment of grenadiers, he replied, in wrath and scorn, that if Goliath of
+ Gath had come to him with such a proposal, and proffered him the command
+ of the whole sons of Anak in a body, he should never have had occasion or
+ opportunity to repeat the temptation to another. "I would have slain him,"
+ said the little man of loyalty, "even where he stood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charge was stated anew by the Counsel for the Crown; and forth came
+ the notorious Doctor Oates, rustling in the full silken canonicals of
+ priesthood, for it was a time when he affected no small dignity of
+ exterior decoration and deportment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This singular man, who, aided by the obscure intrigues of the Catholics
+ themselves, and the fortuitous circumstance of Godfrey's murder, had been
+ able to cram down the public throat such a mass of absurdity as his
+ evidence amounts to, had no other talent for imposture than an impudence
+ which set conviction and shame alike at defiance. A man of sense or
+ reflection, by trying to give his plot an appearance of more probability,
+ would most likely have failed, as wise men often to do in addressing the
+ multitude, from not daring to calculate upon the prodigious extent of
+ their credulity, especially where the figments presented to them involve
+ the fearful and the terrible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates was by nature choleric; and the credit he had acquired made him
+ insolent and conceited. Even his exterior was portentous. A fleece of
+ white periwig showed a most uncouth visage, of great length, having the
+ mouth, as the organ by use of which he was to rise to eminence, placed in
+ the very centre of the countenance, and exhibiting to the astonished
+ spectator as much chin below as there was nose and brow above the
+ aperture. His pronunciation, too, was after a conceited fashion of his
+ own, in which he accented the vowels in a manner altogether peculiar to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This notorious personage, such as we have described him, stood forth on
+ the present trial, and delivered his astonishing testimony concerning the
+ existence of a Catholic Plot for the subversion of the government and
+ murder of the King, in the same general outline in which it may be found
+ in every English history. But as the doctor always had in reserve some
+ special piece of evidence affecting those immediately on trial, he was
+ pleased, on the present occasion, deeply to inculpate the Countess of
+ Derby. "He had seen," as he said, "that honourable lady when he was at the
+ Jesuits' College at Saint Omer's. She had sent for him to an inn, or <i>auberge</i>,
+ as it was there termed&mdash;the sign of the Golden Lamb; and had ordered
+ him to breakfast in the same room with her ladyship; and afterwards told
+ him, that, knowing he was trusted by the Fathers of the Society, she was
+ determined that he should have a share of her secrets also; and
+ therewithal, that she drew from her bosom a broad sharp-pointed knife,
+ such as butchers kill sheep with, and demanded of him what he thought of
+ it for <i>the purpose</i>; and when he, the witness, said for what purpose
+ she rapt him on the fingers with her fan, called him a dull fellow, and
+ said it was designed to kill the King with."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Geoffrey Peveril could no longer refrain his indignation and
+ surprise. "Mercy of Heaven!" he said, "did ever one hear of ladies of
+ quality carrying butchering knives about them, and telling every scurvy
+ companion she meant to kill the King with them?&mdash;Gentleman of the
+ Jury, do but think if this is reasonable&mdash;though, if the villain
+ could prove by any honest evidence, that my Lady of Derby ever let such a
+ scum as himself come to speech of her, I would believe all he can say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey," said the Judge, "rest you quiet&mdash;You must not fly out&mdash;passion
+ helps you not here&mdash;the Doctor must be suffered to proceed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Oates went on to state how the lady complained of the wrongs the
+ House of Derby had sustained from the King and the oppression of her
+ religion, and boasted of the schemes of the Jesuits and seminary priests;
+ and how they would be farthered by her noble kinsman of the House of
+ Stanley. He finally averred that both the Countess and the Fathers of the
+ seminary abroad, founded much upon the talents and courage of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril and his son&mdash;the latter of whom was a member of her family.
+ Of Hudson, he only recollected of having heard one of the Fathers say,
+ that although but a dwarf in stature, he would prove a giant in the cause
+ of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he had ended his evidence, there was a pause, until the Judge, as if
+ the thought had suddenly occurred to him, demanded of Dr. Oates, whether
+ he had ever mentioned the names of the Countess of Derby in any of the
+ previous informations which he had lodged before the Privy Council, and
+ elsewhere, upon this affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates seemed rather surprised at the question, and coloured with anger, as
+ he answered, in his peculiar mode of pronunciation, "Whoy, no, maay
+ laard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And pray, Doctor," said the Judge, "how came so great a revealer of
+ mysteries as you have lately proved, to have suffered so material a
+ circumstance as the accession of this powerful family to the Plot to have
+ remained undiscovered?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maay laard," said Oates, with much effrontery, "aye do not come here to
+ have my evidence questioned as touching the Plaat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not question your evidence, Doctor," said Scroggs, for the time was
+ not arrived that he dared treat him roughly; "nor do I doubt the existence
+ of the <i>Plaat</i>, since it is your pleasure to swear to it. I would
+ only have you, for your own sake, and the satisfaction of all good
+ Protestants, to explain why you have kept back such a weighty point of
+ information from the King and country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maay laard," said Oates, "I will tell you a pretty fable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope," answered the Judge, "it may be the first and last which you
+ shall tell in this place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maay laard," continued Oates, "there was once a faux, who having to carry
+ a goose over a frazen river, and being afraid the aice would not bear him
+ and his booty, did caarry aaver a staane, my laard, in the first instance,
+ to prove the strength of the aice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So your former evidence was but the stone, and now, for the first time,
+ you have brought us the goose?" said Sir William Scroggs; "to tell us
+ this, Doctor, is to make geese of the Court and Jury."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I desoire your laardship's honest construction," said Oates, who saw the
+ current changing against him, but was determined to pay the score with
+ effrontery. "All men knaw at what coast and praice I have given my
+ evidence, which has been always, under Gaad, the means of awakening this
+ poor naation to the dangerous state in which it staunds. Many here knaw
+ that I have been obliged to faartify my ladging at Whitehall against the
+ bloody Papists. It was not to be thought that I should have brought all
+ the story out at aance. I think your wisdome would have advised me
+ otherwise."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] It was on such terms that Dr. Oates was pleased to claim the
+ extraordinary privilege of dealing out the information which he
+ chose to communicate to a court of justice. The only sense in
+ which his story of the fox, stone, and goose could be applicable,
+ is by supposing that he was determined to ascertain the extent of
+ his countrymen's credulity before supplying it with a full meal.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, Doctor," said the Judge, "it is not for me to direct you in this
+ affair; and it is for the Jury to believe you or not; and as for myself, I
+ sit here to do justice to both&mdash;the Jury have heard your answer to my
+ question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doctor Oates retired from the witness-box reddening like a turkey-cock, as
+ one totally unused to have such accounts questioned as he chose to lay
+ before the courts of justice; and there was, perhaps, for the first time,
+ amongst the counsel and solicitors, as well as the templars and students
+ of law there present, a murmur, distinct and audible, unfavourable to the
+ character of the great father of the Popish Plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everett and Dangerfield, with whom the reader is already acquainted, were
+ then called in succession to sustain the accusation. They were subordinate
+ informers&mdash;a sort of under-spur-leathers, as the cant term went&mdash;who
+ followed the path of Oates, with all deference to his superior genius and
+ invention, and made their own fictions chime in and harmonise with his, as
+ well as their talents could devise. But as their evidence had at no time
+ received the full credence into which the impudence of Oates had cajoled
+ the public, so they now began to fall into discredit rather more hastily
+ than their prototype, as the super-added turrets of an ill-constructed
+ building are naturally the first to give way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in vain that Everett, with the precision of a hypocrite, and
+ Dangerfield, with the audacity of a bully, narrated, with added
+ circumstances of suspicion and criminality, their meeting with Julian
+ Peveril in Liverpool, and again at Martindale Castle. It was in vain they
+ described the arms and accoutrements which they pretended to have
+ discovered in old Sir Geoffrey's possession; and that they gave a most
+ dreadful account of the escape of the younger Peveril from Moultrassie
+ Hall, by means of an armed force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Jury listened coldly, and it was visible that they were but little
+ moved by the accusation; especially as the Judge, always professing his
+ belief in the Plot, and his zeal for the Protestant religion, was ever and
+ anon reminding them that presumptions were no proofs&mdash;that hearsay
+ was no evidence&mdash;that those who made a trade of discovery were likely
+ to aid their researches by invention&mdash;and that without doubting the
+ guilt of the unfortunate persons at the bar, he would gladly hear some
+ evidence brought against them of a different nature. "Here we are told of
+ a riot, and an escape achieved by the younger Peveril, at the house of a
+ grave and worthy magistrate, known, I think, to most of us. Why, Master
+ Attorney, bring ye not Master Bridgenorth himself to prove the fact, or
+ all his household, if it be necessary?&mdash;A rising in arms is an affair
+ over public to be left on the hearsay tale of these two men&mdash;though
+ Heaven forbid that I should suppose they speak one word more than they
+ believe! They are the witnesses for the King&mdash;and, what is equally
+ dear to us, the Protestant religion&mdash;and witnesses against a most
+ foul and heathenish Plot. On the other hand, here is a worshipful old
+ knight, for such I must suppose him to be, since he has bled often in
+ battle for the King,&mdash;such, I must say, I suppose him to be, until he
+ is proved otherwise. And here is his son, a hopeful young gentleman&mdash;we
+ must see that they have right, Master Attorney."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unquestionably, my lord," answered the Attorney. "God forbid else! But we
+ will make out these matters against these unhappy gentlemen in a manner
+ more close, if your lordship will permit us to bring in our evidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go on, Master Attorney," said the Judge, throwing himself back in his
+ seat. "Heaven forbid I hinder proving the King's accusation! I only say,
+ what you know as well as I, that <i>de non apparentibus et non
+ existentibus eadem est ratio</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall then call Master Bridgenorth, as your lordship advised, who I
+ think is in waiting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No!" answered a voice from the crowd, apparently that of a female; "he is
+ too wise and too honest to be here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice was distinct as that of Lady Fairfax, when she expressed herself
+ to a similar effect on the trial of Charles the First; but the researches
+ which were made on the present occasion to discover the speaker were
+ unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the slight confusion occasioned by this circumstance was abated, the
+ Attorney, who had been talking aside with the conductors of the
+ prosecution, said, "Whoever favoured us with that information, my lord,
+ had good reason for what they said. Master Bridgenorth has become, I am
+ told, suddenly invisible since this morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look you there now, Master Attorney," said the Judge&mdash;"This comes of
+ not keeping the crown witnesses together and in readiness&mdash;I am sure
+ I cannot help the consequences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor I either, my lord," said the Attorney pettishly. "I could have proved
+ by this worshipful gentleman, Master Justice Bridgenorth, the ancient
+ friendship betwixt this party, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, and the Countess of
+ Derby, of whose doings and intentions Dr. Oates has given such a
+ deliberate evidence. I could have proved his having sheltered her in his
+ Castle against a process of law, and rescued her, by force of arms, from
+ this very Justice Bridgenorth, not without actual violence. Moreover, I
+ could have proved against young Peveril the whole affray charged upon him
+ by the same worshipful evidence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Judge stuck his thumbs into his girdle, which was a favourite
+ attitude of his on such occasions, and exclaimed, "Pshaw, pshaw, Master
+ Attorney!&mdash;Tell me not that you <i>could</i> have proved that, or
+ that, or this&mdash;Prove what you will, but let it be through the mouths
+ of your evidence. Men are not to be licked out of their lives by the rough
+ side of a lawyer's tongue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor is a foul Plot to be smothered," said the Attorney, "for all the
+ haste your lordship is in. I cannot call Master Chiffinch neither, as he
+ is employed on the King's especial affairs, as I am this instant
+ certiorated from the Court at Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Produce the papers, then, Master Attorney, of which this young man is
+ said to be the bearer," said the Judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are before the Privy Council, my lord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then why do you found on them here?" said the Judge&mdash;"This is
+ something like trifling with the Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since your lordship gives it that name," said the Attorney, sitting down
+ in a huff, "you may manage the cause as you will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you do not bring more evidence, I pray you to charge the Jury," said
+ the Judge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall not take the trouble to do so," said the Crown Counsel. "I see
+ plainly how the matter is to go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, but be better advised," said Scroggs. "Consider, your case is but
+ half proved respecting the two Peverils, and doth not pinch on the little
+ man at all, saving that Doctor Oates said that he was in a certain case to
+ prove a giant, which seems no very probable Popish miracle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This sally occasioned a laugh in the Court, which the Attorney-General
+ seemed to take in great dudgeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Attorney," said Oates, who always interfered in the management of
+ these law-suits, "this is a plain an absolute giving away of the cause&mdash;I
+ must needs say it, a mere stoifling of the Plaat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then the devil who bred it may blow wind into it again, if he lists,"
+ answered the Attorney-General; and, flinging down his brief, he left the
+ Court, as if in a huff with all who were concerned in the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Judge having obtained silence,&mdash;for a murmur arose in the Court
+ when the Counsel for the prosecution threw up his brief,&mdash;began to
+ charge the Jury, balancing, as he had done throughout the whole day, the
+ different opinions by which he seemed alternately swayed. He protested on
+ his salvation that he had no more doubt of the existence of the horrid and
+ damnable conspiracy called the Popish Plot, than he had of the treachery
+ of Judas Iscariot; and that he considered Oates as the instrument under
+ Providence of preserving the nation from all the miseries of his Majesty's
+ assassination, and of a second Saint Bartholomew, acted in the streets of
+ London. But then he stated it was the candid construction of the law of
+ England, that the worse the crime, the more strong should be the evidence.
+ Here was the case of accessories tried, whilst their principal&mdash;for
+ such he should call the Countess of Derby&mdash;was unconvicted and at
+ large; and for Doctor Oates, he had but spoke of matters which personally
+ applied to that noble lady, whose words, if she used such in passion,
+ touching aid which she expected in some treasonable matters from these
+ Peverils, and from her kinsmen, or her son's kinsmen, of the House of
+ Stanley, may have been but a burst of female resentment&mdash;<i>dulcis
+ Amaryllidis ira</i>, as the poet hath it. Who knoweth but Doctor Oates did
+ mistake&mdash;he being a gentleman of a comely countenance and easy
+ demeanour&mdash;this same rap with the fan as a chastisement for lack of
+ courage in the Catholic cause, when, peradventure, it was otherwise meant,
+ as Popish ladies will put, it is said, such neophytes and youthful
+ candidates for orders, to many severe trials. "I speak these things
+ jocularly," said the Judge, "having no wish to stain the reputation either
+ of the Honourable Countess or the Reverend Doctor; only I think the
+ bearing between them may have related to something short of high treason.
+ As for what the Attorney-General hath set forth of rescues and force, and
+ I wot not what, sure I am, that in a civil country, when such things
+ happen such things may be proved; and that you and I, gentlemen, are not
+ to take them for granted gratuitously. Touching this other prisoner, this
+ <i>Galfridus minimus</i>, he must needs say," he continued, "he could not
+ discover even a shadow of suspicion against him. Was it to be thought so
+ abortive a creature would thrust himself into depths of policy, far less
+ into stratagems of war? They had but to look at him to conclude the
+ contrary&mdash;the creature was, from his age, fitter for the grave than a
+ conspiracy&mdash;and by his size and appearance, for the inside of a
+ raree-show, than the mysteries of a plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf here broke in upon the Judge by force of screaming, to assure
+ him that he had been, simple as he sat there, engaged in seven plots in
+ Cromwell's time; and, as he proudly added, with some of the tallest men of
+ England. The matchless look and air with which Sir Geoffrey made this
+ vaunt, set all a-laughing, and increased the ridicule with which the whole
+ trial began to be received; so that it was amidst shaking sides and watery
+ eyes that a general verdict of Not Guilty was pronounced, and the
+ prisoners dismissed from the bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a warmer sentiment awakened among those who saw the father and son
+ throw themselves into each other's arms, and, after a hearty embrace,
+ extend their hands to their poor little companion in peril, who, like a
+ dog, when present at a similar scene, had at last succeeded, by stretching
+ himself up to them and whimpering at the same time, to secure to himself a
+ portion of their sympathy and gratulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the singular termination of this trial. Charles himself was
+ desirous to have taken considerable credit with the Duke of Ormond for the
+ evasion of the law, which had been thus effected by his private
+ connivance; and was both surprised and mortified at the coldness with
+ which his Grace replied, that he was rejoiced at the poor gentleman's
+ safety, but would rather have had the King redeem them like a prince, by
+ his royal prerogative of mercy, than that his Judge should convey them out
+ of the power of the law, like a juggler with his cups and balls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0042" id="link2HCH0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;On fair ground
+ I could beat forty of them!
+ &mdash;CORIOLANUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It doubtless occurred to many that were present at the trial we have
+ described, that it was managed in a singular manner, and that the quarrel,
+ which had the appearance of having taken place between the Court and the
+ Crown Counsel, might proceed from some private understanding betwixt them,
+ the object of which was the miscarriage of the accusation. Yet though such
+ underhand dealing was much suspected, the greater part of the audience,
+ being well educated and intelligent, had already suspected the bubble of
+ the Popish Plot, and were glad to see that accusations, founded on what
+ had already cost so much blood, could be evaded in any way. But the crowd,
+ who waited in the Court of Requests, and in the hall, and without doors,
+ viewed in a very different light the combination, as they interpreted it,
+ between the Judge and the Attorney-General, for the escape of the
+ prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oates, whom less provocation than he had that day received often induced
+ to behave like one frantic with passion, threw himself amongst the crowd,
+ and repeated till he was hoarse, "Theay are stoifling the Plaat!&mdash;theay
+ are straangling the Plaat!&mdash;My Laard Justice and Maaster Attarney are
+ in league to secure the escape of the plaaters and Paapists!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the device of the Papist whore of Portsmouth," said one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of old Rowley himself," said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he could be murdered by himself, why hang those that would hinder it!"
+ exclaimed a third.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He should be tried," said a fourth, "for conspiring his own death, and
+ hanged <i>in terrorem</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, Sir Geoffrey, his son, and their little companion, left
+ the hall, intending to go to Lady Peveril's lodgings, which had been
+ removed to Fleet Street. She had been relieved from considerable
+ inconvenience, as Sir Geoffrey gave Julian hastily to understand, by an
+ angel, in the shape of a young friend, and she now expected them doubtless
+ with impatience. Humanity, and some indistinct idea of having
+ unintentionally hurt the feelings of the poor dwarf, induced the honest
+ Cavalier to ask this unprotected being to go with them. "He knew Lady
+ Peveril's lodgings were but small," he said; "but it would be strange, if
+ there was not some cupboard large enough to accommodate the little
+ gentleman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf registered this well-meant remark in his mind, to be the subject
+ of a proper explanation, along with the unhappy reminiscence of the
+ trencher-hornpipe, whenever time should permit an argument of such nicety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus they sallied from the hall, attracting general observation, both
+ from the circumstances in which they had stood so lately, and from their
+ resemblance, as a wag of the Inner Temple expressed it, to the three
+ degrees of comparison, Large, Lesser, Least. But they had not passed far
+ along the street, when Julian perceived that more malevolent passions than
+ mere curiosity began to actuate the crowd which followed, and, as it were,
+ dogged their motions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There go the Papist cut-throats, tantivy for Rome!" said one fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tantivy to Whitehall, you mean!" said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah! the bloodthirsty villains!" cried a woman: "Shame, one of them should
+ be suffered to live, after poor Sir Edmondsbury's cruel murder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Out upon the mealy-mouthed Jury, that turned out the bloodhounds on an
+ innocent town!" cried a fourth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the tumult thickened, and the word began to pass among the more
+ desperate, "Lambe them, lads; lambe them!"&mdash;a cant phrase of the
+ time, derived from the fate of Dr. Lambe, an astrologer and quack, who was
+ knocked on the head by the rabble in Charles the First's time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian began to be much alarmed at these symptoms of violence, and
+ regretted that they had not gone down to the city by water. It was now too
+ late to think of that mode of retreating, and he therefore requested his
+ father in a whisper, to walk steadily forward towards Charing Cross,
+ taking no notice of the insults which might be cast upon them, while the
+ steadiness of their pace and appearance might prevent the rabble from
+ resorting to actual violence. The execution of this prudent resolution was
+ prevented after they had passed the palace, by the hasty disposition of
+ the elder Sir Geoffrey, and the no less choleric temper of Galfridus
+ Minimus, who had a soul which spurned all odds, as well of numbers as of
+ size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now a murrain take the knaves, with their hollowing and whooping," said
+ the large knight; "by this day, if I could but light on a weapon, I would
+ cudgel reason and loyalty into some of their carcasses!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I also," said the dwarf, who was toiling to keep up with the longer
+ strides of his companions, and therefore spoke in a very phthisical tone.&mdash;"I
+ also will cudgel the plebeian knaves beyond measure&mdash;he!&mdash;hem!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the crowd who thronged around them, impeded, and did all but assault
+ them, was a mischievous shoemaker's apprentice, who, hearing this unlucky
+ vaunt of the valorous dwarf, repaid it by flapping him on the head with a
+ boot which he was carrying home to the owner, so as to knock the little
+ gentleman's hat over his eyes. The dwarf, thus rendered unable to discover
+ the urchin that had given him the offence, flew with instinctive ambition
+ against the biggest fellow in the crowd, who received the onset with a
+ kick on the stomach, which made the poor little champion reel back to his
+ companions. They were now assaulted on all sides; but fortune complying
+ with the wish of Sir Geoffrey the larger, ordained that the scuffle should
+ happen near the booth of a cutler, from amongst whose wares, as they stood
+ exposed to the public, Sir Geoffrey Peveril snatched a broadsword, which
+ he brandished with the formidable address of one who had for many a day
+ been in the familiar practice of using such a weapon. Julian, while at the
+ same time he called loudly for a peace-officer, and reminded the
+ assailants that they were attacking inoffensive passengers, saw nothing
+ better for it than to imitate his father's example, and seized also one of
+ the weapons thus opportunely offered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they displayed these demonstrations of defence, the rush which the
+ rabble at first made towards them was so great as to throw down the
+ unfortunate dwarf, who would have been trampled to death in the scuffle,
+ had not his stout old namesake cleared the rascal crowd from about him
+ with a few flourishes of his weapon, and seizing on the fallen champion,
+ put him out of danger (except from missiles), by suddenly placing him on
+ the bulk-head, that is to say, the flat wooden roof of the cutler's
+ projecting booth. From the rusty ironware, which was displayed there, the
+ dwarf instantly snatched an old rapier and target, and covering himself
+ with the one, stood making passes with the other, at the faces and eyes of
+ the people in the street; so much delighted with his post of vantage, that
+ he called loudly to his friends who were skirmishing with the riotous on
+ more equal terms as to position, to lose no time in putting themselves
+ under his protection. But far from being in a situation to need his
+ assistance, the father and son might easily have extricated themselves
+ from the rabble by their own exertions, could they have thought of leaving
+ the mannikin in the forlorn situation, in which, to every eye but his own,
+ he stood like a diminutive puppet, tricked out with sword and target as a
+ fencing-master's sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stones and sticks began now to fly very thick, and the crowd,
+ notwithstanding the exertions of the Peverils to disperse them with as
+ little harm as possible, seemed determined on mischief, when some
+ gentlemen who had been at the trial, understanding that the prisoners who
+ had been just acquitted were in danger of being murdered by the populace,
+ drew their swords, and made forward to effect their rescue, which was
+ completed by a small party of the King's Life Guards, who had been
+ despatched from their ordinary post of alarm, upon intelligence of what
+ was passing. When this unexpected reinforcement arrived, the old jolly
+ Knight at once recognised, amidst the cries of those who then entered upon
+ action, some of the sounds which had animated his more active years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where be these cuckoldly Roundheads," cried some.&mdash;"Down with the
+ sneaking knaves!" cried others.&mdash;"The King and his friends, and the
+ devil a one else!" exclaimed a third set, with more oaths and d&mdash;n
+ me's, than, in the present more correct age, it is necessary to commit to
+ paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old soldier, pricking up his ears like an ancient hunter at the cry of
+ the hounds, would gladly have scoured the Strand, with the charitable
+ purpose, now he saw himself so well supported, of knocking the London
+ knaves, who had insulted him, into twiggen bottles; but he was withheld by
+ the prudence of Julian, who, though himself extremely irritated by the
+ unprovoked ill-usage which they had received, saw himself in a situation
+ in which it was necessary to exercise more caution than vengeance. He
+ prayed and pressed his father to seek some temporary place of retreat from
+ the fury of the populace, while that prudent measure was yet in their
+ power. The subaltern officer, who commanded the party of the Life Guards,
+ exhorted the old Cavalier eagerly to the same sage counsel, using, as a
+ spice of compulsion, the name of the King; while Julian strongly urged
+ that of his mother. The old Knight looked at his blade, crimsoned with
+ cross-cuts and slashes which he had given to the most forward of the
+ assailants, with the eye of one not half sufficed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would I had pinked one of the knaves at least&mdash;but I know not how
+ it was, when I looked on their broad round English faces, I shunned to use
+ my point, and only sliced the rogues a little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the King's pleasure," said the officer, "is, that no tumult be
+ prosecuted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My mother," said Julian, "will die with fright, if the rumour of this
+ scuffle reaches her ere we see her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay," said the Knight, "the King's Majesty and my good dame&mdash;well,
+ their pleasure be done, that's all I can say&mdash;Kings and ladies must
+ be obeyed. But which way to retreat, since retreat we must?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian would have been at some loss to advise what course to take, for
+ everybody in the vicinity had shut up their shops, and chained their
+ doors, upon observing the confusion become so formidable. The poor cutler,
+ however, with whose goods they made so free, offered them an asylum on the
+ part of his landlord, whose house served as a rest for his shop, and only
+ intimated gently, he hoped the gentleman would consider him for the use of
+ his weapons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was hastily revolving whether they ought, in prudence, to accept
+ this man's invitation, aware, by experience, how many trepans, as they
+ were then termed, were used betwixt two contending factions, each too
+ inveterate to be very scrupulous of the character of fair play to an
+ enemy, when the dwarf, exerting his cracked voice to the uttermost, and
+ shrieking like an exhausted herald, from the exalted station which he
+ still occupied on the bulk-head, exhorted them to accept the offer of the
+ worthy man of the mansion. "He himself," he said, as he reposed himself
+ after the glorious conquest in which he had some share, "had been favoured
+ with a beatific vision, too splendid to be described to common and mere
+ mortal ears, but which had commanded him, in a voice to which his heart
+ had bounded as to a trumpet sound, to take refuge with the worthy person
+ of the house, and cause his friends to do so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Vision!" said the Knight of the Peak,&mdash;"sound of a trumpet!&mdash;the
+ little man is stark mad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the cutler, in great haste, intimated to them that their little friend
+ had received an intimation from a gentlewoman of his acquaintance, who
+ spoke to him from the window, while he stood on the bulk-head, that they
+ would find a safe retreat in his landlord's; and desiring them to attend
+ to two or three deep though distant huzzas, made them aware that the
+ rabble were up still, and would soon be upon them with renewed violence,
+ and increased numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father and son, therefore, hastily thanked the officer and his party,
+ as well as the other gentlemen who had volunteered in their assistance,
+ lifted little Sir Geoffrey Hudson from the conspicuous post which he had
+ so creditably occupied during the skirmish, and followed the footsteps of
+ the tenant of the booth, who conducted them down a blind alley and through
+ one or two courts, in case, as he said, any one might have watched where
+ they burrowed, and so into a back-door. This entrance admitted them to a
+ staircase carefully hung with straw mats to exclude damp, from the upper
+ step of which they entered upon a tolerably large withdrawing-room, hung
+ with coarse green serge edged with gilded leather, which the poorer or
+ more economical citizens at that time use instead of tapestry or
+ wainscoting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the poor cutler received from Julian such a gratuity for the loan of
+ the swords, that he generously abandoned the property to the gentlemen who
+ had used them so well; "the rather," he said, "that he saw, by the way
+ they handed their weapons, that they were men of mettle, and tall
+ fellows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the dwarf smiled on him courteously, and bowed, thrusting at the same
+ time, his hand into his pocket, which however, he withdrew carelessly
+ probably because he found he had not the means of making the small
+ donation which he had meditated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler proceeded to say, as he bowed and was about to withdraw, that
+ he saw there would be merry days yet in Old England, and that Bilboa
+ blades would fetch as good a price as ever. "I remember," he said,
+ "gentlemen, though I was then but a 'prentice, the demand for weapons in
+ the years forty-one and forty-two; sword blades were more in request than
+ toothpicks, and Old Ironsides, my master, took more for rascally Provant
+ rapiers, than I dare ask nowadays for a Toledo. But, to be sure, a man's
+ life then rested on the blade he carried; the Cavaliers and Roundheads
+ fought every day at the gates of Whitehall, as it is like, gentlemen, by
+ your good example, they may do again, when I shall be enabled to leave my
+ pitiful booth, and open a shop of better quality. I hope you will
+ recommend me, gentlemen, to your friends. I am always provided with ware
+ which a gentleman may risk his life on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, good friend," said Julian, "I prithee begone. I trust we shall
+ need thy ware no more for some time at least."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler retired, while the dwarf hollowed after him downstairs, that he
+ would call on him soon, and equip himself with a longer blade, and one
+ more proper for action; although, he said, the little weapon he had did
+ well enough for a walking-sword, or in a skirmish with such <i>canaille</i>
+ as they had been engaged with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cutler returned at this summons, and agreed to pleasure the little man
+ with a weapon more suitable to his magnanimity; then, as if the thought
+ had suddenly occurred to him, he said, "But, gentlemen, it will be wild
+ work to walk with your naked swords through the Strand, and it can scarce
+ fail to raise the rabble again. If you please, while you repose yourselves
+ here, I can fit the blades with sheaths."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proposal seemed so reasonable, that Julian and his father gave up
+ their weapons to the friendly cutler, an example which the dwarf followed,
+ after a moment's hesitation, not caring, as he magnificently expressed it,
+ to part so soon with the trusty friend which fortune had but the moment
+ before restored to his hand. The man retired with the weapons under his
+ arm; and, in shutting the door behind him, they heard him turn the key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you hear that?" said Sir Geoffrey to his son&mdash;"and we are
+ disarmed!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, without reply, examined the door, which was fast secured; and then
+ looked at the casements, which were at a storey's height from the ground,
+ and grated besides with iron. "I cannot think," he said, after a moment's
+ pause, "that the fellow means to trepan us; and, in any event, I trust we
+ should have no difficulty in forcing the door, or otherwise making escape.
+ But, before resorting to such violent measures, I think it is better to
+ give the rabble leisure to disperse, by waiting this man's return with our
+ weapons within a reasonable time, when, if he does not appear, I trust we
+ shall find little difficulty in extricating ourselves." As he spoke thus,
+ the hangings were pulled aside, and from a small door which was concealed
+ behind them, Major Bridgenorth entered the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0043" id="link2HCH0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He came amongst them like a new raised spirit
+ To speak of dreadful judgments that impend,
+ And of the wrath to come.
+ &mdash;THE REFORMER.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The astonishment of Julian at the unexpected apparition of Bridgenorth,
+ was instantly succeeded by apprehension of his father's violence, which he
+ had every reason to believe would break forth against one, whom he himself
+ could not but reverence on account of his own merits, as well as because
+ he was the father of Alice. The appearance of Bridgenorth was not however,
+ such as to awaken resentment. His countenance was calm, his step slow and
+ composed, his eye not without the indication of some deep-seated anxiety,
+ but without any expression either of anger or of triumph. "You are
+ welcome," he said, "Sir Geoffrey Peveril, to the shelter and hospitality
+ of this house; as welcome as you would have been in other days, when we
+ called each other neighbours and friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Odzooks," said the old Cavalier; "and had I known it was thy house, man,
+ I would sooner had my heart's blood run down the kennel, than my foot
+ should have crossed your threshold&mdash;in the way of seeking safety,
+ that is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I forgive your inveteracy," said Major Bridgenorth, "on account of your
+ prejudices."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Keep your forgiveness," answered the Cavalier, "until you are pardoned
+ yourself. By Saint George I have sworn, if ever I got my heels out of yon
+ rascally prison, whither I was sent much through your means, Master
+ Bridgenorth,&mdash;that you should pay the reckoning for my bad lodging.&mdash;I
+ will strike no man in his own house; but if you will cause the fellow to
+ bring back my weapon, and take a turn in that blind court there below,
+ along with me, you shall soon see what chance a traitor hath with a true
+ man, and a kennel-blooded Puritan with Peveril of the Peak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth smiled with much composure. "When I was younger and more
+ warm-blooded," he replied, "I refused your challenge, Sir Geoffrey; it is
+ not likely I should now accept it, when each is within a stride of the
+ grave. I have not spared, and will not spare, my blood, when my country
+ wants it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is when there is any chance of treason against the King," said Sir
+ Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my father," said Julian, "let us hear Master Bridgenorth! We have
+ been sheltered in his house; and although we now see him in London, we
+ should remember that he did not appear against us this day, when perhaps
+ his evidence might have given a fatal turn to our situation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right, young man," said Bridgenorth; "and it should be some
+ pledge of my sincere goodwill, that I was this day absent from
+ Westminster, when a few words from my mouth had ended the long line of
+ Peveril of the Peak: it needed but ten minutes to walk to Westminster
+ Hall, to have ensured your condemnation. But could I have done this,
+ knowing, as I now know, that to thee, Julian Peveril, I owe the
+ extrication of my daughter&mdash;of my dearest Alice&mdash;the memory of
+ her departed mother&mdash;from the snares which hell and profligacy had
+ opened around her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is, I trust safe," said Peveril eagerly, and almost forgetting his
+ father's presence; "she is, I trust, safe, and in your own wardship?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not in mine," said the dejected father; "but in that of one in whose
+ protection, next to that of Heaven, I can most fully confide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure&mdash;are you very sure of that?" repeated Julian eagerly.
+ "I found her under the charge of one to whom she had been trusted, and who
+ yet&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who yet was the basest of women," answered Bridgenorth; "but he who
+ selected her for the charge was deceived in her character."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say rather you were deceived in his; remember that when we parted in
+ Moultrassie, I warned you of that Ganlesse&mdash;that&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know your meaning," said Bridgenorth; "nor did you err in describing
+ him as a worldly-wise man. But he has atoned for his error by recovering
+ Alice from the dangers into which she has plunged when separated from you;
+ and besides, I have not thought meet again to entrust him with the charge
+ that is dearest to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank God your eyes are thus far opened!" said Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This day will open them wide, or close them for ever," answered
+ Bridgenorth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this dialogue, which the speakers hurried through without attending
+ to the others who were present, Sir Geoffrey listened with surprise and
+ eagerness, endeavouring to catch something which should render their
+ conversation intelligible; but as he totally failed in gaining any such
+ key to their meaning, he broke in with,&mdash;"'Sblood and thunder,
+ Julian, what unprofitable gossip is this? What hast thou to do with this
+ fellow, more than to bastinado him, if you should think it worth while to
+ beat so old a rogue?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My dearest father," said Julian, "you know not this gentleman&mdash;I am
+ certain you do him injustice. My own obligations to him are many; and I am
+ sure when you come to know them&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope I shall die ere that moment come," said Sir Geoffrey; and
+ continued with increasing violence, "I hope in the mercy of Heaven, that I
+ shall be in the grave of my ancestors, ere I learn that my son&mdash;my
+ only son&mdash;the last hope of my ancient house&mdash;the last remnant of
+ the name of Peveril&mdash;hath consented to receive obligations from the
+ man on earth I am most bound to hate, were I not still more bound to
+ contemn him!&mdash;Degenerate dog-whelp!" he repeated with great
+ vehemence, "you colour without replying! Speak, and disown such disgrace;
+ or, by the God of my fathers&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf suddenly stepped forward and called out, "Forbear!" with a voice
+ at once so discordant and commanding, that it sounded supernatural. "Man
+ of sin and pride," he said, "forbear; and call not the name of a holy God
+ to witness thine unhallowed resentments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rebuke so boldly and decidedly given, and the moral enthusiasm with
+ which he spoke, gave the despised dwarf an ascendancy for the moment over
+ the fiery spirit of his gigantic namesake. Sir Geoffrey Peveril eyed him
+ for an instant askance and shyly, as he might have done a supernatural
+ apparition, and then muttered, "What knowest thou of my cause of wrath?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing," said the dwarf;&mdash;"nothing but this&mdash;that no cause can
+ warrant the oath thou wert about to swear. Ungrateful man! thou wert
+ to-day rescued from the devouring wrath of the wicked, by a marvellous
+ conjunction of circumstances&mdash;Is this a day, thinkest thou, on which
+ to indulge thine own hasty resentments?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I stand rebuked," said Sir Geoffrey, "and by a singular monitor&mdash;the
+ grasshopper, as the prayer-book saith, hath become a burden to me.&mdash;Julian,
+ I will speak to thee of these matters hereafter;&mdash;and for you, Master
+ Bridgenorth, I desire to have no farther communication with you, either in
+ peace or in anger. Our time passes fast, and I would fain return to my
+ family. Cause our weapons to be restored; unbar the doors, and let us part
+ without farther altercation, which can but disturb and aggravate our
+ spirits."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "I have no desire to vex your
+ spirit or my own; but, for thus soon dismissing you, that may hardly be,
+ it being a course inconsistent with the work which I have on hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How, sir! Do you mean that we should abide here, whether with or against
+ our inclinations?" said the dwarf. "Were it not that I am laid under
+ charge to remain here, by one who hath the best right to command this poor
+ microcosm, I would show thee that bolts and bars are unavailing restraints
+ on such as I am."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Truly," said Sir Geoffrey, "I think, upon an emergency, the little man
+ might make his escape through the keyhole."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth's face was moved into something like a smile at the swaggering
+ speech of the pigmy hero, and the contemptuous commentary of Sir Geoffrey
+ Peveril; but such an expression never dwelt on his features for two
+ seconds together, and he replied in these words:&mdash;"Gentlemen, each
+ and all of you must be fain to content yourselves. Believe me, no hurt is
+ intended towards you; on the contrary, your remaining here will be a means
+ of securing your safety, which would be otherwise deeply endangered. It
+ will be your own fault if a hair of your head is hurt. But the stronger
+ force is on my side; and, whatever harm you may meet with should you
+ attempt to break forth by violence, the blame must rest with yourselves.
+ It you will not believe me, I will permit Master Julian Peveril to
+ accompany me, where he shall see that I am provided fully with the means
+ of repressing violence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treason!&mdash;treason!" exclaimed the old Knight&mdash;"Treason against
+ God and King Charles!&mdash;Oh, for one half-hour of the broadsword which
+ I parted with like an ass!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold, my father, I conjure you!" said Julian. "I will go with Master
+ Bridgenorth, since he requests it. I will satisfy myself whether there be
+ danger, and of what nature. It is possible I may prevail on him to desist
+ from some desperate measure, if such be indeed in agitation. Should it be
+ necessary, fear not that your son will behave as he ought to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do your pleasure, Julian," said his father; "I will confide in thee. But
+ if you betray my confidence, a father's curse shall cleave to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bridgenorth now motioned to Peveril to follow him, and they passed through
+ the small door by which he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The passage led to a vestibule or anteroom, in which several other doors
+ and passages seemed to centre. Through one of these Julian was conducted
+ by Bridgenorth, walking with silence and precaution, in obedience to a
+ signal made by his guide to that effect. As they advanced, he heard
+ sounds, like those of the human voice, engaged in urgent and emphatic
+ declamation. With slow and light steps Bridgenorth conducted him through a
+ door which terminated this passage; and as he entered a little gallery,
+ having a curtain in front, the sound of the preacher's voice&mdash;for
+ such it now seemed&mdash;became distinct and audible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian now doubted not that he was in one of those conventicles, which,
+ though contrary to the existing laws, still continued to be regularly held
+ in different parts of London and the suburbs. Many of these, as frequented
+ by persons of moderate political principles, though dissenters from the
+ Church for conscience' sake, were connived at by the prudence or timidity
+ of the government. But some of them, in which assembled the fiercer and
+ more exalted sects of Independents, Anabaptists, Fifth-Monarchy men, and
+ other sectaries, whose stern enthusiasm had contributed so greatly to
+ effect the overthrow of the late King's throne, were sought after,
+ suppressed, and dispersed, whenever they could be discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian was soon satisfied that the meeting into which he was thus secretly
+ introduced was one of the latter class; and, to judge by the violence of
+ the preacher, of the most desperate character. He was still more
+ effectually convinced of this, when, at a sign from Bridgenorth, he
+ cautiously unclosed a part of the curtain which hung before the gallery,
+ and thus, unseen himself, looked down on the audience, and obtained a view
+ of the preacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two hundred persons were assembled beneath, in an area filled up
+ with benches, as if for the exercise of worship; and they were all of the
+ male sex, and well armed with pikes and muskets, as well as swords and
+ pistols. Most of them had the appearance of veteran soldiers, now past the
+ middle of life, yet retaining such an appearance of strength as might well
+ supply the loss of youthful agility. They stood, or sat, in various
+ attitudes of stern attention; and, resting on their spears and muskets,
+ kept their eyes firmly fixed on the preacher, who ended the violence of
+ his declamation by displaying from the pulpit a banner, on which was
+ represented a lion, with the motto, "<i>Vicit Leo ex tribu Judæ.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The torrent of mystical yet animating eloquence of the preacher&mdash;an
+ old grey-haired man, whom zeal seemed to supply with the powers of voice
+ and action, of which years had deprived him&mdash;was suited to the taste
+ of his audience, but could not be transferred to these pages without
+ scandal and impropriety. He menaced the rulers of England with all the
+ judgments denounced on those of Moab and Assyria&mdash;he called upon the
+ saints to be strong, to be up and doing; and promised those miracles
+ which, in the campaigns of Joshua, and his successors, the valiant Judges
+ of Israel, supplied all odds against the Amorites, Midianites, and
+ Philistines. He sounded trumpets, opened vials, broke seals, and denounced
+ approaching judgments under all the mystical signs of the Apocalypse. The
+ end of the world was announced, accompanied with all its preliminary
+ terrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, with deep anxiety, soon heard enough to make him aware that the
+ meeting was likely to terminate in open insurrection, like that of the
+ Fifth-Monarchy men, under Venner, at an earlier period of Charles's reign;
+ and he was not a little concerned at the probability of Bridgenorth being
+ implicated in so criminal and desperate an undertaking. If he had retained
+ any doubts of the issue of the meeting, they must have been removed when
+ the preacher called on his hearers to renounce all expectation which had
+ hitherto been entertained of safety to the nation, from the execution of
+ the ordinary laws of the land. This, he said, was at best but a carnal
+ seeking after earthly aid&mdash;a going down to Egypt for help, which the
+ jealousy of their Divine Leader would resent as a fleeing to another rock,
+ and a different banner, from that which was this day displayed over them.&mdash;And
+ here he solemnly swung the bannered lion over their heads, as the only
+ sign under which they ought to seek for life and safety. He then proceeded
+ to insist, that recourse to ordinary justice was vain as well as sinful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The event of that day at Westminster," he said, "might teach them that
+ the man at Whitehall was even as the man his father;" and closed a long
+ tirade against the vices of the Court, with assurance "that Tophet was
+ ordained of old&mdash;for the King it was made hot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the preacher entered on a description of the approaching theocracy,
+ which he dared to prophesy, Bridgenorth, who appeared for a time to have
+ forgotten the presence of Julian, whilst with stern and fixed attention he
+ drunk in the words of the preacher, seemed suddenly to collect himself,
+ and, taking Julian by the hand, led him out of the gallery, of which he
+ carefully closed the door, into an apartment at no great distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they arrived there, he anticipated the expostulations of Julian, by
+ asking him, in a tone of severe triumph, whether these men he had seen
+ were likely to do their work negligently, or whether it would not be
+ perilous to attempt to force their way from a house, when all the avenues
+ were guarded by such as he had now seen&mdash;men of war from their
+ childhood upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the name of Heaven," said Julian, without replying to Bridgenorth's
+ question, "for what desperate purpose have you assembled so many desperate
+ men? I am well aware that your sentiments of religion are peculiar; but
+ beware how you deceive yourself&mdash;No views of religion can sanction
+ rebellion and murder; and such are the natural and necessary consequences
+ of the doctrine we have just heard poured into the ears of fanatical and
+ violent enthusiasts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My son," said Bridgenorth calmly, "in the days of my non-age, I thought
+ as you do. I deemed it sufficient to pay my tithes of cummin and aniseed&mdash;my
+ poor petty moral observances of the old law; and I thought I was heaping
+ up precious things, when they were in value no more than the husks of the
+ swine-trough. Praised be Heaven, the scales are fallen from mine eyes; and
+ after forty years' wandering in the desert of Sinai, I am at length
+ arrived in the Land of Promise&mdash;My corrupt human nature has left me&mdash;I
+ have cast my slough, and can now with some conscience put my hand to the
+ plough, certain that there is no weakness left in me where-through I may
+ look back. The furrows," he added, bending his brows, while a gloomy fire
+ filled his large eyes, "must be drawn long and deep, and watered by the
+ blood of the mighty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a change in Bridgenorth's tone and manner, when he used these
+ singular expressions, which convinced Julian that his mind, which had
+ wavered for so many years between his natural good sense and the insane
+ enthusiasm of the time, had finally given way to the latter; and, sensible
+ of the danger in which the unhappy man himself, the innocent and beautiful
+ Alice, and his own father, were likely to be placed&mdash;to say nothing
+ of the general risk of the community by a sudden insurrection, he at the
+ same time felt that there was no chance of reasoning effectually with one,
+ who would oppose spiritual conviction to all arguments which reason could
+ urge against his wild schemes. To touch his feeling seemed a more probable
+ resource; and Julian therefore conjured Bridgenorth to think how much his
+ daughter's honour and safety were concerned in his abstaining from the
+ dangerous course which he meditated. "If you fall," he said, "must she not
+ pass under the power and guardianship of her uncle, whom you allow to have
+ shown himself capable of the grossest mistake in the choice of her female
+ protectress; and whom I believe, upon good grounds, to have made that
+ infamous choice with his eyes open?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young man," answered Bridgenorth, "you make me feel like the poor bird,
+ around whose wing some wanton boy has fixed a line, to pull the struggling
+ wretch to earth at his pleasure. Know, since thou wilt play this cruel
+ part, and drag me down from higher contemplations, that she with whom
+ Alice is placed, and who hath in future full power to guide her motions,
+ and decide her fate, despite of Christian and every one else, is&mdash;I
+ will not tell thee who she is&mdash;Enough&mdash;no one&mdash;thou least
+ of all, needs to fear for her safety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment a side-door opened, and Christian himself came into the
+ apartment. He started and coloured when he saw Julian Peveril; then
+ turning to Bridgenorth with an assumed air of indifference, asked, "Is
+ Saul among the prophets?&mdash;Is a Peveril among the saints?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, brother," replied Bridgenorth, "his time is not come more than thine
+ own&mdash;thou art too deep in the ambitious intrigues of manhood, and he
+ in the giddy passions of youth, to hear the still calm voice&mdash;You
+ will both hear it, as I trust and pray."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Ganlesse, or Christian, or by whatever name you are called," said
+ Julian, "by whatever reasons you guide yourself in this most perilous
+ matter, <i>you</i> at least are not influenced by any idea of an immediate
+ divine command for commencing hostilities against the state. Leaving,
+ therefore, for the present, whatever subjects of discussion may be between
+ us, I implore you, as a man of shrewdness and sense, to join with me in
+ dissuading Master Bridgenorth from the fatal enterprise which he now
+ meditates."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young gentleman," said Christian, with great composure, "when we met in
+ the west, I was willing to have made a friend of you, but you rejected the
+ overture. You might, however, even then have seen enough of me to be
+ assured, that I am not likely to rush too rashly on any desperate
+ undertaking. As to this which lies before us, my brother Bridgenorth
+ brings to it the simplicity, though not the harmlessness of the dove, and
+ I the subtilty of the serpent. He hath the leading of saints who are moved
+ by the spirit; and I can add to their efforts a powerful body, who have
+ for their instigators the world, the devil, and the flesh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And can you," said Julian, looking at Bridgenorth, "accede to such an
+ unworthy union?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I unite not with them," said Bridgenorth; "but I may not, without guilt,
+ reject the aid which Providence sends to assist His servants. We are
+ ourselves few, though determined&mdash;Those whose swords come to help the
+ cutting down of the harvest, must be welcome&mdash;When their work is
+ wrought, they will be converted or scattered.&mdash;Have you been at York
+ Place, brother, with that unstable epicure? We must have his last
+ resolution, and that within an hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian looked at Julian, as if his presence prevented him from
+ returning an answer; upon which Bridgenorth arose, and taking the young
+ man by the arm, led him out of the apartment, into that in which they had
+ left his father; assuring him by the way, that determined and vigilant
+ guards were placed in every different quarter by which escape could be
+ effected, and that he would do well to persuade his father to remain a
+ quiet prisoner for a few hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian returned him no answer, and Bridgenorth presently retired, leaving
+ him alone with his father and Hudson. To their questions he could only
+ briefly reply, that he feared they were trepanned, since they were in the
+ house with at least two hundred fanatics, completely armed, and apparently
+ prepared for desperate enterprise. Their own want of arms precluded the
+ possibility of open violence; and however unpleasant it might be to remain
+ in such a condition, it seemed difficult, from the strength of the
+ fastenings at doors and windows, to attempt any secret escape without
+ instantaneous detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valiant dwarf alone nursed hopes, with which he in vain endeavoured to
+ inspire his companions in affliction. "The fair one, whose eyes," he said,
+ "were like the twin stars of Leda"&mdash;for the little man was a great
+ admirer of lofty language&mdash;"had not invited him, the most devoted,
+ and, it might be, not the least favoured of her servants, into this place
+ as a harbour, in order that he might therein suffer shipwreck; and he
+ generously assured his friends, that in his safety they also should be
+ safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Geoffrey, little cheered by this intimation, expressed his despair at
+ not being able to get the length of Whitehall, where he trusted to find as
+ many jolly Cavaliers as would help him to stifle the whole nest of wasps
+ in their hive; while Julian was of opinion that the best service he could
+ now render Bridgenorth, would be timeously to disclose his plot, and, if
+ possible, to send him at the same time warning to save his person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But we must leave them to meditate over their plans at leisure; no one of
+ which, as they all depended on their previous escape from confinement,
+ seemed in any great chance of being executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0044" id="link2HCH0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And some for safety took the dreadful leap;
+ Some for the voice of Heaven seem'd calling on them;
+ Some for advancement, or for lucre's sake&mdash;
+ I leap'd in frolic.
+ &mdash;THE DREAM.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After a private conversation with Bridgenorth, Christian hastened to the
+ Duke of Buckingham's hotel, taking at the same time such a route as to
+ avoid meeting with any acquaintance. He was ushered into the apartment of
+ the Duke, whom he found cracking and eating filberts, with a flask of
+ excellent white wine at his elbow. "Christian," said his Grace, "come help
+ me to laugh&mdash;I have bit Sir Charles Sedley&mdash;flung him for a
+ thousand, by the gods!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad at your luck, my Lord Duke," replied Christian; "but I am come
+ here on serious business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Serious?&mdash;why, I shall hardly be serious in my life again&mdash;ha,
+ ha, ha!&mdash;and for luck, it was no such thing&mdash;sheer wit, and
+ excellent contrivance; and but that I don't care to affront Fortune, like
+ the old Greek general, I might tell her to her face&mdash;In this thou
+ hadst no share. You have heard, Ned Christian, that Mother Cresswell is
+ dead?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I did hear that the devil hath got his due," answered Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said the Duke, "you are ungrateful; for I know you have been
+ obliged to her, as well as others. Before George, a most benevolent and
+ helpful old lady; and that she might not sleep in an unblest grave, I
+ betted&mdash;do you mark me&mdash;with Sedley, that I would write her
+ funeral sermon; that it should be every word in praise of her life and
+ conversation, that it should be all true, and yet that the diocesan should
+ be unable to lay his thumb on Quodling, my little chaplain, who should
+ preach it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I perfectly see the difficulty, my lord," said Christian, who well knew
+ that if he wished to secure attention from this volatile nobleman, he must
+ first suffer, nay, encourage him, to exhaust the topic, whatever it might
+ be, that had got temporary possession of his pineal gland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," said the Duke, "I had caused my little Quodling to go through his
+ oration thus&mdash;'That whatever evil reports had passed current during
+ the lifetime of the worthy matron whom they had restored to dust that day,
+ malice herself could not deny that she was born well, married well, lived
+ well, and died well; since she was born in Shadwell, married to Cresswell,
+ lived in Camberwell, and died in Bridewell.' Here ended the oration, and
+ with it Sedley's ambitious hopes of overreaching Buckingham&mdash;ha, ha,
+ ha!&mdash;And now, Master Christian, what are your commands for me
+ to-day?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "First, to thank your Grace for being so attentive as to send so
+ formidable a person as Colonel Blood, to wait upon your poor friend and
+ servant. Faith, he took such an interest in my leaving town, that he
+ wanted to compel me to do it at point of fox, so I was obliged to spill a
+ little of his malapert blood. Your Grace's swordsmen have had ill luck of
+ late; and it is hard, since you always choose the best hands, and such
+ scrupleless knaves too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come now, Christian," said the Duke, "do not thus exult over me; a great
+ man, if I may so call myself, is never greater than amid miscarriage. I
+ only played this little trick on you, Christian, to impress on you a
+ wholesome idea of the interest I take in your motions. The scoundrel's
+ having dared to draw upon you, is a thing not to be forgiven.&mdash;What!
+ injure my old friend Christian?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why not," said Christian coolly, "if your old friend was so stubborn
+ as not to go out of town, like a good boy, when your Grace required him to
+ do so, for the civil purpose of entertaining his niece in his absence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How&mdash;what!&mdash;how do you mean by <i>my</i> entertaining your
+ niece, Master Christian?" said the Duke. "She was a personage far beyond
+ my poor attentions, being destined, if I recollect aright, to something
+ like royal favour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was her fate, however, to be the guest of your Grace's convent for a
+ brace of days, or so. Marry, my lord, the father confessor was not at
+ home, and&mdash;for convents have been scaled of late&mdash;returned not
+ till the bird was flown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christian, thou art an old reynard&mdash;I see there is no doubling with
+ thee. It was thou, then, that stole away my pretty prize, but left me
+ something so much prettier in my mind, that, had it not made itself wings
+ to fly away with, I would have placed it in a cage of gold. Never be
+ downcast, man; I forgive thee&mdash;I forgive thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace is of a most merciful disposition, especially considering it
+ is I who have had the wrong; and sages have said, that he who doth the
+ injury is less apt to forgive than he who only sustains it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True, true, Christian," said the Duke, "which, as you say, is something
+ quite new, and places my clemency in a striking point of view. Well, then,
+ thou forgiven man, when shall I see my Mauritanian Princess again?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wherever I am certain that a quibble, and a carwhichit, for a play or a
+ sermon, will not banish her from your Grace's memory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not all the wit of South, or of Etherege," said Buckingham hastily, "to
+ say nothing of my own, shall in future make me oblivious of what I owe the
+ Morisco Princess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yet, to leave the fair lady out of thought for a little while&mdash;a
+ very little while," said Christian, "since I swear that in due time your
+ Grace shall see her, and know in her the most extraordinary woman that the
+ age has produced&mdash;to leave her, I say out of sight for a little
+ while, has your Grace had late notice of your Duchess's health?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Health," said the Duke. "Umph&mdash;no&mdash;nothing particular. She has
+ been ill&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is no longer so," subjoined Christian; "she died in Yorkshire
+ forty-eight hours since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou must deal with the devil," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would ill become one of my name to do so," replied Christian. "But in
+ the brief interval, since your Grace hath known of an event which hath not
+ yet reached the public ear, you have, I believe, made proposals to the
+ King for the hand of the Lady Anne, second daughter of the Duke of York,
+ and your Grace's proposals have been rejected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fiends and firebrands, villain!" said the Duke, starting up and seizing
+ Christian by the collar; "who hath told thee that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take your hand from my cloak, my Lord Duke, and I may answer you," said
+ Christian. "I have a scurvy touch of old puritanical humour about me. I
+ abide not the imposition of hands&mdash;take off your grasp from my cloak,
+ or I will find means to make you unloose it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, who had kept his right hand on his dagger-hilt while he held
+ Christian's collar with his left, unloosed it as he spoke, but slowly, and
+ as one who rather suspends than abandons the execution of some hasty
+ impulse; while Christian, adjusting his cloak with perfect composure,
+ said, "Soh&mdash;my cloak being at liberty, we speak on equal terms. I
+ come not to insult your Grace, but to offer you vengeance for the insult
+ you have received."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Vengeance!" said the Duke&mdash;"It is the dearest proffer man can
+ present to me in my present mood. I hunger for vengeance&mdash;thirst for
+ vengeance&mdash;could die to ensure vengeance!&mdash;-'Sdeath!" he
+ continued, walking up and down the large apartment with the most
+ unrestrained and violent agitation; "I have chased this repulse out of my
+ brain with ten thousand trifles, because I thought no one knew it. But it
+ is known, and to thee, the very common-sewer of Court-secrets&mdash;the
+ honour of Villiers is in thy keeping, Ned Christian! Speak, thou man of
+ wiles and of intrigue&mdash;on whom dost thou promise the vengeance?
+ Speak! and if thy answers meet my desires, I will make a bargain with thee
+ as willingly as with thy master, Satan himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will not be," said Christian, "so unreasonable in my terms as stories
+ tell of the old apostate; I will offer your Grace, as he might do,
+ temporal prosperity and revenge, which is his frequent recruiting money,
+ but I leave it to yourself to provide, as you may be pleased, for your
+ future salvation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, gazing upon him fixedly and sadly, replied, "I would to God,
+ Christian, that I could read what purpose of damnable villainy thou hast
+ to propose to me in thy countenance, without the necessity of thy using
+ words!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace can but try a guess," said Christian, calmly smiling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," replied the Duke, after gazing at him again for the space of a
+ minute; "thou art so deeply dyed a hypocrite, that thy mean features, and
+ clear grey eye, are as likely to conceal treason, as any petty scheme of
+ theft or larceny more corresponding to your degree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treason, my lord!" echoed Christian; "you may have guessed more nearly
+ than you were aware of. I honour your Grace's penetration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treason?" echoed the Duke. "Who dare name such a crime to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If a name startles your Grace, you may call it vengeance&mdash;vengeance
+ on the cabal of councillors, who have ever countermined you, in spite of
+ your wit and your interest with the King.&mdash;Vengeance on Arlington,
+ Ormond&mdash;on Charles himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, by Heaven," said the Duke, resuming his disordered walk through the
+ apartment&mdash;"Vengeance on these rats of the Privy Council,&mdash;come
+ at it as you will. But the King!&mdash;never&mdash;never. I have provoked
+ him a hundred times, where he has stirred me once. I have crossed his path
+ in state intrigue&mdash;rivalled him in love&mdash;had the advantage in
+ both,&mdash;and, d&mdash;n it, he has forgiven me! If treason would put me
+ in his throne, I have no apology for it&mdash;it were worse than bestial
+ ingratitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nobly spoken, my lord," said Christian; "and consistent alike with the
+ obligations under which your Grace lies to Charles Stewart, and the sense
+ you have ever shown of them.&mdash;But it signifies not. If your Grace
+ patronise not our enterprise, there is Shaftesbury&mdash;there is Monmouth&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Scoundrel!" exclaimed the Duke, even more vehemently agitated than
+ before, "think you that you shall carry on with others an enterprise which
+ I have refused?&mdash;No, by every heathen and every Christian god!&mdash;Hark
+ ye, Christian, I will arrest you on the spot&mdash;I will, by gods and
+ devils, and carry you to unravel your plot at Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where the first words I speak," answered the imperturbable Christian,
+ "will be to inform the Privy Council in what place they may find certain
+ letters, wherewith your Grace has honoured your poor vassal, containing,
+ as I think, particulars which his Majesty will read with more surprise
+ than pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Sdeath, villain!" said the Duke, once more laying his hand on his
+ poniard-hilt, "thou hast me again at advantage. I know not why I forbear
+ to poniard you where you stand!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might fall, my Lord Duke," said Christian, slightly colouring, and
+ putting his right hand into his bosom, "though not, I think, unavenged&mdash;for
+ I have not put my person into this peril altogether without means of
+ defence. I might fall, but, alas! your Grace's correspondence is in hands,
+ which, by that very act, would be rendered sufficiently active in handing
+ them to the King and the Privy Council. What say you to the Moorish
+ Princess, my Lord Duke? What if I have left her executrix of my will, with
+ certain instructions how to proceed if I return not unharmed from York
+ Place? Oh, my lord, though my head is in the wolf's mouth, I was not goose
+ enough to place it there without settling how many carabines should be
+ fired on the wolf, so soon as my dying cackle was heard.&mdash;Pshaw, my
+ Lord Duke! you deal with a man of sense and courage, yet you speak to him
+ as a child and a coward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke threw himself into a chair, fixed his eyes on the ground, and
+ spoke without raising them. "I am about to call Jerningham," he said; "but
+ fear nothing&mdash;it is only for a draught of wine&mdash;That stuff on
+ the table may be a vehicle of filberts, and walnuts, but not for such
+ communications as yours.&mdash;Bring me champagne," he said to the
+ attendant who answered to his summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic returned, and brought a flask of champagne, with two large
+ silver cups. One of them he filled for Buckingham, who, contrary to the
+ usual etiquette, was always served first at home, and then offered the
+ other to Christian, who declined to receive it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke drank off the large goblet which was presented to him, and for a
+ moment covered his forehead with the palm of his hand; then instantly
+ withdrew it, and said, "Christian, speak your errand plainly. We know each
+ other. If my reputation be in some degree in your hands, you are well
+ aware that your life is in mine. Sit down," he said, taking a pistol from
+ his bosom and laying it on the table&mdash;"Sit down, and let me hear your
+ proposal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord," said Christian, smiling, "I shall produce no such ultimate
+ argument on my part, though possibly, in time of need, I may not be found
+ destitute of them. But my defence is in the situation of things, and in
+ the composed view which, doubtless, your Majesty will take of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Majesty!" repeated the Duke&mdash;"My good friend Christian, you have
+ kept company with the Puritans so long, that you confuse the ordinary
+ titles of the Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not how to apologise," said Christian, "unless your Grace will
+ suppose that I spoke by prophecy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such as the devil delivered to Macbeth," said the Duke&mdash;again paced
+ the chamber, and again seated himself, and said, "Be plain, Christian&mdash;speak
+ out at once, and manfully, what is it you intend?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>I</i>," said Christian&mdash;"What should I do?&mdash;I can do nothing
+ in such a matter; but I thought it right that your Grace should know that
+ the godly of this city"&mdash;(he spoke the word with a kind of ironical
+ grin)&mdash;"are impatient of inactivity, and must needs be up and doing.
+ My brother Bridgenorth is at the head of all old Weiver's congregation;
+ for you must know, that, after floundering from one faith to another, he
+ hath now got beyond ordinances, and is become a Fifth-Monarchy man. He has
+ nigh two hundred of Weiver's people, fully equipped, and ready to fall on;
+ and, with slight aid from your Grace's people, they must carry Whitehall,
+ and make prisoners of all within it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rascal!" said the Duke, "and is it to a Peer of England you make this
+ communication?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," answered Christian, "I admit it would be extreme folly in your
+ Grace to appear until all is over. But let me give Blood and the others a
+ hint on your part. There are the four Germans also&mdash;right
+ Knipperdolings and Anabaptists&mdash;will be specially useful. You are
+ wise, my lord, and know the value of a corps of domestic gladiators, as
+ well as did Octavius, Lepidus, and Anthony, when, by such family forces,
+ they divided the world by indenture tripartite."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stay, stay," said the Duke. "Even if these bloodhounds were to join with
+ you&mdash;not that I would permit it without the most positive assurances
+ for the King's personal safety&mdash;but say the villains were to join,
+ what hope have you of carrying the Court?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bully Tom Armstrong,[*] my lord, hath promised his interest with the Life
+ Guards. Then there are my Lord Shaftesbury's brisk boys in the city&mdash;thirty
+ thousand on the holding up a finger."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Thomas, or Sir Thomas Armstrong, a person who had distinguished
+ himself in youth by duels and drunken exploits. He was
+ particularly connected with the Duke of Monmouth, and was said to
+ be concerned in the Rye-House Plot, for which he suffered capital
+ punishment, 20th June 1684.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Let him hold up both hands, and if he count a hundred for each finger,"
+ said the Duke, "it will be more than I expect. You have not spoken to
+ him?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely not till your Grace's pleasure was known. But, if he is not
+ applied to, there is the Dutch train, Hans Snorehout's congregation, in
+ the Strand&mdash;there are the French Protestants in Piccadilly&mdash;there
+ are the family of Levi in Lewkenor's Lane&mdash;the Muggletonians in
+ Thames Street&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, faugh!&mdash;Out upon them&mdash;out upon them!&mdash;How the knaves
+ will stink of cheese and tobacco when they come upon action!&mdash;they
+ will drown all the perfumes in Whitehall. Spare me the detail; and let me
+ know, my dearest Ned, the sum total of thy most odoriferous forces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fifteen hundred men, well armed," said Christian, "besides the rabble
+ that will rise to a certainty&mdash;they have already nearly torn to
+ pieces the prisoners who were this day acquitted on account of the Plot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All, then, I understand.&mdash;And now, hark ye, most Christian
+ Christian," said he, wheeling his chair full in front of that on which his
+ agent was seated, "you have told me many things to-day&mdash;Shall I be
+ equally communicative? Shall I show you that my accuracy of information
+ matches yours? Shall I tell you, in a word, why you have at once resolved
+ to push every one, from the Puritan to the free-thinker, upon a general
+ attack of the Palace of Whitehall, without allowing me, a peer of the
+ realm, time either to pause upon or to prepare for a step so desperate?
+ Shall I tell you why you would lead or drive, seduce or compel me, into
+ countenancing your measures?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord, if you please to form a guess," said Christian, "I will answer
+ with all sincerity, if you have assigned the right cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Countess of Derby is this day arrived, and attends the Court this
+ evening, with hopes of the kindest reception. She may be surprised amid
+ the mêlée?&mdash;Ha! said I not right, Master Christian? You, who pretend
+ to offer me revenge, know yourself its exquisite sweetness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would not presume," said Christian, half smiling, "to offer your Grace
+ a dish without acting as your taster as well as purveyor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's honestly said," said the Duke. "Away then, my friend. Give Blood
+ this ring&mdash;he knows it, and knows how to obey him who bears it. Let
+ him assemble my gladiators, as thou dost most wittily term my <i>coup
+ jarrets</i>. The old scheme of the German music may be resorted to, for I
+ think thou hast the instruments ready. But take notice, I know nothing
+ on't; and Rowley's person must be safe&mdash;I will hang and burn on all
+ hands if a hair of his black periwig[*] be but singed.&mdash;Then what is
+ to follow&mdash;a Lord Protector of the realm&mdash;or stay&mdash;Cromwell
+ has made the word somewhat slovenly and unpopular&mdash;a Lord Lieutenant
+ of the Kingdom?&mdash;The patriots who take it on themselves to avenge the
+ injustice done to the country, and to remove evil counsellors from before
+ the King's throne, that it may be henceforward established in
+ righteousness&mdash;so I think the rubric runs&mdash;cannot fail to make a
+ fitting choice."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] Charles, to suit his dark complexion, always wore a black peruke.
+ He used to say of the players, that if they wished to represent a
+ villain on the stage, "Oddsfish, they always clapp'd on him a
+ black periwig, whereas the greatest rogue in England [meaning,
+ probably, Dr. Oates] wears a white one."&mdash;<i>See CIBBER's Apology</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "They cannot, my Lord Duke," said Christian, "since there is but one man
+ in the three kingdoms on whom that choice can possibly fall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you Christian," said his Grace; "and I trust you. Away, and make
+ all ready. Be assured your services shall not be forgot. We will have you
+ near to us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Duke," said Christian, "you bind me doubly to you. But remember
+ that as your Grace is spared any obnoxious proceedings which may befall in
+ the way of military execution, or otherwise, so it will be advisable that
+ you hold yourself in preparation, upon a moment's notice, to put yourself
+ at the head of a band of honourable friends and allies, and come presently
+ to the palace, where you will be received by the victors as a commander,
+ and by the vanquished as a preserver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I conceive you&mdash;I conceive you. I will be in prompt readiness," said
+ the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, my lord," continued Christian; "and for Heaven's sake, let none of
+ those toys, which are the very Delilahs of your imagination, come across
+ your Grace this evening, and interfere with the execution of this sublime
+ scheme."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Christian, dost think me mad?" was his Grace's emphatic reply. "It
+ is you who linger, when all should be ordered for a deed so daring. Go
+ then.&mdash;But hark ye, Ned; ere you go, tell me when I shall again see
+ yonder thing of fire and air&mdash;yon Eastern Peri, that glides into
+ apartments by the keyhole, and leaves them through the casement&mdash;yon
+ black-eyed houri of the Mahometan paradise&mdash;when, I say, shall I see
+ her once more?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When your Grace has the truncheon of Lord Lieutenant of the Kingdom,"
+ said Christian, and left the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham stood fixed in contemplation for a moment after he was gone.
+ "Should I have done this?" he said, arguing the matter with himself; "or
+ had I the choice rather of doing aught else? Should I not hasten to the
+ Court, and make Charles aware of the treason which besets him? I will, by
+ Heaven?&mdash;Here, Jerningham, my coach, with the despatch of light!&mdash;I
+ will throw myself at his feet, and tell him of all the follies which I
+ have dreamed of with this Christian.&mdash;And then he will laugh at me,
+ and spurn me.&mdash;No, I have kneeled to him to-day already, and my
+ repulse was nothing gentle. To be spurned once in the sun's daily round is
+ enough for Buckingham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having made this reflection, he seated himself, and began hastily to mark
+ down the young nobles and gentlemen of quality, and others, their very
+ ignoble companions, who he supposed might be likely to assume him for
+ their leader in any popular disturbance. He had nearly completed it, when
+ Jerningham entered, to say the coach would be ready in an instant, and to
+ bring his master's sword, hat, and cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let the coachman draw off," said the Duke, "but be in readiness. And send
+ to the gentlemen thou wilt find named in this list; say I am but ill at
+ ease, and wish their company to a light collation. Let instant expedition
+ be made, and care not for expense; you will find most of them at the Club
+ House in Fuller's Rents."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] The place of meeting of the Green Ribbon Club. "Their place of
+ meeting," says Roger North, "was in a sort of Carrefour at
+ Chancery Lance, in a centre of business and company most proper
+ for such anglers of fools. The house was double balconied in
+ front, as may yet be seen, for the clubbers to issue forth <i>in
+ fresco</i>, with hats and no perukes, pipes in their mouths, merry
+ faces, and dilated throats for vocal encouragement of the
+ canaglia below on usual and unusual occasions."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The preparations for festivity were speedily made, and the intended
+ guests, most of them persons who were at leisure for any call that
+ promised pleasure, though sometimes more deaf to those of duty, began
+ speedily to assemble. There were many youths of the highest rank, and with
+ them, as is usual in those circles, many of a different class, whom
+ talents, or impudence, or wit, or a turn for gambling, had reared up into
+ companions for the great and the gay. The Duke of Buckingham was a general
+ patron of persons of this description; and a numerous attendance took
+ place on the present occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The festivity was pursued with the usual appliances of wine, music, and
+ games of hazard; with which, however, there mingled in that period much
+ more wit, and a good deal more gross profligacy of conversation, than the
+ talents of the present generation can supply, or their taste would permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke himself proved the complete command which he possessed over his
+ versatile character, by maintaining the frolic, the laugh, and the jest,
+ while his ear caught up, and with eagerness, the most distant sounds, as
+ intimating the commencement of Christian's revolutionary project. Such
+ sounds were heard from time to time, and from time to time they died away,
+ without any of those consequences which Buckingham expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length, and when it was late in the evening, Jerningham announced
+ Master Chiffinch from the Court; and that worthy personage followed the
+ annunciation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Strange things have happened, my Lord Duke," he said; "your presence at
+ Court is instantly required by his Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You alarm me," said Buckingham, standing up. "I hope nothing has happened&mdash;I
+ hope there is nothing wrong&mdash;I hope his Majesty is well?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Perfectly well," said Chiffinch; "and desirous to see your Grace without
+ a moment's delay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is sudden," said the Duke. "You see I have had merry fellows about
+ me, and am scarce in case to appear, Chiffinch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace seems to be in very handsome plight," said Chiffinch; "and you
+ know his Majesty is gracious enough to make allowances."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True," said the Duke, not a little anxious in his mind, touching the
+ cause of this unexpected summons&mdash;"True&mdash;his Majesty is most
+ gracious&mdash;I will order my coach."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mine is below," replied the royal messenger; "it will save time, if your
+ Grace will condescend to use it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forced from every evasion, Buckingham took a goblet from the table, and
+ requested his friends to remain at his palace so long as they could find
+ the means of amusement there. He expected, he said, to return almost
+ immediately; if not, he would take farewell of them with his usual toast,
+ "May all of us that are not hanged in the interval, meet together again
+ here on the first Monday of next month."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This standing toast of the Duke bore reference to the character of several
+ of his guests; but he did not drink it on the present occasion without
+ some anticipation concerning his own fate, in case Christian had betrayed
+ him. He hastily made some addition to his dress, and attended Chiffinch in
+ the chariot to Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0045" id="link2HCH0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ High feasting was there there&mdash;the gilded roofs
+ Rung to the wassail-health&mdash;the dancer's step
+ Sprung to the chord responsive&mdash;the gay gamester
+ To fate's disposal flung his heap of gold,
+ And laugh'd alike when it increased or lessen'd:
+ Such virtue hath court-air to teach us patience
+ Which schoolmen preach in vain.
+ &mdash;WHY COME YE NOT TO COURT?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Upon the afternoon of this eventful day, Charles held his Court in the
+ Queen's apartments, which were opened at a particular hour to invited
+ guests of a certain lower degree, but accessible without restriction to
+ the higher classes of nobility who had from birth, and to the courtiers
+ who held by office the privilege of the <i>entrée</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was one part of Charles's character, which unquestionably rendered him
+ personally popular, and postponed to a subsequent reign the precipitation
+ of his family from the throne, that he banished from his Court many of the
+ formal restrictions with which it was in other reigns surrounded. He was
+ conscious of the good-natured grace of his manners, and trusted to it,
+ often not in vain, to remove evil impressions arising from actions, which
+ he was sensible could not be justified on the grounds of liberal or
+ national policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the daytime the King was commonly seen in the public walks alone, or
+ only attended by one or two persons; and his answer to the remonstrance of
+ his brother, on the risk of thus exposing his person, is well known:&mdash;"Believe
+ me, James," he said, "no one will murder <i>me</i>, to make <i>you</i>
+ King."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same manner, Charles's evenings, unless such as were destined to
+ more secret pleasures, were frequently spent amongst all who had any
+ pretence to approach a courtly circle; and thus it was upon the night
+ which we are treating of. Queen Catherine, reconciled or humbled to her
+ fate, had long ceased to express any feelings of jealousy, nay, seemed so
+ absolutely dead to such a passion, that she received at her drawing-room,
+ without scruple, and even with encouragement, the Duchesses of Portsmouth
+ and Cleveland, and others, who enjoyed, though in a less avowed character,
+ the credit of having been royal favourites. Constraint of every kind was
+ banished from a circle so composed, and which was frequented at the same
+ time, if not by the wisest, at least by the wittiest courtiers, who ever
+ assembled round a monarch, and who, as many of them had shared the wants,
+ and shifts, and frolics of his exile, had then acquired a sort of
+ prescriptive licence, which the good-natured prince, when he attained his
+ period of prosperity, could hardly have restrained had it suited his
+ temper to do so. This, however, was the least of Charles's thoughts. His
+ manners were such as secured him from indelicate obtrusion; and he sought
+ no other protection from over-familiarity, than what these and his ready
+ wit afforded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the present occasion, he was peculiarly disposed to enjoy the scene of
+ pleasure which had been prepared. The singular death of Major Coleby,
+ which, taking place in his own presence, had proclaimed, with the voice of
+ a passing bell, the ungrateful neglect of the Prince for whom he had
+ sacrificed everything, had given Charles much pain. But, in his own
+ opinion at least, he had completely atoned for this negligence by the
+ trouble which he had taken for Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son, whose
+ liberation he looked upon not only as an excellent good deed in itself,
+ but, in spite of the grave rebuke of Ormond, as achieved in a very
+ pardonable manner, considering the difficulties with which he was
+ surrounded. He even felt a degree of satisfaction on receiving
+ intelligence from the city that there had been disturbances in the
+ streets, and that some of the more violent fanatics had betaken themselves
+ to their meeting-houses, upon sudden summons, to inquire, as their
+ preachers phrased it, into the causes of Heaven's wrath, and into the
+ backsliding of the Court, lawyers, and jury, by whom the false and bloody
+ favourers of the Popish Plot were screened and cloaked from deserved
+ punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, we repeat, seemed to hear these accounts with pleasure, even
+ when he was reminded of the dangerous and susceptible character of those
+ with whom such suspicions originated. "Will any one now assert," he said,
+ with self-complacence, "that I am so utterly negligent of the interest of
+ friends?&mdash;You see the peril in which I place myself, and even the
+ risk to which I have exposed the public peace, to rescue a man whom I have
+ scarce seen for twenty years, and then only in his buff-coat and
+ bandoleers, with other Train-Band officers who kissed hands upon the
+ Restoration. They say Kings have long hands&mdash;I think they have as
+ much occasion for long memories, since they are expected to watch over and
+ reward every man in England, who hath but shown his goodwill by crying
+ 'God save the King!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, the rogues are even more unreasonable still," said Sedley; "for
+ every knave of them thinks himself entitled to your Majesty's protection
+ in a good cause, whether he has cried God save the King or no."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King smiled, and turned to another part of the stately hall, where
+ everything was assembled which could, according to the taste of the age,
+ make the time glide pleasantly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one place, a group of the young nobility, and of the ladies of the
+ Court, listened to the reader's acquaintance Empson, who was accompanying
+ with his unrivalled breathings on the flute, a young siren, who, while her
+ bosom palpitated with pride and with fear, warbled to the courtly and
+ august presence the beautiful air beginning&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Young I am, and yet unskill'd,
+ How to make a lover yield," &amp;c.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ She performed her task in a manner so corresponding with the strains of
+ the amatory poet, and the voluptuous air with which the words had been
+ invested by the celebrated Purcel, that the men crowded around in
+ ecstasies, while most of the ladies thought it proper either to look
+ extremely indifferent to the words she sung, or to withdraw from the
+ circle as quietly as possible. To the song succeeded a concerto, performed
+ by a select band of most admirable musicians, which the King, whose taste
+ was indisputable, had himself selected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At other tables in the apartment, the elder courtiers worshipped Fortune,
+ at the various fashionable games of ombre, quadrille, hazard, and the
+ like; while heaps of gold which lay before the players, augmented or
+ dwindled with every turn of a card or cast of a die. Many a year's rent of
+ fair estates was ventured upon the main or the odds; which, spent in the
+ old deserted manor-house, had repaired the ravages of Cromwell upon its
+ walls, and replaced the sources of good housekeeping and hospitality,
+ that, exhausted in the last age by fine and sequestration, were now in a
+ fair way of being annihilated by careless prodigality. Elsewhere, under
+ cover of observing the gamester, or listening to the music, the
+ gallantries of that all-licensed age were practised among the gay and
+ fair, closely watched the whilst by the ugly or the old, who promised
+ themselves at least the pleasure of observing, and it may be that of
+ proclaiming, intrigues in which they could not be sharers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From one table to another glided the merry Monarch, exchanging now a
+ glance with a Court beauty, now a jest with a Court wit, now beating time
+ to the music, and anon losing or winning a few pieces of gold on the
+ chance of the game to which he stood nearest;&mdash;the most amiable of
+ voluptuaries&mdash;the gayest and best-natured of companions&mdash;the man
+ that would, of all others, have best sustained his character, had life
+ been a continued banquet, and its only end to enjoy the passing hour, and
+ send it away as pleasantly as might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kings are least of all exempted from the ordinary lot of humanity; and
+ Seged of Ethiopia is, amongst monarchs, no solitary example of the vanity
+ of reckoning on a day or an hour of undisturbed serenity. An attendant on
+ the Court announced suddenly to their Majesties that a lady, who would
+ only announce herself as a Peeress of England, desired to be admitted into
+ the presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen said, hastily, it was <i>impossible</i>. No peeress, without
+ announcing her title, was entitled to the privilege of her rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could be sworn," said a nobleman in attendance, "that it is some whim
+ of the Duchess of Newcastle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attendant who brought the message, said that he did indeed believe it
+ to be the Duchess, both from the singularity of the message, and that the
+ lady spoke with somewhat a foreign accent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the name of madness, then," said the King, "let us admit her. Her
+ Grace is an entire raree-show in her own person&mdash;a universal
+ masquerade&mdash;indeed a sort of private Bedlam-hospital, her whole ideas
+ being like so many patients crazed upon the subjects of love and
+ literature, who act nothing in their vagaries, save Minerva, Venus, and
+ the nine Muses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty's pleasure must always supersede mine," said the Queen. "I
+ only hope I shall not be expected to entertain so fantastic a personage.
+ The last time she came to Court, Isabella"&mdash;(she spoke to one of her
+ Portuguese ladies of honour)&mdash;"you had not returned from our lovely
+ Lisbon!&mdash;her Grace had the assurance to assume a right to bring a
+ train-bearer into my apartment; and when this was not allowed, what then,
+ think you, she did?&mdash;even caused her train to be made so long, that
+ three mortal yards of satin and silver remained in the antechamber,
+ supported by four wenches, while the other end was attached to her Grace's
+ person, as she paid her duty at the upper end of the presence-room. Full
+ thirty yards of the most beautiful silk did her Grace's madness employ in
+ this manner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And most beautiful damsels they were who bore this portentous train,"
+ said the King&mdash;"a train never equalled save by that of the great
+ comet in sixty-six. Sedley and Etherege told us wonders of them; for it is
+ one advantage of this new fashion brought up by the Duchess, that a matron
+ may be totally unconscious of the coquetry of her train and its
+ attendants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Am I to understand, then, your Majesty's pleasure is, that the lady is to
+ be admitted?" said the usher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly," said the King; "that is, if the incognita be really entitled
+ to the honour.&mdash;It may be as well to inquire her title&mdash;there
+ are more madwomen abroad than the Duchess of Newcastle. I will walk into
+ the anteroom myself, and receive your answer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere Charles had reached the lower end of the apartment in his progress
+ to the anteroom, the usher surprised the assembly by announcing a name
+ which had not for many a year been heard in these courtly halls&mdash;"the
+ Countess of Derby!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stately and tall, and still, at an advanced period of life, having a
+ person unbroken by years, the noble lady advanced towards her Sovereign,
+ with a step resembling that with which she might have met an equal. There
+ was indeed nothing in her manner that indicated either haughtiness or
+ assumption unbecoming that presence; but her consciousness of wrongs,
+ sustained from the administration of Charles, and of the superiority of
+ the injured party over those from whom, or in whose name, the injury had
+ been offered, gave her look dignity, and her step firmness. She was
+ dressed in widow's weeds, of the same fashion which were worn at the time
+ her husband was brought to the scaffold; and which, in the thirty years
+ subsequent to that event, she had never permitted her tirewoman to alter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surprise was no pleasing one to the King; and cursing in his heart the
+ rashness which had allowed the lady entrance on the gay scene in which
+ they were engaged, he saw at the same time the necessity of receiving her
+ in a manner suitable to his own character, and her rank in the British
+ Court. He approached her with an air of welcome, into which he threw all
+ his natural grace, while he began, "<i>Chère Comtesse de Derby, puissante
+ Reine de Man, notre très auguste soeur&mdash;&mdash;</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak English, sire, if I may presume to ask such a favour," said the
+ Countess. "I am a Peeress of this nation&mdash;mother to one English Earl,
+ and widow, alas, to another! In England I have spent my brief days of
+ happiness, my long years of widowhood and sorrow. France and its language
+ are but to me the dreams of an uninteresting childhood. I know no tongue
+ save that of my husband and my son. Permit me, as the widow and mother of
+ Derby, thus to render my homage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would have kneeled, but the King gracefully prevented her, and,
+ saluting her cheek, according to the form, led her towards the Queen, and
+ himself performed the ceremony of introduction. "Your Majesty," he said,
+ "must be informed that the Countess has imposed a restriction on French&mdash;the
+ language of gallantry and compliment. I trust your Majesty will, though a
+ foreigner, like herself, find enough of honest English to assure the
+ Countess of Derby with what pleasure we see her at Court, after the
+ absence of so many years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will endeavour to do so, at least," said the Queen, on whom the
+ appearance of the Countess of Derby made a more favourable impression than
+ that of many strangers, whom, at the King's request, she was in the habit
+ of receiving with courtesy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles himself again spoke. "To any other lady of the same rank I might
+ put the question, why she was so long absent from the circle? I fear I can
+ only ask the Countess of Derby, what fortunate cause produces the pleasure
+ of seeing her here?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No fortunate cause, my liege, though one most strong and urgent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King augured nothing agreeable from this commencement; and in truth,
+ from the Countess's first entrance, he had anticipated some unpleasant
+ explanation, which he therefore hastened to parry, having first composed
+ his features into an expression of sympathy and interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said he, "the cause is of a nature in which we can render
+ assistance, we cannot expect your ladyship should enter upon it at the
+ present time; but a memorial addressed to our secretary, or, if it is more
+ satisfactory, to ourselves directly, will receive our immediate, and I
+ trust I need not add, our favourable construction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess bowed with some state, and answered, "My business, sire, is
+ indeed important; but so brief, that it need not for more than a few
+ minutes withdraw your ear from what is more pleasing;&mdash;yet it is so
+ urgent, that I am afraid to postpone it even for a moment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is unusual," said Charles. "But you, Countess of Derby, are an
+ unwonted guest, and must command my time. Does the matter require my
+ private ear?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my part," said the Countess, "the whole Court might listen; but you
+ Majesty may prefer hearing me in the presence of one or two of your
+ counsellors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ormond," said the King, looking around, "attend us for an instant&mdash;and
+ do you, Arlington, do the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King led the way into an adjoining cabinet, and, seating himself,
+ requested the Countess would also take a chair. "It needs not, sire," she
+ replied; then pausing for a moment, as if to collect her spirits, she
+ proceeded with firmness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty well said that no light cause had drawn me from my lonely
+ habitation. I came not hither when the property of my son&mdash;that
+ property which descended to him from a father who died for your Majesty's
+ rights&mdash;was conjured away from him under pretext of justice, that it
+ might first feed the avarice of the rebel Fairfax, and then supply the
+ prodigality of his son-in-law, Buckingham."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are over harsh terms, lady," said the King. "A legal penalty was,
+ as we remember, incurred by an act of irregular violence&mdash;so our
+ courts and our laws term it, though personally I have no objection to call
+ it, with you, an honourable revenge. But admit it were such, in
+ prosecution of the laws of honour, bitter legal consequences are often
+ necessarily incurred."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I come not to argue for my son's wasted and forfeited inheritance, sire,"
+ said the Countess; "I only take credit for my patience, under that
+ afflicting dispensation. I now come to redeem the honour of the House of
+ Derby, more dear to me than all the treasures and lands which ever
+ belonged to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And by whom is the honour of the House of Derby impeached?" said the
+ King; "for on my word you bring me the first news of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Has there one Narrative, as these wild fictions are termed, been printed
+ with regard to the Popish Plot&mdash;this pretended Plot as I will call it&mdash;in
+ which the honour of our house has not been touched and tainted? And are
+ there not two noble gentlemen, father and son, allies of the House of
+ Stanley, about to be placed in jeopardy of their lives, on account of
+ matters in which we are the parties first impeached?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked around, and smiled to Arlington and Ormond. "The
+ Countess's courage, methinks, shames ours. What lips dared have called the
+ immaculate Plot <i>pretended</i>, or the Narrative of the witnesses, our
+ preservers from Popish knives, a wild fiction?&mdash;But, madam," he said,
+ "though I admire the generosity of your interference in behalf of the two
+ Peverils, I must acquaint you, that your interference is unnecessary&mdash;they
+ are this morning acquitted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now may God be praised!" said the Countess, folding her hands. "I have
+ scarce slept since I heard the news of their impeachment; and have arrived
+ here to surrender myself to your Majesty's justice, or to the prejudices
+ of the nation, in hopes, by so doing, I might at least save the lives of
+ my noble and generous friends, enveloped in suspicion only, or chiefly, by
+ their connection with us.&mdash;Are they indeed acquitted?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are, by my honour," said the King. "I marvel you heard it not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I arrived but last night, and remained in the strictest seclusion," said
+ the Countess, "afraid to make any inquiries that might occasion discovery
+ ere I saw your Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now that we <i>have</i> met," said the King, taking her hand kindly&mdash;"a
+ meeting which gives me the greatest pleasure&mdash;may I recommend to you
+ speedily to return to your royal island with as little <i>éclat</i> as you
+ came thither? The world, my dear Countess, has changed since we were
+ young. Men fought in the Civil War with good swords and muskets; but now
+ we fight with indictments and oaths, and such like legal weapons. You are
+ no adept in such warfare; and though I am well aware you know how to hold
+ out a castle, I doubt much if you have the art to parry off an
+ impeachment. This Plot has come upon us like a land storm&mdash;there is
+ no steering the vessel in the teeth of the tempest&mdash;we must run for
+ the nearest haven, and happy if we can reach one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is cowardice, my liege," said the Countess&mdash;"Forgive the word!&mdash;it
+ is but a woman who speaks it. Call your noble friends around you, and make
+ a stand like your royal father. There is but one right and one wrong&mdash;one
+ honourable and forward course; and all others which deviate are oblique
+ and unworthy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your language, my venerated friend," said Ormond, who saw the necessity
+ of interfering betwixt the dignity of the actual Sovereign and the freedom
+ of the Countess, who was generally accustomed to receive, not to pay
+ observance,&mdash;"your language is strong and decided, but it applies not
+ to the times. It might occasion a renewal of the Civil War, and of all its
+ miseries, but could hardly be attended with the effects you sanguinely
+ anticipate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are too rash, my Lady Countess," said Arlington, "not only to rush
+ upon this danger yourself, but to desire to involve his Majesty. Let me
+ say plainly, that, in this jealous time, you have done but ill to exchange
+ the security of Castle Rushin for the chance of a lodging in the Tower of
+ London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And were I to kiss the block there," said the Countess, "as did my
+ husband at Bolton-on-the-Moors, I would do so willingly, rather than
+ forsake a friend!&mdash;and one, too, whom, as in the case of the younger
+ Peveril, I have thrust upon danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But have I not assured you that both of the Peverils, elder and younger,
+ are freed from peril?" said the King; "and, my dear Countess, what can
+ else tempt you to thrust <i>yourself</i> on danger, from which, doubtless,
+ you expect to be relieved by my intervention? Methinks a lady of your
+ judgment should not voluntarily throw herself into a river, merely that
+ her friends might have the risk and merit of dragging her out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess reiterated her intention to claim a fair trial.&mdash;The two
+ counsellors again pressed their advice that she should withdraw, though
+ under the charge of absconding from justice, and remain in her own feudal
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King, seeing no termination to the debate, gently reminded the
+ Countess that her Majesty would be jealous if he detained her ladyship
+ longer, and offered her his hand to conduct her back to the company. This
+ she was under the necessity of accepting, and returned accordingly to the
+ apartments of state, where an event occurred immediately afterwards, which
+ must be transferred to the next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Here stand I tight and trim,
+ Quick of eye, though little of limb;
+ He who denieth the word I have spoken,
+ Betwixt him and me shall lances be broken.
+ &mdash;LAY OF THE LITTLE JOHN DE SAINTRE.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Charles had reconducted the Countess of Derby into the
+ presence-chamber, before he parted with her, he entreated her, in a
+ whisper, to be governed by good counsel, and to regard her own safety; and
+ then turned easily from her, as if to distribute his attentions equally
+ among the other guests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were a good deal circumscribed at the instant, by the arrival of a
+ party of five or six musicians; one of whom, a German, under the patronage
+ of the Duke of Buckingham, was particularly renowned for his performance
+ on the violoncello, but had been detained in inactivity in the antechamber
+ by the non-arrival of his instrument, which had now at length made its
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The domestic who placed it before the owner, shrouded as it was within its
+ wooden case, seemed heartily glad to be rid of his load, and lingered for
+ a moment, as if interested in discovering what sort of instrument was to
+ be produced that could weigh so heavily. His curiosity was satisfied, and
+ in a most extraordinary manner; for, while the musician was fumbling with
+ the key, the case being for his greater convenience placed upright against
+ the wall, the case and instrument itself at once flew open, and out
+ started the dwarf, Geoffrey Hudson,&mdash;at sight of whose unearthly
+ appearance, thus suddenly introduced, the ladies shrieked, and ran
+ backwards; the gentlemen started, and the poor German, on seeing the
+ portentous delivery of his fiddle-case, tumbled on the floor in an agony,
+ supposing, it might be, that his instrument was metamorphosed into the
+ strange figure which supplied its place. So soon, however, as he
+ recovered, he glided out of the apartment, and was followed by most of his
+ companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hudson!" said the King&mdash;"My little old friend, I am not sorry to see
+ you; though Buckingham, who I suppose is the purveyor of this jest, hath
+ served us up but a stale one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will your Majesty honour me with one moment's attention?" said Hudson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Assuredly, my good friend," said the King. "Old acquaintances are
+ springing up in every quarter to-night; and our leisure can hardly be
+ better employed than in listening to them.&mdash;It was an idle trick of
+ Buckingham," he added, in a whisper to Ormond, "to send the poor thing
+ hither, especially as he was to-day tried for the affair of the plot. At
+ any rate he comes not to ask protection from us, having had the rare
+ fortune to come off <i>Plot-free</i>. He is but fishing, I suppose, for
+ some little present or pension."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little man, precise in Court etiquette, yet impatient of the King's
+ delaying to attend to him, stood in the midst of the floor, most
+ valorously pawing and prancing, like a Scots pony assuming the airs of a
+ war-horse, waving meanwhile his little hat with the tarnished feather, and
+ bowing from time to time, as if impatient to be heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak on, then, my friend," said Charles; "if thou hast some poetical
+ address penned for thee, out with it, that thou mayst have time to repose
+ these flourishing little limbs of thine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No poetical speech have I, most mighty Sovereign," answered the dwarf;
+ "but, in plain and most loyal prose, I do accuse, before this company, the
+ once noble Duke of Buckingham of high treason!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well spoken, and manfully&mdash;Get on, man," said the King, who never
+ doubted that this was the introduction to something burlesque or witty,
+ not conceiving that the charge was made in solemn earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great laugh took place among such courtiers as heard, and among many who
+ did not hear, what was uttered by the dwarf; the former entertained by the
+ extravagant emphasis and gesticulation of the little champion, and the
+ others laughing not the less loud that they laughed for example's sake,
+ and upon trust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What matter is there for all this mirth?" said he, very indignantly&mdash;"Is
+ it fit subject for laughing, that I, Geoffrey Hudson, Knight, do, before
+ King and nobles, impeach George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, of high
+ treason?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No subject of mirth, certainly," said Charles, composing his features;
+ "but great matter of wonder.&mdash;Come, cease this mouthing, and
+ prancing, and mummery.&mdash;If there be a jest, come out with it, man;
+ and if not, even get thee to the beaffet, and drink a cup of wine to
+ refresh thee after thy close lodging."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you, my liege," said Hudson impatiently, yet in a whisper,
+ intended only to be audible by the King, "that if you spend overmuch time
+ in trifling, you will be convinced by dire experience of Buckingham's
+ treason. I tell you,&mdash;I asseverate to your Majesty,&mdash;two hundred
+ armed fanatics will be here within the hour, to surprise the guards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stand back, ladies," said the King, "or you may hear more than you will
+ care to listen to. My Lord of Buckingham's jests are not always, you know,
+ quite fitted for female ears; besides, we want a few words in private with
+ our little friend. You, my Lord of Ormond&mdash;you, Arlington" (and he
+ named one or two others), "may remain with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gay crowd bore back, and dispersed through the apartment&mdash;the men
+ to conjecture what the end of this mummery, as they supposed it, was
+ likely to prove; and what jest, as Sedley said, the bass-fiddle had been
+ brought to bed of&mdash;and the ladies to admire and criticise the antique
+ dress, and richly embroidered ruff and hood of the Countess of Derby, to
+ whom the Queen was showing particular attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now, in the name of Heaven, and amongst friends," said the King to
+ the dwarf, "what means all this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treason, my lord the King!&mdash;Treason to his Majesty of England!&mdash;When
+ I was chambered in yonder instrument, my lord, the High-Dutch fellows who
+ bore me, carried me into a certain chapel, to see, as they said to each
+ other, that all was ready. Sire, I went where bass-fiddle never went
+ before, even into a conventicle of Fifth-Monarchists; and when they
+ brought me away, the preacher was concluding his sermon, and was within a
+ 'Now to apply' of setting off like the bell-wether at the head of his
+ flock, to surprise your Majesty in your royal Court! I heard him through
+ the sound-holes of my instrument, when the fellow set me down for a moment
+ to profit by this precious doctrine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would be singular," said Lord Arlington, "were there some reality at
+ the bottom of this buffoonery; for we know these wild men have been
+ consulting together to-day, and five conventicles have held a solemn
+ fast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay," said the King, "if that be the case, they are certainly determined
+ on some villainy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Might I advise," said the Duke of Ormond, "I would summon the Duke of
+ Buckingham to this presence. His connections with the fanatics are well
+ known, though he affects to conceal them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would not, my lord, do his Grace the injustice to treat him as a
+ criminal on such a charge as this?" said the King. "However," he added,
+ after a moment's consideration, "Buckingham is accessible to every sort of
+ temptation, from the flightiness of his genius. I should not be surprised
+ if he nourished hopes of an aspiring kind&mdash;I think we had some proof
+ of it lately.&mdash;Hark ye, Chiffinch; go to him instantly, and bring him
+ here on any fair pretext thou canst devise. I would fain save him from
+ what lawyers call an overt act. The Court would be dull as a dead horse
+ were Buckingham to miscarry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will not your Majesty order the Horse Guards to turn out?" said young
+ Selby, who was present, and an officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, Selby," said the King, "I like not horse-play. But let them be
+ prepared; and let the High Bailiff collect his civil officers, and command
+ the Sheriffs to summon their worshipful attendants from javelin-men to
+ hangmen, and have them in readiness, in case of any sudden tumult&mdash;double
+ the sentinels on the doors of the palace&mdash;and see no strangers get
+ in."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Or <i>out</i>," said the Duke of Ormond. "Where are the foreign fellows
+ who brought in the dwarf?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were sought for, but they were not to be found. They had retreated,
+ leaving their instruments&mdash;a circumstance which seemed to bear hard
+ on the Duke of Buckingham, their patron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hasty preparations were made to provide resistance to any effort of
+ despair which the supposed conspirators might be driven to; and in the
+ meanwhile, the King, withdrawing with Arlington, Ormond, and a few other
+ counsellors, into the cabinet where the Countess of Derby had had her
+ audience, resumed the examination of the little discoverer. His
+ declaration, though singular, was quite coherent; the strain of romance
+ intermingled with it, being in fact a part of his character, which often
+ gained him the fate of being laughed at, when he would otherwise have been
+ pitied, or even esteemed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He commenced with a flourish about his sufferings for the Plot, which the
+ impatience of Ormond would have cut short, had not the King reminded his
+ Grace, that a top, when it is not flogged, must needs go down of itself at
+ the end of a definite time, while the application of the whip may keep it
+ up for hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson was, therefore, allowed to exhaust himself on the subject
+ of his prison-house, which he informed the King was not without a beam of
+ light&mdash;an emanation of loveliness&mdash;a mortal angel&mdash;quick of
+ step and beautiful of eye, who had more than once visited his confinement
+ with words of cheering and comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my faith," said the King, "they fare better in Newgate than I was
+ aware of. Who would have thought of the little gentleman being solaced
+ with female society in such a place?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray your Majesty," said the dwarf, after the manner of a solemn
+ protest, "to understand nothing amiss. My devotion to this fair creature
+ is rather like what we poor Catholics pay to the blessed saints, than
+ mixed with any grosser quality. Indeed, she seems rather a sylphid of the
+ Rosicrucian system, than aught more carnal; being slighter, lighter, and
+ less than the females of common life, who have something of that
+ coarseness of make which is doubtless derived from the sinful and gigantic
+ race of the antediluvians."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, say on, man," quoth Charles. "Didst thou not discover this sylph to
+ be a mere mortal wench after all?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who?&mdash;I, my liege?&mdash;Oh, fie!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, little gentleman, do not be so particularly scandalised," said the
+ King; "I promise you I suspect you of no audacity of gallantry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Time wears fast," said the Duke of Ormond impatiently, and looking at his
+ watch. "Chiffinch hath been gone ten minutes, and ten minutes will bring
+ him back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True," said Charles gravely. "Come to the point, Hudson; and tell us what
+ this female has to do with your coming hither in this extraordinary
+ manner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everything, my lord," said little Hudson. "I saw her twice during my
+ confinement in Newgate, and, in my thought, she is the very angel who
+ guards my life and welfare; for, after my acquittal, as I walked towards
+ the city with two tall gentlemen, who had been in trouble along with me,
+ and just while we stood to our defence against a rascally mob, and just as
+ I had taken possession of an elevated situation, to have some vantage
+ against the great odds of numbers, I heard a heavenly voice sound, as it
+ were, from a window behind me, counselling me to take refuge in a certain
+ house; to which measure I readily persuaded my gallant friends the
+ Peverils, who have always shown themselves willing to be counselled by
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Showing therein their wisdom at once and modesty," said the King. "But
+ what chanced next? Be brief&mdash;be like thyself, man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For a time, sire," said the dwarf, "it seemed as if I were not the
+ principal object of attention. First, the younger Peveril was withdrawn
+ from us by a gentleman of venerable appearance, though something smacking
+ of a Puritan, having boots of neat's leather, and wearing his weapon
+ without a sword-knot. When Master Julian returned, he informed us, for the
+ first time, that we were in the power of a body of armed fanatics who
+ were, as the poet says, prompt for direful act. And your Majesty will
+ remark, that both father and son were in some measure desperate, and
+ disregardful from that moment of the assurances which I gave them, that
+ the star which I was bound to worship, would, in her own time, shine forth
+ in signal of our safety. May it please your Majesty, in answer to my
+ hilarious exhortations to confidence, the father did but say <i>tush</i>,
+ and the son <i>pshaw</i>, which showed how men's prudence and manners are
+ disturbed by affliction. Nevertheless, these two gentlemen, the Peverils,
+ forming a strong opinion of the necessity there was to break forth, were
+ it only to convey a knowledge of these dangerous passages to your Majesty,
+ commenced an assault on the door of the apartment, I also assisting with
+ the strength which Heaven hath given, and some threescore years have left
+ me. We could not, as it unhappily proved, manage our attempt so silently,
+ but that our guards overheard us, and, entering in numbers, separated us
+ from each other, and compelled my companions, at point of pike and
+ poniard, to go to some other and more distant apartment, thus separating
+ our fair society. I was again enclosed in the now solitary chamber, and I
+ will own that I felt a certain depression of soul. But when bale is at
+ highest, as the poet singeth, boot is at nighest, for a door of hope was
+ suddenly opened&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the name of God, my liege," said the Duke of Ormond, "let this poor
+ creature's story be translated into the language of common sense by some
+ of the scribblers of romances about Court, and we may be able to make
+ meaning of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson looked with a frowning countenance of reproof upon the
+ impatient old Irish nobleman, and said, with a very dignified air, "That
+ one Duke upon a poor gentleman's hand was enough at a time, and that, but
+ for his present engagement and dependency with the Duke of Buckingham, he
+ would have endured no such terms from the Duke of Ormond."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Abate your valour, and diminish your choler, at our request, most
+ puissant Sir Geoffrey Hudson," said the King; "and forgive the Duke of
+ Ormond for my sake; but at all events go on with your story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geoffrey Hudson laid his hand on his bosom, and bowed in proud and
+ dignified submission to his Sovereign; then waved his forgiveness
+ gracefully to Ormond, accompanied with a horrible grin, which he designed
+ for a smile of gracious forgiveness and conciliation. "Under the Duke's
+ favour, then," he proceeded, "when I said a door of hope was opened to me,
+ I meant a door behind the tapestry, from whence issued that fair vision&mdash;yet
+ not so fair as lustrously dark, like the beauty of a continental night,
+ where the cloudless azure sky shrouds us in a veil more lovely than that
+ of day!&mdash;but I note your Majesty's impatience;&mdash;enough. I
+ followed my beautiful guide into an apartment, where there lay, strangely
+ intermingled, warlike arms and musical instruments. Amongst these I saw my
+ own late place of temporary obscurity&mdash;a violoncello. To my
+ astonishment, she turned around the instrument, and opening it behind the
+ pressure of a spring, showed that it was filled with pistols, daggers, and
+ ammunition made up in bandoleers. 'These,' she said, 'are this night
+ destined to surprise the Court of the unwary Charles'&mdash;your Majesty
+ must pardon my using her own words; 'but if thou darest go in their stead,
+ thou mayst be the saviour of king and kingdoms; if thou art afraid, keep
+ secret, I will myself try the adventure.' Now may Heaven forbid, that
+ Geoffrey Hudson were craven enough, said I, to let thee run such a risk!
+ You know not&mdash;you cannot know, what belongs to such ambuscades and
+ concealments&mdash;I am accustomed to them&mdash;have lurked in the pocket
+ of a giant, and have formed the contents of a pasty. 'Get in then,' she
+ said, 'and lose no time.' Nevertheless, while I prepared to obey, I will
+ not deny that some cold apprehensions came over my hot valour, and I
+ confessed to her, if it might be so, I would rather find my way to the
+ palace on my own feet. But she would not listen to me, saying hastily, 'I
+ would be intercepted, or refused admittance, and that I must embrace the
+ means she offered me of introduction into the presence, and when there,
+ tell the King to be on his guard&mdash;little more is necessary; for once
+ the scheme is known, it becomes desperate.' Rashly and boldly, I bid adieu
+ to the daylight which was then fading away. She withdrew the contents of
+ the instrument destined for my concealment, and having put them behind the
+ chimney-board, introduced me in their room. As she clasped me in, I
+ implored her to warn the men who were to be entrusted with me, to take
+ heed and keep the neck of the violoncello uppermost; but ere I had
+ completed my request, I found I was left alone, and in darkness,
+ Presently, two or three fellows entered, whom, by their language, which I
+ in some sort understood, I perceived to be Germans, and under the
+ influence of the Duke of Buckingham. I heard them receive from the leader
+ a charge how they were to deport themselves, when they should assume the
+ concealed arms&mdash;and&mdash;for I will do the Duke no wrong&mdash;I
+ understood their orders were precise, not only to spare the person of the
+ King, but also those of the courtiers, and to protect all who might be in
+ the presence against an irruption of the fanatics. In other respects, they
+ had charge to disarm the Gentlemen-pensioners in the guard-room, and, in
+ fine, to obtain the command of the Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked disconcerted and thoughtful at this communication, and
+ bade Lord Arlington see that Selby quietly made search into the contents
+ of the other cases which had been brought as containing musical
+ instruments. He then signed to the dwarf to proceed in his story, asking
+ him again and again, and very solemnly, whether he was sure that he heard
+ the Duke's name mentioned, as commanding or approving this action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf answered in the affirmative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This," said the King, "is carrying the frolic somewhat far."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dwarf proceeded to state, that he was carried after his metamorphosis
+ into the chapel, where he heard the preacher seemingly about the close of
+ his harangue, the tenor of which he also mentioned. Words, he said, could
+ not express the agony which he felt when he found that his bearer, in
+ placing the instrument in a corner, was about to invert its position, in
+ which case, he said, human frailty might have proved too great for love,
+ for loyalty, for true obedience, nay, for the fear of death, which was
+ like to ensue on discovery; and he concluded, that he greatly doubted he
+ could not have stood on his head for many minutes without screaming aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could not have blamed you," said the King; "placed in such a posture in
+ the royal oak, I must needs have roared myself.&mdash;Is this all you have
+ to tell us of this strange conspiracy?" Sir Geoffrey Hudson replied in the
+ affirmative, and the King presently subjoined&mdash;"Go, my little friend,
+ your services shall not be forgotten. Since thou hast crept into the
+ bowels of a fiddle for our service, we are bound, in duty and conscience,
+ to find you a more roomy dwelling in future."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was a violoncello, if your Majesty is pleased to remember," said the
+ little jealous man, "not a common fiddle; though, for your Majesty's
+ service, I would have crept even into a kit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whatever of that nature could have been performed by any subject of ours,
+ thou wouldst have enacted in our behalf&mdash;of that we hold ourselves
+ certain. Withdraw for a little; and hark ye, for the present, beware what
+ you say about this matter. Let your appearance be considered&mdash;do you
+ mark me&mdash;as a frolic of the Duke of Buckingham; and not a word of
+ conspiracy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Were it not better to put him under some restraint, sire?" said the Duke
+ of Ormond, when Hudson had left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is unnecessary," said the King. "I remember the little wretch of old.
+ Fortune, to make him the model of absurdity, has closed a most lofty soul
+ within that little miserable carcass. For wielding his sword and keeping
+ his word, he is a perfect Don Quixote in decimo-octavo. He shall be taken
+ care of.&mdash;But, oddsfish, my lords, is not this freak of Buckingham
+ too villainous and ungrateful?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He had not had the means of being so, had your Majesty," said the Duke of
+ Ormond, "been less lenient on other occasions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord, my lord," said Charles hastily&mdash;"your lordship is
+ Buckingham's known enemy&mdash;we will take other and more impartial
+ counsel&mdash;Arlington, what think you of all this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May it please your Majesty," said Arlington, "I think the thing is
+ absolutely impossible, unless the Duke has had some quarrel with your
+ Majesty, of which we know nothing. His Grace is very flighty, doubtless,
+ but this seems actual insanity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, faith," said the King, "some words passed betwixt us this morning&mdash;his
+ Duchess it seems is dead&mdash;and to lose no time, his Grace had cast his
+ eyes about for means of repairing the loss, and had the assurance to ask
+ our consent to woo my niece Lady Anne."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which your Majesty of course rejected?" said the statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And not without rebuking his assurance," added the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In private, sire, or before any witnesses?" said the Duke of Ormond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before no one," said the King,&mdash;"excepting, indeed, little
+ Chiffinch; and he, you know, is no one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Hinc illæ lachrymæ</i>," said Ormond. "I know his Grace well. While
+ the rebuke of his aspiring petulance was a matter betwixt your Majesty and
+ him, he might have let it pass by; but a check before a fellow from whom
+ it was likely enough to travel through the Court, was a matter to be
+ revenged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Selby came hastily from the other room, to say, that his Grace of
+ Buckingham had just entered the presence-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King rose. "Let a boat be in readiness, with a party of the yeomen,"
+ said he. "It may be necessary to attach him of treason, and send him to
+ the Tower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Should not a Secretary of State's warrant be prepared?" said Ormond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, my Lord Duke," said the King sharply. "I still hope that the
+ necessity may be avoided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0047" id="link2HCH0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect.
+ &mdash;RICHARD III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before giving the reader an account of the meeting betwixt Buckingham and
+ his injured Sovereign, we may mention a trifling circumstance or two which
+ took place betwixt his Grace and Chiffinch, in the short drive betwixt
+ York Place and Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the outset, the Duke endeavoured to learn from the courtier the special
+ cause of his being summoned so hastily to the Court. Chiffinch answered,
+ cautiously, that he believed there were some gambols going forward, at
+ which the King desired the Duke's presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This did not quite satisfy Buckingham, for, conscious of his own rash
+ purpose, he could not but apprehend discovery. After a moment's silence,
+ "Chiffinch," he said abruptly, "did you mention to any one what the King
+ said to me this morning touching the Lady Anne?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Duke," said Chiffinch, hesitantly, "surely my duty to the King&mdash;my
+ respect to your Grace&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mentioned it to no one, then?" said the Duke sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To no one," replied Chiffinch faintly, for he was intimidated by the
+ Duke's increasing severity of manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ye lie, like a scoundrel!" said the Duke&mdash;"You told Christian!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Grace," said Chiffinch&mdash;"your Grace&mdash;your Grace ought to
+ remember that I told you Christian's secret; that the Countess of Derby
+ was come up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you think the one point of treachery may balance for the other? But
+ no. I must have a better atonement. Be assured I will blow your brains
+ out, ere you leave this carriage, unless you tell me the truth of this
+ message from Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Chiffinch hesitated what reply to make, a man, who, by the blaze of the
+ torches, then always borne, as well by the lackeys who hung behind the
+ carriage, as by the footmen who ran by the side, might easily see who sat
+ in the coach, approached, and sung in a deep manly voice, the burden of an
+ old French song on the battle of Marignan, in which is imitated the German
+ French of the defeated Swiss.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "<i>Tout est verlore
+ La tintelore,
+ Tout est verlore</i>
+ Bei Got."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "I am betrayed," said the Duke, who instantly conceived that this chorus,
+ expressing "all is lost," was sung by one of his faithful agents, as a
+ hint to him that their machinations were discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He attempted to throw himself from the carriage, but Chiffinch held him
+ with a firm, though respectful grasp. "Do not destroy yourself, my lord,"
+ he said, in a tone of deep humility&mdash;"there are soldiers and officers
+ of the peace around the carriage, to enforce your Grace's coming to
+ Whitehall, and to prevent your escape. To attempt it would be to confess
+ guilt; and I advise you strongly against that&mdash;the King is your
+ friend&mdash;be your own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke, after a moment's consideration, said sullenly, "I believe you
+ are right. Why should I fly, when I am guilty of nothing but sending some
+ fireworks to entertain the Court, instead of a concert of music?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the dwarf, who came so unexpectedly out of the bass-viol&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Was a masking device of my own, Chiffinch," said the Duke, though the
+ circumstance was then first known to him. "Chiffinch, you will bind me for
+ ever, if you will permit me to have a minute's conversation with
+ Christian."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With Christian, my lord?&mdash;Where could you find him?&mdash;You are
+ aware we must go straight to the Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True," said the Duke, "but I think I cannot miss finding him; and you,
+ Master Chiffinch, are no officer, and have no warrant either to detain me
+ prisoner, or prevent my speaking to whom I please."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chiffinch replied, "My Lord Duke, your genius is so great, and your
+ escapes so numerous, that it will be from no wish of my own if I am forced
+ to hurt a man so skilful and so popular."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, then, there is life in it yet," said the Duke, and whistled; when,
+ from beside the little cutler's booth, with which the reader is
+ acquainted, appeared, suddenly, Master Christian, and was in a moment at
+ the side of the coach. "<i>Ganz ist verloren</i>," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know it," said Christian; "and all our godly friends are dispersed upon
+ the news. Luckily the Colonel and these German rascals gave a hint. All is
+ safe&mdash;You go to Court&mdash;Hark ye, I will follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You, Christian? that would be more friendly than wise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, what is there against me?" said Christian. "I am innocent as the
+ child unborn&mdash;so is your Grace. There is but one creature who can
+ bear witness to our guilt; but I trust to bring her on the stage in our
+ favour&mdash;besides, if I were not, I should presently be sent for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The familiar of whom I have heard you speak, I warrant?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark in your ear again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I understand," said the Duke, "and will delay Master Chiffinch,&mdash;for
+ he, you must know, is my conductor,&mdash;no longer.&mdash;Well,
+ Chiffinch, let them drive on.&mdash;<i>Vogue la Galère!</i>" he exclaimed,
+ as the carriage went onward; "I have sailed through worse perils than this
+ yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not for me to judge," said Chiffinch; "your Grace is a bold
+ commander; and Christian hath the cunning of the devil for a pilot; but&mdash;&mdash;However,
+ I remain your Grace's poor friend, and will heartily rejoice in your
+ extrication."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give me a proof of your friendship," said the Duke. "Tell me what you
+ know of Christian's familiar, as he calls her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it to be the same dancing wench who came with Empson to my
+ house on the morning that Mistress Alice made her escape from us. But you
+ have seen her, my lord?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I?" said the Duke; "when did I see her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She was employed by Christian, I believe, to set his niece at liberty,
+ when he found himself obliged to gratify his fanatical brother-in-law, by
+ restoring his child; besides being prompted by a private desire, as I
+ think, of bantering your Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Umph! I suspected so much. I will repay it," said the Duke. "But first to
+ get out of this dilemma.&mdash;That little Numidian witch, then, was his
+ familiar; and she joined in the plot to tantalise me?&mdash;But here we
+ reach Whitehall.&mdash;Now, Chiffinch, be no worse than thy word, and&mdash;now,
+ Buckingham, be thyself!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But ere we follow Buckingham into the presence, where he had so difficult
+ a part to sustain, it may not be amiss to follow Christian after his brief
+ conversation with him. On re-entering the house, which he did by a
+ circuitous passage, leading from a distant alley, and through several
+ courts, Christian hastened to a low matted apartment, in which Bridgenorth
+ sat alone, reading the Bible by the light of a small brazen lamp, with the
+ utmost serenity of countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you dismissed the Peverils?" said Christian hastily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have," said the Major.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And upon what pledge&mdash;that they will not carry information against
+ you to Whitehall?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They gave me their promise voluntarily, when I showed them our armed
+ friends were dismissed. To-morrow, I believe, it is their purpose to lodge
+ informations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why not to-night, I pray you?" said Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because they allow us that time for escape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then, do you not avail yourself of it? Wherefore are you here?" said
+ Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, rather, why do <i>you</i> not fly?" said Bridgenorth. "Of a surety,
+ you are as deeply engaged as I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Brother Bridgenorth, I am the fox, who knows a hundred modes of deceiving
+ the hounds; you are the deer, whose sole resource is in hasty flight.
+ Therefore lose no time&mdash;begone to the country&mdash;or rather,
+ Zedekiah Fish's vessel, the <i>Good Hope</i>, lies in the river, bound for
+ Massachusetts&mdash;take the wings of the morning, and begone&mdash;she
+ can fall down to Gravesend with the tide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And leave to thee, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, "the charge of
+ my fortune and my daughter? No, brother; my opinion of your good faith
+ must be re-established ere I again trust thee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go thy ways, then, for a suspicious fool," said Christian, suppressing
+ his strong desire to use language more offensive; "or rather stay where
+ thou art, and take thy chance of the gallows!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is appointed to all men to die once," said Bridgenorth; "my life hath
+ been a living death. My fairest boughs have been stripped by the axe of
+ the forester&mdash;that which survives must, if it shall blossom, be
+ grafted elsewhere, and at a distance from my aged trunk. The sooner, then,
+ the root feels the axe, the stroke is more welcome. I had been pleased,
+ indeed, had I been called to bringing yonder licentious Court to a purer
+ character, and relieving the yoke of the suffering people of God. That
+ youth too&mdash;son to that precious woman, to whom I owe the last tie
+ that feebly links my wearied spirit to humanity&mdash;could I have
+ travailed with <i>him</i> in the good cause!&mdash;But that, with all my
+ other hopes is broken for ever; and since I am not worthy to be an
+ instrument in so great a work, I have little desire to abide longer in
+ this vale of sorrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Farewell, then, desponding fool!" said Christian, unable, with all his
+ calmness, any longer to suppress his contempt for the resigned and
+ hopeless predestinarian. "That fate should have clogged me with such
+ confederates!" he muttered, as he left the apartment&mdash;"this bigoted
+ fool is now nearly irreclaimable&mdash;I must to Zarah; for she, or no
+ one, must carry us through these straits. If I can but soothe her sullen
+ temper, and excite her vanity to action,&mdash;betwixt her address, the
+ King's partiality for the Duke, Buckingham's matchless effrontery, and my
+ own hand upon the helm, we may yet weather the tempest that darkens around
+ us. But what we do must be hastily done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another apartment he found the person he sought&mdash;the same who
+ visited the Duke of Buckingham's harem, and, having relieved Alice
+ Bridgenorth from her confinement there, had occupied her place as has been
+ already narrated, or rather intimated. She was now much more plainly
+ attired than when she had tantalised the Duke with her presence; but her
+ dress had still something of the Oriental character, which corresponded
+ with the dark complexion and quick eye of the wearer. She had the kerchief
+ at her eyes as Christian entered the apartment, but suddenly withdrew it,
+ and, flashing on him a glance of scorn and indignation, asked him what he
+ meant by intruding where his company was alike unsought for and undesired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A proper question," said Christian, "from a slave to her master!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rather, say, a proper question, and of all questions the most proper,
+ from a mistress to her slave! Know you not, that from the hour in which
+ you discovered your ineffable baseness, you have made me mistress of your
+ lot? While you seemed but a demon of vengeance, you commanded terror, and
+ to good purpose; but such a foul fiend as thou hast of late shown thyself&mdash;such
+ a very worthless, base trickster of the devil&mdash;such a sordid
+ grovelling imp of perdition, can gain nothing but scorn from a soul like
+ mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gallantly mouthed," said Christian, "and with good emphasis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," answered Zarah, "I can speak&mdash;sometimes&mdash;I can also be
+ mute; and that no one knows better than thou."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou art a spoiled child, Zarah, and dost but abuse the indulgence I
+ entertain for your freakish humour," replied Christian; "thy wits have
+ been disturbed since ever you landed in England, and all for the sake of
+ one who cares for thee no more than for the most worthless object who
+ walks the streets, amongst whom he left you to engage in a brawl for one
+ he loved better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is no matter," said Zarah, obviously repressing very bitter emotion;
+ "it signifies not that he loves another better; there is none&mdash;no,
+ none&mdash;that ever did, or can, love him so well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pity you, Zarah!" said Christian, with some scorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I deserve your pity," she replied, "were your pity worth my accepting.
+ Whom have I to thank for my wretchedness but you?&mdash;You bred me up in
+ thirst of vengeance, ere I knew that good and evil were anything better
+ than names;&mdash;to gain your applause, and to gratify the vanity you had
+ excited, I have for years undergone a penance, from which a thousand would
+ have shrunk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A thousand, Zarah!" answered Christian; "ay, a hundred thousand, and a
+ million to boot; the creature is not on earth, being mere mortal woman,
+ that would have undergone the thirtieth part of thy self-denial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe it," said Zarah, drawing up her slight but elegant figure; "I
+ believe it&mdash;I have gone through a trial that few indeed could have
+ sustained. I have renounced the dear intercourse of my kind; compelled my
+ tongue only to utter, like that of a spy, the knowledge which my ear had
+ only collected as a base eavesdropper. This I have done for years&mdash;for
+ years&mdash;and all for the sake of your private applause&mdash;and the
+ hope of vengeance on a woman, who, if she did ill in murdering my father,
+ has been bitterly repaid by nourishing a serpent in her bosom, that had
+ the tooth, but not the deafened ear, of the adder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well&mdash;well&mdash;well," reiterated Christian; "and had you not your
+ reward in my approbation&mdash;in the consequences of your own unequalled
+ dexterity&mdash;by which, superior to anything of thy sex that history has
+ ever known, you endured what woman never before endured, insolence without
+ notice, admiration without answer, and sarcasm without reply?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not without reply!" said Zarah fiercely. "Gave not Nature to my feelings
+ a course of expression more impressive than words? and did not those
+ tremble at my shrieks, who would have little minded my entreaties or my
+ complaints? And my proud lady, who sauced her charities with the taunts
+ she thought I heard not&mdash;she was justly paid by the passing her
+ dearest and most secret concerns into the hands of her mortal enemy; and
+ the vain Earl&mdash;yet he was a thing as insignificant as the plume that
+ nodded in his cap;&mdash;and the maidens and ladies who taunted me&mdash;I
+ had, or can easily have, my revenge upon them. But there is <i>one</i>,"
+ she added, looking upward, "who never taunted me; one whose generous
+ feelings could treat the poor dumb girl even as his sister; who never
+ spoke word of her but was to excuse or defend&mdash;and you tell me I must
+ not love him, and that it is madness to love him!&mdash;I <i>will</i> be
+ mad then, for I will love till the latest breath of my life!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Think but an instant, silly girl&mdash;silly but in one respect, since in
+ all others thou mayest brave the world of women. Think what I have
+ proposed to thee, for the loss of this hopeless affection, a career so
+ brilliant!&mdash;Think only that it rests with thyself to be the wife&mdash;the
+ wedded wife&mdash;of the princely Buckingham! With my talents&mdash;with
+ thy wit and beauty&mdash;with his passionate love of these attributes&mdash;a
+ short space might rank you among England's princesses.&mdash;Be but guided
+ by me&mdash;he is now at deadly pass&mdash;needs every assistance to
+ retrieve his fortunes&mdash;above all, that which we alone can render him.
+ Put yourself under my conduct, and not fate itself shall prevent your
+ wearing a Duchess's coronet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A coronet of thistle-down, entwined with thistle-leaves," said Zarah.&mdash;"I
+ know not a slighter thing than your Buckingham! I saw him at your request&mdash;saw
+ him when, as a man, he should have shown himself generous and noble&mdash;I
+ stood the proof at your desire, for I laugh at those dangers from which
+ the poor blushing wailers of my sex shrink and withdraw themselves. What
+ did I find him?&mdash;a poor wavering voluptuary&mdash;his nearest attempt
+ to passion like the fire on a wretched stubble-field, that may singe,
+ indeed, or smoke, but can neither warm nor devour. Christian! were his
+ coronet at my feet this moment, I would sooner take up a crown of gilded
+ gingerbread, than extend my hand to raise it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are mad, Zarah&mdash;with all your taste and talent, you are utterly
+ mad! But let Buckingham pass&mdash;Do you owe <i>me</i> nothing on this
+ emergency?&mdash;Nothing to one who rescued you from the cruelty of your
+ owner, the posture-master, to place you in ease and affluence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christian," she replied, "I owe you much. Had I not felt I did so, I
+ would, as I have been often tempted to do, have denounced thee to the
+ fierce Countess, who would have gibbeted you on her feudal walls of Castle
+ Rushin, and bid your family seek redress from the eagles, that would long
+ since have thatched their nest with your hair, and fed their young ospreys
+ with your flesh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am truly glad you have had so much forbearance for me," answered
+ Christian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have it, in truth and in sincerity," replied Zarah&mdash;"Not for your
+ benefits to me&mdash;such as they were, they were every one interested,
+ and conferred from the most selfish considerations. I have overpaid them a
+ thousand times by the devotion to your will, which I have displayed at the
+ greatest personal risk. But till of late I respected your powers of mind&mdash;your
+ inimitable command of passion&mdash;the force of intellect which I have
+ ever seen you exercise over all others, from the bigot Bridgenorth to the
+ debauched Buckingham&mdash;in that, indeed, I have recognised my master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And those powers," said Christian, "are unlimited as ever; and with thy
+ assistance, thou shalt see the strongest meshes that the laws of civil
+ society ever wove to limit the natural dignity of man, broke asunder like
+ a spider's web."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused and answered, "While a noble motive fired thee&mdash;ay, a
+ noble motive, though irregular&mdash;for I was born to gaze on the sun
+ which the pale daughters of Europe shrink from&mdash;I could serve thee&mdash;I
+ could have followed, while revenge or ambition had guided thee&mdash;but
+ love of <i>wealth</i>, and by what means acquired!&mdash;What sympathy can
+ I hold with that?&mdash;Wouldst thou not have pandered to the lust of the
+ King, though the object was thine own orphan niece?&mdash;You smile?&mdash;Smile
+ again when I ask you whether you meant not my own prostitution, when you
+ charged me to remain in the house of that wretched Buckingham?&mdash;Smile
+ at that question, and by Heaven, I stab you to the heart!" And she thrust
+ her hand into her bosom, and partly showed the hilt of a small poniard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if I smile," said Christian, "it is but in scorn of so odious an
+ accusation. Girl, I will not tell thee the reason, but there exists not on
+ earth the living thing over whose safety and honour I would keep watch as
+ over thine. Buckingham's wife, indeed, I wished thee; and through thy own
+ beauty and thy wit, I doubted not to bring the match to pass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Vain flatterer," said Zarah, yet seeming soothed even by the flattery
+ which she scoffed at, "you would persuade me that it was honourable love
+ which you expected the Duke was to have offered me. How durst you urge a
+ gross a deception, to which time, place, and circumstance gave the lie?&mdash;How
+ dare you now again mention it, when you well know, that at the time you
+ mention, the Duchess was still in life?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In life, but on her deathbed," said Christian; "and for time, place, and
+ circumstance, had your virtue, my Zarah, depended on these, how couldst
+ thou have been the creature thou art? I knew thee all-sufficient to bid
+ him defiance&mdash;else&mdash;for thou art dearer to me than thou thinkest&mdash;I
+ had not risked thee to win the Duke of Buckingham; ay, and the kingdom of
+ England to boot. So now, wilt thou be ruled and go on with me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zarah, or Fenella, for our readers must have been long aware of the
+ identity of these two personages, cast down her eyes, and was silent for a
+ long time. "Christian," she said at last, in a solemn voice, "if my ideas
+ of right and of wrong be wild and incoherent, I owe it, first, to the wild
+ fever which my native sun communicated to my veins; next, to my childhood,
+ trained amidst the shifts, tricks, and feats of jugglers and mountebanks;
+ and then, to a youth of fraud and deception, through the course thou didst
+ prescribe me, in which I might, indeed, hear everything, but communicate
+ with no one. The last cause of my wild errors, if such they are,
+ originates, O Christian, with you alone; by whose intrigues I was placed
+ with yonder lady, and who taught me, that to revenge my father's death,
+ was my first great duty on earth, and that I was bound by nature to hate
+ and injure her by whom I was fed and fostered, though as she would have
+ fed and caressed a dog, or any other mute animal. I also think&mdash;for I
+ will deal fairly with you&mdash;that you had not so easily detected your
+ niece, in the child whose surprising agility was making yonder brutal
+ mountebank's fortune; nor so readily induced him to part with his
+ bond-slave, had you not, for your own purposes, placed me under his
+ charge, and reserved the privilege of claiming me when you pleased. I
+ could not, under any other tuition, have identified myself with the
+ personage of a mute, which it has been your desire that I should perform
+ through life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You do me injustice, Zarah," said Christian&mdash;"I found you capable of
+ the avenging of your father's death&mdash;I consecrated you to it, as I
+ consecrated my own life and hopes; and you held the duty sacred, till
+ these mad feeling towards a youth who loves your cousin&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Who&mdash;loves&mdash;my&mdash;cousin," repeated Zarah (for we will
+ continue to call her by her real name) slowly, and as if the words dropped
+ unconsciously from her lips. "Well&mdash;be it so!&mdash;Man of many
+ wiles, I will follow thy course for a little, a very little farther; but
+ take heed&mdash;tease me not with remonstrances against the treasure of my
+ secret thoughts&mdash;I mean my most hopeless affection to Julian Peveril&mdash;and
+ bring me not as an assistant to any snare which you may design to cast
+ around him. You and your Duke shall rue the hour most bitterly, in which
+ you provoke me. You may suppose you have me in your power; but remember,
+ the snakes of my burning climate are never so fatal as when you grasp
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I care not for these Peverils," said Christian&mdash;"I care not for
+ their fate a poor straw, unless where it bears on that of the destined
+ woman, whose hands are red in your father's blood. Believe me, I can
+ divide her fate and theirs. I will explain to you how. And for the Duke,
+ he may pass among men of the town for wit, and among soldiers for valour,
+ among courtiers for manners and for form; and why, with his high rank and
+ immense fortune, you should throw away an opportunity, which, as I could
+ now improve it&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak not of it," said Zarah, "if thou wouldst have our truce&mdash;remember
+ it is no peace&mdash;if, I say, thou wouldst have our truce grow to be an
+ hour old!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This, then," said Christian, with a last effort to work upon the vanity
+ of this singular being, "is she who pretended such superiority to human
+ passion, that she could walk indifferently and unmoved through the halls
+ of the prosperous, and the prison cells of the captive, unknowing and
+ unknown, sympathising neither with the pleasures of the one, nor the woes
+ of the other, but advancing with sure, though silent steps, her own plans,
+ in despite and regardless of either!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My own plans!" said Zarah&mdash;"<i>Thy</i> plans, Christian&mdash;thy
+ plans of extorting from the surprised prisoners, means whereby to convict
+ them&mdash;thine own plans, formed with those more powerful than thyself,
+ to sound men's secrets, and, by using them as a matter of accusation, to
+ keep up the great delusion of the nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such access was indeed given you as my agent," said Christian, "and for
+ advancing a great national change. But how did you use it?&mdash;to
+ advance your insane passion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Insane!" said Zarah&mdash;"Had he been less than insane whom I addressed,
+ he and I had ere now been far from the toils which you have pitched for us
+ both. I had means prepared for everything; and ere this, the shores of
+ Britain had been lost to our sight for ever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The dwarf, too," said Christian&mdash;"Was it worthy of you to delude
+ that poor creature with flattering visions&mdash;lull him asleep with
+ drugs! Was <i>that</i> my doing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was my destined tool," said Zarah haughtily. "I remembered your
+ lessons too well not to use him as such. Yet scorn him not too much. I
+ tell you, that yon very miserable dwarf, whom I made my sport in the
+ prison&mdash;yon wretched abortion of nature, I would select for a
+ husband, ere I would marry your Buckingham;&mdash;the vain and imbecile
+ pigmy has yet the warm heart and noble feelings, that a man should hold
+ his highest honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In God's name, then, take your own way," said Christian; "and, for my
+ sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her tongue,
+ since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the privilege of
+ her own will. Who would have thought it? But the colt has slipped the
+ bridle, and I must needs follow, since I cannot guide her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our narrative returns to the Court of King Charles at Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0048" id="link2HCH0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &mdash;&mdash;But oh!
+ What shall I say to thee, Lord Scroop; thou cruel,
+ Ingrateful, savage, and inhuman creature!
+ Thou that didst bear the key of all my counsels,
+ That knew'st the very bottom of my soul,
+ That almost mightst have coined me into gold,
+ Wouldst thou have practised on me for thy use?
+ &mdash;HENRY V.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At no period of his life, not even when that life was in imminent danger,
+ did the constitutional gaiety of Charles seem more overclouded, than when
+ waiting for the return of Chiffinch with the Duke of Buckingham. His mind
+ revolted at the idea, that the person to whom he had been so particularly
+ indulgent, and whom he had selected as the friend of his lighter hours and
+ amusements, should prove capable of having tampered with a plot apparently
+ directed against his liberty and life. He more than once examined the
+ dwarf anew, but could extract nothing more than his first narrative
+ contained. The apparition of the female to him in the cell of Newgate, he
+ described in such fanciful and romantic colours, that the King could not
+ help thinking the poor man's head a little turned; and, as nothing was
+ found in the kettledrum, and other musical instruments brought for the use
+ of the Duke's band of foreigners, he nourished some slight hope that the
+ whole plan might be either a mere jest, or that the idea of an actual
+ conspiracy was founded in mistake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The persons who had been despatched to watch the motions of Mr. Weiver's
+ congregation, brought back word that they had quietly dispersed. It was
+ known, at the same time, that they had met in arms, but this augured no
+ particular design of aggression, at a time when all true Protestants
+ conceived themselves in danger of immediate massacre; when the fathers of
+ the city had repeatedly called out the Train-Bands, and alarmed the
+ citizens of London, under the idea of an instant insurrection of the
+ Catholics; and when, to sum the whole up, in the emphatic words of an
+ alderman of the day, there was a general belief that they would all waken
+ some unhappy morning with their throats cut. Who was to do these dire
+ deeds, it was more difficult to suppose; but all admitted the possibility
+ that they might be achieved, since one Justice of the Peace was already
+ murdered. There was, therefore, no inference of hostile intentions against
+ the State, to be decidedly derived from a congregation of Protestants <i>par
+ excellence</i>, military from old associations, bringing their arms with
+ them to a place of worship, in the midst of a panic so universal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither did the violent language of the minister, supposing that to be
+ proved, absolutely infer meditated violence. The favourite parables of the
+ preachers, and the metaphors and ornaments which they selected, were at
+ all times of a military cast; and the taking the kingdom of heaven by
+ storm, a strong and beautiful metaphor, when used generally as in
+ Scripture, was detailed in their sermons in all the technical language of
+ the attack and defence of a fortified place. The danger, in short,
+ whatever might have been its actual degree, had disappeared as suddenly as
+ a bubble upon the water, when broken by a casual touch, and had left as
+ little trace behind it. It became, therefore, matter of much doubt,
+ whether it had ever actually existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While various reports were making from without, and while their tenor was
+ discussed by the King, and such nobles and statesmen as he thought proper
+ to consult on the occasion, a gradual sadness and anxiety mingled with,
+ and finally silenced, the mirth of the evening. All became sensible that
+ something unusual was going forward; and the unwonted distance which
+ Charles maintained from his guests, while it added greatly to the dulness
+ that began to predominate in the presence-chamber, gave intimation that
+ something unusual was labouring in the King's mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus play was neglected&mdash;the music was silent, or played without
+ being heard&mdash;gallants ceased to make compliments, and ladies to
+ expect them; and a sort of apprehensive curiosity pervaded the circle.
+ Each asked the others why they were grave; and no answer was returned, any
+ more than could have been rendered by a herd of cattle instinctively
+ disturbed by the approach of a thunderstorm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To add to the general apprehension, it began to be whispered, that one or
+ two of the guests, who were desirous of leaving the palace, had been
+ informed no one could be permitted to retire until the general hour of
+ dismissal. And these, gliding back into the hall, communicated in whispers
+ that the sentinels at the gates were doubled, and that there was a troop
+ of the Horse Guards drawn up in the court&mdash;circumstances so unusual,
+ as to excite the most anxious curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the state of the Court, when wheels were heard without, and the
+ bustle which took place denoted the arrival of some person of consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here comes Chiffinch," said the King, "with his prey in his clutch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was indeed the Duke of Buckingham; nor did he approach the royal
+ presence without emotion. On entering the court, the flambeaux which were
+ borne around the carriage gleamed on the scarlet coats, laced hats, and
+ drawn broadswords of the Horse Guards&mdash;a sight unusual, and
+ calculated to strike terror into a conscience which was none of the
+ clearest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke alighted from the carriage, and only said to the officer, whom he
+ saw upon duty, "You are late under arms to-night, Captain Carleton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such are our orders, sir," answered Carleton, with military brevity; and
+ then commanded the four dismounted sentinels at the under gate to make way
+ for the Duke of Buckingham. His Grace had no sooner entered, than he heard
+ behind him the command, "Move close up, sentinels&mdash;closer yet to the
+ gate." And he felt as if all chance of rescue were excluded by the sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he advanced up the grand staircase, there were other symptoms of alarm
+ and precaution. The Yeomen of the Guard were mustered in unusual numbers,
+ and carried carabines instead of their halberds; and the
+ Gentlemen-pensioners, with their partisans, appeared also in proportional
+ force. In short, all that sort of defence which the royal household
+ possesses within itself, seemed, for some hasty and urgent reason, to have
+ been placed under arms, and upon duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham ascended the royal staircase with an eye attentive to these
+ preparations, and a step steady and slow, as if he counted each step on
+ which he trode. "Who," he asked himself, "shall ensure Christian's
+ fidelity? Let him but stand fast, and we are secure. Otherwise&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he shaped the alternative, he entered the presence-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King stood in the midst of the apartment, surrounded by the personages
+ with whom he had been consulting. The rest of the brilliant assembly,
+ scattered into groups, looked on at some distance. All were silent when
+ Buckingham entered, in hopes of receiving some explanation of the
+ mysteries of the evening. All bent forward, though etiquette forbade them
+ to advance, to catch, if possible, something of what was about to pass
+ betwixt the King and his intriguing statesman. At the same time, those
+ counsellors who stood around Charles, drew back on either side, so as to
+ permit the Duke to pay his respects to his Majesty in the usual form. He
+ went through the ceremonial with his accustomed grace, but was received by
+ Charles with much unwonted gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have waited for you some time, my Lord Duke. It is long since
+ Chiffinch left us, to request your attendance here. I see you are
+ elaborately dressed. Your toilette was needless on the present occasion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Needless to the splendour of your Majesty's Court," said the Duke, "but
+ not needless on my part. This chanced to be Black Monday at York Place,
+ and my club of <i>Pendables</i> were in full glee when your Majesty's
+ summons arrived. I could not be in the company of Ogle, Maniduc, Dawson,
+ and so forth, but what I must needs make some preparation, and some
+ ablution, ere entering the circle here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust the purification will be complete," said the King, without any
+ tendency to the smile which always softened features, that, ungilded by
+ its influence, were dark, harsh, and even severe. "We wished to ask your
+ Grace concerning the import of a sort of musical mask which you designed
+ us here, but which miscarried, as we are given to understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It must have been a great miscarriage indeed," said the Duke, "since your
+ Majesty looks so serious on it. I thought to have done your Majesty
+ pleasure (as I have seen you condescend to be pleased with such passages),
+ by sending the contents of that bass-viol; but I fear the jest has been
+ unacceptable&mdash;I fear the fireworks may have done mischief."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not the mischief they were designed for, perhaps," said the King gravely;
+ "you see, my lord, we are all alive, and unsinged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Long may your Majesty remain so," said the Duke; "yet I see there is
+ something misconstrued on my part&mdash;it must be a matter unpardonable,
+ however little intended, since it hath displeased so indulgent a master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too indulgent a master, indeed, Buckingham," replied the King; "and the
+ fruit of my indulgence has been to change loyal men into traitors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May it please your Majesty, I cannot understand this," said the Duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Follow us, my lord," answered Charles, "and we will endeavour to explain
+ our meaning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attended by the same lords who stood around him, and followed by the Duke
+ of Buckingham, on whom all eyes were fixed, Charles retired into the same
+ cabinet which had been the scene of repeated consultations in the course
+ of the evening. There, leaning with his arms crossed on the back of an
+ easy-chair, Charles proceeded to interrogate the suspected nobleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us be plain with each other. Speak out, Buckingham. What, in one
+ word, was to have been the regale intended for us this evening?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A petty mask, my lord. I had destined a little dancing-girl to come out
+ of that instrument, who, I thought, would have performed to your Majesty's
+ liking&mdash;a few Chinese fireworks there were, thinking the
+ entertainment was to have taken place in the marble hall, might, I hoped,
+ have been discharged with good effect, and without the slightest alarm, at
+ the first appearance of my little sorceress, and were designed to have
+ masked, as it were, her entrance upon the stage. I hope there have been no
+ perukes singed&mdash;no ladies frightened&mdash;no hopes of noble descent
+ interrupted by my ill-fancied jest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have seen no such fireworks, my lord; and your female dancer, of whom
+ we now hear for the first time, came forth in the form of our old
+ acquaintance Geoffrey Hudson, whose dancing days are surely ended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty surprises me! I beseech you, let Christian be sent for&mdash;Edward
+ Christian&mdash;he will be found lodging in a large old house near Sharper
+ the cutler's, in the Strand. As I live by bread, sire, I trusted him with
+ the arrangement of this matter, as indeed the dancing-girl was his
+ property. If he has done aught to dishonour my concert, or disparage my
+ character, he shall die under the baton."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is singular," said the King, "and I have often observed it, that this
+ fellow Christian bears the blame of all men's enormities&mdash;he performs
+ the part which, in a great family, is usually assigned to that
+ mischief-doing personage, Nobody. When Chiffinch blunders, he always
+ quotes Christian. When Sheffield writes a lampoon, I am sure to hear of
+ Christian having corrected, or copied, or dispersed it&mdash;he is the <i>ame
+ damnée</i> of every one about my Court&mdash;the scapegoat, who is to
+ carry away all their iniquities; and he will have a cruel load to bear
+ into the wilderness. But for Buckingham's sins, in particular, he is the
+ regular and uniform sponsor; and I am convinced his Grace expects
+ Christian should suffer every penalty he has incurred, in this world or
+ the next."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so," with the deepest reverence replied the Duke. "I have no hope of
+ being either hanged or damned by proxy; but it is clear some one hath
+ tampered with and altered my device. If I am accused of aught, let me at
+ least hear the charge, and see my accuser."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is but fair," said the King. "Bring our little friend from behind
+ the chimney-board. [Hudson being accordingly produced, he continued.]
+ There stands the Duke of Buckingham. Repeat before him the tale you told
+ us. Let him hear what were those contents of the bass-viol which were
+ removed that you might enter it. Be not afraid of any one, but speak the
+ truth boldly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May it please your Majesty," said Hudson, "fear is a thing unknown to
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His body has no room to hold such a passion; or there is too little of it
+ to be worth fearing for," said Buckingham.&mdash;"But let him speak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere Hudson had completed his tale, Buckingham interrupted him by
+ exclaiming, "Is it possible that I can be suspected by your Majesty on the
+ word of this pitiful variety of the baboon tribe?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Villain-Lord, I appeal thee to the combat!" said the little man, highly
+ offended at the appellation thus bestowed on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "La you there now!" said the Duke&mdash;"The little animal is quite
+ crazed, and defies a man who need ask no other weapon than a corking-pin
+ to run him through the lungs, and whose single kick could hoist him from
+ Dover to Calais without yacht or wherry. And what can you expect from an
+ idiot, who is <i>engoué</i> of a common rope-dancing girl, that capered on
+ a pack-thread at Ghent in Flanders, unless they were to club their talents
+ to set up a booth at Bartholomew Fair?&mdash;Is it not plain, that
+ supposing the little animal is not malicious, as indeed his whole kind
+ bear a general and most cankered malice against those who have the
+ ordinary proportions of humanity&mdash;Grant, I say, that this were not a
+ malicious falsehood of his, why, what does it amount to?&mdash;That he has
+ mistaken squibs and Chinese crackers for arms! He says not he himself
+ touched or handled them; and judging by the sight alone, I question if the
+ infirm old creature, when any whim or preconception hath possession of his
+ noddle, can distinguish betwixt a blunderbuss and a black-pudding."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horrible clamour which the dwarf made so soon as he heard this
+ disparagement of his military skill&mdash;the haste with which he
+ blundered out a detail of this warlike experiences&mdash;and the absurd
+ grimaces which he made in order to enforce his story, provoked not only
+ the risibility of Charles, but even of the statesmen around him, and added
+ absurdity to the motley complexion of the scene. The King terminated this
+ dispute, by commanding the dwarf to withdraw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more regular discussion of his evidence was then resumed, and Ormond was
+ the first who pointed out, that it went farther than had been noticed,
+ since the little man had mentioned a certain extraordinary and treasonable
+ conversation held by the Duke's dependents, by whom he had been conveyed
+ to the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure not to lack my lord of Ormond's good word," said the Duke
+ scornfully; "but I defy him alike, and all my other enemies, and shall
+ find it easy to show that this alleged conspiracy, if any grounds for it
+ at all exist, in a mere sham-plot, got up to turn the odium justly
+ attached to the Papists upon the Protestants. Here is a half-hanged
+ creature, who, on the very day he escapes from the gallows, which many
+ believe was his most deserved destiny, comes to take away the reputation
+ of a Protestant Peer&mdash;and on what?&mdash;on the treasonable
+ conversation of three or four German fiddlers, heard through the
+ sound-holes of a violoncello, and that, too, when the creature was incased
+ in it, and mounted on a man's shoulders! The urchin, too, in repeating
+ their language, shows he understands German as little as my horse does;
+ and if he did rightly hear, truly comprehend, and accurately report what
+ they said, still, is my honour to be touched by the language held by such
+ persons as these are, with whom I have never communicated, otherwise than
+ men of my rank do with those of their calling and capacity?&mdash;Pardon
+ me, sire, if I presume to say, that the profound statesmen who endeavoured
+ to stifle the Popish conspiracy by the pretended Meal-tub Plot, will take
+ little more credit by their figments about fiddles and concertos."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The assistant counsellors looked at each other; and Charles turned on his
+ heel, and walked through the room with long steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this period the Peverils, father and son, were announced to have
+ reached the palace, and were ordered into the royal presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These gentlemen had received the royal mandate at a moment of great
+ interest. After being dismissed from their confinement by the elder
+ Bridgenorth, in the manner and upon the terms which the reader must have
+ gathered from the conversation of the latter with Christian, they reached
+ the lodgings of Lady Peveril, who awaited them with joy, mingled with
+ terror and uncertainty. The news of the acquittal had reached her by the
+ exertions of the faithful Lance Outram, but her mind had been since
+ harassed by the long delay of their appearance, and rumours of
+ disturbances which had taken place in Fleet Street and in the Strand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the first rapturous meeting was over, Lady Peveril, with an anxious
+ look towards her son, as if recommending caution, said she was now about
+ to present to him the daughter of an old friend, whom he had <i>never</i>
+ (there was an emphasis on the word) seen before. "This young lady," she
+ continued, "was the only child of Colonel Mitford, in North Wales, who had
+ sent her to remain under her guardianship for an interval, finding himself
+ unequal to attempt the task of her education."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ay, ay," said Sir Geoffrey, "Dick Mitford must be old now&mdash;beyond
+ the threescore and ten, I think. He was no chicken, though a cock of the
+ game, when he joined the Marquis of Hertford at Namptwich with two hundred
+ wild Welshmen.&mdash;Before George, Julian, I love that girl as if she was
+ my own flesh and blood! Lady Peveril would never have got through this
+ work without her; and Dick Mitford sent me a thousand pieces, too, in
+ excellent time, when there was scarce a cross to keep the devil from
+ dancing in our pockets, much more for these law-doings. I used it without
+ scruple, for there is wood ready to be cut at Martindale when we get down
+ there, and Dick Mitford knows I would have done the like for him. Strange
+ that he should have been the only one of my friends to reflect I might
+ want a few pieces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst Sir Geoffrey thus run on, the meeting betwixt Alice and Julian
+ Peveril was accomplished, without any particular notice on his side,
+ except to say, "Kiss her, Julian&mdash;kiss her. What the devil! is that
+ the way you learned to accost a lady at the Isle of Man, as if her lips
+ were a red-hot horseshoe?&mdash;And do not you be offended, my pretty one;
+ Julian is naturally bashful, and has been bred by an old lady, but you
+ will find him, by-and-by, as gallant as thou hast found me, my princess.&mdash;And
+ now, Dame Peveril, to dinner, to dinner! the old fox must have his
+ belly-timber, though the hounds have been after him the whole day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lance, whose joyous congratulations were next to be undergone, had the
+ consideration to cut them short, in order to provide a plain but hearty
+ meal from the next cook's shop, at which Julian sat, like one enchanted,
+ betwixt his mistress and his mother. He easily conceived that the last was
+ the confidential friend to whom Bridgenorth had finally committed the
+ charge of his daughter, and his only anxiety now was, to anticipate the
+ confusion that was likely to arise when her real parentage was made known
+ to his father. Wisely, however, he suffered not these anticipations to
+ interfere with the delight of his present situation, in the course of
+ which many slight but delightful tokens of recognition were exchanged,
+ without censure, under the eye of Lady Peveril, under cover of the
+ boisterous mirth of the old Baronet, who spoke for two, ate for four, and
+ drank wine for half-a-dozen. His progress in the latter exercise might
+ have proceeded rather too far, had he not been interrupted by a gentleman
+ bearing the King's orders, that he should instantly attend upon the
+ presence at Whitehall, and bring his son along with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Peveril was alarmed, and Alice grew pale with sympathetic anxiety;
+ but the old Knight, who never saw more than what lay straight before him,
+ set it down to the King's hasty anxiety to congratulate him on his escape;
+ an interest on his Majesty's part which he considered by no means
+ extravagant, conscious that it was reciprocal on his own side. It came
+ upon him, indeed, with the more joyful surprise that he had received a
+ previous hint, ere he left the court of justice, that it would be prudent
+ in him to go down to Martindale before presenting himself at Court&mdash;a
+ restriction which he supposed as repugnant to his Majesty's feelings as it
+ was to his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he consulted with Lance Outram about cleaning his buff-belt and
+ sword-hilt, as well as time admitted, Lady Peveril had the means to give
+ Julian more distinct information, that Alice was under her protection by
+ her father's authority, and with his consent to their union, if it could
+ be accomplished. She added that it was her determination to employ the
+ mediation of the Countess of Derby, to overcome the obstacles which might
+ be foreseen on the part of Sir Geoffrey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0049" id="link2HCH0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In the King's name,
+ Let fall your swords and daggers!
+ &mdash;CRITIC.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the father and son entered the cabinet of audience, it was easily
+ visible that Sir Geoffrey had obeyed the summons as he would have done the
+ trumpet's call to horse; and his dishevelled grey locks and half-arranged
+ dress, though they showed zeal and haste, such as he would have used when
+ Charles I. called him to attend a council of war, seemed rather indecorous
+ in a pacific drawing-room. He paused at the door of the cabinet, but when
+ the King called on him to advance, came hastily forward, with every
+ feeling of his earlier and later life afloat, and contending in his
+ memory, threw himself on his knees before the King, seized his hand, and,
+ without even an effort to speak, wept aloud. Charles, who generally felt
+ deeply so long as an impressive object was before his eyes, indulged for a
+ moment the old man's rapture.&mdash;"My good Sir Geoffrey," he said, "you
+ have had some hard measure; we owe you amends, and will find time to pay
+ our debt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No suffering&mdash;no debt," said the old man; "I cared not what the
+ rogues said of me&mdash;I knew they could never get twelve honest fellows
+ to believe a word of their most damnable lies. I did long to beat them
+ when they called me traitor to your Majesty&mdash;that I confess&mdash;But
+ to have such an early opportunity of paying my duty to your Majesty,
+ overpays it all. The villains would have persuaded me I ought not to come
+ to Court&mdash;aha!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Ormond perceived that the King coloured much; for in truth it
+ was from the Court that the private intimation had been given to Sir
+ Geoffrey to go down to the country, without appearing at Whitehall; and
+ he, moreover, suspected that the jolly old Knight had not risen from his
+ dinner altogether dry-lipped, after the fatigues of a day so agitating.&mdash;"My
+ old friend," he whispered, "you forget that your son is to be presented&mdash;permit
+ me to have that honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I crave your Grace's pardon humbly," said Sir Geoffrey, "but it is an
+ honour I design for myself, as I apprehend no one can so utterly surrender
+ and deliver him up to his Majesty's service as the father that begot him
+ is entitled to do.&mdash;Julian, come forward, and kneel.&mdash;Here he
+ is, please your Majesty&mdash;Julian Peveril&mdash;a chip of the old block&mdash;as
+ stout, though scarce so tall a tree, as the old trunk, when at the
+ freshest. Take him to you, sir, for a faithful servant, <i>à pendre</i>,
+ as the French say; if he fears fire or steel, axe or gallows, in your
+ Majesty's service, I renounce him&mdash;he is no son of mine&mdash;I
+ disown him, and he may go to the Isle of Man, the Isle of Dogs, or the
+ Isle of Devils, for what I care."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles winked to Ormond, and having, with his wonted courtesy, expressed
+ his thorough conviction that Julian would imitate the loyalty of his
+ ancestors, and especially of his father, added, that he believed his Grace
+ of Ormond had something to communicate which was of consequence to his
+ service. Sir Geoffrey made his military reverence at this hint, and
+ marched off in the rear of the Duke, who proceeded to inquire of him
+ concerning the events of the day. Charles, in the meanwhile, having in the
+ first place, ascertained that the son was not in the same genial condition
+ with the father, demanded and received from him a precise account of all
+ the proceedings subsequent to the trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian, with the plainness and precision which such a subject demanded,
+ when treated in such a presence, narrated all that happened down to the
+ entrance of Bridgenorth; and his Majesty was so much pleased with his
+ manner, that he congratulated Arlington on their having gained the
+ evidence of at least one man of sense to these dark and mysterious events.
+ But when Bridgenorth was brought upon the scene, Julian hesitated to
+ bestow a name upon him; and although he mentioned the chapel which he had
+ seen filled with men in arms, and the violent language of the preacher, he
+ added, with earnestness, that notwithstanding all this, the men departed
+ without coming to any extremity, and had all left the place before his
+ father and he were set at liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you retired quietly to your dinner in Fleet Street, young man," said
+ the King severely, "without giving a magistrate notice of the dangerous
+ meeting which was held in the vicinity of our palace, and who did not
+ conceal their intention of proceeding to extremities?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Peveril blushed, and was silent. The King frowned, and stepped aside to
+ communicate with Ormond, who reported that the father seemed to have known
+ nothing of the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And the son, I am sorry to say," said the King, "seems more unwilling to
+ speak the truth than I should have expected. We have all variety of
+ evidence in this singular investigation&mdash;a mad witness like the
+ dwarf, a drunken witness like the father, and now a dumb witness.&mdash;Young
+ man," he continued, addressing Julian, "your behaviour is less frank than
+ I expected from your father's son. I must know who this person is with
+ whom you held such familiar intercourse&mdash;you know him, I presume?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian acknowledged that he did, but, kneeling on one knee, entreated his
+ Majesty's forgiveness for concealing his name; "he had been freed," he
+ said, "from his confinement, on promising to that effect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was a promise made, by your own account, under compulsion," answered
+ the King, "and I cannot authorise your keeping it; it is your duty to
+ speak the truth&mdash;if you are afraid of Buckingham, the Duke shall
+ withdraw."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no reason to fear the Duke of Buckingham," said Peveril; "that I
+ had an affair with one of his household, was the man's own fault and not
+ mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oddsfish!" said the King, "the light begins to break in on me&mdash;I
+ thought I remembered thy physiognomy. Wert thou not the very fellow whom I
+ met at Chiffinch's yonder morning?&mdash;The matter escaped me since; but
+ now I recollect thou saidst then, that thou wert the son of that jolly old
+ three-bottle Baronet yonder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is true," said Julian, "that I met your Majesty at Master Chiffinch's,
+ and I am afraid had the misfortune to displease you; but&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No more of that, young man&mdash;no more of that&mdash;But I recollect
+ you had with you that beautiful dancing siren.&mdash;Buckingham, I will
+ hold you gold to silver, that she was the intended tenant of that
+ bass-fiddle?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty has rightly guessed it," said the Duke; "and I suspect she
+ has put a trick upon me, by substituting the dwarf in her place; for
+ Christian thinks&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Damn Christian!" said the King hastily&mdash;"I wish they would bring him
+ hither, that universal referee."&mdash;And as the wish was uttered,
+ Christian's arrival was announced. "Let him attend," said the King: "But
+ hark&mdash;a thought strikes me.&mdash;Here, Master Peveril&mdash;yonder
+ dancing maiden that introduced you to us by the singular agility of her
+ performance, is she not, by your account, a dependent of the Countess of
+ Derby?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have known her such for years," answered Julian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then will we call the Countess hither," said the King: "It is fit we
+ should learn who this little fairy really is; and if she be now so
+ absolutely at the beck of Buckingham, and this Master Christian of his&mdash;why
+ I think it would be but charity to let her ladyship know so much, since I
+ question if she will wish, in that case, to retain her in her service.
+ Besides," he continued, speaking apart, "this Julian, to whom suspicion
+ attaches in these matters from his obstinate silence, is also of the
+ Countess's household. We will sift this matter to the bottom, and do
+ justice to all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby, hastily summoned, entered the royal closet at one
+ door, just as Christian and Zarah, or Fenella, were ushered in by the
+ other. The old Knight of Martindale, who had ere this returned to the
+ presence, was scarce controlled, even by the signs which she made, so much
+ was he desirous of greeting his old friend; but as Ormond laid a kind
+ restraining hand upon his arm, he was prevailed on to sit still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, after a deep reverence to the King, acknowledged the rest of
+ the nobility present by a slighter reverence, smiled to Julian Peveril,
+ and looked with surprise at the unexpected apparition of Fenella.
+ Buckingham bit his lip, for he saw the introduction of Lady Derby was
+ likely to confuse and embroil every preparation which he had arranged for
+ his defence; and he stole a glance at Christian, whose eye, when fixed on
+ the Countess, assumed the deadly sharpness which sparkles in the adder's,
+ while his cheek grew almost black under the influence of strong emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there any one in this presence whom your ladyship recognises," said
+ the King graciously, "besides your old friends of Ormond and Arlington?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see, my liege, two worthy friends of my husband's house," replied the
+ Countess; "Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son&mdash;the latter a
+ distinguished member of my son's household."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any one else?" continued the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An unfortunate female of my family, who disappeared from the Island of
+ Man at the same time when Julian Peveril left it upon business of
+ importance. She was thought to have fallen from the cliff into the sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had your ladyship any reason to suspect&mdash;pardon me," said the King,
+ "for putting such a question&mdash;any improper intimacy between Master
+ Peveril and this same female attendant?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My liege," said the Countess, colouring indignantly, "my household is of
+ reputation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, my lady, be not angry," said the King; "I did but ask&mdash;such
+ things will befall in the best regulated families."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not in mine, sire," said the Countess. "Besides that, in common pride and
+ in common honesty, Julian Peveril is incapable of intriguing with an
+ unhappy creature, removed by her misfortune almost beyond the limits of
+ humanity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zarah looked at her, and compressed her lips, as if to keep in the words
+ that would fain break from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know how it is," said the King&mdash;"What your ladyship says may be
+ true in the main, yet men's tastes have strange vagaries. This girl is
+ lost in Man as soon as the youth leaves it, and is found in Saint Jame's
+ Park, bouncing and dancing like a fairy, so soon as he appears in London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Impossible!" said the Countess; "she cannot dance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe," said the King, "she can do more feats than your ladyship
+ either suspects or would approve of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess drew up, and was indignantly silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King proceeded&mdash;"No sooner is Peveril in Newgate, than, by the
+ account of the venerable little gentleman, this merry maiden is even there
+ also for company. Now, without inquiring how she got in, I think
+ charitably that she had better taste than to come there on the dwarf's
+ account.&mdash;Ah ha! I think Master Julian is touched in conscience!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian did indeed start as the King spoke, for it reminded him of the
+ midnight visit in his cell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked fixedly at him, and then proceeded&mdash;"Well, gentlemen,
+ Peveril is carried to his trial, and is no sooner at liberty, than we find
+ him in the house where the Duke of Buckingham was arranging what he calls
+ a musical mask.&mdash;Egad, I hold it next to certain, that this wench put
+ the change on his Grace, and popt the poor dwarf into the bass-viol,
+ reserving her own more precious hours to be spent with Master Julian
+ Peveril.&mdash;Think you not so, Sir Christian, you, the universal
+ referee? Is there any truth in this conjecture?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian stole a glance at Zarah, and read that in her eye which
+ embarrassed him. "He did not know," he said; "he had indeed engaged this
+ unrivalled performer to take the proposed part in the mask; and she was to
+ have come forth in the midst of a shower of lambent fire, very
+ artificially prepared with perfumes, to overcome the smell of the powder;
+ but he knew not why&mdash;excepting that she was wilful and capricious,
+ like all great geniuses&mdash;she had certainly spoiled the concert by
+ cramming in that more bulky dwarf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should like," said the King, "to see this little maiden stand forth,
+ and bear witness, in such manner as she can express herself, on this
+ mysterious matter. Can any one here understand her mode of communication?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christian said, he knew something of it since he had become acquainted
+ with her in London. The Countess spoke not till the King asked her, and
+ then owned dryly, that she had necessarily some habitual means of
+ intercourse with one who had been immediately about her person for so many
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think," said Charles, "that this same Master Peveril has the
+ more direct key to her language, after all we have heard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King looked first at Peveril, who blushed like a maiden at the
+ inference which the King's remark implied, and then suddenly turned his
+ eyes on the supposed mute, on whose cheek a faint colour was dying away. A
+ moment afterwards, at a signal from the Countess, Fenella, or Zarah,
+ stepped forward, and having kissed her lady's hand, stood with her arms
+ folded on her breast, with a humble air, as different from that which she
+ wore in the harem of the Duke of Buckingham, as that of a Magdalene from a
+ Judith. Yet this was the least show of her talent of versatility, for so
+ well did she play the part of the dumb girl, that Buckingham, sharp as his
+ discernment was, remained undecided whether the creature which stood
+ before him could possibly be the same with her, who had, in a different
+ dress, made such an impression on his imagination, or indeed was the
+ imperfect creature she now represented. She had at once all that could
+ mark the imperfection of hearing, and all that could show the wonderful
+ address by which nature so often makes up of the deficiency. There was the
+ lip that trembles not at any sound&mdash;the seeming insensibility to the
+ conversation that passed around; while, on the other hand, was the quick
+ and vivid glance; that seemed anxious to devour the meaning of those
+ sounds, which she could gather no otherwise than by the motion of the
+ lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Examined after her own fashion, Zarah confirmed the tale of Christian in
+ all its points, and admitted that she had deranged the project laid for a
+ mask, by placing the dwarf in her own stead; the cause of her doing so she
+ declined to assign, and the Countess pressed her no farther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everything tells to exculpate my Lord of Buckingham," said Charles, "from
+ so absurd an accusation: the dwarf's testimony is too fantastic, that of
+ the two Peverils does not in the least affect the Duke; that of the dumb
+ damsel completely contradicts the possibility of his guilt. Methinks, my
+ lords, we should acquaint him that he stands acquitted of a complaint, too
+ ridiculous to have been subjected to a more serious scrutiny than we have
+ hastily made upon this occasion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arlington bowed in acquiescence, but Ormond spoke plainly.&mdash;"I should
+ suffer, sire, in the opinion of the Duke of Buckingham, brilliant as his
+ talents are known to be, should I say that I am satisfied in my own mind
+ on this occasion. But I subscribe to the spirit of the times; and I agree
+ it would be highly dangerous, on such accusations as we have been able to
+ collect, to impeach the character of a zealous Protestant like his Grace&mdash;Had
+ he been a Catholic, under such circumstances of suspicion, the Tower had
+ been too good a prison for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckingham bowed to the Duke of Ormond, with a meaning which even his
+ triumph could not disguise.&mdash;"<i>Tu me la pagherai!</i>" he muttered,
+ in a tone of deep and abiding resentment; but the stout old Irishman, who
+ had long since braved his utmost wrath, cared little for this expression
+ of his displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King then, signing to the other nobles to pass into the public
+ apartments, stopped Buckingham as he was about to follow them; and when
+ they were alone, asked, with a significant tone, which brought all the
+ blood in the Duke's veins into his countenance, "When was it, George, that
+ your useful friend Colonel Blood became a musician?&mdash;You are silent,"
+ he said; "do not deny the charge, for yonder villain, once seen, is
+ remembered for ever. Down, down on your knees, George, and acknowledge
+ that you have abused my easy temper.&mdash;Seek for no apology&mdash;none
+ will serve your turn. I saw the man myself, among your Germans as you call
+ them; and you know what I must needs believe from such a circumstance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Believe that I have been guilty&mdash;most guilty, my liege and King,"
+ said the Duke, conscience-stricken, and kneeling down;&mdash;"believe that
+ I was misguided&mdash;that I was mad&mdash;Believe anything but that I was
+ capable of harming, or being accessory to harm, your person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not believe it," said the King; "I think of you, Villiers, as the
+ companion of my dangers and my exile, and am so far from supposing you
+ mean worse than you say, that I am convinced you acknowledge more than
+ ever you meant to attempt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By all that is sacred," said the Duke, still kneeling, "had I not been
+ involved to the extent of life and fortune with the villain Christian&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nay, if you bring Christian on the stage again," said the King, smiling,
+ "it is time for me to withdraw. Come, Villiers, rise&mdash;I forgive thee,
+ and only recommend one act of penance&mdash;the curse you yourself
+ bestowed on the dog who bit you&mdash;marriage, and retirement to your
+ country-seat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke rose abashed, and followed the King into the circle, which
+ Charles entered, leaning on the shoulder of his repentant peer; to whom he
+ showed so much countenance, as led the most acute observers present, to
+ doubt the possibility of there existing any real cause for the surmises to
+ the Duke's prejudice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess of Derby had in the meanwhile consulted with the Duke of
+ Ormond, with the Peverils, and with her other friends; and, by their
+ unanimous advice, though with considerable difficulty, became satisfied,
+ that to have thus shown herself at Court, was sufficient to vindicate the
+ honour of her house; and that it was her wisest course, after having done
+ so, to retire to her insular dominions, without farther provoking the
+ resentment of a powerful faction. She took farewell of the King in form,
+ and demanded his permission to carry back with her the helpless creature
+ who had so strangely escaped from her protection, into a world where her
+ condition rendered her so subject to every species of misfortune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will your ladyship forgive me?" said Charles. "I have studied your sex
+ long&mdash;I am mistaken if your little maiden is not as capable of caring
+ for herself as any of us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Impossible!" said the Countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Possible, and most true," whispered the King. "I will instantly convince
+ you of the fact, though the experiment is too delicate to be made by any
+ but your ladyship. Yonder she stands, looking as if she heard no more than
+ the marble pillar against which she leans. Now, if Lady Derby will
+ contrive either to place her hand near the region of the damsel's heart,
+ or at least on her arm, so that she can feel the sensation of the blood
+ when the pulse increases, then do you, my Lord of Ormond, beckon Julian
+ Peveril out of sight&mdash;I will show you in a moment that it can stir at
+ sounds spoken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Countess, much surprised, afraid of some embarrassing pleasantry on
+ the part of Charles, yet unable to repress her curiosity, placed herself
+ near Fenella, as she called her little mute; and, while making signs to
+ her, contrived to place her hand on her wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the King, passing near them, said, "This is a horrid deed&mdash;the
+ villain Christian has stabbed young Peveril!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mute evidence of the pulse, which bounded as if a cannon had been
+ discharged close by the poor girl's ear, was accompanied by such a loud
+ scream of agony, as distressed, while it startled, the good-natured
+ monarch himself. "I did but jest," he said; "Julian is well, my pretty
+ maiden. I only used the wand of a certain blind deity, called Cupid, to
+ bring a deaf and dumb vassal of his to the exercise of her faculties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am betrayed!" she said, with her eyes fixed on the ground&mdash;"I am
+ betrayed!&mdash;and it is fit that she, whose life has been spent in
+ practising treason on others, should be caught in her own snare. But where
+ is my tutor in iniquity?&mdash;where is Christian, who taught me to play
+ the part of spy on this unsuspicious lady, until I had well-nigh delivered
+ her into his bloody hands?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This," said the King, "craves more secret examination. Let all leave the
+ apartment who are not immediately connected with these proceedings, and
+ let this Christian be again brought before us.&mdash;Wretched man," he
+ continued, addressing Christian, "what wiles are these you have practised,
+ and by what extraordinary means?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She has betrayed me, then!" said Christian&mdash;"Betrayed me to bonds
+ and death, merely for an idle passion, which can never be successful!&mdash;But
+ know, Zarah," he added, addressing her sternly, "when my life is forfeited
+ through thy evidence, the daughter has murdered the father!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unfortunate girl stared on him in astonishment. "You said," at length
+ she stammered forth, "that I was the daughter of your slaughtered
+ brother?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was partly to reconcile thee to the part thou wert to play in my
+ destined drama of vengeance&mdash;partly to hide what men call the infamy
+ of thy birth. But <i>my</i> daughter thou art! and from the eastern clime,
+ in which thy mother was born, you derive that fierce torrent of passion
+ which I laboured to train to my purposes, but which, turned into another
+ channel, has become the cause of your father's destruction.&mdash;My
+ destiny is the Tower, I suppose?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke these words with great composure, and scarce seemed to regard the
+ agonies of his daughter, who, throwing herself at his feet, sobbed and
+ wept most bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This must not be," said the King, moved with compassion at this scene of
+ misery. "If you consent, Christian, to leave this country, there is a
+ vessel in the river bound for New England&mdash;Go, carry your dark
+ intrigues to other lands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might dispute the sentence," said Christian boldly; "and if I submit to
+ it, it is a matter of my own choice.&mdash;One half-hour had made me even
+ with that proud woman, but fortune hath cast the balance against me.&mdash;Rise,
+ Zarah, Fenella no more! Tell the Lady of Derby, that, if the daughter of
+ Edward Christian, the niece of her murdered victim, served her as a
+ menial, it was but for the purpose of vengeance&mdash;miserably, miserably
+ frustrated!&mdash;Thou seest thy folly now&mdash;thou wouldst follow
+ yonder ungrateful stripling&mdash;thou wouldst forsake all other thoughts
+ to gain his slightest notice; and now thou art a forlorn outcast,
+ ridiculed and insulted by those on whose necks you might have trod, had
+ you governed yourself with more wisdom!&mdash;But come, thou art still my
+ daughter&mdash;there are other skies than that which canopies Britain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stop him," said the King; "we must know by what means this maiden found
+ access to those confined in our prisons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I refer your Majesty to your most Protestant jailer, and to the most
+ Protestant Peers, who, in order to obtain perfect knowledge of the depth
+ of the Popish Plot, have contrived these ingenious apertures for visiting
+ them in their cells by night or day. His Grace of Buckingham can assist
+ your Majesty, if you are inclined to make the inquiry."[*]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+[*] It was said that very unfair means were used to compel the
+ prisoners, committed on account of the Popish Plot, to make
+ disclosures, and that several of them were privately put to the
+ torture.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Christian," said the Duke, "thou art the most barefaced villain who ever
+ breathed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of a commoner, I may," answered Christian, and led his daughter out of
+ the presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See after him, Selby," said the King; "lose not sight of him till the
+ ship sail; if he dare return to Britain, it shall be at his peril. Would
+ to God we had as good riddance of others as dangerous! And I would also,"
+ he added, after a moment's pause, "that all our political intrigues and
+ feverish alarms could terminate as harmlessly as now. Here is a plot
+ without a drop of blood; and all the elements of a romance, without its
+ conclusion. Here we have a wandering island princess (I pray my Lady of
+ Derby's pardon), a dwarf, a Moorish sorceress, an impenitent rogue, and a
+ repentant man of rank, and yet all ends without either hanging or
+ marriage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not altogether without the latter," said the Countess, who had an
+ opportunity, during the evening, of much private conversation with Julian
+ Peveril. "There is a certain Major Bridgenorth, who, since your Majesty
+ relinquishes farther inquiry into these proceedings, which he had
+ otherwise intended to abide, designs, as we are informed, to leave England
+ for ever. Now, this Bridgenorth, by dint of law, hath acquired strong
+ possession over the domains of Peveril, which he is desirous to restore to
+ the ancient owners, with much fair land besides, conditionally, that our
+ young Julian will receive them as the dowry of his only child and heir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By my faith," said the King, "she must be a foul-favoured wench, indeed,
+ if Julian requires to be pressed to accept her on such fair conditions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They love each other like lovers of the last age," said the Countess;
+ "but the stout old Knight likes not the round-headed alliance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our royal recommendation shall put that to rights," said the King; "Sir
+ Geoffrey Peveril has not suffered hardship so often at our command, that
+ he will refuse our recommendation when it comes to make him amends for all
+ his losses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be supposed the King did not speak without being fully aware of the
+ unlimited ascendancy which he possessed over the old Tory; for within four
+ weeks afterwards, the bells of Martindale-Moultrassie were ringing for the
+ union of the families, from whose estates it takes its compound name, and
+ the beacon-light of the Castle blazed high over hill and dale, and
+ summoned all to rejoice who were within twenty miles of its gleam.
+ </p>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0097m.jpg" alt="0097m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0097.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0129m.jpg" alt="0129m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0129.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0165m.jpg" alt="0165m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0165.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0208m.jpg" alt="0208m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0208.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+<div class="fig" style="width:65%;">
+ <img src="images/0402m.jpg" alt="0402m " width="100%" /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h5>
+ <a href="images/0402.jpg"><i>Original</i></a>
+ </h5>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Peveril of the Peak, by Sir Walter Scott
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+Title: Peveril of the Peak
+
+Author: Sir Walter Scott
+
+Release Date: June, 2004 [EBook #5959]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on September 30, 2002]
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+Edition: 10
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+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: Latin1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, PEVERIL OF THE PEAK ***
+
+
+
+
+PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+By Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
+
+First published in 1822.
+
+Etext prepared by Emma Wong Shee,
+ John Bickers, jbickers@ihug.co.nz
+ and Dagny, dagnypg@yahoo.com
+
+
+
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+
+ BY
+
+ SIR WALTER SCOTT, BART.
+
+
+
+
+
+ PEVERIL OF THE PEAK
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+ When civil dudgeon first grew high,
+ And men fell out, they knew not why;
+ When foul words, jealousies, and fears,
+ Set folk together by the ears--
+ --BUTLER.
+
+William, the Conqueror of England, was, or supposed himself to be, the
+father of a certain William Peveril, who attended him to the battle of
+Hastings, and there distinguished himself. The liberal-minded monarch,
+who assumed in his charters the veritable title of Gulielmus
+Bastardus, was not likely to let his son's illegitimacy be any bar to
+the course of his royal favour, when the laws of England were issued
+from the mouth of the Norman victor, and the lands of the Saxons were
+at his unlimited disposal. William Peveril obtained a liberal grant of
+property and lordships in Derbyshire, and became the erecter of that
+Gothic fortress, which, hanging over the mouth of the Devil's Cavern,
+so well known to tourists, gives the name of Castleton to the adjacent
+village.
+
+From this feudal Baron, who chose his nest upon the principles on
+which an eagle selects her eyry, and built it in such a fashion as if
+he had intended it, as an Irishman said of the Martello towers, for
+the sole purpose of puzzling posterity, there was, or conceived
+themselves to be, descended (for their pedigree was rather
+hypothetical) an opulent family of knightly rank, in the same county
+of Derby. The great fief of Castleton, with its adjacent wastes and
+forests, and all the wonders which they contain, had been forfeited in
+King John's stormy days, by one William Peveril, and had been granted
+anew to the Lord Ferrers of that day. Yet this William's descendants,
+though no longer possessed of what they alleged to have been their
+original property, were long distinguished by the proud title of
+Peverils of the Peak, which served to mark their high descent and
+lofty pretensions.
+
+In Charles the Second's time, the representative of this ancient
+family was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, a man who had many of the ordinary
+attributes of an old-fashioned country gentleman, and very few
+individual traits to distinguish him from the general portrait of that
+worthy class of mankind. He was proud of small advantages, angry at
+small disappointments, incapable of forming any resolution or opinion
+abstracted from his own prejudices--he was proud of his birth, lavish
+in his housekeeping, convivial with those kindred and acquaintances,
+who would allow his superiority in rank--contentious and quarrelsome
+with all that crossed his pretensions--kind to the poor, except when
+they plundered his game--a Royalist in his political opinions, and one
+who detested alike a Roundhead, a poacher, and a Presbyterian. In
+religion Sir Geoffrey was a high-churchman, of so exalted a strain
+that many thought he still nourished in private the Roman Catholic
+tenets, which his family had only renounced in his father's time, and
+that he had a dispensation for conforming in outward observances to
+the Protestant faith. There was at least such a scandal amongst the
+Puritans, and the influence which Sir Geoffrey Peveril certainly
+appeared to possess amongst the Catholic gentlemen of Derbyshire and
+Cheshire, seemed to give countenance to the rumour.
+
+Such was Sir Geoffrey, who might have passed to his grave without
+further distinction than a brass-plate in the chancel, had he not
+lived in times which forced the most inactive spirits into exertion,
+as a tempest influences the sluggish waters of the deadest mere. When
+the Civil Wars broke out, Peveril of the Peak, proud from pedigree,
+and brave by constitution, raised a regiment for the King, and showed
+upon several occasions more capacity for command than men had
+heretofore given him credit for.
+
+Even in the midst of the civil turmoil, he fell in love with, and
+married, a beautiful and amiable young lady of the noble house of
+Stanley; and from that time had the more merit in his loyalty, as it
+divorced him from her society, unless at very brief intervals, when
+his duty permitted an occasional visit to his home. Scorning to be
+allured from his military duty by domestic inducements, Peveril of
+the Peak fought on for several rough years of civil war, and performed
+his part with sufficient gallantry, until his regiment was surprised
+and cut to pieces by Poyntz, Cromwell's enterprising and successful
+general of cavalry. The defeated Cavalier escaped from the field of
+battle, and, like a true descendant of William the Conqueror,
+disdaining submission, threw himself into his own castellated mansion,
+which was attacked and defended in a siege of that irregular kind
+which caused the destruction of so many baronial residences during the
+course of those unhappy wars. Martindale Castle, after having suffered
+severely from the cannon which Cromwell himself brought against it,
+was at length surrendered when in the last extremity. Sir Geoffrey
+himself became a prisoner, and while his liberty was only restored
+upon a promise of remaining a peaceful subject to the Commonwealth in
+future, his former delinquencies, as they were termed by the ruling
+party, were severely punished by fine and sequestration.
+
+But neither his forced promise, nor the fear of farther unpleasant
+consequences to his person or property, could prevent Peveril of the
+Peak from joining the gallant Earl of Derby the night before the fatal
+engagement in Wiggan Lane, where the Earl's forces were dispersed. Sir
+Geoffrey having had his share in that action, escaped with the relics
+of the Royalists after the defeat, to join Charles II. He witnessed
+also the final defeat of Worcester, where he was a second time made
+prisoner; and as, in the opinion of Cromwell and the language of the
+times, he was regarded as an obstinate malignant, he was in great
+danger of having shared with the Earl of Derby his execution at
+Bolton-le-Moor, having partaken with him the dangers of two actions.
+But Sir Geoffrey's life was preserved by the interest of a friend, who
+possessed influence in the councils of Oliver.--This was a Mr.
+Bridgenorth, a gentleman of middling quality, whose father had been
+successful in some commercial adventure during the peaceful reign of
+James I.; and who had bequeathed his son a considerable sum of money,
+in addition to the moderate patrimony which he inherited from his
+father.
+
+The substantial, though small-sized, brick building of Moultrassie
+Hall, was but two miles distant from Martindale Castle, and the young
+Bridgenorth attended the same school with the heir of the Peverils. A
+sort of companionship, if not intimacy, took place betwixt them, which
+continued during their youthful sports--the rather that Bridgenorth,
+though he did not at heart admit Sir Geoffrey's claims of superiority
+to the extent which the other's vanity would have exacted, paid
+deference in a reasonable degree to the representative of a family so
+much more ancient and important than his own, without conceiving that
+he in any respect degraded himself by doing so.
+
+Mr. Bridgenorth did not, however, carry his complaisance so far as to
+embrace Sir Geoffrey's side during the Civil War. On the contrary, as
+an active Justice of the Peace, he rendered much assistance in
+arraying the militia in the cause of the Parliament, and for some time
+held a military commission in that service. This was partly owing to
+his religious principles, for he was a zealous Presbyterian, partly to
+his political ideas, which, without being absolutely democratical,
+favoured the popular side of the great national question. Besides, he
+was a moneyed man, and to a certain extent had a shrewd eye to his
+worldly interest. He understood how to improve the opportunities which
+civil war afforded, of advancing his fortune, by a dexterous use of
+his capital; and he was not at a loss to perceive that these were
+likely to be obtained in joining the Parliament; while the King's
+cause, as it was managed, held out nothing to the wealthy but a course
+of exaction and compulsory loans. For these reasons, Bridgenorth
+became a decided Roundhead, and all friendly communication betwixt his
+neighbour and him was abruptly broken asunder. This was done with the
+less acrimony, that, during the Civil War, Sir Geoffrey was almost
+constantly in the field, following the vacillating and unhappy
+fortunes of his master; while Major Bridgenorth, who soon renounced
+active military service, resided chiefly in London, and only
+occasionally visited the Hall.
+
+Upon these visits, it was with great pleasure he received the
+intelligence, that Lady Peveril had shown much kindness to Mrs.
+Bridgenorth, and had actually given her and her family shelter in
+Martindale Castle, when Moultrassie Hall was threatened with pillage
+by a body of Prince Rupert's ill-disciplined Cavaliers. This
+acquaintance had been matured by frequent walks together, which the
+vicinity of their places of residence suffered the Lady Peveril to
+have with Mrs. Bridgenorth, who deemed herself much honoured in being
+thus admitted into the society of so distinguished a lady. Major
+Bridgenorth heard of this growing intimacy with great pleasure, and he
+determined to repay the obligation, as far as he could without much
+hurt to himself, by interfering with all his influence, in behalf of
+her unfortunate husband. It was chiefly owing to Major Bridgenorth's
+mediation, that Sir Geoffrey's life was saved after the battle of
+Worcester. He obtained him permission to compound for his estate on
+easier terms than many who had been less obstinate in malignancy; and,
+finally, when, in order to raise the money to the composition, the
+Knight was obliged to sell a considerable portion of his patrimony,
+Major Bridgenorth became the purchaser, and that at a larger price
+than had been paid to any Cavalier under such circumstances, by a
+member of the Committee for Sequestrations. It is true, the prudent
+committeeman did not, by any means, lose sight of his own interest in
+the transaction, for the price was, after all, very moderate, and the
+property lay adjacent to Moultrassie Hall, the value of which was at
+least trebled by the acquisition. But then it was also true, that the
+unfortunate owner must have submitted to much worse conditions, had
+the committeeman used, as others did, the full advantages which his
+situation gave him; and Bridgenorth took credit to himself, and
+received it from others, for having, on this occasion, fairly
+sacrificed his interest to his liberality.
+
+Sir Geoffrey Peveril was of the same opinion, and the rather that Mr.
+Bridgenorth seemed to bear his exaltation with great moderation, and
+was disposed to show him personally the same deference in his present
+sunshine of prosperity, which he had exhibited formerly in their early
+acquaintance. It is but justice to Major Bridgenorth to observe, that
+in this conduct he paid respect as much to the misfortunes as to the
+pretensions of his far-descended neighbour, and that, with the frank
+generosity of a blunt Englishman, he conceded points of ceremony,
+about which he himself was indifferent, merely because he saw that his
+doing so gave pleasure to Sir Geoffrey.
+
+Peveril of the Peak did justice to his neighbour's delicacy, in
+consideration of which he forgot many things. He forgot that Major
+Bridgenorth was already in possession of a fair third of his estate,
+and had various pecuniary claims affecting the remainder, to the
+extent of one-third more. He endeavoured even to forget, what it was
+still more difficult not to remember, the altered situation in which
+they and their mansions now stood to each other.
+
+Before the Civil War, the superb battlements and turrets of Martindale
+Castle looked down on the red brick-built Hall, as it stole out from
+the green plantations, just as an oak in Martindale Chase would have
+looked beside one of the stunted and formal young beech-trees with
+which Bridgenorth had graced his avenue; but after the siege which we
+have commemorated, the enlarged and augmented Hall was as much
+predominant in the landscape over the shattered and blackened ruins of
+the Castle, of which only one wing was left habitable, as the youthful
+beech, in all its vigour of shoot and bud, would appear to the same
+aged oak stripped of its boughs, and rifted by lightning, one-half
+laid in shivers on the ground, and the other remaining a blackened and
+ungraceful trunk, rent and splintered, and without either life or
+leaves. Sir Geoffrey could not but feel, that the situation and
+prospects were exchanged as disadvantageously for himself as the
+appearance of their mansions; and that though the authority of the man
+in office under the Parliament, the sequestrator, and the
+committeeman, had been only exerted for the protection of the Cavalier
+and the malignant, they would have been as effectual if applied to
+procure his utter ruin; and that he was become a client, while his
+neighbour was elevated into a patron.
+
+There were two considerations, besides the necessity of the case and
+the constant advice of his lady, which enabled Peveril of the Peak to
+endure, with some patience, this state of degradation. The first was,
+that the politics of Major Bridgenorth began, on many points, to
+assimilate themselves to his own. As a Presbyterian, he was not an
+utter enemy to monarchy, and had been considerably shocked at the
+unexpected trial and execution of the King; as a civilian and a man of
+property, he feared the domination of the military; and though he
+wished not to see Charles restored by force of arms, yet he arrived at
+the conclusion, that to bring back the heir of the royal family on
+such terms of composition as might ensure the protection of those
+popular immunities and privileges for which the Long Parliament had at
+first contended, would be the surest and most desirable termination to
+the mutations in state affairs which had agitated Britain. Indeed, the
+Major's ideas on this point approached so nearly those of his
+neighbour, that he had well-nigh suffered Sir Geoffrey, who had a
+finger in almost all the conspiracies of the Royalists, to involve him
+in the unfortunate rising of Penruddock and Groves, in the west, in
+which many of the Presbyterian interest, as well as the Cavalier
+party, were engaged. And though his habitual prudence eventually kept
+him out of this and other dangers, Major Bridgenorth was considered
+during the last years of Cromwell's domination, and the interregnum
+which succeeded, as a disaffected person to the Commonwealth, and a
+favourer of Charles Stewart.
+
+But besides this approximation to the same political opinions, another
+bond of intimacy united the families of the Castle and the Hall. Major
+Bridgenorth, fortunate, and eminently so, in all his worldly
+transactions, was visited by severe and reiterated misfortunes in his
+family, and became, in this particular, an object of compassion to his
+poorer and more decayed neighbour. Betwixt the breaking out of the
+Civil War and the Restoration, he lost successively a family of no
+less than six children, apparently through a delicacy of constitution,
+which cut off the little prattlers at the early age when they most
+wind themselves round the heart of the parents.
+
+In the beginning of the year 1658, Major Bridgenorth was childless;
+ere it ended, he had a daughter, indeed, but her birth was purchased
+by the death of an affectionate wife, whose constitution had been
+exhausted by maternal grief, and by the anxious and harrowing
+reflection, that from her the children they had lost derived that
+delicacy of health, which proved unable to undergo the tear and wear
+of existence. The same voice which told Bridgenorth that he was the
+father of a living child (it was the friendly voice of Lady Peveril),
+communicated to him the melancholy intelligence that he was no longer
+a husband. The feelings of Major Bridgenorth were strong and deep,
+rather than hasty and vehement; and his grief assumed the form of a
+sullen stupor, from which neither the friendly remonstrances of Sir
+Geoffrey, who did not fail to be with his neighbour at this
+distressing conjuncture, even though he knew he must meet the
+Presbyterian pastor, nor the ghastly exhortations of this latter
+person, were able to rouse the unfortunate widower.
+
+At length Lady Peveril, with the ready invention of a female sharped
+by the sight of distress and the feelings of sympathy, tried on the
+sufferer one of those experiments by which grief is often awakened
+from despondency into tears. She placed in Bridgenorth's arms the
+infant whose birth had cost him so dear, and conjured him to remember
+that his Alice was not yet dead, since she survived in the helpless
+child she had left to his paternal care.
+
+"Take her away--take her away!" said the unhappy man, and they were
+the first words he had spoken; "let me not look on her--it is but
+another blossom that has bloomed to fade, and the tree that bore it
+will never flourish more!"
+
+He almost threw the child into Lady Peveril's arms, placed his hands
+before his face, and wept aloud. Lady Peveril did not say "be
+comforted," but she ventured to promise that the blossom should ripen
+to fruit.
+
+"Never, never!" said Bridgenorth; "take the unhappy child away, and
+let me only know when I shall wear black for her--Wear black!" he
+exclaimed, interrupting himself, "what other colour shall I wear
+during the remainder of my life?"
+
+"I will take the child for a season," said Lady Peveril, "since the
+sight of her is so painful to you; and the little Alice shall share
+the nursery of our Julian, until it shall be pleasure and not pain for
+you to look on her."
+
+"That hour will never come," said the unhappy father; "her doom is
+written--she will follow the rest--God's will be done.--Lady, I thank
+you--I trust her to your care; and I thank God that my eye shall not
+see her dying agonies."
+
+Without detaining the reader's attention longer on this painful theme,
+it is enough to say that the Lady Peveril did undertake the duties of
+a mother to the little orphan; and perhaps it was owing, in a great
+measure, to her judicious treatment of the infant, that its feeble
+hold of life was preserved, since the glimmering spark might probably
+have been altogether smothered, had it, like the Major's former
+children, undergone the over-care and over-nursing of a mother
+rendered nervously cautious and anxious by so many successive losses.
+The lady was the more ready to undertake this charge, that she herself
+had lost two infant children; and that she attributed the preservation
+of the third, now a fine healthy child of three years old, to Julian's
+being subjected to rather a different course of diet and treatment
+than was then generally practised. She resolved to follow the same
+regiment with the little orphan, which she had observed in the case of
+her own boy; and it was equally successful. By a more sparing use of
+medicine, by a bolder admission of fresh air, by a firm, yet cautious
+attention to encourage rather than to supersede the exertions of
+nature, the puny infant, under the care of an excellent nurse,
+gradually improved in strength and in liveliness.
+
+Sir Geoffrey, like most men of his frank and good-natured disposition,
+was naturally fond of children, and so much compassionated the sorrows
+of his neighbour, that he entirely forgot his being a Presbyterian,
+until it became necessary that the infant should be christened by a
+teacher of that persuasion.
+
+This was a trying case--the father seemed incapable of giving
+direction; and that the threshold of Martindale Castle should be
+violated by the heretical step of a dissenting clergyman, was matter
+of horror to its orthodox owner. He had seen the famous Hugh Peters,
+with a Bible in one hand and a pistol in the other, ride in triumph
+through the court-door when Martindale was surrendered; and the
+bitterness of that hour had entered like iron into his soul. Yet such
+was Lady Peveril's influence over the prejudices of her husband, that
+he was induced to connive at the ceremony taking place in a remote
+garden house, which was not properly within the precincts of the
+Castle-wall. The lady even dared to be present while the ceremony was
+performed by the Reverend Master Solsgrace, who had once preached a
+sermon of three hours' length before the House of Commons, upon a
+thanksgiving occasion after the relief of Exeter. Sir Geoffrey Peveril
+took care to be absent the whole day from the Castle, and it was only
+from the great interest which he took in the washing, perfuming, and
+as it were purification of the summer-house, that it could have been
+guessed he knew anything of what had taken place in it.
+
+But, whatever prejudices the good Knight might entertain against his
+neighbour's form of religion, they did not in any way influence his
+feelings towards him as a sufferer under severe affliction. The mode
+in which he showed his sympathy was rather singular, but exactly
+suited the character of both, and the terms on which they stood with
+each other.
+
+Morning after morning the good Baronet made Moultrassie Hall the
+termination of his walk or ride, and said a single word of kindness as
+he passed. Sometimes he entered the old parlour where the proprietor
+sat in solitary wretchedness and despondency; but more frequently (for
+Sir Geoffrey did not pretend to great talents of conversation), he
+paused on the terrace, and stopping or halting his horse by the
+latticed window, said aloud to the melancholy inmate, "How is it with
+you, Master Bridgenorth?" (the Knight would never acknowledge his
+neighbour's military rank of Major); "I just looked in to bid you keep
+a good heart, man, and to tell you that Julian is well, and little
+Alice is well, and all are well at Martindale Castle."
+
+A deep sigh, sometimes coupled with "I thank you, Sir Geoffrey; my
+grateful duty waits on Lady Peveril," was generally Bridgenorth's only
+answer. But the news was received on the one part with the kindness
+which was designed upon the other; it gradually became less painful
+and more interesting; the lattice window was never closed, nor was the
+leathern easy-chair which stood next to it ever empty, when the usual
+hour of the Baronet's momentary visit approached. At length the
+expectation of that passing minute became the pivot upon which the
+thoughts of poor Bridgenorth turned during all the rest of the day.
+Most men have known the influence of such brief but ruling moments at
+some period of their lives. The moment when a lover passes the window
+of his mistress--the moment when the epicure hears the dinner-bell,--
+is that into which is crowded the whole interest of the day; the hours
+which precede it are spent in anticipation; the hours which follow, in
+reflection on what has passed; and fancy dwelling on each brief
+circumstance, gives to seconds the duration of minutes, to minutes
+that of hours. Thus seated in his lonely chair, Bridgenorth could
+catch at a distance the stately step of Sir Geoffrey, or the heavy
+tramp of his war-horse, Black Hastings, which had borne him in many an
+action; he could hear the hum of "The King shall enjoy his own again,"
+or the habitual whistle of "Cuckolds and Roundheads," die unto
+reverential silence, as the Knight approached the mansion of
+affliction; and then came the strong hale voice of the huntsman
+soldier with its usual greeting.
+
+By degrees the communication became something more protracted, as
+Major Bridgenorth's grief, like all human feelings, lost its
+overwhelming violence, and permitted him to attend, in some degree, to
+what passed around him, to discharge various duties which pressed upon
+him, and to give a share of attention to the situation of the country,
+distracted as it was by the contending factions, whose strife only
+terminated in the Restoration. Still, however, though slowly
+recovering from the effects of the shock which he had sustained, Major
+Bridgenorth felt himself as yet unable to make up his mind to the
+effort necessary to see his infant; and though separated by so short a
+distance from the being in whose existence he was more interested than
+in anything the world afforded, he only made himself acquainted with
+the windows of the apartment where little Alice was lodged, and was
+often observed to watch them from the terrace, as they brightened in
+the evening under the influence of the setting sun. In truth, though a
+strong-minded man in most respects, he was unable to lay aside the
+gloomy impression that this remaining pledge of affection was soon to
+be conveyed to that grave which had already devoured all besides that
+was dear to him; and he awaited in miserable suspense the moment when
+he should hear that symptoms of the fatal malady had begun to show
+themselves.
+
+The voice of Peveril continued to be that of a comforter until the
+month of April 1660, when it suddenly assumed a new and different
+tone. "The King shall enjoy his own again," far from ceasing, as the
+hasty tread of Black Hastings came up the avenue, bore burden to the
+clatter of his hoofs on the paved courtyard, as Sir Geoffrey sprang
+from his great war-saddle, now once more garnished with pistols of two
+feet in length, and, armed with steel-cap, back and breast, and a
+truncheon in his hand, he rushed into the apartment of the astonished
+Major, with his eyes sparkling, and his cheek inflamed, while he
+called out, "Up! up, neighbour! No time now to mope in the chimney-
+corner! Where is your buff-coat and broadsword, man? Take the true
+side once in your life, and mend past mistakes. The King is all
+lenity, man--all royal nature and mercy. I will get your full pardon."
+
+"What means all this?" said Bridgenorth--"Is all well with you--all
+well at Martindale Castle, Sir Geoffrey?"
+
+"Well as you could wish them, Alice, and Julian, and all. But I have
+news worth twenty of that--Monk has declared at London against those
+stinking scoundrels the Rump. Fairfax is up in Yorkshire--for the King
+--for the King, man! Churchmen, Presbyterians, and all, are in buff
+and bandoleer for King Charles. I have a letter from Fairfax to secure
+Derby and Chesterfield with all the men I can make. D--n him, fine
+that I should take orders from him! But never mind that--all are
+friends now, and you and I, good neighbour, will charge abreast, as
+good neighbours should. See there! read--read--read--and then boot and
+saddle in an instant.
+
+ 'Hey for cavaliers--ho for cavaliers,
+ Pray for cavaliers,
+ Dub-a-dub, dub-a-dub,
+ Have at old Beelzebub,
+ Oliver shakes in his bier!'"
+
+After thundering forth this elegant effusion of loyal enthusiasm, the
+sturdy Cavalier's heart became too full. He threw himself on a seat,
+and exclaiming, "Did ever I think to live to see this happy day!" he
+wept, to his own surprise, as much as to that of Bridgenorth.
+
+Upon considering the crisis in which the country was placed, it
+appeared to Major Bridgenorth, as it had done to Fairfax, and other
+leaders of the Presbyterian party, that their frank embracing of the
+royal interest was the wisest and most patriotic measure which they
+could adopt in the circumstances, when all ranks and classes of men
+were seeking refuge from the uncertainty and varied oppression
+attending the repeated contests between the factions of Westminster
+Hall and of Wallingford House. Accordingly he joined with Sir
+Geoffrey, with less enthusiasm indeed, but with equal sincerity,
+taking such measures as seemed proper to secure their part of the
+country on the King's behalf, which was done as effectually and
+peaceably as in other parts of England. The neighbours were both at
+Chesterfield, when news arrived that the King had landed in England;
+and Sir Geoffrey instantly announced his purpose of waiting upon his
+Majesty, even before his return to the Castle of Martindale.
+
+"Who knows, neighbour," he said, "whether Sir Geoffrey Peveril will
+ever return to Martindale? Titles must be going amongst them yonder,
+and I have deserved something among the rest.--Lord Peveril would
+sound well--or stay, Earl of Martindale--no, not of Martindale--Earl
+of the Peak.--Meanwhile, trust your affairs to me--I will see you
+secured--I would you had been no Presbyterian, neighbour--a
+knighthood,--I mean a knight-bachelor, not a knight-baronet,--would
+have served your turn well."
+
+"I leave these things to my betters, Sir Geoffrey," said the Major,
+"and desire nothing so earnestly as to find all well at Martindale
+when I return."
+
+"You will--you will find them all well," said the Baronet; "Julian,
+Alice, Lady Peveril, and all of them--Bear my commendations to them,
+and kiss them all, neighbour, Lady Peveril and all--you may kiss a
+Countess when I come back; all will go well with you now you are
+turned honest man."
+
+"I always meant to be so, Sir Geoffrey," said Bridgenorth calmly.
+
+"Well, well, well--no offence meant," said the Knight, "all is well
+now--so you to Moultrassie Hall, and I to Whitehall. Said I well, aha!
+So ho, mine host, a stoup of Canary to the King's health ere we get to
+horse--I forgot, neighbour--you drink no healths."
+
+"I wish the King's health as sincerely as if I drank a gallon to it,"
+replied the Major; "and I wish you, Sir Geoffrey, all success on your
+journey, and a safe return."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+ Why, then, we will have bellowing of beeves,
+ Broaching of barrels, brandishing of spigots;
+ Blood shall flow freely, but it shall be gore
+ Of herds and flocks, and venison and poultry,
+ Join'd to the brave heart's-blood of John-a-Barleycorn!
+ --OLD PLAY.
+
+Whatever rewards Charles might have condescended to bestow in
+acknowledgement of the sufferings and loyalty of Peveril of the Peak,
+he had none in his disposal equal to the pleasure which Providence had
+reserved for Bridgenorth on his return to Derbyshire. The exertion to
+which he had been summoned, had had the usual effect of restoring to a
+certain extent the activity and energy of his character, and he felt
+it would be unbecoming to relapse into the state of lethargic
+melancholy from which it had roused him. Time also had its usual
+effect in mitigating the subjects of his regret; and when he had
+passed one day at the Hall in regretting that he could not expect the
+indirect news of his daughter's health, which Sir Geoffrey used to
+communicate in his almost daily call, he reflected that it would be in
+every respect becoming that he should pay a personal visit at
+Martindale Castle, carry thither the remembrances of the Knight to his
+lady, assure her of his health, and satisfy himself respecting that of
+his daughter. He armed himself for the worst--he called to
+recollection the thin cheeks, faded eye, wasted hand, pallid lip,
+which had marked the decaying health of all his former infants.
+
+"I shall see," he said, "these signs of mortality once more--I shall
+once more see a beloved being to whom I have given birth, gliding to
+the grave which ought to enclose me long before her. No matter--it is
+unmanly so long to shrink from that which must be--God's will be
+done!"
+
+He went accordingly, on the subsequent morning, to Martindale Castle,
+and gave the lady the welcome assurances of her husband's safety, and
+of his hopes of preferment.
+
+"For the first, may Almighty God be praised!" said the Lady Peveril;
+"and be the other as our gracious and restored Sovereign may will it.
+We are great enough for our means, and have means sufficient for
+contentment, though not for splendour. And now I see, good Master
+Bridgenorth, the folly of putting faith in idle presentiments of evil.
+So often had Sir Geoffrey's repeated attempts in favour of the
+Stewarts led him into new misfortunes, that when, the other morning, I
+saw him once more dressed in his fatal armour, and heard the sound of
+his trumpet, which had been so long silent, it seemed to me as if I
+saw his shroud, and heard his death-knell. I say this to you, good
+neighbour, the rather because I fear your own mind has been harassed
+with anticipations of impending calamity, which it may please God to
+avert in your case as it has done in mine; and here comes a sight
+which bears good assurance of it."
+
+The door of the apartment opened as she spoke, and two lovely children
+entered. The eldest, Julian Peveril, a fine boy betwixt four and five
+years old, led in his hand, with an air of dignified support and
+attention, a little girl of eighteen months, who rolled and tottered
+along, keeping herself with difficulty upright by the assistance of
+her elder, stronger, and masculine companion.
+
+Bridgenorth cast a hasty and fearful glance upon the countenance of
+his daughter, and, even in that glimpse, perceived, with exquisite
+delight, that his fears were unfounded. He caught her in his arms,
+pressed her to his heart, and the child, though at first alarmed at
+the vehemence of his caresses, presently, as if prompted by Nature,
+smiled in reply to them. Again he held her at some distance from him,
+and examined her more attentively; he satisfied himself that the
+complexion of the young cherub he had in his arms was not the hectic
+tinge of disease, but the clear hue of ruddy health; and that though
+her little frame was slight, it was firm and springy.
+
+"I did not think that it could have been thus," he said, looking to
+Lady Peveril, who had sat observing the scene with great pleasure;
+"but praise be to God in the first instance, and next, thanks to you,
+madam, who have been His instrument."
+
+"Julian must lose his playfellow now, I suppose?" said the lady; "but
+the Hall is not distant, and I will see my little charge often. Dame
+Martha, the housekeeper at Moultrassie, has sense, and is careful. I
+will tell her the rules I have observed with little Alice, and----"
+
+"God forbid my girl should ever come to Moultrassie," said Major
+Bridgenorth hastily; "it has been the grave of her race. The air of
+the low grounds suited them not--or there is perhaps a fate connected
+with the mansion. I will seek for her some other place of abode."
+
+"That you shall not, under your favour be it spoken, Major
+Bridgenorth," answered the lady. "If you do so, we must suppose that
+you are undervaluing my qualities as a nurse. If she goes not to her
+father's house, she shall not quit mine. I will keep the little lady
+as a pledge of her safety and my own skill; and since you are afraid
+of the damp of the low grounds, I hope you will come here frequently
+to visit her."
+
+This was a proposal which went to the heart of Major Bridgenorth. It
+was precisely the point which he would have given worlds to arrive at,
+but which he saw no chance of attaining.
+
+It is too well known, that those whose families are long pursued by
+such a fatal disease as existed in his, become, it may be said,
+superstitious respecting its fatal effects, and ascribe to place,
+circumstance, and individual care, much more perhaps than these can in
+any case contribute to avert the fatality of constitutional distemper.
+Lady Peveril was aware that this was peculiarly the impression of her
+neighbour; that the depression of his spirits, the excess of his care,
+the feverishness of his apprehensions, the restraint and gloom of the
+solitude in which he dwelt, were really calculated to produce the evil
+which most of all he dreaded. She pitied him, she felt for him, she
+was grateful for former protection received at his hands--she had
+become interested in the child itself. What female fails to feel such
+interest in the helpless creature she has tended? And to sum the whole
+up, the dame had a share of human vanity; and being a sort of Lady
+Bountiful in her way (for the character was not then confined to the
+old and the foolish), she was proud of the skill by which she had
+averted the probable attacks of hereditary malady, so inveterate in
+the family of Bridgenorth. It needed not, perhaps, in other cases,
+that so many reasons should be assigned for an act of neighbourly
+humanity; but civil war had so lately torn the country asunder, and
+broken all the usual ties of vicinage and good neighbourhood, that it
+was unusual to see them preserved among persons of different political
+opinions.
+
+Major Bridgenorth himself felt this; and while the tear of joy in his
+eye showed how gladly he would accept Lady Peveril's proposal, he
+could not help stating the obvious inconveniences attendant upon her
+scheme, though it was in the tone of one who would gladly hear them
+overruled. "Madam," he said, "your kindness makes me the happiest and
+most thankful of men; but can it be consistent with your own
+convenience? Sir Geoffrey has his opinions on many points, which have
+differed, and probably do still differ, from mine. He is high-born,
+and I of middling parentage only. He uses the Church Service, and I
+the Catechism of the Assembly of Divines at Westminster----"
+
+"I hope you will find prescribed in neither of them," said the Lady
+Peveril, "that I may not be a mother to your motherless child. I
+trust, Master Bridgenorth, the joyful Restoration of his Majesty, a
+work wrought by the direct hand of Providence, may be the means of
+closing and healing all civil and religious dissensions among us, and
+that, instead of showing the superior purity of our faith, by
+persecuting those who think otherwise from ourselves on doctrinal
+points, we shall endeavour to show its real Christian tendency, by
+emulating each other in actions of good-will towards man, as the best
+way of showing our love to God."
+
+"Your ladyship speaks what your own kind heart dictates," answered
+Bridgenorth, who had his own share of the narrow-mindedness of the
+time; "and sure am I, that if all who call themselves loyalists and
+Cavaliers, thought like you--and like my friend Sir Geoffrey"--(this
+he added after a moment's pause, being perhaps rather complimentary
+than sincere)--"we, who thought it our duty in time past to take arms
+for freedom of conscience, and against arbitrary power, might now sit
+down in peace and contentment. But I wot not how it may fall. You have
+sharp and hot spirits amongst you; I will not say our power was always
+moderately used, and revenge is sweet to the race of fallen Adam."
+
+"Come, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril gaily, "those evil
+omenings do but point out conclusions, which, unless they were so
+anticipated, are most unlikely to come to pass. You know what
+Shakespeare says--
+
+ 'To fly the boar before the boar pursues,
+ Were to incense the boar to follow us,
+ And make pursuit when he did mean no chase.'
+
+"But I crave your pardon--it is so long since we have met, that I
+forgot you love no play-books."
+
+"With reverence to your ladyship," said Bridgenorth, "I were much to
+blame did I need the idle words of a Warwickshire stroller, to teach
+me my grateful duty to your ladyship on this occasion, which appoints
+me to be directed by you in all things which my conscience will
+permit."
+
+"Since you permit me such influence, then," replied the Lady Peveril,
+"I shall be moderate in exercising it, in order that I may, in my
+domination at least, give you a favourable impression of the new order
+of things. So, if you will be a subject of mine for one day,
+neighbour, I am going, at my lord and husband's command, to issue out
+my warrants to invite the whole neighbourhood to a solemn feast at the
+Castle, on Thursday next; and I not only pray you to be personally
+present yourself, but to prevail on your worthy pastor, and such
+neighbours and friends, high and low, as may think in your own way, to
+meet with the rest of the neighbourhood, to rejoice on this joyful
+occasion of the King's Restoration, and thereby to show that we are to
+be henceforward a united people."
+
+The parliamentarian Major was considerably embarrassed by this
+proposal. He looked upward, and downward, and around, cast his eye
+first to the oak-carved ceiling, and anon fixed it upon the floor;
+then threw it around the room till it lighted on his child, the sight
+of whom suggested another and a better train of reflections than
+ceiling and floor had been able to supply.
+
+"Madam," he said, "I have long been a stranger to festivity, perhaps
+from constitutional melancholy, perhaps from the depression which is
+natural to a desolate and deprived man, in whose ear mirth is marred,
+like a pleasant air when performed on a mistuned instrument. But
+though neither my thoughts nor temperament are Jovial or Mercurial, it
+becomes me to be grateful to Heaven for the good He has sent me by the
+means of your ladyship. David, the man after God's own heart, did wash
+and eat bread when his beloved child was removed--mine is restored to
+me, and shall I not show gratitude under a blessing, when he showed
+resignation under an affliction? Madam, I will wait on your gracious
+invitation with acceptance; and such of my friends with whom I may
+possess influence, and whose presence your ladyship may desire, shall
+accompany me to the festivity, that our Israel may be as one people."
+
+Having spoken these words with an aspect which belonged more to a
+martyr than to a guest bidden to a festival, and having kissed, and
+solemnly blessed his little girl, Major Bridgenorth took his departure
+for Moultrassie Hall.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+ Here's neither want of appetite nor mouths;
+ Pray Heaven we be not scant of meat or mirth!
+ --OLD PLAY.
+
+Even upon ordinary occasions, and where means were ample, a great
+entertainment in those days was not such a sinecure as in modern
+times, when the lady who presides has but to intimate to her menials
+the day and hour when she wills it to take place. At that simple
+period, the lady was expected to enter deeply into the arrangement and
+provision of the whole affair; and from a little gallery, which
+communicated with her own private apartment, and looked down upon the
+kitchen, her shrill voice was to be heard, from time to time, like
+that of the warning spirit in a tempest, rising above the clash of
+pots and stewpans--the creaking spits--the clattering of marrowbones
+and cleavers--the scolding of cooks--and all the other various kinds
+of din which form an accompaniment to dressing a large dinner.
+
+But all this toil and anxiety was more than doubled in the case of the
+approaching feast at Martindale Castle, where the presiding Genius of
+the festivity was scarce provided with adequate means to carry her
+hospitable purpose into effect. The tyrannical conduct of husbands, in
+such cases, is universal; and I scarce know one householder of my
+acquaintance who has not, on some ill-omened and most inconvenient
+season, announced suddenly to his innocent helpmate, that he had
+invited
+
+ "Some odious Major Rock,
+ To drop in at six o'clock,"
+
+to the great discomposure of the lady, and the discredit, perhaps, of
+her domestic arrangements.
+
+Peveril of the Peak was still more thoughtless; for he had directed
+his lady to invite the whole honest men of the neighbourhood to make
+good cheer at Martindale Castle, in honour of the blessed Restoration
+of his most sacred Majesty, without precisely explaining where the
+provisions were to come from. The deer-park had lain waste ever since
+the siege; the dovecot could do little to furnish forth such an
+entertainment; the fishponds, it is true, were well provided (which
+the neighbouring Presbyterians noted as a suspicious circumstance);
+and game was to be had for the shooting, upon the extensive heaths and
+hills of Derbyshire. But these were but the secondary parts of a
+banquet; and the house-steward and bailiff, Lady Peveril's only
+coadjutors and counsellors, could not agree how the butcher-meat--the
+most substantial part, or, as it were, the main body of the
+entertainment--was to be supplied. The house-steward threatened the
+sacrifice of a fine yoke of young bullocks, which the bailiff, who
+pleaded the necessity of their agricultural services, tenaciously
+resisted; and Lady Peveril's good and dutiful nature did not prevent
+her from making some impatient reflections on the want of
+consideration of her absent Knight, who had thus thoughtlessly placed
+her in so embarrassing a situation.
+
+These reflections were scarcely just, if a man is only responsible for
+such resolutions as he adopts when he is fully master of himself. Sir
+Geoffrey's loyalty, like that of many persons in his situation, had,
+by dint of hopes and fears, victories and defeats, struggles and
+sufferings, all arising out of the same moving cause, and turning, as
+it were, on the same pivot, acquired the character of an intense and
+enthusiastic passion; and the singular and surprising change of
+fortune, by which his highest wishes were not only gratified, but far
+exceeded, occasioned for some time a kind of intoxication of loyal
+rapture which seemed to pervade the whole kingdom. Sir Geoffrey had
+seen Charles and his brothers, and had been received by the merry
+monarch with that graceful, and at the same time frank urbanity, by
+which he conciliated all who approached him; the Knight's services and
+merits had been fully acknowledged, and recompense had been hinted at,
+if not expressly promised. Was it for Peveril of the Peak, in the
+jubilee of his spirits, to consider how his wife was to find beef and
+mutton to feast his neighbours?
+
+Luckily, however, for the embarrassed lady, there existed some one who
+had composure of mind sufficient to foresee this difficulty. Just as
+she had made up her mind, very reluctantly, to become debtor to Major
+Bridgenorth for the sum necessary to carry her husband's commands into
+effect, and whilst she was bitterly regretting this departure from the
+strictness of her usual economy, the steward, who, by-the-bye, had not
+been absolutely sober since the news of the King's landing at Dover,
+burst into the apartment, snapping his fingers, and showing more marks
+of delight than was quite consistent with the dignity of my lady's
+large parlour.
+
+"What means this, Whitaker?" said the lady, somewhat peevishly; for
+she was interrupted in the commencement of a letter to her neighbour
+on the unpleasant business of the proposed loan,--"Is it to be always
+thus with you?--Are you dreaming?"
+
+"A vision of good omen, I trust," said the steward, with a triumphant
+flourish of the hand; "far better than Pharaoh's, though, like his, it
+be of fat kine."
+
+"I prithee be plain, man," said the lady, "or fetch some one who can
+speak to purpose."
+
+"Why, odds-my-life, madam," said the steward, "mine errand can speak
+for itself. Do you not hear them low? Do you not hear them bleat? A
+yoke of fat oxen, and half a score prime wethers. The Castle is
+victualled for this bout, let them storm when they will; and Gatherill
+may have his d--d mains ploughed to the boot."
+
+The lady, without farther questioning her elated domestic, rose and
+went to the window, where she certainly beheld the oxen and sheep
+which had given rise to Whitaker's exultation. "Whence come they?"
+said she, in some surprise.
+
+"Let them construe that who can," answered Whitaker; "the fellow who
+drove them was a west-country man, and only said they came from a
+friend to help to furnish out your ladyship's entertainment; the man
+would not stay to drink--I am sorry he would not stay to drink--I
+crave your ladyship's pardon for not keeping him by the ears to drink
+--it was not my fault."
+
+"That I'll be sworn it was not," said the lady.
+
+"Nay, madam, by G--, I assure you it was not," said the zealous
+steward; "for, rather than the Castle should lose credit, I drank his
+health myself in double ale, though I had had my morning draught
+already. I tell you the naked truth, my lady, by G--!"
+
+"It was no great compulsion, I suppose," said the lady; "but,
+Whitaker, suppose you should show your joy on such occasions, by
+drinking and swearing a little less, rather than a little more, would
+it not be as well, think you?"
+
+"I crave your ladyship's pardon," said Whitaker, with much reverence;
+"I hope I know my place. I am your ladyship's poor servant; and I know
+it does not become me to drink and swear like your ladyship--that is,
+like his honour, Sir Geoffrey, I would say. But I pray you, if I am
+not to drink and swear after my degree, how are men to know Peveril of
+the Peak's steward,--and I may say butler too, since I have had the
+keys of the cellar ever since old Spigots was shot dead on the
+northwest turret, with a black jack in his hand,--I say, how is an old
+Cavalier like me to be known from those cuckoldly Roundheads that do
+nothing but fast and pray, if we are not to drink and swear according
+to our degree?"
+
+The lady was silent, for she well knew speech availed nothing; and,
+after a moment's pause, proceeded to intimate to the steward that she
+would have the persons, whose names were marked in a written paper,
+which she delivered to him, invited to the approaching banquet.
+
+Whitaker, instead of receiving the list with the mute acquiescence of
+a modern Major Domo, carried it into the recess of one of the windows,
+and, adjusting his spectacles, began to read it to himself. The first
+names, being those of distinguished Cavalier families in the
+neighbourhood, he muttered over in a tone of approbation--paused and
+pshawed at that of Bridgenorth--yet acquiesced, with the observation,
+"But he is a good neighbour, so it may pass for once." But when he
+read the name and surname of Nehemiah Solsgrace, the Presbyterian
+parson, Whitaker's patience altogether forsook him; and he declared he
+would as soon throw himself into Eldon-hole,[*] as consent that the
+intrusive old puritan howlet, who had usurped the pulpit of a sound
+orthodox divine, should ever darken the gates of Martindale Castle by
+any message or mediation of his.
+
+[*] A chasm in the earth supposed to be unfathomable, one of the
+ wonders of the Peak.
+
+"The false crop-eared hypocrites," cried he, with a hearty oath, "have
+had their turn of the good weather. The sun is on our side of the
+hedge now, and we will pay off old scores, as sure as my name is
+Richard Whitaker."
+
+"You presume on your long services, Whitaker, and on your master's
+absence, or you had not dared to use me thus," said the lady.
+
+The unwonted agitation of her voice attracted the attention of the
+refractory steward, notwithstanding his present state of elevation;
+but he no sooner saw that her eye glistened, and her cheek reddened,
+than his obstinacy was at once subdued.
+
+"A murrain on me," he said, "but I have made my lady angry in good
+earnest! and that is an unwonted sight for to see.--I crave your
+pardon, my lady! It was not poor Dick Whitaker disputed your
+honourable commands, but only that second draught of double ale. We
+have put a double stroke of malt to it, as your ladyship well knows,
+ever since the happy Restoration. To be sure I hate a fanatic as I do
+the cloven foot of Satan; but then your honourable ladyship hath a
+right to invite Satan himself, cloven foot and all, to Martindale
+Castle; and to send me to hell's gate with a billet of invitation--and
+so your will shall be done."
+
+The invitations were sent round accordingly, in all due form; and one
+of the bullocks was sent down to be roasted whole at the market-place
+of a little village called Martindale-Moultrassie, which stood
+considerably to the eastward both of the Castle and Hall, from which
+it took its double name, at about an equal distance from both; so
+that, suppose a line drawn from the one manor-house to the other, to
+be the base of a triangle, the village would have occupied the salient
+angle. As the said village, since the late transference of a part of
+Peveril's property, belonged to Sir Geoffrey and to Bridgenorth in
+nearly equal portions, the lady judged it not proper to dispute the
+right of the latter to add some hogsheads of beer to the popular
+festivity.
+
+In the meanwhile, she could not but suspect the Major of being the
+unknown friend who had relieved her from the dilemma arising from the
+want of provisions; and she esteemed herself happy when a visit from
+him, on the day preceding the proposed entertainment, gave her, as she
+thought, an opportunity of expressing her gratitude.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+ No, sir--I will not pledge--I'm one of those
+ Who think good wine needs neither bush nor preface
+ To make it welcome. If you doubt my word,
+ Fill the quart-cup, and see if I will choke on't.
+ --OLD PLAY.
+
+There was a serious gravity of expression in the disclamation with
+which Major Bridgenorth replied to the thanks tendered to him by Lady
+Peveril, for the supply of provisions which had reached her Castle so
+opportunely. He seemed first not to be aware what she alluded to; and,
+when she explained the circumstance, he protested so seriously that he
+had no share in the benefit conferred, that Lady Peveril was compelled
+to believe him, the rather that, being a man of plain downright
+character, affecting no refined delicacy of sentiment, and practising
+almost a quaker-like sincerity of expression, it would have been much
+contrary to his general character to have made such a disavowal,
+unless it were founded in truth.
+
+"My present visit to you, madam," said he, "had indeed some reference
+to the festivity of to-morrow." Lady Peveril listened, but as her
+visitor seemed to find some difficulty in expressing himself, she was
+compelled to ask an explanation. "Madam," said the Major, "you are not
+perhaps entirely ignorant that the more tender-conscienced among us
+have scruples at certain practices, so general amongst your people at
+times of rejoicing, that you may be said to insist upon them as
+articles of faith, or at least greatly to resent their omission."
+
+"I trust, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, not fully
+comprehending the drift of his discourse, "that we shall, as your
+entertainers, carefully avoid all allusions or reproaches founded on
+past misunderstanding."
+
+"We would expect no less, madam, from your candour and courtesy," said
+Bridgenorth; "but I perceive you do not fully understand me. To be
+plain, then, I allude to the fashion of drinking healths, and pledging
+each other in draughts of strong liquor, which most among us consider
+as a superfluous and sinful provoking of each other to debauchery, and
+the excessive use of strong drink; and which, besides, if derived, as
+learned divines have supposed, from the custom of the blinded Pagans,
+who made libations and invoked idols when they drank, may be justly
+said to have something in it heathenish, and allied to demon-worship."
+
+The lady had already hastily considered all the topics which were
+likely to introduce discord into the proposed festivity; but this very
+ridiculous, yet fatal discrepancy, betwixt the manners of the parties
+on convivial occasions, had entirely escaped her. She endeavoured to
+soothe the objecting party, whose brows were knit like one who had
+fixed an opinion by which he was determined to abide.
+
+"I grant," she said, "my good neighbour, that this custom is at least
+idle, and may be prejudicial if it leads to excess in the use of
+liquor, which is apt enough to take place without such conversation.
+But I think, when it hath not this consequence, it is a thing
+indifferent, affords a unanimous mode of expressing our good wishes to
+our friends, and our loyal duty to our sovereign; and, without meaning
+to put any force upon the inclination of those who believe otherwise,
+I cannot see how I can deny my guests and friends the privilege of
+drinking a health to the King, or to my husband, after the old English
+fashion."
+
+"My lady," said the Major, "if the age of fashion were to command it,
+Popery is one of the oldest English fashions that I have heard of; but
+it is our happiness that we are not benighted like our fathers, and
+therefore we must act according to the light that is in us, and not
+after their darkness. I had myself the honour to attend the Lord-
+Keeper Whitelocke, when, at the table of the Chamberlain of the
+kingdom of Sweden, he did positively refuse to pledge the health of
+his Queen, Christina, thereby giving great offence, and putting in
+peril the whole purpose of that voyage; which it is not to be thought
+so wise a man would have done, but that he held such compliance a
+thing not merely indifferent, but rather sinful and damnable."
+
+"With all respect to Whitelocke," said the Lady Peveril, "I continue
+of my own opinion, though, Heaven knows, I am no friend to riot or
+wassail. I would fain accommodate myself to your scruples, and will
+discourage all other pledges; but surely those of the King and of
+Peveril of the Peak may be permitted?"
+
+"I dare not," answered Bridgenorth, "lay even the ninety-ninth part of
+a grain of incense upon an altar erected to Satan."
+
+"How, sir!" said the lady; "do you bring Satan into comparison with
+our master King Charles, and with my noble lord and husband?"
+
+"Pardon me, madam," answered Bridgenorth, "I have no such thoughts--
+indeed they would ill become me. I do wish the King's health and Sir
+Geoffrey's devoutly, and I will pray for both. But I see not what good
+it should do their health if I should prejudice my own by quaffing
+pledges out of quart flagons."
+
+"Since we cannot agree upon this matter," said Lady Peveril, "we must
+find some resource by which to offend those of neither party. Suppose
+you winked at our friends drinking these pledges, and we should
+connive at your sitting still?"
+
+But neither would this composition satisfy Bridgenorth, who was of
+opinion, as he expressed himself, that it would be holding a candle to
+Beelzebub. In fact, his temper, naturally stubborn, was at present
+rendered much more so by a previous conference with his preacher, who,
+though a very good man in the main, was particularly and illiberally
+tenacious of the petty distinctions which his sect adopted; and while
+he thought with considerable apprehension on the accession of power
+which Popery, Prelacy, and Peveril of the Peak, were like to acquire
+by the late Revolution, became naturally anxious to put his flock on
+their guard, and prevent their being kidnapped by the wolf. He
+disliked extremely that Major Bridgenorth, indisputably the head of
+the Presbyterian interest in that neighbourhood, should have given his
+only daughter to be, as he termed it, nursed by a Canaanitish woman;
+and he told him plainly that he liked not this going to feast in the
+high places with the uncircumcised in heart, and looked on the whole
+conviviality only as a making-merry in the house of Tirzah.
+
+Upon receiving this rebuke from his pastor, Bridgenorth began to
+suspect he might have been partly wrong in the readiness which, in his
+first ardour of gratitude, he had shown to enter into intimate
+intercourse with the Castle of Martindale; but he was too proud to
+avow this to the preacher, and it was not till after a considerable
+debate betwixt them, that it was mutually agreed their presence at the
+entertainment should depend upon the condition, that no healths or
+pledges should be given in their presence. Bridgenorth, therefore, as
+the delegate and representative of his party, was bound to stand firm
+against all entreaty, and the lady became greatly embarrassed. She now
+regretted sincerely that her well-intended invitation had ever been
+given, for she foresaw that its rejection was to awaken all former
+subjects of quarrel, and perhaps to lead to new violences amongst
+people who had not many years since been engaged in civil war. To
+yield up the disputed point to the Presbyterians, would have been to
+offend the Cavalier party, and Sir Geoffrey in particular, in the most
+mortal degree; for they made it as firm a point of honour to give
+healths, and compel others to pledge them, as the Puritans made it a
+deep article of religion to refuse both. At length the lady changed
+the discourse, introduced that of Major Bridgenorth's child, caused it
+to be sent for, and put into his arms. The mother's stratagem took
+effect; for, though the parliamentary major stood firm, the father, as
+in the case of the Governor of Tilbury, was softened, and he agreed
+that his friends should accept a compromise. This was, that the major
+himself, the reverend divine, and such of their friends as held strict
+Puritan tenets, should form a separate party in the Large Parlour,
+while the Hall should be occupied by the jovial Cavaliers; and that
+each party should regulate their potations after their own conscience,
+or after their own fashion.
+
+Major Bridgenorth himself seemed greatly relieved after this important
+matter had been settled. He had held it matter of conscience to be
+stubborn in maintaining his own opinion, but was heartily glad when he
+escaped from the apparently inevitable necessity of affronting Lady
+Peveril by the refusal of her invitation. He remained longer than
+usual, and spoke and smiled more than was his custom. His first care
+on his return was to announce to the clergyman and his congregation
+the compromise which he had made, and this not as a matter for
+deliberation, but one upon which he had already resolved; and such was
+his authority among them, that though the preacher longed to pronounce
+a separation of the parties, and to exclaim--"To your tents, O
+Israel!" he did not see the chance of being seconded by so many, as
+would make it worth while to disturb the unanimous acquiescence in
+their delegate's proposal.
+
+Nevertheless, each party being put upon the alert by the consequences
+of Major Bridgenorth's embassy, so many points of doubt and delicate
+discussion were started in succession, that the Lady Peveril, the only
+person, perhaps, who was desirous of achieving an effectual
+reconciliation between them, incurred, in reward for her good
+intentions, the censure of both factions, and had much reason to
+regret her well-meant project of bringing the Capulets and Montagues
+of Derbyshire together on the same occasion of public festivity.
+
+As it was now settled that the guests were to form two different
+parties, it became not only a subject of dispute betwixt themselves,
+which should be first admitted within the Castle of Martindale, but
+matter of serious apprehension to Lady Peveril and Major Bridgenorth,
+lest, if they were to approach by the same avenue and entrance, a
+quarrel might take place betwixt them, and proceed to extremities,
+even before they reached the place of entertainment. The lady believed
+she had discovered an admirable expedient for preventing the
+possibility of such interference, by directing that the Cavaliers
+should be admitted by the principal entrance, while the Roundheads
+should enter the Castle through a great breach which had been made in
+the course of the siege, and across which there had been made a sort
+of by-path to drive the cattle down to their pasture in the wood. By
+this contrivance the Lady Peveril imagined she had altogether avoided
+the various risks which might occur from two such parties encountering
+each other, and disputing for precedence. Several other circumstances
+of less importance were adjusted at the same time, and apparently so
+much to the satisfaction of the Presbyterian teacher, that, in a long
+lecture on the subject of the Marriage Garment, he was at the pains to
+explain to his hearers, that outward apparel was not alone meant by
+that scriptural expression, but also a suitable frame of mind for
+enjoyment of peaceful festivity; and therefore he exhorted the
+brethren, that whatever might be the errors of the poor blinded
+malignants, with whom they were in some sort to eat and drink upon the
+morrow they ought not on this occasion to show any evil will against
+them, lest they should therein become troublers of the peace of
+Israel.
+
+Honest Doctor Dummerar, the elected Episcopal Vicar of Martindale
+/cum/ Moultrassie, preached to the Cavaliers on the same subject. He
+had served the cure before the breaking out of the rebellion, and was
+in high favour with Sir Geoffrey, not merely on account of his sound
+orthodoxy and deep learning, but his exquisite skill in playing at
+bowls, and his facetious conversation over a pipe and tankard of
+October. For these latter accomplishments, the Doctor had the honour
+to be recorded by old Century White amongst the roll of lewd,
+incompetent, profligate clergymen of the Church of England, whom he
+denounced to God and man, on account chiefly of the heinous sin of
+playing at games of skill and chance, and of occasionally joining in
+the social meetings of their parishioners. When the King's party began
+to lose ground, Doctor Dummerar left his vicarage, and, betaking
+himself to the camp, showed upon several occasions, when acting as
+chaplain to Sir Geoffrey Peveril's regiment, that his portly bodily
+presence included a stout and masculine heart. When all was lost, and
+he himself, with most other loyal divines, was deprived of his living,
+he made such shift as he could; now lurking in the garrets of old
+friends in the University, who shared with him, and such as him, the
+slender means of livelihood which the evil times had left them; and
+now lying hid in the houses of the oppressed and sequestered gentry,
+who respected at once his character and sufferings. When the
+Restoration took place, Doctor Dummerar emerged from some one of his
+hiding-places, and hied him to Martindale Castle, to enjoy the triumph
+inseparable from this happy change.
+
+His appearance at the Castle in his full clerical dress, and the warm
+reception which he received from the neighbouring gentry, added not a
+little to the alarm which was gradually extending itself through the
+party which were so lately the uppermost. It is true, Doctor Dummerar
+framed (honest worthy man) no extravagant views of elevation or
+preferment; but the probability of his being replaced in the living,
+from which he had been expelled under very flimsy pretences, inferred
+a severe blow to the Presbyterian divine, who could not be considered
+otherwise than as an intruder. The interest of the two preachers,
+therefore, as well as the sentiments of their flocks, were at direct
+variance; and here was another fatal objection in the way of Lady
+Peveril's scheme of a general and comprehensive healing ordinance.
+
+Nevertheless, as we have already hinted, Doctor Dummerar behaved as
+handsomely upon the occasion as the Presbyterian incumbent had done.
+It is true, that in a sermon which he preached in the Castle hall to
+several of the most distinguished Cavalier families, besides a world
+of boys from the village, who went to see the novel circumstance of a
+parson in a cassock and surplice, he went at great length into the
+foulness of the various crimes committed by the rebellious party
+during the late evil times, and greatly magnified the merciful and
+peaceful nature of the honourable Lady of the Manor, who condescended
+to look upon, or receive into her house in the way of friendship and
+hospitality, men holding the principles which had led to the murder of
+the King--the slaying and despoiling his loyal subjects--and the
+plundering and breaking down of the Church of God. But then he wiped
+all this handsomely up again, with the observation, that since it was
+the will of their gracious and newly-restored Sovereign, and the
+pleasure of the worshipful Lady Peveril, that this contumacious and
+rebellious race should be, for a time, forborne by their faithful
+subjects, it would be highly proper that all the loyal liegemen
+should, for the present, eschew subjects of dissension or quarrel with
+these sons of Shimei; which lesson of patience he enforced by the
+comfortable assurance, that they could not long abstain from their old
+rebellious practices; in which case, the Royalists would stand
+exculpated before God and man, in extirpating them from the face of
+the earth.
+
+The close observers of the remarkable passages of the times from which
+we draw the events of our history, have left it upon record, that
+these two several sermons, much contrary, doubtless, to the intention
+of the worthy divines by whom they were delivered, had a greater
+effect in exasperating, than in composing, the disputes betwixt the
+two factions. Under such evil auspices, and with corresponding
+forebodings on the mind of Lady Peveril, the day of festivity at
+length arrived.
+
+By different routes, and forming each a sort of procession, as if the
+adherents of each party were desirous of exhibiting its strength and
+numbers, the two several factions approached Martindale Castle; and so
+distinct did they appear in dress, aspect, and manners, that it seemed
+as if the revellers of a bridal party, and the sad attendants upon a
+funeral solemnity, were moving towards the same point from different
+quarters.
+
+The puritanical party was by far the fewer in numbers, for which two
+excellent reasons might be given. In the first place, they had enjoyed
+power for several years, and, of course, became unpopular among the
+common people, never at any time attached to those, who, being in the
+immediate possession of authority, are often obliged to employ it in
+controlling their humours. Besides, the country people of England had,
+and still have, an animated attachment to field sports, and a natural
+unrestrained joviality of disposition, which rendered them impatient
+under the severe discipline of the fanatical preachers; while they
+were not less naturally discontented with the military despotism of
+Cromwell's Major-Generals. Secondly, the people were fickle as usual,
+and the return of the King had novelty in it, and was therefore
+popular. The side of the Puritans was also deserted at this period by
+a numerous class of more thinking and prudential persons, who never
+forsook them till they became unfortunate. These sagacious personages
+were called in that age the Waiters upon Providence, and deemed it a
+high delinquency towards Heaven if they afforded countenance to any
+cause longer than it was favoured by fortune.
+
+But, though thus forsaken by the fickle and the selfish, a solemn
+enthusiasm, a stern and determined depth of principle, a confidence in
+the sincerity of their own motives, and the manly English pride which
+inclined them to cling to their former opinions, like the traveller in
+the fable to his cloak, the more strongly that the tempest blew around
+them, detained in the ranks of the Puritans many, who, if no longer
+formidable from numbers, were still so from their character. They
+consisted chiefly of the middling gentry, with others whom industry or
+successful speculations in commerce or in mining had raised into
+eminence--the persons who feel most umbrage from the overshadowing
+aristocracy, and are usually the most vehement in defence of what they
+hold to be their rights. Their dress was in general studiously simple
+and unostentatious, or only remarkable by the contradictory
+affectation of extreme simplicity or carelessness. The dark colour of
+their cloaks, varying from absolute black to what was called sad-
+coloured--their steeple-crowned hats, with their broad shadowy brims--
+their long swords, suspended by a simple strap around the loins,
+without shoulder-belt, sword-knot, plate, buckles, or any of the other
+decorations with which the Cavaliers loved to adorn their trusty
+rapiers,--the shortness of their hair, which made their ears appear of
+disproportioned size,--above all, the stern and gloomy gravity of
+their looks, announced their belonging to that class of enthusiasts,
+who, resolute and undismayed, had cast down the former fabric of
+government, and who now regarded with somewhat more than suspicion,
+that which had been so unexpectedly substituted in its stead. There
+was gloom in their countenances; but it was not that of dejection, far
+less of despair. They looked like veterans after a defeat, which may
+have checked their career and wounded their pride, but has left their
+courage undiminished.
+
+The melancholy, now become habitual, which overcast Major
+Bridgenorth's countenance, well qualified him to act as the chief of
+the group who now advanced from the village. When they reached the
+point by which they were first to turn aside into the wood which
+surrounded the Castle, they felt a momentary impression of
+degradation, as if they were yielding the high road to their old and
+oft-defeated enemies the Cavaliers. When they began to ascend the
+winding path, which had been the daily passage of the cattle, the
+opening of the wooded glade gave them a view of the Castle ditch, half
+choked with the rubbish of the breach, and of the breach itself, which
+was made at the angle of a large square flanking-tower, one-half of
+which had been battered into ruins, while the other fragment remained
+in a state strangely shattered and precarious, and seemed to be
+tottering above the huge aperture in the wall. A stern still smile was
+exchanged among the Puritans, as the sight reminded them of the
+victories of former days. Holdfast Clegg, a millwright of Derby, who
+had been himself active at the siege, pointed to the breach, and said,
+with a grim smile to Mr. Solsgrace, "I little thought, that when my
+own hand helped to level the cannon which Oliver pointed against yon
+tower, we should have been obliged to climb like foxes up the very
+walls which we won by our bow and by our spear. Methought these
+malignants had then enough of shutting their gates and making high
+their horn against us."
+
+"Be patient, my brother," said Solsgrace; "be patient, and let not thy
+soul be disquieted. We enter not this high place dishonourably, seeing
+we ascend by the gate which the Lord opened to the godly."
+
+The words of the pastor were like a spark to gunpowder. The
+countenances of the mournful retinue suddenly expanded, and, accepting
+what had fallen from him as an omen and a light from heaven how they
+were to interpret their present situation, they uplifted, with one
+consent, one of the triumphant songs in which the Israelites
+celebrated the victories which had been vouchsafed to them over the
+heathen inhabitants of the Promised Land:--
+
+ "Let God arise, and then His foes
+ Shall turn themselves to flight,
+ His enemies for fear shall run,
+ And scatter out of sight;
+
+ And as wax melts before the fire,
+ And wind blows smoke away,
+ So in the presence of the Lord,
+ The wicked shall decay.
+
+ God's army twenty thousand is,
+ Of angels bright and strong,
+ The Lord also in Sinai
+ Is present them among.
+
+ Thou didst, O Lord, ascend on high,
+ And captive led'st them all,
+ Who, in times past, Thy chosen flock
+ In bondage did enthral."
+
+These sounds of devotional triumph reached the joyous band of the
+Cavaliers, who, decked in whatever pomp their repeated misfortunes and
+impoverishment had left them, were moving towards the same point,
+though by a different road, and were filling the principal avenue to
+the Castle, with tiptoe mirth and revelry. The two parties were
+strongly contrasted; for, during that period of civil dissension, the
+manners of the different factions distinguished them as completely as
+separate uniforms might have done. If the Puritan was affectedly plain
+in his dress, and ridiculously precise in his manners, the Cavalier
+often carried his love of ornament into tawdry finery, and his
+contempt of hypocrisy into licentious profligacy. Gay gallant fellows,
+young and old, thronged together towards the ancient Castle, with
+general and joyous manifestation of those spirits, which, as they had
+been buoyant enough to support their owners during the worst of times,
+as they termed Oliver's usurpation, were now so inflated as to
+transport them nearly beyond the reach of sober reason. Feathers
+waved, lace glittered, spears jingled, steeds caracoled; and here and
+there a petronel, or pistol, was fired off by some one, who found his
+own natural talents for making a noise inadequate to the dignity of
+the occasion. Boys--for, as we said before, the rabble were with the
+uppermost party, as usual--halloo'd and whooped, "Down with the Rump,"
+and "Fie upon Oliver!" Musical instruments, of as many different
+fashions as were then in use, played all at once, and without any
+regard to each other's tune; and the glee of the occasion, while it
+reconciled the pride of the high-born of the party to fraternise with
+the general rout, derived an additional zest from the conscious
+triumph, that their exultation was heard by their neighbours, the
+crestfallen Roundheads.
+
+When the loud and sonorous swell of the psalm-tune, multiplied by all
+the echoes of the cliffs and ruinous halls, came full upon their ear,
+as if to warn them how little they were to reckon upon the depression
+of their adversaries, at first it was answered with a scornful laugh,
+raised to as much height as the scoffers' lungs would permit, in order
+that it might carry to the psalmodists the contempt of their auditors;
+but this was a forced exertion of party spleen. There is something in
+melancholy feelings more natural to an imperfect and suffering state
+than in those of gaiety, and when they are brought into collision, the
+former seldom fail to triumph. If a funeral-train and wedding-
+procession were to meet unexpectedly, it will readily be allowed that
+the mirth of the last would be speedily merged in the gloom of the
+others. But the Cavaliers, moreover, had sympathies of a different
+kind. The psalm-tune, which now came rolling on their ear, had been
+heard too often, and upon too many occasions had preceded victory
+gained over the malignants, to permit them, even in their triumph, to
+hear it without emotion. There was a sort of pause, of which the party
+themselves seemed rather ashamed, until the silence was broken by the
+stout old knight, Sir Jasper Cranbourne, whose gallantry was so
+universally acknowledged, that he could afford, if we may use such an
+expression, to confess emotions, which men whose courage was in any
+respect liable to suspicion, would have thought it imprudent to
+acknowledge.
+
+"Adad," said the old Knight, "may I never taste claret again, if that
+is not the very tune with which the prick-eared villains began their
+onset at Wiggan Lane, where they trowled us down like so many
+ninepins! Faith, neighbours, to say truth, and shame the devil, I did
+not like the sound of it above half."
+
+"If I thought the round-headed rogues did it in scorn of us," said
+Dick Wildblood of the Dale, "I would cudgel their psalmody out of
+their peasantly throats with this very truncheon;" a motion which,
+being seconded by old Roger Raine, the drunken tapster of the Peveril
+Arms in the village, might have brought on a general battle, but that
+Sir Jasper forbade the feud.
+
+"We'll have no ranting, Dick," said the old Knight to the young
+Franklin; "adad, man, we'll have none, for three reasons: first,
+because it would be ungentle to Lady Peveril; then, because it is
+against the King's peace; and, lastly, Dick, because if we did set on
+the psalm-singing knaves, thou mightest come by the worst, my boy, as
+has chanced to thee before."
+
+"Who, I! Sir Jasper?" answered Dick--"I come by the worst!--I'll be
+d--d if it ever happened but in that accursed lane, where we had no
+more flank, front, or rear, than if we had been so many herrings in a
+barrel."
+
+"That was the reason, I fancy," answered Sir Jasper, "that you, to
+mend the matter, scrambled into the hedge, and stuck there, horse and
+man, till I beat thee through it with my leading-staff; and then,
+instead of charging to the front, you went right-about, and away as
+fast as your feet would carry you."
+
+This reminiscence produced a laugh at Dick's expense, who was known,
+or at least suspected, to have more tongue in his head than mettle in
+his bosom. And this sort of rallying on the part of the Knight having
+fortunately abated the resentment which had begun to awaken in the
+breasts of the royalist cavalcade, farther cause for offence was
+removed, by the sudden ceasing of the sounds which they had been
+disposed to interpret into those of premeditated insult.
+
+This was owing to the arrival of the Puritans at the bottom of the
+large and wide breach, which had been formerly made in the wall of the
+Castle by their victorious cannon. The sight of its gaping heaps of
+rubbish, and disjointed masses of building, up which slowly winded a
+narrow and steep path, such as is made amongst ancient ruins by the
+rare passage of those who occasionally visit them, was calculated,
+when contrasted with the grey and solid massiveness of the towers and
+curtains which yet stood uninjured, to remind them of their victory
+over the stronghold of their enemies, and how they had bound nobles
+and princes with fetters of iron.
+
+But feelings more suitable to the purpose of their visit to Martindale
+Castle, were awakened in the bosoms even of these stern sectaries,
+when the Lady of the Castle, still in the very prime of beauty and of
+womanhood, appeared at the top of the breach with her principal female
+attendants, to receive her guests with the honour and courtesy
+becoming her invitation. She had laid aside the black dress which had
+been her sole attire for several years, and was arrayed with a
+splendour not unbecoming her high descent and quality. Jewels, indeed,
+she had none; but her long and dark hair was surmounted with a chaplet
+made of oak leaves, interspersed with lilies; the former being the
+emblem of the King's preservation in the Royal Oak, and the latter of
+his happy Restoration. What rendered her presence still more
+interesting to those who looked on her, was the presence of the two
+children whom she held in either hand; one of whom was well known to
+them all to be the child of their leader, Major Bridgenorth, who had
+been restored to life and health by the almost maternal care of the
+Lady Peveril.
+
+If even the inferior persons of the party felt the healing influence
+of her presence, thus accompanied, poor Bridgenorth was almost
+overwhelmed with it. The strictness of his cast and manners permitted
+him not to sink on his knee, and kiss the hand which held his little
+orphan; but the deepness of his obeisance--the faltering tremor of his
+voice--and the glistening of his eye, showed a grateful respect for
+the lady whom he addressed, deeper and more reverential than could
+have been expressed even by Persian prostration. A few courteous and
+mild words, expressive of the pleasure she found in once more seeing
+her neighbours as her friends--a few kind inquiries, addressed to the
+principal individuals among her guests, concerning their families and
+connections, completed her triumph over angry thoughts and dangerous
+recollections, and disposed men's bosoms to sympathise with the
+purposes of the meeting.
+
+Even Solsgrace himself, although imagining himself bound by his office
+and duty to watch over and counteract the wiles of the "Amalekitish
+woman," did not escape the sympathetic infection; being so much struck
+with the marks of peace and good-will exhibited by Lady Peveril, that
+he immediately raised the psalm--
+
+ "O what a happy thing it is,
+ And joyful, for to see
+ Brethren to dwell together in
+ Friendship and unity!"
+
+Accepting this salutation as a mark of courtesy repaid, the Lady
+Peveril marshalled in person this party of her guests to the
+apartment, where ample good cheer was provided for them; and had even
+the patience to remain while Master Nehemiah Solsgrace pronounced a
+benediction of portentous length, as an introduction to the banquet.
+Her presence was in some measure a restraint on the worthy divine,
+whose prolusion lasted the longer, and was the more intricate and
+embarrassed, that he felt himself debarred from rounding it off by his
+usual alliterative petition for deliverance from Popery, Prelacy, and
+Peveril of the Peak, which had become so habitual to him, that, after
+various attempts to conclude with some other form of words, he found
+himself at last obliged to pronounce the first words of his usual
+/formula/ aloud, and mutter the rest in such a manner as not to be
+intelligible even by those who stood nearest to him.
+
+The minister's silence was followed by all the various sounds which
+announce the onset of a hungry company on a well-furnished table; and
+at the same time gave the lady an opportunity to leave the apartment,
+and look to the accommodation of her other company. She felt, indeed,
+that it was high time to do so; and that the royalist guests might be
+disposed to misapprehend, or even to resent, the prior attentions
+which she had thought it prudent to offer to the Puritans.
+
+These apprehensions were not altogether ill-founded. It was in vain
+that the steward had displayed the royal standard, with its proud
+motto of /Tandem Triumphans/, on one of the great towers which flanked
+the main entrance of the Castle; while, from the other, floated the
+banner of Peveril of the Peak, under which many of those who now
+approached had fought during all the vicissitudes of civil war. It was
+in vain he repeated his clamorous "Welcome, noble Cavaliers! welcome,
+generous gentlemen!" There was a slight murmur amongst them, that
+their welcome ought to have come from the mouth of the Colonel's lady
+--not from that of a menial. Sir Jasper Cranbourne, who had sense as
+well as spirit and courage, and who was aware of his fair cousin's
+motives, having been indeed consulted by her upon all the arrangements
+which she had adopted, saw matters were in such a state that no time
+ought to be lost in conducting the guests to the banqueting apartment,
+where a fortunate diversion from all these topics of rising discontent
+might be made, at the expense of the good cheer of all sorts, which
+the lady's care had so liberally provided.
+
+The stratagem of the old soldier succeeded in its utmost extent. He
+assumed the great oaken-chair usually occupied by the steward at his
+audits; and Dr. Dummerar having pronounced a brief Latin benediction
+(which was not the less esteemed by the hearers that none of them
+understood it), Sir Jasper exhorted the company to wet their appetites
+to the dinner by a brimming cup to his Majesty's health, filled as
+high and as deep as their goblets would permit. In a moment all was
+bustle, with the clank of wine-cups and of flagons. In another moment
+the guests were on their feet like so many statues, all hushed as
+death, but with eyes glancing with expectation, and hands
+outstretched, which displayed their loyal brimmers. The voice of Sir
+Jasper, clear, sonorous, and emphatic, as the sound of his war-
+trumpet, announced the health of the restored Monarch, hastily echoed
+back by the assemblage, impatient to render it due homage. Another
+brief pause was filled by the draining of their cups, and the
+mustering breath to join in a shout so loud, that not only the rafters
+of the old hall trembled while they echoed it back, but the garlands
+of oaken boughs and flowers with which they were decorated, waved
+wildly, and rustled as if agitated by a sudden whirlwind. This rite
+observed, the company proceeded to assail the good cheer with which
+the table groaned, animated as they were to the attack both by mirth
+and melody, for they were attended by all the minstrels of the
+district, who, like the Episcopal clergy, had been put to silence
+during the reign of the self-entitled saints of the Commonwealth. The
+social occupation of good eating and drinking, the exchange of pledges
+betwixt old neighbours who had been fellow-soldiers in the moment of
+resistance--fellow-sufferers in the time of depression and
+subjugation, and were now partners in the same general subject of
+congratulation, soon wiped from their memory the trifling cause of
+complaint, which in the minds of some had darkened the festivity of
+the day; so that when the Lady Peveril walked into the hall,
+accompanied as before with the children and her female attendants, she
+was welcomed with the acclamations due to the mistress of the banquet
+and of the Castle--the dame of the noble Knight, who had led most of
+them to battle with an undaunted and persevering valour, which was
+worthy of better success.
+
+Her address to them was brief and matronly, yet spoken with so much
+feeling as found its way to every bosom. She apologised for the
+lateness of her personal welcome, by reminding them that there were
+then present in Martindale Castle that day, persons whom recent happy
+events had converted from enemies into friends, but on whom the latter
+character was so recently imposed, that she dared not neglect with
+them any point of ceremonial. But those whom she now addressed, were
+the best, the dearest the most faithful friends of her husband's
+house, to whom and to their valour Peveril had not only owed those
+successes, which had given them and him fame during the late unhappy
+times, but to whose courage she in particular had owed the
+preservation of their leader's life, even when it could not avert
+defeat. A word or two of heartfelt authority, completed all which she
+had boldness to add, and, bowing gracefully round her, she lifted a
+cup to her lips as if to welcome her guests.
+
+There still remained, and especially amongst the old Cavaliers of the
+period, some glimmering of that spirit which inspired Froissart, when
+he declares that a knight hath double courage at need, when animated
+by the looks and words of a beautiful and virtuous woman. It was not
+until the reign which was commencing at the moment we are treating of,
+that the unbounded licence of the age, introducing a general course of
+profligacy, degraded the female sex into mere servants of pleasure,
+and, in so doing, deprived society of that noble tone of feeling
+towards the sex, which, considered as a spur to "raise the clear
+spirit," is superior to every other impulse, save those of religion
+and of patriotism. The beams of the ancient hall of Martindale Castle
+instantly rang with a shout louder and shriller than that at which
+they had so lately trembled, and the names of the Knight of the Peak
+and his lady were proclaimed amid waving of caps and hats, and
+universal wishes for their health and happiness.
+
+Under these auspices the Lady Peveril glided from the hall, and left
+free space for the revelry of the evening.
+
+That of the Cavaliers may be easily conceived, since it had the usual
+accompaniments of singing, jesting, quaffing of healths, and playing
+of tunes, which have in almost every age and quarter of the world been
+the accompaniments of festive cheer. The enjoyments of the Puritans
+were of a different and less noisy character. They neither sung,
+jested, heard music, nor drank healths; and yet they seemed not the
+less, in their own phrase, to enjoy the creature-comforts, which the
+frailty of humanity rendered grateful to their outward man. Old
+Whitaker even protested, that, though much the smaller party in point
+of numbers, they discussed nearly as much sack and claret as his own
+more jovial associates. But those who considered the steward's
+prejudices, were inclined to think, that, in order to produce such a
+result, he must have thrown in his own by-drinkings--no inconsiderable
+item--to the sum total of the Presbyterian potations.
+
+Without adopting such a partial and scandalous report, we shall only
+say, that on this occasion, as on most others, the rareness of
+indulgence promoted the sense of enjoyment, and that those who made
+abstinence, or at least moderation, a point of religious principle,
+enjoyed their social meeting the better that such opportunities rarely
+presented themselves. If they did not actually drink each other's
+healths, they at least showed, by looking and nodding to each other as
+they raised their glasses, that they all were sharing the same festive
+gratification of the appetite, and felt it enhanced, because it was at
+the same time enjoyed by their friends and neighbours. Religion, as it
+was the principal topic of their thoughts, became also the chief
+subject of their conversation, and as they sat together in small
+separate knots, they discussed doctrinal and metaphysical points of
+belief, balanced the merits of various preachers, compared the creeds
+of contending sects, and fortified by scriptural quotations those
+which they favoured. Some contests arose in the course of these
+debates, which might have proceeded farther than was seemly, but for
+the cautious interference of Major Bridgenorth. He suppressed also, in
+the very bud, a dispute betwixt Gaffer Hodgeson of Charnelycot and the
+Reverend Mr. Solsgrace, upon the tender subject of lay-preaching and
+lay-ministering; nor did he think it altogether prudent or decent to
+indulge the wishes of some of the warmer enthusiasts of the party, who
+felt disposed to make the rest partakers of their gifts in
+extemporaneous prayer and exposition. These were absurdities that
+belonged to the time, which, however, the Major had sense enough to
+perceive were unfitted, whether the offspring of hypocrisy or
+enthusiasm, for the present time and place.
+
+The Major was also instrumental in breaking up the party at an early
+and decorous hour, so that they left the Castle long before their
+rivals, the Cavaliers, had reached the springtide of their merriment;
+an arrangement which afforded the greatest satisfaction to the lady,
+who dreaded the consequences which might not improbably have taken
+place, had both parties met at the same period and point of retreat.
+
+It was near midnight ere the greater part of the Cavaliers, meaning
+such as were able to effect their departure without assistance,
+withdrew to the village of Martindale Moultrassie, with the benefit of
+the broad moon to prevent the chance of accidents. Their shouts, and
+the burden of their roaring chorus of--
+
+ "The King shall enjoy his own again!"
+
+were heard with no small pleasure by the lady, heartily glad that the
+riot of the day was over without the occurrence of any unpleasing
+accident. The rejoicing was not, however, entirely ended; for the
+elevated Cavaliers, finding some of the villagers still on foot around
+a bonfire on the street, struck merrily in with them--sent to Roger
+Raine of the Peveril Arms, the loyal publican whom we have already
+mentioned, for two tubs of merry stingo (as it was termed), and lent
+their own powerful assistance at the /dusting/ it off to the health of
+the King and the loyal General Monk. Their shouts for a long time
+disturbed, and even alarmed, the little village; but no enthusiasm is
+able to withstand for ever the natural consequences of late hours, and
+potations pottle-deep. The tumult of the exulting Royalists at last
+sunk into silence, and the moon and the owl were left in undisturbed
+sovereignty over the old tower of the village church, which, rising
+white above a circle of knotty oaks, was tenanted by the bird, and
+silvered by the planet.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+ 'Twas when they raised, 'mid sap and siege,
+ The banners of their rightful liege,
+ At their she-captain's call,
+ Who, miracle of womankind!
+ Lent mettle to the meanest hind
+ That mann'd her castle wall.
+ --WILLIAM S. ROSE.
+
+On the morning succeeding the feast, the Lady Peveril, fatigued with
+the exertions and the apprehensions of the former day, kept her
+apartment for two or three hours later than her own active habits, and
+the matutinal custom of the time, rendered usual. Meanwhile, Mistress
+Ellesmere, a person of great trust in the family, and who assumed much
+authority in her mistress's absence, laid her orders upon Deborah, the
+governante, immediately to carry the children to their airing in the
+park, and not to let any one enter the gilded chamber, which was
+usually their sporting-place. Deborah, who often rebelled, and
+sometimes successfully, against the deputed authority of Ellesmere,
+privately resolved that it was about to rain, and that the gilded
+chamber was a more suitable place for the children's exercise than the
+wet grass of the park on a raw morning.
+
+But a woman's brain is sometimes as inconstant as a popular assembly;
+and presently after she had voted the morning was like to be rainy,
+and that the gilded chamber was the fittest play-room for the
+children, Mistress Deborah came to the somewhat inconsistent
+resolution, that the park was the fittest place for her own morning
+walk. It is certain, that during the unrestrained joviality of the
+preceding evening, she had danced till midnight with Lance Outram the
+park-keeper; but how far the seeing him just pass the window in his
+woodland trim, with a feather in his hat, and a crossbow under his
+arm, influenced the discrepancy of the opinions Mistress Deborah
+formed concerning the weather, we are far from presuming to guess. It
+is enough for us, that, so soon as Mistress Ellesmere's back was
+turned, Mistress Deborah carried the children into the gilded chamber,
+not without a strict charge (for we must do her justice) to Master
+Julian to take care of his little wife, Mistress Alice; and then,
+having taken so satisfactory a precaution, she herself glided into the
+park by the glass-door of the still-room, which was nearly opposite to
+the great breach.
+
+The gilded chamber in which the children were, by this arrangement,
+left to amuse themselves, without better guardianship than what
+Julian's manhood afforded, was a large apartment, hung with stamped
+Spanish leather, curiously gilded, representing, in a manner now
+obsolete, but far from unpleasing, a series of tilts and combats
+betwixt the Saracens of Grenada, and the Spaniards under the command
+of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, during that memorable siege,
+which was terminated by the overthrow of the last fragments of the
+Moorish empire in Spain.
+
+The little Julian was careering about the room for the amusement of
+his infant friend, as well as his own, mimicking with a reed the
+menacing attitude of the Abencerrages and Zegris engaged in the
+Eastern sport of hurling the JERID, or javelin; and at times sitting
+down beside her, and caressing her into silence and good humour, when
+the petulant or timid child chose to become tired of remaining an
+inactive spectator of his boisterous sport; when, on a sudden, he
+observed one of the panelled compartments of the leather hangings
+slide apart, so as to show a fair hand, with its fingers resting upon
+its edge, prepared, it would seem, to push it still farther back.
+Julian was much surprised, and somewhat frightened, at what he
+witnessed, for the tales of the nursery had strongly impressed on his
+mind the terrors of the invisible world. Yet, naturally bold and high-
+spirited, the little champion placed himself beside his defenceless
+sister, continuing to brandish his weapon in her defence, as boldly as
+he had himself been an Abencerrage of Grenada.
+
+The panel, on which his eye was fixed, gradually continued to slide
+back, and display more and more the form to which the hand
+appertained, until, in the dark aperture which was disclosed, the
+children saw the figure of a lady in a mourning dress, past the
+meridian of life, but whose countenance still retained traces of great
+beauty, although the predominant character both of her features and
+person was an air of almost royal dignity. After pausing a moment on
+the threshold of the portal which she had thus unexpectedly disclosed,
+and looking with some surprise at the children, whom she had not
+probably observed while engaged with the management of the panel, the
+stranger stepped into the apartment, and the panel, upon a touch of a
+spring, closed behind her so suddenly, that Julian almost doubted it
+had ever been open, and began to apprehend that the whole apparition
+had been a delusion.
+
+The stately lady, however, advanced to him, and said, "Are not you the
+little Peveril?"
+
+"Yes," said the boy, reddening, not altogether without a juvenile
+feeling of that rule of chivalry which forbade any one to disown his
+name, whatever danger might be annexed to the avowal of it.
+
+"Then," said the stately stranger, "go to your mother's room, and tell
+her to come instantly to speak with me."
+
+"I wo'not," said the little Julian.
+
+"How?" said the lady,--"so young and so disobedient?--but you do but
+follow the fashion of the time. Why will you not go, my pretty boy,
+when I ask it of you as a favour?"
+
+"I would go, madam," said the boy, "but"--and he stopped short, still
+drawing back as the lady advanced on him, but still holding by the
+hand Alice Bridgenorth, who, too young to understand the nature of the
+dialogue, clung, trembling, to her companion.
+
+The stranger saw his embarrassment, smiled, and remained standing
+fast, while she asked the child once more, "What are you afraid of, my
+brave boy--and why should you not go to your mother on my errand?"
+
+"Because," answered Julian firmly, "if I go, little Alice must stay
+alone with you."
+
+"You are a gallant fellow," said the lady, "and will not disgrace your
+blood, which never left the weak without protection."
+
+The boy understood her not, and still gazed with anxious apprehension,
+first on her who addressed him, and then upon his little companion,
+whose eyes, with the vacant glance of infancy, wandered from the
+figure of the lady to that of her companion and protector, and at
+length, infected by a portion of the fear which the latter's
+magnanimous efforts could not entirely conceal, she flew into Julian's
+arms, and, clinging to him, greatly augmented his alarm, and by
+screaming aloud, rendered it very difficult for him to avoid the
+sympathetic fear which impelled him to do the same.
+
+There was something in the manner and bearing of this unexpected
+inmate which might justify awe at least, if not fear, when joined to
+the singular and mysterious mode in which she had made her appearance.
+Her dress was not remarkable, being the hood and female riding attire
+of the time, such as was worn by the inferior class of gentlewomen;
+but her black hair was very long, and, several locks having escaped
+from under her hood, hung down dishevelled on her neck and shoulders.
+Her eyes were deep black, keen, and piercing, and her features had
+something of a foreign expression. When she spoke, her language was
+marked by a slight foreign accent, although, in construction, it was
+pure English. Her slightest tone and gesture had the air of one
+accustomed to command and to be obeyed; the recollection of which
+probably suggested to Julian the apology he afterwards made for being
+frightened, that he took the stranger for an "enchanted queen."
+
+While the stranger lady and the children thus confronted each other,
+two persons entered almost at the same instant, but from different
+doors, whose haste showed that they had been alarmed by the screams of
+the latter.
+
+The first was Major Bridgenorth, whose ears had been alarmed with the
+cries of his child, as he entered the hall, which corresponded with
+what was called the gilded chamber. His intention had been to remain
+in the more public apartment, until the Lady Peveril should make her
+appearance, with the good-natured purpose of assuring her that the
+preceding day of tumult had passed in every respect agreeably to his
+friends, and without any of those alarming consequences which might
+have been apprehended from a collision betwixt the parties. But when
+it is considered how severely he had been agitated by apprehensions
+for his child's safety and health, too well justified by the fate of
+those who had preceded her, it will not be thought surprising that the
+infantine screams of Alice induced him to break through the barriers
+of form, and intrude farther into the interior of the house than a
+sense of strict propriety might have warranted.
+
+He burst into the gilded chamber, therefore, by a side-door and narrow
+passage, which communicated betwixt that apartment and the hall, and,
+snatching the child up in his arms, endeavoured, by a thousand
+caresses, to stifle the screams which burst yet more violently from
+the little girl, on beholding herself in the arms of one to whose
+voice and manner she was, but for one brief interview, an entire
+stranger.
+
+Of course, Alice's shrieks were redoubled, and seconded by those of
+Julian Peveril, who, on the appearance of this second intruder, was
+frightened into resignation of every more manly idea of rescue than
+that which consisted in invoking assistance at the very top of his
+lungs.
+
+Alarmed by this noise, which in half a minute became very clamorous,
+Lady Peveril, with whose apartment the gilded chamber was connected by
+a private door of communication opening into her wardrobe, entered on
+the scene. The instant she appeared, the little Alice, extricating
+herself from the grasp of her father, ran towards /her/ protectress,
+and when she had once taken hold of her skirts, not only became
+silent, but turned her large blue eyes, in which the tears were still
+glistening, with a look of wonder rather than alarm, towards the
+strange lady. Julian manfully brandished his reed, a weapon which he
+had never parted with during the whole alarm, and stood prepared to
+assist his mother if there should be danger in the encounter betwixt
+her and the stranger.
+
+In fact, it might have puzzled an older person to account for the
+sudden and confused pause which the Lady Peveril made, as she gazed on
+her unexpected guest, as if dubious whether she did, or did not
+recognise, in her still beautiful though wasted and emaciated
+features, a countenance which she had known well under far different
+circumstances.
+
+The stranger seemed to understand the cause of hesitation, for she
+said in that heart-thrilling voice which was peculiarly her own--
+
+"Time and misfortune have changed me much, Margaret--that every mirror
+tells me--yet methinks, Margaret Stanley might still have known
+Charlotte de la Tremouille."
+
+The Lady Peveril was little in the custom of giving way to sudden
+emotion, but in the present case she threw herself on her knees in a
+rapture of mingled joy and grief, and, half embracing those of the
+stranger, exclaimed, in broken language--
+
+"My kind, my noble benefactress--the princely Countess of Derby--the
+royal queen in Man--could I doubt your voice, your features, for a
+moment--Oh, forgive, forgive me!"
+
+The Countess raised the suppliant kinswoman of her husband's house,
+with all the grace of one accustomed from early birth to receive
+homage and to grant protection. She kissed the Lady Peveril's
+forehead, and passed her hand in a caressing manner over her face as
+she said--
+
+"You too are changed, my fair cousin, but it is a change becomes you,
+from a pretty and timid maiden to a sage and comely matron. But my own
+memory, which I once held a good one, has failed me strangely, if this
+gentleman be Sir Geoffrey Peveril."
+
+"A kind and good neighbour only, madam," said Lady Peveril; "Sir
+Geoffrey is at Court."
+
+"I understood so much," said the Countess of Derby, "when I arrived
+here last night."
+
+"How, madam!" said Lady Peveril--"Did you arrive at Martindale
+Castle--at the house of Margaret Stanley, where you have such right to
+command, and did not announce your presence to her?"
+
+"Oh, I know you are a dutiful subject, Margaret," answered the
+Countess, "though it be in these days a rare character--but it was our
+pleasure," she added, with a smile, "to travel incognito--and finding
+you engaged in general hospitality, we desired not to disturb you with
+our royal presence."
+
+"But how and where were you lodged, madam?" said Lady Peveril; "or why
+should you have kept secret a visit which would, if made, have
+augmented tenfold the happiness of every true heart that rejoiced here
+yesterday?"
+
+"My lodging was well cared for by Ellesmere--your Ellesmere now, as
+she was formerly mine--she has acted as quartermaster ere now, you
+know, and on a broader scale; you must excuse her--she had my positive
+order to lodge me in the most secret part of your Castle"--(here she
+pointed to the sliding panel)--"she obeyed orders in that, and I
+suppose also in sending you now hither."
+
+"Indeed I have not yet seen her," said the lady, "and therefore was
+totally ignorant of a visit so joyful, so surprising."
+
+"And I," said the Countess, "was equally surprised to find none but
+these beautiful children in the apartment where I thought I heard you
+moving. Our Ellesmere has become silly--your good-nature has spoiled
+her--she has forgotten the discipline she learned under me."
+
+"I saw her run through the wood," said the Lady Peveril, after a
+moment's recollection, "undoubtedly to seek the person who has charge
+of the children, in order to remove them."
+
+"Your own darlings, I doubt not," said the Countess, looking at the
+children. "Margaret, Providence has blessed you."
+
+"That is my son," said the Lady Peveril, pointing to Julian, who stood
+devouring their discourse with greedy ear; "the little girl--I may
+call mine too." Major Bridgenorth, who had in the meantime again taken
+up his infant, and was engaged in caressing it, set it down as the
+Countess of Derby spoke, sighed deeply, and walked towards the oriel
+window. He was well aware that the ordinary rules of courtesy would
+have rendered it proper that he should withdraw entirely, or at least
+offer to do so; but he was not a man of ceremonious politeness, and he
+had a particular interest in the subjects on which the Countess's
+discourse was likely to turn, which induced him to dispense with
+ceremony. The ladies seemed indeed scarce to notice his presence. The
+Countess had now assumed a chair, and motioned to the Lady Peveril to
+sit upon a stool which was placed by her side. "We will have old times
+once more, though there are here no roaring of rebel guns to drive you
+to take refuge at my side, and almost in my pocket."
+
+"I have a gun, madam," said little Julian, "and the park-keeper is to
+teach me how to fire it next year."
+
+"I will list you for my soldier, then," said the Countess.
+
+"Ladies have no soldiers," said the boy, looking wistfully at her.
+
+"He has the true masculine contempt of our frail sex, I see," said the
+Countess; "it is born with the insolent varlets of mankind, and shows
+itself so soon as they are out of their long clothes.--Did Ellesmere
+never tell you of Latham House and Charlotte of Derby, my little
+master?"
+
+"A thousand thousand times," said the boy, colouring; "and how the
+Queen of Man defended it six weeks against three thousand Roundheads,
+under Rogue Harrison the butcher."
+
+"It was your mother defended Latham House," said the Countess, "not I,
+my little soldier--Hadst thou been there, thou hadst been the best
+captain of the three."
+
+"Do not say so, madam," said the boy, "for mamma would not touch a gun
+for all the universe."
+
+"Not I, indeed, Julian," said his mother; "there I was for certain,
+but as useless a part of the garrison----"
+
+"You forget," said the Countess, "you nursed our hospital, and made
+lint for the soldiers' wounds."
+
+"But did not papa come to help you?" said Julian.
+
+"Papa came at last," said the Countess, "and so did Prince Rupert--but
+not, I think, till they were both heartily wished for.--Do you
+remember that morning, Margaret, when the round-headed knaves, that
+kept us pent up so long, retreated without bag or baggage, at the
+first glance of the Prince's standards appearing on the hill--and how
+you took every high-crested captain you saw for Peveril of the Peak,
+that had been your partner three months before at the Queen's mask?
+Nay, never blush for the thought of it--it was an honest affection--
+and though it was the music of trumpets that accompanied you both to
+the old chapel, which was almost entirely ruined by the enemy's
+bullets; and though Prince Rupert, when he gave you away at the altar,
+was clad in buff and bandoleer, with pistols in his belt, yet I trust
+these warlike signs were no type of future discord?"
+
+"Heaven has been kind to me," said the Lady Peveril, "in blessing me
+with an affectionate husband."
+
+"And in preserving him to you," said the Countess, with a deep sigh;
+"while mine, alas! sealed with his blood his devotion to his king[*]--
+Oh, had he lived to see this day!"
+
+[*] The Earl of Derby and King in Man was beheaded at Bolton-on-the-
+ Moors, after having been made prisoner in a previous skirmish in
+ Wiggan Lane.
+
+"Alas! alas! that he was not permitted!" answered Lady Peveril; "how
+had that brave and noble Earl rejoiced in the unhoped-for redemption
+of our captivity!"
+
+The Countess looked on Lady Peveril with an air of surprise.
+
+"Thou hast not then heard, cousin, how it stands with our house?--How
+indeed had my noble lord wondered, had he been told that the very
+monarch for whom he had laid down his noble life on the scaffold at
+Bolton-le-Moor, should make it his first act of restored monarchy to
+complete the destruction of our property, already well-nigh ruined in
+the royal cause, and to persecute me his widow!"
+
+"You astonish me, madam!" said the Lady Peveril. "It cannot be, that
+you--that you, the wife of the gallant, the faithful, the murdered
+Earl--you, Countess of Derby, and Queen in Man--you, who took on you
+even the character of a soldier, and seemed a man when so many men
+proved women--that you should sustain evil from the event which has
+fulfilled--exceeded--the hopes of every faithful subject--it cannot
+be!"
+
+"Thou art as simple, I see, in this world's knowledge as ever, my fair
+cousin," answered the Countess. "This restoration, which has given
+others security, has placed me in danger--this change which relieved
+other Royalists, scarce less zealous, I presume to think, than I--has
+sent me here a fugitive, and in concealment, to beg shelter and
+assistance from you, fair cousin."
+
+"From me," answered the Lady Peveril--"from me, whose youth your
+kindness sheltered--from the wife of Peveril, your gallant Lord's
+companion in arms--you have a right to command everything; but, alas!
+that you should need such assistance as I can render--forgive me, but
+it seems like some ill-omened vision of the night--I listen to your
+words as if I hoped to be relieved from their painful import by
+awaking."
+
+"It is indeed a dream--a vision," said the Countess of Derby; "but it
+needs no seer to read it--the explanation hath been long since given--
+Put not your faith in princes. I can soon remove your surprise.--This
+gentleman, your friend, is doubtless /honest?/"
+
+The Lady Peveril well knew that the Cavaliers, like other factions,
+usurped to themselves the exclusive denomination of the /honest/
+party, and she felt some difficulty in explaining that her visitor was
+not honest in that sense of the word.
+
+"Had we not better retire, madam?" she said to the Countess, rising,
+as if in order to attend her. But the Countess retained her seat.
+
+"It was but a question of habit," she said; "the gentleman's
+principles are nothing to me, for what I have to tell you is widely
+blazed, and I care not who hears my share of it. You remember--you
+must have heard, for I think Margaret Stanley would not be indifferent
+to my fate--that after my husband's murder at Bolton, I took up the
+standard which he never dropped until his death, and displayed it with
+my own hand in our Sovereignty of Man."
+
+"I did indeed hear so, madam," said the Lady Peveril; "and that you
+had bidden a bold defiance to the rebel government, even after all
+other parts of Britain had submitted to them. My husband, Sir
+Geoffrey, designed at one time to have gone to your assistance with
+some few followers; but we learned that the island was rendered to the
+Parliament party, and that you, dearest lady, were thrown into
+prison."
+
+"But you heard not," said the Countess, "how that disaster befell me.
+--Margaret, I would have held out that island against the knaves as
+long as the sea continued to flow around it. Till the shoals which
+surround it had become safe anchorage--till its precipices had melted
+beneath the sunshine--till of all its strong abodes and castles not
+one stone remained upon another,--would I have defended against these
+villainous hypocritical rebels, my dear husband's hereditary dominion.
+The little kingdom of Man should have been yielded only when not an
+arm was left to wield a sword, not a finger to draw a trigger in its
+defence. But treachery did what force could never have done. When we
+had foiled various attempts upon the island by open force--treason
+accomplished what Blake and Lawson, with their floating castles, had
+found too hazardous an enterprise--a base rebel, whom we had nursed in
+our own bosoms, betrayed us to the enemy. This wretch was named
+Christian----"
+
+Major Bridgenorth started and turned towards the speaker, but
+instantly seemed to recollect himself, and again averted his face. The
+Countess proceeded, without noticing the interruption, which, however,
+rather surprised Lady Peveril, who was acquainted with her neighbour's
+general habits of indifference and apathy, and therefore the more
+surprised at his testifying such sudden symptoms of interest. She
+would once again have moved the Countess to retire to another
+apartment, but Lady Derby proceeded with too much vehemence to endure
+interruption.
+
+"This Christian," she said, "had eaten of my lord his sovereign's
+bread, and drunk of his cup, even from childhood--for his fathers had
+been faithful servants to the House of Man and Derby. He himself had
+fought bravely by my husband's side, and enjoyed all his confidence;
+and when my princely Earl was martyred by the rebels, he recommended
+to me, amongst other instructions communicated in the last message I
+received from him, to continue my confidence in Christian's fidelity.
+I obeyed, although I never loved the man. He was cold and phlegmatic,
+and utterly devoid of that sacred fire which is the incentive to noble
+deeds, suspected, too, of leaning to the cold metaphysics of
+Calvinistic subtlety. But he was brave, wise, and experienced, and, as
+the event proved, possessed but too much interest with the islanders.
+When these rude people saw themselves without hope of relief, and
+pressed by a blockade, which brought want and disease into their
+island, they began to fall off from the faith which they had hitherto
+shown."
+
+"What!" said the Lady Peveril, "could they forget what was due to the
+widow of their benefactor--she who had shared with the generous Derby
+the task of bettering their condition?"
+
+"Do not blame them," said the Countess; "the rude herd acted but
+according to their kind--in present distress they forgot former
+benefits, and, nursed in their earthen hovels, with spirits suited to
+their dwellings, they were incapable of feeling the glory which is
+attached to constancy in suffering. But that Christian should have
+headed their revolt--that he, born a gentleman, and bred under my
+murdered Derby's own care in all that was chivalrous and noble--that
+/he/ should have forgot a hundred benefits--why do I talk of benefits?
+--that he should have forgotten that kindly intercourse which binds
+man to man far more than the reciprocity of obligation--that he should
+have headed the ruffians who broke suddenly into my apartment--immured
+me with my infants in one of my own castles, and assumed or usurped
+the tyranny of the island--that this should have been done by William
+Christian, my vassal, my servant, my friend, was a deed of ungrateful
+treachery, which even this age of treason will scarcely parallel!"
+
+"And you were then imprisoned," said the Lady Peveril, "and in your
+own sovereignty?"
+
+"For more than seven years I have endured strict captivity," said the
+Countess. "I was indeed offered my liberty, and even some means of
+support, if I would have consented to leave the island, and pledge my
+word that I would not endeavour to repossess my son in his father's
+rights. But they little knew the princely house from which I spring--
+and as little the royal house of Stanley which I uphold, who hoped to
+humble Charlotte of Tremouille into so base a composition. I would
+rather have starved in the darkest and lowest vault of Rushin Castle,
+than have consented to aught which might diminish in one hair's-
+breadth the right of my son over his father's sovereignty!"
+
+"And could not your firmness, in a case where hope seemed lost, induce
+them to be generous and dismiss you without conditions?"
+
+"They knew me better than thou dost, wench," answered the Countess;
+"once at liberty, I had not been long without the means of disturbing
+their usurpation, and Christian would have as soon encaged a lioness
+to combat with, as have given me the slightest power of returning to
+the struggle with him. But time had liberty and revenge in store--I
+had still friends and partisans in the island, though they were
+compelled to give way to the storm. Even among the islanders at large,
+most had been disappointed in the effects which they expected from the
+change of power. They were loaded with exactions by their new masters,
+their privileges were abridged, and their immunities abolished, under
+the pretext of reducing them to the same condition with the other
+subjects of the pretended republic. When the news arrived of the
+changes which were current in Britain, these sentiments were privately
+communicated to me. Calcott and others acted with great zeal and
+fidelity; and a rising, effected as suddenly and effectually as that
+which had made me a captive, placed me at liberty and in possession of
+the sovereignty of Man, as Regent for my son, the youthful Earl of
+Derby. Do you think I enjoyed that sovereignty long without doing
+justice on that traitor Christian?"
+
+"How, madam," said Lady Peveril, who, though she knew the high and
+ambitious spirit of the Countess, scarce anticipated the extremities
+to which it was capable of hurrying her--"have you imprisoned
+Christian?"
+
+"Ay, wench--in that sure prison which felon never breaks from,"
+answered the Countess.
+
+Bridgenorth, who had insensibly approached them, and was listening
+with an agony of interest which he was unable any longer to suppress,
+broke in with the stern exclamation--
+
+"Lady, I trust you have not dared----"
+
+The Countess interrupted him in her turn.
+
+"I know not who you are who question--and you know not me when you
+speak to me of that which I dare, or dare not do. But you seem
+interested in the fate of this Christian, and you shall hear it.--I
+was no sooner placed in possession of my rightful power, than I
+ordered the Dempster of the island to hold upon the traitor a High
+Court of Justice, with all the formalities of the isle, as prescribed
+in its oldest records. The Court was held in the open air, before the
+Dempster and the Keys of the island, assembled under the vaulted cope
+of heaven, and seated on the terrace of the Zonwald Hill, where of old
+Druid and Scald held their courts of judgment. The criminal was heard
+at length in his own defence, which amounted to little more than those
+specious allegations of public consideration, which are ever used to
+colour the ugly front of treason. He was fully convicted of his crime,
+and he received the doom of a traitor."
+
+"But which, I trust, is not yet executed?" said Lady Peveril, not
+without an involuntary shudder.
+
+"You are a fool, Margaret," said the Countess sharply; "think you I
+delayed such an act of justice, until some wretched intrigues of the
+new English Court might have prompted their interference? No, wench--
+he passed from the judgment-seat to the place of execution, with no
+farther delay than might be necessary for his soul's sake. He was shot
+to death by a file of musketeers in the common place of execution
+called Hango Hill."
+
+Bridgenorth clasped his hands together, wrung them, and groaned
+bitterly.
+
+"As you seem interested for this criminal," added the Countess,
+addressing Bridgenorth, "I do him but justice in repeating to you,
+that his death was firm and manly, becoming the general tenor of his
+life, which, but for that gross act of traitorous ingratitude, had
+been fair and honourable. But what of that? The hypocrite is a saint,
+and the false traitor a man of honour, till opportunity, that faithful
+touchstone, proves their metal to be base."
+
+"It is false, woman--it is false!" said Bridgenorth, no longer
+suppressing his indignation.
+
+"What means this bearing, Master Bridgenorth?" said Lady Peveril, much
+surprised. "What is this Christian to you, that you should insult the
+Countess of Derby under my roof?"
+
+"Speak not to me of countesses and of ceremonies," said Bridgenorth;
+"grief and anger leave me no leisure for idle observances to humour
+the vanity of overgrown children.--O Christian--worthy, well worthy,
+of the name thou didst bear! My friend--my brother--the brother of my
+blessed Alice--the only friend of my desolate estate! art thou then
+cruelly murdered by a female fury, who, but for thee, had deservedly
+paid with her own blood that of God's saints, which she, as well as
+her tyrant husband, had spilled like water!--Yes, cruel murderess!" he
+continued, addressing the Countess, "he whom thou hast butchered in
+thy insane vengeance, sacrificed for many a year the dictates of his
+own conscience to the interest of thy family, and did not desert it
+till thy frantic zeal for royalty had well-nigh brought to utter
+perdition the little community in which he was born. Even in confining
+thee, he acted but as the friends of the madman, who bind him with
+iron for his own preservation; and for thee, as I can bear witness, he
+was the only barrier between thee and the wrath of the Commons of
+England; and but for his earnest remonstrances, thou hadst suffered
+the penalty of thy malignancy, even like the wicked wife of Ahab."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, "I will allow for your
+impatience upon hearing these unpleasing tidings; but there is neither
+use nor propriety in farther urging this question. If in your grief
+you forget other restraints, I pray you to remember that the Countess
+is my guest and kinswoman, and is under such protection as I can
+afford her. I beseech you, in simple courtesy, to withdraw, as what
+must needs be the best and most becoming course in these trying
+circumstances."
+
+"Nay, let him remain," said the Countess, regarding him with
+composure, not unmingled with triumph; "I would not have it otherwise;
+I would not that my revenge should be summed up in the stinted
+gratification which Christian's death hath afforded. This man's rude
+and clamorous grief only proves that the retribution I have dealt has
+been more widely felt than by the wretched sufferer himself. I would I
+knew that it had but made sore as many rebel hearts, as there were
+loyal breasts afflicted by the death of my princely Derby!"
+
+"So please you, madam," said Lady Peveril, "since Master Bridgenorth
+hath not the manners to leave us upon my request, we will, if your
+ladyship lists, leave him, and retire to my apartment.--Farewell,
+Master Bridgenorth; we will meet hereafter on better terms."
+
+"Pardon me, madam," said the Major, who had been striding hastily
+through the room, but now stood fast, and drew himself up, as one who
+has taken a resolution;--"to yourself I have nothing to say but what
+is respectful; but to this woman I must speak as a magistrate. She has
+confessed a murder in my presence--the murder too of my brother-in-law
+--as a man, and as a magistrate, I cannot permit her to pass from
+hence, excepting under such custody as may prevent her farther flight.
+She has already confessed that she is a fugitive, and in search of a
+place of concealment, until she should be able to escape into foreign
+parts.--Charlotte, Countess of Derby, I attach thee of the crime of
+which thou hast but now made thy boast."
+
+"I shall not obey your arrest," said the Countess composedly; "I was
+born to give, but not to receive such orders. What have your English
+laws to do with my acts of justice and of government, within my son's
+hereditary kingdom? Am I not Queen in Man, as well as Countess of
+Derby? A feudatory Sovereign indeed; but yet independent so long as my
+dues of homage are duly discharged. What right can you assert over
+me?"
+
+"That given by the precepts of Scripture," answered Bridgenorth--
+"'Whoso spilleth man's blood, by man shall his blood be spilled.'
+Think not the barbarous privileges of ancient feudal customs will
+avail to screen you from the punishment due for an Englishman murdered
+upon pretexts inconsistent with the act of indemnity."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, "if by fair terms you
+desist not from your present purpose, I tell you that I neither dare,
+nor will, permit any violence against this honourable lady within the
+walls of my husband's castle."
+
+"You will find yourself unable to prevent me from executing my duty,
+madam," said Bridgenorth, whose native obstinacy now came in aid of
+his grief and desire of revenge; "I am a magistrate, and act by
+authority."
+
+"I know not that," said Lady Peveril. "That you /were/ a magistrate,
+Master Bridgenorth, under the late usurping powers, I know well; but
+till I hear of your having a commission in the name of the King, I now
+hesitate to obey you as such."
+
+"I shall stand on small ceremony," said Bridgenorth. "Were I no
+magistrate, every man has title to arrest for murder against the terms
+of the indemnities held out by the King's proclamations, and I will
+make my point good."
+
+"What indemnities? What proclamations?" said the Countess of Derby
+indignantly. "Charles Stuart may, if he pleases (and it doth seem to
+please him), consort with those whose hands have been red with the
+blood, and blackened with the plunder, of his father and of his loyal
+subjects. He may forgive them if he will, and count their deeds good
+service. What has that to do with this Christian's offence against me
+and mine? Born a Mankesman--bred and nursed in the island--he broke
+the laws under which he lived, and died for the breach of them, after
+the fair trial which they allowed.--Methinks, Margaret, we have enough
+of this peevish and foolish magistrate--I attend you to your
+apartment."
+
+Major Bridgenorth placed himself betwixt them and the door, in a
+manner which showed him determined to interrupt their passage; when
+the Lady Peveril, who thought she already showed more deference to him
+in this matter than her husband was likely to approve of, raised her
+voice, and called loudly on her steward, Whitaker. That alert person,
+who had heard high talking, and a female voice with which he was
+unacquainted, had remained for several minutes stationed in the
+anteroom, much afflicted with the anxiety of his own curiosity. Of
+course he entered in an instant.
+
+"Let three of the men instantly take arms," said the lady; "bring them
+into the anteroom, and wait my farther orders."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+ You shall have no worse prison than my chamber,
+ Nor jailer than myself.
+ --THE CAPTAIN.
+
+The command which Lady Peveril laid on her domestics to arm
+themselves, was so unlike the usual gentle acquiescence of her
+manners, that Major Bridgenorth was astonished. "How mean you, madam?"
+said he; "I thought myself under a friendly roof."
+
+"And you are so, Master Bridgenorth," said the Lady Peveril, without
+departing from the natural calmness of her voice and manner; "but it
+is a roof which must not be violated by the outrage of one friend
+against another."
+
+"It is well, madam," said Bridgenorth, turning to the door of the
+apartment. "The worthy Master Solsgrace has already foretold, that the
+time was returned when high houses and proud names should be once more
+an excuse for the crimes of those who inhabit the one and bear the
+other. I believed him not, but now see he is wiser than I. Yet think
+not I will endure this tamely. The blood of my brother--of the friend
+of my bosom--shall not long call from the altar, 'How long, O Lord,
+how long!' If there is one spark of justice left in this unhappy
+England, that proud woman and I shall meet where she can have no
+partial friend to protect her."
+
+So saying, he was about to leave the apartment, when Lady Peveril
+said, "You depart not from this place, Master Bridgenorth, unless you
+give me your word to renounce all purpose against the noble Countess's
+liberty upon the present occasion."
+
+"I would sooner," answered he, "subscribe to my own dishonour, madam,
+written down in express words, than to any such composition. If any
+man offers to interrupt me, his blood be on his own head!" As Major
+Bridgenorth spoke, Whitaker threw open the door, and showed that, with
+the alertness of an old soldier, who was not displeased to see things
+tend once more towards a state of warfare, he had got with him four
+stout fellows in the Knight of the Peak's livery, well armed with
+swords and carabines, buff-coats, and pistols at their girdles.
+
+"I will see," said Major Bridgenorth, "if any of these men be so
+desperate as to stop me, a freeborn Englishman, and a magistrate in
+the discharge of my duty."
+
+So saying, he advanced upon Whitaker and his armed assistants, with
+his hand on the hilt of his sword.
+
+"Do not be so desperate, Master Bridgenorth," exclaimed Lady Peveril;
+and added, in the same moment, "Lay hold upon, and disarm him,
+Whitaker; but do him no injury."
+
+Her commands were obeyed. Bridgenorth, though a man of moral
+resolution, was not one of those who undertook to cope in person with
+odds of a description so formidable. He half drew his sword, and
+offered such show of resistance as made it necessary to secure him by
+actual force; but then yielded up his weapon, and declared that,
+submitting to force which one man was unable to resist, he made those
+who commanded, and who employed it, responsible for assailing his
+liberty without a legal warrant.
+
+"Never mind a warrant on a pinch, Master Bridgenorth," said old
+Whitaker; "sure enough you have often acted upon a worse yourself. My
+lady's word is as good as a warrant, sure, as Old Noll's commission;
+and you bore that many a day, Master Bridgenorth, and, moreover, you
+laid me in the stocks for drinking the King's health, Master
+Bridgenorth, and never cared a farthing about the laws of England."
+
+"Hold your saucy tongue, Whitaker," said the Lady Peveril; "and do
+you, Master Bridgenorth, not take it to heart that you are detained
+prisoner for a few hours, until the Countess of Derby can have nothing
+to fear from your pursuit. I could easily send an escort with her that
+might bid defiance to any force you could muster; but I wish, Heaven
+knows, to bury the remembrance of old civil dissensions, not to awaken
+new. Once more, will you think better of it--assume your sword again,
+and forget whom you have now seen at Martindale Castle?"
+
+"Never," said Bridgenorth. "The crime of this cruel woman will be the
+last of human injuries which I can forget. The last thought of earthly
+kind which will leave me, will be the desire that justice shall be
+done on her."
+
+"If such be your sentiments," said Lady Peveril, "though they are more
+allied to revenge than to justice, I must provide for my friend's
+safety, by putting restraint upon your person. In this room you will
+be supplied with every necessary of life, and every convenience; and a
+message shall relieve your domestics of the anxiety which your absence
+from the Hall is not unlikely to occasion. When a few hours, at most
+two days, are over, I will myself relieve you from confinement, and
+demand your pardon for now acting as your obstinacy compels me to do."
+
+The Major made no answer, but that he was in her hands, and must
+submit to her pleasure; and then turned sullenly to the window, as if
+desirous to be rid of their presence.
+
+The Countess and the Lady Peveril left the apartment arm in arm; and
+the lady issued forth her directions to Whitaker concerning the mode
+in which she was desirous that Bridgenorth should be guarded and
+treated during his temporary confinement; at the same time explaining
+to him, that the safety of the Countess of Derby required that he
+should be closely watched.
+
+In all proposals for the prisoner's security, such as the regular
+relief of guards, and the like, Whitaker joyfully acquiesced, and
+undertook, body for body, that he should be detained in captivity for
+the necessary period. But the old steward was not half so docile when
+it came to be considered how the captive's bedding and table should be
+supplied; and he thought Lady Peveril displayed a very undue degree of
+attention to her prisoner's comforts. "I warrant," he said, "that the
+cuckoldly Roundhead ate enough of our fat beef yesterday to serve him
+for a month; and a little fasting will do his health good. Marry, for
+drink, he shall have plenty of cold water to cool his hot liver, which
+I will be bound is still hissing with the strong liquors of yesterday.
+And as for bedding, there are the fine dry board--more wholesome than
+the wet straw I lay upon when I was in the stocks, I trow."
+
+"Whitaker," said the lady peremptorily, "I desire you to provide
+Master Bridgenorth's bedding and food in the way I have signified to
+you; and to behave yourself towards him in all civility."
+
+"Lack-a-day! yes, my lady," said Whitaker; "you shall have all your
+directions punctually obeyed; but as an old servant, I cannot but
+speak my mind."
+
+The ladies retired after this conference with the steward in the
+antechamber, and were soon seated in another apartment, which was
+peculiarly dedicated to the use of the mistress of the mansion--
+having, on the one side, access to the family bedroom; and, on the
+other, to the still-room which communicated with the garden. There was
+also a small door which, ascending a few steps, led to that balcony,
+already mentioned, that overhung the kitchen; and the same passage, by
+a separate door, admitted to the principal gallery in the chapel; so
+that the spiritual and temporal affairs of the Castle were placed
+almost at once within the reach of the same regulating and directing
+eye.[*]
+
+[*] This peculiar collocation of apartments may be seen at Haddon
+ Hall, Derbyshire, once a seat of the Vernons, where, in the lady's
+ pew in the chapel, there is a sort of scuttle, which opens into
+ the kitchen, so that the good lady could ever and anon, without
+ much interruption of her religious duties, give an eye that the
+ roast-meat was not permitted to burn, and that the turn-broche did
+ his duty.
+
+In the tapestried room, from which issued these various sally-ports,
+the Countess and Lady Peveril were speedily seated; and the former,
+smiling upon the latter, said, as she took her hand, "Two things have
+happened to-day, which might have surprised me, if anything ought to
+surprise me in such times:--the first is, that yonder roundheaded
+fellow should have dared to use such insolence in the house of Peveril
+of the Peak. If your husband is yet the same honest and downright
+Cavalier whom I once knew, and had chanced to be at home, he would
+have thrown the knave out of window. But what I wonder at still more,
+Margaret, is your generalship. I hardly thought you had courage
+sufficient to have taken such decided measures, after keeping on terms
+with the man so long. When he spoke of justices and warrants, you
+looked so overawed that I thought I felt the clutch of the parish-
+beadles on my shoulder, to drag me to prison as a vagrant."
+
+"We owe Master Bridgenorth some deference, my dearest lady," answered
+the Lady Peveril; "he has served us often and kindly, in these late
+times; but neither he, nor any one else, shall insult the Countess of
+Derby in the house of Margaret Stanley."
+
+"Thou art become a perfect heroine, Margaret," replied the Countess.
+
+"Two sieges, and alarms innumerable," said Lady Peveril, "may have
+taught me presence of mind. My courage is, I believe, as slender as
+ever."
+
+"Presence of mind /is/ courage," answered the Countess. "Real valour
+consists not in being insensible to danger, but in being prompt to
+confront and disarm it;--and we may have present occasion for all that
+we possess," she added, with some slight emotion, "for I hear the
+trampling of horses' steps on the pavement of the court."
+
+In one moment, the boy Julian, breathless with joy, came flying into
+the room, to say that papa was returned, with Lamington and Sam
+Brewer; and that he was himself to ride Black Hastings to the stable.
+In the second the tramp of the honest Knight's heavy jack-boots was
+heard, as, in his haste to see his lady, he ascended the staircase by
+two steps at a time. He burst into the room; his manly countenance and
+disordered dress showing marks that he had been riding fast; and
+without looking to any one else, caught his good lady in his arms, and
+kissed her a dozen of times.--Blushing, and with some difficulty, Lady
+Peveril extricated herself from Sir Geoffrey's arms; and in a voice of
+bashful and gentle rebuke, bid him, for shame, observe who was in the
+room.
+
+"One," said the Countess, advancing to him, "who is right glad to see
+that Sir Geoffrey Peveril, though turned courtier and favourite, still
+values the treasure which she had some share in bestowing upon him.
+You cannot have forgot the raising of the leaguer of Latham House!"
+
+"The noble Countess of Derby!" said Sir Geoffrey, doffing his plumed
+hat with an air of deep deference, and kissing with much reverence the
+hand which she held out to him; "I am as glad to see your ladyship in
+my poor house, as I would be to hear that they had found a vein of
+lead in the Brown Tor. I rode hard, in the hope of being your escort
+through the country. I feared you might have fallen into bad hands,
+hearing there was a knave sent out with a warrant from the Council."
+
+"When heard you so? and from whom?"
+
+"It was from Cholmondley of Vale Royal," said Sir Geoffrey; "he is
+come down to make provision for your safety through Cheshire; and I
+promised to bring you there in safety. Prince Rupert, Ormond, and
+other friends, do not doubt the matter will be driven to a fine; but
+they say the Chancellor, and Harry Bennet, and some others of the
+over-sea counsellors, are furious at what they call a breach of the
+King's proclamation. Hang them, say I!--They left us to bear all the
+beating; and now they are incensed that we should wish to clear scores
+with those who rode us like nightmares!"
+
+"What did they talk of for my chastisement?" said the Countess.
+
+"I wot not," said Sir Geoffrey; "some friends, as I said, from our
+kind Cheshire, and others, tried to bring it to a fine; but some,
+again, spoke of nothing but the Tower, and a long imprisonment."
+
+"I have suffered imprisonment long enough for King Charles's sake,"
+said the Countess; "and have no mind to undergo it at his hand.
+Besides, if I am removed from the personal superintendence of my son's
+dominions in Man, I know not what new usurpation may be attempted
+there. I must be obliged to you, cousin, to contrive that I may get in
+security to Vale Royal, and from thence I know I shall be guarded
+safely to Liverpool."
+
+"You may rely on my guidance and protection, noble lady," answered her
+host, "though you had come here at midnight, and with the rogue's head
+in your apron, like Judith in the Holy Apocrypha, which I joy to hear
+once more read in churches."
+
+"Do the gentry resort much to the Court?" said the lady.
+
+"Ay, madam," replied Sir Geoffrey; "and according to our saying, when
+miners do begin to bore in these parts, it is /for the grace of God,
+and what they there may find/."
+
+"Meet the old Cavaliers with much countenance?" continued the
+Countess.
+
+"Faith, madam, to speak truth," replied the Knight, "the King hath so
+gracious a manner, that it makes every man's hopes blossom, though we
+have seen but few that have ripened into fruit."
+
+"You have not, yourself, my cousin," answered the Countess, "had room
+to complain of ingratitude, I trust? Few have less deserved it at the
+King's hand."
+
+Sir Geoffrey was unwilling, like most prudent persons, to own the
+existence of expectations which had proved fallacious, yet had too
+little art in his character to conceal his disappointment entirely.
+"Who, I, madam?" he said; "Alas! what should a poor country knight
+expect from the King, besides the pleasure of seeing him in Whitehall
+once more, and enjoying his own again? And his Majesty was very
+gracious when I was presented, and spoke to me of Worcester, and of my
+horse, Black Hastings--he had forgot his name, though--faith, and
+mine, too, I believe, had not Prince Rupert whispered it to him. And I
+saw some old friends, such as his Grace of Ormond, Sir Marmaduke
+Langdale, Sir Philip Musgrave, and so forth; and had a jolly rouse or
+two, to the tune of old times."
+
+"I should have thought so many wounds received--so many dangers risked
+--such considerable losses--merited something more than a few smooth
+words," said the Countess.
+
+"Nay, my lady, there were other friends of mine who had the same
+thought," answered Peveril. "Some were of opinion that the loss of so
+many hundred acres of fair land was worth some reward of honour at
+least; and there were who thought my descent from William the
+Conqueror--craving your ladyship's pardon for boasting it in your
+presence--would not have become a higher rank or title worse than the
+pedigree of some who have been promoted. But what said the witty Duke
+of Buckingham, forsooth? (whose grandsire was a Lei'stershire Knight--
+rather poorer, and scarcely so well-born as myself)--Why, he said,
+that if all of my degree who deserved well of the King in the late
+times were to be made peers, the House of Lords must meet upon
+Salisbury Plain!"
+
+"And that bad jest passed for a good argument!" said the Countess;
+"and well it might, where good arguments pass for bad jests. But here
+comes one I must be acquainted with."
+
+This was little Julian, who now re-entered the hall, leading his
+little sister, as if he had brought her to bear witness to the
+boastful tale which he told his father, of his having manfully ridden
+Black Hastings to the stable-yard, alone in the saddle; and that
+Saunders though he walked by the horse's head, did not once put his
+hand upon the rein, and Brewer, though he stood beside him, scarce
+held him by the knee. The father kissed the boy heartily; and the
+Countess, calling him to her so soon as Sir Geoffrey had set him down,
+kissed his forehead also, and then surveyed all his features with a
+keen and penetrating eye.
+
+"He is a true Peveril," said she, "mixed as he should be with some
+touch of the Stanley. Cousin, you must grant me my boon, and when I am
+safely established, and have my present affair arranged, you must let
+me have this little Julian of yours some time hence, to be nurtured in
+my house, held as my page, and the playfellow of the little Derby. I
+trust in Heaven, they will be such friends as their fathers have been,
+and may God send them more fortunate times!"
+
+"Marry, and I thank you for the proposal with all my heart, madam,"
+said the Knight. "There are so many noble houses decayed, and so many
+more in which the exercise and discipline for the training of noble
+youths is given up and neglected, that I have often feared I must have
+kept Gil to be young master at home; and I have had too little nurture
+myself to teach him much, and so he would have been a mere hunting
+hawking knight of Derbyshire. But in your ladyship's household, and
+with the noble young Earl, he will have all, and more than all, the
+education which I could desire."
+
+"There shall be no distinction betwixt them, cousin," said the
+Countess; "Margaret Stanley's son shall be as much the object of care
+to me as my own, since you are kindly disposed to entrust him to my
+charge.--You look pale, Margaret," she continued, "and the tear stands
+in your eye? Do not be so foolish, my love--what I ask is better than
+you can desire for your boy; for the house of my father, the Duke de
+la Tremouille, was the most famous school of chivalry in France; nor
+have I degenerated from him, or suffered any relaxation in that noble
+discipline which trained young gentlemen to do honour to their race.
+You can promise your Julian no such advantages, if you train him up a
+mere home-bred youth."
+
+"I acknowledge the importance of the favour, madam," said Lady
+Peveril, "and must acquiesce in what your ladyship honours us by
+proposing, and Sir Geoffrey approves of; but Julian is an only child,
+and----"
+
+"An only son," said the Countess, "but surely not an only child. You
+pay too high deference to our masters, the male sex, if you allow
+Julian to engross all your affection, and spare none for this
+beautiful girl."
+
+So saying, she set down Julian, and, taking Alice Bridgenorth on her
+lap, began to caress her; and there was, notwithstanding her masculine
+character, something so sweet in the tone of her voice and in the cast
+of her features, that the child immediately smiled, and replied to her
+marks of fondness. This mistake embarrassed Lady Peveril exceedingly.
+Knowing the blunt impetuosity of her husband's character, his devotion
+to the memory of the deceased Earl of Derby, and his corresponding
+veneration for his widow, she was alarmed for the consequences of his
+hearing the conduct of Bridgenorth that morning, and was particularly
+desirous that he should not learn it save from herself in private, and
+after due preparation. But the Countess's error led to a more
+precipitate disclosure.
+
+"That pretty girl, madam," answered Sir Geoffrey, "is none of ours--I
+wish she were. She belongs to a neighbour hard by--a good man, and, to
+say truth, a good neighbour--though he was carried off from his
+allegiance in the late times by a d--d Presbyterian scoundrel, who
+calls himself a parson, and whom I hope to fetch down from his perch
+presently, with a wannion to him! He has been cock of the roost long
+enough.--There are rods in pickle to switch the Geneva cloak with, I
+can tell the sour-faced rogues that much. But this child is the
+daughter of Bridgenorth--neighbour Bridgenorth, of Moultrassie Hall."
+
+"Bridgenorth?" said the Countess; "I thought I had known all the
+honourable names in Derbyshire--I remember nothing of Bridgenorth.--
+But stay--was there not a sequestrator and committeeman of that name?
+Sure, it cannot be he?"
+
+Peveril took some shame to himself, as he replied, "It is the very man
+whom your ladyship means, and you may conceive the reluctance with
+which I submitted to receive good offices from one of his kidney; but
+had I not done so, I should have scarce known how to find a roof to
+cover Dame Margaret's head."
+
+The Countess, as he spoke, raised the child gently from her lap, and
+placed it upon the carpet, though little Alice showed a disinclination
+to the change of place, which the lady of Derby and Man would
+certainly have indulged in a child of patrician descent and loyal
+parentage.
+
+"I blame you not," she said; "no one knows what temptation will bring
+us down to. Yet I /did/ think Peveril of the Peak would have resided
+in its deepest cavern, sooner than owed an obligation to a regicide."
+
+"Nay, madam," answered the Knight, "my neighbour is bad enough, but
+not so bad as you would make him; he is but a Presbyterian--that I
+must confess--but not an Independent."
+
+"A variety of the same monster," said the Countess, "who hallooed
+while the others hunted, and bound the victim whom the Independents
+massacred. Betwixt such sects I prefer the Independents. They are at
+least bold, bare-faced, merciless villains, have more of the tiger in
+them, and less of the crocodile. I have no doubt it was that worthy
+gentleman who took it upon him this morning----"
+
+She stopped short, for she saw Lady Peveril was vexed and embarrassed.
+
+"I am," she said, "the most luckless of beings. I have said something,
+I know not what, to distress you, Margaret--Mystery is a bad thing,
+and betwixt us there should be none."
+
+"There is none, madam," said Lady Peveril, something impatiently; "I
+waited but an opportunity to tell my husband what had happened--Sir
+Geoffrey, Master Bridgenorth was unfortunately here when the Lady
+Derby and I met; and he thought it part of his duty to speak of----"
+
+"To speak of what?" said the Knight, bending his brows. "You were ever
+something too fond, dame, of giving way to the usurpation of such
+people."
+
+"I only mean," said Lady Peveril, "that as the person--he to whom Lord
+Derby's story related--was the brother of his late lady, he threatened
+--but I cannot think that he was serious."
+
+"Threaten?--threaten the Lady of Derby and Man in my house!--the widow
+of my friend--the noble Charlotte of Latham House!--by Heaven, the
+prick-eared slave shall answer it! How comes it that my knaves threw
+him not out of the window?"
+
+"Alas! Sir Geoffrey, you forget how much we owe him," said the lady.
+
+"Owe him!" said the Knight, still more indignant; for in his
+singleness of apprehension he conceived that his wife alluded to
+pecuniary obligations,--"if I do owe him some money, hath he not
+security for it? and must he have the right, over and above, to
+domineer and play the magistrate in Martindale Castle?--Where is he?--
+what have you made of him? I will--I must speak with him."
+
+"Be patient, Sir Geoffrey," said the Countess, who now discerned the
+cause of her kinswoman's apprehension; "and be assured I did not need
+your chivalry to defend me against this discourteous faitour, as
+/Morte d'Arthur/ would have called him. I promise you my kinswoman
+hath fully righted my wrong; and I am so pleased to owe my deliverance
+entirely to her gallantry, that I charge and command you, as a true
+knight, not to mingle in the adventure of another."
+
+Lady Peveril, who knew her husband's blunt and impatient temper, and
+perceived that he was becoming angry, now took up the story, and
+plainly and simply pointed out the cause of Master Bridgenorth's
+interference.
+
+"I am sorry for it," said the Knight; "I thought he had more sense;
+and that this happy change might have done some good upon him. But you
+should have told me this instantly--It consists not with my honour
+that he should be kept prisoner in this house, as if I feared anything
+he could do to annoy the noble Countess, while she is under my roof,
+or within twenty miles of this Castle."
+
+So saying, and bowing to the Countess, he went straight to the gilded
+chamber, leaving Lady Peveril in great anxiety for the event of an
+angry meeting between a temper hasty as that of her husband, and
+stubborn like that of Bridgenorth. Her apprehensions were, however,
+unnecessary; for the meeting was not fated to take place.
+
+When Sir Geoffrey Peveril, having dismissed Whitaker and his
+sentinels, entered the gilded chamber, in which he expected to find
+his captive, the prisoner had escaped, and it was easy to see in what
+manner. The sliding panel had, in the hurry of the moment, escaped the
+memory of Lady Peveril, and of Whitaker, the only persons who knew
+anything of it. It was probable that a chink had remained open,
+sufficient to indicate its existence to Bridgenorth; who withdrawing
+it altogether, had found his way into the secret apartment with which
+it communicated, and from thence to the postern of the Castle by
+another secret passage, which had been formed in the thickness of the
+wall, as is not uncommon in ancient mansions; the lords of which were
+liable to so many mutations of fortune, that they usually contrived to
+secure some lurking place and secret mode of retreat from their
+fortresses. That Bridgenorth had discovered and availed himself of
+this secret mode of retreat was evident; because the private doors
+communicating with the postern and the sliding panel in the gilded
+chamber were both left open.
+
+Sir Geoffrey returned to the ladies with looks of perplexity. While he
+deemed Bridgenorth within his reach, he was apprehensive of nothing he
+could do; for he felt himself his superior in personal strength, and
+in that species of courage which induces a man to rush, without
+hesitation, upon personal danger. But when at a distance, he had been
+for many years accustomed to consider Bridgenorth's power and
+influence as something formidable; and notwithstanding the late change
+of affairs, his ideas so naturally reverted to his neighbour as a
+powerful friend or dangerous enemy, that he felt more apprehension on
+the Countess's score, than he was willing to acknowledge even to
+himself. The Countess observed his downcast and anxious brow, and
+requested to know if her stay there was likely to involve him in any
+trouble, or in any danger.
+
+"The trouble should be welcome," said Sir Geoffrey, "and more welcome
+the danger, which should come on such an account. My plan was, that
+your ladyship should have honoured Martindale with a few days'
+residence, which might have been kept private until the search after
+you was ended. Had I seen this fellow Bridgenorth, I have no doubt I
+could have compelled him to act discreetly; but he is now at liberty,
+and will keep out of my reach; and, what is worse, he has the secret
+of the priest's chamber."
+
+Here the Knight paused, and seemed much embarrassed.
+
+"You can, then, neither conceal nor protect me?" said the Countess.
+
+"Pardon, my honoured lady," answered the Knight, "and let me say out
+my say. The plain truth is, that this man hath many friends among the
+Presbyterians here, who are more numerous than I would wish them; and
+if he falls in with the pursuivant fellow who carries the warrant of
+the Privy Council, it is likely he will back him with force sufficient
+to try to execute it. And I doubt whether any of our friends can be
+summoned together in haste, sufficient to resist such a power as they
+are like to bring together."
+
+"Nor would I wish any friends to take arms, in my name, against the
+King's warrant, Sir Geoffrey," said the Countess.
+
+"Nay, for that matter," replied the Knight, "an his Majesty will grant
+warrants against his best friends, he must look to have them resisted.
+But the best I can think of in this emergence is--though the proposal
+be something inhospitable--that your ladyship should take presently to
+horse, if your fatigue will permit. I will mount also, with some brisk
+fellows, who will lodge you safe at Vale Royal, though the Sheriff
+stopped the way with a whole /posse comitatus/."
+
+The Countess of Derby willingly acquiesced in this proposal. She had
+enjoyed a night's sound repose in the private chamber, to which
+Ellesmere had guided her on the preceding evening, and was quite ready
+to resume her route, or flight--"she scarce knew," she said, "which of
+the two she should term it."
+
+Lady Peveril wept at the necessity which seemed to hurry her earliest
+friend and protectress from under her roof, at the instant when the
+clouds of adversity were gathering around her; but she saw no
+alternative equally safe. Nay, however strong her attachment to Lady
+Derby, she could not but be more readily reconciled to her hasty
+departure, when she considered the inconvenience, and even danger, in
+which her presence, at such a time, and in such circumstances, was
+likely to involve a man so bold and hot-tempered as her husband Sir
+Geoffrey.
+
+While Lady Peveril, therefore, made every arrangement which time
+permitted and circumstances required, for the Countess prosecuting her
+journey, her husband, whose spirits always rose with the prospect of
+action, issued his orders to Whitaker to get together a few stout
+fellows, with back and breast pieces, and steel-caps. "There are the
+two lackeys, and Outram and Saunders, besides the other groom fellow,
+and Roger Raine, and his son; but bid Roger not come drunk again;--
+thyself, young Dick of the Dale and his servant, and a file or two of
+the tenants,--we shall be enough for any force they can make. All
+these are fellows that will strike hard, and ask no question why--
+their hands are ever readier than their tongues, and their mouths are
+more made for drinking than speaking."
+
+Whitaker, apprised of the necessity of the case, asked if he should
+not warn Sir Jasper Cranbourne.
+
+"Not a word to him, as you live," said the Knight; "this may be an
+outlawry, as they call it, for what I know; and therefore I will bring
+no lands or tenements into peril, saving mine own. Sir Jasper hath had
+a troublesome time of it for many a year. By my will, he shall sit
+quiet for the rest of's days."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+ /Fang./--A rescue! a rescue!
+ /Mrs. Quickly./--Good people, bring a rescue or two.
+ --Henry IV. /Part I./
+
+The followers of Peveril were so well accustomed to the sound of "Boot
+and Saddle," that they were soon mounted and in order; and in all the
+form, and with some of the dignity of danger, proceeded to escort the
+Countess of Derby through the hilly and desert tract of country which
+connects the frontier of the shire with the neighbouring county of
+Cheshire. The cavalcade moved with considerable precaution, which they
+had been taught by the discipline of the Civil Wars. One wary and
+well-mounted trooper rode about two hundred yards in advance;
+followed, at about half that distance, by two more, with their
+carabines advanced, as if ready for action. About one hundred yards
+behind the advance, came the main body; where the Countess of Derby,
+mounted on Lady Peveril's ambling palfrey (for her own had been
+exhausted by the journey from London to Martindale Castle),
+accompanied by one groom, of approved fidelity, and one waiting-maid,
+was attended and guarded by the Knight of the Peak, and three files of
+good and practised horsemen. In the rear came Whitaker, with Lance
+Outram, as men of especial trust, to whom the covering the retreat was
+confided. They rode, as the Spanish proverb expresses it, "with the
+beard on the shoulder," looking around, that is, from time to time,
+and using every precaution to have the speediest knowledge of any
+pursuit which might take place.
+
+But, however wise in discipline, Peveril and his followers were
+somewhat remiss in civil policy. The Knight had communicated to
+Whitaker, though without any apparent necessity, the precise nature of
+their present expedition; and Whitaker was equally communicative to
+his comrade Lance, the keeper. "It is strange enough, Master
+Whitaker," said the latter, when he had heard the case, "and I wish
+you, being a wise man, would expound it;--why, when we have been
+wishing for the King--and praying for the King--and fighting for the
+King--and dying for the King, for these twenty years, the first thing
+we find to do on his return, is to get into harness to resist his
+warrant?"
+
+"Pooh! you silly fellow," said Whitaker, "that is all you know of the
+true bottom of our quarrel! Why, man, we fought for the King's person
+against his warrant, all along from the very beginning; for I remember
+the rogues' proclamations, and so forth, always ran in the name of the
+King and Parliament."
+
+"Ay! was it even so?" replied Lance. "Nay, then, if they begin the old
+game so soon again, and send out warrants in the King's name against
+his loyal subjects, well fare our stout Knight, say I, who is ready to
+take them down in their stocking-soles. And if Bridgenorth takes the
+chase after us, I shall not be sorry to have a knock at him for one."
+
+"Why, the man, bating he is a pestilent Roundhead and Puritan," said
+Whitaker, "is no bad neighbour. What has he done to thee, man?"
+
+"He has poached on the manor," answered the keeper.
+
+"The devil he has!" replied Whitaker. "Thou must be jesting, Lance.
+Bridgenorth is neither hunter nor hawker; he hath not so much of
+honesty in him."
+
+"Ay, but he runs after game you little think of, with his sour,
+melancholy face, that would scare babes and curdle milk," answered
+Lance.
+
+"Thou canst not mean the wenches?" said Whitaker; "why, he hath been
+melancholy mad with moping for the death of his wife. Thou knowest our
+lady took the child, for fear he should strangle it for putting him in
+mind of its mother, in some of his tantrums. Under her favour, and
+among friends, there are many poor Cavaliers' children, that care
+would be better bestowed upon--But to thy tale."
+
+"Why, thus it runs," said Lance. "I think you may have noticed, Master
+Whitaker, that a certain Mistress Deborah hath manifested a certain
+favour for a certain person in a certain household."
+
+"For thyself, to wit," answered Whitaker; "Lance Outram, thou art the
+vainest coxcomb----"
+
+"Coxcomb?" said Lance; "why, 'twas but last night the whole family saw
+her, as one would say, fling herself at my head."
+
+"I would she had been a brickbat then, to have broken it, for thy
+impertinence and conceit," said the steward.
+
+"Well, but do but hearken. The next morning--that is, this very
+blessed morning--I thought of going to lodge a buck in the park,
+judging a bit of venison might be wanted in the larder, after
+yesterday's wassail; and, as I passed under the nursery window, I did
+but just look up to see what madam governante was about; and so I saw
+her, through the casement, whip on her hood and scarf as soon as she
+had a glimpse of me. Immediately after I saw the still-room door open,
+and made sure she was coming through the garden, and so over the
+breach and down to the park; and so, thought I, 'Aha, Mistress Deb, if
+you are so ready to dance after my pipe and tabor, I will give you a
+couranto before you shall come up with me.' And so I went down Ivy-tod
+Dingle, where the copse is tangled, and the ground swampy, and round
+by Haxley-bottom, thinking all the while she was following, and
+laughing in my sleeve at the round I was giving her."
+
+"You deserved to be ducked for it," said Whitaker, "for a weather-
+headed puppy; but what is all this Jack-a-lantern story to
+Bridgenorth?"
+
+"Why, it was all along of he, man," continued Lance, "that is, of
+Bridgenorth, that she did not follow me--Gad, I first walked slow, and
+then stopped, and then turned back a little, and then began to wonder
+what she had made of herself, and to think I had borne myself
+something like a jackass in the matter."
+
+"That I deny," said Whitaker, "never jackass but would have borne him
+better--but go on."
+
+"Why, turning my face towards the Castle, I went back as if I had my
+nose bleeding, when just by the Copely thorn, which stands, you know,
+a flight-short from the postern-gate, I saw Madam Deb in close
+conference with the enemy."
+
+"What enemy?" said the steward.
+
+"What enemy! why, who but Bridgenorth? They kept out of sight, and
+among the copse; but, thought I, it is hard if I cannot stalk you,
+that have stalked so many bucks. If so, I had better give my shafts to
+be pudding pins. So I cast round the thicket, to watch their waters;
+and may I never bend crossbow again, if I did not see him give her
+gold, and squeeze her by the hand!"
+
+"And was that all you saw pass between them?" said the steward.
+
+"Faith, and it was enough to dismount me from my hobby," said Lance.
+"What! when I thought I had the prettiest girl in the Castle dancing
+after my whistle, to find that she gave me the bag to hold, and was
+smuggling in a corner with a rich old Puritan!"
+
+"Credit me, Lance, it is not as thou thinkest," said Whitaker.
+"Bridgenorth cares not for these amorous toys, and thou thinkest of
+nothing else. But it is fitting our Knight should know that he has met
+with Deborah in secret, and given her gold; for never Puritan gave
+gold yet, but it was earnest for some devil's work done, or to be
+done."
+
+"Nay, but," said Lance, "I would not be such a dog-bolt as to go and
+betray the girl to our master. She hath a right to follow her fancy,
+as the dame said who kissed her cow--only I do not much approve her
+choice, that is all. He cannot be six years short of fifty; and a
+verjuice countenance, under the penthouse of a slouched beaver, and
+bag of meagre dried bones, swaddled up in a black cloak, is no such
+temptation, methinks."
+
+"I tell you once more," said Whitaker, "you are mistaken; and that
+there neither is, nor can be, any matter of love between them, but
+only some intrigue, concerning, perhaps, this same noble Countess of
+Derby. I tell thee, it behoves my master to know it, and I will
+presently tell it to him."
+
+So saying, and in spite of all the remonstrances which Lance continued
+to make on behalf of Mistress Deborah, the steward rode up to the main
+body of their little party, and mentioned to the Knight, and the
+Countess of Derby, what he had just heard from the keeper, adding at
+the same time his own suspicions, that Master Bridgenorth of
+Moultrassie Hall was desirous to keep up some system of espial in the
+Castle of Martindale, either in order to secure his menaced vengeance
+on the Countess of Derby, as authoress of his brother-in-law's death,
+or for some unknown, but probably sinister purpose.
+
+The Knight of the Peak was filled with high resentment at Whitaker's
+communication. According to his prejudices, those of the opposite
+faction were supposed to make up by wit and intrigue what they wanted
+in open force; and he now hastily conceived that his neighbour, whose
+prudence he always respected, and sometimes even dreaded, was
+maintaining for his private purposes, a clandestine correspondence
+with a member of his family. If this was for the betrayal of his noble
+guest, it argued at once treachery and presumption; or, viewing the
+whole as Lance had done, a criminal intrigue with a woman so near the
+person of Lady Peveril, was in itself, he deemed, a piece of sovereign
+impertinence and disrespect on the part of such a person as
+Bridgenorth, against whom Sir Geoffrey's anger was kindled
+accordingly.
+
+Whitaker had scarce regained his post in the rear, when he again
+quitted it, and galloped to the main body with more speed than before,
+with the unpleasing tidings that they were pursued by half a score of
+horseman, and better.
+
+"Ride on briskly to Hartley-nick," said the Knight, "and there, with
+God to help, we will bide the knaves.--Countess of Derby--one word and
+a short one--Farewell!--you must ride forward with Whitaker and
+another careful fellow, and let me alone to see that no one treads on
+your skirts."
+
+"I will abide with you and stand them," said the Countess; "you know
+of old, I fear not to look on man's work."
+
+"You /must/ ride on, madam," said the Knight, "for the sake of the
+young Earl, and the rest of my noble friends' family. There is no
+manly work which can be worth your looking upon; it is but child's
+play that these fellows bring with them."
+
+As she yielded a reluctant consent to continue her flight, they
+reached the bottom of Hartley-nick, a pass very steep and craggy, and
+where the road, or rather path, which had hitherto passed over more
+open ground, became pent up and confined betwixt copsewood on the one
+side, and, on the other, the precipitous bank of a mountain stream.
+
+The Countess of Derby, after an affectionate adieu to Sir Geoffrey,
+and having requested him to convey her kind commendations to her
+little page-elect and his mother, proceeded up the pass at a round
+pace, and with her attendants and escort, was soon out of sight.
+Immediately after she had disappeared, the pursuers came up with Sir
+Geoffrey Peveril, who had divided and drawn up his party so as
+completely to occupy the road at three different points.
+
+The opposite party was led, as Sir Geoffrey had expected, by Major
+Bridgenorth. At his side was a person in black, with a silver
+greyhound on his arm; and he was followed by about eight or ten
+inhabitants of the village of Martindale Moultrassie, two or three of
+whom were officers of the peace, and others were personally known to
+Sir Geoffrey as favourers of the subverted government.
+
+As the party rode briskly up, Sir Geoffrey called to them to halt; and
+as they continued advancing, he ordered his own people to present
+their pistols and carabines; and after assuming that menacing
+attitude, he repeated, with a voice of thunder, "Halt, or we fire!"
+
+The other party halted accordingly, and Major Bridgenorth advanced, as
+if to parley.
+
+"Why, how now, neighbour," said Sir Geoffrey, as if he had at that
+moment recognised him for the first time,--"what makes you ride so
+sharp this morning? Are you not afraid to harm your horse, or spoil
+your spurs?"
+
+"Sir Geoffrey," said the Major, "I have not time for jesting--I'm on
+the King's affairs."
+
+"Are you sure it is not upon Old Noll's, neighbour? You used to hold
+his the better errand," said the Knight, with a smile which gave
+occasion to a horse-laugh among his followers.
+
+"Show him your warrant," said Bridgenorth to the man in black formerly
+mentioned, who was a pursuivant. Then taking the warrant from the
+officer, he gave it to Sir Geoffrey--"To this, at least, you will pay
+regard."
+
+"The same regard which you would have paid to it a month back or so,"
+said the Knight, tearing the warrant to shreds.--"What a plague do you
+stare at? Do you think you have a monopoly of rebellion, and that we
+have not a right to show a trick of disobedience in our turn?"
+
+"Make way, Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "or you will
+compel me to do that I may be sorry for. I am in this matter the
+avenger of the blood of one of the Lord's saints, and I will follow
+the chase while Heaven grants me an arm to make my way."
+
+"You shall make no way here but at your peril," said Sir Geoffrey;
+"this is my ground--I have been harassed enough for these twenty years
+by saints, as you call yourselves. I tell you, master, you shall
+neither violate the security of my house, nor pursue my friends over
+the grounds, nor tamper, as you have done, amongst my servants, with
+impunity. I have had you in respect for certain kind doings, which I
+will not either forget or deny, and you will find it difficult to make
+me draw a sword or bend a pistol against you; but offer any hostile
+movement, or presume to advance a foot, and I will make sure of you
+presently. And for those rascals, who come hither to annoy a noble
+lady on my bounds, unless you draw them off, I will presently send
+some of them to the devil before their time."
+
+"Make room at your proper peril," said Major Bridgenorth; and he put
+his right hand on his holster-pistol. Sir Geoffrey closed with him
+instantly, seized him by the collar, and spurred Black Hastings,
+checking him at the same time, so that the horse made a courbette, and
+brought the full weight of his chest against the counter of the other.
+A ready soldier might, in Bridgenorth's situation, have rid himself of
+his adversary with a bullet. But Bridgenorth's courage,
+notwithstanding his having served some time with the Parliament army,
+was rather of a civil than a military character; and he was inferior
+to his adversary, not only in strength and horsemanship, but also and
+especially in the daring and decisive resolution which made Sir
+Geoffrey thrust himself readily into personal contest. While,
+therefore, they tugged and grappled together upon terms which bore
+such little accordance with their long acquaintance and close
+neighbourhood, it was no wonder that Bridgenorth should be unhorsed
+with much violence. While Sir Geoffrey sprung from the saddle, the
+party of Bridgenorth advanced to rescue their leader, and that of the
+Knight to oppose them. Swords were unsheathed, and pistols presented;
+but Sir Geoffrey, with the voice of a herald, commanded both parties
+to stand back, and to keep the peace.
+
+The pursuivant took the hint, and easily found a reason for not
+prosecuting a dangerous duty. "The warrant," he said, "was destroyed.
+They that did it must be answerable to the Council; for his part, he
+could proceed no farther without his commission."
+
+"Well said, and like a peaceable fellow!" said Sir Geoffrey.--"Let him
+have refreshment at the Castle--his nag is sorely out of condition.--
+Come, neighbour Bridgenorth, get up, man--I trust you have had no hurt
+in this mad affray? I was loath to lay hand on you, man, till you
+plucked out your petronel."
+
+As he spoke thus, he aided the Major to rise. The pursuivant,
+meanwhile, drew aside; and with him the constable and head-borough,
+who were not without some tacit suspicion, that though Peveril was
+interrupting the direct course of law in this matter, yet he was
+likely to have his offence considered by favourable judges; and
+therefore it might be as much for their interest and safety to give
+way as to oppose him. But the rest of the party, friends of
+Bridgenorth, and of his principles, kept their ground notwithstanding
+this defection, and seemed, from their looks, sternly determined to
+rule their conduct by that of their leader, whatever it might be.
+
+But it was evident that Bridgenorth did not intend to renew the
+struggle. He shook himself rather roughly free from the hands of Sir
+Geoffrey Peveril; but it was not to draw his sword. On the contrary,
+he mounted his horse with a sullen and dejected air; and, making a
+sign to his followers, turned back the same road which he had come.
+Sir Geoffrey looked after him for some minutes. "Now, there goes a
+man," said he, "who would have been a right honest fellow had he not
+been a Presbyterian. But there is no heartiness about them--they can
+never forgive a fair fall upon the sod--they bear malice, and that I
+hate as I do a black cloak, or a Geneva skull-cap, and a pair of long
+ears rising on each side on't, like two chimneys at the gable ends of
+a thatched cottage. They are as sly as the devil to boot; and,
+therefore, Lance Outram, take two with you, and keep after them, that
+they may not turn our flank, and get on the track of the Countess
+again after all."
+
+"I had as soon they should course my lady's white tame doe," answered
+Lance, in the spirit of his calling. He proceeded to execute his
+master's orders by dogging Major Bridgenorth at a distance, and
+observing his course from such heights as commanded the country. But
+it was soon evident that no manoeuvre was intended, and that the Major
+was taking the direct road homeward. When this was ascertained, Sir
+Geoffrey dismissed most of his followers; and retaining only his own
+domestics, rode hastily forward to overtake the Countess.
+
+It is only necessary to say farther, that he completed his purpose of
+escorting the Countess of Derby to Vale Royal, without meeting any
+further hindrance by the way. The lord of the mansion readily
+undertook to conduct the high-minded lady to Liverpool, and the task
+of seeing her safely embarked for her son's hereditary dominions,
+where there was no doubt of her remaining in personal safety until the
+accusation against her for breach of the Royal Indemnity, by the
+execution of Christian, could be brought to some compromise.
+
+For a length of time this was no easy matter. Clarendon, then at the
+head of Charles's administration, considered her rash action, though
+dictated by motives which the human breast must, in some respects,
+sympathise with, as calculated to shake the restored tranquillity of
+England, by exciting the doubts and jealousies of those who had to
+apprehend the consequences of what is called, in our own time, a
+/reaction/. At the same time, the high services of this distinguished
+family--the merits of the Countess herself--the memory of her gallant
+husband--and the very peculiar circumstances of jurisdiction which
+took the case out of all common rules, pleaded strongly in her favour;
+and the death of Christian was at length only punished by the
+imposition of a heavy fine, amounting, we believe, to many thousand
+pounds; which was levied, with great difficulty, out of the shattered
+estates of the young Earl of Derby.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+ My native land, good night!
+ --BYRON.
+
+Lady Peveril remained in no small anxiety for several hours after her
+husband and the Countess had departed from Martindale Castle; more
+especially when she learned that Major Bridgenorth, concerning whose
+motions she made private inquiry, had taken horse with a party, and
+was gone to the westward in the same direction with Sir Geoffrey.
+
+At length her immediate uneasiness in regard to the safety of her
+husband and the Countess was removed, by the arrival of Whitaker, with
+her husband's commendations, and an account of the scuffle betwixt
+himself and Major Bridgenorth.
+
+Lady Peveril shuddered to see how nearly they had approached to
+renewal of the scenes of civil discord; and while she was thankful to
+Heaven for her husband's immediate preservation, she could not help
+feeling both regret and apprehension for the consequences of his
+quarrel with Major Bridgenorth. They had now lost an old friend, who
+had showed himself such under those circumstances of adversity by
+which friendship is most severely tried; and she could not disguise
+from herself that Bridgenorth, thus irritated, might be a troublesome,
+if not a dangerous enemy. His rights as a creditor, he had hitherto
+used with gentleness; but if he should employ rigour, Lady Peveril,
+whose attention to domestic economy had made her much better
+acquainted with her husband's affairs than he was himself, foresaw
+considerable inconvenience from the measures which the law put in his
+power. She comforted herself with the recollection, however, that she
+had still a strong hold on Bridgenorth, through his paternal
+affection, and from the fixed opinion which he had hitherto
+manifested, that his daughter's health could only flourish while under
+her charge. But any expectations of reconciliation which Lady Peveril
+might probably have founded on this circumstance, were frustrated by
+an incident which took place in the course of the following morning.
+
+The governante, Mistress Deborah, who has been already mentioned, went
+forth, as usual, with the children, to take their morning exercise in
+the Park, attended by Rachael, a girl who acted occasionally as her
+assistant in attending upon them. But not as usual did she return. It
+was near the hour of breakfast, when Ellesmere, with an unwonted
+degree of primness in her mouth and manner, came to acquaint her lady
+that Mistress Deborah had not thought proper to come back from the
+Park, though the breakfast hour approached so near.
+
+"She will come, then, presently," said Lady Peveril with indifference.
+
+Ellesmere gave a short and doubtful cough, and then proceeded to say,
+that Rachael had been sent home with little Master Julian, and that
+Mistress Deborah had been pleased to say, she would walk on with Miss
+Bridgenorth as far as Moultrassie Holt; which was a point at which the
+property of the Major, as matters now stood, bounded that of Sir
+Geoffrey Peveril.
+
+"Is the wench turned silly," exclaimed the lady, something angrily,
+"that she does not obey my orders, and return at regular hours?"
+
+"She may be turning silly," said Ellesmere mysteriously; "or she may
+be turning too sly; and I think it were as well your ladyship looked
+to it."
+
+"Looked to what, Ellesmere?" said the lady impatiently. "You are
+strangely oracular this morning. If you know anything to the prejudice
+of this young woman, I pray you speak it out."
+
+"I prejudice!" said Ellesmere; "I scorn to prejudice man, woman, or
+child, in the way of a fellow-servant; only I wish your ladyship to
+look about you, and use your own eyes--that is all."
+
+"You bid me use my own eyes, Ellesmere; but I suspect," answered the
+lady, "you would be better pleased were I contented to see through
+your spectacles. I charge you--and you know I will be obeyed--I charge
+you to tell me what you know or suspect about this girl, Deborah
+Debbitch."
+
+"I see through spectacles!" exclaimed the indignant Abigail; "your
+ladyship will pardon me in that, for I never use them, unless a pair
+that belonged to my poor mother, which I put on when your ladyship
+wants your pinners curiously wrought. No woman above sixteen ever did
+white-seam without barnacles. And then as to suspecting, I suspect
+nothing; for as your ladyship hath taken Mistress Deborah Debbitch
+from under my hand, to be sure it is neither bread nor butter of mine.
+Only" (here she began to speak with her lips shut, so as scarce to
+permit a sound to issue, and mincing her words as if she pinched off
+the ends of them before she suffered them to escape),--"only, madam,
+if Mistress Deborah goes so often of a morning to Moultrassie Holt,
+why, I should not be surprised if she should never find the way back
+again."
+
+"Once more, what do you mean, Ellesmere? You were wont to have some
+sense--let me know distinctly what the matter is."
+
+"Only, madam," pursued the Abigail, "that since Bridgenorth came back
+from Chesterfield, and saw you at the Castle Hall, Mistress Deborah
+has been pleased to carry the children every morning to that place;
+and it has so happened that she has often met the Major, as they call
+him, there in his walks; for he can walk about now like other folks;
+and I warrant you she hath not been the worse of the meeting--one way
+at least, for she hath bought a new hood might serve yourself, madam;
+but whether she hath had anything in hand besides a piece of money, no
+doubt your ladyship is best judge."
+
+Lady Peveril, who readily adopted the more good-natured construction
+of the governante's motives, could not help laughing at the idea of a
+man of Bridgenorth's precise appearance, strict principles, and
+reserved habits, being suspected of a design of gallantry; and readily
+concluded, that Mistress Deborah had found her advantage in gratifying
+his parental affection by a frequent sight of his daughter during the
+few days which intervened betwixt his first seeing little Alice at the
+Castle, and the events which had followed. But she was somewhat
+surprised, when, an hour after the usual breakfast hour, during which
+neither the child nor Mistress Deborah appeared, Major Bridgenorth's
+only man-servant arrived at the Castle on horseback, dressed as for a
+journey; and having delivered a letter addressed to herself, and
+another to Mistress Ellesmere, rode away without waiting any answer.
+
+There would have been nothing remarkable in this, had any other person
+been concerned; but Major Bridgenorth was so very quiet and orderly in
+all his proceedings--so little liable to act hastily or by impulse,
+that the least appearance of bustle where he was concerned, excited
+surprise and curiosity.
+
+Lady Peveril broke her letter hastily open, and found that it
+contained the following lines:--
+
+
+ "/For the Hands of the Honourable and Honoured Lady Peveril--
+ These:/
+
+ "Madam--Please it your Ladyship,--I write more to excuse myself to
+ your ladyship, than to accuse either you or others, in respect
+ that I am sensible it becomes our frail nature better to confess
+ our own imperfections, than to complain of those of others.
+ Neither do I mean to speak of past times, particularly in respect
+ of your worthy ladyship, being sensible that if I have served you
+ in that period when our Israel might be called triumphant, you
+ have more than requited me, in giving to my arms a child,
+ redeemed, as it were, from the vale of the shadow of death. And
+ therefore, as I heartily forgive to your ladyship the unkind and
+ violent measure which you dealt to me at our last meeting (seeing
+ that the woman who was the cause of strife is accounted one of
+ your kindred people), I do entreat you, in like manner, to pardon
+ my enticing away from your service the young woman called Deborah
+ Debbitch, whose direction, is, it may be, indispensable to the
+ health of my dearest child. I had purposed, madam, with your
+ gracious permission, that Alice should have remained at Martindale
+ Castle, under your kind charge, until she could so far discern
+ betwixt good and evil, that it should be matter of conscience to
+ teach her the way in which she should go. For it is not unknown to
+ your ladyship, and in no way do I speak it reproachfully, but
+ rather sorrowfully, that a person so excellently gifted as
+ yourself--I mean touching natural qualities--has not yet received
+ that true light, which is a lamp to the paths, but are contented
+ to stumble in darkness, and among the graves of dead men. It has
+ been my prayer in the watches of the night, that your ladyship
+ should cease from the doctrine which causeth to err; but I grieve
+ to say, that our candlestick being about to be removed, the land
+ will most likely be involved in deeper darkness than ever; and the
+ return of the King, to which I and many looked forward as a
+ manifestation of divine favour, seems to prove little else than a
+ permitted triumph of the Prince of the Air, who setteth about to
+ restore his Vanity-fair of bishops, deans, and such like,
+ extruding the peaceful ministers of the word, whose labours have
+ proved faithful to many hungry souls. So, hearing from a sure
+ hand, that commission has gone forth to restore these dumb dogs,
+ the followers of Laud and of Williams, who were cast forth by the
+ late Parliament, and that an Act of Conformity, or rather of
+ deformity, of worship, was to be expected, it is my purpose to
+ flee from the wrath to come, and to seek some corner where I may
+ dwell in peace, and enjoy liberty of conscience. For who would
+ abide in the Sanctuary, after the carved work thereof is broken
+ down, and when it hath been made a place for owls, and satyrs of
+ the wilderness?--And herein I blame myself, madam, that I went in
+ the singleness of my heart too readily into that carousing in the
+ house of feasting, wherein my love of union, and my desire to show
+ respect to your ladyship, were made a snare to me. But I trust it
+ will be an atonement, that I am now about to absent myself from
+ the place of my birth, and the house of my fathers, as well as
+ from the place which holdeth the dust of those pledges of my
+ affection. I have also to remember, that in this land my honour
+ (after the worldly estimation) hath been abated, and my utility
+ circumscribed, by your husband, Sir Geoffrey Peveril; and that
+ without any chance of my obtaining reparation at his hand, whereby
+ I may say the hand of a kinsman was lifted up against my credit
+ and my life. These things are bitter to the taste of the old Adam;
+ wherefore to prevent farther bickerings, and, it may be,
+ bloodshed, it is better that I leave this land for a time. The
+ affairs which remain to be settled between Sir Geoffrey and
+ myself, I shall place in the hand of the righteous Master Joachim
+ Win-the-Fight, an attorney in Chester, who will arrange them with
+ such attention to Sir Geoffrey's convenience, as justice, and the
+ due exercise of the law, will permit; for, as I trust I shall
+ have grace to resist the temptation to make the weapons of carnal
+ warfare the instruments of my revenge, so I scorn to effect it
+ through the means of Mammon. Wishing, madam, that the Lord may
+ grant you every blessing, and, in especial, that which is over all
+ others, namely, the true knowledge of His way, I remain, your
+ devoted servant to command, RALPH BRIDGENORTH.
+
+ "/Written at Moultrassie Hall, this tenth
+ day of July, 1660./"
+
+
+So soon as Lady Peveril had perused this long and singular homily, in
+which it seemed to her that her neighbour showed more spirit of
+religious fanaticism than she could have supposed him possessed of,
+she looked up and beheld Ellesmere,--with a countenance in which
+mortification, and an affected air of contempt, seemed to struggle
+together,--who, tired with watching the expression of her mistress's
+countenance, applied for confirmation of her suspicions in plain
+terms.
+
+"I suppose, madam," said the waiting-woman, "the fanatic fool intends
+to marry the wench? They say he goes to shift the country. Truly it's
+time, indeed; for, besides that the whole neighbourhood would laugh
+him to scorn, I should not be surprised if Lance Outram, the keeper,
+gave him a buck's head to bear; for that is all in the way of his
+office."
+
+"There is no great occasion for your spite at present, Ellesmere,"
+replied her lady. "My letter says nothing of marriage; but it would
+appear that Master Bridgenorth, being to leave this country, has
+engaged Deborah to take care of his child; and I am sure I am heartily
+glad of it, for the infant's sake."
+
+"And I am glad of it for my own," said Ellesmere; "and, indeed, for
+the sake of the whole house.--And your ladyship thinks she is not like
+to be married to him? Troth, I could never see how he should be such
+an idiot; but perhaps she is going to do worse; for she speaks here of
+coming to high preferment, and that scarce comes by honest servitude
+nowadays; then she writes me about sending her things, as if I were
+mistress of the wardrobe to her ladyship--ay, and recommends Master
+Julian to the care of my age and experience, forsooth, as if she
+needed to recommend the dear little jewel to me; and then, to speak of
+my age--But I will bundle away her rags to the Hall, with a witness!"
+
+"Do it with all civility," said the lady, "and let Whitaker send her
+the wages for which she has served, and a broad-piece over and above;
+for though a light-headed young woman, she was kind to the children."
+
+"I know who is kind to their servants, madam, and would spoil the best
+ever pinned a gown."
+
+"I spoiled a good one, Ellesmere, when I spoiled thee," said the lady;
+"but tell Mistress Deborah to kiss the little Alice for me, and to
+offer my good wishes to Major Bridgenorth, for his temporal and future
+happiness."
+
+She permitted no observation or reply, but dismissed her attendant,
+without entering into farther particulars.
+
+When Ellesmere had withdrawn, Lady Peveril began to reflect, with much
+feeling of compassion, on the letter of Major Bridgenorth; a person in
+whom there were certainly many excellent qualities, but whom a series
+of domestic misfortunes, and the increasing gloom of a sincere, yet
+stern feeling of devotion, rendered lonely and unhappy; and she had
+more than one anxious thought for the happiness of the little Alice,
+brought up, as she was likely to be, under such a father. Still the
+removal of Bridgenorth was, on the whole, a desirable event; for while
+he remained at the Hall, it was but too likely that some accidental
+collision with Sir Geoffrey might give rise to a rencontre betwixt
+them, more fatal than the last had been.
+
+In the meanwhile, she could not help expressing to Doctor Dummerar her
+surprise and sorrow, that all which she had done and attempted, to
+establish peace and unanimity betwixt the contending factions, had
+been perversely fated to turn out the very reverse of what she had
+aimed at.
+
+"But for my unhappy invitation," she said, "Bridgenorth would not have
+been at the Castle on the morning which succeeded the feast, would not
+have seen the Countess, and would not have incurred the resentment and
+opposition of my husband. And but for the King's return, an event
+which was so anxiously expected as the termination of all our
+calamities, neither the noble lady nor ourselves had been engaged in
+this new path of difficulty and danger."
+
+"Honoured madam," said Doctor Dummerar, "were the affairs of this
+world to be guided implicitly by human wisdom, or were they uniformly
+to fall out according to the conjectures of human foresight, events
+would no longer be under the domination of that time and chance, which
+happen unto all men, since we should, in the one case, work out our
+own purposes to a certainty, by our own skill, and in the other,
+regulate our conduct according to the views of unerring prescience.
+But man is, while in this vale of tears, like an uninstructed bowler,
+so to speak, who thinks to attain the jack, by delivering his bowl
+straight forward upon it, being ignorant that there is a concealed
+bias within the spheroid, which will make it, in all probability,
+swerve away, and lose the cast."
+
+Having spoken this with a sententious air, the Doctor took his shovel-
+shaped hat, and went down to the Castle green, to conclude a match of
+bowls with Whitaker, which had probably suggested this notable
+illustration of the uncertain course of human events.
+
+Two days afterwards, Sir Geoffrey arrived. He had waited at Vale Royal
+till he heard of the Countess's being safely embarked for Man, and
+then had posted homeward to his Castle and Dame Margaret. On his way,
+he learned from some of his attendants, the mode in which his lady had
+conducted the entertainment which she had given to the neighbourhood
+at his order; and notwithstanding the great deference he usually
+showed in cases where Lady Peveril was concerned, he heard of her
+liberality towards the Presbyterian party with great indignation.
+
+"I could have admitted Bridgenorth," he said, "for he always bore him
+in neighbourly and kindly fashion till this last career--I could have
+endured him, so he would have drunk the King's health, like a true man
+--but to bring that snuffling scoundrel Solsgrace, with all his
+beggarly, long-eared congregation, to hold a conventicle in my
+father's house--to let them domineer it as they listed--why, I would
+not have permitted them such liberty, when they held their head the
+highest! They never, in the worst of times, found any way into
+Martindale Castle but what Noll's cannon made for them; and that they
+should come and cant there, when good King Charles is returned--By my
+hand, Dame Margaret shall hear of it!"
+
+But, notwithstanding these ireful resolutions, resentment altogether
+subsided in the honest Knight's breast, when he saw the fair features
+of his lady lightened with affectionate joy at his return in safety.
+As he took her in his arms and kissed her, he forgave her ere he
+mentioned her offence.
+
+"Thou hast played the knave with me, Meg," he said, shaking his head,
+and smiling at the same time, "and thou knowest in what manner; but I
+think thou art true church-woman, and didst only act from silly
+womanish fancy of keeping fair with these roguish Roundheads. But let
+me have no more of this. I had rather Martindale Castle were again
+rent by their bullets, than receive any of the knaves in the way of
+friendship--I always except Ralph Bridgenorth of the Hall, if he
+should come to his senses again."
+
+Lady Peveril was here under the necessity of explaining what she had
+heard of Master Bridgenorth--the disappearance of the governante with
+his daughter, and placed Bridgenorth's letter in his hand. Sir
+Geoffrey shook his head at first, and then laughed extremely at the
+idea that there was some little love-intrigue between Bridgenorth and
+Mistress Deborah.
+
+"It is the true end of a dissenter," he said, "to marry his own maid-
+servant, or some other person's. Deborah is a good likely wench, and
+on the merrier side of thirty, as I should think."
+
+"Nay, nay," said the Lady Peveril, "you are as uncharitable as
+Ellesmere--I believe it but to be affection to his child."
+
+"Pshaw! pshaw!" answered the Knight, "women are eternally thinking of
+children; but among men, dame, many one carresses the infant that he
+may kiss the child's maid; and where's the wonder or the harm either,
+if Bridgenorth should marry the wench? Her father is a substantial
+yeoman; his family has had the same farm since Bosworthfield--as good
+a pedigree as that of the great-grandson of a Chesterfield brewer, I
+trow. But let us hear what he says for himself--I shall spell it out
+if there is any roguery in the letter about love and liking, though it
+might escape your innocence, Dame Margaret."
+
+The Knight of the Peak began to peruse the letter accordingly, but was
+much embarrassed by the peculiar language in which it was couched.
+"What he means by moving of candlesticks, and breaking down of carved
+work in the church, I cannot guess; unless he means to bring back the
+large silver candlesticks which my grandsire gave to be placed on the
+altar at Martindale Moultrassie; and which his crop-eared friends,
+like sacrilegious villains as they are, stole and melted down. And in
+like manner, the only breaking I know of, was when they pulled down
+the rails of the communion table (for which some of their fingers are
+hot enough by this time), and when the brass ornaments were torn down
+from Peveril monuments; and that was breaking and removing with a
+vengeance. However, dame, the upshot is, that poor Bridgenorth is
+going to leave the neighbourhood. I am truly sorry for it, though I
+never saw him oftener than once a day, and never spoke to him above
+two words. But I see how it is--that little shake by the shoulder
+sticks in his stomach; and yet, Meg, I did but lift him out of the
+saddle as I might have lifted thee into it, Margaret--I was careful
+not to hurt him; and I did not think him so tender in point of honour
+as to mind such a thing much; but I see plainly where his sore lies;
+and I warrant you I will manage that he stays at the Hall, and that
+you get back Julian's little companion. Faith, I am sorry myself at
+the thought of losing the baby, and of having to choose another ride
+when it is not hunting weather, than round by the Hall, with a word at
+the window."
+
+"I should be very glad, Sir Geoffrey," said the Lady Peveril, "that
+you could come to a reconciliation with this worthy man, for such I
+must hold Master Bridgenorth to be."
+
+"But for his dissenting principles, as good a neighbour as ever
+lived," said Sir Geoffrey.
+
+"But I scarce see," continued the lady, "any possibility of bringing
+about a conclusion so desirable."
+
+"Tush, dame," answered the Knight, "thou knowest little of such
+matters. I know the foot he halts upon, and you shall see him go as
+sound as ever."
+
+Lady Peveril had, from her sincere affection and sound sense, as good
+a right to claim the full confidence of her husband, as any woman in
+Derbyshire; and, upon this occasion, to confess the truth, she had
+more anxiety to know his purpose than her sense of their mutual and
+separate duties permitted her in general to entertain. She could not
+imagine what mode of reconciliation with his neighbour, Sir Geoffrey
+(no very acute judge of mankind or their peculiarities) could have
+devised, which might not be disclosed to her; and she felt some secret
+anxiety lest the means resorted to might be so ill chosen as to render
+the breach rather wider. But Sir Geoffrey would give no opening for
+farther inquiry. He had been long enough colonel of a regiment abroad,
+to value himself on the right of absolute command at home; and to all
+the hints which his lady's ingenuity could devise and throw out, he
+only answered, "Patience, Dame Margaret, patience. This is no case for
+thy handling. Thou shalt know enough on't by-and-by, dame.--Go, look
+to Julian. Will the boy never have done crying for lack of that little
+sprout of a Roundhead? But we will have little Alice back with us in
+two or three days, and all will be well again."
+
+As the good Knight spoke these words, a post winded his horn in the
+court, and a large packet was brought in, addressed to the worshipful
+Sir Geoffrey Peveril, Justice of the Peace, and so forth; for he had
+been placed in authority as soon as the King's Restoration was put
+upon a settled basis. Upon opening the packet, which he did with no
+small feeling of importance, he found that it contained the warrant
+which he had solicited for replacing Doctor Dummerar in the parish,
+from which he had been forcibly ejected during the usurpation.
+
+Few incidents could have given more delight to Sir Geoffrey. He could
+forgive a stout able-bodied sectary or nonconformist, who enforced his
+doctrines in the field by downright blows on the casques and cuirasses
+of himself and other Cavaliers. But he remembered with most vindictive
+accuracy, the triumphant entrance of Hugh Peters through the breach of
+his Castle; and for his sake, without nicely distinguishing betwixt
+sects or their teachers, he held all who mounted a pulpit without
+warrant from the Church of England--perhaps he might also in private
+except that of Rome--to be disturbers of the public tranquillity--
+seducers of the congregation from their lawful preachers--instigators
+of the late Civil War--and men well disposed to risk the fate of a new
+one.
+
+Then, on the other hand, besides gratifying his dislike to Solsgrace,
+he saw much satisfaction in the task of replacing his old friend and
+associate in sport and in danger, the worthy Doctor Dummerar, in his
+legitimate rights and in the ease and comforts of his vicarage. He
+communicated the contents of the packet, with great triumph, to the
+lady, who now perceived the sense of the mysterious paragraph in Major
+Bridgenorth's letter, concerning the removal of the candlestick, and
+the extinction of light and doctrine in the land. She pointed this out
+to Sir Geoffrey, and endeavoured to persuade him that a door was now
+opened to reconciliation with his neighbour, by executing the
+commission which he had received in an easy and moderate manner, after
+due delay, and with all respect to the feelings both of Solsgrace and
+his congregation, which circumstances admitted of. This, the lady
+argued, would be doing no injury whatever to Doctor Dummerar;--nay,
+might be the means of reconciling many to his ministry, who might
+otherwise be disgusted with it for ever, by the premature expulsion of
+a favourite preacher.
+
+There was much wisdom, as well as moderation, in this advice; and, at
+another time, Sir Geoffrey would have sense enough to have adopted it.
+But who can act composedly or prudently in the hour of triumph? The
+ejection of Mr. Solsgrace was so hastily executed, as to give it some
+appearance of persecution; though, more justly considered, it was the
+restoring of his predecessor to his legal rights. Solsgrace himself
+seemed to be desirous to make his sufferings as manifest as possible.
+He held out to the last; and on the Sabbath after he had received
+intimation of his ejection, attempted to make his way to the pulpit,
+as usual, supported by Master Bridgenorth's attorney, Win-the-Fight,
+and a few zealous followers.
+
+Just as their party came into the churchyard on the one side, Doctor
+Dummerar, dressed in full pontificals, in a sort of triumphal
+procession accompanied by Peveril of the Peak, Sir Jasper Cranbourne,
+and other Cavaliers of distinction, entered at the other.
+
+To prevent an actual struggle in the church, the parish officers were
+sent to prevent the farther approach of the Presbyterian minister;
+which was effected without farther damage than a broken head,
+inflicted by Roger Raine, the drunken innkeeper of the Peveril Arms,
+upon the Presbyterian attorney of Chesterfield.
+
+Unsubdued in spirit, though compelled to retreat by superior force,
+the undaunted Mr. Solsgrace retired to the vicarage; where under some
+legal pretext which had been started by Mr. Win-the-Fight (in that day
+unaptly named), he attempted to maintain himself--bolted gates--barred
+windows--and, as report said (though falsely), made provision of fire-
+arms to resist the officers. A scene of clamour and scandal
+accordingly took place, which being reported to Sir Geoffrey, he came
+in person, with some of his attendants carrying arms--forced the
+outer-gate and inner-doors of the house; and proceeding to the study,
+found no other garrison save the Presbyterian parson, with the
+attorney, who gave up possession of the premises, after making
+protestation against the violence that had been used.
+
+The rabble of the village being by this time all in motion, Sir
+Geoffrey, both in prudence and good-nature, saw the propriety of
+escorting his prisoners, for so they might be termed, safely through
+the tumult; and accordingly conveyed them in person, through much
+noise and clamour, as far as the avenue of Moultrassie Hall, which
+they chose for the place of their retreat.
+
+But the absence of Sir Geoffrey gave the rein to some disorders,
+which, if present, he would assuredly have restrained. Some of the
+minister's books were torn and flung about as treasonable and
+seditious trash, by the zealous parish-officers or their assistants. A
+quantity of his ale was drunk up in healths to the King and Peveril of
+the Peak. And, finally, the boys, who bore the ex-parson no good-will
+for his tyrannical interference with their games at skittles, foot-
+ball, and so forth, and, moreover, remembered the unmerciful length of
+his sermons, dressed up an effigy with his Geneva gown and band, and
+his steeple-crowned hat, which they paraded through the village, and
+burned on the spot whilom occupied by a stately Maypole, which
+Solsgrace had formerly hewed down with his own reverend hands.
+
+Sir Geoffrey was vexed at all this and sent to Mr. Solsgrace, offering
+satisfaction for the goods which he had lost; but the Calvinistical
+divine replied, "From a thread to a shoe-latchet, I will not take
+anything that is thine. Let the shame of the work of thy hands abide
+with thee."
+
+Considerable scandal, indeed, arose against Sir Geoffrey Peveril as
+having proceeded with indecent severity and haste upon this occasion;
+and rumour took care to make the usual additions to the reality. It
+was currently reported, that the desperate Cavalier, Peveril of the
+Peak, had fallen on a Presbyterian congregation, while engaged in the
+peaceable exercise of religion, with a band of armed men--had slain
+some, desperately wounded many more, and finally pursued the preacher
+to his vicarage which he burned to the ground. Some alleged the
+clergyman had perished in the flames; and the most mitigated report
+bore, that he had only been able to escape by disposing his gown, cap,
+and band, near a window, in such a manner as to deceive them with the
+idea of his person being still surrounded by flames, while he himself
+fled by the back part of the house. And although few people believed
+in the extent of the atrocities thus imputed to our honest Cavalier,
+yet still enough of obloquy attached to him to infer very serious
+consequences, as the reader will learn at a future period of our
+history.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+ /Bessus/.--'Tis a challenge, sir, is it not?
+ /Gentleman/.--'Tis an inviting to the field.
+ --King and No King.
+
+For a day or two after this forcible expulsion from the vicarage, Mr.
+Solsgrace continued his residence at Moultrassie Hall, where the
+natural melancholy attendant on his situation added to the gloom of
+the owner of the mansion. In the morning, the ejected divine made
+excursions to different families in the neighbourhood, to whom his
+ministry had been acceptable in the days of his prosperity, and from
+whose grateful recollections of that period he now found sympathy and
+consolation. He did not require to be condoled with, because he was
+deprived of an easy and competent maintenance, and thrust out upon the
+common of life, after he had reason to suppose he would be no longer
+liable to such mutations of fortune. The piety of Mr. Solsgrace was
+sincere; and if he had many of the uncharitable prejudices against
+other sects, which polemical controversy had generated, and the Civil
+War brought to a head, he had also that deep sense of duty, by which
+enthusiasm is so often dignified, and held his very life little, if
+called upon to lay it down in attestation of the doctrines in which he
+believed. But he was soon to prepare for leaving the district which
+Heaven, he conceived, had assigned to him as his corner of the
+vineyard; he was to abandon his flock to the wolf--was to forsake
+those with whom he had held sweet counsel in religious communion--was
+to leave the recently converted to relapse into false doctrines, and
+forsake the wavering, whom his continued cares might have directed
+into the right path,--these were of themselves deep causes of sorrow,
+and were aggravated, doubtless, by those natural feelings with which
+all men, especially those whose duties or habits have confined them to
+a limited circle, regard the separation from wonted scenes, and their
+accustomed haunts of solitary musing, or social intercourse.
+
+There was, indeed, a plan of placing Mr. Solsgrace at the head of a
+nonconforming congregation in his present parish, which his followers
+would have readily consented to endow with a sufficient revenue. But
+although the act for universal conformity was not yet passed, such a
+measure was understood to be impending, and there existed a general
+opinion among the Presbyterians, that in no hands was it likely to be
+more strictly enforced, than in those of Peveril of the Peak.
+Solsgrace himself considered not only his personal danger as being
+considerable,--for, assuming perhaps more consequence than was
+actually attached to him or his productions, he conceived the honest
+Knight to be his mortal and determined enemy,--but he also conceived
+that he should serve the cause of his Church by absenting himself from
+Derbyshire.
+
+"Less known pastors," he said, "though perhaps more worthy of the
+name, may be permitted to assemble the scattered flocks in caverns or
+in secret wilds, and to them shall the gleaning of the grapes of
+Ephraim be better than the vintage of Abiezer. But I, that have so
+often carried the banner forth against the mighty--I, whose tongue
+hath testified, morning and evening, like the watchman upon the tower,
+against Popery, Prelacy, and the tyrant of the Peak--for me to abide
+here, were but to bring the sword of bloody vengeance amongst you,
+that the shepherd might be smitten, and the sheep scattered. The
+shedders of blood have already assailed me, even within that ground
+which they themselves call consecrated; and yourselves have seen the
+scalp of the righteous broken, as he defended my cause. Therefore, I
+will put on my sandals, and gird my loins, and depart to a far
+country, and there do as my duty shall call upon me, whether it be to
+act or to suffer--to bear testimony at the stake or in the pulpit."
+
+Such were the sentiments which Mr. Solsgrace expressed to his
+desponding friends, and which he expatiated upon at more length with
+Major Bridgenorth; not failing, with friendly zeal, to rebuke the
+haste which the latter had shown to thrust out the hand of fellowship
+to the Amalekite woman, whereby he reminded him, "He had been rendered
+her slave and bondsman for a season, like Samson, betrayed by Delilah,
+and might have remained longer in the house of Dagon, had not Heaven
+pointed to him a way out of the snare. Also, it sprung originally from
+the Major's going up to feast in the high place of Baal, that he who
+was the champion of the truth was stricken down, and put to shame by
+the enemy, even in the presence of the host."
+
+These objurgations seeming to give some offence to Major Bridgenorth,
+who liked, no better than any other man, to hear of his own mishaps,
+and at the same time to have them imputed to his own misconduct, the
+worthy divine proceeded to take shame to himself for his own sinful
+compliance in that matter; for to the vengeance justly due for that
+unhappy dinner at Martindale Castle (which was, he said, a crying of
+peace when there was no peace, and a dwelling in the tents of sin), he
+imputed his ejection from his living, with the destruction of some of
+his most pithy and highly prized volumes of divinity, with the loss of
+his cap, gown, and band, and a double hogshead of choice Derby ale.
+
+The mind of Major Bridgenorth was strongly tinged with devotional
+feeling, which his late misfortunes had rendered more deep and solemn;
+and it is therefore no wonder, that, when he heard these arguments
+urged again and again, by a pastor whom he so much respected, and who
+was now a confessor in the cause of their joint faith, he began to
+look back with disapproval on his own conduct, and to suspect that he
+had permitted himself to be seduced by gratitude towards Lady Peveril,
+and by her special arguments in favour of a mutual and tolerating
+liberality of sentiments, into an action which had a tendency to
+compromise his religious and political principles.
+
+One morning, as Major Bridgenorth had wearied himself with several
+details respecting the arrangement of his affairs, he was reposing in
+the leathern easy-chair, beside the latticed window, a posture which,
+by natural association, recalled to him the memory of former times,
+and the feelings with which he was wont to expect the recurring visit
+of Sir Geoffrey, who brought him news of his child's welfare,--
+"Surely," he said, thinking, as it were, aloud, "there was no sin in
+the kindness with which I then regarded that man."
+
+Solsgrace, who was in the apartment, and guessed what passed through
+his friend's mind, acquainted as he was with every point of his
+history, replied--"When God caused Elijah to be fed by ravens, while
+hiding at the brook Cherith, we hear not of his fondling the unclean
+birds, whom, contrary to their ravening nature, a miracle compelled to
+minister to him."
+
+"It may be so," answered Bridgenorth, "yet the flap of their wings
+must have been gracious in the ear of the famished prophet, like the
+tread of his horse in mine. The ravens, doubtless, resumed their
+nature when the season was passed, and even so it has fared with
+him.--Hark!" he exclaimed, starting, "I hear his horse's hoof tramp
+even now."
+
+It was seldom that the echoes of that silent house and courtyard were
+awakened by the trampling of horses, but such was now the case.
+
+Both Bridgenorth and Solsgrace were surprised at the sound, and even
+disposed to anticipate some farther oppression on the part of the
+government, when the Major's old servant introduced, with little
+ceremony (for his manners were nearly as plain as his master's), a
+tall gentleman on the farther side of middle life, whose vest and
+cloak, long hair, slouched hat and drooping feather, announced him as
+a Cavalier. He bowed formally, but courteously, to both gentlemen, and
+said, that he was "Sir Jasper Cranbourne, charged with an especial
+message to Master Ralph Bridgenorth of Moultrassie Hall, by his
+honourable friend Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak, and that he
+requested to know whether Master Bridgenorth would be pleased to
+receive his acquittal of commission here or elsewhere."
+
+"Anything which Sir Geoffrey Peveril can have to say to me," said
+Major Bridgenorth, "may be told instantly, and before my friend, from
+whom I have no secrets."
+
+"The presence of any other friend were, instead of being
+objectionable, the thing in the world most to be desired," said Sir
+Jasper, after a moment's hesitation, and looking at Mr. Solsgrace;
+"but this gentleman seems to be a sort of clergyman."
+
+"I am not conscious of any secrets," answered Bridgenorth, "nor do I
+desire to have any, in which a clergyman is unfitting confidant."
+
+"At your pleasure," replied Sir Jasper. "The confidence, for aught I
+know, may be well enough chosen, for your divines (always under your
+favour) have proved no enemies to such matters as I am to treat with
+you upon."
+
+"Proceed, sir," answered Mr. Bridgenorth gravely; "and I pray you to
+be seated, unless it is rather your pleasure to stand."
+
+"I must, in the first place, deliver myself of my small commission,"
+answered Sir Jasper, drawing himself up; "and it will be after I have
+seen the reception thereof, that I shall know whether I am, or am not,
+to sit down at Moultrassie Hall.--Sir Geoffrey Peveril, Master
+Bridgenorth, hath carefully considered with himself the unhappy
+circumstances which at present separate you as neighbours. And he
+remembers many passages in former times--I speak his very words--which
+incline him to do all that can possibly consist with his honour, to
+wipe out unkindness between you; and for this desirable object, he is
+willing to condescend in a degree, which, as you could not have
+expected, it will no doubt give you great pleasure to learn."
+
+"Allow me to say, Sir Jasper," said Bridgenorth, "that this is
+unnecessary. I have made no complaints of Sir Geoffrey--I have
+required no submission from him--I am about to leave this country; and
+what affairs we may have together, can be as well settled by others as
+by ourselves."
+
+"In a word," said the divine, "the worthy Major Bridgenorth hath had
+enough of trafficking with the ungodly, and will no longer, on any
+terms, consort with them."
+
+"Gentleman both," said Sir Jasper, with imperturbable politeness,
+bowing, "you greatly mistake the tenor of my commission, which you
+will do as well to hear out, before making any reply to it.--I think,
+Master Bridgenorth, you cannot but remember your letter to the Lady
+Peveril, of which I have here a rough copy, in which you complain of
+the hard measure which you have received at Sir Geoffrey's hand, and,
+in particular, when he pulled you from your horse at or near Hartley-
+nick. Now, Sir Geoffrey thinks so well of you, as to believe, that,
+were it not for the wide difference betwixt his descent and rank and
+your own, you would have sought to bring this matter to a gentleman-
+like arbitrament, as the only mode whereby your stain may be
+honourably wiped away. Wherefore, in this slight note, he gives you,
+in his generosity, the offer of what you, in your modesty (for to
+nothing else does he impute your acquiescence), have declined to
+demand of him. And withal, I bring you the measure of his weapon; and
+when you have accepted the cartel which I now offer you, I shall be
+ready to settle the time, place, and other circumstances of your
+meeting."
+
+"And I," said Solsgrace, with a solemn voice, "should the Author of
+Evil tempt my friend to accept of so bloodthirsty a proposal, would be
+the first to pronounce against him sentence of the greater
+excommunication."
+
+"It is not you whom I address, reverend sir," replied the envoy; "your
+interest, not unnaturally, may determine you to be more anxious about
+your patron's life than about his honour. I must know, from himself,
+to which /he/ is disposed to give the preference."
+
+So saying, and with a graceful bow, he again tendered the challenge to
+Major Bridgenorth. There was obviously a struggle in that gentleman's
+bosom, between the suggestions of human honour and those of religious
+principle; but the latter prevailed. He calmly waived receiving the
+paper which Sir Jasper offered to him, and spoke to the following
+purpose:--"It may not be known to you, Sir Jasper, that since the
+general pouring out of Christian light upon this kingdom, many solid
+men have been led to doubt whether the shedding human blood by the
+hand of a fellow-creature be in /any/ respect justifiable. And
+although this rule appears to me to be scarcely applicable to our
+state in this stage of trial, seeing that such non-resistance, if
+general, would surrender our civil and religious rights into the hands
+of whatsoever daring tyrants might usurp the same; yet I am, and have
+been, inclined to limit the use of carnal arms to the case of
+necessary self-defence, whether such regards our own person, or the
+protection of our country against invasion; or of our rights of
+property, and the freedom of our laws and of our conscience, against
+usurping power. And as I have never shown myself unwilling to draw my
+sword in any of the latter causes, so you shall excuse my suffering it
+now to remain in the scabbard, when, having sustained a grievous
+injury, the man who inflicted it summons me to combat, either upon an
+idle punctilio, or, as is more likely, in mere bravado."
+
+"I have heard you with patience," said Sir Jasper; "and now, Master
+Bridgenorth, take it not amiss, if I beseech you to bethink yourself
+better on this matter. I vow to Heaven, sir, that your honour lies a-
+bleeding; and that in condescending to afford you this fair meeting,
+and thereby giving you some chance to stop its wounds, Sir Geoffrey
+has been moved by a tender sense of your condition, and an earnest
+wish to redeem your dishonour. And it will be but the crossing of
+your blade with his honoured sword for the space of some few minutes,
+and you will either live or die a noble and honoured gentleman.
+Besides, that the Knight's exquisite skill of fence may enable him, as
+his good-nature will incline him, to disarm you with some flesh wound,
+little to the damage of your person, and greatly to the benefit of
+your reputation."
+
+"The tender mercies of the wicked," said Master Solsgrace
+emphatically, by way of commenting on this speech, which Sir Jasper
+had uttered very pathetically, "are cruel."
+
+"I pray to have no farther interruption from your reverence," said Sir
+Jasper; "especially as I think this affair very little concerns you;
+and I entreat that you permit me to discharge myself regularly of my
+commission from my worthy friend."
+
+So saying, he took his sheathed rapier from his belt, and passing the
+point through the silk thread which secured the letter, he once more,
+and literally at sword point, gracefully tendered it to Major
+Bridgenorth who again waved it aside, though colouring deeply at the
+same time, as if he was putting a marked constraint upon himself--drew
+back, and made Sir Jasper Cranbourne a deep bow.
+
+"Since it is to be thus," said Sir Jasper, "I must myself do violence
+to the seal of Sir Geoffrey's letter, and read it to you, that I may
+fully acquit myself of the charge entrusted to me, and make you,
+Master Bridgenorth, equally aware of the generous intentions of Sir
+Geoffrey on your behalf."
+
+"If," said Major Bridgenorth, "the contents of the letter be to no
+other purpose than you have intimated, methinks farther ceremony is
+unnecessary on this occasion, as I have already taken my course."
+
+"Nevertheless," said Sir Jasper, breaking open the letter, "it is
+fitting that I read to you the letter of my worshipful friend." And he
+read accordingly as follows:--
+
+
+ "/For the worthy hands of Ralph Bridgenorth, Esquire, of
+ Moultrassie Hall--These:/
+
+ "By the honoured conveyance of the Worshipful Sir Jasper
+ Cranbourne, Knight, of Long-Mallington.
+
+ "Master Bridgenorth,--We have been given to understand by your
+ letter to our loving wife, Dame Margaret Peveril, that you hold
+ hard construction of certain passages betwixt you and I, of a late
+ date, as if your honour should have been, in some sort, prejudiced
+ by what then took place. And although you have not thought it fit
+ to have direct recourse to me, to request such satisfaction as is
+ due from one gentleman of condition to another, yet I am fully
+ minded that this proceeds only from modesty, arising out of the
+ distinction of our degree, and from no lack of that courage which
+ you have heretofore displayed, I would I could say in a good
+ cause. Wherefore I am purposed to give you, by my friend, Sir
+ Jasper Cranbourne, a meeting, for the sake of doing that which
+ doubtless you entirely long for. Sir Jasper will deliver you the
+ length of my weapon, and appoint circumstances and an hour for our
+ meeting; which, whether early or late--on foot or horseback--with
+ rapier or backsword--I refer to yourself, with all the other
+ privileges of a challenged person; only desiring, that if you
+ decline to match my weapon, you will send me forthwith the length
+ and breadth of your own. And nothing doubting that the issue of
+ this meeting must needs be to end, in one way or other, all
+ unkindness betwixt two near neighbours,--I remain, your humble
+ servant to command,
+ "Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak.
+
+ "Given from my poor house of Martindale Castle, this same ____ of
+ ____, sixteen hundred and sixty."
+
+
+"Bear back my respects to Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Major
+Bridgenorth. "According to his light, his meaning may be fair towards
+me; but tell him that our quarrel had its rise in his own wilful
+aggression towards me; and that though I wish to be in charity with
+all mankind, I am not so wedded to his friendship as to break the laws
+of God, and run the risk of suffering or committing murder, in order
+to regain it. And for you, sir, methinks your advanced years and past
+misfortunes might teach you the folly of coming on such idle errands."
+
+"I shall do your message, Master Ralph Bridgenorth," said Sir Jasper;
+"and shall then endeavour to forget your name, as a sound unfit to be
+pronounced, or even remembered, by a man of honour. In the meanwhile,
+in return for your uncivil advice, be pleased to accept of mine;
+namely, that as your religion prevents your giving a gentleman
+satisfaction, it ought to make you very cautious of offering him
+provocation."
+
+So saying, and with a look of haughty scorn, first at the Major, and
+then at the divine, the envoy of Sir Geoffrey put his hat on his head,
+replaced his rapier in its belt, and left the apartment. In a few
+minutes afterwards, the tread of his horse died away at a considerable
+distance.
+
+Bridgenorth had held his hand upon his brow ever since his departure,
+and a tear of anger and shame was on his face as he raised it when the
+sound was heard no more. "He carries this answer to Martindale
+Castle," he said. "Men will hereafter think of me as a whipped,
+beaten, dishonourable fellow, whom every one may baffle and insult at
+their pleasure. It is well I am leaving the house of my father."
+
+Master Solsgrace approached his friend with much sympathy, and grasped
+him by the hand. "Noble brother," he said, with unwonted kindness of
+manner, "though a man of peace, I can judge what this sacrifice hath
+cost to thy manly spirit. But God will not have from us an imperfect
+obedience. We must not, like Ananias and Sapphira, reserve behind some
+darling lust, some favourite sin, while we pretend to make sacrifice
+of our worldly affections. What avails it to say that we have but
+secreted a little matter, if the slightest remnant of the accursed
+thing remain hidden in our tent? Would it be a defence in thy prayers
+to say, I have not murdered this man for the lucre of gain, like a
+robber--nor for the acquisition of power, like a tyrant,--nor for the
+gratification of revenge, like a darkened savage; but because the
+imperious voice of worldly honour said, 'Go forth--kill or be killed--
+is it not I that have sent thee?' Bethink thee, my worthy friend, how
+thou couldst frame such a vindication in thy prayers; and if thou art
+forced to tremble at the blasphemy of such an excuse, remember in thy
+prayers the thanks due to Heaven, which enabled thee to resist the
+strong temptation."
+
+"Reverend and dear friend," answered Bridgenorth, "I feel that you
+speak the truth. Bitterer, indeed, and harder, to the old Adam, is the
+text which ordains him to suffer shame, than that which bids him to do
+valiantly for the truth. But happy am I that my path through the
+wilderness of this world will, for some space at least, be along with
+one, whose zeal and friendship are so active to support me when I am
+fainting in the way."
+
+While the inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall thus communicated together
+upon the purport of Sir Jasper Cranbourne's visit, that worthy knight
+greatly excited the surprise of Sir Geoffrey Peveril, by reporting the
+manner in which his embassy had been received.
+
+"I took him for a man of other metal," said Sir Geoffrey;--"nay, I
+would have sworn it, had any one asked my testimony. But there is no
+making a silken purse out of a sow's ear. I have done a folly for him
+that I will never do for another: and that is, to think a Presbyterian
+would fight without his preacher's permission. Give them a two hours'
+sermon, and let them howl a psalm to a tune that is worse than the
+cries of a flogged hound, and the villains will lay on like threshers;
+but for a calm, cool, gentleman-like turn upon the sod, hand to hand,
+in a neighbourly way, they have not honour enough to undertake it. But
+enough of our crop-eared cur of a neighbour.--Sir Jasper, you will
+tarry with us to dine, and see how Dame Margaret's kitchen smokes; and
+after dinner I will show you a long-winged falcon fly. She is not
+mine, but the Countess's, who brought her from London on her fist
+almost the whole way, for all the haste she was in, and left her with
+me to keep the perch for a season."
+
+This match was soon arranged, and Dame Margaret overheard the good
+Knight's resentment mutter itself off, with those feelings with which
+we listen to the last growling of the thunderstorm; which, as the
+black cloud sinks beneath the hill, at once assures us that there has
+been danger, and that the peril is over. She could not, indeed, but
+marvel in her own mind at the singular path of reconciliation with his
+neighbour which her husband had, with so much confidence, and in the
+actual sincerity of his goodwill to Mr. Bridgenorth, attempted to
+open; and she blessed God internally that it had not terminated in
+bloodshed. But these reflections she locked carefully within her own
+bosom, well knowing that they referred to subjects in which the Knight
+of the Peak would neither permit his sagacity to be called in
+question, nor his will to be controlled.
+
+The progress of the history hath hitherto been slow; but after this
+period so little matter worth of mark occurred at Martindale, that we
+must hurry over hastily the transactions of several years.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+ /Cleopatra./--Give me to drink mandragora,
+ That I may sleep away this gap of time.
+ --Antony and Cleopatra.
+
+There passed, as we hinted at the conclusion of the last chapter, four
+or five years after the period we have dilated upon; the events of
+which scarcely require to be discussed, so far as our present purpose
+is concerned, in as many lines. The Knight and his Lady continued to
+reside at their Castle--she, with prudence and with patience,
+endeavouring to repair the damages which the Civil Wars had inflicted
+upon their fortune; and murmuring a little when her plans of economy
+were interrupted by the liberal hospitality, which was her husband's
+principal expense, and to which he was attached, not only from his own
+English heartiness of disposition, but from ideas of maintaining the
+dignity of his ancestry--no less remarkable, according to the
+tradition of their buttery, kitchen, and cellar, for the fat beeves
+which they roasted, and the mighty ale which they brewed, than for
+their extensive estates, and the number of their retainers.
+
+The world, however, upon the whole, went happily and easily with the
+worthy couple. Sir Geoffrey's debt to his neighbour Bridgenorth
+continued, it is true, unabated; but he was the only creditor upon the
+Martindale estate--all others being paid off. It would have been most
+desirable that this encumbrance also should be cleared, and it was the
+great object of Dame Margaret's economy to effect the discharge; for
+although interest was regularly settled with Master Win-the-Fight, the
+Chesterfield attorney, yet the principal sum, which was a large one,
+might be called for at an inconvenient time. The man, too, was gloomy,
+important, and mysterious, and always seemed as if he was thinking
+upon his broken head in the churchyard of Martindale-cum-Moultrassie.
+
+Dame Margaret sometimes transacted the necessary business with him in
+person; and when he came to the Castle on these occasions, she thought
+she saw a malicious and disobliging expression in his manner and
+countenance. Yet his actual conduct was not only fair, but liberal;
+for indulgence was given, in the way of delay of payment, whenever
+circumstances rendered it necessary to the debtor to require it. It
+seemed to Lady Peveril that the agent, in such cases, was acting under
+the strict orders of his absent employer, concerning whose welfare she
+could not help feeling a certain anxiety.
+
+Shortly after the failure of the singular negotiation for attaining
+peace by combat, which Peveril had attempted to open with Major
+Bridgenorth, that gentleman left his seat of Moultrassie Hall in the
+care of his old housekeeper, and departed, no one knew whither, having
+in company with him his daughter Alice and Mrs. Deborah Debbitch, now
+formally installed in all the duties of a governante; to these was
+added the Reverend Master Solsgrace. For some time public rumour
+persisted in asserting, that Major Bridgenorth had only retreated to a
+distant part of the country for a season, to achieve his supposed
+purpose of marrying Mrs. Deborah, and of letting the news be cold, and
+the laugh of the neighbourhood be ended, ere he brought her down as
+mistress of Moultrassie Hall. This rumour died away; and it was then
+affirmed, that he had removed to foreign parts, to ensure the
+continuance of health in so delicate a constitution as that of little
+Alice. But when the Major's dread of Popery was remembered, together
+with the still deeper antipathies of worthy Master Nehemiah Solsgrace,
+it was resolved unanimously, that nothing less than what they might
+deem a fair chance of converting the Pope would have induced the
+parties to trust themselves within Catholic dominions. The most
+prevailing opinion was, that they had gone to New England, the refuge
+then of many whom too intimate concern with the affairs of the late
+times, or the desire of enjoying uncontrolled freedom of conscience,
+had induced to emigrate from Britain.
+
+Lady Peveril could not help entertaining a vague idea, that
+Bridgenorth was not so distant. The extreme order in which everything
+was maintained at Moultrassie Hall, seemed--no disparagement to the
+care of Dame Dickens the housekeeper, and the other persons engaged--
+to argue, that the master's eye was not so very far off, but that its
+occasional inspection might be apprehended. It is true, that neither
+the domestics nor the attorney answered any questions respecting the
+residence of Master Bridgenorth; but there was an air of mystery about
+them when interrogated, that seemed to argue more than met the ear.
+
+About five years after Master Bridgenorth had left the country, a
+singular incident took place. Sir Geoffrey was absent at the
+Chesterfield races, and Lady Peveril, who was in the habit of walking
+around every part of the neighbourhood unattended, or only accompanied
+by Ellesmere, or her little boy, had gone down one evening upon a
+charitable errand to a solitary hut, whose inhabitant lay sick of a
+fever, which was supposed to be infectious. Lady Peveril never allowed
+apprehensions of this kind to stop "devoted charitable deeds;" but she
+did not choose to expose either her son or her attendant to the risk
+which she herself, in some confidence that she knew precautions for
+escaping the danger, did not hesitate to incur.
+
+Lady Peveril had set out at a late hour in the evening, and the way
+proved longer than she expected--several circumstances also occurred
+to detain her at the hut of her patient. It was a broad autumn
+moonlight, when she prepared to return homeward through the broken
+glades and upland which divided her from the Castle. This she
+considered as a matter of very little importance, in so quiet and
+sequestered a country, where the road lay chiefly through her own
+domains, especially as she had a lad about fifteen years old, the son
+of her patient, to escort her on the way. The distance was better than
+two miles, but might be considerably abridged by passing through an
+avenue belonging to the estate of Moultrassie Hall, which she had
+avoided as she came, not from the ridiculous rumours which pronounced
+it to be haunted, but because her husband was much displeased when any
+attempt was made to render the walks of the Castle and Hall common to
+the inhabitants of both. The good lady, in consideration, perhaps, of
+extensive latitude allowed to her in the more important concerns of
+the family, made a point of never interfering with her husband's whims
+or prejudices; and it is a compromise which we would heartily
+recommend to all managing matrons of our acquaintance; for it is
+surprising how much real power will be cheerfully resigned to the fair
+sex, for the pleasure of being allowed to ride one's hobby in peace
+and quiet.
+
+Upon the present occasion, however, although the Dobby's Walk[*] was
+within the inhabited domains of the Hall, the Lady Peveril determined
+to avail herself of it, for the purpose of shortening her road home,
+and she directed her steps accordingly. But when the peasant-boy, her
+companion, who had hitherto followed her, whistling cheerily, with a
+hedge-bill in his hand, and his hat on one side, perceived that she
+turned to the stile which entered to the Dobby's Walk, he showed
+symptoms of great fear, and at length coming to the lady's side,
+petitioned her, in a whimpering tone,--"Don't ye now--don't ye now,
+my lady, don't ye go yonder."
+
+[*] Dobby, an old English name for goblin.
+
+Lady Peveril, observing that his teeth chattered in his head, and that
+his whole person exhibited great signs of terror, began to recollect
+the report, that the first Squire of Moultrassie, the brewer of
+Chesterfield, who had brought the estate, and then died of melancholy
+for lack of something to do (and, as was said, not without suspicions
+of suicide), was supposed to walk in this sequestered avenue,
+accompanied by a large headless mastiff, which, when he was alive, was
+a particular favourite of the ex-brewer. To have expected any
+protection from her escort, in the condition to which superstitious
+fear had reduced him, would have been truly a hopeless trust; and Lady
+Peveril, who was not apprehensive of any danger, thought there would
+be great cruelty in dragging the cowardly boy into a scene which he
+regarded with so much apprehension. She gave him, therefore, a silver
+piece, and permitted him to return. The latter boon seemed even more
+acceptable than the first; for ere she could return the purse into her
+pocket, she heard the wooden clogs of her bold convoy in full retreat,
+by the way from whence they came.
+
+Smiling within herself at the fear she esteemed so ludicrous, Lady
+Peveril ascended the stile, and was soon hidden from the broad light
+of the moonbeams, by the numerous and entangled boughs of the huge
+elms, which, meeting from either side, totally overarched the old
+avenue. The scene was calculated to excite solemn thoughts; and the
+distant glimmer of a light from one of the numerous casements in the
+front of Moultrassie Hall, which lay at some distance, was calculated
+to make them even melancholy. She thought of the fate of that family--
+of the deceased Mrs. Bridgenorth, with whom she had often walked in
+this very avenue, and who, though a woman of no high parts or
+accomplishments, had always testified the deepest respect, and the
+most earnest gratitude, for such notice as she had shown to her.
+She thought of her blighted hopes--her premature death--the despair of
+her self-banished husband--the uncertain fate of their orphan child,
+for whom she felt, even at this distance of time, some touch of a
+mother's affection.
+
+Upon such sad subjects her thoughts were turned, when, just as she
+attained the middle of the avenue, the imperfect and checkered light
+which found its way through the silvan archway, showed her something
+which resembled the figure of a man. Lady Peveril paused a moment, but
+instantly advanced;--her bosom, perhaps, gave one startled throb, as a
+debt to the superstitious belief of the times, but she instantly
+repelled the thought of supernatural appearances. From those that were
+merely mortal, she had nothing to fear. A marauder on the game was the
+worst character whom she was likely to encounter; and he would be sure
+to hide himself from her observation. She advanced, accordingly,
+steadily; and, as she did so, had the satisfaction to observe that the
+figure, as she expected, gave place to her, and glided away amongst
+the trees on the left-hand side of the avenue. As she passed the spot
+on which the form had been so lately visible, and bethought herself
+that this wanderer of the night might, nay must, be in her vicinity,
+her resolution could not prevent her mending her pace, and that with
+so little precaution, that, stumbling over the limb of a tree, which,
+twisted off by a late tempest, still lay in the avenue, she fell, and,
+as she fell, screamed aloud. A strong hand in a moment afterwards
+added to her fears by assisting her to rise, and a voice, to whose
+accents she was not a stranger, though they had been long unheard,
+said, "Is it not you, Lady Peveril?"
+
+"It is I," said she, commanding her astonishment and fear; "and if my
+ear deceive me not, I speak to Master Bridgenorth."
+
+"I was that man," said he, "while oppression left me a name."
+
+He spoke nothing more, but continued to walk beside her for a minute
+or two in silence. She felt her situation embarrassing; and to divest
+it of that feeling, as well as out of real interest in the question,
+she asked him, "How her god-daughter Alice now was?"
+
+"Of god-daughter, madam," answered Major Bridgenorth, "I know nothing;
+that being one of the names which have been introduced, to the
+corruption and pollution of God's ordinances. The infant who owed to
+your ladyship (so called) her escape from disease and death, is a
+healthy and thriving girl, as I am given to understand by those in
+whose charge she is lodged, for I have not lately seen her. And it is
+even the recollection of these passages, which in a manner impelled
+me, alarmed also by your fall, to offer myself to you at this time and
+mode, which in other respects is no way consistent with my present
+safety."
+
+"With your safety, Master Bridgenorth?" said the Lady Peveril;
+"surely, I could never have thought that it was in danger!"
+
+"You have some news, then, yet to learn, madam," said Major
+Bridgenorth; "but you will hear in the course of tomorrow, reasons why
+I dare not appear openly in the neighbourhood of my own property, and
+wherefore there is small judgment in committing the knowledge of my
+present residence to any one connected with Martindale Castle."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said the lady, "you were in former times prudent
+and cautious--I hope you have been misled by no hasty impression--by
+no rash scheme--I hope----"
+
+"Pardon my interrupting you, madam," said Bridgenorth. "I have indeed
+been changed--ay, my very heart within me hath been changed. In the
+times to which your ladyship (so called) thinks proper to refer, I was
+a man of this world--bestowing on it all my thoughts--all my actions,
+save formal observances--little deeming what was the duty of a
+Christian man, and how far his self-denial ought to extend--even unto
+his giving all as if he gave nothing. Hence I thought chiefly on
+carnal things--on the adding of field to field, and wealth to wealth--
+of balancing between party and party--securing a friend here, without
+losing a friend there--But Heaven smote me for my apostasy, the rather
+that I abused the name of religion, as a self-seeker, and a most
+blinded and carnal will-worshipper--But I thank Him who hath at length
+brought me out of Egypt."
+
+In our day--although we have many instances of enthusiasm among us--we
+might still suspect one who avowed it thus suddenly and broadly of
+hypocrisy, or of insanity; but according to the fashion of the times,
+such opinions as those which Bridgenorth expressed were openly
+pleaded, as the ruling motives of men's actions. The sagacious Vane--
+the brave and skilful Harrison--were men who acted avowedly under the
+influence of such. Lady Peveril, therefore, was more grieved than
+surprised at the language she heard Major Bridgenorth use, and
+reasonably concluded that the society and circumstances in which he
+might lately have been engaged, had blown into a flame the spark of
+eccentricity which always smouldered in his bosom. This was the more
+probable, considering that he was melancholy by constitution and
+descent--that he had been unfortunate in several particulars--and that
+no passion is more easily nursed by indulgence, than the species of
+enthusiasm of which he now showed tokens. She therefore answered him
+by calmly hoping, "That the expression of his sentiments had not
+involved him in suspicion or in danger."
+
+"In suspicion, madam?" answered the Major;--"for I cannot forbear
+giving to you, such is the strength of habit, one of those idle titles
+by which we poor potsherds are wont, in our pride, to denominate each
+other--I walk not only in suspicion, but in that degree of danger,
+that, were your husband to meet me at this instant--me, a native
+Englishman, treading on my own lands--I have no doubt he would do his
+best to offer me to the Moloch of Roman superstition, who now rages
+abroad for victims among God's people."
+
+"You surprise me by your language, Major Bridgenorth," said the lady,
+who now felt rather anxious to be relieved from his company, and with
+that purpose walked on somewhat hastily. He mended his pace, however,
+and kept close by her side.
+
+"Know you not," said he, "that Satan hath come down upon earth with
+great wrath, because his time is short? The next heir to the crown is
+an avowed Papist; and who dare assert, save sycophants and time-
+servers, that he who wears it is not equally ready to stoop to Rome,
+were he not kept in awe by a few noble spirits in the Commons' House?
+You believe not this--yet in my solitary and midnight walks, when I
+thought on your kindness to the dead and to the living, it was my
+prayer that I might have the means granted to warn you--and lo! Heaven
+hath heard me."
+
+"What I was while in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of
+iniquity, it signifies not to recall," answered he. "I was then like
+to Gallio, who cared for none of these things. I doted on creature
+comforts--I clung to worldly honour and repute--my thoughts were
+earthward--or those I turned to Heaven were cold, formal, pharisaical
+meditations--I brought nothing to the altar save straw and stubble.
+Heaven saw need to chastise me in love--I was stript of all I clung to
+on earth--my worldly honour was torn from me--I went forth an exile
+from the home of my fathers, a deprived and desolate man--a baffled,
+and beaten, and dishonoured man. But who shall find out the ways of
+Providence? Such were the means by which I was chosen forth as a
+champion for the truth--holding my life as nothing, if thereby that
+may be advanced. But this was not what I wished to speak of. Thou hast
+saved the earthly life of my child--let me save the eternal welfare of
+yours."
+
+Lady Peveril was silent. They were now approaching the point where the
+avenue terminated in a communication with a public road, or rather
+pathway, running through an unenclosed common field; this the lady had
+to prosecute for a little way, until a turn of the path gave her
+admittance into the Park of Martindale. She now felt sincerely anxious
+to be in the open moonshine, and avoided reply to Bridgenorth that she
+might make the more haste. But as they reached the junction of the
+avenue and the public road, he laid his hand on her arm, and commanded
+rather than requested her to stop. She obeyed. He pointed to a huge
+oak, of the largest size, which grew on the summit of a knoll in the
+open ground which terminated the avenue, and was exactly so placed as
+to serve for a termination to the vista. The moonshine without the
+avenue was so strong, that, amidst the flood of light which it poured
+on the venerable tree, they could easily discover, from the shattered
+state of the boughs on one side, that it had suffered damage from
+lightning. "Remember you," he said, "when we last looked together on
+that tree? I had ridden from London, and brought with me a protection
+from the committee for your husband; and as I passed the spot--here on
+this spot where we now stand, you stood with my lost Alice--two--the
+last two of my beloved infants gambolled before you. I leaped from my
+horse--to her I was a husband--to those a father--to you a welcome and
+revered protector--What am I now to any one?" He pressed his hand on
+his brow, and groaned in agony of spirit.
+
+It was not in the Lady Peveril's nature to hear sorrow without an
+attempt at consolation. "Master Bridgenorth," she said, "I blame no
+man's creed, while I believe and follow my own; and I rejoice that in
+yours you have sought consolation for temporal afflictions. But does
+not every Christian creed teach us alike, that affliction should
+soften our heart?"
+
+"Ay, woman," said Bridgenorth sternly, "as the lightning which
+shattered yonder oak hath softened its trunk. No; the seared wood is
+the fitter for the use of the workmen--the hardened and the dried-up
+heart is that which can best bear the task imposed by these dismal
+times. God and man will no longer endure the unbridled profligacy of
+the dissolute--the scoffing of the profane--the contempt of the divine
+laws--the infraction of human rights. The times demand righters and
+avengers, and there will be no want of them."
+
+"I deny not the existence of much evil," said Lady Peveril, compelling
+herself to answer, and beginning at the same time to walk forward;
+"and from hearsay, though not, I thank Heaven, from observation, I am
+convinced of the wild debauchery of the times. But let us trust it may
+be corrected without such violent remedies as you hint at. Surely the
+ruin of a second civil war--though I trust your thoughts go not that
+dreadful length--were at best a desperate alternative."
+
+"Sharp, but sure," replied Bridgenorth. "The blood of the Paschal lamb
+chased away the destroying angel--the sacrifices offered on the
+threshing-floor of Araunah, stayed the pestilence. Fire and sword are
+severe remedies, but they pure and purify."
+
+"Alas! Major Bridgenorth," said the lady, "wise and moderate in your
+youth, can you have adopted in your advanced life the thoughts and
+language of those whom you yourself beheld drive themselves and the
+nation to the brink of ruin?"
+
+"I know not what I then was--you know not what I now am," he replied,
+and suddenly broke off; for they even then came forth into the open
+light, and it seemed as if, feeling himself under the lady's eye, he
+was disposed to soften his tone and his language.
+
+At the first distinct view which she had of his person, she was aware
+that he was armed with a short sword, a poniard, and pistols at his
+belt--precautions very unusual for a man who formerly had seldom, and
+only on days of ceremony, carried a walking rapier, though such was
+the habitual and constant practice of gentlemen of his station in
+life. There seemed also something of more stern determination than
+usual in his air, which indeed had always been rather sullen than
+affable; and ere she could repress the sentiment, she could not help
+saying, "Master Bridgenorth, you are indeed changed."
+
+"You see but the outward man," he replied; "the change within is yet
+deeper. But it was not of myself that I desired to talk--I have
+already said, that as you have preserved my child from the darkness of
+the grave, I would willingly preserve yours from that more utter
+darkness, which, I fear, hath involved the path and walks of his
+father."
+
+"I must not hear this of Sir Geoffrey," said the Lady Peveril; "I must
+bid you farewell for the present; and when we again meet at a more
+suitable time, I will at least listen to your advice concerning
+Julian, although I should not perhaps incline to it."
+
+"That more suitable time may never come," replied Bridgenorth. "Time
+wanes, eternity draws nigh. Hearken! it is said to be your purpose to
+send the young Julian to be bred up in yonder bloody island, under the
+hand of your kinswoman, that cruel murderess, by whom was done to
+death a man more worthy of vital existence than any that she can boast
+among her vaunted ancestry. These are current tidings--Are they true?"
+
+"I do not blame you, Master Bridgenorth, for thinking harshly of my
+cousin of Derby," said Lady Peveril; "nor do I altogether vindicate
+the rash action of which she hath been guilty. Nevertheless, in her
+habitation, it is my husband's opinion and my own, that Julian may be
+trained in the studies and accomplishments becoming his rank, along
+with the young Earl of Derby."
+
+"Under the curse of God, and the blessing of the Pope of Rome," said
+Bridgenorth. "You, lady, so quick-sighted in matters of earthly
+prudence, are you blind to the gigantic pace at which Rome is moving
+to regain this country, once the richest gem in her usurped tiara? The
+old are seduced by gold--the youth by pleasure--the weak by flattery--
+cowards by fear--and the courageous by ambition. A thousand baits for
+each taste, and each bait concealing the same deadly hook."
+
+"I am well aware, Master Bridgenorth," said Lady Peveril, "that my
+kinswoman is a Catholic;[*] but her son is educated in the Church of
+England's principles, agreeably to the command of her deceased
+husband."
+
+[*] I have elsewhere noticed that this is a deviation from the truth--
+ Charlotte, Countess of Derby, was a Huguenot.
+
+"Is it likely," answered Bridgenorth, "that she, who fears not
+shedding the blood of the righteous, whether on the field or scaffold,
+will regard the sanction of her promise when her religion bids her
+break it? Or, if she does, what shall your son be the better, if he
+remain in the mire of his father? What are your Episcopal tenets but
+mere Popery? save that ye have chosen a temporal tyrant for your Pope,
+and substitute a mangled mass in English for that which your
+predecessors pronounced in Latin.--But why speak I of these things to
+one who hath ears, indeed, and eyes, yet cannot see, listen to, or
+understand what is alone worthy to be heard, seen, and known? Pity
+that what hath been wrought so fair and exquisite in form and
+disposition, should be yet blind, deaf, and ignorant, like the things
+which perish!"
+
+"We shall not agree on these subjects, Master Bridgenorth," said the
+lady, anxious still to escape from this strange conference, though
+scarce knowing what to apprehend; "once more, I must bid you
+farewell."
+
+"Stay yet an instant," he said, again laying his hand on her arm; "I
+would stop you if I saw you rushing on the brink of an actual
+precipice--let me prevent you from a danger still greater. How shall I
+work upon your unbelieving mind? Shall I tell you that the debt of
+bloodshed yet remains a debt to be paid by the bloody house of Derby?
+And wilt thou send thy son to be among those from whom it shall be
+exacted?"
+
+"You wish to alarm me in vain, Master Bridgenorth," answered the lady;
+"what penalty can be exacted from the Countess, for an action, which I
+have already called a rash one, has been long since levied."
+
+"You deceive yourself," retorted he sternly. "Think you a paltry sum
+of money, given to be wasted on the debaucheries of Charles, can atone
+for the death of such a man as Christian--a man precious alike to
+heaven and to earth? Not on such terms is the blood of the righteous
+to be poured forth! Every hour's delay is numbered down as adding
+interest to the grievous debt, which will one day be required from
+that blood-thirsty woman."
+
+At this moment the distant tread of horses was heard on the road on
+which they held this singular dialogue. Bridgenorth listened a moment,
+and then said, "Forget that you have seen me--name not my name to your
+nearest or dearest--lock my counsel in your breast--profit by it, and
+it shall be well with you."
+
+So saying, he turned from her, and plunging through a gap in the
+fence, regained the cover of his own wood, along which the path still
+led.
+
+The noise of horses advancing at full trot now came nearer; and Lady
+Peveril was aware of several riders, whose forms rose indistinctly on
+the summit of the rising ground behind her. She became also visible to
+them; and one or two of the foremost made towards her at increased
+speed, challenging her as they advanced with the cry of "Stand! Who
+goes there?" The foremost who came up, however, exclaimed, "Mercy on
+us, if it be not my lady!" and Lady Peveril, at the same moment,
+recognised one of her own servants. Her husband rode up immediately
+afterwards, with, "How now, Dame Margaret? What makes you abroad so
+far from home and at an hour so late?"
+
+Lady Peveril mentioned her visit at the cottage, but did not think it
+necessary to say aught of having seen Major Bridgenorth; afraid, it
+may be, that her husband might be displeased with that incident.
+
+"Charity is a fine thing and a fair," answered Sir Geoffrey; "but I
+must tell you, you do ill, dame, to wander about the country like a
+quacksalver, at the call of every old woman who has a colic-fit; and
+at this time of night especially, and when the land is so unsettled
+besides."
+
+"I am sorry to hear that it so," said the lady. "I had heard no such
+news."
+
+"News?" repeated Sir Geoffrey, "why, here has a new plot broken out
+among the Roundheads, worse than Venner's by a butt's length;[*] and
+who should be so deep in it as our old neighbour Bridgenorth? There is
+search for him everywhere; and I promise you if he is found, he is
+like to pay old scores."
+
+[*] The celebrated insurrection of the Anabaptists and Fifth Monarchy
+ men in London, in the year 1661.
+
+"Then I am sure, I trust he will not be found," said Lady Peveril.
+
+"Do you so?" replied Sir Geoffrey. "Now I, on my part hope that he
+will; and it shall not be my fault if he be not; for which effect I
+will presently ride down to Moultrassie, and make strict search,
+according to my duty; there shall neither rebel nor traitor earth so
+near Martindale Castle, that I will assure them. And you, my lady, be
+pleased for once to dispense with a pillion, and get up, as you have
+done before, behind Saunders, who shall convey you safe home."
+
+The Lady obeyed in silence; indeed she did not dare to trust her voice
+in an attempt to reply, so much was she disconcerted with the
+intelligence she had just heard.
+
+She rode behind the groom to the Castle, where she awaited in great
+anxiety the return of her husband. He came back at length; but to her
+great relief, without any prisoner. He then explained more fully than
+his haste had before permitted, that an express had come down to
+Chesterfield, with news from Court of a proposed insurrection amongst
+the old Commonwealth men, especially those who had served in the army;
+and that Bridgenorth, said to be lurking in Derbyshire, was one of the
+principal conspirators.
+
+After some time, this report of a conspiracy seemed to die away like
+many others of that period. The warrants were recalled, but nothing
+more was seen or heard of Major Bridgenorth; although it is probable
+he might safely enough have shown himself as openly as many did who
+lay under the same circumstances of suspicion.
+
+About this time also, Lady Peveril, with many tears, took a temporary
+leave of her son Julian, who was sent, as had long been intended, for
+the purpose of sharing the education of the young Earl of Derby.
+Although the boding words of Bridgenorth sometimes occurred to Lady
+Peveril's mind, she did not suffer them to weigh with her in
+opposition to the advantages which the patronage of the Countess of
+Derby secured to her son.
+
+The plan seemed to be in every respect successful; and when, from time
+to time, Julian visited the house of his father, Lady Peveril had the
+satisfaction to see him, on every occasion, improved in person and in
+manner, as well as ardent in the pursuit of more solid acquirements.
+In process of time he became a gallant and accomplished youth, and
+travelled for some time upon the continent with the young Earl. This
+was the more especially necessary for the enlarging of their
+acquaintance with the world; because the Countess had never appeared
+in London, or at the Court of King Charles, since her flight to the
+Isle of Man in 1660; but had resided in solitary and aristocratic
+state, alternately on her estates in England and in that island.
+
+This had given to the education of both the young men, otherwise as
+excellent as the best teachers could render it, something of a narrow
+and restricted character; but though the disposition of the young Earl
+was lighter and more volatile than that of Julian, both the one and
+the other had profited, in a considerable degree, by the opportunities
+afforded them. It was Lady Derby's strict injunction to her son, now
+returning from the continent, that he should not appear at the Court
+of Charles. But having been for some time of age, he did not think it
+absolutely necessary to obey her in this particular; and had remained
+for some time in London, partaking the pleasures of the gay Court
+there, with all the ardour of a young man bred up in comparative
+seclusion.
+
+In order to reconcile the Countess to this transgression of her
+authority (for he continued to entertain for her the profound respect
+in which he had been educated), Lord Derby agreed to make a long
+sojourn with her in her favourite island, which he abandoned almost
+entirely to her management.
+
+Julian Peveril had spent at Martindale Castle a good deal of the time
+which his friend had bestowed in London; and at the period to which,
+passing over many years, our story has arrived, as it were, /per
+saltum/, they were both living as the Countess's guests, in the Castle
+of Rushin, in the venerable kingdom of Man.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+ Mona--long hid from those who roam the main.
+ --COLLINS.
+
+The Isle of Man, in the middle of the seventeenth century, was very
+different, as a place of residence, from what it is now. Men had not
+then discovered its merit as a place of occasional refuge from the
+storms of life, and the society to be there met with was of a very
+uniform tenor. There were no smart fellows, whom fortune had tumbled
+from the seat of their barouches--no plucked pigeons or winged rooks--
+no disappointed speculators--no ruined miners--in short, no one worth
+talking to. The society of the island was limited to the natives
+themselves, and a few merchants, who lived by contraband trade. The
+amusements were rare and monotonous, and the mercurial young Earl was
+soon heartily tired of his dominions. The islanders, also, become too
+wise for happiness, had lost relish for the harmless and somewhat
+childish sports in which their simple ancestors had indulged
+themselves. May was no longer ushered in by the imaginary contest
+between the Queen of returning winter and advancing spring; the
+listeners no longer sympathised with the lively music of the followers
+of the one, or the discordant sounds with which the other asserted a
+more noisy claim to attention. Christmas, too, closed, and the
+steeples no longer jangled forth a dissonant peal. The wren, to seek
+for which used to be the sport dedicated to the holytide, was left
+unpursued and unslain. Party spirit had come among these simple
+people, and destroyed their good humour, while it left them their
+ignorance. Even the races, a sport generally interesting to people of
+all ranks, were no longer performed, because they were no longer
+interesting. The gentlemen were divided by feuds hitherto unknown, and
+each seemed to hold it scorn to be pleased with the same diversions
+that amused those of the opposite faction. The hearts of both parties
+revolted from the recollection of former days, when all was peace
+among them, when the Earl of Derby, now slaughtered, used to bestow
+the prize, and Christian, since so vindictively executed, started
+horses to add to the amusement.
+
+Julian was seated in the deep recess which led to a latticed window of
+the old Castle; and, with his arms crossed, and an air of profound
+contemplation, was surveying the long perspective of ocean, which
+rolled its successive waves up to the foot of the rock on which the
+ancient pile is founded. The Earl was suffering under the infliction
+of ennui--now looking into a volume of Homer--now whistling--now
+swinging on his chair--now traversing the room--till, at length, his
+attention became swallowed up in admiration of the tranquillity of his
+companion.
+
+"King of Men!" he said, repeating the favourite epithet by which Homer
+describes Agamemnon,--"I trust, for the old Greek's sake, he had a
+merrier office than being King of Man--Most philosophical Julian, will
+nothing rouse thee--not even a bad pun on my own royal dignity?"
+
+"I wish you would be a little more the King in Man," said Julian,
+starting from his reverie, "and then you would find more amusement in
+your dominions."
+
+"What! dethrone that royal Semiramis my mother," said the young lord,
+"who has as much pleasure in playing Queen as if she were a real
+Sovereign?--I wonder you can give me such counsel."
+
+"Your mother, as you well know, my dear Derby, would be delighted, did
+you take any interest in the affairs of the island."
+
+"Ay, truly, she would permit me to be King; but she would choose to
+remain Viceroy over me. Why, she would only gain a subject the more,
+by my converting my spare time, which is so very valuable to me, to
+the cares of royalty. No, no, Julian, she thinks it power, to direct
+all the affairs of these poor Manxmen; and, thinking it power, she
+finds it pleasure. I shall not interfere, unless she hold a high court
+of justice again. I cannot afford to pay another fine to my brother,
+King Charles--But I forget--this is a sore point with you."
+
+"With the Countess, at least," replied Julian; "and I wonder you will
+speak of it."
+
+"Why, I bear no malice against the poor man's memory any more than
+yourself, though I have not the same reasons for holding it in
+veneration," replied the Earl of Derby; "and yet I have some respect
+for it too. I remember their bringing him out to die--It was the first
+holiday I ever had in my life, and I heartily wish it had been on some
+other account."
+
+"I would rather hear you speak of anything else, my lord," said
+Julian.
+
+"Why, there it goes," answered the Earl; "whenever I talk of anything
+that puts you on your mettle, and warms your blood, that runs as cold
+as a merman's--to use a simile of this happy island--hey pass! you
+press me to change the subject.--Well, what shall we talk of?--O
+Julian, if you had not gone down to earth yourself among the castles
+and caverns of Derbyshire, we should have had enough of delicious
+topics--the play-houses, Julian--Both the King's house and the
+Duke's--Louis's establishment is a jest to them;--and the Ring in the
+Park, which beats the Corso at Naples--and the beauties, who beat the
+whole world!"
+
+"I am very willing to hear you speak on the subject, my lord,"
+answered Julian; "the less I have seen of London world myself, the
+more I am likely to be amused by your account of it."
+
+"Ay, my friend--but where to begin?--with the wit of Buckingham, and
+Sedley, and Etherege, or with the grace of Harry Jermyn--the courtesy
+of the Duke of Monmouth, or with the loveliness of La Belle Hamilton--
+of the Duchess of Richmond--of Lady ----, the person of Roxalana, the
+smart humour of Mrs. Nelly----"
+
+"Or what say you to the bewitching sorceries of Lady Cynthia?"
+demanded his companion.
+
+"Faith, I would have kept these to myself," said the Earl, "to follow
+your prudent example. But since you ask me, I fairly own I cannot tell
+what to say of them; only I think of them twenty times as often as all
+the beauties I have spoken of. And yet she is neither the twentieth
+part so beautiful as the plainest of these Court beauties, nor so
+witty as the dullest I have named, nor so modish--that is the great
+matter--as the most obscure. I cannot tell what makes me dote on her,
+except that she is a capricious as her whole sex put together."
+
+"That I should think a small recommendation," answered his companion.
+
+"Small, do you term it," replied the Earl, "and write yourself a
+brother of the angle? Why, which like you best? to pull a dead strain
+on a miserable gudgeon, which you draw ashore by main force, as the
+fellows here tow in their fishing-boats--or a lively salmon, that
+makes your rod crack, and your line whistle--plays you ten thousand
+mischievous pranks--wearies your heart out with hopes and fears--and
+is only laid panting on the bank, after you have shown the most
+unmatchable display of skill, patience, and dexterity?--But I see you
+have a mind to go on angling after your own old fashion. Off laced
+coat, and on brown jerkin;--lively colours scare fish in the sober
+waters of the Isle of Man;--faith, in London you will catch few,
+unless the bait glistens a little. But you /are/ going?--Well, good
+luck to you. I will take to the barge;--the sea and wind are less
+inconstant than the tide you have embarked on."
+
+"You have learned to say all these smart things in London, my lord,"
+answered Julian; "but we shall have you a penitent for them, if Lady
+Cynthia be of my mind. Adieu, and pleasure till we meet."
+
+The young men parted accordingly; and while the Earl betook him to his
+pleasure voyage, Julian, as his friend had prophesied, assumed the
+dress of one who means to amuse himself with angling. The hat and
+feather were exchanged for a cap of grey cloth; the deeply-laced cloak
+and doublet for a simple jacket of the same colour, with hose
+conforming; and finally, with rod in hand, and pannier at his back,
+mounted upon a handsome Manx pony, young Peveril rode briskly over the
+country which divided him from one of those beautiful streams that
+descend to the sea from the Kirk-Merlagh mountains.
+
+Having reached the spot where he meant to commence his day's sport,
+Julian let his little steed graze, which, accustomed to the situation,
+followed him like a dog; and now and then, when tired of picking
+herbage in the valley through which the stream winded, came near her
+master's side, and, as if she had been a curious amateur of the sport,
+gazed on the trouts as Julian brought them struggling to the shore.
+But Fairy's master showed, on that day, little of the patience of a
+real angler, and took no heed to old Isaac Walton's recommendation, to
+fish the streams inch by inch. He chose, indeed, with an angler's eye,
+the most promising casts, which the stream broke sparkling over a
+stone, affording the wonted shelter to a trout; or where, gliding away
+from a rippling current to a still eddy it streamed under the
+projecting bank, or dashed from the pool of some low cascade. By this
+judicious selection of spots whereon to employ his art, the
+sportsman's basket was soon sufficiently heavy, to show that his
+occupation was not a mere pretext; and so soon as this was the case,
+he walked briskly up the glen, only making a cast from time to time,
+in case of his being observed from any of the neighbouring heights.
+
+It was a little green and rocky valley through which the brook
+strayed, very lonely, although the slight track of an unformed road
+showed that it was occasionally traversed, and that it was not
+altogether void of inhabitants. As Peveril advanced still farther, the
+right bank reached to some distance from the stream, leaving a piece
+of meadow ground, the lower part of which, being close to the brook,
+was entirely covered with rich herbage, being possibly occasionally
+irrigated by its overflow. The higher part of the level ground
+afforded a stance for an old house, of singular structure, with a
+terraced garden, and a cultivated field or two beside it. In former
+times, a Danish or Norwegian fastness had stood here, called the Black
+Fort, from the colour of a huge healthy hill, which, rising behind the
+building, appeared to be the boundary of the valley, and to afford the
+source of the brook. But the original structure had been long
+demolished, as, indeed, it probably only consisted of dry stones, and
+its materials had been applied to the construction of the present
+mansion--the work of some churchman during the sixteenth century, as
+was evident from the huge stone-work of its windows, which scarce left
+room for light to pass through, as well as from two or three heavy
+buttresses, which projected from the front of the house, and exhibited
+on their surface little niches for images. These had been carefully
+destroyed, and pots of flowers were placed in the niches in their
+stead, besides their being ornamented by creeping plants of various
+kinds, fancifully twined around them. The garden was also in good
+order; and though the spot was extremely solitary, there was about it
+altogether an air of comfort, accommodation, and even elegance, by no
+means generally characteristic of the habitations of the island at the
+time.
+
+With much circumspection, Julian Peveril approached the low Gothic
+porch, which defended the entrance of the mansion from the tempests
+incident to its situation, and was, like the buttresses, overrun with
+ivy and other creeping plants. An iron ring, contrived so as when
+drawn up and down to rattle against the bar of notched iron through
+which it was suspended, served the purpose of a knocker; and to this
+he applied himself, though with the greatest precaution.
+
+He received no answer for some time, and indeed it seemed as if the
+house was totally uninhabited; when, at length, his impatience getting
+the upper hand, he tried to open the door, and, as it was only upon
+the latch, very easily succeeded. He passed through a little low-
+arched hall, the upper end of which was occupied by a staircase, and
+turning to the left, opened the door of a summer parlour, wainscoted
+with black oak, and very simply furnished with chairs and tables of
+the same materials; the former cushioned with the leather. The
+apartment was gloomy--one of those stone-shafted windows which we have
+mentioned, with its small latticed panes, and thick garland of
+foliage, admitting but an imperfect light.
+
+Over the chimneypiece (which was of the same massive materials with
+the panelling of the apartment) was the only ornament of the room; a
+painting, namely, representing an officer in the military dress of the
+Civil Wars. It was a green jerkin, then the national and peculiar wear
+of the Manxmen; his short band which hung down on the cuirass--the
+orange-coloured scarf, but, above all, the shortness of his close-cut
+hair, showing evidently to which of the great parties he had belonged.
+His right hand rested on the hilt of his sword; and in the left he
+held a small Bible, bearing the inscription, "/In hoc signo/." The
+countenance was of a light complexion, with fair and almost effeminate
+blue eyes, and an oval form of face--one of those physiognomies, to
+which, though not otherwise unpleasing, we naturally attach the idea
+of melancholy and of misfortune.[*] Apparently it was well known to
+Julian Peveril; for after having looked at it for a long time, he
+could not forbear muttering aloud, "What would I give that that man
+had never been born, or that he still lived!"
+
+[*] I am told that a portrait of the unfortunate William Christian is
+ still preserved in the family of Waterson of Ballnabow of Kirk
+ Church, Rushin. William Dhône is dressed in a green coat without
+ collar or cape, after the fashion of those puritanic times, with
+ the head in a close cropt wig, resembling the bishop's peruke of
+ the present day. The countenance is youthful and well-looking,
+ very unlike the expression of foreboding melancholy. I have so far
+ taken advantage of this criticism, as to bring my ideal portrait
+ in the present edition, nearer to the complexion at least of the
+ fair-haired William Dhône.
+
+"How now--how is this?" said a female, who entered the room as he
+uttered this reflection. "/You/ here, Master Peveril, in spite of all
+the warnings you have had! You here in the possession of folk's house
+when they are abroad, and talking to yourself, as I shall warrant!"
+
+"Yes, Mistress Deborah," said Peveril, "I am here once more, as you
+see, against every prohibition, and in defiance of all danger.--Where
+is Alice?"
+
+"Where you will never see her, Master Julian--you may satisfy yourself
+of that," answered Mistress Deborah, for it was that respectable
+governante; and sinking down at the same time upon one of the large
+leathern chairs, she began to fan herself with her handkerchief, and
+complain of the heat in a most ladylike fashion.
+
+In fact, Mistress Debbitch, while her exterior intimated a
+considerable change of condition for the better, and her countenance
+showed the less favourable effects of the twenty years which had
+passed over her head, was in mind and manners very much what she had
+been when she battled the opinions of Madam Ellesmere at Martindale
+Castle. In a word, she was self-willed, obstinate, and coquettish as
+ever, otherwise no ill-disposed person. Her present appearance was
+that of a woman of the better rank. From the sobriety of the fashion
+of her dress, and the uniformity of its colours, it was plain she
+belonged to some sect which condemned superfluous gaiety in attire;
+but no rules, not those of a nunnery or of a quaker's society, can
+prevent a little coquetry in that particular, where a woman is
+desirous of being supposed to retain some claim to personal attention.
+All Mistress Deborah's garments were so arranged as might best set off
+a good-looking woman, whose countenance indicated ease and good cheer
+--who called herself five-and-thirty, and was well entitled, if she
+had a mind, to call herself twelve or fifteen years older.
+
+Julian was under the necessity of enduring all her tiresome and
+fantastic airs, and awaiting with patience till she had "prinked
+herself and pinned herself"--flung her hoods back, and drawn them
+forward--snuffed at a little bottle of essences--closed her eyes like
+a dying fowl--turned them up like duck in a thunderstorm; when at
+length, having exhausted her round of /minauderies/, she condescended
+to open the conversation.
+
+"These walks will be the death of me," she said, "and all on your
+account, Master Julian Peveril; for if Dame Christian should learn
+that you have chosen to make your visits to her niece, I promise you
+Mistress Alice would be soon obliged to find other quarters, and so
+should I."
+
+"Come now, Mistress Deborah, be good-humoured," said Julian;
+"consider, was not all this intimacy of ours of your own making? Did
+you not make yourself known to me the very first time I strolled up
+this glen with my fishing-rod, and tell me that you were my former
+keeper, and that Alice had been my little playfellow? And what could
+there be more natural, than that I should come back and see two such
+agreeable persons as often as I could?"
+
+"Yes," said Dame Deborah; "but I did not bid you fall in love with us,
+though, or propose such a matter as marriage either to Alice or
+myself."
+
+"To do you justice, you never did, Deborah," answered the youth; "but
+what of that? Such things will come out before one is aware. I am sure
+you must have heard such proposals fifty times when you least expected
+them."
+
+"Fie, fie, fie, Master Julian Peveril," said the governante; "I would
+have you to know that I have always so behaved myself, that the best
+of the land would have thought twice of it, and have very well
+considered both what he was going to say, and how he was going to say
+it, before he came out with such proposals to me."
+
+"True, true, Mistress Deborah," continued Julian; "but all the world
+hath not your discretion. Then Alice Bridgenorth is a child--a mere
+child; and one always asks a baby to be one's little wife, you know.
+Come, I know you will forgive me. Thou wert ever the best-natured,
+kindest woman in the world; and you know you have said twenty times we
+were made for each other."
+
+"Oh no, Master Julian Peveril; no, no, no!" ejaculated Deborah. "I may
+indeed have said your estates were born to be united; and to be sure
+it is natural for me, that come of the old stock of the yeomanry of
+Peveril of the Peak's estate, to wish that it was all within the ring
+fence again; which sure enough it might be, were you to marry Alice
+Bridgenorth. But then there is the knight your father, and my lady
+your mother; and there is her father, that is half crazy with his
+religion; and her aunt that wears eternal black grogram for that
+unlucky Colonel Christian; and there is the Countess of Derby, that
+would serve us all with the same sauce if we were thinking of anything
+that would displease her. And besides all that, you have broke your
+word with Mistress Alice, and everything is over between you; and I am
+of opinion it is quite right it should be all over. And perhaps it may
+be, Master Julian, that I should have thought so a long time ago,
+before a child like Alice put it into my head; but I am so good-
+natured."
+
+No flatterer like a lover, who wishes to carry his point.
+
+"You are the best-natured, kindest creature in the world, Deborah.--
+But you have never seen the ring I bought for you at Paris. Nay, I
+will put it on your finger myself;--what! your foster-son, whom you
+loved so well, and took such care of?"
+
+He easily succeeded in putting a pretty ring of gold, with a humorous
+affectation of gallantry, on the fat finger of Mistress Deborah
+Debbitch. Hers was a soul of a kind often to be met with, both among
+the lower and higher vulgar, who, without being, on a broad scale,
+accessible to bribes or corruption, are nevertheless much attached to
+perquisites, and considerably biassed in their line of duty, though
+perhaps insensibly, by the love of petty observances, petty presents,
+and trivial compliments. Mistress Debbitch turned the ring round, and
+round, and round, and at length said, in a whisper, "Well, Master
+Julian Peveril, it signifies nothing denying anything to such a young
+gentleman as you, for young gentlemen are always so obstinate! and so
+I may as well tell you, that Mistress Alice walked back from the Kirk-
+Truagh along with me, just now, and entered the house at the same time
+with myself."
+
+"Why did you not tell me so before?" said Julian, starting up; "where
+--where is she?"
+
+"You had better ask why I tell you so /now/, Master Julian," said Dame
+Deborah; "for, I promise you, it is against her express commands; and
+I would not have told you, had you not looked so pitiful;--but as for
+seeing you, that she will not--and she is in her own bedroom, with a
+good oak door shut and bolted upon her--that is one comfort.--And so,
+as for any breach of trust on my part--I promise you the little saucy
+minx gives it no less name--it is quite impossible."
+
+"Do not say so, Deborah--only go--only try--tell her to hear me--tell
+her I have a hundred excuses for disobeying her commands--tell her I
+have no doubt to get over all obstacles at Martindale Castle."
+
+"Nay, I tell you it is all in vain," replied the Dame. "When I saw
+your cap and rod lying in the hall, I did but say, 'There he is
+again,' and she ran up the stairs like a young deer; and I heard key
+turned, and bolt shot, ere I could say a single word to stop her--I
+marvel you heard her not."
+
+"It was because I am, as I ever was, an owl--a dreaming fool, who let
+all those golden minutes pass, which my luckless life holds out to me
+so rarely.--Well--tell her I go--go for ever--go where she will hear
+no more of me--where no one shall hear more of me!"
+
+"Oh, the Father!" said the dame, "hear how he talks!--What will become
+of Sir Geoffrey, and your mother, and of me, and of the Countess, if
+you were to go so far as you talk of? And what would become of poor
+Alice too? for I will be sworn she likes you better than she says, and
+I know she used to sit and look the way that you used to come up the
+stream, and now and then ask me if the morning were good for fishing.
+And all the while you were on the continent, as they call it, she
+scarcely smiled once, unless it was when she got two beautiful long
+letters about foreign parts."
+
+"Friendship, Dame Deborah--only friendship--cold and calm remembrance
+of one who, by your kind permission, stole in on your solitude now and
+then, with news from the living world without--Once, indeed, I
+thought--but it is all over--farewell."
+
+So saying, he covered his face with one hand, and extended the other,
+in the act of bidding adieu to Dame Debbitch, whose kind heart became
+unable to withstand the sight of his affliction.
+
+"Now, do not be in such haste," she said; "I will go up again, and
+tell her how it stands with you, and bring her down, if it is in
+woman's power to do it."
+
+And so saying, she left the apartment, and ran upstairs.
+
+Julian Peveril, meanwhile, paced the apartment in great agitation,
+waiting the success of Deborah's intercession; and she remained long
+enough absent to give us time to explain, in a short retrospect, the
+circumstances which had led to his present situation.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+ Ah me! for aught that ever I could read,
+ Could ever hear by tale or history,
+ The course of true love never did run smooth!
+ --Midsummer Night's Dream.
+
+The celebrated passage which we have prefixed to this chapter has,
+like most observations of the same author, its foundation in real
+experience. The period at which love is formed for the first time, and
+felt most strongly, is seldom that at which there is much prospect of
+its being brought to a happy issue. The state of artificial society
+opposes many complicated obstructions to early marriages; and the
+chance is very great, that such obstacles prove insurmountable. In
+fine, there are few men who do not look back in secret to some period
+of their youth, at which a sincere and early affection was repulsed,
+or betrayed, or become abortive from opposing circumstances. It is
+these little passages of secret history, which leave a tinge of
+romance in every bosom, scarce permitting us, even in the most busy or
+the most advanced period of life, to listen with total indifference to
+a tale of true love.
+
+Julian Peveril had so fixed his affections, as to insure the fullest
+share of that opposition which early attachments are so apt to
+encounter. Yet nothing so natural as that he should have done so. In
+early youth, Dame Debbitch had accidentally met with the son of her
+first patroness, and who had himself been her earliest charge, fishing
+in the little brook already noticed, which watered the valley in which
+she resided with Alice Bridgenorth. The dame's curiosity easily
+discovered who he was; and besides the interest which persons in her
+condition usually take in the young people who have been under their
+charge, she was delighted with the opportunity to talk about former
+times--about Martindale Castle, and friends there--about Sir Geoffrey
+and his good lady--and, now and then, about Lance Outram the park-
+keeper.
+
+The mere pleasure of gratifying her inquiries, would scarce have had
+power enough to induce Julian to repeat his visits to the lonely glen;
+but Deborah had a companion--a lovely girl--bred in solitude, and in
+the quiet and unpretending tastes which solitude encourages--spirited,
+also, and inquisitive, and listening, with laughing cheek, and an
+eager eye, to every tale which the young angler brought from the town
+and castle.
+
+The visits of Julian to the Black Fort were only occasional--so far
+Dame Deborah showed common-sense--which was, perhaps, inspired by the
+apprehension of losing her place, in case of discovery. She had,
+indeed, great confidence in the strong and rooted belief--amounting
+almost to superstition--which Major Bridgenorth entertained, that his
+daughter's continued health could only be insured by her continuing
+under the charge of one who had acquired Lady Peveril's supposed skill
+in treating those subject to such ailments. This belief Dame Deborah
+had improved to the utmost of her simple cunning,--always speaking in
+something of an oracular tone, upon the subject of her charge's
+health, and hinting at certain mysterious rules necessary to maintain
+it in the present favourable state. She had availed herself of this
+artifice, to procure for herself and Alice a separate establishment at
+the Black Fort; for it was originally Major Bridgenorth's resolution,
+that his daughter and her governante should remain under the same roof
+with the sister-in-law of his deceased wife, the widow of the
+unfortunate Colonel Christian. But this lady was broken down with
+premature age, brought on by sorrow; and, in a short visit which Major
+Bridgenorth made to the island, he was easily prevailed on to consider
+her house at Kirk-Truagh, as a very cheerless residence for his
+daughter. Dame Deborah, who longed for domestic independence, was
+careful to increase this impression by alarming her patron's fears on
+account of Alice's health. The mansion of Kirk-Truagh stood, she said,
+much exposed to the Scottish winds, which could not but be cold, as
+they came from a country where, as she was assured, there was ice and
+snow at midsummer. In short, she prevailed, and was put into full
+possession of the Black Fort, a house which, as well as Kirk-Truagh,
+belonged formerly to Christian, and now to his widow.
+
+Still, however, it was enjoined on the governante and her charge, to
+visit Kirk-Truagh from time to time, and to consider themselves as
+under the management and guardianship of Mistress Christian--a state
+of subjection, the sense of which Deborah endeavoured to lessen, by
+assuming as much freedom of conduct as she possibly dared, under the
+influence, doubtless, of the same feelings of independence, which
+induced her, at Martindale Hall, to spurn the advice of Mistress
+Ellesmere.
+
+It was this generous disposition to defy control which induced her to
+procure for Alice, secretly, some means of education, which the stern
+genius of puritanism would have proscribed. She ventured to have her
+charge taught music--nay, even dancing; and the picture of the stern
+Colonel Christian trembled on the wainscot where it was suspended,
+while the sylph-like form of Alice, and the substantial person of Dame
+Deborah, executed French /chaussées/ and /borrées/, to the sound of a
+small kit, which screamed under the bow of Monsieur De Pigal, half
+smuggler, half dancing-master. This abomination reached the ears of
+the Colonel's widow, and by her was communicated to Bridgenorth, whose
+sudden appearance in the island showed the importance he attached to
+the communication. Had she been faithless to her own cause, that had
+been the latest hour of Mrs. Deborah's administration. But she
+retreated into her stronghold.
+
+"Dancing," she said, "was exercise, regulated and timed by music; and
+it stood to reason, that it must be the best of all exercise for a
+delicate person, especially as it could be taken within doors, and in
+all states of the weather."
+
+Bridgenorth listened, with a clouded and thoughtful brow, when, in
+exemplification of her doctrine, Mistress Deborah, who was no
+contemptible performer on the viol, began to jangle Sellenger's Round,
+and desired Alice to dance an old English measure to the tune. As the
+half-bashful, half-smiling girl, about fourteen--for such was her age
+--moved gracefully to the music, the father's eye unavoidably followed
+the light spring of her step, and marked with joy the rising colour in
+her cheek. When the dance was over, he folded her in his arms,
+smoothed her somewhat disordered locks with a father's affectionate
+hand, smiled, kissed her brow, and took his leave, without one single
+word farther interdicting the exercise of dancing. He did not himself
+communicate the result of his visit at the Black Fort to Mrs.
+Christian, but she was not long of learning it, by the triumph of Dame
+Deborah on her next visit.
+
+"It is well," said the stern old lady; "my brother Bridgenorth hath
+permitted you to make a Herodias of Alice, and teach her dancing. You
+have only now to find her a partner for life--I shall neither meddle
+nor make more in their affairs."
+
+In fact, the triumph of Dame Deborah, or rather of Dame Nature, on
+this occasion, had more important effects than the former had ventured
+to anticipate; for Mrs. Christian, though she received with all
+formality the formal visits of the governante and her charge, seemed
+thenceforth so pettish with the issue of her remonstrance, upon the
+enormity of her niece dancing to a little fiddle, that she appeared to
+give up interference in her affairs, and left Dame Debbitch and Alice
+to manage both education and housekeeping--in which she had hitherto
+greatly concerned herself--much after their own pleasure.
+
+It was in this independent state that they lived, when Julian first
+visited their habitation; and he was the rather encouraged to do so by
+Dame Deborah, that she believed him to be one of the last persons in
+the world with whom Mistress Christian would have desired her niece to
+be acquainted--the happy spirit of contradiction superseding, with
+Dame Deborah, on this, as on other occasions, all consideration of the
+fitness of things. She did not act altogether without precaution
+neither. She was aware she had to guard not only against any reviving
+interest or curiosity on the part of Mistress Christian, but against
+the sudden arrival of Major Bridgenorth, who never failed once in the
+year to make his appearance at the Black Fort when least expected, and
+to remain there for a few days. Dame Debbitch, therefore, exacted of
+Julian, that his visits should be few and far between; that he should
+condescend to pass for a relation of her own, in the eyes of two
+ignorant Manx girls and a lad, who formed her establishment; and that
+he should always appear in his angler's dress made of the simple
+/Loughtan/, or buff-coloured wool of the island, which is not
+subjected to dyeing. By these cautions, she thought his intimacy at
+the Black Fort would be entirely unnoticed, or considered as
+immaterial, while, in the meantime, it furnished much amusement to her
+charge and herself.
+
+This was accordingly the case during the earlier part of their
+intercourse, while Julian was a lad, and Alice a girl two or three
+years younger. But as the lad shot up to youth, and the girl to
+womanhood, even Dame Deborah Debbitch's judgment saw danger in their
+continued intimacy. She took an opportunity to communicate to Julian
+who Miss Bridgenorth actually was, and the peculiar circumstances
+which placed discord between their fathers. He heard the story of
+their quarrel with interest and surprise, for he had only resided
+occasionally at Martindale Castle, and the subject of Bridgenorth's
+quarrel with his father had never been mentioned in his presence. His
+imagination caught fire at the sparks afforded by this singular story;
+and, far from complying with the prudent remonstrance of Dame Deborah,
+and gradually estranging himself from the Black Fort and its fair
+inmate, he frankly declared, he considered his intimacy there, so
+casually commenced, as intimating the will of Heaven, that Alice and
+he were designed for each other, in spite of every obstacle which
+passion or prejudice could raise up betwixt them. They had been
+companions in infancy; and a little exertion of memory enabled him to
+recall his childish grief for the unexpected and sudden disappearance
+of his little companion, whom he was destined again to meet with in
+the early bloom of opening beauty, in a country which was foreign to
+them both.
+
+Dame Deborah was confounded at the consequences of her communication,
+which had thus blown into a flame the passion which she hoped it would
+have either prevented or extinguished. She had not the sort of head
+which resists the masculine and energetic remonstrances of passionate
+attachment, whether addressed to her on her own account, or on behalf
+of another. She lamented, and wondered, and ended her feeble
+opposition, by weeping, and sympathising, and consenting to allow the
+continuance of Julian's visits, provided he should only address
+himself to Alice as a friend; to gain the world, she would consent to
+nothing more. She was not, however, so simple, but that she also had
+her forebodings of the designs of Providence on this youthful couple;
+for certainly they could not be more formed to be united than the good
+estates of Martindale and Moultrassie.
+
+Then came a long sequence of reflections. Martindale Castle wanted but
+some repairs to be almost equal to Chatsworth. The Hall might be
+allowed to go to ruin; or, what would be better, when Sir Geoffrey's
+time came (for the good knight had seen service, and must be breaking
+now), the Hall would be a good dowery-house, to which my lady and
+Ellesmere might retreat; while (empress of the still-room, and queen
+of the pantry) Mistress Deborah Debbitch should reign housekeeper at
+the Castle, and extend, perhaps, the crown-matrimonial to Lance
+Outram, provided he was not become too old, too fat, or too fond of
+ale.
+
+Such were the soothing visions under the influence of which the dame
+connived at an attachment, which lulled also to pleasing dreams,
+though of a character so different, her charge and her visitant.
+
+The visits of the young angler became more and more frequent; and the
+embarrassed Deborah, though foreseeing all the dangers of discovery,
+and the additional risk of an explanation betwixt Alice and Julian,
+which must necessarily render their relative situation so much more
+delicate, felt completely overborne by the enthusiasm of the young
+lover, and was compelled to let matters take their course.
+
+The departure of Julian for the continent interrupted the course of
+his intimacy at the Black Fort, and while it relieved the elder of its
+inmates from much internal apprehension, spread an air of languor and
+dejection over the countenance of the younger, which, at
+Bridgenorth's next visit to the Isle of Man, renewed all his terrors
+for his daughter's constitutional malady.
+
+Deborah promised faithfully she should look better the next morning,
+and she kept her word. She had retained in her possession for some
+time a letter which Julian had, by some private conveyance, sent to
+her charge, for his youthful friend. Deborah had dreaded the
+consequences of delivering it as a billet-doux, but, as in the case of
+the dance, she thought there could be no harm in administering it as a
+remedy.
+
+It had complete effect; and next day the cheeks of the maiden had a
+tinge of the rose, which so much delighted her father, that, as he
+mounted his horse, he flung his purse into Deborah's hand, with the
+desire she should spare nothing that could make herself and his
+daughter happy, and the assurance that she had his full confidence.
+
+This expression of liberality and confidence from a man of Major
+Bridgenorth's reserved and cautious disposition, gave full plumage to
+Mistress Deborah's hopes; and emboldened her not only to deliver
+another letter of Julian's to the young lady, but to encourage more
+boldly and freely than formerly the intercourse of the lovers when
+Peveril returned from abroad.
+
+At length, in spite of all Julian's precaution, the young Earl became
+suspicious of his frequent solitary fishing parties; and he himself,
+now better acquainted with the world than formerly, became aware that
+his repeated visits and solitary walks with a person so young and
+beautiful as Alice, might not only betray prematurely the secret of
+his attachment, but be of essential prejudice to her who was its
+object.
+
+Under the influence of this conviction, he abstained, for an unusual
+period, from visiting the Black Fort. But when he next indulged
+himself with spending an hour in the place where he would gladly have
+abode for ever, the altered manner of Alice--the tone in which she
+seemed to upbraid his neglect, penetrated his heart, and deprived him
+of that power of self-command, which he had hitherto exercised in
+their interviews. It required but a few energetic words to explain to
+Alice at once his feelings, and to make her sensible of the real
+nature of her own. She wept plentifully, but her tears were not all of
+bitterness. She sat passively still, and without reply, while he
+explained to her, with many an interjection, the circumstances which
+had placed discord between their families; for hitherto, all that she
+had known was, that Master Peveril, belonging to the household of the
+great Countess or Lady of Man, must observe some precautions in
+visiting a relative of the unhappy Colonel Christian. But, when Julian
+concluded his tale with the warmest protestations of eternal love, "My
+poor father!" she burst forth, "and was this to be the end of all thy
+precautions?--This, that the son of him that disgraced and banished
+thee, should hold such language to your daughter?"
+
+"You err, Alice, you err," cried Julian eagerly. "That I hold this
+language--that the son of Peveril addresses thus the daughter of your
+father--that he thus kneels to you for forgiveness of injuries which
+passed when we were both infants, shows the will of Heaven, that in
+our affection should be quenched the discord of our parents. What else
+could lead those who parted infants on the hills of Derbyshire, to
+meet thus in the valleys of Man?"
+
+Alice, however new such a scene, and, above all, her own emotions,
+might be, was highly endowed with that exquisite delicacy which is
+imprinted in the female heart, to give warning of the slightest
+approach to impropriety in a situation like hers.
+
+"Rise, rise, Master Peveril," she said; "do not do yourself and me
+this injustice--we have done both wrong--very wrong; but my fault was
+done in ignorance. O God! my poor father, who needs comfort so much--
+is it for me to add to his misfortunes? Rise!" she added more firmly;
+"if you retain this unbecoming posture any longer, I will leave the
+room and you shall never see me more."
+
+The commanding tone of Alice overawed the impetuosity of her lover,
+who took in silence a seat removed to some distance from hers, and was
+again about to speak. "Julian," said she in a milder tone, "you have
+spoken enough, and more than enough. Would you had left me in the
+pleasing dream in which I could have listened to you for ever! but the
+hour of wakening is arrived." Peveril waited the prosecution of her
+speech as a criminal while he waits his doom; for he was sufficiently
+sensible that an answer, delivered not certainly without emotion, but
+with firmness and resolution, was not to be interrupted. "We have done
+wrong," she repeated, "very wrong; and if we now separate for ever,
+the pain we may feel will be but a just penalty for our error. We
+should never have met: meeting, we should part as soon as possible.
+Our farther intercourse can but double our pain at parting. Farewell,
+Julian; and forget we ever have seen each other!"
+
+"Forget!" said Julian; "never, never. To /you/, it is easy to speak
+the word--to think the thought. To /me/, an approach to either can
+only be by utter destruction. Why should you doubt that the feud of
+our fathers, like so many of which we have heard, might be appeased by
+our friendship? You are my only friend. I am the only one whom Heaven
+has assigned to you. Why should we separate for the fault of others,
+which befell when we were but children?"
+
+"You speak in vain, Julian," said Alice; "I pity you--perhaps I pity
+myself--indeed, I should pity myself, perhaps, the most of the two;
+for you will go forth to new scenes and new faces, and will soon
+forget me; but, I, remaining in this solitude, how shall /I/ forget?--
+that, however, is not now the question--I can bear my lot, and it
+commands us to part."
+
+"Hear me yet a moment," said Peveril; "this evil is not, cannot be
+remediless. I will go to my father,--I will use the intercession of my
+mother, to whom he can refuse nothing--I will gain their consent--they
+have no other child--and they must consent, or lose him for ever. Say,
+Alice, if I come to you with my parents' consent to my suit, will you
+again say, with that tone so touching and so sad, yet so incredibly
+determined--Julian, we must part?" Alice was silent. "Cruel girl, will
+you not even deign to answer me?" said her lover.
+
+"I would refer you to my father," said Alice, blushing and casting her
+eyes down; but instantly raising them again, she repeated, in a firmer
+and a sadder tone, "Yes, Julian, I would refer you to my father; and
+you would find that your pilot, Hope, had deceived you; and that you
+had but escaped the quicksands to fall upon the rocks."
+
+"I would that could be tried!" said Julian. "Methinks I could persuade
+your father that in ordinary eyes our alliance is not undesirable. My
+family have fortune, rank, long descent--all that fathers look for
+when they bestow a daughter's hand."
+
+"All this would avail you nothing," said Alice. "The spirit of my
+father is bent upon the things of another world; and if he listened to
+hear you out, it would be but to tell you that he spurned your
+offers."
+
+"You know not--you know not, Alice," said Julian. "Fire can soften
+iron--thy father's heart cannot be so hard, or his prejudices so
+strong, but I shall find some means to melt him. Forbid me not--Oh,
+forbid me not at least the experiment!"
+
+"I can but advise," said Alice; "I can forbid you nothing; for, to
+forbid, implies power to command obedience. But if you will be wise,
+and listen to me--Here, and on this spot, we part for ever!"
+
+"Not so, by Heaven!" said Julian, whose bold and sanguine temper
+scarce saw difficulty in attaining aught which he desired. "We now
+part, indeed, but it is that I may return armed with my parents'
+consent. They desire that I should marry--in their last letters they
+pressed it more openly--they shall have their desire; and such a bride
+as I will present to them has not graced their house since the
+Conqueror gave it origin. Farewell, Alice! Farewell, for a brief
+space!"
+
+She replied, "Farewell, Julian! Farewell for ever!"
+
+Julian, within a week of this interview, was at Martindale Castle,
+with the view of communicating his purpose. But the task which seems
+easy at a distance, proves as difficult, upon a nearer approach, as
+the fording of a river, which from afar appeared only a brook. There
+lacked not opportunities of entering upon the subject; for in the
+first ride which he took with his father, the Knight resumed the
+subject of his son's marriage, and liberally left the lady to his
+choice; but under the strict proviso, that she was of a loyal and an
+honourable family;--if she had fortune, it was good and well, or
+rather, it was better than well; but if she was poor, why, "there is
+still some picking," said Sir Geoffrey, "on the bones of the old
+estate; and Dame Margaret and I will be content with the less, that
+you young folks may have your share of it. I am turned frugal already,
+Julian. You see what a north-country shambling bit of a Galloway nag I
+ride upon--a different beast, I wot, from my own old Black Hastings,
+who had but one fault, and that was his wish to turn down Moultrassie
+avenue."
+
+"Was that so great a fault?" said Julian, affecting indifference,
+while his heart was trembling, as it seemed to him, almost in his very
+throat.
+
+"It used to remind me of that base, dishonourable Presbyterian fellow,
+Bridgenorth," said Sir Geoffrey; "and I would as lief think of a toad:
+--they say he has turned Independent, to accomplish the full degree of
+rascality.--I tell you, Gill, I turned off the cow-boy, for gathering
+nuts in his woods--I would hang a dog that would so much as kill a
+hare there.--But what is the matter with you? You look pale."
+
+Julian made some indifferent answer, but too well understood, from the
+language and tone which his father used, that his prejudices against
+Alice's father were both deep and envenomed, as those of country
+gentlemen often become, who, having little to do or think of, are but
+too apt to spend their time in nursing and cherishing petty causes of
+wrath against their next neighbours.
+
+In the course of the same day, he mentioned the Bridgenorth to his
+mother, as if in a casual manner. But the Lady Peveril instantly
+conjured him never to mention the name, especially in his father's
+presence.
+
+"Was that Major Bridgenorth, of whom I have heard the name mentioned,"
+said Julian, "so very bad a neighbour?"
+
+"I do not say so," said Lady Peveril; "nay, we were more than once
+obliged to him, in the former unhappy times; but your father and he
+took some passages so ill at each other's hands, that the least
+allusion to him disturbs Sir Geoffrey's temper, in a manner quite
+unusual, and which, now that his health is somewhat impaired, is
+sometimes alarming to me. For Heaven's sake, then, my dear Julian,
+avoid upon all occasions the slightest allusion to Moultrassie, or any
+of its inhabitants."
+
+This warning was so seriously given, that Julian himself saw that
+mentioning his secret purpose would be the sure way to render it
+abortive, and therefore he returned disconsolate to the Isle.
+
+Peveril had the boldness, however, to make the best he could of what
+had happened, by requesting an interview with Alice, in order to
+inform her what had passed betwixt his parents and him on her account.
+It was with great difficulty that this boon was obtained; and Alice
+Bridgenorth showed no slight degree of displeasure, when she
+discovered, after much circumlocution, and many efforts to give an air
+of importance to what he had to communicate, that all amounted but to
+this, that Lady Peveril continued to retain a favourable opinion of
+her father, Major Bridgenorth, which Julian would fain have
+represented as an omen of their future more perfect reconciliation.
+
+"I did not think you would thus have trifled with me, Master Peveril,"
+said Alice, assuming an air of dignity; "but I will take care to avoid
+such intrusion in future--I request you will not again visit the Black
+Fort; and I entreat of you, good Mistress Debbitch, that you will no
+longer either encourage or permit this gentleman's visits, as the
+result of such persecution will be to compel me to appeal to my aunt
+and father for another place of residence, and perhaps also for
+another and more prudent companion."
+
+This last hint struck Mistress Deborah with so much terror, that she
+joined her ward in requiring and demanding Julian's instant absence,
+and he was obliged to comply with their request. But the courage of a
+youthful lover is not easily subdued; and Julian, after having gone
+through the usual round of trying to forget his ungrateful mistress,
+and entertaining his passion with augmented violence, ended by the
+visit to the Black Fort, the beginning of which we narrated in the
+last chapter.
+
+We then left him anxious for, yet almost fearful of, an interview with
+Alice, which he prevailed upon Deborah to solicit; and such was the
+tumult of his mind, that, while he traversed the parlour, it seemed to
+him that the dark melancholy eyes of the slaughtered Christian's
+portrait followed him wherever he went, with the fixed, chill, and
+ominous glance, which announced to the enemy of his race mishap and
+misfortune.
+
+The door of the apartment opened at length, and these visions were
+dissipated.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+ Parents have flinty hearts! No tears can move them.
+ --OTWAY.
+
+When Alice Bridgenorth at length entered the parlour where her anxious
+lover had so long expected her, it was with a slow step, and a
+composed manner. Her dress was arranged with an accurate attention to
+form, which at once enhanced the appearance of its puritanic
+simplicity, and struck Julian as a bad omen; for although the time
+bestowed upon the toilet may, in many cases, intimate the wish to
+appear advantageously at such an interview, yet a ceremonious
+arrangement of attire is very much allied with formality, and a
+preconceived determination to treat a lover with cold politeness.
+
+The sad-coloured gown--the pinched and plaited cap, which carefully
+obscured the profusion of long dark-brown hair--the small ruff, and
+the long sleeves, would have appeared to great disadvantage on a shape
+less graceful than Alice Bridgenorth's; but an exquisite form, though
+not, as yet, sufficiently rounded in the outlines to produce the
+perfection of female beauty, was able to sustain and give grace even
+to this unbecoming dress. Her countenance, fair and delicate, with
+eyes of hazel, and a brow of alabaster, had, notwithstanding, less
+regular beauty than her form, and might have been justly subjected to
+criticism. There was, however, a life and spirit in her gaiety, and a
+depth of sentiment in her gravity, which made Alice, in conversation
+with the very few persons with whom she associated, so fascinating in
+her manners and expression, whether of language or countenance--so
+touching, also, in her simplicity and purity of thought, that brighter
+beauties might have been overlooked in her company. It was no wonder,
+therefore, that an ardent character like Julian, influenced by these
+charms, as well as by the secrecy and mystery attending his
+intercourse with Alice, should prefer the recluse of the Black Fort to
+all others with whom he had become acquainted in general society.
+
+His heart beat high as she came into the apartment, and it was almost
+without an attempt to speak that his profound obeisance acknowledged
+her entrance.
+
+"This is a mockery, Master Peveril," said Alice, with an effort to
+speak firmly, which yet was disconcerted by a slightly tremulous
+inflection of voice--"a mockery, and a cruel one. You come to this
+lone place, inhabited only by two women, too simple to command your
+absence--too weak to enforce it--you come, in spite of my earnest
+request--to the neglect of your own time--to the prejudice, I may
+fear, of my character--you abuse the influence you possess over the
+simple person to whom I am entrusted--All this you do, and think to
+make up by low reverences and constrained courtesy! Is this
+honourable, or is it fair?--Is it," she added, after a moment's
+hesitation--"is it kind?"
+
+The tremulous accent fell especially on the last word she uttered, and
+it was spoken in a low tone of gentle reproach, which went to Julian's
+heart.
+
+"If," said he, "there was a mode by which, at the peril of my life,
+Alice, I could show my regard--my respect--my devoted tenderness--the
+danger would be dearer to me than ever was pleasure."
+
+"You have said such things often," said Alice, "and they are such as I
+ought not to hear, and do not desire to hear. I have no tasks to
+impose on you--no enemies to be destroyed--no need or desire of
+protection--no wish, Heaven knows, to expose you to danger--It is your
+visits here alone to which danger attaches. You have but to rule your
+own wilful temper--to turn your thoughts and your cares elsewhere, and
+I can have nothing to ask--nothing to wish for. Use your own reason--
+consider the injury you do yourself--the injustice you do us--and let
+me, once more, in fair terms, entreat you to absent yourself from this
+place--till--till----"
+
+She paused, and Julian eagerly interrupted her.--"Till when, Alice?--
+till when?--impose on me any length of absence which your severity can
+inflict, short of a final separation--Say, Begone for years, but
+return when these years are over; and, slow and wearily as they must
+pass away, still the thought that they must at length have their
+period, will enable me to live through them. Let me, then, conjure
+thee, Alice, to name a date--to fix a term--to say till /when!/"
+
+"Till you can bear to think of me only as a friend and sister."
+
+"That is a sentence of eternal banishment indeed!" said Julian; "it is
+seeming, no doubt, to fix a term of exile, but attaching to it an
+impossible condition."
+
+"And why impossible, Julian?" said Alice, in a tone of persuasion;
+"were we not happier ere you threw the mask from your own countenance,
+and tore the veil from my foolish eyes? Did we not meet with joy,
+spend our time happily, and part cheerily, because we transgressed no
+duty, and incurred no self-reproach? Bring back that state of happy
+ignorance, and you shall have no reason to call me unkind. But while
+you form schemes which I know to be visionary, and use language of
+such violence and passion, you shall excuse me if I now, and once for
+all, declare, that since Deborah shows herself unfit for the trust
+reposed in her, and must needs expose me to persecutions of this
+nature, I will write to my father, that he may fix me another place of
+residence; and in the meanwhile I will take shelter with my aunt at
+Kirk-Truagh."
+
+"Hear me, unpitying girl," said Peveril, "hear me, and you shall see
+how devoted I am to obedience, in all that I can do to oblige you!
+You say you were happy when we spoke not on such topics--well--at all
+expense of my own suppressed feelings, that happy period shall return.
+I will meet you--walk with you--read with you--but only as a brother
+would with his sister, or a friend with his friend; the thoughts I may
+nourish, be they of hope or of despair, my tongue shall not give birth
+to, and therefore I cannot offend; Deborah shall be ever by your side,
+and her presence shall prevent my even hinting at what might displease
+you--only do not make a crime to me of those thoughts which are the
+dearest part of my existence; for believe me it were better and kinder
+to rob me of existence itself."
+
+"This is the mere ecstasy of passion, Julian," answered Alice
+Bridgenorth; "that which is unpleasant, our selfish and stubborn will
+represents as impossible. I have no confidence in the plan you
+propose--no confidence in your resolution, and less than none in the
+protection of Deborah. Till you can renounce, honestly and explicitly,
+the wishes you have lately expressed, we must be strangers;--and could
+you renounce them even at this moment, it were better that we should
+part for a long time; and, for Heaven's sake, let it be as soon as
+possible--perhaps it is even now too late to prevent some unpleasant
+accident--I thought I heard a noise."
+
+"It was Deborah," answered Julian. "Be not afraid, Alice; we are
+secure against surprise."
+
+"I know not," said Alice, "what you mean by such security--I have
+nothing to hide. I sought not this interview; on the contrary, averted
+it as long as I could--and am now most desirous to break it off."
+
+"And wherefore, Alice, since you say it must be our last? Why should
+you shake the sand which is passing so fast? the very executioner
+hurries not the prayers of the wretches upon the scaffold.--And see
+you not--I will argue as coldly as you can desire--see you not that
+you are breaking your own word, and recalling the hope which yourself
+held out to me?"
+
+"What hope have I suggested? What word have I given, Julian?" answered
+Alice. "You yourself build wild hopes in the air, and accuse me of
+destroying what had never any earthly foundation. Spare yourself,
+Julian--spare me--and in mercy to us both depart, and return not again
+till you can be more reasonable."
+
+"Reasonable?" replied Julian; "it is you, Alice, who will deprive me
+altogether of reason. Did you not say, that if our parents could be
+brought to consent to our union, you would no longer oppose my suit?"
+
+"No--no--no," said Alice eagerly, and blushing deeply,--"I did not say
+so, Julian--it was your own wild imagination which put construction on
+my silence and my confusion."
+
+"You do /not/ say so, then?" answered Julian; "and if all other
+obstacles were removed, I should find one in the cold flinty bosom of
+her who repays the most devoted and sincere affection with contempt
+and dislike?--Is that," he added, in a deep tone of feeling--"is that
+what Alice Bridgenorth says to Julian Peveril?"
+
+"Indeed--indeed, Julian," said the almost weeping girl, "I do not say
+so--I say nothing, and I ought not to say anything concerning what I
+might do, in a state of things which can never take place. Indeed,
+Julian, you ought not thus to press me. Unprotected as I am--wishing
+you well--very well--why should you urge me to say or do what would
+lessen me in my own eyes? to own affection for one from whom fate has
+separated me for ever? It is ungenerous--it is cruel--it is seeking a
+momentary and selfish gratification to yourself, at the expense of
+every feeling which I ought to entertain."
+
+"You have said enough, Alice," said Julian, with sparkling eyes; "you
+have said enough in deprecating my urgency, and I will press you no
+farther. But you overrate the impediments which lie betwixt us--they
+must and shall give way."
+
+"So you said before," answered Alice, "and with what probability, your
+own account may show. You dared not to mention the subject to your own
+father--how should you venture to mention it to mine?"
+
+"That I will soon enable you to decide upon. Major Bridgenorth, by my
+mother's account, is a worthy and an estimable man. I will remind him,
+that to my mother's care he owes the dearest treasure and comfort of
+his life; and I will ask him if it is a just retribution to make that
+mother childless. Let me but know where to find him, Alice, and you
+shall soon hear if I have feared to plead my cause with him."
+
+"Alas!" answered Alice, "you well know my uncertainty as to my dear
+father's residence. How often has it been my earnest request to him
+that he would let me share his solitary abode, or his obscure
+wanderings! But the short and infrequent visits which he makes to this
+house are all that he permits me of his society. Something I might
+surely do, however little, to alleviate the melancholy by which he is
+oppressed."
+
+"Something we might both do," said Peveril. "How willingly would I aid
+you in so pleasing a task! All old griefs should be forgotten--all old
+friendships revived. My father's prejudices are those of an Englishman
+--strong, indeed, but not insurmountable by reason. Tell me, then,
+where Major Bridgenorth is, and leave the rest to me; or let me but
+know by what address your letters reach him, and I will forthwith
+essay to discover his dwelling."
+
+"Do not attempt it, I charge you," said Alice. "He is already a man of
+sorrows; and what would he think were I capable of entertaining a suit
+so likely to add to them? Besides, I could not tell you, if I would,
+where he is now to be found. My letters reach him from time to time,
+by means of my aunt Christian; but of his address I am entirely
+ignorant."
+
+"Then, by Heaven," answered Julian, "I will watch his arrival in this
+island, and in this house; and ere he has locked thee in his arms, he
+shall answer to me on the subject of my suit."
+
+"Then demand that answer now," said a voice from without the door,
+which was at the same time slowly opened--"Demand that answer now, for
+here stands Ralph Bridgenorth."
+
+As he spoke, he entered the apartment with his usual slow and sedate
+step--raised his flapp'd and steeple-crowned hat from his brows, and,
+standing in the midst of the room, eyed alternately his daughter and
+Julian Peveril with a fixed and penetrating glance.
+
+"Father!" said Alice, utterly astonished, and terrified besides, by
+his sudden appearance at such a conjuncture,--"Father, I am not to
+blame."
+
+"Of that anon, Alice," said Bridgenorth; "meantime retire to your
+apartment--I have that to say to this youth which will not endure your
+presence."
+
+"Indeed--indeed, father," said Alice, alarmed at what she supposed
+these words indicated, "Julian is as little to be blamed as I! It was
+chance, it was fortune, which caused our meeting together." Then
+suddenly rushing forward, she threw her arms around her father,
+saying, "Oh, do him no injury--he meant no wrong! Father, you were
+wont to be a man of reason and religious peace."
+
+"And wherefore should I not be so now, Alice?" said Bridgenorth,
+raising his daughter from the ground, on which she had almost sunk in
+the earnestness of her supplication. "Dost thou know aught, maiden,
+which should inflame my anger against this young man, more than reason
+or religion may bridle? Go--go to thy chamber. Compose thine own
+passions--learn to rule these--and leave it to me to deal with this
+stubborn young man."
+
+Alice arose, and, with her eyes fixed on the ground, retired slowly
+from the apartment. Julian followed her steps with his eyes till the
+last wave of her garment was visible at the closing door; then turned
+his looks to Major Bridgenorth, and then sunk them on the ground. The
+Major continued to regard him in profound silence; his looks were
+melancholy and even austere; but there was nothing which indicated
+either agitation or keen resentment. He motioned to Julian to take a
+seat, and assumed one himself. After which he opened the conversation
+in the following manner:--
+
+"You seemed but now, young gentleman, anxious to learn where I was to
+be found. Such I at least conjectured, from the few expressions which
+I chanced to overhear; for I made bold, though it may be contrary to
+the code of modern courtesy, to listen a moment or two, in order to
+gather upon what subject so young a man as you entertained so young a
+woman as Alice, in a private interview."
+
+"I trust, sir," said Julian, rallying spirits in what he felt to be a
+case of extremity, "you have heard nothing on my part which has given
+offence to a gentleman, whom, though unknown, I am bound to respect so
+highly."
+
+"On the contrary," said Bridgenorth, with the same formal gravity, "I
+am pleased to find that your business is, or appears to be, with me,
+rather than with my daughter. I only think you had done better to have
+entrusted it to me in the first instance, as my sole concern."
+
+The utmost sharpness of attention which Julian applied, could not
+discover if Bridgenorth spoke seriously or ironically to the above
+purpose. He was, however, quick-witted beyond his experience, and was
+internally determined to endeavour to discover something of the
+character and the temper of him with whom he spoke. For that purpose,
+regulating his reply in the same tone with Bridgenorth's observation,
+he said, that not having the advantage to know his place of residence,
+he had applied for information to his daughter.
+
+"Who is now known to you for the first time?" said Bridgenorth. "Am I
+so to understand you?"
+
+"By no means," answered Julian, looking down; "I have been known to
+your daughter for many years; and what I wished to say, respects both
+her happiness and my own."
+
+"I must understand you," said Bridgenorth, "even as carnal men
+understand each other on the matters of this world. You are attached
+to my daughter by the cords of love; I have long known this."
+
+"You, Master Bridgenorth?" exclaimed Peveril--"/You/ have long known
+it?"
+
+"Yes, young man. Think you, that as the father of an only child, I
+could have suffered Alice Bridgenorth--the only living pledge of her
+who is now an angel in heaven--to have remained in this seclusion
+without the surest knowledge of all her material actions? I have, in
+person, seen more, both of her and of you, than you could be aware of;
+and when absent in the body, I had the means of maintaining the same
+superintendence. Young man, they say that such love as you entertain
+for my daughter teaches much subtilty; but believe not that it can
+overreach the affection which a widowed father bears to an only
+child."
+
+"If," said Julian, his heart beating thick and joyfully, "if you have
+known this intercourse so long, may I not hope that it has not met
+your disapprobation?"
+
+The Major paused for an instant, and then answered, "In some respects,
+certainly not. Had it done so--had there seemed aught on your side, or
+on my daughter's, to have rendered your visits here dangerous to her,
+or displeasing to me, she had not been long the inhabitant of this
+solitude, or of this island. But be not so hasty as to presume, that
+all which you may desire in this matter can be either easily or
+speedily accomplished."
+
+"I foresee, indeed, difficulties," answered Julian; "but with your
+kind acquiescence, they are such as I trust to remove. My father is
+generous--my mother is candid and liberal. They loved you once; I
+trust they will love you again. I will be the mediator betwixt you--
+peace and harmony shall once more inhabit our neighbourhood, and----"
+
+Bridgenorth interrupted him with a grim smile; for such it seemed, as
+it passed over a face of deep melancholy. "My daughter well said, but
+short while past, that you were a dreamer of dreams--an architect of
+plans and hopes fantastic as the visions of the night. It is a great
+thing you ask of me;--the hand of my only child--the sum of my worldly
+substance, though that is but dross in comparison. You ask the key of
+the only fountain from which I may yet hope to drink one pleasant
+draught; you ask to be the sole and absolute keeper of my earthly
+happiness--and what have you offered, or what have you to offer in
+return, for the surrender you require of me?"
+
+"I am but too sensible," said Peveril, abashed at his own hasty
+conclusions, "how difficult it may be."
+
+"Nay, but interrupt me not," replied Bridgenorth, "till I show you the
+amount of what you offer me in exchange for a boon, which, whatever
+may be its intrinsic value, is earnestly desired by you, and
+comprehends all that is valuable on earth which I have it in my power
+to bestow. You may have heard that in the late times I was the
+antagonist of your father's principles and his profane faction, but
+not the enemy of his person."
+
+"I have ever heard," replied Julian, "much the contrary; and it was
+but now that I reminded you that you had been his friend."
+
+"Ay. When he was in affliction and I in prosperity, I was neither
+unwilling, nor altogether unable, to show myself such. Well, the
+tables are turned--the times are changed. A peaceful and unoffending
+man might have expected from a neighbour, now powerful in his turn,
+such protection, when walking in the paths of the law, as all men,
+subjects of the same realm, have a right to expect even from perfect
+strangers. What chances? I pursue, with the warrant of the King and
+law, a murderess, bearing on her hand the blood of my near connection,
+and I had, in such a case, a right to call on every liege subject to
+render assistance to the execution. My late friendly neighbour, bound,
+as a man and a magistrate, to give ready assistance to a legal action
+--bound, as a grateful and obliged friend, to respect my rights and my
+person--thrusts himself betwixt me--me, the avenger of blood--and my
+lawful captive; beats me to the earth, at once endangering my life,
+and, in mere human eyes, sullying mine honour; and under his
+protection, the Midianitish woman reaches, like a sea-eagle, the nest
+which she hath made in the wave-surrounded rocks, and remains there
+till gold, duly administered at Court, wipes out all memory of her
+crime, and baffles the vengeance due to the memory of the best and
+bravest of men.--But," he added, apostrophising the portrait of
+Christian, "thou art not yet forgotten, my fair-haired William! The
+vengeance which dogs thy murderess is slow,--but it is sure!"
+
+There was a pause of some moments, which Julian Peveril, willing to
+hear to what conclusion Major Bridgenorth was finally to arrive, did
+not care to interrupt. Accordingly, in a few minutes, the latter
+proceeded.--"These things," he said, "I recall not in bitterness, so
+far as they are personal to me--I recall them not in spite of heart,
+though they have been the means of banishing me from my place of
+residence, where my fathers dwelt, and where my earthly comforts lie
+interred. But the public cause sets further strife betwixt your father
+and me. Who so active as he to execute the fatal edict of black St.
+Bartholomew's day, when so many hundreds of gospel-preachers were
+expelled from house and home--from hearth and altar--from church and
+parish, to make room for belly-gods and thieves? Who, when a devoted
+few of the Lord's people were united to lift the fallen standard, and
+once more advance the good cause, was the readiest to break their
+purpose--to search for, persecute, and apprehend them? Whose breath
+did I feel warm on my neck--whose naked sword was thrust within a foot
+of my body, whilst I lurked darkling, like a thief in concealment, in
+the house of my fathers?--It was Geoffrey Peveril's--it was your
+father's!--What can you answer to all this, or how can you reconcile
+it with your present wishes?
+
+"These things I point out to you, Julian, that I may show you how
+impossible, in the eyes of a merely worldly man, would be the union
+which you are desirous of. But Heaven hath at times opened a door,
+where man beholds no means of issue. Julian, your mother, for one to
+whom the truth is unknown, is, after the fashion of the world, one of
+the best, and one of the wisest of women; and Providence, which gave
+her so fair a form, and tenanted that form with a mind as pure as the
+original frailty of our vile nature will permit, means not, I trust,
+that she shall continue to the end to be a vessel of wrath and
+perdition. Of your father I say nothing--he is what the times and
+example of others, and the counsels of his lordly priest, have made
+him; and of him, once more, I say nothing, save that I have power over
+him, which ere now he might have felt, but that there is one within
+his chambers, who might have suffered in his suffering. Nor do I wish
+to root up your ancient family. If I prize not your boast of family
+honours and pedigree, I would not willingly destroy them; more than I
+would pull down a moss-grown tower, or hew to the ground an ancient
+oak, save for the straightening of the common path, and advantage of
+the public. I have, therefore, no resentment against the humbled House
+of Peveril--nay, I have regard to it in its depression."
+
+He here made a second pause, as if he expected Julian to say
+something. But notwithstanding the ardour with which the young man had
+pressed his suit, he was too much trained in ideas of the importance
+of his family, and in the better habit of respect for his parents, to
+hear, without displeasure, some part of Bridgenorth's discourse.
+
+"The House of Peveril," he replied, "was never humbled."
+
+"Had you said the sons of that House had never been /humble/,"
+answered Bridgenorth, "you would have come nearer the truth.--Are
+/you/ not humbled? Live you not here, the lackey of a haughty woman,
+the play-companion of an empty youth? If you leave this Isle, and go
+to the Court of England, see what regard will there be paid to the old
+pedigree that deduces your descent from kings and conquerors. A
+scurril or obscene jest, an impudent carriage, a laced cloak, a
+handful of gold, and the readiness to wager it on a card, or a die,
+will better advance you at the Court of Charles, than your father's
+ancient name, and slavish devotion of blood and fortune to the cause
+of /his/ father."
+
+"That is, indeed, but too probable," said Peveril; "but the Court
+shall be no element of mine. I will live like my fathers, among my
+people, care for their comforts, decide their differences----"
+
+"Build Maypoles, and dance around them," said Bridgenorth, with
+another of those grim smiles which passed over his features like the
+light of a sexton's torch, as it glares and is reflected by the window
+of the church, when he comes from locking a funeral vault. "No,
+Julian, these are not times in which, by the dreaming drudgery of a
+country magistrate, and the petty cares of a country proprietor, a man
+can serve his unhappy country. There are mighty designs afloat, and
+men are called to make their choice betwixt God and Baal. The ancient
+superstition--the abomination of our fathers--is raising its head, and
+flinging abroad its snares, under the protection of the princes of the
+earth; but she raises not her head unmarked or unwatched; the true
+English hearts are as thousands, which wait but a signal to arise as
+one man, and show the kings of the earth that they have combined in
+vain! We will cast their cords from us--the cup of their abominations
+we will not taste."
+
+"You speak in darkness, Master Bridgenorth," said Peveril. "Knowing so
+much of me, you may, perhaps, also be aware, that I at least have seen
+too much of the delusions of Rome, to desire that they should be
+propagated at home."
+
+"Else, wherefore do I speak to thee friendly and so free?" said
+Bridgenorth. "Do I not know, with what readiness of early wit you
+baffled the wily attempts of the woman's priest, to seduce thee from
+the Protestant faith? Do I not know, how thou wast beset when abroad,
+and that thou didst both hold thine own faith, and secure the wavering
+belief of thy friend? Said I not, this was done like the son of
+Margaret Peveril? Said I not, he holdeth, as yet, but the dead letter
+--but the seed which is sown shall one day sprout and quicken?--
+Enough, however, of this. For to-day this is thy habitation. I will
+see in thee neither the servant of the daughter of Eshbaal, nor the
+son of him who pursued my life, and blemished my honours; but thou
+shalt be to me, for this day, as the child of her, without whom my
+house had been extinct."
+
+So saying, he stretched out his thin, bony hand, and grasped that of
+Julian Peveril; but there was such a look of mourning in his welcome,
+that whatever delight the youth anticipated, spending so long a time
+in the neighbourhood of Alice Bridgenorth, perhaps in her society, or
+however strongly he felt the prudence of conciliating her father's
+good-will, he could not help feeling as if his heart was chilled in
+his company.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+ This day at least is friendship's--on the morrow
+ Let strife come an she will.
+ --OTWAY.
+
+Deborah Debbitch, summoned by her master, now made her appearance,
+with her handkerchief at her eyes, and an appearance of great mental
+trouble. "It was not my fault, Major Bridgenorth," she said; "how
+could I help it? like will to like--the boy would come--the girl would
+see him."
+
+"Peace, foolish woman," said Bridgenorth, "and hear what I have got to
+say."
+
+"I know what your honour has to say well enough," said Deborah.
+"Service, I wot, is no inheritance nowadays--some are wiser than other
+some--if I had not been wheedled away from Martindale, I might have
+had a house of mine own by this time."
+
+"Peace, idiot!" said Bridgenorth; but so intent was Deborah on her
+vindication, that he could but thrust the interjection, as it were
+edgewise, between her exclamations, which followed as thick as is
+usual in cases, where folks endeavour to avert deserved censure by a
+clamorous justification ere the charge be brought.
+
+"No wonder she was cheated," she said, "out of sight of her own
+interest, when it was to wait on pretty Miss Alice. All your honour's
+gold should never have tempted me, but that I knew she was but a dead
+castaway, poor innocent, if she were taken away from my lady or me.--
+And so this is the end on't!--up early, and down late--and this is all
+my thanks!--But your honour had better take care what you do--she has
+the short cough yet sometimes--and should take physic, spring and
+fall."
+
+"Peace, chattering fool!" said her master, so soon as her failing
+breath gave him an opportunity to strike in, "thinkest thou I knew not
+of this young gentleman's visits to the Black Fort, and that, if they
+had displeased me, I would not have known how to stop them?"
+
+"Did I know that your honour knew of his visits!" exclaimed Deborah,
+in a triumphant tone,--for, like most of her condition, she never
+sought farther for her defence than a lie, however inconsistent and
+improbable--"/Did/ I know that your honour knew of it!--Why, how
+should I have permitted his visits else? I wonder what your honour
+takes me for! Had I not been sure it was the thing in this world that
+your honour most desired would I have presumed to lend it a hand
+forward? I trust I know my duty better. Hear if I ever asked another
+youngster into the house, save himself--for I knew your honour was
+wise, and quarrels cannot last for ever, and love begins where hatred
+ends; and, to be sure, they love as if they were born one for the
+other--and then, the estates of Moultrassie and Martindale suit each
+other like sheath and knife."
+
+"Parrot of a woman, hold your tongue!" said Bridgenorth, his patience
+almost completely exhausted; "or, if you will prate, let it be to your
+playfellows in the kitchen, and bid them get ready some dinner
+presently, for Master Peveril is far from home."
+
+"That I will, and with all my heart," said Deborah; "and if there are
+a pair of fatter fowls in Man than shall clap their wings on the table
+presently, your honour shall call me goose as well as parrot." She
+then left the apartment.
+
+"It is to such a woman as that," said Bridgenorth, looking after her
+significantly, "that you conceived me to have abandoned the charge of
+my only child! But enough of this subject--we will walk abroad, if you
+will, while she is engaged in a province fitter for her
+understanding."
+
+So saying, he left the house, accompanied by Julian Peveril, and they
+were soon walking side by side, as if they had been old acquaintances.
+
+It may have happened to many of our readers, as it has done to
+ourselves, to be thrown by accident into society with some individual
+whose claims to what is called a /serious/ character stand
+considerably higher than our own, and with whom, therefore, we have
+conceived ourselves likely to spend our time in a very stiff and
+constrained manner; while, on the other hand, our destined companion
+may have apprehended some disgust from the supposed levity and
+thoughtless gaiety of a disposition that when we, with that urbanity
+and good-humour which is our principal characteristic, have
+accommodated ourself to our companion, by throwing as much seriousness
+into our conversation as our habits will admit, he, on the other hand,
+moved by our liberal example, hath divested his manners of part of
+their austerity; and our conversation has, in consequence, been of
+that pleasant texture, betwixt the useful and agreeable, which best
+resembles "the fairy-web of night and day," usually called in prose
+the twilight. It is probable both parties may, on such occasions, have
+been the better for their encounter, even if it went no farther than
+to establish for the time a community of feeling between men, who,
+separated more perhaps by temper than by principle, are too apt to
+charge each other with profane frivolity on the one hand, or
+fanaticism on the other.
+
+It fared thus in Peveril's walk with Bridgenorth, and in the
+conversation which he held with him.
+
+Carefully avoiding the subject on which he had already spoken, Major
+Bridgenorth turned his conversation chiefly on foreign travel, and on
+the wonders he had seen in distant countries, and which he appeared to
+have marked with a curious and observant eye. This discourse made the
+time fly light away; for although the anecdotes and observations thus
+communicated were all tinged with the serious and almost gloomy spirit
+of the narrator, they yet contained traits of interest and of wonder,
+such as are usually interesting to a youthful ear, and were
+particularly so to Julian, who had, in his disposition, some cast of
+the romantic and adventurous.
+
+It appeared that Bridgenorth knew the south of France, and could tell
+many stories of the French Huguenots, who already began to sustain
+those vexations which a few years afterwards were summed up by the
+revocation of the Edict of Nantz. He had even been in Hungary, for he
+spoke as from personal knowledge of the character of several of the
+heads of the great Protestant insurrection, which at this time had
+taken place under the celebrated Tekeli; and laid down solid reasons
+why they were entitled to make common cause with the Great Turk,
+rather than submit to the Pope of Rome. He talked also of Savoy, where
+those of the reformed religion still suffered a cruel persecution; and
+he mentioned with a swelling spirit, the protection which Oliver had
+afforded to the oppressed Protestant Churches; "therein showing
+himself," he added, "more fit to wield the supreme power, than those
+who, claiming it by right of inheritance, use it only for their own
+vain and voluptuous pursuits."
+
+"I did not expect," said Peveril modestly, "to have heard Oliver's
+panegyric from you, Master Bridgenorth."
+
+"I do not panegyrise him," answered Bridgenorth; "I speak but truth of
+that extraordinary man, now being dead, whom, when alive, I feared not
+to withstand to his face. It is the fault of the present unhappy King,
+if he make us look back with regret to the days when the nation was
+respected abroad, and when devotion and sobriety were practised at
+home.--But I mean not to vex your spirit by controversy. You have
+lived amongst those who find it more easy and more pleasant to be the
+pensioners of France than her controllers--to spend the money which
+she doles out to themselves, than to check the tyranny with which she
+oppresses our poor brethren of the religion. When the scales shall
+fall from thine eyes, all this thou shalt see; and seeing, shalt learn
+to detest and despise it."
+
+By this time they had completed their walk, and were returned to the
+Black Fort, by a different path from that which had led them up the
+valley. The exercise and the general tone of conversation had removed,
+in some degree, the shyness and embarrassment which Peveril originally
+felt in Bridgenorth's presence and which the tenor of his first
+remarks had rather increased than diminished. Deborah's promised
+banquet was soon on the board; and in simplicity as well as neatness
+and good order, answered the character she had claimed for it. In one
+respect alone, there seemed some inconsistency, perhaps a little
+affectation. Most of the dishes were of silver, and the plates were of
+the same metal; instead of the trenchers and pewter which Peveril had
+usually seen employed on similar occasions at the Black Fort.
+
+Presently, with the feeling of one who walks in a pleasant dream from
+which he fears to awake, and whose delight is mingled with wonder and
+with uncertainty, Julian Peveril found himself seated between Alice
+Bridgenorth and her father--the being he most loved on earth, and the
+person whom he had ever considered as the great obstacle to their
+intercourse. The confusion of his mind was such, that he could
+scarcely reply to the importunate civilities of Dame Deborah; who,
+seated with them at table in her quality of governante, now dispensed
+the good things which had been prepared under her own eye.
+
+As for Alice she seemed to have found a resolution to play the mute;
+for she answered not, excepting briefly, to the questions of Dame
+Debbitch; nay, even when her father, which happened once or twice,
+attempted to bring her forward in the conversation, she made no
+further reply than respect for him rendered absolutely necessary.
+
+Upon Bridgenorth himself, then, devolved the task of entertaining the
+company; and contrary to his ordinary habits, he did not seem to
+shrink from it. His discourse was not only easy, but almost cheerful,
+though ever and anon crossed by some expressions indicative of natural
+and habitual melancholy, or prophetic of future misfortune and woe.
+Flashes of enthusiasm, too, shot along his conversation, gleaming like
+the sheet-lightening of an autumn eve, which throws a strong, though
+momentary illumination, across the sober twilight, and all the
+surrounding objects, which, touched by it, assume a wilder and more
+striking character. In general, however, Bridgenorth's remarks were
+plain and sensible; and as he aimed at no graces of language, any
+ornament which they received arose out of the interest with which they
+were impressed on his hearers. For example, when Deborah, in the pride
+and vulgarity of her heart, called Julian's attention to the plate
+from which they had been eating, Bridgenorth seemed to think an
+apology necessary for such superfluous expense.
+
+"It was a symptom," he said, "of approaching danger, when such men, as
+were not usually influenced by the vanities of life employed much
+money in ornaments composed of the precious metals. It was a sign that
+the merchant could not obtain a profit for the capital, which, for the
+sake of security, he invested in this inert form. It was a proof that
+the noblemen or gentlemen feared the rapacity of power, when they put
+their wealth into forms the most portable and the most capable of
+being hidden; and it showed the uncertainty of credit, when a man of
+judgment preferred the actual possession of a mass of a silver to the
+convenience of a goldsmith's or a banker's receipt. While a shadow of
+liberty remained," he said, "domestic rights were last invaded; and,
+therefore, men disposed upon their cupboards and tables the wealth
+which in these places would remain longest, though not perhaps
+finally, sacred from the grasp of a tyrannical government. But let
+there be a demand for capital to support a profitable commerce, and
+the mass is at once consigned to the furnace, and, ceasing to be a
+vain and cumbrous ornament of the banquet, becomes a potent and active
+agent for furthering the prosperity of the country."
+
+"In war, too," said Peveril, "plate has been found a ready resource."
+
+"But too much so," answered Bridgenorth. "In the late times, the plate
+of the nobles and gentry, with that of the colleges, and the sale of
+the crown-jewels, enabled the King to make his unhappy stand, which
+prevented matters returning to a state of peace and good order, until
+the sword had attained an undue superiority both over King and
+Parliament."
+
+He looked at Julian as he spoke, much as he who proves a horse offers
+some object suddenly to his eyes, then watches to see if he starts or
+blenches from it. But Julian's thoughts were too much bent on other
+topics to manifest any alarm. His answer referred to a previous part
+of Bridgenorth's discourse, and was not returned till after a brief
+pause. "War, then," he said, "war, the grand impoverisher, is also a
+creator of wealth which it wastes and devours?"
+
+"Yes," replied Bridgenorth, "even as the sluice brings into action the
+sleeping waters of the lake, which it finally drains. Necessity
+invents arts and discovers means; and what necessity is sterner than
+that of civil war? Therefore, even war is not in itself unmixed evil,
+being the creator of impulses and energies which could not otherwise
+have existed in society."
+
+"Men should go to war, then," said Peveril, "that they may send their
+silver plate to the mint, and eat from pewter dishes and wooden
+plates?"
+
+"Not so, my son," said Bridgenorth. Then checking himself as he
+observed the deep crimson in Julian's cheek and brow, he added, "I
+crave your pardon for such familiarity; but I meant not to limit what
+I said even now to such trifling consequences, although it may be
+something salutary to tear men from their pomps and luxuries, and
+teach those to be Romans who would otherwise be Sybarites. But I would
+say, that times of public danger, as they call into circulation the
+miser's hoard and the proud man's bullion, and so add to the
+circulating wealth of the country, do also call into action many a
+brave and noble spirit, which would otherwise lie torpid, give no
+example to the living, and bequeath no name to future ages. Society
+knows not, and cannot know, the mental treasures which slumber in her
+bosom, till necessity and opportunity call forth the statesman and the
+soldier from the shades of lowly life to the parts they are designed
+by Providence to perform, and the stations which nature had qualified
+them to hold. So rose Oliver--so rose Milton--so rose many another
+name which cannot be forgotten--even as the tempest summons forth and
+displays the address of the mariner."
+
+"You speak," said Peveril, "as if national calamity might be, in some
+sort, an advantage."
+
+"And if it were not so," replied Bridgenorth, "it had not existed in
+this state of trial, where all temporal evil is alleviated by
+something good in its progress or result, and where all that is good
+is close coupled with that which is in itself evil."
+
+"It must be a noble sight," said Julian, "to behold the slumbering
+energies of a great mind awakened into energy, and to see it assume
+the authority which is its due over spirits more meanly endowed."
+
+"I once witnessed," said Bridgenorth, "something to the same effect;
+and as the tale is brief, I will tell it you, if you will:-
+
+"Amongst my wanderings, the Transatlantic settlements have not escaped
+me; more especially the country of New England, into which our native
+land has shaken from her lap, as a drunkard flings from him his
+treasures, so much that is precious in the eyes of God and of His
+children. There thousands of our best and most godly men--such whose
+righteousness might come of cities--are content to be the inhabitants
+of the desert, rather encountering the unenlightened savages, than
+stooping to extinguish, under the oppression practised in Britain, the
+light that is within their own minds. There I remained for a time,
+during the wars which the colony maintained with Philip, a great
+Indian Chief, or Sachem, as they were called, who seemed a messenger
+sent from Satan to buffet them. His cruelty was great--his
+dissimulation profound; and the skill and promptitude with which he
+maintained a destructive and desultory warfare, inflicted many
+dreadful calamities on the settlement. I was, by chance, at a small
+village in the woods, more than thirty miles from Boston, and in its
+situation exceedingly lonely, and surrounded with thickets.
+Nevertheless, there was no idea of any danger from the Indians at that
+time, for men trusted to the protection of a considerable body of
+troops who had taken the field for protection of the frontiers, and
+who lay, or were supposed to lie, betwixt the hamlet and the enemy's
+country. But they had to do with a foe, whom the devil himself had
+inspired at once with cunning and cruelty. It was on a Sabbath
+morning, when we had assembled to take sweet counsel together in the
+Lord's house. Our temple was but constructed of wooden logs; but when
+shall the chant of trained hirelings, or the sounding of tin and brass
+tubes amid the aisles of a minster, arise so sweetly to Heaven, as did
+the psalm in which we united at once our voices and our hearts! An
+excellent worthy, who now sleeps in the Lord, Nehemia Solsgrace, long
+the companion of my pilgrimage, had just begun to wrestle in prayer,
+when a woman, with disordered looks and dishevelled hair, entered our
+chapel in a distracted manner, screaming incessantly, 'The Indians!
+The Indians!'--In that land no man dares separate himself from his
+means of defence; and whether in the city or in the field, in the
+ploughed land or the forest, men keep beside them their weapons, as
+did the Jews at the rebuilding of the Temple. So we sallied forth with
+our guns and pikes, and heard the whoop of these incarnate devils,
+already in possession of a part of the town, and exercising their
+cruelty on the few whom weighty causes or indisposition had withheld
+from public worship; and it was remarked as a judgment, that, upon
+that bloody Sabbath, Adrian Hanson, a Dutchman, a man well enough
+disposed towards man, but whose mind was altogether given to worldly
+gain, was shot and scalped as he was summing his weekly gains in his
+warehouse. In fine, there was much damage done; and although our
+arrival and entrance into combat did in some sort put them back, yet
+being surprised and confused, and having no appointed leader of our
+band, the devilish enemy shot hard at us and had some advantage. It
+was pitiful to hear the screams of women and children amid the report
+of guns and the whistling of bullets, mixed with the ferocious yells
+of these savages, which they term their war-whoop. Several houses in
+the upper part of the village were soon on fire; and the roaring of
+the flames, and crackling of the great beams as they blazed, added to
+the horrible confusion; while the smoke which the wind drove against
+us gave farther advantage to the enemy, who fought as it were,
+invisible, and under cover, whilst we fell fast by their unerring
+fire. In this state of confusion, and while we were about to adopt the
+desperate project of evacuating the village, and, placing the women
+and children in the centre, of attempting a retreat to the nearest
+settlement, it pleased Heaven to send us unexpected assistance. A tall
+man, of a reverend appearance, whom no one of us had ever seen before,
+suddenly was in the midst of us, as we hastily agitated the resolution
+of retreating. His garments were of the skin of the elk, and he wore
+sword and carried gun; I never saw anything more august than his
+features, overshadowed by locks of grey hair, which mingled with a
+long beard of the same colour. 'Men and brethren,' he said, in a voice
+like that which turns back the flight, 'why sink your hearts? and why
+are you thus disquieted? Fear ye that the God we serve will give you
+up to yonder heathen dogs? Follow me, and you shall see this day that
+there is a captain in Israel!' He uttered a few brief but distinct
+orders, in a tone of one who was accustomed to command; and such was
+the influence of his appearance, his mien, his language, and his
+presence of mind, that he was implicitly obeyed by men who had never
+seen him until that moment. We were hastily divided, by his orders,
+into two bodies; one of which maintained the defence of the village
+with more courage than ever, convinced that the Unknown was sent by
+God to our rescue. At his command they assumed the best and most
+sheltered positions for exchanging their deadly fire with the Indians;
+while, under cover of the smoke, the stranger sallied from the town,
+at the head of the other division of the New England men, and,
+fetching a circuit, attacked the Red Warriors in the rear. The
+surprise, as is usual amongst savages, had complete effect; for they
+doubted not that they were assailed in their turn, and placed betwixt
+two hostile parties by the return of a detachment from the provincial
+army. The heathens fled in confusion, abandoning the half-won village,
+and leaving behind them such a number of their warriors, that the
+tribe hath never recovered its loss. Never shall I forget the figure
+of our venerable leader, when our men, and not they only, but the
+women and children of the village, rescued from the tomahawk and
+scalping-knife, stood crowded around him, yet scarce venturing to
+approach his person, and more minded, perhaps, to worship him as a
+descended angel, than to thank him as a fellow-mortal. 'Not unto me be
+the glory,' he said; 'I am but an implement, frail as yourselves, in
+the hand of Him who is strong to deliver. Bring me a cup of water,
+that I may allay my parched throat, ere I essay the task of offering
+thanks where they are most due.' I was nearest to him as he spoke, and
+I gave into his hand the water he requested. At that moment we
+exchanged glances, and it seemed to me that I recognised a noble
+friend whom I had long since deemed in glory; but he gave me no time
+to speak, had speech been prudent. Sinking on his knees, and signing
+us to obey him, he poured forth a strong and energetic thanksgiving
+for the turning back of the battle, which, pronounced with a voice
+loud and clear as a war-trumpet, thrilled through the joints and
+marrow of the hearers. I have heard many an act of devotion in my
+life, had Heaven vouchsafed me grace to profit by them; but such a
+prayer as this, uttered amid the dead and the dying, with a rich tone
+of mingled triumph and adoration, was beyond them all--it was like the
+song of the inspired prophetess who dwelt beneath the palm-tree
+between Ramah and Bethel. He was silent; and for a brief space we
+remained with our faces bent to the earth--no man daring to lift his
+head. At length we looked up, but our deliverer was no longer amongst
+us; nor was he ever again seen in the land which he had rescued."
+
+Here Bridgenorth, who had told this singular story with an eloquence
+and vivacity of detail very contrary to the usual dryness of his
+conversation, paused for an instant, and then resumed--"Thou seest,
+young man, that men of valour and of discretion are called forth to
+command in circumstances of national exigence, though their very
+existence is unknown in the land which they are predestined to
+deliver."
+
+"But what thought the people of the mysterious stranger?" said Julian,
+who had listened with eagerness, for the story was of a kind
+interesting to the youthful and the brave.
+
+"Many things," answered Bridgenorth, "and, as usual, little to the
+purpose. The prevailing opinion was, notwithstanding his own
+disclamation, that the stranger was really a supernatural being;
+others believed him an inspired champion, transported in the body from
+some distant climate, to show us the way to safety; others, again,
+concluded that he was a recluse, who, either from motives of piety, or
+other cogent reasons, had become a dweller in the wilderness, and
+shunned the face of man."
+
+"And, if I may presume to ask," said Julian, "to which of these
+opinions were you disposed to adhere?"
+
+"The last suited best with the transient though close view with which
+I had perused the stranger's features," replied Bridgenorth; "for
+although I dispute not that it may please Heaven, on high occasions,
+even to raise one from the dead in defence of his country, yet I
+doubted not then, as I doubt not now, that I looked on the living form
+of one, who had indeed powerful reasons to conceal him in the cleft of
+the rock."
+
+"Are these reasons a secret?" said Julian Peveril.
+
+"Not properly a secret," replied Bridgenorth; "for I fear not thy
+betraying what I might tell thee in private discourse; and besides,
+wert thou so base, the prey lies too distant for any hunters to whom
+thou couldst point out its traces. But the name of this worthy will
+sound harsh in thy ear, on account of one action of his life--being
+his accession to a great measure, which made the extreme isles of the
+earth to tremble. Have you never heard of Richard Whalley?"
+
+"Of the regicide?" exclaimed Peveril, starting.
+
+"Call his act what thou wilt," said Bridgenorth; "he was not less the
+rescuer of that devoted village, that, with other leading spirits of
+the age, he sat in the judgment-seat when Charles Stewart was
+arraigned at the bar, and subscribed the sentence that went forth upon
+him."
+
+"I have ever heard," said Julian, in an altered voice, and colouring
+deeply, "that you, Master Bridgenorth, with other Presbyterians, were
+totally averse to that detestable crime, and were ready to have made
+joint-cause with the Cavaliers in preventing so horrible a parricide."
+
+"If it were so," said Bridgenorth, "we have been richly rewarded by
+his successor."
+
+"Rewarded!" exclaimed Julian; "does the distinction of good and evil,
+and our obligation to do the one and forbear the other, depend on the
+reward which may attach to our actions?"
+
+"God forbid," answered Bridgenorth; "yet those who view the havoc
+which this house of Stewart have made in the Church and State--the
+tyranny which they exercise over men's persons and consciences--may
+well doubt whether it be lawful to use weapons in their defence. Yet
+you hear me not praise, or even vindicate the death of the King,
+though so far deserved, as he was false to his oath as a Prince and
+Magistrate. I only tell you what you desired to know, that Richard
+Whalley, one of the late King's judges, was he of whom I have just
+been speaking. I knew his lofty brow, though time had made it balder
+and higher; his grey eye retained all its lustre; and though the
+grizzled beard covered the lower part of his face, it prevented me not
+from recognising him. The scent was hot after him for his blood; but
+by the assistance of those friends whom Heaven had raised up for his
+preservation, he was concealed carefully, and emerged only to do the
+will of Providence in the matter of that battle. Perhaps his voice may
+be heard in the field once more, should England need one of her
+noblest hearts."
+
+"Now, God forbid!" said Julian.
+
+"Amen," returned Bridgenorth. "May God avert civil war, and pardon
+those whose madness would bring it on us!"
+
+There was a long pause, during which Julian, who had scarce lifted his
+eyes towards Alice, stole a glance in that direction, and was struck
+by the deep cast of melancholy which had stolen over features, to
+which a cheerful, if not gay expression, was most natural. So soon as
+she caught his eye, she remarked, and, as Julian thought, with
+significance, that the shadows were lengthening, and evening coming
+on.
+
+He heard; and although satisfied that she hinted at his departure, he
+could not, upon the instant, find resolution to break the spell which
+detained him. The language which Bridgenorth held was not only new and
+alarming, but so contrary to the maxims in which he was brought up,
+that, as a son of Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak, he would, in
+another case, have thought himself called upon to dispute its
+conclusions, even at the sword's point. But Bridgenorth's opinions
+were delivered with so much calmness--seemed so much the result of
+conviction--that they excited in Julian rather a spirit of wonder,
+than of angry controversy. There was a character of sober decision,
+and sedate melancholy, in all that he said, which, even had he not
+been the father of Alice (and perhaps Julian was not himself aware how
+much he was influenced by that circumstance), would have rendered it
+difficult to take personal offence. His language and sentiments were
+of that quiet, yet decided kind, upon which it is difficult either to
+fix controversy, or quarrel, although it be impossible to acquiesce in
+the conclusions to which they lead.
+
+While Julian remained, as if spell-bound to his chair, scarce more
+surprised at the company in which he found himself, than at the
+opinions to which he was listening, another circumstance reminded him
+that the proper time of his stay at Black Fort had been expended.
+Little Fairy, the Manx pony, which, well accustomed to the vicinity of
+Black Fort, used to feed near the house while her master made his
+visits there, began to find his present stay rather too long. She had
+been the gift of the Countess to Julian, whilst a youth, and came of a
+high-spirited mountain breed, remarkable alike for hardiness, for
+longevity, and for a degree of sagacity approaching to that of the
+dog. Fairy showed the latter quality, by the way in which she chose to
+express her impatience to be moving homewards. At least such seemed
+the purpose of the shrill neigh with which she startled the female
+inmates of the parlour, who, the moment afterwards, could not forbear
+smiling to see the nose of the pony advanced through the opened
+casement.
+
+"Fairy reminds me," said Julian, looking to Alice, and rising, "that
+the term of my stay here is exhausted."
+
+"Speak with me yet one moment," said Bridgenorth, withdrawing him into
+a Gothic recess of the old-fashioned apartment, and speaking so low
+that he could not be overheard by Alice and her governante, who, in
+the meantime, caressed, and fed with fragments of bread the intruder
+Fairy.
+
+"You have not, after all," said Bridgenorth, "told me the cause of
+your coming hither." He stopped, as if to enjoy his embarrassment, and
+then added, "And indeed it were most unnecessary that you should do
+so. I have not so far forgotten the days of my youth, or those
+affections which bind poor frail humanity but too much to the things
+of this world. Will you find no words to ask of me the great boon
+which you seek, and which, peradventure, you would not have hesitated
+to have made your own, without my knowledge, and against my consent?--
+Nay, never vindicate thyself, but mark me farther. The patriarch
+bought his beloved by fourteen years' hard service to her father
+Laban, and they seemed to him but as a few days. But he that would wed
+my daughter must serve, in comparison, but a few days; though in
+matters of such mighty import, that they shall seem as the service of
+many years. Reply not to me now, but go, and peace be with you."
+
+He retired so quickly, after speaking, that Peveril had literally not
+an instant to reply. He cast his eyes around the apartment, but
+Deborah and her charge had also disappeared. His gaze rested for a
+moment on the portrait of Christian, and his imagination suggested
+that his dark features were illuminated by a smile of haughty triumph.
+He stared, and looked more attentively--it was but the effect of the
+evening beam, which touched the picture at the instant. The effect was
+gone, and there remained but the fixed, grave, inflexible features of
+the republican soldier.
+
+Julian left the apartment as one who walks in a dream; he mounted
+Fairy, and, agitated by a variety of thoughts, which he was unable to
+reduce to order, he returned to Castle Rushin before the night sat
+down.
+
+Here he found all in movement. The Countess, with her son, had, upon
+some news received, or resolution formed, during his absence, removed,
+with a principal part of their family, to the yet stronger Castle of
+Holm-Peel, about eight miles' distance across the island; and which
+had been suffered to fall into a much more dilapidated condition than
+that of Castletown, so far as it could be considered as a place of
+residence. But as a fortress, Holm-Peel was stronger than Castletown;
+nay, unless assailed regularly, was almost impregnable; and was always
+held by a garrison belonging to the Lords of Man. Here Peveril arrived
+at nightfall. He was told in the fishing-village, that the night-bell
+of the Castle had been rung earlier than usual, and the watch set with
+circumstances of unusual and jealous repetition.
+
+Resolving, therefore, not to disturb the garrison by entering at that
+late hour, he obtained an indifferent lodging in the town for the
+night, and determined to go to the Castle early on the succeeding
+morning. He was not sorry thus to gain a few hours of solitude, to
+think over the agitating events of the preceding day.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+ ----What seem'd its head,
+ The likeness of a kingly crown had on.
+ --PARADISE LOST.
+
+Sodor, or Holm-Peel, so is named the castle to which our Julian
+directed his course early on the following morning, is one of those
+extraordinary monuments of antiquity with which this singular and
+interesting island abounds. It occupies the whole of a high rocky
+peninsula, or rather an island, for it is surrounded by the sea at
+high-water, and scarcely accessible even when the tide is out,
+although a stone causeway, of great solidity, erected for the express
+purpose, connects the island with the mainland. The whole space is
+surrounded by double walls of great strength and thickness; and the
+access to the interior, at the time which we treat of, was only by two
+flights of steep and narrow steps, divided from each other by a strong
+tower and guard-house; under the former of which, there is an
+entrance-arch. The open space within the walls extends to two acres,
+and contains many objects worthy of antiquarian curiosity. There were
+besides the castle itself, two cathedral churches, dedicated, the
+earlier to St. Patrick, the latter to St. Germain; besides two smaller
+churches; all of which had become, even in that day, more or less
+ruinous. Their decayed walls, exhibiting the rude and massive
+architecture of the most remote period, were composed of a ragged
+grey-stone, which formed a singular contrast with the bright red
+freestone of which the window-cases, corner-stones, arches, and other
+ornamental parts of the building, were composed.
+
+Besides these four ruinous churches, the space of ground enclosed by
+the massive exterior walls of Holm-Peel exhibited many other vestiges
+of the olden time. There was a square mound of earth, facing, with its
+angles to the points of the compass, one of those motes, as they were
+called, on which, in ancient times, the northern tribes elected or
+recognised their chiefs, and held their solemn popular assemblies, or
+/comitia/. There was also one of those singular towers, so common in
+Ireland as to have proved the favourite theme of her antiquaries; but
+of which the real use and meaning seems yet to be hidden in the mist
+of ages. This of Holm-Peel had been converted to the purpose of a
+watch-tower. There were, besides, Runic monuments, of which legends
+could not be deciphered; and later inscriptions to the memory of
+champions, of whom the names only were preserved from oblivion. But
+tradition and superstitious eld, still most busy where real history is
+silent, had filled up the long blank of accurate information with
+tales of Sea-kings and Pirates, Hebridean Chiefs and Norwegian
+Resolutes, who had formerly warred against, and in defence of, this
+famous castle. Superstition, too, had her tales of fairies, ghosts,
+and spectres--her legions of saints and demons, of fairies and of
+familiar spirits, which in no corner of the British empire are told
+and received with more absolute credulity than in the Isle of Man.
+
+Amidst all these ruins of an older time arose the Castle itself,--now
+ruinous--but in Charles II.'s reign well garrisoned, and, in a
+military point of view, kept in complete order. It was a venerable and
+very ancient building, containing several apartments of sufficient
+size and height to be termed noble. But in the surrender of the island
+by Christian, the furniture had been, in a great measure, plundered or
+destroyed by the republican soldiers; so that, as we have before
+hinted, its present state was ill adapted for the residence of the
+noble proprietor. Yet it had been often the abode, not only of the
+Lords of Man, but of those state prisoners whom the Kings of Britain
+sometimes committed to their charge.
+
+In this Castle of Holm-Peel the great king-maker, Richard, Earl of
+Warwick, was confined, during one period of his eventful life, to
+ruminate at leisure on his farther schemes of ambition. And here, too,
+Eleanor, the haughty wife of the good Duke of Gloucester, pined out in
+seclusion the last days of her banishment. The sentinels pretended
+that her discontented spectre was often visible at night, traversing
+the battlements of the external walls, or standing motionless beside a
+particular solitary turret of one of the watch-towers with which they
+are flanked; but dissolving into air at cock-crow, or when the bell
+tolled from the yet remaining tower of St. Germain's church.
+
+Such was Holm-Peel, as records inform us, till towards the end of the
+seventeenth century.
+
+It was in one of the lofty but almost unfurnished apartments of this
+ancient Castle that Julian Peveril found his friend the Earl of Derby,
+who had that moment sat down to a breakfast composed of various sorts
+of fish. "Welcome, most imperial Julian," he said; "welcome to our
+royal fortress; in which, as yet, we are not like to be starved with
+hunger, though well-nigh dead for cold."
+
+Julian answered by inquiring the meaning of this sudden movement.
+
+"Upon my word," replied the Earl, "you know nearly as much of it as I
+do. My mother has told me nothing about it; supposing I believe, that
+I shall at length be tempted to inquire; but she will find herself
+much mistaken. I shall give her credit for full wisdom in her
+proceedings, rather than put her to the trouble to render a reason,
+though no woman can render one better."
+
+"Come, come; this is affectation, my good friend," said Julian. "You
+should inquire into these matters a little more curiously."
+
+"To what purpose?" said the Earl. "To hear old stories about the
+Tinwald laws, and the contending rights of the lords and the clergy,
+and all the rest of that Celtic barbarism, which, like Burgesse's
+thorough-paced doctrine enters at one ear, paces through, and goes out
+at the other?"
+
+"Come, my lord," said Julian, "you are not so indifferent as you would
+represent yourself--you are dying of curiosity to know what this hurry
+is about; only you think it the courtly humour to appear careless
+about your own affairs."
+
+"Why, what should it be about," said the young Earl "unless some
+factious dispute between our Majesty's minister, Governor Nowel, and
+our vassals? or perhaps some dispute betwixt our Majesty and the
+ecclesiastical jurisdictions? for all which our Majesty cares as
+little as any king in Christendom."
+
+"I rather suppose there is intelligence from England," said Julian. "I
+heard last night in Peel-town, that Greenhalgh is come over with
+unpleasant news."
+
+"He brought me nothing that was pleasant, I wot well," said the Earl.
+"I expected something from St. Evremond or Hamilton--some new plays by
+Dryden or Lee, and some waggery or lampoons from the Rose Coffee-
+house; and the fellow has brought me nothing but a parcel of tracts
+about Protestants and Papists, and a folio play-book, one of the
+conceptions, as she calls them, of that old mad-woman the Duchess of
+Newcastle."
+
+"Hush, my lord, for Heaven's sake," said Peveril; "here comes the
+Countess; and you know she takes fire at the least slight to her
+ancient friend."
+
+"Let her read her ancient friend's works herself, then," said the
+Earl, "and think her as wise as she can; but I would not give one of
+Waller's songs, or Denham's satires, for a whole cart-load of her
+Grace's trash.--But here comes our mother with care on her brow."
+
+The Countess of Derby entered the apartment accordingly, holding in
+her hand a number of papers. Her dress was a mourning habit, with a
+deep train of black velvet, which was borne by a little favourite
+attendant, a deaf and dumb girl, whom, in compassion to her
+misfortune, the Countess had educated about her person for some years.
+Upon this unfortunate being, with the touch of romance which marked
+many of her proceedings, Lady Derby had conferred the name of Fenella,
+after some ancient princess of the island. The Countess herself was
+not much changed since we last presented her to our readers. Age had
+rendered her step more slow, but not less majestic; and while it
+traced some wrinkles on her brow, had failed to quench the sedate fire
+of her dark eye. The young men rose to receive her with the formal
+reverence which they knew she loved, and were greeted by her with
+equal kindness.
+
+"Cousin Peveril," she said (for so she always called Julian, in
+respect of his mother being a kinswoman of her husband), "you were ill
+abroad last night, when we much needed your counsel."
+
+Julian answered with a blush which he could not prevent, "That he had
+followed his sport among the mountains too far--had returned late--and
+finding her ladyship was removed from Castletown, had instantly
+followed the family hither; but as the night-bell was rung, and the
+watch set, he had deemed it more respectful to lodge for the night in
+the town."
+
+"It is well," said the Countess; "and, to do you justice, Julian, you
+are seldom a truant neglecter of appointed hours, though, like the
+rest of the youth of this age, you sometimes suffer your sports to
+consume too much of time that should be spent otherwise. But for your
+friend Philip, he is an avowed contemner of good order, and seems to
+find pleasure in wasting time, even when he does not enjoy it."
+
+"I have been enjoying my time just now at least," said the Earl,
+rising from table, and picking his teeth carelessly. "These fresh
+mullets are delicious, and so is the Lachrymæ Christi. I pray you to
+sit down to breakfast, Julian, and partake the goods my royal
+foresight has provided. Never was King of Man nearer being left to the
+mercy of the execrable brandy of his dominions. Old Griffiths would
+never, in the midst of our speedy retreat of last night, have had
+sense enough to secure a few flasks, had I not given him a hint on
+that important subject. But presence of mind amid danger and tumult,
+is a jewel I have always possessed."
+
+"I wish, then, Philip, you would exert it to better purpose," said the
+Countess, half smiling, half displeased; for she doated upon her son
+with all a mother's fondness, even when she was most angry with him
+for being deficient in the peculiar and chivalrous disposition which
+had distinguished his father, and which was so analogous to her own
+romantic and high-minded character. "Lend me your signet," she added
+with a sigh; "for it were, I fear, vain to ask you to read over these
+despatches from England, and execute the warrants which I have thought
+necessary to prepare in consequence."
+
+"My signet you shall command with all my heart, madam," said Earl
+Philip; "but spare me the revision of what you are much more capable
+to decide upon. I am, you know, a most complete /Roi fainéant/, and
+never once interfered with my /Maire de palais/ in her proceedings."
+
+The Countess made signs to her little train-bearer, who immediately
+went to seek for wax and a light, with which she presently returned.
+
+In the meanwhile the Countess continued, addressing Peveril. "Philip
+does himself less than justice. When you were absent, Julian (for if
+you had been here I would have given you the credit of prompting your
+friend), he had a spirited controversy with the Bishop, for an attempt
+to enforce spiritual censures against a poor wretch, by confining her
+in the vault under the chapel."[*]
+
+[*] Beneath the only one of the four churches in Castle Rushin, which
+ is or was kept a little in repair, is a prison or dungeon, for
+ ecclesiastical offenders. "This," says Waldron, "is certainly one
+ of the most dreadful places that imagination can form; the sea
+ runs under it through the hollows of the rock with such a
+ continual roar, that you would think it were every moment breaking
+ in upon you, and over it are the vaults for burying the dead. The
+ stairs descending to this place of terrors are not above thirty,
+ but so steep and narrow, that they are very difficult to go down,
+ a child of eight or nine years not being able to pass them but
+ sideways."--WALDRON'S /Description of the Isle of Man, in his
+ Works/, p. 105, folio.
+
+"Do not think better of me than I deserve," said the Earl to Peveril;
+"my mother has omitted to tell you the culprit was pretty Peggy of
+Ramsey, and her crime what in Cupid's courts would have been called a
+peccadillo."
+
+"Do not make yourself worse than you are," replied Peveril, who
+observed the Countess's cheek redden,--"you know you would have done
+as much for the oldest and poorest cripple in the island. Why, the
+vault is under the burial-ground of the chapel, and, for aught I know,
+under the ocean itself, such a roaring do the waves make in its
+vicinity. I think no one could remain there long, and retain his
+reason."
+
+"It is an infernal hole," answered the Earl, "and I will have it built
+up one day--that is full certain.--But hold--hold--for God's sake,
+madam--what are you going to do?--Look at the seal before you put it
+to the warrant--you will see it is a choice antique cameo Cupid,
+riding on a flying fish--I had it for twenty zechins, from Signor
+Furabosco at Rome--a most curious matter for an antiquary, but which
+will add little faith to a Manx warrant.
+
+"My signet--my signet--Oh! you mean that with the three monstrous
+legs, which I supposed was devised as the most preposterous device, to
+represent our most absurd Majesty of Man.--The signet--I have not seen
+it since I gave it to Gibbon, my monkey, to play with.--He did whine
+for it most piteously--I hope he has not gemmed the green breast of
+ocean with my symbol of sovereignty!"
+
+"Now, by Heaven," said the Countess, trembling, and colouring deeply
+with anger, "it was your father's signet! the last pledge which he
+sent, with his love to me, and his blessing to thee, the night before
+they murdered him at Bolton!"
+
+"Mother, dearest mother," said the Earl, startled out of his apathy,
+and taking her hand, which he kissed tenderly, "I did but jest--the
+signet is safe--Peveril knows that it is so.--Go fetch it, Julian, for
+Heaven's sake--here are my keys--it is in the left-hand drawer of my
+travelling cabinet--Nay, mother, forgive me--it was but a /mauvaise
+plaisanterie/; only an ill-imagined jest, ungracious, and in bad
+taste, I allow--but only one of Philip's follies. Look at me, dearest
+mother, and forgive me."
+
+The Countess turned her eyes towards him, from which the tears were
+fast falling.
+
+"Philip," she said, "you try me too unkindly, and too severely. If
+times are changed, as I have heard you allege--if the dignity of rank,
+and the high feelings of honour and duty, are now drowned in giddy
+jests and trifling pursuits, let /me/ at least, who live secluded from
+all others, die without perceiving the change which has happened, and,
+above all, without perceiving it in mine own son. Let me not learn the
+general prevalence of this levity, which laughs at every sense of
+dignity or duty, through your personal disrespect--Let me not think
+that when I die----"
+
+"Speak nothing of it, mother," said the Earl, interrupting her
+affectionately. "It is true, I cannot promise to be all my father and
+his fathers were; for we wear silk vests for their steel coats, and
+feathered beavers for their crested helmets. But believe me, though to
+be an absolute Palmerin of England is not in my nature, no son ever
+loved a mother more dearly, or would do more to oblige her. And that
+you may own this, I will forthwith not only seal the warrants, to the
+great endangerment of my precious fingers, but also read the same from
+end to end, as well as the despatches thereunto appertaining."
+
+A mother is easily appeased, even when most offended; and it was with
+an expanding heart that the Countess saw her son's very handsome
+features, while reading these papers, settle into an expression of
+deep seriousness, such as they seldom wore. It seemed to her as if the
+family likeness to his gallant but unfortunate father increased, when
+the expression of their countenances became similar in gravity. The
+Earl had no sooner perused the despatches, which he did with great
+attention, than he rose and said, "Julian, come with me."
+
+The Countess looked surprised. "I was wont to share your father's
+counsels, my son," she said; "but do not think that I wish to intrude
+myself upon yours. I am too well pleased to see you assume the power
+and the duty of thinking for yourself, which is what I have so long
+urged you to do. Nevertheless, my experience, who have been so long
+administrator of your authority in Man, might not, I think, be
+superfluous to the matter in hand."
+
+"Hold me excused, dearest mother," said the Earl gravely. "The
+interference was none of my seeking; had you taken your own course,
+without consulting me, it had been well; but since I have entered on
+the affair--and it appears sufficiently important--I must transact it
+to the best of my own ability."
+
+"Go, then, my son," said the Countess, "and may Heaven enlighten thee
+with its counsel, since thou wilt have none of mine.--I trust that
+you, Master Peveril, will remind him of what is fit for his own
+honour; and that only a coward abandons his rights, and only a fool
+trusts his enemies."
+
+The Earl answered not, but, taking Peveril by the arm, led him up a
+winding stair to his own apartment, and from thence into a projecting
+turret, where, amidst the roar of waves and sea-mews' clang, he held
+with him the following conversation:--
+
+"Peveril, it is well I looked into these warrants. My mother queens it
+at such a rate as may cost me not only my crown, which I care little
+for, but perhaps my head, which, though others may think little of, I
+would feel it an inconvenience to be deprived of."
+
+"What on earth is the matter?" said Peveril, with considerable
+anxiety.
+
+"It seems," said the Earl of Derby, "that old England who takes a
+frolicsome brain-fever once every two or three years, for the benefit
+of her doctors, and the purification of the torpid lethargy brought on
+by peace and prosperity, is now gone stark staring mad on the subject
+of a real or supposed Popish plot. I read one programme on the
+subject, by a fellow called Oates, and thought it the most absurd
+foolery I ever perused. But that cunning fellow Shaftesbury, and some
+others amongst the great ones, having taken it up, and are driving on
+at such a rate as makes harness crack, and horses smoke for it. The
+King, who has sworn never to kiss the pillow his father went to sleep
+on, temporises, and gives way to the current; the Duke of York,
+suspected and hated on account of his religion, is about to be driven
+to the continent; several principal Catholic nobles are in the Tower
+already; and the nation, like a bull at Tutbury-running, is persecuted
+with so many inflammatory rumours and pestilent pamphlets, that she
+has cocked her tail, flung up her heels, taken the bit betwixt her
+teeth and is as furiously unmanageable as in the year 1642."
+
+"All this you must have known already," said Peveril; "I wonder you
+told me not of news so important."
+
+"It would have taken long to tell," said the Earl; "moreover, I
+desired to have you /solus/; thirdly, I was about to speak when my
+mother entered; and, to conclude, it was no business of mine. But
+these despatches of my politic mother's private correspondent put a
+new face on the whole matter; for it seems some of the informers--a
+trade which, having become a thriving one, is now pursued by many--
+have dared to glance at the Countess herself as an agent in this same
+plot--ay, and have found those that are willing enough to believe
+their report."
+
+"On mine honour," said Peveril, "you both take it with great coolness.
+I think the Countess the more composed of the two; for, except her
+movement hither, she exhibited no mark of alarm, and, moreover,
+seemed no way more anxious to communicate the matter to your lordship
+than decency rendered necessary."
+
+"My good mother," said the Earl, "loves power, though it has cost her
+dear. I wish I could truly say that my neglect of business is entirely
+assumed in order to leave it in her hands, but that better motive
+combines with natural indolence. But she seems to have feared I should
+not think exactly like her in this emergency, and she was right in
+supposing so."
+
+"How comes the emergency upon you?" said Julian; "and what form does
+the danger assume?"
+
+"Marry, thus it is," said the Earl: "I need not bid you remember the
+affair of Colonel Christian. That man, besides his widow, who is
+possessed of large property--Dame Christian of Kirk Truagh, whom you
+have often heard of, and perhaps seen--left a brother called Edward
+Christian, whom you never saw at all. Now this brother--but I dare say
+you know all about it."
+
+"Not I, on my honour," said Peveril; "you know the Countess seldom or
+never alludes to the subject."
+
+"Why," replied the Earl, "I believe in her heart she is something
+ashamed of that gallant act of royalty and supreme jurisdiction, the
+consequences of which maimed my estate so cruelly.--Well, cousin, this
+same Edward Christian was one of the dempsters at the time, and,
+naturally enough, was unwilling to concur in the sentence which
+adjudged his /aîné/ to be shot like a dog. My mother, who was then in
+high force, and not to be controlled by any one, would have served the
+dempster with the same sauce with which she dressed his brother, had
+he not been wise enough to fly from the island. Since that time, the
+thing has slept on all hands; and though we knew that Dempster
+Christian made occasionally secret visits to his friends in the
+island, along with two or three other Puritans of the same stamp, and
+particularly a prick-eared rogue, called Bridgenorth, brother-in-law
+to the deceased, yet my mother, thank Heaven, has hitherto had the
+sense to connive at them, though, for some reason or other, she holds
+this Bridgenorth in especial disfavour."
+
+"And why," said Peveril, forcing himself to speak, in order to conceal
+the very unpleasant surprise which he felt, "why does the Countess now
+depart from so prudent a line of conduct?"
+
+"You must know the case is now different. The rogues are not satisfied
+with toleration--they would have supremacy. They have found friends in
+the present heat of the popular mind. My mother's name, and especially
+that of her confessor, Aldrick the Jesuit, have been mentioned in this
+beautiful maze of a plot, which if any such at all exists, she knows
+as little of as you or I. However, she is a Catholic, and that is
+enough; and I have little doubt, that if the fellows could seize on
+our scrap of a kingdom here, and cut all our throats, they would have
+the thanks of the present House of Commons, as willingly as old
+Christian had those of the Rump, for a similar service."
+
+"From whence did you receive all this information?" said Peveril,
+again speaking, though by the same effort which a man makes who talks
+in his sleep.
+
+"Aldrick has seen the Duke of York in secret, and his Royal Highness,
+who wept while he confessed his want of power to protect his friends--
+and it is no trifle will wring tears from him--told him to send us
+information that we should look to our safety, for that Dempster
+Christian and Bridgenorth were in the island, with secret and severe
+orders; that they had formed a considerable party there, and were
+likely to be owned and protected in anything they might undertake
+against us. The people of Ramsey and Castletown are unluckily
+discontented about some new regulation of the imposts; and to tell you
+the truth, though I thought yesterday's sudden remove a whim of my
+mother's, I am almost satisfied they would have blockaded us in Rushin
+Castle, where we could not have held out for lack of provisions. Here
+we are better supplied, and, as we are on our guard, it is likely the
+intended rising will not take place."
+
+"And what is to be done in this emergency?" said Peveril.
+
+"That is the very question, my gentle coz," answered the Earl. "My
+mother sees but one way of going to work, and that is by royal
+authority. Here are the warrants she had prepared, to search for,
+take, and apprehend the bodies of Edward Christian and Robert--no,
+Ralph Bridgenorth, and bring them to instant trial. No doubt, she
+would soon have had them in the Castle court, with a dozen of the old
+matchlocks levelled against them--that is her way of solving all
+sudden difficulties."
+
+"But in which, I trust, you do not acquiesce, my lord," answered
+Peveril, whose thoughts instantly reverted to Alice, if they could
+ever be said to be absent from her.
+
+"Truly I acquiesce in no such matter," said the Earl. "William
+Christian's death cost me a fair half of my inheritance. I have no
+fancy to fall under the displeasure of my royal brother, King Charles,
+for a new escapade of the same kind. But how to pacify my mother, I
+know not. I wish the insurrection would take place, and then, as we
+are better provided than they can be, we might knock the knaves on the
+head; and yet, since they began the fray, we should keep the law on
+our side."
+
+"Were it not better," said Peveril, "if by any means these men could
+be induced to quit the island?"
+
+"Surely," replied the Earl; "but that will be no easy matter--they are
+stubborn on principle, and empty threats will not move them. This
+stormblast in London is wind in their sails, and they will run their
+length, you may depend on it. I have sent orders, however, to clap up
+the Manxmen upon whose assistance they depended, and if I can find the
+two worthies themselves, here are sloops enough in the harbour--I will
+take the freedom to send them on a pretty distant voyage, and I hope
+matters will be settled before they return to give an account of it."
+
+At this moment a soldier belonging to the garrison approached the two
+young men, with many bows and tokens of respect. "How now, friend?"
+said the Earl to him. "Leave off thy courtesies, and tell thy
+business."
+
+The man, who was a native islander, answered in Manx, that he had a
+letter for his honour, Master Julian Peveril. Julian snatched the
+billet hastily, and asked whence it came.
+
+"It was delivered to him by a young woman," the soldier replied, "who
+had given him a piece of money to deliver it into Master Peveril's own
+hand."
+
+"Thou art a lucky fellow, Julian," said the Earl. "With that grave
+brow of thine, and thy character for sobriety and early wisdom, you
+set the girls a-wooing, without waiting till they are asked; whilst I,
+their drudge and vassal, waste both language and leisure, without
+getting a kind word or look, far less a billet-doux."
+
+This the young Earl said with a smile of conscious triumph, as in fact
+he valued himself not a little upon the interest which he supposed
+himself to possess with the fair sex.
+
+Meanwhile the letter impressed on Peveril a different train of
+thoughts from what his companion apprehended. It was in Alice's hand,
+and contained these few words:--
+
+
+ "I fear what I am going to do is wrong; but I must see you. Meet me
+ at noon at Goddard Crovan's Stone, with as much secrecy as you
+ may."
+
+
+The letter was signed only with the initials A. B.; but Julian had no
+difficulty in recognising the handwriting, which he had often seen,
+and which was remarkably beautiful. He stood suspended, for he saw the
+difficulty and impropriety of withdrawing himself from the Countess
+and his friend at this moment of impending danger; and yet, to neglect
+this invitation was not to be thought of. He paused in the utmost
+perplexity.
+
+"Shall I read your riddle?" said the Earl. "Go where love calls you--I
+will make an excuse to my mother--only, most grave anchorite, be
+hereafter more indulgent to the failings of others than you have been
+hitherto, and blaspheme not the power of the little deity."
+
+"Nay, but, Cousin Derby--" said Peveril, and stopped short, for he
+really knew not what to say. Secured himself by a virtuous passion
+from the contagious influence of the time, he had seen with regret his
+noble kinsman mingle more in its irregularities than he approved of,
+and had sometimes played the part of a monitor. Circumstances seemed
+at present to give the Earl a right of retaliation. He kept his eye
+fixed on his friend, as if he waited till he should complete his
+sentence, and at length exclaimed, "What! cousin, quite /à-la-mort!/
+Oh, most judicious Julian! Oh, most precise Peveril! have you bestowed
+so much wisdom on me that you have none left for yourself? Come, be
+frank--tell me name and place--or say but the colour of the eyes of
+the most emphatic she--or do but let me have the pleasure to hear thee
+say, 'I love!'--confess one touch of human frailty--conjugate the verb
+/amo/, and I will be a gentle schoolmaster, and you shall have, as
+father Richards used to say, when we were under his ferule, '/licentia
+exeundi/.'"
+
+"Enjoy your pleasant humour at my expense, my lord," said Peveril; "I
+fairly will confess thus much, that I would fain, if it consisted with
+my honour and your safety, have two hours at my own disposal; the more
+especially as the manner in which I shall employ them may much concern
+the safety of the island."
+
+"Very likely, I dare say," answered the Earl, still laughing. "No
+doubt you are summoned out by some Lady Politic Wouldbe of the isle,
+to talk over some of the breast-laws: but never mind--go, and go
+speedily, that you may return as quickly as possible. I expect no
+immediate explosion of this grand conspiracy. When the rogues see us
+on our guard, they will be cautious how they break out. Only, once
+more make haste."
+
+Peveril thought this last advice was not to be neglected; and, glad to
+extricate himself from the raillery of his cousin, walked down towards
+the gate of the Castle, meaning to cross over to the village, and
+there take horse at the Earl's stables, for the place of rendezvous.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+ /Acasto./--Can she not speak?
+ /Oswald./--If speech be only in accented sounds,
+ Framed by the tongue and lips, the maiden's dumb;
+ But if by quick and apprehensive look,
+ By motion, sign, and glance, to give each meaning,
+ Express as clothed in language, be term'd speech,
+ She hath that wondrous faculty; for her eyes,
+ Like the bright stars of heaven, can hold discourse,
+ Though it be mute and soundless.
+ --OLD PLAY.
+
+At the head of the first flight of steps which descended towards the
+difficult and well-defended entrance of the Castle of Holm-Peel,
+Peveril was met and stopped by the Countess's train-bearer. This
+little creature--for she was of the least and slightest size of
+womankind--was exquisitely well formed in all her limbs, which the
+dress she usually wore (a green silk tunic, of a peculiar form) set
+off to the best advantage. Her face was darker than the usual hue of
+Europeans; and the profusion of long and silken hair, which, when she
+undid the braids in which she commonly wore it, fell down almost to
+her ankles, was also rather a foreign attribute. Her countenance
+resembled a most beautiful miniature; and there was a quickness,
+decision, and fire, in Fenella's look, and especially in her eyes,
+which was probably rendered yet more alert and acute, because, through
+the imperfection of her other organs, it was only by sight that she
+could obtain information of what passed around her.
+
+The pretty mute was mistress of many little accomplishments, which the
+Countess had caused to be taught to her in compassion for her forlorn
+situation, and which she learned with the most surprising quickness.
+Thus, for example, she was exquisite in the use of the needle, and so
+ready and ingenious a draughtswoman, that, like the ancient Mexicans,
+she sometimes made a hasty sketch with her pencil the means of
+conveying her ideas, either by direct or emblematical representation.
+Above all, in the art of ornamental writing, much studied at that
+period, Fenella was so great a proficient, as to rival the fame of
+Messrs. Snow, Shelley, and other masters of the pen, whose copybooks,
+preserved in the libraries of the curious, still show the artists
+smiling on the frontispiece in all the honours of flowing gowns and
+full-bottomed wigs, to the eternal glory of caligraphy.
+
+The little maiden had, besides these accomplishments, much ready wit
+and acuteness of intellect. With Lady Derby, and with the two young
+gentlemen, she was a great favourite, and used much freedom in
+conversing with them, by means of a system of signs which had been
+gradually established amongst them, and which served all ordinary
+purposes of communication.
+
+But, though happy in the indulgence and favour of her mistress, from
+whom indeed she was seldom separate, Fenella was by no means a
+favourite with the rest of the household. In fact, it seemed that her
+temper, exasperated perhaps by a sense of her misfortune, was by no
+means equal to her abilities. She was very haughty in her demeanour,
+even towards the upper domestics, who in that establishment were of a
+much higher rank and better birth than in the families of the nobility
+in general. These often complained, not only of her pride and reserve,
+but of her high and irascible temper and vindictive disposition. Her
+passionate propensity had been indeed idly encouraged by the young
+men, and particularly by the Earl, who sometimes amused himself with
+teasing her, that he might enjoy the various singular motions and
+murmurs by which she expressed her resentment. Towards him, these were
+of course only petulant and whimsical indications of pettish anger.
+But when she was angry with others of inferior degree--before whom she
+did not control herself--the expression of her passion, unable to
+display itself in language, had something even frightful, so singular
+were the tones, contortions, and gestures, to which she had recourse.
+The lower domestics, to whom she was liberal almost beyond her
+apparent means, observed her with much deference and respect, but much
+more from fear than from any real attachment; for the caprices of her
+temper displayed themselves even in her gifts; and those who most
+frequently shared her bounty, seemed by no means assured of the
+benevolence of the motives which dictated her liberality.
+
+All these peculiarities led to a conclusion consonant with Manx
+superstition. Devout believers in all the legends of fairies so dear
+to the Celtic tribes, the Manx people held it for certainty that the
+elves were in the habit of carrying off mortal children before
+baptism, and leaving in the cradle of the new born babe one of their
+own brood, which was almost always imperfect in some one or other of
+the organs proper to humanity. Such a being they conceived Fenella to
+be; and the smallness of her size, her dark complexion, her long locks
+of silken hair, the singularity of her manners and tones, as well as
+the caprices of her temper, were to their thinking all attributes of
+the irritable, fickle, and dangerous race from which they supposed her
+to be sprung. And it seemed, that although no jest appeared to offend
+her more than when Lord Derby called her in sport the Elfin Queen, or
+otherwise alluded to her supposed connection with "the pigmy folk,"
+yet still her perpetually affecting to wear the colour of green,
+proper to the fairies, as well as some other peculiarities, seemed
+voluntarily assumed by her, in order to countenance the superstition,
+perhaps because it gave her more authority among the lower orders.
+
+Many were the tales circulated respecting the Countess's /Elf/, as
+Fenella was currently called in the island; and the malcontents of the
+stricter persuasion were convinced, that no one but a Papist and a
+malignant would have kept near her person a creature of such doubtful
+origin. They conceived that Fenella's deafness and dumbness were only
+towards those of this world, and that she had been heard talking, and
+singing, and laughing most elvishly, with the invisibles of her own
+race. They alleged, also, that she had a /Double/, a sort of
+apparition resembling her, which slept in the Countess's ante-room, or
+bore her train, or wrought in her cabinet, while the real Fenella
+joined the song of the mermaids on the moonlight sands, or the dance
+of the fairies in the haunted valley of Glenmoy, or on the heights of
+Snawfell and Barool. The sentinels, too, would have sworn they had
+seen the little maiden trip past them in their solitary night walks,
+without their having it in their power to challenge her, any more than
+if they had been as mute as herself. To all this mass of absurdities
+the better informed paid no more attention than to the usual idle
+exaggerations of the vulgar, which so frequently connect that which is
+unusual with what is supernatural.
+
+Such, in form and habits, was the little female, who, holding in her
+hand a small old-fashioned ebony rod, which might have passed for a
+divining wand, confronted Julian on the top of the flight of steps
+which led down the rock from the Castle court. We ought to observe,
+that as Julian's manner to the unfortunate girl had been always
+gentle, and free from those teasing jests in which his gay friend
+indulged, with less regard to the peculiarity of her situation and
+feelings; so Fenella, on her part, had usually shown much greater
+deference to him than to any of the household, her mistress, the
+Countess, always excepted.
+
+On the present occasion, planting herself in the very midst of the
+narrow descent, so as to make it impossible for Peveril to pass by
+her, she proceeded to put him to the question by a series of gestures,
+which we will endeavour to describe. She commenced by extending her
+hand slightly, accompanied with the sharp inquisitive look which
+served her as a note of interrogation. This was meant as an inquiry
+whether he was going to a distance. Julian, in reply, extended his arm
+more than half, to intimate that the distance was considerable.
+Fenella looked grave, shook her head, and pointed to the Countess's
+window, which was visible from the spot where they stood. Peveril
+smiled, and nodded, to intimate there was no danger in quitting her
+mistress for a short space. The little maiden next touched an eagle's
+feather which she wore in her hair, a sign which she usually employed
+to designate the Earl, and then looked inquisitively at Julian once
+more, as if to say, "Goes he with you?" Peveril shook his head, and,
+somewhat wearied by these interrogatories, smiled, and made an effort
+to pass. Fenella frowned, struck the end of her ebony rod
+perpendicularly on the ground, and again shook her head, as if
+opposing his departure. But finding that Julian persevered in his
+purpose, she suddenly assumed another and milder mood, held him by the
+skirt of his cloak with one hand, and raised the other in an imploring
+attitude, whilst every feature of her lively countenance was composed
+into the like expression of supplication; and the fire of the large
+dark eyes, which seemed in general so keen and piercing as almost to
+over-animate the little sphere to which they belonged, seemed
+quenched, for the moment, in the large drops which hung on her long
+eyelashes, but without falling.
+
+Julian Peveril was far from being void of sympathy towards the poor
+girl, whose motives in opposing his departure appeared to be her
+affectionate apprehension for her mistress's safety. He endeavoured to
+reassure by smiles, and, at the same time, by such signs as he could
+devise, to intimate that there was no danger, and that he would return
+presently; and having succeeded in extricating his cloak from her
+grasp, and in passing her on the stair, he began to descend the steps
+as speedily as he could, in order to avoid farther importunity.
+
+But with activity much greater than his, the dumb maiden hastened to
+intercept him, and succeeded by throwing herself, at the imminent risk
+of life and limb, a second time into the pass which he was descending,
+so as to interrupt his purpose. In order to achieve this, she was
+obliged to let herself drop a considerable height from the wall of a
+small flanking battery, where two patereroes were placed to scour the
+pass, in case any enemy could have mounted so high. Julian had scarce
+time to shudder at her purpose, as he beheld her about to spring from
+the parapet, ere, like a thing of gossamer, she stood light and
+uninjured on the rocky platform below. He endeavoured, by the gravity
+of his look and gesture, to make her understand how much he blamed her
+rashness; but the reproof, though obviously quite intelligible, was
+entirely thrown away. A hasty wave of her hand intimated how she
+contemned the danger and the remonstrance; while, at the same time,
+she instantly resumed, with more eagerness than before, the earnest
+and impressive gestures by which she endeavoured to detain him in the
+fortress.
+
+Julian was somewhat staggered by her pertinacity. "Is it possible," he
+thought, "that any danger can approach the Countess, of which this
+poor maiden has, by the extreme acuteness of her observation, obtained
+knowledge which has escaped others?"
+
+He signed to Fenella hastily to give him the tablets and the pencil
+which she usually carried with her, and wrote on them the question,
+"Is there danger near to your mistress, that you thus stop me?"
+
+"There is danger around the Countess," was the answer instantly
+written down; "but there is much more in your own purpose."
+
+"How?--what?--what know you of my purpose?" said Julian, forgetting,
+in his surprise, that the party he addressed had neither ear to
+comprehend, nor voice to reply to uttered language. She had regained
+her book in the meantime, and sketched, with a rapid pencil, on one of
+the leaves, a scene which she showed to Julian. To his infinite
+surprise he recognised Goddard Crovan's Stone, a remarkable monument,
+of which she had given the outline with sufficient accuracy; together
+with a male and female figure, which, though only indicated by a few
+slight touches of the pencil, bore yet, he thought, some resemblance
+to himself and Alice Bridgenorth.
+
+When he had gazed on the sketch for an instant with surprise, Fenella
+took the book from his hand, laid her finger upon the drawing, and
+slowly and sternly shook her head, with a frown which seemed to
+prohibit the meeting which was there represented. Julian, however,
+though disconcerted, was in no shape disposed to submit to the
+authority of his monitress. By whatever means she, who so seldom
+stirred from the Countess's apartment, had become acquainted with a
+secret which he thought entirely his own, he esteemed it the more
+necessary to keep the appointed rendezvous, that he might learn from
+Alice, if possible, how the secret had transpired. He had also formed
+the intention of seeking out Bridgenorth; entertaining an idea that a
+person so reasonable and calm as he had shown himself in their late
+conference, might be persuaded, when he understood that the Countess
+was aware of his intrigues, to put an end to her danger and his own,
+by withdrawing from the island. And could he succeed in this point, he
+should at once, he thought, render a material benefit to the father of
+his beloved Alice--remove the Earl from his state of anxiety--save the
+Countess from a second time putting her feudal jurisdiction in
+opposition to that of the Crown of England--and secure quiet
+possession of the island to her and her family.
+
+With this scheme of mediation on his mind, Peveril determined to rid
+himself of the opposition of Fenella to his departure, with less
+ceremony than he had hitherto observed towards her; and suddenly
+lifting up the damsel in his arms before she was aware of his purpose,
+he turned about, set her down on the steps above him, and began to
+descend the pass himself as speedily as possible. It was then that the
+dumb maiden gave full course to the vehemence of her disposition; and
+clapping her hands repeatedly, expressed her displeasure in sound, or
+rather a shriek, so extremely dissonant, that it resembled more the
+cry of a wild creature, than anything which could have been uttered by
+female organs. Peveril was so astounded at the scream as it rung
+through the living rocks, that he could not help stopping and looking
+back in alarm, to satisfy himself that she had not sustained some
+injury. He saw her, however, perfectly safe, though her face seemed
+inflamed and distorted with passion. She stamped at him with her foot,
+shook her clenched hand, and turning her back upon him, without
+further adieu, ran up the rude steps as lightly as a kid could have
+tripped up that rugged ascent, and paused for a moment at the summit
+of the first flight.
+
+Julian could feel nothing but wonder and compassion for the impotent
+passion of a being so unfortunately circumstanced, cut off, as it
+were, from the rest of mankind, and incapable of receiving in
+childhood that moral discipline which teaches us mastery of our
+wayward passions, ere yet they have attained their meridian strength
+and violence. He waved his hand to her, in token of amicable farewell;
+but she only replied by once more menacing him with her little hand
+clenched; and then ascending the rocky staircase with almost
+preternatural speed, was soon out of sight.
+
+Julian, on his part, gave no farther consideration to her conduct or
+its motives, but hastening to the village on the mainland, where the
+stables of the Castle were situated, he again took his palfrey from
+the stall, and was soon mounted and on his way to the appointed place
+of rendezvous, much marvelling, as he ambled forward with speed far
+greater than was promised by the diminutive size of the animal he was
+mounted on, what could have happened to produce so great a change in
+Alice's conduct towards him, that in place of enjoining his absence as
+usual, or recommending his departure from the island, she should now
+voluntarily invite him to a meeting. Under impression of the various
+doubts which succeeded each other in his imagination, he sometimes
+pressed Fairy's sides with his legs; sometimes laid his holly rod
+lightly on her neck; sometimes incited her by his voice, for the
+mettled animal needed neither whip nor spur, and achieved the distance
+betwixt the Castle of Holm-Peel and the stone at Goddard Crovan, at
+the rate of twelve miles within the hour.
+
+The monumental stone, designed to commemorate some feat of an ancient
+King of Man, which had been long forgotten, was erected on the side of
+a narrow lonely valley, or rather glen, secluded from observation by
+the steepness of its banks, upon a projection of which stood the tall,
+shapeless, solitary rock, frowning, like a shrouded giant, over the
+brawling of the small rivulet which watered the ravine.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+ This a love-meeting? See the maiden mourns,
+ And the sad suitor bends his looks on earth.
+ There's more hath pass'd between them than belongs
+ To Love's sweet sorrows.
+ --OLD PLAY.
+
+As he approached the monument of Goddard Crovan, Julian cast many an
+anxious glance to see whether any object visible beside the huge grey
+stone should apprise him, whether he was anticipated, at the appointed
+place of rendezvous, by her who had named it. Nor was it long before
+the flutter of a mantle, which the breeze slightly waved, and the
+motion necessary to replace it upon the wearer's shoulders, made him
+aware that Alice had already reached their place of meeting. One
+instant set the palfrey at liberty, with slackened girths and loosened
+reins, to pick its own way through the dell at will; another placed
+Julian Peveril by the side of Alice Bridgenorth.
+
+That Alice should extend her hand to her lover, as with the ardour of
+a young greyhound he bounded over the obstacles of the rugged path,
+was as natural as that Julian, seizing on the hand so kindly stretched
+out, should devour it with kisses, and, for a moment or two, without
+reprehension; while the other hand, which should have aided in the
+liberation of its fellow, served to hide the blushes of the fair
+owner. But Alice, young as she was, and attached to Julian by such
+long habits of kindly intimacy, still knew well how to subdue the
+tendency of her own treacherous affections.
+
+"This is not right," she said, extricating her hand from Julian's
+grasp, "this is not right, Julian. If I have been too rash in
+admitting such a meeting as the present, it is not you that should
+make me sensible of my folly."
+
+Julian Peveril's mind had been early illuminated with that touch of
+romantic fire which deprives passion of selfishness, and confers on it
+the high and refined tone of generous and disinterested devotion. He
+let go the hand of Alice with as much respect as he could have paid to
+that of a princess; and when she seated herself upon a rocky fragment,
+over which nature had stretched a cushion of moss and lichen,
+interspersed with wild flowers, backed with a bush of copsewood, he
+took his place beside her, indeed, but at such distance as to intimate
+the duty of an attendant, who was there only to hear and to obey.
+Alice Bridgenorth became more assured as she observed the power which
+she possessed over her lover; and the self-command which Peveril
+exhibited, which other damsels in her situation might have judged
+inconsistent with intensity of passion, she appreciated more justly,
+as a proof of his respectful and disinterested sincerity. She
+recovered, in addressing him, the tone of confidence which rather
+belonged to the scenes of their early acquaintance, than to those
+which had passed betwixt them since Peveril had disclosed his
+affection, and thereby had brought restraint upon their intercourse.
+
+"Julian," she said, "your visit of yesterday--your most ill-timed
+visit, has distressed me much. It has misled my father--it has
+endangered you. At all risks, I resolved that you should know this,
+and blame me not if I have taken a bold and imprudent step in desiring
+this solitary interview, since you are aware how little poor Deborah
+is to be trusted."
+
+"Can you fear misconstruction from me, Alice?" replied Peveril warmly;
+"from me, whom you have thus highly favoured--thus deeply obliged?"
+
+"Cease your protestations, Julian," answered the maiden; "they do but
+make me the more sensible that I have acted over boldly. But I did for
+the best.--I could not see you whom I have known so long--you, who say
+you regard me with partiality----"
+
+"/Say/ that I regard you with partiality!" interrupted Peveril in his
+turn. "Ah, Alice, with a cold and doubtful phrase you have used to
+express the most devoted, the most sincere affection!"
+
+"Well, then," said Alice sadly, "we will not quarrel about words; but
+do not again interrupt me.--I could not, I say, see you, who, I
+believe, regard me with sincere though vain and fruitless attachment,
+rush blindfold into a snare, deceived and seduced by those very
+feelings towards me."
+
+"I understand you not, Alice," said Peveril; "nor can I see any danger
+to which I am at present exposed. The sentiments which your father has
+expressed towards me, are of a nature irreconcilable with hostile
+purposes. If he is not offended with the bold wishes I may have
+formed,--and his whole behaviour shows the contrary,--I know not a man
+on earth from whom I have less cause to apprehend any danger or ill-
+will."
+
+"My father," said Alice, "means well by his country, and well by you;
+yet I sometimes fear he may rather injure than serve his good cause;
+and still more do I dread, that in attempting to engage you as an
+auxiliary, he may forget those ties which ought to bind you, and I am
+sure which will bind you, to a different line of conduct from his
+own."
+
+"You lead me into still deeper darkness, Alice," answered Peveril.
+"That your father's especial line of politics differs widely from
+mine, I know well; but how many instances have occurred, even during
+the bloody scenes of civil warfare, of good and worthy men laying the
+prejudice of party affections aside, and regarding each other with
+respect, and even with friendly attachment, without being false to
+principle on either side?"
+
+"It may be so," said Alice; "but such is not the league which my
+father desires to form with you, and that to which he hopes your
+misplaced partiality towards his daughter may afford a motive for your
+forming with him."
+
+"And what is it," said Peveril, "which I would refuse, with such a
+prospect before me?"
+
+"Treachery and dishonour!" replied Alice; "whatever would render you
+unworthy of the poor boon at which you aim--ay, were it more worthless
+than I confess it to be."
+
+"Would your father," said Peveril, as he unwillingly received the
+impression which Alice designed to convey,--"would he, whose views of
+duty are so strict and severe--would he wish to involve me in aught,
+to which such harsh epithets as treachery and dishonour can be applied
+with the lightest shadow of truth?"
+
+"Do not mistake me, Julian," replied the maiden; "my father is
+incapable of requesting aught of you that is not to his thinking just
+and honourable; nay, he conceives that he only claims from you a debt,
+which is due as a creature to the Creator, and as a man to your
+fellow-men."
+
+"So guarded, where can be the danger of our intercourse?" replied
+Julian. "If he be resolved to require, and I determined to accede to,
+nothing save what flows from conviction, what have I to fear, Alice?
+And how is my intercourse with your father dangerous? Believe not so;
+his speech has already made impression on me in some particulars, and
+he listened with candour and patience to the objections which I made
+occasionally. You do Master Bridgenorth less than justice in
+confounding him with the unreasonable bigots in policy and religion,
+who can listen to no argument but what favours their own
+prepossessions."
+
+"Julian," replied Alice; "it is you who misjudge my father's powers,
+and his purpose with respect to you, and who overrate your own powers
+of resistance. I am but a girl, but I have been taught by
+circumstances to think for myself, and to consider the character of
+those around me. My father's views in ecclesiastical and civil policy
+are as dear to him as the life which he cherishes only to advance
+them. They have been, with little alteration, his companions through
+life. They brought him at one period into prosperity, and when they
+suited not the times, he suffered for having held them. They have
+become not only a part, but the very dearest part, of his existence.
+If he shows them not to you at first, in the flexible strength which
+they have acquired over his mind, do not believe that they are the
+less powerful. He who desires to make converts, must begin by degrees.
+But that he should sacrifice to an inexperienced young man, whose
+ruling motive he will term a childish passion, any part of those
+treasured principles which he has maintained through good repute and
+bad repute--Oh, do not dream of such an impossibility! If you meet at
+all, you must be the wax, he the seal--you must receive, he must
+bestow, an absolute impression."
+
+"That," said Peveril, "were unreasonable. I will frankly avow to you,
+Alice, that I am not a sworn bigot to the opinions entertained by my
+father, much as I respect his person. I could wish that our Cavaliers,
+or whatsoever they are pleased to call themselves, would have some
+more charity towards those who differ from them in Church and State.
+But to hope that I would surrender the principles in which I have
+lived, were to suppose me capable of deserting my benefactress, and
+breaking the hearts of my parents."
+
+"Even so I judged of you," answered Alice; "and therefore I asked this
+interview, to conjure that you will break off all intercourse with our
+family--return to your parents--or, what will be much safer, visit the
+continent once more, and abide till God send better days to England,
+for these are black with many a storm."
+
+"And can you bid me go, Alice?" said the young man, taking her
+unresisting hand; "can you bid me go, and yet own an interest in my
+fate?--Can you bid me, for fear of dangers, which, as a man, as a
+gentleman, and a loyal one, I am bound to show my face to, meanly
+abandon my parents, my friends, my country--suffer the existence of
+evils which I might aid to prevent--forego the prospect of doing such
+little good as might be in my power--fall from an active and
+honourable station, into the condition of a fugitive and time-server--
+Can you bid me do all this, Alice? Can you bid me do all this, and, in
+the same breath, bid farewell for ever to you and happiness?--It is
+impossible--I cannot surrender at once my love and my honour."
+
+"There is no remedy," said Alice, but she could not suppress a sigh
+while she said so--"there is no remedy--none whatever. What we might
+have been to each other, placed in more favourable circumstances, it
+avails not to think of now; and, circumstanced as we are, with open
+war about to break out betwixt our parents and friends, we can be but
+well-wishers--cold and distant well-wishers, who must part on this
+spot, and at this hour, never meet again."
+
+"No, by Heaven!" said Peveril, animated at the same time by his own
+feelings, and by the sight of the emotions which his companion in vain
+endeavoured to suppress,--"No, by Heaven!" he exclaimed, "we part not
+--Alice, we part not. If I am to leave my native land, you shall be my
+companion in my exile. What have you to lose?--Whom have you to
+abandon?--Your father?--The good old cause, as it is termed, is dearer
+to him than a thousand daughters; and setting him aside, what tie is
+there between you and this barren isle--between my Alice and any spot
+of the British dominions, where her Julian does not sit by her?"
+
+"O Julian," answered the maiden, "why make my duty more painful by
+visionary projects, which you ought not to name, or I to listen to?
+Your parents--my father--it cannot be!"
+
+"Fear not for my parents, Alice," replied Julian, and pressing close
+to his companion's side, he ventured to throw his arm around her;
+"they love me, and they will soon learn to love, in Alice, the only
+being on earth who could have rendered their son happy. And for your
+own father, when State and Church intrigues allow him to bestow a
+thought upon you, will he not think that your happiness, your
+security, is better cared for when you are my wife, than were you to
+continue under the mercenary charge of yonder foolish woman? What
+could his pride desire better for you, than the establishment which
+will one day be mine? Come then, Alice, and since you condemn me to
+banishment--since you deny me a share in those stirring achievements
+which are about to agitate England--come! do you--for you only can--do
+you reconcile me to exile and inaction, and give happiness to one,
+who, for your sake, is willing to resign honour."
+
+"It cannot--it cannot be," said Alice, faltering as she uttered her
+negative. "And yet," she said, "how many in my place--left alone and
+unprotected, as I am--But I must not--I must not--for your sake,
+Julian, I must not."
+
+"Say not for my sake you must not, Alice," said Peveril eagerly; "this
+is adding insult to cruelty. If you will do aught for my sake, you
+will say yes; or you will suffer this dear head to drop on my shoulder
+--the slightest sign--the moving of an eyelid, shall signify consent.
+All shall be prepared within an hour; within another the priest shall
+unite us; and within a third, we leave the isle behind us, and seek
+our fortunes on the continent." But while he spoke, in joyful
+anticipation of the consent which he implored, Alice found means to
+collect together her resolution, which, staggered by the eagerness of
+her lover, the impulse of her own affections, and the singularity of
+her situation,--seeming, in her case, to justify what would have been
+most blamable in another,--had more than half abandoned her.
+
+The result of a moment's deliberation was fatal to Julian's proposal.
+She extricated herself from the arm which had pressed her to his side
+--arose, and repelling his attempts to approach or detain her, said,
+with a simplicity not unmingled with dignity, "Julian, I always knew I
+risked much in inviting you to this meeting; but I did not guess that
+I could have been so cruel to both to you and to myself, as to suffer
+you to discover what you have to-day seen too plainly--that I love you
+better than you love me. But since you do know it, I will show you
+that Alice's love is disinterested--She will not bring an ignoble name
+into your ancient house. If hereafter, in your line, there should
+arise some who may think the claims of the hierarchy too exorbitant,
+the powers of the crown too extensive, men shall not say these ideas
+were derived from Alice Bridgenorth, their whig granddame."
+
+"Can you speak thus, Alice?" said her lover. "Can you use such
+expressions? and are you not sensible that they show plainly it is
+your own pride, not regard for me, that makes you resist the happiness
+of both?"
+
+"Not so, Julian; not so," answered Alice, with tears in her eyes; "it
+is the command of duty to us both--of duty, which we cannot
+transgress, without risking our happiness here and hereafter. Think
+what I, the cause of all, should feel, when your father frowns, your
+mother weeps, your noble friends stand aloof, and you, even you
+yourself, shall have made the painful discovery, that you have
+incurred the contempt and resentment of all to satisfy a boyish
+passion; and that the poor beauty, once sufficient to mislead you, is
+gradually declining under the influence of grief and vexation. This I
+will not risk. I see distinctly it is best we should here break off
+and part; and I thank God, who gives me light enough to perceive, and
+strength enough to withstand, your folly as well as my own. Farewell,
+then, Julian; but first take the solemn advice which I called you
+hither to impart to you:--Shun my father--you cannot walk in his
+paths, and be true to gratitude and to honour. What he doth from pure
+and honourable motives, you cannot aid him in, except upon the
+suggestion of a silly and interested passion, at variance with all the
+engagements you have formed at coming into life."
+
+"Once more, Alice," answered Julian, "I understand you not. If a
+course of action is good, it needs no vindication from the actor's
+motives--if bad, it can derive none."
+
+"You cannot blind me with your sophistry, Julian," replied Alice
+Bridgenorth, "any more than you can overpower me with your passion.
+Had the patriarch destined his son to death upon any less ground than
+faith and humble obedience to a divine commandment, he had meditated a
+murder and not a sacrifice. In our late bloody and lamentable wars,
+how many drew swords on either side, from the purest and most
+honourable motives? How many from the culpable suggestions of
+ambition, self-seeking, and love of plunder? Yet while they marched in
+the same ranks, and spurred their horses at the same trumpet-sound,
+the memory of the former is dear to us as patriots or loyalists--that
+of those who acted on mean or unworthy promptings, is either execrated
+or forgotten. Once more, I warn you, avoid my father--leave this
+island, which will be soon agitated by strange incidents--while you
+stay, be on your guard--distrust everything--be jealous of every one,
+even of those to whom it may seem almost impossible, from
+circumstances, to attach a shadow of suspicion--trust not the very
+stones of the most secret apartment in Holm-Peel, for that which hath
+wings shall carry the matter."
+
+Here Alice broke off suddenly, and with a faint shriek; for, stepping
+from behind the stunted copse which had concealed him, her father
+stood unexpectedly before them.
+
+The reader cannot have forgotten that this was the second time in
+which the stolen interviews of the lovers had been interrupted by the
+unexpected apparition of Major Bridgenorth. On this second occasion
+his countenance exhibited anger mixed with solemnity, like that of the
+spirit to a ghost-seer, whom he upbraids with having neglected a
+charge imposed at their first meeting. Even his anger, however,
+produced no more violent emotion than a cold sternness of manner in
+his speech and action. "I thank you, Alice," he said to his daughter,
+"for the pains you have taken to traverse my designs towards this
+young man, and towards yourself. I thank you for the hints you have
+thrown out before my appearance, the suddenness of which alone has
+prevented you from carrying your confidence to a pitch which would
+have placed my life and that of others at the discretion of a boy,
+who, when the cause of God and his country is laid before him, has not
+leisure to think of them, so much is he occupied with such a baby-face
+as thine." Alice, pale as death, continued motionless, with her eyes
+fixed on the ground, without attempting the slightest reply to the
+ironical reproaches of her father.
+
+"And you," continued Major Bridgenorth, turning from his daughter to
+her lover,--"you sir, have well repaid the liberal confidence which I
+placed in you with so little reserve. You I have to thank also for
+some lessons, which may teach me to rest satisfied with the churl's
+blood which nature has poured into my veins, and with the rude nurture
+which my father allotted to me."
+
+"I understand you not, sir," replied Julian Peveril, who, feeling the
+necessity of saying something, could not, at the moment, find anything
+more fitting to say.
+
+"Yes, sir, I thank you," said Major Bridgenorth, in the same cold
+sarcastic tone, "for having shown me that breach of hospitality,
+infringement of good faith, and such like peccadilloes, are not
+utterly foreign to the mind and conduct of the heir of a knightly
+house of twenty descents. It is a great lesson to me, sir: for
+hitherto I had thought with the vulgar, that gentle manners went with
+gentle blood. But perhaps courtesy is too chivalrous a quality to be
+wasted in intercourse with a round-headed fanatic like myself."
+
+"Major Bridgenorth," said Julian, "whatever has happened in this
+interview which may have displeased you, has been the result of
+feelings suddenly and strongly animated by the crisis of the moment--
+nothing was premeditated."
+
+"Not even your meeting, I suppose?" replied Bridgenorth, in the same
+cold tone. "You, sir, wandered hither from Holm-Peel--my daughter
+strolled forth from the Black Fort; and chance, doubtless, assigned
+you a meeting by the stone of Goddard Crovan?--Young man, disgrace
+yourself by no more apologies--they are worse than useless.--And you,
+maiden, who, in your fear of losing your lover, could verge on
+betraying what might have cost a father his life--begone to your home.
+I will talk with you at more leisure, and teach you practically those
+duties which you seem to have forgotten."
+
+"On my honour, sir," said Julian, "your daughter is guiltless of all
+that can offend you; she resisted every offer which the headstrong
+violence of my passion urged me to press upon her."
+
+"And, in brief," said Bridgenorth, "I am not to believe that you met
+in this remote place of rendezvous by Alice's special appointment?"
+
+Peveril knew not what to reply, and Bridgenorth again signed with his
+hand to his daughter to withdraw.
+
+"I obey you, father," said Alice, who had by this time recovered from
+the extremity of her surprise,--"I obey you; but Heaven is my witness
+that you do me more than injustice in suspecting me capable of
+betraying your secrets, even had it been necessary to save my own life
+or that of Julian. That you are walking in a dangerous path I well
+know; but you do it with your eyes open, and are actuated by motives
+of which you can estimate the worth and value. My sole wish was, that
+this young man should not enter blindfold on the same perils; and I
+had a right to warn him, since the feelings by which he is hoodwinked
+had a direct reference to me."
+
+"'Tis well, minion," said Bridgenorth, "you have spoken your say.
+Retire, and let me complete the conference which you have so
+considerately commenced."
+
+"I go, sir," said Alice.--"Julian, to you my last words are, and I
+would speak them with my last breath--Farewell, and caution!"
+
+She turned from them, disappeared among the underwood, and was seen no
+more.
+
+"A true specimen of womankind," said her father, looking after her,
+"who would give the cause of nations up, rather than endanger a hair
+of her lover's head.--You, Master Peveril, doubtless, hold her
+opinion, that the best love is a safe love!"
+
+"Were danger alone in my way," said Peveril, much surprised at the
+softened tone in which Bridgenorth made this observation, "there are
+few things which I would not face to--to--deserve your good opinion."
+
+"Or rather to win my daughter's hand," said Bridgenorth. "Well, young
+man, one thing has pleased me in your conduct, though of much I have
+my reasons to complain--one thing /has/ pleased me. You have
+surmounted that bounding wall of aristocratical pride, in which your
+father, and, I suppose, his fathers, remained imprisoned, as in the
+precincts of a feudal fortress--you have leaped over this barrier, and
+shown yourself not unwilling to ally yourself with a family whom your
+father spurns as low-born and ignoble."
+
+However favourable this speech sounded towards success in his suit, it
+so broadly stated the consequences of that success so far as his
+parents were concerned, that Julian felt it in the last degree
+difficult to reply. At length, perceiving that Major Bridgenorth
+seemed resolved quietly to await his answer, he mustered up courage to
+say, "The feelings which I entertain towards your daughter, Master
+Bridgenorth, are of a nature to supersede many other considerations,
+to which in any other case, I should feel it my duty to give the most
+reverential attention. I will not disguise from you, that my father's
+prejudices against such a match would be very strong; but I devoutly
+believe they would disappear when he came to know the merit of Alice
+Bridgenorth, and to be sensible that she only could make his son
+happy."
+
+"In the meanwhile, you are desirous to complete the union which you
+propose without the knowledge of your parents, and take the chance of
+their being hereafter reconciled to it? So I understand, from the
+proposal which you made but lately to my daughter."
+
+The turns of human nature, and of human passion, are so irregular and
+uncertain, that although Julian had but a few minutes before urged to
+Alice a private marriage, and an elopement to the continent, as a
+measure upon which the whole happiness of his life depended, the
+proposal seemed not to him half so delightful when stated by the calm,
+cold, dictatorial accents of her father. It sounded no longer like the
+dictates of ardent passion, throwing all other considerations aside,
+but as a distinct surrender of the dignity of his house to one who
+seemed to consider their relative situation as the triumph of
+Bridgenorth over Peveril. He was mute for a moment, in the vain
+attempt to shape his answer so as at once to intimate acquiescence in
+what Bridgenorth stated, and a vindication of his own regard for his
+parents, and for the honour of his house.
+
+This delay gave rise to suspicion, and Bridgenorth's eye gleamed, and
+his lip quivered while he gave vent to it. "Hark ye, young man--deal
+openly with me in this matter, if you would not have me think you the
+execrable villain who would have seduced an unhappy girl, under
+promises which he never designed to fulfil. Let me but suspect this,
+and you shall see, on the spot, how far your pride and your pedigree
+will preserve you against the just vengeance of a father."
+
+"You do me wrong," said Peveril--"you do me infinite wrong, Major
+Bridgenorth, I am incapable of the infamy which you allude to. The
+proposal I made to your daughter was as sincere as ever was offered by
+man to woman. I only hesitated, because you think it necessary to
+examine me so very closely; and to possess yourself of all my purposes
+and sentiments, in their fullest extent, without explaining to me the
+tendency of your own."
+
+"Your proposal, then, shapes itself thus," said Bridgenorth:--"You are
+willing to lead my only child into exile from her native country, to
+give her a claim to kindness and protection from your family, which
+you know will be disregarded, on condition I consent to bestow her
+hand on you, with a fortune sufficient to have matched your ancestors,
+when they had most reason to boast of their wealth. This, young man,
+seems no equal bargain. And yet," he continued, after a momentary
+pause, "so little do I value the goods of this world, that it might
+not be utterly beyond thy power to reconcile me to the match which you
+have proposed to me, however unequal it may appear."
+
+"Show me but the means which can propitiate your favour, Major
+Bridgenorth," said Peveril,--"for I will not doubt that they will be
+consistent with my honour and duty--and you shall soon see how eagerly
+I will obey your directions, or submit to your conditions."
+
+"They are summed in few words," answered Bridgenorth. "Be an honest
+man, and the friend of your country."
+
+"No one has ever doubted," replied Peveril, "that I am both."
+
+"Pardon me," replied the Major; "no one has, as yet, seen you show
+yourself either. Interrupt me not--I question not your will to be
+both; but you have hitherto neither had the light nor the opportunity
+necessary for the display of your principles, or the service of your
+country. You have lived when an apathy of mind, succeeding to the
+agitations of the Civil War, had made men indifferent to state
+affairs, and more willing to cultivate their own ease, than to stand
+in the gap when the Lord was pleading with Israel. But we are
+Englishmen; and with us such unnatural lethargy cannot continue long.
+Already, many of those who most desired the return of Charles Stewart,
+regard him as a King whom Heaven, importuned by our entreaties, gave
+to us in His anger. His unlimited licence--and example so readily
+followed by the young and the gay around him--has disgusted the minds
+of all sober and thinking men. I had not now held conference with you
+in this intimate fashion, were I not aware that you, Master Julian,
+were free from such stain of the times. Heaven, that rendered the
+King's course of license fruitful, had denied issue to his bed of
+wedlock; and in the gloomy and stern character of his bigoted
+successor, we already see what sort of monarch shall succeed to the
+crown of England. This is a critical period, at which it necessarily
+becomes the duty of all men to step forward, each in his degree, and
+aid in rescuing the country which gave us birth." Peveril remembered
+the warning which he had received from Alice, and bent his eyes on the
+ground, without returning any reply. "How is it, young man," continued
+Bridgenorth, after a pause--"so young as thou art, and bound by no
+ties of kindred profligacy with the enemies of your country, you can
+be already hardened to the claims she may form on you at this crisis?"
+
+"It were easy to answer you generally, Major Bridgenorth," replied
+Peveril--"It were easy to say that my country cannot make a claim on
+me which I will not promptly answer at the risk of lands and life. But
+in dealing thus generally, we should but deceive each other. What is
+the nature of this call? By whom is it to be sounded? And what are to
+be the results? for I think you have already seen enough of the evils
+of civil war, to be wary of again awakening its terrors in a peaceful
+and happy country."
+
+"They that are drenched with poisonous narcotics," said the Major,
+"must be awakened by their physicians, though it were with the sound
+of the trumpet. Better that men should die bravely, with their arms in
+their hands, like free-born Englishmen, than that they should slide
+into the bloodless but dishonoured grave which slavery opens for its
+vassals--But it is not of war that I was about to speak," he added,
+assuming a milder tone. "The evils of which England now complains, are
+such as can be remedied by the wholesome administration of her own
+laws, even in the state in which they are still suffered to exist.
+Have these laws not a right to the support of every individual who
+lives under them? Have they not a right to yours?"
+
+As he seemed to pause for an answer, Peveril replied, "I have to
+learn, Major Bridgenorth, how the laws of England have become so far
+weakened as to require such support as mine. When that is made plain
+to me, no man will more willingly discharge the duty of a faithful
+liegeman to the law as well as the King. But the laws of England are
+under the guardianship of upright and learned judges, and of a
+gracious monarch."
+
+"And of a House of Commons," interrupted Bridgenorth, "no longer
+doting upon restored monarchy, but awakened, as with a peal of
+thunder, to the perilous state of our religion, and of our freedom. I
+appeal to your own conscience, Julian Peveril, whether this awakening
+hath not been in time, since you yourself know, and none better than
+you, the secret but rapid strides which Rome has made to erect her
+Dagon of idolatry within our Protestant land."
+
+Here Julian seeing, or thinking he saw, the drift of Bridgenorth's
+suspicions, hastened to exculpate himself from the thought of
+favouring the Roman Catholic religion. "It is true," he said, "I have
+been educated in a family where that faith is professed by one
+honoured individual, and that I have since travelled in Popish
+countries; but even for these very reasons I have seen Popery too
+closely to be friendly to its tenets. The bigotry of the laymen--the
+persevering arts of the priesthood--the perpetual intrigue for the
+extension of the forms without the spirit of religion--the usurpation
+of that Church over the consciences of men--and her impious
+pretensions to infallibility, are as inconsistent to my mind as they
+can seem to yours, with common-sense, rational liberty, freedom of
+conscience, and pure religion."
+
+"Spoken like the son of your excellent mother," said Bridgenorth,
+grasping his hand; "for whose sake I have consented to endure so much
+from your house unrequited, even when the means of requital were in my
+own hand."
+
+"It was indeed from the instructions of that excellent parent," said
+Peveril, "that I was enabled, in my early youth, to resist and repel
+the insidious attacks made upon my religious faith by the Catholic
+priests into whose company I was necessarily thrown. Like her, I trust
+to live and die in the faith of the reformed Church of England."
+
+"The Church of England!" said Bridgenorth, dropping his young friend's
+hand, but presently resuming it--"Alas! that Church, as now
+constituted, usurps scarcely less than Rome herself upon men's
+consciences and liberties; yet, out of the weakness of this half-
+reformed Church, may God be pleased to work out deliverance to
+England, and praise to Himself. I must not forget, that one whose
+services have been in the cause incalculable, wears the garb of an
+English priest, and hath had Episcopal ordination. It is not for us to
+challenge the instrument, so that our escape is achieved from the net
+of the fowler. Enough, that I find thee not as yet enlightened with
+the purer doctrine, but prepared to profit by it when the spark shall
+reach thee. Enough, in especial, that I find thee willing to uplift
+thy testimony to cry aloud and spare not, against the errors and arts
+of the Church of Rome. But remember, what thou hast now said, thou
+wilt soon be called upon to justify, in a manner the most solemn--the
+most awful."
+
+"What I have said," replied Julian Peveril, "being the unbiassed
+sentiments of my heart, shall, upon no proper occasion, want the
+support of my open avowal; and I think it strange you should doubt me
+so far."
+
+"I doubt thee not, my young friend," said Bridgenorth; "and I trust to
+see that name rank high amongst those by whom the prey shall be rent
+from the mighty. At present, thy prejudices occupy thy mind like the
+strong keeper of the house mentioned in Scripture. But there shall
+come a stronger than he, and make forcible entry, displaying on the
+battlements that sign of faith in which alone there is found
+salvation.--Watch, hope, and pray, that the hour may come."
+
+There was a pause in the conversation, which was first broken by
+Peveril. "You have spoken to me in riddles, Major Bridgenorth; and I
+have asked you for no explanation. Listen to a caution on my part,
+given with the most sincere good-will. Take a hint from me, and
+believe it, though it is darkly expressed. You are here--at least are
+believed to be here--on an errand dangerous to the Lord of the island.
+That danger will be retorted on yourself, if you make Man long your
+place of residence. Be warned, and depart in time."
+
+"And leave my daughter to the guardianship of Julian Peveril! Runs not
+your counsel so, young man?" answered Bridgenorth. "Trust my safety,
+Julian, to my own prudence. I have been accustomed to guide myself
+through worse dangers than now environ me. But I thank you for your
+caution, which I am willing to believe was at least partly
+disinterested."
+
+"We do not, then, part in anger?" said Peveril.
+
+"Not in anger, my son," said Bridgenorth, "but in love and strong
+affection. For my daughter, thou must forbear every thought of seeing
+her, save through me. I accept not thy suit, neither do I reject it;
+only this I intimate to you, that he who would be my son, must first
+show himself the true and loving child of his oppressed and deluded
+country. Farewell; do not answer me now, thou art yet in the gall of
+bitterness, and it may be that strife (which I desire not) should fall
+between us. Thou shalt hear of me sooner than thou thinkest for."
+
+He shook Peveril heartily by the hand, and again bid him farewell,
+leaving him under the confused and mingled impression of pleasure,
+doubt, and wonder. Not a little surprised to find himself so far in
+the good graces of Alice's father, that his suit was even favoured
+with a sort of negative encouragement, he could not help suspecting,
+as well from the language of the daughter as of the father, that
+Bridgenorth was desirous, as the price of his favour, that he should
+adopt some line of conduct inconsistent with the principles in which
+he had been educated.
+
+"You need not fear, Alice," he said in his heart; "not even your hand
+would I purchase by aught which resembled unworthy or truckling
+compliance with tenets which my heart disowns; and well I know, were I
+mean enough to do so, even the authority of thy father were
+insufficient to compel thee to the ratification of so mean a bargain.
+But let me hope better things. Bridgenorth, though strong-minded and
+sagacious, is haunted by the fears of Popery, which are the bugbears
+of his sect. My residence in the family of the Countess of Derby is
+more than enough to inspire him with suspicions of my faith, from
+which, thank Heaven, I can vindicate myself with truth and a good
+conscience."
+
+So thinking, he again adjusted the girths of his palfrey, replaced the
+bit which he had slipped out of its mouth, that it might feed at
+liberty, and mounting, pursued his way back to the Castle of Holm-
+Peel, where he could not help fearing that something extraordinary
+might have happened in his absence.
+
+But the old pile soon rose before him, serene, and sternly still, amid
+the sleeping ocean. The banner, which indicated that the Lord of Man
+held residence within its ruinous precincts, hung motionless by the
+ensign-staff. The sentinels walked to and fro on their posts, and
+hummed or whistled their Manx airs. Leaving his faithful companion,
+Fairy, in the village as before, Julian entered the Castle, and found
+all within in the same state of quietness and good order which
+external appearances had announced.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+ Now rede me, rede me, brother dear,
+ Throughout Merry England,
+ Where will I find a messenger,
+ Betwixt us two to send.
+ --BALLAD OF KING ESTMERE.
+
+Julian's first encounter, after re-entering the Castle, was with its
+young Lord, who received him with his usual kindness and lightness of
+humour.
+
+"Thrice welcome, Sir Knight of Dames," said the Earl; "here you rove
+gallantly, and at free will, through our dominions, fulfilling of
+appointments, and achieving amorous adventures; while we are condemned
+to sit in our royal halls, as dull and as immovable as if our Majesty
+was carved on the stern of some Manx smuggling dogger, and christened
+the King Arthur of Ramsey."
+
+"Nay, in that case you would take the sea," said Julian, "and so enjoy
+travel and adventure enough."
+
+"Oh, but suppose me wind-bound, or detained in harbour by a revenue
+pink, or ashore, if you like it, and lying high and dry upon the sand.
+Imagine the royal image in the dullest of all predicaments, and you
+have not equalled mine."
+
+"I am happy to hear, at least, that you have had no disagreeable
+employment," said Julian; "the morning's alarm has blown over, I
+suppose?"
+
+"In faith it has, Julian; and our close inquiries cannot find any
+cause for the apprehended insurrection. That Bridgenorth is in the
+island seems certain; but private affairs of consequence are alleged
+as the cause of his visit; and I am not desirous to have him arrested
+unless I could prove some malpractices against him and his companions.
+In fact, it would seem we had taken the alarm too soon. My mother
+speaks of consulting you on the subject, Julian; and I will not
+anticipate her solemn communication. It will be partly apologetical, I
+suppose; for we begin to think our retreat rather unroyal, and that,
+like the wicked, we have fled when no man pursued. This idea afflicts
+my mother, who, as a Queen-Dowager, a Queen-Regent, a heroine, and a
+woman in general, would be extremely mortified to think that her
+precipitate retreat hither had exposed her to the ridicule of the
+islanders; and she is disconcerted and out of humour accordingly. In
+the meanwhile, my sole amusement has been the grimaces and fantastic
+gestures of that ape Fenella, who is more out of humour, and more
+absurd, in consequence, than you ever saw her. Morris says, it is
+because you pushed her downstairs, Julian--how is that?"
+
+"Nay, Morris has misreported me," answered Julian; "I did but lift her
+/up/ stairs to be rid of her importunity; for she chose, in her way,
+to contest my going abroad in such an obstinate manner, that I had no
+other mode of getting rid of her."
+
+"She must have supposed your departure, at a moment so critical, was
+dangerous to the state of our garrison," answered the Earl; "it shows
+how dearly she esteems my mother's safety, how highly she rates your
+prowess. But, thank Heaven, there sounds the dinner-bell. I would the
+philosophers, who find a sin and waste of time in good cheer, could
+devise us any pastime half so agreeable."
+
+The meal which the young Earl had thus longed for, as a means of
+consuming a portion of the time which hung heavy on his hands, was
+soon over; as soon, at least, as the habitual and stately formality of
+the Countess's household permitted. She herself, accompanied by her
+gentlewomen and attendants, retired early after the tables were drawn;
+and the young gentlemen were left to their own company. Wine had, for
+the moment, no charms for either; for the Earl was out of spirits from
+ennui, and impatience of his monotonous and solitary course of life;
+and the events of the day had given Peveril too much matter for
+reflection, to permit his starting amusing or interesting topics of
+conversation. After having passed the flask in silence betwixt them
+once or twice, they withdrew each to a separate embrasure of the
+windows of the dining apartment, which, such was the extreme thickness
+of the wall, were deep enough to afford a solitary recess, separated,
+as it were, from the chamber itself. In one of these sat the Earl of
+Derby, busied in looking over some of the new publications which had
+been forwarded from London; and at intervals confessing how little
+power or interest these had for him, by yawning fearfully as he looked
+out on the solitary expanse of waters, which, save from the flight of
+a flock of sea-gulls, or a solitary cormorant, offered so little of
+variety to engage his attention.
+
+Peveril, on his part, held a pamphlet also in his hand, without
+giving, or affecting to give it, even his occasional attention. His
+whole soul turned upon the interview which he had had that day with
+Alice Bridgenorth, and with her father; while he in vain endeavoured
+to form any hypothesis which could explain to him why the daughter,
+to whom he had no reason to think himself indifferent, should have
+been so suddenly desirous of their eternal separation, while her
+father, whose opposition he so much dreaded, seemed to be at least
+tolerant of his addresses. He could only suppose, in explanation, that
+Major Bridgenorth had some plan in prospect, which it was in his own
+power to farther or to impede; while, from the demeanour, and indeed
+the language, of Alice, he had but too much reason to apprehend that
+her father's favour could only be conciliated by something, on his own
+part, approaching to dereliction of principle. But by no conjecture
+which he could form, could he make the least guess concerning the
+nature of that compliance, of which Bridgenorth seemed desirous. He
+could not imagine, notwithstanding Alice had spoken of treachery, that
+her father would dare to propose to him uniting in any plan by which
+the safety of the Countess, or the security of her little kingdom of
+Man, was to be endangered. This carried such indelible disgrace in the
+front, that he could not suppose the scheme proposed to him by any who
+was not prepared to defend with his sword, upon the spot, so flagrant
+an insult offered to his honour. And such a proceeding was totally
+inconsistent with the conduct of Major Bridgenorth in every other
+respect, besides his being too calm and cold-blooded to permit of his
+putting a mortal affront upon the son of his old neighbour, to whose
+mother he confessed so much of obligation.
+
+While Peveril in vain endeavoured to extract something like a probable
+theory out of the hints thrown out by the father and by the daughter--
+not without the additional and lover-like labour of endeavouring to
+reconcile his passion to his honour and conscience--he felt something
+gently pull him by the cloak. He unclasped his arms, which, in
+meditation, had been folded on his bosom; and withdrawing his eyes
+from the vacant prospect of sea-coast and sea which they perused,
+without much consciousness upon what they rested, he beheld beside him
+the little dumb maiden, the elfin Fenella. She was seated on a low
+cushion or stool, with which she had nestled close to Peveril's side,
+and had remained there for a short space of time, expecting, no doubt,
+he would become conscious of her presence; until, tired of remaining
+unnoticed, she at length solicited his attention in the manner which
+we have described. Startled out of his reverie by this intimation of
+her presence, he looked down, and could not, without interest, behold
+this singular and helpless being.
+
+Her hair was unloosened, and streamed over her shoulders in such
+length, that much of it lay upon the ground, and in such quantity,
+that it formed a dark veil, or shadow, not only around her face, but
+over her whole slender and minute form. From the profusion of her
+tresses looked forth her small and dark, but well-formed features,
+together with the large and brilliant black eyes; and her whole
+countenance was composed into the imploring look of one who is
+doubtful of the reception she is about to meet with from a valued
+friend, while she confesses a fault, pleads an apology, or solicits a
+reconciliation. In short, the whole face was so much alive with
+expression, that Julian, though her aspect was so familiar to him,
+could hardly persuade himself but that her countenance was entirely
+new. The wild, fantastic, elvish vivacity of the features, seemed
+totally vanished, and had given place to a sorrowful, tender, and
+pathetic cast of countenance, aided by the expression of the large
+dark eyes, which, as they were turned up towards Julian, glistened
+with moisture, that, nevertheless, did not overflow the eyelids.
+
+Conceiving that her unwonted manner arose from a recollection of the
+dispute which had taken place betwixt them in the morning, Peveril was
+anxious to restore the little maiden's gaiety, by making her sensible
+that there dwelt on his mind no unpleasing recollection of their
+quarrel. He smiled kindly, and shook her hand in one of his; while,
+with the familiarity of one who had known her from childhood, he
+stroked down her long dark tresses with the other. She stooped her
+head, as if ashamed, and, at the same time, gratified with his
+caresses--and he was thus induced to continue them, until, under the
+veil of her rich and abundant locks, he suddenly felt his other hand,
+which she still held in hers, slightly touched with her lips, and, at
+the same time, moistened with a tear.
+
+At once, and for the first time in his life, the danger of being
+misinterpreted in his familiarity with a creature to whom the usual
+modes of explanation were a blank, occurred to Julian's mind; and,
+hastily withdrawing his hand, and changing his posture, he asked her,
+by a sign which custom had rendered familiar, whether she brought any
+message to him from the Countess. She started up, and arranged herself
+in her seat with the rapidity of lightning; and, at the same moment,
+with one turn of her hand, braided her length of locks into a natural
+head-dress of the most beautiful kind. There was, indeed, when she
+looked up, a blush still visible on her dark features; but their
+melancholy and languid expression had given place to that of wild and
+restless vivacity, which was most common to them. Her eyes gleamed
+with more than their wonted fire, and her glances were more piercingly
+wild and unsettled than usual. To Julian's inquiry, she answered, by
+laying her hand on her heart--a motion by which she always indicated
+the Countess--and rising, and taking the direction of her apartment,
+she made a sign to Julian to follow her.
+
+The distance was not great betwixt the dining apartment and that to
+which Peveril now followed his mute guide; yet, in going thither, he
+had time enough to suffer cruelly from the sudden suspicion, that this
+unhappy girl had misinterpreted the uniform kindness with which he had
+treated her, and hence come to regard him with feelings more tender
+than those which belong to friendship. The misery which such a passion
+was likely to occasion to a creature in her helpless situation, and
+actuated by such lively feelings, was great enough to make him refuse
+credit to the suspicion which pressed itself upon his mind; while, at
+the same time, he formed the internal resolution so to conduct himself
+towards Fenella, as to check such misplaced sentiments, if indeed she
+unhappily entertained them towards him.
+
+When they reached the Countess's apartment, they found her with
+writing implements, and many sealed letters before her. She received
+Julian with her usual kindness; and having caused him to be seated,
+beckoned to the mute to resume her needle. In an instant Fenella was
+seated at an embroidering-frame; where, but for the movement of her
+dexterous fingers, she might have seemed a statue, so little did she
+move from her work either head or eye. As her infirmity rendered her
+presence no bar to the most confidential conversation, the Countess
+proceeded to address Peveril as if they had been literally alone
+together.
+
+"Julian," she said, "I am not now about to complain to you of the
+sentiments and conduct of Derby. He is your friend--he is my son. He
+has kindness of heart and vivacity of talent; and yet----"
+
+"Dearest lady," said Peveril, "why will you distress yourself with
+fixing your eye on deficiencies which arise rather from a change of
+times and manners, than any degeneracy of my noble friend? Let him be
+once engaged in his duty, whether in peace or war, and let me pay the
+penalty if he acquits not himself becoming his high station."
+
+"Ay," replied the Countess; "but when will the call of duty prove
+superior to that of the most idle or trivial indulgence which can
+serve to drive over the lazy hour? His father was of another mould;
+and how often was it my lot to entreat that he would spare, from the
+rigid discharge of those duties which his high station imposed, the
+relaxation absolutely necessary to recruit his health and his
+spirits!"
+
+"Still, my dearest lady," said Peveril, "you must allow, that the
+duties to which the times summoned your late honoured lord, were of a
+more stirring, as well as a more peremptory cast, than those which
+await your son."
+
+"I know not that," said the Countess. "The wheel appears to be again
+revolving; and the present period is not unlikely to bring back such
+scenes as my young years witnessed.--Well, be it so; they will not
+find Charlotte de la Tremouille broken in spirit, though depressed by
+years. It was even on this subject I would speak with you, my young
+friend. Since our first early acquaintance--when I saw your gallant
+behaviour as I issued forth to your childish eye, like an apparition,
+from my place of concealment in your father's castle--it has pleased
+me to think you a true son of Stanley and Peveril. I trust your
+nurture in this family has been ever suited to the esteem in which I
+hold you.--Nay, I desire no thanks.--I have to require of you, in
+return, a piece of service, not perhaps entirely safe to yourself, but
+which, as times are circumstanced, no person is so well able to render
+to my house."
+
+"You have been ever my good and noble lady," answered Peveril, "as
+well as my kind, and I may say maternal, protectress. You have a right
+to command the blood of Stanley in the veins of every one--You have a
+thousand rights to command it in mine."[*]
+
+[*] The reader cannot have forgotten that the Earl of Derby was head
+ of the great house of Stanley.
+
+"My advices from England," said the Countess, "resemble more the
+dreams of a sick man, than the regular information which I might have
+expected from such correspondents as mine;--their expressions are like
+those of men who walk in their sleep, and speak by snatches of what
+passes in their dreams. It is said, a plot, real or fictitious, has
+been detected among the Catholics, which has spread far wider and more
+uncontrollable terror than that of the fifth of November. Its outlines
+seem utterly incredible, and are only supported by the evidence of
+wretches, the meanest and most worthless in the creation; yet it is
+received by the credulous people of England with the most undoubting
+belief."
+
+"This is a singular delusion, to rise without some real ground,"
+answered Julian.
+
+"I am no bigot, cousin, though a Catholic," replied the Countess. "I
+have long feared that the well-meant zeal of our priests for
+increasing converts, would draw on them the suspicion of the English
+nation. These efforts have been renewed with double energy since the
+Duke of York conformed to the Catholic faith; and the same event has
+doubled the hate and jealousy of the Protestants. So far, I fear,
+there may be just cause of suspicion, that the Duke is a better
+Catholic than an Englishman, and that bigotry has involved him, as
+avarice, or the needy greed of a prodigal, has engaged his brother, in
+relations with France, whereof England may have too much reason to
+complain. But the gross, thick, and palpable fabrications of
+conspiracy and murder, blood and fire--the imaginary armies--the
+intended massacres--form a collection of falsehoods, that one would
+have thought indigestible, even by the coarse appetite of the vulgar
+for the marvellous and horrible; but which are, nevertheless, received
+as truth by both Houses of Parliament, and questioned by no one who is
+desirous to escape the odious appellation of friend to the bloody
+Papists, and favourer of their infernal schemes of cruelty."
+
+"But what say those who are most likely to be affected by these wild
+reports?" said Julian. "What say the English Catholics themselves?--a
+numerous and wealthy body, comprising so many noble names?"
+
+"Their hearts are dead within them," said the Countess. "They are like
+sheep penned up in the shambles, that the butcher may take his choice
+among them. In the obscure and brief communications which I have had
+by a secure hand, they do but anticipate their own utter ruin, and
+ours--so general is the depression, so universal the despair."
+
+"But the King," said Peveril,--"the King and the Protestant Royalists
+--what say they to this growing tempest?"
+
+"Charles," replied the Countess, "with his usual selfish prudence,
+truckles to the storm; and will let cord and axe do their work on the
+most innocent men in his dominions, rather than lose an hour of
+pleasure in attempting their rescue. And, for the Royalists, either
+they have caught the general delirium which has seized on Protestants
+in general, or they stand aloof and neutral, afraid to show any
+interest in the unhappy Catholics, lest they be judged altogether such
+as themselves, and abettors of the fearful conspiracy in which they
+are alleged to be engaged. In fact, I cannot blame them. It is hard to
+expect that mere compassion for a persecuted sect--or, what is yet
+more rare, an abstract love of justice--should be powerful enough to
+engage men to expose themselves to the awakened fury of a whole
+people; for, in the present state of general agitation, whoever
+disbelieves the least tittle of the enormous improbabilities which
+have been accumulated by these wretched reformers, is instantly hunted
+down, as one who would smother the discovery of the Plot. It is indeed
+an awful tempest; and, remote as we lie from its sphere, we must
+expect soon to feel its effects."
+
+"Lord Derby already told me something of this," said Julian; "and that
+there were agents in this island whose object was to excite
+insurrection."
+
+"Yes," answered the Countess, and her eye flashed fire as she spoke;
+"and had my advice been listened to, they had been apprehended in the
+very fact; and so dealt with, as to be a warning to all others how
+they sought this independent principality on such an errand. But my
+son, who is generally so culpably negligent of his own affairs, was
+pleased to assume the management of them upon this crisis."
+
+"I am happy to learn, madam," answered Peveril, "that the measures of
+precaution which my kinsman has adopted, have had the complete effect
+of disconcerting the conspiracy."
+
+"For the present, Julian; but they should have been such as would have
+made the boldest tremble to think of such infringement of our rights
+in future. But Derby's present plan is fraught with greater danger;
+and yet there is something in it of gallantry, which has my sympathy."
+
+"What is it, madam?" inquired Julian anxiously; "and in what can I aid
+it, or avert its dangers?"
+
+"He purposes," said the Countess, "instantly to set forth for London.
+He is, he says, not merely the feudal chief of a small island, but one
+of the noble Peers of England, who must not remain in the security of
+an obscure and distant castle, when his name, or that of his mother,
+is slandered before his Prince and people. He will take his place, he
+says, in the House of Lords, and publicly demand justice for the
+insult thrown on his house, by perjured and interested witnesses."
+
+"It is a generous resolution, and worthy of my friend," said Julian
+Peveril. "I will go with him and share his fate, be it what it may."
+
+"Alas, foolish boy!" answered the Countess, "as well may you ask a
+hungry lion to feel compassion, as a prejudiced and furious people to
+do justice. They are like the madman at the height of frenzy, who
+murders without compunction his best and dearest friend; and only
+wonders and wails over his own cruelty, when he is recovered from his
+delirium."
+
+"Pardon me, dearest lady," said Julian, "this cannot be. The noble and
+generous people of England cannot be thus strangely misled. Whatever
+prepossessions may be current among the more vulgar, the House of
+Legislature cannot be deeply infected by them--they will remember
+their own dignity."
+
+"Alas! cousin," answered the Countess, "when did Englishmen, even of
+the highest degree, remember anything, when hurried away by the
+violence of party feeling? Even those who have too much sense to
+believe in the incredible fictions which gull the multitude, will
+beware how they expose them, if their own political party can gain a
+momentary advantage by their being accredited. It is amongst such,
+too, that your kinsman has found friends and associates. Neglecting
+the old friends of his house, as too grave and formal companions for
+the humour of the times, his intercourse has been with the versatile
+Shaftesbury--the mercurial Buckingham--men who would not hesitate to
+sacrifice to the popular Moloch of the day, whatsoever or whomsoever,
+whose ruin could propitiate the deity.--Forgive a mother's tears,
+kinsman; but I see the scaffold at Bolton again erected. If Derby goes
+to London while these bloodhounds are in full cry, obnoxious as he is,
+and I have made him by my religious faith, and my conduct in this
+island, he dies his father's death. And yet upon what other course to
+resolve!----"
+
+"Let me go to London, madam," said Peveril, much moved by the distress
+of his patroness; "your ladyship was wont to rely something on my
+judgment. I will act for the best--will communicate with those whom
+you point out to me, and only with them; and I trust soon to send you
+information that this delusion, however strong it may now be, is in
+the course of passing away; at the worst, I can apprise you of the
+danger, should it menace the Earl or yourself; and may be able also to
+point out the means by which it may be eluded."
+
+The Countess listened with a countenance in which the anxiety of
+maternal affection, which prompted her to embrace Peveril's generous
+offer, struggled with her native disinterested and generous
+disposition. "Think what you ask of me, Julian," she replied with a
+sigh. "Would you have me expose the life of my friend's son to those
+perils to which I refuse my own?--No, never!"
+
+"Nay, but madam," replied Julian, "I do not run the same risk--my
+person is not known in London--my situation, though not obscure in my
+own country, is too little known to be noticed in that huge assemblage
+of all that is noble and wealthy. No whisper, I presume, however
+indirect, has connected my name with the alleged conspiracy. I am a
+Protestant, above all; and can be accused of no intercourse, direct or
+indirect, with the Church of Rome. My connections also lie amongst
+those, who, if they do not, or cannot, befriend me, cannot, at least,
+be dangerous to me. In a word, I run no danger where the Earl might
+incur great peril."
+
+"Alas!" said the Countess of Derby, "all this generous reasoning may
+be true; but it could only be listened to by a widowed mother. Selfish
+as I am, I cannot but reflect that my kinswoman has, in all events,
+the support of an affectionate husband--such is the interested
+reasoning to which we are not ashamed to subject our better feelings."
+
+"Do not call it so, madam," answered Peveril; "think of me as the
+younger brother of my kinsman. You have ever done by me the duties of
+a mother; and have a right to my filial service, were it at a risk ten
+times greater than a journey to London, to inquire into the temper of
+the times. I will instantly go and announce my departure to the Earl."
+
+"Stay, Julian," said the Countess; "if you must make this journey in
+our behalf,--and, alas! I have not generosity enough to refuse your
+noble proffer,--you must go alone, and without communication with
+Derby. I know him well; his lightness of mind is free from selfish
+baseness; and for the world, would he not suffer you to leave Man
+without his company. And if he went with you, your noble and
+disinterested kindness would be of no avail--you would but share his
+ruin, as the swimmer who attempts to save a drowning man is involved
+in his fate, if he permit the sufferer to grapple with him."
+
+"It shall be as you please, madam," said Peveril. "I am ready to
+depart upon half-an-hour's notice."
+
+"This night, then," said the Countess, after a moment's pause--"this
+night I will arrange the most secret means of carrying your generous
+project into effect; for I would not excite that prejudice against
+you, which will instantly arise, were it known you had so lately left
+this island, and its Popish lady. You will do well, perhaps, to use a
+feigned name in London."
+
+"Pardon me, madam," said Julian; "I will do nothing that can draw on
+me unnecessary attention; but to bear a feigned name, or affect any
+disguise beyond living with extreme privacy, would, I think, be unwise
+as well as unworthy; and what, if challenged, I might find some
+difficulty in assigning a reason for, consistent with perfect fairness
+of intentions."
+
+"I believe you are right," answered the Countess, after a moment's
+consideration; and then added, "You propose, doubtless, to pass
+through Derbyshire, and visit Martindale Castle?"
+
+"I should wish it, madam, certainly," replied Peveril, "did time
+permit, and circumstances render it advisable."
+
+"Of that," said the Countess, "you must yourself judge. Despatch is,
+doubtless, desirable; on the other hand, arriving from your own
+family-seat, you will be less an object of doubt and suspicion, than
+if you posted up from hence, without even visiting your parents. You
+must be guided in this,--in all,--by your own prudence. Go, my dearest
+son--for to me you should be dear as a son--go, and prepare for your
+journey. I will get ready some despatches, and a supply of money--Nay,
+do not object. Am I not your mother; and are you not discharging a
+son's duty? Dispute not my right of defraying your expenses. Nor is
+this all; for, as I must trust your zeal and prudence to act in our
+behalf when occasion shall demand, I will furnish you with effectual
+recommendations to our friends and kindred, entreating and enjoining
+them to render whatever aid you may require, either for your own
+protection, or the advancement of what you may propose in our favour."
+
+Peveril made no farther opposition to an arrangement, which in truth
+the moderate state of his own finances rendered almost indispensable,
+unless with his father's assistance; and the Countess put into his
+hand bills of exchange to the amount of two hundred pounds, upon a
+merchant in the city. She then dismissed Julian for the space of an
+hour; after which, she said, she must again require his presence.
+
+The preparations for his journey were not of a nature to divert the
+thoughts which speedily pressed on him. He found that half-an-hour's
+conversation had once more completely changed his immediate prospects
+and plans for the future. He had offered to the Countess of Derby a
+service, which her uniform kindness had well deserved at his hand;
+but, by her accepting it, he was upon the point of being separated
+from Alice Bridgenorth, at a time when she was become dearer to him
+than ever, by her avowal of mutual passion. Her image rose before him,
+such as he had that day pressed her to his bosom--her voice was in his
+ear, and seemed to ask whether he could desert her in the crisis which
+everything seemed to announce as impending. But Julian Peveril, his
+youth considered, was strict in judging his duty, and severely
+resolved in executing it. He trusted not his imagination to pursue the
+vision which presented itself; but resolutely seizing his pen, wrote
+to Alice the following letter, explaining his situation, as far as
+justice to the Countess permitted him to do so:--
+
+
+ "I leave you, dearest Alice," thus ran the letter.--"I leave you;
+ and though, in doing so, I but obey the command you have laid on
+ me, yet I can claim little merit for my compliance, since, without
+ additional and most forcible reasons in aid of your orders, I fear
+ I should have been unable to comply with them. But family affairs
+ of importance compel me to absent myself from this island, for, I
+ fear, more than one week. My thoughts, hopes, and wishes will be
+ on the moment that shall restore me to the Black Fort, and its
+ lovely valley. Let me hope that yours will sometimes rest on the
+ lonely exile, whom nothing could render such, but the command of
+ honour and duty. Do not fear that I mean to involve you in a
+ private correspondence, and let not your father fear it. I could
+ not love you so much, but for the openness and candour of your
+ nature; and I would not that you concealed from Major Bridgenorth
+ one syllable of what I now avow. Respecting other matters, he
+ himself cannot desire the welfare of our common country with more
+ zeal than I do. Differences may occur concerning the mode in which
+ that is to be obtained; but, in the principle, I am convinced
+ there can be only one mind between us; nor can I refuse to listen
+ to his experience and wisdom, even where they may ultimately fail
+ to convince me. Farewell--Alice, farewell! Much might be added to
+ that melancholy word, but nothing that could express the
+ bitterness with which it is written. Yet I could transcribe it
+ again and again, rather than conclude the last communication which
+ I can have with you for some time. My sole comfort is, that my
+ stay will scarce be so long as to permit you to forget one who
+ never can forget you."
+
+
+He held the paper in his hand for a minute after he had folded, but
+before he had sealed it, while he hurriedly debated in his own mind
+whether he had not expressed himself towards Major Bridgenorth in so
+conciliating a manner as might excite hopes of proselytism, which his
+conscience told him he could not realise with honour. Yet, on the
+other hand, he had no right, from what Bridgenorth had said, to
+conclude that their principles were diametrically irreconcilable; for
+though the son of a high Cavalier, and educated in the family of the
+Countess of Derby, he was himself, upon principle, an enemy of
+prerogative, and a friend to the liberty of the subject. And with such
+considerations, he silenced all internal objections on the point of
+honour; although his conscience secretly whispered that these
+conciliatory expressions towards the father were chiefly dictated by
+the fear, that during his absence Major Bridgenorth might be tempted
+to change the residence of his daughter, and perhaps to convey her
+altogether out of his reach.
+
+Having sealed his letter, Julian called his servant, and directed him
+to carry it under cover of one addressed to Mrs. Debbitch, to a house
+in the town of Rushin, where packets and messages intended for the
+family at Black Fort were usually deposited; and for that purpose to
+take horse immediately. He thus got rid of an attendant, who might
+have been in some degree a spy on his motions. He then exchanged the
+dress he usually wore for one more suited to travelling; and, having
+put a change or two of linen into a small cloak-bag, selected as arms
+a strong double-edged sword and an excellent pair of pistols, which
+last he carefully loaded with double bullets. Thus appointed, and with
+twenty pieces in his purse, and the bills we have mentioned secured in
+a private pocket-book, he was in readiness to depart as soon as he
+should receive the Countess's commands.
+
+The buoyant spirit of youth and hope, which had, for a moment, been
+chilled by the painful and dubious circumstances in which he was
+placed, as well as the deprivation which he was about to undergo, now
+revived in full vigour. Fancy, turning from more painful
+anticipations, suggested to him that he was now entering upon life, at
+a crisis when resolution and talents were almost certain to make the
+fortune of their possessor. How could he make a more honourable entry
+on the bustling scene, than sent by, and acting in behalf of, one of
+the noblest houses in England; and should he perform what his charge
+might render incumbent with the resolution and the prudence necessary
+to secure success, how many occurrences might take place to render his
+mediation necessary to Bridgenorth; and thus enable him, on the most
+equal and honourable terms, to establish a claim to his gratitude and
+to his daughter's hand.
+
+Whilst he was dwelling on such pleasing, though imaginary prospects,
+he could not help exclaiming aloud--"Yes, Alice, I will win thee
+nobly!" The words had scarce escaped his lips, when he heard at the
+door of his apartment, which the servant had left ajar, a sound like a
+deep sigh, which was instantly succeeded by a gentle tap--"Come in,"
+replied Julian, somewhat ashamed of his exclamation, and not a little
+afraid that it had been caught up by some eavesdropper--"Come in," he
+again repeated; but his command was not obeyed; on the contrary, the
+knock was repeated somewhat louder. He opened the door, and Fenella
+stood before him.
+
+With eyes that seemed red with recent tears, and with a look of the
+deepest dejection, the little mute, first touching her bosom, and
+beckoning with her finger, made to him the usual sign that the
+Countess desired to see him--then turned, as if to usher him to her
+apartment. As he followed her through the long gloomy vaulted passages
+which afforded communication betwixt the various apartments of the
+castle, he could not but observe that her usual light trip was
+exchanged for a tardy and mournful step, which she accompanied with
+low inarticulate moaning (which she was probably the less able to
+suppress, because she could not judge how far it was audible), and
+also with wringing of the hands, and other marks of extreme
+affliction.
+
+At this moment a thought came across Peveril's mind, which, in spite
+of his better reason, made him shudder involuntarily. As a Peaksman,
+and a long resident in the Isle of Man, he was well acquainted with
+many a superstitious legend, and particularly with a belief, which
+attached to the powerful family of the Stanleys, for their peculiar
+demon, a Banshie, or female spirit, who was wont to shriek "foreboding
+evil times;" and who was generally seen weeping and bemoaning herself
+before the death of any person of distinction belonging to the family.
+For an instant, Julian could scarcely divest himself of the belief
+that the wailing, jibbering form, which glided before him, with a lamp
+in her hand, was a genius of his mother's race, come to announce to
+him as an analogous reflection, that if the suspicion which had
+crossed his mind concerning Fenella was a just one, her ill-fated
+attachment to him, like that of the prophetic spirit to his family,
+could bode nothing but disaster, and lamentation, and woe.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+ Now, hoist the anchor, mates--and let the sails
+ Give their broad bosom to the buxom wind,
+ Like lass that woos a lover.
+ --ANONYMOUS.
+
+The presence of the Countess dispelled the superstitious feeling,
+which, for an instant, had encroached on Julian's imagination, and
+compelled him to give attention to the matters of ordinary life. "Here
+are your credentials," she said, giving him a small packet, carefully
+packed up in a sealskin cover; "you had better not open them till you
+come to London. You must not be surprised to find that there are one
+or two addressed to men of my own persuasion. These, for all our
+sakes, you will observe caution in delivering."
+
+"I go your messenger, madam," said Peveril; "and whatever you desire
+me to charge myself with, of that I undertake the care. Yet allow me
+to doubt whether an intercourse with Catholics will at this moment
+forward the purposes of my mission."
+
+"You have caught the general suspicion of this wicked sect already,"
+said the Countess, smiling, "and are the fitter to go amongst
+Englishmen in their present mood. But, my cautious friend, these
+letters are so addressed, and the persons to whom they are addressed
+so disguised, that you will run no danger in conversing with them.
+Without their aid, indeed, you will not be able to obtain the accurate
+information you go in search of. None can tell so exactly how the wind
+sets, as the pilot whose vessel is exposed to the storm. Besides,
+though you Protestants deny our priesthood the harmlessness of the
+dove, you are ready enough to allow us a full share of the wisdom of
+the serpent; in plain terms, their means of information are extensive,
+and they are not deficient in the power of applying it. I therefore
+wish you to have the benefit of their intelligence and advice, if
+possible."
+
+"Whatever you impose upon me as a part of my duty, madam, rely on its
+being discharged punctually," answered Peveril. "And, now, as there is
+little use in deferring the execution of a purpose when once fixed,
+let me know your ladyship's wishes concerning my departure."
+
+"It must be sudden and secret," said the Countess; "the island is full
+of spies; and I would not wish that any of them should have notice
+that an envoy of mine was about to leave Man for London. Can you be
+ready to go on board to-morrow?"
+
+"To-night--this instant if you will," said Julian,--"my little
+preparations are complete."
+
+"Be ready, then, in your chamber, at two hours after midnight. I will
+send one to summon you, for our secret must be communicated, for the
+present, to as few as possible. A foreign sloop is engaged to carry
+you over; then make the best of your way to London, by Martindale
+Castle, or otherwise, as you find most advisable. When it is necessary
+to announce your absence, I will say you are gone to see your parents.
+But stay--your journey will be on horseback, of course, from
+Whitehaven. You have bills of exchange, it is true; but are you
+provided with ready money to furnish yourself with a good horse?"
+
+"I am sufficiently rich, madam," answered Julian; "and good nags are
+plenty in Cumberland. There are those among them who know how to come
+by them good and cheap."
+
+"Trust not to that," said the Countess. "Here is what will purchase
+for you the best horse on the Borders.--Can you be simple enough to
+refuse it?" she added, as she pressed on him a heavy purse, which he
+saw himself obliged to accept.
+
+"A good horse, Julian," continued the Countess, "and a good sword,
+next to a good heart and head, are the accomplishments of a cavalier."
+
+"I kiss your hands, then, madam," said Peveril, "and humbly beg you to
+believe, that whatever may fail in my present undertaking, my purpose
+to serve you, my noble kinswoman and benefactress, can at least never
+swerve or falter."
+
+"I know it, my son, I know it; and may God forgive me if my anxiety
+for your friend has sent you on dangers which should have been his!
+Go--go--May saints and angels bless you! Fenella shall acquaint him
+that you sup in your own apartment. So indeed will I; for to-night I
+should be unable to face my son's looks. Little will he thank me for
+sending you on his errand; and there will be many to ask, whether it
+was like the Lady of Latham to trust her friend's son on the danger
+which should have been braved by her own. But oh! Julian, I am now a
+forlorn widow, whom sorrow has made selfish!"
+
+"Tush, madam," answered Peveril; "it is more unlike the Lady of Latham
+to anticipate dangers which may not exist at all, and to which, if
+they do indeed occur, I am less obnoxious than my noble kinsman.
+Farewell!--All blessings attend you, madam. Commend me to Derby, and
+make him my excuses. I shall expect a summons at two hours after
+midnight."
+
+They took an affectionate leave of each other; the more affectionate,
+indeed, on the part of the Countess, that she could not entirely
+reconcile her generous mind to exposing Peveril to danger on her son's
+behalf; and Julian betook himself to his solitary apartment.
+
+His servant soon afterwards brought him wine and refreshments; to
+which, notwithstanding the various matters he had to occupy his mind,
+he contrived to do reasonable justice. But when this needful
+occupation was finished, his thoughts began to stream in upon him like
+a troubled tide--at once recalling the past, and anticipating the
+future. It was in vain that he wrapped himself in his riding cloak,
+and, lying down on his bed, endeavoured to compose himself to sleep.
+The uncertainty of the prospect before him--the doubt how Bridgenorth
+might dispose of his daughter during his absence--the fear that the
+Major himself might fall into the power of the vindictive Countess,
+besides a numerous train of vague and half-formed apprehensions,
+agitated his blood, and rendered slumber impossible. Alternately to
+recline in the old oaken easy-chair, and listen to the dashing of the
+waves under the windows, mingled, as the sound was, with the scream of
+the sea-birds; or traverse the apartment with long and slow steps,
+pausing occasionally to look out on the sea, slumbering under the
+influence of a full moon, which tipped each wave with silver--such
+were the only pastimes he could invent, until midnight had passed for
+one hour; the next was wasted in anxious expectation of the summons of
+departure.
+
+At length it arrived--a tap at his door was followed by a low murmur,
+which made him suspect that the Countess had again employed her mute
+attendant as the most secure minister of her pleasure on this
+occasion. He felt something like impropriety in this selection; and it
+was with a feeling of impatience alien to the natural generosity of
+his temper, that, when he opened the door, he beheld the dumb maiden
+standing before him. The lamp which he held in his hand showed his
+features distinctly, and probably made Fenella aware of the expression
+which animated them. She cast her large dark eyes mournfully on the
+ground; and, without again looking him in the face, made him a signal
+to follow her. He delayed no longer than was necessary to secure his
+pistols in his belt, wrap his cloak closer around him, and take his
+small portmanteau under his arm. Thus accoutred, he followed her out
+of the Keep, or inhabited part of the Castle, by a series of obscure
+passages leading to a postern gate, which she unlocked with a key,
+selected from a bundle which she carried at her girdle.
+
+They now stood in the castle-yard, in the open moonlight, which
+glimmered white and ghastly on the variety of strange and ruinous
+objects to which we have formerly alluded, and which gave the scene
+rather the appearance of some ancient cemetery, than of the interior
+of a fortification. The round and elevated tower--the ancient mount,
+with its quadrangular sides facing the ruinous edifices which once
+boasted the name of Cathedral--seemed of yet more antique and
+anomalous form, when seen by the pale light which now displayed them.
+To one of these churches Fenella took the direct course, and was
+followed by Julian; although he at once divined, and was superstitious
+enough to dislike, the path which she was about to adopt. It was by a
+secret passage through this church that in former times the guard-room
+of the garrison, situated at the lower and external defences,
+communicated with the Keep of the Castle; and through this passage
+were the keys of the Castle every night carried to the Governor's
+apartment, so soon as the gates were locked, and the watch set. The
+custom was given up in James the First's time, and the passage
+abandoned, on account of the well-known legend of the /Mauthe Dog/--a
+fiend, or demon, in the shape of a large, shaggy, black mastiff, by
+which the church was said to be haunted. It was devoutly believed,
+that in former times this spectre became so familiar with mankind, as
+to appear nightly in the guard-room, issuing from the passage which we
+have mentioned at night, and retiring to it at daybreak. The soldiers
+became partly familiarised to its presence; yet not so much so as to
+use any licence of language while the apparition was visible; until
+one fellow, rendered daring by intoxication, swore he would know
+whether it was dog or devil, and, with his drawn sword, followed the
+spectre when it retreated by the usual passage. The man returned in a
+few minutes, sobered by terror, his mouth gaping, and his hair
+standing on end, under which horror he died; but, unhappily for the
+lovers of the marvellous, altogether unable to disclose the horrors
+which he had seen. Under the evil repute arising from this tale of
+wonder, the guard-room was abandoned, and a new one constructed. In
+like manner, the guards after that period held another and more
+circuitous communication with the Governor or Seneschal of the Castle;
+and that which lay through the ruinous church was entirely abandoned.
+
+In defiance of the legendary terrors which tradition had attached to
+the original communication, Fenella, followed by Peveril, now boldly
+traversed the ruinous vaults through which it lay--sometimes only
+guided over heaps of ruins by the precarious light of the lamp borne
+by the dumb maiden--sometimes having the advantage of a gleam of
+moonlight, darting into the dreary abyss through the shafted windows,
+or through breaches made by time. As the path was by no means a
+straight one, Peveril could not but admire the intimate acquaintance
+with the mazes which his singular companion displayed, as well as the
+boldness with which she traversed them. He himself was not so utterly
+void of the prejudices of the times, but that he contemplated, with
+some apprehension, the possibility of their intruding on the lair of
+the phantom hound, of which he had heard so often; and in every remote
+sight of the breeze among the ruins, he thought he heard him baying at
+the mortal footsteps which disturbed his gloomy realm. No such
+terrors, however, interrupted their journey; and in the course of a
+few minutes, they attained the deserted and now ruinous guard-house.
+The broken walls of the little edifice served to conceal them from the
+sentinels, one of whom was keeping a drowsy watch at the lower gate of
+the Castle; whilst another, seated on the stone steps which
+communicated with the parapet of the bounding and exterior wall, was
+slumbering, in full security, with his musket peacefully grounded by
+his side. Fenella made a sign to Peveril to move with silence and
+caution, and then showed him, to his surprise, from the window of the
+deserted guard-room, a boat, for it was now high water, with four
+rowers, lurking under the cliff on which the castle was built; and
+made him farther sensible that he was to have access to it by a ladder
+of considerable height placed at the window of the ruin.
+
+Julian was both displeased and alarmed by the security and
+carelessness of the sentinels, who had suffered such preparations to
+be made without observation or alarm given; and he hesitated whether
+he should not call the officer of the guard, upbraid him with
+negligence, and show him how easily Holm-Peel, in spite of its natural
+strength, and although reported impregnable, might be surprised by a
+few resolute men. Fenella seemed to guess his thoughts with that
+extreme acuteness of observation which her deprivations had occasioned
+her acquiring. She laid one hand on his arm, and a finger of the other
+on her own lips, as if to enjoin forbearance; and Julian, knowing that
+she acted by the direct authority of the Countess, obeyed her
+accordingly; but with the internal resolution to lose no time in
+communicating his sentiments to the Earl, concerning the danger to
+which the Castle was exposed on this point.
+
+In the meantime, he descended the ladder with some precaution, for the
+steps were unequal, broken, wet, and slippery; and having placed
+himself in the stern of the boat, made a signal to the men to push
+off, and turned to take farewell of his guide. To his utter
+astonishment, Fenella rather slid down, than descended regularly, the
+perilous ladder, and, the boat being already pushed off, made a spring
+from the last step of it with incredible agility, and seated herself
+beside Peveril, ere he could express either remonstrance or surprise.
+He commanded the men once more to pull in to the precarious landing-
+place; and throwing into his countenance a part of the displeasure
+which he really felt, endeavoured to make her comprehend the necessity
+of returning to her mistress. Fenella folded her arms, and looked at
+him with a haughty smile, which completely expressed the determination
+of her purpose. Peveril was extremely embarrassed; he was afraid of
+offending the Countess, and interfering with her plan, by giving
+alarm, which otherwise he was much tempted to have done. On Fenella,
+it was evident, no species of argument which he could employ was
+likely to make the least impression; and the question remained, how,
+if she went on with him, he was to rid himself of so singular and
+inconvenient a companion, and provide, at the same time, sufficiently
+for her personal security.
+
+The boatmen brought the matter to a decision; for, after lying on
+their oars for a minute, and whispering among themselves in Low Dutch
+or German, they began to pull stoutly, and were soon at some distance
+from the Castle. The possibility of the sentinels sending a musket-
+ball, or even a cannon-shot, after them, was one of the contingencies
+which gave Peveril momentary anxiety; but they left the fortress, as
+they must have approached it, unnoticed, or at least unchallenged--a
+carelessness on the part of the garrison, which, notwithstanding that
+the oars were muffled, and that the men spoke little, and in whispers,
+argued, in Peveril's opinion, great negligence on the part of the
+sentinels. When they were a little way from the Castle, the men began
+to row briskly towards a small vessel which lay at some distance.
+Peveril had, in the meantime, leisure to remark, that the boatmen
+spoke to each other doubtfully, and bent anxious looks on Fenella, as
+if uncertain whether they had acted properly in bringing her off.
+
+After about a quarter of an hour's rowing, they reached the little
+sloop, where Peveril was received by the skipper, or captain, on the
+quarter-deck, with an offer of spirits or refreshments. A word or two
+among the seamen withdrew the captain from his hospitable cares, and
+he flew to the ship's side, apparently to prevent Fenella from
+entering the vessel. The men and he talked eagerly in Dutch, looking
+anxiously at Fenella as they spoke together; and Peveril hoped the
+result would be, that the poor woman should be sent ashore again. But
+she baffled whatever opposition could be offered to her; and when the
+accommodation-ladder, as it is called, was withdrawn, she snatched the
+end of a rope, and climbed on board with the dexterity of a sailor,
+leaving them no means of preventing her entrance, save by actual
+violence, to which apparently they did not choose to have recourse.
+Once on deck, she took the captain by the sleeve, and led him to the
+head of the vessel, where they seemed to hold intercourse in a manner
+intelligible to both.
+
+Peveril soon forgot the presence of the mute, as he began to muse upon
+his own situation, and the probability that he was separated for some
+considerable time from the object of his affections. "Constancy," he
+repeated to himself,--"Constancy." And, as if in coincidence with the
+theme of his reflections, he fixed his eyes on the polar star, which
+that night twinkled with more than ordinary brilliancy. Emblem of pure
+passion and steady purpose--the thoughts which arose as he viewed its
+clear and unchanging light, were disinterested and noble. To seek his
+country's welfare, and secure the blessings of domestic peace--to
+discharge a bold and perilous duty to his friend and patron--to regard
+his passion for Alice Bridgenorth, as the loadstar which was to guide
+him to noble deeds--were the resolutions which thronged upon his mind,
+and which exalted his spirits to that state of romantic melancholy,
+which perhaps is ill exchanged even for feelings of joyful rapture.
+
+He was recalled from those contemplations by something which nestled
+itself softly and closely to his side--a woman's sigh sounded so near
+him, as to disturb his reverie; and as he turned his head, he saw
+Fenella seated beside him, with her eyes fixed on the same star which
+had just occupied his own. His first emotion was that of displeasure;
+but it was impossible to persevere in it towards a being so helpless
+in many respects, so interesting in others; whose large dark eyes were
+filled with dew, which glistened in the moonlight; and the source of
+whose emotions seemed to be in a partiality which might well claim
+indulgence, at least from him who was the object of it. At the same
+time, Julian resolved to seize the present opportunity, for such
+expostulations with Fenella on the strangeness of her conduct, as the
+poor maiden might be able to comprehend. He took her hand with great
+kindness, but at the same time with much gravity, pointed to the boat,
+and to the Castle, whose towers and extended walls were now scarce
+visible in the distance; and thus intimated to her the necessity of
+her return to Holm-Peel. She looked down, and shook her head, as if
+negativing his proposal with obstinate decision. Julian renewed his
+expostulation by look and gesture--pointed to his own heart, to
+intimate the Countess--and bent his brows, to show the displeasure
+which she must entertain. To all which the maiden only answered by her
+tears.
+
+At length, as if driven to explanation by his continued remonstrances,
+she suddenly seized him by the arm, to arrest his attention--cast her
+eye hastily around, as if to see whether she was watched by any one--
+then drew the other hand, edge-wise, across her slender throat--
+pointed to the boat, and to the Castle, and nodded.
+
+On this series of signs, Peveril could put no interpretation,
+excepting that he was menaced with some personal danger, from which
+Fenella seemed to conceive that her presence was a protection.
+Whatever was her meaning, her purpose seemed unalterably adopted; at
+least it was plain he had no power to shake it. He must therefore wait
+till the end of their short voyage, to disembarrass himself of his
+companion; and, in the meanwhile, acting on the idea of her having
+harboured a misplaced attachment to him, he thought he should best
+consult her interest, and his own character, in keeping at as great a
+distance from her as circumstances admitted. With this purpose, he
+made the sign she used for going to sleep, by leaning his head on his
+palm; and having thus recommended to her to go to rest, he himself
+desired to be conducted to his berth.
+
+The captain readily showed him a hammock, in the after-cabin, into
+which he threw himself, to seek that repose which the exercise and
+agitation of the preceding day, as well as the lateness of the hour,
+made him now feel desirable. Sleep, deep and heavy, sunk down on him
+in a few minutes, but it did not endure long. In his sleep he was
+disturbed by female cries; and at length, as he thought, distinctly
+heard the voice of Alice Bridgenorth call on his name.
+
+He awoke, and starting up to quit his bed, became sensible, from the
+motion of the vessel, and the swinging of the hammock, that his dream
+had deceived him. He was still startled by its extreme vivacity and
+liveliness. "Julian Peveril, help! Julian Peveril!" The sounds still
+rung in his ears--the accents were those of Alice--and he could scarce
+persuade himself that his imagination had deceived him. Could she be
+in the same vessel? The thought was not altogether inconsistent with
+her father's character, and the intrigues in which he was engaged; but
+then, if so, to what peril was she exposed, that she invoked his name
+so loudly?
+
+Determined to make instant inquiry, he jumped out of his hammock,
+half-dressed as he was, and stumbling about the little cabin, which
+was as dark as pitch, at length, with considerable difficulty, reached
+the door. The door, however, he was altogether unable to open; and was
+obliged to call loudly to the watch upon deck. The skipper, or
+captain, as he was called, being the only person aboard who could
+speak English, answered to the summons, and replied to Peveril's
+demand, what noise that was?--that a boat was going off with the young
+woman--that she whimpered a little as she left the vessel--and "dat
+vaas all."
+
+His dream was thus fully explained. Fancy had caught up the
+inarticulate and vehement cries with which Fenella was wont to express
+resistance or displeasure--had coined them into language, and given
+them the accents of Alice Bridgenorth. Our imagination plays wilder
+tricks with us almost every night.
+
+The captain now undid the door, and appeared with a lantern; without
+the aid of which Peveril could scarce have regained his couch, where
+he now slumbered secure and sound, until day was far advanced, and the
+invitation of the captain called him up to breakfast.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+ Now, what is this that haunts me like my shadow,
+ Frisking and mumming like an elf in moonlight!
+ --BEN JONSON.
+
+Peveril found the master of the vessel rather less rude than those in
+his station of life usually are, and received from him full
+satisfaction concerning the fate of Fenella, upon whom the captain
+bestowed a hearty curse, for obliging him to lay-to until he had sent
+his boat ashore, and had her back again.
+
+"I hope," said Peveril, "no violence was necessary to reconcile her to
+go ashore? I trust she offered no foolish resistance?"
+
+"Resist! mein Gott," said the captain, "she did resist like a troop of
+horse--she did cry, you might hear her at Whitehaven--she did go up
+the rigging like a cat up a chimney; but dat vas ein trick of her old
+trade."
+
+"What trade do you mean?" said Peveril.
+
+"Oh," said the seaman, "I vas know more about her than you, Meinheer.
+I vas know that she vas a little, very little girl, and prentice to
+one seiltanzer, when my lady yonder had the good luck to buy her."
+
+"A seiltanzer!" said Peveril; "what do you mean by that?"
+
+"I mean a rope-danzer, a mountebank, a Hans pickel-harring. I vas know
+Adrian Brackel vell--he sell de powders dat empty men's stomach, and
+fill him's own purse. Not know Adrian Brackel, mein Gott! I have
+smoked many a pound of tabak with him."
+
+Peveril now remembered that Fenella had been brought into the family
+when he and the young Earl were in England, and while the Countess was
+absent on an expedition to the continent. Where the Countess found
+her, she never communicated to the young men; but only intimated, that
+she had received her out of compassion, in order to relieve her from a
+situation of extreme distress.
+
+He hinted so much to the communicative seaman, who replied, "that for
+distress he knew nocht's on't; only, that Adrian Brackel beat her when
+she would not dance on the rope, and starved her when she did, to
+prevent her growth." The bargain between the countess and the
+mountebank, he said, he had made himself; because the Countess had
+hired his brig upon her expedition to the continent. None else knew
+where she came from. The Countess had seen her on a public stage at
+Ostend--compassionated her helpless situation, and the severe
+treatment she received--and had employed him to purchase the poor
+creature from her master, and charged him with silence towards all her
+retinue.--"And so I do keep silence," continued the faithful
+confidant, "van I am in the havens of Man; but when I am on the broad
+seas, den my tongue is mine own, you know. Die foolish beoples in the
+island, they say she is a wechsel-balg--what you call a fairy-elf
+changeling. My faith, they do not never have seen ein wechsel-balg;
+for I saw one myself at Cologne, and it was twice as big as yonder
+girl, and did break the poor people, with eating them up, like de
+great big cuckoo in the sparrow's nest; but this Venella eat no more
+than other girls--it was no wechsel-balg in the world."
+
+By a different train of reasoning, Julian had arrived at the same
+conclusion; in which, therefore, he heartily acquiesced. During the
+seaman's prosing, he was reflecting within himself, how much of the
+singular flexibility of her limbs and movements the unfortunate girl
+must have derived from the discipline and instructions of Adrian
+Brackel; and also how far the germs of her wilful and capricious
+passions might have been sown during her wandering and adventurous
+childhood. Aristocratic, also, as his education had been, these
+anecdotes respecting Fenella's original situation and education,
+rather increased his pleasure of having shaken off her company; and
+yet he still felt desirous to know any farther particulars which the
+seaman could communicate on the same subject. But he had already told
+all he knew. Of her parents he knew nothing, except that "her father
+must have been a damned hundsfoot, and a schelm, for selling his own
+flesh and blood to Adrian Brackel;" for by such a transaction had the
+mountebank become possessed of his pupil.
+
+This conversation tended to remove any passing doubts which might have
+crept on Peveril's mind concerning the fidelity of the master of the
+vessel, who appeared from thence to have been a former acquaintance of
+the Countess, and to have enjoyed some share of her confidence. The
+threatening motion used by Fenella, he no longer considered as worthy
+of any notice, excepting as a new mark of the irritability of her
+temper.
+
+He amused himself with walking the deck, and musing on his past and
+future prospects, until his attention was forcibly arrested by the
+wind, which began to rise in gusts from the north-west, in a manner so
+unfavourable to the course they intended to hold, that the master,
+after many efforts to beat against it, declared his bark, which was by
+no means an excellent sea-boat, was unequal to making Whitehaven; and
+that he was compelled to make a fair wind of it, and run for
+Liverpool. To this course Peveril did not object. It saved him some
+land journey, in case he visited his father's castle; and the
+Countess's commission would be discharged as effectually the one way
+as the other.
+
+The vessel was put, accordingly, before the wind, and ran with great
+steadiness and velocity. The captain, notwithstanding, pleading some
+nautical hazards, chose to lie off, and did not attempt the mouth of
+the Mersey until morning, when Peveril had at length the satisfaction
+of being landed upon the quay of Liverpool, which even then showed
+symptoms of the commercial prosperity that has since been carried
+to such a height.
+
+The master, who was well acquainted with the port, pointed out to
+Julian a decent place of entertainment, chiefly frequented by
+seafaring people; for, although he had been in the town formerly, he
+did not think it proper to go anywhere at present where he might have
+been unnecessarily recognised. Here he took leave of the seaman, after
+pressing upon him with difficulty a small present for his crew. As for
+his passage, the captain declined any recompense whatever; and they
+parted upon the most civil terms.
+
+The inn to which he was recommended was full of strangers, seamen, and
+mercantile people, all intent upon their own affairs, and discussing
+them with noise and eagerness, peculiar to the business of a thriving
+seaport. But although the general clamour of the public room, in which
+the guests mixed with each other, related chiefly to their own
+commercial dealings, there was a general theme mingling with them,
+which was alike common and interesting to all; so that, amidst
+disputes about freight, tonnage, demurrage, and such like, were heard
+the emphatic sounds of "Deep, damnable, accursed plot,"--"Bloody
+Papist villains,"--"The King in danger--the gallows too good for
+them," and so forth.
+
+The fermentation excited in London had plainly reached even this
+remote seaport, and was received by the inhabitants with the peculiar
+stormy energy which invests men in their situation with the character
+of the winds and waves with which they are chiefly conversant. The
+commercial and nautical interests of England were indeed particularly
+anti-Catholic; although it is not, perhaps, easy to give any distinct
+reason why they should be so, since theological disputes in general
+could scarce be considered as interesting to them. But zeal, amongst
+the lower orders at least, is often in an inverse ratio to knowledge;
+and sailors were not probably the less earnest and devoted
+Protestants, that they did not understand the controversy between the
+Churches. As for the merchants, they were almost necessarily inimical
+to the gentry of Lancashire and Cheshire; many of whom still retained
+the faith of Rome, which was rendered ten times more odious to the men
+of commerce, as the badge of their haughty aristocratic neighbours.
+
+From the little which Peveril heard of the sentiments of the people of
+Liverpool, he imagined he should act most prudently in leaving the
+place as soon as possible, and before any suspicion should arise of
+his having any connection with the party which appeared to have become
+so obnoxious.
+
+In order to accomplish his journey, it was first necessary that he
+should purchase a horse; and for this purpose he resolved to have
+recourse to the stables of a dealer well known at the time, and who
+dwelt in the outskirts of the place; and having obtained directions to
+his dwelling, he went thither to provide himself.
+
+Joe Bridlesley's stables exhibited a large choice of good horses; for
+that trade was in former days more active than at present. It was an
+ordinary thing for a stranger to buy a horse for the purpose of a
+single journey, and to sell him, as well as he could, when he had
+reached the point of his destination; and hence there was a constant
+demand, and a corresponding supply; upon both of which, Bridlesley,
+and those of his trade, contrived, doubtless, to make handsome
+profits.
+
+Julian, who was no despicable horse-jockey, selected for his purpose a
+strong well-made horse, about sixteen hands high, and had him led into
+the yard, to see whether the paces corresponded with his appearance.
+As these also gave perfect satisfaction to the customer, it remained
+only to settle the price with Bridlesley; who of course swore his
+customer had pitched upon the best horse ever darkened the stable-
+door, since he had dealt that way; that no such horses were to be had
+nowadays, for that the mares were dead that foaled them; and having
+named a corresponding price, the usual haggling commenced betwixt the
+seller and purchaser, for adjustment of what the French dealers call
+/le prix juste/.
+
+The reader, if he be at all acquainted with this sort of traffic, well
+knows it is generally a keen encounter of wits, and attracts the
+notice of all the idlers within hearing, who are usually very ready to
+offer their opinions, or their evidence. Amongst these, upon the
+present occasion, was a thin man, rather less than the ordinary size,
+and meanly dressed; but whose interference was in a confident tone,
+and such as showed himself master of the subject on which he spoke.
+The price of the horse being settled to about fifteen pounds, which
+was very high for the period, that of the saddle and bridle had next
+to be adjusted, and the thin mean-looking person before-mentioned,
+found nearly as much to say on this subject as on the other. As his
+remarks had a conciliating and obliging tendency towards the stranger,
+Peveril concluded he was one of those idle persons, who, unable or
+unwilling to supply themselves with the means of indulgence at their
+own cost, do not scruple to deserve them at the hands of others, by a
+little officious complaisance; and considering that he might acquire
+some useful information from such a person, was just about to offer
+him the courtesy of a morning draught, when he observed he had
+suddenly left the yard. He had scarce remarked this circumstance,
+before a party of customers entered the place, whose haughty
+assumption of importance claimed the instant attention of Bridlesley,
+and all his militia of grooms and stable-boys.
+
+"Three good horses," said the leader of the party, a tall bulky man,
+whose breath was drawn full and high, under a consciousness of fat,
+and of importance--"three good and able-bodied horses, for the service
+of the Commons of England."
+
+Bridlesley said he had some horses which might serve the Speaker
+himself at need; but that, to speak Christian truth, he had just sold
+the best in his stable to that gentleman present, who, doubtless,
+would give up the bargain if the horse was needed for the service of
+the State.
+
+"You speak well, friend," said the important personage; and advancing
+to Julian, demanded, in a very haughty tone, the surrender of the
+purchase which he had just made.
+
+Peveril, with some difficulty, subdued the strong desire which he felt
+to return a round refusal to so unreasonable a request, but
+fortunately, recollecting that the situation in which he at present
+stood, required, on his part, much circumspection, he replied simply,
+that upon showing him any warrant to seize upon horses for the public
+service, he must of course submit to resign his purchase.
+
+The man, with an air of extreme dignity, pulled from his pocket, and
+thrust into Peveril's hand, a warrant, subscribed by the Speaker of
+the House of Commons, empowering Charles Topham, their officer of the
+Black Rod, to pursue and seize upon the persons of certain individuals
+named in the warrant; and of all other persons who are, or should be,
+accused by competent witnesses, of being accessory to, or favourers
+of, the hellish and damnable Popish Plot, at present carried on within
+the bowels of the kingdom; and charging all men, as they loved their
+allegiance, to render the said Charles Topham their readiest and most
+effective assistance, in execution of the duty entrusted to his care.
+
+On perusing a document of such weighty import, Julian had no
+hesitation to give up his horse to this formidable functionary; whom
+somebody compared to a lion, which, as the House of Commons was
+pleased to maintain such an animal, they were under the necessity of
+providing for by frequent commitments; until "/Take him, Topham/,"
+became a proverb, and a formidable one, in the mouth of the public.
+
+The acquiescence of Peveril procured him some grace in the sight of
+the emissary; who, before selecting two horses for his attendants,
+gave permission to the stranger to purchase a grey horse, much
+inferior, indeed, to that which he had resigned, both in form and in
+action, but very little lower in price, as Mr. Bridlesley, immediately
+on learning the demand for horses upon the part of the Commons of
+England, had passed a private resolution in his own mind, augmenting
+the price of his whole stud, by an imposition of at least twenty per
+cent., /ad valorem/.
+
+Peveril adjusted and paid the price with much less argument than on
+the former occasion; for, to be plain with the reader, he had noticed
+in the warrant of Mr. Topham, the name of his father, Sir Geoffrey
+Peveril of Martindale Castle, engrossed at full length, as one of
+those subjected to arrest by that officer.
+
+When aware of this material fact, it became Julian's business to leave
+Liverpool directly, and carry the alarm to Derbyshire, if, indeed, Mr.
+Topham had not already executed his charge in that county, which he
+thought unlikely, as it was probable they would commence by securing
+those who lived nearest to the seaports. A word or two which he
+overheard strengthened his hopes.
+
+"And hark ye, friend," said Mr. Topham; "you will have the horses at
+the door of Mr. Shortell, the mercer, in two hours, as we shall
+refresh ourselves there with a cool tankard, and learn what folks live
+in the neighbourhood that may be concerned in my way. And you will
+please to have that saddle padded, for I am told the Derbyshire roads
+are rough.--And you, Captain Dangerfield, and Master Everett, you must
+put on your Protestant spectacles, and show me where there is the
+shadow of a priest, or of a priest's favourer; for I am come down with
+a broom in my cap to sweep this north country of such like cattle."
+
+One of the persons he thus addressed, who wore the garb of a broken-
+down citizen, only answered, "Ay, truly, Master Topham, it is time to
+purge the garner."
+
+The other, who had a formidable pair of whiskers, a red nose, and a
+tarnished laced coat, together with a hat of Pistol's dimensions, was
+more loquacious. "I take it on my damnation," said this zealous
+Protestant witness, "that I will discover the marks of the beast on
+every one of them betwixt sixteen and seventy, as plainly as if they
+had crossed themselves with ink, instead of holy water. Since we have
+a King willing to do justice, and a House of Commons to uphold
+prosecutions, why, damn me, the cause must not stand still for lack of
+evidence."
+
+"Stick to that, noble captain," answered the officer; "but, prithee,
+reserve thy oaths for the court of justice; it is but sheer waste to
+throw them away, as you do in your ordinary conversation."
+
+"Fear you nothing, Master Topham," answered Dangerfield; "it is right
+to keep a man's gifts in use; and were I altogether to renounce oaths
+in my private discourse, how should I know how to use one when I
+needed it? But you hear me use none of your Papist abjurations. I
+swear not by the mass, or before George, or by anything that belongs
+to idolatry; but such downright oaths as may serve a poor Protestant
+gentleman, who would fain serve Heaven and the King."
+
+"Bravely spoken, most noble Festus," said his yoke-fellow. "But do not
+suppose, that although I am not in the habit of garnishing my words
+with oaths out of season, I shall be wanting, when called upon, to
+declare the height and the depth, the width and the length, of this
+hellish plot against the King and the Protestant faith."
+
+Dizzy, and almost sick, with listening to the undisguised brutality of
+these fellows, Peveril, having with difficulty prevailed on Bridlesley
+to settle his purchase, at length led forth his grey steed; but was
+scarce out of the yard, when he heard the following alarming
+conversation pass, of which he seemed himself the object.
+
+"Who is that youth?" said the slow soft voice of the more precise of
+the two witnesses. "Methinks I have seen him somewhere before. Is he
+from these parts?"
+
+"Not that I know of," said Bridlesley; who, like all the other
+inhabitants of England at the time, answered the interrogatories of
+these fellows with the deference which is paid in Spain to the
+questions of an inquisitor. "A stranger--entirely a stranger--never
+saw him before--a wild young colt, I warrant him; and knows a horse's
+mouth as well as I do."
+
+"I begin to bethink me I saw such a face as his at the Jesuits'
+consult, in the White Horse Tavern," answered Everett.
+
+"And I think I recollect," said Captain Dangerfield----
+
+"Come, come, master and captain," said the authoritative voice of
+Topham, "we will have none of your recollections at present. We all
+know what these are likely to end in. But I will have you know, you
+are not to run till the leash is slipped. The young man is a well-
+looking lad, and gave up his horse handsomely for the service of the
+House of Commons. He knows how to behave himself to his betters, I
+warrant you; and I scarce think he has enough in his purse to pay the
+fees."
+
+This speech concluded the dialogue, which Peveril, finding himself so
+much concerned in the issue, thought it best to hear to an end. Now,
+when it ceased, to get out of the town unobserved, and take the
+nearest way to his father's castle, seemed his wisest plan. He had
+settled his reckoning at the inn, and brought with him to Bridlesley's
+the small portmanteau which contained his few necessaries, so that he
+had no occasion to return thither. He resolved, therefore, to ride
+some miles before he stopped, even for the purpose of feeding his
+horse; and being pretty well acquainted with the country, he hoped to
+be able to push forward to Martindale Castle sooner than the
+worshipful Master Topham; whose saddle was, in the first place, to be
+padded, and who, when mounted, would, in all probability, ride with
+the precaution of those who require such security against the effects
+of a hard trot.
+
+Under the influence of these feelings, Julian pushed for Warrington, a
+place with which he was well acquainted; but, without halting in the
+town, he crossed the Mersey, by the bridge built by an ancestor of his
+friend the Earl of Derby, and continued his route towards Dishley, on
+the borders of Derbyshire. He might have reached this latter village
+easily, had his horse been fitter for a forced march; but in the
+course of the journey, he had occasion, more than once, to curse the
+official dignity of the person who had robbed him of his better steed,
+while taking the best direction he could through a country with which
+he was only generally acquainted.
+
+At length, near Altringham, a halt became unavoidable; and Peveril had
+only to look for some quiet and sequestered place of refreshment. This
+presented itself, in the form of a small cluster of cottages; the best
+of which united the characters of an alehouse and a mill, where the
+sign of the Cat (the landlord's faithful ally in defence of his meal-
+sacks), booted as high as Grimalkin in the fairy tale, and playing on
+the fiddle for the more grace, announced that John Whitecraft united
+the two honest occupations of landlord and miller; and, doubtless,
+took toll from the public in both capacities.
+
+Such a place promised a traveller, who journeyed incognito, safer, if
+not better accommodation, than he was like to meet with in more
+frequented inns; and at the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian halted
+accordingly.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+ In these distracted times, when each man dreads
+ The bloody stratagems of busy hands.
+ --OTWAY.
+
+At the door of the Cat and Fiddle, Julian received the usual attention
+paid to the customers of an inferior house of entertainment. His horse
+was carried by a ragged lad, who acted as hostler, into a paltry
+stable; where, however, the nag was tolerably supplied with food and
+litter.
+
+Having seen the animal on which his comfort, perhaps his safety,
+depended, properly provided for, Peveril entered the kitchen, which
+indeed was also the parlour and hall of the little hostelry, to try
+what refreshment he could obtain for himself. Much to his
+satisfaction, he found there was only one guest in the house besides
+himself; but he was less pleased when he found that he must either go
+without dinner, or share with that single guest the only provisions
+which chanced to be in the house, namely, a dish of trouts and eels,
+which their host, the miller, had brought in from his mill-stream.
+
+At the particular request of Julian, the landlady undertook to add a
+substantial dish of eggs and bacon, which perhaps she would not have
+undertaken for, had not the sharp eye of Peveril discovered the flitch
+hanging in its smoky retreat, when, as its presence could not be
+denied, the hostess was compelled to bring it forward as a part of her
+supplies.
+
+She was a buxom dame about thirty, whose comely and cheerful
+countenance did honour to the choice of the jolly miller, her loving
+mate; and was now stationed under the shade of an old-fashioned huge
+projecting chimney, within which it was her province to "work i' the
+fire," and provide for the wearied wayfaring man, the good things
+which were to send him rejoicing on his course. Although, at first,
+the honest woman seemed little disposed to give herself much
+additional trouble on Julian's account, yet the good looks, handsome
+figure, and easy civility of her new guest, soon bespoke the principal
+part of her attention; and while busy in his service, she regarded
+him, from time to time, with looks, where something like pity mingled
+with complacency. The rich smoke of the rasher, and the eggs with
+which it was flanked, already spread itself through the apartment; and
+the hissing of these savoury viands bore chorus to the simmering of
+the pan, in which the fish were undergoing a slower decoction. The
+table was covered with a clean huck-aback napkin, and all was in
+preparation for the meal, which Julian began to expect with a good
+deal of impatience, when the companion, who was destined to share it
+with him, entered the apartment.
+
+At the first glance Julian recognised, to his surprise, the same
+indifferently dressed, thin-looking person, who, during the first
+bargain which he had made with Bridlesley, had officiously interfered
+with his advice and opinion. Displeased at having the company of any
+stranger forced upon him, Peveril was still less satisfied to find one
+who might make some claim of acquaintance with him, however slender,
+since the circumstances in which he stood compelled him to be as
+reserved as possible. He therefore turned his back upon his destined
+messmate, and pretended to amuse himself by looking out of the window,
+determined to avoid all intercourse until it should be inevitably
+forced upon him.
+
+In the meanwhile, the other stranger went straight up to the landlady,
+where she toiled on household cares intent, and demanded of her, what
+she meant by preparing bacon and eggs, when he had positively charged
+her to get nothing ready but the fish.
+
+The good woman, important as every cook in the discharge of her duty,
+deigned not for some time so much as to acknowledge that she heard the
+reproof of her guest; and when she did so, it was only to repel it in
+a magisterial and authoritative tone.--"If he did not like bacon--
+(bacon from their own hutch, well fed on pease and bran)--if he did
+not like bacon and eggs--(new-laid eggs, which she had brought in from
+the hen-roost with her own hands)--why so put case--it was the worse
+for his honour, and the better for those who did."
+
+"The better for those who like them?" answered the guest; "that is as
+much as to say I am to have a companion, good woman."
+
+"Do not good woman me, sir," replied the miller's wife, "till I call
+you good man; and, I promise you, many would scruple to do that to one
+who does not love eggs and bacon of a Friday."
+
+"Nay, my good lady," said her guest, "do not fix any misconstruction
+upon me--I dare say the eggs and the bacon are excellent; only they
+are rather a dish too heavy for my stomach."
+
+"Ay, or your conscience perhaps, sir," answered the hostess. "And now,
+I bethink me, you must needs have your fish fried with oil, instead of
+the good drippings I was going to put to them. I would I could spell
+the meaning of all this now; but I warrant John Bigstaff, the
+constable, could conjure something out of it."
+
+There was a pause here; but Julian, somewhat alarmed at the tone which
+the conversation assumed, became interested in watching the dumb show
+which succeeded. By bringing his head a little towards the left, but
+without turning round, or quitting the projecting latticed window
+where he had taken his station, he could observe that the stranger,
+secured, as he seemed to think himself, from observation, had sidled
+close up to the landlady, and, as he conceived, had put a piece of
+money into her hand. The altered tone of the miller's moiety
+corresponded very much with this supposition.
+
+"Nay, indeed, and forsooth," she said, "her house was Liberty Hall;
+and so should every publican's be. What was it to her what gentlefolks
+ate or drank, providing they paid for it honestly? There were many
+honest gentlemen, whose stomachs could not abide bacon, grease, or
+dripping, especially on a Friday; and what was that to her, or any one
+in her line, so gentlefolks paid honestly for the trouble? Only, she
+would say, that her bacon and eggs could not be mended betwixt this
+and Liverpool, and that she would live and die upon."
+
+"I shall hardly dispute it," said the stranger; and turning towards
+Julian, he added, "I wish this gentleman, who I suppose is my
+trencher-companion, much joy of the dainties which I cannot assist him
+in consuming."
+
+"I assure you, sir," answered Peveril, who now felt himself compelled
+to turn about, and reply with civility, "that it was with difficulty I
+could prevail on my landlady to add my cover to yours, though she
+seems now such a zealot for the consumption of eggs and bacon."
+
+"I am zealous for nothing," said the landlady, "save that men would
+eat their victuals, and pay their score; and if there be enough in one
+dish to serve two guests, I see little purpose in dressing them two;
+however, they are ready now, and done to a nicety.--Here, Alice!
+Alice!"
+
+The sound of that well-known name made Julian start; but the Alice who
+replied to the call ill resembled the vision which his imagination
+connected with the accents, being a dowdy slipshod wench, the drudge
+of the low inn which afforded him shelter. She assisted her mistress
+in putting on the table the dishes which the latter had prepared; and
+a foaming jug of home-brewed ale being placed betwixt them, was
+warranted by Dame Whitecraft as excellent; "for," said she, "we know
+by practice that too much water drowns the miller, and we spare it on
+our malt as we would in our mill-dam."
+
+"I drink to your health in it, dame," said the elder stranger; "and a
+cup of thanks for these excellent fish; and to the drowning of all
+unkindness between us."
+
+"I thank you, sir," said the dame, "and wish you the like; but I dare
+not pledge you, for our Gaffer says that ale is brewed too strong for
+women; so I only drink a glass of canary at a time with a gossip, or
+any gentleman guest that is so minded."
+
+"You shall drink one with me, then, dame," said Peveril, "so you will
+let me have a flagon."
+
+"That you shall, sir, and as good as ever was broached; but I must to
+the mill, to get the key from the goodman."
+
+So saying, and tucking her clean gown through the pocket-holes, that
+her steps might be the more alert, and her dress escape dust, off she
+tripped to the mill, which lay close adjoining.
+
+"A dainty dame, and dangerous, is the miller's wife," said the
+stranger, looking at Peveril. "Is not that old Chaucer's phrase?"
+
+"I--I believe so," said Peveril, not much read in Chaucer, who was
+then even more neglected than at present; and much surprised at a
+literary quotation from one of the mean appearance exhibited by the
+person before him.
+
+"Yes," answered the stranger, "I see that you, like other young
+gentlemen of the time, are better acquainted with Cowley and Waller,
+than with the 'well of English undefiled.' I cannot help differing.
+There are touches of nature about the old bard of Woodstock, that, to
+me, are worth all the turns of laborious wit in Cowley, and all the
+ornate and artificial simplicity of his courtly competitor. The
+description, for instance, of his country coquette--
+
+ 'Wincing she was, as is a wanton colt,
+ Sweet as a flower, and upright as a bolt.'
+
+Then, again, for pathos, where will you mend the dying scene of
+Arcite?
+
+ 'Alas, my heart's queen! alas, my wife!
+ Giver at once, and ender of my life.
+ What is this world?--What axen men to have?
+ Now with his love--now in his cold grave
+ Alone, withouten other company.'
+
+But I tire you, sir; and do injustice to the poet, whom I remember but
+by halves."
+
+"On the contrary, sir," replied Peveril, "you make him more
+intelligible to me in your recitation, than I have found him when I
+have tried to peruse him myself."
+
+"You were only frightened by the antiquated spelling, and 'the letters
+black,'" said his companion. "It is many a scholar's case, who
+mistakes a nut, which he could crack with a little exertion, for a
+bullet, which he must needs break his teeth on; but yours are better
+employed.--Shall I offer you some of this fish?"
+
+"Not so, sir," replied Julian, willing to show himself a man of
+reading in his turn; "I hold with old Caius, and profess to fear
+judgment, to fight where I cannot choose, and to eat no fish."
+
+The stranger cast a startled look around him at this observation,
+which Julian had thrown out, on purpose to ascertain, if possible, the
+quality of his companion, whose present language was so different from
+the character he had assumed at Bridlesley's. His countenance, too,
+although the features were of an ordinary, not to say mean cast, had
+that character of intelligence which education gives to the most
+homely face; and his manners were so easy and disembarrassed, as
+plainly showed a complete acquaintance with society, as well as the
+habit of mingling with it in the higher stages. The alarm which he had
+evidently shown at Peveril's answer, was but momentary; for he almost
+instantly replied, with a smile, "I promise you, sir, that you are in
+no dangerous company; for notwithstanding my fish dinner, I am much
+disposed to trifle with some of your savoury mess, if you will indulge
+me so far."
+
+Peveril accordingly reinforced the stranger's trencher with what
+remained of the bacon and eggs, and saw him swallow a mouthful or two
+with apparent relish; but presently after began to dally with his
+knife and fork, like one whose appetite was satiated; and then took a
+long draught of the black jack, and handed his platter to the large
+mastiff dog, who, attracted by the smell of the dinner, had sat down
+before him for some time, licking his chops, and following with his
+eye every morsel which the guest raised to his head.
+
+"Here, my poor fellow," said he, "thou hast had no fish, and needest
+this supernumerary trencher-load more than I do. I cannot withstand
+thy mute supplication any longer."
+
+The dog answered these courtesies by a civil shake of the tail, while
+he gobbled up what was assigned him by the stranger's benevolence, in
+the greater haste, that he heard his mistress's voice at the door.
+
+"Here is the canary, gentlemen," said the landlady; "and the goodman
+has set off the mill, to come to wait on you himself. He always does
+so, when company drink wine."
+
+"That he may come in for the host's, that is, for the lion's share,"
+said the stranger, looking at Peveril.
+
+"The shot is mine," said Julian; "and if mine host will share it, I
+will willingly bestow another quart on him, and on you, sir. I never
+break old customs."
+
+These sounds caught the ear of Gaffer Whitecraft, who had entered the
+room, a strapping specimen of his robust trade, prepared to play the
+civil, or the surly host, as his company should be acceptable or
+otherwise. At Julian's invitation, he doffed his dusty bonnet--brushed
+from his sleeve the looser particles of his professional dust--and
+sitting down on the end of a bench, about a yard from the table,
+filled a glass of canary, and drank to his guests, and "especially to
+this noble gentleman," indicating Peveril, who had ordered the canary.
+
+Julian returned the courtesy by drinking his health, and asking what
+news were about in the country?
+
+"Nought, sir, I hears on nought, except this Plot, as they call it,
+that they are pursuing the Papishers about; but it brings water to my
+mill, as the saying is. Between expresses hurrying hither and thither,
+and guards and prisoners riding to and again, and the custom of the
+neighbours, that come to speak over the news of an evening, nightly, I
+may say, instead of once a week, why, the spigot is in use, gentlemen,
+and your land thrives; and then I, serving as constable, and being a
+known Protestant, I have tapped, I may venture to say, it may be ten
+stands of ale extraordinary, besides a reasonable sale of wine for a
+country corner. Heaven make us thankful, and keep all good Protestants
+from Plot and Popery."
+
+"I can easily conceive, my friend," said Julian, "that curiosity is a
+passion which runs naturally to the alehouse; and that anger, and
+jealousy, and fear, are all of them thirsty passions, and great
+consumers of home-brewed. But I am a perfect stranger in these parts;
+and I would willingly learn, from a sensible man like you, a little of
+this same Plot, of which men speak so much, and appear to know so
+little."
+
+"Learn a little of it?--Why, it is the most horrible--the most
+damnable, bloodthirsty beast of a Plot--But hold, hold, my good
+master; I hope, in the first place, you believe there is a Plot; for,
+otherwise, the Justice must have a word with you, as sure as my name
+is John Whitecraft."
+
+"It shall not need," said Peveril; "for I assure you, mine host, I
+believe in the Plot as freely and fully as a man can believe in
+anything he cannot understand."
+
+"God forbid that anybody should pretend to understand it," said the
+implicit constable; "for his worship the Justice says it is a mile
+beyond him; and he be as deep as most of them. But men may believe,
+though they do not understand; and that is what the Romanists say
+themselves. But this I am sure of, it makes a rare stirring time for
+justices, and witnesses, and constables.--So here's to your health
+again, gentlemen, in a cup of neat canary."
+
+"Come, come, John Whitecraft," said the wife, "do not you demean
+yourself by naming witnesses along with justices and constables. All
+the world knows how they come by their money."
+
+"Ay, but all the world knows that they /do/ come by it, dame; and that
+is a great comfort. They rustle in their canonical silks, and swagger
+in their buff and scarlet, who but they?--Ay, ay, the cursed fox
+thrives--and not so cursed neither. Is there not Doctor Titus Oates,
+the saviour of the nation--does he not live at Whitehall, and eat off
+plate, and have a pension of thousands a year, for what I know? and is
+he not to be Bishop of Litchfield, so soon as Dr. Doddrum dies?"
+
+"Then I hope Dr. Doddrum's reverence will live these twenty years; and
+I dare say I am the first that ever wished such a wish," said the
+hostess. "I do not understand these doings, not I; and if a hundred
+Jesuits came to hold a consult at my house, as they did at the White
+Horse Tavern, I should think it quite out of the line of business to
+bear witness against them, provided they drank well, and paid their
+score."
+
+"Very true, dame," said her elder guest; "that is what I call keeping
+a good publican conscience; and so I will pay my score presently, and
+be jogging on my way."
+
+Peveril, on his part, also demanded a reckoning, and discharged it so
+liberally, that the miller flourished his hat as he bowed, and the
+hostess courtesied down to the ground.
+
+The horses of both guests were brought forth; and they mounted, in
+order to depart in company. The host and hostess stood in the doorway,
+to see them depart. The landlord proffered a stirrup-cup to the elder
+guest, while the landlady offered Peveril a glass from her own
+peculiar bottle. For this purpose, she mounted on the horse-block,
+with flask and glass in hand; so that it was easy for the departing
+guest, although on horse-back, to return the courtesy in the most
+approved manner, namely, by throwing his arm over his landlady's
+shoulder, and saluting her at parting.
+
+Dame Whitecraft did not decline this familiarity; for there is no room
+for traversing upon a horse-block, and the hands which might have
+served her for resistance, were occupied with glass and bottle--
+matters too precious to be thrown away in such a struggle. Apparently,
+however, she had something else in her head; for as, after a brief
+affectation of reluctance, she permitted Peveril's face to approach
+hers, she whispered in his ear, "Beware of trepans!"--an awful
+intimation, which, in those days of distrust, suspicion, and
+treachery, was as effectual in interdicting free and social
+intercourse, as the advertisement of "man-traps and spring-guns," to
+protect an orchard. Pressing her hand, in intimation that he
+comprehended her hint, she shook his warmly in return, and bade God
+speed him. There was a cloud on John Whitecraft's brow; nor did his
+final farewell sound half so cordial as that which had been spoken
+within doors. But then Peveril reflected, that the same guest is not
+always equally acceptable to landlord and landlady; and unconscious of
+having done anything to excite the miller's displeasure, he pursued
+his journey without thinking farther of the matter.
+
+Julian was a little surprised, and not altogether pleased, to find
+that his new acquaintance held the same road with him. He had many
+reasons for wishing to travel alone; and the hostess's caution still
+rung in his ears. If this man, possessed of so much shrewdness as his
+countenance and conversation intimated, versatile, as he had occasion
+to remark, and disguised beneath his condition, should prove, as was
+likely, to be a concealed Jesuit or seminary-priest, travelling upon
+their great task of the conversion of England, and rooting out of the
+Northern heresy,--a more dangerous companion, for a person in his own
+circumstances, could hardly be imagined; since keeping society with
+him might seem to authorise whatever reports had been spread
+concerning the attachment of his family to the Catholic cause. At the
+same time, it was very difficult, without actual rudeness, to shake
+off the company of one who seemed so determined, whether spoken to or
+not, to remain alongside of him.
+
+Peveril tried the experiment of riding slow; but his companion,
+determined not to drop him, slackened his pace, so as to keep close by
+him. Julian then spurred his horse to a full trot; and was soon
+satisfied, that the stranger, notwithstanding the meanness of his
+appearance, was so much better mounted than himself, as to render vain
+any thought of outriding him. He pulled up his horse to a more
+reasonable pace, therefore, in a sort of despair. Upon his doing so,
+his companion, who had been hitherto silent, observed, that Peveril
+was not so well qualified to try speed upon the road, as he would have
+been had he abode by his first bargain of horse-flesh that morning.
+
+Peveril assented dryly, but observed, that the animal would serve his
+immediate purpose, though he feared it would render him indifferent
+company for a person better mounted.
+
+"By no means," answered his civil companion; "I am one of those who
+have travelled so much, as to be accustomed to make my journey at any
+rate of motion which may be most agreeable to my company."
+
+Peveril made no reply to this polite intimation, being too sincere to
+tender the thanks which, in courtesy, were the proper answer.--A
+second pause ensued, which was broken by Julian asking the stranger
+whether their roads were likely to lie long together in the same
+direction.
+
+"I cannot tell," said the stranger, smiling, "unless I knew which way
+you were travelling."
+
+"I am uncertain how far I shall go to-night," said Julian, willingly
+misunderstanding the purport of the reply.
+
+"And so am I," replied the stranger; "but though my horse goes better
+than yours, I think it will be wise to spare him; and in case our road
+continues to lie the same way, we are likely to sup, as we have dined
+together."
+
+Julian made no answer whatever to this round intimation, but continued
+to ride on, turning, in his own mind, whether it would not be wisest
+to come to a distinct understanding with his pertinacious attendant,
+and to explain, in so many words, that it was his pleasure to travel
+alone. But, besides that the sort of acquaintance which they had
+formed during dinner, rendered him unwilling to be directly uncivil
+towards a person of gentleman-like manners, he had also to consider
+that he might very possibly be mistaken in this man's character and
+purpose; in which case, the cynically refusing the society of a sound
+Protestant, would afford as pregnant matter of suspicion, as
+travelling in company with a disguised Jesuit.
+
+After brief reflection, therefore, he resolved to endure the
+encumbrance of the stranger's society, until a fair opportunity should
+occur to rid himself of it; and, in the meantime, to act with as much
+caution as he possibly could, in any communication that might take
+place between them; for Dame Whitecraft's parting caution still rang
+anxiously in his ears, and the consequences of his own arrest upon
+suspicion, must deprive him of every opportunity of serving his
+father, or the countess, or Major Bridgenorth, upon whose interest,
+also, he had promised himself to keep an eye.
+
+While he revolved these things in his mind, they had journeyed several
+miles without speaking; and now entered upon a more waste country, and
+worse roads, than they had hitherto found, being, in fact, approaching
+the more hilly district of Derbyshire. In travelling on a very stony
+and uneven lane, Julian's horse repeatedly stumbled; and, had he not
+been supported by the rider's judicious use of the bridle, must at
+length certainly have fallen under him.
+
+"These are times which crave wary riding, sir," said his companion;
+"and by your seat in the saddle, and your hand on the rein, you seem
+to understand it to be so."
+
+"I have been long a horseman, sir," answered Peveril.
+
+"And long a traveller, too, sir, I should suppose; since by the great
+caution you observe, you seem to think the human tongue requires a
+curb, as well as the horse's jaws."
+
+"Wiser men than I have been of opinion," answered Peveril, "that it
+were a part of prudence to be silent, when men have little or nothing
+to say."
+
+"I cannot approve of their opinion," answered the stranger. "All
+knowledge is gained by communication, either with the dead, through
+books, or, more pleasingly, through the conversation of the living.
+The /deaf and dumb/, alone, are excluded from improvement; and surely
+their situation is not so enviable that we should imitate them."
+
+At this illustration, which awakened a startling echo in Peveril's
+bosom, the young man looked hard at his companion; but in the composed
+countenance, and calm blue eye, he read no consciousness of a farther
+meaning than the words immediately and directly implied. He paused a
+moment, and then answered, "You seem to be a person, sir, of shrewd
+apprehension; and I should have thought it might have occurred to you,
+that in the present suspicious times, men may, without censure, avoid
+communication with strangers. You know not me; and to me you are
+totally unknown. There is not room for much discourse between us,
+without trespassing on the general topics of the day, which carry in
+them seeds of quarrel between friends, much more betwixt strangers. At
+any other time, the society of an intelligent companion would have
+been most acceptable upon my solitary ride; but at present----"
+
+"At present!" said the other, interrupting him. "You are like the old
+Romans, who held that /hostis/ meant both a stranger and an enemy. I
+will therefore be no longer a stranger. My name is Ganlesse--by
+profession I am a Roman Catholic priest--I am travelling here in dread
+of my life--and I am very glad to have you for a companion."
+
+"I thank you for the information with all my heart," said Peveril;
+"and to avail myself of it to the uttermost, I must beg you to ride
+forward, or lag behind, or take a side-path, at your own pleasure; for
+as I am no Catholic, and travel upon business of high concernment, I
+am exposed both to risk and delay, and even to danger, by keeping such
+suspicious company. And so, Master Ganlesse, keep your own pace, and I
+will keep the contrary; for I beg leave to forbear your company."
+
+As Peveril spoke thus, he pulled up his horse, and made a full stop.
+
+The stranger burst out a-laughing. "What!" he said, "you forbear my
+company for a trifle of danger? Saint Anthony! How the warm blood of
+the Cavaliers is chilled in the young men of the present day! This
+young gallant, now, has a father, I warrant, who has endured as many
+adventures for hunting priests, as a knight-errant for distressed
+damsels."
+
+"This raillery avails nothing, sir," said Peveril. "I must request you
+will keep your own way."
+
+"My way is yours," said the pertinacious Master Ganlesse, as he called
+himself; "and we will both travel the safer, that we journey in
+company. I have the receipt of fern-seed, man, and walk invisible.
+Besides, you would not have me quit you in this lane, where there is
+no turn to right or left?"
+
+Peveril moved on, desirous to avoid open violence--for which the
+indifferent tone of the traveller, indeed, afforded no apt pretext--
+yet highly disliking his company, and determined to take the first
+opportunity to rid himself of it.
+
+The stranger proceeded at the same pace with him, keeping cautiously
+on his bridle hand, as if to secure that advantage in case of a
+struggle. But his language did not intimate the least apprehension.
+"You do me wrong," he said to Peveril, "and you equally wrong
+yourself. You are uncertain where to lodge to-night--trust to my
+guidance. Here is an ancient hall, within four miles, with an old
+knightly Pantaloon for its lord--an all-be-ruffed Dame Barbara for the
+lady gay--a Jesuit, in a butler's habit, to say grace--an old tale of
+Edgehill and Worster fights to relish a cold venison pasty, and a
+flask of claret mantled with cobwebs--a bed for you in the priest's
+hiding-hole--and, for aught I know, pretty Mistress Betty, the dairy-
+maid, to make it ready."
+
+"This has no charms for me, sir," said Peveril, who, in spite of
+himself, could not but be amused with the ready sketch which the
+stranger gave of many an old mansion in Cheshire and Derbyshire, where
+the owners retained the ancient faith of Rome.
+
+"Well, I see I cannot charm you in this way," continued his companion;
+"I must strike another key. I am no longer Ganlesse, the seminary
+priest, but (changing his tone, and snuffling in the nose) Simon
+Canter, a poor preacher of the Word, who travels this way to call
+sinners to repentance; and to strengthen, and to edify, and to
+fructify among the scattered remnant who hold fast the truth.--What
+say you to this, sir?"
+
+"I admire your versatility, sir, and could be entertained with it at
+another time. At present sincerity is more in request."
+
+"Sincerity!" said the stranger;--"a child's whistle, with but two
+notes in it--yea, yea, and nay, nay. Why, man, the very Quakers have
+renounced it, and have got in its stead a gallant recorder, called
+Hypocrisy, that is somewhat like Sincerity in form, but of much
+greater compass, and combines the whole gamut. Come, be ruled--be a
+disciple of Simon Canter for the evening, and we will leave the old
+tumble-down castle of the knight aforesaid, on the left hand, for a
+new brick-built mansion, erected by an eminent salt-boiler from
+Namptwich, who expects the said Simon to make a strong spiritual
+pickle for the preservation of a soul somewhat corrupted by the evil
+communications of this wicked world. What say you? He has two
+daughters--brighter eyes never beamed under a pinched hood; and for
+myself, I think there is more fire in those who live only to love and
+to devotion, than in your court beauties, whose hearts are running on
+twenty follies besides. You know not the pleasure of being conscience-
+keeper to a pretty precisian, who in one breath repeats her foibles,
+and in the next confesses her passion. Perhaps, though, you may have
+known such in your day? Come, sir, it grows too dark to see your
+blushes; but I am sure they are burning on your cheek."
+
+"You take great freedom, sir," said Peveril, as they now approached
+the end of the lane, where it opened on a broad common; "and you seem
+rather to count more on my forbearance, than you have room to do with
+safety. We are now nearly free of the lane which has made us
+companions for this late half hour. To avoid your farther company, I
+will take the turn to the left, upon that common; and if you follow
+me, it shall be at your peril. Observe, I am well armed; and you will
+fight at odds."
+
+"Not at odds," returned the provoking stranger, "while I have my brown
+jennet, with which I can ride round and round you at pleasure; and
+this text, of a handful in length (showing a pistol which he drew from
+his bosom), which discharges very convincing doctrine on the pressure
+of a forefinger, and is apt to equalise all odds, as you call them, of
+youth and strength. Let there be no strife between us, however--the
+moor lies before us--choose your path on it--I take the other."
+
+"I wish you good night, sir," said Peveril to the stranger. "I ask
+your forgiveness, if I have misconstrued you in anything; but the
+times are perilous, and a man's life may depend on the society in
+which he travels."
+
+"True," said the stranger; "but in your case, the danger is already
+undergone, and you should seek to counteract it. You have travelled in
+my company long enough to devise a handsome branch of the Popish Plot.
+How will you look, when you see come forth, in comely folio form, The
+Narrative of Simon Canter, otherwise called Richard Ganlesse,
+concerning the horrid Popish Conspiracy for the Murder of the King,
+and Massacre of all Protestants, as given on oath to the Honourable
+House of Commons; setting forth, how far Julian Peveril, younger of
+Martindale Castle, is concerned in carrying on the same----"
+
+"How, sir? What mean you?" said Peveril, much startled.
+
+"Nay, sir," replied his companion, "do not interrupt my title-page.
+Now that Oates and Bedloe have drawn the great prizes, the subordinate
+discoverers get little but by the sale of their Narrative; and
+Janeway, Newman, Simmons, and every bookseller of them, will tell you
+that the title is half the narrative. Mine shall therefore set forth
+the various schemes you have communicated to me, of landing ten
+thousand soldiers from the Isle of Man upon the coast of Lancashire;
+and marching into Wales, to join the ten thousand pilgrims who are to
+be shipped from Spain; and so completing the destruction of the
+Protestant religion, and of the devoted city of London. Truly, I think
+such a Narrative, well spiced with a few horrors, and published /cum
+privilegio parliamenti/, might, though the market be somewhat
+overstocked, be still worth some twenty or thirty pieces."
+
+"You seem to know me, sir," said Peveril; "and if so, I think I may
+fairly ask you your purpose in thus bearing me company, and the
+meaning of all this rhapsody. If it be mere banter, I can endure it
+within proper limit; although it is uncivil on the part of a stranger.
+If you have any farther purpose, speak it out; I am not to be trifled
+with."
+
+"Good, now," said the stranger, laughing, "into what an unprofitable
+chafe you have put yourself! An Italian /fuoruscito/, when he desires
+a parley with you, takes aim from behind a wall, with his long gun,
+and prefaces his conference with /Posso tirare/. So does your man-of-
+war fire a gun across the bows of a Hansmogan Indiaman, just to bring
+her to; and so do I show Master Julian Peveril, that, if I were one of
+the honourable society of witnesses and informers, with whom his
+imagination has associated me for these two hours past, he is as much
+within my danger now, as what he is ever likely to be." Then, suddenly
+changing his tone to serious, which was in general ironical, he added,
+"Young man, when the pestilence is diffused through the air of a city,
+it is in vain men would avoid the disease, by seeking solitude, and
+shunning the company of their fellow-sufferers."
+
+"In what, then, consists their safety?" said Peveril, willing to
+ascertain, if possible, the drift of his companion's purpose.
+
+"In following the counsels of wise physicians;" such was the
+stranger's answer.
+
+"And as such," said Peveril, "you offer me your advice?"
+
+"Pardon me, young man," said the stranger haughtily, "I see no reason
+I should do so.--I am not," he added, in his former tone, "your fee'd
+physician--I offer no advice--I only say it would be wise that you
+sought it."
+
+"And from whom, or where, can I obtain it?" said Peveril. "I wander in
+this country like one in a dream; so much a few months have changed
+it. Men who formerly occupied themselves with their own affairs, are
+now swallowed up in matters of state policy; and those tremble under
+the apprehension of some strange and sudden convulsion of empire, who
+were formerly only occupied by the fear of going to bed supperless.
+And to sum up the matter, I meet a stranger apparently well acquainted
+with my name and concerns, who first attaches himself to me, whether I
+will or no; and then refuses me an explanation of his business, while
+he menaces me with the strangest accusations."
+
+"Had I meant such infamy," said the stranger, "believe me, I had not
+given you the thread of my intrigue. But be wise, and come one with
+me. There is, hard by, a small inn, where, if you can take a
+stranger's warrant for it, we shall sleep in perfect security."
+
+"Yet, you yourself," said Peveril, "but now were anxious to avoid
+observation; and in that case, how can you protect me?"
+
+"Pshaw! I did but silence that tattling landlady, in the way in which
+such people are most readily hushed; and for Topham, and his brace of
+night owls, they must hawk at other and lesser game than I should
+prove."
+
+Peveril could not help admiring the easy and confident indifference
+with which the stranger seemed to assume a superiority to all the
+circumstances of danger around him; and after hastily considering the
+matter with himself, came to the resolution to keep company with him
+for this night at least; and to learn, if possible, who he really was,
+and to what party in the estate he was attached. The boldness and
+freedom of his talk seemed almost inconsistent with his following the
+perilous, though at that time the gainful trade of an informer. No
+doubt, such persons assumed every appearance which could insinuate
+them into the confidence of their destined victims; but Julian thought
+he discovered in this man's manner, a wild and reckless frankness,
+which he could not but connect with the idea of sincerity in the
+present case. He therefore answered, after a moment's recollection, "I
+embrace your proposal, sir; although, by doing so, I am reposing a
+sudden, and perhaps an unwary, confidence."
+
+"And what am I, then, reposing in you?" said the stranger. "Is not our
+confidence mutual?"
+
+"No; much the contrary. I know nothing of you whatever--you have named
+me; and, knowing me to be Julian Peveril, know you may travel with me
+in perfect security."
+
+"The devil I do!" answered his companion. "I travel in the same
+security as with a lighted petard, which I may expect to explode every
+moment. Are you not the son of Peveril of the Peak, with whose name
+Prelacy and Popery are so closely allied, that no old woman of either
+sex in Derbyshire concludes her prayer without a petition to be freed
+from all three? And do you not come from the Popish Countess of Derby,
+bringing, for aught I know, a whole army of Manxmen in your pocket,
+with full complement of arms, ammunition, baggage, and a train of
+field artillery?"
+
+"It is not very likely I should be so poorly mounted," said Julian,
+laughing, "if I had such a weight to carry. But lead on, sir. I see I
+must wait for your confidence, till you think proper to confer it; for
+you are already so well acquainted with my affairs, that I have
+nothing to offer you in exchange for it."
+
+"/Allons/, then," said his companion; "give your horse the spur, and
+raise the curb rein, lest he measure the ground with his nose instead
+of his paces. We are not now more than a furlong or two from the place
+of entertainment."
+
+They mended their pace accordingly, and soon arrived at the small
+solitary inn which the traveller had mentioned. When its light began
+to twinkle before them, the stranger, as if recollecting something he
+had forgotten, "By the way, you must have a name to pass by; for it
+may be ill travelling under your own, as the fellow who keeps this
+house is an old Cromwellian. What will you call yourself?--My name is
+--for the present--Ganlesse."
+
+"There is no occasion to assume a name at all," answered Julian. "I do
+not incline to use a borrowed one, especially as I may meet with some
+one who knows my own."
+
+"I will call you Julian, then," said Master Ganlesse; "for Peveril
+will smell, in the nostrils of mine host, of idolatry, conspiracy,
+Smithfield faggots, fish on Fridays, the murder of Sir Edmondsbury
+Godfrey, and the fire of purgatory."
+
+As he spoke thus, they alighted under the great broad-branched oak
+tree, that served to canopy the ale-bench, which, at an earlier hour,
+had groaned under the weight of a frequent conclave of rustic
+politicians. Ganlesse, as he dismounted, whistled in a particularly
+shrill note, and was answered from within the house.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+ He was a fellow in a peasant's garb;
+ Yet one could censure you a woodcock's carving.
+ Like any courtier at the ordinary.
+ --THE ORDINARY.
+
+The person who appeared at the door of the little inn to receive
+Ganlesse, as we mentioned in our last chapter, sung, as he came
+forward, this scrap of an old ballad,--
+
+ "Good even to you, Diccon;
+ And how have you sped;
+ Bring you the bonny bride
+ To banquet and bed?"
+
+To which Ganlesse answered, in the same tone and tune,--
+
+ "Content thee, kind Robin;
+ He need little care,
+ Who brings home a fat buck
+ Instead of a hare."
+
+"You have missed your blow, then?" said the other, in reply.
+
+"I tell you I have not," answered Ganlesse; "but you will think of
+nought but your own thriving occupation--May the plague that belongs
+to it stick to it! though it hath been the making of thee."
+
+"A man must live, Diccon Ganlesse," said the other.
+
+"Well, well," said Ganlesse, "bid my friend welcome, for my sake. Hast
+thou got any supper?"
+
+"Reeking like a sacrifice--Chaubert has done his best. That fellow is
+a treasure! give him a farthing candle, and he will cook a good supper
+out of it.--Come in, sir. My friend's friend is welcome, as we say
+in my country."
+
+"We must have our horses looked to first," said Peveril, who began to
+be considerably uncertain about the character of his companions--"that
+done, I am for you."
+
+Ganlesse gave a second whistle; a groom appeared, who took charge of
+both their horses, and they themselves entered the inn.
+
+The ordinary room of a poor inn seemed to have undergone some
+alterations, to render it fit for company of a higher description.
+There were a beaufet, a couch, and one or two other pieces of
+furniture, of a style inconsistent with the appearance of the place.
+The tablecloth, which was already laid, was of the finest damask; and
+the spoons, forks, &c., were of silver. Peveril looked at this
+apparatus with some surprise; and again turning his eyes attentively
+upon his travelling companion, Ganlesse, he could not help discovering
+(by the aid of imagination, perhaps), that though insignificant in
+person, plain in features, and dressed like one in indigence, there
+lurked still about his person and manners, that indefinable ease of
+manner which belongs only to men of birth and quality, or to those who
+are in the constant habit of frequenting the best company. His
+companion, whom he called Will Smith, although tall and rather good-
+looking, besides being much better dressed, had not, nevertheless,
+exactly the same ease of demeanour; and was obliged to make up for the
+want, by an additional proportion of assurance. Who these two persons
+could be, Peveril could not attempt even to form a guess. There was
+nothing for it but to watch their manner and conversation.
+
+After speaking a moment in whispers, Smith said to his companion, "We
+must go look after our nags for ten minutes, and allow Chaubert to do
+his office."
+
+"Will not he appear, and minister before us, then?" said Ganlesse.
+
+"What! he?--he shift a trencher--he hand a cup?--No, you forget whom
+you speak of. Such an order were enough to make him fall on his own
+sword--he is already on the borders of despair, because no craw-fish
+are to be had."
+
+"Alack-a day!" replied Ganlesse. "Heaven forbid I should add to such a
+calamity! To stable, then, and see we how our steeds eat their
+provender, while ours is getting ready."
+
+They adjourned to the stable accordingly, which, though a poor one,
+had been hastily supplied with whatever was necessary for the
+accommodation of four excellent horses; one of which, that from which
+Ganlesse was just dismounted, the groom we have mentioned was cleaning
+and dressing by the light of a huge wax-candle.
+
+"I am still so far Catholic," said Ganlesse, laughing, as he saw that
+Peveril noticed this piece of extravagance. "My horse is my saint, and
+I dedicate a candle to him."
+
+"Without asking so great a favour for mine, which I see standing
+behind yonder old hen-coop," replied Peveril, "I will at least relieve
+him of his saddle and bridle."
+
+"Leave him to the lad of the inn," said Smith; "he is not worthy of
+any other person's handling; and I promise you, if you slip a single
+buckle, you will so flavour of that stable duty, that you might as
+well eat roast-beef as ragouts, for any relish you will have of them."
+
+"I love roast-beef as well as ragouts, at any time," said Peveril,
+adjusting himself to a task which every young man should know how to
+perform when need is; "and my horse, though it be but a sorry jade,
+will champ better on hay and corn, than on an iron bit."
+
+While he was unsaddling his horse, and shaking down some litter for
+the poor wearied animal, he heard Smith observe to Ganlesse,--"By my
+faith, Dick, thou hast fallen into poor Slender's blunder; missed Anne
+Page, and brought us a great lubberly post-master's boy."
+
+"Hush, he will hear thee," answered Ganlesse; "there are reasons for
+all things--it is well as it is. But, prithee, tell thy fellow to help
+the youngster."
+
+"What!" replied Smith, "d'ye think I am mad?--Ask Tom Beacon--Tom of
+Newmarket--Tom of ten thousand, to touch such a four-legged brute as
+that?--Why, he would turn me away on the spot--discard me, i'faith. It
+was all he would do to take in hand your own, my good friend; and if
+you consider him not the better, you are like to stand groom to him
+yourself to-morrow."
+
+"Well, Will," answered Ganlesse, "I will say that for thee, thou hast
+a set of the most useless, scoundrelly, insolent vermin about thee,
+that ever ate up a poor gentleman's revenues."
+
+"Useless? I deny it," replied Smith. "Every one of my fellows does
+something or other so exquisitely, that it were sin to make him do
+anything else--it is your jacks-of-all-trades who are masters of none.
+--But hark to Chaubert's signal. The coxcomb is twangling it on the
+lute, to the tune of /Eveillez-vous, belle endormie/.--Come, Master
+What d'ye call (addressing Peveril),--get ye some water, and wash this
+filthy witness from your hand, as Betterton says in the play; for
+Chaubert's cookery is like Friar Bacon's Head--time is--time was--time
+will soon be no more."
+
+So saying, and scarce allowing Julian time to dip his hands in a
+bucket, and dry them on a horse-cloth, he hurried him from the stable
+back to the supper-chamber.
+
+Here all was prepared for their meal, with an epicurean delicacy,
+which rather belonged to the saloon of a palace, than the cabin in
+which it was displayed. Four dishes of silver, with covers of the same
+metal, smoked on the table; and three seats were placed for the
+company. Beside the lower end of the board, was a small side-table, to
+answer the purpose of what is now called a dumb waiter; on which
+several flasks reared their tall, stately, and swan-like crests, above
+glasses and rummers. Clean covers were also placed within reach; and a
+small travelling-case of morocco, hooped with silver, displayed a
+number of bottles, containing the most approved sauces that culinary
+ingenuity had then invented.
+
+Smith, who occupied the lower seat, and seemed to act as president of
+the feast, motioned the two travellers to take their places and begin.
+"I would not stay a grace-time," he said, "to save a whole nation from
+perdition. We could bring no chauffettes with any convenience; and
+even Chaubert is nothing, unless his dishes are tasted in the very
+moment of projection. Come, uncover, and let us see what he has done
+for us.--Hum!--ha!--ay--squab-pigeons--wildfowl--young chickens--
+venison cutlets--and a space in the centre, wet, alas! by a gentle
+tear from Chaubert's eye, where should have been the /soupe aux
+écrevisses/. The zeal of that poor fellow is ill repaid by his paltry
+ten louis per month."
+
+"A mere trifle," said Ganlesse; "but, like yourself, Will, he serves a
+generous master."
+
+The repast now commenced; and Julian, though he had seen his young
+friend the Earl of Derby, and other gallants, affect a considerable
+degree of interest and skill in the science of the kitchen, and was
+not himself either an enemy or a stranger to the pleasures of a good
+table, found that, on the present occasion, he was a mere novice. Both
+his companions, but Smith in especial, seemed to consider that they
+were now engaged in the only true business of life; and weighed all
+its minutiæ with a proportional degree of accuracy. To carve the
+morsel in the most delicate manner--and to apportion the proper
+seasoning with the accuracy of the chemist,--to be aware, exactly, of
+the order in which one dish should succeed another, and to do
+plentiful justice to all--was a minuteness of science to which Julian
+had hitherto been a stranger. Smith accordingly treated him as a mere
+novice in epicurism, cautioning him to eat his soup before the
+bouilli, and to forget the Manx custom of bolting the boiled meat
+before the broth, as if Cutlar MacCulloch and all his whingers were at
+the door. Peveril took the hint in good part, and the entertainment
+proceeded with animation.
+
+At length Ganlesse paused, and declared the supper exquisite. "But, my
+friend Smith," he added, "are your wines curious? When you brought all
+that trash of plates and trumpery into Derbyshire, I hope you did not
+leave us at the mercy of the strong ale of the shire, as thick and
+muddy as the squires who drink it?"
+
+"Did I not know that /you/ were to meet me, Dick Ganlesse?" answered
+their host. "And can you suspect me of such an omission? It is true,
+you must make champagne and claret serve, for my burgundy would not
+bear travelling. But if you have a fancy for sherry, or Vin de Cahors,
+I have a notion Chaubert and Tom Beacon have brought some for their
+own drinking."
+
+"Perhaps the gentlemen would not care to impart," said Ganlesse.
+
+"Oh, fie!--anything in the way of civility," replied Smith. "They are,
+in truth, the best-natured lads alive, when treated respectfully; so
+that if you would prefer----"
+
+"By no means," said Ganlesse--"a glass of champagne will serve in a
+scarcity of better."
+
+ "The cork shall start obsequious to my thumb,"
+
+said Smith; and as he spoke, he untwisted the wire, and the cork
+struck the roof of the cabin. Each guest took a large rummer glass of
+the sparkling beverage, which Peveril had judgment and experience
+enough to pronounce exquisite.
+
+"Give me your hand, sir," said Smith; "it is the first word of sense
+you have spoken this evening."
+
+"Wisdom, sir," replied Peveril, "is like the best ware in the pedlar's
+pack, which he never produces till he knows his customer."
+
+"Sharp as mustard," returned the /bon vivant/; "but be wise, most
+noble pedlar, and take another rummer of this same flask, which you
+see I have held in an oblique position for your service--not
+permitting it to retrograde to the perpendicular. Nay, take it off
+before the bubble bursts on the rim, and the zest is gone."
+
+"You do me honour, sir," said Peveril, taking the second glass. "I
+wish you a better office than that of my cup-bearer."
+
+"You cannot wish Will Smith one more congenial to his nature," said
+Ganlesse. "Others have a selfish delight in the objects of sense, Will
+thrives, and is happy by imparting them to his friends."
+
+"Better help men to pleasures than to pains, Master Ganlesse,"
+answered Smith, somewhat angrily.
+
+"Nay, wrath thee not, Will," said Ganlesse; "and speak no words in
+haste, lest you may have cause to repent at leisure. Do I blame thy
+social concern for the pleasures of others? Why, man, thou dost
+therein most philosophically multiply thine own. A man has but one
+throat, and can but eat, with his best efforts, some five or six times
+a day; but thou dinest with every friend that cuts a capon, and art
+quaffing wine in other men's gullets, from morning to night--/et sic
+de cæteris/."
+
+"Friend Ganlesse," returned Smith, "I prithee beware--thou knowest I
+can cut gullets as well as tickle them."
+
+"Ay, Will," answered Ganlesse carelessly; "I think I have seen thee
+wave thy whinyard at the throat of a Hogan-Mogan--a Netherlandish
+weasand, which expanded only on thy natural and mortal objects of
+aversion,--Dutch cheese, rye-bread, pickled herring, onion, and
+Geneva."
+
+"For pity's sake, forbear the description!" said Smith; "thy words
+overpower the perfumes, and flavour the apartment like a dish of
+salmagundi!"
+
+"But for an epiglottis like mine," continued Ganlesse, "down which the
+most delicate morsels are washed by such claret as thou art now
+pouring out, thou couldst not, in thy bitterest mood, wish a worse
+fate than to be necklaced somewhat tight by a pair of white arms."
+
+"By a tenpenny cord," answered Smith; "but not till you were dead;
+that thereafter you be presently embowelled, you being yet alive; that
+your head be then severed from your body, and your body divided into
+quarters, to be disposed of at his Majesty's pleasure.--How like you
+that, Master Richard Ganlesse?"
+
+"E'en as you like the thoughts of dining on bran-bread and milk-
+porridge--an extremity which you trust never to be reduced to. But all
+this shall not prevent me from pledging you in a cup of sound claret."
+
+As the claret circulated, the glee of the company increased; and Smith
+placing the dishes which had been made use of upon the side-table,
+stamped with his foot on the floor, and the table sinking down a trap,
+again rose, loaded with olives, sliced neat's tongue, caviare, and
+other provocatives for the circulation of the bottle.
+
+"Why, Will," said Ganlesse, "thou art a more complete mechanist than I
+suspected; thou hast brought thy scene-shifting inventions to
+Derbyshire in marvellously short time."
+
+"A rope and pullies can be easily come by," answered Will; "and with a
+saw and a plane, I can manage that business in half a day. I love the
+knack of clean and secret conveyance--thou knowest it was the
+foundation of my fortunes."
+
+"It may be the wreck of them too, Will," replied his friend.
+
+"True, Diccon," answered Will; "but, /dum vivimus, vivamus/,--that is
+my motto; and therewith I present you a brimmer to the health of the
+fair lady you wot of."
+
+"Let it come, Will," replied his friend; and the flask circulated
+briskly from hand to hand.
+
+Julian did not think it prudent to seem a check on their festivity, as
+he hoped in its progress something might occur to enable him to judge
+of the character and purposes of his companions. But he watched them
+in vain. Their conversation was animated and lively, and often bore
+reference to the literature of the period, in which the elder seemed
+particularly well skilled. They also talked freely of the Court, and
+of that numerous class of gallants who were then described as "men of
+wit and pleasure about town;" and to which it seemed probable they
+themselves appertained.
+
+At length the universal topic of the Popish Plot was started; upon
+which Ganlesse and Smith seemed to entertain the most opposite
+opinions. Ganlesse, if he did not maintain the authority of Oates in
+its utmost extent, contended, that at least it was confirmed in a
+great measure by the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey, and the
+letters written by Coleman to the confessor of the French King.
+
+With much more noise, and less power of reasoning, Will Smith
+hesitated not to ridicule and run down the whole discovery, as one of
+the wildest and most causeless alarms which had ever been sounded in
+the ears of a credulous public. "I shall never forget," he said, "Sir
+Godfrey's most original funeral. Two bouncing parsons, well armed with
+sword and pistol, mounted the pulpit, to secure the third fellow who
+preached from being murdered in the face of the congregation. Three
+parsons in one pulpit--three suns in one hemisphere--no wonder men
+stood aghast at such a prodigy."
+
+"What then, Will," answered his companion, "you are one of those who
+think the good knight murdered himself, in order to give credit to the
+Plot?"
+
+"By my faith, not I," said the other; "but some true blue Protestant
+might do the job for him, in order to give the thing a better colour.
+--I will be judged by our silent friend, whether that be not the most
+feasible solution of the whole."
+
+"I pray you, pardon me, gentlemen," said Julian; "I am but just landed
+in England, and am a stranger to the particular circumstances which
+have thrown the nation into such a ferment. It would be the highest
+degree of assurance in me to give my opinion betwixt gentlemen who
+argue the matter so ably; besides, to say truth, I confess weariness--
+your wine is more potent than I expected, or I have drunk more of it
+than I meant to do."
+
+"Nay, if an hour's nap will refresh you," said the elder of the
+strangers, "make no ceremony with us. Your bed--all we can offer as
+such--is that old-fashioned Dutch-built sofa, as the last new phrase
+calls it. We shall be early stirrers tomorrow morning."
+
+"And that we may be so," said Smith, "I propose that we do sit up all
+this night--I hate lying rough, and detest a pallet-bed. So have at
+another flask, and the newest lampoon to help it out--
+
+ 'Now a plague of their votes
+ Upon Papists and Plots,
+ And be d--d Doctor Oates.
+ Tol de rol.'"
+
+"Nay, but our Puritanic host," said Ganlesse.
+
+"I have him in my pocket, man--his eyes, ears, nose, and tongue,"
+answered his boon companion, "are all in my possession."
+
+"In that case, when you give him back his eyes and nose, I pray you
+keep his ears and tongue," answered Ganlesse. "Seeing and smelling are
+organs sufficient for such a knave--to hear and tell are things he
+should have no manner of pretensions to."
+
+"I grant you it were well done," answered Smith; "but it were a
+robbing of the hangman and the pillory; and I am an honest fellow, who
+would give Dun[*] and the devil his due. So,
+
+ 'All joy to great Cæsar,
+ Long life, love, and pleasure;
+ May the King live for ever,
+ 'Tis no matter for us, boys.'"
+
+[*] Dun was the hangman of the day at Tyburn. He was successor of
+ Gregory Brunden, who was by many believed to be the same who
+ dropped the axe upon Charles I., though others were suspected of
+ being the actual regicide.
+
+While this Bacchanalian scene proceeded, Julian had wrapt himself
+closely in his cloak, and stretched himself on the couch which they
+had shown him. He looked towards the table he had left--the tapers
+seemed to become hazy and dim as he gazed--he heard the sound of
+voices, but they ceased to convey any impression to his understanding;
+and in a few minutes, he was faster asleep than he had ever been in
+the whole course of his life.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+ The Gordon then his bugle blew,
+ And said, awa, awa;
+ The House of Rhodes is all on flame,
+ I hauld it time to ga'.
+ --OLD BALLAD.
+
+When Julian awaked the next morning, all was still and vacant in the
+apartment. The rising sun, which shone through the half-closed
+shutters, showed some relics of the last night's banquet, which his
+confused and throbbing head assured him had been carried into a
+debauch.
+
+Without being much of a boon companion, Julian, like other young men
+of the time, was not in the habit of shunning wine, which was then
+used in considerable quantities; and he could not help being
+surprised, that the few cups he had drunk over night had produced on
+his frame the effects of excess. He rose up, adjusted his dress, and
+sought in the apartment for water to perform his morning ablutions,
+but without success. Wine there was on the table; and beside it one
+stool stood, and another lay, as if thrown down in the heedless riot
+of the evening. "Surely," he thought to himself, "the wine must have
+been very powerful, which rendered me insensible to the noise my
+companions must have made ere they finished their carouse."
+
+With momentary suspicion he examined his weapons, and the packet which
+he had received from the Countess, and kept in a secret pocket of his
+upper coat, bound close about his person. All was safe; and the very
+operation reminded him of the duties which lay before him. He left the
+apartment where they had supped, and went into another, wretched
+enough, where, in a truckle-bed, were stretched two bodies, covered
+with a rug, the heads belonging to which were amicably deposited upon
+the same truss of hay. The one was the black shock-head of the groom;
+the other, graced with a long thrum nightcap, showed a grizzled pate,
+and a grave caricatured countenance, which the hook-nose and lantern-
+jaws proclaimed to belong to the Gallic minister of good cheer, whose
+praises he had heard sung forth on the preceding evening. These
+worthies seemed to have slumbered in the arms of Bacchus as well as
+of Morpheus, for there were broken flasks on the floor; and their deep
+snoring alone showed that they were alive.
+
+Bent upon resuming his journey, as duty and expedience alike dictated,
+Julian next descended the trap-stair, and essayed a door at the bottom
+of the steps. It was fastened within. He called--no answer was
+returned. It must be, he thought, the apartment of the revellers, now
+probably sleeping as soundly as their dependants still slumbered, and
+as he himself had done a few minutes before. Should he awake them?--To
+what purpose? They were men with whom accident had involved him
+against his own will; and situated as he was, he thought it wise to
+take the earliest opportunity of breaking off from society which was
+suspicious, and might be perilous. Ruminating thus, he essayed another
+door, which admitted him to a bedroom, where lay another harmonious
+slumberer. The mean utensils, pewter measures, empty cans and casks,
+with which this room was lumbered, proclaimed it that of the host, who
+slept surrounded by his professional implements of hospitality and
+stock-in-trade.
+
+This discovery relieved Peveril from some delicate embarrassment which
+he had formerly entertained. He put upon the table a piece of money,
+sufficient, as he judged, to pay his share of the preceding night's
+reckoning; not caring to be indebted for his entertainment to the
+strangers, whom he was leaving without the formality of an adieu.
+
+His conscience cleared of this gentleman-like scruple, Peveril
+proceeded with a light heart, though somewhat a dizzy head, to the
+stable, which he easily recognised among a few other paltry outhouses.
+His horse, refreshed with rest, and perhaps not unmindful of his
+services the evening before, neighed as his master entered the stable;
+and Peveril accepted the sound as an omen of a prosperous journey. He
+paid the augury with a sieveful of corn; and, while his palfrey
+profited by his attention, walked into the fresh air to cool his
+heated blood, and consider what course he should pursue in order to
+reach the Castle of Martindale before sunset. His acquaintance with
+the country in general gave him confidence that he could not have
+greatly deviated from the nearest road; and with his horse in good
+condition, he conceived he might easily reach Martindale before
+nightfall.
+
+Having adjusted his route in his mind, he returned into the stable to
+prepare his steed for the journey, and soon led him into the ruinous
+courtyard of the inn, bridled, saddled, and ready to be mounted. But
+as Peveril's hand was upon the mane, and his left foot in the stirrup,
+a hand touched his cloak, and the voice of Ganlesse said, "What,
+Master Peveril, is this your foreign breeding? or have you learned in
+France to take French leave of your friends?"
+
+Julian started like a guilty thing, although a moment's reflection
+assured him that he was neither wrong nor in danger. "I cared not to
+disturb you," he said, "although I did come as far as the door of your
+chamber. I supposed your friend and you might require, after our last
+night's revel, rather sleep than ceremony. I left my own bed, though a
+rough one, with more reluctance than usual; and as my occasions oblige
+me to be an early traveller, I thought it best to depart without
+leave-taking. I have left a token for mine host on the table of his
+apartment."
+
+"It was unnecessary," said Ganlesse; "the rascal is already overpaid.
+--But are you not rather premature in your purpose of departing? My
+mind tells me that Master Julian Peveril had better proceed with me to
+London, than turn aside for any purpose whatever. You may see already
+that I am no ordinary person, but a master-spirit of the time. For the
+cuckoo I travel with, and whom I indulge in his prodigal follies, he
+also has his uses. But you are a different cast; and I not only would
+serve you, but even wish you, to be my own."
+
+Julian gazed on this singular person when he spoke. We have already
+said his figure was mean and slight, with very ordinary and unmarked
+features, unless we were to distinguish the lightnings of a keen grey
+eye, which corresponded in its careless and prideful glance, with the
+haughty superiority which the stranger assumed in his conversation. It
+was not till after a momentary pause that Julian replied, "Can you
+wonder, sir, that in my circumstances--if they are indeed known to you
+so well as they seem--I should decline unnecessary confidence on the
+affairs of moment which have called me hither, or refuse the company
+of a stranger, who assigns no reason for desiring mine?"
+
+"Be it as you list, young man," answered Ganlesse; "only remember
+hereafter, you had a fair offer--it is not every one to whom I would
+have made it. If we should meet hereafter, on other, and on worse
+terms, impute it to yourself and not to me."
+
+"I understand not your threat," answered Peveril, "If a threat be
+indeed implied. I have done no evil--I feel no apprehension--and I
+cannot, in common sense, conceive why I should suffer for refusing my
+confidence to a stranger, who seems to require that I should submit me
+blindfold to his guidance."
+
+"Farewell, then, Sir Julian of the Peak,--that may soon be," said the
+stranger, removing the hand which he had as yet left carelessly on the
+horse's bridle.
+
+"How mean you by that phrase?" said Julian; "and why apply such a
+title to me?"
+
+The stranger smiled, and only answered, "Here our conference ends. The
+way is before you. You will find it longer and rougher than that by
+which I would have guided you."
+
+So saying, Ganlesse turned his back and walked toward the house. On
+the threshold he turned about once more, and seeing that Peveril had
+not yet moved from the spot, he again smiled and beckoned to him; but
+Julian, recalled by that sign to recollection, spurred his horse and
+set forward on his journey.
+
+It was not long ere his local acquaintance with the country enabled
+him to regain the road to Martindale, from which he had diverged on
+the preceding evening for about two miles. But the roads, or rather
+the paths, of this wild country, so much satirised by their native
+poet, Cotton, were so complicated in some places, so difficult to be
+traced in others, and so unfit for hasty travelling in almost all,
+that in spite of Julian's utmost exertions, and though he made no
+longer delay upon the journey than was necessary to bait his horse at
+a small hamlet through which he passed at noon, it was nightfall ere
+he reached an eminence, from which, an hour sooner, the battlements of
+Martindale Castle would have been visible; and where, when they were
+hid in night, their situation was indicated by a light constantly
+maintained in a lofty tower, called the Warder's Turret; and which
+domestic beacon had acquired, through all the neighbourhood, the name
+of Peveril's Polestar.
+
+This was regularly kindled at curfew toll, and supplied with as much
+wood and charcoal as maintained the light till sunrise; and at no
+period was the ceremonial omitted, saving during the space intervening
+between the death of a Lord of the Castle and his interment. When this
+last event had taken place, the nightly beacon was rekindled with some
+ceremony, and continued till fate called the successor to sleep with
+his fathers. It is not known from which circumstance the practice of
+maintaining this light originally sprung. Tradition spoke of it
+doubtfully. Some thought it was the signal of general hospitality,
+which, in ancient times, guided the wandering knight, or the weary
+pilgrim, to rest and refreshment. Others spoke of it as a "love-
+lighted watchfire," by which the provident anxiety of a former lady of
+Martindale guided her husband homeward through the terrors of a
+midnight storm. The less favourable construction of unfriendly
+neighbours of the dissenting persuasion, ascribed the origin and
+continuance of this practice to the assuming pride of the family of
+Peveril, who thereby chose to intimate their ancient /suzerainté/ over
+the whole country, in the manner of the admiral who carries the
+lantern in the poop, for the guidance of the fleet. And in the former
+times, our old friend, Master Solsgrace, dealt from the pulpit many a
+hard hit against Sir Geoffrey, as he that had raised his horn, and set
+up his candlestick on high. Certain it is, that all the Peverils, from
+father to son, had been especially attentive to the maintenance of
+this custom, as something intimately connected with the dignity of
+their family; and in the hands of Sir Geoffrey, the observance was not
+likely to be omitted.
+
+Accordingly, the polar-star of Peveril had continued to beam more or
+less brightly during all the vicissitudes of the Civil War; and
+glimmered, however faintly, during the subsequent period of Sir
+Geoffrey's depression. But he was often heard to say, and sometimes to
+swear, that while there was a perch of woodland left to the estate,
+the old beacon-grate should not lack replenishing. All this his son
+Julian well knew; and therefore it was with no ordinary feelings of
+surprise and anxiety, that, looking in the direction of the Castle, he
+perceived that the light was not visible. He halted--rubbed his eyes--
+shifted his position--and endeavoured, in vain, to persuade himself
+that he had mistaken the point from which the polar-star of his house
+was visible, or that some newly intervening obstacle, the growth of a
+plantation, perhaps, or the erection of some building, intercepted the
+light of the beacon. But a moment's reflection assured him, that from
+the high and free situation which Martindale Castle bore in reference
+to the surrounding country, this could not have taken place; and the
+inference necessarily forced itself upon his mind, that Sir Geoffrey,
+his father, was either deceased, or that the family must have been
+disturbed by some strange calamity, under the pressure of which, their
+wonted custom and solemn usage had been neglected.
+
+Under the influence of undefinable apprehension, young Peveril now
+struck the spurs into his jaded steed, and forcing him down the broken
+and steep path, at a pace which set safety at defiance, he arrived at
+the village of Martindale-Moultrassie, eagerly desirous to ascertain
+the cause of this ominous eclipse. The street, through which his tired
+horse paced slow and reluctantly, was now deserted and empty; and
+scarcely a candle twinkled from a casement, except from the latticed
+window of the little inn, called the Peveril Arms, from which a broad
+light shone, and several voices were heard in rude festivity.
+
+Before the door of this inn, the jaded palfrey, guided by the instinct
+or experience which makes a hackney well acquainted with the outside
+of a house of entertainment, made so sudden and determined a pause,
+that, notwithstanding his haste, the rider thought it best to
+dismount, expecting to be readily supplied with a fresh horse by Roger
+Raine, the landlord, the ancient dependant of his family. He also
+wished to relive his anxiety, by inquiring concerning the state of
+things at the Castle, when he was surprised to hear, bursting from the
+taproom of the loyal old host, a well-known song of the Commonwealth
+time, which some puritanical wag had written in reprehension of the
+Cavaliers, and their dissolute courses, and in which his father came
+in for a lash of the satirist.
+
+ "Ye thought in the world there was no power to tame ye,
+ So you tippled and drabb'd till the saints overcame ye;
+ 'Forsooth,' and 'Ne'er stir,' sir, have vanquish'd 'G-- d--n me,'
+ Which nobody can deny.
+
+ There was bluff old Sir Geoffrey loved brandy and mum well,
+ And to see a beer-glass turned over the thumb well;
+ But he fled like the wind, before Fairfax and Cromwell,
+ Which nobody can deny."
+
+Some strange revolution, Julian was aware, must have taken place, both
+in the village and in the Castle, ere these sounds of unseemly insult
+could have been poured forth in the very inn which was decorated with
+the armorial bearings of his family; and not knowing how far it might
+be advisable to intrude on these unfriendly revellers, without the
+power of repelling or chastising their insolence, he led his horse to
+a back-door, which as he recollected, communicated with the landlord's
+apartment, having determined to make private inquiry of him concerning
+the state of matters at the Castle. He knocked repeatedly, and as
+often called on Roger Raine with an earnest but stifled voice. At
+length a female voice replied by the usual inquiry, "Who is there?"
+
+"It is I, Dame Raine--I, Julian Peveril--tell your husband to come to
+me presently."
+
+"Alack, and a well-a-day, Master Julian, if it be really you--you are
+to know my poor goodman has gone where he can come to no one; but,
+doubtless, we shall all go to him, as Matthew Chamberlain says."
+
+"He is dead, then?" said Julian. "I am extremely sorry----"
+
+"Dead six months and more, Master Julian; and let me tell you, it is a
+long time for a lone woman, as Matt Chamberlain says."
+
+"Well, do you or your chamberlain undo the door. I want a fresh horse;
+and I want to know how things are at the Castle."
+
+"The Castle--lack-a-day!--Chamberlain--Matthew Chamberlain--I say,
+Matt!"
+
+Matt Chamberlain apparently was at no great distance, for he presently
+answered her call; and Peveril, as he stood close to the door, could
+hear them whispering to each other, and distinguish in a great measure
+what they said. And here it may be noticed, that Dame Raine,
+accustomed to submit to the authority of old Roger, who vindicated as
+well the husband's domestic prerogative, as that of the monarch in the
+state, had, when left a buxom widow, been so far incommoded by the
+exercise of her newly acquired independence, that she had recourse,
+upon all occasions, to the advice of Matt Chamberlain; and as Matt
+began no longer to go slipshod, and in a red nightcap, but wore
+Spanish shoes, and a high-crowned beaver (at least of a Sunday), and
+moreover was called Master Matthew by his fellow-servants, the
+neighbours in the village argued a speedy change of the name of the
+sign-post; nay, perhaps, of the very sign itself, for Matthew was a
+bit of a Puritan, and no friend to Peveril of the Peak.
+
+"Now counsel me, an you be a man, Matt Chamberlain," said Widow Raine;
+"for never stir, if here be not Master Julian's own self, and he wants
+a horse, and what not, and all as if things were as they wont to be."
+
+"Why, dame, an ye will walk by my counsel," said the Chamberlain,
+"e'en shake him off--let him be jogging while his boots are green.
+This is no world for folks to scald their fingers in other folks'
+broth."
+
+"And that is well spoken, truly," answered Dame Raine; "but then look
+you, Matt, we have eaten their bread, and, as my poor goodman used to
+say----"
+
+"Nay, nay, dame, they that walk by the counsel of the dead, shall have
+none of the living; and so you may do as you list; but if you will
+walk by mine, drop latch, and draw bolt, and bid him seek quarters
+farther--that is my counsel."
+
+"I desire nothing of you, sirrah," said Peveril, "save but to know how
+Sir Geoffrey and his lady do?"
+
+"Lack-a-day!--lack-a-day!" in a tone of sympathy, was the only answer
+he received from the landlady; and the conversation betwixt her and
+her chamberlain was resumed, but in a tone too low to be overheard.
+
+At length Matt Chamberlain spoke aloud, and with a tone of authority:
+"We undo no doors at this time of night, for it is against the
+Justices' orders, and might cost us our licence; and for the Castle,
+the road up to it lies before you, and I think you know it as well as
+we do."
+
+"And I know you," said Peveril, remounting his wearied horse, "for an
+ungrateful churl, whom, on the first opportunity, I will assuredly
+cudgel to a mummy."
+
+To this menace Matthew made no reply, and Peveril presently heard him
+leave the apartment, after a few earnest words betwixt him and his
+mistress.
+
+Impatient at this delay, and at the evil omen implied in these
+people's conversation and deportment, Peveril, after some vain
+spurring of his horse, which positively refused to move a step
+farther, dismounted once more, and was about to pursue his journey on
+foot, notwithstanding the extreme disadvantage under which the high
+riding-boots of the period laid those who attempted to walk with such
+encumbrances, when he was stopped by a gentle call from the window.
+
+Her counsellor was no sooner gone, than the good-nature and habitual
+veneration of the dame for the house of Peveril, and perhaps some fear
+for her counsellor's bones, induced her to open the casement, and cry,
+but in a low and timid tone, "Hist! hist! Master Julian--be you gone?"
+
+"Not yet, dame," said Julian; "though it seems my stay is unwelcome."
+
+"Nay, but good young master, it is because men counsel so differently;
+for here was my poor old Roger Raine would have thought the chimney
+corner too cold for you; and here is Matt Chamberlain thinks the cold
+courtyard is warm enough."
+
+"Never mind that, dame," said Julian; "do but only tell me what has
+happened at Martindale Castle? I see the beacon is extinguished."
+
+"Is it in troth?--ay, like enough--then good Sir Geoffrey has gone to
+heaven with my old Roger Raine!"
+
+"Sacred Heaven!" exclaimed Peveril; "when was my father taken ill?"
+
+"Never as I knows of," said the dame; "but, about three hours since,
+arrived a party at the Castle, with buff-coats and bandoleers, and one
+of the Parliament's folks, like in Oliver's time. My old Roger Raine
+would have shut the gates of the inn against them, but he is in the
+churchyard, and Matt says it is against law; and so they came in and
+refreshed men and horses, and sent for Master Bridgenorth, that is at
+Moultrassie Hall even now; and so they went up to the Castle, and
+there was a fray, it is like, as the old Knight was no man to take
+napping, as poor Roger Raine used to say. Always the officers had the
+best on't; and reason there is, since they had the law of their side,
+as our Matthew says. But since the pole-star of the Castle is out, as
+your honour says, why, doubtless, the old gentleman is dead."
+
+"Gracious Heaven!--Dear dame, for love or gold, let me have a horse to
+make for the Castle!"
+
+"The Castle?" said the dame; "the Roundheads, as my poor Roger called
+them, will kill you as they have killed your father! Better creep into
+the woodhouse, and I will send Bett with a blanket and some supper--Or
+stay--my old Dobbin stands in the little stable beside the hencoop--
+e'en take him, and make the best of your way out of the country, for
+there is no safety here for you. Hear what songs some of them are
+singing at the tap!--so take Dobbin, and do not forget to leave your
+own horse instead."
+
+Peveril waited to hear no farther, only, that just as he turned to go
+off to the stable, the compassionate female was heard to exclaim--"O
+Lord! what will Matthew Chamberlain say!" but instantly added, "Let
+him say what he will, I may dispose of what's my own."
+
+With the haste of a double-fee'd hostler did Julian exchange the
+equipments of his jaded brute with poor Dobbin, who stood quietly
+tugging at his rackful of hay, without dreaming of the business which
+was that night destined for him. Notwithstanding the darkness of the
+place, Julian succeeded marvellous quickly in preparing for his
+journey; and leaving his own horse to find its way to Dobbin's rack by
+instinct, he leaped upon his new acquisition, and spurred him sharply
+against the hill, which rises steeply from the village to the Castle.
+Dobbin, little accustomed to such exertions, snorted, panted, and
+trotted as briskly as he could, until at length he brought his rider
+before the entrance-gate of his father's ancient seat.
+
+The moon was now rising, but the portal was hidden from its beams,
+being situated, as we have mentioned elsewhere, in a deep recess
+betwixt two large flanking towers. Peveril dismounted, turned his
+horse loose, and advanced to the gate, which, contrary to his
+expectation, he found open. He entered the large courtyard; and could
+then perceive that lights yet twinkled in the lower part of the
+building, although he had not before observed them, owing to the
+height of the outward walls. The main door, or great hall-gate, as it
+was called, was, since the partially decayed state of the family,
+seldom opened, save on occasions of particular ceremony. A smaller
+postern door served the purpose of ordinary entrance; and to that
+Julian now repaired. This also was open--a circumstance which would of
+itself have alarmed him, had he not already had so many causes for
+apprehension. His heart sunk within him as he turned to the left,
+through a small outward hall, towards the great parlour, which the
+family usually occupied as a sitting apartment; and his alarm became
+still greater, when, on a nearer approach, he heard proceeding from
+thence the murmur of several voices. He threw the door of the
+apartment wide; and the sight which was thus displayed, warranted all
+the evil bodings which he had entertained.
+
+In front of him stood the old Knight, whose arms were strongly
+secured, over the elbows, by a leathern belt drawn tight round them,
+and made fast behind; two ruffianly-looking men, apparently his
+guards, had hold of his doublet. The scabbard-less sword which lay on
+the floor, and the empty sheath which hung by Sir Geoffrey's side,
+showed the stout old Cavalier had not been reduced to this state of
+bondage without an attempt at resistance. Two or three persons, having
+their backs turned towards Julian, sat round a table, and appeared
+engaged in writing--the voices which he had heard were theirs, as they
+murmured to each other. Lady Peveril--the emblem of death, so pallid
+was her countenance--stood at the distance of a yard or two from her
+husband, upon whom her eyes were fixed with an intenseness of gaze,
+like that of one who looks her last on the object which she loves the
+best. She was the first to perceive Julian; and she exclaimed,
+"Merciful Heaven!--my son!--the misery of our house is complete!"
+
+"My son!" echoed Sir Geoffrey, starting from the sullen state of
+dejection, and swearing a deep oath--"thou art come in the right time,
+Julian. Strike me one good blow--cleave me that traitorous thief from
+the crown to the brisket! and that done, I care not what comes next."
+
+The sight of his father's situation made the son forget the inequality
+of the contest which he was about to provoke.
+
+"Villains," he said, "unhand him!" and rushing on the guards with his
+drawn sword, compelled them to let go Sir Geoffrey, and stand on their
+own defence.
+
+Sir Geoffrey, thus far liberated, shouted to his lady. "Undo the belt,
+dame, and we will have three good blows for it yet--they must fight
+well that beat both father and son."
+
+But one of those men who had started up from the writing-table when
+the fray commenced, prevented Lady Peveril from rendering her husband
+this assistance; while another easily mastered the hampered Knight,
+though not without receiving several severe kicks from his heavy boots
+--his condition permitting him no other mode of defence. A third, who
+saw that Julian, young, active, and animated with the fury of a son
+who fights for his parents, was compelling the two guards to give
+ground, seized on his collar, and attempted to master his sword.
+Suddenly dropping that weapon, and snatching one of his pistols,
+Julian fired it at the head of the person by whom he was thus
+assailed. He did not drop, but, staggering back as if he had received
+a severe blow, showed Peveril, as he sunk into a chair, the features
+of old Bridgenorth, blackened with the explosion, which had even set
+fire to a part of his grey hair. A cry of astonishment escaped from
+Julian; and in the alarm and horror of the moment, he was easily
+secured and disarmed by those with whom he had been at first engaged.
+
+"Heed it not, Julian," said Sir Geoffrey; "heed it not, my brave boy--
+that shot has balanced all accounts!--but how--what the devil--he
+lives!--Was your pistol loaded with chaff? or has the foul fiend given
+him proof against lead?"
+
+There was some reason for Sir Geoffrey's surprise, since, as he spoke,
+Major Bridgenorth collected himself--sat up in the chair as one who
+recovers from a stunning blow--then rose, and wiping with his
+handkerchief the marks of the explosion from his face, he approached
+Julian, and said, in the same cold unaltered tone in which he usually
+expressed himself, "Young man, you have reason to bless God, who has
+this day saved you from the commission of a great crime."
+
+"Bless the devil, ye crop-eared knave!" exclaimed Sir Geoffrey; "for
+nothing less than the father of all fanatics saved your brains from
+being blown about like the rinsings of Beelzebub's porridge pot!"
+
+"Sir Geoffrey," said Major Bridgenorth, "I have already told you, that
+with you I will hold no argument; for to you I am not accountable for
+any of my actions."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said the lady, making a strong effort to speak,
+and to speak with calmness, "whatever revenge your Christian state of
+conscience may permit you to take on my husband--I--I, who have some
+right to experience compassion at your hand, for most sincerely did I
+compassionate you when the hand of Heaven was heavy on you--I implore
+you not to involve my son in our common ruin!--Let the destruction of
+the father and mother, with the ruin of our ancient house, satisfy
+your resentment for any wrong which you have ever received at my
+husband's hand."
+
+"Hold your peace, housewife," said the Knight, "you speak like a fool,
+and meddle with what concerns you not.--Wrong at /my/ hand? The
+cowardly knave has ever had but even too much right. Had I cudgelled
+the cur soundly when he first bayed at me, the cowardly mongrel had
+been now crouching at my feet, instead of flying at my throat. But if
+I get through this action, as I have got through worse weather, I will
+pay off old scores, as far as tough crab-tree and cold iron will bear
+me out."
+
+"Sir Geoffrey," replied Bridgenorth, "if the birth you boast of has
+made you blind to better principles, it might have at least taught you
+civility. What do you complain of? I am a magistrate; and I execute a
+warrant, addressed to me by the first authority in that state. I am a
+creditor also of yours; and law arms me with powers to recover my own
+property from the hands of an improvident debtor."
+
+"You a magistrate!" said the Knight; "much such a magistrate as Noll
+was a monarch. Your heart is up, I warrant, because you have the
+King's pardon; and are replaced on the bench, forsooth, to persecute
+the poor Papist. There was never turmoil in the state, but knaves had
+their vantage by it--never pot boiled, but the scum was cast
+uppermost."
+
+"For God's sake, my dearest husband," said Lady Peveril, "cease this
+wild talk! It can but incense Master Bridgenorth, who might otherwise
+consider, that in common charity----"
+
+"Incense him!" said Sir Geoffrey, impatiently interrupting her;
+"God's-death, madam, you will drive me mad! Have you lived so long in
+this world, and yet expect consideration and charity from an old
+starved wolf like that? And if he had it, do you think that I, or you,
+madam, as my wife, are subjects for his charity?--Julian, my poor
+fellow, I am sorry thou hast come so unluckily, since thy petronel was
+not better loaded--but thy credit is lost for ever as a marksman."
+
+This angry colloquy passed so rapidly on all sides, that Julian,
+scarce recovered from the extremity of astonishment with which he was
+overwhelmed at finding himself suddenly plunged into a situation of
+such extremity, had no time to consider in what way he could most
+effectually act for the succour of his parents. To speak to
+Bridgenorth fair seemed the more prudent course; but to this his pride
+could hardly stoop; yet he forced himself to say, with as much
+calmness as he could assume,
+
+"Master Bridgenorth, since you act as a magistrate, I desire to be
+treated according to the laws of England; and demand to know of what
+we are accused, and by whose authority we are arrested?"
+
+"Here is another howlet for ye!" exclaimed the impetuous old Knight;
+"his mother speaks to a Puritan of charity; and thou must talk of law
+to a round-headed rebel, with a wannion to you! What warrant hath he,
+think ye, beyond the Parliament's or the devil's?"
+
+"Who speaks of the Parliament?" said a person entering, whom Peveril
+recognised as the official person whom he had before seen at the
+horse-dealer's, and who now bustled in with all the conscious dignity
+of plenary authority,--"Who talks of the Parliament?" he exclaimed. "I
+promise you, enough has been found in this house to convict twenty
+plotters--Here be arms, and that good store. Bring them in, Captain."
+
+"The very same," exclaimed the Captain, approaching, "which I mention
+in my printed Narrative of Information, lodged before the Honourable
+House of Commons; they were commissioned from old Vander Huys of
+Rotterdam, by orders of Don John of Austria, for the service of the
+Jesuits."
+
+"Now, by this light," said Sir Geoffrey, "they are the pikes,
+musketoons, and pistols, that have been hidden in the garret ever
+since Naseby fight!"
+
+"And here," said the Captain's yoke-fellow, Everett, "are proper
+priest's trappings--antiphoners, and missals, and copes, I warrant
+you--ay, and proper pictures, too, for Papists to mutter and bow
+over."
+
+"Now plague on thy snuffling whine," said Sir Geoffrey; "here is a
+rascal will swear my grandmother's old farthingale to be priest's
+vestments, and the story book of Owlenspiegel a Popish missal!"
+
+"But how's this, Master Bridgenorth?" said Topham, addressing the
+magistrate; "your honour has been as busy as we have; and you have
+caught another knave while we recovered these toys."
+
+"I think, sir," said Julian, "if you look into your warrant, which, if
+I mistake not, names the persons whom you are directed to arrest, you
+will find you have not title to apprehend me."
+
+"Sir," said the officer, puffing with importance, "I do not know who
+you are; but I would you were the best man in England, that I might
+teach you the respect due to the warrant of the House. Sir, there
+steps not the man within the British seas, but I will arrest him on
+authority of this bit of parchment; and I do arrest you accordingly.--
+What do you accuse him of, gentlemen?"
+
+Dangerfield swaggered forward, and peeping under Julian's hat, "Stop
+my vital breath," he exclaimed, "but I have seen you before, my
+friend, an I could but think where; but my memory is not worth a bean,
+since I have been obliged to use it so much of late, in the behalf of
+the poor state. But I do know the fellow; and I have seen him amongst
+the Papists--, I'll take that on my assured damnation."
+
+"Why, Captain Dangerfield," said the Captain's smoother, but more
+dangerous associate,--"verily, it is the same youth whom we saw at the
+horse-merchant's yesterday; and we had matter against him then, only
+Master Topham did not desire us to bring it out."
+
+"Ye may bring out what ye will against him now," said Topham, "for he
+hath blasphemed the warrant of the House. I think ye said ye saw him
+somewhere."
+
+"Ay, verily," said Everett, "I have seen him amongst the seminary
+pupils at Saint Omer's--he was who but he with the regents there."
+
+"Nay, Master Everett, collect yourself," said Topham; "for as I think,
+you said you saw him at a consult of the Jesuits in London."
+
+"It was I said so, Master Topham," said the undaunted Dangerfield;
+"and mine is the tongue that will swear it."
+
+"Good Master Topham," said Bridgenorth, "you may suspend farther
+inquiry at present, as it doth but fatigue and perplex the memory of
+the King's witnesses."
+
+"You are wrong, Master Bridgenorth--clearly wrong. It doth but keep
+them in wind--only breathes them like greyhounds before a coursing
+match."
+
+"Be it so," said Bridgenorth, with his usual indifference of manner;
+"but at present this youth must stand committed upon a warrant, which
+I will presently sign, of having assaulted me while in discharge of my
+duty as a magistrate, for the rescue of a person legally attached. Did
+you not hear the report of a pistol?"
+
+"I will swear to it," said Everett.
+
+"And I," said Dangerfield. "While we were making search in the cellar,
+I heard something very like a pistol-shot; but I conceived it to be
+the drawing of a long-corked bottle of sack, to see whether there were
+any Popish relics in the inside on't."
+
+"A pistol-shot!" exclaimed Topham; "here might have been a second Sir
+Edmondsbury Godfrey's matter.--Oh, thou real spawn of the red old
+dragon! for he too would have resisted the House's warrant, had we not
+taken him something at unawares.--Master Bridgenorth, you are a
+judicious magistrate, and a worthy servant of the state--I would we
+had many such sound Protestant justices. Shall I have this young
+fellow away with his parents--what think you?--or will you keep him
+for re-examination?"
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said Lady Peveril, in spite of her husband's
+efforts to interrupt her, "for God's sake, if ever you knew what it
+was to love one of the many children you have lost, or her who is now
+left to you, do not pursue your vengeance to the blood of my poor boy!
+I will forgive you all the rest--all the distress you have wrought--
+all the yet greater misery with which you threaten us; but do not be
+extreme with one who never can have offended you! Believe, that if
+your ears are shut against the cry of a despairing mother, those which
+are open to the complaint of all who sorrow, will hear my petition and
+your answer!"
+
+The agony of mind and of voice with which Lady Peveril uttered these
+words, seemed to thrill through all present, though most of them were
+but too much inured to such scenes. Every one was silent, when,
+ceasing to speak, she fixed on Bridgenorth her eyes, glistening with
+tears, with the eager anxiety of one whose life or death seemed to
+depend upon the answer to be returned. Even Bridgenorth's
+inflexibility seemed to be shaken; and his voice was tremulous, as he
+answered, "Madam, I would to God I had the present means of relieving
+your great distress, otherwise than by recommending to you a reliance
+upon Providence; and that you take heed to your spirit, that it murmur
+not under this crook in your lot. For me, I am but as a rod in the
+hand of the strong man, which smites not of itself, but because it is
+wielded by the arm of him who holds the same."
+
+"Even as I and my black rod are guided by the Commons of England,"
+said Master Topham, who seemed marvellously pleased with the
+illustration.
+
+Julian now thought it time to say something in his own behalf; and he
+endeavoured to temper it with as much composure as it was possible for
+him to assume. "Master Bridgenorth," he said, "I neither dispute your
+authority, nor this gentleman's warrant----"
+
+"You do not?" said Topham. "Oh, ho, master youngster, I thought we
+should bring you to your senses presently!"
+
+"Then, if you so will it, Master Topham," said Bridgenorth, "thus it
+shall be. You shall set out with early day, taking you, towards
+London, the persons of Sir Geoffrey and Lady Peveril; and that they
+may travel according to their quality, you will allow them their
+coach, sufficiently guarded."
+
+"I will travel with them myself," said Topham; "for these rough
+Derbyshire roads are no easy riding; and my very eyes are weary with
+looking on these bleak hills. In the coach I can sleep as sound as if
+I were in the House, and Master Bodderbrains on his legs."
+
+"It will become you so to take your ease, Master Topham," answered
+Bridgenorth. "For this youth, I will take him under my charge, and
+bring him up myself."
+
+"I may not be answerable for that, worthy Master Bridgenorth," said
+Topham, "since he comes within the warrant of the House."
+
+"Nay, but," said Bridgenorth, "he is only under custody for an
+assault, with the purpose of a rescue; and I counsel you against
+meddling with him, unless you have stronger guard. Sir Geoffrey is now
+old and broken, but this young fellow is in the flower of his youth,
+and hath at his beck all the debauched young Cavaliers of the
+neighbourhood--You will scarce cross the country without a rescue."
+
+Topham eyed Julian wistfully, as a spider may be supposed to look upon
+a stray wasp which has got into his web, and which he longs to secure,
+though he fears the consequences of attempting him.
+
+Julian himself replied, "I know not if this separation be well or ill
+meant on your part, Master Bridgenorth; but on mine, I am only
+desirous to share the fate of my parents; and therefore I will give my
+word of honour to attempt neither rescue nor escape, on condition you
+do not separate me from them."
+
+"Do not say so, Julian," said his mother; "abide with Master
+Bridgenorth--my mind tells me he cannot mean so ill by us as his rough
+conduct would now lead us to infer."
+
+"And I," said Sir Geoffrey, "know, that between the doors of my
+father's house and the gates of hell, there steps not such a villain
+on the ground! And if I wish my hands ever to be unbound again, it is
+because I hope for one downright blow at a grey head, that has hatched
+more treason than the whole Long Parliament."
+
+"Away with thee," said the zealous officer; "is Parliament a word for
+so foul a mouth as thine?--Gentlemen," he added, turning to Everett
+and Dangerfield, "you will bear witness to this."
+
+"To his having reviled the House of Commons--by G--d, that I will!"
+said Dangerfield; "I will take it on my damnation."
+
+"And verily," said Everett, "as he spoke of Parliament generally, he
+hath contemned the House of Lords also."
+
+"Why, ye poor insignificant wretches," said Sir Geoffrey, "whose very
+life is a lie--and whose bread is perjury--would you pervert my
+innocent words almost as soon as they have quitted my lips? I tell you
+the country is well weary of you; and should Englishmen come to their
+senses, the jail, the pillory, the whipping-post, and the gibbet, will
+be too good preferment for such base blood-suckers.--And now, Master
+Bridgenorth, you and they may do your worst; for I will not open my
+mouth to utter a single word while I am in the company of such
+knaves."
+
+"Perhaps, Sir Geoffrey," answered Bridgenorth, "you would better have
+consulted your own safety in adopting that resolution a little sooner
+--the tongue is a little member, but it causes much strife.--You,
+Master Julian, will please to follow me, and without remonstrance or
+resistance; for you must be aware that I have the means of
+compelling."
+
+Julian was, indeed, but too sensible, that he had no other course but
+that of submission to superior force; but ere he left the apartment,
+he kneeled down to receive his father's blessing, which the old man
+bestowed not without a tear in his eye, and in the emphatic words,
+"God bless thee, my boy; and keep thee good and true to Church and
+King, whatever wind shall bring foul weather!"
+
+His mother was only able to pass her hand over his head, and to
+implore him, in a low tone of voice, not to be rash or violent in any
+attempt to render them assistance. "We are innocent," she said, "my
+son--we are innocent--and we are in God's hands. Be the thought our
+best comfort and protection."
+
+Bridgenorth now signed to Julian to follow him, which he did,
+accompanied, or rather conducted, by the two guards who had first
+disarmed him. When they had passed from the apartment, and were at the
+door of the outward hall, Bridgenorth asked Julian whether he should
+consider him as under parole; in which case, he said, he would
+dispense with all other security but his own promise.
+
+Peveril, who could not help hoping somewhat from the favourable and
+unresentful manner in which he was treated by one whose life he had so
+recently attempted, replied, without hesitation, that he would give
+his parole for twenty-four hours, neither to attempt to escape by
+force nor by flight.
+
+"It is wisely said," replied Bridgenorth; "for though you might cause
+bloodshed, be assured that your utmost efforts could do no service to
+your parents.--Horses there--horses to the courtyard!"
+
+The trampling of horses was soon heard; and in obedience to
+Bridgenorth's signal, and in compliance with his promise, Julian
+mounted one which was presented to him, and prepared to leave the
+house of his fathers, in which his parents were now prisoners, and to
+go, he knew not whither, under the custody of one known to be the
+ancient enemy of his family. He was rather surprised at observing,
+that Bridgenorth and he were about to travel without any other
+attendants.
+
+When they were mounted, and as they rode slowly towards the outer gate
+of the courtyard, Bridgenorth said to him, "it is not every one who
+would thus unreservedly commit his safety by travelling at night, and
+unaided, with the hot-brained youth who so lately attempted his life."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," said Julian, "I might tell you truly, that I
+knew you not at the time when I directed my weapon against you; but I
+must also add, that the cause in which I used it, might have rendered
+me, even had I known you, a slight respecter of your person. At
+present, I do know you; and have neither malice against your person,
+nor the liberty of a parent to fight for. Besides, you have my word;
+and when was a Peveril known to break it?"
+
+"Ay," replied his companion, "a Peveril--a Peveril of the Peak!--a
+name which has long sounded like a war-trumpet in the land; but which
+has now perhaps sounded its last loud note. Look back, young man, on
+the darksome turrets of your father's house, which uplift themselves
+above the sons of their people. Think upon your father, a captive--
+yourself in some sort a fugitive--your light quenched--your glory
+abased--your estate wrecked and impoverished. Think that Providence
+has subjected the destinies of the race of Peveril to one, whom, in
+their aristocratic pride, they held as a plebeian upstart. Think of
+this; and when you again boast of your ancestry, remember, that he who
+raiseth the lowly can also abase the high in heart."
+
+Julian did indeed gaze for an instant, with a swelling heart, upon the
+dimly seen turrets of his paternal mansion, on which poured the
+moonlight, mixed with long shadows of the towers and trees. But while
+he sadly acknowledged the truth of Bridgenorth's observation, he felt
+indignant at his ill-timed triumph. "If fortune had followed worth,"
+he said, "the Castle of Martindale, and the name of Peveril, had
+afforded no room for their enemy's vainglorious boast. But those who
+have stood high on Fortune's wheel, must abide by the consequence of
+its revolutions. This much I will at least say for my father's house,
+that it has not stood unhonoured; nor will it fall--if it is to fall--
+unlamented. Forbear, then, if you are indeed the Christian you call
+yourself, to exult in the misfortunes of others, or to confide in your
+own prosperity. If the light of our house be now quenched, God can
+rekindle it in His own good time."
+
+Peveril broke off in extreme surprise; for as he spake the last words,
+the bright red beams of the family beacon began again to glimmer from
+its wonted watch-tower, checkering the pale moonbeam with a ruddier
+glow. Bridgenorth also gazed on this unexpected illumination with
+surprise, and not, as it seemed, without disquietude. "Young man," he
+resumed, "it can scarcely be but that Heaven intends to work great
+things by your hand, so singularly has that augury followed on your
+words."
+
+So saying, he put his horse once more in motion; and looking back,
+from time to time, as if to assure himself that the beacon of the
+Castle was actually rekindled, he led the way through the well-known
+paths and alleys, to his own house of Moultrassie, followed by
+Peveril, who although sensible that the light might be altogether
+accidental, could not but receive as a good omen an event so
+intimately connected with the traditions and usages of his family.
+
+They alighted at the hall-door, which was hastily opened by a female;
+and while the deep tone of Bridgenorth called on the groom to take
+their horses, the well-known voice of his daughter Alice was heard to
+exclaim in thanksgiving to God, who had restored her father in safety.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+ We meet, as men see phantoms in a dream,
+ Which glide, and sigh, and sign, and move their lips,
+ But make no sound; or, if they utter voice,
+ 'Tis but a low and undistinguish'd moaning,
+ Which has nor word nor sense of utter'd sound.
+ --THE CHIEFTAIN.
+
+We said, at the conclusion of the last chapter, that a female form
+appeared at the door of Moultrassie Hall; and that the well-known
+accents of Alice Bridgenorth were heard to hail the return of her
+father, from what she naturally dreaded as a perilous visit to the
+Castle of Martindale.
+
+Julian, who followed his conductor with a throbbing heart into the
+lighted hall, was therefore prepared to see her whom he best loved,
+with her arms thrown around her father. The instant she had quitted
+his paternal embrace, she was aware of the unexpected guest who had
+returned in his company. A deep blush, rapidly succeeded by a deadly
+paleness, and again by a slighter suffusion, showed plainly to her
+lover that his sudden appearance was anything but indifferent to her.
+He bowed profoundly--a courtesy which she returned with equal
+formality, but did not venture to approach more nearly, feeling at
+once the delicacy of his own situation and of hers.
+
+Major Bridgenorth turned his cold, fixed, grey, melancholy glance,
+first on the one of them and then on the other. "Some," he said
+gravely, "would, in my case, have avoided this meeting; but I have
+confidence in you both, although you are young, and beset with the
+snares incidental to your age. There are those within who should not
+know that ye have been acquainted. Wherefore, be wise, and be as
+strangers to each other."
+
+Julian and Alice exchanged glances as her father turned from them, and
+lifting a lamp which stood in the entrance-hall, led the way to the
+interior apartment. There was little of consolation in this exchange
+of looks; for the sadness of Alice's glance was mingled with fear, and
+that of Julian clouded by an anxious sense of doubt. The look also was
+but momentary; for Alice, springing to her father, took the light out
+of his hand, and stepping before him, acted as the usher of both into
+the large oaken parlour, which has been already mentioned as the
+apartment in which Bridgenorth had spent the hours of dejection which
+followed the death of his consort and family. It was now lighted up as
+for the reception of company; and five or six persons sat in it, in
+the plain, black, stiff dress, which was affected by the formal
+Puritans of the time, in evidence of their contempt of the manners of
+the luxurious Court of Charles the Second; amongst whom, excess of
+extravagance in apparel, like excess of every other kind, was highly
+fashionable.
+
+Julian at first glanced his eyes but slightly along the range of grave
+and severe faces which composed this society--men sincere, perhaps, in
+their pretensions to a superior purity of conduct and morals, but in
+whom that high praise was somewhat chastened by an affected austerity
+in dress and manners, allied to those Pharisees of old, who made broad
+their phylacteries, and would be seen of man to fast, and to discharge
+with rigid punctuality the observances of the law. Their dress was
+almost uniformly a black cloak and doublet, cut straight and close,
+and undecorated with lace or embroidery of any kind, black Flemish
+breeches and hose, square-toed shoes, with large roses made of serge
+ribbon. Two or three had large loose boots of calf-leather, and almost
+every one was begirt with a long rapier, which was suspended by
+leathern thongs, to a plain belt of buff, or of black leather. One or
+two of the elder guests, whose hair had been thinned by time, had
+their heads covered with a skull-cap of black silk or velvet, which,
+being drawn down betwixt the ears and the skull, and permitting no
+hair to escape, occasioned the former to project in the ungraceful
+manner which may be remarked in old pictures, and which procured for
+the Puritans the term of "prickeared Roundheads," so unceremoniously
+applied to them by their contemporaries.
+
+These worthies were ranged against the wall, each in his ancient high-
+backed, long-legged chair; neither looking towards, nor apparently
+discoursing with each other; but plunged in their own reflections, or
+awaiting, like an assembly of Quakers, the quickening power of divine
+inspiration.
+
+Major Bridgenorth glided along this formal society with noiseless
+step, and a composed severity of manner, resembling their own. He
+paused before each in succession, and apparently communicated, as he
+passed, the transactions of the evening, and the circumstances under
+which the heir of Martindale Castle was now a guest at Moultrassie
+Hall. Each seemed to stir at his brief detail, like a range of statues
+in an enchanted hall, starting into something like life, as a talisman
+is applied to them successively. Most of them, as they heard the
+narrative of their host, cast upon Julian a look of curiosity, blended
+with haughty scorn and the consciousness of spiritual superiority;
+though, in one or two instances, the milder influences of compassion
+were sufficiently visible.--Peveril would have undergone this gantlet
+of eyes with more impatience, had not his own been for the time
+engaged in following the motions of Alice, who glided through the
+apartment; and only speaking very briefly, and in whispers, to one or
+two of the company who addressed her, took her place beside a treble-
+hooded old lady, the only female of the party, and addressed herself
+to her in such earnest conversation, as might dispense with her
+raising her head, or looking at any others in the company.
+
+Her father put a question, to which she was obliged to return an
+answer--"Where was Mistress Debbitch?"
+
+"She has gone out," Alice replied, "early after sunset, to visit some
+old acquaintances in the neighbourhood, and she was not yet returned."
+
+Major Bridgenorth made a gesture indicative of displeasure; and, not
+content with that, expressed his determined resolution that Dame
+Deborah should no longer remain a member of his family. "I will have
+those," he said aloud, and without regarding the presence of his
+guests, "and those only, around me, who know to keep within the sober
+and modest bounds of a Christian family. Who pretends to more freedom,
+must go out from among us, as not being of us."
+
+A deep and emphatic humming noise, which was at that time the mode in
+which the Puritans signified their applause, as well of the doctrines
+expressed by a favourite divine in the pulpit, as of those delivered
+in private society, ratified the approbation of the assessors, and
+seemed to secure the dismission of the unfortunate governante, who
+stood thus detected of having strayed out of bounds. Even Peveril,
+although he had reaped considerable advantages, in his early
+acquaintance with Alice, from the mercenary and gossiping disposition
+of her governess, could not hear of her dismissal without
+approbation, so much was he desirous, that, in the hour of difficulty
+which might soon approach, Alice might have the benefit of countenance
+and advice from one of her own sex of better manners, and less
+suspicious probity, than Mistress Debbitch.
+
+Almost immediately after this communication had taken place, a servant
+in mourning showed his thin, pinched, and wrinkled visage in the
+apartment, announcing, with a voice more like a passing bell than the
+herald of a banquet, that refreshments were provided in an adjoining
+apartment. Gravely leading the way, with his daughter on one side, and
+the puritanical female whom we have distinguished on the other,
+Bridgenorth himself ushered his company, who followed, with little
+attention to order or ceremony, into the eating-room, where a
+substantial supper was provided.
+
+In this manner, Peveril, although entitled according to ordinary
+ceremonial, to some degree of precedence--a matter at that time
+considered of much importance, although now little regarded--was left
+among the last of those who quitted the parlour; and might indeed have
+brought up the rear of all, had not one of the company, who was
+himself late in the retreat, bowed and resigned to Julian the rank in
+the company which had been usurped by others.
+
+This act of politeness naturally induced Julian to examine the
+features of the person who had offered him this civility; and he
+started to observe, under the pinched velvet cap, and above the short
+band-strings, the countenance of Ganlesse, as he called himself--his
+companion on the preceding evening. He looked again and again,
+especially when all were placed at the supper board, and when,
+consequently, he had frequent opportunities of observing this person
+fixedly without any breach of good manners. At first he wavered in his
+belief, and was much inclined to doubt the reality of his
+recollection; for the difference of dress was such as to effect a
+considerable change of appearance; and the countenance itself, far
+from exhibiting anything marked or memorable, was one of those
+ordinary visages which we see almost without remarking them, and which
+leave our memory so soon as the object is withdrawn from our eyes. But
+the impression upon his mind returned, and became stronger, until it
+induced him to watch with peculiar attention the manners of the
+individual who had thus attracted his notice.
+
+During the time of a very prolonged grace before meat, which was
+delivered by one of the company--who, from his Geneva band and serge
+doublet, presided, as Julian supposed, over some dissenting
+congregation--he noticed that this man kept the same demure and severe
+cast of countenance usually affected by the Puritans, and which rather
+caricatured the reverence unquestionably due upon such occasions. His
+eyes were turned upward, and his huge penthouse hat, with a high crown
+and broad brim, held in both hands before him, rose and fell with the
+cadences of the speaker's voice; thus marking time, as it were, to the
+periods of the benediction. Yet when the slight bustle took place
+which attends the adjusting of chairs, &c., as men sit down to table,
+Julian's eye encountered that of the stranger; and as their looks met,
+there glanced from those of the latter an expression of satirical
+humour and scorn, which seemed to intimate internal ridicule of the
+gravity of his present demeanour.
+
+Julian again sought to fix his eye, in order to ascertain that he had
+not mistaken the tendency of this transient expression, but the
+stranger did not allow him another opportunity. He might have been
+discovered by the tone of his voice; but the individual in question
+spoke little, and in whispers, which was indeed the fashion of the
+whole company, whose demeanour at table resembled that of mourners at
+a funeral feast.
+
+The entertainment itself was coarse, though plentiful; and must,
+according to Julian's opinion, be distasteful to one so exquisitely
+skilled in good cheer, and so capable of enjoying, critically and
+scientifically, the genial preparations of his companion Smith, as
+Ganlesse had shown himself on the preceding evening. Accordingly, upon
+close observation, he remarked that the food which he took upon his
+plate remained there unconsumed; and that his actual supper consisted
+only of a crust of bread, with a glass of wine.
+
+The repast was hurried over with the haste of those who think it
+shame, if not sin, to make mere animal enjoyments the means of
+consuming time, or of receiving pleasure; and when men wiped their
+mouths and moustaches, Julian remarked that the object of his
+curiosity used a handkerchief of the finest cambric--an article rather
+inconsistent with the exterior plainness, not to say coarseness, of
+his appearance. He used also several of the more minute refinements,
+then only observed at tables of the higher rank; and Julian thought he
+could discern, at every turn, something of courtly manners and
+gestures, under the precise and rustic simplicity of the character
+which he had assumed.[*]
+
+[*] A Scottish gentleman /in hiding/, as it was emphatically termed,
+ for some concern in a Jacobite insurrection or plot, was
+ discovered among a number of ordinary persons, by the use of his
+ toothpick.
+
+But if this were indeed that same Ganlesse with whom Julian had met on
+the preceding evening, and who had boasted the facility with which he
+could assume any character which he pleased to represent for the time,
+what could be the purpose of this present disguise? He was, if his own
+words could be credited, a person of some importance, who dared to
+defy the danger of those officers and informers, before whom all ranks
+at that time trembled; nor was he likely, as Julian conceived, without
+some strong purpose, to subject himself to such a masquerade as the
+present, which could not be otherwise than irksome to one whose
+conversation proclaimed him of light life and free opinions. Was his
+appearance here for good or for evil? Did it respect his father's
+house, or his own person, or the family of Bridgenorth? Was the real
+character of Ganlesse known to the master of the house, inflexible as
+he was in all which concerned morals as well as religion? If not,
+might not the machinations of a brain so subtile affect the peace and
+happiness of Alice Bridgenorth?
+
+These were questions which no reflection could enable Peveril to
+answer. His eyes glanced from Alice to the stranger; and new fears,
+and undefined suspicions, in which the safety of that beloved and
+lovely girl was implicated, mingled with the deep anxiety which
+already occupied his mind, on account of his father and his father's
+house.
+
+He was in this tumult of mind, when after a thanksgiving as long as
+the grace, the company arose from table, and were instantly summoned
+to the exercise of family worship. A train of domestics, grave, sad,
+and melancholy as their superiors, glided in to assist at this act of
+devotion, and ranged themselves at the lower end of the apartment.
+Most of these men were armed with long tucks, as the straight stabbing
+swords, much used by Cromwell's soldiery, were then called. Several
+had large pistols also; and the corselets or cuirasses of some were
+heard to clank, as they seated themselves to partake in this act of
+devotion. The ministry of him whom Julian had supposed a preacher was
+not used on this occasion. Major Bridgenorth himself read and
+expounded a chapter of Scripture, with much strength and manliness of
+expression, although so as not to escape the charge of fanaticism. The
+nineteenth chapter of Jeremiah was the portion of Scripture which he
+selected; in which, under the type of breaking a potter's vessel, the
+prophet presages the desolation of the Jews. The lecturer was not
+naturally eloquent; but a strong, deep, and sincere conviction of the
+truth of what he said supplied him with language of energy and fire,
+as he drew parallel between the abominations of the worship of Baal,
+and the corruptions of the Church of Rome--so favourite a topic with
+the Puritans of that period; and denounced against the Catholics, and
+those who favoured them, that hissing and desolation which the prophet
+directed against the city of Jerusalem. His hearers made a yet closer
+application than the lecturer himself suggested; and many a dark proud
+eye intimated, by a glance on Julian, that on his father's house were
+already, in some part, realised those dreadful maledictions.
+
+The lecture finished, Bridgenorth summoned them to unite with him in
+prayer; and on a slight change of arrangements amongst the company,
+which took place as they were about to kneel down, Julian found his
+place next to the single-minded and beautiful object of his affection,
+as she knelt, in her loveliness, to adore her Creator. A short time
+was permitted for mental devotion; during which Peveril could hear her
+half-breathed petition for the promised blessings of peace on earth,
+and good-will towards the children of men.
+
+The prayer which ensued was in a different tone. It was poured forth
+by the same person who had officiated as chaplain at the table; and
+was in the tone of a Boanerges, or Son of Thunder--a denouncer of
+crimes--an invoker of judgments--almost a prophet of evil and of
+destruction. The testimonies and the sins of the day were not
+forgotten--the mysterious murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey was
+insisted upon--and thanks and praise were offered, that the very night
+on which they were assembled, had not seen another offering of a
+Protestant magistrate, to the bloodthirsty fury of revengeful
+Catholics.
+
+Never had Julian found it more difficult, during an act of devotion,
+to maintain his mind in a frame befitting the posture and the
+occasion; and when he heard the speaker return thanks for the downfall
+and devastation of his family, he was strongly tempted to have started
+upon his feet, and charged him with offering a tribute, stained with
+falsehood and calumny, at the throne of truth itself. He resisted,
+however, an impulse which it would have been insanity to have yielded
+to, and his patience was not without its reward; for when his fair
+neighbour arose from her knees, the lengthened and prolonged prayer
+being at last concluded, he observed that her eyes were streaming with
+tears; and one glance with which she looked at him in that moment,
+showed more of affectionate interest for him in his fallen fortunes
+and precarious condition, than he had been able to obtain from her
+when his worldly estate seemed so much the more exalted of the two.
+
+Cheered and fortified with the conviction that one bosom in the
+company, and that in which he most eagerly longed to secure an
+interest, sympathised with his distress, he felt strong to endure
+whatever was to follow, and shrunk not from the stern still smile with
+which, one by one, the meeting regarded him, as, gliding to their
+several places of repose, they indulged themselves at parting with a
+look of triumph on one whom they considered as their captive enemy.
+
+Alice also passed by her lover, her eyes fixed on the ground, and
+answered his low obeisance without raising them. The room was now
+empty, but for Bridgenorth and his guest, or prisoner; for it is
+difficult to say in which capacity Peveril ought to regard himself. He
+took an old brazen lamp from the table, and, leading the way, said at
+the same time, "I must be the uncourtly chamberlain, who am to usher
+you to a place of repose, more rude, perhaps, than you have been
+accustomed to occupy."
+
+Julian followed him, in silence, up an old-fashioned winding
+staircase, within a turret. At the landing-place on the top was a
+small apartment, where an ordinary pallet bed, two chairs, and a small
+stone table, were the only furniture. "Your bed," continued
+Bridgenorth, as if desirous to prolong their interview, "is not of the
+softest; but innocence sleeps as sound upon straw as on down."
+
+"Sorrow, Major Bridgenorth, finds little rest on either," replied
+Julian. "Tell me, for you seem to await some question from me, what is
+to be the fate of my parents, and why you separate me from them?"
+
+Bridgenorth, for answer, indicated with his finger the mark which his
+countenance still showed from the explosion of Julian's pistol.
+
+"That," replied Julian, "is not the real cause of your proceedings
+against me. It cannot be, that you, who have been a soldier, and are a
+man, can be surprised or displeased by my interference in the defence
+of my father. Above all, you cannot, and I must needs say you do not,
+believe that I would have raised my hand against you personally, had
+there been a moment's time for recognition."
+
+"I may grant all this," said Bridgenorth; "but what the better are you
+for my good opinion, or for the ease with which I can forgive you the
+injury which you aimed at me? You are in my custody as a magistrate,
+accused of abetting the foul, bloody, and heathenish plot, for the
+establishment of Popery, the murder of the King, and the general
+massacre of all true Protestants."
+
+"And on what grounds, either of fact or suspicion, dare any one accuse
+me of such a crime?" said Julian. "I have hardly heard of the plot,
+save by the mouth of common rumour, which, while it speaks of nothing
+else, takes care to say nothing distinctly even on that subject."
+
+"It may be enough for me to tell you," replied Bridgenorth, "and
+perhaps it is a word too much--that you are a discovered intriguer--a
+spied spy--who carries tokens and messages betwixt the Popish Countess
+of Derby and the Catholic party in London. You have not conducted your
+matters with such discretion, but that this is well known, and can be
+sufficiently proved. To this charge, which you are well aware you
+cannot deny, these men, Everett and Dangerfield, are not unwilling to
+add, from the recollection of your face, other passages, which will
+certainly cost you your life when you come before a Protestant jury."
+
+"They lie like villains," said Peveril, "who hold me accessory to any
+plot either against the King, the nation, or the state of religion;
+and for the Countess, her loyalty has been too long, and too highly
+proved, to permit her being implicated in such injurious suspicions."
+
+"What she has already done," said Bridgenorth, his face darkening as
+he spoke, "against the faithful champions of pure religion, hath
+sufficiently shown of what she is capable. She hath betaken herself to
+her rock, and sits, as she thinks, in security, like the eagle
+reposing after his bloody banquet. But the arrow of the fowler may yet
+reach her--the shaft is whetted--the bow is bended--and it will be
+soon seen whether Amalek or Israel shall prevail. But for thee, Julian
+Peveril--why should I conceal it from thee?--my heart yearns for thee
+as a woman's for her first-born. To thee I will give, at the expense
+of my own reputation--perhaps at the risk of personal suspicion--for
+who, in these days of doubt, shall be exempted from it--to thee, I
+say, I will give means of escape, which else were impossible to thee.
+The staircase of this turret descends to the gardens--the postern-gate
+is unlatched--on the right hand lie the stables, where you will find
+your own horse--take it, and make for Liverpool--I will give you
+credit with a friend under the name of Simon Simonson, one persecuted
+by the prelates; and he will expedite your passage from the kingdom."
+
+"Major Bridgenorth," said Julian, "I will not deceive you. Were I to
+accept your offer of freedom, it would be to attend to a higher call
+than that of mere self-preservation. My father is in danger--my mother
+in sorrow--the voices of religion and nature call me to their side. I
+am their only child--their only hope--I will aid them, or perish with
+them!"
+
+"Thou art mad," said Bridgenorth--"aid them thou canst not--perish
+with them thou mayst, and even accelerate their ruin; for, in addition
+to the charges with which thy unhappy father is loaded, it would be no
+slight aggravation, that while he meditated arming and calling
+together the Catholics and High Churchmen of Cheshire and Derbyshire,
+his son should prove to be the confidential agent of the Countess of
+Derby, who aided her in making good her stronghold against the
+Protestant commissioners, and was despatched by her to open secret
+communication with the Popish interest in London."
+
+"You have twice stated me as such an agent," said Peveril, resolved
+that his silence should not be construed into an admission of the
+charge, though he felt it was in some degree well founded--"What
+reason have you for such an allegation?"
+
+"Will it suffice for a proof of my intimate acquaintance with your
+mystery," replied Bridgenorth, "if I should repeat to you the last
+words which the Countess used to you when you left the Castle of that
+Amalekitish woman? Thus she spoke: 'I am now a forlorn widow,' she
+said, 'whom sorrow has made selfish.'"
+
+Peveril started, for these were the very words the Countess had used;
+but he instantly recovered himself, and replied, "Be your information
+of what nature it will, I deny, and I defy it, so far as it attaches
+aught like guilt to me. There lives not a man more innocent of a
+disloyal thought, or of a traitorous purpose. What I say for myself, I
+will, to the best of my knowledge, say and maintain on account of the
+noble Countess, to whom I am indebted for nurture."
+
+"Perish, then, in thy obstinacy!" said Bridgenorth; and turning
+hastily from him, he left the room, and Julian heard him hasten down
+the narrow staircase, as if distrusting his own resolution.
+
+With a heavy heart, yet with that confidence in an overruling
+Providence which never forsakes a good and brave man, Peveril betook
+himself to his lowly place of repose.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+ The course of human life is changeful still,
+ As is the fickle wind and wandering rill;
+ Or, like the light dance which the wild-breeze weaves
+ Amidst the fated race of fallen leaves;
+ Which now its breath bears down, now tosses high,
+ Beats to the earth, or wafts to middle sky.
+ Such, and so varied, the precarious play
+ Of fate with man, frail tenant of a day!
+ --ANONYMOUS.
+
+Whilst, overcome with fatigue, and worn out by anxiety, Julian Peveril
+slumbered as a prisoner in the house of his hereditary enemy, Fortune
+was preparing his release by one of those sudden frolics with which
+she loves to confound the calculations and expectancies of humanity;
+and as she fixes on strange agents for such purposes, she condescended
+to employ on the present occasion, no less a personage than Mistress
+Deborah Debbitch.
+
+Instigated, doubtless, by the pristine reminiscences of former times,
+no sooner had that most prudent and considerate dame found herself in
+the vicinity of the scenes of her earlier days, than she bethought
+herself of a visit to the ancient house-keeper of Martindale Castle,
+Dame Ellesmere by name, who, long retired from active service, resided
+at the keeper's lodge, in the west thicket, with her nephew, Lance
+Outram, subsisting upon the savings of her better days, and on a small
+pension allowed by Sir Geoffrey to her age and faithful services.
+
+Now Dame Ellesmere and Mistress Deborah had not by any means been
+formerly on so friendly a footing, as this haste to visit her might be
+supposed to intimate. But years had taught Deborah to forget and
+forgive; or perhaps she had no special objection, under cover of a
+visit to Dame Ellesmere, to take the chance of seeing what changes
+time had made on her old admirer the keeper. Both inhabitants were in
+the cottage when, after having seen her master set forth on his
+expedition to the Castle, Mistress Debbitch, dressed in her very best
+gown, footed it through gutter, and over stile, and by pathway green,
+to knock at their door, and to lift the hatch at the hospitable
+invitation which bade her come in.
+
+Dame Ellesmere's eyes were so often dim, that, even with the aid of
+spectacles, she failed to recognise, in the portly and mature
+personage who entered their cottage, the tight well-made lass, who,
+presuming on her good looks and flippant tongue, had so often provoked
+her by insubordination; and her former lover, the redoubted Lance, not
+being conscious that ale had given rotundity to his own figure, which
+was formerly so slight and active, and that brandy had transferred to
+his nose the colour which had once occupied his cheeks, was unable to
+discover that Deborah's French cap, composed of sarsenet and Brussels
+lace, shaded the features which had so often procured him a rebuke
+from Dr. Dummerar, for suffering his eyes, during the time of prayers,
+to wander to the maid-servants' bench.
+
+In brief, the blushing visitor was compelled to make herself known;
+and when known, was received by aunt and nephew with the most sincere
+cordiality.
+
+The home-brewed was produced; and, in lieu of more vulgar food, a few
+slices of venison presently hissed in the frying pan, giving strong
+room for inference that Lance Outram, in his capacity of keeper,
+neglected not his own cottage when he supplied the larder at the
+Castle. A modest sip of the excellent Derbyshire ale, and a taste of
+the highly-seasoned hash, soon placed Deborah entirely at home with
+her old acquaintance.
+
+Having put all necessary questions, and received all suitable answers,
+respecting the state of the neighbourhood, and such of her own friends
+as continued to reside there, the conversation began rather to flag,
+until Deborah found the art of again re-newing its interest, by
+communicating to her friends the dismal intelligence that they must
+soon look for deadly bad news from the Castle; for that her present
+master, Major Bridgenorth, had been summoned, by some great people
+from London, to assist in taking her old master, Sir Geoffrey; and
+that all Master Bridgenorth's servants, and several other persons whom
+she named, friends and adherents of the same interest, had assembled a
+force to surprise the Castle; and that as Sir Geoffrey was now so old,
+and gouty withal, it could not be expected he should make the defence
+he was wont; and then he was known to be so stout-hearted, that it was
+not to be supposed that he would yield up without stroke of sword; and
+then if he was killed, as he was like to be, amongst them that liked
+never a bone of his body, and now had him at their mercy, why, in that
+case, she, Dame Deborah, would look upon Lady Peveril as little better
+than a dead woman; and undoubtedly there would be a general mourning
+through all that country, where they had such great kin; and silks
+were likely to rise on it, as Master Lutestring, the mercer of
+Chesterfield, was like to feel in his purse bottom. But for her part,
+let matters wag how they would, an if Master Julian Peveril was to
+come to his own, she could give as near a guess as e'er another who
+was likely to be Lady at Martindale.
+
+The text of this lecture, or, in other words, the fact that
+Bridgenorth was gone with a party to attack Sir Geoffrey Peveril in
+his own Castle of Martindale, sounded so stunningly strange in the
+ears of those old retainers of his family, that they had no power
+either to attend to Mistress Deborah's inferences, or to interrupt the
+velocity of speech with which she poured them forth. And when at
+length she made a breathless pause, all that poor Dame Ellesmere could
+reply, was the emphatic question, "Bridgenorth brave Peveril of the
+Peak!--Is the woman mad?"
+
+"Come, come, dame," said Deborah, "woman me no more than I woman you.
+I have not been called Mistress at the head of the table for so many
+years, to be woman'd here by you. And for the news, it is as true as
+that you are sitting there in a white hood, who will wear a black one
+ere long."
+
+"Lance Outram," said the old woman, "make out, if thou be'st a man,
+and listen about if aught stirs up at the Castle."
+
+"If there should," said Outram, "I am even too long here;" and he
+caught up his crossbow, and one or two arrows, and rushed out of the
+cottage.
+
+"Well-a-day!" said Mistress Deborah, "see if my news have not
+frightened away Lance Outram too, whom they used to say nothing could
+start. But do not take on so, dame; for I dare say if the Castle and
+the lands pass to my new master, Major Bridgenorth, as it is like they
+will--for I have heard that he has powerful debts over the estate--you
+shall have my good word with him, and I promise you he is no bad man;
+something precise about preaching and praying, and about the dress
+which one should wear, which, I must own, beseems not a gentleman, as,
+to be sure, every woman knows best what becomes her. But for you,
+dame, that wear a prayer-book at your girdle, with your housewife-
+case, and never change the fashion of your white hood, I dare say he
+will not grudge you the little matter you need, and are not able to
+win."
+
+"Out, sordid jade!" exclaimed Dame Ellesmere, her very flesh quivering
+betwixt apprehension and anger, "and hold your peace this instant, or
+I will find those that shall flay the very hide from thee with dog-
+whips. Hast thou ate thy noble master's bread, not only to betray his
+trust, and fly from his service, but wouldst thou come here, like an
+ill-omened bird as thou art, to triumph over his downfall?"
+
+"Nay, dame," said Deborah, over whom the violence of the old woman had
+obtained a certain predominance; "it is not I that say it--only the
+warrant of the Parliament folks."
+
+"I thought we had done with their warrants ever since the blessed
+twenty-ninth of May," said the old housekeeper of Martindale Castle;
+"but this I tell thee, sweetheart, that I have seen such warrants
+crammed, at the sword's point, down the throats of them that brought
+them; and so shall this be, if there is one true man left to drink of
+the Dove."
+
+As she spoke, Lance Outram re-entered the cottage. "Naunt," he said in
+dismay, "I doubt it is true what she says. The beacon tower is as
+black as my belt. No Pole-star of Peveril. What does that betoken?"
+
+"Death, ruin, and captivity," exclaimed old Ellesmere. "Make for the
+Castle, thou knave. Thrust in thy great body. Strike for the house
+that bred thee and fed thee; and if thou art buried under the ruins,
+thou diest a man's death."
+
+"Nay, naunt, I shall not be slack," answered Outram. "But here come
+folks that I warrant can tell us more on't."
+
+One or two of the female servants, who had fled from the Castle during
+the alarm, now rushed in with various reports of the case; but all
+agreeing that a body of armed men were in possession of the Castle,
+and that Major Bridgenorth had taken young Master Julian prisoner, and
+conveyed him down to Moultrassie Hall, with his feet tied under the
+belly of the nag--a shameful sight to be seen--and he so well born and
+so handsome.
+
+Lance scratched his head; and though feeling the duty incumbent upon
+him as a faithful servant, which was indeed specially dinned into him
+by the cries and exclamations of his aunt, he seemed not a little
+dubious how to conduct himself. "I would to God, naunt," he said at
+last, "that old Whitaker were alive now, with his long stories about
+Marston Moor and Edge Hill, that made us all yawn our jaws off their
+hinges, in spite of broiled rashers and double beer! When a man is
+missed, he is moaned, as they say; and I would rather than a broad
+piece he had been here to have sorted this matter, for it is clean out
+of my way as a woodsman, that have no skill of war. But dang it, if
+old Sir Geoffrey go to the wall without a knock for it!--Here you,
+Nell"--(speaking to one of the fugitive maidens from the Castle)--
+"but, no--you have not the heart of a cat, and are afraid of your own
+shadow by moonlight--But, Cis, you are a stout-hearted wench, and know
+a buck from a bullfinch. Hark thee, Cis, as you would wish to be
+married, get up to the Castle again, and get thee in--thou best
+knowest where--for thou hast oft gotten out of postern to a dance or
+junketing, to my knowledge--Get thee back to the Castle, as ye hope to
+be married--See my lady--they cannot hinder thee of that--my lady has
+a head worth twenty of ours--If I am to gather force, light up the
+beacon for a signal; and spare not a tar barrel on't. Thou mayst do it
+safe enough. I warrant the Roundheads busy with drink and plunder.--
+And, hark thee, say to my lady I am gone down to the miners' houses at
+Bonadventure. The rogues were mutinying for their wages but yesterday;
+they will be all ready for good or bad. Let her send orders down to
+me; or do you come yourself, your legs are long enough."
+
+"Whether they are or not, Master Lance (and you know nothing of the
+matter), they shall do your errand to-night, for love of the old
+knight and his lady."
+
+So Cisly Sellok, a kind of Derbyshire Camilla, who had won the smock
+at the foot-race at Ashbourne, sprung forward towards the Castle with
+a speed which few could have equalled.
+
+"There goes a mettled wench," said Lance; "and now, naunt, give me the
+old broadsword--it is above the bed-head--and my wood-knife; and I
+shall do well enough."
+
+"And what is to become of me?" bleated the unfortunate Mistress
+Deborah Debbitch.
+
+"You must remain here with my aunt, Mistress Deb; and, for old
+acquaintance' sake, she will take care no harm befalls you; but take
+heed how you attempt to break bounds."
+
+So saying, and pondering in his own mind the task which he had
+undertaken, the hardy forester strode down the moonlight glade,
+scarcely hearing the blessings and cautions which Dame Ellesmere kept
+showering after him. His thoughts were not altogether warlike. "What a
+tight ankle the jade hath!--she trips it like a doe in summer over
+dew. Well, but here are the huts--Let us to this gear.--Are ye all
+asleep, you dammers, sinkers, and drift-drivers? turn out, ye
+subterranean badgers. Here is your master, Sir Geoffrey, dead, for
+aught ye know or care. Do not you see the beacon is unlit, and you sit
+there like so many asses?"
+
+"Why," answered one of the miners, who now began to come out of
+their huts--
+
+ "An he be dead,
+ He will eat no more bread."
+
+"And you are like to eat none neither," said Lance; "for the works
+will be presently stopped, and all of you turned off."
+
+"Well, and what of it, Master Lance? As good play for nought as work
+for nought. Here is four weeks we have scarce seen the colour of Sir
+Geoffrey's coin; and you ask us to care whether he be dead or in life?
+For you, that goes about, trotting upon your horse, and doing for work
+what all men do for pleasure, it may be well enough; but it is another
+matter to be leaving God's light, and burrowing all day and night in
+darkness, like a toad in a hole--that's not to be done for nought, I
+trow; and if Sir Geoffrey is dead, his soul will suffer for't; and if
+he's alive, we'll have him in the Barmoot Court."
+
+"Hark ye, gaffer," said Lance, "and take notice, my mates, all of
+you," for a considerable number of these rude and subterranean people
+had now assembled to hear the discussion--"Has Sir Geoffrey, think
+you, ever put a penny in his pouch out of this same Bonadventure
+mine?"
+
+"I cannot say as I think he has," answered old Ditchley, the party who
+maintained the controversy.
+
+"Answer on your conscience, though it be but a leaden one. Do not you
+know that he hath lost a good penny?"
+
+"Why, I believe he may," said Gaffer Ditchley. "What then!--lose
+to-day, win to-morrow--the miner must eat in the meantime."
+
+"True; but what will you eat when Master Bridgenorth gets the land,
+that will not hear of a mine being wrought on his own ground? Will he
+work on at dead loss, think ye?" demanded trusty Lance.
+
+"Bridgenorth?--he of Moultrassie Hall, that stopped the great Felicity
+Work, on which his father laid out, some say, ten thousand pounds, and
+never got in a penny? Why, what has he to do with Sir Geoffrey's
+property down here at Bonadventure? It was never his, I trow."
+
+"Nay, what do I know?" answered Lance, who saw the impression he had
+made. "Law and debt will give him half Derbyshire, I think, unless you
+stand by old Sir Geoffrey."
+
+"But if Sir Geoffrey be dead," said Ditchley cautiously, "what good
+will our standing by do to him?"
+
+"I did not say he was dead, but only as bad as dead; in the hands of
+the Roundheads--a prisoner up yonder, at his own Castle," said Lance;
+"and will have his head cut off, like the good Earl of Derby's at
+Bolton-le-Moors."
+
+"Nay, then, comrades," said Gaffer Ditchley, "an it be as Master Lance
+says, I think we should bear a hand for stout old Sir Geoffrey,
+against a low-born mean-spirited fellow like Bridgenorth, who shut up
+a shaft had cost thousands, without getting a penny profit on't. So
+hurra for Sir Geoffrey, and down with the Rump! But hold ye a blink--
+hold"--(and the waving of his hand stopped the commencing cheer)--
+"Hark ye, Master Lance, it must be all over, for the beacon is as
+black as night; and you know yourself that marks the Lord's death."
+
+"It will kindle again in an instant," said Lance; internally adding,
+"I pray to God it may!--It will kindle in an instant--lack of fuel,
+and the confusion of the family."
+
+"Ay, like enow, like enow," said Ditchley; "but I winna budge till I
+see it blazing."
+
+"Why then, there a-goes!" said Lance. "Thank thee, Cis--thank thee, my
+good wench.--Believe your own eyes, my lads, if you will not believe
+me; and now hurra for Peveril of the Peak--the King and his friends--
+and down with Rumps and Roundheads!"
+
+The sudden rekindling of the beacon had all the effect which Lance
+could have desired upon the minds of his rude and ignorant hearers,
+who, in their superstitious humour, had strongly associated the Polar-
+star of Peveril with the fortunes of the family. Once moved, according
+to the national character of their countrymen, they soon became
+enthusiastic; and Lance found himself at the head of thirty stout
+fellows and upwards, armed with their pick-axes, and ready to execute
+whatever task he should impose on them.
+
+Trusting to enter the Castle by the postern, which had served to
+accommodate himself and other domestics upon an emergency, his only
+anxiety was to keep his march silent; and he earnestly recommended to
+his followers to reserve their shouts for the moment of the attack.
+They had not advanced far on their road to the Castle, when Cisly
+Sellok met them so breathless with haste, that the poor girl was
+obliged to throw herself into Master Lance's arms.
+
+"Stand up, my mettled wench," said he, giving her a sly kiss at the
+same time, "and let us know what is going on up at the Castle."
+
+"My lady bids you, as you would serve God and your master, not to come
+up to the Castle, which can but make bloodshed; for she says Sir
+Geoffrey is lawfully in hand, and that he must bide the issue; and
+that he is innocent of what he is charged with, and is going up to
+speak for himself before King and Council, and she goes up with him.
+And besides, they have found out the postern, the Roundhead rogues;
+for two of them saw me when I went out of door, and chased me; but I
+showed them a fair pair of heels."
+
+"As ever dashed dew from the cowslip," said Lance. "But what the foul
+fiend is to be done? for if they have secured the postern, I know not
+how the dickens we can get in."
+
+"All is fastened with bolt and staple, and guarded with gun and
+pistol, at the Castle," quoth Cisly; "and so sharp are they, that they
+nigh caught me coming with my lady's message, as I told you. But my
+lady says, if you could deliver her son, Master Julian, from
+Bridgenorth, that she would hold it good service."
+
+"What!" said Lance, "is young master at the Castle? I taught him to
+shoot his first shaft. But how to get in!"
+
+"He was at the Castle in the midst of the ruffle, but old Bridgenorth
+has carried him down prisoner to the hall," answered Cisly. "There was
+never faith nor courtesy in an old Puritan who never had pipe and
+tabor in his house since it was built."
+
+"Or who stopped a promising mine," said Ditchley, "to save a few
+thousand pounds, when he might have made himself as rich as Lord of
+Chatsworth, and fed a hundred good fellows all the whilst."
+
+"Why, then," said Lance, "since you are all of a mind, we will go draw
+the cover for the old badger; and I promise you that the Hall is not
+like one of your real houses of quality where the walls are as thick
+as whinstone-dikes, but foolish brick-work, that your pick-axes will
+work through as if it were cheese. Huzza once more for Peveril of the
+Peak! down with Bridgenorth, and all upstart cuckoldly Roundheads!"
+
+Having indulged the throats of his followers with one buxom huzza,
+Lance commanded them to cease their clamours, and proceeded to conduct
+them, by such paths as seemed the least likely to be watched, to the
+courtyard of Moultrassie Hall. On the road they were joined by several
+stout yeoman farmers, either followers of the Peveril family, or
+friends to the High Church and Cavalier party; most of whom, alarmed
+by the news which began to fly fast through the neighbourhood, were
+armed with sword and pistol.
+
+Lance Outram halted his party, at the distance, as he himself
+described it, of a flight-shot from the house, and advanced, alone,
+and in silence, to reconnoitre; and having previously commanded
+Ditchley and his subterranean allies to come to his assistance
+whenever he should whistle, he crept cautiously forward, and soon
+found that those whom he came to surprise, true to the discipline
+which had gained their party such decided superiority during the Civil
+War, had posted a sentinel, who paced through the courtyard, piously
+chanting a psalm-tune, while his arms, crossed on his bosom, supported
+a gun of formidable length.
+
+"Now, a true solder," said Lance Outram to himself, "would put a stop
+to thy snivelling ditty, by making a broad arrow quiver in your heart,
+and no great alarm given. But, dang it, I have not the right spirit
+for a soldier--I cannot fight a man till my blood's up; and for
+shooting him from behind a wall it is cruelly like to stalking a deer.
+I'll e'en face him, and try what to make of him."
+
+With this doughty resolution, and taking no farther care to conceal
+himself, he entered the courtyard boldly, and was making forward to
+the front door of the hall, as a matter of course. But the old
+Cromwellian, who was on guard, had not so learned his duty. "Who goes
+there?--Stand, friend--stand; or, verily, I will shoot thee to death!"
+were challenges which followed each other quick, the last being
+enforced by the levelling and presenting the said long-barrelled gun
+with which he was armed.
+
+"Why, what a murrain!" answered Lance. "Is it your fashion to go a-
+shooting at this time o' night? Why, this is but a time for bat-
+fowling."
+
+"Nay, but hark thee, friend," said the experienced sentinel, "I am
+none of those who do this work negligently. Thou canst not snare me
+with thy crafty speech, though thou wouldst make it to sound simple in
+mine ear. Of a verity I will shoot, unless thou tell thy name and
+business."
+
+"Name!" said Lance; "why, what a dickens should it be but Robin
+Round--honest Robin of Redham; and for business, an you must needs
+know, I come on a message from some Parliament man, up yonder at the
+Castle, with letters for worshipful Master Bridgenorth of Moultrassie
+Hall; and this be the place, as I think; though why ye be marching up
+and down at his door, like the sign of a Red Man, with your old
+firelock there, I cannot so well guess."
+
+"Give me the letters, my friend," said the sentinel, to whom this
+explanation seemed very natural and probable, "and I will cause them
+forthwith to be delivered into his worship's own hand."
+
+Rummaging in his pockets, as if to pull out the letters which never
+existed, Master Lance approached within the sentinel's piece, and,
+before he was aware, suddenly seized him by the collar, whistled sharp
+and shrill, and exerting his skill as a wrestler, for which he had
+been distinguished in his youth, he stretched his antagonist on his
+back--the musket for which they struggled going off in the fall.
+
+The miners rushed into the courtyard at Lance's signal; and hopeless
+any longer of prosecuting his design in silence, Lance commanded two
+of them to secure the prisoner, and the rest to cheer loudly, and
+attack the door of the house. Instantly the courtyard of the mansion
+rang with the cry of "Peveril of the Peak for ever!" with all the
+abuse which the Royalists had invented to cast upon the Roundheads,
+during so many years of contention; and at the same time, while some
+assailed the door with their mining implements, others directed their
+attack against the angle, where a kind of porch joined to the main
+front of the building; and there, in some degree protected by the
+projection of the wall, and of a balcony which overhung the porch,
+wrought in more security, as well as with more effect, than the
+others; for the doors being of oak, thickly studded with nails,
+offered a more effectual resistance to violence than the brick-work.
+
+The noise of this hubbub on the outside, soon excited wild alarm and
+tumult within. Lights flew from window to window, and voices were
+heard demanding the cause of the attack; to which the party cries of
+those who were in the courtyard afforded a sufficient, or at least the
+only answer, which was vouchsafed. At length the window of a
+projecting staircase opened, and the voice of Bridgenorth himself
+demanded authoritatively what the tumult meant, and commanded the
+rioters to desist, upon their own proper and immediate peril.
+
+"We want our young master, you canting old thief," was the reply; "and
+if we have him not instantly, the topmost stone of your house shall
+lie as low as the foundation."
+
+"We shall try that presently," said Bridgenorth; "for if there is
+another blow struck against the walls of my peaceful house, I will
+fire my carabine among you, and your blood be upon your own head. I
+have a score of friends, well armed with musket and pistol, to defend
+my house; and we have both the means and heart, with Heaven's
+assistance, to repay any violence you can offer."
+
+"Master Bridgenorth," replied Lance, who, though no soldier, was
+sportsman enough to comprehend the advantage which those under cover,
+and using firearms, must necessarily have over his party, exposed to
+their aim, in a great measure, and without means of answering their
+fire,--"Master Bridgenorth, let us crave parley with you, and fair
+conditions. We desire to do you no evil, but will have back our young
+master; it is enough that you have got our old one and his lady. It is
+foul chasing to kill hart, hind, and fawn; and we will give you some
+light on the subject in an instant."
+
+This speech was followed by a great crash amongst the lower windows of
+the house, according to a new species of attack which had been
+suggested by some of the assailants.
+
+"I would take the honest fellow's word, and let young Peveril go,"
+said one of the garrison, who, carelessly yawning, approached on the
+inside of the post at which Bridgenorth had stationed himself.
+
+"Are you mad?" said Bridgenorth; "or do you think me poor enough in
+spirit to give up the advantages I now possess over the family of
+Peveril, for the awe of a parcel of boors, whom the first discharge
+will scatter like chaff before the whirlwind?"
+
+"Nay," answered the speaker, who was the same individual that had
+struck Julian by his resemblance to the man who called himself
+Ganlesse, "I love a dire revenge, but we shall buy it somewhat too
+dear if these rascals set the house on fire, as they are like to do,
+while you are parleying from the window. They have thrown torches or
+firebrands into the hall; and it is all our friends can do to keep the
+flame from catching the wainscoting, which is old and dry."
+
+"Now, may Heaven judge thee for thy lightness of spirit," answered
+Bridgenorth; "one would think mischief was so properly thy element,
+that to thee it was indifferent whether friend or foe was the
+sufferer."
+
+So saying, he ran hastily downstairs towards the hall, into which,
+through broken casements, and betwixt the iron bars, which prevented
+human entrance, the assailants had thrust lighted straw, sufficient to
+excite much smoke and some fire, and to throw the defenders of the
+house into great confusion; insomuch, that of several shots fired
+hastily from the windows, little or no damage followed to the
+besiegers, who, getting warm on the onset, answered the hostile
+charges with loud shouts of "Peveril for ever!" and had already made a
+practicable breach through the brick-wall of the tenement, through
+which Lance, Ditchley, and several of the most adventurous among their
+followers, made their way into the hall.
+
+The complete capture of the house remained, however, as far off as
+ever. The defenders mixed with much coolness and skill that solemn and
+deep spirit of enthusiasm which sets life at less than nothing, in
+comparison to real or supposed duty. From the half-open doors which
+led into the hall, they maintained a fire which began to grow fatal.
+One miner was shot dead; three or four were wounded; and Lance scarce
+knew whether he should draw his forces from the house, and leave it a
+prey to the flames, or, making a desperate attack on the posts
+occupied by the defenders, try to obtain unmolested possession of the
+place. At this moment, his course of conduct was determined by an
+unexpected occurrence, of which it is necessary to trace the cause.
+
+Julian Peveril had been, like other inhabitants of Moultrassie Hall on
+that momentous night, awakened by the report of the sentinel's musket,
+followed by the shouts of his father's vassals and followers; of which
+he collected enough to guess that Bridgenorth's house was attacked
+with a view to his liberation. Very doubtful of the issue of such an
+attempt, dizzy with the slumber from which he had been so suddenly
+awakened, and confounded with the rapid succession of events to which
+he had been lately a witness, he speedily put on a part of his
+clothes, and hastened to the window of his apartment. From this he
+could see nothing to relieve his anxiety, for it looked towards a
+quarter different from that on which the attack was made. He attempted
+his door; it was locked on the outside; and his perplexity and anxiety
+became extreme, when suddenly the lock was turned, and in an
+underdress, hastily assumed in the moment of alarm, her hair streaming
+on her shoulders, her eyes gleaming betwixt fear and resolution, Alice
+Bridgenorth rushed into his apartment, and seized his hand with the
+fervent exclamation, "Julian, save my father!"
+
+The light which she bore in her hand served to show those features
+which could rarely have been viewed by any one without emotion, but
+which bore an expression irresistible to a lover.
+
+"Alice," he said, "what means this? What is the danger? Where is your
+father?"
+
+"Do not stay to question," she answered; "but if you would save him,
+follow me!"
+
+At the same time she led the way, with great speed, half-way down the
+turret stair case which led to his room, thence turning through a side
+door, along a long gallery, to a larger and wider stair, at the bottom
+of which stood her father, surrounded by four or five of his friends,
+scarce discernible through the smoke of the fire which began to take
+hold in the hall, as well as that which arose from the repeated
+discharge of their own firearms.
+
+Julian saw there was not a moment to be lost, if he meant to be a
+successful mediator. He rushed through Bridgenorth's party ere they
+were aware of his approach, and throwing himself amongst the
+assailants who occupied the hall in considerable numbers, he assured
+them of his personal safety, and conjured them to depart.
+
+"Not without a few more slices at the Rump, master," answered Lance.
+"I am principally glad to see you safe and well; but here is Joe
+Rimegap shot as dead as a buck in season, and more of us are hurt; and
+we'll have revenge, and roast the Puritans like apples for lambswool!"
+
+"Then you shall roast me along with them," said Julian; "for I vow to
+God, I will not leave the hall, being bound by parole of honour to
+abide with Major Bridgenorth till lawfully dismissed."
+
+"Now out on you, an you were ten times a Peveril!" said Ditchley; "to
+give so many honest fellows loss and labour on your behalf, and to
+show them no kinder countenance.--I say, beat up the fire, and burn
+all together!"
+
+"Nay, nay; but peace, my masters, and hearken to reason," said Julian;
+"we are all here in evil condition, and you will only make it worse by
+contention. Do you help to put out this same fire, which will else
+cost us all dear. Keep yourselves under arms. Let Master Bridgenorth
+and me settle some grounds of accommodation, and I trust all will be
+favourably made up on both sides; and if not, you shall have my
+consent and countenance to fight it out; and come on it what will, I
+will never forget this night's good service."
+
+He then drew Ditchley and Lance Outram aside, while the rest stood
+suspended at his appearance and words, and expressing the utmost
+thanks and gratitude for what they had already done, urged them, as
+the greatest favour which they could do towards him and his father's
+house, to permit him to negotiate the terms of his emancipation from
+thraldom; at the same time forcing on Ditchley five or six gold
+pieces, that the brave lads of Bonadventure might drink his health;
+whilst to Lance he expressed the warmest sense of his active kindness,
+but protested he could only consider it as good service to his house,
+if he was allowed to manage the matter after his own fashion.
+
+"Why," answered Lance, "I am well out on it, Master Julian; for it is
+matter beyond my mastery. All that I stand to is, that I will see you
+safe out of this same Moultrassie Hall; for our old Naunt Ellesmere
+will else give me but cold comfort when I come home. Truth is, I began
+unwillingly; but when I saw the poor fellow Joe shot beside me, why, I
+thought we should have some amends. But I put it all in your Honour's
+hands."
+
+During this colloquy both parties had been amicably employed in
+extinguishing the fire, which might otherwise have been fatal to all.
+It required a general effort to get it under; and both parties agreed
+on the necessary labour, with as much unanimity, as if the water they
+brought in leathern buckets from the well to throw upon the fire, had
+some effect in slaking their mutual hostility.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+ Necessity--thou best of peacemakers,
+ As well as surest prompter of invention--
+ Help us to composition!
+ --ANONYMOUS.
+
+While the fire continued, the two parties laboured in active union,
+like the jarring factions of the Jews during the siege of Jerusalem,
+when compelled to unite in resisting an assault of the besiegers. But
+when the last bucket of water had hissed on the few embers that
+continued to glimmer--when the sense of mutual hostility, hitherto
+suspended by a feeling of common danger, was in its turn rekindled--
+the parties, mingled as they had hitherto been in one common exertion,
+drew off from each other, and began to arrange themselves at opposite
+sides of the hall, and handle their weapons, as if for a renewal of
+the fight.
+
+Bridgenorth interrupted any farther progress of this menaced
+hostility. "Julian Peveril," he said, "thou art free to walk thine own
+path, since thou wilt not walk with me that road which is more safe,
+as well as more honourable. But if you do by my counsel, you will get
+soon beyond the British seas."
+
+"Ralph Bridgenorth," said one of his friends, "this is but evil and
+feeble conduct on thine own part. Wilt thou withhold thy hand from the
+battle, to defend, from these sons of Belial, the captive of thy bow
+and of thy spear? Surely we are enow to deal with them in the security
+of the old serpent, until we essay whether the Lord will not give us
+victory therein."
+
+A hum of stern assent followed; and had not Ganlesse now interfered,
+the combat would probably have been renewed. He took the advocate for
+war apart into one of the window recesses, and apparently satisfied
+his objections; for as he returned to his companions, he said to them,
+"Our friend hath so well argued this matter, that, verily, since he is
+of the same mind with the worthy Major Bridgenorth, I think the youth
+may be set at liberty."
+
+As no farther objection was offered, it only remained with Julian to
+thank and reward those who had been active in his assistance. Having
+first obtained from Bridgenorth a promise of indemnity to them for the
+riot they had committed, a few kind words conveyed his sense of their
+services; and some broad pieces, thrust into the hand of Lance Outram,
+furnished the means for affording them a holiday. They would have
+remained to protect him, but, fearful of farther disorder, and relying
+entirely on the good faith of Major Bridgenorth, he dismissed them all
+except Lance, whom he detained to attend upon him for a few minutes,
+till he should depart from Moultrassie. But ere leaving the Hall, he
+could not repress his desire to speak with Bridgenorth in secret; and
+advancing towards him, he expressed such a desire.
+
+Tacitly granting what was asked of him, Bridgenorth led the way to a
+small summer saloon adjoining to the Hall, where, with his usual
+gravity and indifference of manner, he seemed to await in silence what
+Peveril had to communicate.
+
+Julian found it difficult, where so little opening was afforded him,
+to find a tone in which to open the subjects he had at heart, that
+should be at once dignified and conciliating. "Major Bridgenorth," he
+said at length, "you have been a son, and an affectionate one--You may
+conceive my present anxiety--My father!--What has been designed for
+him?"
+
+"What the law will," answered Bridgenorth. "Had he walked by the
+counsels which I procured to be given to him, he might have dwelt
+safely in the house of his ancestors. His fate is now beyond my
+control--far beyond yours. It must be with him as his country decide."
+
+"And my mother?" said Peveril.
+
+"Will consult, as she has ever done, her own duty; and create her own
+happiness by doing so," replied Bridgenorth. "Believe, my designs
+towards your family are better than they may seem through the mist
+which adversity has spread around your house. I may triumph as a man;
+but as a man I must also remember, in my hour, that mine enemies have
+had theirs.--Have you aught else to say?" he added, after a momentary
+pause. "You have rejected once, yea, and again, the hand I stretched
+out to you. Methinks little more remains between us."
+
+These words, which seemed to cut short farther discussion, were calmly
+spoken; so that though they appeared to discourage farther question,
+they could not interrupt that which still trembled on Julian's tongue.
+He made a step or two towards the door; then suddenly returned. "Your
+daughter?" he said--"Major Bridgenorth--I should ask--I /do/ ask
+forgiveness for mentioning her name--but may I not inquire after her?
+--May I not express my wishes for her future happiness?"
+
+"Your interest in her is but too flattering," said Bridgenorth; "but
+you have already chosen your part; and you must be, in future,
+strangers to each other. I may have wished it otherwise, but the hour
+of grace is passed, during which your compliance with my advice might
+--I will speak it plainly--have led to your union. For her happiness--
+if such a word belongs to mortal pilgrimage--I shall care for it
+sufficiently. She leaves this place to-day, under the guardianship of
+a sure friend."
+
+"Not of----?" exclaimed Peveril, and stopped short; for he felt he had
+no right to pronounce the name which came to his lips.
+
+"Why do you pause?" said Bridgenorth; "a sudden thought is often a
+wise, almost always an honest one. With whom did you suppose I meant
+to entrust my child, that the idea called forth so anxious an
+expression?"
+
+"Again I should ask your forgiveness," said Julian, "for meddling
+where I have little right to interfere. But I saw a face here that is
+known to me--the person calls himself Ganlesse--Is it with him that
+you mean to entrust your daughter?"
+
+"Even to the person who call himself Ganlesse," said Bridgenorth,
+without expressing either anger or surprise.
+
+"And do you know to whom you commit a charge so precious to all who
+know her, and so dear to yourself?" said Julian.
+
+"Do /you/ know, who ask me the question?" answered Bridgenorth.
+
+"I own I do not," answered Julian; "but I have seen him in a character
+so different from that he now wears, that I feel it my duty to warn
+you, how you entrust the charge of your child to one who can
+alternately play the profligate or the hypocrite, as it suits his own
+interest or humour."
+
+Bridgenorth smiled contemptuously. "I might be angry," he said, "with
+the officious zeal which supposes that its green conceptions can
+instruct my grey hairs; but, good Julian, I do but only ask from you
+the liberal construction, that I, who have had much converse with
+mankind, know with whom I trust what is dearest to me. He of whom thou
+speakest hath one visage to his friends, though he may have others to
+the world, living amongst those before whom honest features should be
+concealed under a grotesque vizard; even as in the sinful sports of
+the day, called maskings and mummeries, where the wise, if he show
+himself at all, must be contented to play the apish and fantastic
+fool."
+
+"I would only pray your wisdom to beware," said Julian, "of one, who,
+as he has a vizard for others, may also have one which can disguise
+his real features from you yourself."
+
+"This is being over careful, young man," replied Bridgenorth, more
+shortly than he had hitherto spoken; "if you would walk by my counsel,
+you will attend to your own affairs, which, credit me, deserve all
+your care, and leave others to the management of theirs."
+
+This was too plain to be misunderstood; and Peveril was compelled to
+take his leave of Bridgenorth, and of Moultrassie Hall, without
+farther parley or explanation. The reader may imagine how oft he
+looked back, and tried to guess, amongst the lights which continued to
+twinkle in various parts of the building, which sparkle it was that
+gleamed from the bower of Alice. When the road turned into another
+direction, he sunk into deep reverie, from which he was at length
+roused by the voice of Lance, who demanded where he intended to
+quarter for the night. He was unprepared to answer the question, but
+the honest keeper himself prompted a solution of the problem, by
+requesting that he would occupy a spare bed in the Lodge; to which
+Julian willingly agreed. The rest of the inhabitants had retired to
+rest when they entered; but Dame Ellesmere, apprised by a messenger of
+her nephew's hospitable intent, had everything in the best readiness
+she could, for the son of her ancient patron. Peveril betook himself
+to rest; and, notwithstanding so many subjects of anxiety, slept
+soundly till the morning was far advanced.
+
+His slumbers were first broken by Lance, who had been long up, and
+already active in his service. He informed him, that his horse, arms,
+and small cloak-bag had been sent from the Castle by one of Major
+Bridgenorth's servants, who brought a letter, discharging from the
+Major's service the unfortunate Deborah Debbitch, and prohibiting her
+return to the Hall. The officer of the House of Commons, escorted by a
+strong guard, had left Martindale Castle that morning early,
+travelling in Sir Geoffrey's carriage--his lady being also permitted
+to attend on him. To this he had to add, that the property at the
+Castle was taken possession of by Master Win-the-fight, the attorney,
+from Chesterfield, with other officers of law, in name of Major
+Bridgenorth, a large creditor of the unfortunate knight.
+
+Having told these Job's tidings, Lance paused; and, after a moment's
+hesitation, declared he was resolved to quit the country, and go up to
+London along with his young master. Julian argued the point with him;
+and insisted he had better stay to take charge of his aunt, in case
+she should be disturbed by these strangers. Lance replied, "She would
+have one with her, who would protect her well enough; for there was
+wherewithal to buy protection amongst them. But for himself, he was
+resolved to follow Master Julian to the death."
+
+Julian heartily thanked him for his love.
+
+"Nay, it is not altogether out of love neither," said Lance, "though I
+am as loving as another; but it is, as it were, partly out of fear,
+lest I be called over the coals for last night's matter; for as for
+the miners, they will never trouble them, as the creatures only act
+after their kind."
+
+"I will write in your behalf to Major Bridgenorth, who is bound to
+afford you protection, if you have such fear," said Julian.
+
+"Nay, for that matter, it is not altogether fear, more than altogether
+love," answered the enigmatical keeper, "although it hath a tasting of
+both in it. And, to speak plain truth, thus it is--Dame Debbitch and
+Naunt Ellesmere have resolved to set up their horses together, and
+have made up all their quarrels. And of all ghosts in the world, the
+worst is, when an old true-love comes back to haunt a poor fellow like
+me. Mistress Deborah, though distressed enow for the loss of her
+place, has been already speaking of a broken sixpence, or some such
+token, as if a man could remember such things for so many years, even
+if she had not gone over seas, like woodcock, in the meanwhile."
+
+Julian could scarce forbear laughing. "I thought you too much of a
+man, Lance, to fear a woman marrying you whether you would or no."
+
+"It has been many an honest man's luck, for all that," said Lance;
+"and a woman in the very house has so many deuced opportunities. And
+then there would be two upon one; for Naunt, though high enough when
+any of /your/ folks are concerned, hath some look to the main chance;
+and it seems Mistress Deb is as rich as a Jew."
+
+"And you, Lance," said Julian, "have no mind to marry for cake and
+pudding."
+
+"No, truly, master," answered Lance, "unless I knew of what dough they
+were baked. How the devil do I know how the jade came by so much? And
+then if she speaks of tokens and love-passages, let her be the same
+tight lass I broke the sixpence with, and I will be the same true lad
+to her. But I never heard of true love lasting ten years; and hers, if
+it lives at all, must be nearer twenty."
+
+"Well, then, Lance," said Julian, "since you are resolved on the
+thing, we will go to London together; where, if I cannot retain you in
+my service, and if my father recovers not these misfortunes, I will
+endeavour to promote you elsewhere."
+
+"Nay, nay," said Lance, "I trust to be back to bonny Martindale before
+it is long, and to keep the greenwood, as I have been wont to do; for,
+as to Dame Debbitch, when they have not me for their common butt,
+Naunt and she will soon bend bows on each other. So here comes old
+Dame Ellesmere with your breakfast. I will but give some directions
+about the deer to Rough Ralph, my helper, and saddle my forest pony,
+and your honour's horse, which is no prime one, and we will be ready
+to trot."
+
+Julian was not sorry for this addition to his establishment; for Lance
+had shown himself, on the preceding evening, a shrewd and bold fellow,
+and attached to his master. He therefore set himself to reconcile his
+aunt to parting with her nephew for some time. Her unlimited devotion
+for "the family," readily induced the old lady to acquiesce in his
+proposal, though not without a gentle sigh over the ruins of a castle
+in the air, which was founded on the well-saved purse of Mistress
+Deborah Debbitch. "At any rate," she thought, "it was as well that
+Lance should be out of the way of that bold, long-legged, beggarly
+trollop, Cis Sellok." But to poor Deb herself, the expatriation of
+Lance, whom she had looked to as a sailor to a port under his lee, for
+which he can run, if weather becomes foul, was a second severe blow,
+following close on her dismissal from the profitable service of Major
+Bridgenorth.
+
+Julian visited the disconsolate damsel, in hopes of gaining some light
+upon Bridgenorth's projects regarding his daughter--the character of
+this Ganlesse--and other matters, with which her residence in the
+family might have made her acquainted; but he found her by far too
+much troubled in mind to afford him the least information. The name of
+Ganlesse she did not seem to recollect--that of Alice rendered her
+hysterical--that of Bridgenorth, furious. She numbered up the various
+services she had rendered in the family--and denounced the plague of
+swartness to the linen--of leanness to the poultry--of dearth and
+dishonour to the housekeeping--and of lingering sickness and early
+death to Alice;--all which evils, she averred, had only been kept off
+by her continued, watchful, and incessant cares.--Then again turning
+to the subject of the fugitive Lance, she expressed such a total
+contempt of that mean-spirited fellow, in a tone between laughing and
+crying, as satisfied Julian it was not a topic likely to act as a
+sedative; and that, therefore, unless he made a longer stay than the
+urgent state of his affairs permitted, he was not likely to find
+Mistress Deborah in such a state of composure as might enable him to
+obtain from her any rational or useful information.
+
+Lance, who good-naturedly took upon himself the whole burden of Dame
+Debbitch's mental alienation, or "taking on," as such fits of /passio
+hysterica/ are usually termed in the country, had too much feeling to
+present himself before the victim of her own sensibility, and of his
+obduracy. He therefore intimated to Julian, by his assistant Ralph,
+that the horses stood saddled behind the Lodge, and that all was ready
+for their departure.
+
+Julian took the hint, and they were soon mounted, and clearing the
+road, at a rapid trot, in the direction of London; but not by the most
+usual route. Julian calculated that the carriage in which his father
+was transported would travel slowly; and it was his purpose, if
+possible, to get to London before it should arrive there, in order to
+have time to consult, with the friends of his family, what measures
+should be taken in his father's behalf.
+
+In this manner they advanced a day's journey towards London; at the
+conclusion of which, Julian found his resting-place in a small inn
+upon the road. No one came, at the first call, to attend upon the
+guests and their horses, although the house was well lighted up; and
+there was a prodigious chattering in the kitchen, such as can only be
+produced by a French cook when his mystery is in the very moment of
+projection. It instantly occurred to Julian--so rare was the ministry
+of these Gallic artists at that time--that the clamour he heard must
+necessarily be produced by the Sieur Chaubert, on whose /plats/ he had
+lately feasted, along with Smith and Ganlesse.
+
+One, or both of these, were therefore probably in the little inn; and
+if so, he might have some opportunity to discover their real purpose
+and character. How to avail himself of such a meeting he knew not; but
+chance favoured him more than he could have expected.
+
+"I can scarce receive you, gentlefolks," said the landlord, who at
+length appeared at the door; "here be a sort of quality in my house
+to-night, whom less than all will not satisfy; nor all neither, for
+that matter."
+
+"We are but plain fellows, landlord," said Julian; "we are bound for
+Moseley-market, and can get no farther to-night. Any hole will serve
+us, no matter what."
+
+"Why," said the honest host, "if that be the case, I must e'en put one
+of you behind the bar, though the gentlemen have desired to be
+private; the other must take heart of grace and help me at the tap."
+
+"The tap for me," said Lance, without waiting his master's decision.
+"It is an element which I could live and die in."
+
+"The bar, then, for me," said Peveril; and stepping back, whispered to
+Lance to exchange cloaks with him, desirous, if possible, to avoid
+being recognised.
+
+The exchange was made in an instant; and presently afterwards the
+landlord brought a light; and as he guided Julian into his hostelry,
+cautioned him to sit quiet in the place where he should stow him; and
+if he was discovered, to say that he was one of the house, and leave
+him to make it good. "You will hear what the gallants say," he added;
+"but I think thou wilt carry away but little on it; for when it is not
+French, it is Court gibberish; and that is as hard to construe."
+
+The bar, into which our hero was inducted on these conditions, seemed
+formed, with respect to the public room, upon the principle of a
+citadel, intended to observe and bridle a rebellious capital. Here sat
+the host on the Saturday evenings, screened from the observation of
+his guests, yet with the power of observing both their wants and their
+behaviour, and also that of overhearing their conversation--a practice
+which he was much addicted to, being one of that numerous class of
+philanthropists, to whom their neighbours' business is of as much
+consequence, or rather more, than their own.
+
+Here he planted his new guest, with a repeated caution not to disturb
+the gentlemen by speech or motion; and a promise that he should be
+speedily accommodated with a cold buttock of beef, and a tankard of
+home-brewed. And here he left him with no other light than that which
+glimmered from the well-illuminated apartment within, through a sort
+of shuttle which accommodated the landlord with a view into it.
+
+This situation, inconvenient enough in itself, was, on the present
+occasion, precisely what Julian would have selected. He wrapped
+himself in the weather-beaten cloak of Lance Outram, which had been
+stained, by age and weather, into a thousand variations from its
+original Lincoln green; and with as little noise as he could, set
+himself to observe the two inmates, who had engrossed to themselves
+the whole of the apartment, which was usually open to the public. They
+sat by a table well covered with such costly rarities, as could only
+have been procured by much forecast, and prepared by the exquisite
+Mons. Chaubert; to which both seemed to do much justice.
+
+Julian had little difficulty in ascertaining, that one of the
+travellers was, as he had anticipated, the master of the said
+Chaubert, or, as he was called by Ganlesse, Smith; the other, who
+faced him, he had never seen before. This last was dressed like a
+gallant of the first order. His periwig, indeed, as he travelled on
+horseback, did not much exceed in size the bar-wig of a modern lawyer;
+but then the essence which he shook from it with every motion,
+impregnated a whole apartment, which was usually only perfumed by that
+vulgar herb, tobacco. His riding-coat was laced in the newest and most
+courtly style; and Grammont himself might have envied the embroidery
+of his waistcoat, and the peculiar cut of his breeches, which buttoned
+above the knee, permitting the shape of a very handsome leg to be
+completely seen. This, by the proprietor thereof, had been stretched
+out upon a stool, and he contemplated its proportions, from time to
+time, with infinite satisfaction.
+
+The conversation between these worthies was so interesting, that we
+propose to assign to it another chapter.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+ ----This is some creature of the elements,
+ Most like your sea-gull. He can wheel and whistle
+ His screaming song, e'en when the storm is loudest--
+ Take for his sheeted couch the restless foam
+ Of the wild wave-crest--slumber in the calm,
+ And daily with the storm. Yet 'tis a gull,
+ An arrant gull, with all this.
+ --THE CHAMPION.
+
+"And here is to thee," said the fashionable gallant whom we have
+described, "honest Tom; and a cup of welcome to thee out of Looby-
+land. Why, thou hast been so long in the country, that thou hast got a
+bumpkinly clod-compelling sort of look thyself. That greasy doublet
+fits thee as if it were thy reserved Sunday's apparel; and the points
+seem as if they were stay-laces bought for thy true-love Marjory. I
+marvel thou canst still relish a ragout. Methinks now, to a stomach
+bound in such a jacket, eggs and bacon were a diet more conforming."
+
+"Rally away, my good lord, while wit lasts," answered his companion;
+"yours is not the sort of ammunition which will bear much expenditure.
+Or rather, tell me news from Court, since we have met so opportunely."
+
+"You would have asked me these an hour ago," said the lord, "had not
+your very soul been under Chaubert's covered dishes. You remembered
+King's affairs will keep cool, and /entre-mets/ must be eaten hot."
+
+"Not so, my lord; I only kept common talk whilst that eavesdropping
+rascal of a landlord was in the room; so that, now the coast is clear
+once more, I pray you for news from Court."
+
+"The Plot is nonsuited," answered the courtier--"Sir George Wakeman
+acquitted--the witnesses discredited by the jury--Scroggs, who ranted
+on one side, is now ranting on t'other."
+
+"Rat the Plot, Wakeman, witnesses, Papists, and Protestants, all
+together! Do you think I care for such trash as that?--Till the Plot
+comes up the Palace backstair, and gets possession of old Rowley's own
+imagination, I care not a farthing who believes or disbelieves. I hang
+by him will bear me out."
+
+"Well, then," said the lord, "the next news is Rochester's disgrace."
+
+"Disgraced!--How, and for what? The morning I came off he stood as
+fair as any one."
+
+"That's over--the epitaph[*] has broken his neck--and now he may write
+one for his own Court favour, for it is dead and buried."
+
+[*] The epitaph alluded to is the celebrated epigram made by Rochester
+ on Charles II. It was composed at the King's request, who
+ nevertheless resented its poignancy.
+
+ The lines are well known:--
+
+ "Here lies our sovereign lord the King,
+ Whose word no man relies on,
+ Who never said a foolish thing,
+ And never did a wise one."
+
+"The epitaph!" exclaimed Tom; "why, I was by when it was made; and it
+passed for an excellent good jest with him whom it was made upon."
+
+"Ay, so it did amongst ourselves," answered his companion; "but it got
+abroad, and had a run like a mill-race. It was in every coffee-house,
+and in half the diurnals. Grammont translated it into French too; and
+there is no laughing at so sharp a jest, when it is dinned into your
+ears on all sides. So disgraced is the author; and but for his Grace
+of Buckingham, the Court would be as dull as my Lord Chancellor's
+wig."
+
+"Or as the head it covers.--Well, my lord, the fewer at Court, there
+is the more room for those that can bustle there. But there are two
+mainstrings of Shaftesbury's fiddle broken--the Popish Plot fallen
+into discredit--and Rochester disgraced. Changeful times--but here is
+to the little man who shall mend them."
+
+"I apprehend you," replied his lordship; "and meet your health with my
+love. Trust me, my lord loves you, and longs for you.--Nay, I have
+done you reason.--By your leave, the cup is with me. Here is to his
+buxom Grace of Bucks."
+
+"As blithe a peer," said Smith, "as ever turned night to day. Nay, it
+shall be an overflowing bumper, an you will; and I will drink it
+/super naculum/.--And how stands the great Madam?"[*]
+
+[*] The Duchess of Portsmouth, Charles II.'s favourite mistress; very
+ unpopular at the time of the Popish Plot, as well from her
+ religion as her country, being a Frenchwoman and a Catholic.
+
+"Stoutly against all change," answered the lord--"Little Anthony[*]
+can make nought of her."
+
+[*] Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury, the politician and
+ intriguer of the period.
+
+"Then he shall bring her influence to nought. Hark in thine ear. Thou
+knowest----" (Here he whispered so low that Julian could not catch the
+sound.)
+
+"Know him?" answered the other--"Know Ned of the Island?--To be sure I
+do."
+
+"He is the man that shall knot the great fiddle-strings that have
+snapped. Say I told you so; and thereupon I give thee his health."
+
+"And thereupon I pledge thee," said the young nobleman, "which on any
+other argument I were loath to do--thinking of Ned as somewhat the cut
+of a villain."
+
+"Granted, man--granted," said the other,--"a very thorough-paced
+rascal; but able, my lord, able and necessary; and, in this plan,
+indispensable.--Pshaw!--This champagne turns stronger as it gets
+older, I think."
+
+"Hark, mine honest fellow," said the courtier; "I would thou wouldst
+give me some item of all this mystery. Thou hast it, I know; for whom
+do men entrust but trusty Chiffinch?"
+
+"It is your pleasure to say so, my lord," answered Smith (whom we
+shall hereafter call by his real name of Chiffinch) with such drunken
+gravity, for his speech had become a little altered by his copious
+libations in the course of the evening,--"few men know more, or say
+less, than I do; and it well becomes my station. /Conticuere omnes/,
+as the grammar hath it--all men should learn to hold their tongue."
+
+"Except with a friend, Tom--except with a friend. Thou wilt never be
+such a dogbolt as to refuse a hint to a friend? Come, you get too wise
+and statesman-like for your office.--The ligatures of thy most
+peasantly jacket there are like to burst with thy secret. Come, undo a
+button, man; it is for the health of thy constitution--Let out a reef;
+and let thy chosen friend know what is meditating. Thou knowest I am
+as true as thyself to little Anthony, if he can but get uppermost."
+
+"/If/, thou lordly infidel!" said Chiffinch--"talk'st thou to me of
+/ifs?/--There is neither /if/ nor /and/ in the matter. The great Madam
+shall be pulled a peg down--the great Plot screwed a peg or two up.
+Thou knowest Ned?--Honest Ned had a brother's death to revenge."
+
+"I have heard so," said the nobleman; "and that his persevering
+resentment of that injury was one of the few points which seemed to be
+a sort of heathenish virtue in him."
+
+"Well," continued Chiffinch, "in manoeuvring to bring about this
+revenge, which he hath laboured at many a day, he hath discovered a
+treasure."
+
+"What!--In the Isle of Man?" said his companion.
+
+"Assure yourself of it.--She is a creature so lovely, that she needs
+but be seen to put down every one of the favourites, from Portsmouth
+and Cleveland down to that threepenny baggage, Mistress Nelly."
+
+"By my word, Chiffinch," said my lord, "that is a reinforcement after
+the fashion of thine own best tactics. But bethink thee, man! To make
+such a conquest, there wants more than a cherry-cheek and a bright
+eye--there must be wit--wit, man, and manners, and a little sense
+besides, to keep influence when it is gotten."
+
+"Pshaw! will you tell me what goes to this vocation?" said Chiffinch.
+"Here, pledge me her health in a brimmer.--Nay, you shall do it on
+knees, too.--Never such a triumphant beauty was seen--I went to church
+on purpose, for the first time these ten years--Yet I lie, it was not
+to church neither--it was to chapel."
+
+"To chapel!--What the devil, is she a Puritan?" exclaimed the other
+courtier.
+
+"To be sure she is. Do you think I would be accessory to bringing a
+Papist into favour in these times, when, as my good Lord said in the
+House, there should not be a Popish manservant, nor a Popish maid-
+servant, not so much as dog or cat, left to bark or mew about the
+King!"[*]
+
+[*] Such was the extravagance of Shaftesbury's eloquence.
+
+"But consider, Chiffie, the dislikelihood of her pleasing," said the
+noble courtier.--"What! old Rowley, with his wit, and love of wit--his
+wildness, and love of wildness--he form a league with a silly,
+scrupulous, unidea'd Puritan!--Not if she were Venus."
+
+"Thou knowest nought of the matter," answered Chiffinch. "I tell thee,
+the fine contrast between the seeming saint and falling sinner will
+give zest to the old gentleman's inclination. If I do not know him,
+who does?--Her health, my lord, on your bare knee, as you would live
+to be of the bedchamber."
+
+"I pledge you most devoutly," answered his friend. "But you have not
+told me how the acquaintance is to be made; for you cannot, I think,
+carry her to Whitehall."
+
+"Aha, my dear lord, you would have the whole secret! but that I cannot
+afford--I can spare a friend a peep at my ends, but no one must look
+on the means by which they are achieved."--So saying, he shook his
+drunken head most wisely.
+
+The villainous design which this discourse implied, and which his
+heart told him was designed against Alice Bridgenorth, stirred Julian
+so extremely, that he involuntarily shifted his posture, and laid his
+hand on his sword hilt.
+
+Chiffinch heard a rustling, and broke off, exclaiming, "Hark!--
+Zounds, something moved--I trust I have told the tale to no ears but
+thine."
+
+"I will cut off any which have drunk in but a syllable of thy words,"
+said the nobleman; and raising a candle, he took a hasty survey of the
+apartment. Seeing nothing that could incur his menaced resentment, he
+replaced the light and continued:--"Well, suppose the Belle Louise de
+Querouaille[*] shoots from her high station in the firmament, how will
+you rear up the downfallen Plot again--for without that same Plot,
+think of it as thou wilt, we have no change of hands--and matters
+remain as they were, with a Protestant courtezan instead of a Papist--
+Little Anthony can but little speed without that Plot of his--I
+believe, in my conscience, he begot it himself."[+]
+
+[*] Charles's principal mistress /en titre/. She was created Duchess
+ of Portsmouth.
+
+[+] Shaftesbury himself is supposed to have said that he knew not who
+ was the inventor of the Plot, but that he himself had all the
+ advantage of the discovery.
+
+"Whoever begot it," said Chiffinch, "he hath adopted it; and a
+thriving babe it has been to him. Well, then, though it lies out of my
+way, I will play Saint Peter again--up with t'other key, and unlock
+t'other mystery."
+
+"Now thou speakest like a good fellow; and I will, with my own hands,
+unwire this fresh flask, to begin a brimmer to the success of thy
+achievement."
+
+"Well, then," continued the communicative Chiffinch, "thou knowest
+that they have long had a nibbling at the old Countess of Derby.--So
+Ned was sent down--he owes her an old accompt, thou knowest--with
+private instructions to possess himself of the island, if he could, by
+help of some of his old friends. He hath ever kept up spies upon her;
+and happy man was he, to think his hour of vengeance was come so nigh.
+But he missed his blow; and the old girl being placed on her guard,
+was soon in a condition to make Ned smoke for it. Out of the island he
+came with little advantage for having entered it; when, by some means
+--for the devil, I think, stands ever his friend--he obtained
+information concerning a messenger, whom her old Majesty of Man had
+sent to London to make party in her behalf. Ned stuck himself to this
+fellow--a raw, half-bred lad, son of an old blundering Cavalier of the
+old stamp, down in Derbyshire--and so managed the swain, that he
+brought him to the place where I was waiting, in anxious expectation
+of the pretty one I told you of. By Saint Anthony, for I will swear by
+no meaner oath, I stared when I saw this great lout--not that the
+fellow is so ill-looked neither--I stared like--like--good now, help
+me to a simile."
+
+"Like Saint Anthony's pig, an it were sleek," said the young lord;
+"your eyes, Chiffie, have the very blink of one. But what hath all
+this to do with the Plot? Hold, I have had wine enough."
+
+"You shall not balk me," said Chiffinch; and a jingling was heard, as
+if he were filling his comrade's glass with a very unsteady hand. "Hey
+--What the devil is the matter?--I used to carry my glass steady--very
+steady."
+
+"Well, but this stranger?"
+
+"Why, he swept at game and ragout as he would at spring beef or summer
+mutton. Never saw so unnurtured a cub--Knew no more what he ate than
+an infidel--I cursed him by my gods when I saw Chaubert's /chef-d'
+oeuvres/ glutted down so indifferent a throat. We took the freedom to
+spice his goblet a little, and ease him of his packet of letters; and
+the fool went on his way the next morning with a budget artificially
+filled with grey paper. Ned would have kept him, in hopes to have made
+a witness of him, but the boy was not of that mettle."
+
+"How will you prove your letters?" said the courtier.
+
+"La you there, my lord," said Chiffinch; "one may see with half an
+eye, for all your laced doublet, that you have been of the family of
+Furnival's, before your brother's death sent you to Court. How prove
+the letters?--Why, we have but let the sparrow fly with a string round
+his foot.--We have him again so soon as we list."
+
+"Why, thou art turned a very Machiavel, Chiffinch," said his friend.
+"But how if the youth proved restive?--I have heard these Peak men
+have hot heads and hard hands."
+
+"Trouble not yourself--that was cared for, my lord," said Chiffinch--
+"his pistols might bark, but they could not bite."
+
+"Most exquisite Chiffinch, thou art turned micher as well as padder--
+Canst both rob a man and kidnap him!"
+
+"Micher and padder--what terms be these?" said Chiffinch. "Methinks
+these are sounds to lug out upon. You will have me angry to the degree
+of falling foul--robber and kidnapper!"
+
+"You mistake verb for noun-substantive," replied his lordship; "I said
+/rob/ and /kidnap/--a man may do either once and away without being
+professional."
+
+"But not without spilling a little foolish noble blood, or some such
+red-coloured gear," said Chiffinch, starting up.
+
+"Oh yes," said his lordship; "all this may be without these dire
+consequences, and as you will find to-morrow, when you return to
+England; for at present you are in the land of Champagne, Chiffie; and
+that you may continue so, I drink thee this parting cup to line thy
+nightcap."
+
+"I do not refuse your pledge," said Chiffinch; "but I drink to thee in
+dudgeon and in hostility--It is cup of wrath, and a gage of battle.
+To-morrow, by dawn, I will have thee at point of fox, wert thou the
+last of the Savilles.--What the devil! think you I fear you because
+you are a lord?"
+
+"Not so, Chiffinch," answered his companion. "I know thou fearest
+nothing but beans and bacon, washed down with bumpkin-like beer.--
+Adieu, sweet Chiffinch--to bed--Chiffinch--to bed."
+
+So saying, he lifted a candle, and left the apartment. And Chiffinch,
+whom the last draught had nearly overpowered, had just strength enough
+left to do the same, muttering, as he staggered out, "Yes, he shall
+answer it.--Dawn of day? D--n me--It is come already--Yonder's the
+dawn--No, d--n me, 'tis the fire glancing on the cursed red lattice--
+It is the smell of the brandy in this cursed room--It could not be the
+wine--Well, old Rowley shall send me no more errands to the country
+again--Steady, steady."
+
+So saying, he reeled out of the apartment, leaving Peveril to think
+over the extraordinary conversation he had just heard.
+
+The name of Chiffinch, the well-known minister of Charles's pleasures,
+was nearly allied to the part which he seemed about to play in the
+present intrigue; but that Christian, whom he had always supposed a
+Puritan as strict as his brother-in-law, Bridgenorth, should be
+associated with him in a plot so infamous, seemed alike unnatural and
+monstrous. The near relationship might blind Bridgenorth, and warrant
+him in confiding his daughter to such a man's charge; but what a
+wretch he must be, that could coolly meditate such an ignominious
+abuse of his trust! In doubt whether he could credit for a moment the
+tale which Chiffinch had revealed, he hastily examined his packet, and
+found that the sealskin case in which it had been wrapt up, now only
+contained an equal quantity of waste paper. If he had wanted farther
+confirmation, the failure of the shot which he fired at Bridgenorth,
+and of which the wadding only struck him, showed that his arms had
+been tampered with. He examined the pistol which still remained
+charged, and found that the ball had been drawn. "May I perish," said
+he to himself, "amid these villainous intrigues, but thou shalt be
+more surely loaded, and to better purpose! The contents of these
+papers may undo my benefactress--their having been found on me, may
+ruin my father--that I have been the bearer of them, may cost, in
+these fiery times, my own life--that I care least for--they form a
+branch of the scheme laid against the honour and happiness of a
+creature so innocent, that it is almost sin to think of her within the
+neighbourhood of such infamous knaves. I will recover the letters at
+all risks--But how?--that is to be thought on.--Lance is stout and
+trusty; and when a bold deed is once resolved upon, there never yet
+lacked the means of executing it."
+
+His host now entered, with an apology for his long absence; and after
+providing Peveril with some refreshments, invited him to accept, for
+his night-quarters, the accommodation of a remote hayloft, which he
+was to share with his comrade; professing, at the same time, he could
+hardly have afforded them this courtesy, but out of deference to the
+exquisite talents of Lance Outram, as assistant at the tap; where,
+indeed, it seems probable that he, as well as the admiring landlord,
+did that evening contrive to drink nearly as much liquor as they drew.
+
+But Lance was a seasoned vessel, on whom liquor made no lasting
+impression; so that when Peveril awaked that trusty follower at dawn,
+he found him cool enough to comprehend and enter into the design which
+he expressed, of recovering the letters which had been abstracted from
+his person.
+
+Having considered the whole matter with much attention, Lance
+shrugged, grinned, and scratched his head; and at length manfully
+expressed his resolution. "Well, my naunt speaks truth in her old
+saw----
+
+ 'He that serves Peveril maunna be slack,
+ Neither for weather, nor yet for wrack.'
+
+And then again, my good dame was wont to say, that whenever Peveril
+was in a broil, Outram was in a stew; so I will never bear a base
+mind, but even hold a part with you as my fathers have done with
+yours, for four generations, whatever more."
+
+"Spoken like a most gallant Outram," said Julian; "and were we but rid
+of that puppy lord and his retinue, we two could easily deal with the
+other three."
+
+"Two Londoners and a Frenchman?" said Lance,--"I would take them in
+mine own hand. And as for my Lord Saville, as they call him, I heard
+word last night that he and all his men of gilded gingerbread--that
+looked at an honest fellow like me, as if they were the ore and I the
+dross--are all to be off this morning to some races, or such-like
+junketings, about Tutbury. It was that brought him down here, where he
+met this other civet-cat by accident."
+
+In truth, even as Lance spoke, a trampling was heard of horses in the
+yard; and from the hatch of their hayloft they beheld Lord Saville's
+attendants mustered, and ready to set out as soon as he could make his
+appearance.
+
+"So ho, Master Jeremy," said one of the fellows, to a sort of
+principal attendant, who just came out of the house, "methinks the
+wine has proved a sleeping cup to my lord this morning."
+
+"No," answered Jeremy, "he hath been up before light writing letters
+for London; and to punish thy irreverence, thou, Jonathan, shalt be
+the man to ride back with them."
+
+"And so to miss the race?" said Jonathan sulkily; "I thank you for
+this good turn, good Master Jeremy; and hang me if I forget it."
+
+Farther discussion was cut short by the appearance of the young
+nobleman, who, as he came out of the inn, said to Jeremy, "These be
+the letters. Let one of the knaves ride to London for life and death,
+and deliver them as directed; and the rest of them get to horse and
+follow me."
+
+Jeremy gave Jonathan the packet with a malicious smile; and the
+disappointed groom turned his horse's head sullenly towards London,
+while Lord Saville, and the rest of his retinue, rode briskly off in
+an opposite direction, pursued by the benedictions of the host and his
+family, who stood bowing and courtesying at the door, in gratitude,
+doubtless, for the receipt of an unconscionable reckoning.
+
+It was full three hours after their departure, that Chiffinch lounged
+into the room in which they had supped, in a brocade nightgown, and
+green velvet cap, turned up with the most costly Brussels lace. He
+seemed but half awake; and it was with drowsy voice that he called for
+a cup of cold small beer. His manner and appearance were those of a
+man who had wrestled hard with Bacchus on the preceding evening, and
+had scarce recovered the effects of his contest with the jolly god.
+Lance, instructed by his master to watch the motions of the courtier,
+officiously attended with the cooling beverage he called for,
+pleading, as an excuse to the landlord, his wish to see a Londoner in
+his morning-gown and cap.
+
+No sooner had Chiffinch taken his morning draught, than he inquired
+after Lord Saville.
+
+"His lordship was mounted and away by peep of dawn," was Lance's
+reply.
+
+"What the devil!" exclaimed Chiffinch; "why, this is scarce civil.--
+What! off for the races with his whole retinue?"
+
+"All but one," replied Lance, "whom his lordship sent back to London
+with letters."
+
+"To London with letters!" said Chiffinch. "Why, I am for London, and
+could have saved his express a labour.--But stop--hold--I begin to
+recollect--d----n, can I have blabbed?--I have--I have--I remember it
+all now--I have blabbed; and to the very weasel of the Court, who
+sucks the yelk out of every man's secret. Furies and fire--that my
+afternoons should ruin my mornings thus!--I must turn boon companion
+and good fellow in my cups--and have my confidences and my quarrels--
+my friends and my enemies, with a plague to me, as if any one could do
+a man much good or harm but his own self. His messenger must be
+stopped, though--I will put a spoke in his wheel.--Hark ye, drawer-
+fellow--call my groom hither--call Tom Beacon."
+
+Lance obeyed; but failed not, when he had introduced the domestic, to
+remain in the apartment, in order to hear what should pass betwixt him
+and his master.
+
+"Hark ye, Tom," said Chiffinch, "here are five pieces for you."
+
+"What's to be done now, I trow?" said Tom, without even the ceremony
+of returning thanks, which he was probably well aware would not be
+received even in part payment of the debt he was incurring.
+
+"Mount your fleet nag, Tom--ride like the devil--overtake the groom
+whom Lord Saville despatched to London this morning--lame his horse--
+break his bones--fill him as drunk as the Baltic sea; or do whatever
+may best and most effectively stop his journey.--Why does the lout
+stand there without answering me? Dost understand me?"
+
+"Why, ay, Master Chiffinch," said Tom; "and so I am thinking doth this
+honest man here, who need not have heard quite so much of your
+counsel, an it had been your will."
+
+"I am bewitched this morning," said Chiffinch to himself, "or else the
+champagne runs in my head still. My brain has become the very lowlands
+of Holland--a gill-cup would inundate it--Hark thee, fellow," he
+added, addressing Lance, "keep my counsel--there is a wager betwixt
+Lord Saville and me, which of us shall first have a letter in London.
+Here is to drink my health, and bring luck on my side. Say nothing of
+it; but help Tom to his nag.--Tom, ere thou startest come for thy
+credentials--I will give thee a letter to the Duke of Bucks, that may
+be evidence thou wert first in town."
+
+Tom Beacon ducked and exited; and Lance, after having made some show
+of helping him to horse, ran back to tell his master the joyful
+intelligence, that a lucky accident had abated Chiffinch's party to
+their own number.
+
+Peveril immediately ordered his horses to be got ready; and, so soon
+as Tom Beacon was despatched towards London, on a rapid trot, had the
+satisfaction to observe Chiffinch, with his favourite Chaubert, mount
+to pursue the same journey, though at a more moderate rate. He
+permitted them to attain such a distance, that they might be dogged
+without suspicion; then paid his reckoning, mounted his horse, and
+followed, keeping his men carefully in view, until he should come to a
+place proper for the enterprise which he meditated.
+
+It had been Peveril's intention, that when they came to some solitary
+part of the road, they should gradually mend their pace, until they
+overtook Chaubert--that Lance Outram should then drop behind, in order
+to assail the man of spits and stoves, while he himself, spurring
+onwards, should grapple with Chiffinch. But this scheme presupposed
+that the master and servant should travel in the usual manner--the
+latter riding a few yards behind the former. Whereas, such and so
+interesting were the subjects of discussion betwixt Chiffinch and the
+French cook, that, without heeding the rules of etiquette, they rode
+on together, amicably abreast, carrying on a conversation on the
+mysteries of the table, which the ancient Comus, or a modern
+gastronome, might have listened to with pleasure. It was therefore
+necessary to venture on them both at once.
+
+For this purpose, when they saw a long tract of road before them,
+unvaried by the least appearance of man, beast, or human habitation,
+they began to mend their pace, that they might come up to Chiffinch,
+without giving him any alarm, by a sudden and suspicious increase of
+haste. In this manner they lessened the distance which separated them
+till they were within about twenty yards, when Peveril, afraid that
+Chiffinch might recognise him at a nearer approach, and so trust to
+his horse's heels, made Lance the signal to charge.
+
+At the sudden increase of their speed, and the noise with which it was
+necessarily attended, Chiffinch looked around, but had time to do no
+more, for Lance, who had pricked his pony (which was much more speedy
+than Julian's horse) into full gallop, pushed, without ceremony,
+betwixt the courtier and his attendant; and ere Chaubert had time for
+more than one exclamation, he upset both horse and Frenchman,--
+/morbleu!/ thrilling from his tongue as he rolled on the ground
+amongst the various articles of his occupation, which, escaping from
+the budget in which he bore them, lay tumbled upon the highway in
+strange disorder; while Lance, springing from his palfrey, commanded
+his foeman to be still, under no less a penalty than that of death, if
+he attempted to rise.
+
+Before Chiffinch could avenge his trusty follower's downfall, his own
+bridle was seized by Julian, who presented a pistol with the other
+hand, and commanded him to stand or die.
+
+Chiffinch, though effeminate, was no coward. He stood still as
+commanded, and said, with firmness, "Rogue, you have taken me at
+surprise. If you are highwaymen, there is my purse. Do us no bodily
+harm, and spare the budget of spices and sauces."
+
+"Look you, Master Chiffinch," said Peveril, "this is no time for
+dallying. I am no highwayman, but a man of honour. Give me back that
+packet which you stole from me the other night; or, by all that is
+good, I will send a brace of balls through you, and search for it at
+leisure."
+
+"What night?--What packet?" answered Chiffinch, confused; yet willing
+to protract the time for the chance of assistance, or to put Peveril
+off his guard. "I know nothing of what you mean. If you are a man of
+honour, let me draw my sword, and I will do you right, as a gentleman
+should do to another."
+
+"Dishonourable rascal!" said Peveril, "you escape not in this manner.
+You plundered me when you had me at odds; and I am not the fool to let
+my advantage escape, now that my turn is come. Yield up the packet;
+and then, if you will, I will fight you on equal terms. But first," he
+reiterated, "yield up the packet, or I will instantly send you where
+the tenor of your life will be hard to answer for."
+
+The tone of Peveril's voice, the fierceness of his eye, and the manner
+in which he held the loaded weapon, within a hand's-breadth of
+Chiffinch's head, convinced the last there was neither room for
+compromise, nor time for trifling. He thrust his hand into a side
+pocket of his cloak, and with visible reluctance, produced those
+papers and despatches with which Julian had been entrusted by the
+Countess of Derby.
+
+"They are five in number," said Julian; "and you have given me only
+four. Your life depends on full restitution."
+
+"It escaped from my hand," said Chiffinch, producing the missing
+document--"There it is. Now, sir, your pleasure is fulfilled, unless,"
+he added sulkily, "you design either murder or farther robbery."
+
+"Base wretch!" said Peveril, withdrawing his pistol, yet keeping a
+watchful eye on Chiffinch's motions, "thou art unworthy any honest
+man's sword; and yet, if you dare draw your own, as you proposed but
+now, I am willing to give you a chance upon fair equality of terms."
+
+"Equality!" said Chiffinch sneeringly; "yes, a proper equality--sword
+and pistol against single rapier, and two men upon one, for Chaubert
+is no fighter. No sir; I shall seek amends upon some more fitting
+occasion, and with more equal weapons."
+
+"By backbiting, or by poison, base pander!" said Julian; "these are
+thy means of vengeance. But mark me--I know your vile purpose
+respecting a lady who is too worthy that her name should be uttered in
+such a worthless ear. Thou hast done me one injury, and thou see'st I
+have repaid it. But prosecute this farther villainy, and be assured I
+will put thee to death like a foul reptile, whose very slaver is fatal
+to humanity. Rely upon this, as if Machiavel had sworn it; for so
+surely as you keep your purpose, so surely will I prosecute my
+revenge.--Follow me, Lance, and leave him to think on what I have told
+him."
+
+Lance had, after the first shock, sustained a very easy part in this
+recontre; for all he had to do, was to point the butt of his whip, in
+the manner of a gun, at the intimidated Frenchman, who, lying on his
+back, and gazing at random on the skies, had as little the power or
+purpose of resistance, as any pig which had ever come under his own
+slaughter-knife.
+
+Summoned by his master from the easy duty of guarding such an
+unresisting prisoner, Lance remounted his horse, and they both rode
+off, leaving their discomfited antagonists to console themselves for
+their misadventure as they best could. But consolation was hard to
+come by in the circumstances. The French artist had to lament the
+dispersion of his spices, and the destruction of his magazine of
+sauces--an enchanter despoiled of his magic wand and talisman, could
+scarce have been in more desperate extremity. Chiffinch had to mourn
+the downfall of his intrigue, and its premature discovery. "To this
+fellow, at least," he thought, "I can have bragged none--here my evil
+genius alone has betrayed me. With this infernal discovery, which may
+cost me so dear on all hands, champagne had nought to do. If there be
+a flask left unbroken, I will drink it after dinner, and try if it may
+not even yet suggest some scheme of redemption and of revenge."
+
+With this manly resolution, he prosecuted his journey to London.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+ A man so various, that he seem'd to be
+ Not one, but all mankind's epitome;
+ Stiff in opinions--always in the wrong--
+ Was everything by starts, but nothing long;
+ Who, in the course of one revolving moon,
+ Was chemist, fiddler, statesman, and buffoon;
+ Then, all for women, painting, fiddling, drinking;
+ Besides a thousand freaks that died in thinking.
+ --DRYDEN.
+
+We must now transport the reader to the magnificent hotel in ----
+Street, inhabited at this time by the celebrated George Villiers, Duke
+of Buckingham, whom Dryden has doomed to a painful immortality by the
+few lines which we have prefixed to this chapter. Amid the gay and
+licentious of the laughing Court of Charles, the Duke was the most
+licentious and most gay; yet, while expending a princely fortune, a
+strong constitution, and excellent talents, in pursuit of frivolous
+pleasures, he nevertheless nourished deeper and more extensive
+designs; in which he only failed from want of that fixed purpose and
+regulated perseverance essential to all important enterprises, but
+particularly in politics.
+
+It was long past noon; and the usual hour of the Duke's levee--if
+anything could be termed usual where all was irregular--had been long
+past. His hall was filled with lackeys and footmen, in the most
+splendid liveries; the interior apartments, with the gentlemen and
+pages of his household, arrayed as persons of the first quality, and,
+in that respect, rather exceeding than falling short of the Duke in
+personal splendour. But his antechamber, in particular, might be
+compared to a gathering of eagles to the slaughter, were not the
+simile too dignified to express that vile race, who, by a hundred
+devices all tending to one common end, live upon the wants of needy
+greatness, or administer to the pleasures of summer-teeming luxury, or
+stimulate the wild wishes of lavish and wasteful extravagance, by
+devising new modes and fresh motives of profusion. There stood the
+projector, with his mysterious brow, promising unbounded wealth to
+whomsoever might choose to furnish the small preliminary sum necessary
+to change egg-shells into the great /arcanum/. There was Captain
+Seagull, undertaker for a foreign settlement, with the map under his
+arm of Indian or American kingdoms, beautiful as the primitive Eden,
+waiting the bold occupants, for whom a generous patron should equip
+two brigantines and a fly-boat. Thither came, fast and frequent, the
+gamesters, in their different forms and calling. This, light, young,
+gay in appearance, the thoughtless youth of wit and pleasure--the
+pigeon rather than the rook--but at heart the same sly, shrewd, cold-
+blooded calculator, as yonder old hard-featured professor of the same
+science, whose eyes are grown dim with watching of the dice at
+midnight; and whose fingers are even now assisting his mental
+computation of chances and of odds. The fine arts, too--I would it
+were otherwise--have their professors amongst this sordid train. The
+poor poet, half ashamed, in spite of habit, of the part which he is
+about to perform, and abashed by consciousness at once of his base
+motive and his shabby black coat, lurks in yonder corner for the
+favourable moment to offer his dedication. Much better attired, the
+architect presents his splendid vision of front and wings, and designs
+a palace, the expense of which may transfer his employer to a jail.
+But uppermost of all, the favourite musician, or singer, who waits on
+my lord to receive, in solid gold, the value of the dulcet sounds
+which solaced the banquet of the preceding evening.
+
+Such, and many such like, were the morning attendants of the Duke of
+Buckingham--all genuine descendants of the daughter of the horse-
+leech, whose cry is "Give, give."
+
+But the levee of his Grace contained other and very different
+characters; and was indeed as various as his own opinions and
+pursuits. Besides many of the young nobility and wealthy gentry of
+England, who made his Grace the glass at which they dressed themselves
+for the day, and who learned from him how to travel, with the newest
+and best grace, the general Road to Ruin; there were others of a
+graver character--discarded statesmen, political spies, opposition
+orators, servile tools of administration, men who met not elsewhere,
+but who regarded the Duke's mansion as a sort of neutral ground; sure,
+that if he was not of their opinion to-day, this very circumstance
+rendered it most likely he should think with them to-morrow. The
+Puritans themselves did not shun intercourse with a man whose talents
+must have rendered him formidable, even if they had not been united
+with high rank and an immense fortune. Several grave personages, with
+black suits, short cloaks, and band-strings of a formal cut, were
+mingled, as we see their portraits in a gallery of paintings, among
+the gallants who ruffled in silk and embroidery. It is true, they
+escaped the scandal of being thought intimates of the Duke, by their
+business being supposed to refer to money matters. Whether these grave
+and professing citizens mixed politics with money lending, was not
+known; but it had been long observed, that the Jews, who in general
+confine themselves to the latter department, had become for some time
+faithful attendants at the Duke's levee.
+
+It was high-tide in the antechamber, and had been so for more than an
+hour, ere the Duke's gentleman-in-ordinary ventured into his
+bedchamber, carefully darkened, so as to make midnight at noonday, to
+know his Grace's pleasure. His soft and serene whisper, in which he
+asked whether it were his Grace's pleasure to rise, was briefly and
+sharply answered by the counter questions, "Who waits?--What's
+o'clock?"
+
+"It is Jerningham, your Grace," said the attendant. "It is one,
+afternoon; and your Grace appointed some of the people without at
+eleven."
+
+"Who are they?--What do they want?"
+
+"A message from Whitehall, your Grace."
+
+"Pshaw! it will keep cold. Those who make all others wait, will be the
+better of waiting in their turn. Were I to be guilty of ill-breeding,
+it should rather be to a king than a beggar."
+
+"The gentlemen from the city."
+
+"I am tired of them--tired of their all cant, and no religion--all
+Protestantism, and no charity. Tell them to go to Shaftesbury--to
+Aldersgate Street with them--that's the best market for their wares."
+
+"Jockey, my lord, from Newmarket."
+
+"Let him ride to the devil--he has horse of mine, and spurs of his
+own. Any more?"
+
+"The whole antechamber is full, my lord--knights and squires, doctors
+and dicers."
+
+"The dicers, with their doctors[*] in their pockets, I presume."
+
+[*] Doctor, a cant name for false dice.
+
+"Counts, captains, and clergymen."
+
+"You are alliterative, Jerningham," said the Duke; "and that is a
+proof you are poetical. Hand me my writing things."
+
+Getting half out of bed--thrusting one arm into a brocade nightgown,
+deeply furred with sables, and one foot into a velvet slipper, while
+the other pressed in primitive nudity the rich carpet--his Grace,
+without thinking farther on the assembly without, began to pen a few
+lines of a satirical poem; then suddenly stopped--threw the pen into
+the chimney--exclaimed that the humour was past--and asked his
+attendant if there were any letters. Jerningham produced a huge
+packet.
+
+"What the devil!" said his Grace, "do you think I will read all these?
+I am like Clarence, who asked a cup of wine, and was soused into a
+butt of sack. I mean, is there anything which presses?"
+
+"This letter, your Grace," said Jerningham, "concerning the Yorkshire
+mortgage."
+
+"Did I not bid thee carry it to old Gatheral, my steward?"
+
+"I did, my lord," answered the other; "but Gatheral says there are
+difficulties."
+
+"Let the usurers foreclose, then--there is no difficulty in that; and
+out of a hundred manors I shall scarce miss one," answered the Duke.
+"And hark ye, bring me my chocolate."
+
+"Nay, my lord, Gatheral does not say it is impossible--only
+difficult."
+
+"And what is the use of him, if he cannot make it easy? But you are
+all born to make difficulties," replied the Duke.
+
+"Nay, if your Grace approves the terms in this schedule, and pleases
+to sign it, Gatheral will undertake for the matter," answered
+Jerningham.
+
+"And could you not have said so at first, you blockhead?" said the
+Duke, signing the paper without looking at the contents--"What other
+letters? And remember, I must be plagued with no more business."
+
+"Billets-doux, my lord--five or six of them. This left at the porter's
+lodge by a vizard mask."
+
+"Pshaw!" answered the Duke, tossing them over, while his attendant
+assisted in dressing him--"an acquaintance of a quarter's standing."
+
+"This given to one of the pages by my Lady ----'s waiting-woman."
+
+"Plague on it--a Jeremiade on the subject of perjury and treachery,
+and not a single new line to the old tune," said the Duke, glancing
+over the billet. "Here is the old cant--/cruel man--broken vows--
+Heaven's just revenge/. Why, the woman is thinking of murder--not of
+love. No one should pretend to write upon so threadbare a topic
+without having at least some novelty of expression. /The despairing
+Araminta/--Lie there, fair desperate. And this--how comes it?"
+
+"Flung into the window of the hall, by a fellow who ran off at full
+speed," answered Jerningham.
+
+"This is a better text," said the Duke; "and yet it is an old one too
+--three weeks old at least--The little Countess with the jealous lord
+--I should not care a farthing for her, save for that same jealous
+lord--Plague on't, and he's gone down to the country--/this evening--
+in silence and safety--written with a quill pulled from the wing of
+Cupid/--Your ladyship has left him pen-feathers enough to fly away
+with--better clipped his wings when you had caught him, my lady--And
+/so confident of her Buckingham's faith/,--I hate confidence in a
+young person. She must be taught better--I will not go."
+
+"You Grace will not be so cruel!" said Jerningham.
+
+"Thou art a compassionate fellow, Jerningham; but conceit must be
+punished."
+
+"But if your lordship should resume your fancy for her?"
+
+"Why, then, you must swear the billet-doux miscarried," answered the
+Duke. "And stay, a thought strikes me--it shall miscarry in great
+style. Hark ye--Is--what is the fellow's name--the poet--is he
+yonder?"
+
+"There are six gentlemen, sir, who, from the reams of paper in their
+pocket, and the threadbare seams at their elbows, appear to wear the
+livery of the Muses."
+
+"Poetical once more, Jerningham. He, I mean, who wrote the last
+lampoon," said the Duke.
+
+"To whom your Grace said you owed five pieces and a beating!" replied
+Jerningham.
+
+"The money for his satire, and the cudgel for his praise--Good--find
+him--give him the five pieces, and thrust the Countess's billet-doux--
+Hold--take Araminta's and the rest of them--thrust them all into his
+portfolio--All will come out at the Wit's Coffee-house; and if the
+promulgator be not cudgelled into all the colours of the rainbow,
+there is no spite in woman, no faith in crabtree, or pith in heart of
+oak--Araminta's wrath alone would overburden one pair of mortal
+shoulders."
+
+"But, my Lord Duke," said his attendant, "this Settle[*] is so dull a
+rascal, that nothing he can write will take."
+
+[*] Elkana Settle, the unworthy scribbler whom the envy of Rochester
+ and others tried to raise to public estimation, as a rival to
+ Dryden; a circumstance which has been the means of elevating him
+ to a very painful species of immortality.
+
+"Then as we have given him steel to head the arrow," said the Duke,
+"we will give him wings to waft it with--wood, he has enough of his
+own to make a shaft or bolt of. Hand me my own unfinished lampoon--
+give it to him with the letters--let him make what he can of them
+all."
+
+"My Lord Duke--I crave pardon--but your Grace's style will be
+discovered; and though the ladies' names are not at the letters, yet
+they will be traced."
+
+"I would have it so, you blockhead. Have you lived with me so long,
+and cannot discover that the éclat of an intrigue is, with me, worth
+all the rest of it?"
+
+"But the danger, my Lord Duke?" replied Jerningham. "There are
+husbands, brothers, friends, whose revenge may be awakened."
+
+"And beaten to sleep again," said Buckingham haughtily. "I have Black
+Will and his cudgel for plebeian grumblers; and those of quality I can
+deal with myself. I lack breathing and exercise of late."
+
+"But yet your Grace----"
+
+"Hold your peace, fool! I tell you that your poor dwarfish spirit
+cannot measure the scope of mine. I tell thee I would have the course
+of my life a torrent--I am weary of easy achievements, and wish for
+obstacles, that I can sweep before my irresistible course."
+
+Another gentleman now entered the apartment. "I humbly crave your
+Grace's pardon," he said; "but Master Christian is so importunate for
+admission instantly, that I am obliged to take your Grace's pleasure."
+
+"Tell him to call three hours hence. Damn his politic pate, that would
+make all men dance after his pipe!"
+
+"I thank thee for the compliment, my Lord Duke," said Christian,
+entering the apartment in somewhat a more courtly garb, but with the
+same unpretending and undistinguished mien, and in the same placid and
+indifferent manner with which he had accosted Julian Peveril upon
+different occasions during his journey to London. "It is precisely my
+present object to pipe to you; and you may dance to your own profit,
+if you will."
+
+"On my word, Master Christian," said the Duke haughtily, "the affair
+should be weighty, that removes ceremony so entirely from betwixt us.
+If it relates to the subject of our last conversation, I must request
+our interview be postponed to some farther opportunity. I am engaged
+in an affair of some weight." Then turning his back on Christian, he
+went on with his conversation with Jerningham. "Find the person you
+wot of, and give him the papers; and hark ye, give him this gold to
+pay for the shaft of his arrow--the steel-head and peacock's wing we
+have already provided."
+
+"This is all well, my lord," said Christian calmly, and taking his
+seat at the same time in an easy-chair at some distance; "but your
+Grace's levity is no match for my equanimity. It is necessary I should
+speak with you; and I will await your Grace's leisure in the
+apartment."
+
+"/Very well/, sir," said the Duke peevishly; "if an evil is to be
+undergone, the sooner it is over the better--I can take measures to
+prevent its being renewed. So let me hear your errand without farther
+delay."
+
+"I will wait till your Grace's toilette is completed," said Christian,
+with the indifferent tone which was natural to him. "What I have to
+say must be between ourselves."
+
+"Begone, Jerningham; and remain without till I call. Leave my doublet
+on the couch.--How now, I have worn this cloth of silver a hundred
+times."
+
+"Only twice, if it please your Grace," replied Jerningham.
+
+"As well twenty times--keep it for yourself, or give it to my valet,
+if you are too proud of your gentility."
+
+"Your Grace has made better men than me wear your cast clothes," said
+Jerningham submissively.
+
+"Thou art sharp, Jerningham," said the Duke--"in one sense I have, and
+I may again. So now, that pearl-coloured will do with the ribbon and
+George. Get away with thee.--And now that he is gone, Master
+Christian, may I once more crave your pleasure?"
+
+"My Lord Duke," said Christian, "you are a worshipper of difficulties
+in state affairs, as in love matters."
+
+"I trust you have been no eavesdropper, Master Christian," replied the
+Duke; "it scarce argues the respect due to me, or to my roof."
+
+"I know not what you mean, my lord," replied Christian.
+
+"Nay, I care not if the whole world heard what I said but now to
+Jerningham. But to the matter," replied the Duke of Buckingham.
+
+"Your Grace is so much occupied with conquests over the fair and over
+the witty, that you have perhaps forgotten what a stake you have in
+the little Island of Man."
+
+"Not a whit, Master Christian. I remember well enough that my
+roundheaded father-in-law, Fairfax, had the island from the Long
+Parliament; and was ass enough to quit hold of it at the Restoration,
+when, if he had closed his clutches, and held fast, like a true bird
+of prey, as he should have done, he might have kept it for him and
+his. It had been a rare thing to have had a little kingdom--made laws
+of my own--had my Chamberlain with his white staff--I would have
+taught Jerningham, in half a day, to look as wise, walk as stiffly,
+and speak as silly, as Harry Bennet."
+
+"You might have done this, and more, if it had pleased your Grace."
+
+"Ay, and if it had pleased my Grace, thou, Ned Christian, shouldst
+have been the Jack Ketch of my dominions."
+
+"/I/ your Jack Ketch, my lord?" said Christian, more in a tone of
+surprise than of displeasure.
+
+"Why, ay; thou hast been perpetually intriguing against the life of
+yonder poor old woman. It were a kingdom to thee to gratify thy spleen
+with thy own hands."
+
+"I only seek justice against the Countess," said Christian.
+
+"And the end of justice is always a gibbet," said the Duke.
+
+"Be it so," answered Christian. "Well, the Countess is in the Plot."
+
+"The devil confound the Plot, as I believe he first invented it!" said
+the Duke of Buckingham; "I have heard of nothing else for months. If
+one must go to hell, I would it were by some new road, and in
+gentlemen's company. I should not like to travel with Oates, Bedloe,
+and the rest of that famous cloud of witnesses."
+
+"Your Grace is then resolved to forego all the advantages which may
+arise? If the House of Derby fall under forfeiture, the grant to
+Fairfax, now worthily represented by your Duchess, revives, and you
+become the Lord and Sovereign of Man."
+
+"In right of a woman," said the Duke; "but, in troth, my godly dame
+owes me some advantage for having lived the first year of our marriage
+with her and old Black Tom, her grim, fighting, puritanic father. A
+man might as well have married the Devil's daughter, and set up
+housekeeping with his father-in-law."[*]
+
+[*] Mary, daughter of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, was wedded to the Duke of
+ Buckingham, whose versatility made him capable of rendering
+ himself for a time as agreeable to his father-in-law, though a
+ rigid Presbyterian, as to the gay Charles II.
+
+"I understand you are willing, then, to join your interest for a heave
+at the House of Derby, my Lord Duke?"
+
+"As they are unlawfully possessed of my wife's kingdom, they certainly
+can expect no favour at my hand. But thou knowest there is an interest
+at Whitehall predominant over mine."
+
+"That is only by your Grace's sufferance," said Christian.
+
+"No, no; I tell thee a hundred times, no," said the Duke, rousing
+himself to anger at the recollection. "I tell thee that base
+courtezan, the Duchess of Portsmouth, hath impudently set herself to
+thwart and contradict me; and Charles has given me both cloudy looks
+and hard words before the Court. I would he could but guess what is
+the offence between her and me! I would he knew but that! But I will
+have her plumes picked, or my name is not Villiers. A worthless French
+fille-de-joie to brave me thus!--Christian, thou art right; there is
+no passion so spirit-stirring as revenge. I will patronise the Plot,
+if it be but to spite her, and make it impossible for the King to
+uphold her."
+
+As the Duke spoke, he gradually wrought himself into a passion, and
+traversed the apartment with as much vehemence as if the only object
+he had on earth was to deprive the Duchess of her power and favour
+with the King. Christian smiled internally to see him approach the
+state of mind in which he was most easily worked upon, and judiciously
+kept silence, until the Duke called out to him, in a pet, "Well, Sir
+Oracle, you that have laid so many schemes to supplant this she-wolf
+of Gaul, where are all your contrivances now?--Where is the exquisite
+beauty who was to catch the Sovereign's eye at the first glance?--
+Chiffinch, hath he seen her?--and what does he say, that exquisite
+critic in beauty and blank-mange, women and wine?"
+
+"He has /seen/ and approves, but has not yet heard her; and her speech
+answers to all the rest. We came here yesterday; and to-day I intend
+to introduce Chiffinch to her, the instant he arrives from the
+country; and I expect him every hour. I am but afraid of the damsel's
+peevish virtue, for she hath been brought up after the fashion of our
+grandmothers--our mothers had better sense."
+
+"What! so fair, so young, so quick-witted, and so difficult?" said the
+Duke. "By your leave, you shall introduce me as well as Chiffinch."
+
+"That your Grace may cure her of her intractable modesty?" said
+Christian.
+
+"Why," replied the Duke, "it will but teach her to stand in her own
+light. Kings do not love to court and sue; they should have their game
+run down for them."
+
+"Under your Grace's favour," said Christian, "this cannot be--/Non
+omnibus dormio/--Your Grace knows the classic allusion. If this maiden
+become a Prince's favourite, rank gilds the shame and the sin. But to
+any under Majesty, she must not vail topsail."
+
+"Why, thou suspicious fool, I was but in jest," said the Duke. "Do you
+think I would interfere to spoil a plan so much to my own advantage as
+that which you have laid before me?"
+
+Christian smiled and shook his head. "My lord," he said, "I know your
+Grace as well, or better, perhaps, than you know yourself. To spoil a
+well-concerted intrigue by some cross stroke of your own, would give
+you more pleasure, than to bring it to a successful termination
+according to the plans of others. But Shaftesbury, and all concerned,
+have determined that our scheme shall at least have fair play. We
+reckon, therefore, on your help; and--forgive me when I say so--we
+will not permit ourselves to be impeded by your levity and fickleness
+of purpose."
+
+"Who?--I light and fickle of purpose?" said the Duke. "You see me here
+as resolved as any of you, to dispossess the mistress, and to carry on
+the plot; these are the only two things I live for in this world. No
+one can play the man of business like me, when I please, to the very
+filing and labelling of my letters. I am regular as a scrivener."
+
+"You have Chiffinch's letter from the country; he told me he had
+written to you about some passages betwixt him and the young Lord
+Saville."
+
+"He did so--he did so," said the Duke, looking among his letters; "but
+I see not his letter just now--I scarcely noted the contents--I was
+busy when it came--but I have it safely."
+
+"You should have acted on it," answered Christian. "The fool suffered
+himself to be choused out of his secret, and prayed you to see that my
+lord's messenger got not to the Duchess with some despatches which he
+sent up from Derbyshire, betraying our mystery."
+
+The Duke was now alarmed, and rang the bell hastily. Jerningham
+appeared. "Where is the letter I had from Master Chiffinch some hours
+since?"
+
+"If it be not amongst those your Grace has before you, I know nothing
+of it," said Jerningham. "I saw none such arrive."
+
+"You lie, you rascal," said Buckingham; "have you a right to remember
+better than I do?"
+
+"If your Grace will forgive me reminding you, you have scarce opened a
+letter this week," said his gentleman.
+
+"Did you ever hear such a provoking rascal?" said the Duke. "He might
+be a witness in the Plot. He has knocked my character for regularity
+entirely on the head with his damned counter-evidence."
+
+"Your Grace's talent and capacity will at least remain unimpeached,"
+said Christian; "and it is those that must serve yourself and your
+friends. If I might advise, you will hasten to Court, and lay some
+foundation for the impression we wish to make. If your Grace can take
+the first word, and throw out a hint to crossbite Saville, it will be
+well. But above all, keep the King's ear employed, which no one can do
+so well as you. Leave Chiffinch to fill his heart with a proper
+object. Another thing is, there is a blockhead of an old Cavalier, who
+must needs be a bustler in the Countess of Derby's behalf--he is fast
+in hold, with the whole tribe of witnesses at his haunches."
+
+"Nay, then, take him, Topham."
+
+"Topham has taken him already, my lord," said Christian; "and there
+is, besides, a young gallant, a son of the said Knight, who was bred
+in the household of the Countess of Derby, and who has brought letters
+from her to the Provincial of the Jesuits, and others in London."
+
+"What are their names?" said the Duke dryly.
+
+"Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, in Derbyshire, and his son
+Julian."
+
+"What! Peveril of the Peak?" said the Duke,--"a stout old Cavalier as
+ever swore an oath.--A Worcester-man, too--and, in truth, a man of all
+work, when blows were going. I will not consent to his ruin,
+Christian. These fellows must be flogged of such false scents--flogged
+in every sense, they must, and will be, when the nation comes to its
+eyesight again."
+
+"It is of more than the last importance, in the meantime, to the
+furtherance of our plan," said Christian, "that your Grace should
+stand for a space between them and the King's favour. The youth hath
+influence with the maiden, which we should find scarce favourable to
+our views; besides, her father holds him as high as he can any one who
+is no such puritanic fool as himself."
+
+"Well, most Christian Christian," said the Duke, "I have heard your
+commands at length. I will endeavour to stop the earths under the
+throne, that neither the lord, knight, nor squire in question, shall
+find it possible to burrow there. For the fair one, I must leave
+Chiffinch and you to manage her introduction to her high destinies,
+since I am not to be trusted. Adieu, most Christian Christian."
+
+He fixed his eyes on him, and then exclaimed, as he shut the door of
+the apartment,--"Most profligate and damnable villain! And what
+provokes me most of all, is the knave's composed insolence. Your Grace
+will do this--and your Grace will condescend to do that--A pretty
+puppet I should be, to play the second part, or rather the third, in
+such a scheme! No, they shall all walk according to my purpose, or I
+will cross them. I will find this girl out in spite of them, and judge
+if their scheme is likely to be successful. If so, she shall be mine--
+mine entirely, before she becomes the King's; and I will command her
+who is to guide Charles.--Jerningham" (his gentleman entered), "cause
+Christian to be dogged where-ever he goes, for the next four-and-
+twenty hours, and find out where he visits a female newly come to
+town.--You smile, you knave?"
+
+"I did but suspect a fresh rival to Araminta and the little Countess,"
+said Jerningham.
+
+"Away to your business, knave," said the Duke, "and let me think of
+mine.--To subdue a Puritan in Esse--a King's favourite in Posse--the
+very muster of western beauties--that is point first. The impudence of
+this Manx mongrel to be corrected--the pride of Madame la Duchesse to
+be pulled down--and important state intrigue to be farthered, or
+baffled, as circumstances render most to my own honour and glory--I
+wished for business but now, and I have got enough of it. But
+Buckingham will keep his own steerage-way through shoal and through
+weather."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ ----Mark you this, Bassanio--
+ The devil can quote Scripture for his purpose.
+ --MERCHANT OF VENICE.
+
+After leaving the proud mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, Christian,
+full of the deep and treacherous schemes which he meditated, hastened
+to the city, where, in a decent inn, kept by a person of his own
+persuasion, he had been unexpectedly summoned to meet with Ralph
+Bridgenorth of Moultrassie. He was not disappointed--the Major had
+arrived that morning, and anxiously expected him. The usual gloom of
+his countenance was darkened into a yet deeper shade of anxiety, which
+was scarcely relieved, even while, in answer to his inquiry after his
+daughter, Christian gave the most favourable account of her health and
+spirits, naturally and unaffectedly intermingled with such praises of
+her beauty and her disposition, as were likely to be most grateful to
+a father's ear.
+
+But Christian had too much cunning to expatiate on this theme, however
+soothing. He stopped short exactly at the point where, as an
+affectionate relative, he might be supposed to have said enough. "The
+lady," he said, "with whom he had placed Alice, was delighted with her
+aspect and manners, and undertook to be responsible for her health and
+happiness. He had not, he said, deserved so little confidence at the
+hand of his brother, Bridgenorth, as that the Major should, contrary
+to his purpose, and to the plan which they had adjusted together, have
+hurried up from the country, as if his own presence were necessary for
+Alice's protection."
+
+"Brother Christian," said Bridgenorth in reply, "I must see my child--
+I must see this person with whom she is entrusted."
+
+"To what purpose?" answered Christian. "Have you not often confessed
+that the over excess of the carnal affection which you have
+entertained for your daughter, hath been a snare to you?--Have you
+not, more than once, been on the point of resigning those great
+designs which should place righteousness as a counsellor beside the
+throne, because you desired to gratify your daughter's girlish passion
+for this descendant of your old persecutor--this Julian Peveril?"
+
+"I own it," said Bridgenorth; "and worlds would I have given, and
+would yet give, to clasp that youth to my bosom, and call him my son.
+The spirit of his mother looks from his eye, and his stately step is
+as that of his father, when he daily spoke comfort to me in my
+distress, and said, 'The child liveth.'"
+
+"But the youth walks," said Christian, "after his own lights, and
+mistakes the meteor of the marsh for the Polar star. Ralph
+Bridgenorth, I will speak to thee in friendly sincerity. Thou must not
+think to serve both the good cause and Baal. Obey, if thou wilt, thine
+own carnal affections, summon this Julian Peveril to thy house, and
+let him wed thy daughter--But mark the reception she will meet with
+from the proud old knight, whose spirit is now, even now, as little
+broken with his chains, as after the sword of the Saints had prevailed
+at Worcester. Thou wilt see thy daughter spurned from his feet like an
+outcast."
+
+"Christian," said Bridgenorth, interrupting him, "thou dost urge me
+hard; but thou dost it in love, my brother, and I forgive thee--Alice
+shall never be spurned.--But this friend of thine--this lady--thou art
+my child's uncle; and after me, thou art next to her in love and
+affection--Still, thou art not her father--hast not her father's
+fears. Art thou sure of the character of this woman to whom my child
+is entrusted?"
+
+"Am I sure of my own?--Am I sure that my name is Christian--yours
+Bridgenorth?--Is it a thing I am likely to be insecure in?--Have I not
+dwelt for many years in this city?--Do I not know this Court?--And am
+I likely to be imposed upon? For I will not think you can fear my
+imposing upon you."
+
+"Thou art my brother," said Bridgenorth--"the blood and bone of my
+departed Saint--and I am determined that I will trust thee in this
+matter."
+
+"Thou dost well," said Christian; "and who knows what reward may be in
+store for thee?--I cannot look upon Alice, but it is strongly borne in
+on my mind, that there will be work for a creature so excellent beyond
+ordinary women. Courageous Judith freed Bethulia by her valour, and
+the comely features of Esther made her a safeguard and a defence to
+her people in the land of captivity, when she found favour in the
+sight of King Ahasuerus."
+
+"Be it with her as Heaven wills," said Bridgenorth; "and now tell me
+what progress there is in the great work."
+
+"The people are weary of the iniquity of this Court," said Christian;
+"and if this man will continue to reign, it must be by calling to his
+councils men of another stamp. The alarm excited by the damnable
+practices of the Papists has called up men's souls, and awakened their
+eyes to the dangers of their state.--He himself--for he will give up
+brother and wife to save himself--is not averse to a change of
+measures; and though we cannot at first see the Court purged as with a
+winnowing fan, yet there will be enough of the good to control the bad
+--enough of the sober party to compel the grant of that universal
+toleration, for which we have sighed so long, as a maiden for her
+beloved. Time and opportunity will lead the way to more thorough
+reformation; and that will be done without stroke of sword, which our
+friends failed to establish on a sure foundation, even when their
+victorious blades were in their hands."
+
+"May God grant it!" said Bridgenorth; "for I fear me I should scruple
+to do aught which should once more unsheath the civil sword; but
+welcome all that comes in a peaceful and parliamentary way."
+
+"Ay," said Christian, "and which will bring with it the bitter amends,
+which our enemies have so long merited at our hands. How long hath our
+brother's blood cried for vengeance from the altar!--Now shall that
+cruel Frenchwoman find that neither lapse of years, nor her powerful
+friends, nor the name of Stanley, nor the Sovereignty of Man, shall
+stop the stern course of the pursuer of blood. Her name shall be
+struck from the noble, and her heritage shall another take."
+
+"Nay, but, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, "art thou not over
+eager in pursuing this thing?--It is thy duty as a Christian to
+forgive thine enemies."
+
+"Ay, but not the enemies of Heaven--not those who shed the blood of
+the saints," said Christian, his eyes kindling that vehement and fiery
+expression which at times gave to his uninteresting countenance the
+only character of passion which it ever exhibited. "No, Bridgenorth,"
+he continued, "I esteem this purpose of revenge holy--I account it a
+propitiatory sacrifice for what may have been evil in my life. I have
+submitted to be spurned by the haughty--I have humbled myself to be as
+a servant; but in my breast was the proud thought, I who do this--do
+it that I may avenge my brother's blood."
+
+"Still, my brother," said Bridgenorth, "although I participate thy
+purpose, and have aided thee against this Moabitish woman, I cannot
+but think thy revenge is more after the law of Moses than after the
+law of love."
+
+"This comes well from thee, Ralph Bridgenorth," answered Christian;
+"from thee, who has just smiled over the downfall of thine own enemy."
+
+"If you mean Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "I smile not on
+his ruin. It is well he is abased; but if it lies with me, I may
+humble his pride, but will never ruin his house."
+
+"You know your purpose best," said Christian; "and I do justice,
+brother Bridgenorth, to the purity of your principles; but men who see
+with but worldly eyes, would discern little purpose of mercy in the
+strict magistrate and severe creditor--and such have you been to
+Peveril."
+
+"And, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, his colour rising as he
+spoke, "neither do I doubt your purpose, nor deny the surprising
+address with which you have procured such perfect information
+concerning the purposes of yonder woman of Ammon. But it is free to me
+to think, that in your intercourse with the Court, and with courtiers,
+you may, in your carnal and worldly policy, sink the value of those
+spiritual gifts, for which you were once so much celebrated among the
+brethren."
+
+"Do not apprehend it," said Christian, recovering his temper, which
+had been a little ruffled by the previous discussion. "Let us but work
+together as heretofore; and I trust each of us shall be found doing
+the work of a faithful servant to that good old cause for which we
+have heretofore drawn the sword."
+
+So saying, he took his hat, and bidding Bridgenorth farewell, declared
+his intention of returning in the evening.
+
+"Fare thee well!" said Bridgenorth; "to that cause wilt thou find me
+ever a true and devoted adherent. I will act by that counsel of thine,
+and will not even ask thee--though it may grieve my heart as a parent
+--with whom, or where, thou hast entrusted my child. I will try to cut
+off, and cast from me, even my right hand, and my right eye; but for
+thee, Christian, if thou dost deal otherwise than prudently and
+honestly in this matter, it is what God and man will require at thy
+hand."
+
+"Fear not me," said Christian hastily, and left the place, agitated by
+reflections of no pleasant kind.
+
+"I ought to have persuaded him to return," he said, as he stepped out
+into the street. "Even his hovering in this neighbourhood may spoil
+the plan on which depends the rise of my fortunes--ay, and of his
+child's. Will men say I have ruined her, when I shall have raised her
+to the dazzling height of the Duchess of Portsmouth, and perhaps made
+her a mother to a long line of princes? Chiffinch hath vouched for
+opportunity; and the voluptuary's fortune depends upon his gratifying
+the taste of his master for variety. If she makes an impression, it
+must be a deep one; and once seated in his affections, I fear not her
+being supplanted.--What will her father say? Will he, like a prudent
+man, put his shame in his pocket, because it is well gilded? or will
+he think it fitting to make a display of moral wrath and parental
+frenzy? I fear the latter--He has ever kept too strict a course to
+admit his conniving at such licence. But what will his anger avail?--I
+need not be seen in the matter--those who are will care little for the
+resentment of a country Puritan. And after all, what I am labouring to
+bring about is best for himself, the wench, and above all, for me,
+Edward Christian."
+
+With such base opiates did this unhappy wretch stifle his own
+conscience, while anticipating the disgrace of his friend's family,
+and the ruin of a near relative, committed in confidence to his
+charge. The character of this man was of no common description; nor
+was it by an ordinary road that he had arrived at the present climax
+of unfeeling and infamous selfishness.
+
+Edward Christian, as the reader is aware, was the brother of that
+William Christian, who was the principal instrument in delivering up
+the Isle of Man to the Republic, and who became the victim of the
+Countess of Derby's revenge on that account. Both had been educated as
+Puritans, but William was a soldier, which somewhat modified the
+strictness of his religious opinions; Edward, a civilian, seemed to
+entertain these principles in the utmost rigour. But it was only
+seeming. The exactness of deportment, which procured him great honour
+and influence among the /sober party/, as they were wont to term
+themselves, covered a voluptuous disposition, the gratification of
+which was sweet to him as stolen waters, and pleasant as bread eaten
+in secret. While, therefore, his seeming godliness brought him worldly
+gain, his secret pleasures compensated for his outward austerity;
+until the Restoration, and the Countess's violent proceedings against
+his brother interrupted the course of both. He then fled from his
+native island, burning with the desire of revenging his brother's
+death--the only passion foreign to his own gratification which he was
+ever known to cherish, and which was also, at least, partly selfish,
+since it concerned the restoration of his own fortunes.
+
+He found easy access to Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, who, in right of
+his Duchess, claimed such of the Derby estate as had been bestowed by
+the Parliament on his celebrated father-in-law, Lord Fairfax. His
+influence at the Court of Charles, where a jest was a better plea than
+a long claim of faithful service, was so successfully exerted, as to
+contribute greatly to the depression of that loyal and ill-rewarded
+family. But Buckingham was incapable, even for his own interest, of
+pursuing the steady course which Christian suggested to him; and his
+vacillation probably saved the remnant of the large estates of the
+Earl of Derby.
+
+Meantime, Christian was too useful a follower to be dismissed. From
+Buckingham, and others of that stamp, he did not affect to conceal the
+laxity of his morals; but towards the numerous and powerful party to
+which he belonged, he was able to disguise them by a seeming gravity
+of exterior, which he never laid aside. Indeed, so wide and absolute
+was then the distinction betwixt the Court and the city, that a man
+might have for some time played two several parts, as in two different
+spheres, without its being discovered in the one that he exhibited
+himself in a different light in the other. Besides, when a man of
+talent shows himself an able and useful partisan, his party will
+continue to protect and accredit him, in spite of conduct the most
+contradictory to their own principles. Some facts are, in such cases,
+denied--some are glossed over--and party zeal is permitted to cover at
+least as many defects as ever doth charity.
+
+Edward Christian had often need of the partial indulgence of his
+friends; but he experienced it, for he was eminently useful.
+Buckingham, and other courtiers of the same class, however dissolute
+in their lives, were desirous of keeping some connection with the
+Dissenting or Puritanic party, as it was termed; thereby to strengthen
+themselves against their opponents at Court. In such intrigues,
+Christian was a notable agent; and at one time had nearly procured an
+absolute union between a class which professed the most rigid
+principles of religion and morality, and the latitudinarian courtiers,
+who set all principle at defiance.
+
+Amidst the vicissitudes of a life of intrigue, during which
+Buckingham's ambitious schemes, and his own, repeatedly sent him
+across the Atlantic, it was Edward Christian's boast that he never
+lost sight of his principal object,--revenge on the Countess of Derby.
+He maintained a close and intimate correspondence with his native
+island, so as to be perfectly informed of whatever took place there;
+and he stimulated, on every favourable opportunity, the cupidity of
+Buckingham to possess himself of this petty kingdom, by procuring the
+forfeiture of its present Lord. It was not difficult to keep his
+patron's wild wishes alive on this topic, for his own mercurial
+imagination attached particular charms to the idea of becoming a sort
+of sovereign even in this little island; and he was, like Catiline, as
+covetous of the property of others, as he was profuse of his own.
+
+But it was not until the pretended discovery of the Papist Plot that
+the schemes of Christian could be brought to ripen; and then, so
+odious were the Catholics in the eyes of the credulous people of
+England, that, upon the accusation of the most infamous of mankind,
+common informers, the scourings of jails, and the refuse of the
+whipping-post, the most atrocious charges against persons of the
+highest rank and fairest character were readily received and credited.
+
+This was a period which Christian did not fail to improve. He drew
+close his intimacy with Bridgenorth, which had indeed never been
+interrupted, and readily engaged him in his schemes, which, in the
+eyes of his brother-in-law, were alike honourable and patriotic. But,
+while he flattered Bridgenorth with the achieving a complete
+reformation in the state--checking the profligacy of the Court--
+relieving the consciences of the Dissenters from the pressures of the
+penal laws--amending, in fine, the crying grievances of the time--
+while he showed him also, in prospect, revenge upon the Countess of
+Derby, and a humbling dispensation on the house of Peveril, from whom
+Bridgenorth had suffered such indignity, Christian did not neglect, in
+the meanwhile, to consider how he could best benefit himself by the
+confidence reposed in him by his unsuspicious relation.
+
+The extreme beauty of Alice Bridgenorth--the great wealth which time
+and economy had accumulated on her father--pointed her out as a most
+desirable match to repair the wasted fortunes of some of the followers
+of the Court; and he flattered himself that he could conduct such a
+negotiation so as to be in a high degree conducive to his own
+advantage. He found there would be little difficulty in prevailing on
+Major Bridgenorth to entrust him with the guardianship of his
+daughter. That unfortunate gentleman had accustomed himself, from the
+very period of her birth, to regard the presence of his child as a
+worldly indulgence too great to be allowed to him; and Christian had
+little trouble in convincing him that the strong inclination which he
+felt to bestow her on Julian Peveril, provided he could be brought
+over to his own political opinions, was a blameable compromise with
+his more severe principles. Late circumstances had taught him the
+incapacity and unfitness of Dame Debbitch for the sole charge of so
+dear a pledge; and he readily and thankfully embraced the kind offer
+of her maternal uncle, Christian, to place Alice under the protection
+of a lady of rank in London, whilst he himself was to be engaged in
+the scenes of bustle and blood, which, in common with all good
+Protestants, he expected was speedily to take place on a general
+rising of the Papists, unless prevented by the active and energetic
+measures of the good people of England. He even confessed his fears,
+that his partial regard for Alice's happiness might enervate his
+efforts in behalf of his country; and Christian had little trouble in
+eliciting from him a promise, that he would forbear to inquire after
+her for some time.
+
+Thus certain of being the temporary guardian of his niece for a space
+long enough, he flattered himself, for the execution of his purpose,
+Christian endeavoured to pave the way by consulting Chiffinch, whose
+known skill in Court policy qualified him best as an adviser on this
+occasion. But this worthy person, being, in fact, a purveyor for his
+Majesty's pleasures, and on that account high in his good graces,
+thought it fell within the line of his duty to suggest another scheme
+than that on which Christian consulted him. A woman of such exquisite
+beauty as Alice was described, he deemed more worthy to be a partaker
+of the affections of the merry Monarch, whose taste in female beauty
+was so exquisite, than to be made the wife of some worn-out prodigal
+of quality. And then, doing perfect justice to his own character, he
+felt it would not be one whit impaired, while his fortune would be, in
+every respect, greatly amended, if, after sharing the short reign of
+the Gwyns, the Davises, the Robertses, and so forth, Alice Bridgenorth
+should retire from the state of a royal favourite, into the humble
+condition of Mrs. Chiffinch.
+
+After cautiously sounding Christian, and finding that the near
+prospect of interest to himself effectually prevented his starting at
+this iniquitous scheme, Chiffinch detailed it to him fully, carefully
+keeping the final termination out of sight, and talking of the favour
+to be acquired by the fair Alice as no passing caprice, but the
+commencement of a reign as long and absolute as that of the Duchess of
+Portsmouth, of whose avarice and domineering temper Charles was now
+understood to be much tired, though the force of habit rendered him
+unequal to free himself of her yoke.
+
+Thus chalked out, the scene prepared was no longer the intrigue of a
+Court pander, and a villainous resolution for the ruin of an innocent
+girl, but became a state intrigue, for the removal of an obnoxious
+favourite, and the subsequent change of the King's sentiments upon
+various material points, in which he was at present influenced by the
+Duchess of Portsmouth. In this light it was exhibited to the Duke of
+Buckingham, who, either to sustain his character for daring gallantry,
+or in order to gratify some capricious fancy, had at one time made
+love to the reigning favourite, and experienced a repulse which he had
+never forgiven.
+
+But one scheme was too little to occupy the active and enterprising
+spirit of the Duke. An appendix of the Popish Plot was easily so
+contrived as to involve the Countess of Derby, who, from character and
+religion, was precisely the person whom the credulous part of the
+public were inclined to suppose the likely accomplice of such a
+conspiracy. Christian and Bridgenorth undertook the perilous
+commission of attacking her even in her own little kingdom of Man, and
+had commissions for this purpose, which were only to be produced in
+case of their scheme taking effect.
+
+It miscarried, as the reader is aware, from the Countess's alert
+preparations for defence; and neither Christian nor Bridgenorth held
+it sound policy to practise openly, even under parliamentary
+authority, against a lady so little liable to hesitate upon the
+measures most likely to secure her feudal sovereignty; wisely
+considering that even the omnipotence, as it has been somewhat too
+largely styled, of Parliament, might fail to relieve them from the
+personal consequences of a failure.
+
+On the continent of Britain, however, no opposition was to be feared;
+and so well was Christian acquainted with all the motions in the
+interior of the Countess's little court, or household, that Peveril
+would have been arrested the instant he set foot on shore, but for the
+gale of wind which obliged the vessel, in which he was a passenger, to
+run for Liverpool. Here Christian, under the name of Ganlesse,
+unexpectedly met with him, and preserved him from the fangs of the
+well-breathed witnesses of the Plot, with the purpose of securing his
+despatches, or, if necessary, his person also, in such a manner as to
+place him at his own discretion--a narrow and perilous game, which he
+thought it better, however, to undertake, than to permit these
+subordinate agents, who were always ready to mutiny against all in
+league with them, to obtain the credit which they must have done by
+the seizure of the Countess of Derby's despatches. It was, besides,
+essential to Buckingham's schemes that these should not pass into the
+hands of a public officer like Topham, who, however pompous and
+stupid, was upright and well-intentioned, until they had undergone the
+revisal of a private committee, where something might have probably
+been suppressed, even supposing that nothing had been added. In short,
+Christian, in carrying on his own separate and peculiar intrigue, by
+the agency of the Great Popish Plot, as it was called, acted just like
+an engineer, who derives the principle of motion which turns his
+machinery, by means of a steam-engine, or large water-wheel,
+constructed to drive a separate and larger engine. Accordingly, he was
+determined that, while he took all the advantage he could from their
+supposed discoveries, no one should be admitted to tamper or interfere
+with his own plans of profit and revenge.
+
+Chiffinch, who, desirous of satisfying himself with his own eyes of
+that excellent beauty which had been so highly extolled, had gone down
+to Derbyshire on purpose, was infinitely delighted, when, during the
+course of a two hours' sermon at the dissenting chapel in Liverpool,
+which afforded him ample leisure for a deliberate survey, he arrived
+at the conclusion that he had never seen a form or face more
+captivating. His eyes having confirmed what was told him, he hurried
+back to the little inn which formed their place of rendezvous, and
+there awaited Christian and his niece, with a degree of confidence in
+the success of their project which he had not before entertained; and
+with an apparatus of luxury, calculated, as he thought, to make a
+favourable impression on the mind of a rustic girl. He was somewhat
+surprised, when, instead of Alice Bridgenorth, to whom he expected
+that night to have been introduced, he found that Christian was
+accompanied by Julian Peveril. It was indeed a severe disappointment,
+for he had prevailed on his own indolence to venture this far from the
+Court, in order that he might judge, with his own paramount taste,
+whether Alice was really the prodigy which her uncle's praises had
+bespoken her, and, as such, a victim worthy of the fate to which she
+was destined.
+
+A few words betwixt the worthy confederates determined them on the
+plan of stripping Peveril of the Countess's despatches; Chiffinch
+absolutely refusing to take any share in arresting him, as a matter of
+which his Master's approbation might be very uncertain.
+
+Christian had also his own reasons for abstaining from so decisive a
+step. It was by no means likely to be agreeable to Bridgenorth, whom
+it was necessary to keep in good humour;--it was not necessary, for
+the Countess's despatches were of far more importance than the person
+of Julian. Lastly, it was superfluous in this respect also, that
+Julian was on the road to his father's castle, where it was likely he
+would be seized, as a matter of course, along with the other
+suspicious persons who fell under Topham's warrant, and the
+denunciations of his infamous companions. He, therefore, far from
+using any violence to Peveril, assumed towards him such a friendly
+tone, as might seem to warn him against receiving damage from others,
+and vindicate himself from having any share in depriving him of his
+charge. This last manoeuvre was achieved by an infusion of a strong
+narcotic into Julian's wine; under the influence of which he slumbered
+so soundly, that the confederates were easily able to accomplish their
+inhospitable purpose.
+
+The events of the succeeding days are already known to the reader.
+Chiffinch set forward to return to London, with the packet, which it
+was desirable should be in Buckingham's hands as soon as possible;
+while Christian went to Moultrassie, to receive Alice from her father,
+and convey her safely to London--his accomplice agreeing to defer his
+curiosity to see more of her until they should have arrived in that
+city.
+
+Before parting with Bridgenorth, Christian had exerted his utmost
+address to prevail on him to remain at Moultrassie; he had even
+overstepped the bounds of prudence, and, by his urgency, awakened some
+suspicions of an indefinite nature, which he found it difficult to
+allay. Bridgenorth, therefore, followed his brother-in-law to London;
+and the reader has already been made acquainted with the arts which
+Christian used to prevent his farther interference with the destinies
+of his daughter, or the unhallowed schemes of her ill-chosen guardian.
+Still Christian, as he strode along the street in profound reflection,
+saw that his undertaking was attended with a thousand perils; and the
+drops stood like beads on his brow when he thought of the presumptuous
+levity and fickle temper of Buckingham--the frivolity and intemperance
+of Chiffinch--the suspicions of the melancholy and bigoted, yet
+sagacious and honest Bridgenorth. "Had I," he thought, "but tools
+fitted, each to their portion of the work, how easily could I heave
+asunder and disjoint the strength that opposes me! But with these
+frail and insufficient implements, I am in daily, hourly, momentary
+danger, that one lever or other gives way, and that the whole ruin
+recoils on my own head. And yet, were it not for those failings I
+complain of, how were it possible for me to have acquired that power
+over them all which constitutes them my passive tools, even when they
+seem most to exert their own free will? Yes, the bigots have some
+right when they affirm that all is for the best."
+
+It may seem strange, that, amidst the various subjects of Christian's
+apprehension, he was never visited by any long or permanent doubt that
+the virtue of his niece might prove the shoal on which his voyage
+should be wrecked. But he was an arrant rogue, as well as a hardened
+libertine; and, in both characters, a professed disbeliever in the
+virtue of the fair sex.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+ As for John Dryden's Charles, I own that King
+ Was never any very mighty thing;
+ And yet he was a devilish honest fellow--
+ Enjoy'd his friend and bottle, and got mellow.
+ --DR. WOLOOT.
+
+London, the grand central point of intrigues of every description, had
+now attracted within its dark and shadowy region the greater number of
+the personages whom we have had occasion to mention.
+
+Julian Peveril, amongst others of the /dramatis personæ/, had arrived,
+and taken up his abode in a remote inn in the suburbs. His business,
+he conceived, was to remain incognito until he should have
+communicated in private with the friends who were most likely to lend
+assistance to his parents, as well as to his patroness, in their
+present situation of doubt and danger. Amongst these, the most
+powerful was the Duke of Ormond, whose faithful services, high rank,
+and acknowledged worth and virtue, still preserved an ascendancy in
+that very Court, where, in general, he was regarded as out of favour.
+Indeed, so much consciousness did Charles display in his demeanour
+towards that celebrated noble, and servant of his father, that
+Buckingham once took the freedom to ask the King whether the Duke of
+Ormond had lost his Majesty's favour, or his Majesty the Duke's?
+since, whenever they chanced to meet, the King appeared the more
+embarrassed of the two. But it was not Peveril's good fortune to
+obtain the advice or countenance of this distinguished person. His
+Grace of Ormond was not at that time in London.
+
+The letter, about the delivery of which the Countess had seemed most
+anxious after that to the Duke of Ormond, was addressed to Captain
+Barstow (a Jesuit, whose real name was Fenwicke), to be found, or at
+least to be heard of, in the house of one Martin Christal in the
+Savoy. To this place hastened Peveril, upon learning the absence of
+the Duke of Ormond. He was not ignorant of the danger which he
+personally incurred, by thus becoming a medium of communication
+betwixt a Popish priest and a suspected Catholic. But when he
+undertook the perilous commission of his patroness, he had done so
+frankly, and with the unreserved resolution of serving her in the
+manner in which she most desired her affairs to be conducted. Yet he
+could not forbear some secret apprehension, when he felt himself
+engaged in the labyrinth of passages and galleries, which led to
+different obscure sets of apartments in the ancient building termed
+the Savoy.
+
+This antiquated and almost ruinous pile occupied a part of the site of
+the public offices in the Strand, commonly called Somerset House. The
+Savoy had been formerly a palace, and took its name from an Earl of
+Savoy, by whom it was founded. It had been the habitation of John of
+Gaunt, and various persons of distinction--had become a convent, an
+hospital, and finally, in Charles II.'s time, a waste of dilapidated
+buildings and ruinous apartments, inhabited chiefly by those who had
+some connection with, or dependence upon, the neighbouring palace of
+Somerset House, which, more fortunate than the Savoy, had still
+retained its royal title, and was the abode of a part of the Court,
+and occasionally of the King himself, who had apartments there.
+
+It was not without several inquiries, and more than one mistake, that,
+at the end of a long and dusky passage, composed of boards so wasted
+by time that they threatened to give way under his feet, Julian at
+length found the name of Martin Christal, broker and appraiser, upon a
+shattered door. He was about to knock, when some one pulled his cloak;
+and looking round, to his great astonishment, which indeed almost
+amounted to fear, he saw the little mute damsel, who had accompanied
+him for a part of the way on his voyage from the Isle of Man.
+
+"Fenella!" he exclaimed, forgetting that she could neither hear nor
+reply,--"Fenella! Can this be you?"
+
+Fenella, assuming the air of warning and authority, which she had
+heretofore endeavoured to adopt towards him, interposed betwixt Julian
+and the door at which he was about to knock--pointed with her finger
+towards it in a prohibiting manner, and at the same time bent her
+brows, and shook her head sternly.
+
+After a moment's consideration, Julian could place but one
+interpretation upon Fenella's appearance and conduct, and that was, by
+supposing her lady had come up to London, and had despatched this mute
+attendant, as a confidential person, to apprise him of some change of
+her intended operations, which might render the delivery of her
+letters to Barstow, /alias/ Fenwicke, superfluous, or perhaps
+dangerous. He made signs to Fenella, demanding to know whether she had
+any commission from the Countess. She nodded. "Had she any letter?" he
+continued, by the same mode of inquiry. She shook her head
+impatiently, and, walking hastily along the passage, made a signal to
+him to follow. He did so, having little doubt that he was about to be
+conducted into the Countess's presence; but his surprise, at first
+excited by Fenella's appearance, was increased by the rapidity and
+ease with which she seemed to track the dusky and decayed mazes of the
+dilapidated Savoy, equal to that with which he had seen her formerly
+lead the way through the gloomy vaults of Castle Rushin, in the Isle
+of Man.
+
+When he recollected, however, that Fenella had accompanied the
+Countess on a long visit to London, it appeared not improbable that
+she might then have acquired this local knowledge which seemed so
+accurate. Many foreigners, dependent on Queen or Queen Dowager, had
+apartments in the Savoy. Many Catholic priests also found refuge in
+its recesses, under various disguises, and in defiance of the severity
+of the laws against Popery. What was more likely than that the
+Countess of Derby, a Catholic and a Frenchwoman, should have had
+secret commissions amongst such people; and that the execution of such
+should be entrusted, at least occasionally, to Fenella?
+
+Thus reflecting, Julian continued to follow her light and active
+footsteps as she glided from the Strand to Spring-Garden, and thence
+into the Park.
+
+It was still early in the morning, and the Mall was untenanted, save
+by a few walkers, who frequented these shades for the wholesome
+purposes of air and exercise. Splendour, gaiety, and display, did not
+come forth, at that period, until noon was approaching. All readers
+have heard that the whole space where the Horse Guards are now built,
+made, in the time of Charles II., a part of St. James's Park; and that
+the old building, now called the Treasury, was a part of the ancient
+Palace of Whitehall, which was thus immediately connected with the
+Park. The canal had been constructed, by the celebrated Le Notre, for
+the purpose of draining the Park; and it communicated with the Thames
+by a decoy, stocked with a quantity of the rarer waterfowl. It was
+towards this decoy that Fenella bent her way with unabated speed; and
+they were approaching a group of two or three gentlemen, who sauntered
+by its banks, when, on looking closely at him who appeared to be the
+chief of the party, Julian felt his heart beat uncommonly thick, as if
+conscious of approaching some one of the highest consequence.
+
+The person whom he looked upon was past the middle age of life, of a
+dark complexion, corresponding with the long, black, full-bottomed
+periwig, which he wore instead of his own hair. His dress was plain
+black velvet, with a diamond star, however, on his cloak, which hung
+carelessly over one shoulder. His features, strongly lined, even to
+harshness, had yet an expression of dignified good-humour; he was well
+and strongly built, walked upright and yet easily, and had upon the
+whole the air of a person of the highest consideration. He kept rather
+in advance of his companions, but turned and spoke to them, from time
+to time, with much affability, and probably with some liveliness,
+judging by the smiles, and sometimes the scarce restrained laughter,
+by which some of his sallies were received by his attendants. They
+also wore only morning dresses; but their looks and manner were those
+of men of rank, in presence of one in station still more elevated.
+They shared the attention of their principal in common with seven or
+eight little black curly-haired spaniels, or rather, as they are now
+called, cockers, which attended their master as closely, and perhaps
+with as deep sentiments of attachment, as the bipeds of the group; and
+whose gambols, which seemed to afford him much amusement, he sometimes
+checked, and sometimes encouraged. In addition to this pastime, a
+lackey, or groom, was also in attendance, with one or two little
+baskets and bags, from which the gentleman we have described took,
+from time to time, a handful of seeds, and amused himself with
+throwing them to the waterfowl.
+
+This the King's favourite occupation, together with his remarkable
+countenance, and the deportment of the rest of the company towards
+him, satisfied Julian Peveril that he was approaching, perhaps
+indecorously, near the person of Charles Stewart, the second of that
+unhappy name.
+
+While he hesitated to follow his dumb guide any nearer, and felt the
+embarrassment of being unable to communicate to her his repugnance to
+further intrusion, a person in the royal retinue touched a light and
+lively air on the flageolet, at a signal from the King, who desired to
+have some tune repeated which had struck him in the theatre on the
+preceding evening. While the good-natured monarch marked time with his
+foot, and with the motion of his hand, Fenella continued to approach
+him, and threw into her manner the appearance of one who was
+attracted, as it were in spite of herself, by the sounds of the
+instrument.
+
+Anxious to know how this was to end, and astonished to see the dumb
+girl imitate so accurately the manner of one who actually heard the
+musical notes, Peveril also drew near, though at somewhat greater
+distance.
+
+The King looked good-humouredly at both, as if he admitted their
+musical enthusiasm as an excuse for their intrusion; but his eyes
+became riveted on Fenella, whose face and appearance, although rather
+singular than beautiful, had something in them wild, fantastic, and,
+as being so, even captivating, to an eye which had been gratified
+perhaps to satiety with the ordinary forms of female beauty. She did
+not appear to notice how closely she was observed; but, as if acting
+under an irresistible impulse, derived from the sounds to which she
+seemed to listen, she undid the bodkin round which her long tresses
+were winded, and flinging them suddenly over her slender person, as if
+using them as a natural veil, she began to dance, with infinite grace
+and agility, to the tune which the flageolet played.
+
+Peveril lost almost his sense of the King's presence, when he observed
+with what wonderful grace and agility Fenella kept time to notes,
+which could only be known to her by the motions of the musician's
+fingers. He had heard, indeed, among other prodigies, of a person in
+Fenella's unhappy situation acquiring, by some unaccountable and
+mysterious tact, the power of acting as an instrumental musician, nay,
+becoming so accurate a performer as to be capable of leading a musical
+band; and he also heard of deaf and dumb persons dancing with
+sufficient accuracy, by observing the motions of their partner. But
+Fenella's performance seemed more wonderful than either, since the
+musician was guided by his written notes, and the dancer by the
+motions of the others; whereas Fenella had no intimation, save what
+she seemed to gather, with infinite accuracy, by observing the motion
+of the artist's fingers on his small instrument.
+
+As for the King, who was ignorant of the particular circumstances
+which rendered Fenella's performance almost marvellous, he was
+contented, at her first commencement, to authorise what seemed to him
+the frolic of this singular-looking damsel, by a good-natured smile,
+but when he perceived the exquisite truth and justice, as well as the
+wonderful combination of grace and agility, with which she executed to
+this favourite air a dance which was perfectly new to him, Charles
+turned his mere acquiescence into something like enthusiastic
+applause. He bore time to her motions with the movement of his foot--
+applauded with head and with hand--and seemed, like herself, carried
+away by the enthusiasm of the gestic art.
+
+After a rapid yet graceful succession of /entrechats/, Fenella
+introduced a slow movement, which terminated the dance; then dropping
+a profound courtesy, she continued to stand motionless before the
+King, her arms folded on her bosom, her head stooped, and her eyes
+cast down, after the manner of an Oriental slave; while through the
+misty veil of her shadowy locks, it might be observed, that the colour
+which exercise had called to her cheeks was dying fast away, and
+resigning them to their native dusky hue.
+
+"By my honour," exclaimed the King, "she is like a fairy who trips it
+in moonlight. There must be more of air and fire than of earth in her
+composition. It is well poor Nelly Gwyn saw her not, or she would have
+died of grief and envy. Come, gentlemen, which of you contrived this
+pretty piece of morning pastime?"
+
+The courtiers looked at each other, but none of them felt authorised
+to claim the merit of a service so agreeable.
+
+"We must ask the quick-eyed nymph herself then," said the King; and,
+looking at Fenella, he added, "Tell us, my pretty one, to whom we owe
+the pleasure of seeing you?--I suspect the Duke of Buckingham; for
+this is exactly a /tour de son métier/."
+
+Fenella, on observing that the King addressed her, bowed low, and
+shook her head, in signal that she did not understand what he said.
+"Oddsfish, that is true," said the King; "she must perforce be a
+foreigner--her complexion and agility speak it. France or Italy has
+had the moulding of those elastic limbs, dark cheek, and eye of fire."
+He then put to her in French, and again in Italian, the question, "By
+whom she had been sent hither?"
+
+At the second repetition, Fenella threw back her veiling tresses, so
+as to show the melancholy which sat on her brow; while she sadly shook
+her head, and intimated by imperfect muttering, but of the softest and
+most plaintive kind, her organic deficiency.
+
+"Is it possible Nature can have made such a fault?" said Charles. "Can
+she have left so curious a piece as thou art without the melody of
+voice, whilst she has made thee so exquisitely sensible to the beauty
+of sound?--Stay: what means this? and what young fellow are you
+bringing up there? Oh, the master of the show, I suppose.--Friend," he
+added, addressing himself to Peveril, who, on the signal of Fenella,
+stepped forward almost instinctively, and kneeled down, "we thank thee
+for the pleasure of this morning.--My Lord Marquis, you rooked me at
+piquet last night; for which disloyal deed thou shalt now atone, by
+giving a couple of pieces to this honest youth, and five to the girl."
+
+As the nobleman drew out his purse and came forward to perform the
+King's generous commission, Julian felt some embarrassment ere he was
+able to explain, that he had not title to be benefited by the young
+person's performance, and that his Majesty had mistaken his character.
+
+"And who art thou, then, my friend?" said Charles; "but, above all,
+and particularly, who is this dancing nymph, whom thou standest
+waiting on like an attendant fawn?"
+
+"The young person is a retainer of the Countess-Dowager of Derby, so
+please your Majesty," said Peveril, in a low tone of voice; "and I
+am----"
+
+"Hold, hold," said the King; "this is a dance to another tune, and not
+fit for a place so public. Hark thee, friend; do thou and the young
+woman follow Empson where he will conduct thee.--Empson, carry them--
+hark in thy ear."
+
+"May it please your Majesty, I ought to say," said Peveril, "that I am
+guiltless of any purpose of intrusion----"
+
+"Now a plague on him who can take no hint," said the King, cutting
+short his apology. "Oddsfish, man, there are times when civility is
+the greatest impertinence in the world. Do thou follow Empson, and
+amuse thyself for a half-hour's space with the fairy's company, till
+we shall send for you."
+
+Charles spoke this not without casting an anxious eye around, and in a
+tone which intimated apprehension of being overheard. Julian could
+only bow obedience, and follow Empson, who was the same person that
+played so rarely on the flageolet.
+
+When they were out of sight of the King and his party, the musician
+wished to enter into conversation with his companions, and addressed
+himself first to Fenella with a broad compliment of, "By the mass, ye
+dance rarely--ne'er a slut on the boards shows such a shank! I would
+be content to play to you till my throat were as dry as my whistle.
+Come, be a little free--old Rowley will not quit the Park till nine. I
+will carry you to Spring-Garden, and bestow sweet-cakes and a quart of
+Rhenish on both of you; and we'll be cameradoes,--What the devil? no
+answer?--How's this, brother?--Is this neat wench of yours deaf or
+dumb or both? I should laugh at that, and she trip it so well to the
+flageolet."
+
+To rid himself of this fellow's discourse, Peveril answered him in
+French, that he was a foreigner, and spoke no English; glad to escape,
+though at the expense of a fiction, from the additional embarrassment
+of a fool, who was likely to ask more questions than his own wisdom
+might have enabled him to answer.
+
+"/Étranger/--that means stranger," muttered their guide; "more French
+dogs and jades come to lick the good English butter of our bread, or
+perhaps an Italian puppet-show. Well if it were not that they have a
+mortal enmity to the whole /gamut/, this were enough to make any
+honest fellow turn Puritan. But if I am to play to her at the
+Duchess's, I'll be d--d but I put her out in the tune, just to teach
+her to have the impudence to come to England, and to speak no
+English."
+
+Having muttered to himself this truly British resolution, the musician
+walked briskly on towards a large house near the bottom of St. James's
+Street, and entered the court, by a grated door from the Park, of
+which the mansion commanded an extensive prospect.
+
+Peveril finding himself in front of a handsome portico, under which
+opened a stately pair of folding-doors, was about to ascend the steps
+that led to the main entrance, when his guide seized him by the arm,
+exclaiming. "Hold, Mounseer! What! you'll lose nothing, I see, for
+want of courage; but you must keep the back way, for all your fine
+doublet. Here it is not, knock, and it shall be opened; but may be
+instead, knock and you shall be knocked."
+
+Suffering himself to be guided by Empson, Julian deviated from the
+principal door, to one which opened, with less ostentation, in an
+angle of the courtyard. On a modest tap from the flute-player,
+admittance was afforded him and his companions by a footman, who
+conducted them through a variety of stone passages, to a very handsome
+summer parlour, where a lady, or something resembling one, dressed in
+a style of extra elegance, was trifling with a play-book while she
+finished her chocolate. It would not be easy to describe her, but by
+weighing her natural good qualities against the affectations which
+counterbalanced them. She would have been handsome, but for rouge and
+/minauderie/--would have been civil, but for overstrained airs of
+patronage and condescension--would have had an agreeable voice, had
+she spoken in her natural tone--and fine eyes, had she not made such
+desperate hard use of them. She could only spoil a pretty ankle by too
+liberal display; but her shape, though she could not yet be thirty
+years old, had the embon-point which might have suited better with ten
+years more advanced. She pointed Empson to a seat with the air of a
+Duchess, and asked him, languidly, how he did this age, that she had
+not seen him? and what folks these were he had brought with him?
+
+"Foreigners, madam; d--d foreigners," answered Empson; "starving
+beggars, that our old friend has picked up in the Park this morning--
+the wench dances, and the fellow plays on the Jew's trump, I believe.
+On my life, madam, I begin to be ashamed of old Rowley; I must
+discard him, unless he keeps better company in future."
+
+"Fie, Empson," said the lady; "consider it is our duty to countenance
+him, and keep him afloat; and indeed I always make a principle of it.
+Hark ye, he comes not hither this morning?"
+
+"He will be here," answered Empson, "in the walking of a minuet."
+
+"My God!" exclaimed the lady, with unaffected alarm; and starting up
+with utter neglect of her usual and graceful languor, she tripped as
+swiftly as a milk-maid into an adjoining apartment, where they heard
+presently a few words of eager and animated discussion.
+
+"Something to be put out of the way, I suppose," said Empson. "Well
+for madam I gave her the hint. There he goes, the happy swain."
+
+Julian was so situated, that he could, from the same casement through
+which Empson was peeping, observe a man in a laced roquelaure, and
+carrying his rapier under his arm, glide from the door by which he had
+himself entered, and out of the court, keeping as much as possible
+under the shade of the buildings.
+
+The lady re-entered at this moment, and observing how Empson's eyes
+were directed, said with a slight appearance of hurry, "A gentleman of
+the Duchess of Portsmouth's with a billet; and so tiresomely pressing
+for an answer, that I was obliged to write without my diamond pen. I
+have daubed my fingers, I dare say," she added, looking at a very
+pretty hand, and presently after dipping her fingers in a little
+silver vase of rose-water. "But that little exotic monster of yours,
+Empson, I hope she really understands no English?--On my life she
+coloured.--Is she such a rare dancer?--I must see her dance, and hear
+him play on the Jew's harp."
+
+"Dance!" replied Empson; "she danced well enough when /I/ played to
+her. I can make anything dance. Old Counsellor Clubfoot danced when he
+had a fit of the gout; you have seen no such /pas seul/ in the
+theatre. I would engage to make the Archbishop of Canterbury dance the
+hays like a Frenchman. There is nothing in dancing; it all lies in the
+music. Rowley does not know that now. He saw this poor wench dance;
+and thought so much on't, when it was all along of me. I would have
+defied her to sit still. And Rowley gives her the credit of it, and
+five pieces to boot; and I have only two for my morning's work!"
+
+"True, Master Empson," said the lady; "but you are of the family,
+though in a lower station; and you ought to consider----"
+
+"By G--, madam," answered Empson, "all I consider is, that I play the
+best flageolet in England; and that they can no more supply my place,
+if they were to discard me, than they could fill Thames from Fleet-
+Ditch."
+
+"Well, Master Empson, I do not dispute but you are a man of talents,"
+replied the lady; "still, I say, mind the main chance--you please the
+ear to-day--another has the advantage of you to-morrow."
+
+"Never, mistress, while ears have the heavenly power of distinguishing
+one note from another."
+
+"Heavenly power, say you, Master Empson?" said the lady.
+
+"Ay, madam, heavenly; for some very neat verses which we had at our
+festival say,
+
+ 'What know we of the blest above,
+ But that they sing and that they love?'
+
+It is Master Waller wrote them, as I think; who, upon my word, ought
+to be encouraged."
+
+"And so should you, my dear Empson," said the dame, yawning, "were it
+only for the honour you do to your own profession. But in the
+meantime, will you ask these people to have some refreshment?--and
+will you take some yourself?--the chocolate is that which the
+Ambassador Portuguese fellow brought over to the Queen."
+
+"If it be genuine," said the musician.
+
+"How, sir?" said the fair one, half rising from her pile of cushions--
+"Not genuine, and in this house!--Let me understand you, Master Empson
+--I think, when I first saw you, you scarce knew chocolate from
+coffee."
+
+"By G--, madam," answered the flageolet-player, "you are perfectly
+right. And how can I show better how much I have profited by your
+ladyship's excellent cheer, except by being critical?"
+
+"You stand excused, Master Empson," said the /petite maitresse/,
+sinking gently back on the downy couch, from which a momentary
+irritation had startled her--"I think the chocolate will please you,
+though scarce equal to what we had from the Spanish resident Mendoza.
+--But we must offer these strange people something. Will you ask them
+if they would have coffee and chocolate, or cold wild-fowl, fruit, and
+wine? They must be treated, so as to show them where they are, since
+here they are."
+
+"Unquestionably, madam," said Empson; "but I have just at this instant
+forgot the French for chocolate, hot bread, coffee, game, and
+drinkables."
+
+"It is odd," said the lady; "and I have forgot my French and Italian
+at the same moment. But it signifies little--I will order the things
+to be brought, and they will remember the names of them themselves."
+
+Empson laughed loudly at this jest, and pawned his soul that the cold
+sirloin which entered immediately after, was the best emblem of roast-
+beef all the world over. Plentiful refreshments were offered to all
+the party, of which both Fenella and Peveril partook.
+
+In the meanwhile, the flageolet-player drew closer to the side of the
+lady of the mansion--their intimacy was cemented, and their spirits
+set afloat, by a glass of liqueur, which gave them additional
+confidence in discussing the characters, as well of the superior
+attendants of the Court, as of the inferior rank, to which they
+themselves might be supposed to belong.
+
+The lady, indeed, during this conversation, frequently exerted her
+complete and absolute superiority over Master Empson; in which that
+musical gentleman humbly acquiesced whenever the circumstance was
+recalled to his attention, whether in the way of blunt contradiction,
+sarcastic insinuation, downright assumption of higher importance, or
+in any of the other various modes by which such superiority is usually
+asserted and maintained. But the lady's obvious love of scandal was
+the lure which very soon brought her again down from the dignified
+part which for a moment she assumed, and placed her once more on a
+gossiping level with her companion.
+
+Their conversation was too trivial, and too much allied to petty Court
+intrigues, with which he was totally unacquainted, to be in the least
+interesting to Julian. As it continued for more than an hour, he soon
+ceased to pay the least attention to a discourse consisting of
+nicknames, patchwork, and innuendo; and employed himself in reflecting
+on his own complicated affairs, and the probable issue of his
+approaching audience with the King, which had been brought about by so
+singular an agent, and by means so unexpected. He often looked to his
+guide, Fenella; and observed that she was, for the greater part of the
+time, drowned in deep and abstracted meditation. But three or four
+times--and it was when the assumed airs and affected importance of the
+musician and their hostess rose to the most extravagant excess--he
+observed that Fenella dealt askance on them some of those bitter and
+almost blighting elfin looks, which in the Isle of Man were held to
+imply contemptuous execration. There was something in all her manner
+so extraordinary, joined to her sudden appearance, and her demeanour
+in the King's presence, so oddly, yet so well contrived to procure him
+a private audience--which he might, by graver means, have sought in
+vain--that it almost justified the idea, though he smiled at it
+internally, that the little mute agent was aided in her machinations
+by the kindred imps, to whom, according to Manx superstition, her
+genealogy was to be traced.
+
+Another idea sometimes occurred to Julian, though he rejected the
+question, as being equally wild with those doubts which referred
+Fenella to a race different from that of mortals--"Was she really
+afflicted with those organical imperfections which had always seemed
+to sever her from humanity?--If not, what could be the motives of so
+young a creature practising so dreadful a penance for such an
+unremitted term of years? And how formidable must be the strength of
+mind which could condemn itself to so terrific a sacrifice--How deep
+and strong the purpose for which it was undertaken!"
+
+But a brief recollection of past events enabled him to dismiss this
+conjecture as altogether wild and visionary. He had but to call to
+memory the various stratagems practised by his light-hearted
+companion, the young Earl of Derby, upon this forlorn girl--the
+conversations held in her presence, in which the character of a
+creature so irritable and sensitive upon all occasions, was freely,
+and sometimes satirically discussed, without her expressing the least
+acquaintance with what was going forward, to convince him that so deep
+a deception could never have been practised for so many years, by a
+being of a turn of mind so peculiarly jealous and irascible.
+
+He renounced, therefore, the idea, and turned his thoughts to his own
+affairs, and his approaching interview with his Sovereign; in which
+meditation we propose to leave him, until we briefly review the
+changes which had taken place in the situation of Alice Bridgenorth.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+ I fear the devil worst when gown and cassock,
+ Or, in the lack of them, old Calvin's cloak,
+ Conceals his cloven hoof.
+ --ANONYMOUS.
+
+Julian Peveril had scarce set sail for Whitehaven, when Alice
+Bridgenorth and her governante, at the hasty command of her father,
+were embarked with equal speed and secrecy on board of a bark bound
+for Liverpool. Christian accompanied them on their voyage, as the
+friend to whose guardianship Alice was to be consigned during any
+future separation from her father, and whose amusing conversation,
+joined to his pleasing though cold manners, as well as his near
+relationship, induced Alice, in her forlorn situation, to consider her
+fate as fortunate in having such a guardian.
+
+At Liverpool, as the reader already knows, Christian took the first
+overt step in the villainy which he had contrived against the innocent
+girl, by exposing her at a meeting-house to the unhallowed gaze of
+Chiffinch, in order to convince him she was possessed of such uncommon
+beauty as might well deserve the infamous promotion to which they
+meditated to raise her.
+
+Highly satisfied with her personal appearance, Chiffinch was no less
+so with the sense and delicacy of her conversation, when he met her in
+company with her uncle afterwards in London. The simplicity, and at
+the same time the spirit of her remarks, made him regard her as his
+scientific attendant the cook might have done a newly invented sauce,
+sufficiently /piquante/ in its qualities to awaken the jaded appetite
+of a cloyed and gorged epicure. She was, he said and swore, the very
+corner-stone on which, with proper management, and with his
+instruction, a few honest fellows might build a Court fortune.
+
+That the necessary introduction might take place, the confederates
+judged fit she should be put under the charge of an experienced lady,
+whom some called Mistress Chiffinch, and others Chiffinch's mistress--
+one of those obliging creatures who are willing to discharge all the
+duties of a wife, without the inconvenient and indissoluble ceremony.
+
+It was one, and not perhaps the least prejudicial consequence of the
+license of that ill-governed time, that the bounds betwixt virtue and
+vice were so far smoothed down and levelled, that the frail wife, or
+the tender friend who was no wife, did not necessarily lose their
+place in society; but, on the contrary, if they moved in the higher
+circles, were permitted and encouraged to mingle with women whose rank
+was certain, and whose reputation was untainted.
+
+A regular /liaison/, like that of Chiffinch and his fair one, inferred
+little scandal; and such was his influence, as prime minister of his
+master's pleasures, that, as Charles himself expressed it, the lady
+whom we introduced to our readers in the last chapter, had obtained a
+brevet commission to rank as a married woman. And to do the gentle
+dame justice, no wife could have been more attentive to forward his
+plans, or more liberal in disposing of his income.
+
+She inhabited a set of apartments called Chiffinch's--the scene of
+many an intrigue, both of love and politics; and where Charles often
+held his private parties for the evening, when, as frequently
+happened, the ill-humour of the Duchess of Portsmouth, his reigning
+Sultana, prevented his supping with her. The hold which such an
+arrangement gave a man like Chiffinch, used as he well knew how to use
+it, made him of too much consequence to be slighted even by the first
+persons in the state, unless they stood aloof from all manner of
+politics and Court intrigue.
+
+In the charge of Mistress Chiffinch, and of him whose name she bore,
+Edward Christian placed the daughter of his sister, and of his
+confiding friend, calmly contemplating her ruin as an event certain to
+follow; and hoping to ground upon it his own chance of a more assured
+fortune, than a life spent in intrigue had hitherto been able to
+procure for him.
+
+The innocent Alice, without being able to discover what was wrong
+either in the scenes of unusual luxury with which she was surrounded,
+or in the manners of her hostess, which, both from nature and policy,
+were kind and caressing--felt nevertheless an instinctive apprehension
+that all was not right--a feeling in the human mind, allied, perhaps,
+to that sense of danger which animals exhibit when placed in the
+vicinity of the natural enemies of their race, and which makes birds
+cower when the hawk is in the air, and beasts tremble when the tiger
+is abroad in the desert. There was a heaviness at her heart which she
+could not dispel; and the few hours which she had already spent at
+Chiffinch's were like those passed in prison by one unconscious of the
+cause or event of his captivity. It was the third morning after her
+arrival in London, that the scene took place which we now recur to.
+
+The impertinence and vulgarity of Empson, which was permitted to him
+as an unrivalled performer upon his instrument, were exhausting
+themselves at the expense of all other musical professors, and Mrs.
+Chiffinch was listening with careless indifference, when some one was
+heard speaking loudly, and with animation, in the inner apartment.
+
+"Oh, gemini and gilliflower water!" exclaimed the damsel, startled out
+of her fine airs into her natural vulgarity of exclamation, and
+running to the door of communication--"if he has not come back again
+after all!--and if old Rowley----"
+
+A tap at the farther and opposite door here arrested her attention--
+she quitted the handle of that which she was about to open as speedily
+as if it had burnt her fingers, and, moving back towards her couch,
+asked, "Who is there?"
+
+"Old Rowley himself, madam," said the King, entering the apartment
+with his usual air of easy composure.
+
+"O crimini!--your Majesty!--I thought----"
+
+"That I was out of hearing, doubtless," said the King; "and spoke of
+me as folk speak of absent friends. Make no apology. I think I have
+heard ladies say of their lace, that a rent is better than a darn.--
+Nay, be seated.--Where is Chiffinch?"
+
+"He is down at York House, your Majesty," said the dame, recovering,
+though with no small difficulty, the calm affectation of her usual
+demeanour. "Shall I send your Majesty's commands?"
+
+"I will wait his return," said the King.--"Permit me to taste your
+chocolate."
+
+"There is some fresh frothed in the office," said the lady; and using
+a little silver call, or whistle, a black boy, superbly dressed, like
+an Oriental page, with gold bracelets on his naked arms, and a gold
+collar around his equally bare neck, attended with the favourite
+beverage of the morning, in an apparatus of the richest china.
+
+While he sipped his cup of chocolate, the King looked round the
+apartment, and observing Fenella, Peveril, and the musician, who
+remained standing beside a large Indian screen, he continued,
+addressing Mistress Chiffinch, though with polite indifference, "I
+sent you the fiddles this morning--or rather the flute--Empson, and a
+fairy elf whom I met in the Park, who dances divinely. She has brought
+us the very newest saraband from the Court of Queen Mab, and I sent
+her here, that you may see it at leisure."
+
+"Your Majesty does me by far too much honour," said Chiffinch, her
+eyes properly cast down, and her accents minced into becoming
+humility.
+
+"Nay, little Chiffinch," answered the King, in a tone of as
+contemptuous familiarity as was consistent with his good-breeding, "it
+was not altogether for thine own private ear, though quite deserving
+of all sweet sounds; but I thought Nelly had been with thee this
+morning."
+
+"I can send Bajazet for her, your Majesty," answered the lady.
+
+"Nay, I will not trouble your little heathen sultan to go so far.
+Still it strikes me that Chiffinch said you had company--some country
+cousin, or such a matter--Is there not such a person?"
+
+"There is a young person from the country," said Mistress Chiffinch,
+striving to conceal a considerable portion of embarrassment; "but she
+is unprepared for such an honour as to be admitted into your Majesty's
+presence, and----"
+
+"And therefore the fitter to receive it, Chiffinch. There is nothing
+in nature so beautiful as the first blush of a little rustic between
+joy and fear, and wonder and curiosity. It is the down on the peach--
+pity it decays so soon!--the fruit remains, but the first high
+colouring and exquisite flavour are gone.--Never put up thy lip for
+the matter, Chiffinch, for it is as I tell you; so pray let us have
+/la belle cousine/."
+
+Mistress Chiffinch, more embarrassed than ever, again advanced towards
+the door of communication, which she had been in the act of opening
+when his Majesty entered. But just as she coughed pretty loudly,
+perhaps as a signal to some one within, voices were again heard in a
+raised tone of altercation----the door was flung open, and Alice
+rushed out of the inner apartment, followed to the door of it by the
+enterprising Duke of Buckingham, who stood fixed with astonishment on
+finding his pursuit of the flying fair one had hurried him into the
+presence of the King.
+
+Alice Bridgenorth appeared too much transported with anger to permit
+her to pay attention to the rank or character of the company into
+which she had thus suddenly entered. "I remain no longer here, madam,"
+she said to Mrs. Chiffinch, in a tone of uncontrollable resolution; "I
+leave instantly a house where I am exposed to company which I detest,
+and to solicitations which I despise."
+
+The dismayed Mrs. Chiffinch could only implore her, in broken
+whispers, to be silent; adding, while she pointed to Charles, who
+stood with his eyes fixed rather on his audacious courtier than on the
+game which he pursued, "The King--the King!"
+
+"If I am in the King's presence," said Alice aloud, and in the same
+torrent of passionate feeling, while her eye sparkled through tears of
+resentment and insulted modesty, "it is the better--it is his
+Majesty's duty to protect me; and on his protection I throw myself."
+
+These words, which were spoken aloud, and boldly, at once recalled
+Julian to himself, who had hitherto stood, as it were, bewildered. He
+approached Alice, and, whispering in her ear that she had beside her
+one who would defend her with his life, implored her to trust to his
+guardianship in this emergency.
+
+Clinging to his arm in all the ecstasy of gratitude and joy, the
+spirit which had so lately invigorated Alice in her own defence, gave
+way in a flood of tears, when she saw herself supported by him whom
+perhaps she most wished to recognise as her protector. She permitted
+Peveril gently to draw her back towards the screen before which he had
+been standing; where, holding by his arm, but at the same time
+endeavouring to conceal herself behind him, they waited the conclusion
+of a scene so singular.
+
+The King seemed at first so much surprised at the unexpected
+apparition of the Duke of Buckingham, as to pay little or no attention
+to Alice, who had been the means of thus unceremoniously introducing
+his Grace into the presence at a most unsuitable moment. In that
+intriguing Court, it had not been the first time that the Duke had
+ventured to enter the lists of gallantry in rivalry of his Sovereign,
+which made the present insult the more intolerable. His purpose of
+lying concealed in those private apartments was explained by the
+exclamations of Alice; and Charles, notwithstanding the placidity of
+his disposition, and his habitual guard over his passions, resented
+the attempt to seduce his destined mistress, as an Eastern Sultan
+would have done the insolence of a vizier, who anticipated his
+intended purchases of captive beauty in the slave-market. The swarthy
+features of Charles reddened, and the strong lines on his dark visage
+seemed to become inflated, as he said, in a voice which faltered with
+passion, "Buckingham, you dared not have thus insulted your equal! To
+your master you may securely offer any affront, since his rank glues
+his sword to the scabbard."
+
+The haughty Duke did not brook this taunt unanswered. "My sword," he
+said, with emphasis, "was never in the scabbard, when your Majesty's
+service required it should be unsheathed."
+
+"Your Grace means, when its service was required for its master's
+interest," said the King; "for you could only gain the coronet of a
+Duke by fighting for the royal crown. But it is over--I have treated
+you as a friend--a companion--almost an equal--you have repaid me with
+insolence and ingratitude."
+
+"Sire," answered the Duke firmly, but respectfully, "I am unhappy in
+your displeasure; yet thus far fortunate, that while your words can
+confer honour, they cannot impair or take it away.--It is hard," he
+added, lowering his voice, so as only to be heard by the King,--"It is
+hard that the squall of a peevish wench should cancel the services of
+so many years!"
+
+"It is harder," said the King, in the same subdued tone, which both
+preserved through the rest of the conversation, "that a wench's bright
+eyes can make a nobleman forget the decencies due to his Sovereign's
+privacy."
+
+"May I presume to ask your Majesty what decencies are those?" said the
+Duke.
+
+Charles bit his lip to keep himself from smiling. "Buckingham," he
+said, "this is a foolish business; and we must not forget (as we have
+nearly done), that we have an audience to witness this scene, and
+should walk the stage with dignity. I will show you your fault in
+private."
+
+"It is enough that your Majesty has been displeased, and that I have
+unhappily been the occasion," said the Duke, kneeling; "although quite
+ignorant of any purpose beyond a few words of gallantry; and I sue
+thus low for your Majesty's pardon."
+
+So saying, he kneeled gracefully down. "Thou hast it, George," said
+the placable Prince. "I believe thou wilt be sooner tired of offending
+than I of forgiving."
+
+"Long may your Majesty live to give the offence, with which it is your
+royal pleasure at present to charge my innocence," said the Duke.
+
+"What mean you by that, my lord?" said Charles, the angry shade
+returning to his brow for a moment.
+
+"My Liege," replied the Duke, "you are too honourable to deny your
+custom of shooting with Cupid's bird-bolts in other men's warrens. You
+have ta'en the royal right of free-forestry over every man's park. It
+is hard that you should be so much displeased at hearing a chance
+arrow whizz near your own pales."
+
+"No more on't," said the King; "but let us see where the dove has
+harboured."
+
+"The Helen has found a Paris while we were quarrelling," replied the
+Duke.
+
+"Rather an Orpheus," said the King; "and what is worse, one that is
+already provided with a Eurydice--She is clinging to the fiddler."
+
+"It is mere fright," said Buckingham, "like Rochester's, when he crept
+into the bass-viol to hide himself from Sir Dermot O'Cleaver."
+
+"We must make the people show their talents," said the King, "and stop
+their mouths with money and civility, or we shall have this foolish
+encounter over half the town."
+
+The King then approached Julian, and desired him to take his
+instrument, and cause his female companion to perform a saraband.
+
+"I had already the honour to inform your Majesty," said Julian, "that
+I cannot contribute to your pleasure in the way you command me; and
+that this young person is----"
+
+"A retainer of the Lady Powis," said the King, upon whose mind things
+not connected with his pleasures made a very slight impression. "Poor
+lady, she is in trouble about the lords in the Tower."
+
+"Pardon me, sir," said Julian, "she is a dependant of the Countess of
+Derby."
+
+"True, true," answered Charles; "it is indeed of Lady Derby, who hath
+also her own distresses in these times. Do you know who taught the
+young person to dance? Some of her steps mightily resemble Le Jeune's
+of Paris."
+
+"I presume she was taught abroad, sir," said Julian; "for myself, I am
+charged with some weighty business by the Countess, which I would
+willingly communicate to your Majesty."
+
+"We will send you to our Secretary of State," said the King. "But this
+dancing envoy will oblige us once more, will she not?--Empson, now
+that I remember, it was to your pipe that she danced--Strike up, man,
+and put mettle into her feet."
+
+Empson began to play a well-known measure; and, as he had threatened,
+made more than one false note, until the King, whose ear was very
+accurate, rebuked him with, "Sirrah, art thou drunk at this early
+hour, or must thou too be playing thy slippery tricks with me? Thou
+thinkest thou art born to beat time, but I will have time beat into
+thee."
+
+The hint was sufficient, and Empson took good care so to perform his
+air as to merit his high and deserved reputation. But on Fenella it
+made not the slightest impression. She rather leant than stood against
+the wall of the apartment; her countenance as pale as death, her arms
+and hands hanging down as if stiffened, and her existence only
+testified by the sobs which agitated her bosom, and the tears which
+flowed from her half-closed eyes.
+
+"A plague on it," said the King, "some evil spirit is abroad this
+morning; and the wenches are all bewitched, I think. Cheer up, my
+girl. What, in the devil's name, has changed thee at once from a Nymph
+to a Niobe? If thou standest there longer thou wilt grow to the very
+marble wall--Or--oddsfish, George, have you been bird-bolting in this
+quarter also?"
+
+Ere Buckingham could answer to this charge, Julian again kneeled down
+to the King, and prayed to be heard, were it only for five minutes.
+"The young woman," he said, "had been long in attendance of the
+Countess of Derby. She was bereaved of the faculties of speech and
+hearing."
+
+"Oddsfish, man, and dances so well?" said the King. "Nay, all Gresham
+College shall never make me believe that."
+
+"I would have thought it equally impossible, but for what I to-day
+witnessed," said Julian; "but only permit me, sir, to deliver the
+petition of my lady the Countess."
+
+"And who art thou thyself, man?" said the Sovereign; "for though
+everything which wears bodice and breast-knot has a right to speak to
+a King, and be answered, I know not that they have a title to audience
+through an envoy extraordinary."
+
+"I am Julian Peveril of Derbyshire," answered the supplicant, "the son
+of Sir Geoffrey Peveril of Martindale Castle, who----"
+
+"Body of me--the old Worcester man?" said the King. "Oddsfish, I
+remember him well--some harm has happened to him, I think--Is he not
+dead, or very sick at least?"
+
+"Ill at ease, and it please your Majesty, but not ill in health. He
+has been imprisoned on account of an alleged accession to this Plot."
+
+"Look you there," said the King; "I knew he was in trouble; and yet
+how to help the stout old Knight, I can hardly tell. I can scarce
+escape suspicion of the Plot myself, though the principal object of it
+is to take away my own life. Were I to stir to save a plotter, I
+should certainly be brought in as an accessory.--Buckingham, thou hast
+some interest with those who built this fine state engine, or at least
+who have driven it on--be good-natured for once, though it is scarcely
+thy wont, and interfere to shelter our old Worcester friend, Sir
+Godfrey. You have not forgot him?"
+
+"No, sir," answered the Duke; "for I never heard the name."
+
+"It is Sir Geoffrey his Majesty would say," said Julian.
+
+"And if his Majesty /did/ say Sir Geoffrey, Master Peveril, I cannot
+see of what use I can be to your father," replied the Duke coldly. "He
+is accused of a heavy crime; and a British subject so accused, can
+have no shelter either from prince or peer, but must stand to the
+award and deliverance of God and his country."
+
+"Now, Heaven forgive thee thy hypocrisy, George," said the King
+hastily. "I would rather hear the devil preach religion than thee
+teach patriotism. Thou knowest as well as I, that the nation is in a
+scarlet fever for fear of the poor Catholics, who are not two men to
+five hundred; and that the public mind is so harassed with new
+narrations of conspiracy, and fresh horrors every day, that people
+have as little real sense of what is just or unjust as men who talk in
+their sleep of what is sense or nonsense. I have borne, and borne with
+it--I have seen blood flow on the scaffold, fearing to thwart the
+nation in its fury--and I pray to God that I or mine be not called on
+to answer for it. I will no longer swim with the torrent, which honour
+and conscience call upon me to stem--I will act the part of a
+Sovereign, and save my people from doing injustice, even in their own
+despite."
+
+Charles walked hastily up and down the room as he expressed these
+unwonted sentiments, with energy equally unwonted. After a momentary
+pause, the Duke answered him gravely, "Spoken like a Royal King, sir,
+but--pardon me--not like a King of England."
+
+Charles paused, as the Duke spoke, beside a window which looked full
+on Whitehall, and his eye was involuntarily attracted by the fatal
+window of the Banqueting House out of which his unhappy father was
+conducted to execution. Charles was naturally, or, more purposely,
+constitutionally brave; but a life of pleasure, together with the
+habit of governing his course rather by what was expedient than by
+what was right, rendered him unapt to dare the same scene of danger or
+of martyrdom, which had closed his father's life and reign; and the
+thought came over his half-formed resolution, like the rain upon a
+kindling beacon. In another man, his perplexity would have seemed
+almost ludicrous; but Charles would not lose, even under these
+circumstances, the dignity and grace, which were as natural to him as
+his indifference and good humour. "Our Council must decide in this
+matter," he said, looking to the Duke; "and be assured, young man," he
+added, addressing Julian, "your father shall not want an intercessor
+in his King, so far as the laws will permit my interference in his
+behalf."
+
+Julian was about to retire, when Fenella, with a marked look, put into
+his hand a slip of paper, on which she had hastily written, "The
+packet--give him the packet."
+
+After a moment's hesitation, during which he reflected that Fenella
+was the organ of the Countess's pleasure, Julian resolved to obey.
+"Permit me, then, Sire," he said, "to place in your royal hands this
+packet, entrusted to me by the Countess of Derby. The letters have
+already been once taken from me; and I have little hope that I can now
+deliver them as they are addressed. I place them, therefore, in your
+royal hands, certain that they will evince the innocence of the
+writer."
+
+The King shook his head as he took the packet reluctantly. "It is no
+safe office you have undertaken, young man. A messenger has sometimes
+his throat cut for the sake of his despatches--But give them to me;
+and, Chiffinch, give me wax and a taper." He employed himself in
+folding the Countess's packet in another envelope. "Buckingham," he
+said, "you are evidence that I do not read them till the Council shall
+see them."
+
+Buckingham approached, and offered his services in folding the parcel,
+but Charles rejected his assistance; and having finished his task, he
+sealed the packet with his own signet-ring. The Duke bit his lip and
+retired.
+
+"And now, young man," said the King, "your errand is sped, so far as
+it can at present be forwarded."
+
+Julian bowed deeply, as to take leave at these words, which he rightly
+interpreted as a signal for his departure. Alice Bridgenorth still
+clung to his arm, and motioned to withdraw along with him. The King
+and Buckingham looked at each other in conscious astonishment, and yet
+not without a desire to smile, so strange did it seem to them that a
+prize, for which, an instant before, they had been mutually
+contending, should thus glide out of their grasp, or rather be borne
+off by a third and very inferior competitor.
+
+"Mistress Chiffinch," said the King, with a hesitation which he could
+not disguise, "I hope your fair charge is not about to leave you?"
+
+"Certainly not, your Majesty," answered Chiffinch. "Alice, my love--
+you mistake--that opposite door leads to your apartments."
+
+"Pardon me, madam," answered Alice; "I have indeed mistaken my road,
+but it was when I came hither."
+
+"The errant damosel," said Buckingham, looking at Charles with as much
+intelligence as etiquette permitted him to throw into his eye, and
+then turning it towards Alice, as she still held by Julian's arm, "is
+resolved not to mistake her road a second time. She has chosen a
+sufficient guide."
+
+"And yet stories tell that such guides have led maidens astray," said
+the King.
+
+Alice blushed deeply, but instantly recovered her composure so soon as
+she saw that her liberty was likely to depend upon the immediate
+exercise of resolution. She quitted, from a sense of insulted
+delicacy, the arm of Julian, to which she had hitherto clung; but as
+she spoke, she continued to retain a slight grasp of his cloak. "I
+have indeed mistaken my way," she repeated still addressing Mrs.
+Chiffinch, "but it was when I crossed this threshold. The usage to
+which I have been exposed in your house has determined me to quit it
+instantly."
+
+"I will not permit that, my young mistress," answered Mrs. Chiffinch,
+"until your uncle, who placed you under my care, shall relieve me of
+the charge of you."
+
+"I will answer for my conduct, both to my uncle, and, what is of more
+importance, to my father," said Alice. "You must permit me to depart,
+madam; I am free-born, and you have no right to detain me."
+
+"Pardon me, my young madam," said Mistress Chiffinch, "I have a right,
+and I will maintain it too."
+
+"I will know that before quitting this presence," said Alice firmly;
+and, advancing a step or two, she dropped on her knee before the King.
+"Your Majesty," said she, "if indeed I kneel before King Charles, is
+the father of your subjects."
+
+"Of a good many of them," said the Duke of Buckingham apart.
+
+"I demand protection of you, in the name of God, and of the oath your
+Majesty swore when you placed on your head the crown of this kingdom!"
+
+"You have my protection," said the King, a little confused by an
+appeal so unexpected and so solemn. "Do but remain quiet with this
+lady, with whom your parents have placed you; neither Buckingham nor
+any one else shall intrude on you."
+
+"His Majesty," added Buckingham, in the same tone, and speaking from
+the restless and mischief-making spirit of contradiction, which he
+never could restrain, even when indulging it was most contrary, not
+only to propriety, but to his own interest,--"His Majesty will protect
+you, fair lady, from all intrusion save what must not be termed such."
+
+Alice darted a keen look on the Duke, as if to read his meaning;
+another on Charles, to know whether she had guessed it rightly. There
+was a guilty confession on the King's brow, which confirmed Alice's
+determination to depart. "Your Majesty will forgive me," she said; "it
+is not here that I can enjoy the advantage of your royal protection. I
+am resolved to leave this house. If I am detained, it must be by
+violence, which I trust no one dare offer to me in your Majesty's
+presence. This gentleman, whom I have long known, will conduct me to
+my friends."
+
+"We make but an indifferent figure in this scene, methinks," said the
+King, addressing the Duke of Buckingham, and speaking in a whisper;
+"but she must go--I neither will, nor dare, stop her from returning to
+her father."
+
+"And if she does," swore the Duke internally, "I would, as Sir Andrew
+Smith saith, I might never touch fair lady's hand." And stepping back,
+he spoke a few words with Empson the musician, who left the apartment,
+for a few minutes, and presently returned.
+
+The King seemed irresolute concerning the part he should act under
+circumstances so peculiar. To be foiled in a gallant intrigue, was to
+subject himself to the ridicule of his gay court; to persist in it by
+any means which approached to constraint, would have been tyrannical;
+and, what perhaps he might judge as severe an imputation, it would
+have been unbecoming a gentleman. "Upon my honour, young lady," he
+said, with an emphasis, "you have nothing to fear in this house. But
+it is improper, for your own sake, that you should leave it in this
+abrupt manner. If you will have the goodness to wait but a quarter of
+an hour, Mistress Chiffinch's coach will be placed at your command, to
+transport you where you will. Spare yourself the ridicule, and me the
+pain of seeing you leave the house of one of my servants, as if you
+were escaping from a prison."
+
+The King spoke in good-natured sincerity, and Alice was inclined for
+an instant to listen to his advice; but recollecting that she had to
+search for her father and uncle, or, failing them, for some suitable
+place of secure residence, it rushed on her mind that the attendants
+of Mistress Chiffinch were not likely to prove trusty guides or
+assistants in such a purpose. Firmly and respectfully she announced
+her purpose of instant departure. She needed no other escort, she
+said, than what this gentleman, Master Julian Peveril, who was well
+known to her father, would willingly afford her; nor did she need that
+farther than until she had reached her father's residence.
+
+"Farewell, then, lady, a God's name!" said the King; "I am sorry so
+much beauty should be wedded to so many shrewish suspicions.--For you,
+Master Peveril, I should have thought you had enough to do with your
+own affairs without interfering with the humours of the fair sex. The
+duty of conducting all strayed damsels into the right path is, as
+matters go in this good city, rather too weighty an undertaking for
+your youth and inexperience."
+
+Julian, eager to conduct Alice from a place of which he began fully to
+appreciate the perils, answered nothing to this taunt, but bowing
+reverently, led her from the apartment. Her sudden appearance, and the
+animated scene which followed, had entirely absorbed, for the moment,
+the recollection of his father and of the Countess of Derby; and while
+the dumb attendant of the latter remained in the room, a silent, and,
+as it were, stunned spectator of all that had happened, Peveril had
+become, in the predominating interest of Alice's critical situation,
+totally forgetful of her presence. But no sooner had he left the room,
+without noticing or attending to her, than Fenella, starting, as from
+a trance, drew herself up, and looked wildly around, like one waking
+from a dream, as if to assure herself that her companion was gone, and
+gone without paying the slightest attention to her. She folded her
+hands together, and cast her eyes upwards, with an expression of such
+agony as explained to Charles (as he thought) what painful ideas were
+passing in her mind. "This Peveril is a perfect pattern of successful
+perfidy, carrying off this Queen of the Amazons, but he has left us, I
+think, a disconsolate Ariadne in her place.--But weep not, my princess
+of pretty movements," he said, addressing himself to Fenella; "if we
+cannot call in Bacchus to console you, we will commit you to the care
+of Empson, who shall drink with /Liber Pater/ for a thousand pounds,
+and I will say done first."
+
+As the King spoke these words, Fenella rushed past him with her wonted
+rapidity of step, and, with much less courtesy than was due to the
+royal presence, hurried downstairs, and out of the house, without
+attempting to open any communication with the Monarch. He saw her
+abrupt departure with more surprise than displeasure; and presently
+afterwards, bursting into a fit of laughter, he said to the Duke,
+"Oddsfish, George, this young spark might teach the best of us how to
+manage the wenches. I have had my own experience, but I could never
+yet contrive either to win or lose them with so little ceremony."
+
+"Experience, sir," replied the duke, "cannot be acquired without
+years."
+
+"True, George; and you would, I suppose, insinuate," said Charles,
+"that the gallant who acquires it, loses as much in youth as he gains
+in art? I defy your insinuation, George. You cannot overreach your
+master, old as you think him, either in love or politics. You have not
+the secret /plumer la poule sans la faire crier/, witness this
+morning's work. I will give you odds at all games--ay, and at the Mall
+too, if thou darest accept my challenge.--Chiffinch, what for dost
+thou convulse thy pretty throat and face with sobbing and hatching
+tears, which seem rather unwilling to make their appearance!"
+
+"It is for fear," whined Chiffinch, "that your Majesty should think--
+that you should expect----"
+
+"That I should expect gratitude from a courtier, or faith from a
+woman?" answered the King, patting her at the same time under the
+chin, to make her raise her face--"Tush! chicken, I am not so
+superfluous."
+
+"There it is now," said Chiffinch, continuing to sob the more
+bitterly, as she felt herself unable to produce any tears; "I see your
+Majesty is determined to lay all the blame on me, when I am innocent
+as an unborn babe--I will be judged by his Grace."
+
+"No doubt, no doubt, Chiffie," said the King. "His Grace and you will
+be excellent judges in each other's cause, and as good witnesses in
+each other's favour. But to investigate the matter impartially, we
+must examine our evidence apart.--My Lord Duke, we meet at the Mall at
+noon, if your Grace dare accept my challenge."
+
+His Grace of Buckingham bowed, and retired.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+ But when the bully with assuming pace,
+ Cocks his broad hat, edged round with tarnish'd lace,
+ Yield not the way--defy his strutting pride,
+ And thrust him to the muddy kennel's side,
+ Yet rather bear the shower and toils of mud,
+ Than in the doubtful quarrel risk thy blood.
+ --GAY'S TRIVIA.
+
+Julian Peveril, half-leading, half-supporting, Alice Bridgenorth, had
+reached the middle of Saint Jame's Street ere the doubt occurred to
+him which way they should bend their course. He then asked Alice
+whither he should conduct her, and learned, to his surprise and
+embarrassment, that, far from knowing where her father was to be
+found, she had no certain knowledge that he was in London, and only
+hoped that he had arrived, from the expressions which he had used at
+parting. She mentioned her uncle Christian's address, but it was with
+doubt and hesitation, arising from the hands in which he had already
+placed her; and her reluctance to go again under his protection was
+strongly confirmed by her youthful guide, when a few words had
+established to his conviction the identity of Ganlesse and Christian.
+--What then was to be done?
+
+"Alice," said Julian, after a moment's reflection, "you must seek your
+earliest and best friend--I mean my mother. She has now no castle in
+which to receive you--she has but a miserable lodging, so near the
+jail in which my father is confined, that it seems almost a cell of
+the same prison. I have not seen her since my coming hither; but thus
+much have I learned by inquiry. We will now go to her apartment; such
+as it is, I know she will share it with one so innocent and so
+unprotected as you are."
+
+"Gracious Heaven!" said the poor girl, "am I then so totally deserted,
+that I must throw myself on the mercy of her who, of all the world,
+has most reason to spurn me from her?--Julian, can you advise me to
+this?--Is there none else who will afford me a few hours' refuge, till
+I can hear from my father?--No other protectress but her whose ruin
+has, I fear, been accelerated by----Julian, I dare not appear before
+your mother! she must hate me for my family, and despise me for my
+meanness. To be a second time cast on her protection, when the first
+has been so evil repaid--Julian, I dare not go with you."
+
+"She has never ceased to love you, Alice," said her conductor, whose
+steps she continued to attend, even while declaring her resolution not
+to go with him, "she never felt anything but kindness towards you,
+nay, towards your father; for though his dealings with us have been
+harsh, she can allow much for the provocation which he has received.
+Believe me, with her you will be safe as with a mother--perhaps it may
+be the means of reconciling the divisions by which we have suffered so
+much."
+
+"Might God grant it!" said Alice. "Yet how shall I face your mother?
+And will she be able to protect me against these powerful men--against
+my uncle Christian? Alas, that I must call him my worst enemy!"
+
+"She has the ascendancy which honour hath over infamy, and virtue over
+vice," said Julian; "and to no human power but your father's will she
+resign you, if you consent to choose her for your protectress. Come,
+then, with me, Alice; and----"
+
+Julian was interrupted by some one, who, laying an unceremonious hold
+of his cloak, pulled it with so much force as compelled him to stop
+and lay his hand on his sword. He turned at the same time, and, when
+he turned, beheld Fenella. The cheek of the mute glowed like fire; her
+eyes sparkled, and her lips were forcibly drawn together, as if she
+had difficulty to repress those wild screams which usually attended
+her agonies of passion, and which, uttered in the open street, must
+instantly have collected a crowd. As it was, her appearance was so
+singular, and her emotion so evident, that men gazed as they came on,
+and looked back after they had passed, at the singular vivacity of her
+gestures; while, holding Peveril's cloak with one hand, she made with
+the other the most eager and imperious signs that he should leave
+Alice Bridgenorth and follow her. She touched the plume in her bonnet
+to remind him of the Earl--pointed to her heart, to imitate the
+Countess--raised her closed hand, as if to command him in their name--
+and next moment folded both, as if to supplicate him in her own; while
+pointing to Alice with an expression at once of angry and scornful
+derision, she waved her hand repeatedly and disdainfully, to intimate
+that Peveril ought to cast her off, as something undeserving his
+protection.
+
+Frightened, she knew not why, at these wild gestures, Alice clung
+closer to Julian's arm than she had at first dared to do; and this
+mark of confidence in his protection seemed to increase the passion of
+Fenella.
+
+Julian was dreadfully embarrassed; his situation was sufficiently
+precarious, even before Fenella's ungovernable passions threatened to
+ruin the only plan which he had been able to suggest. What she wanted
+with him--how far the fate of the Earl and Countess might depend on
+his following her, he could not even conjecture; but be the call how
+peremptory soever, he resolved not to comply with it until he had seen
+Alice placed in safety. In the meantime, he determined not to lose
+sight of Fenella; and disregarding her repeated, disdainful, and
+impetuous rejection of the hand which he offered her, he at length
+seemed so far to have soothed her, that she seized upon his right arm,
+and, as if despairing of his following /her/ path, appeared reconciled
+to attend him on that which he himself should choose.
+
+Thus, with a youthful female clinging to each arm, and both remarkably
+calculated to attract the public eye, though from very different
+reasons, Julian resolved to make the shortest road to the water-side,
+and there to take boat for Blackfriars, as the nearest point of
+landing to Newgate, where he concluded that Lance had already
+announced his arrival in London to Sir Geoffrey, then inhabiting that
+dismal region, and to his lady, who, so far as the jailer's rigour
+permitted, shared and softened his imprisonment.
+
+Julian's embarrassment in passing Charing Cross and Northumberland
+House was so great as to excite the attention of the passengers; for
+he had to compose his steps so as to moderate the unequal and rapid
+pace of Fenella to the timid and faint progress of his left-hand
+companion; and while it would have been needless to address himself to
+the former, who could not comprehend him, he dared not speak himself
+to Alice, for fear of awakening into frenzy the jealousy, or at least
+the impatience of Fenella.
+
+Many passengers looked at them with wonder, and some with smiles; but
+Julian remarked that there were two who never lost sight of them, and
+to whom his situation, and the demeanour of his companions, seemed to
+afford matter of undisguised merriment. These were young men, such as
+may be seen in the same precincts in the present day, allowing for the
+difference in the fashion of their apparel. They abounded in periwig,
+and fluttered with many hundred yards of ribbon, disposed in bow-knots
+upon their sleeves, their breeches, and their waistcoats, in the very
+extremity of the existing mode. A quantity of lace and embroidery made
+their habits rather fine than tasteful. In a word, they were dressed
+in that caricature of the fashion, which sometimes denotes a
+harebrained man of quality who has a mind to be distinguished as a fop
+of the first order, but is much more frequently in the disguise of
+those who desire to be esteemed men of rank on account of their dress,
+having no other pretension to the distinction.
+
+These two gallants passed Peveril more than once, linked arm in arm,
+then sauntered, so as to oblige him to pass them in turn, laughing and
+whispering during these manoeuvres--staring broadly at Peveril and his
+female companions--and affording them, as they came into contact, none
+of those facilities of giving place which are required on such
+occasions by the ordinary rules of the pavé.
+
+Peveril did not immediately observe their impertinence; but when it
+was too gross to escape his notice, his gall began to arise; and, in
+addition to all the other embarrassments of his situation, he had to
+combat the longing desire which he felt to cudgel handsomely the two
+coxcombs who seemed thus determined on insulting him. Patience and
+sufferance were indeed strongly imposed on him by circumstances; but
+at length it became scarcely possible to observe their dictates any
+longer.
+
+When, for the third time, Julian found himself obliged, with his
+companions, to pass this troublesome brace of fops, they kept walking
+close behind him, speaking so loud as to be heard, and in a tone of
+perfect indifference whether he listened to them or not.
+
+"This is bumpkin's best luck," said the taller of the two (who was
+indeed a man of remarkable size, alluding to the plainness of
+Peveril's dress, which was scarce fit for the streets of London)--"Two
+such fine wenches, and under guard of a grey frock and an oaken
+riding-rod!"
+
+"Nay, Puritan's luck rather, and more than enough of it," said his
+companion. "You may read Puritan in his pace and in his patience."
+
+"Right as a pint bumper, Tom," said his friend--"Isschar is an ass
+that stoopeth between two burdens."
+
+"I have a mind to ease long-eared Laurence of one of his
+encumbrances," said the shorter fellow. "That black-eyed sparkler
+looks as if she had a mind to run away from him."
+
+"Ay," answered the taller, "and the blue-eyed trembler looks as if she
+would fall behind into my loving arms."
+
+At these words, Alice, holding still closer by Peveril's arm than
+formerly, mended her pace almost to running, in order to escape from
+men whose language was so alarming; and Fenella walked hastily forward
+in the same manner, having perhaps caught, from the men's gestures and
+demeanour, that apprehension which Alice had taken from their
+language.
+
+Fearful of the consequences of a fray in the streets, which must
+necessarily separate him from these unprotected females, Peveril
+endeavoured to compound betwixt the prudence necessary for their
+protection and his own rising resentment; and as this troublesome pair
+of attendants endeavoured again to pass them close to Hungerford
+Stairs, he said to them with constrained calmness, "Gentlemen, I owe
+you something for the attention you have bestowed on the affairs of a
+stranger. If you have any pretension to the name I have given you, you
+will tell me where you are to be found."
+
+"And with what purpose," said the taller of the two sneeringly, "does
+your most rustic gravity, or your most grave rusticity, require of us
+such information?"
+
+So saying, they both faced about, in such a manner as to make it
+impossible for Julian to advance any farther.
+
+"Make for the stairs, Alice," he said; "I will be with you in an
+instant." Then freeing himself with difficulty from the grasp of his
+companions, he cast his cloak hastily round his left arm, and said,
+sternly, to his opponents, "Will you give me your names, sirs; or will
+you be pleased to make way?"
+
+"Not till we know for whom we are to give place," said one of them.
+
+"For one who will else teach you what you want--good manners," said
+Peveril, and advanced as if to push between them.
+
+They separated, but one of them stretched forth his foot before
+Peveril, as if he meant to trip him. The blood of his ancestors was
+already boiling within him; he struck the man on the face with the
+oaken rod which he had just sneered at, and throwing it from him,
+instantly unsheathed his sword. Both the others drew, and pushed at
+once; but he caught the point of the one rapier in his cloak, and
+parried the other thrust with his own weapon. He must have been less
+lucky in the second close, but a cry arose among the watermen, of
+"Shame, shame! two upon one!"
+
+"They are men of the Duke of Buckingham's," said one fellow--"there's
+no safe meddling with them."
+
+"They may be the devil's men, if they will," said an ancient Triton,
+flourishing his stretcher; "but I say fair play, and old England for
+ever; and, I say, knock the gold-laced puppies down, unless they will
+fight turn about with grey jerkin, like honest fellows. One down--
+t'other come on."
+
+The lower orders of London have in all times been remarkable for the
+delight which they have taken in club-law, or fist-law; and for
+the equity and impartiality with which they see it administered. The
+noble science of defence was then so generally known, that a bout at
+single rapier excited at that time as much interest and as little
+wonder as a boxing-match in our own days. The bystanders experienced
+in such affrays, presently formed a ring, within which Peveril and the
+taller and more forward of his antagonists were soon engaged in close
+combat with their swords, whilst the other, overawed by the
+spectators, was prevented from interfering.
+
+"Well done the tall fellow!"--"Well thrust, long-legs!'--"Huzza for
+two ells and a quarter!" were the sounds with which the fray was at
+first cheered; for Peveril's opponent not only showed great activity
+and skill in fence, but had also a decided advantage, from the anxiety
+with which Julian looked out for Alice Bridgenorth; the care for whose
+safety diverted him in the beginning of the onset from that which he
+ought to have exclusively bestowed on the defence of his own life. A
+slight flesh-wound in the side at once punished, and warned him of,
+his inadvertence; when, turning his whole thoughts on the business in
+which he was engaged, and animated with anger against his impertinent
+intruder, the rencontre speedily began to assume another face, amidst
+cries of "Well done, grey jerkin!"--"Try the metal of his gold
+doublet!"--"Finely thrust!"--"Curiously parried!"--"There went another
+eyelet-hole to his broidered jerkin!"--"Fairly pinked, by G--d!" In
+applause, accompanying a successful and conclusive lunge, by which
+Peveril ran his gigantic antagonist through the body. He looked at his
+prostrate foe for a moment; then, recovering himself, called loudly to
+know what had become of the lady.
+
+"Never mind the lady, if you be wise," said one of the watermen; "the
+constable will be here in an instant. I'll give your honour a cast
+across the water in a moment. It may be as much as your neck's worth.
+Shall only charge a Jacobus."
+
+"You be d--d!" said one of his rivals in profession, "as your father
+was before you; for a Jacobus, I'll set the gentleman into Alsatia,
+where neither bailiff nor constable dare trespass."
+
+"The lady, you scoundrels, the lady!" exclaimed Peveril---"Where is
+the lady?"
+
+"I'll carry your honour where you shall have enough of ladies, if that
+be your want," said the old Triton; and as he spoke, the clamour
+amongst the watermen was renewed, each hoping to cut his own profit
+out of the emergency of Julian's situation.
+
+"A sculler will be least suspected, your honour," said one fellow.
+
+"A pair of oars will carry you through the water like a wild-duck,"
+said another.
+
+"But you have got never a tilt, brother," said a third. "Now I can put
+the gentleman as snug as if he were under hatches."
+
+In the midst of the oaths and clamour attending this aquatic
+controversy for his custom, Peveril at length made them understand
+that he would bestow a Jacobus, not on him whose boat was first oars,
+but on whomsoever should inform him of the fate of the lady.
+
+"Of which lady?" said a sharp fellow: "for, to my thought, there was a
+pair of them."
+
+"Of both, of both," answered Peveril; "but first, of the fair-haired
+lady?"
+
+"Ay, ay, that was she that shrieked so when gold-jacket's companion
+handed her into No. 20."
+
+"Who--what--who dared to hand her?" exclaimed Peveril.
+
+"Nay, master, you have heard enough of my tale without a fee," said
+the waterman.
+
+"Sordid rascal!" said Peveril, giving him a gold piece, "speak out, or
+I'll run my sword through you!"
+
+"For the matter of that, master," answered the fellow, "not while I
+can handle this trunnion--but a bargain's a bargain; and so I'll tell
+you, for your gold piece, that the comrade of the fellow forced one of
+your wenches, her with the fair hair, will she, nill she, into
+Tickling Tom's wherry; and they are far enough up Thames by this time,
+with wind and tide."
+
+"Sacred Heaven, and I stand here!" exclaimed Julian.
+
+"Why, that is because your honour will not take a boat."
+
+"You are right, my friend--a boat--a boat instantly!"
+
+"Follow me, then, squire.--Here, Tom, bear a hand--the gentleman is
+our fare."
+
+A volley of water language was exchanged betwixt the successful
+candidate for Peveril's custom and his disappointed brethren, which
+concluded by the ancient Triton's bellowing out, in a tone above them
+all, "that the gentleman was in a fair way to make a voyage to the
+isle of gulls, for that sly Jack was only bantering him--No. 20 had
+rowed for York Buildings."
+
+"To the isle of gallows," cried another; "for here comes one who will
+mar his trip up Thames, and carry him down to Execution Dock."
+
+In fact, as he spoke the word, a constable, with three or four of his
+assistants, armed with the old-fashioned brown bills, which were still
+used for arming those guardians of the peace, cut off our hero's
+farther progress to the water's edge, by arresting him in the King's
+name. To attempt resistance would have been madness, as he was
+surrounded on all sides; so Peveril was disarmed, and carried before
+the nearest Justice of the Peace, for examination and committal.
+
+The legal sage before whom Julian was taken was a man very honest in
+his intentions, very bounded in his talents, and rather timid in his
+disposition. Before the general alarm given to England, and to the
+city of London in particular, by the notable discovery of the Popish
+Plot, Master Maulstatute had taken serene and undisturbed pride and
+pleasure in the discharge of his duties as a Justice of the Peace,
+with the exercise of all its honorary privileges and awful authority.
+But the murder of Sir Edmondsbury Godfrey had made a strong, nay, an
+indelible impression on his mind; and he walked the Courts of Themis
+with fear and trembling after that memorable and melancholy event.
+
+Having a high idea of his official importance, and rather an exalted
+notion of his personal consequence, his honour saw nothing from that
+time but cords and daggers before his eyes, and never stepped out of
+his own house, which he fortified, and in some measure garrisoned,
+with half-a-dozen tall watchmen and constables, without seeing himself
+watched by a Papist in disguise, with a drawn sword under his cloak.
+It was even whispered, that, in the agonies of his fears, the
+worshipful Master Maulstatute mistook the kitchen-wench with a
+tinderbox, for a Jesuit with a pistol; but if any one dared to laugh
+at such an error, he would have done well to conceal his mirth, lest
+he fell under the heavy inculpation of being a banterer and stifler
+of the Plot--a crime almost as deep as that of being himself a
+plotter. In fact, the fears of the honest Justice, however
+ridiculously exorbitant, were kept so much in countenance by the
+outcry of the day, and the general nervous fever, which afflicted
+every good Protestant, that Master Maulstatute was accounted the
+bolder man and the better magistrate, while, under the terror of the
+air-drawn dagger which fancy placed continually before his eyes, he
+continued to dole forth Justice in the recesses of his private
+chamber, nay, occasionally to attend Quarter-Sessions, when the hall
+was guarded by a sufficient body of the militia. Such was the wight,
+at whose door, well chained and doubly bolted, the constable who had
+Julian in custody now gave his important and well-known knock.
+
+Notwithstanding this official signal, the party was not admitted until
+the clerk, who acted the part of high-warder, had reconnoitred them
+through a grated wicket; for who could say whether the Papists might
+not have made themselves master of Master Constable's sign, and have
+prepared a pseudo watch to burst in and murder the Justice, under
+pretence of bringing in a criminal before him?--Less hopeful projects
+had figured in the Narrative of the Popish Plot.
+
+All being found right, the key was turned, the bolts were drawn, and
+the chain unhooked, so as to permit entrance to the constable, the
+prisoner, and the assistants; and the door was then a suddenly shut
+against the witnesses, who, as less trustworthy persons, were
+requested (through the wicket) to remain in the yard, until they
+should be called in their respective turns.
+
+Had Julian been inclined for mirth, as was far from being the case, he
+must have smiled at the incongruity of the clerk's apparel, who had
+belted over his black buckram suit a buff baldric, sustaining a
+broadsword, and a pair of huge horse-pistols; and, instead of the low
+flat hat, which, coming in place of the city cap, completed the dress
+of a scrivener, had placed on his greasy locks a rusted steel-cap,
+which had seen Marston-Moor; across which projected his well-used
+quill, in the guise of a plume--the shape of the morion not admitting
+of its being stuck, as usual, behind his ear.
+
+This whimsical figure conducted the constable, his assistants, and the
+prisoner, into the low hall, where his principal dealt forth justice;
+who presented an appearance still more singular than that of his
+dependant.
+
+Sundry good Protestants, who thought so highly of themselves as to
+suppose they were worthy to be distinguished as objects of Catholic
+cruelty, had taken to defensive arms on the occasion. But it was
+quickly found that a breast-plate and back-plate of proof, fastened
+together with iron clasps, was no convenient enclosure for a man who
+meant to eat venison and custard; and that a buff-coat or shirt of
+mail was scarcely more accommodating to the exertions necessary on
+such active occasions. Besides, there were other objections, as the
+alarming and menacing aspects which such warlike habiliments gave to
+the Exchange, and other places, where merchants most do congregate;
+and excoriations were bitterly complained of by many, who, not
+belonging to the artillery company, or trained bands, had no
+experience in bearing defensive armour.
+
+To obviate these objections, and, at the same time, to secure the
+persons of all true Protestant citizens against open force or privy
+assassinations on the part of the Papists, some ingenious artist,
+belonging, we may presume, to the worshipful Mercers' Company, had
+contrived a species of armour, of which neither the horse-armory in
+the Tower, nor Gwynnap's Gothic Hall, no, nor Dr. Meyrick's invaluable
+collection of ancient arms, has preserved any specimen. It was called
+silk-armour, being composed of a doublet and breeches of quilted silk,
+so closely stitched, and of such thickness, as to be proof against
+either bullet or steel; while a thick bonnet of the same materials,
+with ear-flaps attached to it, and on the whole, much resembling a
+nightcap, completed the equipment and ascertained the security of the
+wearer from the head to the knee.
+
+Master Maulstatute, among other worthy citizens, had adopted this
+singular panoply, which had the advantage of being soft, and warm, and
+flexible, as well as safe. And he now sat in his judicial elbow-chair
+--a short, rotund figure, hung round, as it were, with cushions, for
+such was the appearance of the quilted garments; and with a nose
+protruded from under the silken casque, the size of which, together
+with the unwieldiness of the whole figure, gave his worship no
+indifferent resemblance to the sign of the Hog in Armour, which was
+considerably improved by the defensive garment being of dusty orange
+colour, not altogether unlike the hue of those half-wild swine which
+are to be found in the forest of Hampshire.
+
+Secure in these invulnerable envelopments, his worship had rested
+content, although severed from his own death-doing weapons, of rapier,
+poniard, and pistols, which were placed nevertheless, at no great
+distance from his chair. One offensive implement, indeed, he thought
+it prudent to keep on the table beside his huge Coke upon Lyttleton.
+This was a sort of pocket flail, consisting of a piece of strong ash,
+about eighteen inches long, to which was attached a swinging club of
+/lignum-vitæ/, nearly twice as long as the handle, but jointed so as
+to be easily folded up. This instrument, which bore at that time the
+singular name of the Protestant flail, might be concealed under the
+coat, until circumstances demanded its public appearance. A better
+precaution against surprise than his arms, whether offensive or
+defensive, was a strong iron grating, which, crossing the room in
+front of the justice's table, and communicating by a grated door,
+which was usually kept locked, effectually separated the accused party
+from his judge.
+
+Justice Maulstatute, such as we have described him, chose to hear the
+accusation of the witnesses before calling on Peveril for his defence.
+The detail of the affray was briefly given by the bystanders, and
+seemed deeply to touch the spirit of the examinator. He shook his
+silken casque emphatically, when he understood that, after some
+language betwixt the parties, which the witnesses did not quite
+understand, the young man in custody struck the first blow, and drew
+his sword before the wounded party had unsheathed his weapon. Again he
+shook his crested head yet more solemnly, when the result of the
+conflict was known; and yet again, when one of the witnesses declared,
+that, to the best of his knowledge, the sufferer in the fray was a
+gentleman belonging to the household of his Grace the Duke of
+Buckingham.
+
+"A worthy peer," quoth the armed magistrate--"a true Protestant, and a
+friend to his country. Mercy on us, to what a height of audacity hath
+this age arisen! We see well, and could, were we as blind as a mole,
+out of what quiver this shaft hath been drawn."
+
+He then put on his spectacles, and having desired Julian to be brought
+forward, he glared upon him awfully with those glazen eyes, from under
+the shade of his quilted turban.
+
+"So young," he said, "and so hardened--lack-a-day!--and a Papist, I'll
+warrant."
+
+Peveril had time enough to recollect the necessity of his being at
+large, if he could possibly obtain his freedom, and interposed here a
+civil contradiction of his worship's gracious supposition. "He was no
+Catholic," he said, "but an unworthy member of the Church of England."
+
+"Perhaps but a lukewarm Protestant, notwithstanding," said the sage
+Justice; "there are those amongst us who ride tantivy to Rome, and
+have already made out half the journey--ahem!"
+
+Peveril disowned his being any such.
+
+"And who art thou, then?" said the Justice; "for, friend, to tell you
+plainly, I like not your visage--ahem!"
+
+These short and emphatic coughs were accompanied each by a succinct
+nod, intimating the perfect conviction of the speaker that he had made
+the best, the wisest, and the most acute observation, of which the
+premises admitted.
+
+Julian, irritated by the whole circumstances of his detention,
+answered the Justice's interrogation in rather a lofty tone. "My name
+is Julian Peveril!"
+
+"Now, Heaven be around us!" said the terrified Justice--"the son of
+that black-hearted Papist and traitor, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, now in
+hands, and on the verge of trial!"
+
+"How, sir!" exclaimed Julian, forgetting his situation, and, stepping
+forward to the grating, with a violence which made the bars clatter,
+he so startled the appalled Justice, that, snatching his Protestant
+flail, Master Maulstatute aimed a blow at his prisoner, to repel what
+he apprehended was a premeditated attack. But whether it was owing to
+the Justice's hurry of mind, or inexperience in managing the weapon,
+he not only missed his aim, but brought the swinging part of the
+machine round his own skull, with such a severe counter-buff, as
+completely to try the efficacy of his cushioned helmet, and, in spite
+of its defence, to convey a stunning sensation, which he rather
+hastily imputed to the consequence of a blow received from Peveril.
+
+His assistants did not directly confirm the opinion which the Justice
+had so unwarrantably adopted; but all with one voice agreed that, but
+for their own active and instantaneous interference, there was no
+knowing what mischief might have been done by a person so dangerous as
+the prisoner. The general opinion that he meant to proceed in the
+matter of his own rescue, /par voie du fait/, was indeed so deeply
+impressed on all present, that Julian saw it would be in vain to offer
+any defence, especially being but too conscious that the alarming and
+probably the fatal consequences of his rencontre with the bully,
+rendered his commitment inevitable. He contented himself with asking
+into what prison he was to be thrown; and when the formidable word
+Newgate was returned as full answer, he had at least the satisfaction
+to reflect, that, stern and dangerous as was the shelter of that roof,
+he should at least enjoy it in company with his father; and that, by
+some means or other, they might perhaps obtain the satisfaction of a
+melancholy meeting, under the circumstances of mutual calamity, which
+seemed impending over their house.
+
+Assuming the virtue of more patience than he actually possessed,
+Julian gave the magistrate (to whom all the mildness of his demeanour
+could not, however, reconcile him), the direction to the house where
+he lodged, together with a request that his servant, Lance Outram,
+might be permitted to send him his money and wearing apparel; adding,
+that all which might be in his possession, either of arms or writings,
+--the former amounting to a pair of travelling pistols, and the last
+to a few memoranda of little consequence, he willingly consented to
+place at the disposal of the magistrate. It was in that moment that he
+entertained, with sincere satisfaction, the comforting reflection,
+that the important papers of Lady Derby were already in the possession
+of the sovereign.
+
+The Justice promised attention to his requests; but reminded him, with
+great dignity, that his present complacent and submissive behaviour
+ought, for his own sake, to have been adopted from the beginning,
+instead of disturbing the presence of magistracy with such atrocious
+marks of the malignant, rebellious, and murderous spirit of Popery, as
+he had at first exhibited. "Yet," he said, "as he was a goodly young
+man, and of honourable quality, he would not suffer him to be dragged
+through the streets as a felon, but had ordered a coach for his
+accommodation."
+
+His honour, Master Maulstatute, uttered the word "coach" with the
+importance of one who, as Dr. Johnson saith of later date, is
+conscious of the dignity of putting horses to his chariot. The
+worshipful Master Maulstatute did not, however on this occasion, do
+Julian the honour of yoking to his huge family caroche the two
+"frampal jades" (to use the term of the period), which were wont to
+drag that ark to the meeting house of pure and precious Master
+Howlaglass, on a Thursday's evening for lecture, and on a Sunday for a
+four-hours' sermon. He had recourse to a leathern convenience, then
+more rare, but just introduced, with every prospect of the great
+facility which has since been afforded by hackney coaches, to all
+manner of communication, honest and dishonest, legal and illegal. Our
+friend Julian, hitherto much more accustomed to the saddle than to any
+other conveyance, soon found himself in a hackney carriage, with the
+constable and two assistants for his companions, armed up to the teeth
+--the port of destination being, as they had already intimated, the
+ancient fortress of Newgate.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+ 'Tis the black ban-dog of our jail--Pray look on him,
+ But at a wary distance--rouse him not--
+ He bays not till he worries.
+ --THE BLACK DOG OF NEWGATE.
+
+The coach stopped before those tremendous gates, which resemble those
+of Tartarus, save only that they rather more frequently permit safe
+and honourable egress; although at the price of the same anxiety and
+labour with which Hercules, and one or two of the demi-gods,
+extricated themselves from the Hell of the ancient mythology, and
+sometimes, it is said, by the assistance of the golden boughs.
+
+Julian stepped out of the vehicle, carefully supported on either side
+by his companions, and also by one or two turnkeys, whom the first
+summons of the deep bell at the gate had called to their assistance.
+That attention, it may be guessed, was not bestowed lest he should
+make a false step, so much as for fear of his attempting an escape, of
+which he had no intentions. A few prentices and straggling boys of the
+neighbouring market, which derived considerable advantage from
+increase of custom, in consequence of the numerous committals on
+account of the Popish Plot, and who therefore were zealous of
+Protestants, saluted him on his descent with jubilee shouts of "Whoop,
+Papist! whoop, Papist! D----n to the Pope, and all his adherents!"
+
+Under such auspices, Peveril was ushered in beneath that gloomy
+gateway, where so many bid adieu on their entrance at once to honour
+and to life. The dark and dismal arch under which he soon found
+himself opened upon a large courtyard, where a number of debtors were
+employed in playing at handball, pitch-and-toss, hustle-cap, and other
+games, for which relaxations the rigour of their creditors afforded
+them full leisure, while it debarred them the means of pursuing the
+honest labour by which they might have redeemed their affairs, and
+maintained their starving and beggared families.
+
+But with this careless and desperate group Julian was not to be
+numbered, being led, or rather forced, by his conductors, into a low
+arched door, which, carefully secured by bolts and bars, opened for
+his reception on one side of the archway, and closed, with all its
+fastenings, the moment after his hasty entrance. He was then conducted
+along two or three gloomy passages, which, where they intersected each
+other, were guarded by as many strong wickets, one of iron gates, and
+the others of stout oak, clinched with plates, and studded with nails
+of the same metal. He was not allowed to pause until he found himself
+hurried into a little round vaulted room, which several of these
+passages opened into, and which seemed, with respect to the labyrinth
+through part of which he had passed, to resemble the central point of
+a spider's web, in which the main lines of that reptile's curious maze
+are always found to terminate.
+
+The resemblance did not end here; for in this small vaulted apartment,
+the walls of which were hung round with musketoons, pistols,
+cutlasses, and other weapons, as well as with many sets of fetters and
+irons of different construction, all disposed in great order, and
+ready for employment, a person sat, who might not unaptly be compared
+to a huge bloated and bottled spider, placed there to secure the prey
+which had fallen into his toils.
+
+This official had originally been a very strong and square-built man,
+of large size, but was now so overgrown, from overfeeding, perhaps,
+and want of exercise, as to bear the same resemblance to his former
+self which a stall-fed ox still retains to a wild bull. The look of no
+man is so inauspicious as a fat man, upon whose features ill-nature
+has marked an habitual stamp. He seems to have reversed the old
+proverb of "laugh and be fat," and to have thriven under the influence
+of the worst affections of the mind. Passionate we can allow a jolly
+mortal to be; but it seems unnatural to his goodly case to be sulky
+and brutal. Now this man's features, surly and tallow-coloured; his
+limbs, swelled and disproportioned; his huge paunch and unwieldy
+carcass, suggested the idea, that, having once found his way into this
+central recess, he had there fattened, like the weasel in the fable,
+and fed largely and foully, until he had become incapable of
+retreating through any of the narrow paths that terminated at his
+cell; and was thus compelled to remain, like a toad under the cold
+stone, fattening amid the squalid airs of the dungeons by which he was
+surrounded, which would have proved pestiferous to any other than such
+a congenial inhabitant. Huge iron-clasped books lay before this
+ominous specimen of pinguitude--the records of the realm of misery, in
+which office he officiated as prime minister; and had Peveril come
+thither as an unconcerned visitor, his heart would have sunk within
+him at considering the mass of human wretchedness which must needs be
+registered in these fatal volumes. But his own distresses sat too
+heavy on his mind to permit any general reflections of this nature.
+
+The constable and this bulky official whispered together, after the
+former had delivered to the latter the warrant of Julian's commitment.
+The word /whispered/ is not quite accurate, for their communication
+was carried on less by words than by looks and expressive signs; by
+which, in all such situations, men learn to supply the use of
+language, and to add mystery to what is in itself sufficiently
+terrible to the captive. The only words which could be heard were
+those of the Warden, or, as he was called then, the Captain of the
+Jail, "Another bird to the cage----?"
+
+"Who will whistle 'Pretty Pope of Rome,' with any starling in your
+Knight's ward," answered the constable, with a facetious air, checked,
+however, by the due respect to the supreme presence in which he stood.
+
+The Grim Feature relaxed into something like a smile as he heard the
+officer's observation; but instantly composing himself into the stern
+solemnity which for an instant had been disturbed, he looked fiercely
+at his new guest, and pronounced with an awful and emphatic, yet
+rather an under-voice, the single and impressive word, "/Garnish!/"
+
+Julian Peveril replied with assumed composure; for he had heard of the
+customs of such places, and was resolved to comply with them, so as if
+possible to obtain the favour of seeing his father, which he shrewdly
+guessed must depend on his gratifying the avarice of the keeper. "I am
+quite ready," he said, "to accede to the customs of the place in which
+I unhappily find myself. You have but to name your demands, and I will
+satisfy them."
+
+So saying, he drew out his purse, thinking himself at the same time
+fortunate that he had retained about him a considerable sum of gold.
+The Captain remarked its width, depth, its extension, and depression,
+with an involuntary smile, which had scarce contorted his hanging
+under-lip, and the wiry and greasy moustache which thatched the upper,
+when it was checked by the recollection that there were regulations
+which set bounds to his rapacity, and prevented him from pouncing on
+his prey like a kite, and swooping it all off at once.
+
+This chilling reflection produced the following sullen reply to
+Peveril:--"There were sundry rates. Gentlemen must choose for
+themselves. He asked nothing but his fees. But civility," he muttered,
+"must be paid for."
+
+"And shall, if I can have it for payment," said Peveril; "but the
+price, my good sir, the price?"
+
+He spoke with some degree of scorn, which he was the less anxious to
+repress, that he saw, even in this jail, his purse gave him an
+indirect but powerful influence over his jailer.
+
+The Captain seemed to feel the same; for, as he spoke, he plucked from
+his head, almost involuntarily, a sort of scalded fur-cap, which
+served it for covering. But his fingers revolting from so unusual an
+act of complaisance, began to indemnify themselves by scratching his
+grizzly shock-head, as he muttered, in a tone resembling the softened
+growling of a mastiff when he has ceased to bay the intruder who shows
+no fear of him,--"There are different rates. There is the Little Ease,
+for common fees of the crown--rather dark, and the common sewer runs
+below it; and some gentlemen object to the company, who are chiefly
+padders and michers. Then the Master's side--the garnish came to one
+piece--and none lay stowed there but who were in for murder at the
+least."
+
+"Name your highest price, sir, and take it," was Julian's concise
+reply.
+
+"Three pieces for the Knight's ward," answered the governor of this
+terrestrial Tartarus.
+
+"Take five, and place me with Sir Geoffrey," was again Julian's
+answer, throwing down the money upon the desk before him.
+
+"Sir Geoffrey?--Hum!--ay, Sir Geoffrey," said the jailer, as if
+meditating what he ought to do. "Well, many a man has paid money to
+see Sir Geoffrey--Scarce so much as you have, though. But then you are
+like to see the last of him.--Ha, ha ha!"
+
+These broken muttered exclamations, which terminated somewhat like the
+joyous growl of a tiger over his meal, Julian could not comprehend;
+and only replied to by repeating his request to be placed in the same
+cell with Sir Geoffrey.
+
+"Ay, master," said the jailer, "never fear; I'll keep word with you,
+as you seem to know something of what belongs to your station and
+mine. And hark ye, Jem Clink will fetch you the darbies."
+
+"Derby!" interrupted Julian,--"Has the Earl or Countess----"
+
+"Earl or Countess!--Ha, ha, ha!" again laughed, or rather growled, the
+warden. "What is your head running on? You are a high fellow belike!
+but all is one here. The darbies are the fetlocks--the fast-keepers,
+my boy--the bail for good behaviour, my darling; and if you are not
+the more conforming, I can add you a steel nightcap, and a curious
+bosom-friend, to keep you warm of a winter night. But don't be
+disheartened; you have behaved genteel; and you shall not be put upon.
+And as for this here matter, ten to one it will turn out chance-
+medley, or manslaughter, at the worst on it; and then it is but a
+singed thumb instead of a twisted neck--always if there be no Papistry
+about it, for then I warrant nothing.--Take the gentleman's worship
+away, Clink."
+
+A turnkey, who was one of the party that had ushered Peveril into the
+presence of this Cerberus, now conveyed him out in silence; and, under
+his guidance, the prisoner was carried through a second labyrinth of
+passages with cells opening on each side, to that which was destined
+for his reception.
+
+On the road through this sad region, the turnkey more than once
+ejaculated, "Why, the gentleman must be stark-mad! Could have had the
+best crown cell to himself for less than half the garnish, and must
+pay double to pig in with Sir Geoffrey! Ha, ha!--Is Sir Geoffrey akin
+to you, if any one may make free to ask?"
+
+"I am his son," answered Peveril sternly, in hopes to impose some curb
+on the fellow's impertinence; but the man only laughed louder than
+before.
+
+"His son!--Why, that's best of all--Why, you are a strapping youth--
+five feet ten, if you be an inch--and Sir Geoffrey's son!--Ha, ha,
+ha!"
+
+"Truce with your impertinence," said Julian. "My situation gives you
+no title to insult me!"
+
+"No more I do," said the turnkey, smothering his mirth at the
+recollection, perhaps, that the prisoner's purse was not exhausted. "I
+only laughed because you said you were Sir Geoffrey's son. But no
+matter--'tis a wise child that knows his own father. And here is Sir
+Geoffrey's cell; so you and he may settle the fatherhood between you."
+
+So saying, he ushered his prisoner into a cell, or rather a strong
+room of the better order, in which there were four chairs, a truckle-
+bed, and one or two other articles of furniture.
+
+Julian looked eagerly around for his father; but to his surprise the
+room appeared totally empty. He turned with anger on the turnkey, and
+charged him with misleading him; but the fellow answered, "No, no,
+master; I have kept faith with you. Your father, if you call him so,
+is only tappiced in some corner. A small hole will hide him; but I'll
+rouse him out presently for you.--Here, hoicks!--Turn out, Sir
+Geoffrey!--Here is--Ha, ha, ha!--your son--or your wife's son--for I
+think you have but little share in him--come to wait on you."
+
+Peveril knew not how to resent the man's insolence; and indeed his
+anxiety, and apprehension of some strange mistake, mingled with, and
+in some degree neutralised his anger. He looked again and again,
+around and around the room; until at length he became aware of
+something rolled up in a dark corner, which rather resembled a small
+bundle of crimson cloth than any living creature. At the vociferation
+of the turnkey, however, the object seemed to acquire life and motion,
+uncoiled itself in some degree, and, after an effort or two, gained an
+erect posture; still covered from top to toe with the crimson drapery
+in which it was at first wrapped. Julian, at the first glance,
+imagined from the size that he saw a child of five years old; but a
+shrill and peculiar tone of voice soon assured him of his mistake.
+
+"Warder," said this unearthly sound, "what is the meaning of this
+disturbance? Have you more insults to heap on the head of one who hath
+ever been the butt of fortune's malice? But I have a soul that can
+wrestle with all my misfortunes; it is as large as any of your
+bodies."
+
+"Nay, Sir Geoffrey, if this be the way you welcome your own son!" said
+the turnkey; "but you quality folks know your own ways best."
+
+"My son!" exclaimed the little figure. "Audacious----"
+
+"Here is some strange mistake," said Peveril, in the same breath. "I
+sought Sir Geoffrey----"
+
+"And you have him before you, young man," said the pigmy tenant of the
+cell, with an air of dignity; at the same time casting on the floor
+his crimson cloak, and standing before them in his full dignity of
+three feet six inches of height. "I who was the favoured servant of
+three successive Sovereigns of the Crown of England, am now the tenant
+of this dungeon, and the sport of its brutal keepers. I am Sir
+Geoffrey Hudson."
+
+Julian, though he had never before seen this important personage, had
+no difficulty in recognising, from description, the celebrated dwarf
+of Henrietta Maria, who had survived the dangers of civil war and
+private quarrel--the murder of his royal master, Charles I., and the
+exile of his widow--to fall upon evil tongues and evil days, amidst
+the unsparing accusations connected with the Popish Plot. He bowed to
+the unhappy old man, and hastened to explain to him, and to the
+turnkey, that it was Sir Geoffrey Peveril, of Martindale Castle in
+Derbyshire whose prison he desired to share.
+
+"You should have said that before you parted with the gold-dust, my
+master," answered the turnkey; "for t'other Sir Geoffrey, that is the
+big, tall, grey-haired man, was sent to the Tower last night; and the
+Captain will think he has kept his word well enow with you, by lodging
+you with this here Sir Geoffrey Hudson, who is the better show of the
+two."
+
+"I pray you go to your master," said Peveril; "explain the mistake;
+and say to him I beg to be sent to the Tower."
+
+"The Tower!--Ha, ha, ha!" exclaimed the fellow. "The Tower is for
+lords and knights, and not for squires of low degree--for high
+treason, and not for ruffing on the streets with rapier and dagger;
+and there must go a secretary's warrant to send you there."
+
+"At least, let me not be a burden on this gentleman," said Julian.
+"There can be no use in quartering us together, since we are not even
+acquainted. Go tell your master of the mistake."
+
+"Why, so I should," said Clink, still grinning, "if I were not sure
+that he knew it already. You paid to be sent to Sir Geoffrey, and he
+sent you to Sir Geoffrey. You are so put down in the register, and he
+will blot it for no man. Come, come, be comfortable, and you shall
+have light and easy irons--that's all I can do for you."
+
+Resistance and expostulation being out of the question, Peveril
+submitted to have a light pair of fetters secured on his ankles, which
+allowed him, nevertheless, the power of traversing the apartment.
+
+During this operation, he reflected that the jailer, who had taken the
+advantage of the equivoque betwixt the two Sir Geoffreys, must have
+acted as his assistant had hinted, and cheated him from malice
+prepense, since the warrant of committal described him as the son of
+Sir Geoffrey Peveril. It was therefore in vain, as well as degrading,
+to make farther application to such a man on the subject. Julian
+determined to submit to his fate, as what could not be averted by any
+effort of his own.
+
+Even the turnkey was moved in some degree by his youth, good mien, and
+the patience with which, after the first effervescence of
+disappointment, the new prisoner resigned himself to his situation.
+"You seem a brave young gentleman," he said; "and shall at least have
+a good dinner, and as good a pallet to sleep on, as is within the walls
+of Newgate.----And, Master Sir Geoffrey, you ought to make much of
+him, since you do not like tall fellows; for I can tell you that Master
+Peveril is in for pinking long Jack Jenkins, that was the Master of
+Defence--as tall a man as in London, always excepting the King's
+Porter, Master Evans, that carried you about in his pocket, Sir
+Geoffrey, as all the world heard tell."
+
+"Begone, fellow!" answered the dwarf. "Fellow, I scorn you!"
+
+The turnkey sneered, withdrew, and locked the door behind him.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+ Degenerate youth, and not of Tydeus' kind,
+ Whose little body lodged a mighty mind.
+ --ILIAD.
+
+Left quiet at least, if not alone, for the first time after the events
+of this troubled and varied day, Julian threw himself on an old oaken
+seat, beside the embers of a sea-coal fire, and began to muse on the
+miserable situation of anxiety and danger in which he was placed;
+where, whether he contemplated the interests of his love, his family
+affections, or his friendships, all seemed such a prospect as that of
+a sailor who looks upon breakers on every hand, from the deck of a
+vessel which no longer obeys the helm.
+
+As Peveril sat sunk in despondency, his companion in misfortune drew a
+chair to the opposite side of the chimney-corner, and began to gaze at
+him with a sort of solemn earnestness, which at length compelled him,
+though almost in spite of himself, to pay some attention to the
+singular figure who seemed so much engrossed with contemplating him.
+
+Geoffrey Hudson (we drop occasionally the title of knighthood, which
+the King had bestowed on him in a frolic, but which might introduce
+some confusion into our history), although a dwarf of the least
+possible size, had nothing positively ugly in his countenance, or
+actually distorted in his limbs. His head, hands, and feet were indeed
+large, and disproportioned to the height of his body, and his body
+itself much thicker than was consistent with symmetry, but in a degree
+which was rather ludicrous than disagreeable to look upon. His
+countenance, in particular, had he been a little taller, would have
+been accounted, in youth, handsome, and now, in age, striking and
+expressive; it was but the uncommon disproportion betwixt the head and
+the trunk which made the features seem whimsical and bizarre--an
+effect which was considerably increased by the dwarf's moustaches,
+which it was his pleasure to wear so large, that they almost twisted
+back amongst, and mingled with, his grizzled hair.
+
+The dress of this singular wight announced that he was not entirely
+free from the unhappy taste which frequently induces those whom nature
+has marked by personal deformity, to distinguish, and at the same time
+to render themselves ridiculous, by the use of showy colours, and
+garments fantastically and extraordinarily fashioned. But poor
+Geoffrey Hudson's laces, embroideries, and the rest of his finery,
+were sorely worn and tarnished by the time which he had spent in jail,
+under the vague and malicious accusation that he was somehow or other
+an accomplice in this all-involving, all-devouring whirlpool of a
+Popish conspiracy--an impeachment which, if pronounced by a mouth the
+foulest and most malicious, was at that time sufficiently predominant
+to sully the fairest reputation. It will presently appear, that in the
+poor man's manner of thinking, and tone of conversation, there was
+something analogous to his absurd fashion of apparel; for, as in the
+latter, good stuff and valuable decorations were rendered ludicrous by
+the fantastic fashion in which they were made up; so, such glimmerings
+of good sense and honourable feeling as the little man often evinced,
+were made ridiculous by a restless desire to assume certain airs of
+importance, and a great jealousy of being despised, on account of the
+peculiarity of his outward form.
+
+After the fellow-prisoners had looked at each other for some time in
+silence, the dwarf, conscious of his dignity as first owner of their
+joint apartment, thought it necessary to do the honours of it to the
+new-comer. "Sir," he said, modifying the alternate harsh and squeaking
+tones of his voice into accents as harmonious as they could attain, "I
+understand you to be the son of my worthy namesake, and ancient
+acquaintance, the stout Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak. I promise
+you, I have seen your father where blows have been going more plenty
+than gold pieces; and for a tall heavy man, who lacked, as we
+martialists thought, some of the lightness and activity of our more
+slightly made Cavaliers, he performed his duty as a man might desire.
+I am happy to see you, his son; and, though by a mistake, I am glad we
+are to share this comfortless cabin together."
+
+Julian bowed, and thanked his courtesy; and Geoffrey Hudson, having
+broken the ice, preceded to question him without further ceremony.
+"You are no courtier, I presume, young gentleman?"
+
+Julian replied in the negative.
+
+"I thought so," continued the dwarf; "for although I have now no
+official duty at Court, the region in which my early years were spent,
+and where I once held a considerable office, yet I still, when I had
+my liberty, visited the Presence from time to time, as in duty bound
+for former service; and am wont, from old habit, to take some note of
+the courtly gallants, those choice spirits of the age, among whom I
+was once enrolled. You are, not to compliment you, a marked figure,
+Master Peveril--though something of the tallest, as was your father's
+case; I think, I could scarce have seen you anywhere without
+remembering you."
+
+Peveril thought he might, with great justice, have returned the
+compliment, but contented himself with saying, "he had scarce seen the
+British Court."
+
+"Tis pity," said Hudson; "a gallant can hardly be formed without
+frequenting it. But you have been perhaps in a rougher school; you
+have served, doubtless?"
+
+"My Maker, I hope," said Julian.
+
+"Fie on it, you mistake. I meant," said Hudson, "/á la François/,--you
+have served in the army?"
+
+"No. I have not yet had that honour," said Julian.
+
+"What! neither courtier nor soldier, Master Peveril?" said the
+important little man: "your father is to blame. By cock and pie he is,
+Master Peveril! How shall a man be known, or distinguished, unless by
+his bearing in peace and war? I tell you, sir, that at Newberry, where
+I charged with my troop abreast with Prince Rupert, and when, as you
+may have heard, we were both beaten off by those cuckoldly hinds the
+Trained Bands of London,--we did what men could; and I think it was a
+matter of three or four minutes after most of our gentlemen had been
+driven off, that his Highness and I continued to cut at their long
+pikes with our swords; and I think might have broken in, but that I
+had a tall, long-legged brute of a horse, and my sword was somewhat
+short,--in fine, at last we were obliged to make volte-face, and then,
+as I was going to say, the fellows were so glad to get rid of us, that
+they set up a great jubilee cry of 'There goes Prince Robin and Cock
+Robin!'--Ay, ay, every scoundrel among them knew me well. But those
+days are over.--And where were you educated, young gentleman?"
+
+Peveril named the household of the Countess of Derby.
+
+"A most honourable lady, upon my word as a gentleman," said Hudson.--
+"I knew the noble Countess well when I was about the person of my
+royal mistress, Henrietta Maria. She was then the very muster of all
+that was noble, loyal, and lovely. She was, indeed, one of the fifteen
+fair ones of the Court, whom I permitted to call me Piccoluomini--a
+foolish jest on my somewhat diminutive figure, which always
+distinguished me from ordinary beings, even when I was young--I have
+now lost much stature by stooping; but, always the ladies had their
+jest at me.--Perhaps, young man, I had my own amends of some of them
+somewhere, and somehow or other--I /say/ nothing if I had or no; far
+less do I insinuate disrespect to the noble Countess. She was daughter
+of the Duc de la Tremouille, or, more correctly, des Thouars. But
+certainly to serve the ladies, and condescend to their humours, even
+when somewhat too free, or too fantastic, is the true decorum of
+gentle blood."
+
+Depressed as his spirits were, Peveril could scarce forbear smiling
+when he looked at the pigmy creature, who told these stories with
+infinite complacency, and appeared disposed to proclaim, as his own
+herald, that he had been a very model of valour and gallantry, though
+love and arms seemed to be pursuits totally irreconcilable to his
+shrivelled, weather-beaten countenance, and wasted limbs. Julian was,
+however, so careful to avoid giving his companion pain, that he
+endeavoured to humour him, by saying, that, "unquestionably, one bred
+up like Sir Geoffrey Hudson, in court and camps, knew exactly when to
+suffer personal freedoms, and when to control them."
+
+The little Knight, with great vivacity, though with some difficulty,
+began to drag his seat from the side of the fire opposite to that
+where Julian was seated, and at length succeeded in bringing it near
+him, in token of increasing cordiality.
+
+"You say well, Master Peveril," said the dwarf; "and I have given
+proofs both of bearing and forbearing. Yes, sir, there was not that
+thing which my most royal mistress, Henrietta Maria, could have
+required of me, that I would not have complied with, sir; I was her
+sworn servant, both in war and in festival, in battle and pageant,
+sir. At her Majesty's particular request, I once condescended to
+become--ladies, you know, have strange fancies--to become the tenant,
+for a time, of the interior of a pie."
+
+"Of a pie?" said Julian, somewhat amazed.
+
+"Yes, sir, of a pie. I hope you find nothing risible in my
+complaisance?" replied his companion, something jealously.
+
+"Not I, sir," said Peveril; "I have other matters than laughter in my
+head at present."
+
+"So had I," said the dwarfish champion, "when I found myself
+imprisoned in a huge platter, of no ordinary dimensions you may be
+assured, since I could lie at length in it, and when I was entombed,
+as it were, in walls of standing crust, and a huge cover of pastry,
+the whole constituting a sort of sarcophagus, of size enough to have
+recorded the epitaph of a general officer or an archbishop on the lid.
+Sir, notwithstanding the conveniences which were made to give me air,
+it was more like being buried alive than aught else which I could
+think of."
+
+"I conceive it, sir," said Julian.
+
+"Moreover, sir," continued the dwarf, "there were few in the secret,
+which was contrived for the Queen's divertisement; for advancing of
+which I would have crept into a filbert nut, had it been possible; and
+few, as I said, being private in the scheme, there was a risk of
+accidents. I doubted, while in my darksome abode, whether some awkward
+attendant might not have let me fall, as I have seen happen to a
+venison pasty; or whether some hungry guest might not anticipate the
+moment of my resurrection, by sticking his knife into my upper crust.
+And though I had my weapons about me, young man, as has been my custom
+in every case of peril, yet, if such a rash person had plunged deep
+into the bowels of the supposed pasty, my sword and dagger could
+barely have served me to avenge, assuredly not to prevent, either of
+these catastrophes."
+
+"Certainly I do so understand it," said Julian, who began, however, to
+feel that the company of little Hudson, talkative as he showed
+himself, was likely rather to aggravate than to alleviate the
+inconveniences of a prison.
+
+"Nay," continued the little man, enlarging on his former topic, "I had
+other subjects of apprehension; for it pleased my Lord of Buckingham,
+his Grace's father who now bears the title, in his plenitude of Court
+favour, to command the pasty to be carried down to the office, and
+committed anew to the oven, alleging preposterously that it was better
+to be eaten warm than cold."
+
+"And did this, sir, not disturb your equanimity?" said Julian.
+
+"My young friend," said Geoffrey Hudson, "I cannot deny it.--Nature
+will claim her rights from the best and boldest of us.--I thought of
+Nebuchadnezzar and his fiery furnace; and I waxed warm with
+apprehension.--But, I thank Heaven, I also thought of my sworn duty to
+my royal mistress; and was thereby obliged and enabled to resist all
+temptations to make myself prematurely known. Nevertheless, the Duke--
+if of malice, may Heaven forgive him--followed down into the office
+himself, and urged the master-cook very hard that the pasty should be
+heated, were it but for five minutes. But the master-cook, being privy
+to the very different intentions of my royal mistress, did most
+manfully resist the order; and I was again reconveyed in safety to the
+royal table."
+
+"And in due time liberated from your confinement, I doubt not?" said
+Peveril.
+
+"Yes, sir; that happy, and I may say, glorious moment, at length
+arrived," continued the dwarf. "The upper crust was removed--I started
+up to the sound of trumpet and clarion, like the soul of a warrior
+when the last summons shall sound--or rather (if that simile be over
+audacious), like a spell-bound champion relieved from his enchanted
+state. It was then that, with my buckler on my arm, and my trusty
+Bilboa in my hand, I executed a sort of warlike dance, in which my
+skill and agility then rendered me pre-eminent, displaying, at the
+same time my postures, both of defence and offence, in a manner so
+totally inimitable, that I was almost deafened with the applause of
+all around me, and half-drowned by the scented waters with which the
+ladies of the Court deluged me from their casting bottles. I had
+amends of his Grace of Buckingham also; for as I tripped a hasty
+morris hither and thither upon the dining-table, now offering my
+blade, now recovering it, I made a blow at his nose--a sort of
+estramaçon--the dexterity of which consists in coming mighty near to
+the object you seem to aim at, yet not attaining it. You may have seen
+a barber make such a flourish with his razor. I promise you his Grace
+sprung back a half-yard at least. He was pleased to threaten to brain
+me with a chicken-bone, as he disdainfully expressed it; but the King
+said, 'George, you have but a Rowland for an Oliver.' And so I tripped
+on, showing a bold heedlessness of his displeasure, which few dared to
+have done at that time, albeit countenanced to the utmost like me by
+the smiles of the brave and the fair. But, well-a-day! sir, youth, its
+fashions, its follies, its frolics, and all its pomp and pride, are as
+idle and transitory as the crackling of thorns under a pot."
+
+"The flower that is cast into the oven were a better simile," thought
+Peveril. "Good God, that a man should live to regret not being young
+enough to be still treated as baked meat, and served up in a pie!"
+
+His companion, whose tongue had for many days been as closely
+imprisoned as his person, seemed resolved to indemnify his loquacity,
+by continuing to indulge it on the present occasion at his companion's
+expense. He proceeded, therefore, in a solemn tone, to moralise on the
+adventure which he had narrated.
+
+"Young men will no doubt think one to be envied," he said, "who was
+thus enabled to be the darling and admiration of the Court"--(Julian
+internally stood self-exculpated from the suspicion)--"and yet it is
+better to possess fewer means of distinction, and remain free from the
+backbiting, the slander, and the odium, which are always the share of
+Court favour. Men who had no other cause, cast reflections upon me
+because my size varied somewhat from the common proportion; and jests
+were sometimes unthinkingly passed upon me by those I was bound to,
+who did not in that case, peradventure, sufficiently consider that the
+wren is made by the same hand which formed the bustard, and that the
+diamond, though small in size, out-values ten thousand-fold the rude
+granite. Nevertheless, they proceeded in the vein of humour; and as I
+could not in duty or gratitude retort upon nobles and princes, I was
+compelled to cast about in my mind how to vindicate my honour towards
+those, who, being in the same rank with myself, as servants and
+courtiers, nevertheless bore themselves towards me as if they were of
+a superior class in the rank of honour, as well as in the accidental
+circumstance of stature. And as a lesson to my own pride, and that of
+others, it so happened, that the pageant which I have but just
+narrated--which I justly reckon the most honourable moment of my life,
+excepting perhaps my distinguished share in the battle of Round-way-
+down--became the cause of a most tragic event, in which I acknowledge
+the greatest misfortune of my existence."
+
+The dwarf here paused, fetched a sigh, big at once with regret, and
+with the importance becoming the subject of a tragic history; then
+proceeded as follows:--
+
+"You would have thought in your simplicity, young gentleman, that the
+pretty pageant I have mentioned could only have been quoted to my
+advantage, as a rare masking frolic, prettily devised, and not less
+deftly executed; and yet the malice of the courtiers, who maligned and
+envied me, made them strain their wit, and exhaust their ingenuity, in
+putting false and ridiculous constructions upon it. In short, my ears
+were so much offended with allusions to pies, puff-paste, ovens, and
+the like, that I was compelled to prohibit such subject of mirth,
+under penalty of my instant and severe displeasure. But it happ'd
+there was then a gallant about the Court, a man of good quality, son
+to a knight baronet, and in high esteem with the best in that sphere,
+also a familiar friend of mine own, from whom, therefore, I had no
+reason to expect any of that species of gibing which I had intimated
+my purpose to treat as offensive. Howbeit, it pleased the Honourable
+Mr. Crofts, so was this youth called and designed, one night, at the
+Groom Porter's being full of wine and waggery, to introduce this
+threadbare subject, and to say something concerning a goose-pie, which
+I could not but consider as levelled at me. Nevertheless, I did but
+calmly and solidly pray him to choose a different subject; failing
+which, I let him know I should be sudden in my resentment.
+Notwithstanding, he continued in the same tone, and even aggravated
+the offence, by speaking of a tomtit, and other unnecessary and
+obnoxious comparisons; whereupon I was compelled to send him a cartel,
+and we met accordingly. Now, as I really loved the youth, it was my
+intention only to correct him by a flesh wound or two; and I would
+willingly that he had named the sword for his weapon. Nevertheless, he
+made pistols his election; and being on horseback, he produced by way
+of his own weapon, a foolish engine, which children are wont, in their
+roguery, to use for spouting water; a--a--in short, I forget the
+name."
+
+"A squirt, doubtless," said Peveril, who began to recollect having
+heard something of this adventure.
+
+"You are right," said the dwarf; "you have indeed the name of the
+little engine, of which I have had experience in passing the yards at
+Westminster.--Well, sir, this token of slight regard compelled me to
+give the gentleman such language, as soon rendered it necessary for
+him to make more serious arms. We fought on horseback--breaking
+ground, and advancing by signal; and, as I never miss aim, I had the
+misadventure to kill the Honourable Master Crofts at the first shot. I
+would not wish my worst foe the pain which I felt, when I saw him reel
+on his saddle, and so fall down to the earth!--and, when I perceived
+that the life-blood was pouring fast, I could not but wish to Heaven
+that it had been my own instead of his. Thus fell youth, hopes, and
+bravery, a sacrifice to a silly and thoughtless jest; yet, alas!
+wherein had I choice, seeing that honour is, as it were, the very
+breath in our nostrils; and that in no sense can we be said to live,
+if we permit ourselves to be deprived of it?"
+
+The tone of feeling in which the dwarfish hero concluded his story,
+gave Julian a better opinion of his heart, and even of his
+understanding, than he had been able to form of one who gloried in
+having, upon a grand occasion, formed the contents of a pasty. He was
+indeed enabled to conjecture that the little champion was seduced into
+such exhibitions, by the necessity attached to his condition, by his
+own vanity, and by the flattery bestowed on him by those who sought
+pleasure in practical jokes. The fate of the unlucky Master Crofts,
+however, as well as various exploits of this diminutive person during
+the Civil Wars, in which he actually, and with great gallantry,
+commanded a troop of horse, rendered most men cautious of openly
+rallying him; which was indeed the less necessary, as, when left
+alone, he seldom failed voluntarily to show himself on the ludicrous
+side.
+
+At one hour after noon, the turnkey, true to his word, supplied the
+prisoners with a very tolerable dinner and a flask of well-flavoured
+though light claret; which the old man, who was something of a bon-
+vivant, regretted to observe, was nearly as diminutive as himself. The
+evening also passed away, but not without continued symptoms of
+garrulity on the part of Geoffrey Hudson.
+
+It is true these were of a graver character than he had hitherto
+exhibited, for when the flask was empty, he repeated a long Latin
+prayer. But the religious act in which he had been engaged, only gave
+his discourse a more serious turn than belonged to his former themes,
+of war, lady's love, and courtly splendour.
+
+The little Knight harangued, at first on polemical points of divinity,
+and diverged from this thorny path, into the neighbouring and twilight
+walk of mysticism. He talked of secret warnings--of the predictions of
+sad-eyed prophets--of the visits of monitory spirits, and the
+Rosicrucian secrets of the Cabala; all which topics he treated of with
+such apparent conviction, nay, with so many appeals to personal
+experience, that one would have supposed him a member of the
+fraternity of gnomes, or fairies, whom he resembled so much in point
+of size.
+
+In short, he persevered for a stricken hour in such a torrent of
+unnecessary tattle, as determined Peveril, at all events, to endeavour
+to procure a separate lodging. Having repeated his evening prayers in
+Latin, as formerly (for the old gentleman was a Catholic, which was
+the sole cause of his falling under suspicion), he set off on a new
+score, as they were undressing, and continued to prattle until he had
+fairly talked both himself and his companion to sleep.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+ Of airy tongues that syllable men's names.
+ --COMUS.
+
+Julian had fallen asleep, with his brain rather filled with his own
+sad reflections, than with the mystical lore of the little Knight; and
+yet it seemed as if in his visions the latter had been more present to
+his mind than the former.
+
+He dreamed of gliding spirits, gibbering phantoms, bloody hands,
+which, dimly seen by twilight, seemed to beckon him forward like
+errant-knight on sad adventure bound. More than once he started from
+his sleep, so lively was the influence of these visions on his
+imagination; and he always awaked under the impression that some one
+stood by his bedside. The chillness of his ankles, the weight and
+clatter of the fetters, as he turned himself on his pallet, reminded
+him on these occasions where he was, and under what circumstances. The
+extremity to which he saw all that was dear to him at present reduced,
+struck a deeper cold on his heart than the iron upon his limbs; nor
+could he compose himself again to rest without a mental prayer to
+Heaven for protection. But when he had been for a third time awakened
+from repose by these thick-stirring fancies, his distress of mind
+vented itself in speech, and he was unable to suppress the almost
+despairing ejaculation, "God have mercy upon us!"
+
+"Amen!" answered a voice as sweet and "soft as honey dew," which
+sounded as if the words were spoken close by his bedside.
+
+The natural inference was, that Geoffrey Hudson, his companion in
+calamity, had echoed the prayer which was so proper to the situation
+of both. But the tone of voice was so different from the harsh and
+dissonant sounds of the dwarf's enunciation, that Peveril was
+impressed with the certainty it could not proceed from Hudson. He was
+struck with involuntary terror, for which he could give no sufficient
+reason; and it was not without an effort that he was able to utter the
+question, "Sir Geoffrey, did you speak?"
+
+No answer was returned. He repeated the question louder; and the same
+silver-toned voice, which had formerly said "/Amen/" to his prayers,
+answered to his interrogatory, "Your companion will not awake while I
+am here."
+
+"And who are you?--What seek you?--How came you into this place?" said
+Peveril, huddling, eagerly, question upon question.
+
+"I am a wretched being, but one who loves you well.--I come for your
+good.--Concern yourself no farther."
+
+It now rushed on Julian's mind that he had heard of persons possessed
+of the wonderful talent of counterfeiting sounds to such accuracy,
+that they could impose on their hearers the belief, that they
+proceeded from a point of the apartment entirely opposite to that
+which the real speaker occupied. Persuaded that he had now gained the
+depth of the mystery, he replied, "This trifling, Sir Geoffrey, is
+unseasonable. Say what you have to say in your own voice and manner.
+These apish pleasantries do not become midnight in a Newgate dungeon."
+
+"But the being who speaks with you," answered the voice, "is fitted
+for the darkest hour, and the most melancholy haunts."
+
+Impatient of suspense, and determined to satisfy his curiosity, Julian
+jumped at once from his pallet, hoping to secure the speaker, whose
+voice indicated he was so near. But he altogether failed in his
+attempt, and grasped nothing save thin air.
+
+For a turn or two, Peveril shuffled at random about the room, with his
+arms extended; and then at last recollected, that with the impediment
+of his shackles, and the noise which necessarily accompanied his
+motions, and announced where he was, it would be impossible for him to
+lay hands on any one who might be disposed to keep out of his reach.
+He therefore endeavoured to return to his bed; but, in groping for his
+way, lighted first on that of his fellow-prisoner. The little captive
+slept deep and heavy, as was evinced from his breathing; and upon
+listening a moment, Julian became again certain, either that his
+companion was the most artful of ventriloquists and of dissemblers, or
+that there was actually within the precincts of that guarded chamber,
+some third being, whose very presence there seemed to intimate that it
+belonged not to the ordinary line of humanity.
+
+Julian was no ready believer in the supernatural; but that age was
+very far from being so incredulous concerning ghostly occurrences as
+our own; and it was no way derogatory to his good sense, that he
+shared the prejudices of his time. His hair began to bristle, and the
+moisture to stand on his brow, as he called on his companion to awake,
+for Heaven's sake.
+
+The dwarf answered--but he spoke without awaking.--"The day may dawn
+and be d--d. Tell the master of the horse I will not go to the
+hunting, unless I have the little black jennet."
+
+"I tell you," said Julian, "there is some one in the apartment. Have
+you not a tinder-box to strike a light?"
+
+"I care not how slight my horse be," replied the slumberer, pursuing
+his own train of ideas, which, doubtless, carried him back to the
+green woods of Windsor, and the royal deer-hunts which he had
+witnessed there. "I am not overweight--I will not ride that great
+Holstein brute, that I must climb up to by a ladder, and then sit on
+his back like a pin-cushion on an elephant."
+
+Julian at length put his hand to the sleeper's shoulder, and shook
+him, so as to awake him from his dream; when, after two or three
+snorts and groans, the dwarf asked peevishly, what the devil ailed
+him?
+
+"The devil himself, for what I know," said Peveril, "is at this very
+moment in the room here beside us."
+
+The dwarf on this information started up, crossed himself, and began
+to hammer a flint and steel with all despatch, until he had lighted a
+little piece of candle, which he said was consecrated to Saint
+Bridget, and as powerful as the herb called /fuga dæmonum/, or the
+liver of the fish burnt by Tobit in the house of Raguel, for chasing
+all goblins, and evil or dubious spirits, from the place of its
+radiance; "if, indeed," as the dwarf carefully guarded his
+proposition, "they existed anywhere, save in the imagination of his
+fellow-prisoner."
+
+Accordingly, the apartment was no sooner enlightened by this holy
+candle's end, than Julian began to doubt the evidence of his own ears;
+for not only was there no one in the room save Sir Geoffrey Hudson and
+himself, but all the fastenings of the door were so secure, that it
+seemed impossible that they could have been opened and again fixed,
+without a great deal of noise, which, on the last occasion at least,
+could not possibly have escaped his ears, seeing that he must have
+been on his feet, and employed in searching the chamber, when the
+unknown, if an earthly being, was in the act of retreating from it.
+
+Julian gazed for a moment with great earnestness, and no little
+perplexity, first on the bolted door, then on the grated window; and
+began to accuse his own imagination of having played him an unpleasant
+trick. He answered little to the questions of Hudson, and returning to
+his bed, heard, in silence, a long studied oration on the merits of
+Saint Bridget, which comprehended the greater part of her long-winded
+legend, and concluded with the assurance, that, from all accounts
+preserved of her, that holy saint was the least of all possible women,
+except those of the pigmy kind.
+
+By the time the dwarf had ceased to speak, Julian's desire of sleep
+had returned; and after a few glances around the apartment, which was
+still illuminated by the expiring beams of the holy taper, his eyes
+were again closed in forgetfulness, and his repose was not again
+disturbed in the course of that night.
+
+Morning dawns on Newgate, as well as on the freest mountain-turf which
+Welshman or wild-goat ever trode; but in so different a fashion, that
+the very beams of heaven's precious sun, when they penetrate into the
+recesses of the prison-house, have the air of being committed to jail.
+Still, with the light of day around him, Peveril easily persuaded
+himself of the vanity of his preceding night's visions; and smiled
+when he reflected that fancies, similar to those to which his ear was
+often exposed in the Isle of Man, had been able to arrange themselves
+in a manner so impressive, when he heard them from the mouth of so
+singular a character as Hudson, and in the solitude of a prison.
+
+Before Julian had awaked, the dwarf had already quitted his bed, and
+was seated in the chimney-corner of the apartment, where, with his own
+hands, he had arranged a morsel of fire, partly attending to the
+simmering of a small pot, which he had placed on the flame, partly
+occupied with a huge folio volume which lay on the table before him,
+and seemed well-nigh as tall and bulky as himself. He was wrapped up
+in the dusky crimson cloak already mentioned, which served him for a
+morning-gown, as well as a mantle against the cold, and which
+corresponded with a large montero-cap, that enveloped his head. The
+singularity of his features, and of the eyes, armed with spectacles,
+which were now cast on the subject of his studies, now directed
+towards his little cauldron, would have tempted Rembrandt to exhibit
+him on canvas, either in the character of an alchymist, or of a
+necromancer, engaged in some strange experiment, under the direction
+of one of the huge manuals which treat of the theory of these mystic
+arts.
+
+The attention of the dwarf was bent, however, upon a more domestic
+object. He was only preparing soup, of no unsavoury quality, for
+breakfast, which he invited Peveril to partake with him. "I am an old
+soldier," he said, "and, I must add, an old prisoner; and understand
+how to shift for myself better than you can do, young man.--Confusion
+to the scoundrel Clink, he has put the spice-box out of my reach!--
+Will you hand it me from the mantelpiece?--I will teach you, as the
+French have it, /faire la cuisine;/ and then, if you please, we will
+divide, like brethren, the labours of our prison house."
+
+Julian readily assented to the little man's friendly proposal, without
+interposing any doubt as to his continuing an inmate of the same cell.
+Truth is, that although, upon the whole, he was inclined to regard the
+whispering voice of the preceding evening as the impression of his own
+excited fancy, he felt, nevertheless, curiosity to see how a second
+night was to pass over in the same cell; and the tone of the invisible
+intruder, which at midnight had been heard by him with terror, now
+excited, on recollection, a gentle and not unpleasing species of
+agitation--the combined effect of awe, and of awakened curiosity.
+
+Days of captivity have little to mark them as they glide away. That
+which followed the night which we have described afforded no
+circumstance of note. The dwarf imparted to his youthful companion a
+volume similar to that which formed his own studies, and which proved
+to be a tome of one of Scuderi's now forgotten romances, of which
+Geoffrey Hudson was a great admirer, and which were then very
+fashionable both at the French and English Courts; although they
+contrive to unite in their immense folios all the improbabilities and
+absurdities of the old romances of chivalry, without that tone of
+imagination which pervades them, and all the metaphysical absurdities
+which Cowley and the poets of the age had heaped upon the passion of
+love, like so many load of small coal upon a slender fire, which it
+smothers instead of aiding.
+
+But Julian had no alternative, saving only to muse over the sorrows of
+Artamenes and Mandane, or on the complicated distresses of his own
+situation; and in these disagreeable divertisements, the morning crept
+through as it could.
+
+Noon first, and thereafter nightfall, were successively marked by a
+brief visit from their stern turnkey, who, with noiseless step and
+sullen demeanour, did in silence the necessary offices about the meals
+of the prisoners, exchanging with them as few words as an official in
+the Spanish Inquisition might have permitted himself upon a similar
+occasion. With the same taciturn gravity, very different from the
+laughing humour into which he had been surprised on a former occasion,
+he struck their fetters with a small hammer, to ascertain, by the
+sound thus produced, whether they had been tampered with by file or
+otherwise. He next mounted on a table, to make the same experiment on
+the window-grating.
+
+Julian's heart throbbed; for might not one of those grates have been
+so tampered with as to give entrance to the nocturnal visitant? But
+they returned to the experienced ear of Master Clink, when he struck
+them in turn with the hammer, a clear and ringing sound, which assured
+him of their security.
+
+"It would be difficult for any one to get in through these defences,"
+said Julian, giving vent in words to his own feelings.
+
+"Few wish that," answered the surly groom, misconstruing what was
+passing in Peveril's mind; "and let me tell you, master, folks will
+find it quite as difficult to get out." He retired, and night came on.
+
+The dwarf, who took upon himself for the day the whole duties of the
+apartment, trundled about the room, making a most important clatter as
+he extinguished their fire, and put aside various matters which had
+been in use in the course of the day, talking to himself all the while
+in a tone of no little consequence, occasionally grounded on the
+dexterity with which an old soldier could turn his hand to anything.
+Then came the repetition of his accustomed prayers; but his
+disposition to converse did not, as on the former occasion, revive
+after his devotions. On the contrary, long before Julian had closed an
+eye, the heavy breathing from Sir Geoffrey Hudson's pallet declared
+that the dwarf was already in the arms of Morpheus.
+
+Amid the total darkness of the apartment, and with a longing desire,
+and at the same time no small fear, for the recurrence of the
+mysterious address of the preceding evening, Julian lay long awake
+without his thoughts receiving any interruption save when the clock
+told the passing hour from the neighbouring steeple of St. Sepulchre.
+At length he sunk into slumber; but had not slept to his judgment
+above an hour, when he was roused by the sound which his waking ear
+had so long expected in vain.
+
+"Can you sleep?--Will you sleep?--Dare you sleep?" were the questions
+impressed on his ear, in the same clear, soft, and melodious voice,
+which had addressed him on the preceding night.
+
+"Who is it asks me the question?" answered Julian. "But be the
+questioner good or evil, I reply that I am a guiltless prisoner; and
+that innocence may wish and dare to sleep soundly."
+
+"Ask no questions of me," said the voice; "neither attempt to discover
+who speaks to you; and be assured that folly alone can sleep, with
+fraud around and danger before him."
+
+"Can you, who tell me of dangers, counsel me how to combat or how to
+avoid them?" said Julian.
+
+"My power is limited," said the voice; "yet something I can do, as the
+glow-worm can show a precipice. But you must confide in me."
+
+"Confidence must beget confidence," answered Julian. "I cannot repose
+trust in I know not what or whom."
+
+"Speak not so loud," replied the voice, sinking almost into a whisper.
+
+"Last night you said my companion would not awake," said Julian.
+
+"To-night I warrant not that he shall sleep," said the voice. And as
+it spoke, the hoarse, snatching, discordant tones of the dwarf were
+heard, demanding of Julian why he talked in his sleep--wherefore he
+did not rest himself, and let other people rest--and, finally, whether
+his visions of last night were returned upon him again?
+
+"Say yes," said the voice in a whisper, so low, yet so distinct, that
+Julian almost doubted whether it was not an echo of his own thought.--
+"Say but yes--and I part to return no more!"
+
+In desperate circumstances men look to strange and unusual remedies;
+and although unable to calculate the chances of advantage which this
+singular communication opened to him, Julian did not feel inclined to
+let them at once escape from him. He answered the dwarf, that he had
+been troubled by an alarming dream.
+
+"I could have sworn it, from the sound of your voice," said Hudson.
+"It is strange, now, that you overgrown men never possess the extreme
+firmness of nerves proper to us who are cast in a more compact mould.
+My own voice retains its masculine sounds on all occasions. Dr.
+Cockerel was of opinion, that there was the same allowance of nerve
+and sinew to men of every size, and that nature spun the stock out
+thinner or stronger, according to the extent of surface which they
+were to cover. Hence, the least creatures are oftentimes the
+strongest. Place a beetle under a tall candlestick, and the insect
+will move it by its efforts to get out; which is, in point of
+comparative strength, as if one of us should shake his Majesty's
+prison of Newgate by similar struggles. Cats also, and weasels, are
+creatures of greater exertion or endurance than dogs or sheep. And in
+general, you may remark, that little men dance better, and are more
+unwearied under exertion of every kind, than those to whom their own
+weight must necessarily be burdensome. I respect you, Master Peveril,
+because I am told you have killed one of those gigantic fellows, who
+go about swaggering as if their souls were taller than ours, because
+their noses are nearer to the clouds by a cubit or two. But do not
+value yourself on this as anything very unusual. I would have you to
+know it hath been always thus; and that, in the history of all ages,
+the clean, tight, dapper little fellow, hath proved an overmatch for
+his bulky antagonist. I need only instance out of Holy Writ, the
+celebrated downfall of Goliah, and of another lubbard, who had more
+fingers to his hand, and more inches to his stature, than ought to
+belong to an honest man, and who was slain by a nephew of good King
+David; and of many others whom I do not remember; nevertheless they
+were all Philistines of gigantic stature. In the classics, also, you
+have Tydeus, and other tight, compact heroes, whose diminutive bodies
+were the abode of large minds. And indeed you may observe, in sacred
+as well as profane history, that your giants are ever heretics and
+blasphemers, robbers and oppressors, outragers of the female sex, and
+scoffers at regular authority. Such were Gog and Magog, whom our
+authentic chronicles vouch to have been slain near to Plymouth, by the
+good little Knight Corineus, who gave name to Cornwall. Ascaparte also
+was subdued by Bevis, and Colbrand by Guy, as Southampton and Warwick
+can testify. Like unto these was the giant Hoel, slain in Bretagne by
+King Arthur. And if Ryence, King of North Wales, who was done to death
+by the same worthy champion of Christendom, be not actually termed a
+giant, it is plain he was little better, since he required twenty-four
+kings' beards, which were then worn full and long, to fur his gown;
+whereby computing each beard at eighteen inches (and you cannot allow
+less for a beard-royal), and supposing only the front of the gown
+trimmed therewith, as we use ermine; and that the back was mounted and
+lined, instead of cat-skins and squirrels' fur, with the beards of
+earls and dukes, and other inferior dignitaries--may amount to--But I
+will work the question to-morrow."
+
+Nothing is more soporific to any (save a philosopher or moneyed man)
+than the operation of figures; and when in bed, the effect is
+irresistible. Sir Geoffrey fell asleep in the act of calculating King
+Ryence's height, from the supposed length of his mantle. Indeed, had
+he not stumbled on this abstruse subject of calculation, there is no
+guessing how long he might have held forth upon the superiority of men
+of little stature, which was so great a favourite with him, that,
+numerous as such narratives are, the dwarf had collected almost all
+the instances of their victories over giants, which history or romance
+afforded.
+
+No sooner had unequivocal signs of the dwarf's sound slumbers reached
+Julian's ears, than he began to listen eagerly for the renewal of that
+mysterious communication which was at once interesting and awful.
+Even whilst Hudson was speaking, he had, instead of bestowing his
+attention upon his eulogy on persons of low statue, kept his ears on
+watchful guard to mark if possible, the lightest sounds of any sort
+which might occur in the apartment; so that he thought it scarce
+possible that even a fly should have left it withouts its motion being
+overheard. If, therefore, his invisible monitor was indeed a creature
+of this world--an opinion which Julian's sound sense rendered him
+unwilling to renounce--that being could not have left the apartment;
+and he waited impatiently for a renewal of their communication. He was
+disappointed; not the slightest sound reached his ear; and the
+nocturnal visitor, if still in the room, appeared determined on
+silence.
+
+It was in vain that Peveril coughed, hemmed, and gave other symptoms
+of being awake; at length, such became his impatience, that he
+resolved, at any risk, to speak first, in hopes of renewing the
+communication betwixt them. "Whoever thou art," he said, in a voice
+loud enough to be heard by a waking person, but not so high as to
+disturb his sleeping companion--"Whoever, or whatever thou art, thou
+hast shown some interest in the fate of such a castaway as Julian
+Peveril, speak once more, I conjure thee; and be your communication
+for good or evil, believe me, I am equally prepared to abide the
+issue."
+
+No answer of any kind was returned to this invocation; nor did the
+least sound intimate the presence of the being to whom it was so
+solemnly addressed.
+
+"I speak in vain," said Julian; "and perhaps I am but invoking that
+which is insensible of human feeling, or which takes a malign pleasure
+in human suffering."
+
+There was a gentle and half-broken sigh from a corner of the
+apartment, which, answering to this exclamation, seemed to contradict
+the imputation which it conveyed.
+
+Julian, naturally courageous, and familiarised by this time to his
+situation, raised himself in bed, and stretched out his arm, to repeat
+his adjuration, when the voice, as if alarmed at his action and
+energy, whispered, in a tone more hurried than that which it had
+hitherto used, "Be still--move not--or I am mute for ever!"
+
+"It is then a mortal being who is present with me," was the natural
+inference of Julian, "and one who is probably afraid of being
+detected; I have then some power over my visitor, though I must be
+cautious how I use it.--If your intents are friendly," he proceeded,
+"there was never a time in which I lacked friends more, or would be
+more grateful for kindness. The fate of all who are dear to me is
+weighed in the balance, and with worlds would I buy the tidings of
+their safety."
+
+"I have said my power is limited," replied the voice. "/You/ I may be
+able to preserve--the fate of your friends is beyond my control."
+
+"Let me at least know it," said Julian; "and, be it as it may, I will
+not shun to share it."
+
+"For whom would you inquire?" said the soft, sweet voice, not without
+a tremulousness of accent, as if the question was put with diffident
+reluctance.
+
+"My parents," said Julian, after a moment's hesitation; "how fare
+they?--What will be their fate?"
+
+"They fare as the fort under which the enemy has dug a deadly mine.
+The work may have cost the labour of years, such were the impediments
+to the engineers; but Time brings opportunity upon its wings."
+
+"And what will be the event?" said Peveril.
+
+"Can I read the future," answered the voice, "save by comparison with
+past?--Who has been hunted on these stern and unmitigable accusations,
+but has been at last brought to bay? Did high and noble birth,
+honoured age, and approved benevolence, save the unfortunate Lord
+Stafford? Did learning, capacity of intrigue, or high Court favour,
+redeem Coleman, although the confidential servant of the heir
+presumptive of the Crown of England?--Did subtilty and genius, and
+exertions of a numerous sect, save Fenwicke, or Whitbread, or any
+other of the accused priests?--Were Groves, Pickering, or the other
+humble wretches who have suffered, safe in their obscurity? There is
+no condition in life, no degree of talent, no form of principle, which
+affords protection against an accusation, which levels conditions,
+confounds characters, renders men's virtues their sins, and rates them
+as dangerous in proportion as they have influence, though attained in
+the noblest manner, and used for the best purposes. Call such a one
+but an accessory to the Plot--let him be mouthed in the evidence of
+Oates or Dugdale--and the blindest shall foresee the issue of their
+trial."
+
+"Prophet of Evil!" said Julian, "my father has a shield invulnerable
+to protect him. He is innocent."
+
+"Let him plead his innocence at the bar of Heaven," said the voice;
+"it will serve him little where Scroggs presides."
+
+"Still I fear not," said Julian, counterfeiting more confidence than
+he really possessed; "my father's cause will be pleaded before twelve
+Englishmen."
+
+"Better before twelve wild beasts," answered the Invisible, "than
+before Englishmen, influenced with party prejudice, passion, and
+epidemic terror of an imaginary danger. They are bold in guilt in
+proportion to the number amongst whom the crime is divided."
+
+"Ill-omened speaker," said Julian, "thine is indeed a voice fitted
+only to sound with the midnight bell, and the screeching owl. Yet
+speak again. Tell me, if thou canst"--(He would have said of Alice
+Bridgenorth, but the word would not leave his tongue)--"Tell me," he
+said, "if the noble house of Derby----"
+
+"Let them keep their rock like the sea-fowl in the tempest; and it may
+so fall out," answered the voice, "that their rock may be a safe
+refuge. But there is blood on their ermine; and revenge has dogged
+them for many a year, like a bloodhound that hath been distanced in
+the morning chase, but may yet grapple the quarry ere the sun shall
+set. At present, however, they are safe.--Am I now to speak farther on
+your own affairs, which involve little short of your life and honour?"
+
+"There is," said Julian, "one, from whom I was violently parted
+yesterday; if I knew but of her safety, I were little anxious for my
+own."
+
+"One!" returned the voice, "only /one/ from whom you were parted
+yesterday?"
+
+"But in parting from whom," said Julian, "I felt separated from all
+happiness which the world can give me."
+
+"You mean Alice Bridgenorth," said the Invisible, with some bitterness
+of accent; "but her you will never see more. Your own life and hers
+depend on your forgetting each other."
+
+"I cannot purchase my own life at that price," replied Julian.
+
+"Then DIE in your obstinacy," returned the Invisible; nor to all the
+entreaties which he used was he able obtain another word in the course
+of that remarkable night.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+ A short hough'd man, but full of pride.
+ --ALLAN RAMSAY.
+
+The blood of Julian Peveril was so much fevered by the state in which
+his invisible visitor left him, that he was unable, for a length of
+time, to find repose. He swore to himself, that he would discover and
+expose the nocturnal demon which stole on his hours of rest, only to
+add gall to bitterness, and to pour poison into those wounds which
+already smarted so severely. There was nothing which his power
+extended to, that, in his rage, he did not threaten. He proposed a
+closer and a more rigorous survey of his cell, so that he might
+discover the mode by which his tormentor entered, were it as
+unnoticeable as an auger-hole. If his diligence should prove
+unavailing, he determined to inform the jailers, to whom it could not
+be indifferent to know, that their prison was open to such
+intrusions. He proposed to himself, to discover from their looks
+whether they were already privy to these visits; and if so, to
+denounce them to the magistrates, to the judges, to the House of
+Commons, was the least that his resentment proposed. Sleep surprised
+his worn-out frame in the midst of his projects of discovery and
+vengeance, and, as frequently happens, the light of the ensuing day
+proved favourable to calmer resolutions.
+
+He now reflected that he had no ground to consider the motives of his
+visitor as positively malevolent, although he had afforded him little
+encouragement to hope for assistance on the points he had most at
+heart. Towards himself, there had been expressed a decided feeling,
+both of sympathy and interest; if through means of these he could
+acquire his liberty, he might, when possessed of freedom, turn it to
+the benefit of those for whom he was more interested than for his own
+welfare. "I have behaved like a fool," he said; "I ought to have
+temporised with this singular being, learned the motives of its
+interference, and availed myself of its succour, provided I could do
+so without any dishonourable conditions. It would have been always
+time enough to reject such when they should have been proposed to me."
+
+So saying, he was forming projects for regulating his intercourse with
+the stranger more prudently, in case their communication should be
+renewed, when his meditations were interrupted by the peremptory
+summons of Sir Geoffrey Hudson, that he would, in his turn, be pleased
+to perform those domestic duties of their common habitation, which the
+dwarf had yesterday taken upon himself.
+
+There was no resisting a request so reasonable, and Peveril
+accordingly rose and betook himself to the arrangement of their
+prison, while Sir Hudson, perched upon a stool from which his legs did
+not by half-way reach the ground, sat in a posture of elegant languor,
+twangling upon an old broken-winded guitar, and singing songs in
+Spanish, Moorish, and Lingua Franca, most detestably out of tune. He
+failed not, at the conclusion of each ditty, to favour Julian with
+some account of what he had sung, either in the way of translation, or
+historical anecdote, or as the lay was connected with some peculiar
+part of his own eventful history, in the course of which the poor
+little man had chanced to have been taken by a Sallee rover, and
+carried captive into Morocco.
+
+This part of his life Hudson used to make the era of many strange
+adventures; and, if he could himself be believed, he had made wild
+work among the affections of the Emperor's seraglio. But, although few
+were in a situation to cross-examine him on gallantries and intrigues
+of which the scene was so remote, the officers of the garrison of
+Tangier had a report current amongst them, that the only use to which
+the tyrannical Moors could convert a slave of such slender corporeal
+strength, was to employ him to lie a-bed all day and hatch turkey's
+eggs. The least allusion to this rumour used to drive him well-nigh
+frantic, and the fatal termination of his duel with young Crofts,
+which began in wanton mirth, and ended in bloodshed, made men more coy
+than they had formerly been, of making the fiery little hero the
+subject of their raillery.
+
+While Peveril did the drudgery of the apartment, the dwarf remained
+much at his ease, carolling in the manner we have described; but when
+he beheld Julian attempting the task of the cook, Sir Geoffrey Hudson
+sprang from the stool on which he sat /en Signor/, at the risk of
+breaking both his guitar and his neck, exclaiming, "That he would
+rather prepare breakfast every morning betwixt this and the day of
+judgment, than commit a task of such consequence to an inexperienced
+bungler like his companion."
+
+The young man gladly resigned his task to the splenetic little Knight,
+and only smiled at his resentment when he added, that, to be but a
+mortal of middle stature, Julian was as stupid as a giant. Leaving the
+dwarf to prepare the meal after his own pleasure, Peveril employed
+himself in measuring the room with his eyes on every side, and in
+endeavouring to discover some private entrance, such as might admit
+his midnight visitant, and perhaps could be employed in case of need
+for effecting his own escape. The floor next engaged a scrutiny
+equally minute, but more successful.
+
+Close by his own pallet, and dropped in such a manner that he must
+have seen it sooner but for the hurry with which he obeyed the summons
+of the impatient dwarf, lay a slip of paper, sealed, and directed with
+the initial letters, J.P., which seemed to ascertain that it was
+addressed to himself. He took the opportunity of opening it while the
+soup was in the very moment of projection, and the full attention of
+his companion was occupied by what he, in common with wiser and taller
+men, considered as one of the principal occupations of life; so that,
+without incurring his observation or awaking his curiosity, Julian had
+the opportunity to read as follows:--
+
+
+ "Rash and infatuated as you are, there is one who would forfeit
+ much to stand betwixt you and your fate. You are to-morrow to be
+ removed to the Tower, where your life cannot be assured for a
+ single day; for, during the few hours you have been in London, you
+ have provoked a resentment which is not easily slaked. There is
+ but one chance for you,--renounce A.B.--think no more of her. If
+ that be impossible, think of her but as one whom you can never see
+ again. If your heart can resolve to give up an attachment which it
+ should never have entertained, and which it would be madness to
+ cherish longer, make your acquiescence in this condition known by
+ putting on your hat a white band, or white feather, or knot of
+ ribbon of the same colour, whichever you may most easily come by.
+ A boat will, in that case, run, as if by accident, on board of
+ that which is to convey you to the Tower. Do you in the confusion
+ jump overboard, and swim to the Southwark side of the Thames.
+ Friends will attend there to secure your escape, and you will find
+ yourself with one who will rather lose character and life, than
+ that a hair of your head should fall to the ground; but who, if
+ you reject the warning, can only think of you as of the fool who
+ perishes in his folly. May Heaven guide you to a sound judgment of
+ your condition! So prays one who would be your friend, if you
+ pleased,
+ "UNKNOWN."
+
+
+The Tower!--it was a word of terror, even more so than a civil prison;
+for how many passages to death did that dark structure present! The
+severe executions which it had witnessed in preceding reigns, were not
+perhaps more numerous than the secret murders which had taken place
+within its walls; yet Peveril did not a moment hesitate on the part
+which he had to perform. "I will share my father's fate," he said; "I
+thought but of him when they brought me hither; I will think of
+nothing else when they convey me to yonder still more dreadful place
+of confinement; it is his, and it is but meet that it should be his
+son's.--And thou, Alice Bridgenorth, the day that I renounce thee, may
+I be held alike a traitor and a dastard!--Go, false adviser, and share
+the fate of seducers and heretical teachers!"
+
+He could not help uttering this last expression aloud, as he threw the
+billet into the fire, with a vehemence which made the dwarf start with
+surprise. "What say you of burning heretics, young man?" he exclaimed;
+"by my faith, your zeal must be warmer than mine, if you talk on such
+a subject when the heretics are the prevailing number. May I measure
+six feet without my shoes, but the heretics would have the best of it
+if we came to that work. Beware of such words."
+
+"Too late to beware of words spoken and heard," said the turnkey, who,
+opening the door with unusual precautions to avoid noise, had stolen
+unperceived into the room; "However, Master Peveril has behaved like a
+gentlemen, and I am no tale-bearer, on condition he will consider I
+have had trouble in his matters."
+
+Julian had no alternative but to take the fellow's hint and administer
+a bribe, with which Master Clink was so well satisfied, that he
+exclaimed, "It went to his heart to take leave of such a kind-natured
+gentleman, and that he could have turned the key on him for twenty
+years with pleasure. But the best friends must part."
+
+"I am to be removed, then?" said Julian.
+
+"Ay, truly, master, the warrant is come from the Council."
+
+"To convey me to the Tower."
+
+"Whew!" exclaimed the officer of the law--"who the devil told you
+that? But since you do know it, there is no harm to say ay. So make
+yourself ready to move immediately; and first, hold out your dew-
+beaters till I take off the darbies."
+
+"Is that usual?" said Peveril, stretching out his feet as the fellow
+directed, while his fetters were unlocked.
+
+"Why, ay, master, these fetters belong to the keeper; they are not a-
+going to send them to the Lieutenant, I trow. No, no, the warders must
+bring their own gear with them; they get none here, I promise them.
+Nevertheless, if your honour hath a fancy to go in fetters, as
+thinking it may move compassion of your case----"
+
+"I have no intention to make my case seem worse than it is," said
+Julian; whilst at the same time it crossed his mind that his anonymous
+correspondent must be well acquainted both with his own personal
+habits, since the letter proposed a plan of escape which could only be
+executed by a bold swimmer, and with the fashions of prison, since it
+was foreseen that he would not be ironed on his passage to the Tower.
+The turnkey's next speech made him carry conjecture still farther.
+
+"There is nothing in life I would not do for so brave a guest," said
+Clink; "I would nab one of my wife's ribbons for you, if your honour
+had the fancy to mount the white flag in your beaver."
+
+"To what good purpose?" said Julian, shortly connecting, as was
+natural, the man's proposed civility with the advice given and the
+signal prescribed in the letter.
+
+"Nay, to no good purpose I know of," said the turnkey; "only it is the
+fashion to seem white and harmless--a sort of token of not-guiltiness,
+as I may say, which folks desire to show the world, whether they be
+truly guilty or not; but I cannot say that guiltiness or not-
+guiltiness argufies much, saving they be words in the verdict."
+
+"Strange," thought Peveril, although the man seemed to speak quite
+naturally, and without any double meaning, "strange that all should
+apparently combine to realise the plan of escape, could I but give my
+consent to it! And had I not better consent? Whoever does so much for
+me must wish me well, and a well-wisher would never enforce the unjust
+conditions on which I am required to consent to my liberation."
+
+But this misgiving of his resolution was but for a moment. He speedily
+recollected, that whoever aided him in escaping, must be necessarily
+exposed to great risk, and had a right to name the stipulation on
+which he was willing to incur it. He also recollected that falsehood
+is equally base, whether expressed in words or in dumb show; and that
+he should lie as flatly by using the signal agreed upon in evidence of
+his renouncing Alice Bridgenorth, as he would in direct terms if he
+made such renunciation without the purpose of abiding by it.
+
+"If you would oblige me," he said to the turnkey, "let me have a piece
+of black silk or crape for the purpose you mention."
+
+"Of crape!" said the fellow; "what should that signify? Why, the bien
+morts, who bing out to tour at you,[*] will think you a chimney-
+sweeper on Mayday."
+
+[*] The smart girls, who turn out to look at you.
+
+"It will show my settled sorrow," said Julian, "as well as my
+determined resolution."
+
+"As you will, sir," answered the fellow; "I'll provide you with a
+black rag of some kind or other. So, now; let us be moving."
+
+Julian intimated his readiness to attend him, and proceeded to bid
+farewell to his late companion, the stout Geoffrey Hudson. The parting
+was not without emotion on both sides, more particularly on that of
+the poor little man, who had taken a particular liking to the
+companion of whom he was now about to be deprived. "Fare ye well," he
+said, "my young friend," taking Julian's hand in both his own uplifted
+palms, in which action he somewhat resembled the attitude of a sailor
+pulling a rope overhead,--"Many in my situation would think himself
+wronged, as a soldier and servant of the king's chamber, in seeing you
+removed to a more honourable prison than that which I am limited
+unto. But, I thank God, I grudge you not the Tower, nor the rocks of
+Scilly, nor even Carisbrooke Castle, though the latter was graced with
+the captivity of my blessed and martyred master. Go where you will, I
+wish you all the distinction of an honourable prison-house, and a safe
+and speedy deliverance in God's own time. For myself, my race is near
+a close, and that because I fall martyr to the over-tenderness of my
+own heart. There is a circumstance, good Master Julian Peveril, which
+should have been yours, had Providence permitted our farther intimacy,
+but it fits not the present hour. Go, then, my friend, and bear
+witness in life and death, that Geoffrey Hudson scorns the insults and
+persecutions of fortune, as he would despise, and has often despised,
+the mischievous pranks of an overgrown schoolboy."
+
+So saying, he turned away, and hid his face with his little
+handkerchief, while Julian felt towards him that tragi-comic sensation
+which makes us pity the object which excites it, not the less that we
+are somewhat inclined to laugh amid our sympathy. The jailer made him
+a signal, which Peveril obeyed, leaving the dwarf to disconsolate
+solitude.
+
+As Julian followed the keeper through the various windings of his
+penal labyrinth, the man observed, that "he was a rum fellow, that
+little Sir Geoffrey, and, for gallantry, a perfect Cock of Bantam, for
+as old as he was. There was a certain gay wench," he said, "that had
+hooked him; but what she could make of him, save she carried him to
+Smithfield, and took money for him, as for a motion of puppets, it
+was," he said, "hard to gather."
+
+Encouraged by this opening, Julian asked if his attendant knew why his
+prison was changed. "To teach you to become a King's post without
+commission," answered the fellow.
+
+He stopped in his tattle as they approached that formidable central
+point, in which lay couched on his leathern elbow-chair the fat
+commander of the fortress, stationed apparently for ever in the midst
+of his citadel, as the huge Boa is sometimes said to lie stretched as
+a guard upon the subterranean treasures of Eastern Rajas. This
+overgrown man of authority eyed Julian wistfully and sullenly, as the
+miser the guinea which he must part with, or the hungry mastiff the
+food which is carried to another kennel. He growled to himself as he
+turned the leaves of his ominous register, in order to make the
+necessary entry respecting the removal of his prisoner. "To the Tower
+--to the Tower--ay, ay, all must to the Tower--that's the fashion of
+it--free Britons to a military prison, as if we had neither bolts nor
+chains here!--I hope Parliament will have it up, this Towering work,
+that's all.--Well, the youngster will take no good by the change, and
+that is one comfort."
+
+Having finished at once his official act of registration, and his
+soliloquy, he made a signal to his assistants to remove Julian, who
+was led along the same stern passages which he had traversed upon his
+entrance, to the gate of the prison, whence a coach, escorted by two
+officers of justice, conveyed him to the water-side.
+
+A boat here waited him, with four warders of the Tower, to whose
+custody he was formally resigned by his late attendants. Clink,
+however, the turnkey, with whom he was more especially acquainted, did
+not take leave of him without furnishing him with the piece of black
+crape which he requested. Peveril fixed it on his hat amid the
+whispers of his new guardians. "The gentleman is in a hurry to go into
+mourning," said one; "mayhap he had better wait till he has cause."
+
+"Perhaps others may wear mourning for him, ere he can mourn for any
+one," answered another of these functionaries.
+
+Yet notwithstanding the tenor of these whispers, their behaviour to
+their prisoner was more respectful than he had experienced from his
+former keepers, and might be termed a sullen civility. The ordinary
+officers of the law were in general rude, as having to do with felons
+of every description; whereas these men were only employed with
+persons accused of state crimes--men who were from birth and
+circumstances usually entitled to expect, and able to reward, decent
+usage.
+
+The change of keepers passed unnoticed by Julian, as did the gay and
+busy scene presented by the broad and beautiful river on which he was
+now launched. A hundred boats shot past them, bearing parties intent
+on business, or on pleasure. Julian only viewed them with the stern
+hope, that whoever had endeavoured to bribe him from his fidelity by
+the hope of freedom, might see, from the colour of the badge which he
+had assumed, how determined he was to resist the temptation presented
+to him.
+
+It was about high-water, and a stout wherry came up the river, with
+sail and oar, so directly upon that in which Julian was embarked, that
+it seemed as if likely to run her aboard. "Get your carabines ready,"
+cried the principal warder to his assistants. "What the devil can
+these scoundrels mean?"
+
+But the crew in the other boat seemed to have perceived their error,
+for they suddenly altered their course, and struck off into the middle
+stream, while a torrent of mutual abuse was exchanged betwixt them and
+the boat whose course they had threatened to impede.
+
+"The Unknown has kept his faith," said Julian to himself; "I too have
+kept mine."
+
+It even seemed to him, as the boats neared each other, that he heard,
+from the other wherry, something like a stifled scream or groan; and
+when the momentary bustle was over, he asked the warder who sat next
+him, what boat that was.
+
+"Men-of-war's-men, on a frolic, I suppose," answered the warder. "I
+know no one else would be so impudent as run foul of the King's boat;
+for I am sure the fellow put the helm up on purpose. But mayhap you,
+sir, know more of the matter than I do."
+
+This insinuation effectually prevented Julian from putting farther
+questions, and he remained silent until the boat came under the dusky
+bastions of the Tower. The tide carried them up under a dark and
+lowering arch, closed at the upper end by the well-known Traitor's
+gate,[*] formed like a wicket of huge intersecting bars of wood,
+through which might be seen a dim and imperfect view of soldiers and
+warders upon duty, and of the steep ascending causeway which leads up
+from the river into the interior of the fortress. By this gate,--and
+it is the well-known circumstance which assigned its name,--those
+accused of state crimes were usually committed to the Tower. The
+Thames afforded a secret and silent mode of conveyance for
+transporting thither such whose fallen fortunes might move the
+commiseration, or whose popular qualities might excite the sympathy,
+of the public; and even where no cause for especial secrecy existed,
+the peace of the city was undisturbed by the tumult attending the
+passage of the prisoner and his guards through the most frequented
+streets.
+
+[*] See note, "Fortunes of Nigel."
+
+Yet this custom, however recommended by state policy, must have often
+struck chill upon the heart of the criminal, who thus, stolen, as it
+were, out of society, reached the place of his confinement, without
+encountering even one glance of compassion on the road; and as, from
+under the dusky arch, he landed on those flinty steps, worn by many a
+footstep anxious as his own, against which the tide lapped fitfully
+with small successive waves, and hence looked forward to the steep
+ascent into a Gothic state prison, and backward to such part of the
+river as the low-brow'd vault suffered to become visible, he must
+often have felt that he was leaving daylight, hope, and life itself,
+behind him.
+
+While the warder's challenge was made and answered, Peveril
+endeavoured to obtain information from his conductors where he was
+likely to be confined; but the answer was brief and general--"Where
+the Lieutenant should direct."
+
+"Could he not be permitted to share the imprisonment of his father,
+Sir Geoffrey Peveril?" He forgot not, on this occasion, to add the
+surname of his house.
+
+The warder, an old man of respectable appearance, stared, as if at the
+extravagance of the demand, and said bluntly, "It is impossible."
+
+"At least," said Peveril, "show me where my father is confined, that I
+may look upon the walls which separate us."
+
+"Young gentleman," said the senior warder, shaking his grey head, "I
+am sorry for you; but asking questions will do you no service. In this
+place we know nothing of fathers and sons."
+
+Yet chance seemed, in a few minutes afterwards, to offer Peveril that
+satisfaction which the rigour of his keepers was disposed to deny to
+him. As he was conveyed up the steep passage which leads under what is
+called the Wakefield Tower, a female voice, in a tone wherein grief
+and joy were indescribably mixed, exclaimed, "My son!--My dear son!"
+
+Even those who guarded Julian seemed softened by a tone of such acute
+feeling. They slackened their pace. They almost paused to permit him
+to look up towards the casement from which the sounds of maternal
+agony proceeded; but the aperture was so narrow, and so closely
+grated, that nothing was visible save a white female hand, which
+grasped one of those rusty barricadoes, as if for supporting the
+person within, while another streamed a white handkerchief, and then
+let it fall. The casement was instantly deserted.
+
+"Give it me," said Julian to the officer who lifted the handkerchief;
+"it is perhaps a mother's last gift."
+
+The old warder lifted the napkin, and looked at it with the jealous
+minuteness of one who is accustomed to detect secret correspondence in
+the most trifling acts of intercourse.
+
+"There may be writing on it with invisible ink," said one of his
+comrades.
+
+"It is wetted, but I think it is only with tears," answered the
+senior. "I cannot keep it from the poor young gentleman."
+
+"Ah, Master Coleby," said his comrade, in a gentle tone of reproach,
+"you would have been wearing a better coat than a yeoman's to-day, had
+it not been for your tender heart."
+
+"It signifies little," said old Coleby, "while my heart is true to my
+King, what I feel in discharging my duty, or what coat keeps my old
+bosom from the cold weather."
+
+Peveril, meanwhile, folded in his breast the token of his mother's
+affection which chance had favoured him with; and when placed in the
+small and solitary chamber which he was told to consider as his own
+during his residence in the Tower, he was soothed even to weeping by
+this trifling circumstance, which he could not help considering as an
+omen, that his unfortunate house was not entirely deserted by
+Providence.
+
+But the thoughts and occurrences of a prison are too uniform for a
+narrative, and we must now convey our readers into a more bustling
+scene.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+ Henceforth 'tis done--Fortune and I are friends;
+ And I must live, for Buckingham commends.
+ --POPE.
+
+The spacious mansion of the Duke of Buckingham, with the demesne
+belonging to it, originally bore the name of York House and occupied a
+large portion of the ground adjacent to the Savoy.
+
+This had been laid out by the munificence of his father, the favourite
+of Charles the First, in a most splendid manner, so as almost to rival
+Whitehall itself. But during the increasing rage for building new
+streets, and the creating of almost an additional town, in order to
+connect London and Westminster, this ground had become of very great
+value; and the second Duke of Buckingham, who was at once fond of
+scheming, and needy of money, had agreed to a plan laid before him by
+some adventurous architect, for converting the extensive grounds
+around his palace into those streets, lanes, and courts, which still
+perpetuate his name and titles; though those who live in Buckingham
+Street, Duke Street, Villiers Street, or in Of-alley (for even that
+connecting particle is locally commemorated), probably think seldom of
+the memory of the witty, eccentric, and licentious George Villiers,
+Duke of Buckingham, whose titles are preserved in the names of their
+residence and its neighbourhood.
+
+This building-plan the Duke had entered upon with all the eagerness
+which he usually attached to novelty. His gardens were destroyed--his
+pavilions levelled--his splendid stables demolished--the whole pomp of
+his suburban demesne laid waste, cumbered with ruins, and intersected
+with the foundations of new buildings and cellars, and the process of
+levelling different lines for the intended streets. But the
+undertaking, although it proved afterwards both lucrative and
+successful, met with a check at the outset, partly from want of the
+necessary funds, partly from the impatient and mercurial temper of the
+Duke, which soon carried him off in pursuit of some more new object.
+So that, though much was demolished, very little, in comparison, was
+reared up in the stead, and nothing was completed. The principal part
+of the ducal mansion still remained uninjured; but the demesne in
+which it stood bore a strange analogy to the irregular mind of its
+noble owner. Here stood a beautiful group of exotic trees and shrubs,
+the remnant of the garden, amid yawning common-sewers, and heaps of
+rubbish. In one place an old tower threatened to fall upon the
+spectator; and in another he ran the risk of being swallowed up by a
+modern vault. Grandeur of conception could be discovered in the
+undertaking, but was almost everywhere marred by poverty or negligence
+of execution. In short, the whole place was the true emblem of an
+understanding and talents run to waste, and become more dangerous than
+advantageous to society, by the want of steady principle, and the
+improvidence of the possessor.
+
+There were men who took a different view of the Duke's purpose in
+permitting his mansion to be thus surrounded, and his demesne occupied
+by modern buildings which were incomplete, and ancient which were but
+half demolished. They alleged, that, engaged as he was in so many
+mysteries of love and of politics, and having the character of the
+most daring and dangerous intriguer of his time, his Grace found it
+convenient to surround himself with this ruinous arena, into which
+officers of justice could not penetrate without some difficulty and
+hazard; and which might afford, upon occasion, a safe and secret
+shelter for such tools as were fit for desperate enterprises, and a
+private and unobserved mode of access to those whom he might have any
+special reason for receiving in secret.
+
+Leaving Peveril in the Tower, we must once more convey our readers to
+the Levee of the Duke, who, on the morning of Julian's transference to
+that fortress, thus addressed his minister-in-chief, and principal
+attendant: "I have been so pleased with your conduct in this matter,
+Jerningham, that if Old Nick were to arise in our presence, and offer
+me his best imp as a familiar in thy room, I would hold it but a poor
+compliment."
+
+"A legion of imps," said Jerningham, bowing, "could not have been more
+busy than I in your Grace's service; but if your Grace will permit me
+to say so, your whole plan was well-nigh marred by your not returning
+home till last night, or rather this morning."
+
+"And why, I pray you, sage Master Jerningham," said his Grace, "should
+I have returned home an instant sooner than my pleasure and
+convenience served?"
+
+"Nay, my Lord Duke," replied the attendant, "I know not; only, when
+you sent us word by Empson, in Chiffinch's apartment, to command us to
+make sure of the girl at any rate, and at all risks, you said you
+would be here so soon as you could get freed of the King."
+
+"Freed of the King, you rascal! What sort of phrase is that?" demanded
+the Duke.
+
+"It was Empson who used it, my lord, as coming from your Grace."
+
+"There is much very fit for my Grace to say, that misbecomes such
+mouths as Empson's or yours to repeat," answered the Duke haughtily,
+but instantly resumed his tone of familiarity, for his humour was as
+capricious as his pursuits. "But I know what thou wouldst have; first,
+your wisdom would know what became of me since thou hadst my commands
+at Chiffinch's; and next, your valour would fain sound another
+flourish of trumpets on thine own most artificial retreat, leaving thy
+comrade in the hands of the Philistines."
+
+"May it please your Grace," said Jerningham, "I did but retreat for
+the preservation of the baggage."
+
+"What! do you play at crambo with me?" said the Duke. "I would have
+you to know that the common parish fool should be whipt, were he to
+attempt to pass pun or quodlibet as a genuine jest, even amongst
+ticket-porters and hackney chairmen."
+
+"And yet I have heard your Grace indulge in the /jeu de mots/,"
+answered the attendant.
+
+"Sirrah Jerningham," answered the patron, "discard they memory, or
+keep it under correction, else it will hamper thy rise in the world.
+Thou mayst perchance have seen me also have a fancy to play at trap-
+ball, or to kiss a serving wench, or to guzzle ale and eat toasted
+cheese in a porterly whimsy; but is it fitting thou shouldst remember
+such follies? No more on't.--Hark you; how came the long lubberly
+fool, Jenkins, being a master of the noble science of defence, to
+suffer himself to be run through the body so simply by a rustic swain
+like this same Peveril?"
+
+"Please your Grace, this same Corydon is no such novice. I saw the
+onset; and, except in one hand, I never saw a sword managed with such
+life, grace, and facility."
+
+"Ay, indeed?" said the Duke, taking his own sheathed rapier in his
+hand, "I could not have thought that. I am somewhat rusted, and have
+need of breathing. Peveril is a name of note. As well go to the Barns-
+elms, or behind Montagu House, with him as with another. His father a
+rumoured plotter, too. The public would have noted it in me as
+becoming a zealous Protestant. Needful I do something to maintain my
+good name in the city, to atone for non-attendance on prayer and
+preaching. But your Laertes is fast in the Fleet; and I suppose his
+blundering blockhead of an antagonist is dead or dying."
+
+"Recovering, my lord, on the contrary," replied Jerningham; "the blade
+fortunately avoided his vitals."
+
+"D--n his vitals!" answered the Duke. "Tell him to postpone his
+recovery, or I will put him to death in earnest."
+
+"I will caution his surgeon," said Jerningham, "which will answer
+equally well."
+
+"Do so; and tell him he had better be on his own deathbed as cure his
+patient till I send him notice.--That young fellow must be let loose
+again at no rate."
+
+"There is little danger," said the attendant. "I hear some of the
+witnesses have got their net flung over him on account of some matters
+down in the north; and that he is to be translated to the Tower for
+that, and for some letters of the Countess of Derby, as rumour goes."
+
+"To the Tower let him go, and get out as he can," replied the Duke;
+"and when you hear he is fast there, let the fencing fellow recover as
+fast as the surgeon and he can mutually settle it."
+
+The Duke, having said this, took two or three turns in the apartment,
+and appeared to be in deep thought. His attendant waited the issue of
+his meditations with patience, being well aware that such moods,
+during which his mind was strongly directed in one point, were never
+of so long duration with his patron as to prove a severe burden to his
+own patience.
+
+Accordingly, after the silence of seven or eight minutes, the Duke
+broke through it, taking from the toilette a large silk purse, which
+seemed full of gold. "Jerningham," he said, "thou art a faithful
+fellow, and it would be sin not to cherish thee. I beat the King at
+Mall on his bold defiance. The honour is enough for me; and thou, my
+boy, shalt have the winnings."
+
+Jerningham pocketed the purse with due acknowledgements.
+
+"Jerningham," his Grace continued, "I know you blame me for changing
+my plans too often; and on my soul I have heard you so learned on the
+subject, that I have become of your opinion, and have been vexed at
+myself for two or three hours together, for not sticking as constantly
+to one object, as doubtless I shall, when age (touching his forehead)
+shall make this same weathercock too rusty to turn with the changing
+breeze. But as yet, while I have spirit and action, let it whirl like
+the vane at the mast-head, which teaches the pilot how to steer his
+course; and when I shift mine, think I am bound to follow Fortune, and
+not to control her."
+
+"I can understand nothing from all this, please your Grace," replied
+Jerningham, "save that you have been pleased to change some purposed
+measures, and think that you have profited by doing so."
+
+"You shall judge yourself," replied the Duke. "I have seen the Duchess
+of Portsmouth.--You start. It is true, by Heaven! I have seen her, and
+from sworn enemies we have become sworn friends. The treaty between
+such high and mighty powers had some weighty articles; besides, I had
+a French negotiator to deal with; so that you will allow a few hours'
+absence was but a necessary interval to make up our matters of
+diplomacy."
+
+"Your Grace astonishes me," said Jerningham. "Christian's plan of
+supplanting the great lady is then entirely abandoned? I thought you
+had but desired to have the fair successor here, in order to carry it
+on under your own management."
+
+"I forgot what I meant at the time," said the Duke; "unless that I was
+resolved she should not jilt me as she did the good-natured man of
+royalty; and so I am still determined, since you put me in mind of the
+fair Dowsabelle. But I had a contrite note from the Duchess while we
+were at the Mall. I went to see her, and found her a perfect Niobe.--
+On my soul, in spite of red eyes and swelled features, and dishevelled
+hair, there are, after all, Jerningham, some women who do, as the
+poets say, look lovely in affliction. Out came the cause; and with
+such humility, such penitence, such throwing herself on my mercy (she
+the proudest devil, too, in the whole Court), that I must have had
+heart of steel to resist it all. In short, Chiffinch in a drunken fit
+had played the babbler, and let young Saville into our intrigue.
+Saville plays the rogue, and informs the Duchess by a messenger, who
+luckily came a little late into the market. She learned, too, being a
+very devil for intelligence, that there had been some jarring between
+the master and me about this new Phillis; and that I was most likely
+to catch the bird,--as any one may see who looks on us both. It must
+have been Empson who fluted all this into her Grace's ear; and
+thinking she saw how her ladyship and I could hunt in couples, she
+entreats me to break Christian's scheme, and keep the wench out of the
+King's sight, especially if she were such a rare piece of perfection
+as fame has reported her."
+
+"And your Grace has promised her your hand to uphold the influence
+which you have so often threatened to ruin?" said Jerningham.
+
+"Ay, Jerningham; my turn was as much served when she seemed to own
+herself in my power, and cry me mercy.--And observe, it is all one to
+me by which ladder I climb into the King's cabinet. That of Portsmouth
+is ready fixed--better ascend by it than fling it down to put up
+another--I hate all unnecessary trouble."
+
+"And Christian?" said Jerningham.
+
+"May go to the devil for a self-conceited ass. One pleasure of this
+twist of intrigue is, to revenge me of that villain, who thought
+himself so essential, that, by Heaven! he forced himself on my
+privacy, and lectured me like a schoolboy. Hang the cold-blooded
+hypocritical vermin! If he mutters, I will have his nose slit as wide
+as Coventry's.[*]--Hark ye, is the Colonel come?"
+
+"I expect him every moment, your Grace,"
+
+[*] The ill-usage of Sir John Coventry by some of the Life Guardsmen,
+ in revenge of something said in Parliament concerning the King's
+ theatrical amours, gave rise to what was called Coventry's Act,
+ against cutting and maiming the person.
+
+"Send him up when he arrives," said the Duke.----"Why do you stand
+looking at me? What would you have?"
+
+"Your Grace's direction respecting the young lady," said Jerningham.
+
+"Odd zooks," said the Duke, "I had totally forgotten her.--Is she very
+tearful?--Exceedingly afflicted?"
+
+"She does not take on so violently as I have seen some do," said
+Jerningham; "but for a strong, firm, concentrated indignation, I have
+seen none to match her."
+
+"Well, we will permit her to cool. I will not face the affliction of a
+second fair one immediately. I am tired of snivelling, and swelled
+eyes, and blubbered cheeks for some time; and, moreover, must husband
+my powers of consolation. Begone, and send the Colonel."
+
+"Will your Grace permit me one other question?" demanded his
+confidant.
+
+"Ask what thou wilt, Jerningham, and then begone."
+
+"Your Grace has determined to give up Christian," said the attendant.
+"May I ask what becomes of the kingdom of Man?"
+
+"Forgotten, as I have a Christian soul!" said the Duke; "as much
+forgotten as if I had never nourished that scheme of royal ambition.--
+D--n it, we must knit up the ravelled skein of that intrigue.--Yet it
+is but a miserable rock, not worth the trouble I have been bestowing
+on it; and for a kingdom--it has a sound indeed; but, in reality, I
+might as well stick a cock-chicken's feather into my hat, and call it
+a plume. Besides, now I think upon it, it would scarce be honourable
+to sweep that petty royalty out of Derby's possession. I won a
+thousand pieces of the young Earl when he was last here, and suffered
+him to hang about me at Court. I question if the whole revenue of his
+kingdom is worth twice as much. Easily I could win it of him, were he
+here, with less trouble than it would cost me to carry on these
+troublesome intrigues of Christian's."
+
+"If I may be permitted to say so, please your Grace," answered
+Jerningham, "although your Grace is perhaps somewhat liable to change
+your mind, no man in England can afford better reasons for doing so."
+
+"I think so myself, Jerningham," said the Duke; "and it may be it is
+one reason for my changing. One likes to vindicate his own conduct,
+and to find out fine reasons for doing what one has a mind to.--And
+now, once again, begone. Or, hark ye--hark ye--I shall need some loose
+gold. You may leave the purse I gave you; and I will give you an order
+for as much, and two years' interest, on old Jacob Doublefee."
+
+"As your Grace pleases," said Jerningham, his whole stock of
+complaisance scarcely able to conceal his mortification at exchanging
+for a distant order, of a kind which of late had not been very
+regularly honoured, the sunny contents of the purse which had actually
+been in his pocket. Secretly, but solemnly did he make a vow, that two
+years' interest alone should not be the compensation for this
+involuntary exchange in the form of his remuneration.
+
+As the discontented dependant left the apartment, he met, at the head
+of the grand staircase, Christian himself, who, exercising the freedom
+of an ancient friend of the house, was making his way, unannounced, to
+the Duke's dressing apartment. Jerningham, conjecturing that his visit
+at this crisis would be anything but well timed, or well taken,
+endeavoured to avert his purpose by asserting that the Duke was
+indisposed, and in his bedchamber; and this he said so loud that his
+master might hear him, and, if he pleased, realise the apology which
+he offered in his name, by retreating into the bedroom as his last
+sanctuary, and drawing the bolt against intrusion.
+
+But, far from adopting a stratagem to which he had had recourse on
+former occasions, in order to avoid those who came upon him, though at
+an appointed hour, and upon business of importance, Buckingham called,
+in a loud voice, from his dressing apartment, commanding his
+chamberlain instantly to introduce his good friend Master Christian,
+and censuring him for hesitating for an instant to do so.
+
+"Now," thought Jerningham within himself, "if Christian knew the Duke
+as well as I do, he would sooner stand the leap of a lion, like the
+London 'prentice bold, than venture on my master at this moment, who
+is even now in a humour nearly as dangerous as the animal."
+
+He then ushered Christian into his master's presence, taking care to
+post himself within earshot of the door.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+ "Speak not of niceness, when there's chance of wreck,"
+ The captain said, as ladies writhed their neck
+ To see the dying dolphin flap the deck:
+ "If we go down, on us these gentry sup;
+ We dine upon them, if we haul them up.
+ Wise men applaud us when we eat the eaters,
+ As the devil laughs when keen folks cheat the cheaters."
+ --THE SEA VOYAGE.
+
+There was nothing in Duke's manner towards Christian which could have
+conveyed to that latter personage, experienced as he was in the worst
+possible ways of the world, that Buckingham would, at that particular
+moment, rather have seen the devil than himself; unless it was that
+Buckingham's reception of him, being rather extraordinarily courteous
+towards so old an acquaintance, might have excited some degree of
+suspicion.
+
+Having escaped with some difficulty from the vague region of general
+compliments, which bears the same relation to that of business that
+Milton informs us the /Limbo Patrum/ has to the sensible and material
+earth, Christian asked his Grace of Buckingham, with the same blunt
+plainness with which he usually veiled a very deep and artificial
+character, whether he had lately seen Chiffinch or his helpmate?
+
+"Neither of them lately," answered Buckingham. "Have not you waited on
+them yourself?--I thought you would have been more anxious about the
+great scheme."
+
+"I have called once and again," said Christian, "but I can gain no
+access to the sight of that important couple. I begin to be afraid
+they are paltering with me."
+
+"Which, by the welkin and its stars, you would not be slow in
+avenging, Master Christian. I know your puritanical principles on that
+point well," said the Duke. "Revenge may be well said to be sweet,
+when so many grave and wise men are ready to exchange for it all the
+sugar-plums which pleasures offer to the poor sinful people of the
+world, besides the reversion of those which they talk of expecting in
+the way of /post obit/."
+
+"You may jest, my lord," said Christian, "but still----"
+
+"But still you will be revenged on Chiffinch, and his little
+commodious companion. And yet the task may be difficult--Chiffinch has
+so many ways of obliging his master--his little woman is such a
+convenient pretty sort of a screen, and has such winning little ways
+of her own, that, in faith, in your case, I would not meddle with
+them. What is this refusing their door, man? We all do it to our best
+friends now and then, as well as to duns and dull company."
+
+"If your Grace is in a humour of rambling thus wildly in your talk,"
+said Christian, "you know my old faculty of patience--I can wait till
+it be your pleasure to talk more seriously."
+
+"Seriously!" said his Grace--"Wherefore not?--I only wait to know what
+your serious business may be."
+
+"In a word, my lord, from Chiffinch's refusal to see me, and some vain
+calls which I have made at your Grace's mansion, I am afraid either
+that our plan has miscarried, or that there is some intention to
+exclude me from the farther conduct of the matter." Christian
+pronounced these words with considerable emphasis.
+
+"That were folly as well as treachery," returned the Duke, "to exclude
+from the spoil the very engineer who conducted the attack. But hark
+ye, Christian--I am sorry to tell bad news without preparation; but as
+you insist on knowing the worst, and are not ashamed to suspect your
+best friends, out it must come--Your niece left Chiffinch's house the
+morning before yesterday."
+
+Christian staggered, as if he had received a severe blow; and the
+blood ran to his face in such a current of passion, that the Duke
+concluded he was struck with an apoplexy. But, exerting the
+extraordinary command which he could maintain under the most trying
+circumstances, he said, with a voice, the composure of which had an
+unnatural contrast with the alteration of his countenance, "Am I to
+conclude, that in leaving the protection of the roof in which I placed
+her, the girl has found shelter under that of your Grace?"
+
+"Sir," replied Buckingham gravely, "the supposition does my gallantry
+more credit than it deserves."
+
+"Oh, my Lord Duke," answered Christian, "I am not one whom you can
+impose on by this species of courtly jargon. I know of what your Grace
+is capable; and that to gratify the caprice of a moment you would not
+hesitate to disappoint even the schemes at which you yourself have
+laboured most busily.--Suppose this jest played off. Take your laugh
+at those simple precautions by which I intended to protect your
+Grace's interest, as well as that of others. Let us know the extent of
+your frolic, and consider how far its consequences can be repaired."
+
+"On my word, Christian," said the Duke, laughing, "you are the most
+obliging of uncles and of guardians. Let your niece pass through as
+many adventures as Boccaccio's bride of the King of Garba, you care
+not. Pure or soiled, she will still make the footstool of your
+fortune."
+
+An Indian proverb says, that the dart of contempt will even pierce
+through the shell of the tortoise; but this is more peculiarly the
+case when conscience tells the subject of the sarcasm that it is
+justly merited. Christian, stung with Buckingham's reproach, at once
+assumed a haughty and threatening mien, totally inconsistent with that
+in which sufferance seemed to be as much his badge as that of Shylock.
+"You are a foul-mouthed and most unworthy lord," he said; "and as such
+I will proclaim you, unless you make reparation for the injury you
+have done me."
+
+"And what," said the Duke of Buckingham, "shall I proclaim /you/, that
+can give you the least title to notice from such as I am? What name
+shall I bestow on the little transaction which has given rise to such
+unexpected misunderstanding?"
+
+Christian was silent, either from rage or from mental conviction.
+
+"Come, come, Christian," said the Duke, smiling, "we know too much of
+each other to make a quarrel safe. Hate each other we may--circumvent
+each other--it is the way of Courts--but proclaim!--a fico for the
+phrase."
+
+"I used it not," said Christian, "till your Grace drove me to
+extremity. You know, my lord, I have fought both at home and abroad;
+and you should not rashly think that I will endure any indignity which
+blood can wipe away."
+
+"On the contrary," said the Duke, with the same civil and sneering
+manner, "I can confidently assert, that the life of half a score of
+your friends would seem very light to you, Christian, if their
+existence interfered, I do not say with your character, as being a
+thing of much less consequence, but with any advantage which their
+existence might intercept. Fie upon it, man, we have known each other
+long. I never thought you a coward; and am only glad to see I could
+strike a few sparkles of heat out of your cold and constant
+disposition. I will now, if you please, tell you at once the fate of
+the young lady, in which I pray you to believe that I am truly
+interested."
+
+"I hear you, my Lord Duke," said Christian. "The curl of your upper
+lip, and your eyebrow, does not escape me. Your Grace knows the French
+proverb, 'He laughs best who laughs last.' But I hear you."
+
+"Thank Heaven you do," said Buckingham; "for your case requires haste,
+I promise you, and involves no laughing matter. Well then, hear a
+simple truth, on which (if it became me to offer any pledge for what I
+assert to be such) I could pledge life, fortune, and honour. It was
+the morning before last, when meeting with the King at Chiffinch's
+unexpectedly--in fact I had looked in to fool an hour away, and to
+learn how your scheme advanced--I saw a singular scene. Your niece
+terrified little Chiffinch--(the hen Chiffinch, I mean)--bid the King
+defiance to his teeth, and walked out of the presence triumphantly,
+under the guardianship of a young fellow of little mark or likelihood,
+excepting a tolerable personal presence, and the advantage of a most
+unconquerable impudence. Egad, I can hardly help laughing to think how
+the King and I were both baffled; for I will not deny, that I had
+tried to trifle for a moment with the fair Indamora. But, egad, the
+young fellow swooped her off from under our noses, like my own
+Drawcansir clearing off the banquet from the two Kings of Brentford.
+There was a dignity in the gallant's swaggering retreat which I must
+try to teach Mohun;[*] it will suit his part admirably."
+
+[*] Then a noted actor.
+
+"This is incomprehensible, my Lord Duke," said Christian, who by this
+time had recovered all his usual coolness; "you cannot expect me to
+believe this. Who dared be so bold as to carry of my niece in such a
+manner, and from so august a presence? And with whom, a stranger as he
+must have been, would she, wise and cautious as I know her, have
+consented to depart in such a manner?--My lord, I cannot believe
+this."
+
+"One of your priests, my most devoted Christian," replied the Duke,
+"would only answer, Die, infidel, in thine unbelief; but I am only a
+poor worldling sinner, and I will add what mite of information I can.
+The young fellow's name, as I am given to understand, is Julian, son
+of Sir Geoffrey, whom men call Peveril of the Peak."
+
+"Peveril of the Devil, who hath his cavern there!" said Christian
+warmly; "for I know that gallant, and believe him capable of anything
+bold and desperate. But how could he intrude himself into the royal
+presence? Either Hell aids him, or Heaven looks nearer into mortal
+dealings than I have yet believed. If so, may God forgive us, who
+deemed he thought not on us at all!"
+
+"Amen, most Christian Christian," replied the Duke. "I am glad to see
+thou hast yet some touch of grace that leads thee to augur so. But
+Empson, the hen Chiffinch, and half-a-dozen more, saw the swain's
+entrance and departure. Please examine these witnesses with your own
+wisdom, if you think your time may not be better employed in tracing
+the fugitives. I believe he gained entrance as one of some dancing or
+masking party. Rowley, you know, is accessible to all who will come
+forth to make him sport. So in stole this termagant tearing gallant,
+like Samson among the Philistines, to pull down our fine scheme about
+our ears."
+
+"I believe you, my lord," said Christian; "I cannot but believe you;
+and I forgive you, since it is your nature, for making sport of what
+is ruin and destruction. But which way did they take?"
+
+"To Derbyshire, I should presume, to seek her father," said the Duke.
+"She spoke of going into paternal protection, instead of yours, Master
+Christian. Something had chanced at Chiffinch's, to give her cause to
+suspect that you had not altogether provided for his daughter in the
+manner which her father was likely to approve of."
+
+"Now, Heaven be praised," said Christian, "she knows not her father is
+come to London! and they must be gone down either to Martindale
+Castle, or to Moultrassie Hall; in either case they are in my power--I
+must follow them close. I will return instantly to Derbyshire--I am
+undone if she meet her father until these errors are amended. Adieu,
+my lord. I forgive the part which I fear your Grace must have had in
+baulking our enterprise--it is no time for mutual reproaches."
+
+"You speak truth, Master Christian," said the Duke, "and I wish you
+all success. Can I help you with men, or horses, or money?"
+
+"I thank your Grace," said Christian, and hastily left the apartment.
+
+The Duke watched his descending footsteps on the staircase, until they
+could be heard no longer, and then exclaimed to Jerningham, who
+entered, "/Victoria! victoria! magna est veritas et prævalebit!/--Had
+I told the villain a word of a lie, he is so familiar with all the
+regions of falsehood--his whole life has been such an absolute
+imposture, that I had stood detected in an instant; but I told him
+truth, and that was the only means of deceiving him. Victoria! my dear
+Jerningham, I am prouder of cheating Christian, than I should have
+been of circumventing a minister of state."
+
+"Your Grace holds his wisdom very high," said the attendant.
+
+"His cunning, at least, I do, which, in Court affairs, often takes the
+weather-gage of wisdom,--as in Yarmouth Roads a herring-buss will
+baffle a frigate. He shall not return to London if I can help it,
+until all these intrigues are over."
+
+As his Grace spoke, the Colonel, after whom he had repeatedly made
+inquiry, was announced by a gentleman of his household. "He met not
+Christian, did he?" said the Duke hastily.
+
+"No, my lord," returned the domestic, "the Colonel came by the old
+garden staircase."
+
+"I judged as much," replied the Duke; "'tis an owl that will not take
+wing in daylight, when there is a thicket left to skulk under. Here he
+comes from threading lane, vault, and ruinous alley, very near ominous
+a creature as the fowl of ill augury which he resembles."
+
+The Colonel, to whom no other appellation seemed to be given, than
+that which belonged to his military station, now entered the
+apartment. He was tall, strongly built, and past the middle period of
+life, and his countenance, but for the heavy cloud which dwelt upon
+it, might have been pronounced a handsome one. While the Duke spoke to
+him, either from humility or some other cause, his large serious eye
+was cast down upon the ground; but he raised it when he answered, with
+a keen look of earnest observation. His dress was very plain, and more
+allied to that of the Puritans than of the Cavaliers of the time; a
+shadowy black hat, like the Spanish sombrero; a large black mantle or
+cloak, and a long rapier, gave him something the air of a Castilione,
+to which his gravity and stiffness of demeanour added considerable
+strength.
+
+"Well, Colonel," said the Duke, "we have been long strangers--how have
+matters gone with you?"
+
+"As with other men of action in quiet times," answered the colonel,
+"or as a good war-caper[*] that lies high and dry in a muddy creek,
+till seams and planks are rent and riven."
+
+[*] A privateer.
+
+"Well, Colonel," said the Duke, "I have used your valour before now,
+and I may again; so that I shall speedily see that the vessel is
+careened, and undergoes a thorough repair."
+
+"I conjecture, then," said the Colonel, "that your Grace has some
+voyage in hand?"
+
+"No, but there is one which I want to interrupt," replied the Duke.
+
+"Tis but another stave of the same tune.--Well, my lord, I listen,"
+answered the stranger.
+
+"Nay," said the Duke, "it is but a trifling matter after all.--You
+know Ned Christian?"
+
+"Ay, surely, my lord," replied the Colonel, "we have been long known
+to each other."
+
+"He is about to go down to Derbyshire to seek a certain niece of his,
+whom he will scarcely find there. Now, I trust to your tried
+friendship to interrupt his return to London. Go with him, or meet
+him, cajole him, or assail him, or do what thou wilt with him--only
+keep him from London for a fortnight at least, and then I care little
+how soon he comes."
+
+"For by that time, I suppose," replied the Colonel, "any one may find
+the wench that thinks her worth the looking for."
+
+"Thou mayst think her worth the looking for thyself, Colonel,"
+rejoined the Duke; "I promise you she hath many a thousand stitched to
+her petticoat; such a wife would save thee from skeldering on the
+public."
+
+"My lord, I sell my blood and my sword, but not my honour," answered
+the man sullenly; "if I marry, my bed may be a poor, but it shall be
+an honest one."
+
+"Then thy wife will be the only honest matter in thy possession,
+Colonel--at least since I have known you," replied the Duke.
+
+"Why, truly, your Grace may speak your pleasure on that point. It is
+chiefly your business which I have done of late; and if it were less
+strictly honest than I could have wished, the employer was to blame as
+well as the agent. But for marrying a cast-off mistress, the man
+(saving your Grace, to whom I am bound) lives not who dares propose it
+to me."
+
+The Duke laughed loudly. "Why, this is mine Ancient Pistol's vein," he
+replied.
+
+ ----"Shall I Sir Pandarus of Troy become,
+ And by my side wear steel?--then Lucifer take all!"
+
+"My breeding is too plain to understand ends of playhouse verse, my
+lord," said the Colonel suddenly. "Has your Grace no other service to
+command me?"
+
+"None--only I am told you have published a Narrative concerning the
+Plot."
+
+"What should ail me, my lord?" said the Colonel; "I hope I am a
+witness as competent as any that has yet appeared?"
+
+"Truly, I think so to the full," said the Duke; "and it would have
+been hard, when so much profitable mischief was going, if so excellent
+a Protestant as yourself had not come in for a share."
+
+"I came to take your Grace's commands, not to be the object of your
+wit," said the Colonel.
+
+"Gallantly spoken, most resolute and most immaculate Colonel! As you
+are to be on full pay in my service for a month to come, I pray your
+acceptance of this purse, for contingents and equipments, and you
+shall have my instructions from time to time."
+
+"They shall be punctually obeyed, my lord," said the Colonel; "I know
+the duty of a subaltern officer. I wish your Grace a good morning."
+
+So saying, he pocketed the purse, without either affecting hesitation,
+or expressing gratitude, but merely as a part of a transaction in the
+regular way of business, and stalked from the apartment with the same
+sullen gravity which marked his entrance. "Now, there goes a scoundrel
+after my own heart," said the Duke; "a robber from his cradle, a
+murderer since he could hold a knife, a profound hypocrite in
+religion, and a worse and deeper hypocrite in honour,--would sell his
+soul to the devil to accomplish any villainy, and would cut the throat
+of his brother, did he dare to give the villainy he had so acted its
+right name.--Now, why stand you amazed, good Master Jerningham, and
+look on me as you would on some monster of Ind, when you had paid your
+shilling to see it, and were staring out your pennyworth with your
+eyes as round as a pair of spectacles? Wink, man, and save them, and
+then let thy tongue untie the mystery."
+
+"On my word, my Lord Duke," answered Jerningham, "since I am compelled
+to speak, I can only say, that the longer I live with your Grace, I am
+the more at a loss to fathom your motives of action. Others lay plans,
+either to attain profit or pleasure by their execution; but your
+Grace's delight is to counteract your own schemes, when in the very
+act of performance; like a child--forgive me--that breaks its
+favourite toy, or a man who should set fire to the house he has half
+built."
+
+"And why not, if he wanted to warm his hands at the blaze?" said the
+Duke.
+
+"Ay, my lord," replied his dependent; "but what if, in doing so, he
+should burn his fingers?--My lord, it is one of your noblest
+qualities, that you will sometimes listen to the truth without taking
+offence; but were it otherwise, I could not, at this moment, help
+speaking out at every risk."
+
+"Well, say on, I can bear it," said the Duke, throwing himself into an
+easy-chair, and using his toothpick with graceful indifference and
+equanimity; "I love to hear what such potsherds as thou art, think of
+the proceeding of us who are of the pure porcelain clay of the earth."
+
+"In the name of Heaven, my lord, let me then ask you," said
+Jerningham, "what merit you claim, or what advantage you expect, from
+having embroiled everything in which you are concerned to a degree
+which equals the chaos of the blind old Roundhead's poem which your
+Grace is so fond of? To begin with the King. In spite of good-humour,
+he will be incensed at your repeated rivalry."
+
+"His Majesty defied me to it."
+
+"You have lost all hopes of the Isle, by quarrelling with Christian."
+
+"I have ceased to care a farthing about it," replied the Duke.
+
+"In Christian himself, whom you have insulted, and to whose family you
+intend dishonour, you have lost a sagacious, artful, and cool-headed
+instrument and adherent," said the monitor.
+
+"Poor Jerningham!" answered the Duke; "Christian would say as much for
+thee, I doubt not, wert thou discarded tomorrow. It is the common
+error of such tools as you and he to think themselves indispensable.
+As to his family, what was never honourable cannot be dishonoured by
+any connection with my house."
+
+"I say nothing of Chiffinch," said Jerningham, "offended as he will be
+when he learns why, and by whom, his scheme has been ruined, and the
+lady spirited away--He and his wife, I say nothing of them."
+
+"You need not," said the Duke; "for were they even fit persons to
+speak to me about, the Duchess of Portsmouth has bargained for their
+disgrace."
+
+"Then this bloodhound of a Colonel, as he calls himself, your Grace
+cannot even lay /him/ on a quest which is to do you service, but you
+must do him such indignity at the same time, as he will not fail to
+remember, and be sure to fly at your throat should he ever have an
+opportunity of turning on you."
+
+"I will take care he has none," said the Duke; "and yours, Jerningham,
+is a low-lived apprehension. Beat your spaniel heartily if you would
+have him under command. Ever let your agents see you know what they
+are, and prize them accordingly. A rogue, who must needs be treated as
+a man of honour, is apt to get above his work. Enough, therefore, of
+your advice and censure, Jerningham; we differ in every particular.
+Were we both engineers, you would spend your life in watching some old
+woman's wheel, which spins flax by the ounce; I must be in the midst
+of the most varied and counteracting machinery, regulating checks and
+counter-checks, balancing weights, proving springs and wheels,
+directing and controlling a hundred combined powers."
+
+"And your fortune, in the meanwhile?" said Jerningham; "pardon this
+last hint, my lord."
+
+"My fortune," said the Duke, "is too vast to be hurt by a petty wound;
+and I have, as thou knowest, a thousand salves in store for the
+scratches and scars which it sometimes receives in greasing my
+machinery."
+
+"Your Grace does not mean Dr. Wilderhead's powder of projection?"
+
+"Pshaw! he is a quacksalver, and mountebank, and beggar."
+
+"Or Solicitor Drowndland's plan for draining the fens?"
+
+"He is a cheat,--/videlicet/, an attorney."
+
+"Or the Laird of Lackpelf's sale of Highland woods?"
+
+"He is a Scotsman," said the Duke,--"/videlicet/, both cheat and
+beggar."
+
+"These streets here, upon the site of your noble mansion-house?" said
+Jerningham.
+
+"The architect's a bite, and the plan's a bubble. I am sick of the
+sight of this rubbish, and I will soon replace our old alcoves,
+alleys, and flower-pots by an Italian garden and a new palace."
+
+"That, my lord, would be to waste, not to improve your fortune," said
+his domestic.
+
+"Clodpate, and muddy spirit that thou art, thou hast forgot the most
+hopeful scheme of all--the South Sea Fisheries--their stock is up 50
+per cent. already. Post down to the Alley, and tell old Mansses to buy
+£20,000 for me.--Forgive me, Plutus, I forgot to lay my sacrifice on
+thy shrine, and yet expected thy favours!--Fly post-haste, Jerningham
+--for thy life, for thy life, for thy life!"[*]
+
+[*] Stock-jobbing, as it is called, that is, dealing in shares of
+ monopolies, patent, and joint-stock companies of every
+ description, was at least as common in Charles II.'s time as our
+ own; and as the exercise of ingenuity in this way promised a road
+ to wealth without the necessity of industry, it was then much
+ pursued by dissolute courtiers.
+
+With hands and eyes uplifted, Jerningham left the apartment; and the
+Duke, without thinking a moment farther on old or new intrigues--on
+the friendship he had formed, or the enmity he had provoked--on the
+beauty whom he had carried off from her natural protectors, as well as
+from her lover--or on the monarch against whom he had placed himself
+in rivalship,--sat down to calculate chances with all the zeal of
+Demoivre, tired of the drudgery in half-an-hour, and refused to see
+the zealous agent whom he had employed in the city, because he was
+busily engaged in writing a new lampoon.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+ Ah! changeful head, and fickle heart!
+ --PROGRESS OF DISCONTENT.
+
+No event is more ordinary in narratives of this nature, than the
+abduction of the female on whose fate the interest is supposed to
+turn; but that of Alice Bridgenorth was thus far particular, that she
+was spirited away by the Duke of Buckingham, more in contradiction
+than in the rivalry of passion; and that, as he made his first
+addresses to her at Chiffinch's, rather in the spirit of rivalry to
+this Sovereign, than from any strong impression which her beauty had
+made on his affections, so he had formed the sudden plan of spiriting
+her away by means of his dependents, rather to perplex Christian, the
+King, Chiffinch, and all concerned, than because he had any particular
+desire for her society at his own mansion. Indeed, so far was this
+from being the case, that his Grace was rather surprised than
+delighted with the success of the enterprise which had made her an
+inmate there, although it is probable he might have thrown himself
+into an uncontrollable passion, had he learned its miscarriage instead
+of its success.
+
+Twenty-four hours had passed over since he had returned to his own
+roof, before, notwithstanding sundry hints from Jerningham, he could
+even determine on the exertion necessary to pay his fair captive a
+visit; and then it was with the internal reluctance of one who can
+only be stirred from indolence by novelty.
+
+"I wonder what made me plague myself about this wench," said he, "and
+doom myself to encounter all the hysterical rhapsodies of a country
+Phillis, with her head stuffed with her grandmother's lessons about
+virtue and the Bible-book, when the finest and best-bred women in town
+may be had upon more easy terms. It is a pity one cannot mount the
+victor's car of triumph without having a victory to boast of; yet,
+faith, it is what most of our modern gallants do, though it would not
+become Buckingham.--Well, I must see her," he concluded, "though it
+were but to rid the house of her. The Portsmouth will not hear of her
+being set at liberty near Charles, so much is she afraid of a new fair
+seducing the old sinner from his allegiance. So how the girl is to be
+disposed of--for I shall have little fancy to keep her here, and she
+is too wealthy to be sent down to Cliefden as a housekeeper--is a
+matter to be thought on."
+
+He then called for such a dress as might set off his natural good mien
+--a compliment which he considered as due to his own merit; for as to
+anything farther, he went to pay his respects to his fair prisoner
+with almost as little zeal in the cause, as a gallant to fight a duel
+in which he has no warmer interest than the maintenance of his
+reputation as man of honour.
+
+The set of apartments consecrated to the use of those favourites who
+occasionally made Buckingham's mansion their place of abode, and who
+were, so far as liberty was concerned, often required to observe the
+regulations of a convent, were separated from the rest of the Duke's
+extensive mansion. He lived in the age when what was called gallantry
+warranted the most atrocious actions of deceit and violence; as may be
+best illustrated by the catastrophe of an unfortunate actress, whose
+beauty attracted the attention of the last De Vere, Earl of Oxford.
+While her virtue defied his seductions, he ruined her under colour of
+a mock marriage, and was rewarded for a success which occasioned the
+death of his victim, by the general applause of the men of wit and
+gallantry who filled the drawing-room of Charles.
+
+Buckingham had made provision in the interior of his ducal mansion for
+exploits of a similar nature; and the set of apartments which he now
+visited were alternately used to confine the reluctant, and to
+accommodate the willing.
+
+Being now destined for the former purpose, the key was delivered to
+the Duke by a hooded and spectacled old lady, who sat reading a devout
+book in the outer hall which divided these apartments (usually called
+the Nunnery) from the rest of the house. This experienced dowager
+acted as mistress of the ceremonies on such occasions, and was the
+trusty depositary of more intrigues than were known to any dozen of
+her worshipful calling besides.
+
+"As sweet a linnet," she said, as she undid the outward door, "as ever
+sung in a cage."
+
+"I was afraid she might have been more for moping than for singing,
+Dowlas," said the Duke.
+
+"Till yesterday she was so, please your Grace," answered Dowlas; "or,
+to speak sooth, till early this morning, we heard of nothing but
+Lachrymæ. But the air of your noble Grace's house is favourable to
+singing-birds; and to-day matters have been a-much mended."
+
+"Tis sudden, dame," said the Duke; "and 'tis something strange,
+considering that I have never visited her, that the pretty trembler
+should have been so soon reconciled to her fate."
+
+"Ah, your Grace has such magic, that it communicates itself to your
+very walls; as wholesome Scripture says, Exodus, first and seventh,
+'It cleaveth to the walls and the doorposts.'"
+
+"You are too partial, Dame Dowlas," said the Duke of Buckingham.
+
+"Not a word but truth," said the dame; "and I wish I may be an outcast
+from the fold of the lambs, but I think this damsel's very frame has
+changed since she was under your Grace's roof. Methinks she hath a
+lighter form, a finer step, a more displayed ankle--I cannot tell, but
+I think there is a change. But, lack-a-day, your Grace knows I am as
+old as I am trusty, and that my eyes wax something uncertain."
+
+"Especially when you wash them with a cup of canary, Dame Dowlas,"
+answered the Duke, who was aware that temperance was not amongst the
+cardinal virtues which were most familiar to the old lady's practice.
+
+"Was it canary, your Grace said?--Was it indeed with canary, that your
+Grace should have supposed me to have washed my eyes?" said the
+offended matron. "I am sorry that your Grace should know me no
+better."
+
+"I crave your pardon, dame," said the Duke, shaking aside,
+fastidiously, the grasp which, in the earnestness of her exculpation,
+Madam Dowlas had clutched upon his sleeve. "I crave your pardon. Your
+nearer approach has convinced me of my erroneous imputation--I should
+have said nantz--not canary."
+
+So saying, he walked forward into the inner apartments, which were
+fitted up with an air of voluptuous magnificence.
+
+"The dame said true, however," said the proud deviser and proprietor
+of the splendid mansion--"A country Phillis might well reconcile
+herself to such a prison as this, even without a skilful bird-fancier
+to touch a bird-call. But I wonder where she can be, this rural
+Phidele. Is it possible she can have retreated, like a despairing
+commandant, into her bedchamber, the very citadel of the place,
+without even an attempt to defend the outworks?"
+
+As he made this reflection, he passed through an antechamber and
+little eating parlour, exquisitely furnished, and hung with excellent
+paintings of the Venetian school.
+
+Beyond these lay a withdrawing-room, fitted up in a style of still
+more studied elegance. The windows were darkened with painted glass,
+of such a deep and rich colour, as made the midday beams, which found
+their way into the apartment, imitate the rich colours of sunset; and,
+in the celebrated expression of the poet, "taught light to counterfeit
+a gloom."
+
+Buckingham's feelings and taste had been too much, and too often, and
+too readily gratified, to permit him, in the general case, to be
+easily accessible, even to those pleasures which it had been the
+business of his life to pursue. The hackneyed voluptuary is like the
+jaded epicure, the mere listlessness of whose appetite becomes at
+length a sufficient penalty for having made it the principal object of
+his enjoyment and cultivation. Yet novelty has always some charms, and
+uncertainty has more.
+
+The doubt how he was to be received--the change of mood which his
+prisoner was said to have evinced--the curiosity to know how such a
+creature as Alice Bridgenorth had been described, was likely to bear
+herself under the circumstances in which she was so unexpectedly
+placed, had upon Buckingham the effect of exciting unusual interest.
+On his own part, he had none of those feelings of anxiety with which a
+man, even of the most vulgar mind, comes to the presence of the female
+whom he wishes to please, far less the more refined sentiments of
+love, respect, desire, and awe, with which the more refined lover
+approaches the beloved object. He had been, to use an expressive
+French phrase, too completely /blasé/ even from his earliest youth, to
+permit him now to experience the animal eagerness of the one, far less
+the more sentimental pleasure of the other. It is no small aggravation
+of this jaded and uncomfortable state of mind, that the voluptuary
+cannot renounce the pursuits with which he is satiated, but must
+continue, for his character's sake, or from the mere force of habit,
+to take all the toil, fatigue, and danger of the chase, while he has
+so little real interest in the termination.
+
+Buckingham, therefore, felt it due to his reputation as a successful
+hero of intrigue, to pay his addresses to Alice Bridgenorth with
+dissembled eagerness; and, as he opened the door of the inner
+apartment, he paused to consider, whether the tone of gallantry, or
+that of passion, was fittest to use on the occasion. This delay
+enabled him to hear a few notes of a lute touched with exquisite
+skill, and accompanied by the still sweeter strains of a female voice,
+which, without executing any complete melody, seemed to sport itself
+in rivalship of the silver sound of the instrument.
+
+"A creature so well educated," said the Duke, "with the sense she is
+said to possess, would, rustic as she is, laugh at the assumed rants
+of Oroondates. It is the vein of Dorimont--once, Buckingham, thine own
+--that must here do the feat, besides that the part is easier."
+
+So thinking, he entered the room with that easy grace which
+characterised the gay courtiers among whom he flourished, and
+approached the fair tenant, whom he found seated near a table covered
+with books and music, and having on her left hand the large half-open
+casement, dim with stained glass, admitting only a doubtful light into
+this lordly retiring-room, which, hung with the richest tapestry of
+the Gobelines, and ornamented with piles if china and splendid
+mirrors, seemed like a bower built for a prince to receive his bride.
+
+The splendid dress of the inmate corresponded with the taste of the
+apartment which she occupied and partook of the Oriental costume which
+the much-admired Roxalana had the brought into fashion. A slender foot
+and ankle, which escaped from the wide trowser of richly ornamented
+and embroidered blue satin, was the only part of her person distinctly
+seen; the rest was enveloped, from head to foot, in a long veil of
+silver gauze, which, like a feathery and light mist on a beautiful
+landscape, suffered you to perceive that what it concealed was rarely
+lovely, yet induced the imagination even to enhance the charms it
+shaded. Such part of the dress as could be discovered was, like the
+veil and the trowsers, in the Oriental taste; a rich turban, and
+splendid caftan, were rather indicated than distinguished through the
+folds of the former. The whole attire argued at least coquetry on the
+part of the fair one, who must have expected, from her situation, a
+visitor of some pretension; and induced Buckingham to smile internally
+at Christian's account of the extreme simplicity and purity of his
+niece.
+
+He approached the lady /en cavalier/, and addressed her with the air
+of being conscious, while he acknowledged his offences, that his
+condescending to do so formed a sufficient apology for them. "Fair
+Mistress Alice," he said, "I am sensible how deeply I ought to sue for
+pardon for the mistaken zeal of my servants, who, seeing you deserted
+and exposed without protection during an unlucky affray, took it upon
+them to bring you under the roof of one who would expose his life
+rather than suffer you to sustain a moment's anxiety. Was it my fault
+that those around me should have judged it necessary to interfere for
+your preservation; or that, aware of the interest I must take in you,
+they have detained you till I could myself, in personal attendance,
+receive your commands?"
+
+"That attendance has not been speedily rendered, my lord," answered
+the lady. "I have been a prisoner for two days--neglected, and left to
+the charge of menials."
+
+"How say you, lady?--Neglected!" exclaimed the Duke. "By Heaven, if
+the best in my household has failed in his duty, I will discard him on
+the instant!"
+
+"I complain of no lack of courtesy from your servants, my lord," she
+replied; "but methinks it had been but complaisant in the Duke himself
+to explain to me earlier wherefore he has had the boldness to detain
+me as a state prisoner."
+
+"And can the divine Alice doubt," said Buckingham, "that, had time and
+space, those cruel enemies to the flight of passion, given permission,
+the instant in which you crossed your vassal's threshold had seen its
+devoted master at your feet, who hath thought, since he saw you, of
+nothing but the charms which that fatal morning placed before him at
+Chiffinch's?"
+
+"I understand, then, my lord," said the lady, "that you have been
+absent, and have had no part in the restraint which has been exercised
+upon me?"
+
+"Absent on the King's command, lady, and employed in the discharge of
+his duty," answered Buckingham without hesitation. "What could I do?--
+The moment you left Chiffinch's, his Majesty commanded me to the
+saddle in such haste, that I had no time to change my satin buskins
+for riding-boots.[*] If my absence has occasioned you a moment of
+inconvenience, blame the inconsiderate zeal of those who, seeing me
+depart from London, half distracted at my separation from you, were
+willing to contribute their unmannered, though well-meant exertions,
+to preserve their master from despair, by retaining the fair Alice
+within his reach. To whom, indeed, could they have restored you? He
+whom you selected as your champion is in prison, or fled--your father
+absent from town--your uncle in the north. To Chiffinch's house you
+had expressed your well-founded aversion; and what fitter asylum
+remained than that of your devoted slave, where you must ever reign a
+queen?"
+
+[*] This case is not without precedent. Among the jealousies and fears
+ expressed by the Long Parliament, they insisted much upon an agent
+ for the King departing for the continent so abruptly, that he had
+ not time to change his court dress--white buskins, to wit, and
+ black silk pantaloons--for an equipment more suitable to travel
+ with.
+
+"An imprisoned one," said the lady. "I desire not royalty."
+
+"Alas! how wilfully you misconstrue me!" said the Duke, kneeling on
+one knee; "and what right can you have to complain of a few hours'
+gentle restraint--you, who destine so many to hopeless captivity? Be
+merciful for once, and withdraw that envious veil; for the divinities
+are ever most cruel when they deliver their oracles from such clouded
+recesses. Suffer at least my rash hand----"
+
+"I will save your Grace that unworthy trouble," said the lady
+haughtily; and rising up, she flung back over her shoulders the veil
+which shrouded her, saying, at the same time, "Look on me, my Lord
+Duke, and see if these be indeed the charms which have made on your
+Grace an impression so powerful."
+
+Buckingham did look; and the effect produced on him by surprise was so
+strong, that he rose hastily from his knee, and remained for a few
+seconds as if he had been petrified. The figure that stood before him
+had neither the height nor the rich shape of Alice Bridgenorth; and,
+though perfectly well made, was so slightly formed, as to seem almost
+infantine. Her dress was three or four short vests of embroidered
+satin, disposed one over the other, of different colours, or rather
+different shades of similar colours; for strong contrast was carefully
+avoided. These opened in front, so as to show part of the throat and
+neck, partially obscured by an inner covering of the finest lace; over
+the uppermost vest was worn a sort of mantle, or coat of rich fur. A
+small but magnificent turban was carelessly placed on her head, from
+under which flowed a profusion of coal-black tresses, which Cleopatra
+might have envied. The taste and splendour of the Eastern dress
+corresponded with the complexion of the lady's face, which was
+brunette, of a shade so dark as might almost have served an Indian.
+
+Amidst a set of features, in which rapid and keen expression made
+amends for the want of regular beauty, the essential points of eyes as
+bright as diamonds, and teeth as white as pearls, did not escape the
+Duke of Buckingham, a professed connoisseur in female charms. In a
+word, the fanciful and singular female who thus unexpectedly produced
+herself before him, had one of those faces which are never seen
+without making an impression; which, when removed, are long after
+remembered; and for which, in our idleness, we are tempted to invent a
+hundred histories, that we may please our fancy by supposing the
+features under the influence of different kinds of emotion. Every one
+must have in recollection countenances of this kind, which, from a
+captivating and stimulating originality of expression, abide longer in
+the memory, and are more seductive to the imagination, than ever
+regular beauty.
+
+"My Lord Duke," said the lady, "it seems the lifting of my veil has
+done the work of magic upon your Grace. Alas, for the captive
+princess, whose nod was to command a vassal so costly as your Grace!
+She runs, methinks, no slight chance of being turned out of doors,
+like a second Cinderella, to seek her fortune among lackeys and
+lightermen."
+
+"I am astonished!" said the Duke. "That villain, Jerningham--I will
+have the scoundrel's blood!"
+
+"Nay, never abuse Jerningham for the matter," said the Unknown; "but
+lament your own unhappy engagements. While you, my Lord Duke, were
+posting northward, in white satin buskins, to toil in the King's
+affairs, the right and lawful princess sat weeping in sables in the
+uncheered solitude to which your absence condemned her. Two days she
+was disconsolate in vain; on the third came an African enchantress to
+change the scene for her, and the person for your Grace. Methinks, my
+lord, this adventure will tell but ill, when some faithful squire
+shall recount or record the gallant adventures of the second Duke of
+Buckingham."
+
+"Fairly bit and bantered to boot," said the Duke--"the monkey has a
+turn for satire, too, by all that is /piquante/.--Hark ye, fair
+Princess, how dared you adventure on such a trick as you have been
+accomplice to?"
+
+"Dare, my lord," answered the stranger; "put the question to others,
+not to one who fears nothing."
+
+"By my faith, I believe so; for thy front is bronzed by nature.--Hark
+ye, once more, mistress--What is your name and condition?"
+
+"My condition I have told you--I am a Mauritanian sorceress by
+profession, and my name is Zarah," replied the Eastern maiden.
+
+"But methinks that face, shape, and eyes"--said the Duke--"when didst
+thou pass for a dancing fairy?--Some such imp thou wert not many days
+since."
+
+"My sister you may have seen--my twin sister; but not me, my lord,"
+answered Zarah.
+
+"Indeed," said the Duke, "that duplicate of thine, if it was not thy
+very self, was possessed with a dumb spirit, as thou with a talking
+one. I am still in the mind that you are the same; and that Satan,
+always so powerful with your sex, had art enough on our former
+meeting, to make thee hold thy tongue."
+
+"Believe what you will of it, my lord," replied Zarah, "it cannot
+change the truth.--And now, my lord, I bid you farewell. Have you any
+commands to Mauritania?"
+
+"Tarry a little, my Princess," said the Duke; "and remember, that you
+have voluntarily entered yourself as pledge for another; and are
+justly subjected to any penalty which it is my pleasure to exact. None
+must brave Buckingham with impunity."
+
+"I am in no hurry to depart, if your Grace hath any commands for me."
+
+"What! are you neither afraid of my resentment, nor of my love, fair
+Zarah?" said the Duke.
+
+"Of neither, by this glove," answered the lady. "Your resentment must
+be a pretty passion indeed, if it could stoop to such a helpless
+object as I am; and for your love--good lack! good lack!"
+
+"And why good lack with such a tone of contempt, lady?" said the
+Duke, piqued in spite of himself. "Think you Buckingham cannot love,
+or has never been beloved in return?"
+
+"He may have thought himself beloved," said the maiden; "but by what
+slight creatures!--things whose heads could be rendered giddy by a
+playhouse rant--whose brains were only filled with red-heeled shoes
+and satin buskins--and who run altogether mad on the argument of a
+George and a star."
+
+"And are there no such frail fair ones in your climate, most scornful
+Princess?" said the Duke.
+
+"There are," said the lady; "but men rate them as parrots and monkeys
+--things without either sense or soul, head or heart. The nearness we
+bear to the sun has purified, while it strengthens, our passions. The
+icicles of your frozen climate shall as soon hammer hot bars into
+ploughshares, as shall the foppery and folly of your pretended
+gallantry make an instant's impression on a breast like mine."
+
+"You speak like one who knows what passion is," said the Duke. "Sit
+down, fair lady, and grieve not that I detain you. Who can consent to
+part with a tongue of so much melody, or an eye of such expressive
+eloquence!--You have known then what it is to love?"
+
+"I know--no matter if by experience, or through the report of others--
+but I do know, that to love, as I would love, would be to yield not an
+iota to avarice, not one inch to vanity, not to sacrifice the
+slightest feeling to interest or to ambition; but to give up all to
+fidelity of heart and reciprocal affection."
+
+"And how many women, think you, are capable of feeling such
+disinterested passion?"
+
+"More, by thousands, than there are men who merit it," answered Zarah.
+"Alas! how often do you see the female, pale, and wretched, and
+degraded, still following with patient constancy the footsteps of some
+predominating tyrant, and submitting to all his injustice with the
+endurance of a faithful and misused spaniel, which prizes a look from
+his master, though the surliest groom that ever disgraced humanity,
+more than all the pleasure which the world besides can furnish him?
+Think what such would be to one who merited and repaid her devotion."
+
+"Perhaps the very reverse," said the Duke; "and for your simile, I can
+see little resemblance. I cannot charge my spaniel with any perfidy;
+but for my mistresses--to confess truth, I must always be in a cursed
+hurry if I would have the credit of changing them before they leave
+me."
+
+"And they serve you but rightly, my lord," answered the lady; "for
+what are you?--Nay, frown not; for you must hear the truth for once.
+Nature has done its part, and made a fair outside, and courtly
+education hath added its share. You are noble, it is the accident of
+birth--handsome, it is the caprice of Nature--generous, because to
+give is more easy than to refuse--well-apparelled, it is to the credit
+of your tailor--well-natured in the main, because you have youth and
+health--brave, because to be otherwise were to be degraded--and witty,
+because you cannot help it."
+
+The Duke darted a glance on one of the large mirrors. "Noble, and
+handsome, and court-like, generous, well-attired, good-humoured,
+brave, and witty!--You allow me more, madam, than I have the slightest
+pretension to, and surely enough to make my way, at some point at
+least, to female favour."
+
+"I have neither allowed you a heart nor a head," said Zarah calmly.--
+"Nay, never redden as if you would fly at me. I say not but nature may
+have given you both; but folly has confounded the one, and selfishness
+perverted the other. The man whom I call deserving the name is one
+whose thoughts and exertions are for others, rather than himself,--
+whose high purpose is adopted on just principles, and never abandoned
+while heaven or earth affords means of accomplishing it. He is one who
+will neither seek an indirect advantage by a specious road, nor take
+an evil path to gain a real good purpose. Such a man were one for whom
+a woman's heart should beat constant while he breathes, and break when
+he dies."
+
+She spoke with so much energy that the water sparkled in her eyes, and
+her cheek coloured with the vehemence of her feelings.
+
+"You speak," said the Duke, "as if you had yourself a heart which
+could pay the full tribute to the merit which you describe so warmly."
+
+"And have I not?" said she, laying her hand on her bosom. "Here beats
+one that would bear me out in what I have said, whether in life or in
+death."
+
+"Were it in my power," said the Duke, who began to get farther
+interested in his visitor than he could at first have thought possible
+--"Were it in my power to deserve such faithful attachment, methinks
+it should be my care to requite it."
+
+"Your wealth, your titles, your reputation as a gallant--all you
+possess, were too little to merit such sincere affection."
+
+"Come, fair lady," said the Duke, a good deal piqued, "do not be quite
+so disdainful. Bethink you, that if your love be as pure as coined
+gold, still a poor fellow like myself may offer you an equivalent in
+silver--The quantity of my affection must make up for its quality."
+
+"But I am not carrying my affection to market, my lord; and therefore
+I need none of the base coin you offer in change for it."
+
+"How do I know that, my fairest?" said the Duke. "This is the realm of
+Paphos--You have invaded it, with what purpose you best know; but I
+think with none consistent with your present assumption of cruelty.
+Come, come--eyes that are so intelligent can laugh with delight, as
+well as gleam with scorn and anger. You are here a waif on Cupid's
+manor, and I must seize on you in name of the deity."
+
+"Do not think of touching me, my lord," said the lady. "Approach me
+not, if you would hope to learn the purpose of my being here. Your
+Grace may suppose yourself a Solomon if you please, but I am no
+travelling princess, come from distant climes, either to flatter your
+pride, or wonder at your glory."
+
+"A defiance, by Jupiter!" said the Duke.
+
+"You mistake the signal," said the 'dark ladye'; "I came not here
+without taking sufficient precautions for my retreat."
+
+"You mouth it bravely," said the Duke; "but never fortress so boasted
+its resources but the garrison had some thoughts of surrender. Thus I
+open the first parallel."
+
+They had been hitherto divided from each other by a long narrow table,
+which, placed in the recess of the large casement we have mentioned,
+had formed a sort of barrier on the lady's side, against the
+adventurous gallant. The Duke went hastily to remove it as he spoke;
+but, attentive to all his motions, his visitor instantly darted
+through the half-open window. Buckingham uttered a cry of horror and
+surprise, having no doubt, at first, that she had precipitated herself
+from a height of at least fourteen feet; for so far the window was
+distant from the ground. But when he sprung to the spot, he perceived,
+to his astonishment, that she had effected her descent with equal
+agility and safety.
+
+The outside of this stately mansion was decorated with a quantity of
+carving, in the mixed state, betwixt the Gothic and Grecian styles,
+which marks the age of Elizabeth and her successor; and though the
+feat seemed a surprising one, the projections of these ornaments were
+sufficient to afford footing to a creature so light and active, even
+in her hasty descent.
+
+Inflamed alike by mortification and curiosity, Buckingham at first
+entertained some thought of following her by the same dangerous route,
+and had actually got upon the sill of the window for that purpose; and
+was contemplating what might be his next safe movement, when, from a
+neighbouring thicket of shrubs, amongst which his visitor had
+disappeared, he heard her chant a verse of a comic song, then much in
+fashion, concerning a despairing lover who had recourse to a
+precipice--
+
+ "But when he came near,
+ Beholding how steep
+ The sides did appear,
+ And the bottom how deep;
+ Though his suit was rejected,
+ He sadly reflected,
+ That a lover forsaken
+ A new love may get;
+ But a neck that's once broken
+ Can never be set."
+
+The Duke could not help laughing, though much against his will, at the
+resemblance which the verses bore to his own absurd situation, and,
+stepping back into the apartment, desisted from an attempt which might
+have proved dangerous as well as ridiculous. He called his attendants,
+and contented himself with watching the little thicket, unwilling to
+think that a female, who had thrown herself in a great measure into
+his way, meant absolutely to mortify him by a retreat.
+
+That question was determined in an instant. A form, wrapped in a
+mantle, with a slouched hat and shadowy plume, issued from the bushes,
+and was lost in a moment amongst the ruins of ancient and of modern
+buildings, with which, as we have already stated, the demesne formerly
+termed York House, was now encumbered in all directions.
+
+The Duke's servants, who had obeyed his impatient summons, were
+hastily directed to search for this tantalising siren in every
+direction. Their master, in the meantime, eager and vehement in every
+new pursuit, but especially when his vanity was piqued, encouraged
+their diligence by bribes, and threats, and commands. All was in vain.
+They found nothing of the Mauritanian Princess, as she called herself,
+but the turban and the veil; both of which she had left in the
+thicket, together with her satin slippers; which articles, doubtless,
+she had thrown aside as she exchanged them for others less remarkable.
+
+Finding all his search in vain, the Duke of Buckingham, after the
+example of spoiled children of all ages and stations, gave a loose to
+the frantic vehemence of passion; and fiercely he swore vengeance on
+his late visitor, whom he termed by a thousand opprobrious epithets,
+of which the elegant phrase "Jilt" was most frequently repeated.
+
+Even Jerningham, who knew the depths and the shallows of his master's
+mood, and was bold to fathom them at almost every state of his
+passions, kept out of his way on the present occasion; and, cabineted
+with the pious old housekeeper, declared to her, over a bottle of
+ratafia, that, in his apprehension, if his Grace did not learn to put
+some control on his temper, chains, darkness, straw, and Bedlam, would
+be the final doom of the gifted and admired Duke of Buckingham.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XL
+
+ ----Contentious fierce,
+ Ardent, and dire, spring from no petty cause.
+ --ALBION.
+
+The quarrels between man and wife are proverbial; but let not these
+honest folks think that connections of a less permanent nature are
+free from similar jars. The frolic of the Duke of Buckingham, and the
+subsequent escape of Alice Bridgenorth, had kindled fierce dissension
+in Chiffinch's family, when, on his arrival in town, he learned these
+two stunning events: "I tell you," he said to his obliging helpmate,
+who seemed but little moved by all that he could say on the subject,
+"that your d--d carelessness has ruined the work of years."
+
+"I think it is the twentieth time you have said so," replied the dame;
+"and without such frequent assurance, I was quite ready to believe
+that a very trifling matter would overset any scheme of yours, however
+long thought of."
+
+"How on earth could you have the folly to let the Duke into the house
+when you expected the King?" said the irritated courtier.
+
+"Lord, Chiffinch," answered the lady, "ought not you to ask the porter
+rather than me, that sort of question?--I was putting on my cap to
+receive his Majesty."
+
+"With the address of a madge-howlet," said Chiffinch, "and in the
+meanwhile you gave the cat the cream to keep."
+
+"Indeed, Chiffinch," said the lady, "these jaunts to the country do
+render you excessively vulgar! there is a brutality about your very
+boots! nay, your muslin ruffles, being somewhat soiled, give to your
+knuckles a sort of rural rusticity, as I may call it."
+
+"It were a good deed," muttered Chiffinch, "to make both boots and
+knuckles bang the folly and affectation out of thee." Then speaking
+aloud, he added, like a man who would fain break off an argument, by
+extorting from his adversary a confession that he has reason on his
+side, "I am sure, Kate, you must be sensible that our all depends on
+his Majesty's pleasure."
+
+"Leave that to me," said she; "I know how to pleasure his Majesty
+better than you can teach me. Do you think his Majesty is booby enough
+to cry like a schoolboy because his sparrow has flown away? His
+Majesty has better taste. I am surprised at you, Chiffinch," she
+added, drawing herself up, "who were once thought to know the points
+of a fine woman, that you should have made such a roaring about this
+country wench. Why, she has not even the country quality of being
+plump as a barn-door fowl, but is more like a Dunstable lark, that one
+must crack bones and all if you would make a mouthful of it. What
+signifies whence she came, or where she goes? There will be those
+behind that are much more worthy of his Majesty's condescending
+attention, even when the Duchess of Portsmouth takes the frumps."
+
+"You mean your neighbour, Mistress Nelly," said her worthy helpmate;
+"but Kate, her date is out. Wit she has, let her keep herself warm
+with it in worse company, for the cant of a gang of strollers is not
+language for a prince's chamber."[*]
+
+[*] In Evelyn's Memoirs is the following curious passage respecting
+ Nell Gwyn, who is hinted at in the text:--"I walked with him [King
+ Charles II.] through Saint James Park to the garden, where I both
+ saw and heard a very familiar discourse between ... [/the King/]
+ and Mrs. Nelly, as they called her, an intimate comedian, she
+ looking out of her garden on a terrace at the top of the wall, and
+ [/the King/] standing on the green walk under it. I was heartily
+ sorry at this scene."--EVELYN'S /Memoirs/, vol. i. p.413.
+
+"It is no matter what I mean, or whom I mean," said Mrs. Chiffinch;
+"but I tell you, Tom Chiffinch, that you will find your master quite
+consoled for loss of the piece of prudish puritanism that you would
+need saddle him with; as if the good man were not plagued enough with
+them in Parliament, but you must, forsooth, bring them into his very
+bedchamber."
+
+"Well, Kate," said Chiffinch, "if a man were to speak all the sense of
+the seven wise masters, a woman would find nonsense enough to
+overwhelm him with; so I shall say no more, but that I would to Heaven
+I may find the King in no worse humour than you describe him. I am
+commanded to attend him down the river to the Tower to-day, where he
+is to make some survey of arms and stores. They are clever fellows who
+contrive to keep Rowley from engaging in business, for, by my word, he
+has a turn for it."
+
+"I warrant you," said Chiffinch the female, nodding, but rather to her
+own figure, reflected from a mirror, than to her politic husband,--"I
+warrant you we will find means of occupying him that will sufficiently
+fill up his time."
+
+"On my honour, Kate," said the male Chiffinch, "I find you strangely
+altered, and, to speak truth, grown most extremely opinionative. I
+shall be happy if you have good reason for your confidence."
+
+The dame smiled superciliously, but deigned no other answer, unless
+this were one,--"I shall order a boat to go upon the Thames to-day
+with the royal party."
+
+"Take care what you do, Kate; there are none dare presume so far but
+women of the first rank. Duchess of Bolton--of Buckingham--of----"
+
+"Who cares for a list of names? why may not I be as forward as the
+greatest B. amongst your string of them?"
+
+"Nay, faith, thou mayest match the greatest B. in Court already,"
+answered Chiffinch; "so e'en take thy own course of it. But do not let
+Chaubert forget to get some collation ready, and a /souper au petit
+couvert/, in case it should be commanded for the evening."
+
+"Ay, there your boasted knowledge of Court matters begins and ends.--
+Chiffinch, Chaubert, and Company;--dissolve that partnership, and you
+break Tom Chiffinch for a courtier."
+
+"Amen, Kate," replied Chiffinch; "and let me tell you it is as safe to
+rely on another person's fingers as on our own wit. But I must give
+orders for the water.--If you will take the pinnace, there are the
+cloth-of-gold cushions in the chapel may serve to cover the benches
+for the day. They are never wanted where they lie, so you may make
+free with them too."
+
+Madam Chiffinch accordingly mingled with the flotilla which attended
+the King on his voyage down the Thames, amongst whom was the Queen,
+attended by some of the principal ladies of the Court. The little
+plump Cleopatra, dressed to as much advantage as her taste could
+devise, and seated upon her embroidered cushions like Venus in her
+shell, neglected nothing that effrontery and minauderie could perform
+to draw upon herself some portion of the King's observation; but
+Charles was not in the vein, and did not even pay her the slightest
+passing attention of any kind, until her boatmen having ventured to
+approach nearer to the Queen's barge than etiquette permitted,
+received a peremptory order to back their oars, and fall out of the
+royal procession. Madam Chiffinch cried for spite, and transgressed
+Solomon's warning, by cursing the King in her heart; but had no better
+course than to return to Westminster, and direct Chaubert's
+preparations for the evening.
+
+In the meantime the royal barge paused at the Tower; and, accompanied
+by a laughing train of ladies and of courtiers, the gay Monarch made
+the echoes of the old prison-towers ring with the unwonted sounds of
+mirth and revelry. As they ascended from the river-side to the centre
+of the building, where the fine old keep of William the Conqueror,
+called the White Tower, predominates over the exterior defences,
+Heaven only knows how many gallant jests, good or bad, were run on the
+comparison of his Majesty's state-prison to that of Cupid, and what
+killing similes were drawn between the ladies' eyes and the guns of
+the fortress, which, spoken with a fashionable congée, and listened to
+with a smile from a fair lady, formed the fine conversations of the
+day.
+
+This gay swarm of flutterers did not, however, attend close on the
+King's person, though they had accompanied him upon his party on the
+river. Charles, who often formed manly and sensible resolutions,
+though he was too easily diverted from them by indolence or pleasure,
+had some desire to make himself personally acquainted with the state
+of the military stores, arms, &c. of which the Tower was then, as now,
+the magazine; and, although he had brought with him the usual number
+of his courtiers, only three or four attended him on the scrutiny
+which he intended. Whilst, therefore, the rest of the train amused
+themselves as they might in other parts of the Tower, the King,
+accompanied by the Dukes of Buckingham, Ormond, and one or two others,
+walked through the well-known hall, in which is preserved the most
+splendid magazine of arms in the world, and which, though far from
+exhibiting its present extraordinary state of perfection, was even
+then an arsenal worthy of the great nation to which it belonged.
+
+The Duke of Ormond, well known for his services during the Great Civil
+War, was, as we have elsewhere noticed, at present rather on cold
+terms with his Sovereign, who nevertheless asked his advice on many
+occasions, and who required it on the present amongst others, when it
+was not a little feared that the Parliament, in their zeal for the
+Protestant religion, might desire to take the magazines of arms and
+ammunition under their own exclusive orders. While Charles sadly
+hinted at such a termination of the popular jealousies of the period,
+and discussed with Ormond the means of resisting, or evading it,
+Buckingham, falling a little behind, amused himself with ridiculing
+the antiquated appearance and embarrassed demeanour of the old warder
+who attended on the occasion, and who chanced to be the very same who
+escorted Julian Peveril to his present place of confinement. The Duke
+prosecuted his raillery with the greater activity, that he found the
+old man, though restrained by the place and presence, was rather upon
+the whole testy, and disposed to afford what sportsmen call /play/ to
+his persecutor. The various pieces of ancient armour, with which the
+wall was covered, afforded the principal source of the Duke's wit, as
+he insisted upon knowing from the old man, who, he said, could best
+remember matters from the days of King Arthur downwards at the least,
+the history of the different warlike weapons, and anecdotes of the
+battles in which they had been wielded. The old man obviously
+suffered, when he was obliged, by repeated questions, to tell the
+legends (often sufficiently absurd) which the tradition of the place
+had assigned to particular relics. Far from flourishing his partisan,
+and augmenting the emphasis of his voice, as was and is the prevailing
+fashion of these warlike Ciceroni, it was scarcely possible to extort
+from him a single word concerning those topics on which their
+information is usually overflowing.
+
+"Do you know, my friend," said the Duke to him at last, "I begin to
+change my mind respecting you. I supposed you must have served as a
+Yeoman of the Guard since bluff King Henry's time, and expected to
+hear something from you about the Field of the Cloth of Gold,--and I
+thought of asking you the colour of Anne Bullen's breastknot, which
+cost the Pope three kingdoms; but I am afraid you are but a novice in
+such recollections of love and chivalry. Art sure thou didst not creep
+into thy warlike office from some dark shop in Tower-Hamlets, and that
+thou hast not converted an unlawful measuring-yard into that glorious
+halberd?--I warrant thou canst not even tell you whom this piece of
+antique panoply pertained to?"
+
+The Duke pointed at random to a cuirass which hung amongst others, but
+was rather remarkable from being better cleansed.
+
+"I should know that piece of iron," said the warder bluntly, yet with
+some change in his voice; "for I have known a man within side of it
+who would not have endured half the impertinence I have heard spoken
+to-day."
+
+The tone of the old man, as well as the words, attracted the attention
+of Charles and the Duke of Ormond, who were only two steps before the
+speaker. They both stopped, and turned round; the former saying at the
+same time,--"how now, sirrah!--what answers are these?--What man do
+you speak of?"
+
+"Of one who is none now," said the warder, "whatever he may have
+been."
+
+"The old man surely speaks of himself," said the Duke of Ormond,
+closely examining the countenance of the warder, which he in vain
+endeavoured to turn away. "I am sure I remember these features--Are
+not you my old friend, Major Coleby?"
+
+"I wish your Grace's memory had been less accurate," said the old man,
+colouring deeply, and fixing his eyes on the ground.
+
+The King was greatly shocked.--"Good God!" he said, "the gallant Major
+Coleby, who joined us with his four sons and a hundred and fifty men
+at Warrington!--And is this all we could do for an old Worcester
+friend?"
+
+The tears rushed thick into the old man's eyes as he said in broken
+accents, "Never mind me, sire; I am well enough here--a worn-out
+soldier rusting among old armour. Where one old Cavalier is better,
+there are twenty worse.--I am sorry your Majesty should know anything
+of it, since it grieves you."
+
+With that kindness, which was a redeeming point of his character,
+Charles, while the old man was speaking, took the partisan from him
+with his own hand, and put it into that of Buckingham, saying, "What
+Coleby's hand has borne, can disgrace neither yours nor mine,--and you
+owe him this atonement. Time has been with him, that, for less
+provocation, he would have laid it about your ears."
+
+The Duke bowed deeply, but coloured with resentment, and took an
+immediate opportunity to place the weapon carelessly against a pile of
+arms. The King did not observe a contemptuous motion, which, perhaps,
+would not have pleased him, being at the moment occupied with the
+veteran, whom he exhorted to lean upon him, as he conveyed him to a
+seat, permitting no other person to assist him. "Rest there," he said,
+"my brave old friend; and Charles Stewart must be poor indeed, if you
+wear that dress an hour longer.--You look very pale, my good Coleby,
+to have had so much colour a few minutes since. Be not vexed at what
+Buckingham says; no one minds his folly.--You look worse and worse.
+Come, come, you are too much hurried by this meeting. Sit still--do
+not rise--do not attempt to kneel. I command you to repose yourself
+till I have made the round of these apartments."
+
+The old Cavalier stooped his head in token of acquiescence in the
+command of his Sovereign, but he raised it not again. The tumultuous
+agitation of the moment had been too much for spirits which had been
+long in a state of depression, and health which was much decayed. When
+the King and his attendants, after half-an-hour's absence, returned to
+the spot where they had left the veteran, they found him dead, and
+already cold, in the attitude of one who has fallen easily asleep. The
+King was dreadfully shocked; and it was with a low and faltering voice
+that he directed the body, in due time, to be honourably buried in the
+chapel of the Tower.[*] He was then silent, until he attained the
+steps in front of the arsenal, where the party in attendance upon his
+person began to assemble at his approach, along with some other
+persons of respectable appearance, whom curiosity had attracted.
+
+[*] A story of this nature is current in the legends of the Tower. The
+ affecting circumstances are, I believe, recorded in one of the
+ little manuals which are put into the hands of visitors, but are
+ not to be found in the later editions.
+
+"This is dreadful," said the King. "We must find some means of
+relieving the distresses, and rewarding the fidelity of our suffering
+followers, or posterity will cry fie upon our memory."
+
+"Your Majesty has had often such plans agitated in your Council," said
+Buckingham.
+
+"True, George," said the King. "I can safely say it is not my fault. I
+have thought of it for years."
+
+"It cannot be too well considered," said Buckingham; "besides, every
+year makes the task of relief easier."
+
+"True," said the Duke of Ormond, "by diminishing the number of
+sufferers. Here is poor old Coleby will no longer be a burden to the
+Crown."
+
+"You are too severe, my Lord of Ormond," said the King, "and should
+respect the feelings you trespass on. You cannot suppose that we would
+have permitted this poor man to hold such a situation, had we known of
+the circumstances?"
+
+"For God's sake, then, sire," said the Duke of Ormond, "turn your
+eyes, which have just rested on the corpse of one old friend, upon
+the distresses of others. Here is the valiant old Sir Geoffrey Peveril
+of the Peak, who fought through the whole war, wherever blows were
+going, and was the last man, I believe, in England, who laid down his
+arms--Here is his son, of whom I have the highest accounts, as a
+gallant of spirit, accomplishments, and courage--Here is the
+unfortunate House of Derby--for pity's sake, interfere in behalf of
+these victims, whom the folds of this hydra-plot have entangled, in
+order to crush them to death--rebuke the fiends that are seeking to
+devour their lives, and disappoint the harpies that are gaping for
+their property. This very day seven-night the unfortunate family,
+father and son, are to be brought upon trial for crimes of which they
+are as guiltless, I boldly pronounce, as any who stand in this
+presence. For God's sake, sire, let us hope that, should the
+prejudices of the people condemn them, as it has done others, you will
+at last step in between the blood-hunters and their prey."
+
+The King looked, as he really was, exceedingly perplexed.
+
+Buckingham, between whom and Ormond there existed a constant and
+almost mortal quarrel, interfered to effect a diversion in Charles's
+favour. "Your Majesty's royal benevolence," he said, "needs never
+want exercise, while the Duke of Ormond is near your person. He has
+his sleeve cut in the old and ample fashion, that he may always have
+store of ruined cavaliers stowed in it to produce at demand, rare old
+raw-boned boys, with Malmsey noses, bald heads, spindle shanks, and
+merciless histories of Edgehill and Naseby."
+
+"My sleeve is, I dare say, of an antique cut," said Ormond, looking
+full at the Duke; "but I pin neither bravoes nor ruffians upon it, my
+Lord of Buckingham, as I see fastened to coats of the new mode."
+
+"That is a little too sharp for our presence, my lord," said the King.
+
+"Not if I make my words good," said Ormond.--"My Lord of Buckingham,
+will you name the man you spoke to as you left the boat?"
+
+"I spoke to no one," said the Duke hastily--"nay, I mistake, I
+remember a fellow whispered in my ear, that one, who I thought had
+left London was still lingering in town. A person whom I had business
+with."
+
+"Was yon the messenger?" said Ormond, singling out from the crowd who
+stood in the court-yard a tall dark-looking man, muffled in a large
+cloak, wearing a broad shadowy black beaver hat, with a long sword of
+the Spanish fashion--the very Colonel, in short, whom Buckingham had
+despatched in quest of Christian, with the intention of detaining him
+in the country.
+
+When Buckingham's eyes had followed the direction of Ormond's finger,
+he could not help blushing so deeply as to attract the King's
+attention.
+
+"What new frolic is this, George?" he said. "Gentlemen, bring that
+fellow forward. On my life, a truculent-looking caitiff--Hark ye,
+friend, who are you? If an honest man, Nature has forgot to label it
+upon your countenance.--Does none here know him?
+
+ 'With every symptom of a knave complete,
+ If he be honest, he's a devilish cheat.'"
+
+"He is well known to many, sire," replied Ormond; "and that he walks
+in this area with his neck safe, and his limbs unshackled, is an
+instance, amongst many, that we live under the sway of the most
+merciful Prince of Europe."
+
+"Oddsfish! who is the man, my Lord Duke?" said the King. "Your Grace
+talks mysteries--Buckingham blushes--and the rogue himself is dumb."
+
+"That honest gentleman, please your Majesty," replied the Duke of
+Ormond, "whose modesty makes him mute, though it cannot make him
+blush, is the notorious Colonel Blood, as he calls himself, whose
+attempt to possess himself of your Majesty's royal crown took place at
+no very distant date, in this very Tower of London."
+
+"That exploit is not easily forgotten," said the King; "but that the
+fellow lives, shows your Grace's clemency as well as mine."
+
+"I cannot deny that I was in his hands, sire," said Ormond, "and had
+certainly been murdered by him, had he chosen to take my life on the
+spot, instead of destining me--I thank him for the honour--to be
+hanged at Tyburn. I had certainly been sped, if he had thought me
+worth knife or pistol, or anything short of the cord.--Look at him
+sire! If the rascal dared, he would say at this moment, like Caliban
+in the play, 'Ho, ho, I would I had done it!'"
+
+"Why, oddsfish!" answered the King, "he hath a villainous sneer, my
+lord, which seems to say as much; but, my Lord Duke, we have pardoned
+him, and so has your Grace."
+
+"It would ill have become me," said the Duke of Ormond, "to have been
+severe in prosecuting an attempt on my poor life, when your Majesty
+was pleased to remit his more outrageous and insolent attempt upon
+your royal crown. But I must conceive it as a piece of supreme
+insolence on the part of this bloodthirsty bully, by whomsoever he may
+be now backed, to appear in the Tower, which was the theatre of one of
+his villainies, or before me, who was well-nigh the victim of
+another."
+
+"It shall be amended in future," said the King.--"Hark ye, sirrah
+Blood, if you again presume to thrust yourself in the way you have
+done but now, I will have the hangman's knife and your knavish ears
+made acquainted."
+
+Blood bowed, and with a coolness of impudence which did his nerves
+great honour, he said he had only come to the Tower accidentally, to
+communicate with a particular friend on business of importance. "My
+Lord Duke of Buckingham," he said, "knew he had no other intentions."
+
+"Get you gone, you scoundrelly cut-throat," said the Duke, as much
+impatient of Colonel Blood's claim of acquaintance, as a town-rake of
+the low and blackguard companions of his midnight rambles, when they
+accost him in daylight amidst better company; "if you dare to quote my
+name again, I will have you thrown into the Thames."
+
+Blood, thus repulsed, turned round with the most insolent composure,
+and walked away down from the parade, all men looking at him, as at
+some strange and monstrous prodigy, so much was he renowned for daring
+and desperate villainy. Some even followed him, to have a better
+survey of the notorious Colonel Blood, like the smaller tribe of birds
+which keep fluttering round an owl when he appears in the light of the
+sun. But as, in the latter case, these thoughtless flutterers are
+careful to keep out of reach of the beak and claws of the bird of
+Minerva, so none of those who followed and gazed on Blood as something
+ominous, cared to bandy looks with him, or to endure and return the
+lowering and deadly glances, which he shot from time to time on those
+who pressed nearest to him. He stalked on in this manner, like a
+daunted, yet sullen wolf, afraid to stop, yet unwilling to fly, until
+he reached the Traitor's Gate, and getting on board a sculler which
+waited for him, he disappeared from their eyes.
+
+Charles would fain have obliterated all recollection of his
+appearance, by the observation, "It were a shame that such a reprobate
+scoundrel should be the subject of discord between two noblemen of
+distinction;" and he recommended to the Dukes of Buckingham and Ormond
+to join hands, and forget a misunderstanding which rose on so unworthy
+a subject.
+
+Buckingham answered carelessly, "That the Duke of Ormond's honoured
+white hairs were a sufficient apology for his making the first
+overtures to a reconciliation," and he held out his hand accordingly.
+But Ormond only bowed in return, and said, "The King had no cause to
+expect that the Court would be disturbed by his personal resentments,
+since time would not yield him back twenty years, nor the grave
+restore his gallant son Ossory. As to the ruffian who had intruded
+himself there, he was obliged to him, since, by showing that his
+Majesty's clemency extended even to the very worst of criminals, he
+strengthened his hopes of obtaining the King's favour for such of his
+innocent friends as were now in prison, and in danger, from the odious
+charges brought against them on the score of the Popish Plot."
+
+The King made no other answer to this insinuation, than by directing
+that the company should embark for their return to Whitehall; and thus
+took leave of the officers of the Tower who were in attendance, with
+one of those well-turned compliments to their discharge of duty, which
+no man knew better how to express; and issued at the same time strict
+and anxious orders for protection and defence of the important
+fortress confided to them, and all which it contained.
+
+Before he parted with Ormond on their arrival at Whitehall, he turned
+round to him, as one who has made up his resolution, and said, "Be
+satisfied, my Lord Duke--our friends' case shall be looked to."
+
+In the same evening the Attorney-General, and North, Lord Chief
+Justice of the Common Pleas, had orders with all secrecy, to meet his
+Majesty that evening on especial matters of state, at the apartments
+of Chiffinch, the centre of all affairs, whether of gallantry or
+business.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLI
+
+ Yet, Corah, thou shalt from oblivion pass;
+ Erect thyself, thou monumental brass,
+ High as the serpent of thy metal made,
+ While nations stand secure beneath thy shade.
+ --ABSALOM AND ACHITOPHEL.
+
+The morning which Charles had spent in visiting the Tower, had been
+very differently employed by those unhappy individuals, whom their bad
+fate, and the singular temper of the times, had made the innocent
+tenants of that state prison, and who had received official notice
+that they were to stand their trial in the Court of Queen's Bench at
+Westminster, on the seventh succeeding day. The stout old Cavalier at
+first only railed at the officer for spoiling his breakfast with the
+news, but evinced great feeling when he was told that Julian was to be
+put under the same indictment.
+
+We intend to dwell only very generally on the nature of their trial,
+which corresponded, in the outline, with almost all those which took
+place during the prevalence of the Popish Plot. That is, one or two
+infamous and perjured evidences, whose profession of common informers
+had become frightfully lucrative, made oath to the prisoners having
+expressed themselves interested in the great confederacy of the
+Catholics. A number of others brought forward facts or suspicions,
+affecting the character of the parties as honest Protestants and good
+subjects; and betwixt the direct and presumptive evidence, enough was
+usually extracted for justifying, to a corrupted court and perjured
+jury, the fatal verdict of Guilty.
+
+The fury of the people had, however, now begun to pass away, exhausted
+even by its own violence. The English nation differ from all others,
+indeed even from those of the sister kingdoms, in being very easily
+sated with punishment, even when they suppose it most merited. Other
+nations are like the tamed tiger, which, when once its native appetite
+for slaughter is indulged in one instance, rushes on in promiscuous
+ravages. But the English public have always rather resembled what is
+told of the sleuth-dog, which, eager, fierce, and clamorous in pursuit
+of his prey, desists from it so soon as blood is sprinkled upon his
+path.
+
+Men's minds were now beginning to cool--the character of the witnesses
+was more closely sifted--their testimonies did not in all cases tally
+--and a wholesome suspicion began to be entertained of men, who would
+never say they had made a full discovery of all they knew, but
+avowedly reserved some points of evidence to bear on future trials.
+
+The King also, who had lain passive during the first burst of popular
+fury, was now beginning to bestir himself, which produced a marked
+effect on the conduct of the Crown Counsel, and even the Judges. Sir
+George Wakeman had been acquitted in spite of Oates's direct
+testimony; and public attention was strongly excited concerning the
+event of the next trial; which chanced to be that of the Peverils,
+father and son, with whom, I know not from what concatenation, little
+Hudson the dwarf was placed at the bar of the Court of King's Bench.
+
+It was a piteous sight to behold a father and son, who had been so
+long separated, meet under circumstances so melancholy; and many tears
+were shed, when the majestic old man--for such he was, though now
+broken with years--folded his son to his bosom, with a mixture of joy,
+affection, and a bitter anticipation of the event of the impending
+trial. There was a feeling in the Court that for a moment overcame
+every prejudice and party feeling. Many spectators shed tears; and
+there was even a low moaning, as of those who weep aloud.
+
+Such as felt themselves sufficiently at ease to remark the conduct of
+poor little Geoffrey Hudson, who was scarcely observed amid the
+preponderating interest created by his companions in misfortune, could
+not but notice a strong degree of mortification on the part of that
+diminutive gentleman. He had soothed his great mind by the thoughts of
+playing the character which he was called on to sustain, in a manner
+which should be long remembered in that place; and on his entrance,
+had saluted the numerous spectators, as well as the Court, with a
+cavalier air, which he meant should express grace, high-breeding,
+perfect coolness, with a noble disregard to the issue of their
+proceedings. But his little person was so obscured and jostled aside,
+on the meeting of the father and son, who had been brought in
+different boats from the Tower, and placed at the bar at the same
+moment, that his distress and his dignity were alike thrown into the
+background, and attracted neither sympathy nor admiration.
+
+The dwarf's wisest way to attract attention would have been to remain
+quiet, when so remarkable an exterior would certainly have received in
+its turn the share of public notice which he so eagerly coveted. But
+when did personal vanity listen to the suggestions of prudence?--Our
+impatient friend scrambled, with some difficulty, on the top of the
+bench intended for his seat; and there, "paining himself to stand a-
+tiptoe," like Chaucer's gallant Sir Chaunticlere, he challenged the
+notice of the audience as he stood bowing and claiming acquaintance of
+his namesake Sir Geoffrey the larger, with whose shoulders,
+notwithstanding his elevated situation, he was scarcely yet upon a
+level.
+
+The taller Knight, whose mind was occupied in a very different manner,
+took no notice of these advances upon the dwarf's part, but sat down
+with the determination rather to die on the spot than evince any
+symptoms of weakness before Roundheads and Presbyterians; under which
+obnoxious epithets, being too old-fashioned to find out party
+designations of newer date, he comprehended all persons concerned in
+his present trouble.
+
+By Sir Geoffrey the larger's change of position, his face was thus
+brought on a level with that of Sir Geoffrey the less, who had an
+opportunity of pulling him by the cloak. He of Martindale Castle,
+rather mechanically than consciously, turned his head towards the
+large wrinkled visage, which, struggling between an assumed air of
+easy importance, and an anxious desire to be noticed, was grimacing
+within a yard of him. But neither the singular physiognomy, the nods
+and smiles of greeting and recognition into which it was wreathed, nor
+the strange little form by which it was supported, had at that moment
+the power of exciting any recollections in the old Knight's mind; and
+having stared for a moment at the poor little man, his bulky namesake
+turned away his head without farther notice.
+
+Julian Peveril, the dwarf's more recent acquaintance, had, even amid
+his own anxious feelings, room for sympathy with those of his little
+fellow-sufferer. As soon as he discovered that he was at the same
+terrible bar with himself, although he could not conceive how their
+causes came to be conjoined, he acknowledged him by a hearty shake of
+the hand, which the old man returned with affected dignity and real
+gratitude. "Worthy youth," he said, "thy presence is restorative, like
+the nepenthe of Homer even in this syncopé of our mutual fate. I am
+concerned to see that your father hath not the same alacrity of soul
+as that of ours, which are lodged within smaller compass; and that he
+hath forgotten an ancient comrade and fellow-soldier, who now stands
+beside him to perform, perhaps, their last campaign."
+
+Julian briefly replied, that his father had much to occupy him. But
+the little man--who, to do him justice, cared no more (in his own
+phrase) for imminent danger or death, than he did for the puncture of
+a flea's proboscis--did not so easily renounce the secret object of
+his ambition, which was to acquire the notice of the large and lofty
+Sir Geoffrey Peveril, who, being at least three inches taller than his
+son, was in so far possessed of that superior excellence, which the
+poor dwarf, in his secret soul, valued before all other distinctions,
+although in his conversation, he was constantly depreciating it. "Good
+comrade and namesake," he proceeded, stretching out his hand, so as to
+again to reach the elder Peveril's cloak, "I forgive your want of
+reminiscence, seeing it is long since I saw you at Naseby, fighting as
+if you had as many arms as the fabled Briareus."
+
+The Knight of Martindale, who had again turned his head towards the
+little man, and had listened, as if endeavouring to make something out
+of his discourse, here interrupted him with a peevish, "Pshaw!"
+
+"Pshaw!" repeated Sir Geoffrey the less; "/Pshaw/ is an expression of
+slight esteem,--nay, of contempt,--in all languages; and were this a
+befitting place----"
+
+But the Judges had now taken their places, the criers called silence,
+and the stern voice of the Lord Chief Justice (the notorious Scroggs)
+demanded what the officers meant by permitting the accused to
+communicate together in open court.
+
+It may here be observed, that this celebrated personage was, upon the
+present occasion, at a great loss how to proceed. A calm, dignified,
+judicial demeanour, was at no time the characteristic of his official
+conduct. He always ranted and roared either on the one side or the
+other; and of late, he had been much unsettled which side to take,
+being totally incapable of anything resembling impartiality. At the
+first trials for the Plot, when the whole stream of popularity ran
+against the accused, no one had been so loud as Scroggs; to attempt to
+the character of Oates or Bedloe, or any other leading witnesses, he
+treated as a crime more heinous than it would have been to blaspheme
+the Gospel on which they had been sworn--it was a stifling of the
+Plot, or discrediting of the King's witnesses--a crime not greatly, if
+at all, short of high treason against the King himself.
+
+But, of late, a new light had begun to glimmer upon the understanding
+of this interpreter of the laws. Sagacious in the signs of the times,
+he began to see that the tide was turning; and that Court favour at
+least, and probably popular opinion also, were likely, in a short
+time, to declare against the witnesses, and in favour of the accused.
+
+The opinion which Scroggs had hitherto entertained of the high respect
+in which Shaftesbury, the patron of the Plot, was held by Charles, had
+been definitely shaken by a whisper from his brother North to the
+following effect: "His Lordship has no more interest at Court than
+your footman."
+
+This notice, from a sure hand, and received but that morning, had put
+the Judge to a sore dilemma; for, however indifferent to actual
+consistency, he was most anxious to save appearances. He could not but
+recollect how violent he had been on former occasions in favour of
+these prosecutions; and being sensible at the same time that the
+credit of the witnesses, though shaken in the opinion of the more
+judicious, was, amongst the bulk of the people out of doors, as strong
+as ever, he had a difficult part to play. His conduct, therefore,
+during the whole trial, resembled the appearance of a vessel about to
+go upon another tack, when her sails are shivering in the wind, ere
+they have yet caught the impulse which is to send her forth in a new
+direction. In a word, he was so uncertain which side it was his
+interest to favour, that he might be said on that occasion to have
+come nearer a state of total impartiality than he was ever capable of
+attaining, whether before or afterwards. This was shown by his
+bullying now the accused, and now the witnesses, like a mastiff too
+much irritated to lie still without baying, but uncertain whom he
+shall first bite.
+
+The indictment was then read; and Sir Geoffrey Peveril heard, with
+some composure, the first part of it, which stated him to have placed
+his son in the household of the Countess of Derby, a recusant Papist,
+for the purpose of aiding the horrible and bloodthirsty Popish Plot--
+with having had arms and ammunition concealed in his house--and with
+receiving a blank commission from the Lord Stafford, who had suffered
+death on account of the Plot. But when the charge went on to state
+that he had communicated for the same purpose with Geoffrey Hudson,
+sometimes called Sir Geoffrey Hudson, now, or formerly in the domestic
+service of the Queen Dowager, he looked at his companion as if he
+suddenly recalled him to remembrance, and broke out impatiently,
+"These lies are too gross to require a moment's consideration. I might
+have had enough of intercourse, though in nothing but what was loyal
+and innocent, with my noble kinsman, the late Lord Stafford--I will
+call him so in spite of his misfortunes--and with my wife's relation,
+the Honourable Countess of Derby. But what likelihood can there be
+that I should have colleagued with a decrepit buffoon, with whom I
+never had an instant's communication, save once at an Easter feast,
+when I whistled a hornpipe, as he danced on a trencher to amuse the
+company?"
+
+The rage of the poor dwarf brought tears in his eyes, while, with an
+affected laugh, he said, that instead of those juvenile and festive
+passages, Sir Geoffrey Peveril might have remembered his charging
+along with him at Wiggan Lane.
+
+"On my word," said Sir Geoffrey, after a moment's recollection, "I
+will do you justice, Master Hudson--I believe you were there--I think
+I heard you did good service. But you will allow you might have been
+near one without his seeing you."
+
+A sort of titter ran through the Court at the simplicity of the larger
+Sir Geoffrey's testimony, which the dwarf endeavoured to control, by
+standing on his tiptoes, and looking fiercely around, as if to
+admonish the laughers that they indulged their mirth at their own
+peril. But perceiving that this only excited farther scorn, he
+composed himself into a semblance of careless contempt, observing,
+with a smile, that no one feared the glance of a chained lion; a
+magnificent simile, which rather increased than diminished the mirth
+of those who heard it.
+
+Against Julian Peveril there failed not to be charged the aggravated
+fact, that he had been bearer of letters between the Countess of Derby
+and other Papists and priests, engaged in the universal treasonable
+conspiracy of the Catholics; and the attack of the house at
+Moultrassie Hall,--with his skirmish with Chiffinch, and his assault,
+as it was termed, on the person of John Jenkins, servant to the Duke
+of Buckingham, were all narrated at length, as so many open and overt
+acts of treasonable import. To this charge Peveril contented himself
+with pleading--Not Guilty.
+
+His little companion was not satisfied with so simple a plea; for when
+he heard it read, as a part of the charge applying to him, that he had
+received from an agent of the Plot a blank commission as Colonel of a
+regiment of grenadiers, he replied, in wrath and scorn, that if
+Goliath of Gath had come to him with such a proposal, and proffered
+him the command of the whole sons of Anak in a body, he should never
+have had occasion or opportunity to repeat the temptation to another.
+"I would have slain him," said the little man of loyalty, "even where
+he stood."
+
+The charge was stated anew by the Counsel for the Crown; and forth
+came the notorious Doctor Oates, rustling in the full silken
+canonicals of priesthood, for it was a time when he affected no small
+dignity of exterior decoration and deportment.
+
+This singular man, who, aided by the obscure intrigues of the
+Catholics themselves, and the fortuitous circumstance of Godfrey's
+murder, had been able to cram down the public throat such a mass of
+absurdity as his evidence amounts to, had no other talent for
+imposture than an impudence which set conviction and shame alike at
+defiance. A man of sense or reflection, by trying to give his plot an
+appearance of more probability, would most likely have failed, as wise
+men often to do in addressing the multitude, from not daring to
+calculate upon the prodigious extent of their credulity, especially
+where the figments presented to them involve the fearful and the
+terrible.
+
+Oates was by nature choleric; and the credit he had acquired made him
+insolent and conceited. Even his exterior was portentous. A fleece of
+white periwig showed a most uncouth visage, of great length, having
+the mouth, as the organ by use of which he was to rise to eminence,
+placed in the very centre of the countenance, and exhibiting to the
+astonished spectator as much chin below as there was nose and brow
+above the aperture. His pronunciation, too, was after a conceited
+fashion of his own, in which he accented the vowels in a manner
+altogether peculiar to himself.
+
+This notorious personage, such as we have described him, stood forth
+on the present trial, and delivered his astonishing testimony
+concerning the existence of a Catholic Plot for the subversion of the
+government and murder of the King, in the same general outline in
+which it may be found in every English history. But as the doctor
+always had in reserve some special piece of evidence affecting those
+immediately on trial, he was pleased, on the present occasion, deeply
+to inculpate the Countess of Derby. "He had seen," as he said, "that
+honourable lady when he was at the Jesuits' College at Saint Omer's.
+She had sent for him to an inn, or /auberge/, as it was there termed--
+the sign of the Golden Lamb; and had ordered him to breakfast in the
+same room with her ladyship; and afterwards told him, that, knowing he
+was trusted by the Fathers of the Society, she was determined that he
+should have a share of her secrets also; and therewithal, that she
+drew from her bosom a broad sharp-pointed knife, such as butchers kill
+sheep with, and demanded of him what he thought of it for /the
+purpose/; and when he, the witness, said for what purpose she rapt him
+on the fingers with her fan, called him a dull fellow, and said it was
+designed to kill the King with."
+
+Here Sir Geoffrey Peveril could no longer refrain his indignation and
+surprise. "Mercy of Heaven!" he said, "did ever one hear of ladies of
+quality carrying butchering knives about them, and telling every
+scurvy companion she meant to kill the King with them?--Gentleman of
+the Jury, do but think if this is reasonable--though, if the villain
+could prove by any honest evidence, that my Lady of Derby ever let
+such a scum as himself come to speech of her, I would believe all he
+can say."
+
+"Sir Geoffrey," said the Judge, "rest you quiet--You must not fly out
+--passion helps you not here--the Doctor must be suffered to proceed."
+
+Doctor Oates went on to state how the lady complained of the wrongs
+the House of Derby had sustained from the King and the oppression of
+her religion, and boasted of the schemes of the Jesuits and seminary
+priests; and how they would be farthered by her noble kinsman of the
+House of Stanley. He finally averred that both the Countess and the
+Fathers of the seminary abroad, founded much upon the talents and
+courage of Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son--the latter of whom was a
+member of her family. Of Hudson, he only recollected of having heard
+one of the Fathers say, that although but a dwarf in stature, he would
+prove a giant in the cause of the Church.
+
+When he had ended his evidence, there was a pause, until the Judge, as
+if the thought had suddenly occurred to him, demanded of Dr. Oates,
+whether he had ever mentioned the names of the Countess of Derby in
+any of the previous informations which he had lodged before the Privy
+Council, and elsewhere, upon this affair.
+
+Oates seemed rather surprised at the question, and coloured with
+anger, as he answered, in his peculiar mode of pronunciation, "Whoy,
+no, maay laard."
+
+"And pray, Doctor," said the Judge, "how came so great a revealer of
+mysteries as you have lately proved, to have suffered so material a
+circumstance as the accession of this powerful family to the Plot to
+have remained undiscovered?"
+
+"Maay laard," said Oates, with much effrontery, "aye do not come here
+to have my evidence questioned as touching the Plaat."
+
+"I do not question your evidence, Doctor," said Scroggs, for the time
+was not arrived that he dared treat him roughly; "nor do I doubt the
+existence of the /Plaat/, since it is your pleasure to swear to it. I
+would only have you, for your own sake, and the satisfaction of all
+good Protestants, to explain why you have kept back such a weighty
+point of information from the King and country."
+
+"Maay laard," said Oates, "I will tell you a pretty fable."
+
+"I hope," answered the Judge, "it may be the first and last which you
+shall tell in this place."
+
+"Maay laard," continued Oates, "there was once a faux, who having to
+carry a goose over a frazen river, and being afraid the aice would not
+bear him and his booty, did caarry aaver a staane, my laard, in the
+first instance, to prove the strength of the aice."
+
+"So your former evidence was but the stone, and now, for the first
+time, you have brought us the goose?" said Sir William Scroggs; "to
+tell us this, Doctor, is to make geese of the Court and Jury."
+
+"I desoire your laardship's honest construction," said Oates, who saw
+the current changing against him, but was determined to pay the score
+with effrontery. "All men knaw at what coast and praice I have given
+my evidence, which has been always, under Gaad, the means of awakening
+this poor naation to the dangerous state in which it staunds. Many
+here knaw that I have been obliged to faartify my ladging at Whitehall
+against the bloody Papists. It was not to be thought that I should
+have brought all the story out at aance. I think your wisdome would
+have advised me otherwise."[*]
+
+[*] It was on such terms that Dr. Oates was pleased to claim the
+ extraordinary privilege of dealing out the information which he
+ chose to communicate to a court of justice. The only sense in
+ which his story of the fox, stone, and goose could be applicable,
+ is by supposing that he was determined to ascertain the extent of
+ his countrymen's credulity before supplying it with a full meal.
+
+"Nay, Doctor," said the Judge, "it is not for me to direct you in this
+affair; and it is for the Jury to believe you or not; and as for
+myself, I sit here to do justice to both--the Jury have heard your
+answer to my question."
+
+Doctor Oates retired from the witness-box reddening like a turkey-
+cock, as one totally unused to have such accounts questioned as he
+chose to lay before the courts of justice; and there was, perhaps, for
+the first time, amongst the counsel and solicitors, as well as the
+templars and students of law there present, a murmur, distinct and
+audible, unfavourable to the character of the great father of the
+Popish Plot.
+
+Everett and Dangerfield, with whom the reader is already acquainted,
+were then called in succession to sustain the accusation. They were
+subordinate informers--a sort of under-spur-leathers, as the cant term
+went--who followed the path of Oates, with all deference to his
+superior genius and invention, and made their own fictions chime in
+and harmonise with his, as well as their talents could devise. But as
+their evidence had at no time received the full credence into which
+the impudence of Oates had cajoled the public, so they now began to
+fall into discredit rather more hastily than their prototype, as the
+super-added turrets of an ill-constructed building are naturally the
+first to give way.
+
+It was in vain that Everett, with the precision of a hypocrite, and
+Dangerfield, with the audacity of a bully, narrated, with added
+circumstances of suspicion and criminality, their meeting with Julian
+Peveril in Liverpool, and again at Martindale Castle. It was in vain
+they described the arms and accoutrements which they pretended to have
+discovered in old Sir Geoffrey's possession; and that they gave a most
+dreadful account of the escape of the younger Peveril from Moultrassie
+Hall, by means of an armed force.
+
+The Jury listened coldly, and it was visible that they were but little
+moved by the accusation; especially as the Judge, always professing
+his belief in the Plot, and his zeal for the Protestant religion, was
+ever and anon reminding them that presumptions were no proofs--that
+hearsay was no evidence--that those who made a trade of discovery
+were likely to aid their researches by invention--and that without
+doubting the guilt of the unfortunate persons at the bar, he would
+gladly hear some evidence brought against them of a different nature.
+"Here we are told of a riot, and an escape achieved by the younger
+Peveril, at the house of a grave and worthy magistrate, known, I
+think, to most of us. Why, Master Attorney, bring ye not Master
+Bridgenorth himself to prove the fact, or all his household, if it be
+necessary?--A rising in arms is an affair over public to be left on
+the hearsay tale of these two men--though Heaven forbid that I should
+suppose they speak one word more than they believe! They are the
+witnesses for the King--and, what is equally dear to us, the
+Protestant religion--and witnesses against a most foul and heathenish
+Plot. On the other hand, here is a worshipful old knight, for such I
+must suppose him to be, since he has bled often in battle for the
+King,--such, I must say, I suppose him to be, until he is proved
+otherwise. And here is his son, a hopeful young gentleman--we must see
+that they have right, Master Attorney."
+
+"Unquestionably, my lord," answered the Attorney. "God forbid else!
+But we will make out these matters against these unhappy gentlemen in
+a manner more close, if your lordship will permit us to bring in our
+evidence."
+
+"Go on, Master Attorney," said the Judge, throwing himself back in his
+seat. "Heaven forbid I hinder proving the King's accusation! I only
+say, what you know as well as I, that /de non apparentibus et non
+existentibus eadem est ratio/."
+
+"We shall then call Master Bridgenorth, as your lordship advised, who
+I think is in waiting."
+
+"No!" answered a voice from the crowd, apparently that of a female;
+"he is too wise and too honest to be here."
+
+The voice was distinct as that of Lady Fairfax, when she expressed
+herself to a similar effect on the trial of Charles the First; but the
+researches which were made on the present occasion to discover the
+speaker were unsuccessful.
+
+After the slight confusion occasioned by this circumstance was abated,
+the Attorney, who had been talking aside with the conductors of the
+prosecution, said, "Whoever favoured us with that information, my
+lord, had good reason for what they said. Master Bridgenorth has
+become, I am told, suddenly invisible since this morning."
+
+"Look you there now, Master Attorney," said the Judge--"This comes of
+not keeping the crown witnesses together and in readiness--I am sure I
+cannot help the consequences."
+
+"Nor I either, my lord," said the Attorney pettishly. "I could have
+proved by this worshipful gentleman, Master Justice Bridgenorth, the
+ancient friendship betwixt this party, Sir Geoffrey Peveril, and the
+Countess of Derby, of whose doings and intentions Dr. Oates has given
+such a deliberate evidence. I could have proved his having sheltered
+her in his Castle against a process of law, and rescued her, by force
+of arms, from this very Justice Bridgenorth, not without actual
+violence. Moreover, I could have proved against young Peveril the
+whole affray charged upon him by the same worshipful evidence."
+
+Here the Judge stuck his thumbs into his girdle, which was a favourite
+attitude of his on such occasions, and exclaimed, "Pshaw, pshaw,
+Master Attorney!--Tell me not that you /could/ have proved that, or
+that, or this--Prove what you will, but let it be through the mouths
+of your evidence. Men are not to be licked out of their lives by the
+rough side of a lawyer's tongue."
+
+"Nor is a foul Plot to be smothered," said the Attorney, "for all the
+haste your lordship is in. I cannot call Master Chiffinch neither, as
+he is employed on the King's especial affairs, as I am this instant
+certiorated from the Court at Whitehall."
+
+"Produce the papers, then, Master Attorney, of which this young man is
+said to be the bearer," said the Judge.
+
+"They are before the Privy Council, my lord."
+
+"Then why do you found on them here?" said the Judge--"This is
+something like trifling with the Court."
+
+"Since your lordship gives it that name," said the Attorney, sitting
+down in a huff, "you may manage the cause as you will."
+
+"If you do not bring more evidence, I pray you to charge the Jury,"
+said the Judge.
+
+"I shall not take the trouble to do so," said the Crown Counsel. "I
+see plainly how the matter is to go."
+
+"Nay, but be better advised," said Scroggs. "Consider, your case is
+but half proved respecting the two Peverils, and doth not pinch on the
+little man at all, saving that Doctor Oates said that he was in a
+certain case to prove a giant, which seems no very probable Popish
+miracle."
+
+This sally occasioned a laugh in the Court, which the Attorney-General
+seemed to take in great dudgeon.
+
+"Master Attorney," said Oates, who always interfered in the management
+of these law-suits, "this is a plain an absolute giving away of the
+cause--I must needs say it, a mere stoifling of the Plaat."
+
+"Then the devil who bred it may blow wind into it again, if he lists,"
+answered the Attorney-General; and, flinging down his brief, he left
+the Court, as if in a huff with all who were concerned in the affair.
+
+The Judge having obtained silence,--for a murmur arose in the Court
+when the Counsel for the prosecution threw up his brief,--began to
+charge the Jury, balancing, as he had done throughout the whole day,
+the different opinions by which he seemed alternately swayed. He
+protested on his salvation that he had no more doubt of the existence
+of the horrid and damnable conspiracy called the Popish Plot, than he
+had of the treachery of Judas Iscariot; and that he considered Oates
+as the instrument under Providence of preserving the nation from all
+the miseries of his Majesty's assassination, and of a second Saint
+Bartholomew, acted in the streets of London. But then he stated it was
+the candid construction of the law of England, that the worse the
+crime, the more strong should be the evidence. Here was the case of
+accessories tried, whilst their principal--for such he should call the
+Countess of Derby--was unconvicted and at large; and for Doctor Oates,
+he had but spoke of matters which personally applied to that noble
+lady, whose words, if she used such in passion, touching aid which she
+expected in some treasonable matters from these Peverils, and from her
+kinsmen, or her son's kinsmen, of the House of Stanley, may have been
+but a burst of female resentment--/dulcis Amaryllidis ira/, as the
+poet hath it. Who knoweth but Doctor Oates did mistake--he being a
+gentleman of a comely countenance and easy demeanour--this same rap
+with the fan as a chastisement for lack of courage in the Catholic
+cause, when, peradventure, it was otherwise meant, as Popish ladies
+will put, it is said, such neophytes and youthful candidates for
+orders, to many severe trials. "I speak these things jocularly," said
+the Judge, "having no wish to stain the reputation either of the
+Honourable Countess or the Reverend Doctor; only I think the bearing
+between them may have related to something short of high treason. As
+for what the Attorney-General hath set forth of rescues and force, and
+I wot not what, sure I am, that in a civil country, when such things
+happen such things may be proved; and that you and I, gentlemen, are
+not to take them for granted gratuitously. Touching this other
+prisoner, this /Galfridus minimus/, he must needs say," he continued,
+"he could not discover even a shadow of suspicion against him. Was it
+to be thought so abortive a creature would thrust himself into depths
+of policy, far less into stratagems of war? They had but to look at
+him to conclude the contrary--the creature was, from his age, fitter
+for the grave than a conspiracy--and by his size and appearance, for
+the inside of a raree-show, than the mysteries of a plot."
+
+The dwarf here broke in upon the Judge by force of screaming, to
+assure him that he had been, simple as he sat there, engaged in seven
+plots in Cromwell's time; and, as he proudly added, with some of the
+tallest men of England. The matchless look and air with which Sir
+Geoffrey made this vaunt, set all a-laughing, and increased the
+ridicule with which the whole trial began to be received; so that it
+was amidst shaking sides and watery eyes that a general verdict of
+Not Guilty was pronounced, and the prisoners dismissed from the bar.
+
+But a warmer sentiment awakened among those who saw the father and son
+throw themselves into each other's arms, and, after a hearty embrace,
+extend their hands to their poor little companion in peril, who, like
+a dog, when present at a similar scene, had at last succeeded, by
+stretching himself up to them and whimpering at the same time, to
+secure to himself a portion of their sympathy and gratulation.
+
+Such was the singular termination of this trial. Charles himself was
+desirous to have taken considerable credit with the Duke of Ormond for
+the evasion of the law, which had been thus effected by his private
+connivance; and was both surprised and mortified at the coldness with
+which his Grace replied, that he was rejoiced at the poor gentleman's
+safety, but would rather have had the King redeem them like a prince,
+by his royal prerogative of mercy, than that his Judge should convey
+them out of the power of the law, like a juggler with his cups and
+balls.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLII
+
+ ----On fair ground
+ I could beat forty of them!
+ --CORIOLANUS.
+
+It doubtless occurred to many that were present at the trial we have
+described, that it was managed in a singular manner, and that the
+quarrel, which had the appearance of having taken place between the
+Court and the Crown Counsel, might proceed from some private
+understanding betwixt them, the object of which was the miscarriage of
+the accusation. Yet though such underhand dealing was much suspected,
+the greater part of the audience, being well educated and intelligent,
+had already suspected the bubble of the Popish Plot, and were glad to
+see that accusations, founded on what had already cost so much blood,
+could be evaded in any way. But the crowd, who waited in the Court of
+Requests, and in the hall, and without doors, viewed in a very
+different light the combination, as they interpreted it, between the
+Judge and the Attorney-General, for the escape of the prisoners.
+
+Oates, whom less provocation than he had that day received often
+induced to behave like one frantic with passion, threw himself amongst
+the crowd, and repeated till he was hoarse, "Theay are stoifling the
+Plaat!--theay are straangling the Plaat!--My Laard Justice and Maaster
+Attarney are in league to secure the escape of the plaaters and
+Paapists!"
+
+"It is the device of the Papist whore of Portsmouth," said one.
+
+"Of old Rowley himself," said another.
+
+"If he could be murdered by himself, why hang those that would hinder
+it!" exclaimed a third.
+
+"He should be tried," said a fourth, "for conspiring his own death,
+and hanged /in terrorem/."
+
+In the meanwhile, Sir Geoffrey, his son, and their little companion,
+left the hall, intending to go to Lady Peveril's lodgings, which had
+been removed to Fleet Street. She had been relieved from considerable
+inconvenience, as Sir Geoffrey gave Julian hastily to understand, by
+an angel, in the shape of a young friend, and she now expected them
+doubtless with impatience. Humanity, and some indistinct idea of
+having unintentionally hurt the feelings of the poor dwarf, induced
+the honest Cavalier to ask this unprotected being to go with them. "He
+knew Lady Peveril's lodgings were but small," he said; "but it would
+be strange, if there was not some cupboard large enough to accommodate
+the little gentleman."
+
+The dwarf registered this well-meant remark in his mind, to be the
+subject of a proper explanation, along with the unhappy reminiscence
+of the trencher-hornpipe, whenever time should permit an argument of
+such nicety.
+
+And thus they sallied from the hall, attracting general observation,
+both from the circumstances in which they had stood so lately, and
+from their resemblance, as a wag of the Inner Temple expressed it, to
+the three degrees of comparison, Large, Lesser, Least. But they had
+not passed far along the street, when Julian perceived that more
+malevolent passions than mere curiosity began to actuate the crowd
+which followed, and, as it were, dogged their motions.
+
+"There go the Papist cut-throats, tantivy for Rome!" said one fellow.
+
+"Tantivy to Whitehall, you mean!" said another.
+
+"Ah! the bloodthirsty villains!" cried a woman: "Shame, one of them
+should be suffered to live, after poor Sir Edmondsbury's cruel
+murder."
+
+"Out upon the mealy-mouthed Jury, that turned out the bloodhounds on
+an innocent town!" cried a fourth.
+
+In short, the tumult thickened, and the word began to pass among the
+more desperate, "Lambe them, lads; lambe them!"--a cant phrase of the
+time, derived from the fate of Dr. Lambe, an astrologer and quack, who
+was knocked on the head by the rabble in Charles the First's time.
+
+Julian began to be much alarmed at these symptoms of violence, and
+regretted that they had not gone down to the city by water. It was now
+too late to think of that mode of retreating, and he therefore
+requested his father in a whisper, to walk steadily forward towards
+Charing Cross, taking no notice of the insults which might be cast
+upon them, while the steadiness of their pace and appearance might
+prevent the rabble from resorting to actual violence. The execution of
+this prudent resolution was prevented after they had passed the
+palace, by the hasty disposition of the elder Sir Geoffrey, and the no
+less choleric temper of Galfridus Minimus, who had a soul which
+spurned all odds, as well of numbers as of size.
+
+"Now a murrain take the knaves, with their hollowing and whooping,"
+said the large knight; "by this day, if I could but light on a weapon,
+I would cudgel reason and loyalty into some of their carcasses!"
+
+"And I also," said the dwarf, who was toiling to keep up with the
+longer strides of his companions, and therefore spoke in a very
+phthisical tone.--"I also will cudgel the plebeian knaves beyond
+measure--he!--hem!"
+
+Among the crowd who thronged around them, impeded, and did all but
+assault them, was a mischievous shoemaker's apprentice, who, hearing
+this unlucky vaunt of the valorous dwarf, repaid it by flapping him on
+the head with a boot which he was carrying home to the owner, so as to
+knock the little gentleman's hat over his eyes. The dwarf, thus
+rendered unable to discover the urchin that had given him the offence,
+flew with instinctive ambition against the biggest fellow in the
+crowd, who received the onset with a kick on the stomach, which made
+the poor little champion reel back to his companions. They were now
+assaulted on all sides; but fortune complying with the wish of Sir
+Geoffrey the larger, ordained that the scuffle should happen near the
+booth of a cutler, from amongst whose wares, as they stood exposed to
+the public, Sir Geoffrey Peveril snatched a broadsword, which he
+brandished with the formidable address of one who had for many a day
+been in the familiar practice of using such a weapon. Julian, while at
+the same time he called loudly for a peace-officer, and reminded the
+assailants that they were attacking inoffensive passengers, saw
+nothing better for it than to imitate his father's example, and seized
+also one of the weapons thus opportunely offered.
+
+When they displayed these demonstrations of defence, the rush which
+the rabble at first made towards them was so great as to throw down
+the unfortunate dwarf, who would have been trampled to death in the
+scuffle, had not his stout old namesake cleared the rascal crowd from
+about him with a few flourishes of his weapon, and seizing on the
+fallen champion, put him out of danger (except from missiles), by
+suddenly placing him on the bulk-head, that is to say, the flat wooden
+roof of the cutler's projecting booth. From the rusty ironware, which
+was displayed there, the dwarf instantly snatched an old rapier and
+target, and covering himself with the one, stood making passes with
+the other, at the faces and eyes of the people in the street; so much
+delighted with his post of vantage, that he called loudly to his
+friends who were skirmishing with the riotous on more equal terms as
+to position, to lose no time in putting themselves under his
+protection. But far from being in a situation to need his assistance,
+the father and son might easily have extricated themselves from the
+rabble by their own exertions, could they have thought of leaving the
+mannikin in the forlorn situation, in which, to every eye but his own,
+he stood like a diminutive puppet, tricked out with sword and target
+as a fencing-master's sign.
+
+Stones and sticks began now to fly very thick, and the crowd,
+notwithstanding the exertions of the Peverils to disperse them with as
+little harm as possible, seemed determined on mischief, when some
+gentlemen who had been at the trial, understanding that the prisoners
+who had been just acquitted were in danger of being murdered by the
+populace, drew their swords, and made forward to effect their rescue,
+which was completed by a small party of the King's Life Guards, who
+had been despatched from their ordinary post of alarm, upon
+intelligence of what was passing. When this unexpected reinforcement
+arrived, the old jolly Knight at once recognised, amidst the cries of
+those who then entered upon action, some of the sounds which had
+animated his more active years.
+
+"Where be these cuckoldly Roundheads," cried some.--"Down with the
+sneaking knaves!" cried others.--"The King and his friends, and the
+devil a one else!" exclaimed a third set, with more oaths and d--n
+me's, than, in the present more correct age, it is necessary to commit
+to paper.
+
+The old soldier, pricking up his ears like an ancient hunter at the
+cry of the hounds, would gladly have scoured the Strand, with the
+charitable purpose, now he saw himself so well supported, of knocking
+the London knaves, who had insulted him, into twiggen bottles; but he
+was withheld by the prudence of Julian, who, though himself extremely
+irritated by the unprovoked ill-usage which they had received, saw
+himself in a situation in which it was necessary to exercise more
+caution than vengeance. He prayed and pressed his father to seek some
+temporary place of retreat from the fury of the populace, while that
+prudent measure was yet in their power. The subaltern officer, who
+commanded the party of the Life Guards, exhorted the old Cavalier
+eagerly to the same sage counsel, using, as a spice of compulsion, the
+name of the King; while Julian strongly urged that of his mother. The
+old Knight looked at his blade, crimsoned with cross-cuts and slashes
+which he had given to the most forward of the assailants, with the eye
+of one not half sufficed.
+
+"I would I had pinked one of the knaves at least--but I know not how
+it was, when I looked on their broad round English faces, I shunned to
+use my point, and only sliced the rogues a little."
+
+"But the King's pleasure," said the officer, "is, that no tumult be
+prosecuted."
+
+"My mother," said Julian, "will die with fright, if the rumour of this
+scuffle reaches her ere we see her."
+
+"Ay, ay," said the Knight, "the King's Majesty and my good dame--well,
+their pleasure be done, that's all I can say--Kings and ladies must be
+obeyed. But which way to retreat, since retreat we must?"
+
+Julian would have been at some loss to advise what course to take, for
+everybody in the vicinity had shut up their shops, and chained their
+doors, upon observing the confusion become so formidable. The poor
+cutler, however, with whose goods they made so free, offered them an
+asylum on the part of his landlord, whose house served as a rest for
+his shop, and only intimated gently, he hoped the gentleman would
+consider him for the use of his weapons.
+
+Julian was hastily revolving whether they ought, in prudence, to
+accept this man's invitation, aware, by experience, how many trepans,
+as they were then termed, were used betwixt two contending factions,
+each too inveterate to be very scrupulous of the character of fair
+play to an enemy, when the dwarf, exerting his cracked voice to the
+uttermost, and shrieking like an exhausted herald, from the exalted
+station which he still occupied on the bulk-head, exhorted them to
+accept the offer of the worthy man of the mansion. "He himself," he
+said, as he reposed himself after the glorious conquest in which he
+had some share, "had been favoured with a beatific vision, too
+splendid to be described to common and mere mortal ears, but which had
+commanded him, in a voice to which his heart had bounded as to a
+trumpet sound, to take refuge with the worthy person of the house, and
+cause his friends to do so."
+
+"Vision!" said the Knight of the Peak,--"sound of a trumpet!--the
+little man is stark mad."
+
+But the cutler, in great haste, intimated to them that their little
+friend had received an intimation from a gentlewoman of his
+acquaintance, who spoke to him from the window, while he stood on the
+bulk-head, that they would find a safe retreat in his landlord's; and
+desiring them to attend to two or three deep though distant huzzas,
+made them aware that the rabble were up still, and would soon be upon
+them with renewed violence, and increased numbers.
+
+The father and son, therefore, hastily thanked the officer and his
+party, as well as the other gentlemen who had volunteered in their
+assistance, lifted little Sir Geoffrey Hudson from the conspicuous
+post which he had so creditably occupied during the skirmish, and
+followed the footsteps of the tenant of the booth, who conducted them
+down a blind alley and through one or two courts, in case, as he said,
+any one might have watched where they burrowed, and so into a back-
+door. This entrance admitted them to a staircase carefully hung with
+straw mats to exclude damp, from the upper step of which they entered
+upon a tolerably large withdrawing-room, hung with coarse green serge
+edged with gilded leather, which the poorer or more economical
+citizens at that time use instead of tapestry or wainscoting.
+
+Here the poor cutler received from Julian such a gratuity for the loan
+of the swords, that he generously abandoned the property to the
+gentlemen who had used them so well; "the rather," he said, "that he
+saw, by the way they handed their weapons, that they were men of
+mettle, and tall fellows."
+
+Here the dwarf smiled on him courteously, and bowed, thrusting at the
+same time, his hand into his pocket, which however, he withdrew
+carelessly probably because he found he had not the means of making
+the small donation which he had meditated.
+
+The cutler proceeded to say, as he bowed and was about to withdraw,
+that he saw there would be merry days yet in Old England, and that
+Bilboa blades would fetch as good a price as ever. "I remember," he
+said, "gentlemen, though I was then but a 'prentice, the demand for
+weapons in the years forty-one and forty-two; sword blades were more
+in request than toothpicks, and Old Ironsides, my master, took more
+for rascally Provant rapiers, than I dare ask nowadays for a Toledo.
+But, to be sure, a man's life then rested on the blade he carried; the
+Cavaliers and Roundheads fought every day at the gates of Whitehall,
+as it is like, gentlemen, by your good example, they may do again,
+when I shall be enabled to leave my pitiful booth, and open a shop of
+better quality. I hope you will recommend me, gentlemen, to your
+friends. I am always provided with ware which a gentleman may risk his
+life on."
+
+"Thank you, good friend," said Julian, "I prithee begone. I trust we
+shall need thy ware no more for some time at least."
+
+The cutler retired, while the dwarf hollowed after him downstairs,
+that he would call on him soon, and equip himself with a longer blade,
+and one more proper for action; although, he said, the little weapon
+he had did well enough for a walking-sword, or in a skirmish with such
+/canaille/ as they had been engaged with.
+
+The cutler returned at this summons, and agreed to pleasure the little
+man with a weapon more suitable to his magnanimity; then, as if the
+thought had suddenly occurred to him, he said, "But, gentlemen, it
+will be wild work to walk with your naked swords through the Strand,
+and it can scarce fail to raise the rabble again. If you please, while
+you repose yourselves here, I can fit the blades with sheaths."
+
+The proposal seemed so reasonable, that Julian and his father gave up
+their weapons to the friendly cutler, an example which the dwarf
+followed, after a moment's hesitation, not caring, as he magnificently
+expressed it, to part so soon with the trusty friend which fortune had
+but the moment before restored to his hand. The man retired with the
+weapons under his arm; and, in shutting the door behind him, they
+heard him turn the key.
+
+"Did you hear that?" said Sir Geoffrey to his son--"and we are
+disarmed!"
+
+Julian, without reply, examined the door, which was fast secured; and
+then looked at the casements, which were at a storey's height from the
+ground, and grated besides with iron. "I cannot think," he said, after
+a moment's pause, "that the fellow means to trepan us; and, in any
+event, I trust we should have no difficulty in forcing the door, or
+otherwise making escape. But, before resorting to such violent
+measures, I think it is better to give the rabble leisure to disperse,
+by waiting this man's return with our weapons within a reasonable
+time, when, if he does not appear, I trust we shall find little
+difficulty in extricating ourselves." As he spoke thus, the hangings
+were pulled aside, and from a small door which was concealed behind
+them, Major Bridgenorth entered the room.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIII
+
+ He came amongst them like a new raised spirit
+ To speak of dreadful judgments that impend,
+ And of the wrath to come.
+ --THE REFORMER.
+
+The astonishment of Julian at the unexpected apparition of
+Bridgenorth, was instantly succeeded by apprehension of his father's
+violence, which he had every reason to believe would break forth
+against one, whom he himself could not but reverence on account of his
+own merits, as well as because he was the father of Alice. The
+appearance of Bridgenorth was not however, such as to awaken
+resentment. His countenance was calm, his step slow and composed, his
+eye not without the indication of some deep-seated anxiety, but
+without any expression either of anger or of triumph. "You are
+welcome," he said, "Sir Geoffrey Peveril, to the shelter and
+hospitality of this house; as welcome as you would have been in other
+days, when we called each other neighbours and friends."
+
+"Odzooks," said the old Cavalier; "and had I known it was thy house,
+man, I would sooner had my heart's blood run down the kennel, than my
+foot should have crossed your threshold--in the way of seeking safety,
+that is."
+
+"I forgive your inveteracy," said Major Bridgenorth, "on account of
+your prejudices."
+
+"Keep your forgiveness," answered the Cavalier, "until you are
+pardoned yourself. By Saint George I have sworn, if ever I got my
+heels out of yon rascally prison, whither I was sent much through your
+means, Master Bridgenorth,--that you should pay the reckoning for my
+bad lodging.--I will strike no man in his own house; but if you will
+cause the fellow to bring back my weapon, and take a turn in that
+blind court there below, along with me, you shall soon see what chance
+a traitor hath with a true man, and a kennel-blooded Puritan with
+Peveril of the Peak."
+
+Bridgenorth smiled with much composure. "When I was younger and more
+warm-blooded," he replied, "I refused your challenge, Sir Geoffrey;
+it is not likely I should now accept it, when each is within a stride
+of the grave. I have not spared, and will not spare, my blood, when my
+country wants it."
+
+"That is when there is any chance of treason against the King," said
+Sir Geoffrey.
+
+"Nay, my father," said Julian, "let us hear Master Bridgenorth! We
+have been sheltered in his house; and although we now see him in
+London, we should remember that he did not appear against us this day,
+when perhaps his evidence might have given a fatal turn to our
+situation."
+
+"You are right, young man," said Bridgenorth; "and it should be some
+pledge of my sincere goodwill, that I was this day absent from
+Westminster, when a few words from my mouth had ended the long line of
+Peveril of the Peak: it needed but ten minutes to walk to Westminster
+Hall, to have ensured your condemnation. But could I have done this,
+knowing, as I now know, that to thee, Julian Peveril, I owe the
+extrication of my daughter--of my dearest Alice--the memory of her
+departed mother--from the snares which hell and profligacy had opened
+around her?"
+
+"She is, I trust safe," said Peveril eagerly, and almost forgetting
+his father's presence; "she is, I trust, safe, and in your own
+wardship?"
+
+"Not in mine," said the dejected father; "but in that of one in whose
+protection, next to that of Heaven, I can most fully confide."
+
+"Are you sure--are you very sure of that?" repeated Julian eagerly. "I
+found her under the charge of one to whom she had been trusted, and
+who yet----"
+
+"And who yet was the basest of women," answered Bridgenorth; "but he
+who selected her for the charge was deceived in her character."
+
+"Say rather you were deceived in his; remember that when we parted in
+Moultrassie, I warned you of that Ganlesse--that----"
+
+"I know your meaning," said Bridgenorth; "nor did you err in
+describing him as a worldly-wise man. But he has atoned for his error
+by recovering Alice from the dangers into which she has plunged when
+separated from you; and besides, I have not thought meet again to
+entrust him with the charge that is dearest to me."
+
+"I thank God your eyes are thus far opened!" said Julian.
+
+"This day will open them wide, or close them for ever," answered
+Bridgenorth.
+
+During this dialogue, which the speakers hurried through without
+attending to the others who were present, Sir Geoffrey listened with
+surprise and eagerness, endeavouring to catch something which should
+render their conversation intelligible; but as he totally failed in
+gaining any such key to their meaning, he broke in with,--"'Sblood and
+thunder, Julian, what unprofitable gossip is this? What hast thou to
+do with this fellow, more than to bastinado him, if you should think
+it worth while to beat so old a rogue?"
+
+"My dearest father," said Julian, "you know not this gentleman--I am
+certain you do him injustice. My own obligations to him are many; and
+I am sure when you come to know them----"
+
+"I hope I shall die ere that moment come," said Sir Geoffrey; and
+continued with increasing violence, "I hope in the mercy of Heaven,
+that I shall be in the grave of my ancestors, ere I learn that my son
+--my only son--the last hope of my ancient house--the last remnant of
+the name of Peveril--hath consented to receive obligations from the
+man on earth I am most bound to hate, were I not still more bound to
+contemn him!--Degenerate dog-whelp!" he repeated with great vehemence,
+"you colour without replying! Speak, and disown such disgrace; or, by
+the God of my fathers----"
+
+The dwarf suddenly stepped forward and called out, "Forbear!" with a
+voice at once so discordant and commanding, that it sounded
+supernatural. "Man of sin and pride," he said, "forbear; and call not
+the name of a holy God to witness thine unhallowed resentments."
+
+The rebuke so boldly and decidedly given, and the moral enthusiasm
+with which he spoke, gave the despised dwarf an ascendancy for the
+moment over the fiery spirit of his gigantic namesake. Sir Geoffrey
+Peveril eyed him for an instant askance and shyly, as he might have
+done a supernatural apparition, and then muttered, "What knowest thou
+of my cause of wrath?"
+
+"Nothing," said the dwarf;--"nothing but this--that no cause can
+warrant the oath thou wert about to swear. Ungrateful man! thou wert
+to-day rescued from the devouring wrath of the wicked, by a marvellous
+conjunction of circumstances--Is this a day, thinkest thou, on which
+to indulge thine own hasty resentments?"
+
+"I stand rebuked," said Sir Geoffrey, "and by a singular monitor--the
+grasshopper, as the prayer-book saith, hath become a burden to me.--
+Julian, I will speak to thee of these matters hereafter;--and for you,
+Master Bridgenorth, I desire to have no farther communication with
+you, either in peace or in anger. Our time passes fast, and I would
+fain return to my family. Cause our weapons to be restored; unbar the
+doors, and let us part without farther altercation, which can but
+disturb and aggravate our spirits."
+
+"Sir Geoffrey Peveril," said Bridgenorth, "I have no desire to vex
+your spirit or my own; but, for thus soon dismissing you, that may
+hardly be, it being a course inconsistent with the work which I have
+on hand."
+
+"How, sir! Do you mean that we should abide here, whether with or
+against our inclinations?" said the dwarf. "Were it not that I am laid
+under charge to remain here, by one who hath the best right to command
+this poor microcosm, I would show thee that bolts and bars are
+unavailing restraints on such as I am."
+
+"Truly," said Sir Geoffrey, "I think, upon an emergency, the little
+man might make his escape through the keyhole."
+
+Bridgenorth's face was moved into something like a smile at the
+swaggering speech of the pigmy hero, and the contemptuous commentary
+of Sir Geoffrey Peveril; but such an expression never dwelt on his
+features for two seconds together, and he replied in these words:--
+"Gentlemen, each and all of you must be fain to content yourselves.
+Believe me, no hurt is intended towards you; on the contrary, your
+remaining here will be a means of securing your safety, which would be
+otherwise deeply endangered. It will be your own fault if a hair of
+your head is hurt. But the stronger force is on my side; and, whatever
+harm you may meet with should you attempt to break forth by violence,
+the blame must rest with yourselves. It you will not believe me, I
+will permit Master Julian Peveril to accompany me, where he shall see
+that I am provided fully with the means of repressing violence."
+
+"Treason!--treason!" exclaimed the old Knight--"Treason against God
+and King Charles!--Oh, for one half-hour of the broadsword which I
+parted with like an ass!"
+
+"Hold, my father, I conjure you!" said Julian. "I will go with Master
+Bridgenorth, since he requests it. I will satisfy myself whether there
+be danger, and of what nature. It is possible I may prevail on him to
+desist from some desperate measure, if such be indeed in agitation.
+Should it be necessary, fear not that your son will behave as he ought
+to do."
+
+"Do your pleasure, Julian," said his father; "I will confide in thee.
+But if you betray my confidence, a father's curse shall cleave to
+you."
+
+Bridgenorth now motioned to Peveril to follow him, and they passed
+through the small door by which he entered.
+
+The passage led to a vestibule or anteroom, in which several other
+doors and passages seemed to centre. Through one of these Julian was
+conducted by Bridgenorth, walking with silence and precaution, in
+obedience to a signal made by his guide to that effect. As they
+advanced, he heard sounds, like those of the human voice, engaged in
+urgent and emphatic declamation. With slow and light steps Bridgenorth
+conducted him through a door which terminated this passage; and as he
+entered a little gallery, having a curtain in front, the sound of the
+preacher's voice--for such it now seemed--became distinct and audible.
+
+Julian now doubted not that he was in one of those conventicles,
+which, though contrary to the existing laws, still continued to be
+regularly held in different parts of London and the suburbs. Many of
+these, as frequented by persons of moderate political principles,
+though dissenters from the Church for conscience' sake, were connived
+at by the prudence or timidity of the government. But some of them, in
+which assembled the fiercer and more exalted sects of Independents,
+Anabaptists, Fifth-Monarchy men, and other sectaries, whose stern
+enthusiasm had contributed so greatly to effect the overthrow of the
+late King's throne, were sought after, suppressed, and dispersed,
+whenever they could be discovered.
+
+Julian was soon satisfied that the meeting into which he was thus
+secretly introduced was one of the latter class; and, to judge by the
+violence of the preacher, of the most desperate character. He was
+still more effectually convinced of this, when, at a sign from
+Bridgenorth, he cautiously unclosed a part of the curtain which hung
+before the gallery, and thus, unseen himself, looked down on the
+audience, and obtained a view of the preacher.
+
+About two hundred persons were assembled beneath, in an area filled up
+with benches, as if for the exercise of worship; and they were all of
+the male sex, and well armed with pikes and muskets, as well as swords
+and pistols. Most of them had the appearance of veteran soldiers, now
+past the middle of life, yet retaining such an appearance of strength
+as might well supply the loss of youthful agility. They stood, or sat,
+in various attitudes of stern attention; and, resting on their spears
+and muskets, kept their eyes firmly fixed on the preacher, who ended
+the violence of his declamation by displaying from the pulpit a
+banner, on which was represented a lion, with the motto, "/Vicit Leo
+ex tribu Judæ./"
+
+The torrent of mystical yet animating eloquence of the preacher--an
+old grey-haired man, whom zeal seemed to supply with the powers of
+voice and action, of which years had deprived him--was suited to the
+taste of his audience, but could not be transferred to these pages
+without scandal and impropriety. He menaced the rulers of England with
+all the judgments denounced on those of Moab and Assyria--he called
+upon the saints to be strong, to be up and doing; and promised those
+miracles which, in the campaigns of Joshua, and his successors, the
+valiant Judges of Israel, supplied all odds against the Amorites,
+Midianites, and Philistines. He sounded trumpets, opened vials, broke
+seals, and denounced approaching judgments under all the mystical
+signs of the Apocalypse. The end of the world was announced,
+accompanied with all its preliminary terrors.
+
+Julian, with deep anxiety, soon heard enough to make him aware that
+the meeting was likely to terminate in open insurrection, like that of
+the Fifth-Monarchy men, under Venner, at an earlier period of
+Charles's reign; and he was not a little concerned at the probability
+of Bridgenorth being implicated in so criminal and desperate an
+undertaking. If he had retained any doubts of the issue of the
+meeting, they must have been removed when the preacher called on his
+hearers to renounce all expectation which had hitherto been
+entertained of safety to the nation, from the execution of the
+ordinary laws of the land. This, he said, was at best but a carnal
+seeking after earthly aid--a going down to Egypt for help, which the
+jealousy of their Divine Leader would resent as a fleeing to another
+rock, and a different banner, from that which was this day displayed
+over them.--And here he solemnly swung the bannered lion over their
+heads, as the only sign under which they ought to seek for life and
+safety. He then proceeded to insist, that recourse to ordinary justice
+was vain as well as sinful.
+
+"The event of that day at Westminster," he said, "might teach them
+that the man at Whitehall was even as the man his father;" and closed
+a long tirade against the vices of the Court, with assurance "that
+Tophet was ordained of old--for the King it was made hot."
+
+As the preacher entered on a description of the approaching theocracy,
+which he dared to prophesy, Bridgenorth, who appeared for a time to
+have forgotten the presence of Julian, whilst with stern and fixed
+attention he drunk in the words of the preacher, seemed suddenly to
+collect himself, and, taking Julian by the hand, led him out of the
+gallery, of which he carefully closed the door, into an apartment at
+no great distance.
+
+When they arrived there, he anticipated the expostulations of Julian,
+by asking him, in a tone of severe triumph, whether these men he had
+seen were likely to do their work negligently, or whether it would not
+be perilous to attempt to force their way from a house, when all the
+avenues were guarded by such as he had now seen--men of war from their
+childhood upwards.
+
+"In the name of Heaven," said Julian, without replying to
+Bridgenorth's question, "for what desperate purpose have you assembled
+so many desperate men? I am well aware that your sentiments of
+religion are peculiar; but beware how you deceive yourself--No views
+of religion can sanction rebellion and murder; and such are the
+natural and necessary consequences of the doctrine we have just heard
+poured into the ears of fanatical and violent enthusiasts."
+
+"My son," said Bridgenorth calmly, "in the days of my non-age, I
+thought as you do. I deemed it sufficient to pay my tithes of cummin
+and aniseed--my poor petty moral observances of the old law; and I
+thought I was heaping up precious things, when they were in value no
+more than the husks of the swine-trough. Praised be Heaven, the scales
+are fallen from mine eyes; and after forty years' wandering in the
+desert of Sinai, I am at length arrived in the Land of Promise--My
+corrupt human nature has left me--I have cast my slough, and can now
+with some conscience put my hand to the plough, certain that there is
+no weakness left in me where-through I may look back. The furrows," he
+added, bending his brows, while a gloomy fire filled his large eyes,
+"must be drawn long and deep, and watered by the blood of the mighty."
+
+There was a change in Bridgenorth's tone and manner, when he used
+these singular expressions, which convinced Julian that his mind,
+which had wavered for so many years between his natural good sense and
+the insane enthusiasm of the time, had finally given way to the
+latter; and, sensible of the danger in which the unhappy man himself,
+the innocent and beautiful Alice, and his own father, were likely to
+be placed--to say nothing of the general risk of the community by a
+sudden insurrection, he at the same time felt that there was no chance
+of reasoning effectually with one, who would oppose spiritual
+conviction to all arguments which reason could urge against his wild
+schemes. To touch his feeling seemed a more probable resource; and
+Julian therefore conjured Bridgenorth to think how much his daughter's
+honour and safety were concerned in his abstaining from the dangerous
+course which he meditated. "If you fall," he said, "must she not pass
+under the power and guardianship of her uncle, whom you allow to have
+shown himself capable of the grossest mistake in the choice of her
+female protectress; and whom I believe, upon good grounds, to have
+made that infamous choice with his eyes open?"
+
+"Young man," answered Bridgenorth, "you make me feel like the poor
+bird, around whose wing some wanton boy has fixed a line, to pull the
+struggling wretch to earth at his pleasure. Know, since thou wilt play
+this cruel part, and drag me down from higher contemplations, that she
+with whom Alice is placed, and who hath in future full power to guide
+her motions, and decide her fate, despite of Christian and every one
+else, is--I will not tell thee who she is--Enough--no one--thou least
+of all, needs to fear for her safety."
+
+At this moment a side-door opened, and Christian himself came into the
+apartment. He started and coloured when he saw Julian Peveril; then
+turning to Bridgenorth with an assumed air of indifference, asked, "Is
+Saul among the prophets?--Is a Peveril among the saints?"
+
+"No, brother," replied Bridgenorth, "his time is not come more than
+thine own--thou art too deep in the ambitious intrigues of manhood,
+and he in the giddy passions of youth, to hear the still calm voice--
+You will both hear it, as I trust and pray."
+
+"Master Ganlesse, or Christian, or by whatever name you are called,"
+said Julian, "by whatever reasons you guide yourself in this most
+perilous matter, /you/ at least are not influenced by any idea of an
+immediate divine command for commencing hostilities against the state.
+Leaving, therefore, for the present, whatever subjects of discussion
+may be between us, I implore you, as a man of shrewdness and sense, to
+join with me in dissuading Master Bridgenorth from the fatal
+enterprise which he now meditates."
+
+"Young gentleman," said Christian, with great composure, "when we met
+in the west, I was willing to have made a friend of you, but you
+rejected the overture. You might, however, even then have seen enough
+of me to be assured, that I am not likely to rush too rashly on any
+desperate undertaking. As to this which lies before us, my brother
+Bridgenorth brings to it the simplicity, though not the harmlessness
+of the dove, and I the subtilty of the serpent. He hath the leading
+of saints who are moved by the spirit; and I can add to their efforts
+a powerful body, who have for their instigators the world, the devil,
+and the flesh."
+
+"And can you," said Julian, looking at Bridgenorth, "accede to such an
+unworthy union?"
+
+"I unite not with them," said Bridgenorth; "but I may not, without
+guilt, reject the aid which Providence sends to assist His servants.
+We are ourselves few, though determined--Those whose swords come to
+help the cutting down of the harvest, must be welcome--When their work
+is wrought, they will be converted or scattered.--Have you been at
+York Place, brother, with that unstable epicure? We must have his last
+resolution, and that within an hour."
+
+Christian looked at Julian, as if his presence prevented him from
+returning an answer; upon which Bridgenorth arose, and taking the
+young man by the arm, led him out of the apartment, into that in which
+they had left his father; assuring him by the way, that determined and
+vigilant guards were placed in every different quarter by which escape
+could be effected, and that he would do well to persuade his father to
+remain a quiet prisoner for a few hours.
+
+Julian returned him no answer, and Bridgenorth presently retired,
+leaving him alone with his father and Hudson. To their questions he
+could only briefly reply, that he feared they were trepanned, since
+they were in the house with at least two hundred fanatics, completely
+armed, and apparently prepared for desperate enterprise. Their own
+want of arms precluded the possibility of open violence; and however
+unpleasant it might be to remain in such a condition, it seemed
+difficult, from the strength of the fastenings at doors and windows,
+to attempt any secret escape without instantaneous detection.
+
+The valiant dwarf alone nursed hopes, with which he in vain
+endeavoured to inspire his companions in affliction. "The fair one,
+whose eyes," he said, "were like the twin stars of Leda"--for the
+little man was a great admirer of lofty language--"had not invited
+him, the most devoted, and, it might be, not the least favoured of her
+servants, into this place as a harbour, in order that he might therein
+suffer shipwreck; and he generously assured his friends, that in his
+safety they also should be safe."
+
+Sir Geoffrey, little cheered by this intimation, expressed his despair
+at not being able to get the length of Whitehall, where he trusted to
+find as many jolly Cavaliers as would help him to stifle the whole
+nest of wasps in their hive; while Julian was of opinion that the best
+service he could now render Bridgenorth, would be timeously to
+disclose his plot, and, if possible, to send him at the same time
+warning to save his person.
+
+But we must leave them to meditate over their plans at leisure; no one
+of which, as they all depended on their previous escape from
+confinement, seemed in any great chance of being executed.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIV
+
+ And some for safety took the dreadful leap;
+ Some for the voice of Heaven seem'd calling on them;
+ Some for advancement, or for lucre's sake--
+ I leap'd in frolic.
+ --THE DREAM.
+
+After a private conversation with Bridgenorth, Christian hastened to
+the Duke of Buckingham's hotel, taking at the same time such a route
+as to avoid meeting with any acquaintance. He was ushered into the
+apartment of the Duke, whom he found cracking and eating filberts,
+with a flask of excellent white wine at his elbow. "Christian," said
+his Grace, "come help me to laugh--I have bit Sir Charles Sedley--
+flung him for a thousand, by the gods!"
+
+"I am glad at your luck, my Lord Duke," replied Christian; "but I am
+come here on serious business."
+
+"Serious?--why, I shall hardly be serious in my life again--ha, ha,
+ha!--and for luck, it was no such thing--sheer wit, and excellent
+contrivance; and but that I don't care to affront Fortune, like the
+old Greek general, I might tell her to her face--In this thou hadst no
+share. You have heard, Ned Christian, that Mother Cresswell is dead?"
+
+"Yes, I did hear that the devil hath got his due," answered Christian.
+
+"Well," said the Duke, "you are ungrateful; for I know you have been
+obliged to her, as well as others. Before George, a most benevolent
+and helpful old lady; and that she might not sleep in an unblest
+grave, I betted--do you mark me--with Sedley, that I would write her
+funeral sermon; that it should be every word in praise of her life and
+conversation, that it should be all true, and yet that the diocesan
+should be unable to lay his thumb on Quodling, my little chaplain, who
+should preach it."
+
+"I perfectly see the difficulty, my lord," said Christian, who well
+knew that if he wished to secure attention from this volatile
+nobleman, he must first suffer, nay, encourage him, to exhaust the
+topic, whatever it might be, that had got temporary possession of his
+pineal gland.
+
+"Why," said the Duke, "I had caused my little Quodling to go through
+his oration thus--'That whatever evil reports had passed current
+during the lifetime of the worthy matron whom they had restored to
+dust that day, malice herself could not deny that she was born well,
+married well, lived well, and died well; since she was born in
+Shadwell, married to Cresswell, lived in Camberwell, and died in
+Bridewell.' Here ended the oration, and with it Sedley's ambitious
+hopes of overreaching Buckingham--ha, ha, ha!--And now, Master
+Christian, what are your commands for me to-day?"
+
+"First, to thank your Grace for being so attentive as to send so
+formidable a person as Colonel Blood, to wait upon your poor friend
+and servant. Faith, he took such an interest in my leaving town, that
+he wanted to compel me to do it at point of fox, so I was obliged to
+spill a little of his malapert blood. Your Grace's swordsmen have had
+ill luck of late; and it is hard, since you always choose the best
+hands, and such scrupleless knaves too."
+
+"Come now, Christian," said the Duke, "do not thus exult over me; a
+great man, if I may so call myself, is never greater than amid
+miscarriage. I only played this little trick on you, Christian, to
+impress on you a wholesome idea of the interest I take in your
+motions. The scoundrel's having dared to draw upon you, is a thing not
+to be forgiven.--What! injure my old friend Christian?"
+
+"And why not," said Christian coolly, "if your old friend was so
+stubborn as not to go out of town, like a good boy, when your Grace
+required him to do so, for the civil purpose of entertaining his niece
+in his absence?"
+
+"How--what!--how do you mean by /my/ entertaining your niece, Master
+Christian?" said the Duke. "She was a personage far beyond my poor
+attentions, being destined, if I recollect aright, to something like
+royal favour."
+
+"It was her fate, however, to be the guest of your Grace's convent for
+a brace of days, or so. Marry, my lord, the father confessor was not
+at home, and--for convents have been scaled of late--returned not till
+the bird was flown."
+
+"Christian, thou art an old reynard--I see there is no doubling with
+thee. It was thou, then, that stole away my pretty prize, but left me
+something so much prettier in my mind, that, had it not made itself
+wings to fly away with, I would have placed it in a cage of gold.
+Never be downcast, man; I forgive thee--I forgive thee."
+
+"Your Grace is of a most merciful disposition, especially considering
+it is I who have had the wrong; and sages have said, that he who doth
+the injury is less apt to forgive than he who only sustains it."
+
+"True, true, Christian," said the Duke, "which, as you say, is
+something quite new, and places my clemency in a striking point of
+view. Well, then, thou forgiven man, when shall I see my Mauritanian
+Princess again?"
+
+"Wherever I am certain that a quibble, and a carwhichit, for a play or
+a sermon, will not banish her from your Grace's memory."
+
+"Not all the wit of South, or of Etherege," said Buckingham hastily,
+"to say nothing of my own, shall in future make me oblivious of what I
+owe the Morisco Princess."
+
+"Yet, to leave the fair lady out of thought for a little while--a very
+little while," said Christian, "since I swear that in due time your
+Grace shall see her, and know in her the most extraordinary woman that
+the age has produced--to leave her, I say out of sight for a little
+while, has your Grace had late notice of your Duchess's health?"
+
+"Health," said the Duke. "Umph--no--nothing particular. She has been
+ill--but----"
+
+"She is no longer so," subjoined Christian; "she died in Yorkshire
+forty-eight hours since."
+
+"Thou must deal with the devil," said the Duke.
+
+"It would ill become one of my name to do so," replied Christian. "But
+in the brief interval, since your Grace hath known of an event which
+hath not yet reached the public ear, you have, I believe, made
+proposals to the King for the hand of the Lady Anne, second daughter
+of the Duke of York, and your Grace's proposals have been rejected."
+
+"Fiends and firebrands, villain!" said the Duke, starting up and
+seizing Christian by the collar; "who hath told thee that?"
+
+"Take your hand from my cloak, my Lord Duke, and I may answer you,"
+said Christian. "I have a scurvy touch of old puritanical humour about
+me. I abide not the imposition of hands--take off your grasp from my
+cloak, or I will find means to make you unloose it."
+
+The Duke, who had kept his right hand on his dagger-hilt while he held
+Christian's collar with his left, unloosed it as he spoke, but slowly,
+and as one who rather suspends than abandons the execution of some
+hasty impulse; while Christian, adjusting his cloak with perfect
+composure, said, "Soh--my cloak being at liberty, we speak on equal
+terms. I come not to insult your Grace, but to offer you vengeance for
+the insult you have received."
+
+"Vengeance!" said the Duke--"It is the dearest proffer man can present
+to me in my present mood. I hunger for vengeance--thirst for vengeance
+--could die to ensure vengeance!---'Sdeath!" he continued, walking up
+and down the large apartment with the most unrestrained and violent
+agitation; "I have chased this repulse out of my brain with ten
+thousand trifles, because I thought no one knew it. But it is known,
+and to thee, the very common-sewer of Court-secrets--the honour of
+Villiers is in thy keeping, Ned Christian! Speak, thou man of wiles
+and of intrigue--on whom dost thou promise the vengeance? Speak! and
+if thy answers meet my desires, I will make a bargain with thee as
+willingly as with thy master, Satan himself."
+
+"I will not be," said Christian, "so unreasonable in my terms as
+stories tell of the old apostate; I will offer your Grace, as he might
+do, temporal prosperity and revenge, which is his frequent recruiting
+money, but I leave it to yourself to provide, as you may be pleased,
+for your future salvation."
+
+The Duke, gazing upon him fixedly and sadly, replied, "I would to God,
+Christian, that I could read what purpose of damnable villainy thou
+hast to propose to me in thy countenance, without the necessity of thy
+using words!"
+
+"Your Grace can but try a guess," said Christian, calmly smiling.
+
+"No," replied the Duke, after gazing at him again for the space of a
+minute; "thou art so deeply dyed a hypocrite, that thy mean features,
+and clear grey eye, are as likely to conceal treason, as any petty
+scheme of theft or larceny more corresponding to your degree."
+
+"Treason, my lord!" echoed Christian; "you may have guessed more
+nearly than you were aware of. I honour your Grace's penetration."
+
+"Treason?" echoed the Duke. "Who dare name such a crime to me?"
+
+"If a name startles your Grace, you may call it vengeance--vengeance
+on the cabal of councillors, who have ever countermined you, in spite
+of your wit and your interest with the King.--Vengeance on Arlington,
+Ormond--on Charles himself."
+
+"No, by Heaven," said the Duke, resuming his disordered walk through
+the apartment--"Vengeance on these rats of the Privy Council,--come at
+it as you will. But the King!--never--never. I have provoked him a
+hundred times, where he has stirred me once. I have crossed his path
+in state intrigue--rivalled him in love--had the advantage in both,--
+and, d--n it, he has forgiven me! If treason would put me in his
+throne, I have no apology for it--it were worse than bestial
+ingratitude."
+
+"Nobly spoken, my lord," said Christian; "and consistent alike with
+the obligations under which your Grace lies to Charles Stewart, and
+the sense you have ever shown of them.--But it signifies not. If your
+Grace patronise not our enterprise, there is Shaftesbury--there is
+Monmouth----"
+
+"Scoundrel!" exclaimed the Duke, even more vehemently agitated than
+before, "think you that you shall carry on with others an enterprise
+which I have refused?--No, by every heathen and every Christian god!--
+Hark ye, Christian, I will arrest you on the spot--I will, by gods and
+devils, and carry you to unravel your plot at Whitehall."
+
+"Where the first words I speak," answered the imperturbable Christian,
+"will be to inform the Privy Council in what place they may find
+certain letters, wherewith your Grace has honoured your poor vassal,
+containing, as I think, particulars which his Majesty will read with
+more surprise than pleasure."
+
+"'Sdeath, villain!" said the Duke, once more laying his hand on his
+poniard-hilt, "thou hast me again at advantage. I know not why I
+forbear to poniard you where you stand!"
+
+"I might fall, my Lord Duke," said Christian, slightly colouring, and
+putting his right hand into his bosom, "though not, I think, unavenged
+--for I have not put my person into this peril altogether without
+means of defence. I might fall, but, alas! your Grace's correspondence
+is in hands, which, by that very act, would be rendered sufficiently
+active in handing them to the King and the Privy Council. What say you
+to the Moorish Princess, my Lord Duke? What if I have left her
+executrix of my will, with certain instructions how to proceed if I
+return not unharmed from York Place? Oh, my lord, though my head is in
+the wolf's mouth, I was not goose enough to place it there without
+settling how many carabines should be fired on the wolf, so soon as my
+dying cackle was heard.--Pshaw, my Lord Duke! you deal with a man of
+sense and courage, yet you speak to him as a child and a coward."
+
+The Duke threw himself into a chair, fixed his eyes on the ground,
+and spoke without raising them. "I am about to call Jerningham," he
+said; "but fear nothing--it is only for a draught of wine--That stuff
+on the table may be a vehicle of filberts, and walnuts, but not for
+such communications as yours.--Bring me champagne," he said to the
+attendant who answered to his summons.
+
+The domestic returned, and brought a flask of champagne, with two
+large silver cups. One of them he filled for Buckingham, who, contrary
+to the usual etiquette, was always served first at home, and then
+offered the other to Christian, who declined to receive it.
+
+The Duke drank off the large goblet which was presented to him, and
+for a moment covered his forehead with the palm of his hand; then
+instantly withdrew it, and said, "Christian, speak your errand
+plainly. We know each other. If my reputation be in some degree in
+your hands, you are well aware that your life is in mine. Sit down,"
+he said, taking a pistol from his bosom and laying it on the table--
+"Sit down, and let me hear your proposal."
+
+"My lord," said Christian, smiling, "I shall produce no such ultimate
+argument on my part, though possibly, in time of need, I may not be
+found destitute of them. But my defence is in the situation of things,
+and in the composed view which, doubtless, your Majesty will take of
+them."
+
+"Majesty!" repeated the Duke--"My good friend Christian, you have kept
+company with the Puritans so long, that you confuse the ordinary
+titles of the Court."
+
+"I know not how to apologise," said Christian, "unless your Grace will
+suppose that I spoke by prophecy."
+
+"Such as the devil delivered to Macbeth," said the Duke--again paced
+the chamber, and again seated himself, and said, "Be plain, Christian
+--speak out at once, and manfully, what is it you intend?"
+
+"/I/," said Christian--"What should I do?--I can do nothing in such a
+matter; but I thought it right that your Grace should know that the
+godly of this city"--(he spoke the word with a kind of ironical grin)
+--"are impatient of inactivity, and must needs be up and doing. My
+brother Bridgenorth is at the head of all old Weiver's congregation;
+for you must know, that, after floundering from one faith to another,
+he hath now got beyond ordinances, and is become a Fifth-Monarchy man.
+He has nigh two hundred of Weiver's people, fully equipped, and ready
+to fall on; and, with slight aid from your Grace's people, they must
+carry Whitehall, and make prisoners of all within it."
+
+"Rascal!" said the Duke, "and is it to a Peer of England you make this
+communication?"
+
+"Nay," answered Christian, "I admit it would be extreme folly in your
+Grace to appear until all is over. But let me give Blood and the
+others a hint on your part. There are the four Germans also--right
+Knipperdolings and Anabaptists--will be specially useful. You are
+wise, my lord, and know the value of a corps of domestic gladiators,
+as well as did Octavius, Lepidus, and Anthony, when, by such family
+forces, they divided the world by indenture tripartite."
+
+"Stay, stay," said the Duke. "Even if these bloodhounds were to join
+with you--not that I would permit it without the most positive
+assurances for the King's personal safety--but say the villains were
+to join, what hope have you of carrying the Court?"
+
+"Bully Tom Armstrong,[*] my lord, hath promised his interest with the
+Life Guards. Then there are my Lord Shaftesbury's brisk boys in the
+city--thirty thousand on the holding up a finger."
+
+[*] Thomas, or Sir Thomas Armstrong, a person who had distinguished
+ himself in youth by duels and drunken exploits. He was
+ particularly connected with the Duke of Monmouth, and was said to
+ be concerned in the Rye-House Plot, for which he suffered capital
+ punishment, 20th June 1684.
+
+"Let him hold up both hands, and if he count a hundred for each
+finger," said the Duke, "it will be more than I expect. You have not
+spoken to him?"
+
+"Surely not till your Grace's pleasure was known. But, if he is not
+applied to, there is the Dutch train, Hans Snorehout's congregation,
+in the Strand--there are the French Protestants in Piccadilly--there
+are the family of Levi in Lewkenor's Lane--the Muggletonians in Thames
+Street----"
+
+"Ah, faugh!--Out upon them--out upon them!--How the knaves will stink
+of cheese and tobacco when they come upon action!--they will drown all
+the perfumes in Whitehall. Spare me the detail; and let me know, my
+dearest Ned, the sum total of thy most odoriferous forces."
+
+"Fifteen hundred men, well armed," said Christian, "besides the rabble
+that will rise to a certainty--they have already nearly torn to pieces
+the prisoners who were this day acquitted on account of the Plot."
+
+"All, then, I understand.--And now, hark ye, most Christian
+Christian," said he, wheeling his chair full in front of that on which
+his agent was seated, "you have told me many things to-day--Shall I be
+equally communicative? Shall I show you that my accuracy of
+information matches yours? Shall I tell you, in a word, why you have
+at once resolved to push every one, from the Puritan to the free-
+thinker, upon a general attack of the Palace of Whitehall, without
+allowing me, a peer of the realm, time either to pause upon or to
+prepare for a step so desperate? Shall I tell you why you would lead
+or drive, seduce or compel me, into countenancing your measures?"
+
+"My lord, if you please to form a guess," said Christian, "I will
+answer with all sincerity, if you have assigned the right cause."
+
+"The Countess of Derby is this day arrived, and attends the Court this
+evening, with hopes of the kindest reception. She may be surprised
+amid the mêlée?--Ha! said I not right, Master Christian? You, who
+pretend to offer me revenge, know yourself its exquisite sweetness."
+
+"I would not presume," said Christian, half smiling, "to offer your
+Grace a dish without acting as your taster as well as purveyor."
+
+"That's honestly said," said the Duke. "Away then, my friend. Give
+Blood this ring--he knows it, and knows how to obey him who bears it.
+Let him assemble my gladiators, as thou dost most wittily term my
+/coup jarrets/. The old scheme of the German music may be resorted to,
+for I think thou hast the instruments ready. But take notice, I know
+nothing on't; and Rowley's person must be safe--I will hang and burn
+on all hands if a hair of his black periwig[*] be but singed.--Then
+what is to follow--a Lord Protector of the realm--or stay--Cromwell
+has made the word somewhat slovenly and unpopular--a Lord Lieutenant
+of the Kingdom?--The patriots who take it on themselves to avenge the
+injustice done to the country, and to remove evil counsellors from
+before the King's throne, that it may be henceforward established in
+righteousness--so I think the rubric runs--cannot fail to make a
+fitting choice."
+
+[*] Charles, to suit his dark complexion, always wore a black peruke.
+ He used to say of the players, that if they wished to represent a
+ villain on the stage, "Oddsfish, they always clapp'd on him a
+ black periwig, whereas the greatest rogue in England [meaning,
+ probably, Dr. Oates] wears a white one."--/See CIBBER's Apology/.
+
+"They cannot, my Lord Duke," said Christian, "since there is but one
+man in the three kingdoms on whom that choice can possibly fall."
+
+"I thank you Christian," said his Grace; "and I trust you. Away, and
+make all ready. Be assured your services shall not be forgot. We will
+have you near to us."
+
+"My Lord Duke," said Christian, "you bind me doubly to you. But
+remember that as your Grace is spared any obnoxious proceedings which
+may befall in the way of military execution, or otherwise, so it will
+be advisable that you hold yourself in preparation, upon a moment's
+notice, to put yourself at the head of a band of honourable friends
+and allies, and come presently to the palace, where you will be
+received by the victors as a commander, and by the vanquished as a
+preserver."
+
+"I conceive you--I conceive you. I will be in prompt readiness," said
+the Duke.
+
+"Ay, my lord," continued Christian; "and for Heaven's sake, let none
+of those toys, which are the very Delilahs of your imagination, come
+across your Grace this evening, and interfere with the execution of
+this sublime scheme."
+
+"Why, Christian, dost think me mad?" was his Grace's emphatic reply.
+"It is you who linger, when all should be ordered for a deed so
+daring. Go then.--But hark ye, Ned; ere you go, tell me when I shall
+again see yonder thing of fire and air--yon Eastern Peri, that glides
+into apartments by the keyhole, and leaves them through the casement--
+yon black-eyed houri of the Mahometan paradise--when, I say, shall I
+see her once more?"
+
+"When your Grace has the truncheon of Lord Lieutenant of the Kingdom,"
+said Christian, and left the apartment.
+
+Buckingham stood fixed in contemplation for a moment after he was
+gone. "Should I have done this?" he said, arguing the matter with
+himself; "or had I the choice rather of doing aught else? Should I not
+hasten to the Court, and make Charles aware of the treason which
+besets him? I will, by Heaven?--Here, Jerningham, my coach, with the
+despatch of light!--I will throw myself at his feet, and tell him of
+all the follies which I have dreamed of with this Christian.--And then
+he will laugh at me, and spurn me.--No, I have kneeled to him to-day
+already, and my repulse was nothing gentle. To be spurned once in the
+sun's daily round is enough for Buckingham."
+
+Having made this reflection, he seated himself, and began hastily to
+mark down the young nobles and gentlemen of quality, and others, their
+very ignoble companions, who he supposed might be likely to assume him
+for their leader in any popular disturbance. He had nearly completed
+it, when Jerningham entered, to say the coach would be ready in an
+instant, and to bring his master's sword, hat, and cloak.
+
+"Let the coachman draw off," said the Duke, "but be in readiness. And
+send to the gentlemen thou wilt find named in this list; say I am but
+ill at ease, and wish their company to a light collation. Let instant
+expedition be made, and care not for expense; you will find most of
+them at the Club House in Fuller's Rents."[*]
+
+[*] The place of meeting of the Green Ribbon Club. "Their place of
+ meeting," says Roger North, "was in a sort of Carrefour at
+ Chancery Lance, in a centre of business and company most proper
+ for such anglers of fools. The house was double balconied in
+ front, as may yet be seen, for the clubbers to issue forth /in
+ fresco/, with hats and no perukes, pipes in their mouths, merry
+ faces, and dilated throats for vocal encouragement of the
+ canaglia below on usual and unusual occasions."
+
+The preparations for festivity were speedily made, and the intended
+guests, most of them persons who were at leisure for any call that
+promised pleasure, though sometimes more deaf to those of duty, began
+speedily to assemble. There were many youths of the highest rank, and
+with them, as is usual in those circles, many of a different class,
+whom talents, or impudence, or wit, or a turn for gambling, had reared
+up into companions for the great and the gay. The Duke of Buckingham
+was a general patron of persons of this description; and a numerous
+attendance took place on the present occasion.
+
+The festivity was pursued with the usual appliances of wine, music,
+and games of hazard; with which, however, there mingled in that period
+much more wit, and a good deal more gross profligacy of conversation,
+than the talents of the present generation can supply, or their taste
+would permit.
+
+The Duke himself proved the complete command which he possessed over
+his versatile character, by maintaining the frolic, the laugh, and the
+jest, while his ear caught up, and with eagerness, the most distant
+sounds, as intimating the commencement of Christian's revolutionary
+project. Such sounds were heard from time to time, and from time to
+time they died away, without any of those consequences which
+Buckingham expected.
+
+At length, and when it was late in the evening, Jerningham announced
+Master Chiffinch from the Court; and that worthy personage followed
+the annunciation.
+
+"Strange things have happened, my Lord Duke," he said; "your presence
+at Court is instantly required by his Majesty."
+
+"You alarm me," said Buckingham, standing up. "I hope nothing has
+happened--I hope there is nothing wrong--I hope his Majesty is well?"
+
+"Perfectly well," said Chiffinch; "and desirous to see your Grace
+without a moment's delay."
+
+"This is sudden," said the Duke. "You see I have had merry fellows
+about me, and am scarce in case to appear, Chiffinch."
+
+"Your Grace seems to be in very handsome plight," said Chiffinch; "and
+you know his Majesty is gracious enough to make allowances."
+
+"True," said the Duke, not a little anxious in his mind, touching the
+cause of this unexpected summons--"True--his Majesty is most gracious
+--I will order my coach."
+
+"Mine is below," replied the royal messenger; "it will save time, if
+your Grace will condescend to use it."
+
+Forced from every evasion, Buckingham took a goblet from the table,
+and requested his friends to remain at his palace so long as they
+could find the means of amusement there. He expected, he said, to
+return almost immediately; if not, he would take farewell of them with
+his usual toast, "May all of us that are not hanged in the interval,
+meet together again here on the first Monday of next month."
+
+This standing toast of the Duke bore reference to the character of
+several of his guests; but he did not drink it on the present occasion
+without some anticipation concerning his own fate, in case Christian
+had betrayed him. He hastily made some addition to his dress, and
+attended Chiffinch in the chariot to Whitehall.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLV
+
+ High feasting was there there--the gilded roofs
+ Rung to the wassail-health--the dancer's step
+ Sprung to the chord responsive--the gay gamester
+ To fate's disposal flung his heap of gold,
+ And laugh'd alike when it increased or lessen'd:
+ Such virtue hath court-air to teach us patience
+ Which schoolmen preach in vain.
+ --WHY COME YE NOT TO COURT?
+
+Upon the afternoon of this eventful day, Charles held his Court in the
+Queen's apartments, which were opened at a particular hour to invited
+guests of a certain lower degree, but accessible without restriction
+to the higher classes of nobility who had from birth, and to the
+courtiers who held by office the privilege of the /entrée/.
+
+It was one part of Charles's character, which unquestionably rendered
+him personally popular, and postponed to a subsequent reign the
+precipitation of his family from the throne, that he banished from his
+Court many of the formal restrictions with which it was in other
+reigns surrounded. He was conscious of the good-natured grace of his
+manners, and trusted to it, often not in vain, to remove evil
+impressions arising from actions, which he was sensible could not be
+justified on the grounds of liberal or national policy.
+
+In the daytime the King was commonly seen in the public walks alone,
+or only attended by one or two persons; and his answer to the
+remonstrance of his brother, on the risk of thus exposing his person,
+is well known:--"Believe me, James," he said, "no one will murder
+/me/, to make /you/ King."
+
+In the same manner, Charles's evenings, unless such as were destined
+to more secret pleasures, were frequently spent amongst all who had
+any pretence to approach a courtly circle; and thus it was upon the
+night which we are treating of. Queen Catherine, reconciled or humbled
+to her fate, had long ceased to express any feelings of jealousy, nay,
+seemed so absolutely dead to such a passion, that she received at her
+drawing-room, without scruple, and even with encouragement, the
+Duchesses of Portsmouth and Cleveland, and others, who enjoyed, though
+in a less avowed character, the credit of having been royal
+favourites. Constraint of every kind was banished from a circle so
+composed, and which was frequented at the same time, if not by the
+wisest, at least by the wittiest courtiers, who ever assembled round a
+monarch, and who, as many of them had shared the wants, and shifts,
+and frolics of his exile, had then acquired a sort of prescriptive
+licence, which the good-natured prince, when he attained his period of
+prosperity, could hardly have restrained had it suited his temper to
+do so. This, however, was the least of Charles's thoughts. His manners
+were such as secured him from indelicate obtrusion; and he sought no
+other protection from over-familiarity, than what these and his ready
+wit afforded him.
+
+On the present occasion, he was peculiarly disposed to enjoy the scene
+of pleasure which had been prepared. The singular death of Major
+Coleby, which, taking place in his own presence, had proclaimed, with
+the voice of a passing bell, the ungrateful neglect of the Prince for
+whom he had sacrificed everything, had given Charles much pain. But,
+in his own opinion at least, he had completely atoned for this
+negligence by the trouble which he had taken for Sir Geoffrey Peveril
+and his son, whose liberation he looked upon not only as an excellent
+good deed in itself, but, in spite of the grave rebuke of Ormond, as
+achieved in a very pardonable manner, considering the difficulties
+with which he was surrounded. He even felt a degree of satisfaction on
+receiving intelligence from the city that there had been disturbances
+in the streets, and that some of the more violent fanatics had betaken
+themselves to their meeting-houses, upon sudden summons, to inquire,
+as their preachers phrased it, into the causes of Heaven's wrath, and
+into the backsliding of the Court, lawyers, and jury, by whom the
+false and bloody favourers of the Popish Plot were screened and
+cloaked from deserved punishment.
+
+The King, we repeat, seemed to hear these accounts with pleasure, even
+when he was reminded of the dangerous and susceptible character of
+those with whom such suspicions originated. "Will any one now assert,"
+he said, with self-complacence, "that I am so utterly negligent of the
+interest of friends?--You see the peril in which I place myself, and
+even the risk to which I have exposed the public peace, to rescue a
+man whom I have scarce seen for twenty years, and then only in his
+buff-coat and bandoleers, with other Train-Band officers who kissed
+hands upon the Restoration. They say Kings have long hands--I think
+they have as much occasion for long memories, since they are expected
+to watch over and reward every man in England, who hath but shown his
+goodwill by crying 'God save the King!'"
+
+"Nay, the rogues are even more unreasonable still," said Sedley; "for
+every knave of them thinks himself entitled to your Majesty's
+protection in a good cause, whether he has cried God save the King or
+no."
+
+The King smiled, and turned to another part of the stately hall, where
+everything was assembled which could, according to the taste of the
+age, make the time glide pleasantly away.
+
+In one place, a group of the young nobility, and of the ladies of the
+Court, listened to the reader's acquaintance Empson, who was
+accompanying with his unrivalled breathings on the flute, a young
+siren, who, while her bosom palpitated with pride and with fear,
+warbled to the courtly and august presence the beautiful air
+beginning--
+
+ "Young I am, and yet unskill'd,
+ How to make a lover yield," &c.
+
+She performed her task in a manner so corresponding with the strains
+of the amatory poet, and the voluptuous air with which the words had
+been invested by the celebrated Purcel, that the men crowded around in
+ecstasies, while most of the ladies thought it proper either to look
+extremely indifferent to the words she sung, or to withdraw from the
+circle as quietly as possible. To the song succeeded a concerto,
+performed by a select band of most admirable musicians, which the
+King, whose taste was indisputable, had himself selected.
+
+At other tables in the apartment, the elder courtiers worshipped
+Fortune, at the various fashionable games of ombre, quadrille, hazard,
+and the like; while heaps of gold which lay before the players,
+augmented or dwindled with every turn of a card or cast of a die. Many
+a year's rent of fair estates was ventured upon the main or the odds;
+which, spent in the old deserted manor-house, had repaired the ravages
+of Cromwell upon its walls, and replaced the sources of good
+housekeeping and hospitality, that, exhausted in the last age by fine
+and sequestration, were now in a fair way of being annihilated by
+careless prodigality. Elsewhere, under cover of observing the
+gamester, or listening to the music, the gallantries of that all-
+licensed age were practised among the gay and fair, closely watched
+the whilst by the ugly or the old, who promised themselves at least
+the pleasure of observing, and it may be that of proclaiming,
+intrigues in which they could not be sharers.
+
+From one table to another glided the merry Monarch, exchanging now a
+glance with a Court beauty, now a jest with a Court wit, now beating
+time to the music, and anon losing or winning a few pieces of gold on
+the chance of the game to which he stood nearest;--the most amiable of
+voluptuaries--the gayest and best-natured of companions--the man that
+would, of all others, have best sustained his character, had life been
+a continued banquet, and its only end to enjoy the passing hour, and
+send it away as pleasantly as might be.
+
+But Kings are least of all exempted from the ordinary lot of humanity;
+and Seged of Ethiopia is, amongst monarchs, no solitary example of the
+vanity of reckoning on a day or an hour of undisturbed serenity. An
+attendant on the Court announced suddenly to their Majesties that a
+lady, who would only announce herself as a Peeress of England, desired
+to be admitted into the presence.
+
+The Queen said, hastily, it was /impossible/. No peeress, without
+announcing her title, was entitled to the privilege of her rank.
+
+"I could be sworn," said a nobleman in attendance, "that it is some
+whim of the Duchess of Newcastle."
+
+The attendant who brought the message, said that he did indeed believe
+it to be the Duchess, both from the singularity of the message, and
+that the lady spoke with somewhat a foreign accent.
+
+"In the name of madness, then," said the King, "let us admit her. Her
+Grace is an entire raree-show in her own person--a universal
+masquerade--indeed a sort of private Bedlam-hospital, her whole ideas
+being like so many patients crazed upon the subjects of love and
+literature, who act nothing in their vagaries, save Minerva, Venus,
+and the nine Muses."
+
+"Your Majesty's pleasure must always supersede mine," said the Queen.
+"I only hope I shall not be expected to entertain so fantastic a
+personage. The last time she came to Court, Isabella"--(she spoke to
+one of her Portuguese ladies of honour)--"you had not returned from
+our lovely Lisbon!--her Grace had the assurance to assume a right to
+bring a train-bearer into my apartment; and when this was not allowed,
+what then, think you, she did?--even caused her train to be made so
+long, that three mortal yards of satin and silver remained in the
+antechamber, supported by four wenches, while the other end was
+attached to her Grace's person, as she paid her duty at the upper end
+of the presence-room. Full thirty yards of the most beautiful silk did
+her Grace's madness employ in this manner."
+
+"And most beautiful damsels they were who bore this portentous train,"
+said the King--"a train never equalled save by that of the great comet
+in sixty-six. Sedley and Etherege told us wonders of them; for it is
+one advantage of this new fashion brought up by the Duchess, that a
+matron may be totally unconscious of the coquetry of her train and its
+attendants."
+
+"Am I to understand, then, your Majesty's pleasure is, that the lady
+is to be admitted?" said the usher.
+
+"Certainly," said the King; "that is, if the incognita be really
+entitled to the honour.--It may be as well to inquire her title--there
+are more madwomen abroad than the Duchess of Newcastle. I will walk
+into the anteroom myself, and receive your answer."
+
+But ere Charles had reached the lower end of the apartment in his
+progress to the anteroom, the usher surprised the assembly by
+announcing a name which had not for many a year been heard in these
+courtly halls--"the Countess of Derby!"
+
+Stately and tall, and still, at an advanced period of life, having a
+person unbroken by years, the noble lady advanced towards her
+Sovereign, with a step resembling that with which she might have met
+an equal. There was indeed nothing in her manner that indicated either
+haughtiness or assumption unbecoming that presence; but her
+consciousness of wrongs, sustained from the administration of Charles,
+and of the superiority of the injured party over those from whom, or
+in whose name, the injury had been offered, gave her look dignity, and
+her step firmness. She was dressed in widow's weeds, of the same
+fashion which were worn at the time her husband was brought to the
+scaffold; and which, in the thirty years subsequent to that event, she
+had never permitted her tirewoman to alter.
+
+The surprise was no pleasing one to the King; and cursing in his heart
+the rashness which had allowed the lady entrance on the gay scene in
+which they were engaged, he saw at the same time the necessity of
+receiving her in a manner suitable to his own character, and her rank
+in the British Court. He approached her with an air of welcome, into
+which he threw all his natural grace, while he began, "/Chère Comtesse
+de Derby, puissante Reine de Man, notre très auguste sœur----/"
+
+"Speak English, sire, if I may presume to ask such a favour," said the
+Countess. "I am a Peeress of this nation--mother to one English Earl,
+and widow, alas, to another! In England I have spent my brief days of
+happiness, my long years of widowhood and sorrow. France and its
+language are but to me the dreams of an uninteresting childhood. I
+know no tongue save that of my husband and my son. Permit me, as the
+widow and mother of Derby, thus to render my homage."
+
+She would have kneeled, but the King gracefully prevented her, and,
+saluting her cheek, according to the form, led her towards the Queen,
+and himself performed the ceremony of introduction. "Your Majesty," he
+said, "must be informed that the Countess has imposed a restriction on
+French--the language of gallantry and compliment. I trust your Majesty
+will, though a foreigner, like herself, find enough of honest English
+to assure the Countess of Derby with what pleasure we see her at
+Court, after the absence of so many years."
+
+"I will endeavour to do so, at least," said the Queen, on whom the
+appearance of the Countess of Derby made a more favourable impression
+than that of many strangers, whom, at the King's request, she was in
+the habit of receiving with courtesy.
+
+Charles himself again spoke. "To any other lady of the same rank I
+might put the question, why she was so long absent from the circle? I
+fear I can only ask the Countess of Derby, what fortunate cause
+produces the pleasure of seeing her here?"
+
+"No fortunate cause, my liege, though one most strong and urgent."
+
+The King augured nothing agreeable from this commencement; and in
+truth, from the Countess's first entrance, he had anticipated some
+unpleasant explanation, which he therefore hastened to parry, having
+first composed his features into an expression of sympathy and
+interest.
+
+"If," said he, "the cause is of a nature in which we can render
+assistance, we cannot expect your ladyship should enter upon it at the
+present time; but a memorial addressed to our secretary, or, if it is
+more satisfactory, to ourselves directly, will receive our immediate,
+and I trust I need not add, our favourable construction."
+
+The Countess bowed with some state, and answered, "My business, sire,
+is indeed important; but so brief, that it need not for more than a
+few minutes withdraw your ear from what is more pleasing;--yet it is
+so urgent, that I am afraid to postpone it even for a moment."
+
+"This is unusual," said Charles. "But you, Countess of Derby, are an
+unwonted guest, and must command my time. Does the matter require my
+private ear?"
+
+"For my part," said the Countess, "the whole Court might listen; but
+you Majesty may prefer hearing me in the presence of one or two of
+your counsellors."
+
+"Ormond," said the King, looking around, "attend us for an instant--
+and do you, Arlington, do the same."
+
+The King led the way into an adjoining cabinet, and, seating himself,
+requested the Countess would also take a chair. "It needs not, sire,"
+she replied; then pausing for a moment, as if to collect her spirits,
+she proceeded with firmness.
+
+"Your Majesty well said that no light cause had drawn me from my
+lonely habitation. I came not hither when the property of my son--that
+property which descended to him from a father who died for your
+Majesty's rights--was conjured away from him under pretext of justice,
+that it might first feed the avarice of the rebel Fairfax, and then
+supply the prodigality of his son-in-law, Buckingham."
+
+"These are over harsh terms, lady," said the King. "A legal penalty
+was, as we remember, incurred by an act of irregular violence--so our
+courts and our laws term it, though personally I have no objection to
+call it, with you, an honourable revenge. But admit it were such, in
+prosecution of the laws of honour, bitter legal consequences are often
+necessarily incurred."
+
+"I come not to argue for my son's wasted and forfeited inheritance,
+sire," said the Countess; "I only take credit for my patience, under
+that afflicting dispensation. I now come to redeem the honour of the
+House of Derby, more dear to me than all the treasures and lands which
+ever belonged to it."
+
+"And by whom is the honour of the House of Derby impeached?" said the
+King; "for on my word you bring me the first news of it."
+
+"Has there one Narrative, as these wild fictions are termed, been
+printed with regard to the Popish Plot--this pretended Plot as I will
+call it--in which the honour of our house has not been touched and
+tainted? And are there not two noble gentlemen, father and son, allies
+of the House of Stanley, about to be placed in jeopardy of their
+lives, on account of matters in which we are the parties first
+impeached?"
+
+The King looked around, and smiled to Arlington and Ormond. "The
+Countess's courage, methinks, shames ours. What lips dared have called
+the immaculate Plot /pretended/, or the Narrative of the witnesses,
+our preservers from Popish knives, a wild fiction?--But, madam," he
+said, "though I admire the generosity of your interference in behalf
+of the two Peverils, I must acquaint you, that your interference is
+unnecessary--they are this morning acquitted."
+
+"Now may God be praised!" said the Countess, folding her hands. "I
+have scarce slept since I heard the news of their impeachment; and
+have arrived here to surrender myself to your Majesty's justice, or to
+the prejudices of the nation, in hopes, by so doing, I might at least
+save the lives of my noble and generous friends, enveloped in
+suspicion only, or chiefly, by their connection with us.--Are they
+indeed acquitted?"
+
+"They are, by my honour," said the King. "I marvel you heard it not."
+
+"I arrived but last night, and remained in the strictest seclusion,"
+said the Countess, "afraid to make any inquiries that might occasion
+discovery ere I saw your Majesty."
+
+"And now that we /have/ met," said the King, taking her hand kindly--
+"a meeting which gives me the greatest pleasure--may I recommend to
+you speedily to return to your royal island with as little /éclat/ as
+you came thither? The world, my dear Countess, has changed since we
+were young. Men fought in the Civil War with good swords and muskets;
+but now we fight with indictments and oaths, and such like legal
+weapons. You are no adept in such warfare; and though I am well aware
+you know how to hold out a castle, I doubt much if you have the art to
+parry off an impeachment. This Plot has come upon us like a land storm
+--there is no steering the vessel in the teeth of the tempest--we must
+run for the nearest haven, and happy if we can reach one."
+
+"This is cowardice, my liege," said the Countess--"Forgive the word!--
+it is but a woman who speaks it. Call your noble friends around you,
+and make a stand like your royal father. There is but one right and
+one wrong--one honourable and forward course; and all others which
+deviate are oblique and unworthy."
+
+"Your language, my venerated friend," said Ormond, who saw the
+necessity of interfering betwixt the dignity of the actual Sovereign
+and the freedom of the Countess, who was generally accustomed to
+receive, not to pay observance,--"your language is strong and decided,
+but it applies not to the times. It might occasion a renewal of the
+Civil War, and of all its miseries, but could hardly be attended with
+the effects you sanguinely anticipate."
+
+"You are too rash, my Lady Countess," said Arlington, "not only to
+rush upon this danger yourself, but to desire to involve his Majesty.
+Let me say plainly, that, in this jealous time, you have done but ill
+to exchange the security of Castle Rushin for the chance of a lodging
+in the Tower of London."
+
+"And were I to kiss the block there," said the Countess, "as did my
+husband at Bolton-on-the-Moors, I would do so willingly, rather than
+forsake a friend!--and one, too, whom, as in the case of the younger
+Peveril, I have thrust upon danger."
+
+"But have I not assured you that both of the Peverils, elder and
+younger, are freed from peril?" said the King; "and, my dear Countess,
+what can else tempt you to thrust /yourself/ on danger, from which,
+doubtless, you expect to be relieved by my intervention? Methinks a
+lady of your judgment should not voluntarily throw herself into a
+river, merely that her friends might have the risk and merit of
+dragging her out."
+
+The Countess reiterated her intention to claim a fair trial.--The two
+counsellors again pressed their advice that she should withdraw,
+though under the charge of absconding from justice, and remain in her
+own feudal kingdom.
+
+The King, seeing no termination to the debate, gently reminded the
+Countess that her Majesty would be jealous if he detained her ladyship
+longer, and offered her his hand to conduct her back to the company.
+This she was under the necessity of accepting, and returned
+accordingly to the apartments of state, where an event occurred
+immediately afterwards, which must be transferred to the next chapter.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVI
+
+ Here stand I tight and trim,
+ Quick of eye, though little of limb;
+ He who denieth the word I have spoken,
+ Betwixt him and me shall lances be broken.
+ --LAY OF THE LITTLE JOHN DE SAINTRE.
+
+When Charles had reconducted the Countess of Derby into the presence-
+chamber, before he parted with her, he entreated her, in a whisper, to
+be governed by good counsel, and to regard her own safety; and then
+turned easily from her, as if to distribute his attentions equally
+among the other guests.
+
+These were a good deal circumscribed at the instant, by the arrival of
+a party of five or six musicians; one of whom, a German, under the
+patronage of the Duke of Buckingham, was particularly renowned for his
+performance on the violoncello, but had been detained in inactivity in
+the antechamber by the non-arrival of his instrument, which had now at
+length made its appearance.
+
+The domestic who placed it before the owner, shrouded as it was within
+its wooden case, seemed heartily glad to be rid of his load, and
+lingered for a moment, as if interested in discovering what sort of
+instrument was to be produced that could weigh so heavily. His
+curiosity was satisfied, and in a most extraordinary manner; for,
+while the musician was fumbling with the key, the case being for his
+greater convenience placed upright against the wall, the case and
+instrument itself at once flew open, and out started the dwarf,
+Geoffrey Hudson,--at sight of whose unearthly appearance, thus
+suddenly introduced, the ladies shrieked, and ran backwards; the
+gentlemen started, and the poor German, on seeing the portentous
+delivery of his fiddle-case, tumbled on the floor in an agony,
+supposing, it might be, that his instrument was metamorphosed into the
+strange figure which supplied its place. So soon, however, as he
+recovered, he glided out of the apartment, and was followed by most of
+his companions.
+
+"Hudson!" said the King--"My little old friend, I am not sorry to see
+you; though Buckingham, who I suppose is the purveyor of this jest,
+hath served us up but a stale one."
+
+"Will your Majesty honour me with one moment's attention?" said
+Hudson.
+
+"Assuredly, my good friend," said the King. "Old acquaintances are
+springing up in every quarter to-night; and our leisure can hardly be
+better employed than in listening to them.--It was an idle trick of
+Buckingham," he added, in a whisper to Ormond, "to send the poor thing
+hither, especially as he was to-day tried for the affair of the plot.
+At any rate he comes not to ask protection from us, having had the
+rare fortune to come off /Plot-free/. He is but fishing, I suppose,
+for some little present or pension."
+
+The little man, precise in Court etiquette, yet impatient of the
+King's delaying to attend to him, stood in the midst of the floor,
+most valorously pawing and prancing, like a Scots pony assuming the
+airs of a war-horse, waving meanwhile his little hat with the
+tarnished feather, and bowing from time to time, as if impatient to be
+heard.
+
+"Speak on, then, my friend," said Charles; "if thou hast some poetical
+address penned for thee, out with it, that thou mayst have time to
+repose these flourishing little limbs of thine."
+
+"No poetical speech have I, most mighty Sovereign," answered the
+dwarf; "but, in plain and most loyal prose, I do accuse, before this
+company, the once noble Duke of Buckingham of high treason!"
+
+"Well spoken, and manfully--Get on, man," said the King, who never
+doubted that this was the introduction to something burlesque or
+witty, not conceiving that the charge was made in solemn earnest.
+
+A great laugh took place among such courtiers as heard, and among many
+who did not hear, what was uttered by the dwarf; the former
+entertained by the extravagant emphasis and gesticulation of the
+little champion, and the others laughing not the less loud that they
+laughed for example's sake, and upon trust.
+
+"What matter is there for all this mirth?" said he, very indignantly--
+"Is it fit subject for laughing, that I, Geoffrey Hudson, Knight, do,
+before King and nobles, impeach George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham,
+of high treason?"
+
+"No subject of mirth, certainly," said Charles, composing his
+features; "but great matter of wonder.--Come, cease this mouthing, and
+prancing, and mummery.--If there be a jest, come out with it, man; and
+if not, even get thee to the beaffet, and drink a cup of wine to
+refresh thee after thy close lodging."
+
+"I tell you, my liege," said Hudson impatiently, yet in a whisper,
+intended only to be audible by the King, "that if you spend overmuch
+time in trifling, you will be convinced by dire experience of
+Buckingham's treason. I tell you,--I asseverate to your Majesty,--two
+hundred armed fanatics will be here within the hour, to surprise the
+guards."
+
+"Stand back, ladies," said the King, "or you may hear more than you
+will care to listen to. My Lord of Buckingham's jests are not always,
+you know, quite fitted for female ears; besides, we want a few words
+in private with our little friend. You, my Lord of Ormond--you,
+Arlington" (and he named one or two others), "may remain with us."
+
+The gay crowd bore back, and dispersed through the apartment--the men
+to conjecture what the end of this mummery, as they supposed it, was
+likely to prove; and what jest, as Sedley said, the bass-fiddle had
+been brought to bed of--and the ladies to admire and criticise the
+antique dress, and richly embroidered ruff and hood of the Countess of
+Derby, to whom the Queen was showing particular attention.
+
+"And now, in the name of Heaven, and amongst friends," said the King
+to the dwarf, "what means all this?"
+
+"Treason, my lord the King!--Treason to his Majesty of England!--When
+I was chambered in yonder instrument, my lord, the High-Dutch fellows
+who bore me, carried me into a certain chapel, to see, as they said to
+each other, that all was ready. Sire, I went where bass-fiddle never
+went before, even into a conventicle of Fifth-Monarchists; and when
+they brought me away, the preacher was concluding his sermon, and was
+within a 'Now to apply' of setting off like the bell-wether at the
+head of his flock, to surprise your Majesty in your royal Court! I
+heard him through the sound-holes of my instrument, when the fellow
+set me down for a moment to profit by this precious doctrine."
+
+"It would be singular," said Lord Arlington, "were there some reality
+at the bottom of this buffoonery; for we know these wild men have been
+consulting together to-day, and five conventicles have held a solemn
+fast."
+
+"Nay," said the King, "if that be the case, they are certainly
+determined on some villainy."
+
+"Might I advise," said the Duke of Ormond, "I would summon the Duke of
+Buckingham to this presence. His connections with the fanatics are
+well known, though he affects to conceal them."
+
+"You would not, my lord, do his Grace the injustice to treat him as a
+criminal on such a charge as this?" said the King. "However," he
+added, after a moment's consideration, "Buckingham is accessible to
+every sort of temptation, from the flightiness of his genius. I should
+not be surprised if he nourished hopes of an aspiring kind--I think we
+had some proof of it lately.--Hark ye, Chiffinch; go to him instantly,
+and bring him here on any fair pretext thou canst devise. I would fain
+save him from what lawyers call an overt act. The Court would be dull
+as a dead horse were Buckingham to miscarry."
+
+"Will not your Majesty order the Horse Guards to turn out?" said young
+Selby, who was present, and an officer.
+
+"No, Selby," said the King, "I like not horse-play. But let them be
+prepared; and let the High Bailiff collect his civil officers, and
+command the Sheriffs to summon their worshipful attendants from
+javelin-men to hangmen, and have them in readiness, in case of any
+sudden tumult--double the sentinels on the doors of the palace--and
+see no strangers get in."
+
+"Or /out/," said the Duke of Ormond. "Where are the foreign fellows
+who brought in the dwarf?"
+
+They were sought for, but they were not to be found. They had
+retreated, leaving their instruments--a circumstance which seemed to
+bear hard on the Duke of Buckingham, their patron.
+
+Hasty preparations were made to provide resistance to any effort of
+despair which the supposed conspirators might be driven to; and in the
+meanwhile, the King, withdrawing with Arlington, Ormond, and a few
+other counsellors, into the cabinet where the Countess of Derby had
+had her audience, resumed the examination of the little discoverer.
+His declaration, though singular, was quite coherent; the strain of
+romance intermingled with it, being in fact a part of his character,
+which often gained him the fate of being laughed at, when he would
+otherwise have been pitied, or even esteemed.
+
+He commenced with a flourish about his sufferings for the Plot, which
+the impatience of Ormond would have cut short, had not the King
+reminded his Grace, that a top, when it is not flogged, must needs go
+down of itself at the end of a definite time, while the application of
+the whip may keep it up for hours.
+
+Geoffrey Hudson was, therefore, allowed to exhaust himself on the
+subject of his prison-house, which he informed the King was not
+without a beam of light--an emanation of loveliness--a mortal angel--
+quick of step and beautiful of eye, who had more than once visited his
+confinement with words of cheering and comfort.
+
+"By my faith," said the King, "they fare better in Newgate than I was
+aware of. Who would have thought of the little gentleman being solaced
+with female society in such a place?"
+
+"I pray your Majesty," said the dwarf, after the manner of a solemn
+protest, "to understand nothing amiss. My devotion to this fair
+creature is rather like what we poor Catholics pay to the blessed
+saints, than mixed with any grosser quality. Indeed, she seems rather
+a sylphid of the Rosicrucian system, than aught more carnal; being
+slighter, lighter, and less than the females of common life, who have
+something of that coarseness of make which is doubtless derived from
+the sinful and gigantic race of the antediluvians."
+
+"Well, say on, man," quoth Charles. "Didst thou not discover this
+sylph to be a mere mortal wench after all?"
+
+"Who?--I, my liege?--Oh, fie!"
+
+"Nay, little gentleman, do not be so particularly scandalised," said
+the King; "I promise you I suspect you of no audacity of gallantry."
+
+"Time wears fast," said the Duke of Ormond impatiently, and looking at
+his watch. "Chiffinch hath been gone ten minutes, and ten minutes will
+bring him back."
+
+"True," said Charles gravely. "Come to the point, Hudson; and tell us
+what this female has to do with your coming hither in this
+extraordinary manner."
+
+"Everything, my lord," said little Hudson. "I saw her twice during my
+confinement in Newgate, and, in my thought, she is the very angel who
+guards my life and welfare; for, after my acquittal, as I walked
+towards the city with two tall gentlemen, who had been in trouble
+along with me, and just while we stood to our defence against a
+rascally mob, and just as I had taken possession of an elevated
+situation, to have some vantage against the great odds of numbers, I
+heard a heavenly voice sound, as it were, from a window behind me,
+counselling me to take refuge in a certain house; to which measure I
+readily persuaded my gallant friends the Peverils, who have always
+shown themselves willing to be counselled by me."
+
+"Showing therein their wisdom at once and modesty," said the King.
+"But what chanced next? Be brief--be like thyself, man."
+
+"For a time, sire," said the dwarf, "it seemed as if I were not the
+principal object of attention. First, the younger Peveril was
+withdrawn from us by a gentleman of venerable appearance, though
+something smacking of a Puritan, having boots of neat's leather, and
+wearing his weapon without a sword-knot. When Master Julian returned,
+he informed us, for the first time, that we were in the power of a
+body of armed fanatics who were, as the poet says, prompt for direful
+act. And your Majesty will remark, that both father and son were in
+some measure desperate, and disregardful from that moment of the
+assurances which I gave them, that the star which I was bound to
+worship, would, in her own time, shine forth in signal of our safety.
+May it please your Majesty, in answer to my hilarious exhortations to
+confidence, the father did but say /tush/, and the son /pshaw/, which
+showed how men's prudence and manners are disturbed by affliction.
+Nevertheless, these two gentlemen, the Peverils, forming a strong
+opinion of the necessity there was to break forth, were it only to
+convey a knowledge of these dangerous passages to your Majesty,
+commenced an assault on the door of the apartment, I also assisting
+with the strength which Heaven hath given, and some threescore years
+have left me. We could not, as it unhappily proved, manage our attempt
+so silently, but that our guards overheard us, and, entering in
+numbers, separated us from each other, and compelled my companions, at
+point of pike and poniard, to go to some other and more distant
+apartment, thus separating our fair society. I was again enclosed in
+the now solitary chamber, and I will own that I felt a certain
+depression of soul. But when bale is at highest, as the poet singeth,
+boot is at nighest, for a door of hope was suddenly opened----"
+
+"In the name of God, my liege," said the Duke of Ormond, "let this
+poor creature's story be translated into the language of common sense
+by some of the scribblers of romances about Court, and we may be able
+to make meaning of it."
+
+Geoffrey Hudson looked with a frowning countenance of reproof upon the
+impatient old Irish nobleman, and said, with a very dignified air,
+"That one Duke upon a poor gentleman's hand was enough at a time, and
+that, but for his present engagement and dependency with the Duke of
+Buckingham, he would have endured no such terms from the Duke of
+Ormond."
+
+"Abate your valour, and diminish your choler, at our request, most
+puissant Sir Geoffrey Hudson," said the King; "and forgive the Duke of
+Ormond for my sake; but at all events go on with your story."
+
+Geoffrey Hudson laid his hand on his bosom, and bowed in proud and
+dignified submission to his Sovereign; then waved his forgiveness
+gracefully to Ormond, accompanied with a horrible grin, which he
+designed for a smile of gracious forgiveness and conciliation. "Under
+the Duke's favour, then," he proceeded, "when I said a door of hope
+was opened to me, I meant a door behind the tapestry, from whence
+issued that fair vision--yet not so fair as lustrously dark, like the
+beauty of a continental night, where the cloudless azure sky shrouds
+us in a veil more lovely than that of day!--but I note your Majesty's
+impatience;--enough. I followed my beautiful guide into an apartment,
+where there lay, strangely intermingled, warlike arms and musical
+instruments. Amongst these I saw my own late place of temporary
+obscurity--a violoncello. To my astonishment, she turned around the
+instrument, and opening it behind the pressure of a spring, showed
+that it was filled with pistols, daggers, and ammunition made up in
+bandoleers. 'These,' she said, 'are this night destined to surprise
+the Court of the unwary Charles'--your Majesty must pardon my using
+her own words; 'but if thou darest go in their stead, thou mayst be
+the saviour of king and kingdoms; if thou art afraid, keep secret, I
+will myself try the adventure.' Now may Heaven forbid, that Geoffrey
+Hudson were craven enough, said I, to let thee run such a risk! You
+know not--you cannot know, what belongs to such ambuscades and
+concealments--I am accustomed to them--have lurked in the pocket of a
+giant, and have formed the contents of a pasty. 'Get in then,' she
+said, 'and lose no time.' Nevertheless, while I prepared to obey, I
+will not deny that some cold apprehensions came over my hot valour,
+and I confessed to her, if it might be so, I would rather find my way
+to the palace on my own feet. But she would not listen to me, saying
+hastily, 'I would be intercepted, or refused admittance, and that I
+must embrace the means she offered me of introduction into the
+presence, and when there, tell the King to be on his guard--little
+more is necessary; for once the scheme is known, it becomes
+desperate.' Rashly and boldly, I bid adieu to the daylight which was
+then fading away. She withdrew the contents of the instrument destined
+for my concealment, and having put them behind the chimney-board,
+introduced me in their room. As she clasped me in, I implored her to
+warn the men who were to be entrusted with me, to take heed and keep
+the neck of the violoncello uppermost; but ere I had completed my
+request, I found I was left alone, and in darkness, Presently, two or
+three fellows entered, whom, by their language, which I in some sort
+understood, I perceived to be Germans, and under the influence of the
+Duke of Buckingham. I heard them receive from the leader a charge how
+they were to deport themselves, when they should assume the concealed
+arms--and--for I will do the Duke no wrong--I understood their orders
+were precise, not only to spare the person of the King, but also those
+of the courtiers, and to protect all who might be in the presence
+against an irruption of the fanatics. In other respects, they had
+charge to disarm the Gentlemen-pensioners in the guard-room, and, in
+fine, to obtain the command of the Court."
+
+The King looked disconcerted and thoughtful at this communication, and
+bade Lord Arlington see that Selby quietly made search into the
+contents of the other cases which had been brought as containing
+musical instruments. He then signed to the dwarf to proceed in his
+story, asking him again and again, and very solemnly, whether he was
+sure that he heard the Duke's name mentioned, as commanding or
+approving this action.
+
+The dwarf answered in the affirmative.
+
+"This," said the King, "is carrying the frolic somewhat far."
+
+The dwarf proceeded to state, that he was carried after his
+metamorphosis into the chapel, where he heard the preacher seemingly
+about the close of his harangue, the tenor of which he also mentioned.
+Words, he said, could not express the agony which he felt when he
+found that his bearer, in placing the instrument in a corner, was
+about to invert its position, in which case, he said, human frailty
+might have proved too great for love, for loyalty, for true obedience,
+nay, for the fear of death, which was like to ensue on discovery; and
+he concluded, that he greatly doubted he could not have stood on his
+head for many minutes without screaming aloud.
+
+"I could not have blamed you," said the King; "placed in such a
+posture in the royal oak, I must needs have roared myself.--Is this
+all you have to tell us of this strange conspiracy?" Sir Geoffrey
+Hudson replied in the affirmative, and the King presently subjoined--
+"Go, my little friend, your services shall not be forgotten. Since
+thou hast crept into the bowels of a fiddle for our service, we are
+bound, in duty and conscience, to find you a more roomy dwelling in
+future."
+
+"It was a violoncello, if your Majesty is pleased to remember," said
+the little jealous man, "not a common fiddle; though, for your
+Majesty's service, I would have crept even into a kit."
+
+"Whatever of that nature could have been performed by any subject of
+ours, thou wouldst have enacted in our behalf--of that we hold
+ourselves certain. Withdraw for a little; and hark ye, for the
+present, beware what you say about this matter. Let your appearance be
+considered--do you mark me--as a frolic of the Duke of Buckingham; and
+not a word of conspiracy."
+
+"Were it not better to put him under some restraint, sire?" said the
+Duke of Ormond, when Hudson had left the room.
+
+"It is unnecessary," said the King. "I remember the little wretch of
+old. Fortune, to make him the model of absurdity, has closed a most
+lofty soul within that little miserable carcass. For wielding his
+sword and keeping his word, he is a perfect Don Quixote in decimo-
+octavo. He shall be taken care of.--But, oddsfish, my lords, is not
+this freak of Buckingham too villainous and ungrateful?"
+
+"He had not had the means of being so, had your Majesty," said the
+Duke of Ormond, "been less lenient on other occasions."
+
+"My lord, my lord," said Charles hastily--"your lordship is
+Buckingham's known enemy--we will take other and more impartial
+counsel--Arlington, what think you of all this?"
+
+"May it please your Majesty," said Arlington, "I think the thing is
+absolutely impossible, unless the Duke has had some quarrel with your
+Majesty, of which we know nothing. His Grace is very flighty,
+doubtless, but this seems actual insanity."
+
+"Why, faith," said the King, "some words passed betwixt us this
+morning--his Duchess it seems is dead--and to lose no time, his Grace
+had cast his eyes about for means of repairing the loss, and had the
+assurance to ask our consent to woo my niece Lady Anne."
+
+"Which your Majesty of course rejected?" said the statesman.
+
+"And not without rebuking his assurance," added the King.
+
+"In private, sire, or before any witnesses?" said the Duke of Ormond.
+
+"Before no one," said the King,--"excepting, indeed, little Chiffinch;
+and he, you know, is no one."
+
+"/Hinc illæ lachrymæ/," said Ormond. "I know his Grace well. While the
+rebuke of his aspiring petulance was a matter betwixt your Majesty and
+him, he might have let it pass by; but a check before a fellow from
+whom it was likely enough to travel through the Court, was a matter to
+be revenged."
+
+Here Selby came hastily from the other room, to say, that his Grace of
+Buckingham had just entered the presence-chamber.
+
+The King rose. "Let a boat be in readiness, with a party of the
+yeomen," said he. "It may be necessary to attach him of treason, and
+send him to the Tower."
+
+"Should not a Secretary of State's warrant be prepared?" said Ormond.
+
+"No, my Lord Duke," said the King sharply. "I still hope that the
+necessity may be avoided."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVII
+
+ High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect.
+ --RICHARD III.
+
+Before giving the reader an account of the meeting betwixt Buckingham
+and his injured Sovereign, we may mention a trifling circumstance or
+two which took place betwixt his Grace and Chiffinch, in the short
+drive betwixt York Place and Whitehall.
+
+In the outset, the Duke endeavoured to learn from the courtier the
+special cause of his being summoned so hastily to the Court. Chiffinch
+answered, cautiously, that he believed there were some gambols going
+forward, at which the King desired the Duke's presence.
+
+This did not quite satisfy Buckingham, for, conscious of his own rash
+purpose, he could not but apprehend discovery. After a moment's
+silence, "Chiffinch," he said abruptly, "did you mention to any one
+what the King said to me this morning touching the Lady Anne?"
+
+"My Lord Duke," said Chiffinch, hesitantly, "surely my duty to the
+King--my respect to your Grace----"
+
+"You mentioned it to no one, then?" said the Duke sternly.
+
+"To no one," replied Chiffinch faintly, for he was intimidated by the
+Duke's increasing severity of manner.
+
+"Ye lie, like a scoundrel!" said the Duke--"You told Christian!"
+
+"Your Grace," said Chiffinch--"your Grace--your Grace ought to
+remember that I told you Christian's secret; that the Countess of
+Derby was come up."
+
+"And you think the one point of treachery may balance for the other?
+But no. I must have a better atonement. Be assured I will blow your
+brains out, ere you leave this carriage, unless you tell me the truth
+of this message from Court."
+
+As Chiffinch hesitated what reply to make, a man, who, by the blaze of
+the torches, then always borne, as well by the lackeys who hung behind
+the carriage, as by the footmen who ran by the side, might easily see
+who sat in the coach, approached, and sung in a deep manly voice, the
+burden of an old French song on the battle of Marignan, in which is
+imitated the German French of the defeated Swiss.
+
+ "/Tout est verlore
+ La tintelore,
+ Tout est verlore/
+ Bei Got."
+
+"I am betrayed," said the Duke, who instantly conceived that this
+chorus, expressing "all is lost," was sung by one of his faithful
+agents, as a hint to him that their machinations were discovered.
+
+He attempted to throw himself from the carriage, but Chiffinch held
+him with a firm, though respectful grasp. "Do not destroy yourself, my
+lord," he said, in a tone of deep humility--"there are soldiers and
+officers of the peace around the carriage, to enforce your Grace's
+coming to Whitehall, and to prevent your escape. To attempt it would
+be to confess guilt; and I advise you strongly against that--the King
+is your friend--be your own."
+
+The Duke, after a moment's consideration, said sullenly, "I believe
+you are right. Why should I fly, when I am guilty of nothing but
+sending some fireworks to entertain the Court, instead of a concert of
+music?"
+
+"And the dwarf, who came so unexpectedly out of the bass-viol----"
+
+"Was a masking device of my own, Chiffinch," said the Duke, though the
+circumstance was then first known to him. "Chiffinch, you will bind me
+for ever, if you will permit me to have a minute's conversation with
+Christian."
+
+"With Christian, my lord?--Where could you find him?--You are aware we
+must go straight to the Court."
+
+"True," said the Duke, "but I think I cannot miss finding him; and
+you, Master Chiffinch, are no officer, and have no warrant either to
+detain me prisoner, or prevent my speaking to whom I please."
+
+Chiffinch replied, "My Lord Duke, your genius is so great, and your
+escapes so numerous, that it will be from no wish of my own if I am
+forced to hurt a man so skilful and so popular."
+
+"Nay, then, there is life in it yet," said the Duke, and whistled;
+when, from beside the little cutler's booth, with which the reader is
+acquainted, appeared, suddenly, Master Christian, and was in a moment
+at the side of the coach. "/Ganz ist verloren/," said the Duke.
+
+"I know it," said Christian; "and all our godly friends are dispersed
+upon the news. Luckily the Colonel and these German rascals gave a
+hint. All is safe--You go to Court--Hark ye, I will follow."
+
+"You, Christian? that would be more friendly than wise."
+
+"Why, what is there against me?" said Christian. "I am innocent as the
+child unborn--so is your Grace. There is but one creature who can bear
+witness to our guilt; but I trust to bring her on the stage in our
+favour--besides, if I were not, I should presently be sent for."
+
+"The familiar of whom I have heard you speak, I warrant?"
+
+"Hark in your ear again."
+
+"I understand," said the Duke, "and will delay Master Chiffinch,--for
+he, you must know, is my conductor,--no longer.--Well, Chiffinch, let
+them drive on.--/Vogue la Galère!/" he exclaimed, as the carriage went
+onward; "I have sailed through worse perils than this yet."
+
+"It is not for me to judge," said Chiffinch; "your Grace is a bold
+commander; and Christian hath the cunning of the devil for a pilot;
+but----However, I remain your Grace's poor friend, and will heartily
+rejoice in your extrication."
+
+"Give me a proof of your friendship," said the Duke. "Tell me what you
+know of Christian's familiar, as he calls her."
+
+"I believe it to be the same dancing wench who came with Empson to my
+house on the morning that Mistress Alice made her escape from us. But
+you have seen her, my lord?"
+
+"I?" said the Duke; "when did I see her?"
+
+"She was employed by Christian, I believe, to set his niece at
+liberty, when he found himself obliged to gratify his fanatical
+brother-in-law, by restoring his child; besides being prompted by a
+private desire, as I think, of bantering your Grace."
+
+"Umph! I suspected so much. I will repay it," said the Duke. "But
+first to get out of this dilemma.--That little Numidian witch, then,
+was his familiar; and she joined in the plot to tantalise me?--But
+here we reach Whitehall.--Now, Chiffinch, be no worse than thy word,
+and--now, Buckingham, be thyself!"
+
+But ere we follow Buckingham into the presence, where he had so
+difficult a part to sustain, it may not be amiss to follow Christian
+after his brief conversation with him. On re-entering the house, which
+he did by a circuitous passage, leading from a distant alley, and
+through several courts, Christian hastened to a low matted apartment,
+in which Bridgenorth sat alone, reading the Bible by the light of a
+small brazen lamp, with the utmost serenity of countenance.
+
+"Have you dismissed the Peverils?" said Christian hastily.
+
+"I have," said the Major.
+
+"And upon what pledge--that they will not carry information against
+you to Whitehall?"
+
+"They gave me their promise voluntarily, when I showed them our armed
+friends were dismissed. To-morrow, I believe, it is their purpose to
+lodge informations."
+
+"And why not to-night, I pray you?" said Christian.
+
+"Because they allow us that time for escape."
+
+"Why, then, do you not avail yourself of it? Wherefore are you here?"
+said Christian.
+
+"Nay, rather, why do /you/ not fly?" said Bridgenorth. "Of a surety,
+you are as deeply engaged as I."
+
+"Brother Bridgenorth, I am the fox, who knows a hundred modes of
+deceiving the hounds; you are the deer, whose sole resource is in
+hasty flight. Therefore lose no time--begone to the country--or
+rather, Zedekiah Fish's vessel, the /Good Hope/, lies in the river,
+bound for Massachusetts--take the wings of the morning, and begone--
+she can fall down to Gravesend with the tide."
+
+"And leave to thee, brother Christian," said Bridgenorth, "the charge
+of my fortune and my daughter? No, brother; my opinion of your good
+faith must be re-established ere I again trust thee."
+
+"Go thy ways, then, for a suspicious fool," said Christian,
+suppressing his strong desire to use language more offensive; "or
+rather stay where thou art, and take thy chance of the gallows!"
+
+"It is appointed to all men to die once," said Bridgenorth; "my life
+hath been a living death. My fairest boughs have been stripped by the
+axe of the forester--that which survives must, if it shall blossom, be
+grafted elsewhere, and at a distance from my aged trunk. The sooner,
+then, the root feels the axe, the stroke is more welcome. I had been
+pleased, indeed, had I been called to bringing yonder licentious Court
+to a purer character, and relieving the yoke of the suffering people
+of God. That youth too--son to that precious woman, to whom I owe the
+last tie that feebly links my wearied spirit to humanity--could I have
+travailed with /him/ in the good cause!--But that, with all my other
+hopes is broken for ever; and since I am not worthy to be an
+instrument in so great a work, I have little desire to abide longer in
+this vale of sorrow."
+
+"Farewell, then, desponding fool!" said Christian, unable, with all
+his calmness, any longer to suppress his contempt for the resigned and
+hopeless predestinarian. "That fate should have clogged me with such
+confederates!" he muttered, as he left the apartment--"this bigoted
+fool is now nearly irreclaimable--I must to Zarah; for she, or no one,
+must carry us through these straits. If I can but soothe her sullen
+temper, and excite her vanity to action,--betwixt her address, the
+King's partiality for the Duke, Buckingham's matchless effrontery, and
+my own hand upon the helm, we may yet weather the tempest that darkens
+around us. But what we do must be hastily done."
+
+In another apartment he found the person he sought--the same who
+visited the Duke of Buckingham's harem, and, having relieved Alice
+Bridgenorth from her confinement there, had occupied her place as has
+been already narrated, or rather intimated. She was now much more
+plainly attired than when she had tantalised the Duke with her
+presence; but her dress had still something of the Oriental character,
+which corresponded with the dark complexion and quick eye of the
+wearer. She had the kerchief at her eyes as Christian entered the
+apartment, but suddenly withdrew it, and, flashing on him a glance of
+scorn and indignation, asked him what he meant by intruding where his
+company was alike unsought for and undesired.
+
+"A proper question," said Christian, "from a slave to her master!"
+
+"Rather, say, a proper question, and of all questions the most proper,
+from a mistress to her slave! Know you not, that from the hour in
+which you discovered your ineffable baseness, you have made me
+mistress of your lot? While you seemed but a demon of vengeance, you
+commanded terror, and to good purpose; but such a foul fiend as thou
+hast of late shown thyself--such a very worthless, base trickster of
+the devil--such a sordid grovelling imp of perdition, can gain nothing
+but scorn from a soul like mine."
+
+"Gallantly mouthed," said Christian, "and with good emphasis."
+
+"Yes," answered Zarah, "I can speak--sometimes--I can also be mute;
+and that no one knows better than thou."
+
+"Thou art a spoiled child, Zarah, and dost but abuse the indulgence I
+entertain for your freakish humour," replied Christian; "thy wits have
+been disturbed since ever you landed in England, and all for the sake
+of one who cares for thee no more than for the most worthless object
+who walks the streets, amongst whom he left you to engage in a brawl
+for one he loved better."
+
+"It is no matter," said Zarah, obviously repressing very bitter
+emotion; "it signifies not that he loves another better; there is none
+--no, none--that ever did, or can, love him so well."
+
+"I pity you, Zarah!" said Christian, with some scorn.
+
+"I deserve your pity," she replied, "were your pity worth my
+accepting. Whom have I to thank for my wretchedness but you?--You bred
+me up in thirst of vengeance, ere I knew that good and evil were
+anything better than names;--to gain your applause, and to gratify the
+vanity you had excited, I have for years undergone a penance, from
+which a thousand would have shrunk."
+
+"A thousand, Zarah!" answered Christian; "ay, a hundred thousand, and
+a million to boot; the creature is not on earth, being mere mortal
+woman, that would have undergone the thirtieth part of thy self-
+denial."
+
+"I believe it," said Zarah, drawing up her slight but elegant figure;
+"I believe it--I have gone through a trial that few indeed could have
+sustained. I have renounced the dear intercourse of my kind; compelled
+my tongue only to utter, like that of a spy, the knowledge which my
+ear had only collected as a base eavesdropper. This I have done for
+years--for years--and all for the sake of your private applause--and
+the hope of vengeance on a woman, who, if she did ill in murdering my
+father, has been bitterly repaid by nourishing a serpent in her bosom,
+that had the tooth, but not the deafened ear, of the adder."
+
+"Well--well--well," reiterated Christian; "and had you not your reward
+in my approbation--in the consequences of your own unequalled
+dexterity--by which, superior to anything of thy sex that history has
+ever known, you endured what woman never before endured, insolence
+without notice, admiration without answer, and sarcasm without reply?"
+
+"Not without reply!" said Zarah fiercely. "Gave not Nature to my
+feelings a course of expression more impressive than words? and did
+not those tremble at my shrieks, who would have little minded my
+entreaties or my complaints? And my proud lady, who sauced her
+charities with the taunts she thought I heard not--she was justly paid
+by the passing her dearest and most secret concerns into the hands of
+her mortal enemy; and the vain Earl--yet he was a thing as
+insignificant as the plume that nodded in his cap;--and the maidens
+and ladies who taunted me--I had, or can easily have, my revenge upon
+them. But there is /one/," she added, looking upward, "who never
+taunted me; one whose generous feelings could treat the poor dumb girl
+even as his sister; who never spoke word of her but was to excuse or
+defend--and you tell me I must not love him, and that it is madness to
+love him!--I /will/ be mad then, for I will love till the latest
+breath of my life!"
+
+"Think but an instant, silly girl--silly but in one respect, since in
+all others thou mayest brave the world of women. Think what I have
+proposed to thee, for the loss of this hopeless affection, a career so
+brilliant!--Think only that it rests with thyself to be the wife--the
+wedded wife--of the princely Buckingham! With my talents--with thy wit
+and beauty--with his passionate love of these attributes--a short
+space might rank you among England's princesses.--Be but guided by me
+--he is now at deadly pass--needs every assistance to retrieve his
+fortunes--above all, that which we alone can render him. Put yourself
+under my conduct, and not fate itself shall prevent your wearing a
+Duchess's coronet."
+
+"A coronet of thistle-down, entwined with thistle-leaves," said Zarah.
+--"I know not a slighter thing than your Buckingham! I saw him at your
+request--saw him when, as a man, he should have shown himself generous
+and noble--I stood the proof at your desire, for I laugh at those
+dangers from which the poor blushing wailers of my sex shrink and
+withdraw themselves. What did I find him?--a poor wavering voluptuary
+--his nearest attempt to passion like the fire on a wretched stubble-
+field, that may singe, indeed, or smoke, but can neither warm nor
+devour. Christian! were his coronet at my feet this moment, I would
+sooner take up a crown of gilded gingerbread, than extend my hand to
+raise it."
+
+"You are mad, Zarah--with all your taste and talent, you are utterly
+mad! But let Buckingham pass--Do you owe /me/ nothing on this
+emergency?--Nothing to one who rescued you from the cruelty of your
+owner, the posture-master, to place you in ease and affluence?"
+
+"Christian," she replied, "I owe you much. Had I not felt I did so, I
+would, as I have been often tempted to do, have denounced thee to the
+fierce Countess, who would have gibbeted you on her feudal walls of
+Castle Rushin, and bid your family seek redress from the eagles, that
+would long since have thatched their nest with your hair, and fed
+their young ospreys with your flesh."
+
+"I am truly glad you have had so much forbearance for me," answered
+Christian.
+
+"I have it, in truth and in sincerity," replied Zarah--"Not for your
+benefits to me--such as they were, they were every one interested, and
+conferred from the most selfish considerations. I have overpaid them a
+thousand times by the devotion to your will, which I have displayed at
+the greatest personal risk. But till of late I respected your powers
+of mind--your inimitable command of passion--the force of intellect
+which I have ever seen you exercise over all others, from the bigot
+Bridgenorth to the debauched Buckingham--in that, indeed, I have
+recognised my master."
+
+"And those powers," said Christian, "are unlimited as ever; and with
+thy assistance, thou shalt see the strongest meshes that the laws of
+civil society ever wove to limit the natural dignity of man, broke
+asunder like a spider's web."
+
+She paused and answered, "While a noble motive fired thee--ay, a noble
+motive, though irregular--for I was born to gaze on the sun which the
+pale daughters of Europe shrink from--I could serve thee--I could have
+followed, while revenge or ambition had guided thee--but love of
+/wealth/, and by what means acquired!--What sympathy can I hold with
+that?--Wouldst thou not have pandered to the lust of the King, though
+the object was thine own orphan niece?--You smile?--Smile again when I
+ask you whether you meant not my own prostitution, when you charged me
+to remain in the house of that wretched Buckingham?--Smile at that
+question, and by Heaven, I stab you to the heart!" And she thrust her
+hand into her bosom, and partly showed the hilt of a small poniard.
+
+"And if I smile," said Christian, "it is but in scorn of so odious an
+accusation. Girl, I will not tell thee the reason, but there exists
+not on earth the living thing over whose safety and honour I would
+keep watch as over thine. Buckingham's wife, indeed, I wished thee;
+and through thy own beauty and thy wit, I doubted not to bring the
+match to pass."
+
+"Vain flatterer," said Zarah, yet seeming soothed even by the flattery
+which she scoffed at, "you would persuade me that it was honourable
+love which you expected the Duke was to have offered me. How durst you
+urge a gross a deception, to which time, place, and circumstance gave
+the lie?--How dare you now again mention it, when you well know, that
+at the time you mention, the Duchess was still in life?"
+
+"In life, but on her deathbed," said Christian; "and for time, place,
+and circumstance, had your virtue, my Zarah, depended on these, how
+couldst thou have been the creature thou art? I knew thee all-
+sufficient to bid him defiance--else--for thou art dearer to me than
+thou thinkest--I had not risked thee to win the Duke of Buckingham;
+ay, and the kingdom of England to boot. So now, wilt thou be ruled and
+go on with me?"
+
+Zarah, or Fenella, for our readers must have been long aware of the
+identity of these two personages, cast down her eyes, and was silent
+for a long time. "Christian," she said at last, in a solemn voice, "if
+my ideas of right and of wrong be wild and incoherent, I owe it,
+first, to the wild fever which my native sun communicated to my veins;
+next, to my childhood, trained amidst the shifts, tricks, and feats of
+jugglers and mountebanks; and then, to a youth of fraud and deception,
+through the course thou didst prescribe me, in which I might, indeed,
+hear everything, but communicate with no one. The last cause of my
+wild errors, if such they are, originates, O Christian, with you
+alone; by whose intrigues I was placed with yonder lady, and who
+taught me, that to revenge my father's death, was my first great duty
+on earth, and that I was bound by nature to hate and injure her by
+whom I was fed and fostered, though as she would have fed and caressed
+a dog, or any other mute animal. I also think--for I will deal fairly
+with you--that you had not so easily detected your niece, in the child
+whose surprising agility was making yonder brutal mountebank's
+fortune; nor so readily induced him to part with his bond-slave, had
+you not, for your own purposes, placed me under his charge, and
+reserved the privilege of claiming me when you pleased. I could not,
+under any other tuition, have identified myself with the personage of
+a mute, which it has been your desire that I should perform through
+life."
+
+"You do me injustice, Zarah," said Christian--"I found you capable of
+the avenging of your father's death--I consecrated you to it, as I
+consecrated my own life and hopes; and you held the duty sacred, till
+these mad feeling towards a youth who loves your cousin----"
+
+"Who--loves--my--cousin," repeated Zarah (for we will continue to call
+her by her real name) slowly, and as if the words dropped
+unconsciously from her lips. "Well--be it so!--Man of many wiles, I
+will follow thy course for a little, a very little farther; but take
+heed--tease me not with remonstrances against the treasure of my
+secret thoughts--I mean my most hopeless affection to Julian Peveril--
+and bring me not as an assistant to any snare which you may design to
+cast around him. You and your Duke shall rue the hour most bitterly,
+in which you provoke me. You may suppose you have me in your power;
+but remember, the snakes of my burning climate are never so fatal as
+when you grasp them."
+
+"I care not for these Peverils," said Christian--"I care not for their
+fate a poor straw, unless where it bears on that of the destined
+woman, whose hands are red in your father's blood. Believe me, I can
+divide her fate and theirs. I will explain to you how. And for the
+Duke, he may pass among men of the town for wit, and among soldiers
+for valour, among courtiers for manners and for form; and why, with
+his high rank and immense fortune, you should throw away an
+opportunity, which, as I could now improve it----"
+
+"Speak not of it," said Zarah, "if thou wouldst have our truce--
+remember it is no peace--if, I say, thou wouldst have our truce grow
+to be an hour old!"
+
+"This, then," said Christian, with a last effort to work upon the
+vanity of this singular being, "is she who pretended such superiority
+to human passion, that she could walk indifferently and unmoved
+through the halls of the prosperous, and the prison cells of the
+captive, unknowing and unknown, sympathising neither with the
+pleasures of the one, nor the woes of the other, but advancing with
+sure, though silent steps, her own plans, in despite and regardless of
+either!"
+
+"My own plans!" said Zarah--"/Thy/ plans, Christian--thy plans of
+extorting from the surprised prisoners, means whereby to convict them
+--thine own plans, formed with those more powerful than thyself, to
+sound men's secrets, and, by using them as a matter of accusation, to
+keep up the great delusion of the nation."
+
+"Such access was indeed given you as my agent," said Christian, "and
+for advancing a great national change. But how did you use it?--to
+advance your insane passion."
+
+"Insane!" said Zarah--"Had he been less than insane whom I addressed,
+he and I had ere now been far from the toils which you have pitched
+for us both. I had means prepared for everything; and ere this, the
+shores of Britain had been lost to our sight for ever."
+
+"The dwarf, too," said Christian--"Was it worthy of you to delude that
+poor creature with flattering visions--lull him asleep with drugs! Was
+/that/ my doing?"
+
+"He was my destined tool," said Zarah haughtily. "I remembered your
+lessons too well not to use him as such. Yet scorn him not too much. I
+tell you, that yon very miserable dwarf, whom I made my sport in the
+prison--yon wretched abortion of nature, I would select for a husband,
+ere I would marry your Buckingham;--the vain and imbecile pigmy has
+yet the warm heart and noble feelings, that a man should hold his
+highest honour."
+
+"In God's name, then, take your own way," said Christian; "and, for my
+sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her tongue,
+since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the privilege
+of her own will. Who would have thought it? But the colt has slipped
+the bridle, and I must needs follow, since I cannot guide her."
+
+Our narrative returns to the Court of King Charles at Whitehall.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+ ----But oh!
+ What shall I say to thee, Lord Scroop; thou cruel,
+ Ingrateful, savage, and inhuman creature!
+ Thou that didst bear the key of all my counsels,
+ That knew'st the very bottom of my soul,
+ That almost mightst have coined me into gold,
+ Wouldst thou have practised on me for thy use?
+ --HENRY V.
+
+At no period of his life, not even when that life was in imminent
+danger, did the constitutional gaiety of Charles seem more
+overclouded, than when waiting for the return of Chiffinch with the
+Duke of Buckingham. His mind revolted at the idea, that the person to
+whom he had been so particularly indulgent, and whom he had selected
+as the friend of his lighter hours and amusements, should prove
+capable of having tampered with a plot apparently directed against his
+liberty and life. He more than once examined the dwarf anew, but could
+extract nothing more than his first narrative contained. The
+apparition of the female to him in the cell of Newgate, he described
+in such fanciful and romantic colours, that the King could not help
+thinking the poor man's head a little turned; and, as nothing was
+found in the kettledrum, and other musical instruments brought for the
+use of the Duke's band of foreigners, he nourished some slight hope
+that the whole plan might be either a mere jest, or that the idea of
+an actual conspiracy was founded in mistake.
+
+The persons who had been despatched to watch the motions of Mr.
+Weiver's congregation, brought back word that they had quietly
+dispersed. It was known, at the same time, that they had met in arms,
+but this augured no particular design of aggression, at a time when
+all true Protestants conceived themselves in danger of immediate
+massacre; when the fathers of the city had repeatedly called out the
+Train-Bands, and alarmed the citizens of London, under the idea of an
+instant insurrection of the Catholics; and when, to sum the whole up,
+in the emphatic words of an alderman of the day, there was a general
+belief that they would all waken some unhappy morning with their
+throats cut. Who was to do these dire deeds, it was more difficult to
+suppose; but all admitted the possibility that they might be achieved,
+since one Justice of the Peace was already murdered. There was,
+therefore, no inference of hostile intentions against the State, to be
+decidedly derived from a congregation of Protestants /par excellence/,
+military from old associations, bringing their arms with them to a
+place of worship, in the midst of a panic so universal.
+
+Neither did the violent language of the minister, supposing that to be
+proved, absolutely infer meditated violence. The favourite parables of
+the preachers, and the metaphors and ornaments which they selected,
+were at all times of a military cast; and the taking the kingdom of
+heaven by storm, a strong and beautiful metaphor, when used generally
+as in Scripture, was detailed in their sermons in all the technical
+language of the attack and defence of a fortified place. The danger,
+in short, whatever might have been its actual degree, had disappeared
+as suddenly as a bubble upon the water, when broken by a casual touch,
+and had left as little trace behind it. It became, therefore, matter
+of much doubt, whether it had ever actually existed.
+
+While various reports were making from without, and while their tenor
+was discussed by the King, and such nobles and statesmen as he thought
+proper to consult on the occasion, a gradual sadness and anxiety
+mingled with, and finally silenced, the mirth of the evening. All
+became sensible that something unusual was going forward; and the
+unwonted distance which Charles maintained from his guests, while it
+added greatly to the dulness that began to predominate in the
+presence-chamber, gave intimation that something unusual was labouring
+in the King's mind.
+
+Thus play was neglected--the music was silent, or played without being
+heard--gallants ceased to make compliments, and ladies to expect them;
+and a sort of apprehensive curiosity pervaded the circle. Each asked
+the others why they were grave; and no answer was returned, any more
+than could have been rendered by a herd of cattle instinctively
+disturbed by the approach of a thunderstorm.
+
+To add to the general apprehension, it began to be whispered, that one
+or two of the guests, who were desirous of leaving the palace, had
+been informed no one could be permitted to retire until the general
+hour of dismissal. And these, gliding back into the hall,
+communicated in whispers that the sentinels at the gates were doubled,
+and that there was a troop of the Horse Guards drawn up in the court--
+circumstances so unusual, as to excite the most anxious curiosity.
+
+Such was the state of the Court, when wheels were heard without, and
+the bustle which took place denoted the arrival of some person of
+consequence.
+
+"Here comes Chiffinch," said the King, "with his prey in his clutch."
+
+It was indeed the Duke of Buckingham; nor did he approach the royal
+presence without emotion. On entering the court, the flambeaux which
+were borne around the carriage gleamed on the scarlet coats, laced
+hats, and drawn broadswords of the Horse Guards--a sight unusual, and
+calculated to strike terror into a conscience which was none of the
+clearest.
+
+The Duke alighted from the carriage, and only said to the officer,
+whom he saw upon duty, "You are late under arms to-night, Captain
+Carleton."
+
+"Such are our orders, sir," answered Carleton, with military brevity;
+and then commanded the four dismounted sentinels at the under gate to
+make way for the Duke of Buckingham. His Grace had no sooner entered,
+than he heard behind him the command, "Move close up, sentinels--
+closer yet to the gate." And he felt as if all chance of rescue were
+excluded by the sound.
+
+As he advanced up the grand staircase, there were other symptoms of
+alarm and precaution. The Yeomen of the Guard were mustered in unusual
+numbers, and carried carabines instead of their halberds; and the
+Gentlemen-pensioners, with their partisans, appeared also in
+proportional force. In short, all that sort of defence which the royal
+household possesses within itself, seemed, for some hasty and urgent
+reason, to have been placed under arms, and upon duty.
+
+Buckingham ascended the royal staircase with an eye attentive to these
+preparations, and a step steady and slow, as if he counted each step
+on which he trode. "Who," he asked himself, "shall ensure Christian's
+fidelity? Let him but stand fast, and we are secure. Otherwise----"
+
+As he shaped the alternative, he entered the presence-chamber.
+
+The King stood in the midst of the apartment, surrounded by the
+personages with whom he had been consulting. The rest of the brilliant
+assembly, scattered into groups, looked on at some distance. All were
+silent when Buckingham entered, in hopes of receiving some explanation
+of the mysteries of the evening. All bent forward, though etiquette
+forbade them to advance, to catch, if possible, something of what was
+about to pass betwixt the King and his intriguing statesman. At the
+same time, those counsellors who stood around Charles, drew back on
+either side, so as to permit the Duke to pay his respects to his
+Majesty in the usual form. He went through the ceremonial with his
+accustomed grace, but was received by Charles with much unwonted
+gravity.
+
+"We have waited for you some time, my Lord Duke. It is long since
+Chiffinch left us, to request your attendance here. I see you are
+elaborately dressed. Your toilette was needless on the present
+occasion."
+
+"Needless to the splendour of your Majesty's Court," said the Duke,
+"but not needless on my part. This chanced to be Black Monday at York
+Place, and my club of /Pendables/ were in full glee when your
+Majesty's summons arrived. I could not be in the company of Ogle,
+Maniduc, Dawson, and so forth, but what I must needs make some
+preparation, and some ablution, ere entering the circle here."
+
+"I trust the purification will be complete," said the King, without
+any tendency to the smile which always softened features, that,
+ungilded by its influence, were dark, harsh, and even severe. "We
+wished to ask your Grace concerning the import of a sort of musical
+mask which you designed us here, but which miscarried, as we are given
+to understand."
+
+"It must have been a great miscarriage indeed," said the Duke, "since
+your Majesty looks so serious on it. I thought to have done your
+Majesty pleasure (as I have seen you condescend to be pleased with
+such passages), by sending the contents of that bass-viol; but I fear
+the jest has been unacceptable--I fear the fireworks may have done
+mischief."
+
+"Not the mischief they were designed for, perhaps," said the King
+gravely; "you see, my lord, we are all alive, and unsinged."
+
+"Long may your Majesty remain so," said the Duke; "yet I see there is
+something misconstrued on my part--it must be a matter unpardonable,
+however little intended, since it hath displeased so indulgent a
+master."
+
+"Too indulgent a master, indeed, Buckingham," replied the King; "and
+the fruit of my indulgence has been to change loyal men into
+traitors."
+
+"May it please your Majesty, I cannot understand this," said the Duke.
+
+"Follow us, my lord," answered Charles, "and we will endeavour to
+explain our meaning."
+
+Attended by the same lords who stood around him, and followed by the
+Duke of Buckingham, on whom all eyes were fixed, Charles retired into
+the same cabinet which had been the scene of repeated consultations in
+the course of the evening. There, leaning with his arms crossed on the
+back of an easy-chair, Charles proceeded to interrogate the suspected
+nobleman.
+
+"Let us be plain with each other. Speak out, Buckingham. What, in one
+word, was to have been the regale intended for us this evening?"
+
+"A petty mask, my lord. I had destined a little dancing-girl to come
+out of that instrument, who, I thought, would have performed to your
+Majesty's liking--a few Chinese fireworks there were, thinking the
+entertainment was to have taken place in the marble hall, might, I
+hoped, have been discharged with good effect, and without the
+slightest alarm, at the first appearance of my little sorceress, and
+were designed to have masked, as it were, her entrance upon the stage.
+I hope there have been no perukes singed--no ladies frightened--no
+hopes of noble descent interrupted by my ill-fancied jest."
+
+"We have seen no such fireworks, my lord; and your female dancer, of
+whom we now hear for the first time, came forth in the form of our old
+acquaintance Geoffrey Hudson, whose dancing days are surely ended."
+
+"Your Majesty surprises me! I beseech you, let Christian be sent for--
+Edward Christian--he will be found lodging in a large old house near
+Sharper the cutler's, in the Strand. As I live by bread, sire, I
+trusted him with the arrangement of this matter, as indeed the
+dancing-girl was his property. If he has done aught to dishonour my
+concert, or disparage my character, he shall die under the baton."
+
+"It is singular," said the King, "and I have often observed it, that
+this fellow Christian bears the blame of all men's enormities--he
+performs the part which, in a great family, is usually assigned to
+that mischief-doing personage, Nobody. When Chiffinch blunders, he
+always quotes Christian. When Sheffield writes a lampoon, I am sure to
+hear of Christian having corrected, or copied, or dispersed it--he is
+the /ame damnée/ of every one about my Court--the scapegoat, who is to
+carry away all their iniquities; and he will have a cruel load to bear
+into the wilderness. But for Buckingham's sins, in particular, he is
+the regular and uniform sponsor; and I am convinced his Grace expects
+Christian should suffer every penalty he has incurred, in this world
+or the next."
+
+"Not so," with the deepest reverence replied the Duke. "I have no hope
+of being either hanged or damned by proxy; but it is clear some one
+hath tampered with and altered my device. If I am accused of aught,
+let me at least hear the charge, and see my accuser."
+
+"That is but fair," said the King. "Bring our little friend from
+behind the chimney-board. [Hudson being accordingly produced, he
+continued.] There stands the Duke of Buckingham. Repeat before him the
+tale you told us. Let him hear what were those contents of the bass-
+viol which were removed that you might enter it. Be not afraid of any
+one, but speak the truth boldly."
+
+"May it please your Majesty," said Hudson, "fear is a thing unknown to
+me."
+
+"His body has no room to hold such a passion; or there is too little
+of it to be worth fearing for," said Buckingham.--"But let him speak."
+
+Ere Hudson had completed his tale, Buckingham interrupted him by
+exclaiming, "Is it possible that I can be suspected by your Majesty on
+the word of this pitiful variety of the baboon tribe?"
+
+"Villain-Lord, I appeal thee to the combat!" said the little man,
+highly offended at the appellation thus bestowed on him.
+
+"La you there now!" said the Duke--"The little animal is quite crazed,
+and defies a man who need ask no other weapon than a corking-pin to
+run him through the lungs, and whose single kick could hoist him from
+Dover to Calais without yacht or wherry. And what can you expect from
+an idiot, who is /engoué/ of a common rope-dancing girl, that capered
+on a pack-thread at Ghent in Flanders, unless they were to club their
+talents to set up a booth at Bartholomew Fair?--Is it not plain, that
+supposing the little animal is not malicious, as indeed his whole kind
+bear a general and most cankered malice against those who have the
+ordinary proportions of humanity--Grant, I say, that this were not a
+malicious falsehood of his, why, what does it amount to?--That he has
+mistaken squibs and Chinese crackers for arms! He says not he himself
+touched or handled them; and judging by the sight alone, I question if
+the infirm old creature, when any whim or preconception hath
+possession of his noddle, can distinguish betwixt a blunderbuss and a
+black-pudding."
+
+The horrible clamour which the dwarf made so soon as he heard this
+disparagement of his military skill--the haste with which he blundered
+out a detail of this warlike experiences--and the absurd grimaces
+which he made in order to enforce his story, provoked not only the
+risibility of Charles, but even of the statesmen around him, and added
+absurdity to the motley complexion of the scene. The King terminated
+this dispute, by commanding the dwarf to withdraw.
+
+A more regular discussion of his evidence was then resumed, and Ormond
+was the first who pointed out, that it went farther than had been
+noticed, since the little man had mentioned a certain extraordinary
+and treasonable conversation held by the Duke's dependents, by whom he
+had been conveyed to the palace.
+
+"I am sure not to lack my lord of Ormond's good word," said the Duke
+scornfully; "but I defy him alike, and all my other enemies, and shall
+find it easy to show that this alleged conspiracy, if any grounds for
+it at all exist, in a mere sham-plot, got up to turn the odium justly
+attached to the Papists upon the Protestants. Here is a half-hanged
+creature, who, on the very day he escapes from the gallows, which many
+believe was his most deserved destiny, comes to take away the
+reputation of a Protestant Peer--and on what?--on the treasonable
+conversation of three or four German fiddlers, heard through the
+sound-holes of a violoncello, and that, too, when the creature was
+incased in it, and mounted on a man's shoulders! The urchin, too, in
+repeating their language, shows he understands German as little as my
+horse does; and if he did rightly hear, truly comprehend, and
+accurately report what they said, still, is my honour to be touched by
+the language held by such persons as these are, with whom I have never
+communicated, otherwise than men of my rank do with those of their
+calling and capacity?--Pardon me, sire, if I presume to say, that the
+profound statesmen who endeavoured to stifle the Popish conspiracy by
+the pretended Meal-tub Plot, will take little more credit by their
+figments about fiddles and concertos."
+
+The assistant counsellors looked at each other; and Charles turned on
+his heel, and walked through the room with long steps.
+
+At this period the Peverils, father and son, were announced to have
+reached the palace, and were ordered into the royal presence.
+
+These gentlemen had received the royal mandate at a moment of great
+interest. After being dismissed from their confinement by the elder
+Bridgenorth, in the manner and upon the terms which the reader must
+have gathered from the conversation of the latter with Christian, they
+reached the lodgings of Lady Peveril, who awaited them with joy,
+mingled with terror and uncertainty. The news of the acquittal had
+reached her by the exertions of the faithful Lance Outram, but her
+mind had been since harassed by the long delay of their appearance,
+and rumours of disturbances which had taken place in Fleet Street and
+in the Strand.
+
+When the first rapturous meeting was over, Lady Peveril, with an
+anxious look towards her son, as if recommending caution, said she was
+now about to present to him the daughter of an old friend, whom he had
+/never/ (there was an emphasis on the word) seen before. "This young
+lady," she continued, "was the only child of Colonel Mitford, in North
+Wales, who had sent her to remain under her guardianship for an
+interval, finding himself unequal to attempt the task of her
+education."
+
+"Ay, ay," said Sir Geoffrey, "Dick Mitford must be old now--beyond the
+threescore and ten, I think. He was no chicken, though a cock of the
+game, when he joined the Marquis of Hertford at Namptwich with two
+hundred wild Welshmen.--Before George, Julian, I love that girl as if
+she was my own flesh and blood! Lady Peveril would never have got
+through this work without her; and Dick Mitford sent me a thousand
+pieces, too, in excellent time, when there was scarce a cross to keep
+the devil from dancing in our pockets, much more for these law-doings.
+I used it without scruple, for there is wood ready to be cut at
+Martindale when we get down there, and Dick Mitford knows I would have
+done the like for him. Strange that he should have been the only one
+of my friends to reflect I might want a few pieces."
+
+Whilst Sir Geoffrey thus run on, the meeting betwixt Alice and Julian
+Peveril was accomplished, without any particular notice on his side,
+except to say, "Kiss her, Julian--kiss her. What the devil! is that
+the way you learned to accost a lady at the Isle of Man, as if her
+lips were a red-hot horseshoe?--And do not you be offended, my pretty
+one; Julian is naturally bashful, and has been bred by an old lady,
+but you will find him, by-and-by, as gallant as thou hast found me, my
+princess.--And now, Dame Peveril, to dinner, to dinner! the old fox
+must have his belly-timber, though the hounds have been after him the
+whole day."
+
+Lance, whose joyous congratulations were next to be undergone, had the
+consideration to cut them short, in order to provide a plain but
+hearty meal from the next cook's shop, at which Julian sat, like one
+enchanted, betwixt his mistress and his mother. He easily conceived
+that the last was the confidential friend to whom Bridgenorth had
+finally committed the charge of his daughter, and his only anxiety now
+was, to anticipate the confusion that was likely to arise when her
+real parentage was made known to his father. Wisely, however, he
+suffered not these anticipations to interfere with the delight of his
+present situation, in the course of which many slight but delightful
+tokens of recognition were exchanged, without censure, under the eye
+of Lady Peveril, under cover of the boisterous mirth of the old
+Baronet, who spoke for two, ate for four, and drank wine for half-a-
+dozen. His progress in the latter exercise might have proceeded rather
+too far, had he not been interrupted by a gentleman bearing the King's
+orders, that he should instantly attend upon the presence at
+Whitehall, and bring his son along with him.
+
+Lady Peveril was alarmed, and Alice grew pale with sympathetic
+anxiety; but the old Knight, who never saw more than what lay straight
+before him, set it down to the King's hasty anxiety to congratulate
+him on his escape; an interest on his Majesty's part which he
+considered by no means extravagant, conscious that it was reciprocal
+on his own side. It came upon him, indeed, with the more joyful
+surprise that he had received a previous hint, ere he left the court
+of justice, that it would be prudent in him to go down to Martindale
+before presenting himself at Court--a restriction which he supposed as
+repugnant to his Majesty's feelings as it was to his own.
+
+While he consulted with Lance Outram about cleaning his buff-belt and
+sword-hilt, as well as time admitted, Lady Peveril had the means to
+give Julian more distinct information, that Alice was under her
+protection by her father's authority, and with his consent to their
+union, if it could be accomplished. She added that it was her
+determination to employ the mediation of the Countess of Derby, to
+overcome the obstacles which might be foreseen on the part of Sir
+Geoffrey.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XLIX
+
+ In the King's name,
+ Let fall your swords and daggers!
+ --CRITIC.
+
+When the father and son entered the cabinet of audience, it was easily
+visible that Sir Geoffrey had obeyed the summons as he would have done
+the trumpet's call to horse; and his dishevelled grey locks and half-
+arranged dress, though they showed zeal and haste, such as he would
+have used when Charles I. called him to attend a council of war,
+seemed rather indecorous in a pacific drawing-room. He paused at the
+door of the cabinet, but when the King called on him to advance, came
+hastily forward, with every feeling of his earlier and later life
+afloat, and contending in his memory, threw himself on his knees
+before the King, seized his hand, and, without even an effort to
+speak, wept aloud. Charles, who generally felt deeply so long as an
+impressive object was before his eyes, indulged for a moment the old
+man's rapture.--"My good Sir Geoffrey," he said, "you have had some
+hard measure; we owe you amends, and will find time to pay our debt."
+
+"No suffering--no debt," said the old man; "I cared not what the
+rogues said of me--I knew they could never get twelve honest fellows
+to believe a word of their most damnable lies. I did long to beat them
+when they called me traitor to your Majesty--that I confess--But to
+have such an early opportunity of paying my duty to your Majesty,
+overpays it all. The villains would have persuaded me I ought not to
+come to Court--aha!"
+
+The Duke of Ormond perceived that the King coloured much; for in truth
+it was from the Court that the private intimation had been given to
+Sir Geoffrey to go down to the country, without appearing at
+Whitehall; and he, moreover, suspected that the jolly old Knight had
+not risen from his dinner altogether dry-lipped, after the fatigues of
+a day so agitating.--"My old friend," he whispered, "you forget that
+your son is to be presented--permit me to have that honour."
+
+"I crave your Grace's pardon humbly," said Sir Geoffrey, "but it is an
+honour I design for myself, as I apprehend no one can so utterly
+surrender and deliver him up to his Majesty's service as the father
+that begot him is entitled to do.--Julian, come forward, and kneel.--
+Here he is, please your Majesty--Julian Peveril--a chip of the old
+block--as stout, though scarce so tall a tree, as the old trunk, when
+at the freshest. Take him to you, sir, for a faithful servant, /à
+pendre/, as the French say; if he fears fire or steel, axe or gallows,
+in your Majesty's service, I renounce him--he is no son of mine--I
+disown him, and he may go to the Isle of Man, the Isle of Dogs, or the
+Isle of Devils, for what I care."
+
+Charles winked to Ormond, and having, with his wonted courtesy,
+expressed his thorough conviction that Julian would imitate the
+loyalty of his ancestors, and especially of his father, added, that he
+believed his Grace of Ormond had something to communicate which was of
+consequence to his service. Sir Geoffrey made his military reverence
+at this hint, and marched off in the rear of the Duke, who proceeded
+to inquire of him concerning the events of the day. Charles, in the
+meanwhile, having in the first place, ascertained that the son was not
+in the same genial condition with the father, demanded and received
+from him a precise account of all the proceedings subsequent to the
+trial.
+
+Julian, with the plainness and precision which such a subject
+demanded, when treated in such a presence, narrated all that happened
+down to the entrance of Bridgenorth; and his Majesty was so much
+pleased with his manner, that he congratulated Arlington on their
+having gained the evidence of at least one man of sense to these dark
+and mysterious events. But when Bridgenorth was brought upon the
+scene, Julian hesitated to bestow a name upon him; and although he
+mentioned the chapel which he had seen filled with men in arms, and
+the violent language of the preacher, he added, with earnestness, that
+notwithstanding all this, the men departed without coming to any
+extremity, and had all left the place before his father and he were
+set at liberty.
+
+"And you retired quietly to your dinner in Fleet Street, young man,"
+said the King severely, "without giving a magistrate notice of the
+dangerous meeting which was held in the vicinity of our palace, and
+who did not conceal their intention of proceeding to extremities?"
+
+Peveril blushed, and was silent. The King frowned, and stepped aside
+to communicate with Ormond, who reported that the father seemed to
+have known nothing of the matter.
+
+"And the son, I am sorry to say," said the King, "seems more unwilling
+to speak the truth than I should have expected. We have all variety of
+evidence in this singular investigation--a mad witness like the dwarf,
+a drunken witness like the father, and now a dumb witness.--Young
+man," he continued, addressing Julian, "your behaviour is less frank
+than I expected from your father's son. I must know who this person is
+with whom you held such familiar intercourse--you know him, I
+presume?"
+
+Julian acknowledged that he did, but, kneeling on one knee, entreated
+his Majesty's forgiveness for concealing his name; "he had been
+freed," he said, "from his confinement, on promising to that effect."
+
+"That was a promise made, by your own account, under compulsion,"
+answered the King, "and I cannot authorise your keeping it; it is your
+duty to speak the truth--if you are afraid of Buckingham, the Duke
+shall withdraw."
+
+"I have no reason to fear the Duke of Buckingham," said Peveril; "that
+I had an affair with one of his household, was the man's own fault and
+not mine."
+
+"Oddsfish!" said the King, "the light begins to break in on me--I
+thought I remembered thy physiognomy. Wert thou not the very fellow
+whom I met at Chiffinch's yonder morning?--The matter escaped me
+since; but now I recollect thou saidst then, that thou wert the son of
+that jolly old three-bottle Baronet yonder."
+
+"It is true," said Julian, "that I met your Majesty at Master
+Chiffinch's, and I am afraid had the misfortune to displease you;
+but----"
+
+"No more of that, young man--no more of that--But I recollect you had
+with you that beautiful dancing siren.--Buckingham, I will hold you
+gold to silver, that she was the intended tenant of that bass-fiddle?"
+
+"Your Majesty has rightly guessed it," said the Duke; "and I suspect
+she has put a trick upon me, by substituting the dwarf in her place;
+for Christian thinks----"
+
+"Damn Christian!" said the King hastily--"I wish they would bring him
+hither, that universal referee."--And as the wish was uttered,
+Christian's arrival was announced. "Let him attend," said the King:
+"But hark--a thought strikes me.--Here, Master Peveril--yonder dancing
+maiden that introduced you to us by the singular agility of her
+performance, is she not, by your account, a dependent of the Countess
+of Derby?"
+
+"I have known her such for years," answered Julian.
+
+"Then will we call the Countess hither," said the King: "It is fit we
+should learn who this little fairy really is; and if she be now so
+absolutely at the beck of Buckingham, and this Master Christian of
+his--why I think it would be but charity to let her ladyship know so
+much, since I question if she will wish, in that case, to retain her
+in her service. Besides," he continued, speaking apart, "this Julian,
+to whom suspicion attaches in these matters from his obstinate
+silence, is also of the Countess's household. We will sift this matter
+to the bottom, and do justice to all."
+
+The Countess of Derby, hastily summoned, entered the royal closet at
+one door, just as Christian and Zarah, or Fenella, were ushered in by
+the other. The old Knight of Martindale, who had ere this returned to
+the presence, was scarce controlled, even by the signs which she made,
+so much was he desirous of greeting his old friend; but as Ormond laid
+a kind restraining hand upon his arm, he was prevailed on to sit
+still.
+
+The Countess, after a deep reverence to the King, acknowledged the
+rest of the nobility present by a slighter reverence, smiled to Julian
+Peveril, and looked with surprise at the unexpected apparition of
+Fenella. Buckingham bit his lip, for he saw the introduction of Lady
+Derby was likely to confuse and embroil every preparation which he had
+arranged for his defence; and he stole a glance at Christian, whose
+eye, when fixed on the Countess, assumed the deadly sharpness which
+sparkles in the adder's, while his cheek grew almost black under the
+influence of strong emotion.
+
+"Is there any one in this presence whom your ladyship recognises,"
+said the King graciously, "besides your old friends of Ormond and
+Arlington?"
+
+"I see, my liege, two worthy friends of my husband's house," replied
+the Countess; "Sir Geoffrey Peveril and his son--the latter a
+distinguished member of my son's household."
+
+"Any one else?" continued the King.
+
+"An unfortunate female of my family, who disappeared from the Island
+of Man at the same time when Julian Peveril left it upon business of
+importance. She was thought to have fallen from the cliff into the
+sea."
+
+"Had your ladyship any reason to suspect--pardon me," said the King,
+"for putting such a question--any improper intimacy between Master
+Peveril and this same female attendant?"
+
+"My liege," said the Countess, colouring indignantly, "my household is
+of reputation."
+
+"Nay, my lady, be not angry," said the King; "I did but ask--such
+things will befall in the best regulated families."
+
+"Not in mine, sire," said the Countess. "Besides that, in common pride
+and in common honesty, Julian Peveril is incapable of intriguing with
+an unhappy creature, removed by her misfortune almost beyond the
+limits of humanity."
+
+Zarah looked at her, and compressed her lips, as if to keep in the
+words that would fain break from them.
+
+"I know how it is," said the King--"What your ladyship says may be
+true in the main, yet men's tastes have strange vagaries. This girl is
+lost in Man as soon as the youth leaves it, and is found in Saint
+Jame's Park, bouncing and dancing like a fairy, so soon as he appears
+in London."
+
+"Impossible!" said the Countess; "she cannot dance."
+
+"I believe," said the King, "she can do more feats than your ladyship
+either suspects or would approve of."
+
+The Countess drew up, and was indignantly silent.
+
+The King proceeded--"No sooner is Peveril in Newgate, than, by the
+account of the venerable little gentleman, this merry maiden is even
+there also for company. Now, without inquiring how she got in, I think
+charitably that she had better taste than to come there on the dwarf's
+account.--Ah ha! I think Master Julian is touched in conscience!"
+
+Julian did indeed start as the King spoke, for it reminded him of the
+midnight visit in his cell.
+
+The King looked fixedly at him, and then proceeded--"Well, gentlemen,
+Peveril is carried to his trial, and is no sooner at liberty, than we
+find him in the house where the Duke of Buckingham was arranging what
+he calls a musical mask.--Egad, I hold it next to certain, that this
+wench put the change on his Grace, and popt the poor dwarf into the
+bass-viol, reserving her own more precious hours to be spent with
+Master Julian Peveril.--Think you not so, Sir Christian, you, the
+universal referee? Is there any truth in this conjecture?"
+
+Christian stole a glance at Zarah, and read that in her eye which
+embarrassed him. "He did not know," he said; "he had indeed engaged
+this unrivalled performer to take the proposed part in the mask; and
+she was to have come forth in the midst of a shower of lambent fire,
+very artificially prepared with perfumes, to overcome the smell of the
+powder; but he knew not why--excepting that she was wilful and
+capricious, like all great geniuses--she had certainly spoiled the
+concert by cramming in that more bulky dwarf."
+
+"I should like," said the King, "to see this little maiden stand
+forth, and bear witness, in such manner as she can express herself, on
+this mysterious matter. Can any one here understand her mode of
+communication?"
+
+Christian said, he knew something of it since he had become acquainted
+with her in London. The Countess spoke not till the King asked her,
+and then owned dryly, that she had necessarily some habitual means of
+intercourse with one who had been immediately about her person for so
+many years.
+
+"I should think," said Charles, "that this same Master Peveril has the
+more direct key to her language, after all we have heard."
+
+The King looked first at Peveril, who blushed like a maiden at the
+inference which the King's remark implied, and then suddenly turned
+his eyes on the supposed mute, on whose cheek a faint colour was dying
+away. A moment afterwards, at a signal from the Countess, Fenella, or
+Zarah, stepped forward, and having kissed her lady's hand, stood with
+her arms folded on her breast, with a humble air, as different from
+that which she wore in the harem of the Duke of Buckingham, as that of
+a Magdalene from a Judith. Yet this was the least show of her talent
+of versatility, for so well did she play the part of the dumb girl,
+that Buckingham, sharp as his discernment was, remained undecided
+whether the creature which stood before him could possibly be the same
+with her, who had, in a different dress, made such an impression on
+his imagination, or indeed was the imperfect creature she now
+represented. She had at once all that could mark the imperfection of
+hearing, and all that could show the wonderful address by which nature
+so often makes up of the deficiency. There was the lip that trembles
+not at any sound--the seeming insensibility to the conversation that
+passed around; while, on the other hand, was the quick and vivid
+glance; that seemed anxious to devour the meaning of those sounds,
+which she could gather no otherwise than by the motion of the lips.
+
+Examined after her own fashion, Zarah confirmed the tale of Christian
+in all its points, and admitted that she had deranged the project laid
+for a mask, by placing the dwarf in her own stead; the cause of her
+doing so she declined to assign, and the Countess pressed her no
+farther.
+
+"Everything tells to exculpate my Lord of Buckingham," said Charles,
+"from so absurd an accusation: the dwarf's testimony is too fantastic,
+that of the two Peverils does not in the least affect the Duke; that
+of the dumb damsel completely contradicts the possibility of his
+guilt. Methinks, my lords, we should acquaint him that he stands
+acquitted of a complaint, too ridiculous to have been subjected to a
+more serious scrutiny than we have hastily made upon this occasion."
+
+Arlington bowed in acquiescence, but Ormond spoke plainly.--"I should
+suffer, sire, in the opinion of the Duke of Buckingham, brilliant as
+his talents are known to be, should I say that I am satisfied in my
+own mind on this occasion. But I subscribe to the spirit of the times;
+and I agree it would be highly dangerous, on such accusations as we
+have been able to collect, to impeach the character of a zealous
+Protestant like his Grace--Had he been a Catholic, under such
+circumstances of suspicion, the Tower had been too good a prison for
+him."
+
+Buckingham bowed to the Duke of Ormond, with a meaning which even his
+triumph could not disguise.--"/Tu me la pagherai!/" he muttered, in a
+tone of deep and abiding resentment; but the stout old Irishman, who
+had long since braved his utmost wrath, cared little for this
+expression of his displeasure.
+
+The King then, signing to the other nobles to pass into the public
+apartments, stopped Buckingham as he was about to follow them; and
+when they were alone, asked, with a significant tone, which brought
+all the blood in the Duke's veins into his countenance, "When was it,
+George, that your useful friend Colonel Blood became a musician?--You
+are silent," he said; "do not deny the charge, for yonder villain,
+once seen, is remembered for ever. Down, down on your knees, George,
+and acknowledge that you have abused my easy temper.--Seek for no
+apology--none will serve your turn. I saw the man myself, among your
+Germans as you call them; and you know what I must needs believe from
+such a circumstance."
+
+"Believe that I have been guilty--most guilty, my liege and King,"
+said the Duke, conscience-stricken, and kneeling down;--"believe that
+I was misguided--that I was mad--Believe anything but that I was
+capable of harming, or being accessory to harm, your person."
+
+"I do not believe it," said the King; "I think of you, Villiers, as
+the companion of my dangers and my exile, and am so far from supposing
+you mean worse than you say, that I am convinced you acknowledge more
+than ever you meant to attempt."
+
+"By all that is sacred," said the Duke, still kneeling, "had I not
+been involved to the extent of life and fortune with the villain
+Christian----"
+
+"Nay, if you bring Christian on the stage again," said the King,
+smiling, "it is time for me to withdraw. Come, Villiers, rise--I
+forgive thee, and only recommend one act of penance--the curse you
+yourself bestowed on the dog who bit you--marriage, and retirement to
+your country-seat."
+
+The Duke rose abashed, and followed the King into the circle, which
+Charles entered, leaning on the shoulder of his repentant peer; to
+whom he showed so much countenance, as led the most acute observers
+present, to doubt the possibility of there existing any real cause for
+the surmises to the Duke's prejudice.
+
+The Countess of Derby had in the meanwhile consulted with the Duke of
+Ormond, with the Peverils, and with her other friends; and, by their
+unanimous advice, though with considerable difficulty, became
+satisfied, that to have thus shown herself at Court, was sufficient to
+vindicate the honour of her house; and that it was her wisest course,
+after having done so, to retire to her insular dominions, without
+farther provoking the resentment of a powerful faction. She took
+farewell of the King in form, and demanded his permission to carry
+back with her the helpless creature who had so strangely escaped from
+her protection, into a world where her condition rendered her so
+subject to every species of misfortune.
+
+"Will your ladyship forgive me?" said Charles. "I have studied your
+sex long--I am mistaken if your little maiden is not as capable of
+caring for herself as any of us."
+
+"Impossible!" said the Countess.
+
+"Possible, and most true," whispered the King. "I will instantly
+convince you of the fact, though the experiment is too delicate to be
+made by any but your ladyship. Yonder she stands, looking as if she
+heard no more than the marble pillar against which she leans. Now, if
+Lady Derby will contrive either to place her hand near the region of
+the damsel's heart, or at least on her arm, so that she can feel the
+sensation of the blood when the pulse increases, then do you, my Lord
+of Ormond, beckon Julian Peveril out of sight--I will show you in a
+moment that it can stir at sounds spoken."
+
+The Countess, much surprised, afraid of some embarrassing pleasantry
+on the part of Charles, yet unable to repress her curiosity, placed
+herself near Fenella, as she called her little mute; and, while making
+signs to her, contrived to place her hand on her wrist.
+
+At this moment the King, passing near them, said, "This is a horrid
+deed--the villain Christian has stabbed young Peveril!"
+
+The mute evidence of the pulse, which bounded as if a cannon had been
+discharged close by the poor girl's ear, was accompanied by such a
+loud scream of agony, as distressed, while it startled, the good-
+natured monarch himself. "I did but jest," he said; "Julian is well,
+my pretty maiden. I only used the wand of a certain blind deity,
+called Cupid, to bring a deaf and dumb vassal of his to the exercise
+of her faculties."
+
+"I am betrayed!" she said, with her eyes fixed on the ground--"I am
+betrayed!--and it is fit that she, whose life has been spent in
+practising treason on others, should be caught in her own snare. But
+where is my tutor in iniquity?--where is Christian, who taught me to
+play the part of spy on this unsuspicious lady, until I had well-nigh
+delivered her into his bloody hands?"
+
+"This," said the King, "craves more secret examination. Let all leave
+the apartment who are not immediately connected with these
+proceedings, and let this Christian be again brought before us.--
+Wretched man," he continued, addressing Christian, "what wiles are
+these you have practised, and by what extraordinary means?"
+
+"She has betrayed me, then!" said Christian--"Betrayed me to bonds and
+death, merely for an idle passion, which can never be successful!--But
+know, Zarah," he added, addressing her sternly, "when my life is
+forfeited through thy evidence, the daughter has murdered the father!"
+
+The unfortunate girl stared on him in astonishment. "You said," at
+length she stammered forth, "that I was the daughter of your
+slaughtered brother?"
+
+"That was partly to reconcile thee to the part thou wert to play in my
+destined drama of vengeance--partly to hide what men call the infamy
+of thy birth. But /my/ daughter thou art! and from the eastern clime,
+in which thy mother was born, you derive that fierce torrent of
+passion which I laboured to train to my purposes, but which, turned
+into another channel, has become the cause of your father's
+destruction.--My destiny is the Tower, I suppose?"
+
+He spoke these words with great composure, and scarce seemed to regard
+the agonies of his daughter, who, throwing herself at his feet, sobbed
+and wept most bitterly.
+
+"This must not be," said the King, moved with compassion at this scene
+of misery. "If you consent, Christian, to leave this country, there is
+a vessel in the river bound for New England--Go, carry your dark
+intrigues to other lands."
+
+"I might dispute the sentence," said Christian boldly; "and if I
+submit to it, it is a matter of my own choice.--One half-hour had made
+me even with that proud woman, but fortune hath cast the balance
+against me.--Rise, Zarah, Fenella no more! Tell the Lady of Derby,
+that, if the daughter of Edward Christian, the niece of her murdered
+victim, served her as a menial, it was but for the purpose of
+vengeance--miserably, miserably frustrated!--Thou seest thy folly now
+--thou wouldst follow yonder ungrateful stripling--thou wouldst
+forsake all other thoughts to gain his slightest notice; and now thou
+art a forlorn outcast, ridiculed and insulted by those on whose necks
+you might have trod, had you governed yourself with more wisdom!--But
+come, thou art still my daughter--there are other skies than that
+which canopies Britain."
+
+"Stop him," said the King; "we must know by what means this maiden
+found access to those confined in our prisons."
+
+"I refer your Majesty to your most Protestant jailer, and to the most
+Protestant Peers, who, in order to obtain perfect knowledge of the
+depth of the Popish Plot, have contrived these ingenious apertures for
+visiting them in their cells by night or day. His Grace of Buckingham
+can assist your Majesty, if you are inclined to make the inquiry."[*]
+
+[*] It was said that very unfair means were used to compel the
+ prisoners, committed on account of the Popish Plot, to make
+ disclosures, and that several of them were privately put to the
+ torture.
+
+"Christian," said the Duke, "thou art the most barefaced villain who
+ever breathed."
+
+"Of a commoner, I may," answered Christian, and led his daughter out
+of the presence.
+
+"See after him, Selby," said the King; "lose not sight of him till the
+ship sail; if he dare return to Britain, it shall be at his peril.
+Would to God we had as good riddance of others as dangerous! And I
+would also," he added, after a moment's pause, "that all our political
+intrigues and feverish alarms could terminate as harmlessly as now.
+Here is a plot without a drop of blood; and all the elements of a
+romance, without its conclusion. Here we have a wandering island
+princess (I pray my Lady of Derby's pardon), a dwarf, a Moorish
+sorceress, an impenitent rogue, and a repentant man of rank, and yet
+all ends without either hanging or marriage."
+
+"Not altogether without the latter," said the Countess, who had an
+opportunity, during the evening, of much private conversation with
+Julian Peveril. "There is a certain Major Bridgenorth, who, since your
+Majesty relinquishes farther inquiry into these proceedings, which he
+had otherwise intended to abide, designs, as we are informed, to leave
+England for ever. Now, this Bridgenorth, by dint of law, hath acquired
+strong possession over the domains of Peveril, which he is desirous to
+restore to the ancient owners, with much fair land besides,
+conditionally, that our young Julian will receive them as the dowry of
+his only child and heir."
+
+"By my faith," said the King, "she must be a foul-favoured wench,
+indeed, if Julian requires to be pressed to accept her on such fair
+conditions."
+
+"They love each other like lovers of the last age," said the Countess;
+"but the stout old Knight likes not the round-headed alliance."
+
+"Our royal recommendation shall put that to rights," said the King;
+"Sir Geoffrey Peveril has not suffered hardship so often at our
+command, that he will refuse our recommendation when it comes to make
+him amends for all his losses."
+
+It may be supposed the King did not speak without being fully aware of
+the unlimited ascendancy which he possessed over the old Tory; for
+within four weeks afterwards, the bells of Martindale-Moultrassie were
+ringing for the union of the families, from whose estates it takes its
+compound name, and the beacon-light of the Castle blazed high over
+hill and dale, and summoned all to rejoice who were within twenty
+miles of its gleam.
+
+
+
+ THE END
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, PEVERIL OF THE PEAK ***
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