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+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62184 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62184)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of For God and Gold, by Julian Corbett
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: For God and Gold
-
-Author: Julian Corbett
-
-Release Date: May 20, 2020 [EBook #62184]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOR GOD AND GOLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- FOR
- GOD AND GOLD
-
-
- BY
-
- JULIAN CORBETT
-
- AUTHOR OF 'THE FALL OF ASGARD'
-
-
-
- London
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED
- NEW YORK : THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1900
-
- All rights reserved
-
-
-
-
-_First Edition 1887_
-
-_Reprinted 1900_
-
-
-
-
- FOR GOD AND GOLD
-
- CALLING ON THIS AILING AGE TO ESCHEW THE SINS AND IMITATE
- THE VIRTUES OF
-
- MR. JASPER FESTING
-
- SOMETIME FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE IN CAMBRIDGE, AND LATE AN OFFICER
- IN HER MAJESTY'S SEA-SERVICE
-
- BY THIS SHOWING FORTH OF
-
- Certain noteworthy passages from his Life in the said University and
- elsewhere, and especially his connection with the beginning of
-
- The Puritan Party
-
- Together with a particular relation of his Voyage to
-
- Nombre de Dios
-
- Under that renowned Navigator
-
- THE LATE
-
- SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNIGHT
-
- WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
- _AND NOW FIRST SET FORTH_
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-It is not to be denied that the usual practice in ushering into the
-world a long-hidden manuscript has been to give some account of its
-existence in its former state, and of the manner in which it came to
-light. For sufficient reasons that course will not be followed in
-the present case.
-
-Should any one in consequence be brought to doubt the genuineness of
-these memoirs, it is hoped that it will be sufficient to refer him to
-a curious little work entitled _Sir Francis Drake Revived_, which
-contains a very sprightly account of that renowned navigator's
-so-called Third Voyage to the Indies, being that in which he
-attempted Nombre de Dios, and which, as the title-leaf recites, is
-'faithfully taken out of the report of Master Christopher Ceely,
-Ellis Hixom, and others who were in the same voyage with him, by
-Philip Nichols, Preacher; Reviewed also by Sir Francis Drake himself
-before his death, and much holpen and enlarged by divers notes with
-his own hand here and there inserted, and set forth by Sir Francis
-Drake (his nephew), now living, 1626.'
-
-So closely do the present memoirs follow that account that it cannot
-reasonably be doubted that Mr. Festing was one of those 'others' who
-had a hand in Preacher Nichols's book, although neither he nor Mr.
-Waldyve are mentioned as being of the expedition. When we consider
-the circumstances under which they sailed, it is only natural to
-suppose that they made it a condition of their assistance that their
-names should be suppressed in the published narrative; and, in view
-of this supposition, it is not unworthy to be noted that Nichols
-makes no mention of a 'captain of the land-soldiers' or a 'merchant'
-as sailing with Drake, although it is known that these officials
-formed part of all well-ordered expeditions to the Spanish Main.
-
-Of course some small discrepancies will be found between the two
-accounts, but they are unimportant, and seem rather to confirm the
-general accuracy of Mr. Festing's memoirs than to cast any suspicion
-upon them. For instance, Nichols gives the name of the man who
-'spoiled all' in the first attempt on the _recuas_ as Pike, but there
-can be no doubt that, by an obvious word-play which would commend
-itself to an Elizabethan punster, the name of the infantry weapon was
-substituted for that of Culverin out of tenderness for the old
-Sergeant's memory.
-
-Such instances might be multiplied indefinitely, but it appears
-better to suffer the curious to note and comment upon them for
-themselves. Should any such be tempted to pursue the subject
-farther, he will find an interesting account of Signor Giampietro
-Pugliano in a letter of Sir Philip Sidney's, who describes the
-esquire of the Emperor's stables in much the same terms as those
-which Sergeant Culverin was in the habit of using.
-
-In fact, Mr. Festing's memoirs receive confirmation from contemporary
-sources too numerous to set out here. He mentions indeed only one
-event of any historical or biographical importance which has not been
-found either related or referred to by other trustworthy writers, and
-that is the piratical attack of Drake upon the Antwerp caravel--an
-exploit about which all parties concerned no doubt took good care to
-keep their own counsel.
-
-These considerations, it is felt, will be enough to carry conviction
-to what Mr. Festing would have called 'all honest kindly readers.'
-To the merciful dealing of such his memoirs are now therefore
-committed without further excuse, defence, or apology.
-
-J. C.
-
- THAMES DITTON,
- _October_ 1887.
-
-
-
-
-FOR GOD AND GOLD
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Erasmus, in his _Praise of Folly_, has uttered a sharp note against
-those scribbling fops who think to eternise their memory by setting
-up for authors, and especially those who spoil paper in blotting it
-with mere trifles and impertinences. Yet have I, that was none
-before, resolved to turn author, and set down certain passages in my
-life that I have thought not unworthy to be remembered.
-
-Many who share my respect for him who is rightly called the honour of
-learning of all our time, forgetting therein, as it must be said, all
-tenderness for me, have marvelled openly that I listen not to his
-wisdom, but will still be spending paper, time, and candles upon such
-trifles and impertinences as he condemns. It were better, say they,
-for a scholar to take in hand some weighty matter of religion, or
-philosophy, or civil government.
-
-But stay, good friends, till I bid you show me how it were better.
-Such treatises are ordnance of power; and are we sure that of late
-years scholars have not been forging too many weapons for dunces to
-arm themselves withal in these wordy wars that now be? A harquebuss
-is a dangerous toy in unskilled hands, and so I know may be a
-discourse of religion, or philosophy, or civil government to
-unlearned controversialists, of whom, God knows, there is a mighty
-company in this present time.
-
-So, I pray you, consider whether Erasmus has not here a little
-dishonoured his scholarship and sounded his note false. Should he
-not rather have placed amidst all other folly that he praises these
-very trifles and impertinences also with which a scholar may seek to
-comfort his solitude?
-
-I am the more moved to the part I have chosen because it is not clear
-that all I have to tell shall be found wholly trifling and
-impertinent. Indeed I think it may contain something noteworthy, not
-in respect of myself, or even of that noble gentleman whose story
-this is as much as mine, but rather in respect of that very mirror
-and pattern of manhood who was my good friend in those days, though
-now with God, and whom of all I ever knew or heard of I honour as in
-courage unsurpassed, in counsel unequalled, and in constancy passing
-all I ever deserved.
-
-So much by way of preface or apology; and now, with a good wish on
-all honest, kindly readers, let me to my tale.
-
-As with many others, my life, it may be said, began with my father's
-death. Till then I had been kept in so great subjection that, save
-in my books, I had hardly lived. For he was an austere, grave man of
-the Reformation party, and one whom the fires of Mary's reign had
-hardened against all Popery, so that towards the end of his life he
-became what is now called a Puritan, ay, and that of a strict sort
-too.
-
-Outwardly to his great friends in the county he was still good
-company. For, not to speak more, because of the honour I bear him,
-he was a worldly man, and not one to use a shoe-horn to drag
-ill-fitting opinions on to men of quality, nor in any way to seek a
-martyr's crown. His chiding and severity were kept for me and his
-servants and tenants, who were all hard-pressed, though, in truth,
-not beyond what justice would warrant were mercy laid aside.
-
-It was a hard case for me, because of my mother I had not even a
-memory. The same hour that I was born she died, leaving my father
-alone in the world save for me. It was then that he most changed,
-they told me, but in no respect showed his grief so much as in
-misliking me.
-
-Yet I think I loved him, for all his chiding and sharpness. Indeed I
-had so little else to love. At least I know that I was sobbing
-bitterly when my old nurse came to tell me that his short sickness
-had come suddenly to an end: for he had but a little time past been
-seized with a quartan ague, which carried off so many that same
-glorious year that our great Queen came to her throne.
-
-It was a cold, gray afternoon in January. I was sitting, hungry and
-forgotten, in my favourite nook in the dim old library. It was an
-ancient, low room, which my father had left standing when he had
-rebuilt the rest of the place in the new style soon after he had
-purchased it. It had been a house of Austin Canons which fell to the
-lot of some spendthrift courtier in King Henry's time, which
-gentleman, getting past his depth in my father's books with over much
-borrowing, was at last driven to release the place to him. So it was
-that the old monastery became our dwelling, but this, the Canons'
-refectory, was all that was left of the former buildings.
-
-At one end there was a deep recess, where I could sit and see the
-dreary darkness settling down on the distant Medway, and the Upchurch
-Marshes, and the Saltings. It was but a sad prospect at any time in
-winter, and made me sad, though I would never sit elsewhere with my
-books. I must have loved it because my father never came to chide me
-there, and because on that cold stone sill I could sit and sob
-undisturbed over the sorrows of men long dead, as I now sat sobbing
-over my own, when Cicely came hurriedly to me.
-
-'The Lord has taken him, Master Jasper,' she cried, as well as her
-sobs would allow. 'The Lord has taken him, before I could call you
-to see how sweet an ending he made. God-a-mercy on him, for he was a
-just and upright gentleman, and one that dallied not with mercy, and
-died a good Reformation man. Ay, that he did, and would see never a
-priest of them all, with their hocus-pocus and Jack-in-the-box, and
-their square caps and their Latins. When the end was coming he cried
-out, "God-a-mercy on me and all usurers," once or twice he did, for
-the usurers seemed to trouble him. So I opened the windows, and bade
-him not trouble himself with the rogues at such a time, but get on
-sweetly with his dying. That was a comfort to him, I know, for he
-grew quiet then, and passed away with but one more cry for mercy on
-them. May the rogues be better for a good man's prayers, that he
-shall pray no more! For 'tis all passed, 'tis all passed; and you
-are Squire of Longdene now, Master Jasper; and maybe your worship
-would like to see how your father lies.'
-
-I dried my tears then, for I had been dreading the summons to see him
-die, and felt glad that I was spared the sight. I was able to follow
-Cicely into the great chamber where he lay, and look bravely for the
-last time on the wise, hard face.
-
-It was when I came out that I felt indeed my life had begun. For
-there stood old Miles, our steward, who had married my nurse, bowing
-respectfully.
-
-'A wise man has gone this day, sir,' he said, 'and a godly and a
-rich. May the Lord in His mercy give your worship strength to bear
-his loss and walk in his footsteps.'
-
-It lifted me up strangely to hear him speak thus; for I was but
-fourteen years old, and had never been called 'your worship' before,
-except sometimes on Saturdays by the Medway fisher lads, who knew I
-had groats in my wallet then. To hear Miles thus call me was a thing
-I could hardly understand. He who had barely a word for me, except
-to scold when he caught me bird-nesting in the orchard, or swear
-after me in breathless chase when I flew my hawk at his pigeons, as
-happened more than once when Harry came to see me and my father was
-away.
-
-It is time I should tell of Harry, my friend and rival, my almost
-brother; for his life was, and, I thank God for His mercy, still is,
-in spite of all the wrong I did, so bound up in mine, that I cannot
-tell my tale without unfolding his.
-
-He was the only son of Sir Fulke Waldyve, a gentleman of good estate
-and ancient family near Rochester, in Kent, and a good neighbour of
-ours. Ever since my father had come to live at Longdene, Sir Fulke
-and he had been fast friends. Not that they had much to make them
-so. For Sir Fulke was an old soldier and courtier of King Henry's
-day, and had named his only son after him as the pattern of manhood.
-From the like cause he swore roundly rasping Tudor oaths at all that
-displeased him, ay, and much that he loved too, from mere habit, but
-above all at Puritans and those who thought Reformation should go
-further than his idol King Henry had carried it. In all ways the
-knight was a man of the old time, while my father was held one of the
-new men, whom many thought to be ruining the country. He had been a
-wool merchant in London, and had made much money at trading and by
-other ways that merchants use.
-
-Even I used to wonder to see them so friendly, and used to watch them
-by the hour together through a hole I knew of in the yew hedge, as
-they sat drinking in our orchard after dinner in the summer-time.
-Sir Fulke was so round and red, with his curly beard and his sunburnt
-face and his merry blue eyes, and my father was so pale and spare and
-grave. I wondered how men could be so little alike, and wondered how
-it would have been with me if that rough old knight had been my
-father instead of the courtly merchant by his side.
-
-'By this light,' I have heard Sir Fulke burst out in the midst of
-their talk, 'I marvel every day what a God's name makes me love you,
-Nick. Your sour face should be as much a rebel in my heart as your
-damned French claret is in my stomach. Were it not that you are so
-good a tippler, I would say that at heart you were no better than a
-pestilent, pragmatical rogue of a Calvinist.'
-
-'Nay, Fulke,' my father would say quickly in his courtly way, being,
-as it seemed, in no way offended that the old knight should speak to
-him so roughly, for they always said my father, like other merchants
-who have thriven, was slow to take offence with men of ancient
-lineage and good estate; 'what matter that our outward seeming is
-different? That is only because our lots were cast differently. Not
-what we are, but what we love, is the talk of friends.'
-
-'Ay, by God's power,' Sir Fulke would cry, 'you have hit it now most
-nicely, Nick. You love a long fleece, and so do I. You love a fair
-stretch of meadowland, and so do I. You love a well-grown tree, and
-so do I; ay, and, you rogue, you love a full money-bag, and so, by
-this light, do I. Mass, but I run myself out of breath with our
-likings, and sack must run me back again.'
-
-'Indeed,' my father would answer, 'were it only our delights that we
-share, I think it would be bond enough, without a common sorrow to
-help it.'
-
-'Ay, ay, Nick; that is it,' the old knight would murmur, sad in a
-moment, for Harry's mother, too, had died in childbed. 'But speak
-not of that. God rest her sweet soul! What is there divided that
-she could not bring together?'
-
-And so they would fall into silence awhile, till Sir Fulke's eye was
-dry again, and his thoughts had wandered away from the beautiful
-woman whom, late in life, he had loved and married and lost, to some
-new plan he had for mending his estate upon which he wanted his
-friend's counsel.
-
-It is little to be wondered at, then, that a great friendship grew up
-also between Harry and me. We were little more alike, I think, than
-our fathers. For on Harry descended all the sunny beauty of his
-mother. Indeed, afterwards, when as a page at Court he personated
-the Princess Cleopatra in a masque before the Queen's grace, an old
-lord who was in presence swore it must be the gentle Lady Waldyve
-alive again. He was lithe and active too, and of quick and nimble
-wit, and as long as I can remember could always give the fisher lads
-more than he took, either with fist or tongue. But more than all
-this, it was his gentle, loving spirit that won and kept my love in
-spite of all our boyish quarrels, ay, and of a greater thing than
-that. When I think of his noble nature, which never allowed him to
-turn a span's breadth from the path of honour, the lofty patience
-wherewith he bore my shortcomings, the tender sympathy I won from him
-in all my troubles, I can still kneel down and thank God that gave me
-such a friend to carry a light before me in the way a gentleman
-should walk.
-
-So what wonder then that I loved him as I loved no one else--save
-one, of whom I shall forbear yet to speak, until my tale compels me.
-Then I must, seeing it was surely God's will that tried me so sore.
-
-Had Harry been other than he was, at the time at least of which I now
-speak, I must yet have loved him, for it was my father's will that I
-should.
-
-'Jasper,' he would say to me sometimes when I had been reading at
-home, 'close your book and ride over to Ashtead to bid young Waldyve
-go a-hawking with you to-morrow. You must see more of him. For
-know, I would have you no merchant, or parson, or plain scholar, but
-a gentleman. You will have money, and he shall teach you how to
-spend it like a gentleman. Make him your friend, and be you his, or
-you shall smart for it.'
-
-So away I would go blithely enough; for those days with Harry were
-the only happy ones I knew, though it must be said they often ended
-sadly with a rebuke and even chastisement from old Miles, till one
-day my father, seeing him, told him he would not have gainsaid any
-prank I played in company with Sir Fulke's son.
-
-This I told Harry next day he came, thinking to strangely delight
-him; but instead he looked grave, and swore one of his father's oaths
-that he would never fly hawk at Miles's pigeons again.
-
-Such was my friend Harry Waldyve when, in the first year of our most
-glorious Queen's reign, whom God bless with fullest measure, my
-father died, and I began my life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-It was not till the morning after my father's death that Sir Fulke
-rode over from Ashtead with Harry. The old knight was redder in the
-face than ever. There were tears in his eyes, too, as he took my
-hand and sat down by the great hearth in the hall without speaking.
-
-As for Harry, he threw his arms about my neck and shyly pressed into
-my hand his set of gilded hawk bells--the most precious thing he had.
-I had long envied him the toys, and his kindness set my tears flowing
-fast again.
-
-'Don't grieve, Jasper,' he said. 'You must not grieve. Dad will be
-your father now. He said he would as we rode along. He told me to
-tell you he was your guardian now, and we are really brothers at
-last, Jasper.'
-
-I looked at Sir Fulke, but he only nodded his head. His face was
-very red, and I knew he could not have spoken without sobbing. So
-Harry and I talked on in low tones till the old knight found his
-voice. He spoke angrily at last, but I did not mind his chiding, for
-somehow I knew it was only to hide his grief, lest we boys should see
-his weakness.
-
-'Yes, I am your guardian, lad,' said he; 'and since I am, why, in
-God's name, did you not send for me before, instead of letting your
-father lie all night like a dog that none cares to bury?'
-
-'Please you, sir,' said I, 'Miles rode out an hour after he died, as
-I thought, to bring the news to you.'
-
-'An hour after his death!' cried Sir Fulke. 'On what devil's errand
-went he then, for he came not to me till six o'clock this morning?'
-
-'Whither rode Miles last night?' I asked then of Cicely, who was
-sobbing hard by. 'Know you, and has he come back?'
-
-'Nay, I know not, your worships,' she said, 'save that he went to
-your worship, as he said, and--and----'
-
-'And what, woman?' cried Sir Fulke testily.
-
-'On an errand of his dead master's, please your worships,' whimpered
-Cicely; 'an errand, by your worship's leave, into Chatham.'
-
-'And what, o' God's name,' cried the knight, 'took him there?'
-
-'Nay, I know not,' replied Cicely, with a look of that sort of
-humility, much used by her class, which is very near of kin to
-defiance. 'Unless it were to take order for his poor worship's
-funeral with the elect that be there.'
-
-'What say you?' roared Sir Fulke, 'you pestilent, canting scrag-end
-of Eve's flesh! What, by the fat of the fiend, has your Calvinistic
-knave of a husband to do with a gentleman's funeral? Knows he not,
-the dog, that it is I who shall order his master's affairs? Is this
-all that comes of Festing's boasted discipline? I told him he was
-wrong, he was always wrong; and here's the end of it. The elect,
-too,--the elect knaves, the elect devils! Do you think, you canting
-jade, that because Mary is dead you shall play what pranks you like
-with a gentleman's body? By this light, you misjudge Henry's and
-Mistress Anne's daughter if your thick heads think that.'
-
-By this time Sir Fulke had railed himself clean out of breath, and as
-he ceased we could hear the sound of horses' feet in the courtyard.
-
-'Run, lads,' said Sir Fulke, 'and if that be Miles bring him before
-me.'
-
-To the door we went, and sure enough found Miles had returned, but
-not alone. Dismounting from their shabby jades were two men, dressed
-all in black. One of them I knew by sight, having seen him about
-Chatham and Rochester. He had a round, red face, with a shrewd,
-solid look in it, and dancing blue eyes full of merriment, which even
-now, though I think he tried to look as grave as he could, he was
-unable to get master of. His companion was a grave, dark-eyed man,
-of dull complexion, whose look repelled me as much as the other's
-attracted.
-
-'Peace be on this house,' the two men chimed when they had finished
-tumbling off their horses, which they did in so clumsy a manner as
-even then, almost made me laugh. 'Peace; and be its sorrow
-comforted.'
-
-The red-faced man then came forward up the steps, and took my hand so
-kindly that I felt at once that I had found a new friend.
-
-'Master Festing,' said he, 'I know you, and desire your worship's
-better acquaintance. Me you know not, though I was your good
-father's friend. He would not have it so known; but let that pass.
-Know me for Master Drake, of Chatham, sometime preacher to his
-Majesty's fleet, and soon to be again, let us hope, now the evil
-times be overpast and joyful days be come again for all true
-Reformation men.'
-
-His black clothes were very shabby, and of old-fashioned cut, and
-there came with him up the steps and into the hall a savoury smell of
-tar and the sea.
-
-'Yes, my lad,' went on Mr. Drake, for 'your worship' was quite out of
-tune with his kind, fatherly way, 'this is an hour of sorrow for you,
-but one of joy for England. A weight is lifted from England's heart,
-and yours shall rise with hers. For, saving a decent grief for your
-father's loss, no true Englishman should weep when his country claps
-her hands and leaps with gladness.'
-
-I did not well understand him then, though I knew he meant to comfort
-me. For in those days we knew little of what was coming, when such
-words as Mr. Drake's would be on every one's lips. England was
-crushed and broken then, shuddering still under the curse of Rome and
-Spain. I was no more a prophet than the rest, and could ill
-understand why this little red-faced preacher should draw himself up
-in his shabby clothes, with glittering eyes, till he almost looked as
-though he had come out of my Plutarch, best loved of books. I was
-glad when he stopped and turned to his friend.
-
-'I had forgot,' said Mr. Drake. 'Be better acquainted with my
-right-worshipful and approved good friend, Mr. Death. One of the
-faithful flock, Mr. Festing, that through the bloody times, which now
-be past, has watched and prayed for England beyond the seas, in
-Frankfort; withstanding steadfastly all backsliders there, and
-helping Mr. Knox to file away the Popish rust that still clung to
-King Edward's service-book.'
-
-He seemed to think that because my father had been a secret but
-active Puritan, I must be one too, and well versed in all those
-unhappy controversies with which the English exiles made their
-banishment doubly hard, and laid the seeds of many troubles that even
-now grow each day ranker.
-
-'Ay, that I did,' said Mr. Death, unfastening his hard lips, 'and
-should have prevailed at last against that bad, factious Erastian,
-Dr. Cox, had he not so traitorously procured us to be driven forth by
-the Gallios of that city.'
-
-'If any man has dealt traitorously with you, Mr. Death,' said Harry,
-'it were well you should come within and speak with my father, who is
-a Justice, and will see you righted, I doubt not.'
-
-'Ay,' echoed I, 'come within and speak with my guardian, who will
-surely welcome all my father's friends.'
-
-Our words had quite another effect to that which we had expected.
-For both the preachers stopped short before the door, looking hard at
-each other. Mr. Death seemed to grow more pale than before, and to
-be at a loss what to do. But Mr. Drake's face I saw grow to so stern
-a look of resolution as only in one other have I seen equalled.
-
-'Come, brother,' said he, 'we have a blow to strike, so let us strike
-quick and hard,' and with that he strode across the hall to where Sir
-Fulke was sitting, who sprang up fiercely when he saw the preachers.
-
-'Drake!' cried he, 'what in the devil's name make you here?'
-
-'In the devil's name I make nothing, Sir Fulke,' answered Drake
-unflinchingly; 'but come to stay you marring, in the devil's name, a
-dead man's wishes; and in God's name to charge you to deliver up to
-me the body of Nicholas Festing for burial.'
-
-I verily believe that had it been the sour-faced Mr. Death that had
-given their errand he would there and then have been sent forth with
-such a dish of blows seasoned with hot railing as would have kept him
-satisfied for many a day. But Sir Fulke, like King Henry and our
-blessed Queen, knew a man when he saw him, and surprised me by his
-quiet answer.
-
-'You open your mouth wide, Drake,' said he; 'by what authority do you
-expect me to fill it?'
-
-'Here is one,' answered Drake, 'that you will be the last to gainsay,
-if men know you for what you are,' and with that he took from his
-breast a paper and handed it to Sir Fulke. He carefully examined the
-signature and writing, and then gave it back to Drake.
-
-'Nicholas Festing wrote that, I doubt not,' said he; and then,
-looking Drake hard in the face, went on, 'Read it to me, and read it
-truly, if you are a man.'
-
-Without wincing a jot under Sir Fulke's stare, Mr. Drake took the
-paper and read as follows:--'Know all men whom it may concern, and
-above all Sir Fulke Waldyve of Ashtead, knight, to whom I have given
-care of all my earthly affairs, that it is my last will that in all
-which concerns the spiritual and heavenly part of me no man shall
-meddle, save as my approved friend Mr. Drake, preacher, of Chatham,
-shall direct; and him I charge to deliver my soul to God, and my body
-to earth, after the manner of the reformed Church, and free from
-Popish, idolatrous, and superstitious ceremonies, saving always the
-laws of this realm. For I would have all men know that I die, as I
-have lived, in the purified and ancient Church of Christ, in
-testimony whereof, above all, I desire to be buried without jangling
-of bells, or mistrustful prayers, or conjuring with incense, as
-though my happy state with God were doubtful, and reverently laid in
-the earth, with thanks to God, in certain hope of a glorious
-resurrection.'
-
-For a moment Sir Fulke looked at me, as though he would ask me to
-read the paper too, but almost immediately he stared hard again at
-Mr. Drake, and was satisfied.
-
-'Enough,' he said, plainly much pained. 'How will you bury him?'
-
-'By the rites in use amongst the true English remnant at Geneva,'
-croaked Mr. Death, who, seeing all danger was over, now came forward.
-'There alone is found the true law of God, there alone has the
-threshing-floor been swept clean of----'
-
-'Peace, fool,' said Sir Fulke sharply. 'If Nicholas Festing wishes
-to be put under the sod like a canting Calvinistical knave, by God's
-head, he shall be, saving always, as he said, the laws of this realm.
-I want no pestilent, heretical sermons from you, but only information
-to lay before the Council, whither I ride this very day, according to
-my duty as a Justice of the Queen's most excellent Majesty. And,
-look you, Drake, promise me to do nothing till I return.'
-
-'My hand on that, Sir Fulke,' said Drake, heartily holding out a hand
-not unstained with pitch, which my guardian, after a moment's
-hesitation, took.
-
-With that the preachers departed, and Sir Fulke soon after followed
-them on his way to London, much saddened, as I think, to see what
-manner of man his friend had been.
-
-Whether he was heard by the Council or not I cannot tell. Certain it
-is, however, that on his return he took no steps to prevent the
-funeral. I expect, if the truth were known, his zeal won little
-encouragement from the Council. For in the early days of our wise
-Queen's reign, in spite of an ordinance against using new doctrines
-or ceremonies without authority, and the proclamation against King
-Edward's service-book, which had been given out the month before,
-things were left to go on with as little mud-stirring as possible,
-until Parliament could be brought together.
-
-I doubt not the poor old knight lamented bitterly the high-handed
-days of his old master, King Henry; but he was helpless, and a day
-was fixed for the funeral to take place at our little church.
-
-Well I remember that sunny January morning, and how I dreaded what
-was to come. At an early hour great numbers of people came flocking
-out of Rochester, Sittingbourne, and the villages around to Longdene.
-For, since this was but the first year of the Queen's reign, no one
-knew as yet of a certainty what order would be taken in
-ecclesiastical matters, and the news that a gentleman was to be
-buried after a new and reformed manner attracted many, since these
-things, being the first that had been seen in Kent, were accounted
-strange at the time, and somewhat boldly done, when as yet the old
-religion was still in force.
-
-The people came rejoicing, with baskets of food, as though to a
-wedding or glutton mass rather than to a funeral. To me alone, in
-all that multitude, it was an occasion of sadness. It was the first
-time the people had had brought home to them that the days of
-England's shame and bondage were over, and when I looked upon the
-crowd, before the gate, eating and drinking and laughing, as they
-waited for the body to come forth, I began to know what Mr. Drake had
-meant, when he said that a weight was lifted from England's heart,
-though it only made heavier the load on mine.
-
-So brightly shone the sun, and so radiant were those happy people,
-scarce one of whom had not lost a friend or kinsman in poor Wyatt's
-mad attempt to do by force what God had now done so quietly by Mary's
-death, that I alone of all the world seemed sad, and in my utter
-loneliness I turned away and wept bitterly.
-
-Mr. Drake was in the room, talking in high spirits to a knot of
-preachers who had just arrived. Many, I was told, had come down from
-London to do honour to the great occasion, as they called it, but I
-forget their names, if I ever knew them.
-
-Good Mr. Drake must have heard my sobs, for he came forward out of
-the gloomy throng and spoke to me very kindly.
-
-'Come, lad, come,' said he, with his tarry hand on my shoulder; 'have
-a stout heart. This is a proud day for you, a day of rejoicing in
-the Lord, that it is given you to bear witness of England's new life,
-and not, as was vouchsafed to me and others here, to bear witness of
-her slow cankering death. All England will praise you for this day's
-work. Ay, and beyond the seas too, many a poor Fleming, and
-Frenchman, and German who was losing heart will smile happily when he
-hears Nicholas Festing's name, and envy his son the part God gave him
-to play.'
-
-Hearing Mr. Drake's words, the preachers gathered round us and vied
-with each other in giving me drafts of comfort, rather, as it seemed
-to me, for their own glorification in each other's eyes, by showing
-their cunning in the brewing of such phrases, than from any desire to
-console me.
-
-'Affliction, Master Festing,' said a fat, pale-faced man, 'is the
-mustard of the spirit; for even as that excellent sauce maketh the
-stomach lusty to receive meat, so doth sorrow stir up the heart to a
-desire for the Word,' and with that he smacked his lips and looked
-towards the sideboard, which Cicely was already furnishing with meat
-against our return.
-
-'Rejoice, too, my boy, in your tears,' said Mr. Death, 'for they be
-the water to drive the mill which shall grind in pieces the
-stumbling-blocks of your soul.'
-
-'And groaning, sir,' said another, 'is the portion of the elect, who,
-being predestined to the eternal company of God, must not defile
-their spirit with the joy of the world, which fills the stomachs of
-the eternally damned.'
-
-'Softly, softly, sir,' interposed a heady-looking man; 'comfort the
-boy, if you will, but comfort him according to the Word.'
-
-'And who are you,' retorted the other angrily, 'to teach me what is
-according to the Word, and what is not?'
-
-'Brethren, brethren,' cried a mild, grave-looking man with a refined
-and scholarly face, 'I pray you remember on what errand you are. On
-a day of triumph like this, is it for the victors to quarrel?
-Moreover, it is time we departed. Mr. Drake, I pray you order our
-manner of proceeding.'
-
-With that we started, to my no small joy, for I was longing to be
-alone in the old library again, and none of those men, save Mr.
-Drake, brought any comfort to my aching heart.
-
-It must have been a strange sight, when I come to think of it now, as
-we crossed the sunlit court and sallied out between the crowds of
-eager faces that lined the way. Instead of the throng of clerks in
-gay attire who used to precede the coffin at burials of persons of
-note, swinging censers, and singing for the soul of the departed,
-there were none but the black company of preachers in their gowns and
-Geneva caps.
-
-The people joined in behind me where I walked with Miles and Cicely,
-and the long line wound down to the church in the valley between the
-frosty hedgerows and the young woods my father had planted.
-
-I knew the little moss-grown church well, for it was a favourite
-resting-place for Miles's pigeons. They, I think, were the only
-living things that cared for it, except a few ill-tempered jackdaws
-and one or two old bent women, who came to mutter prayers upon their
-beads amongst the mouldering stones.
-
-I do not think there had been a parson there since King Henry's time,
-certainly none that I could remember, except on rare occasions when
-one came out of Rochester to shiver through a homily or a funeral, as
-well as the jackdaws and the chilling damp would allow.
-
-It was a place all shunned for its ghostliness, unless they had a
-special call to go there, which indeed was seldom; for there was not
-even a door upon which the parish notices could be fixed. The wood
-had long ago gone to make fires, and the wide-spreading hinges, all
-bent and rusty, hung down with an air of mourning.
-
-But the pigeons and the jackdaws quarrelled for the place. It was a
-pleasant spot for them. All that savoured of Popery, which was all
-the church contained, had been torn down, I think, in Edward's days.
-Rood-screen and all were gone--perhaps to cook a Reformation pot with
-the door. Thus the birds could fly in and out as they liked, and
-rest out of the way of stones and hawks, till Harry hustled them out.
-
-The little painted windows still remained. They were very Popish
-things, with the Virgin and I know not what saints upon them. But it
-did not matter, for the spiders and the ivy--good reformers they--had
-nearly hidden them from sight, so, as it was thought too costly to
-replace them with white glass, they had been allowed to remain.
-
-A grave had been prepared for my father at the end of the north
-aisle, where once was a chapel of St. Thomas, and where were still to
-be seen, moss-grown and time-stained, two or three tombs of the
-Abbots of Longdene. There was great difficulty, I remember, in
-getting the coffin so far, because the pavement was all loose, and in
-some part quite thrust out of place by the rats and the fungus.
-
-As many of the people as there was room for thronged in after us, and
-jostled each other for the best places with many a rude jest. Such
-irreverence was very hard for me to bear, but I do not wish to
-condemn them for it. It was done from no ill-will to me or my
-father, but only from that same exuberant spirit of joy which was
-beginning to fill all men's hearts when each day they saw more
-clearly that England's night was done.
-
-The preachers alone seemed in earnest; for they, good men, had
-suffered much, and this thing that we were now upon must have seemed
-too serious and heaven-sent for idle gaiety.
-
-I was more at ease when the scholarly-looking gentleman began the
-service. His soft, full voice quieted the people directly, and the
-beautiful words he spoke kept them in rapt attention in spite of
-their crowding to see what was to be done.
-
-No wonder, for now they heard, many for the first time in God's
-House, the voice of prayer go up in their own sweet English tongue.
-The preacher began with a collect, in which he commended the dead
-man's soul to God, and prayed that his sins committed in this world
-might be forgiven him, that the gates of heaven might be opened to
-him, and his body raised up upon the last day. So lovely did the
-well-balanced, earnest words sound in our dear old speech that I saw
-tears in many an eye before he had done, and the amen, in which all
-joined at its end, was half choked with sobs.
-
-Incontinently they lowered then the coffin in the grave, and covered
-it with earth, while the old preacher read an epistle taken from 1
-Thessalonians iv.
-
-Deeper and deeper grew the silence, and less and less my pain, as the
-heart-stirring words fell upon the listening throng. 'I would not,
-brethren, have you ignorant concerning them which are asleep, that ye
-sorrow not, even as other which have no hope. For if we believe that
-Jesus is dead and is risen, even so them which sleep in Jesus will
-God bring with him.'
-
-So the solemn periods marched on to the end. 'Wherefore comfort
-yourselves one another with these words,' and therewith the
-white-haired scholar kneeled down, and began with a loud, full voice
-to sing in English the Paternoster.
-
-A sound, as it seemed to me, like the rustle of angels' wings filled
-the mouldering church as the whole throng with one accord kneeled
-with the preacher and joined him as he sang, women and all. Neither
-I nor any there, I think, save the preachers, had heard such a thing
-before. And surely it was the sweet women's voices that made our
-singing sound so holy in my ears, and lifted up my heart with such a
-heaven-born content that at last I could feel indeed that it was not
-a day for sorrow, but one in which I too must rejoice with England.
-
-Our Paternoster was followed by a sermon, in which, after a few words
-on death and eternal life, the preacher fell to exhorting the people
-to be earnest in carrying out the work, and not to be content with a
-pretended evangelical reformation, suffering such things to be
-obtruded on the Church as should make easy the returning back to
-Popery, superstition, and idolatry. They had seen, he said, in
-Germany the evil of suffering, under colour of giving small offence,
-many stumbling-blocks, which after the first beginnings were hard to
-get removed at least not without great struggling.
-
-But, indeed, I remember little of what the good man said; for I was
-but a boy then, and my mind would ever be fixing itself on the jagged
-ends of the rood-screen, which had been left sticking from the wall
-when it had been hewn away.
-
-'Pity it is,' I said to my thoughts, 'they were not clean rooted out.
-Even now they might wound a man's limbs who was passing unawares, and
-time will come when they will grow corrupt, and as they rot away make
-the arch unstable.'
-
-Little I thought then how true a type those same poor beam-ends would
-prove of all that was to come on England ere many years were gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-It would be wearisome for me to relate all that passed in the weeks
-that followed my father's funeral, even if I could. But indeed I
-remember little, except confusedly about men of law who came from
-London and had long speech with my guardian.
-
-In the business of setting my father's affairs in order I too was a
-good deal mixed.
-
-'You cannot know too soon,' Sir Fulke said to me, 'what your estate
-will be. I am one who thinks a lad cannot learn too early to be a
-good steward, and so thought your father too, Jasper. So from the
-first I would see you have a say in your own affairs.'
-
-Thus it came about that I was always present when the lawyers came,
-and though at first I found it irksome, I soon began to take interest
-in my estate.
-
-Yet one event of these days I must relate, seeing that it was the
-beginning of things which afterwards played so great a part in my
-life.
-
-I rode into Rochester one day to see a man of law who dwelt there.
-As we descended the steep hill that leads from off the downs to the
-low-lying ground, the whole district was stretched out like a map
-below us. We could see straight before us the compact little city of
-Rochester, a mass of red roofs girded with a soft belt of trees, and
-crowding round the Cathedral and the great Castle, still grim and
-solid in its decay. About it ran the yellow river in one grand sweep
-from the bridge to where it turned again between Upnor Castle and the
-dock at the growing village of Chatham. Right in front of us, where
-the road was swallowed up between the two round towers of the city
-gate, was a great crowd. It was no strange thing to see, for hither
-were wont to gather the mariners from the fleet which rode between
-the bridge and Upnor and the workmen from the dockyard, that they
-might gossip and drink at the taverns which lined the way without the
-gate. To-day, however, it was a greater crowd than usual; so great
-indeed that we could not pass and had to draw rein.
-
-'What, in the fiend's name,' cried Sir Fulke, 'brings all these
-stockfish gaping here to block a gentleman's path?'
-
-''Tis Drake, 'tis preaching Drake,' said a good-humoured,
-weather-beaten sailor who stood by. And sure enough it was; for no
-sooner were the words out of our friend's mouth than Mr. Drake's
-jolly red face appeared above the heads of the crowd, as he mounted a
-stool close to the gate.
-
-'Come, hearken, mariners,' he cried, 'hearken to the Word of God and
-the whistle of the Lord's boatswain. For the Word of God is like
-unto a capstan. You can turn it about and about till you tear up the
-anchor that binds you to earth. Come, then, my lads, and turn it
-about with me till you tear up the crooked anchor of sin, whereby the
-devil would moor you to the things of this world.'
-
-This was as much as Sir Fulke could bear, and he cried out, 'What
-kennel preaching is this? Have you nothing better to liken the
-blessed Word of God to than a capstan?'
-
-'And wherefore should I not?' cried Drake, not noticing from whom the
-interruption came. 'What ell of tar-yarn is this, that will take
-upon him to reprove the similitudes of a preacher to her Majesty's
-navy? Wherefore, I pray you, should not the Word of God be likened
-to a capstan, when that blessed servant of the Lord, even Hugh
-Latimer, did not himself scruple to liken the Mother of God to a
-saffron-bag?'
-
-'Well, I'll grant you the similitude is right enough,' Sir Fulke
-called out again. 'For, by God's truth, it seems that a preacher
-nowadays can turn the Word about and about till he make it pull up
-anything he will.'
-
-This sally produced a laugh from the rougher part of Drake's
-audience, and many began to cry out, 'What say you to that, master
-preacher? Has he not got you now?'
-
-'What have I to say to it?' said Drake, turning fiercely on them.
-'Know you not your own trade, you lubberly, roeless sons of herrings?
-Know you not that when you man a capstan you go but one way, like
-asses, that you are, in a clay-mill? So it is with the Word. There
-is one right way, that shall profit you to turn it, and if you twist
-it another it shall spin you heels over ears in a heap, like the
-ungodly in the bottomless pit. My similitude was right enough, yet
-would I have defended it with greater courtesy had I known who
-challenged it. Make way, lads, make way for Sir Fulke Waldyve; for
-next under God you shall reverence our blessed Queen and all who hold
-her commission. Make way, and let me ask pardon for my discourtesy
-to our most worthy magistrate.'
-
-'Enough, Drake, enough,' said Sir Fulke good-humouredly; 'you outrun
-me no less in courtesy than wit. Were all preachers such as you
-there would be little call from Injunctions against preaching without
-authority, but since such there be, I must even, in virtue of my
-office, bid you cease, and all this company disperse.'
-
-That they did contentedly, with three cheers for the old knight, who
-was well known, and loved as much as known, at Rochester.
-
-Mr. Drake was bidden to the 'Crown' by my guardian to take a cup of
-wine; for it was always his custom to try and part in friendship with
-those whom he had had occasion to chide.
-
-'But what of the Injunctions about which you are so tender, Sir
-Fulke?' laughed Drake. 'You forget I am an ecclesiastical person,
-and may not haunt or resort to taverns or alehouses, _vide_
-Injunction No. 7.'
-
-'"Save for your honest necessities,"' returned Sir Fulke. 'So run
-the words; and your peace-making I hold, in my capacity of Justice,
-to be a most honest necessity. So come, with no more words, and save
-your tenderness for less honest occasions.'
-
-So we went to the inn, and there they talked of the times quietly
-enough till the lawyer came in. Mr. Drake craved leave to carry me
-home with him when our business was done, that I might see his boys,
-of whom he seemed very proud, and fish with them on the morrow.
-
-Sir Fulke demurred at first, but when Mr. Drake urged that it would
-cheer me a little, and perhaps bring the colour back to me, for I was
-but very poorly after my days of sorrow, my guardian at last
-consented.
-
-Towards evening, then, Mr. Drake came back for me, and we sallied out
-together, Sir Fulke crying out as we left that Mr. Drake was not to
-send me back with any pestilent Calvinistic ideas in my head.
-
-I was surprised that we went across the road down to the
-landing-stage just below the bridge. For I knew not where Mr.
-Drake's house could be if we must go to it by water, but I did not
-say anything till we had taken his boat and were clear of the turmoil
-which the fast-ebbing tide caused as it fought its way angrily
-through the narrow arches of the noble bridge.
-
-'Where is your house, Mr. Drake?' I asked, as we reached the stiller
-water.
-
-'Where is it, my boy?' answered he, chuckling to himself, as if
-vastly tickled by my question. 'Where, but on no man's land.'
-
-'And where may that be?' asked I, not at all understanding his
-merriment.
-
-'Why, in God's free tide-way, my lad,' said Mr. Drake, chuckling more
-heartily than ever. 'Where could an Englishman, and above all a
-Devonshire man, live better than there, where there are no landlords
-and no taxes, and every one is his own king? You will know it some
-day, I hope. Frank knows it. My boys know it.'
-
-I could not quite make out what he meant, and least of all who Frank
-was, and what he had to do with it. And no wonder, for then I did
-not know his strange habit of speaking of his sons as 'Frank and my
-boys.' I did not like to question him more, and was content to
-listen to him as he told me the names and services of the Queen's
-ships which we passed. There were a good many of them moored between
-the bridge and Upnor Castle, whereof some came to great renown
-afterwards, but then they were few and ill kept compared with what a
-man may see in the reach to-day.
-
-Clean past Chatham and the one little dock that it then had we went,
-till we made the reach that runs toward Hoo. Here Mr. Drake stopped
-rowing and pointed down the river.
-
-'Look, Master Festing,' cried he. 'There she lies, there ride her
-jolly old bones over no man's land. That is my house, that is my
-castle, that is where I live with Frank, when he is at home, and my
-boys.'
-
-I looked to where he pointed, and saw an old hulk, after the fashion
-of King Henry VII.'s time, moored just out of the fair-way. A
-handsome vessel she must have been once, but was dismasted and
-plainly very old. I noted this to Mr. Drake.
-
-'Ay,' he said, 'she is old, but trim and staunch yet. They say Cabot
-sailed in her to the Indies once; the first man who touched the
-mainland, let the Spaniards say what they will. I know it, and Frank
-knows it, and so do my boys, and we are proud of it, as we ought to
-be, for he sailed from England in an English ship.'
-
-'But why do you live there?' I asked.
-
-'Well,' said he, 'I have a reason, and I may as well tell you now as
-later. I lived once near Tavistock, in beautiful Devon, on the banks
-of our sweet Tavy, and there I might be dwelling now, but that I
-began to smell the Word of God and know it from the stinking breath
-of the beast of Rome. Then the Lord sent me trials, which, I thank
-Him day and night, He gave me strength to bear. The Justices of
-Devon were, for the most part, very earnest for the old religion, and
-persecution grew hot for those who would not sign the Six Articles.
-I thank God I was one to whom He showed the filthy error of that
-first most pestilent and damnable doctrine concerning
-transubstantiation. For, look you, lad, they would have made us like
-unto themselves, who are worse than the cannibal savages of the
-Indies. They, in their devilish ignorance, do but eat the flesh of
-their enemies; but these, in their most pernicious self-will, would
-pretend to fill their lewd bellies with the flesh of their Redeemer.
-Even as I speak to you of it, lad, my words seem like poison that
-will blister my lips, and I shudder each time I think of it, that
-Christian men are found to set such wanton contumely upon their sweet
-Lord. Come what might, I was no man to sink my soul in the filth of
-such a hell-born superstition as that; so I rose up and fled from the
-destroyer hither to Kent, where I knew true men were to be found.
-Here God showed me yonder hulk, which I purchased with the store of
-money I had saved. There dwelt I in peace till, in the fulness of
-time, King Henry died, and the godly men who stood around the throne
-of his son made me a preacher to the Royal Navy. So I continued
-reaping plenteously in the harvest of the Lord, until Edward's death
-thrust England once more down into the black pit of papacy and
-superstition.'
-
-'But the day has broken again, now,' I said, remembering his former
-words, and wishing to win him back to the genial mood from which he
-had talked himself. He had been getting more and more like a great
-boy as we neared the ship and he talked of his sons, and I was sorry
-to have made him gloomy by my foolish questions.
-
-'So it has, lad, so it has,' he cried, looking up quickly with the
-twinkle in his eyes again. 'It is growing brighter every hour; you
-shall help to brighten it, with God's good will, and so shall Frank,
-so shall my boys. But here we are almost alongside. Ahoy! ahoy!
-ahoy!'
-
-No one answered to his shout, but as we came close alongside we could
-hear a strange commotion in the waist of the ship, into which,
-however, we could not see.
-
-'They are about it again,' said Mr. Drake, with a chuckle; 'my boys
-are.'
-
-'About what?' asked I.
-
-'Fighting!' replied Mr. Drake, with increasing pride and delight. 'I
-know the sound. My boys fight as much as any man's sons in all
-Rochester. Not many days pass without them getting about it.'
-
-'But what do they fight about?' I asked.
-
-'Don't bother your head with that,' replied Mr. Drake; 'they don't.'
-
-With that we went aboard, and I saw the cause of all the hubbub.
-Stripped to the waist were two sturdy lads of about twelve and
-thirteen years of age. They were fighting furiously with their
-fists, to the great delight of nine other boys of all ages, varying
-from a little fellow not more than three years old to a lad of scarce
-less growth than the smaller of the two fighters. The onlookers were
-cheering each telling blow, and hounding on their brothers to further
-efforts. Each time the others shouted I noticed that the baby cried
-out too, as loudly as his little lungs would allow, and beat on the
-deck with an old sword-hilt, which seemed to be his favourite and
-only plaything.
-
-'There, Master Festing,' said Mr. Drake to me, beaming all over his
-round face, 'there are boys for a father to be proud of. Well done,
-Jack! 'Tis Jack and Joe,' he went on. 'You could not have had
-better luck; they are pretty fighters both.'
-
-My answer was drowned in a fresh shout from the boys as they caught
-sight of their father.
-
-'Come on, dad, come on,' they cried. 'Jack is winning again, but you
-shall still see some good sport before 'tis ended.'
-
-They crowded round Mr. Drake to drag him by his cloak to where the
-two boys were still belabouring each other. Thither I think he would
-have gone, for he seemed as excited over it as the baby, but just
-then a thin, weary-looking woman, with eyes red with weeping, came
-running out of the cabin in the poop, and took Mr. Drake wildly by
-the arm.
-
-'Stop them, Ned,' she said, 'stop them, for God's sake; they have
-been fighting this hour. For what black sin has Heaven given me such
-sons?'
-
-'Tut, tut,' answered Mr. Drake; 'would you have a nosegay of milksops
-to call you mother? Rejoice that God has given us sons with whom,
-when the time is come, we shall not fear to speak with our enemies in
-the gate.'
-
-'I know, I know,' she pleaded again; 'but stop them, Ned, this once.
-Look at their bloody faces; and I am so a-weary. Frank would stop
-them if he were here.'
-
-'Ay, though he loves to see them fight,' answered her husband; 'I
-think sometimes he cares too much for you, and not enough for the
-cause. Still, for his sake, I will stop them. Peace, lads, peace!'
-he cried then; 'enough for to-day. It has been well fought, but now
-I bring you a visitor. Look to him, while I shift my boots within.'
-
-The boys ceased fighting instantly, and after wiping their faces they
-shook hands, and then came up to where Mr. Drake had left me with the
-rest. John Drake, being the eldest there, welcomed me, but in a way
-that fell a good deal short of good manners.
-
-'Can you fight?' said he, with a contemptuous look at my black
-broadcloth doublet.
-
-'I can fight with sword and buckler,' I answered, 'a little.'
-
-'Then you are a gentleman?' asked Joe.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Frank is going to be a gentleman. He says so. He is going to make
-all of us gentlemen, too.'
-
-'Who is Frank?' asked I.
-
-'Don't you know Frank?' said Joe, while all the rest laughed at my
-ignorance. 'Frank is our brother, our eldest brother. He is a
-sailor now. He's 'prentice to a shipmaster, who trades to Zeeland
-and France. He will be a master soon, and have a ship of his own.
-He says so. And then he will sail with us against Calais, and win it
-back, and the Queen will make us gentlemen.'
-
-'That is much to do, and will take some doing,' said I, smiling, I am
-afraid; for I could not but be merry over the way they spoke of what
-a poor smack-lad was going to do.
-
-'What are you grinning at?' cried Jack, firing up in a moment. 'Do
-you doubt Frank will do what he says? Take that, then,' and he
-struck me a hard blow on the chest that made me reel again.
-
-I am sorry it made me angry to be struck so, for I returned his blow
-so heartily that, being younger than I, he was spun over on the deck
-somewhat heavily. Yet I think he did not mind, for when he picked
-himself up from where he fell, he came to me quite quietly and felt
-my arm.
-
-'Who would have guessed,' said he, 'that you could strike so shrewd a
-blow,--you with a pale face like that; but Frank could thrash you,
-and so he shall when he comes home, and then we will ask him to let
-you sail with us against Calais.'
-
-I could not laugh at him any more, for I began to take a great liking
-to the sturdy lad, with his broad, flat face and curly hair, since I
-had knocked him down, and could quite forgive him for talking so big
-about his brother Frank.
-
-'I am sorry I struck so hard,' said I.
-
-'Nay, sir,' answered he, 'be not sorry. It is not every one can fell
-me like an ox, and besides, dad says England will want strong arms
-ere long. Won't she, dad?'
-
-'Ay, that she will,' said Mr. Drake, who now came out from under the
-poop; 'and Mr. Festing will use his for her. But come to supper now.'
-
-'Art going to be a soldier, lad?' he said to me, as soon as we were
-seated.
-
-'I think I shall be scholar,' answered I. 'Sir Fulke says I am to go
-to Cambridge soon. It was my father's wish.'
-
-'Well, he was a wise man,' said Mr. Drake, 'and doubtless knew best.
-But it seems to me that England will need pikes and swords sooner
-than books. Still, let that pass.'
-
-'Don't let him be a scholar, dad,' said Jack. 'He must be a sailor,
-and sail with us to the Indies, and find new kingdoms, like the
-Spaniards, and bring back a cargo of gold and pearls. Tell him about
-the Indies, dad.'
-
-So Mr. Drake, with a right good will, fell to talking of the wonders
-of the West, and we twelve boys sat round him, open-eyed, greedily
-devouring his words, while he spoke of the gilded king that was
-there, who ruled over mountains of gold; and of the Indians that
-hunted fish in the sea, as spaniels did rabbits; and of the great
-whelks that were three feet across; and of trees with leaves so big
-that one could cover a man, and almonds as large as a demi-culverin
-ball. I know not what other wonders he related, just as he heard
-them from the mariners who came thence, but we all grew greatly
-excited by his tales, and went to bed to dream things yet stranger
-than the truth.
-
-Such was my first meeting with the Drake family, and fast friends we
-boys became, and though continually fighting amongst themselves for
-the lightest causes, they never offered to attack me again. Francis
-I never saw at this time. He was nearly always abroad, and when he
-returned it so happened that I could not get to see him. Still,
-whenever we got a day away from our grammar, Harry and I always
-slipped off with our crossbows, to sail with the Drakes in their boat
-and fish and shoot wild-fowl.
-
-Those were our happiest days. So greatly did the Drake boys take to
-Harry, after a fight or two, and so much did we take to the sea, that
-all our old pleasures were forsaken, and the pigeons and the jackdaws
-were left in quiet possession of the crumbling old church.
-
-Nor were Mr. Drake's stories of the West the least cause of our love
-for the Medway and that aged hulk. Harry was never tired of
-questioning the old navy preacher about it, and soon we began to
-worry our old tutor to tell us more.
-
-For I must relate that I was now living almost entirely at Ashtead
-with Harry, that I might share with him the tutor whom Sir Fulke had
-secured for us. Poor old long-suffering Master Follet! How I wish I
-could know thee now! Surely when I look back to those days of
-patience, I know thou must have been the sweetest pedant that ever
-said his prayers to Aristotle. But then in my folly I knew thee not.
-I knew thee not for the gentle scholar thou wast, for the
-well-rounded compendium thou hadst made thyself of that old learning
-which is fast passing away,--the old, pure learning, which a man
-could seek so pleasantly when learning was books and naught but
-books, and he who knew them best was accounted wisest.
-
-If Eve had not tempted nor Adam sinned, God might have given us that
-richest gift--to see the hours of our youth, as they pass, with the
-eyes that we look back upon them withal when they are gone. Alas!
-such wit I lacked and knew thee not, my gentle master, nor the hours
-in which I was free to rifle the treasure-house of thy polished
-wisdom. Had I but known, I might have tasted, ere they were yet
-dead, the sweets of those days when he who sought wisdom and would be
-accounted wise might sit out his life in the window-seat of his
-library, drinking in the voice of the mighty dead, while the world
-without glimmered softly in through the painted lattices upon the
-folio before him, and wandered thence to kiss its sister volumes
-sleeping in the shelves.
-
-Now that has changed, with much besides. Now must not a scholar be
-content with the light that comes softened and tender-hued through a
-library window if he would pass for wise amongst men. Now must he
-plunge out into the day and seek for the new wisdom amongst the
-haunts of thronging men, where the sunlight beats fierce and bright
-upon the world to show to him who fears not all its beauty, and all
-its baseness too.
-
-Such wisdom was not our tutor's portion, and his want of it, instead
-of increasing our love for him, as now it would, was our chief ground
-of difference. We each day grew more full of the wonders of the
-West, not alone from what Mr. Drake told us, but also from what we
-heard direct from mariners, with whom groats could win us speech in
-Chatham and Rochester.
-
-Well I remember how he answered when, having drunk dry our other
-wells, we made bold to try what we could find in our tutor.
-
-'I am glad, my boys,' said he, with an anxious look in his delicate,
-wizened face and clear, brown eyes, 'that you have come to me in your
-trouble; for I perceive you have been speaking with some ignorant
-fellows, who have filled your heads with the folly that is now
-everywhere afloat. Beware of it as you would beware the fiend. So
-strong is this madness that has seized on men, and even scholars (if
-indeed they still deserve the name), that in so great a place as
-Paris even Aristotle has been called in question.'
-
-He looked at us as he said this, pausing long with uplifted eyebrows
-to watch the effect which this announcement, to him so terrible,
-would have on us. I did not know what to say, so prayed him civilly
-to proceed.
-
-'You may well be pained,' he continued, though it must be said that I
-don't think we were at all, 'but you will rejoice to hear that these
-things will not continue long. I have here a goad which will soon
-drive these dull-witted cattle back to the right path.'
-
-So saying he laid his hand on a bundle of manuscript, which we knew
-only too well, and leaning fondly over it read slowly, as though it
-were a sweetmeat in his mouth, the title-leaf at the top. Its name
-was in Greek, not because the work was written in that tongue, but
-merely out of a fashion used commonly amongst such men to increase
-their appearance of wisdom.
-
-'It is a work,' the good old man said,--we had heard it a score of
-times before,--'upon which I am labouring, entituled, "'H
-Aristotéleia Apología; or, Ramus Ransacked, being a British Blast
-against Gaulish Gabies, wherein all the preposterous, fantastical
-opinions of late grown current amongst the Dunces of Paris are fully
-set forth, withstood, and refuted by Christoph: Follet." It begins
-with a sharp note against----'
-
-'But, please you, sir,' Harry interrupted,--and I was glad he did,
-for I saw the old man was running out of his course, as he always did
-when he got astride his 'Apology,'--'were it not well first to show
-us how the knowledge of this New World, of which we were asking you,
-had so set things awry?'
-
-'Knowledge of the New World, say you?' said our tutor, evidently a
-little pained. 'Know, my boys, there is no knowledge of this
-pretended New World. No man can know what does not exist: the New
-World does not exist, _ergo_, no man hath knowledge of it.'
-
-'Far be it from me to dispute your syllogism,' said I, for logic was
-his chief delight to teach us, 'yet, saving your premises, I have
-many times spoken with them that have been there and seen it.'
-
-'My boy, my boy,' answered Mr. Follet sadly, 'in what a perilous case
-do I find you! What hope can I have of your scholarship if you will
-set the eyes of moderns against the wits of the ancients? How can
-they have seen this New World of which they are so ready to prate?
-Had it existed, Aristotle would have written of it. Forget you for
-how many years, and for how many and great sages, the whole sum of
-human understanding has been contained within the compass of the
-writings of that great man, and will you seek to increase it by the
-babbling of drunken sailors?'
-
-'But, please you,' said Harry, 'the honest mariners who told me were
-not drunk.'
-
-'The greater liars they, then,' answered Mr. Follet, a little
-testily. 'Or rather, I should say, the more pitiable their
-ignorance; for let me not be carried beyond good manners, which are a
-sweet seasoning of scholarship too often forgotten nowadays in the
-dishes men compound of their wits.'
-
-'Save you sir, for that most excellent conceited figure,' said Harry
-gravely; for the mad knave always knew how to bring his tutor back to
-a fair ambling pace when he grew restive.
-
-'Well, lad, indeed I think it was not amiss,' answered Mr. Follet,
-with a complacent smile. 'It is an indifferent pretty trick I have,
-and one I could doubtless in some measure rear in you; but not if you
-suffer the vulgar to plant weeds in the gardens I am tilling with
-such labour, that I may in due course see you both bring forth a
-plenteous crop of the fruits of scholarship. If you have a desire to
-make yourself learned in cosmography, I myself, who have no small
-skill in it, will teach you. But listen no more to idle sailors'
-tales, whose only guide is experience, wherewith they foolishly seek
-to explain the hidden wonders of the world, seeing they have no skill
-to learn the truth from books.'
-
-'Is it Aristotle, then, alone we must read?' asked Harry, a little
-disheartened at the prospect before us.
-
-'I will not say that,' answered our tutor. 'Though for the wise the
-Stagirite is all-sufficient, yet it cannot be denied but that there
-be some authors who, having reverently and afar-off walked in the
-footsteps of the master, have in a manner amplified, extended, and
-explained, and as it were diluted his vast learning, so as to make it
-more palatable, medicinable, and digestible to the unlearned, such as
-you and Jasper. Therefore, because of your weakness, I would suffer
-you to read the works of Strabo, Seneca, and Claudius Ptolemæus,
-amongst the ancients; and among the moderns, the _Speculum Naturale_
-of Vicenzius Bellovacensis, the _Liber Cosmographicus de Natura
-Locorum_ of Albertus Magnus, together with certain works of our own
-Roger Bacon; but these with circumspection, and under my guidance,
-seeing he was a speculator who erred not from too little boldness, or
-too great respect for Aristotle.'
-
-With this we had to rest content, though I think Harry found little
-comfort in it, seeing that his love for books was never so great as
-mine. As for me, I laid aside my _Plutarch_, and devoured greedily
-all my tutor advised. Nor did I stop there; for, rummaging in the
-library at home, I found other works on cosmography, such as the
-_Imago Mundi_ of Honoré d'Autun, and that of Cardinal Alliacus,
-together with not a few others which some abbot of the later times
-had collected, being, as I imagine, interested in the science.
-
-In these I read constantly, and carried what I found there to Mr.
-Drake and his boys, and my friends amongst the sailors. Hour by hour
-I told them of the dread ocean, where was eternal night, with storms
-that never ceased; of the magic island of Antilia or Atlantis; of the
-marvellous hill in Trapobana, which had the property of drawing the
-nails from a ship which sailed near it, and so wrecking it; and,
-above all, of the Earthly Paradise, of which I loved best to muse.
-
-Again and again I poured into their wondering ears the tale of that
-blessed land which lay beyond the Indies, the first region of the
-East, where the world begins and heaven and earth are hand in hand;
-the land where is raised on high a sanctuary which mortals may not
-enter, and which everlasting bars of fire have closed since he who
-first sinned was driven forth. I told them of the wonders of that
-land; how in it there was neither heat nor cold, and four great
-rivers went forth to fill the place with all manner of sweetness and
-water the Wood of Life, the tree whereof if any man eat the fruit he
-shall continue for everlasting and unchanged.
-
-Some laughed at me, saying I was blinded by too much book-learning,
-but most of the mariners, and especially Drake's boys, listened with
-great respect, caring little, as I think, after the manner of
-seafaring folk, whether the tales they heard were true or not, so
-long as they were strange.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-So passed by the full days of my boyhood; I living, as I have said,
-chiefly at Ashtead in Harry Waldyve's company.
-
-It was not alone in devouring grammar, and such dry bones of
-cosmography as Mr. Follet allowed us to pick, that our time was
-spent. Sir Fulke was not a man to keep boys wholly to such work.
-Although he had managed to acquire some show of skill in theology
-when King Henry brought it into fashion at Court, yet even that I
-soon saw had fallen into sad confusion in his mind, and in no sense
-was he a scholar.
-
-Yet in all such pastimes and pleasant labours as are used in open
-places and the daylight, which in respect of peace or war are not
-only comely and decent, but also very necessary for a courtly
-gentleman to use--in these he still showed the remains of his former
-high skill, or at least a happy trick of imparting to us his great
-knowledge of their mysteries.
-
-Almost every day he would have us out and exercise us under his own
-eye at riding, running at the ring and tilt, and in playing with
-weapons, being especially careful of our fence with the sword and
-spiked target. Like his master King Henry, he had a great love and
-skill for using the bow. This he taught us to use, and less
-willingly also the harquebuss.
-
-We had little time for the sea--an element, as my guardian was wont
-to say, which sorted less with what pertained to a gentleman than the
-land. Yet he did not forbid it, and whenever he went up to the
-Court, which was not seldom, we laid aside awhile our courtly
-exercises, and were continually amongst the marshes and Saltings with
-Mr. Drake's boys, 'Isti dracones horrendi,' as Mr. Follet was wont to
-ease his mind by calling them.
-
-After Sir Fulke's returns from Court it was always our scholarship
-that had the upper hand. For he was wise enough to see how things
-were changing at Court, and came back overflowing with praises of the
-young Queen's beauty and learning.
-
-''Slight, lads,' he would say, 'she puts you both to shame, and goes
-beyond all young gentlemen of her time in the excellency of her
-learning. I tell you it is a sight to make England weep for joy to
-see her stand up, so fair and courteous, and make her speech in
-Latin, or French, or Spanish, or Italian, to the jabbering foreigners
-that come. And as for the Greek; why, Mr. Roger Ascham tells me she
-reads more of it with him in a day at Windsor than any prebendary of
-the church doth Latin in a week; he should know, seeing he had the
-setting forward of all her most excellent gifts of learning.'
-
-'Then must we be double courtiers, sir,' said Harry, 'and court
-learning and the Queen as well, if we want to keep the Court, or the
-Queen shall have but half-courtiers.'
-
-'Half-courtiers or double courtiers,' said Sir Fulke, 'I know that he
-who is out of learning will soon find himself out of Court.'
-
-'Then is he in an evil case,' laughed Harry, 'for he that is out of
-Court is out of his suit, and he that is out of his suit shall be
-shamed unless he quickly suit himself with another. Come, Jasper,
-let us get Mr. Follet to make us breeches to go to Court with.'
-
-And away he would run to his work, while Sir Fulke laughed at his
-boy's trick of turning words upside down. For he soon got the ways
-of that tripping wit which, it must be said, has since come to make
-far better passwords to places at Court than ever a hard-witted
-scholar could learn, did he read twice as much Greek as Mr. Ascham
-himself.
-
-I say not this in envy, though I was too hard-witted ever to come by
-the trick. Harry's gifts were dearer to me than my own, and, God
-knows, I loved him for them, and never in my life envied him
-anything, except once, but for the present time let that pass.
-
-Some three years after my father's death thus passed away before the
-sad day came when Harry and I were forced to separate, since our
-paths led diversely. It was high time that I should go to Cambridge,
-according to my father's wish. Sir Fulke's faith in scholarship was
-not large enough for him to suffer Harry to do the like. For him a
-place was found in the household of that most godly and warlike
-nobleman, Sir Francis Russell, Earl of Bedford, who was godfather to
-Frank Drake, since his renowned father, the first earl, being very
-earnest for the Reformation party, had been a good friend of Mr.
-Drake's when he lived at Tavistock.
-
-Since my father's death I had known no day so sad as that on which I
-took my departure for Cambridge in company with Mr. Follet, who at my
-charges was to install me safely in Trinity College.
-
-Harry rode with us as far as Gravesend, where we were to take the
-river for London. Mr. Drake, too, joined us at Rochester, and,
-riding by my side on his shaggy cob, beguiled the way with much good
-advice as to how I should bear myself at the University.
-
-'I am, in a great measure,' said he, 'out of my former opinion
-against your becoming a scholar, not only because of the excellent
-parts I can see in you, which it were a sin to swathe in a napkin,
-but also because you will find that certain stout hearts amongst the
-godly, to whom I have written concerning you, are fast getting the
-upper hand at Cambridge. So that, I doubt not, you shall find
-yourself set amongst many goodly plants, with whom you shall grow to
-bear fruit medicinable for the purging away of all the clogging
-papistical humours that still be left to fester in the stomach of
-Reformation.'
-
-'He were but a bitter tree,' laughed Harry, 'did he bear but purges.'
-
-'A most wrong conclusion, my malapert Hal,' answered Mr. Drake; 'for
-your bitter pill is a sovereign sweetening of the inwards; and you
-shall find, moreover, that much fruit which grows at Court, though
-sweet in the mouth, is, for the most part, most bitter in the belly.'
-
-'Then,' cried Harry, 'have I learnt a most notable piece of science,
-and can henceforth tell why courtiers' tongues are sweet and
-scholars' bitter. Still, I will be a courtier with a tongue tuned to
-sweet courtesy, and leave bitter railing to scholars.'
-
-'Go, thou madcap,' chuckled Mr. Drake, whom Harry could never offend;
-'go cry "Words, come and play with me," for surely thou wast born
-their play-fellow.'
-
-Mr. Drake then fell to tell me, as he had a score of times before,
-that Trinity was the worthiest college in England, since it was that
-which his good friend, the renowned Earl of Bedford, had chosen for
-Frank's godfather, Lord Russell.
-
-So largely did he speak of this and of the shining light that the
-young Earl had proved himself there, that his talk carried us all the
-way to Gravesend, where, most sadly, we bade adieu to him and Harry.
-As the strong flowing tide carried us up the beautiful Thames my
-spirits grew lighter; for I was not without comfort to soften the
-grief of my first parting with my brother.
-
-As I never attained to his wit and skill in courtly exercises, being
-in no way apt thereto either by birth or nature, so I may say, since
-all men know it, in things pertaining to scholarship he was but a
-child beside me. I know not if I was unduly proud of all I had
-attained to under Mr. Follet's guidance, yet of a surety I know he
-was unduly proud to bring me to Cambridge.
-
-'Were it not unworthy of a scholar, Jasper,' said the worthy man, as
-we sat in the tilt-boat that was carrying us to London, 'I could
-bring my heart to envy you the many and great delights that await you
-whither we are going. Most profitably have you attended to my
-precepts, and eschewing the light of experience, by which the vulgar
-walk, have trusted to books, which are the only true guide. Such
-well-fashioned vessels as I have made you it is now again the delight
-of _Alma Mater_ to fill with her choicest nectar.'
-
-'Did she, then, once choose other vessels?' asked I.
-
-'Alas, dear discipulus, yes,' answered Mr. Pellet, with a little
-flush on his wan cheek; 'and then it was that I was cast forth. It
-was when those Elysian days, whereof the memory is a sweet savour to
-me still, were ended--the days when it was my happy fortune to find a
-place amongst that unmatched garland of fellows and scholars with
-which Dr. Medcalfe crowned St. John's College when he was Master, and
-afterwards when I was chosen out to be a most unworthy member of the
-new-founded house of Trinity. It was an honour I had little hoped to
-win; for (not to speak too much, because of the love I still bear to
-my old and dear college) this royal Trinity which our glorious King
-Henry founded, that _colonia_ of St. John's, that _matre pulchra
-filia pulchrior_, to which you, I hope most humbly and reverently,
-are about to belong, I hold, above all foundations, learned or
-unlearned, that the world has ever seen, to be the most noble,
-princely, and magnificent.'
-
-'What made you, then, leave so honourable a state?' asked I as he
-paused, as if lost in musing on the glories of our college.
-
-'That is soon told,' said he sadly. 'The days I speak of ended with
-the most precious life of our scholar king. It was there, if I may
-make free with the fine figure of my most worthy friend, Mr. Roger
-Ascham, that the Hog of Rome passed over the seas into that most fair
-garden of Cambridge, and set to to root out the fair plants that were
-growing there, and tread them under his cloven feet. Then the
-blighting breath of idolatry carried seeds of tares thither, which,
-taking root, throve most rankly amidst the pollution that beast had
-made, till ignorance choked out scholarship, and I fled.'
-
-'Surely, sir,' said I, for much talk with Mr. Drake had increased the
-hot opinions that were born in me; 'surely the breath of the beast of
-Rome is no better than the vapours from the mouth of hell.'
-
-'Soft and fair, Jasper,' said the old scholar, 'soft and fair. Such
-words sit ill on a scholar's lips. Carry not the rancour of these
-present times into the holy shrine whither you go. The memory of the
-ruin that befell that fair-built fabric did somewhat carry me beyond
-the terms of good manners. Do not you follow me. As you love
-learning, help to guard the doors of yonder dear place against the
-savage turmoil of these shifting times.'
-
-'Must a scholar, then,' said I, 'forget his religion and what he owes
-to his God?'
-
-'No, not that, lad,' answered Mr. Follet, looking a little pained.
-'Your most glorious college was, under the king's grace, as its
-charter recites, divinely appointed for the purpose of bringing the
-pure truth of Christianity into the realm, and repelling the
-nefarious and enormous abuses of the Roman papacy.'
-
-'Then will I strive,' said I, 'with my college to do what King Henry
-said.'
-
-'That is well, lad,' answered my poor tutor, without losing his
-troubled look. 'Still there is no need to forget your scholarship in
-doing parson's work. By learning shall you withstand Rome more than
-by controversy and railing. Love a scholar when you meet him, though
-he hate not Rome. Love him for his learning's sake, and forget Rome.
-Such was the way in the old days, when good Dr. Medcalfe was Master
-of St. John's.'
-
-I saw how pained he was to think that the cargo he had laden with
-such care might be wrecked on the stormy seas which he could perceive
-ahead. So I said no more then, but contented myself with watching
-the multitudes of swans that came about us and the shipping which we
-passed, and with asking a hundred questions about the towns and
-villages on the banks, as well as of the great city which lay before,
-till by dark our sturdy rowers ceased their work at Paul's Chain, and
-we landed.
-
-We lay but one night in London, and came to Cambridge on the fourth
-day. There Mr. Follet at once carried me to Dr. Beaumont, that I
-might be entered at Trinity.
-
-The Doctor, as I must call him, though at that time he was only
-admitted B.D., was a man of about forty years of age, of good
-breeding and presence. In my eyes he seemed a very great person
-indeed, and my respect for good Mr. Follet was never so great as when
-I saw with what honour and affection the Master of Trinity received
-him.
-
-'I have brought you a scholar, Beaumont,' said Mr. Follet, after very
-hearty commendations had passed between them, 'after my own heart;
-one who has imbibed the true principles of Aristotle, and is
-untainted with any new empiric heresy. I have taught him well in our
-own faith--to love learning, and despise experience as the common
-school-house of fools.'
-
-'Ah, Follet,' said Dr. Beaumont, laying his hand on my tutor's
-shoulder fondly, and speaking to him smilingly, as though he had been
-a child, 'happy are you to have kept your scholarship so pure. Let
-us hope your scholar will do no worse, though, God knows, these are
-tainting times, and Cambridge grows so full of railing that ere long,
-I think, there will be no room left for the gentle disputations of
-scholars.'
-
-With that he dismissed us to his brother, Mr. John Beaumont, the
-Vice-Master; who showed me where my lodging was to be in King's Hall,
-not far from the great gateway of King Edward.
-
-How proud I felt as I sat that afternoon looking out upon the little
-court, for that was before Dr. Neville had pulled down the old
-buildings to make the present great court, which is now the envy of
-every college in Europe!
-
-Cambridge seemed to me a hall of Paradise, and Trinity its daïs. In
-spite of what Dr. Beaumont had said, I looked forward to dwelling in
-it as in a realm where the pure quintessence of learning should reign
-over a quiet band of brothers, who in the impassive contemplation of
-wisdom should have lost all hate, and fear, and sorrow.
-
-Suddenly my meditation was disturbed by a loud shout, and I saw a
-number of students surge tumultuously out of an archway into the
-court. In their midst was an effigy with an ox's skull for a head,
-clearly made to counterfeit the devil. This they had clothed in a
-surplice, and crowned with a square cap.
-
-It seemed to delight them beyond measure; for while one held the
-thing the rest danced round it, laughing and shouting, and singing
-ribald verselets against it. Gradually they drew near the window of
-one of the fellows, named Saunderson, who was University Reader in
-Logic, and fell to crying, 'Fasting Johnnie, Fasting Johnnie, come
-and welcome your master, who is here to speak with you.'
-
-Therewith Mr. Saunderson ran at them with a cudgel, but they drove
-him back, so that he could not come at the devil in the surplice.
-
-By this time the uproar had brought a number of students to the gate,
-and Mr. Saunderson, seeing amongst them a number of King's College
-men, cried out, 'To me, to me, all lovers of the old faith, and stay
-this sacrilege.'
-
-There was a rush from the gate at the effigy in answer to his call,
-and in a few moments I could see my college was being worsted. That
-was enough for me in the first blush of my pride, and, without
-thinking, I rushed down and out into the court, just in time to seize
-the effigy as it was being carried out of the gate.
-
-What followed beyond a wild turmoil, in which I was fighting like the
-Drake boys themselves, I cannot say, but soon I knew I was standing
-in the midst of the court with the tattered effigy in my hands and my
-fellow-students shouting round me as if their lungs must burst.
-
-At every pause in their shouting I could hear the voices of the
-Vice-Master and Mr. Saunderson railing at each other in a corner of
-the court with such good will, that every moment I thought it would
-come to blows.
-
-I was feeling very proud of what I had done, though scarcely knew in
-the din what to do next, when all at once I saw a grave-looking young
-man standing in the gateway, which was now shut, and by his side my
-poor tutor looking at me as though his heart would break.
-
-Then at last it burst upon me what I had done. At one blow the fair
-fabric I had raised in my day-dreams, the oft-repeated resolution to
-lead the life of pure scholarship, to soar impassive on the wings of
-science above the little turmoils of the world--at one blow it was
-all gone. Ere one sun had set upon my new life I was the hero of a
-vulgar broil.
-
-In an agony of shame I cast down the detested cause of my grief, and,
-breaking passionately through the excited throng, fled to my rooms
-from the reproachful, heart-rending gaze of poor Mr. Follet.
-
-With my head buried in my arms I sat for some minutes sobbing in
-black despair at my table, when, as I thought, I heard him open my
-door and come towards me; but the step was young, firm, and resolute,
-as unlike as it could be to my dear old tutor's shuffle. A strong
-hand was laid gently on my shoulder, and I heard a deep, full-toned
-voice speaking to me.
-
-'Be of good heart, Mr. Festing,' it said; 'I know why you weep, and
-had I not long ago hardened my heart to the battle, I could weep with
-you.'
-
-I looked up, and saw the same gentleman who had been standing with my
-tutor in the gateway. He was a somewhat ungainly, ill-favoured young
-man of some eight and twenty summers, but yet I felt drawn to him, as
-much by reason of his kindly words as of a look there was in his face
-of fearless resolution, and pure-strained intellect, which a certain
-aspect of weary melancholy softened into what was to me a most sweet
-and lovable expression.
-
-'I am Mr. Thomas Cartwright,' he went on, still looking sorrowfully
-upon me, 'new-made major-fellow of Trinity, with whom you are to
-share this lodging. I have brought this about by the kindness of the
-Master, because Mr. Drake had written to me concerning you, with very
-hearty commendations.'
-
-'Are you a friend of Mr. Drake's, then?' asked I, feeling greatly
-comforted.
-
-'Yes, Mr. Festing,' answered he; 'and also of that most high-wrought
-scholar, Mr. Follet. I know more of you than you know of me, and I
-know why you grieve. It is not hidden from me that you were minded
-to make sacrifice to the Lord of the good parts He has given you, and
-by long hours of patient study to make them worthy His acceptance.
-Yet rejoice that He has shown you at your very going forth what His
-will is with you. Rejoice that we can say this day, as surely as
-Samuel did to Saul, that He has appointed you to go up with us
-against the Amalekites and destroy them utterly. Such is His will;
-and while men hearkened to Him the strong tide of Reformation flowed
-on in full flood under His mighty breath, till its living waters bid
-fair to fill the length and breadth of Christendom with their
-cleansing sweetness. But men wearied of the work, and spared the
-best of the sheep, and of the oxen, and of the fatlings, and of the
-lambs, and destroyed them not. And now the Lord's ears are vexed
-with the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of the oxen amongst the
-people. He turns His face from them, and the tide is fast running
-back. Rise up, then, and do the work of the Lord. Think not of the
-treasure you have been laying up for Him; for, behold, to obey is
-better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams!'
-
-'Must I then abandon all scholarship,' I asked, when he had finished,
-'to join in the din of these bitter controversies?'
-
-'What could the son of Nicholas Festing wish for better?' Mr.
-Cartwright replied. 'For what you call bitter controversy is battle
-under the banner of the Lord of Hosts against the Amalekite.
-Moreover, you need not lay aside scholarship, but you must labour
-thereat, even as I have done, to make of it a weapon wherewith at
-last you shall hew Agag in pieces before the Lord.'
-
-With such words he encouraged me not only then, but daily, till ere a
-term was half over I was as hot a young Puritan as any in Cambridge.
-I cannot blame myself that I so quickly made surrender to that
-remarkable young man, whom St. John's and my college were bidding
-against each other to possess, and who has since made so great a stir
-in England, becoming the very head and heart of the Puritan party.
-
-I had not even good Mr. Follet's influence to help me, for he left
-Cambridge a few days after to take up his place as tutor to Harry and
-one or two other young gentlemen about the Court, to whom he had been
-commended by his good friend Mr. Ascham, a man who at that time was
-the very oracle of the nobility on all such matters.
-
-I was glad enough my tutor was spared any further sight of the
-ill-conditioned state of his university, and, above all, the hornets'
-nest which I soon found my unhappy exploit had stirred up.
-
-It was some days after his departure that I was sitting at the window
-of my lodging pretending to read, but in truth listening to the
-Vice-Master and Mr. Cartwright, who were talking over Mr.
-Saunderson's recent expulsion from his fellowship.
-
-'And how think you the Vice-Chancellor will take it?' said Mr.
-Cartwright thoughtfully.
-
-'Who cares how?' said Mr. Beaumont hotly. 'Who cares what a Romish
-mule like Baker thinks? If he cannot stomach it, so much the worse
-for his Cretan belly.'
-
-'And yet I think he is like to take some order in the matter,' said
-Mr. Cartwright, 'seeing how sturdy a papist Saunderson was.'
-
-'Doubt not he will talk big enough,' answered the Vice-Master. 'He
-thinks because he is Provost of King's he can lift up his head over
-Trinity men. Yet let him beware, or he shall find that Pharaoh will
-lift up the head of the King's Baker from off his shoulders, and good
-Protestant fowls shall eat the flesh from off him. And besides, what
-order can he take? For if we cannot expel a fellow for observing
-fasts and particular days, not to speak of using allegory and citing
-Plato when publicly discoursing on the Scriptures, we may just as
-well write ourselves heathen idolaters and Italian atheists at once.'
-
-At this moment I heard the tramp of armed men below the window, and,
-looking out, I perceived the Proctor with the beadles and his watch
-in the court below halting at our staircase. At that time the
-Proctor's watch always went at night harnessed with good morions and
-corselets, for fear of the Mayor's constable and his men, but it was
-not common to see them so by day.
-
-Mr. Proctor demanded admittance in the Vice-Chancellor's name, and
-therewith entered the room with the beadles and two halberdiers,
-whose bright armour seemed strangely out of place in our dim and
-dusty lodging.
-
-'I arrest you, John Beaumont,' said the Proctor, 'for brawling and
-other offences against the peace and dignity of our Lady the Queen
-and this University.'
-
-'At whose suit?' asked the Vice-Master.
-
-'At Mr. Saunderson's,' he answered. 'Here is the warrant; I pray you
-come peaceably.'
-
-'Oh, I will come gladly enough!' said Mr. Beaumont, 'if it were only
-to enjoy the discomfiture it will bring the King's Baker when Sir
-William Cecil hears of it. Thank God, we have a Chancellor who knows
-my brother and me for true men, and can make a traitor's ears
-tingle--ay, and his back too. Let my brother know all, Mr.
-Cartwright, and pray him write without delay to Sir William.'
-
-The Proctor looked a little troubled at the mention of the great
-Secretary of State, but still he performed his task, and our
-Vice-Master was conducted to prison. And there indeed he lay till an
-answer came down from Sir William, with such a stinging reprimand for
-Dr. Baker that he was glad enough to release Mr. Beaumont and eat his
-humble pie, thanking God it was no worse.
-
-Were I to speak at greater length of Cambridge as it was at that
-time, I should have little else to tell save ringing the changes on
-what happened to me in the first week of residence. Factions and
-contentions were our only occupation; and while the seniors
-quarrelled the students brawled, and grew daily more inordinate and
-contemptuous of rules for their orderly governance, as well in
-behaviour as in religion.
-
-As for learning, it was only part and parcel with our manners. Our
-only philosophy was controversy concerning the ordinances of the
-English Church; while in grammar we studied nothing so much as how to
-rail in Ciceronian Latin,--and cunning professors we had, at least
-for the railing.
-
-Sharing Mr. Cartwright's lodging, I was more fortunate than most.
-Though very earnest in the controversies, he would not neglect his
-scholarship nor mine. Every morning he rose between three and four,
-not allowing himself more than five hours' sleep, whatever happened.
-I rose with him, out of my love of him and learning; and pushing my
-trundle-bed under his standing bedstead, to make room for my stool
-beside him, read with him out of the books we loved so well till nigh
-ten o'clock, when dinner was served in the Hall.
-
-After that the disputations in the schools began, which I always
-attended with him, being proud to carry the books of the most
-brilliant scholar and popular orator in Cambridge.
-
-Between that and supper-time I exercised my body, as I had promised
-Sir Fulke, chiefly in the fencing-school. For there was newly come
-to Cambridge at that time an Italian master of fence, to whom all the
-best gentlemen in the University resorted to learn the new foining
-rapier play, to the great discomfiture of the teachers of sword and
-buckler. Moreover, I rode out continually to the artillery butts or
-the Gog-Magog hills, till Mr. Cartwright persuaded me to abandon the
-evil company that gathered there daily for pastime.
-
-So things went with me and the University, till in the summer of the
-year of grace 1564 a great and notable thing for us came to pass.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-It was after hall one day, in the middle of July, that Mr. Cartwright
-came up to me with the great news.
-
-'Our time has come at last, Jasper,' said he; 'this day the
-Vice-Chancellor has received a letter from Mr. Secretary with very
-sharp orders for the burying of our differences, seeing that the
-Queen's grace will make progress here early in August.'
-
-'That is news indeed,' said I; 'will there not be great things done
-for her entertainment?'
-
-'That is the way my content lies,' answered Mr. Cartwright, radiant.
-'There will be disputations, great disputations, where we shall pour
-into her gracious ear the true wisdom of Reformation, and refute our
-backsliding, halting adversaries.'
-
-'But it is always said,' I replied, 'that the Queen clings to
-ceremonies and superstitions.'
-
-'So she does,' he said, 'and were it not that that godly man, Lord
-Robert Dudley, is ever at her side, things might go harder with the
-faithful than they do.'
-
-'Truly,' said I, 'our High Steward is very earnest for the truth, but
-how shall we prevail with her better than he?'
-
-'God will give us strength, and words, and wisdom,' he answered
-excitedly. 'I shall stand forth in His might at the great
-disputation, and speak words of fire that the Lord shall whisper in
-my ears. She shall listen and know it is the word of God that she
-hears; and lo! she shall go forth from Cambridge henceforth thrice
-blessed, to search out and destroy utterly throughout the length and
-breadth of the land all that the people have disobediently saved from
-the destruction of Amalek.'
-
-'But will she surely hearken?' I said, half pitying and half fearing
-to see him lifting up his voice like one of the prophets.
-
-'Ay, lad!' he cried, growing more and more excited, 'I know she will.
-She is young and good and wise. She has been surrounded by evil
-councillors, but the Lord has bidden me go cry to her, that she may
-see the way of England's, ay, and the world's, salvation.'
-
-It was not until the day after the Queen arrived, when she rode out
-of her lodgings at King's to visit the colleges, that my eyes were
-gladdened with the sight of that most sublime Princess.
-
-I took my stand in Trinity, near the door of the hall, to see her
-ride into it. I shall never forget that sight as she passed on erect
-upon her horse, in a black velvet gown and hat. It was before the
-present monstrous fashions had come into use, and her costume so set
-off the brilliancy of her complexion and the ruddy glow of her hair
-that she looked radiant as a goddess in the joy of her reception, and
-the full flush and beauty of youthful womanhood.
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN ELIZABETH]
-
-As she rode on into the hall I fell upon my knees to worship what
-seemed to me, who had never spoken to and hardly seen a beautiful
-woman before, the most lovely sight my eyes had ever beheld.
-
-With all my lungs I shouted 'Vivat Regina Divina.' She heard my cry
-and smiled down upon me, and I, poor soul, like I know not how many
-more beside me that day, rose up over ears in love with my Queen.
-
-And why should I not? Could a gentleman have a more worthy love?
-Some speak of her littlenesses, and mumble over her womanly faults.
-I, for one, will not listen to them. I did not see them. I
-worshipped what I saw. What that was all men know.
-
-What witnesses could I call in her defence were she arraigned before
-a Court of Perfect Womanhood! And those not her own subjects
-either--it is only natural that they should praise--but foreigners,
-as any may know who have heard, as I have, Signor Giordano Bruno, the
-wisest of all who in my time have travelled hither, and my good
-friend, exhaust his surpassing eloquence in praising her.
-
-'I hold her,' so I have heard him say, 'for a princess without peer
-or rival, a woman so gifted and favoured of Heaven, that whether for
-heroism or learning or sagacity, no soldier, or lawyer, or statesman
-in her kingdom is her equal. I tell you that the wisdom, the
-dignity, the statesmanship, the wit, the beauty of that most royal
-lady has won her a throne upon the steps of which must humbly take
-their place, Semiramis, Dido, Cleopatra, and all princesses of whom
-the world has boasted hitherto. See where she sits upon her lofty
-seat, with the eyes of Christendom fixed upon her in astonishment and
-admiration, wondering to see how, in her beauty and dignity, as by
-the mere force that shines from her glorious face, she kept back from
-her beloved kingdom for well-nigh thirty years the storm that surged
-and roared upon the face of Europe; and, when at last it burst in
-frantic fury on your shores, hurled it back with one majestic sweep
-of her arm, and bound it down once more to receive what it was her
-will to send.'
-
-Happy, happy for the world if thou, my peerless Queen, like the new
-sun-goddess Aphrodite that thou art, shouldst open thy girdle till it
-embraced not only England and Ireland, but the whole globe. Then
-under thy benignant universal rule it should deserve the title thou
-hast won for thine own realm amongst the wisest of other lands; then
-should it be named, as they have named England, 'the pattern of
-perfect monarchy,' '_domicilium quietatis et humanitatis_.'
-
-Such, at any rate, was Cambridge while the sun stayed with us; and
-such indeed was England by the side of other realms. So completely
-did the fair flowers of scholarship which blossomed in the sunbeams
-of her presence obscure the thorns beneath, that Cambridge indeed
-appeared the garden of learning that she thought it.
-
-It was a sight I am proud to have seen when she sat in great St.
-Mary's Church beneath her canopy, with the Doctors and Bachelors in
-due order around her upon the great stage that had been erected there
-for the disputations.
-
-'Surely it is a second Sheba,' whispered Mr. Cartwright to me, as I
-stood by his side with the books he required for setting forth his
-arguments. 'She has come from the South to hear the wisdom of
-Heaven. Pray God he may give me this day some shred of the spirit of
-Solomon.'
-
-'Would God, sir,' said I, 'you might turn her heart, though I fear
-the ungodly have sorely hardened it.'
-
-'Why do you say that?' asked he.
-
-'Did she not last night,' I answered, 'listen to a play of Plautus in
-King's Chapel after evening prayer, and did they not use the
-rood-loft as a gallery for her women?'
-
-'Better use it for that,' said Mr. Cartwright, 'than for the lewd
-mockery of God they hold there daily. What wonder the poor Queen is
-led astray in that pestilent slough of Papacy where she lodges. But
-peace now, for the Proctor calls on the Respondent to begin the act.'
-
-Mr. Thomas Byng of Peterhouse set forth the questions of the
-philosophy act. They were two, namely, 'Monarchy is the best form of
-government;' and secondly, 'The constant changing of the laws is
-dangerous.'
-
-When his oration was finished the masters who were called to the
-disputation came forward. Mr. Cartwright's opponent in this was Mr.
-Thomas Preston of King's, a man of very goodly presence and
-sufficient wit, though more fit for a courtier than a scholar, and at
-heart little better Reformation man than the rest of the King's
-fellows.
-
-He made a speech well wrought enough, and delivered with courtly
-gesture, and very trippingly, to the great pleasure of the Queen.
-Yet for fire, learning, persuasion, and all that pertains to true
-rhetoric and philosophy, it was, to my mind, but the chatter of a jay
-beside my Mr. Cartwright's speaking.
-
-I could see the Queen was well pleased with what he said. It was
-like being in paradise with the angels for me to watch her beautiful
-face, wherein was delicately mirrored all the subtle perceiving
-qualities of her most polished mind, as each was stirred by the magic
-of my master's tongue.
-
-As I look back to it now it seems to me like the shining surface of
-some tropic lake, wherein the great soul of God, that dwells in the
-trees and flowers and vines, is mirrored each moment more gloriously
-as the soft breath of heaven from time to time breaks up the
-reflected image.
-
-I dwell on this because some have said, most wantonly, that Mr.
-Cartwright was so vexed at the favour the Queen afterwards showed to
-Mr. Preston that he thenceforward became a bitter enemy of the church
-she loved. I say it is a wanton lie to speak so. My master was too
-great a soul to harbour such littleness. His hatred of prelacy and
-superstitious forms was of older and firmer standing than that. If
-at that time he changed at all in opinion, it was that he saw too
-well there was no hope of winning the Queen, and that it was to
-Parliament and the people he must henceforth look.
-
-He was very silent as we left the church, and in spite of all I could
-say concerning the Queen's plain pleasure in his speech, I could see
-the melancholy of his face grow deeper and its resolution sterner. I
-know that he saw at once that he had failed, and perceived clearly
-before him the long life of toil and pain and bitterness through
-which he was thenceforth to fight his way.
-
-I was very glad that evening as we sat together gloomily in our
-lodging to hear a knocking at the door. I went to open it, and found
-there a gentleman of the Court, tall of stature, but so wrapped in
-his cloak and shaded by a large Spanish hat that I could not tell who
-it was.
-
-'Is Mr. Cartwright within?' said the gentleman.
-
-'Would you have speech with him?' asked I.
-
-'Yes, and alone,' answered the gentleman. I knew not what to do, but
-Mr. Cartwright, who had started up at the sound of the stranger's
-voice, cried out at once to me that I should go.
-
-I went out straightway to King's College to see the seniors and Court
-ladies go in to the play of Dido, which was being presented there
-that night, wherein Mr. Thomas Preston was playing a chief part.
-
-In an hour's time I returned, but hearing voices still within my
-lodging, waited outside, where a lamp swung over the door. Very soon
-the voices ceased, and the gentleman came out. He seemed so occupied
-with his recent talk with Mr. Cartwright that he took no pains to
-conceal his face, and as he passed out by the lamp I could see it was
-none other than Lord Robert Dudley.
-
-'What said Lord Robert about it?' I asked when I went in, thinking he
-had certainly come from the Queen to speak with my master about his
-oration.
-
-'How knew you it was Lord Robert?' said he quickly.
-
-'I saw his face by the lamp-light,' said I, surprised at his
-sharpness.
-
-'Then tell no man what you saw,' he answered. He was silent a
-moment, and then, as though he thought best to tell me more, since I
-knew so much, or perhaps for very longing to speak with some one, he
-went on.
-
-'He came not to speak of the oration,' said he, 'but of deeper
-matters, of things which nearly concern our Reformation. God grant
-he be a true man!'
-
-'But is he not surely a true friend of ours?' I asked.
-
-'I know not, lad, I know not,' he said. 'He speaks fair enough, but
-I doubt there is too much wind under his cap for us to count too much
-on his steadfastness. Still, better a popinjay at Court than no
-friend at all. Things look black indeed if all he says be true. God
-knows what counsel is being breathed in the Queen's ears, but 'tis
-certain her right hand is held out to Spain. Since peace was made
-with France, I thought there would be leisure for England to complete
-the good work within herself; but now this dallying with Spain and
-the woman of Scotland of which I hear may mar all, and we perhaps
-shall have to fight the fight again. Heaven send these piracies--of
-which Mr. Drake writes to us, and of which Lord Robert speaks--may by
-God's help prosper, till they make a breach between His people and
-the spawn of antichrist, such as no Queen or King or embassy can
-heal.'
-
-It surprised me to hear so godly a man as Mr. Cartwright speak of
-Heaven prospering piracy, but I was wont to believe all he said was
-right, and held my peace. He went on then to tell me how earnest her
-Majesty was that Lord Robert should marry the Queen of Scots, and how
-well she had received the new Spanish ambassador at Richmond, and
-many other evil signs.
-
-'But surely, sir,' said I, 'in this she deserves the praise of our
-party, seeing that if the Queen of Scots had so godly a husband as
-our High Steward, all practices against the cause in Scotland would
-end, and a true succession be assured.'
-
-'Speak not of it, lad,' Mr. Cartwright replied. 'It is but cozening
-of the Lord to dally thus with antichrist. England must have no part
-with the accursed thing. Rome and Reformation, there are these two,
-and no other; and we must choose between them. Pray, lad, and watch
-and toil by night and day, by thought and deed, that the choice may
-be the right. Above all, pray, as I have ever bid you, that we may
-see the Queen speedily matched to some godly Protestant lord, so
-that, being blessed with issue, she may keep the succession clear
-from all fear of Romish taint. Wrestle, lad, with the Lord for that.
-It is the only hope and safeguard of Reformation in England.'
-
-He uttered no more than we all thought then from the wisest and most
-wide-seeing to the most ignorant and bigoted. He, I think, saw it
-more plainly than many, and during the rest of the Queen's visit we
-spoke of little but these things, till I fully shared his thought
-that the tide of Rome, which, had begun to flow again, and had
-already covered so many fair Protestant provinces, was setting hard
-towards England; and each morn and night my prayers went up with
-those of all our party, and many a one beside, that the Queen might
-soon be wed.
-
-So moved was I by all this talk that I could take but little note of
-the disputations, plays, and pageants with which my university
-entertained the Queen, the more so as Mr. Cartwright took no more
-part in them. Still, I saw her every day, and dreamed of her every
-night, feeling I loved her more and more for the dangers that
-surrounded her, and that I would spare not even my life to ward her
-from her enemies.
-
-On the 10th of August, after a morning shower of degrees upon all the
-Court, the Queen left Cambridge, and I not long afterwards, being
-troubled with an ague, went home to Longdene.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-'Hail! man of learning,' cried Harry to me, as the day after my
-coming home I rode up to Ashtead. He was standing at the gate about
-to mount his horse as though for a journey. He had grown a man since
-I saw him, and looked handsomer and happier than I had ever seen him.
-
-'Hail! man of courts and camps,' I cried him back, 'whither away so
-fast?'
-
-'No whither, lad,' said he, 'since you are come, and whither I was
-going I will not tell you, till I hear first where your life-blood
-has gone. 'Slight, man, you look as pale and dry as a love-lorn
-stock-fish. What ails you?'
-
-'Nought but a piece of an ague,' said I, feeling the sight of him
-like medicine to me, 'and perhaps a surfeit of weary wits.'
-
-'Well, save us from universities, then,' answered he. 'Courts and
-camps have their dangers, they say, but, 'fore heaven, I think your
-college is a very Castle Perilous beside them!'
-
-'How will you make that good, most sapient brother?'
-
-'Nay, the maxim is good already, without my making. For, look you,
-in camp a man shall lose at most his life, and at Court his heart;
-but your college puts his spirits in danger, and to be spiritless is
-worse a thousand times than to be dead or even in love.'
-
-'Well, I think you may be right, and in any case have enough spirits
-to share with me.'
-
-'Nay, if you want spirits, come with me whither I was going, and I
-will show you a man who has enough to set a whole graveyard singing.'
-
-'Why, 'tis a very resurrection of spirits. Come, tell me who is your
-miracle man?'
-
-'Who is he? Why, who should he be but that man of men, that prince
-of good companions, Frank Drake?'
-
-'Nay, then I am for you; if it were only to keep peace amongst my
-members. For my ears have had so much of him that I think my eyes
-are like to fall out with them from pure jealousy.'
-
-'Well, 'tis a bargain, then; and we both go a-fishing with him in his
-bark.'
-
-'In his bark? Is he then master already?'
-
-'Ay, that he is. Old Master Death mastered his old master, and now
-he is his own master and his bark's too. For he got that by the old
-dog's will.'
-
-'Well, I am right glad to hear it. But tell me, is he all his
-brothers say?'
-
-'And more, and more, and more again! Why, man, he is my own Lord of
-Bedford with a Will Somers rolled into him, and who could be more of
-a man than that? But we can talk of this as we go along. First come
-within and see my father, while Lashmer gives your horse a bite, that
-we may ride forward.'
-
-Lashmer, I had better say here, was son to Miles, my steward. He
-rode with me on this day, and henceforth became my body-servant and
-most trusty and trusted follower. He was a broad-faced, red-haired
-lad, but not very hard-featured, though his face was just of that
-honest Kentish sort that made one feel compelled to laugh by the mere
-looking at it.
-
-Sir Fulke greeted me boisterously, as usual, with a hearty welcome
-well peppered with oaths, which, I must say, burnt my palate more
-them they used to.
-
-'Art going fishing with Harry?' said my guardian, when our greeting
-was done.
-
-'Yes, sir,' cried Harry; 'we are going to catch Spanish mackerel.'
-
-They both laughed heartily at this, I knew not why; but not having
-heard of such a fish as he named, I thought it was a jest of Harry's
-which my scholar's wits were too hard to see.
-
-'Have you brought your snappers with you?' asked Harry.
-
-'Yes,' said I; 'a pretty case of short ones that were my father's,
-since Miles said the roads were far from safe. But will you shoot
-these fish?'
-
-'No, lad,' said Harry, and he and Sir Fulke both seemed to be
-strangling another laugh; 'but, as you say, one meets
-fellow-travellers now whom it is well to treat at a distance, so
-every gentleman rides with a brace of dags or so in his saddle.'
-'Blame yourselves for it,' said Sir Fulke. 'For since your new
-Reformation men have sent fish out of fashion, in spite of all Mr.
-Secretary can do with his acts and ordinances, fishermen have to fish
-ashore. The hundred of Hoo swarms with such folk, so that a man may
-hardly come to Gravesend in safety. There is never a lane in Kent
-which some of the valiant lubbers will not drag once in a week for
-any fin that's stirring. God knows what will become of the
-sea-service if gentlemen do not set the fashion for fishing again,'
-and therewith the old knight chuckled again till his face was redder
-than a doughty turkey-cock's.
-
-'Come, let us away,' said Harry, 'or Frank Drake will have a rod for
-me. He is testy as the devil if a man be late.'
-
-'What!' said I, 'will he not bide a gentleman's time?'
-
-'Wait till you see him,' answered Harry. 'The sea, in Frank's
-company, is a mighty leveller of gentility. Here, take this; we
-shall be out all night.'
-
-So saying, he tossed me a cloak, and we set out.
-
-The way proved all too short, so much had we to tell each other.
-Harry was overflowing with the delights of the Court. He seemed able
-to talk for ever on the pageants and masques, in which, to my sorrow,
-he had taken a great share; for at Cambridge the men of our party
-began to look askance at such vanities.
-
-It pleased me better to hear him speak of the grace and beauty of the
-Court ladies, who seemed to have been very kind to him. He spoke of
-them in a tone of chivalrous rapture, which made me sometimes long to
-have his gifts, that I too might please women, and know how to speak
-with them, and be thought worthy to be their squire. But I tried
-hard, when he spoke of such things with kindling eyes, to crush my
-chivalry, having well learnt my lesson that this, too, was a carnal
-vanity.
-
-Above all, he praised the Queen as one that shone like a ruby amongst
-pearls, and there I suffered myself to join his song. I think he was
-as much in love with her as I.
-
-Next to the Queen he spoke most of a little girl, called Anne St.
-John, who, from what he said, seemed rather his tyrant than his
-playfellow. She was ever with the Earl, either at Russell House or
-at Woburn, being a niece of the good Countess Margaret, his beloved
-wife, who died soon after Harry joined the Earl's household. My lord
-found great comfort, Harry said, in the child's pretty ways as much
-as in her beauty, for she had ruddy hair and deep brown eyes, like
-the Queen.
-
-She was moreover much beloved by her cousins, the Earl's daughters,
-so that it came about that Harry saw her every day, and became her
-playfellow and willing servant. He made me laugh to hear him speak
-of her tyrannous ways and her jealousy.
-
-'I know not what kind of woman she will grow,' he said; 'but now she
-is the sweetest toy a man could want, and wayward as a haggard. Yet
-my lord will often curb her in his dry, merry way, and she will be as
-thoughtful after it as a little Solomon. Were her pretty spirit in a
-colt I would not care to have his breaking; yet I think that any life
-which my lord will take in hand will never grow awry.'
-
-So he fell to speaking of his lord, Sir Francis Russell, Earl of
-Bedford, to whom he seemed as devoted as ever I was to Mr.
-Cartwright; above all, when he followed him to the north, on his
-being named Governor of Berwick and Warden of the East Marches, and
-saw how great a statesman and soldier he was.
-
-'Truly,' said he, 'may I count myself fortunate in thus being able to
-go in the train of so famous a captain to the best school of arms in
-the country, as Berwick is held to be, not only because of the
-passages of arms that continually take place on the Border, but also
-by reason of the number of skilled and veteran soldiers that are
-gathered there.'
-
-'Then you had a plenitude of professors,' said I.
-
-'Ay, and a plenitude of practice too,' he answered; 'and that in all
-military sciences. For my lord's first care was to increase the
-strength of the defences of the place. So I saw all that craft,
-besides gunnery and weapon exercise, both in play and earnest.
-Furthermore, my lord took me for secretary when he rode during the
-summer with Sir John Foster to settle the limits of the marches, and
-there I learned much of the conduct of military councils and affairs,
-together with many other things that a prudent soldier should know
-and be silent about. Certes, I think I have as much valiant
-scholarship in six months as many come by in six years.'
-
-'And no wonder,' said I, 'with such a godly and warlike tutor.'
-
-'Ay,' cried Harry, with enthusiasm, 'he is a very pattern of all
-valour, piety, and gentleness, and rightly called "the mirror of true
-honour and Christian nobility."'
-
-Indeed, I think he was right. For surely never was royal gift more
-wisely disposed than the wealth with which King Henry endowed Lord
-Russell and his father. Would God the whole of what he stripped from
-the monasteries had fallen into no worse vessels than those two!
-What a pattern of reformation, then, might England indeed have been
-to all the world, lifted far above the reach of even Papist sneer and
-cavil,--in very deed _domicilium quietatis et humanitatis_!
-
-I could fully share Harry's regret when he told me that he had left
-Berwick for good and all. But it was needful that he should be a
-short time with his father before setting forth on his travels into
-France and Italy--a course which the Earl had himself strongly urged,
-as being most necessary for the perfect shaping of a gentleman and
-the building up of a full-grown manhood, wherein, he held, there was
-no such hindrance either in court or camp or council as in youth to
-have known no travel.
-
-Talking thus together of the two years in which we had both passed
-into the dawn of manhood amidst such different scenes, we came to
-Rochester, where we left our horses in Lashmer's charge and took the
-boat, which two of Mr. Drake's boys had brought for Harry.
-
-It made a man of me again to be once more on the river, though I did
-not like to see Harry whisper to the two Drakes and see them nod and
-grin in reply. But I soon forgot this in chatting, as we did,
-chiefly of Frank and his boat.
-
-'Look there!' cried the boys at last. 'Was ever such a dainty?'
-
-I looked and saw a smart-looking craft, such as is used in the
-Zeeland trade, but in better trim than most, lying at moorings close
-to Mr. Drake's hulk.
-
-The boys gave us a lusty cheer as we ran alongside their home and I
-sprang on deck. Mr. Drake embraced me with such fervour and smell of
-tar that I was well-nigh undone, but John and Joseph tore me from
-him, crying, 'Come and see Frank, come and see Frank!'
-
-Seizing each an arm, they dragged me to the cabin under the poop,
-where for the first time I saw that prince of captains, Francis Drake.
-
-Ah! how my heart is lifted up when I think of that September
-afternoon; when I contemplate the condition of two men that day about
-to enter into a life-long struggle which was to glitter with the most
-glorious deeds the world has seen: the one a plain rough mariner, in
-his coarse sailor's slops, sitting in a dingy cabin, intent on a rude
-map of the Indies, the meanest ship-master of an island queen; the
-other an emperor in purple and gold, seated on the loftiest throne in
-Europe, the most powerful monarch in the world, with the crowns of
-six kingdoms clustered on his brow, and the gold of two worlds
-pouring into his lap;--the one surrounded by rude fisher lads; the
-other surfeited with the homage of the most skilful captains, the
-proudest nobles, the most cunning councillors these modern times have
-bred.
-
-Surely no more notable example of God's power to humble pride and
-reward wickedness has ever been seen. Little could I guess then what
-his lot was to be, though when I looked on the man I might have known
-there was no task too great for Francis Drake to achieve.
-
-God never made a man, I think, more fitted for the work he was set to
-do. His stature was low, but though he was then not past twenty
-years old, his deep broad chest and massive limbs showed the strength
-that was to be his. His head well matched his body, being
-hard-looking and round and most pleasant to look on, because of the
-bright brown locks that curled thick and close all over it, and the
-round blue eyes that shone full and clear and steadfast from under
-his thick arched brows. His mouth, which was already slightly
-fringed with a light-coloured beard, was of a piece with the rest,
-wide and good-humoured, with full, well-formed, mobile lips, such as
-we look for in an orator, and withal firm and self-reliant. His
-colour, moreover, was fresh and fair, as of a man whom no sickness
-could take hold of; and his whole aspect so well-favoured and full of
-cheerful resolution as I could not wonder made his family set him up
-to be their idol.
-
-'I am very glad to see you, Mr. Festing,' said he, rising up as I
-entered and holding out his hand very frankly. 'I am glad you are
-come. We want strong hands for our fishing. Jack has told me what
-kind of blow you can strike.'
-
-'But I have only a scholar's arm now,' I said. 'Once I could pull an
-oar and tally on a drag-net indifferently well, but I doubt study has
-softened me.'
-
-Arching his eyebrows still more, he looked at me with that expression
-which I grew to know so well, and which as much as anything, I think,
-made him the master of men he was. It was a look half inquisitive,
-half astonished, yet wholly good-humoured. It seemed to wonder if a
-man could be so foolish as to try to deceive or thwart him, and to be
-ready to laugh at the folly of such an attempt rather than to resent
-it. Though there was plainly something in my speech he did not
-understand, yet he was soon satisfied, and burst out into a
-boisterous laugh.
-
-''Fore God,' said he, 'you are a merry wag,' and then laughed on so
-heartily that no man could help taking the fever, and I laughed too,
-though I knew no better than the stern-post where the jest was.
-
-'Yes, you may laugh,' said Mr. Drake, who had joined us. 'Frank
-knows how to fish, so do my boys. They will catch you now bigger
-fish than any man's sons in all Kent.'
-
-'Where is James?' asked I, not seeing Mr. Drake's fourth son. 'Will
-he not go with us?'
-
-'Peace,' said Harry, as the preacher turned away, and the laughter
-was hushed. 'Don't you know?'
-
-'Let me tell him,' said Frank Drake, looking so stern as almost to
-seem another man. 'You must know, Mr. Festing, nigh a year ago he
-was 'prenticed in a ship that traded to Spain. We have no certain
-news of her, but very ugly tidings of what befell a crew that sailed
-in her company.'
-
-'What tidings were those?' asked I.
-
-'Come away,' said Frank; 'dad forbids us to speak of it. "Avenge it,
-if you will," says he, "but speak not of it."'
-
-We went apart, and he told me one of those stories of which my ears
-were soon but too well filled: of a ship's crew seized in a remote
-port of Spain, and on pretext of some unruly conduct of one or two
-half-drunken men ashore, first thrown into prison, and then handed
-over to the officers of the Inquisition.
-
-'Such, we fear, is Jim's fate,' said Drake, as he ended his story.
-'It is most like he lies rotting now with his shipmates in some
-filthy dungeon, if worse has not befallen him at the hands of those
-hell-hounds. But come, let us not think of it. The tide has turned,
-and it is time we were away.'
-
-We were soon aboard Frank Drake's boat, which was called the
-_Gazehound_. I could not help seeing how trim she was from stem to
-stern compared with other such craft engaged in the French and
-Zeeland trade. Nor could I but wonder at the ready despatch with
-which Frank's crew obeyed his orders. Indeed, we were hardly aboard
-a minute before we were running fast towards the sea, with a gentle
-breeze behind us, and the wicked river rushing recklessly along with
-us.
-
-I know not whether it was some inward warning that made the Medway
-look so dark and cruel as it curled about our sides, or whether it
-was the effect on my worn brain of Frank Drake's fearful tale, which
-he told with fierce earnestness. Yet as the misty darkness deepened
-and the low waste of marsh on either hand began to be lost in the
-night, a sort of horror came over me, perhaps a part of my ague. It
-seemed that we, the river and ourselves, were rushing wildly on to
-some deed that we must hide from heaven. The curdling river seemed
-some huge snake, for whose help we had sold our souls. Rejoicing at
-its work and the folly of its dupe, it seemed to hiss in low laughter
-like a fiend's about us.
-
-I turned from where I looked over the side to break the spell. Harry
-and all the boys, with one or two of the crew, were gathered aft
-around Frank as he sat tiller in hand. I could see them all by the
-light of the lantern we carried. Frank was telling them another
-hideous story of Spanish treachery and cruelty to English mariners
-who had come to trade in the Canaries.
-
-His wide blue eyes were flashing in the excitement of his tale, and
-Harry and the Drake boys were no less excited than he. Even then I
-could see he had that wonderful gift of words by which afterwards at
-his will he could always raise or calm a storm amongst his followers.
-
-Still the night deepened and the river grew darker and more devilish,
-as hand in hand with it we sped on through the darkness to our work.
-The flickering lantern cast strange lights and shadows upon the
-little group at the stern, till they seemed to be rather like some
-foul spirits than my good friends.
-
-They cried to me to join them, but I said I was weary with a headache
-because of my sickness, and would sleep. I crept in then below the
-foredeck, and lay down upon a sail. There was something beneath it
-which made it an uneasy bed. I raised the canvas to see what it
-might be, and beheld some half-dozen longbows, quite new, and several
-sheaves of arrows. I think my sleep would have been easier had I not
-sought to remove the cause of my uneasiness.
-
-For now I began to guess the meaning of all the jests I had heard,
-and questioned Harry when soon after he came to lie beside me.
-
-'What fish, Harry,' I asked, 'is this that you bring me to catch with
-pistols and long-bows?'
-
-'A fish that swims from Antwerp,' answered Harry, laughing. 'Wait
-and you shall see, if we have luck or judgment.'
-
-There was little laughter in me as I lay there in the dim lantern
-light, with the sound of the wicked river whispering temptation in my
-ear. Was it that which seemed to take from me the power to rebuke in
-him what seemed to me no less than sin; or was it shame lest he
-should think that Cambridge had so softened and unmanned me that I no
-longer would follow wherever he led?
-
-Harry must be right, thought I, and Frank Drake too! It must be
-right, yet would God I were in my trundle bed at Mr. Cartwright's
-side again! Surely Cambridge was sorely changing me. The great
-struggle of my life had begun, though I knew it not; the strife for
-the mastery of me between the inward man-made life of scholarship and
-vain hurry after God, and the strong, pure, out-o'-door life of
-England that God Himself had given me for my birthday gift.
-
-Who shall say which is best? Not I, now I am old; but then, as I lay
-there beside Harry, in my vanity and blindness I said to myself:
-'Surely his life is not of God; it is mine that is from heaven, the
-search after wisdom, the merciless war for truth, the exalting of the
-spirit and abasement of the body.'
-
-My lips were trembling with a prayer that he might be turned and grow
-like me, but then I opened my eyes to look at him through the dim
-lantern light, and my prayer died unborn. Surely that
-gently-breathing figure, lying so calm and careless there in all its
-manly beauty, surely that must be all God's work, and what came of it
-His work as well.
-
-So let me cease to resist, and let the hissing river hurry me on
-wheresoever it will with him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-It was John Drake's rough voice that aroused me, as the soft morning
-light glimmered into the cabin where I had been sleeping.
-
-'Rise quickly,' said he; 'the fish is in sight, and Frank says you
-must bear a hand, as it is a big one.'
-
-So great was that extraordinary man's hold already on me that it
-never once seemed strange that I should receive orders from him thus.
-I rose quickly, and buckled on my sword and pistols, well knowing
-what was coming.
-
-I was not at all surprised to see Harry standing, bow in hand, by
-Frank, and all the rest armed with bows and pikes.
-
-'Good-morrow, Mr. Festing,' cried Drake. 'Heaven has sent the
-Antwerpers fortune to-day. Ere another hour or so they will be
-spared all further trouble for their cargo. See where she lies.'
-
-It was a lovely misty morning, such as one can only see in the
-Channel on a sunny autumn day. Nothing was in sight but the shadowy
-form of a good-sized caravel on our larboard bow, heavily laden, and
-toiling at a snail's pace across our course.
-
-As we drew nearer I could make out that she was at least twice,
-perhaps three times, our size, though I could see but few men on
-board her. Still my heart began to beat heavily.
-
-'Steady now, lads,' cried Drake, as some of his brothers began to
-show signs of excitement; 'steady, or we shall get never a bite. Get
-up on the forecastle, Jack, and mend a bit of net; and do you, Mr.
-Waldyve, carol us out a French ditty for a bait. And, look you, not
-a glint and glimmer of weapon.'
-
-Thus, with nothing to show we were not an ordinary French
-fishing-boat, we bore towards the caravel so as to pass close under
-her stern to windward. They, seeing our purpose, and fearing some
-ill-dealing, no doubt, since those waters were even then winning an
-evil name, hailed us.
-
-Still we held on without answer, till they hailed again, asking what
-countrymen we were.
-
-'Now for an English greeting!' cried Drake. 'It would be less than
-courtesy not to let them know our country since they ask so fairly.'
-
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when our bows twanged and a
-little cloud of arrows swept over the caravel. With loud derisive
-cries our crew fitted fresh shafts. Thick and fast they flew, till
-the crew of the caravel dared not show themselves on deck. Every man
-hurried below to shelter himself, except him who was at the helm.
-Bravely he held on in spite of our shafts, till, with a shudder, I
-saw an arrow strike him under the arm. With a low cry he fell on his
-face across the tiller.
-
-The caravel hove up into the wind, and I saw the steersman turned
-helplessly head over ears as the helm swung round--a sickening sight
-to see.
-
-'Save you for a pretty tumbler!' cried Joe Drake, and all the rest
-but Frank and Harry laughed loud.
-
-'Steady, lads, steady,' said he; 'look to your pikes, and gentlemen
-to their swords, or we shall some of us laugh the wrong side.'
-
-As we fell aboard of her I drew my rapier. I can say without pride I
-was by this time no mean fencer, though a bungler beside Harry; yet
-so strange did my blade seem, now that for the first time I drew it
-in earnest, that I felt as though I had never handled one before.
-
-Still, there was no time to think. Frank Drake sprang aboard, Harry
-after him, I after Harry. No sooner did our feet touch the deck than
-out of the after-cabin burst a half-dressed cavalier, rapier in hand.
-Some nine or ten men were at his back, armed with swords and daggers.
-
-With a loud cry they ran upon us, the gentleman straight at me. He
-seemed mad with fury, for he made no shift to fence, more than to
-rush on with uplifted blade as though straightway to _arrebatar_ with
-a wiping sweep, after the method of Carranza. I did but offer him my
-point _di intrare_, and he spitted himself or ever he came within his
-proportion. It was but murder. God forgive me for it when His will
-is! It made me sick to see my rapier half-hidden in his breast, as
-his sword-arm dropped, and for a moment he stood gnashing his teeth
-before he fell backward.
-
-I shut my eyes as the blade drew hard from the wound, and reeled
-against the bulwarks, feeling dizzy with horror and my sickness.
-When I opened my eyes again it was well-nigh all over. For, save for
-two of his servants, no one resisted after the gentleman fell. The
-rest were poor Dutch mariners who cared little who had the cargo they
-carried, so long as they kept their skins whole.
-
-The serving-men were quickly overpowered, and the rest of the crew
-driven within the forecastle. Then Harry came up and slapped me on
-the back.
-
-'Well done, Jasper,' he said. ''Slight, it was a pretty thrust, a
-most scholarly _imbroccata_. Would that Sir Fulke had been here to
-see what his errant disciple can do! Perhaps he would rail less at
-your Italian bodkin-play, and would say, I doubt not, that they can
-teach something beside Latins at Trinity. But what is it, man? You
-look as if the blade were through you instead of him.'
-
-'Hush, Harry!' I said. 'For God's sake, look to him, for I dare not.'
-
-'Poor lad!' answered my dear brother, who could always feel for me
-far more than for himself, 'you are too sick for this bloody work. I
-will do as you bid, though there is little hope for him.'
-
-But there was no need, for as I turned to look upon my work again, I
-saw Frank Drake leaning over the bleeding Spaniard, and, as tenderly
-as a woman, trying to staunch the wound.
-
-It filled me with new wonder and love for this man to see how his
-fierce courage melted to gentleness as soon as the danger was over.
-I marvelled, too, to see how apt he was at surgery even then, though
-he had not yet attained to that great skill which afterwards he made
-it his duty to acquire.
-
-It seemed to make war wondrous gentle to see him, and I was better
-able to give my help. We soon disposed the wounded man more easily,
-and went to minister to the helmsman, but, alas! he was stone dead.
-
-Meanwhile the others had bound the crew, and Frank Drake set about
-questioning them. I don't know whether it made any difference to
-him, but he was most instant to find out if the cargo were Spanish
-owned.
-
-While we were thus engaged there was a sudden cry of a sail in sight.
-Looking up, I could see a tall ship looming through the silver mist,
-and bearing down straight for us.
-
-'Stand by to cast off, lads,' cried Frank, cool and decided, 'till we
-see what she is.'
-
-We were all on board the _Gazehound_ in a minute, and sat
-breathlessly waiting to see what our unwelcome neighbour might be.
-
-Slowly she came down upon, us before the gentle breeze, looking so
-beautiful in the morning sun that I could hardly believe that she
-might contain a pirate's death for us all. The strain would have
-been more than I could have borne had it not been that my senses
-seemed dulled with horror of my deed.
-
-Afterwards I thought it strange that no one had urged Drake to let go
-the prize and run for it; but then all seemed to think that the
-course he had made up his mind to was the only one possible.
-
-Nearer and nearer she drew, till the mist, which was very thick close
-down on the water and had till now hidden her hull, cleared a little,
-and we could see, I at least with sinking heart, the sunlight sparkle
-on the ordnance which protruded from her lofty forecastle, like the
-teeth of some savage hound.
-
-'Culverins!' whispered Harry to me. 'They have point-blank range of
-five hundred paces, and we are within that of her already. There is
-no running now, whatever befalls. Heaven send she is a Queen's ship,
-and no Spaniard.'
-
-'What matters which,' said I, 'if we are pirates? You know well what
-grievous complaints they say the Spanish ambassador has made, and
-what orders the Queen has given the navy.'
-
-'Well, wait a little. See the trumpets on the poop; they are going
-to hail us.'
-
-On she came, a glorious sight, with the sun glowing on her bulging
-sails and the perfect lines of her hull, that swept so gracefully
-from towering poop to lofty forecastle.
-
-Suddenly, as she drew level with us, her trumpets blared forth a loud
-flourish that rolled merrily away over the misty sea. The
-boatswain's pipe chirped out, and we could see the sailors stand by
-to go about.
-
-Again the trumpets brayed a fuller call, and then a mass of red and
-gold aloft unfolded itself with royal languor, till there flashed in
-the sunlight, plain to see, the beautiful banner of our island Queen.
-
-A lusty cheer from all our crew greeted the welcome flag. As it died
-away we could hear the captain of the Queen's ship hailing us to know
-who we were, and what we did.
-
-'The _Gazehound_ of Chatham--Master Drake,' shouted Frank, springing
-on the poop,--and then, after a pause, 'aiding a Spanish caravel in
-distress.'
-
-We could hear a roar of laughter on board the ship at his words, and
-the captain's voice came rolling back:
-
-'Well met, Master Drake, and a fair voyage.'
-
-We gave her another cheer as we saw her keep on her course. She
-answered us with her hautboys and other music, which we listened to
-till it grew faint in the offing, and we were left alone to do our
-will upon our prize and prisoners.
-
-As we watched her sail away so gallantly, with her gay streamers and
-gilded poop glittering like some tropic bird in the sun, I asked
-Drake what she was.
-
-'I know her well enough,' said he, 'but we ask not the names of
-Queen's ships that find us at this work. Yet I will tell you. It is
-the _Minion_, and Captain David Carlet is in command of her. He is
-bound for Guinea with the _John Baptist_ and _Merline_, both of
-London, so I know. They are going to try if they cannot draw a
-little for the Queen out of the Portugal's wells, like Mr. John
-Hawkins. Good luck go with them; but now we must to work.'
-
-After what I had seen of Drake's dealing with the cavalier I had so
-grievously hurt, I had no fear that the crew of the caravel would
-suffer at his hands any great cruelty, such as I had heard less noble
-spirits had inflicted in the fury of their revenge against the
-Inquisition.
-
-I went aboard the prize with the rest when Drake gave the order to
-rummage the cargo. We found that it consisted chiefly of silks and
-woollen goods. A few more inquiries soon showed us that they were
-Spanish owned, and, further, that the cavalier was a gentleman
-returning from secret service in the Netherlands to Spain.
-
-We quickly then completed our work. It was only to set some of the
-cargo on board the _Gazehound_ in order to lighten the caravel enough
-to allow of her being run into Otterham Channel, one of those lonely
-tortuous inlets amongst the Saltings in the mouth of the Medway which
-we had all known so well since boyhood.
-
-As soon as it was done Drake bade his brother and me carry the
-_Gazehound_ back to Rochester, while he and Harry, with half our
-crew, and some of the Netherlanders who were freed for the work, made
-sail in the caravel to the spot whither he intended to take her.
-
-So we parted company, and I with my charge came safely on the next
-morning's tide to our moorings.
-
-The Spanish bales we stowed on board Mr. Drake's hulk. He was not at
-home, purposely, as I could not help thinking, to ease his
-conscience, if indeed our piracy went in any way against it.
-
-Only poor Mrs. Drake was there, trying vainly to get her youngest boy
-away from the taffrail, outside of which he was recklessly climbing
-at the risk of a sudden grave in the rushing tide. She looked more
-wan and weary than ever when she saw what our cargo was, and soon
-seized an occasion to draw me into the cabin for a little comfort.
-
-'Mr. Festing,' she said piteously, 'for God's sake, sir, stop them
-from this bloody work. They will die in a halter, every one of them.
-God pardon me for not bearing His punishment without complaint, but
-what sinful woman was ever chastised with twelve such rods? See,
-there is blood on your own doublet! Shun this sin, Mr. Festing, for
-sin it is. How will God ever give us back our dear James if we break
-His law daily thus? Surely he has been taken in judgment for his and
-his brothers' wickedness. Frank is as bad as the rest, and leads
-them on to it. But vengeance is the Lord's, Master Jasper, and not
-for preachers' sons, for all that men cry out about spoiling the
-Egyptians.'
-
-I tried hard to comfort the poor woman, feeling deeply for her. I
-could pity her the more heartily in her misery at the little care or
-kindness her sons showed for her, seeing I knew what it was to crave
-unsatisfied for a mother's love.
-
-She had often come to me thus for comfort; yet I never found it a
-harder task than now, not only because of my own sense of sin, but
-also from my difficulty in understanding what she felt. At one
-moment she spoke of her boys as an infliction of Heaven; at another
-she seemed in terror that she should lose them; nor could I be sure
-whether her hatred of piracy came from a tenderness for them or the
-laws.
-
-I could only tell her how I had been drawn into it unawares, and
-would do all I could to turn them from further crime.
-
-'God bless you for your words, Master Jasper,' she said. 'What
-should I do if I lost my boys? I see them o' nights dangling in
-halters, and sometimes again lying in blood with Spanish blades at
-their hearts. Then I wake and pray God for comfort, till I sleep
-again; yet I only rise on the morrow to hear more talk of fights, and
-Spaniards, and wild work.'
-
-'Surely,' said I, 'God has set them apart for some notable work in
-His service, seeing how they prosper in what they do.'
-
-'Maybe, maybe,' the poor woman answered. 'Yet more times I think it
-is the devil and not God who is their master; think of it, Master
-Jasper, twelve of them, and not one a godly preacher like their
-father. What will God say to me for that? It was my hope and
-comfort when little Willie came, bless his sweet heart, that he would
-be my own boy, and God's, till he fell in with the old sword-hilt,
-and loved it just like all the rest of them; and played all day with
-it like the others, and grew as heady and masterful as the worst of
-them.'
-
-'Well, Mrs. Drake,' said I, 'I am as earnest as you to turn them to a
-better path. You and I must try, under God; yet, in truth, I know
-not which way to start.'
-
-'Will you not go to the Earl of Bedford?' she said eagerly. 'Did he
-hear what his godson did, I know he would stretch out his hand, and
-the Lord would prosper him. Truly, I thought when godly young Master
-Russell, as he was then, held my pretty curly-pated Frank at his
-baptism, that he would prove the firstfruits of a vineyard that
-should be savoury in the nostrils of the Lord. But He punished my
-pride, and lo! my vine bore nothing but thistles. Still, go to him,
-Master Jasper, and he will save them.'
-
-'But my lord is far away in Berwick,' said I, 'where I cannot reach
-him.'
-
-'Then write to him letters,' she answered, 'or go inform Sir Fulke
-how they deal with his boy. He is a Justice, and will tell the
-Queen, and stop this ungodly breaking of the laws.'
-
-I think this plan had come into my mind before; yet I had driven it
-away as one that sorted ill with my honour, and fearing to get the
-Drakes and Harry into some trouble. Now it looked less evil to me;
-for I think this poor weary mother had somewhat unmanned me. Without
-promising I said I would do all in my power, which seemed greatly to
-comfort her.
-
-So I took my leave, and coming by boat to Rochester, where I found
-Lashmer, rode gloomily towards Longdene, much pondering what way my
-duty lay.
-
-By the time I reached the place where the roads to Longdene and
-Ashtead parted, I had made up my mind, as I knew from the first I
-should. The Puritan party at Cambridge was already growing
-marvellously grim-minded. There had been many who muttered secretly
-against the masques and comedies with which the university had
-entertained the Queen, and in many other things Mr. Cartwright and
-his friends, of whom I was one of the most loyal and devoted, began
-to show a growing faith in all that made life hard and mournful, no
-less than an ever-waxing mistrust of whatever was easy and pleasant.
-
-Tried by this terrible test, my true duty, as I thought, was easy to
-see. I had an inborn English horror of tale-bearing. Here, then,
-was an occasion to wound the carnal scruple. I had a love for Harry
-that was the one bright light in my life, I had an admiration and
-belief in him that fed my hunger for guidance to a noble life. Here,
-then, was a time in which I might humble my earthly idol in the dust.
-
-Poor lad, poor lad! I can look back now from the quiet spot whither
-God has led me, and see my youth as something apart from me. I can
-pity it now, ay, and grieve for it too, seeing that I know how many
-at this very hour are torturing themselves, even as did that youth,
-that was I, long ago.
-
-When will one arise with tongue and pen of flame to show them what
-they do, that men may cease to mar what God in His wisdom and
-goodness has made so fair? Why will ye be so doting, good people?
-What blindness has seized you, so that you cannot understand the gift
-of life that He has given you? It is hard, I know, to fathom all its
-depths, and fully understand the voice with which it speaks to you;
-yet treat it not, therefore, like some poor, mad thing that must be
-laid by the heels and scourged and starved, till it grow so foul and
-ill-favoured that even the angels, who weep for the folly of mankind,
-shall turn from it with loathing.
-
-But I may not rail at you, for I was no wiser as I rode that night up
-to Ashtead. I had started late from Rochester, and it had been dark
-an hour or more before I saw the crowded turrets and gables of my
-guardian's house faintly outlined against the starlit sky.
-
-When I drew rein at the foot of the gentle slope upon which the
-manor-house stood, I could hear the sound of many horses entering the
-gate above. It seemed strange to me that so large a company should
-be coming there at so late an hour, but I soon saw the cause.
-
-As I entered the gate some serving-men were setting torches in the
-sconces round the court, and my bewildered eyes saw their lurid light
-fall on a whole train of packhorses which almost filled the place.
-
-Frank Drake together with some of his brothers and Harry were moving
-busily and silently amongst them. They had plainly just come in, and
-were setting about unloading the packs as though they had no spare
-time on their hands. Sir Fulke was standing on the steps of the hall
-looking at the busy scene below him.
-
-'Who's there?' cried he, suddenly catching sight of Lashmer and me
-dimly in the gateway. 'Where the devil is John Porter? Harry, quick
-to the gate; there are strangers!'
-
-Frank Drake and Harry whipped out their swords in a trice and sprang
-towards me.
-
-'Stand!' they cried together. 'Who are you?'
-
-'A friend!' cried I, riding out into the light and springing from my
-horse.
-
-'Mass!' said Drake, 'but I thought you were some of those rake-hells
-from Hoo that had got wind of our luck and wanted to cut a slice for
-themselves. Is my _Gazehound_ safe?'
-
-'Yes,' said I, 'safe at her moorings, and the cargo in the hold of
-the hulk. And how fares it with the Don?'
-
-'As well as man may,' answered Drake, 'with a hole such as you
-whipped through him. He lives; but no more.'
-
-'Thank God for your care of him, Mr. Drake,' said I. 'But tell me
-now, what means all this hubbub?'
-
-'Why,' answered Harry, 'only that our work took longer than yours,
-and had to be set about more secretly. Come and help unload the
-silk.'
-
-'What!' cried I, aghast; 'the stolen cargo here?'
-
-'_Blanda verba, blanda verba_, my scholar,' said Harry. 'Our prize
-of war, you would say. Of course it is; and where could it be safer
-than in the cellars of the gentleman adventurer who fitted out the
-craft that captured it?'
-
-'Surely you jest,' said I.
-
-'Nay, I jest not,' answered Harry; 'it is plain open-air truth, and
-yet withal so good a jest as to want no bettering at my hands.'
-
-'I can see no jest in it at all,' said I.
-
-'I know it well enough, lad,' cried Harry, putting his arm through
-mine in his old loving way. 'Many do not see it at first, but they
-come to it soon. You learn the lesson quick enough on the Scotch
-marches; but I could see you were so be-Cambridged that, if I told
-you all, you would never join the sport. You shall pardon me; for,
-in truth, I could not rest till I had uncolleged you a little.'
-
-'You know well, dear lad,' said I, for I could never resist him, for
-all my stern resolves, 'there is nothing I cannot forgive you. Yet,
-I pray you, bear with me a little now, for I think my sickness comes
-over me again, and I would go within and rest.'
-
-'Right willingly,' said he. 'Sir Fulke will see you lodged; for I
-must make another journey to Otterham Quay ere the sun is up, to
-bring on what is left of the caravel's cargo.'
-
-So I left him and went within to sleep a fevered, troubled sleep, in
-which I saw the wounded cavalier grinning upon my sword again, till
-he sprang at last from off it, and, seizing Harry and the Drakes,
-swung them up on gibbets in a long ghastly row, while Mrs. Drake
-cried to me, who could not move, to save them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-On the morrow, as I walked in the orchard after dinner with Frank
-Drake and Harry, for the rest were gone, I took occasion to inquire
-what they thought of piracy; for our adventure, and especially my own
-part in it, weighed no less heavily on my mind for my night's rest.
-
-'That was a shrewd thrust of yours, Mr. Festing,' said Drake, as our
-talk turned, naturally enough, on our adventure. 'But for you we
-might have had ugly work. I give you good thanks for it, and all the
-honour; ay, and if I had my way you should have the lion's share of
-the booty too.'
-
-'Have my thanks, Mr. Drake,' said I, 'for your good words. Yet think
-me not churlish if I say they might be better bestowed. As for the
-thrust, it was none, for the Don spitted himself; as for the honour,
-let us talk of that when there is any in such work; and as for the
-booty, I will have none of it.'
-
-'Your reasons, Mr. Festing, your reasons?' said Drake good-humouredly.
-
-'For the honour,' answered I, 'it is a thing which I hold pirates
-have little part in; for the booty, I care not to share with
-water-thieves.'
-
-He turned sharp on me then and stopped in his walk with a flush in
-his face, looking hard at me with that strange, honest, searching
-look of his. I was ready to bite my tongue out; for I saw in a
-moment that my hot words had seared the unsullied spirit of a man
-whom nothing would bend to an act which he thought base, a man in all
-ways nobler than myself. God knows, I thought him wrong, and thought
-he led Harry wrong, but now I would have given half I had to have
-chosen kindlier words to say my say.
-
-'You use hard words, and wrong ones too, Mr. Festing, saving your
-scholarship,' said Drake at last, proud as a Spaniard. 'I am no
-water-thief or pirate either. I shall tell you what a pirate is, not
-to speak more of water-thieves, which is a hard word that breaks no
-more bones than another. By the most ancient customs of the sea,
-sir, whereof be it your excuse that you are ignorant, a pirate is one
-who, without license from his prince or his prince's officers, in
-time of peace or truce doth spoil or rob those which have peace or
-truce with him.'
-
-'Then how shall you justify yourself,' I asked, too cowardly to yield
-to him, 'seeing we have peace with Spain?'
-
-'Nay, but I say,' he answered, 'we have no peace with Spain, or truce
-either. Is it peace when they lay embargos on our ships, throw our
-mariners into prison, and burn and torture them in their streets? Is
-it peace when they shut our trade from their ports, and succour and
-defend our deadliest enemies?'
-
-'That was well, perhaps, months ago,' said I, though it wanted all my
-courage to answer him, such force was in his eyes and voice, 'but now
-truce is made, and prisoners are released, the embargo lifted, and
-King Philip's ambassador received at Court.'
-
-'And how call you that truce?' he asked. 'They brand us heretics and
-Lutheran dogs, with whom they say openly no faith is to be kept; no
-mariner is safe from their rake-hell Inquisition in any port of
-Spain; they send a spy, whom they call ambassador, to search out the
-weakness and plot with the traitors of the land and practise on our
-poor young Queen, that they may bring on us again the curse of Rome,
-as they did in Mary's time. Call you that truce? Call it rather
-war, and worse than war, for it is dastards' warfare? Philip may cry
-truce to Bess, and Bess to Philip, but between the people of Spain
-and England there is, nor shall be, neither peace nor truce till one
-of us is crushed.'
-
-'Yet if all were as you say,' I persisted, more faintly now, for
-there was that in the man which no one could withstand when he was
-moved thus, 'if there be neither peace nor truce, you have no license
-from the Queen. Nor even her goodwill, since you must know what
-urgent orders she has issued against adventurers like yourself.'
-
-'I know well enough,' he answered. 'For some reasons of state she
-has done this. Yet wait till you see the orders carried out, wait
-till you see such an adventurer punished, before you say I have not
-her license. Did you not see how the _Minion_, sailing under her own
-royal flag, passed us by when we were at the work; and was it not one
-of her Justices in constant communication with the Council who fitted
-me out? Is not that license enough?'
-
-'Nay, then you accuse the Queen's grace of bad faith to the Spaniard,
-and you are willing to abet her in her deceit.'
-
-'Faith to those that keep faith, say I. To every Spaniard, and not
-the least the Spanish ambassador, Don Guzman de Silva, she is a
-heretic with whom to break faith is the path to heaven. To such must
-a man give fair words, as the poor Queen does, till she grow great
-enough to strike them straight on the mouth, as, under God, by our
-help she shall. And were all I have said too little excuse for what
-we do, I have even a higher and greater license than all; for, as dad
-says, and all pious men beside, I have God's own commission to prey
-on Antichrist and him who stands his champion, till the filthy breath
-of the beast shall cease to poison the earth. The Spaniard goes
-about to lead away the people after false gods and idolatry and
-superstition. Such men by the Word of God are worthy of death. Here
-in my Bible I hold license from the Great King to seek out and spoil
-and destroy His enemies. Shall I hold my hand so long as He shall
-prosper His servant? How are we to call that piracy and thieving
-which God has so clearly commanded?'
-
-Then all at once came back to me Mr. Cartwright's words, and how he
-spoke of these rovers as doing the Lord's work and being prospered by
-Him. I do not think it was that which overcame me, but rather Frank
-Drake's presence. The recalling of my master's words was but an
-excuse to myself for yielding.
-
-'Mr. Drake, you have prevailed,' said I. 'I crave your pardon; you
-are a better man than I, and a truer servant both to God and the
-Queen. Give me your pardon for my words; they were uncourteous and
-unjust. Forget that they were spoken, and let my memory of them be
-my punishment.'
-
-'Nay, it is you, sir,' said he, holding out his hand, 'it is you that
-have prevailed. I took you for a distempered, fastidious scholar,
-and now I know you for a true man. I desire your better
-acquaintance, Mr. Festing, and nothing better than that we may one
-day adventure together. At any rate, I trust that if you have a mind
-to it at any time, you will know where to look for a captain.'
-
-'Ah,' said Harry, 'Jasper is more for stay-at-home book voyages than
-for a dainty feast of dry haberdine and "poor John" at sea; for I
-think,' the foolish lad added, 'he knows every cosmography book that
-was ever wrote.'
-
-'Say you so?' cried Drake. 'Then I pray you lay in a victualling of
-apples, and we three will aboard the arbour and make a dry voyage
-together.'
-
-So we did, and talked over Drake's map till sunset, of half-known
-worlds and unfurrowed seas, and all the wonders with which the
-learning of the ancients and the fancies of the moderns had peopled
-them.
-
-I cannot say that from that moment I became Frank Drake's friend, for
-he was ever as slow in making a friendship as he was in parting with
-one. Yet before he sailed again I may boast we began to be to one
-another what we continued till his death.
-
-For in those days which followed we were always together, seeing that
-Harry had almost every day to ride forth with his father to bid
-farewell to some neighbour.
-
-I had been much astonished at the learning Drake displayed in his
-first talk with me, and marvelled where a mariner could have gathered
-so great a store of knowledge. He had gladly assented when I bade
-him to Longdene, that we might study together the cosmography books
-that were in my library.
-
-Day by day we pored together over their crabbed latinity, which I
-expounded for his better understanding, while he, as I could see by
-his shrewd questions and ruthless commentation, sucked the old
-pedants dry as herrings.
-
-Ah! sweet bulky tomes, how dear is the sight of you to my declining
-years, since that renowned navigator deigned to ask wisdom of you!
-Well may you stand so proudly in your ranks, mounting guard, as it
-were, over yonder table whereon he read in you. Best beloved to me
-you are of all my books, yea, though I have around me the choicest
-flowers of wit and scholarship, which in these latter years have
-blossomed so bounteously under the glorious rays of our most royal
-sun.
-
-Yes, you I love best; as much for the memory of my dear friend, which
-you enshrine, as for some mighty power that seems to lie still behind
-your great leather covers. Who knows how much you told him that
-listened to your voice with such a wise discernment? Who knows how
-much of fame he owed to what you whispered in his ear, unheard by me?
-Ay, and who can even tell how many of these new dainty fruits our sun
-would have had power to ripen, if he, untaught by you, had not first
-so deeply stirred and tilled our fallow English wit with his heroic
-and inspiring deeds?
-
-How large and fair a place those weeks hold in my memory! Had their
-sands run out less quickly, how great a sorrow I might have been
-spared! For I cannot doubt that had I spent a very little longer
-time with Frank Drake, he would have made of me, there and then, a
-sailor like himself, and I should never have gone back to Cambridge.
-
-But the hours of our studies were numbered, and the day came at last
-when Harry must pass over to France in Drake's bark.
-
-It was a parting of double sadness; for not only was I to lose my two
-friends, but one of them, he that I accounted my brother, was going
-to a far country, where I feared I should lose him, both body and
-soul.
-
-For Harry, like most other young gentlemen in his case, had
-determined to pass into Italy--a country of which all our party had a
-most wholesome horror, not only as the very home and fount of
-papistry, but also because we held it no better than a foul Circean
-garden, full of all manner of enticements to pleasure and wantonness.
-
-The proverb, by which the Italians themselves would make of every
-Italianate Englishman a fiend incarnate, was ever on our lips. I
-knew how hardly a man of Harry's kidney could escape unsullied,
-seeing how little love he had for learning, in pursuit of which it
-was pretended he should travel to Padua and elsewhere, and which
-alone could save a man from the Italian taint.
-
-I perceived with great pain that since his return from Berwick Harry
-read nothing but the Morte d'Arthur, and such like wanton books of
-chivalry, wherein, as it seemed to me, those were accounted the
-noblest knights who slew most men for mere valour's sake, without any
-quarrel, and lived the most wanton lives.
-
-I spoke long and earnestly to him on this, praying him rather to
-travel in Germany, and countries given up to God's true religion. He
-listened patiently, as he always did to my preaching, though I think
-he must have laughed in his sleeve, knowing how true and pure his
-heart was beside mine. Yet I could not turn him from his purpose,
-and had to bid him farewell with a sinking heart, which he tried to
-comfort by promising that for my sake, if for none other, he would
-come back unchanged.
-
-After Harry's departure Sir Fulke was so lonely that he prayed me
-stay with him, for a little space. And this I was glad enough to do,
-till letters came to me from Mr. Cartwright, wherein he told me of
-the growing heats of the controversies at Cambridge concerning
-conformity, and urged me to return to the standard, which thing I did
-in the beginning of the year of grace 1565.
-
-It is in no way my desire to overstrain patience by speaking of these
-matters, whereof so many have written at so great length, and better
-than I; nor do I wish to speak much of my life, save in so far as it
-was wrapped in those of my two dear friends who were now beyond the
-seas, Frank Drake, on his return from France, having sailed under
-Captain Lovell on his disastrous voyage to the Indies.
-
-Suffice it to say that I remained at Trinity, working diligently,
-under Mr. Cartwright's guidance, to perfect myself in all manner of
-scholarship, that I might render myself well practised in the use of
-the most lethal weapons which he could forge for me in regard to the
-then present controversies.
-
-Every day they and I grew more heated. Conformity was openly
-condemned in Trinity, till at last Mr. Cartwright persuaded the whole
-college, save three, to cast off the garb of Antichrist, and appear
-in chapel without surplices.
-
-It was a day of great rejoicing in my college, for we, setting far
-too high our importance, as is the wont of scholars in places where
-they are gathered together, deemed we had accomplished little less
-than a second Reformation. Yet all it brought about was so sound a
-rating from the Chancellor, in which he was pleased to call us
-'bragging, brainless heads,' with other pretty conceits, that many
-were glad to disclaim their part in the matter and blame Mr.
-Cartwright; so that, fearing the further displeasure of Mr.
-Secretary, and urged thereto by his friends, my master left Cambridge
-and went abroad, whither I would gladly have followed him, but he
-would not have it so.
-
-'It were better,' he said, 'that you should abide here and take your
-degrees; and, moreover, I desire to leave behind me in the University
-some true and understanding friend, who will keep me informed of all
-that passes here.'
-
-Being very glad to take upon myself so honourable an office I did as
-he wished, and Mr. Cartwright's encouragement to scholarship being
-thus withdrawn, my studies became almost entirely turned to theology,
-or rather to that unseemly scramble for scraps of divinity which
-passed for it in those days.
-
-I was even appointed for a time to read the divinity lecture, as a
-gentleman reader without stipendium, and thus becoming always more
-fanatical, and being well known as being in Mr. Cartwright's
-confidence, I grew to be a marked man in Trinity, and in due course
-was elected fellow, to my great content, though I had no intention of
-taking orders, being a violent opponent of conformity.
-
-Those were great days for us in Trinity, for we had, what men love
-best, a perfect content in the sense of our own bigness, at least
-whenever our ears were not tingling with a rating from my Lord
-Burleigh, our chancellor. We went on our ways like prophets, blindly
-swelling out our littleness with the vain wind of our own babbling,
-till we seemed to ourselves to tower like a giant at the head of
-Reformation.
-
-If any had told us then that Frank Drake, or even my Lord of Bedford,
-was doing more for the cause with his little finger than all our
-heads together, we should have laughed him to scorn. Yet now it is
-not clear to me that such a speech would not have had some show of
-reason.
-
-In the year 1567 Dr. Beaumont died, to my great sorrow, and we had
-set over us in his place Dr. Whitgift, Master of Pembroke Hall and
-Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity. He was a man from whom we hoped
-much, seeing that to a good disposition towards the Puritan party, a
-hatred of vestments, and very sound Calvinistic doctrine, he added a
-greater force of scholarship and eloquence than Dr. Beaumont ever
-had, and moreover was a better courtier.
-
-Indeed, I think Trinity could have had no better Master in those
-days. For although he seemed then to my hot head but lukewarm in the
-cause, yet now I can see how high he raised my college during the ten
-years of his mastership, which thing he achieved by a nice handling
-of his authority between the parties, whereby the turbulent spirits
-were pruned to a less rank growth, and the timid digged about and
-fostered to the plentiful production of sweet and peaceful fruit.
-
-Such is the man as I see him now. Then it was different, for my hard
-zeal was always distasteful to him, and we were but sorry friends.
-So little indeed to my taste was the new spirit in the college, that
-on his constantly urging me to conform and take orders, I resigned my
-fellowship in fear of being deprived of it, as Mr. Cartwright was
-afterwards, and retired to Longdene.
-
-I had the full consent of my master for this. He had recently
-returned to Cambridge, and found himself the man of greatest weight
-in the University, and like to be elected Vice-Chancellor had he been
-in priest's orders.
-
-'It will be better in many ways,' said he, when I asked him his
-advice, 'that you should return to your estate; your influence will
-be more useful there. In Cambridge we have an abundance of
-labourers. It is men like yourself that we now require throughout
-the country. The cause needs urgently the support of the gentry, who
-for the most part are papist or half-reformed. Since Mr. Drake has
-got the vicarage of Upchurch you will have a stalwart fellow-worker.
-Go then, and do your best till the time is ripe for our great blow.
-I do not mean in any way to attack our present detestable and
-superstitious manner of church government until I am made Professor
-of Divinity, and can speak with all the authority of our great
-University. Meanwhile in your private study you can help me in my
-labour of grinding the weapons, that they may be sharp and ready in
-my hands when the hour is come.'
-
-Though feeling not a little sad at leaving my dear college, perhaps
-never to return, I could not but rejoice when I reached home that I
-had taken Mr. Cartwright's advice; for I found my good old guardian
-most grievously sick.
-
-He seemed very glad to see me, but yet I could fancy his manner was
-not so frank as of yore. It pained me not a little, for I could see
-by his pinched face that he was near to death's door. Nor could I
-understand why he should be so different, till after I had talked
-with him for some time, particularly of his spiritual state, we were
-interrupted by some one entering the room unbidden.
-
-I started to my feet when I saw at the door a young gentleman whom I
-had known at Cambridge. He had been a scholar of King's, and was one
-of those who took little trouble to disguise their love of papistry.
-He was dressed now in a cassock, and wore a small skull-cap to hide
-his tonsure.
-
-We saluted each other very stiffly, while Sir Fulke looked from one
-to the other in a frightened way, as though he expected us to fly at
-each other's throats.
-
-'Which of us shall remain, Sir Fulke,' said I, 'since there is no
-room for both?'
-
-'Both, lad, both,' cried Sir Fulke.
-
-'Nay,' said the Catholic gentleman, 'you must choose between us. If
-you would have me do my office let this gentleman depart. I cannot
-defile the mass by celebrating it in the presence of a heretic.'
-
-He said this in so soft and polished a manner that, though I felt my
-face flush, I would not let him have the advantage, but replied with
-my utmost politeness, speaking as though I had not heard him.
-
-'It were better I should go, Sir Fulke,' I said; 'I cannot stay and
-stand by while a servant of Antichrist sullies your soul with
-superstition and idolatry even as it is knocking for entry at God's
-door.'
-
-It was the priest's turn to look angry then, but he only bowed to me
-again and was silent.
-
-'Tush, lads,' broke in Sir Fulke, 'there is no need for squabbling
-over me. What matter, Jasper, if I have a bit of a mass in memory of
-the old days? I have been an arrant sinner too, and would ease
-myself of a load of sin with just a piece of confession. I have
-robbed the Church grievously, curse that mad knave Drake that led me
-to it, and been a great swearer, Heaven help me; ay, and you help me
-too, Jasper, since you know better prayers against swearing than the
-priests. You shall come and pray with me after he has done, lad, and
-then God will know it was my wish to make peace with Him and all men
-before I died. Come, lad, will you not? I have no son but you to
-smooth my pillow, since Harry is beyond the sea. Go now, and come
-again. You would not grudge me a bit of a mass like my fathers to
-die upon. May be they would be ashamed of me when I went to do
-homage with them up there, if I came amongst them unshriven and
-unhouselled.'
-
-'Surely, sir,' I said, much melted at the old knight's words, 'you
-would depart in surer hope of Paradise if you please God in your
-death rather than your ancestors.'
-
-'That is right, lad,' said the dying man, 'and so I will. You shall
-come and help me. But there would be no joy in Paradise if my
-ancestors and the old gentry turned their backs upon me, and I had to
-go with the new men. Save your father, there never was one of them I
-could abide; and Mr. Carter says Nick will not be there.'
-
-I looked at Mr. Carter, as Sir Fulke called him, though I knew it was
-not his name. He bowed again to me politely, and I repressed the
-angry burst that I had ready for him, being unwilling to cause Sir
-Fulke any further pain.
-
-'Sir Fulke,' said I, 'it was your good will to let my father be
-buried as he would. I have not forgotten that, and for your sake
-will this day forget my plain duty both to God and myself.'
-
-With that I left the room, and waited below in the hall till I was
-called up again. I found Sir Fulke at the mercy of God, and
-senseless. The Catholic gentleman was gone. So I knelt by the old
-knight's bed, and prayed long and earnestly to God that his opinions
-might be forgiven him, seeing they sprang of ignorance rather than
-perversity, though I had then, it must be said, little hope my
-prayers would be heard; and even as I prayed my guardian passed
-peacefully away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-After Sir Fulke's death, and the stir which naturally followed,
-things grew very quiet with me. Almost my whole day was devoted to
-what Mr. Cartwright had called 'grinding the weapons' for his coming
-attack on prelatical government.
-
-In spite of my books I was very lonely. Mr. Drake was at this time
-almost always away on duty. Upnor Castle was full of Spanish
-prisoners, who had been seized in the neighbouring ports in pursuance
-of the Queen's recent order, whereby she sought to make reprisal for
-a like order issued by her loving brother-in-law the King of Spain.
-And that some recognition might be made for the labours of the
-Inquisition so generously bestowed on the English prisoners in Spain,
-Mr. Drake was ordered to preach at Upnor every day.
-
-It seemed a great delight to the old navy preacher to go and rail
-before them at the Romish church, and it was no doubt most
-medicinable in his case, for never saw I a man more furious against
-Spain than he was at that time, and not without cause.
-
-Frank Drake had sold his bark, and sailed with his cousin, Mr. John
-Hawkins, in the great trading expedition which Sir William Garrard
-and Company had fitted out for the Guinea coast and the Indies. His
-kind old kinsman suffered him to venture his small savings with him,
-and had given him a petty officer's place in the fleet, out of pity
-for the wrongs he had suffered at Rio de la Hacha, under Captain
-Lovell, of which I have already spoken.
-
-We were all rejoiced at his good fortune, for it was as pretty a sail
-of ships as ever left the coast. There was the great _Jesus of
-Lubeck_, Mr. Hawkins's admiral; the _Minion_, his vice-admiral; a
-smart bark of fifty tons, called the _Judith_; besides three others,
-the _Swallow_, the _William and John_, and the _Angel_. It was,
-moreover, no fast secret that the Queen's grace and many of the
-Council were sharers in the venture, so that it lacked not any kind
-of furniture, either of men or arms, and great things were expected
-from it for all concerned, even to the lowest mariner. Indeed I
-myself had adventured a moderate sum, being persuaded by Drake how
-profitable the negro trade had been and would be again.
-
-Of this expedition nothing had now been heard for more than a year,
-and we began to grow anxious. At last a Spaniard who had put into
-Plymouth gave Mr. William Hawkins intelligence that his brother was
-on his way home, laden with the untold spoils of a town which he had
-sacked, and of prizes which he had taken on the seas. We hardly knew
-what to think of this, for such dealings were not at all to John
-Hawkins's liking. He was a wary, far-casting man, and I always
-thought looked on trading, especially in negroes, as more profitable
-than piracy, as indeed it was. Thus he had always laboured while in
-the Indies, by just dealing, that the planters and merchants should
-stand well with him and secretly support him, when, as happened
-sometimes, he was forced to carry a high hand over governors who
-refused to trade quietly.
-
-Mr. Drake was sure the report was all another Spanish lie, and was
-not surprised when, some time after, he heard that some Spanish
-mariners had been bragging over their cups that Hawkins and all his
-men had been entrapped and put to the sword far inland, and the whole
-undertaking brought to nought. I need not say with what alarm and
-anxiety these reports filled us, for they sounded far more like truth
-than the last. It in no way decreased our fear for Frank's safety
-when shortly afterward the Queen seized the treasure-ships of the
-Duke of Alva, which had been chased by privateers and pirates into
-Southampton, Plymouth, and Foy, and were still lying there, since the
-ship-masters knew not how to get through to the Netherlands. We
-could not doubt then that the Council had certain news that all we
-feared was true. Every one now gave up all hope, and thought only of
-revenge and reprisal, when tidings joyfully reached us that the
-_Judith_, one of the ships of the expedition, had put into Mount's
-Bay, crowded with twice her proper crew, and in command of 'Captain'
-Drake!
-
-All kinds of rumours now arose of what had happened, mingled with
-news of how the Spaniards had laid an embargo on British ships in the
-Netherlands and in Spain, and imprisoned every Englishman they could
-clutch. The Queen replied undaunted with like boldness, and every
-prison along the coast was packed with Spanish sailors, and every
-town-hall with treasure and rich cargoes.
-
-Such doings very soon caused it to be reported with greater certainty
-that the Council had certain news of Mr. Hawkins's death and the
-destruction of all his men, when to our great relief it was said that
-the _Minion_, with the general aboard and a half-starved crew, had
-come home. We were more hopeful now, but hungrier than ever for
-news. Mr. Drake brought us every kind of horrible tale from the
-Spanish prisoners at Upnor. I think they devised them in pure
-revenge for his preaching at them, and the more they lied the more he
-rated their idolatry and superstition.
-
-It was some time before we heard the truth. Frank sent us letters
-(in which I noted that he wrote himself 'Captain' Drake) saying that
-Mr. William Hawkins, Governor of Plymouth, had sent him up to inform
-the Council fully of what had occurred, and that he was detained in
-London upon that business. So things stood with us when one morning,
-a month or more after Sir Fulke's death, I was awakened by the sound
-of a gruff, loud voice, such as soldiers affect, in conversation with
-Lashmer's somewhat strident tenor.
-
-'Good master soldier,' cried Lashmer, 'I tell you he is still abed,
-and you cannot see him this two hours.'
-
-'Nay, by this bright honour, but I will see him,' said the other.
-
-'And yet I think you will not,' said Lashmer; 'and yet again, by this
-bright honour is a good oath, and a gentleman's oath, and one that
-may not be sworn to a lie or a thing that is not true, unless,
-indeed, there be provocation; for provocation, look you, master
-soldier, excuses many things. It is your great peacemaker.'
-
-'Why, this is monstrous logic,' returned the bass, 'and such as I
-never heard all the time I was sergeant-groom under the Signor John
-Peter Pugliano, esquire of the Emperor's stables, a man of most
-fertile Italian wit. What need of the philosopher's stone, if by
-mere logic you can make of provocation a peacemaker?'
-
-'Well, softly now, and I will show you,' answered Lashmer, whose talk
-served often to wile a dull hour, since he had been to Cambridge and
-gleaned I know not what stray scraps of learning that careless
-students had dropped in his way,--'I will show you how a man will
-come to swear the peace of another for some assault, or battery, or
-mayhem, or anything, and that other shall show provocation. Then
-shall no peace be sworn, and they shall be at one again. For it
-shall appear that he who battered the other did him no wrong, seeing
-there was provocation in it. So they that thought they had quarrel
-shall find by this same sweet provocation that they have none.'
-
-'Then must I provoke all men,' said the sergeant-groom, 'if I would
-live at peace with them.'
-
-'Ay, by this bright honour,' said Lashmer; 'then no matter how often
-you get a bloody coxcomb, yet shall you never have quarrel with any
-man.'
-
-'Then will I now most lovingly break your pate,' said the other,
-'that you may stand my friend and bring me to your master. For my
-master, the most excellent esquire, Henry Waldyve, bade me spare no
-pains to see your master as soon as possible.'
-
-Whether my servant's logic would have been put to this severe test I
-cannot say, for at Harry's name I sprang out of bed and cried from
-the window that I would see the messenger forthwith.
-
-I hurried from my chamber to find Harry's servant discussing his
-morning ale with Lashmer. He rose to a stiff military position as I
-entered, and made me a most lofty salute with his Spanish hat. He
-was a tall, soldierly-looking man of about forty years of age, with a
-peaked beard and very fierce moustaches that had been nicely
-disciplined in the Spanish fashion to curl nearly up to his eyes. By
-his side hung a very terrible 'schiavona,' which he wore instead of a
-rapier, after the fashion of the German _reiters_, considering, as he
-afterwards told me, that the broadsword was the only fit weapon for
-horsemen. It had a great steel closed hilt, presenting such a
-defiant tangle of rings, hilt-points, and twisted bars after the
-latest pedantic fancy as to make the beholder tremble to think what
-the blade must be.
-
-Indeed his whole appearance was foreign. He wore a large ruff, a
-thing as new to me as his sword; and his doublet, which showed
-clearly the marks of a corselet often worn over it, was pinked and
-slashed in the furthest fantastic fashion.
-
-'If you come on the part of Mr. Waldyve,' said I, receiving his
-salute, 'you are thrice welcome.'
-
-'In truth I bring you, sir, that most excellent and soldierly young
-gentleman's most full and lovingly complete commendation. Know me,
-at your worship's service, as Alexander Culverin, sometime
-sergeant-groom under the Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire of the
-Emperor's stables, and now body-servant and master of the horse to
-that most proper gentleman Mr. Henry Waldyve.'
-
-All this he said drawn up as stiff and soldierly as though he were
-mounting guard over the Emperor's own bedchamber. His presence much
-impressed my peaceful follower, though to me he was a thing to smile
-at lovingly; for somewhere in his face was a simple, kindly, almost
-childish look, that was strangely in contrast with his fiercely
-curling moustache, his loud, gruff voice, and his very warlike
-bearing.
-
-'When came your master home?' I asked, for in truth I was greatly
-surprised to hear of his return so suddenly.
-
-'But a week ago,' said the Sergeant; 'since which time we have been
-lying at my Lord of Bedford's house in London; for Mr. Waldyve had
-matters to report to the Council ere he could come down here.'
-
-'And have you brought me any message from him beside his
-commendations?' I asked.
-
-'Saving your worship's worship,' said the man, 'he would have you
-ride over at your worship's most early haste to Ashtead, since he
-would have some speech with you together with some poor soul, who, to
-judge by his most unhorsemanlike carriage, is a mariner or sailor.'
-
-'Gave he the name of this same sailor?' I asked.
-
-'That he did. A name he had that sorts well with one who splashes
-about all his life in that most base element called water. To be
-short with you, it is one Captain Drake, though I hold it most false
-heraldry to apply so dignified and soldierly a title to a seafaring
-man.'
-
-'Well, we can talk of this as we go,' said I, in a mighty hurry now
-to be off. 'I will ride back with you now, if you will wait till
-Lashmer has saddled our horses.'
-
-I tarried but to eat my manchet and drink my bowl of ale, since I
-hold a morsel in the morning with a good draught, sweetened and
-defecated by all night standing, to be very good and wholesome for
-the eyesight.
-
-As I mounted my horse I saw Culverin watching me with a most judicial
-air. I must own I felt no little comfort and gratitude to my
-guardian for his good training to see him nod a distinct though
-qualified approval to himself when he saw me in the saddle.
-
-'Know you what business your master has with Captain Drake?' I asked
-as we rode out of my gates, my mouth watering for news.
-
-'Nay, not I,' answered Culverin; 'yet I hope it will be none, since I
-hold it unseemly for a gentleman and a soldier to have near
-communication with sailors.'
-
-'Yet Captain Drake,' I said, 'has great love and respect for
-land-soldiers.'
-
-'Has he indeed?' replied the Sergeant, looking very pleased; 'a most
-notable sign of his good sense, and had he said horse-soldiers, it
-would have been a notable sign of his better sense.'
-
-'How make you that good, Master Culverin?' asked Lashmer, whose
-hunger for an argument was by this time getting the better of his awe
-of the stranger.
-
-'It is good of itself, Master Lashmer,' said Sergeant Culverin. 'For
-when I was sergeant-groom under Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire
-of the Emperor's stables, he was wont to say (and, mark you, he was a
-man of most fertile Italian wit) that soldiers were the noblest
-estate of mankind, and horsemen the noblest of soldiers. They were
-masters of war, he said, and ornaments of peace, speedy goers and
-strong abiders, triumphers both in courts and camps. In truth, your
-only salvation is to be a horse-soldier. Take that of me.'
-
-Seeing Lashmer was on the point of a desperate charge upon this
-monstrous position, I changed our subject quickly by asking news of
-Harry.
-
-'It was but three weeks ago, sir,' said Culverin, 'that we got your
-letters telling of Sir Fulke Waldyve's death. We were in winter
-quarters, whither we had gone when the campaign ended so ill for us
-with the fall of St. Jean d'Angely. Then we tarried not for drum or
-trumpet, but came straight homewards in the first ship that sailed.
-It was a pity it fell so. There was pretty warfare there, and most
-profitable for a gentleman to see. For, look you, sir, a soldier can
-learn more from defeats than victories. Take that of me. We were
-present all through last year's campaign, and rode in M. Ardelot's
-regiment when they drubbed us so soundly at Jarnac. After his death
-we were attached to the admiral himself, and so continued till our
-second rout at Moncontour. It was an evil time for the Huguenots,
-but a pretty schoolhouse for a scholar of arms, and my master was
-growing to be a most sweet soldier. I tell you, sir, his name was on
-every tongue in the army, so high a courage and discretion had he
-shown in all passages of arms we had made together.'
-
-'Ah,' said I, 'there is little need to tell me that. I knew well
-what men would say of him when the time came to show what stuff was
-in him.'
-
-'And so did I too, sir,' said he. 'As soon as ever he came to the
-Emperor's Court, and rode down to the tilting ground, I said to
-Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire of the stables, "There is a
-soldier," said I; for his seat was as well as a man could sit. It
-won my heart, sir, to see him. From that hour I was his servant. I
-craved leave to direct his exercises under the esquire, and grew to
-love him as my own horse.'
-
-'Was it, then, pure love that made you follow him to England?' I
-asked.
-
-'Indeed, sir, I think it was. After he had been with us a year or
-so, he took it in his mind to see some service in the French wars. I
-begged to go in his train; for I loved him, and could not see him go
-to the wars without a proper following or some old dog to watch over
-him when dangers were thick.'
-
-'And you gave up your honourable post of sergeant-groom for his sake?'
-
-'Ay, sir, and willingly; for he promised to carry me to England with
-him after he had had his fill of fighting. My bowels yearned for the
-land I had not seen for twenty years. Indeed, sir, there's no man
-loves the smoke of his own country that hath not been singed in the
-flame of another soil. Take that from me, sir, saving your wisdom.'
-
-'Then you are of English parentage, Sergeant Culverin?'
-
-'Yes, sir, though many think not, because of my name and a certain
-carriage that comes to men of travel; yet I am English born, sir, and
-never knew father or mother, save an English great piece on the
-Calais barbican.'
-
-'Then save you, Sergeant, from your kinsmen,' said I, thinking he was
-jesting, 'since the Moors call great pieces the "mothers of death."
-You and it are the only children I ever heard that they had.'
-
-'You are merry, sir, but I jest not,' said the Sergeant, drawing
-himself up very stiff on his horse. 'What I say is sober truth. The
-first human eyes that ever saw me, as I could ever hear, were just
-those of an old gunner, who found me one night in the mouth of his
-culverin. He, good soul, took care of me. "She is the only lass I
-ever loved," he was wont to say, "but I never thought she would be
-mother of a son to me." So he took me home, and his mates and he
-would have the priest kursten me "Culverin" after my mother, and
-"Alexander," because they said I must be born to be a mighty soldier.'
-
-'Truly, Sergeant,' said I, seeing how serious he was, though I had
-much ado to stop laughing, 'a most honourable and soldierly descent.'
-
-'Ay, sir, you may say that,' he answered, looking round at Lashmer,
-from whom came a sound of choking laughter. 'A most soldierly and
-royal parentage. She was as good a piece as ever was cast, and
-stamped, look you, with King Harry's own arms, rest his soul! To say
-no more, for modesty's sake, it is not one or two who have rued their
-ribald merriment at what I am telling you.'
-
-And with that he laid his hand upon the great steel hilt of his
-broadsword, and glared so terribly at Lashmer that I thought the poor
-lad would have fallen from his saddle from pure fear of the bristling
-of the Sergeant's fierce moustache.
-
-I do not think Lashmer ever laughed at Sergeant Culverin again, at
-least not in his face. Indeed it was not many who did; most men
-feared his sword too much, and those who knew him best, and were not
-afraid, loved him too well.
-
-I think three men never greeted each other more warmly than Frank,
-Harry, and I when I reached Ashtead. It was like summer to see them
-again, yet I found them much altered.
-
-Harry seemed shocked by his father's death, and looked very sad in
-his black clothes. His face was bronzed, his short beard neatly
-trimmed to a point, and a scar scarce healed stretched across one
-temple. Yet I thought I never saw him look more manly, handsome, or
-lovable, in spite of the foreign look his travels had given him.
-
-Captain Drake, too, was changed. His eye was as bright and his ways
-as cheery as ever; yet when he was not speaking I could see in his
-face a harder and sterner look than there used to be. His dress,
-too, was very different to what he had worn in the old days; though
-plain, it was of good stuff, and cut according to the fashion. He
-wore, moreover, a smart rapier, and had the air of a gentleman,
-though without having lost his sailor-like looks.
-
-'You will want to know why I sent for you, Jasper,' said Harry, as
-soon as our greetings were over.
-
-'Nay, that do I not,' said I; 'so long as you sent for me, that is
-enough.'
-
-'Well, but I had a good reason,' answered Harry. 'I met Captain
-Drake in London, whither he had come on business, as he will tell
-you. As he was coming hither to see his father at Upchurch we
-journeyed together, and he told me--tell him, Frank, what you told
-me, and then he will know why we sent for him.'
-
-'Well, lad,' said Captain Drake, setting himself down for a long
-tale, as sailors will, 'you remember how I wrote to you of the voyage
-which I made to Cape de la Vela in the Indies with Captain Lovell,
-the year after our brush with the caravel, and how it all ended in
-the wrong I suffered from the Spaniards at Rio de la Hacha for no
-cause but their accursed treachery?'
-
-'Yes, that I do,' said I; for he had written to me about it at
-Cambridge, and Mr. Drake, too, had told me fully of that most wicked
-dealing with his son.
-
-'Well, that was well enough,' Drake went on; 'a plague on the false
-papist hearts; but what came after was worse.'
-
-'And at one time we feared it was worse again,' said I; 'for we
-thought we had lost you as well as our venture. But how came it
-about? We looked for nothing but success under Mr. Hawkins.'
-
-'And nothing but that should you have had,' said Drake. 'Merrily
-should we have singed the King of Spain's beard, and filled some most
-noble pockets beside our own, but that Jack Hawkins was over
-scrupulous with the traitors. Things went well enough at first, in
-spite of bad weather, especially for me; for off Cape de Verde we
-fell in with a Frenchman from Rochelle, who had taken a Portugal
-caravel. This Jack Hawkins chased and took, and made me master and
-captain of her. We called her the _Grace of God_, and a good name
-too, seeing how God graced our venture. For we drubbed the Portugals
-wherever we met them, and before we left the Guinea coast we had
-gathered as fine a cargo of black flesh as a merchant need wish to
-see.
-
-'Being well filled up with what we sought, we sailed for the Indies.
-My luck stood by me still; for when Captain Dudley of the _Judith_
-died, Cousin Jack gave me his place, and made me full captain. We
-found traffic on the Main a bit hard, because the King of Spain had
-most uncourteously charged that no man should trade so much as a
-_peso_-worth with us. Yet negroes are dear to a Don's heart, and
-there are ways, lad, there are ways that none know better than old
-Jack. So we had reasonable trade at mighty good prices, both in
-black flesh and our other merchandise, till we came to Rio de la
-Hacha. We were but two ships when we anchored before the town--the
-_Angel_ and my lady _Judith_. The rest had been sent to Curaçoa to
-make provision for the fleet. So they thought to try their scurvy
-tricks there again, and refused us water, thinking thereby to starve
-us into selling our negroes for half nothing. The Treasurer, who was
-in charge, had fortified the town and got some hundred or so of
-harquebusiers behind his bulwarks; so we could not land, but took a
-caravel in spite of all their shot, right under their noses, and rode
-there till our general came round in the _Jesus_. They soon found
-that an English cock could crow as loud and louder than a Spaniard.
-For old Jack set ashore two hundred small shot and pikemen, and took
-the town. It was no less than their discourtesy deserved, and they
-suffered no harm; for every man of them ran clean out of the place at
-the first bark of our snappers. I think it was only a little comedy
-to please the King of Spain; for Master Treasurer and all of them
-came in at night to trade, and before we left we had two hundred less
-black mouths to fill and a pretty store of gold and pearls in our
-hold.
-
-'We had done such a brisk trade and no bones made all along the
-coast, after our persuasions at Rio de la Hacha, that when we came to
-Carthagena, our traffic being nearly done, we tried nothing against
-it, save that the _Minion_ saluted the castle with a few shot from
-her great pieces, while we landed and took certain _botijos_ of wine
-from an island, just to drink their health, leaving woollen and linen
-cloth there in payment. So we bore up for Florida; but being taken
-in a _furicano_, which I believe the Lord sent to guide us, we were
-driven into San Juan de Ulloa, the port of the city of Mexico, as you
-know. Now listen, lad; listen what God sent us. There in the port
-at our mercy--entirely in our power--were twelve galleons, laden with
-two hundred thousand pounds' worth of gold and silver. Two hundred
-thousand pounds! Think of it, if you can, without going mad, for I
-can't. Yet, in spite of God's plain guidance, as I told him again
-and again, Jack Hawkins set them all at liberty without touching a
-_peso_, fearing, as he said, the Queen's displeasure, the simple
-fool, if he touched the goods of her most loving brother-in-law! Ah!
-had we known how the brave Queen was going to deal with her loving
-brother-in-law's money in her own fair ports of Southampton and the
-West, Jack would have listened to me when I told how best to please
-her Grace!
-
-'Well, it was no good. Not a _peso_ would he touch, but only asked
-leave to refit and victual; and now, lad, comes the worst of all.
-Next morning we saw open of the haven thirteen great ships, being the
-Plate fleet and its wafters--a sight to make an honest Protestant
-man's mouth water. Lord, Lord, Jasper! I cannot think of it with
-loving-kindness to Jack. Just see now, lad! We had complete command
-of the haven. Not a fly-boat, not a pinnace could enter or leave
-without our yea. To keep the Spaniards outside in the north wind was
-only the other way of saying present wreck to every rag and stick of
-them; and that meant wellnigh two millions loss to the Spaniards, and
-Heaven knows what gain to us in wreckage, and flotsam, and trifles we
-should have had for our trouble in saving crews.
-
-'Did God ever show a greater mercy to His faithful people than that?
-I ask you, sir. You know better than I, because you are a scholar.
-Yet Jack Hawkins let his scruples stand before the plain will of God,
-and would make conditions with them. Would I could have told him
-what our lion-hearted Queen was doing in the narrow seas with her
-dear brother-in-law's belongings; but we did not know. Then he would
-have heard the voice of the Lord aright. But, as it was, he was
-stubborn, and let them all in on conditions of peace, and safe
-fitting and victualling for ourselves; to the which was passed the
-word of Don Martin Henriquez, Viceroy of Mexico, himself, who was
-with the fleet; a pox on him till this hand has squeezed him dry, and
-then the knave may go hang!
-
-'I need not tell the rest. You guess what came--what must have come.
-It was like night after day. Relying on all their solemn words and
-papistical oaths, no less than on the hostages they had given us, we
-laboured together two days peaceably to bestow the ships properly in
-the port and prepare ours for refitting. A good part of our ordnance
-we set ashore upon an island in the mouth of the port, which, by the
-conditions, was to be in our possession.
-
-'On the third day after we had let them in, when we were about to set
-the carpenters to work, and were all dismantled, I could see things
-were going treacherously, in spite of their fine words. Soldiers
-were marching to and fro, and ordnance being bent upon us. Jack sent
-to inquire what it might mean, and Don Martin Henriquez passed his
-word of honour to protect us from treason.
-
-'Still the preparation went on, and Jack protested again--this time
-with much effect; for his messenger was seized, a trumpet blown, and
-in a moment all was in a roar and blaze. Out of the smoke that hid
-the quay and ships we could see the glitter of harness and pikes and
-halberds, and the glow of matches, as hundreds of soldiers rushed
-upon us and thrust out to the island in crowded long-boats. In a
-trice our men ashore were overcome and cut down, and our ships
-swarming with Spaniards.
-
-'Lord, what a fight it was then! Tooth and nail, claw and heel, we
-went at them. Such a roar and din there was as my ears at least had
-never heard, till it lulled again, and not a Spaniard was left alive
-upon our ships. It was glorious work, but we had no time to think of
-it.
-
-'No sooner were we clear than we cut our headfasts and warped out on
-our sternfasts; but though that saved us from boarding again, it did
-little good; for the treacherous dogs were masters of the island and
-our great pieces, as well as of their own on the ships and the
-platform. Still, for a whole hour we made a great fight of it, in
-which we sunk two of their great ships and burnt another.
-
-'By this time the _Jesus_ was dismasted and an utter wreck. She,
-being the admiral, had aboard of her all our treasure--twelve
-thousand pounds in gold, lad, besides negroes and merchandise.
-
-'It was impossible to bring her off, so Jack resolved to abandon her,
-after taking out all she had. To this end we drew her off and set
-her in front of the _Minion_, to keep off the shot of the Spanish
-batteries, and so save our whole ship from destruction while we were
-at our work. For the _Minion_ was the only ship we had now that
-would sail, except my _Judith_, which I had got safe off after the
-fight. But the Spaniards saw our game, and fired two other great
-ships of theirs, and loosed them down wind at us. They may call us
-cowards, Jasper, but it is a fearful thing to see two fireships a
-mass of roaring, crackling flames, and each twice and thrice as big
-as yourself, bearing down on you. Who can blame them if the crew of
-the _Minion_ grew afraid and cast her off from the _Jesus_, in spite
-of all their captain or the general could say? So suddenly was it
-done that the general himself almost perished in trying to come
-aboard the _Minion_, and many were drowned in the attempt, and many
-left aboard the grand old _Jesus_ with the treasure, to fall a prey
-to those rake-hell traitors.
-
-'I quickly lay aboard the _Minion_ with the _Judith_, and took out of
-her all I had room for; and so, at the mercy of God and looking for
-nothing but death, seeing how overladen we were and without proper
-provisions, I made my way home as speedily as I might. Jack takes it
-unkindly that I left him; yet, God knows, I did it for the best,
-trusting, by His help, to save my ship and all those aboard, if such
-a thing were possible to any man. Who knows, if I had tarried with
-the general, I should not have fared like him, and had to set half my
-crew ashore to suffer Heaven knows what miseries at the hand of
-Indians and wild beasts and Spaniards, which is worse. Ay, and to
-lose half the rest from famine and sickness. God be praised for His
-mercy to me, and judge between me and Cousin Jack.'
-
-So Frank Drake ended his relation of that famous adventure in the
-port of San Juan de Ulloa, and fell to walking fiercely up and down
-the room where we sat. I knew not what to answer him; for I was
-almost as much moved as he, and firmly believed it was the will of
-God that they should have destroyed the two Spanish fleets. It is
-strange to look back upon now, yet I cannot wonder that I thought as
-I did, seeing what my masters had been at Cambridge, and, above all,
-in what a perilous case England then was.
-
-Never, I think, was reformation in greater danger than at that time.
-There were already constant rumours of the disquiet in the north.
-The rumblings of the Papist storm that was soon to burst from thence
-were making themselves heard. The Scots Queen sat fouling the nest
-to which she had flown for refuge, in our eyes like some unclean bird
-that bred new traitors every day, and Spain cried louder and France
-blustered more fiercely against the one stout heart which would not
-bend to Rome.
-
-The Queen still stoutly held the Duke of Alva's treasure, which she
-had seized; our ports were closed to Spain, and those of Spain to us.
-Sir William Winter was fitting out his expedition to relieve
-Rochelle, with victuals, men, and furniture for the Huguenots.
-Papist prizes, Spanish, French, no matter what, were daily pouring
-into our ports upon the narrow seas, and Don Gueran de Espes, the
-Spanish Ambassador, was a prisoner in his own house in London. It
-was said at all hands that the times could not long endure the
-strain, and we looked for war to burst out every day.
-
-What wonder then, if, when the whole host of Anti-christ seemed to be
-gathering about us, I, like Francis Drake, saw the finger of God in
-the hurricane which had put it in our power to make so big a blow at
-His enemies, and read in the disaster that followed a judgment on
-those who spared to spoil the Egyptians? That was what the scholar
-Said to the sailor; ay, and honestly believed it too.
-
-'Have no doubt, Frank,' said I, 'it was the Lord's will that you had
-smitten and spared not. It was His plain and manifest mercy to you
-to put it in your power to bruise the serpent's head. Would God
-Captain Hawkins had listened with your ears!'
-
-'That is what I tell Harry, but he scorns it,' said Drake eagerly;
-and Harry, to my inquiring look, only laughed a little low laugh, so
-full of complete amusement that it made me shudder, and there rushed
-to my mind the horrid Italian proverb that we heard so
-often--_Inglese Italianato è Diavolo incarnato_.
-
-'Do you not think, then,' I asked of Harry, 'that it is God's will
-that we should smite Antichrist and all his host?'
-
-'Well, let that pass, lad,' said Harry, laying his hand gently upon
-my knee. 'I know not too well what God thinks of us; but it is my
-will, and England's will, that we should smite, as you say, the King
-of Spain, and that is why I sent for you. Ever since he came home
-Frank has been striving to get redress from Spain through the
-Council, but things have come to such a pass with embargoes and
-imprisoned ambassadors that all hope of that is at an end. So Frank
-is going to fry his own fish. Tell him what you are going to do,
-Frank.'
-
-Drake looked at Culverin and Lashmer, who had remained in the room,
-with that same strange stare of his, as though to see whether he
-might safely speak before them.
-
-'Shall they go?' said Harry.
-
-'No,' said Frank, after a pause, and the Sergeant saluted him, and
-Lashmer looked like a happy sheep. 'They are neither men to blab,
-yet we must be close; for it would seem there is a Spanish ear grows
-on every village cross.'
-
-Therewith Frank Drake unfolded to us his mighty project, of which I
-think none but his heroic soul had yet dreamed--that glorious
-enterprise which, before a few more years were gone, was to make
-England's heart to leap with pride like a young stag, and set her
-fair body throbbing with the wild untamable life that was to make her
-what she is.
-
-'The time is past for child's play,' he cried, with glowing face,
-'the time is past for nibbling at our enemy in the narrow seas, it is
-past for peaceable trade with them. If we are to live and dare
-worthily of our manhood, we must bite hard and deep in their vitals.
-Where is that, lad? Whence comes their life? Where but from the
-Indies? There lies the heart of Spain, the heart of Antichrist, open
-and unprotected, for a man who dares to try. I have seen and I know.
-They are no match for us. See what we did at San Juan de Ulloa. In
-spite of their numbers, in spite of their treachery, we saved two of
-our ships and they lost five of theirs, and all three times the
-_Minion's_ size at least. I suffered there, but still I learnt a
-lesson which, by God's help, they shall rue the teaching of. But he
-who attempts this must not flinch or quail. Jack Hawkins is no man
-for it; but I can do it, lads, under God, I can; and if I do it, it
-shall be under no man's flag but my own.'
-
-'Frank,' said I, 'I believe if there is a man in England can attempt
-this thing it is you. But be not hasty to throw away your life,
-which England needs. Think of those unknown seas for which you can
-get no pilot in England; think of the power of him you attack.'
-
-'I know, lad, I know,' answered Drake, as calm and confident as ever.
-'I have thought of it. I will have a pilot, and that pilot shall be
-myself. It may take a year or two, but at last I will know those
-seas as well as any Spaniard of them all. Then I will strike, and
-let them see how I can revenge myself. Revenge is the Lord's, and by
-His chosen people He does His work. To you, and such as you, He
-looks to help me in this, and I have come to ask if you will join me
-in working the revenge of God.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-Before we parted I had promised to help Frank, as far as my purse
-would go, to fit out a ship for the Indies, that he might make survey
-of the whole region, and find out when and how best to strike his
-blow, and haply pick up a prize or two to pay his fellow-adventurers
-a fair profit on their risk.
-
-Harry helped him too, but to a very small extent, for his travels had
-made a large hole in his purse, and he never had the heart to squeeze
-his tenants so hard as others would have done in like case. Frank's
-kinsmen, the Hawkins, still took what they called his desertion at
-San Juan de Ulloa so unkindly that he could get nothing from them,
-and while the disaster was fresh in men's minds a good many pockets
-were shut to him that a year ago would have run like a river at the
-very name of a venture to the Indies.
-
-Still, by the next year--it was, I remember, soon after the bull for
-the Queen's deposition had been found affixed to Lambeth Palace--he
-sailed. It was, I think, in a great measure the fury with which that
-wanton insult to the Queen filled the country that helped Frank more
-than anything to get the money he wanted for his enterprise.
-
-During the whole of this time Harry was in London or elsewhere with
-the Court, and not more than once or twice for a few days at Ashtead.
-I do not know whether I felt more lonely when he was away and I was
-poring over my books at Mr. Cartwright's work, or when he came down
-on his hurried visits.
-
-Each time I saw him his heart seemed farther away from me. Not that
-he was less kind than of old, but now his whole soul seemed wrapped
-up in the pageantries, the passages of arms, and, above all, the
-ladies of the Court. Of these he seemed never to tire of talking,
-though I wearied of listening.
-
-I was longing, as I used, to speak to him of all that was next my
-heart--of the great strife in which I laboured for the purifying of
-religion; of the solemnity of this present life, of which he seemed
-to take no heed; of the awful doom for all eternity, which I
-shuddered to see yawning before him. Yet I knew not how to win his
-ear. Whenever I tried to start such talk he was quick enough to see
-my intention and thwart it with a rattling jest or some whimsical
-conceit. Nor had I much heart for it, if the truth must be told; for
-I dreaded in speaking to him on such things to find he was more
-Italianate than I believed him.
-
-So in his company I was lonely, and in his absence lonely. I strove
-to find comfort in my books, hunting daily in their inmost coverts.
-All was game that my net enclosed. No allusion was too fantastic, no
-phrase too ambiguous, no simile too conceited, no argument too
-fanciful for me. I swept them all up to feed Mr. Cartwright's great
-idea, no matter where I found them. Daily and all day I worked on,
-searching like some warrener for every unsuspected bolt-hole through
-which our adversaries might seek to escape. No sooner was one found
-than I was weaving cunning nets with terms and figures, premiss and
-consequence, to set across it, and entangle them in its wordy meshes
-as soon as ever they should try to give us the slip.
-
-Yet I got little comfort from it all. For though my studies assured
-me of my own salvation, they also confirmed my dread and certainty of
-Harry's perdition. Never was my life more joyless than then. There
-was no one I cared to see except my servant Lashmer, and sometimes
-Mr. Drake, though I won a most godly name by entertaining all the
-preachers and such like that came my way. I was fast growing to be a
-morose misanthropic scholar, and an iron-bound Puritan to boot.
-
-Yet I knew it not, but rejoiced to think how utterly I denied myself
-the joys of this world, and how dear in the sight of God my life must
-be. I shudder, too, to think that as the breach continued to widen
-between Harry and me, I began at last to find some sort of solace in
-what I saw in store for him hereafter, and though I prayed for him
-unceasingly my prayers were the prayers of the Pharisee.
-
-Perhaps it was a sort of jealousy, that he was so wicked and so
-happy, while I, God help me for my blindness, was so good and so
-miserable. I confessed it not to myself, yet indeed I think it was
-no different. For those were the days when I and half England beside
-were gathering up what we took in our ignorance for the manna of
-heaven, when in truth it was little better than a foul poison to our
-souls.
-
-But now I must cry forgiveness for my tedious babbling of myself, if
-indeed my credit be not already cracked with over much borrowing of
-patience with no return of profit or pleasure. Yet, at the risk of
-earning ill-will, I have thought so much necessary for the proper
-understanding of what next befell.
-
-Such, then, was I when one morning some time after Frank Drake had
-sailed I again heard Mr. Alexander Culverin crying out for me at the
-gate. This time he was at once shown to my presence by Lashmer,
-where, with a grave salute, he presented me with a letter from Harry.
-I opened it and read as follows:--
-
-
-DEAR LAD--After my most loving and hearty commendations, this is to
-crave you give me joy. A little pretty bird piped to me and witched
-my heart away or ever I felt it go. In despair I sang back the song
-I learned of her, and, the gods be praised, saw my way to steal her
-heart in payment for mine. Then, lest we should quarrel over the
-felonies, we agreed to love.
-
-Ere Diana sleeps and wakes again the compact will be sealed by Holy
-Church. Then look for your sister at Ashtead, which I pray you see
-well bestowed for her coming, for I am too busy and happy to leave
-her side.
-
-Yours from the seventh heaven of ecstacy, and higher than that again,
-HARRY WALDYVE.
-
-See a mad lover! I had near forgot to tell you your sister's name.
-It is the name of names, even the name of the little ruddy-haired
-child that I knew, and yet knew not, while I was of my Lord of
-Bedford's household.
-
-
-'Why, this is news indeed, Sergeant,' said I.
-
-'Yes, it is new, sir,' said Culverin; 'that is all that is to be said
-in its favour. I knew he would do it, I knew he would, if we stayed
-at Court so long. Not that I blame Mistress St. John. It was not
-her fault. How any lady amongst them all could sit and see him ride
-a tilt without doing the like is more than I can say; but I claim no
-cunning in the management of women, sir, saving your worship.'
-
-'So you think it was his riding that won her?'
-
-'Never doubt it, sir. That and how men spoke of his conduct in the
-wars. It was enough to turn any woman's head. I blame him, not her.'
-
-'But why blame him, Culverin?'
-
-'Why, sir, for good enough reason, because he has spoilt one of the
-prettiest soldiers and horsemen in Europe. For how can a man love
-his horse or even his weapon with a woman like that always about his
-elbow? It is not natural, sir.'
-
-'But cannot a man love his horse and weapon all the better that he
-has something he loves to protect with them?'
-
-'Well, I think not, sir, saving your scholarship. I never knew one
-that could; and if there is one, certes, it is not Mr. Waldyve. He
-never loved a horse well enough before, that was where he always
-failed. He had no contemplation of horsemanship. In the exercise of
-it he was without match that ever I saw, save only Signor John Peter
-Pugliano himself. But his contemplation of it was naught. The
-Signor Esquire of the Emperor's stables always said so. He proved to
-him many times how it was a science to be preferred next to divinity.
-He gave him _La Gloria del Gavallo_ to read, and _Orison Claudia_
-too, but it availed nothing. In pace, in trot, in gallop, in career,
-in stop, in manage he was a Centaur, but he could never see how
-peerless a beast a horse was; how it was the only serviceable
-courtier without flattery, the beast of most beauty, faithfulness,
-courage, and all the virtues. Why, sir, I have seen Signor John
-Peter Pugliano, when a man spoke slightingly of a horse, so belabour
-him with the richness and strength of his contemplation, that before
-he ended the wretch was like to weep that God had made him a man and
-not a horse. But it was never born or bred in Mr. Waldyve, and this
-is what has come of it.'
-
-'Still, men must marry now and then, Sergeant, though the Queen seems
-to think otherwise.'
-
-'I know, sir, I know; yet I hold marriage a poor distempered state
-that soldiers should leave to men of peace, saving your worship's
-presence. Still, it is not of that that I complain most. There is
-worse than that.'
-
-'What do you mean? You told me of no ill fortune.'
-
-'Did I not, sir? Why, then, it is this. He has given her his bay
-horse, and sent me down for the roan--by this light, he has, sir,
-given that peerless quadruped to a woman! What man with
-contemplation enough to fill half a pepper-corn could have done the
-like?'
-
-I knew not how to console the poor soldier, so fell to asking him
-about Mistress St. John. He could tell me little, never having seen
-her except in the tilt-yard at Whitehall and Hampton Court, when, as
-he said, it was easy to know the little red-haired lady by her most
-free nodding at his master.
-
-So I had to rest content till she should come, meanwhile taking what
-pains I could to see that the work-people from Rochester carried out
-Harry's instructions. I found more comfort in the task than I could
-have believed, hoping that now my brother was coming to settle down
-at home things would go between us more as they used.
-
-Indeed, so light did my heart grow as the time of their coming drew
-near, that I began to doubt whether it were not a sin for me take
-pleasure in the company of so carnally-minded a man as Harry, and to
-begin to think I ought wholly to eschew, as far as good manners would
-allow, the conversation of the wanton Court lady that I pictured his
-wife to be.
-
-The day came at last, and, not a little doubting whether it were
-right, I rode out to Rochester to meet them.
-
-They were already at the 'Crown' resting awhile when I alighted
-there. Harry rushed out and seized me by both hands, and then,
-throwing his arm about me in his old way, dragged me to see his wife.
-
-'Wife! wife!' he cried, 'set a good face for our brother, whom you
-wanted so much to see. Here he is come to meet us.'
-
-With that I saw rise to greet me a little lady not much over twenty,
-with ruddy hair and brown eyes like the Queen's. In a moment the
-memory of my old boy's love at Cambridge came to my mind, but when I
-looked once more at the dainty little head and smiling face, set so
-prettily in her snow-white ruff, the memory was lost in the greater
-beauty of the present vision.
-
-Beautiful as I had thought the Queen, yet she, I confessed, was more
-beautiful still, although so like. It was a more laughing face than
-the Queen's, and yet in her eyes, unlike the Queen's, there was that
-wistful look that all men love till they learn to fear it as own
-sister to discontent. Yet this I knew not then, having, as I say,
-known no woman all my life; and so my heart, that I had tried so sore
-to harden, was melted like wax at the soft music of her voice.
-
-'Well met, brother,' she said, holding out her hand with a gay smile.
-
-'Your desires upon you, lady,' I answered, taking her greeting with
-as little awkwardness as I could.
-
-'A most gentle prayer, brother. And yourself shall begin its
-granting.'
-
-'I, lady?'
-
-'Yes, you. Yourself is my desire. Bestow on me yourself and call me
-"sister." All my life I have desired a brother, and Hal says, by
-your sweet leave, I am to be no more brotherless; so call me
-henceforth sister, brother Jasper.'
-
-'Then, sister, shall I gain more than I bestow.'
-
-'Nay, brother, it is I that gain. I have full report of all your
-scholarship and most excellent parts.'
-
-'Believe it not, sister, or you will wrong yourself. Harry will ever
-be making too long an inventory of my commendations. But he is a
-most false reckoner, and you must not take me by his tale.'
-
-'Out upon you, lad,' said Harry. 'What a dry feast of modest phrases
-is that to set before your sister! Come, now, palm to palm is no
-greeting for brother and sister. A man would think you had never
-been to Court.'
-
-But I drew back, feeling very country-bred, and blushed, and then a
-flush of sunset hue made her beauty radiant, and Harry laughed at us
-his rattling laugh, which his wife could only stop with kisses.
-
-That made her my sister indeed. At first I had thought her manner
-tainted with too much Court freedom, but now she seemed a most wise
-and modest lady, who might in deed as well as word be a true sister
-to me. So we talked together pleasantly enough till it was time to
-go, nor did we stop our tongues as we rode out towards Ashtead. And
-yet again, now I bethink me, it was I that talked and she that
-listened, while Harry smiled to see us such good friends.
-
-I thinked he wondered, too, to hear me, and I am sure I marvelled at
-myself no less than that she should want to listen to my homily. Yet
-whenever my tongue ceased wagging, she had some little magic phrase
-or witch's glance to set it a-gallop again, and I felt I could talk
-to her till the sun grew cold.
-
-'It is a scholar,' she said, as we came to the place where our ways
-parted, 'that I have always desired to call "brother." Some one
-whose mouth would be all my books in little, just as was my Lord
-Bedford's when I was a little girl. And now methinks you have
-bestowed on me all my desire.'
-
-'Indeed you wrong yourself and me. I am not such a one, though I
-think my master, Mr. Cartwright, is.'
-
-'Ah, I have heard of him that he is a ripe scholar for all his wild
-doctrine; and now I know it, for I hear his pupil talk. I think Hal
-must speak no more than truth when he says you have read more books
-than Mr. Ascham himself.'
-
-'I tell you, sister, you must not mark his commendations, that are
-bred in love and not in reason.'
-
-'Now, I cry you mercy. You must not tell a new-wed wife that love
-and reason are not one. That were a philosophy fit for none but
-monkish scholars. There I must school you, and you me in all else
-but that. So I will prove a most gentle scholar; and now farewell,
-my brother, since it is here our ways are parting.'
-
-Mark what a change had come over my life since I travelled the road
-but a few hours ago. I had ridden into Rochester from pure good
-manners, thinking to carry a cold greeting to Harry's wife, and so
-return to my books and loneliness. How differently had it fallen
-out! Since I left Longdene I had found a sister--a courtly and
-beautiful woman to whom I could talk, and who would talk kindly to
-me. I knew not what to think as I rode slowly along, with the shouts
-of the crowds which had gathered to welcome Harry and his wife coming
-faintly to my ears across the fields on the still evening air.
-
-It had been the first hot day of summer, and as the night fell I sat
-in my old corner in the library at the open lattice, watching the
-golden labyrinth that broke up the dark stretch of the marshes into a
-hundred fantastic shapes of gloomy hue wherever the intricate
-channels caught the glow of the dying sunset.
-
-No less mazy and shapeless, no less gilded and gloomy, were my
-wandering thoughts. My man-born sense of stern duty cried to me that
-the carnal conversation of Harry and his wife was sin to be shunned,
-a temptation of the devil to drag me from the godly work on which I
-was set. But then, again, my God-born sense of beauty both in body
-and soul said, 'Go to them, and there your hunger shall be filled.'
-
-The labyrinth in the marshes had faded to a faint starlit glimmer
-here and there ere I had resolved my doubts. The whole host of
-heaven glittered down upon the sleeping world, and amidst them from
-either hand the _Lactea Via_ seemed to show a fair path brightened
-with the light of God to the highest regions of His kingdom.
-
-I knelt upon the deep window-seat and thanked God that He had given
-me a lantern for my path, and prayed for strength not to swerve from
-the way He had shown. For I had resolved to face the danger at
-Ashtead, that I might save the two souls I loved so well from the
-certain perdition to which I saw them drifting.
-
-Ah me! what cunning casuists are our desires! How subtly will the
-wantons weave a cloak of reasons round about their nakedness till we
-know them not, and follow whither they entice, taking them in their
-decent array for duty! So we march on after them to death and sin,
-with proudly lifted heads, as who should say, 'See a man who forsakes
-all to follow Christ.'
-
-It was not difficult with such a guide to find occasions for going to
-Ashtead. As the days of their married life wore on, and Harry tired
-of love-making, my visits grew frequent. He every day came to love
-his estate more and more, and was ever riding up and down it, with
-Sergeant Culverin at his heels, planning and altering and improving,
-just like his father. Nor could he do without a share in the country
-life around, and was always away whenever he could hear of a
-cock-fight or a bear-baiting within a reasonable distance.
-
-'Come over and bear Nan company,' he would say at such times. 'Her
-bright wit misses the companionship of the Court, and will, I fear,
-grow dull and humorous unless you keep it clear. It is no little
-comfort to me that you can be by her with your learning. Her
-scholarship trod on the heels of mine when she was little more than a
-baby, and now it has slipped ahead where I can never catch it. So
-you must be a good brother, Jasper, and be to her what I cannot.'
-
-So he would ride off, gallantly waving kisses to his pretty bride,
-and we were left alone to study cosmography together. She had begged
-me to teach it her, and so my great tomes got a second hallowing. I
-wondered daily more and more at her keen wit; her quickness at
-grasping what I had to tell was past all believing unless seen; yet
-would she never stay long at it, but would soon want waywardly to
-wander out into the garden and down amongst the woodlands to talk
-with me of whatever fancies had taken her playful thoughts.
-
-It was a pretty sight then to see how everything loved her. The cows
-came trotting at her call, the colts in the meadows raced for her
-caress and jostled each other jealously, while her dogs squatted
-round with drooping ears, miserable that her favours were for others,
-but too mannerly to protest. Then all together would follow her
-along the fence to the end of the field, where, as she went from
-them, they would break into rough play, and disperse cheerily to
-their rhythmical cropping of the grass again, while the spaniels,
-more fortunate, leaped round her with mended spirits.
-
-Each husbandman we came to would pause at his work and grin in silly
-happiness as she nodded him a merry 'god-den,' and the woodman's eyes
-almost brimmed with tears when she would not stop to hear the
-oft-told secrets of his art; and then when we came near the village
-the children started out of the brakes to peep at her, while the
-younger and braver ran crying after her with a present of
-gillifiowers or long purples, which their hot little hands had
-withered by long cuddling to a sickly faintness.
-
-The strangest and most difficult conquest which she made was
-Alexander. I remember well the day I saw it first. I was riding, as
-I often did, to Ashtead by way of the park, when as I topped a knoll
-I saw her wandering across the close-cropped turf with the old
-soldier at her heels, and a motley following of colts and cows and
-one short-winded hog. Now and again her dainty figure bent down to
-pick a flower, and as she stopped the colts stopped, and the cows and
-the hog, and the Sergeant stooped for a handful of all the flowers in
-reach.
-
-My wonder was increased when I saw Harry not far off overlooking the
-work of the woodmen, seemingly forgotten by his devoted follower. I
-cantered over to her, and, giving my horse to Lashmer, joined her in
-her walk. Soon we came to a woodman's cottage, whither she was
-carrying some simple drug, which her own learned little hands had
-compounded, for a sick child. Culverin and I remained without.
-
-'A most sweet and excellent lady,' sighed the Sergeant, as soon as
-she was out of hearing.
-
-'What! is your mind so changed?' said I. 'But a few months ago you
-had not a good word to throw at her.'
-
-'Well, that is getting on for a year now, sir,' he answered, 'and I
-did not know her as I do now. I did not dream what virtue was in
-her. Why, sir, there is not a colt here, take the wildest you will,
-that would not follow her up the turret stair. I never saw such
-management, except in Signor John Peter Pugliano. And then for
-contemplation, sir, I could not have believed it. It was but
-yesterday she told me horses were the only men for her heart, since
-there was nothing they would not do with coaxing.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-During all this time of which I write I had said nothing to Mrs.
-Waldyve about religion. I had persuaded myself, and that easily
-enough, that I must first make her my warm friend, and gain some
-influence with her by my teaching, and such other ways as I could
-think of. She, I think, avoided all mention of it too, since she
-really loved learning, and feared by speaking of things deeper to
-ruffle the happy calm in which we sailed together.
-
-It was not till after my little godson Fulke had been born, and Frank
-Drake had returned from the Indies, and was gone again to complete
-his discovery of those regions, that we came to talk of what was next
-my heart. Frank had been to see us, and Mrs. Waldyve was so taken
-with his manly, jolly ways, that when he was gone we often talked of
-him. I told her of his father and brothers, and their old strange
-life on the hulk, till one day she said she would like to go to Mr.
-Drake's church and hear him preach, for he made a discourse nearly
-every Sunday.
-
-Harry, who of late had been made a Justice, laughingly gave us
-dispensation from attending our parish churches, and the next Sunday
-we rode over to Upchurch. Harry stayed at home, and Mrs. Waldyve
-rode pillion behind Culverin, thereby for the space of our ride
-making him the happiest man in Christendom.
-
-As we neared Upchurch we overtook a man, who seemed a preacher,
-riding the sorriest nag I ever beheld. In passing him I saw it was
-none other than Mr. Death, the same who had come with Mr. Drake for
-the ordering of my father's funeral. He looked less sour than
-formerly, and wore an aspect of smug and well-fed content; but as he
-knew me not I passed on without speaking.
-
-Mr. Drake greeted us very warmly, and Mrs. Waldyve with great
-respect. He was in the churchyard talking with the godly farmers of
-the parish until it was time for the service. To-day the well-worn
-subject of the Queen's marriage, and all the danger that came of her
-delays, was set aside, and they had been discussing Mr. Strickland's
-Bill, which he had lately moved before Parliament for the abrogation
-of various religious ceremonies, and how the Queen's Grace had taken
-it so ill that she had put him in prison. They continued their talk
-after our greetings were done, while Mr. Drake drew me aside to ask
-what I thought of the new order of the Commission against reading,
-praying, preaching, or administering the sacraments in any place,
-public or private, without license. I condemned it so warmly, as
-will be easily guessed, for a piece of most wanton and sinful
-Erastianism, that the people in the churchyard gathered round to
-listen. I was in the midst of proclaiming it, on the authority of
-Mr. Cartwright, as a thing that should not and would not be borne,
-when little Willie Drake cried out from the skirts of the throng:
-
-'Father, father, there's a wolf in the fold!'
-
-A movement was made towards the church, and I could now see the
-Sergeant pointing out to his mistress the score of bad points of a
-beast tied up to the gate, which I at once recognised as Mr. Death's
-nag. Hoping to avert a storm, I begged them both to come with me
-into the church, which was now crowded; but the tempest had already
-burst.
-
-Mr. Death had got possession of the pulpit. It was a strong
-position, being only approached by the old rood-loft steps, which
-were cut through the solid pier of the chancel arch. The enemy was
-defending the narrow passage with the door, which he held tightly
-shut, and a smart fire of reasons, which he shot down at Mr. Drake
-from behind his barricada.
-
-'You have no license, you have no license,' he was crying as we
-entered.
-
-'What, no license!' said Mr. Drake. 'I who was licensed preacher to
-the King's navy when you were still crying for the mass!'
-
-'Ay, but the Archbishop has revoked all licenses, and you have not
-renewed,' answered Mr. Death. 'The flock must be fed with the Word;
-you may not feed them, and I claim your pulpit.'
-
-'O Death, Death!' cried Mr. Drake, 'is that your sting? There was a
-time when you would brag that no Erastian prelate of them all should
-be your authority, but only the voice of God, that called you to the
-ministry. Is this all that has come of your loud shouting for the
-battle? O Death, Death! where is now your victory?'
-
-'I care not for your roaring, Fire-Drake,' cried Death. 'You are no
-preacher, being unlicensed; and I, being licensed, have authority in
-every pulpit in the diocese.'
-
-The people now began to cry out, some that they would hear him, and
-some that he should be plucked down and cast out of the church. Yet
-they all stood by, waiting to see how the two preachers would settle
-it; and they had not to wait long.
-
-'Nay, if you fear not my roaring, Death,' said Mr. Drake, 'let us see
-what my claws will do.'
-
-With that he made a rapid _escalada_, and, seizing the garrison by
-the throat, plucked him forth by main force. Still no one
-interfered; so, wishing to end the scene, I whispered to Culverin to
-help Mr. Drake, which he did with great good-will, being, as he
-afterwards confessed, much taken by the valorous delivery of Mr.
-Drake's assault.
-
-Mr. Death cried lustily for a rescue, but all to no purpose. Between
-the two strong men he was helpless. In spite of his feeble
-struggles, they ran him right out of the church to where his horse
-was tied. There they set him in the saddle, face to the tail, and,
-giving his jade a smart cut, sent him in an ungainly canter on the
-road to Rochester.
-
-It pained me to think that Mrs. Waldyve should have witnessed such a
-scene the first time I had taken her to a Puritan church. She was
-looking shocked at what had occurred, and seemed in no way to share
-the merriment of the younger part of the congregation.
-
-'Let us go,' she said; 'I have seen enough. It is terrible.'
-
-But I prayed her to remain, pointing out that Mr. Drake was in no way
-to blame, and begging her to stay and see how reverent the people
-would be when he began to preach. Unwillingly, I think, she
-consented, more for fear of hurting me than from any desire she had
-to stay.
-
-Meanwhile Mr. Drake, a little flushed and breathless from his
-victory, had taken his place in the pulpit, and was giving out a
-psalm to quiet the people. They sang it all together in pricksong
-very orderly, so that when it was done they were in a decent mood for
-the sermon.
-
-He preached from the words, 'The hireling fleeth,' in John x. 13, for
-the profit and confusion of that part of his flock which had given
-countenance to Mr. Death. After the manner of his kind, he rated
-them soundly for their treason, with text and parable and a score of
-quaint conceits.
-
-'Is this your gratitude?' he cried. 'Know you not your shepherd? I
-will tell you, then, what he is. He is one of those who, unlike the
-holders of other benefices, has stood by his flock and fed them, nor
-given their care to a poor, dumb, hireling curate, while he himself
-has gone riding round to other flocks to preach vain and new
-doctrines to them, that he may have in return plate and hangings and
-napery and money. I know you, what you are. Your stomachs have
-grown proud and dainty against the Word. You must have choice; you
-must have spicery; you must have a new cook every day. You will run
-to every hireling who will throw you new meat, and turn from the
-sound old hay of your shepherd, who folds and feeds you every night.
-Out upon you! Is this the way to appease the wrath of God, whereby
-the heart, the tongue, the hand of every Englishman is bent against
-another? No! But you care not what divisions be made, so long as
-your stomachs be tickled with new and dainty sauces. Are you mad,
-good people? Has a devil possessed you? Look, look towards the
-east! See you not the great roaring bull that the vile Italian out
-of Rome hath loosed against you? See you not the glitter of his
-brazen horns; smell you not the stench of his filthy breath; hear you
-not the clang of his iron hoofs? Ah! but wait and you will. Wait
-till the bringing forth of the bull-calves that he hath gotten; wait
-till you see them compass you in on every side; and wait till you see
-them grow fat as those of Bashan, on your faith and your consciences
-and your purity. Then you will see; then you will smell; then you
-will hear. In that hour you will cry to him who folded and fed you;
-but the foul waters of idolatry will have passed over his head and
-choked him.'
-
-In such wise Mr. Drake continued very earnest for a good space, the
-people listening with bated breath, and from time to time a mutter of
-approval, ay, and here and there tears of repentance.
-
-Many have marvelled to me at Captain Drake's eloquence, but I know
-whence it came, and if I knew not before I should have known that
-day. I have tried to write down some of what his father said, but
-even if it were rightly done, as I doubt it is not, yet could no one
-tell the force of his preaching, unless he had seen him hold
-spell-bound that throng which so short a while ago had been laughing
-at a rude jest and an unseemly brawl, in which he played the chief
-part.
-
-I watched Mrs. Waldyve's face as he spoke on, and was, as it were,
-carried back to that day long ago when the Queen's grace was
-listening to the divinity act in Mary's Church at Cambridge. And no
-wonder, for never save then had I looked on a face so sweet and ever
-changing to new sweetness.
-
-Her brown eyes were fixed wistfully upon the preacher, and she
-listened so intently that I could see the fire and humour and pathos
-of his words reflected as in a mirror upon her upturned face. Once
-or twice I could see her wince, as one in pain, when some too rude
-conceit or figure jarred upon her delicately-nurtured sense. Then
-she would look round to me as though to find what I thought of it,
-and, seeing my eyes fixed upon her, turn quickly to the preacher
-again with heightened colour, more beautiful than ever. I too tried
-to look away, at the painting of the murder of St. Thomas, half
-defaced and mouldering on the wall of the Becket Chapel; at the
-strange chamber under the tower, where it was said a hermit nun lived
-in solitude so long; at Mr. Drake's red face and ardent figure, but
-all was beyond my power. I had no eyes save to read with beating
-heart the living book at my side, nor ears save to hearken to the
-still voice which whispered in them, 'Lo, how the true spirit of the
-gospel is reawaking in her!'
-
-It was the Sunday set apart for the quarterly taking of the
-communion. When the sermon was done, and while the people sang
-another psalm, the wardens fetched into the nave the trestles and
-communion board from where it stood at the east end of the church.
-Then they spread upon it a fair white cloth, and Mr. Drake brought
-forth a loaf of bread and a skin of wine, with cups and platters.
-
-Mrs. Waldyve watched them as though bewildered or afraid, not knowing
-what to do.
-
-'Jasper,' she whispered, 'we had better depart now. How can I
-receive the holy sacrament after this sort?'
-
-But again I exhorted her to stay, promising that all would be done
-most reverently, and according to the plain word of the gospel, with
-nothing added or taken away, so that whether or not it fell short of
-what her conscience would wish, yet there could be no offence in
-staying, as there clearly would be in going.
-
-She answered me nothing, but gave way and obeyed like a little child,
-leaning on me, as though for support to body and soul, as we drew
-near to the table. It was then I knew that I had prevailed. I knew
-that my will had overcome hers, and that the hour was at hand for me
-to set about my crowning work.
-
-The people made way for us close to where Mr. Drake was seated at the
-table. Mrs. Waldyve knelt down, as she had been accustomed at Court.
-One or two old women, when they saw that, knelt too, in the old
-fashion of their courting days. I stood by her side, and the people
-thronged round, sitting or standing, as each thought best or could
-get accommodated. For to most this was a thing indifferent or
-adiaphoristic.
-
-Mr. Drake now broke the bread and poured out the wine, and then
-passed the cups and platters to the people. Mrs. Waldyve looked up
-to me for guidance, and I bent over her to whisper what she should
-do. So we took and ate the supper of the Lord together, while Mr.
-Drake, from where he sat, read comfortable texts from the Scriptures,
-and now and again offered an earnest prayer of his own making.
-
-With another prayer _ex tempore_ and a psalm the service ended, and
-we all went forth, leaving the wardens to set the table back again in
-the chancel. Mrs. Waldyve said nothing as we waited in the
-churchyard for Culverin to fetch the horses. So we stood in silence,
-side by side, under the spreading branches of the ancient yew tree,
-returning the greetings of the villagers as they filed out under the
-lych-gate, and watching the couples that broke off from the mass, the
-gossips in close talk over the sermon, the lovers sheepishly far
-apart. At last they were all dispersed amongst the trees and the
-black and white cottages that nestled amongst them; and we were left
-alone, looking out over the melancholy Medway, which seemed lost
-amidst the dreary Saltings and the inlets that ran up into the
-marshes. The Sergeant brought the horses at last, and Mr. Drake came
-to say 'Good-bye,' and so we went on our way.
-
-For shame I must forbear to speak of the pride that filled my heart
-as we rode home in silence. She was in deep thought, with eyes
-looking far away. Now and again she looked towards me as though to
-speak, but her lips only let pass a sigh. I knew well of what she
-thought, and did not disturb her meditation. I knew well how that
-strange change had come over her, which now I know not how to name.
-It was a thing that came, and still comes, to many, whether of high
-or low degree. Men such as I was then, when they see its signs so
-suddenly, and, as it were, miraculously appearing, say, 'Behold,
-another whom the Lord has called!'
-
-I say it is for very shame that I forbear, for now I know the coward
-that I was to play so upon a woman's passions. I see her now as some
-bright painted bird for which I lay in wait, spreading my nets in the
-way I had learnt by long and secret watching she would go, and
-setting gins for her, which I furnished with cunning baits, while
-she, trusting me, thought I did but feed her lovingly.
-
-It was not till the afternoon that we spoke of it. We had been
-supping in the orchard, and Harry, finding us but dull companions,
-had fallen asleep in his chair.
-
-'Jasper,' said Mrs. Waldyve, 'come, let us walk together. I must
-have private speech with you.' We rose and wandered down our
-favourite walk by the park, but to-day the colts had no caresses.
-'It cannot be right, Jasper, it cannot be,' she burst out, as we
-entered the wood.
-
-'What cannot be right?' asked I.
-
-'It cannot be right,' she said, 'to cast away, as you have done, all
-the old holy rites of the Church.'
-
-'It is hard to part with them, I know,' I answered, 'since from your
-childhood you have learned to love and hold them sacred. Yet for
-that very cause must you cast them away. Ere we can hope to see
-religion purified, we must first stifle all that deafening ritual
-that drowns the voice of God.'
-
-'Yet,' she pleaded, 'why must we approach Him, as we did this day,
-without order, without ceremony, without any token of homage? If we
-offer it to the Queen, surely the more should we do so to the King of
-Heaven.'
-
-'I do not deny,' said I, 'that what we saw to-day might have been
-done more decently. Yet remember how long popes and prelates and
-priests have stood between God and His people, and marvel not if, now
-that He has called us to the steps of His throne, we know not at
-first how to approach Him reverently. But He will teach us, when at
-last we can draw near and hear what He will whisper in our ear. But
-still there are many left between us and the throne, in spite of all
-that has been done. But the hour is coming when one I know will
-raise his voice like a clarion and bid them stand aside, in words
-they shall not dare to disobey. Then at last we shall be face to
-face with God, and know indeed what His will is.'
-
-This and much more of like effect I told her out of my well-learnt
-lesson. She struggled ever more faintly against me, but I was
-strongly armed against all she could say. I told her of
-predestination, and what she should think of works done in the days
-of her unbelief. All the things she loved so well--ceremonies,
-vestments, and every relic of the ancient mass to which she clung--I
-condemned mercilessly with practised argument. I showed how Rome had
-abused the Christian faith, and how it could not be purified till
-every meretricious adornment by which worship had been turned to
-idolatry was cleansed away.
-
-She fell at last to imploring me to leave her something, but I told
-her, without pity, that no good could come of any unholy union of the
-gospel and papacy, such alluring schemes being only thought on by
-their inventors as an unstable place whence it was hard not to slip
-back to Antichrist.
-
-It was an easy task I had. In the wilderness of doctrine, where she
-suddenly found herself, she seemed but to want a guide who would take
-her by the hand and lead her to rest. So it was but a short work to
-set her again on the path she once had trodden under the good Earl of
-Bedford's lead, and which she had deserted for the flowery mazes of
-the Court.
-
-It were tedious to tell step by step how we trode the sweet and
-dangerous way together. All will understand if they remember what we
-two were. I, from long sojourn at Cambridge, a monk, for with all
-its faults my university was then a most well-ordered monastery,--a
-monk who, as it were, was on a sudden released from his vows; she, a
-woman who, after a strictly ordered childhood, was set loose in a
-pleasure-loving Court, where her life was an ever-changing scene of
-exciting pleasure and gallantry.
-
-The change was too great for both of us. For myself I find no
-excuse, but for her much. Ere the first fires of her youth had burnt
-out she was overcome by the passionate love-making of the handsome
-soldier, who came covered with glory from the wars abroad to lay
-siege to her heart at home. What wonder if she loved before all that
-pattern of manhood and gentleness who so loved her, and thought she
-could feed on his love alone! What wonder that, when passion grew
-dull and she found how full of many things besides love a man's life
-is, and how full of things which, in spite of all her trying, proved
-but dull to what her life had been at Court, insensibly she was ready
-to open her heart to any excitement, even to me and my teaching!
-
-If I had not been blinded by my own accursed pride and
-self-righteousness, I should have known by many marks which we passed
-whither our road led. I should have known when, after that first
-talk, we began to be silent in Harry's presence, though we could
-chatter well enough when he was not by. I should have known when we
-ceased to speak, and moved farther from each other whenever he came
-where we talked. I should have known when she spoke to me of her
-misery in being wed to so ungodly a husband, and begged me to speak
-earnestly to him that he might amend his ways.
-
-It is my one comfort of all that time that I still had manliness left
-to defend him with all my heart to her, and that I was spared that
-last depth of knavery, much used by craven gallants, who, that they
-may win a cheap and easy favour with a woman, will make her believe
-with a score of cunning lies that her husband is unworthy of her.
-
-Though out of the deeps of my love for him I found a hundred excuses
-to offer her, yet I laboured when alone with him to turn his light
-heart to weightier things, well knowing it was useless, or who can
-tell whether I should have tried?
-
-It was as we rode home over the downs from hawking wild-fowl on the
-marsh-lands in the valley of the Medway that I first attacked him,
-and I well remember that my surprise was rather at how much he had
-thought than at what his thought was.
-
-It was such a glorious afternoon as now, since I have known Signor
-Bruno, lifts my heart to God more truly than ever did psalms and
-prayers, much as I loved them and do still. The wide and marshy
-river stretched out below us far away to the low haze-clad lands of
-Hoo and the misty Thames. Water and woodland and field were bathed
-in sunshine which seemed, as it were, to melt all Nature into such
-full and tender harmony with its Creator, as I think, after all my
-many wanderings, can nowhere be seen in truer perfection than in our
-own dear England. Moved by the beauty which wrapped the land, Harry
-fell to praising it with a score of rich conceits, and I seized the
-occasion to broach the cask of divinity which I had brewed for him.
-
-'Surely,' I broke in, 'surely should our lives be one long song of
-gratitude, set to a holy and solemn tune, to Him who made all this so
-fair for us.'
-
-'Why, lad, why?' asked Harry. 'You can only conceive this of
-God--that He is a perfected quintessence of all that is best and
-fairest in us, and therefore must our love of these things, and our
-joy in them, be but a grain of sand beside the mountain of His. His
-delight in the great banquet He has spread is for all eternity, while
-we can but gaze upon it for a little hour. No, lad, I cannot thank
-Him for these things, which are but the crumbs that fall from His
-table; but I worship it all, and Him in it, as I was taught in Italy.
-When will you leave looking for Him in holes which are only full of
-musty quibbles and the mouldering shreds of men's quarrels? Stand
-up, man, and see Him in yonder sky, in yonder woods, in yonder broad
-flowing river.'
-
-'But, Harry, Harry!' I cried, feeling my worst fears confirmed, 'have
-a care, or this Italian dreaming will run you into flat atheism.'
-
-'Ah, Jasper,' he answered, 'I fear you are only like the rest, and
-will brand me atheist and epicure because my voice is not raised in
-any controversy. Must I rail with Baius and howl with Brentius
-before you grant me faith? With whom shall I be saved, and with whom
-damned? Show me that first, lad, for I cannot tell. When I first
-set out upon my travels I strove awhile to study these things for
-love of you and Mr. Follet, yet in every land and every city where I
-came I found the same angry unrest where Antinomian roared against
-Pelagian, and Synergists bellowed between; where Lutheran and
-Calvinist and Papist, and who knows what other legion of sects
-beside, did battle one with another, and each against all, till
-Europe seemed to throb and ring again with their unchristly din, and
-the sweet voice of God could I nowhere hear.'
-
-'Nay, then, I fear you closed your ears in your impatience, or the
-true voice of our purified faith would have sounded clear enough
-above all the rest.'
-
-'No, I tell you, Jasper, I opened my ears wide enough, but they were
-deafened with the clash of syllogism on syllogism, and lie on lie.
-My eyes were blinded with the glint of steel and the flash of fires.
-My nostrils were filled with the stench of railing breath. Then I
-cried, "Where, O God, shall thy spirit be found? Surely not on this
-earth, that men's tongues and pens have so befouled." But there was
-one under the sweet blue sky of Italy who whispered in my ears, "Turn
-thee to Nature and thou shalt find thy quest." I heard him and
-sought earnestly where he showed, and soon the whole world was bright
-with the spirit of God, and I was in the midst of it. Yes, lad, I
-turned from men and saw it shining in the limpid rays of the stars; I
-heard it in the waving grass and the laughter of the brooks; I
-perceived it in the sweet-smelling flowers. Will you then cry
-"Atheist" at me for whom God is everywhere, when for you and the like
-of you He lies but in a little dogma, nay, in the mangled shred of a
-dogma? Take it not unkindly that I speak so hot, but it makes me mad
-to think that men will so befoul the nest which God has given them,
-and think they do Him service.'
-
-'Indeed,' I answered, wishing to follow his mood, for I knew if I
-broke in as I would to another with my theology that he would only
-call me a Puritan and crack some kindly jest, 'I do not complain of
-your heat. There is doubtless much truth in what you say, for Luther
-himself wrote, "There is nought in Nature but a certain craving for
-God," yet he did not hold that mere contemplation of Nature will
-satisfy that craving. The beauty and fulness of Nature does but
-create the hunger which right doctrine alone will fill.'
-
-'Nay, if Luther is to guide us, remember who it was who taught that
-this very passion for God of which you speak, and which is far from
-what I mean, becomes the lust of the spirit. It is that which sets
-your wits awry. Beware of it, Jasper, as you avoid the devil. For I
-tell you, from the lust of the spirit to the lust of the flesh is but
-a little step. You shall see it shortest in a woman.'
-
-'Jest not, Harry, on things so solemn,' said I, not thinking even
-then that he could mean what he said.
-
-'I jest not,' he answered; 'it is sober truth, and if I did jest,
-wherefore not? Sometimes I think that jesting is your only earnest,
-and that there is nothing but that which is worth living for.'
-
-'At least you jest in earnest now,' I said, thinking to weather him
-on another tack. 'Even you must grant that there are other things
-but that worth the life-search--exempli gratia, Fame.'
-
-'How do I know that?' he answered; 'for how shall Fame satisfy a man
-when he has got it? Why, look you, Fame is a thing begets hunger for
-itself faster than a dead dog breeds maggots. There was never a
-fame-glutton yet but went to his grave fasting.'
-
-''Tis because they hunger after earthly fame,' said I. 'Seek
-something higher. If you cannot pursue God, yet at least you may
-search out wisdom. That is earnest enough.'
-
-'Wisdom! wisdom!' cried Harry. 'Why, what is that? In truth, I
-think that Folly is the only Wisdom, and there's no such profitable
-travelling as a voyage in the Ship of Fools. In a thousand times to
-one he who pursues Wisdom shall find he has no quarry but Folly,
-while he that runs merrily after Folly shall find on a sudden that he
-is carrying Wisdom in his hand. Who shall say, amidst the ruins of
-these broken times, where Folly shall be sought and where Wisdom
-shall be found?'
-
-'I know there is great confusion in the times,' said I, 'but still
-there is at least sure ground left for a scholar who will pursue
-diligently the arts and sciences.'
-
-'Who can tell even that?' answered Harry. 'Read Cornelius Agrippa,
-if you know him not. Read his _Vanity and Uncertainty of Arts and
-Sciences_, and you shall find wisdom there that will prove you, by
-most nice argument and sharp reasons, that knowledge is the very
-pestilence that puts all mankind to ruin, that chases away all
-innocence, condemns all truth, and places errors on the highest
-thrones.'
-
-'Oh, Harry, Harry!' I cried in despair, 'you are Italianate past all
-praying for.'
-
-'Well, then, if you cannot pray with me, laugh with me, jest with
-me,' he answered. 'Are we not all the puppets and playthings that
-God has made for His laughter, while He sits at His feast. Let him
-who would be wise make haste to laugh at himself with God, and at all
-men with their little humours. Hola! Quester! Monk! hola, hola!'
-he shouted then to his hounds that stayed behind, and bringing his
-hand with a ringing clap upon his gelding's shoulder, broke gaily
-into a canter across the stretch of sheep-cropped turf that lay
-before us.
-
-What could I do with such a man? To me he was all and more than I
-had dreaded he would become when he travelled into Italy. In my eyes
-he was but one more added to the long list of atheists and epicures
-which that wicked and beautiful land has filled.
-
-Still, I would not desist from my efforts to win him back to what I
-deemed the only true path. Amidst the ruins of his faith I searched
-for some unbroken stones, wherewith I might lay the foundations of a
-new sanctuary for his soul. I tried to make him see the horrors and
-dangers of the Popish religion, and so teach him to love and cling to
-our Christian faith as its most stalwart opponent. The last time
-that ever I attacked him was when I thought by dwelling on the
-idolatry of Rome to gain my end, seeing how wholly opposed it was to
-his own wide and spiritual conceptions. But it was all to little
-purpose.
-
-'In so far,' he answered me, 'as Rome is the enemy of the Queen and
-of England, she is also my enemy. Since the bull of deposition was
-nailed on the gate of Lambeth Palace I have been her foe, ready to do
-all in my power to strike and thwart and humble her as I may find
-occasion, or the Queen's Grace bids me. Yet for Rome's faith I hate
-her not, though I may smile at it sometimes, as I do at others.'
-
-'But surely, Harry,' I said, 'you must detest their damnable,
-idolatrous doctrines of the mass and saints and images. Even for
-your love of mankind you must loathe these chains, by which they drag
-men down into the dark pits of superstition.'
-
-'Rail not at idolatry, lad,' he answered. 'We are all idolaters.
-All men worship the idol which each sets up for himself in such
-manner as his mind, clogged with an imperfect shape, and, as it were,
-fettered and imprisoned in his visible body, can fashion it. Each
-has his own graven image, to which he bows. He thinks it is God, ay,
-and sometimes will almost persuade others so; yet it is nought but a
-little unshapely bit, that he laboriously has hewn from the great
-soul that dwells in his mind. There is but one escape from idolatry.
-We must worship the one universal God, who is formless and yet of
-every form, who is everywhere and in everything, who, as I say, is a
-spirit that breathes in the sweet scents of the flowers, in the
-sighing of the summer wind, in the twittering songs of the birds, in
-the kisses of lovers' lips.'
-
-Such was the mangled philosophy he brought home from Padua, that
-lodestone of wit, to which then gathered all that was bold and
-learned and polished in thought throughout the length and breadth of
-Europe. What wonder that I, being untravelled, had no skill to win
-him from his opinions, and drew each day closer to the gentle spirit
-of her who so trustingly took me for her guide!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-It was early in the year of grace 1572, that Frank Drake came back
-from the second voyage which he made to discover the Spanish Indies.
-He came to see us soon after he landed, in most excellent heart. For
-not only was he the bearer of a modest return for our venture with
-him, but he also brought news that his discovery of those seas was
-now complete, and as happy in its omens as it was complete.
-
-'Heark ye, my lads,' said he, setting a hand on our knees as he sat
-between us, and speaking in a low excited voice. 'I have found the
-treasure-house of the world! I have found the well whence the
-Spaniards draw the life-blood that gives them all their strength to
-trouble Europe and champion Antichrist! Closer, my lads, while I
-whisper its name. Nombre de Dios it is called, "the Name of God,"
-and in the name of God I will so rifle it and breed such terror in
-the place that thenceforth they shall rather call it Nombre de
-Diablo.'
-
-'But how, Frank, bow?' we cried.
-
-'Why, easily enough,' he answered. 'They sleep there in fatness and
-security, they grow soft and womanish with riches; and who can
-wonder? Since thither flow all the wealth of Peru, the gold of El
-Dorado, and the pearls of the Southern sea. Yet they protect it not,
-but lie secure in ease and wantonness, because they deem the land is
-theirs, since the vile Italian has given it to them; they deem it is
-theirs, because they think no man can sail thither save with their
-pilots: but we can and will by God's help. I know a safe place for
-rendezvous hard by, whence we may strike, as we will, swift and
-sudden before they are 'ware of us. Then we will show them whether
-the world is the Pope's to part and grant. They shall see the New
-World is for those that can occupy with a strong arm. Hey! 'twill be
-merry to think how the fat lazy hens will cluck and flutter when the
-hawk has struck and we are rolling home again, with golden wedges for
-ballast, and pearls to fill the cracks.'
-
-'But, Frank,' said I, almost breathless at his gigantic project, 'how
-will you get money to furnish ships for so great a venture?'
-
-'And how many ships do you think I want?' exclaimed Drake. 'Do you
-think I am going to sail away with a whole fleet, like Jack Hawkins,
-with the Spanish Ambassador looking on and sending word before me?
-No, my lads, I know better than that now. I know the thing can be
-done, and I know how to do it. Just two ships is all I take.'
-
-'What!' cried Harry, 'attack the Indies, attack the choicest
-possession of the greatest empire in the world with two ships? You
-must be mad.'
-
-'Maybe, maybe, my lad,' laughed Drake. 'We shall see who is mad and
-who is sane before long; but now I mean to sail with just two ships
-and a pinnace or two for shore work. I have already bespoke in
-Plymouth the _Pasha_, of seventy tons, for my admiral, and then I
-will take again my little _Swan_, of twenty-five, for my
-vice-admiral. She is still staunch, and now knows her way to the
-Indies better than any ship that floats in English waters. Brother
-Jack is to be captain in her.'
-
-'But, for God's sake, Frank,' said I, 'be not so hastily resolved.
-Think again what you do. It is not hens you fly at. It is a mighty
-eagle with claws of iron, whose wings stretch over the four quarters
-of the world.'
-
-'You may say that too,' answered he. 'Yet remember that though the
-eagle lays her eggs in Jupiter's lap, still she escapes not requital
-for her wrong done to the emmet. The Spaniard has foully wronged me,
-and foully wronged one beside whom I am indeed but an emmet. It is
-the Lord's work to do what I say. It can be done, and I am going to
-do it.'
-
-This he said quietly, without boasting, and with so determined an air
-of cheerful resolution that I knew no words of ours would turn him
-from his audacious purpose. So we listened, wondering more and more
-at the fire of his dauntless spirit, while he unfolded to us every
-detail of his plan.
-
-'Would God I could sail with you!' burst out Harry at last, with
-kindling eyes.
-
-'Why not, lad, why not?' cried Frank, smiting him on the back in his
-cheery sea fashion. 'Such lads as you I want. Not a man over thirty
-years old will I have. It is youth and fire we need. The oldest are
-too wary, and will not believe I know best. Say now, will you sail
-and take command of the land-soldiers?'
-
-'Would God I could!' answered Harry mournfully. 'It will be a tale
-to be told beside the story of Æneas, and sung with the song of the
-Argonauts. But tempt me not, Frank; I am married now, and must stay
-to watch over my sweet Nan. My fighting days are over, save at
-England's need.'
-
-'Well, as you will,' said Drake, very disappointed. 'But you miss a
-glorious venture; and you will not go either, Jasper?'
-
-'Gladly I would,' said I, 'but each must to the work his hand finds
-to do, and mine, as you know, is here. My money, as far as my
-capacity goes, shall be with you, though for profit I would rather
-have seen it risked in a plain voyage to Guinea after negroes. Yet,
-since this is the Lord's work which you are on, you shall have what
-help my purse can yield. But for my body, the Lord has need of that
-here.'
-
-This was indeed so, as I thought, though had it been otherwise I
-doubt if then I should have had stomach for Frank's wild enterprise.
-Mr. Cartwright had already sounded his note against prelatical Church
-government and all its brood of evils, and had been deprived both of
-his professorship and his fellowship. Since that time he had been
-busy with his _Admonition to Parliament_. That clarion-blast, which
-was to wake a war in England which seems each day to grow in
-fierceness, was about to be blown, and seeing how much he looked to
-me to help him in his great work, and how stormy a controversy he
-foresaw it would raise, I felt I should not leave his side.
-
-Such was the reason I gave to myself, yet I think my resolve was
-dictated rather by distaste for the danger of so rash an expedition,
-and by the closer ties which bound me to England.
-
-Would God I had had strength to give Frank another answer! What sin
-and misery I might then have been spared, and of how much sorrow
-brought on those I loved best should I have been guiltless! Yet it
-was fated that I should have another tale to tell, so let me hasten
-in shame to the end, which now came quickly.
-
-When Frank left us our lives rolled on in the old ruts again, but
-deeper than before. Out of his great love for his wife, and his
-knightly devotion to her, Harry had made a sacrifice greater than we
-and he guessed in refusing Drake's offer; and seeking to forget it in
-an unceasing round of work and pleasure, he devoted his time more and
-more to his sheep and tenants and estate, and sought more, eagerly
-the assemblies of gentlemen where sport was to be had.
-
-As for his wife, she seemed to think now of nothing but good works
-amongst the poor and reading theology with me. Hour after hour she
-would pore over Genevan Latin, still her Puritanism grew sterner and
-sterner. Harry's hunting and bull-baiting and card-playing became
-more and more distasteful in her eyes, till at last I think it was
-all they could see of him; so that when he came home at nights it was
-little return he got for the love he was ready to lavish upon her.
-
-Perhaps he was to blame, though I can never see in his most noble
-life anything that is not praiseworthy. Perhaps if he could have
-given her a little more and his work a little less, she would have
-been readier to forgive the manly pleasures he loved in common with
-every other gentleman of spirit. Yet I think not. I doubt the
-poison which I, in my self-willed ignorance, administered for a
-wholesome physic was too strong and deadly for her high-wrought
-nature.
-
-Soon she would bid none but the poor and preachers to Ashtead, where
-once she had loved so well to entertain very gallant parties of
-gentry from the country round, ay, and from London too. Nor would
-she go abroad to other houses, as she used, with Harry, since she had
-grown to hate the sports and ungodly conversation and gallantry that
-went forward at such times.
-
-Above all, there was one house which she hated. It belonged to a
-Popish gentleman, and was well known to me as a place where there was
-a great coming and going of strangers, who rode on North Country
-cobbles, and often spoke with a strong North Country burr. We had
-not yet forgotten the Catholic risings in the North. The Duke of
-Norfolk's treasonable practices with Rome for her Majesty's
-destruction had been but recently brought to light, and he was yet
-lying a convicted traitor in the Tower, but still unexecuted.
-Rumours were leaking out or being invented of other great Popish
-plots for the subversion of the realm and the making away with the
-Queen and her ministers. It was no wonder, then, that Harry's
-constant visits to the house of which I speak caused us no little
-anxiety, although now I know he went there bent only on pleasure.
-
-It was one of these visits that brought about the end. I had ridden
-over to Ashtead one afternoon towards the end of April. The morning
-had been showery--a mirror of England's state at that time, as I
-thought to myself, a mixture of sunshine and tears.
-
-To my great surprise, instead of finding Mrs. Waldyve bent over some
-Latin book as usual, she was sitting miserably crouched upon the
-window seat, wild-eyed and weary, as one that grieved sorely and
-could not weep. As soon as she heard my step she sprang up with a
-strange little laugh, and pressed my hand very hard as she spoke.
-
-'Oh, Jasper,' she said, 'I am so glad you are come. I had need of
-you. Let us come to the orchard, where we can talk alone.'
-
-We went out together and seated ourselves side by side, as we had
-done many times before, on the bowed limb of an ancient apple-tree
-which, as though overcome with years, rested, all gnarled and
-twisted, upon the flowery turf. It was one of the first warm days of
-spring. The grass was spangled over with primroses, the trees were
-laden with flowery frost, the choir of the birds was warbling its
-fullest love-notes, and all was bathed in the soft sunshine of the
-waning afternoon.
-
-Yet there was nothing for me so beautiful as the woman who sat by my
-side, gazing far away over the mellow prospect of field and woodland
-and river, or so tuneful as the soft murmur that came in rhythmical
-whisper from her heaving breast.
-
-For a time we sat in silence, and while she gathered strength and
-calmness to speak, I watched the sunlight playing in her hair and,
-wondering, tried to read the thoughts that chased each other across
-her wistful face.
-
-'Jasper!' she said at last, turning suddenly on me, 'whatever comes
-of it you will not think ill of me? Say you will not.'
-
-I tried to calm and comfort her, and begged her to tell me what her
-trouble was; but I was afraid to speak much, for a strange fear of
-her seemed to come over me, and I could not think quietly.
-
-'When he was going over there, you know where, Jasper,' she said,
-'the voice of the Lord whispered to me that I must stay him. So I
-arose and begged him not to go. He patted my cheek, as though I were
-a child, and laughing, asked me of what I was afraid. Then I told
-him how we feared for his body, lest he should be drawn into some
-Popish plot, and, more than that, for his soul, lest he should be
-tempted to backsliding and so to utter perdition. And what think you
-he said, Jasper? I shudder to speak it. He patted my cheek, smiling
-again, and said, "Ah, Nan,' 'tis a pity you are grown such a prim
-little Puritan. But fear not; a Waldyve heart is loyal enough, and
-as for my soul, why, lass, God--if there is a God that marks these
-little coils--must be made of better stuff than to damn my soul for a
-frolic with a jolly papist or two." Then I knew what he was. I was
-stricken dumb, and he rode away. Jasper!' she went on, seizing my
-arm and leaning eagerly towards me, 'he is an atheist! I am married
-to an atheist! My son is an atheist's son! Oh, my God, what shall I
-do? He will grow up to mock God, like his father. He will learn to
-mock at my faith, like Hal. I know it. He will not care for me.
-Hal wins all to him. What shall I do? Counsel me, brother, for
-God's sake, or my heart will break. I have no friend but you. Thank
-God He sent you to me!'
-
-I know not what I said. I could not think of my words, only of her,
-as she leaned her lithe young figure on my arm and sobbed and sobbed
-again. A devil came into me with the sunshine, and the warbling of
-the birds, and the faint scent of the flowers, and at last I dared
-not speak for dread of what words the fiend had put on my tongue.
-
-So we continued for a space, till suddenly her sobs ceased and she
-sprang up to her feet before me. I rose too, stepping a little back
-from her. I dared not go near, for her eyes were glittering, her
-cheeks flushed, and all in the reddening sun she was a vision too
-fair for my strength.
-
-'Jasper,' she said quietly, but much excited and trembling, and
-looking at me very fixedly, 'there is but one way, and the Lord has
-shown it me. I must go away from here, from him, and take little
-Fulke away, or he and I and all will be lost for ever. Jasper, you
-must take us away.'
-
-I started, horror-stricken, to hear from her sweet mouth the very
-words which the devil had set on my own lips and which I had striven
-so hard to keep back. I knew then I could not resist much longer.
-It seemed to me that I must be speaking to a fiend who had taken her
-angel shape, and my courage for so hopeless a battle began to fail me.
-
-'Brother,' it said, coming towards me, 'you will not fail me. Save
-me and my boy, your own godson, from perdition. Take me to where he
-is fostering, and thence whither you will. I care not, so long as I
-am away from this great trial.'
-
-Her form was close to me; what seemed her little white hands were
-upon me; two wistful brown eyes like hers were looking up in my face
-in an agony of pleading. What could I do, what could I do? I had
-taken the soft form in my arms before I knew and passionately kissed
-the sweet upturned face. God forgive me for it, when His will is! I
-was tempted more than I could bear.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-The ways were very foundrous, and night closed in upon us while we
-were still on our flight. Ere Harry had returned we had departed and
-were making for the farm to which little Fulke had been sent with his
-foster-mother. It was a good distance from Ashtead, being the
-farthest part of Harry's estate inland, and detached from the rest by
-a large space. For that reason it had been chosen by him for his
-boy, that he might be as far as possible away from the marshes, which
-were held to be pestilent in the spring.
-
-Mrs. Waldyve was riding pillion behind me. A sort of calm had
-settled upon us with the night, and I picked my way as well as I
-could through the mud, content to feel her soft arm about me, and
-know that it was her sweet form that leaned upon me.
-
-Darker and darker gathered the night, and deeper grew the mire. I
-could no longer see where my horse trod, and had to leave him with
-loosened rein to find his way as best he could. I think the unwonted
-weight upon his back must have wearied him, for all at once he
-stumbled, and we found him stuck up to the girths in a slough.
-
-There was nothing to be done but dismount and lift Mrs. Waldyve off.
-I sank almost over my boots as I took her in my arms, but managed
-nevertheless to set her safely on a firm bank by the side of the
-road. My next care was to get my horse clear, which at last, with
-great toil, I did.
-
-Still, we were in a sorry plight. My horse had so laboured in the
-slough that by the time I had got him free he was strained and weary
-past all going. Moreover, the clouds had gathered above us in great
-masses, so that not only was the darkness almost impenetrable, but I
-had great fear of a heavy downpour of rain.
-
-I know not what would have befallen us had it not been that I was
-aware of a little inn not far distant, which was used by travellers
-passing from Rochester towards Maidstone and Tunbridge.
-
-That I could reach it with my horse I did not doubt, but was fearful
-for Mrs. Waldyve. When, however, I told her how things stood with us
-I found her so resolved and courageous that I determined to set out
-forthwith, and in a shorter time than I had hoped we saw the lights
-of the inn in front of us.
-
-No sooner had we reached shelter than the rain came down in torrents.
-During the happy dream in which I had ridden, and afterwards in the
-labour with my horse, I had hardly realised what we were doing. I
-was reckless, not caring what came so long as I was with her on our
-journey, away from my old mournful life, as it now seemed to me.
-
-It was clear we must pass the night in the inn. To go on was not to
-be thought of. I know not what Mrs. Waldyve thought, but to me it
-seemed quite natural and easy, though, I confess, it was with no
-little comfort that I found there were no travellers there besides
-ourselves.
-
-Perhaps it is well I cannot write down each thing we said and all
-that passed that night; yet I would do it if I could. It seems to me
-now like a faint dream of some other man's life; and, try how I will,
-I can remember little but the bustling hostess setting our supper to
-a tune of chattering gossip, and after it was cleared leaving us with
-a cheery 'Good-night to your gentilities.'
-
-I know we sat side by side in the great chimney corner, my arm about
-her, her hand in mine, talking low, with such soft speech as none but
-a villain would suffer to pass between him and another man's wife. I
-know the rain had ceased and the new-risen moon was shining
-gloriously in between the mullions of the broad low lattice window,
-almost darkening the dancing firelight, and making a large chequer
-pattern on the rush-strewn floor.
-
-How long we sat so I cannot tell, no more than how long we should
-have sat had we not heard the plash of horses' feet in the mud
-outside. The shadow of a cloaked horseman passed across the bright
-chequer pattern on the floor, and then another.
-
-We heard them stop, and then a voice that made our hearts stand still
-hailed the house.
-
-'Hola, house! Hola, within!' it cried.
-
-'What would ye, gentles?' cried the voice of the hostess.
-
-''Slight, to come in, woman. Open quickly,' said the traveller.
-
-'Despatch, despatch, Jem,' cried the landlady. 'See you not it is a
-gentleman and his gentleman servant? In good time, your worship. My
-goodman is in bed. Be patient till he make shift, that we be not
-shamed, and he shall let you in. Will Ostler, Will Ostler, wake up,
-you loon, and take the horses! Was ever such luck? Mass! but I knew
-we should have travellers ever since last Tuesday, when I could not
-sleep for dreaming of green rushes, and that's for strangers.'
-
-I could not speak, or stir, or think, but only stand by the hearth
-and stupidly mark what the shrill voice of the hostess said. Yet I
-had strength to resolve, come what might, I would not draw my blade.
-
-It seemed an age of silence, broken only by muttered words for a
-moment without, and then the door burst open, and Harry, covered with
-mud, strode in with his rapier drawn in his hand and his cloak about
-his left arm. Culverin followed at his heels, and, slamming the door
-after him, stood solidly in front of it, while Harry advanced towards
-us.
-
-There seemed no anger in his face, but rather sorrow and set purpose,
-as he came quickly forward. I stood where I was, hoping in a moment
-to feel his point and have an end to all; but Mrs. Waldyve made a
-sudden movement, half of horror, half as though to protect me.
-
-Harry stopped in a moment with lowered point, and looked at her with
-a face in which was such a constant love and unspeakable pain as
-tears my heart to this hour to think on. Then, setting hard his
-teeth, he lifted his rapier on high and flung it with all his might
-crashing through the window into the yard outside.
-
-I heard the clang of the broken glass. I heard the Sergeant's great
-broadsword come screaming from its sheath. I saw Harry stand
-trembling with set face, trying in vain to speak with steady voice;
-and the Sergeant, rigid as a column, at the door with his drawn
-sword, his naked dagger, and his bristling moustache.
-
-A choking sound came at last from Harry's lips, in which there seemed
-no trace of his own clear, ringing voice.
-
-'For God's sake, Jasper, bring her back. You know not what you do.
-You love her not as I do.'
-
-That was all. I think he would have said more, but could not. For a
-moment he seemed to struggle for words, and then turned and was gone.
-The Sergeant sheathed his sword with an angry clang, turned on his
-heel rudely, without a word or salute, and we were alone again in the
-moonlight.
-
-Then there burst upon me in dazzling light, that seemed to scorch my
-very soul, the horror of my sin. I saw in a moment how blind I had
-been. A mad rage at Heaven and all that had made my life seized me.
-Was it for this I had striven, and denied myself, and lived the life
-of a monk, when others were dancing, and dicing, and drinking in full
-content? Was this, after all my toil and wasted youth, the place
-where my religion had brought me?
-
-So, in wild reaction, my long-pent thoughts, their bonds burst in
-sunder, ran riot through my brain, till I heard a horseman dash away
-through the mud. In hate of Heaven, in hate of myself, I went forth,
-not knowing what I did.
-
-The cool night air and the pure, soft moonlight seemed to soothe my
-fever as I stepped into the yard. There lay Harry's rapier, where it
-had fallen, the hilt buried in the mire, the blade glittering like
-hope in the silver light.
-
-I know not how the fancy seized me, unless, unknown to myself, I was
-infected with a foretaste of that sweet sense which since has flowed
-in such full and tuneful flood from the honeyed lips of Mr. Spenser.
-
-Yet I know, as that rapier lay there so keen and shining, I saw in it
-a mirror of perfect courage and gentleness, wherein I could look for
-every rule of life. I saw in it, as it were, the embodied
-presentment of that noble spirit I had so foully wronged, and I
-clutched at it in forlorn hope to save me amidst the dark waste of
-waters that had flowed over every landmark I had known before, and
-every path I had painfully learned to tread.
-
-Yes, many may think it folly, yet to me it was the devoutest act of
-my life. I drew my own stained blade, and, setting my foot upon it,
-snapped it across, and then flung it into the mire as the weapon of a
-felon knight.
-
-So I kneeled down, and picking up Harry's rapier, like a holy thing,
-I put it to my lips. For I had an oath to swear, and I swore it
-aloud on that unsullied blade, that, come what might, in joy and
-sorrow, by land and sea, in life and death, I would never, by the
-help of Harry's memory, do an act that would disgrace the weapon
-which he had hallowed by true faith, and love, and courtesy, and
-every knightly virtue.
-
-I kissed the blade again, and, rising up, I put it in my own
-scabbard. It fitted easily, as though it shunned not its new
-resting-place. As I looked up I was suddenly aware of Sergeant
-Culverin standing by my side. His posture was as different as could
-be from that in which I had last seen him. Soldierly he was as ever,
-yet the childlike look was on his face behind the fierce moustache,
-and he was saluting me.
-
-'Has your worship any use for me ere I go?' he said, very
-respectfully, and drawn up stiffly to his full height.
-
-I could have easily embraced the grim soldier for that salute and
-those words. In the depth of my degradation, when I so loathed
-myself that I felt I should never dare to look an honest man in the
-face again, I found this steadfast soul did not wholly despise me.
-It seemed to me he was a sign sent, I cannot say from God, for God
-was no more to me now, but sent by some mysterious power of good that
-by hazard I had conjured, to bid me hope my vow would be fulfilled.
-
-'Is your horse strong enough to go back to Ashtead?' said I.
-
-'Yes, your worship,' he answered; 'and as far again in a good cause.'
-
-'Then set the pillion saddle on him,' said I. The Sergeant's
-childlike look grew very apparent and smiling as I spoke. I thought
-at first he was about to seize my hand, but he restrained himself and
-only rigidly saluted as he went to do my bidding. So, hopefully and
-with hardened heart, I went back to the guest chamber of the inn.
-
-She had left the place where I had seen her last, and was sitting in
-the window, as though she had gone there to look after Harry or me, I
-knew not which. How beautiful she shone in the moonlight! I can
-think of it quietly now. The silver flood fell full upon her, and
-illumined her lovely face and form with so heavenly a radiance in the
-dark chamber that she seemed to me like some poor angel, weary of
-worship, who had strayed from heaven. It was as though the eye of
-some great spirit far away was turned upon her to draw her back to
-the realms she had left; as though she saw the golden gate whence she
-came, and, weighed down by the thick and cloying vapours of earth,
-knew not how to take wing back to the life she had loved and lost.
-
-'Will you go back to-night,' said I, 'or wait for the morning?'
-
-She started then from her reverie, and turned on me her sweet brown
-eyes, so wistfully and full of reproach as almost to undo me.
-
-'Must we go back, Jasper?' she said at last, so submissively and in
-such beseeching tones that my head swam and my breath came thick.
-Many a struggle I have had in my changeful life, but never one like
-that. It was only my new guardian that won the strife for me. I
-clapped my hand to Harry's rapier, and, pressing it mighty hard,
-found strength to say firmly, 'Yes!'
-
-I think she saw what I did, for she stood up with that stony calm
-which to me is far more terrible than the wildest passion. Once she
-pressed her little white hands to her eyes, and then drew them slowly
-away, while I stood watching and waiting for my answer.
-
-'We will go now, Jasper,' she said at last. 'You are right; we must
-go; but I can never have been to you what you have been to me.'
-
-Her words cut me like the hangman's lash on the back of prisoner
-unjustly condemned. It was more than I could bear to see her. It
-was past my strength after these scourging words to choose the path
-that was so hard and bitter before the one that was so easy and
-sweet. I felt driven towards her. I sprang forwards to take her
-tender form in my arms, and cover her reproachful face with
-passionate kisses; to show her what she had done; to show her what
-she was to me--more than honour, more than duty, more than all the
-world; to show her that I loved her.
-
-I was at her side with arms wide open to enfold her; in one last
-strife with myself I paused, and like a thunderclap to my strained
-wits the Sergeant's knock rattled out on the door, and I was saved.
-Clutching the rapier by my side once more, I turned to see the
-soldier's tall form appear in the doorway.
-
-'Your bidding is done, sir,' said he.
-
-'Then help Mrs. Waldyve to the saddle,' said I; 'we will walk by her
-side.'
-
-With hanging head, and never a glance to me, she went with tottering
-steps to the Sergeant, who lifted her with loving gentleness into the
-saddle. Then we set forward through the moonlight. Not a word was
-spoken as we toiled along; not a sound broke the stillness of the
-night, save the suck of our boots and the horse's feet in the mire.
-So in silence, each communing with his own thoughts, we came in the
-first gray glimmer of the dawn to Ashtead, and in silence parted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-How the next day passed with me I cannot say. I spent it, I know, in
-my library, pacing up and down and thinking over and over again of
-all that had happened since last the sun rose.
-
-I remember angrily putting away the divinity books which lay on my
-table, and taking down others at random. But they would not speak to
-me as they used, or perhaps I could not hear them for the din of
-self-reproach in my head.
-
-Many times I tried to think what lucky chance it was that brought
-Harry to the inn; but I could not guess, nor did I ever know, till
-the Sergeant told me he came there by hazard, on his way from the
-Popish gentleman's house, for a cup of spiced wine, because they were
-wet, and seeing in the stable my horse and his wife's pillion-saddle,
-had guessed the bitter truth, which the hostess speedily confirmed.
-
-After a heavy night's rest had soothed me I arose at a late hour, and
-saw things more clearly. I took down my _Phædo Platonis_, and read
-in it till I began to see right from wrong again. Gradually it
-seemed to me that there was but one thing to do. I would ride over
-to Ashtead once more, see Harry, and tell him I was going away, I
-knew not for how long or where, but to some land in which I could
-learn the lesson his travels had taught him. So I would crave his
-pardon in years to come, and take my leave of all I loved.
-
-It was towards evening that I slowly crossed the park and came to the
-little wicket that opened into the pretty Italian garden which Harry
-had made for his wife. There I tied my horse, as I had often done
-before, and entered.
-
-The terraces on either hand, where in grotesque solemnity the
-cognisance of his house frowned from many a half-hidden pedestal,
-were ablaze with the first flowers of spring. Celandine, fritillary,
-flower-de-luce, and all were there, like pretty laughing maids who
-knew their beauty and waywardly transgressed the trim stone
-mouldings, within which their luxuriance could not be content. From
-a wide-mouthed dragon's head the water spouted with a pleasant tinkle
-into the glassy basin that occupied the midst; the little trout that
-played there were springing merrily for the evening flies; whilst
-from the ivy and honeysuckle that was fast covering the enclosing
-walls, and from the blossom-laden pear trees in the orchard hard by,
-the birds were singing the requiem of the dying day.
-
-At the end towards the house, between two vases that overflowed with
-woodruff, a flight of steps led upwards to the grassy terrace before
-Mrs. Waldyve's parlour. One lattice of her bow window was open, and
-as I mounted the steps I could hear the low sound of singing within.
-Very sad it came to me amidst the gay carolling of the birds; so sad,
-that I could not choose but go softly across the little velvet lawn
-and peep between the mullions.
-
-All, what a sight was there! Rocking herself to and fro in her chair
-miserably sat Mrs. Waldyve, with hair and dress disordered. Her face
-was pale, her eyes hollow with weeping, and on her knees slumbered
-her little son. As though there was no world but in that small
-peaceful face, she leant over it and now and again touched the tiny
-brow with her lips. Singing ever the same mournful song, she rocked
-herself and leaned over the baby.
-
-I could hear the words she sang--some which her grief had made for
-her--and as I listened I cursed all in heaven and earth, and above
-all myself. For thus she sang a lullaby to her son:--
-
- 'Sleep, baby, sleep, for so thou canst,
- Thou hast no sins to shrive;
- Lully, lully, my babe, hope is not dead,
- Love keepeth hope alive.
-
- 'Sleep, baby, sleep, he will come back,
- Back, honey-sweet, to the hive;
- Lully, lully, my babe, love is not dead,
- Thou keepest love alive.'
-
-
-Those words told me true what had befallen. I should have known well
-enough, even had it not been for the letter she held crushed in her
-hand, and kissed, as I watched her. It was easy to guess what it
-said, though I could not read the words. Years after I saw it again.
-She herself showed it me, long afterwards, when all was healed. It
-still bore witness then how she had crushed it in her grief; it was
-still blistered with her tears. And this is what was written there:--
-
-
-To Mrs. WALDYVE, my own sweet Wife.
-
-You shall receive, dear wife, my parting words in these my parting
-lines. If I ever held your love, as indeed I think I did, it was by
-the poor things my sword had done. Now I go, I know not whither, to
-see if haply I may win it again to me beyond the seas, or at least
-forget a little of what I have lost.
-
-My love I leave you, though I know it is a little thing to you, yet
-hoping, when I am gone, you will find some place for it, if only it
-be when you kneel to pray for our boy.
-
-I would not that my last gift should be reproaches, dear Nan. Such
-are not for me, seeing it was by my own shortcoming that I could not
-keep your love. But first I send you all the thanks my heart can
-conceive or my pen express for your many cares and troubles taken for
-me, whom unworthy you strove to love.
-
-And secondly, I would commend to you my poor child, for his father's
-sake, whom in his happiest times I trow you loved and would have
-loved still had he been worthy.
-
-I cannot write much,--God knows how hardly I wrote even thus far.
-The everlasting, infinite, universal God, that is goodness itself,
-keep you and yours, have mercy on me, and teach me to forgive those
-who have wronged me; amongst whom, believe me, Nan, from my heart, I
-hold you not one. My wife, farewell. Bless my poor boy, pray your
-all-conquering prayers for him. My true God hold you both in His
-arms.--Your most loving, unworthy husband, HARRY WALDYVE.
-
-From Rochester, _this_ 30_th day of April_ 1572.
-
-
-I cannot but rejoice that I then knew no more of that letter than
-that by her kissing of it it was from him, and by the words of her
-song that it told how he was gone. My heart was already so seared
-and torn with shame at my work that, had I known how pathetic was his
-farewell, how deep and noble his sorrow, how touching his
-self-reproaches, and his straining in the anguish of his misery after
-the lost faith of his childhood, I know not how I should have borne
-the pain.
-
-What to do now I could not think. To go in to her was impossible.
-As she sat there grieving with her baby upon her knees and the letter
-in her hand, she seemed to me a holy thing, more purely sanctified in
-her motherhood and grief to him she had lost than ever was vestal to
-her goddess. All faith and reverence I thought had left me, yet I
-could have worshipped that mother and child as devoutly as ever a
-poor Papist bowed before the Virgin's shrine. Still there was a
-holiness about them I dared not profane, even with my worship. I
-felt a thing too unclean even to stand on the steps of the altar
-where she was now enshrined, and I crept away like the guilty thief I
-was.
-
-Hardly less difficult was it to go and leave her alone in the desert
-I had made of the fair garden, where but for me she might have dwelt
-so happily. To go was cowardly; it was sacrilege to stay. I had no
-guide to show me my way, no friend whom I could consult. Wearily,
-rather drifting than with any set purpose, I descended the steps,
-passed by the tinkling water, through the perfume-laden air, closed
-the wicket behind me, and so rode home, my errand undone.
-
-He was gone! I knew not whither; and there was no one of whom I
-could seek counsel. I would have gone to Mr. Drake to tell him all
-and seek comfort, but the thought of the good man's hard Calvinism
-repelled me now. He would not understand. As for Mr. Cartwright, he
-was still less to be thought of. For very shame, I dared not confess
-to his holy ears the depth to which I had fallen, even could I have
-hoped for sympathy from him. No, there was none to ease me of my
-burden.
-
-He was gone; and I must follow,--follow and bring him back to her,
-and then rid them for ever of my accursed presence. That was all I
-could think of. And on the morrow, after committing my affairs to
-old Miles's hands, I rode to Gravesend, and so came next day by river
-to London, whither I heard from the boatmen he had gone.
-
-As I have said, I came to London drifting, rather than with any set
-purpose. As soon as I had sought for Harry at my Lord of Bedford's,
-and at the lodging where he was wont to lie when in London, and found
-no news of him, I was at a loss what to do. I had no friends in
-London that I knew of, nor was I so much as acquainted with any there
-except my merchant and old Mr. Follet, who had a lodging in Warwick
-Court, where he was of easy access to his scholars, both those about
-the Court and those who were sons to wealthy citizens.
-
-To him I was resolved to go, not so much in hope to hear of Harry, as
-trusting in my forlorn state to receive comfort from him, when I
-remembered how peaceful and content was his life, and yet without any
-comfort of religion that I was ever able to discover.
-
-I found him polished and kindly and gentle as ever, and bound still
-in willing servitude to his 'Apology.' He welcomed me very warmly,
-refusing any denial that I would sup with him. Our first
-commendation over, he fell to asking me of my life and work, so that
-we easily came to talk of those deep matters wherein my trouble lay.
-
-'I cannot but rejoice, my dear Jasper,' said the old scholar, bending
-on me his intelligent, clear eyes, 'that you have come to your
-present state. It was always my desire that you should see that as a
-rule or touchstone of right living, nay, if you will, as a _virgula
-divina_, or divining rod, whereby to discover the pure water of life,
-religion is in no comparison with scholarship. So long as men shall
-pursue religion as a chief end, so long shall they be ever athirst
-and rage in these present fevers that now be. I hold there are three
-special points in education, or the leading forth of life, the same
-being, truth in religion, honesty in living, and right order in
-learning. I name them in the order in which the three are now
-commonly held, yet you know, as I do, that in order of excellence
-these points should be reversed.'
-
-'Then you would not have a scholar,' said I, 'lay aside religion
-altogether?'
-
-'I see no need for that,' he answered. 'It was not so in the past
-golden days of scholarship, before Reformation violently killed the
-old kindly tolerance of the Romish Church. Side by side they could
-not exist, so Rome grew hard perforce, and Geneva as hard to
-withstand her. And so the good old days were ended, even the days
-when a man would first take heed that his order of learning was
-rightly governed according to the precepts of the immortal Stagirite,
-from which, secondly, would flow, by the bestowing of such leisure as
-remained, a sufficient honesty in living, the whole being sweetened
-and tempered with such truth of religion as came of itself, without
-straining, out of the other two. It is this straining after God that
-so troubles the world and burns up scholarship. They draw the Ardour
-of Heaven too near, whereby the inflammable principles, whereof He is
-in a great measure composed, so heat men's blood and set their
-stomachs on fire, that cool scholarship itself is set in a blaze, and
-serves but to feed the fires of controversy, whereby learning,
-honesty, and religion itself are fast being consumed.'
-
-'Surely, then, it were better,' said I, 'to shut out this disturbing
-element that makes life so turbid; better to deafen our ears to this
-note which sets all our harmony awry.'
-
-'No, Jasper,' answered Mr. Follet, 'that is impossible. That far-off
-note is your octavo, as Pythagoras taught. You, with your spiritual
-nature, will always hear it sounding in unison with that which you
-yourself are making as you live your Life. If there is discord in
-your ears, it is that you are sounding some other note awry between
-your fundamental earthly note and His in the empyrean. By your
-scholarship I judge your first harmony must be _dia-trion_ to the
-orbit of Mercury, which is science; and thus, if you would have
-concord, your next must be _dia-pente_ to the orbit of Mars, which is
-manhood and knightly adventure. So can you reach through your full
-_dia-pason_ to God, and sound your third and just fifth in complete
-and peaceful harmony with the universe. So I would advise you, if
-the music of your life has seemed meagre. But, above all, beware of
-the fourth, which is the orbit of Venus, that shall bring you nothing
-but most jarring discord, wherein you shall find no rest.'
-
-The old man looked out at me from his clear eyes so shrewdly that,
-although I could only guess at his meaning, I felt he had divined the
-true cause of my discomfort. How far he had learned it I cannot say,
-yet I could not help calling to mind the many times I had written to
-him concerning my most pleasant studies with Mrs. Waldyve. I found
-in my old tutor a strange mingling of shrewd worldly knowledge and
-unreal speculation which drew me nearer to him than I had ever had
-wit to be in my boyhood. It is true I hoped to get little help from
-his medley of philosophies, yet his conversation fascinated me in
-spite of the half-mystic vagueness that seemed to be growing on him
-with his old age, and I stayed with him till a late hour.
-
-Whether right or wrong for others, his own way of thought had brought
-him to an old age of profound peace, most enviable to me in the
-tempestuous flood of doubt that had overwhelmed my life since the
-dams of my faith, which I had deemed so secure, had burst. Moreover,
-his whole discourse was so seasoned with spicery from the writings of
-the ancients, and above all his beloved Aristotle, that it was very
-pleasant to hear, though beyond what my memory will bear to write.
-
-Moreover I wished to speak with him about his 'Apology,' which he had
-not once mentioned. No one but myself can truly know how great must
-have been his sympathy with my troubled state, or how much he must
-have denied himself to minister to it, when for two hours he never
-once spoke of his manuscript. At last, moved to pity because of his
-exceeding kindness, I asked him how it fared.
-
-'Bravely, bravely, my dear discipulus,' said he with beaming face.
-'It has been long in getting set forth because of the great growth
-which it has attained by reason of the weighty arguments I
-continually found. Still the day for the great purging of
-scholarship is very near. I am near to finishing the Latin text, in
-which form I have been weightily advised the work should appear,
-although I had purposed otherwise for the glory of the English
-tongue. The Right Honourable the Earl of Bedford has promised to
-receive the dedicatory epistle, so that I doubt not, with so noble
-and learned a sponsor, my child shall find an honourable reception in
-the courts of science.'
-
-This and much more to like purpose he spoke till I took my leave,
-much comforted by his kindliness, yet little relieved of my inward
-sickness.
-
-Lashmer, who had been passing the time of my visit with Mr. Follet's
-servant, came to my chamber as usual to untruss me when we reached
-our lodging. He seemed full of something, which after a little
-painful repressing he poured forth.
-
-'Did your worship hear whither he had gone?' asked he.
-
-'Whither who had gone?' said I.
-
-'Was not your worship seeking news of Mr. Waldyve?' he asked again.
-
-'Certes, I was,' said I; 'but that is no concern of yours.'
-
-'No, sir, none,' he answered, 'save that I hold all that concerns you
-concerns your faithful servant; but since it is not so, let it pass.'
-
-So he fell into a sullen silence, till I, feeling he held news, could
-refrain no longer from asking what he meant.
-
-'Nay, I meant nothing, sir,' said he. 'A gentleman's movements are
-nothing to me; but since I thought Mr. Follet would have told you
-whither he had gone, I made bold to inquire; for he was ever a most
-kind gentleman to me; but since there is offence in it, let it pass.'
-
-'But what made you think Mr. Follet should know this?' I asked
-sharply.
-
-'Nay, sir, I pray you let it pass. I have no longer desire to know
-what concerns me not.'
-
-'But I have desire to know what you meant, sirrah.'
-
-'Then, saving your displeasure, it was a foolish idle whim of mine,
-that am but a dunce and unlearned, to think that since Mr. Waldyve
-was with Mr. Follet yesterday he would have given your worship news
-of him. It was a stupid, foolish fancy, so I pray you let it pass.'
-
-'Mr. Waldyve with Mr. Follet yesterday, say you?' I cried, as soon as
-I recovered breath. 'Why, how know you this, Lashmer?'
-
-'Nay, I know it not,' said he, making occasion of my anxiety to have
-revenge for my sharpness.
-
-'What a plague makes you say it then?'
-
-'Why, sir, because Mr. Follet's man knows it, and Mr. Follet's man
-told me how Mr. Waldyve was with his master for the space of two
-hours save a thimbleful of sand yesterday about supper-time, during
-all which time he had to wait, for good manners' sake, though like to
-die of a watery mouth for thinking of a roasted rabbit and a dish of
-prunes that were bespoke for him and two other blades at the
-"Portcullis" tavern hard by.'
-
-'Pace! pace! draw rein on your galloping tongue, good Lashmer, and
-tell me whither he has gone.'
-
-'If I could, sir, but I cannot; nor Mr. Follet, nor Mr. Follet's man
-neither, for in truth he told none of them anything, save that they
-were not like to see him for a good space to come.'
-
-'Then leave me, Lashmer, and good-night. Go to your bed now, and
-find a kind thought for a heart-sick master.'
-
-'Heaven save your worship, and pardon a malapert servitor,' said
-Lashmer, and left me to my thoughts.
-
-First, I think, I pondered over Mr. Follet's great tenderness with
-me, when as I felt he must have known all. Then I tried to come to
-conclusions with myself what I was to do. The more I pondered the
-more it seemed useless to search farther for Harry, and the more I
-dwelt on what Mr. Follet had said to me of sounding the note of
-Mars's orbit as a cure for my discords.
-
-I felt shamed, moreover, to think that my old tutor knew all. I felt
-I could no more go back and face him; nay, I felt as though every one
-knew my shame, and a desire grew in me to fly far away from it all.
-I began to reason with myself as to what good end it would serve to
-find Harry, and now it seemed that even if I could find him I dared
-not face him. My bold resolves were melting to cowardice in the heat
-of my remorse, and utterly purposeless and alone I crept with a
-broken spirit to my bed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-Next day I stayed within all the morning. Harry was in London, and
-though I had come thither to seek him, I dared not stir abroad for
-fear of meeting him. I dined in my lodging, sending Lashmer to the
-tavern for a quart of claret.
-
-The food and the wine must have put new heart in me; for after they
-were done I sallied forth alone, resolved to prosecute my search.
-Still dreading success, I wandered eastward along the Strand. Many
-gallants, most splendid with new-fashioned hats and hose, were
-loitering along the way I went. I followed the stream, and so,
-passing Temple Bar and over the Fleet Bridge, I came through Ludgate
-before St. Paul's Church.
-
-I stood a while admiring the grandeur of the front and the lofty
-tower. For then, being untravelled, I was unlearned in architecture,
-and saw not how rude were its proportions and barbarous its ornament
-beside the new style.
-
-Many gallants went by me as I watched, laughing, and passed on into
-the church. Harry had often told me how it was a place of great
-resort, so I followed, thinking perhaps to find what I looked for and
-dreaded to see. The floor of the long and lofty nave was thronged
-with gallants and would-be gallants, strolling up and down, and
-laughing and talking with one another; while between the piers of
-clustered columns which supported the soaring roof-groins and dim
-triforium knots of men were gathered, who seemed for the most part to
-be merchants. From time to time I could see a bond or account-book
-fluttering white amidst their sober robes, but all was done with as
-little noise and bustle as could well be.
-
-For it must be known that Paul's was not then the den of thieves it
-is now. It was not so long since the Queen's proclamation had been
-issued against such as should transact business, or make any fray, or
-shoot any hand-gun or dag within the precincts. It was still had in
-memory, though little regarded, and the place was not wholly
-disorderly.
-
-Yet was it sufficiently out of order to see so gay a company glowing
-in their bright clothes of 'popinjay blue,' 'devil-in-the-head,'
-'lusty gallant,' and I know not what other outlandish new-fashioned
-hues, and to hear their laughter rolling round the gray old walls,
-and the clink of their spurs and rapiers on the pavement, and the
-rustle of their silks and taffeta as they walked.
-
-Wrapped as I was in myself, and shut off by my shame from all men,
-that thoughtless throng only made my sense of loneliness keener. Far
-more in sympathy with me than any creature there was the tall temple
-itself, which, stripped long since of all its altars and Popish
-adornments, seemed to look down in lofty contempt upon the irreverent
-crowd which insulted its ancient dignity. Solemn and sad and alone
-it seemed to wait in patient confidence for the day when their little
-paltry lives would have passed away to oblivion, and its days of
-worship would come again.
-
-That there were many there more loyal with their tongues than in
-ought else I could see as I went forward and came near Duke
-Humphrey's tomb. Here the proclamation seemed wellnigh forgotten.
-Round the battered effigy the throng was thicker and full of ruffling
-loud-voiced swaggerers, who, from their ruffianly carriage and most
-vile Smithfield oaths, made me think their gentility much belied the
-bravery of their clothes. It was a thing I then first noted, and
-have since much grieved over, that men of low station nowadays take
-to wearing garments of gentleman's cut, no matter how common or
-ill-made, so long as they be as good as their scrapings, or
-stealings, or borrowings will buy.
-
-Not wishing to mingle with this lewd throng I turned aside between
-the columns, that I might so pass into the aisle and avoid them. But
-before I could carry out my purpose I felt myself hustled roughly
-into the aisle by some one who thrust violently by me.
-
-'Body of Bacchus!' said a loud, gruff voice, 'know you not better,
-base countryman, than to hustle a gentleman so?'
-
-I turned and saw glaring at me a tall ruffian whom I had noted in the
-throng. He was dressed in garish and faded garments very vilely
-pinked and guarded, and wore on his head a most desperate hat. As
-though to give him a warlike note, his clothes were thrown on in a
-slovenly way, and his moustache frounced out so shock and bristling
-that it seemed from each hair-end a crackling oath must start with
-every word he said. I felt little inclined for a brawl, least of all
-in that place, though to quarrel with any man would perhaps have been
-a comfort in my present state; so I civilly told him I was sorry to
-have stood in his way.
-
-'What, base minion!' said he very fierce, with a whole fusilada of
-oaths, 'think you to pass so lightly from a gentleman's wrath?'
-
-'I pray you, sir, be content,' I replied as quietly as I could, for
-it seemed very silly to quarrel with such a mountebank. 'If I
-wronged your gentility it was unwittingly, and I crave your pardon.'
-
-'Stay, rude rustic,' said he, stepping before me as I turned away,
-and clapping his hand to a rapier of extravagant length. 'This shall
-not serve you. Craving of pardons shall not serve you, nor your
-_pardonnez-mois_ neither. A gentleman must have satisfaction by rule
-and circumstance, after the teaching of the inestimable Signor Rocco.'
-
-I found myself by this time hemmed in by a throng of his fellows, as
-ruffianly and hectoring as himself, none of whom I dare have sworn
-could ever have afforded so much as their noses inside Signor Rocco's
-'College,' so I thought best to make an end.
-
-'Come then, sir,' said I, 'to a fitting place, and I will presently
-give you your desire.'
-
-'Nay, but first name your friends,' my opponent replied. 'For know,
-base scullion, that town-bred gentlemen fight by rule and
-circumstance, and not like two rams in field, without supporters.'
-
-'Yes, pretty shepherd,' cried the throng jeeringly, 'name first your
-friend, if you want a gentleman to walk with you.'
-
-I now saw my evil case and what a trick was put on me, and knew not
-what to do. To draw my rapier, Harry's rapier, on this vermin was
-farthest from my thoughts. Yet the throng hustled me closer, and my
-bully swaggered and threatened loudly.
-
-'I have no friend here,' said I, 'unless any gentleman among you will
-stand by me.'
-
-'Hark to the scurvy rustic,' they cried, in answer to my look around
-to them. 'A pox on your familiarity. You will get no friend here.'
-
-'Nay, my dry-livered lubbers, that he will,' cried a clear jolly
-voice, and I turned to see Frank Drake and another gentleman break
-through the throng to my side. 'What is it, Jasper? Stand back, ye
-lubberly porpoises, and give a seaman sea-room.'
-
-'Stand back, I pray you, gentlemen,' cried my bully very
-condescending; 'I knew not that I spoke with a friend of Captain
-Drake's.'
-
-'Or maybe you would not have spoken so loud, my pot-valiant
-Hercules,' said Frank's friend.
-
-'What is all the coil about, Jasper?' said Frank again, while my
-bully tried to outstare the gentleman.
-
-''Tis nothing,' said I. 'He wanted two friends for me, to help give
-him satisfaction for having been at the pain of jostling me.'
-
-'Give him a tester, sir,' said Frank's friend, 'to buy sack withal.
-That is the best satisfaction for his most barrel-bellied worship.'
-
-'No, gentlemen,' said my bully with great pomp, finding he could not
-outstare his new adversary, 'it is satisfaction enough to know the
-gentleman is a friend of the most valiant Captain Drake. I know of
-no quarrel here that a skin of muscadine will not assuage. I pray
-you, let me conduct you to a very honest tavern hard by where I am
-known, and where I will see you served with the best.'
-
-'Most courtly offered!' said the gentleman. 'And peradventure your
-most sweet honesty will see us served also with very honest dice and
-very honest cards. 'Tis a pity we are promised elsewhere, but so it
-is, and we must perforce pray your valourship to bestow on us instead
-a full measure of your most delectable absence.'
-
-'By the soul of Bacchus,' said the bully, swelling with contempt,
-'were it not for the proclamation, blood should flow for this;' but
-we all laughed at him, and he strode away with his nose in the air,
-as proud as Alexander after Granicus. So we were rid of him and his
-fellows, who followed on his heels all growling, 'Were it not for the
-proclamation,' and swearing like drovers between their teeth.
-
-'A happy meeting, Jasper,' said Frank. 'Yonder go as arrant a lot of
-thieves as any in all London. Be better acquainted with my friend,
-Mr. John Oxenham. A fellow-adventurer, Oxenham, Mr. Festing, but
-not, to my grief, a shipmate.'
-
-'Pity you will not sail with us, Mr. Festing,' said Mr. Oxenham with
-a winning courtesy of manner. 'A man who can stand up to a throng of
-swaggerers like that should try his hand on Spaniards.'
-
-'Why, so he has,' cried Frank,' and to their cost; but now he will be
-doing nothing but ram home most portentous charges of words into
-paper ordnance with a quill rammer. Heaven knows what giants they
-will bring down when they go off!'
-
-We all laughed together, for I cannot say what it was to me to meet
-these two in the midst of my loneliness. I gladly accepted their
-invitation to a tavern, where we could talk in peace. For not only
-was I overjoyed to be with Frank again, but I was much taken with Mr.
-Oxenham.
-
-He was a tall, well-dressed man with a very handsome face, and such
-courageous eyes that I did not wonder they had daunted the Paul's
-man. 'Tis true I should have liked him better had it not been for an
-amorous look he wore over all his manliness. Yet who was I to judge
-him for that? His talk was very pleasant, for he had been a rover
-from his youth, and spoke of what he had seen freely, without
-boasting. We sat drinking a long time, and talked of the glories of
-the West and a sailor's life, for which he had conceived a romantic
-enthusiasm.
-
-'Ah, Mr. Festing,' burst out Mr. Oxenham at last, 'it is a pity you
-will not sail with us to the West, since you are bent on travel. I
-envy you your learning in these things, but none who have not seen
-can picture their glory. Compared with them, to potter about Europe
-from one pestered town to another, from one crowded country to
-another, is like the paddling of a duckling in a puddle beside the
-everlasting flight of the god-like albatross, that never lights, not
-even for love. This old world is gray, and worn, and stifling. Over
-there it is all colour and sunlight and freedom; where the golden
-land brings forth without labour, and he who will may pass through
-and enjoy. Why, when once you come to that Paradise where all is so
-wide and fresh and lovely, you lift your hands in wonder, as you look
-back to this dull corner far away, that your life can ever have been
-so little as to come within the bounds of such a prison; you shall
-hardly believe there was ever room here for aught large enough to
-cause a moment's grief or joy for your expanded soul. There you can
-see Nature and know at last what beauty is. There at last you shall
-drink her fragrant breath, feel the richness of her warm embrace,
-revel in the azure and rose colour and golden sheen that make up her
-divine beauty, and lie in her arms to know at last what it means to
-say, "This is delight."'
-
-'And think, lad,' cried Frank, who hardly, I think, can have seen
-with Mr. Oxenham's eyes, 'think that it is Spaniards who have
-ravished this rich beauty. It is these idolatrous hell-hounds of
-Antichrist who have possessed this Shulamite woman whom the Lord had
-reserved as a bride for his saints. It will be a glorious smiting of
-them. Their lust has made them sleepy and womanish. They are puffed
-up into silly security with their Spanish pride. Why, man, they will
-leave whole estates in charge of one slave, and send out trains of a
-hundred Indians or more laden with gold with but a single negro over
-them. I know it all now. I know every way in and out, and every
-course and time their ships will sail, and I know harbours, lad,
-where none could ever find us, where we can lie in wait and pounce
-out like cats on the good things that come by. And then they have
-not a walled town on the coast, that I know of. We can swoop down on
-the Dons and be away again, made men, or ever they have time to wake
-up out of their beds. Why will not men see what there is to be done,
-if they will only do? One such stroke as I have in mind will do more
-to undo Antichrist than all your thinking. Yet you scholars will not
-see it, but will not cease your idle disputing and dreaming till the
-angels shall come down and cry to you in voice of thunder, "Ye men of
-Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven?"'
-
-His words struck me very deep, and I began to see how idle was our
-scholars' contempt for men of action. So, with ever-growing
-interest, I listened as we talked together till long after supper,
-and Frank unfolded every detail of his plan in his honest practical
-way. Mr. Oxenham, moreover, ceased not to paint his glowing pictures
-not only of what was known of those regions, but also of the
-fairyland beyond, where no Christian had yet trod,--the unknown lands
-where he set my fancy playing with his till my imagination, on which
-I had already heaped so much that was inflammable from my books, was
-all on fire.
-
-As for my reason, Frank's sound sense was enough to satisfy that, and
-his taunt at my standing still and gazing up into heaven while others
-were doing touched my pride nearly. What wonder, then, that when the
-time came to bid them good-night, when I saw before me my lonely
-lodging, when I pictured the blank morrow and all my life beyond,
-empty of hope or joy or fellowship, when they urged me once more most
-earnestly to sail with them, that I could not resist!
-
-They were pressing on me the very course in which I could follow Mr.
-Follet's strangely-worded advice more fully and nobly than I had ever
-dreamed. In place of my faith a sense of destiny seemed to have come
-to me, and to be speaking clearly in this chance meeting. If there
-was anything in man's harmony with the music of the spheres, sure it
-was the wild adventurous war-note of the universal gamut that I heard
-far off in the height of heaven sounding low and clear for my soul's
-response.
-
-My quest for Harry was forgotten, and with it whatever else tied me
-to the old life, which now began to seem but a body of death. For
-that strange voice had come over the wide ocean and whispered its
-witching summons in my ear also. I could not choose but obey.
-
-So we three joined hands and drank a cup on my resolve, and one more
-was added to the throng who day by day were leaving all to taste the
-ripe lips of this New Helen in the West.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-It was arranged that I should go out as gentleman adventurer; and
-since I did not wish to be without place, and had some little
-knowledge of business, gained by always managing my own estate so as
-to make it yield the fullest return, I begged and got the office of
-merchant to the expedition.
-
-I was soon tried in my new post, for Frank was earnest to get back to
-Plymouth to speed the fitting out of the ships and the building of
-the pinnaces, which we were to carry with us in pieces. So I was
-left to purchase the arms and other furniture which was still
-lacking. This had been the only occasion of his staying in London,
-which being left in my hands he was free to depart, and this he
-accordingly did, taking Mr. Oxenham with him.
-
-From my constant fear of meeting Harry, which was greater than ever
-since I had resolved to fly, I stirred abroad no more than my
-business demanded.
-
-Yet I was obliged often to go into the city, for there was still a
-great deal to be done. Money was in no way lacking, both by reason
-of the success of Frank's two former voyages, which had lined his
-pockets well, and of the support he got elsewhere. Nothing was to be
-wanting from the complete furniture of a man-of-war in either ship;
-and our captain, who, both on his person and his ship, would always
-have the best, had furnished me with a long schedule of muskets,
-calivers, targets, pikes, partisans, bows, and artificers' tools, as
-well as cloth and other provision for a whole year, all of which
-things I was bidden to purchase of different merchants as far as
-possible, that no wind of our preparations should be blown into the
-Spanish ambassador's ears.
-
-Such time as I was not thus engaged I spent very profitably in Signor
-Rocco's new College of Fence in Warwick Lane. I had learned that
-Harry did not resort thither, so, since it was near my lodging, I was
-able to enjoy my best-loved pastime and see much excellent
-rapier-play that was new to me, whereby the pain of my delay in
-London was a little eased.
-
-Thus by avoiding other public places, and above all Paul's, at the
-end of a fortnight I found my work complete without the meeting I
-dreaded; and with a lighter heart than I had borne for many a day I
-took ship at Radcliffe with all my lading, and so came to Plymouth
-after a slow passage on the afternoon of Friday, the 23d of May.
-
-The three brothers, for Joseph Drake was of the expedition as well as
-John, received me with open arms, and much commended my pains when
-the arms and furniture came to be stowed on board. They informed me
-that as merchant I was to sail in the admiral with Frank, of which I
-was very glad.
-
-[Illustration: PLYMOUTH]
-
-It seemed that everything was prepared, and that, as they had only
-stayed for my coming, we were to weigh on the morrow. Nothing could
-have been more to my mind. So eager was I to leave my old life
-behind that I hardly accepted their invitation to go ashore to gather
-the men who were yet to come aboard. Yet I did at last for
-good-fellowship, and started with them to the sound of a
-demi-culverin and a flourish of our trumpets, for a signal to the
-mariners to embark.
-
-As we rowed I saw another boat making for the _Swan_, which lay a
-good way from the _Pasha_. They hailed us as we passed, so that I
-knew they were some of our company; but I could not notice them much,
-for Frank just then took occasion to point out Mount Edgcombe to me
-and I looked the other way.
-
-Our passage from tavern to tavern to beat up the stragglers was like
-a triumph. Indeed I think Plymouth was then, and maybe still is,
-flat drunk with the western wine. A crowd followed on our heels,
-cheering us as we went; the citizens came out from their suppers to
-pledge us lustily with brimming tankards; and as for smiles of
-hostesses and wenches in the taverns I had enough showered on myself
-alone, being a gentleman adventurer in the expedition, as would
-wellnigh satisfy a regiment of horse a whole campaign, as such things
-go now.
-
-What with these oglings and smirkings of the pretty Plymouth lasses
-and our constant pledgings, I could have been as jolly as any piece
-of tar-yarn there had it not been for the grievous sights I saw, and
-our pain therefrom in getting our men aboard, though I think a very
-willing crew.
-
-Most had pledged once or twice too often, and were for ever taking
-leave and never departing; some could not have gone if they had been
-willing, at least not on their own legs; others were in pledge, for
-commodities they had never seen, to cogging hosts, who held their
-boots or sword or breeches as security. Some even we could by no
-means come at, save by help of a magistrate's warrant to search some
-dishonest alehouse.
-
-Frank told me what I saw was of no account by the side of what
-sometimes happened.
-
-'Why, lad,' said he, 'I have known it take two days and all the
-magistrates in the borough to gather a company, and then not see it
-done. Nay, it is not an unheard-of thing for this scandal to be the
-utter overthrow of a voyage, and general undoing of owners,
-victuallers, and company. Mine are all picked lads, or you should
-not have seen us come off so easily.'
-
-'I marvel,' said I, and I still do, 'that some among our great
-lord-admirals have not taken order to end these things, which seem a
-great scandal to the reputation of our sea-service no less than an
-injury to the commonwealth, and ought to be reformed.'
-
-'That is well enough,' answered Frank, 'and much to be wished; but to
-keep a mariner at such times from his ale is a thing more lightly
-attempted than easily accomplished.'
-
-Mr. Oxenham was little help to us. Indeed he had so many pouting
-lips to kiss in this his own fair town of Plymouth, and so many
-dainty waists to encircle, that I began to think nothing but a
-warrant or a file of pikes would ever get him aboard.
-
-Still it was done at last, and the sun rose gloriously next morning
-upon us with our company complete. It was Whitsunday Eve, and the
-whole town seemed to have made holiday to bid us God-speed that sunny
-May morning.
-
-It was a fair sight to see the hills around in their fresh spring
-garb crowding down to the harbour, which seemed to spread out its
-shining arms to embrace them. The Hoe was thronged with a great mass
-of people in their gayest clothes; every point beside was bright with
-colour, and a score of small fry were cleaving the clear waters about
-us.
-
-We stood off and on awhile to give them a good sight of us, and bid
-the fair town 'Farewell' with our great pieces and our music. I
-think Frank was very proud of his ships, and well he might be, for
-never can have been a smarter sight in Plymouth harbour than we were
-that day as we beat to and fro with our great flags of St. George at
-the main-tops, and our silk streamers down to the blue water, and now
-and again a white puff from our castles as we answered the ordnance
-from the platform saluting us.
-
-Cheer after cheer went up from the shore folk between each discharge
-till we could no longer hear them, and stood out to sea, fairly
-started at last on that most memorable adventure. I say memorable,
-for surely never was so great a service undertaken with so small a
-power. We were, men and boys, all told, but seventy-three souls,
-being forty-seven in the admiral and twenty-six in the vice-admiral,
-under John Drake, and only one of us all that was not under thirty.
-
-The wind was very favourable at north-east, and we stood on all that
-day and next night. In the morning when I came on deck I found we
-were going under easy sail, only a cable's length from our
-vice-admiral. A boat was towing alongside of us, and I saw that some
-one must have come aboard from the _Swan_.
-
-I went aft to our captain's cabin to see what it might mean. I
-knocked at the door. Frank's cheery voice bade me enter. I opened
-and went in. Heaven save me from such a moment again! My heart
-stood still, my brain swam, for there beside Frank sat Harry, with
-Sergeant Culverin at his back!
-
-He sprang to his feet as I shut the door behind me, and stood glaring
-at me with his hand on his rapier.
-
-'Sit down, Harry!' cried Frank; 'I will have no brawling here.'
-
-Harry took no notice, but stood with his breath coming very fast and
-hard just as before.
-
-'Sit down, sir,' thundered our captain; 'wilt mutiny in my own cabin?
-Hark ye, sir, on my ship there is no difference between a gentleman
-and a cook's boy when it comes to giving orders. Sit down now, and
-take your hand from that weapon, or I shall presently take order to
-have you in irons.'
-
-'You are right, Frank, quite right,' said Harry with an effort as he
-slowly sat himself down. 'But how can you have done us this
-unkindness?'
-
-'Frank, Frank,' said I, finding voice at last, 'you know not what you
-have done.' With that I tottered to the seat on the opposite side of
-the table to Harry. I felt undone and crushed. My long grieving and
-much brooding on my shame had told on me more than I guessed. And
-now to find after my cowardly flight I had fallen into a trap a
-hundredfold more dreadful than that I had sought to escape, to find
-my new hopes shattered at a blow and this awful trial before me, was
-more than I could bear, and in utter broken despair I buried my face
-in my arms upon the table to hide my tears.
-
-'I know well enough what I have done,' said Frank, after he had left
-us thus in silence for some moments. 'Do you think that when two
-good lads, fast friends, come to me each separately from the side of
-one fair lady, haggard and woe-begone, and tell me that they want to
-journey they care not whither, so long as it be far from England, do
-you think then I know not what it means? Why, man, I have a score
-such aboard now. For though many think that the greater the thief
-and blasphemer the better the soldier, yet say I for my work give me,
-next to him who sails for love of God, the honest lad that sails for
-love of a lass. As I judge they are half and half aboard our ships
-now. So think you I could not read the old tale, when I saw it writ
-so plain? And had it not been so, I should yet have known; for there
-comes to me an honest worthy soldier who knew better than I.
-
-'"Captain Drake," says he, "here is a mighty storm blowing between
-two valiant gentlemen, who after long and loving consort have parted
-company, so that they cannot come together again without most nice
-navigation. I pray you take command," says he.
-
-'"How do they bear, Sergeant?" says I.
-
-'"Cry you mercy there, captain," says he; "I am no pilot of
-gentlemen's quarrels, yet I can give you certain just observations,
-whence peradventure you may take their bearings yourself."'
-
-Therewith Frank repeated the whole story as he had it from the
-Sergeant, till he came to Harry's flight from the inn. Then in a low
-earnest voice he told clearly, as though it were passing before his
-eyes, what the Sergeant had seen me do outside with Harry's rapier.
-I felt so shamed to hear it now that I would have stayed him, but
-felt I could not speak.
-
-'So, gentlemen,' said our captain, when he ended the tale,' I knew it
-was a quarrel that might be healed, and knew nothing more sovereign
-in such a case than the lusty sea. I have known many so healed, when
-they get far away and see what a little thing it is they wrestled
-for, beside the prizes a brave lad can win over sea. That is what I
-have done, and I know I am right; and if you be true men, I would
-have you shake hands before you leave this cabin.'
-
-The sound of Harry's hard breathing had ceased as Frank got on with
-his tale, and since he described the scene in the inn-yard I felt my
-brother's eyes had been fixed upon me. Now I heard him rise, and
-felt his hand laid upon my shoulder.
-
-'Poor lad,' said he very gently, 'poor lad! what fearful suffering,
-what a terrible war must have been in your good heart! Why did I not
-know it and help you to victory? You have won alone. I know it now,
-but God forgive me, with what carnage of your soul, which but for my
-folly I could have stayed. We have both sinned, and grievously we
-have both been punished; let us now lay down the scourge.'
-
-I looked up, hardly daring to face him. Yet when I saw his look was
-filled with pity I took courage. Rising to my feet I took his hands
-and pressed them hard, but I could not speak. So putting his arm
-through mine, he led me to the door.
-
-'Come,' said he, 'we will go talk together. While our captain
-finishes writing his instructions we will try to instruct each other
-how best to show ourselves worthy of her.'
-
-I think we both went out very humbled. Not only because Frank had so
-imperiously bent us to his will and shown us what children we were
-beside him, but also because he had compared us to the love-sick boys
-of the crew, and our story to their love squabbles. Yet how could we
-deny it was different? It was indeed hard to confess how little
-different it was, and, as I say, we both went out with our pride, the
-mainstay of quarrels, much humbled.
-
-We had both, I know, tried honestly that our quarrel should end here,
-yet was the rent too wide and deep to be mended so easily. His arm
-seemed to sit uneasily in mine, and ere we had gone a few paces he
-took some excuse of a point coming untied to draw it away.
-
-Like strangers at last we sat down and tried to talk, but it was very
-difficult. I would have given my tongue to have gone on with the
-tale where Frank ended, and to have told Harry how I had seen his
-dear wife mourning over her child for his loss. Yet half from shame
-to confess I had gone back to Ashtead, and half in fear of adding to
-his grief by telling him what abiding love he had left, I held my
-peace, and we fell to talking in false notes about the voyage, till,
-to our great relief, Harry was summoned to Frank's cabin to receive
-his orders for Captain John Drake. As soon as I was alone Sergeant
-Culverin came up to me with his elaborate salute.
-
-'I trust you will forgive my freedom, your worship,' said he.
-
-'Forgive, Sergeant!' I answered. 'I have nothing to forgive; I have
-only thanks for the good work you have done.'
-
-'Nay,' said he, 'I did nothing; no more than that astrolabe with
-which Mr. Oxenham yonder is taking our position. I was but a poor
-instrument for Captain Drake to shape your courses withal.'
-
-'Still I must thank you, Sergeant, from my heart.'
-
-'I pray you, sir, if you love me, say no more. Let us pass to other
-things. How does this most uncivil motion sort with your worship's
-stomach?'
-
-'Well enough, Sergeant; does it quarrel with yours?' I asked, for he
-looked a little pale.
-
-'To be plain with you, sir, the sea and I are not so good friends as
-we hope to become. Last night was most evil to me in yonder
-fly-boat--_Swan_, they call it; yet for liveliness Sparrow would sort
-better with its nature. There was, moreover, a mariner of the watch
-who would increase my load by singing continually a most woeful,
-ancient ballad of pilgrims at sea. Thus it ran, sir:--
-
- '"Thus meanwhile the pilgrims lie,
- And have their bowlies fast them by,
- And cry after hot Malvoisie,
- Their health for to restore.
- And some would have a salted toast,
- For they might eat nor sodden nor roast;
- A man might soon pay for their cost
- As for one day or twain."
-
-And more very sickly stuff to like intent, sir, to a very doleful
-tune.'
-
-'I fear, Sergeant,' said I, 'your voyage to the Indies will not be as
-pleasant as you could desire.'
-
-'Indeed, sir,' said he, 'I wish we could fetch thither a-horseback,
-being, as I think, the only honourable manner of going for gentlemen.
-Still, since it has pleased God to put this shifty, rude, uncourtly
-sea betwixt us and the Indies, we must e'en make shift with a ship.'
-
-'I am sorry for you, Sergeant,' I answered. 'A horse indeed would
-have been a conveyance you better understood.'
-
-'Well, it is not so much that,' said the Sergeant. 'For when I was
-sergeant-groom under the Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire of the
-Emperor's stables, the word always went that a man who could manage a
-horse could manage anything, save it were a woman, by your worship's
-leave. So I think a ship will not come amiss to me, being in
-relation to a horse but a wet lifeless thing.'
-
-'But yet, Sergeant,' said I, 'of a wholly different nature.'
-
-'I know not that, sir,' said he. 'The ancients were wiser than we in
-these matters, saving your worship's learning, and, as I have been
-told, placed amongst their ensigns military the horse, as being
-sacred to the god Neptune as well as to Mars, and the symbol of
-immoderate fury of attack on sea as well as on land. Moreover in
-your tilting of one ship against another you have an image or
-imitation of the crowning glory of horsemanship.'
-
-'But we English do not use this method,' I answered, 'and hold it
-only fit for Turks and Spaniards, and such like, who, having no skill
-in sailing and seamanship, are compelled to use galleys propelled
-with oars.'
-
-'Mass!' said Culverin, 'had I known that I should have sailed even
-less willingly than I did. What you say may be right, yet I hold
-that to sail with a lance at your bows is the more honourable and
-soldierly method. But let that pass. Doubtless by further
-contemplation I shall discover further similitudes between the horse
-and the ship. Since I hear what you say, sir, I see nothing in which
-they are alike save in respect of their prancing--a quality I would
-gladly forego in the present case, seeing that I am like to find
-little comfort in it.'
-
-As we spoke Harry came out of the captain's cabin, and Sergeant
-Culverin had to leave to accompany his master back to the _Swan_. My
-brother, good heart, did his best to bid me farewell as of old, but
-what between my shamefacedness to see his careworn look and damped
-spirit, and his own too recent sense of the great wrong I had done
-him, our leave-taking was cold and formal, for all he tried so hard
-to forgive.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-Our wind held so fair and steady at north-east that on the ninth day
-we sighted Porto Santo in the Madeiras, and two days later the
-Canaries. So persuaded was our captain of a very good passage, and
-so earnest to give the Spaniards no inkling of our purpose, that he
-would not touch for water, but held on without once dropping anchor
-or striking sail till the thirty-fifth day.
-
-In spite of the terrible shock my sudden meeting with Harry had given
-to my spirits, and in spite of my despair at being condemned to face
-my shame and sorrow for I knew not how many months, I could not but
-feel a calm grow over me as we proceeded. None can tell, save he who
-has tried it, what it is to a perturbed spirit to sail on day after
-day over those sunny seas with all the magic of the West before.
-Less and less I brooded over the old life, and more and more on the
-glory of the new, till, as Frank had said, the past seemed to grow
-small, and a faint hope arose in me that my crime was not too great
-for pardon, seeing that I knew how hard my brother would try to
-forgive.
-
-I employed myself in studying navigation and the Spanish tongue with
-Frank, nor were ship duties wanting, for it was ever our captain's
-way to have the gentlemen tally on a rope as well as the meanest
-mariner when need was.
-
-He hated nothing so much as idleness, and those who had no work had
-always to find play, which he himself was not slow in furnishing.
-
-'I know nothing,' he used to say, 'that breeds discontent and faint
-hearts like the union of these two, dullness and idleness.'
-
-So with games, and music, and rummaging and cleaning arms, our
-spirits were kept up when they were like to sink for want of work.
-Frank was very earnest about this on our present voyage, for as we
-neared the Indies the hands, being young, began to frighten
-themselves with tales of the great strength and richness of the
-Indian cities, until, had it not been for Frank's care in stopping
-and preventing such idle talk with other inducements, they would have
-come to think Nombre de Dios as big as London and as strong as
-Berwick.
-
-Nor were we allowed to lose sight of the godly purpose of our
-enterprise. Prayers were ordered every day night and morning, which
-our captain read very earnestly, never forgetting a prayer to God for
-the Queen's Majesty, her most honourable council, and the speedy
-'making' of our voyage, the same having a very good effect, for the
-half at least of the crew were as good Puritans as himself.
-
-Thus it was in a very hopeful and godly state that, on the evening of
-the thirty-fifth day we saw the Isle of Guadeloupe towering on the
-horizon like a priceless jewel in the setting sun. With all our
-music and many a gay flourish of our trumpets we saluted it, and that
-night as we lay a-hull our musicians gave us a double portion of
-melody.
-
-With the first morning light we ran in and anchored off a little
-rocky island three leagues off Dominica, where we lay three days to
-refresh our men. And here we landed and wandered at will, to taste
-for the first time the surpassing loveliness of the tropics.
-
-How shall I tell of those first days in the Indies? My pen seems a
-dumb dead thing when I think of it. Much as I had thought, and
-dreamed, and read of them, this waking, this seeing was far beyond
-all. On either hand the heights of Guadeloupe and Dominica towered
-serenely out of their soft beds of lustrous green. The glittering
-waters between were studded with island gems ablaze with every bright
-hue which God has made, that we may taste the glory which is to come.
-All about us was the hum of bright flies, the sparkle of feather and
-gorgeous flowers, and the rustle of the scented air through the
-crowded canes as it passed on to wave with dreamy motion the heavy
-crowns of the slender palms. And over all, with faint and soothing
-voice, there came in through the dense growth of vine and brake the
-deep-toned booming of the surf.
-
-Such is the pale shadow that I have power to paint of the banquet on
-which our souls feasted as we lay in the deserted huts which the
-Indians, who came there to fish, had built. So rich and heavenly was
-that world that I could not wonder how men were led on to think that
-a little farther, only a little farther, must be a land where gold
-and gems would be as the sand and pebbles here, nay, where beyond
-some glittering hill they would see the open gates of Paradise.
-
-Not only by the memory of all that beauty does the time live in my
-mind, but also because it was here I first had real speech with my
-wronged brother. As we lay in those Dryad's bowers our sorrow seemed
-so far away and little in this New World, so dim beside its dazzling
-glory, that it was for a time half forgotten amidst the thousand new
-things that crowded our thoughts. Like two Sileni we lay, as Mr.
-Oxenham had said, in the arms of lady Nature, and all that was sad
-melted in the glow of her luxuriant life.
-
-We had no spirit for the revels of our comrades, for chasing the
-bright-hued birds, or plucking the gleaming flowers. We were both
-happier to lie looking over the sea where our dainty ships rocked,
-and dreamily talk over Harry's Italianate notions that rose unbidden
-here. Being to me now of undreamed-of interest, since my old faith
-was gone, they were a subject we could talk on more as we used to do.
-
-'Surely,' I remember him saying, 'surely that Italian friar was right
-who told me that the soul was not in the body. Can you not feel
-here, Jasper, how great a thing it is? Can you not feel how there is
-something that binds you like a brother to all this music of bird and
-leaf and air and sea? What can it be but the great soul of the
-universe. That is it, and the friar was right. It is that great
-soul which is not in our bodies, rather are our bodies in the
-soul--the soul that is yours and mine and hers and God's.'
-
-So would our speech always come back to our sorrow and part us again.
-Yet were we too drunken with the western wine to feel the past too
-deeply. Thus, then, once or twice during our stay there we had
-speech of these things, and I began to hope still more that some day
-we might be the same again together, and, moreover, to feel that I
-was beginning to understand what it was he thought of the great
-universal secret.
-
-On the third day after our coming to the island we sailed again,
-greatly refreshed, and in two days more we had sight of Tierra-Firme,
-being the high land above Santa Marta, but came not near the shore,
-that we might not be seen. So without sight of Carthagena we passed
-on, till on the 12th of July we dropped anchor off the haven whither
-we were bound.
-
-It was a spot our captain had noted on his voyage the last year, not
-only as being sheltered by two high points from the winds and a very
-commodious harbour, but also because no Spaniard had any dwelling
-between this place and Santiago de Tolu on the one hand and Nombre de
-Dios on the other, the nearest being at least thirty-five leagues
-distant. Moreover, there was an abundance of food there, both fish
-in the sea and fowls in the woods around, the most plentiful being
-certain birds like to our pheasants, which the Spaniards in those
-regions call guans and curassows. It was by reason of the great
-store of these delicate fowls that our captain named the place Port
-Pheasant.
-
-[Illustration: Overhung with a dense growth of trees.--p. 239]
-
-It must be remembered we had our three pinnaces to set up, for in
-them we were to make our attack. It was most necessary then to have
-a hidden place for this work, and it was not a little his knowledge
-of this secret haven that gave our captain his great hopes of
-success. He judged no one knew it but himself and those who had been
-with him in his previous voyage. Being thus perfectly secure, Frank
-rowed in to see how best to bring the ships to moorings there, and I
-went in the boat.
-
-No place could have been better fitted to our purpose. The headlands
-were but half a cable's length apart, and so overhung with a dense
-growth of brakes and trees, all strange to me, that little could be
-seen beyond save the climbing hills on the mainland. But as soon as
-we rowed in I could see what a paradise it was.
-
-Before us opened a rounded haven, from eight to ten cables' length
-every way. The waves died languidly away towards the shore in
-ever-lessening ripples, as though hushed by the surpassing beauty of
-the place. Where, with loving whispers, they lapped the golden
-beach, they reflected a picture more dazzling than my eyes had ever
-seen. Heaped up in wild profusion was a tangled mass of every hue of
-green that clothed to the water's edge the gently swelling hills.
-Wherever the rocks could find a place to peep, their own rich colour
-was almost hidden by hanging bunches of scarlet flowers. Huge rough
-tree-trunks I could get a glimpse of here and there, with great
-sinews of rugged bark that stood boldly out from them, and were lost
-in the glowing brakes which covered the ground. In the branches
-fluttered birds that mocked the radiance of the flowers, while on
-every point the crested and bronze-hued pheasants plumed themselves,
-and screamed defiance one against the other. Lost to all else but
-this fairyland I was hardly plunged, as it were, into some delicious
-dream, when I was rudely awakened.
-
-''Vast rowing, lads,' said Frank suddenly, in quick, hushed tones.
-'Look! What's yonder?'
-
-His keen eye was the first to see it. I looked where he pointed, and
-in a moment my paradise was tumbled to earth. Away in the trees rose
-a thin blue cloud of smoke. There was no mistaking it; the hand of
-man must be there. 'Whose was it?' was what we each asked ourselves
-with melancholy foreboding.
-
-Our captain, though as disappointed as any of us to see a cuckoo in
-his nest, seemed nothing daunted. Rowing back quickly to the ships,
-he ordered out our other boat, and manning both to their full
-holding, not forgetting muskets, bows, and pikes, returned speedily
-to land.
-
-No sooner were we ashore than we could see many traces of men having
-been there very lately. There were black spots where fires had been,
-and marks of fresh clearing in the brakes. Setting ourselves in
-order, we cautiously went forward along a track that seemed to lead
-to the fire, Frank leading the way in spite of all our efforts to
-dissuade him.
-
-We had not gone far before we came to a tree in the midst of the
-track, so great that four men at full stretch could not have girdled
-it about. I saw Frank stop suddenly and look up on the trunk.
-
-'Ah, Jack Garrett, Jack Garrett,' said he, 'what game is this you
-have been coursing with my hounds?'
-
-I followed his eyes and saw a leaden plate nailed to the tree, on
-which were graven these words:
-
-
-CAPTAIN DRAKE.
-
-If you fortune to come to this port, make hast away! For the
-Spaniards which you had with you here the last year have bewrayed
-this place, and taken away all that you left here.
-
-I depart from hence, this present 7th of July 1572.
-
- Your very loving friend,
- JOHN GARRETT.
-
-
-'My thanks, Jack Garrett, for your kindly warning,' cried Frank. 'A
-true Plymouth man are you, though you did whistle away some of my
-best hounds. See what comes,' he continued, turning to me, 'of
-sparing these false Spaniards' lives. It is enough to make a man cut
-the throat of every prisoner he takes--a thing, by God's help, I will
-never do, whatever it cost me. May they have their reward for their
-treachery, though, by God's mercy, we are too well furnished to be
-hurt by the loss of any gear they stole.'
-
-'Where will you go now, then?' I asked.
-
-'No whither, my lad,' said he. 'Here I purposed to set up my
-pinnaces, and here I will do it. The Spaniards are not here now, and
-if they keep away but two days, I shall order things so that, by
-God's help, they shall rue their coming, if that is their mind.'
-
-He was very cheerful and resolute with it all, and made us so too,
-yet I know he was sorely tried, by his frequent speaking of God's
-name, which was always his way at times when he felt need of all his
-courage, as indeed he did now; for though we found the place
-deserted, the fire we had seen being but the remains of Garrett's
-work, left perhaps as a signal to us to be on our guard, yet there
-was no telling when the Spaniards would be down on us.
-
-No time, therefore, was lost in carrying out our captain's resolve.
-Harry having, as I have said, a good knowledge of such matters,
-speedily marked out a piece of land about three-quarters of an acre
-in extent, of pentagonal form, with one side touching the shore. The
-whole crew then started cheerily to clear this, hauling the trees as
-they were felled with pulleys and hawsers, in such wise as to make a
-rampart all round, a look-out boat being despatched meanwhile to one
-of the points to watch for any disturbance.
-
-All that day we laboured at our fort, and most of the night too; yet
-next morning much still remained to be done when we saw our look-out
-boat rowing hard towards us.
-
-'Sail ho!' shouted the steersman, as soon as he was in hail. 'Three
-sail bearing hard down on us.'
-
-'Blister the fool's tongue!' said Frank beneath his breath, as he
-stood at my side and saw something like alarm in the younger
-mariners' faces, but he sang out cheerily, 'Good news, good news, my
-lads. Now we will trap them here, and never a breath of our coming
-shall reach Nombre de Dios.'
-
-The man reported the three sail, as well as he could tell; a bark
-about the _Swan's_ size, a caravel, and a smaller craft. All set to
-work cheerily to carry out Frank's order; for we were in excellent
-heart again, to see that our captain thought only of offence.
-
-Some pieces of ordnance were removed from the ships, to be set by
-Harry and Mr. Oxenham in the best positions they could find for the
-defence of our fort. The ships were then warped over to the entrance
-of the haven, where they were moored on either hand close under the
-rocks, so that they could not be seen by a ship till she was well
-within. Each had a holdfast to the opposite point, that they might
-be warped across the mouth as soon as the enemy had passed in. All
-fires were extinguished, and the small-shot, gunners, and bowmen who
-were ashore at the fort were well concealed.
-
-So we lay waiting in great anxiety for what was to come. Mr. Oxenham
-and Harry, by pouring out a fire of jests and comfortable speeches,
-kept up the youngsters' spirits as well as might be, though I think
-by their looks there was many a heart thumping hard, when we saw
-through the bushes a large Spanish shallop rowing in towards our
-haven.
-
-As the shallop came on a bark of some fifty tons and a caravel of
-Seville build, as Mr. Oxenham told us, hove to right opposite our
-entrance. The shallop came as far as between the points, and then,
-after stopping as though to discover the place thoroughly, rowed back
-to the ships.
-
-It was impossible to tell whether they had seen us or not; so, seeing
-what our aim was, we could but rejoice when we saw them all make sail
-and stand in. On they came, a pretty sight to see, swaggering in
-most gallantly.
-
-At last they were well inside, in full view of our ships, which yet
-did not move an inch.
-
-'Something must be wrong,' whispered Mr. Oxenham to me. 'Why the
-devil does he not warp across, or at least give them a shot?'
-
-Suddenly there was a loud flourish of trumpets on board the admiral
-and the flag of St. George was run up, but still she did not stir.
-
-'Her holdfasts must have dragged,' said Mr. Oxenham; 'I fear we are
-undone.'
-
-A puff of smoke leaped forth from the strange bark, and we looked to
-see the admiral struck. The boom of the shot rolled across the still
-waters, waking strange echoes in that land-locked bay, and setting
-the guans a-screaming their ear-piercing cry. Ere the sounds died
-away a trumpet brayed answer to our admiral, and we saw the red cross
-flutter out from the stranger's top.
-
-At first we thought it must be some treacherous Spanish stratagem,
-but all our fears were at rest when, as our ships answered the
-stranger's salute, we saw a boat put out from the bark and go abroad
-the admiral.
-
-Our fears and pains were all wasted; for she proved to be a bark from
-the Isle of Wight, belonging to Sir Edward Horsey, the Governor,
-'Wild Ned Horsey,' so well known to us, not only for the mad stories
-of his ruffling youth and his piracies in the narrow seas during the
-old days, but also for the excellent disposition he made for the
-defence of the island, and above all for his notable services when he
-rode at the head of Clinton's horse during the late rising in the
-North.
-
-He was a great gentleman now and high in the Queen's service, yet he
-could not wholly give up his old ways, and had fitted out this
-present ship, under Captain Ranse, to try what Popish prizes he could
-pick up on the high seas or amongst the Indies. He had 'made' his
-voyage so far as to take a shallop off Cape Blanco, and, what was
-better, a caravel carrying _Advisos_ to Nombre de Dios.
-
-He was thus able, when he heard our purpose, to confirm us from the
-papers he had seized that as yet the Spaniards had no knowledge of
-our coming. So very welcome and favourable for our purpose did this
-seem that Captain Ranse was desirous to consort with us in our
-venture.
-
-Nothing could have been more to the minds of most of us than this,
-seeing he had thirty good and well-armed men with him, but Frank was
-little pleased with it, and would gladly have gone forward alone,
-save that he thought it better to put a good face on a bad matter and
-consent, seeing how Captain Ranse, if he were evilly disposed, might
-bring all our voyage to naught.
-
-So they were received upon conditions which I, being a scholar, was
-appointed to draw, whereof having a copy I will set it forth, that
-men in like case hereafter may see how the Prince of Navigators
-ordered these things, since unhappy quarrels have many times arisen
-between captains who have sailed in consort, by reason of their not
-doing things orderly at the outset, after the ancient usages of the
-sea.
-
-As I sat in our council chamber, which had for its walls the rugged
-buttresses of one of those huge trees of which I have spoken, and for
-roof the vast spread of its branches, alive with screaming parrots, I
-could not but muse on dull-eyed lawyers far away in their dingy
-Temple; nor, as I wrote the dry note which contrasted so strangely
-with the splendour of our audacious project, could I but marvel over
-the might of our great Queen's peace, which in such humble shape
-could reach even here to aid her loving subjects in ordering the
-chivalrous brotherhood by which we hoped to add such glory to her
-name. And thus I wrote the words as Frank spoke them, plain and
-clear, that none might have to hunt for sense in a forest of sounds.
-
-'I, Francis Drake, general of the fleet appointed for these seas, to
-wit, the _Pasha_, of seventy tons and forty-seven men, and the
-_Swan_, of twenty-five tons and twenty-six men, together with three
-pinnaces unmanned, have consorted, covenanted, and agreed, and by
-these presents do consort, covenant, and agree, with James Ranse, of
-the _Lion_, fifty tons and thirty men, belonging to and being under
-the flag of the Honourable Sir Edward Horsey, Knight, together with a
-certain caravel to be hereafter measured, and a shallop, her prizes
-and consorts, to have, possess, enjoy, and be partaker with me and my
-fleet, and I with them, of all such lawful prize or prizes as shall
-be taken by me or them, or any of us jointly or severally, in sight
-or out of sight, ton for ton, and man for man, from this present 13th
-day of July 1572, till such time as we mutually determine the
-conditions contained herein.'
-
-So it was signed, sealed, and delivered, and all being settled we
-laboured together harmoniously--the carpenters at setting up the
-pinnaces, and the rest by spells at completing the fort, exercising
-in our weapons, the gathering of victuals, and many pastimes which
-our captain devised.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-Just sixteen days after my ink was dry the great bell in the church
-of Nombre de Dios was calling men to complines as the sun went down.
-So it might have boomed over the waving forest and darkening sea any
-time the last fifty years or more. Yet I doubt if the people would
-have doffed their broad hats, or crossed themselves so peacefully
-to-night, had they known in what other ears it sounded besides their
-own.
-
-I doubt their prayers would have been more fervent that night had
-they been aware how the stars, that just began to glimmer, were
-looking down on four boats crowded with men, that were striking
-a-hull and dropping their grapples hard by the mouth of the Rio
-Francisco, scarce two leagues from the point of their bay.
-
-Yet there we lay in our three pinnaces and the shallop, seventy-three
-desperate souls, on the eve of our great attempt.
-
-The ships and the rest of the men had been left behind, under Captain
-Ranse, at the Isle of Pinos, twenty-five leagues away, and we had
-come on, each man with the comrades he chose, as far as could be. I
-was with Frank, Harry with Mr. Oxenham, the other pinnace being in
-charge of John Drake, and the shallop under John Overy, the master of
-the _Lion_. Everything had been done to encourage the more
-faint-hearted, and we were most excellently furnished with muskets,
-calivers, pikes, fire-pikes, targets, bows, and everything such an
-enterprise could need, apportioned to each man according to his skill
-and disposition.
-
-Yet many a heart must have beat anxiously as we lay waiting for the
-dark night, and would have done so still more had the mariners been
-aware of all that their commanders knew. For at the Isles of Pinos
-we had captured two small frigates from Nombre de Dios, wherein
-certain negroes were lading planks. From these men, being very
-kindly used, we heard that their countrymen, the Cimaroons, had
-fallen upon the town and nearly surprised it but six weeks ago.
-
-These Cimaroons were African negroes who, having risen against their
-masters some eighty years ago, had fled into the woods, and now were
-become two nations, that lived in the country on either side of the
-way from Panama to Nombre de Dios, each under its separate king. For
-defence against these people our prisoners told us soldiers were
-expected from Panama and elsewhere, if they were not already come.
-
-Nothing could have been worse for us; for now we knew that the town
-would be on the alert, and perhaps full of soldiers. Yet, wishing to
-make the best of a bad case, our captain freed these slaves and set
-them ashore, that they might seek their countrymen and bear them a
-good report of us, in case it might fall out that at a future time
-the help of the Spaniards' enemies might be welcome to us.
-
-We who knew these things kept them to ourselves, very thankful for
-our increased force. Frank, I know, saw how ill this fortune was for
-us, yet he was more cheerful and resolute than I had ever seen him
-when he called the boats about him, that he might say his last words
-to the crews.
-
-'Come close,' said he, 'that I have not to speak too loud, and so be
-heard by any negroes in the woods, whereby those in the town might
-have notice of our coming, which I should much grieve at. For I am
-loath to put them to all the charge which I know they would willingly
-bestow for our entertainment, seeing that we come uninvited.'
-
-Putting them thus in cheerful heart, he went on to tell them of the
-vast wealth of the place, which was all open to them, seeing it was
-unwalled and little defended. Then he spoke again of all his wrongs,
-both at Rio de la Hacha and San Juan de Ulloa, and of the bitter
-cruelties of the Spaniards to English mariners whom they caught in
-Spain; and told them how he was now in certain hope of God's favour
-to win a recompense for all these things, since it had been
-vouchsafed to him to get so near his end utterly undiscovered and
-with so excellent a crew of men like-minded to himself.
-
-This cheerful speech much comforted us all, and I saw Harry and the
-Sergeant lie back and go to sleep, being old hands at the work. But
-I could not close my eyes any more than the greater part of the men,
-who soon fell to talking of how strong such a place must be, till
-Frank, seeing how things were going, called on Mr. Oxenham, who was
-in the next boat to us, to tell the story of the founding of Nombre
-de Dios, to keep the men from thinking too much.
-
-'Well, my lads,' said he, sitting up on a barrel, 'it was the early
-days of the Indies then, when Don Nicuese was named at Carthagena
-governor, grand-admiral, captain-general, and I know not what
-_braggadocio_ titles beside, of his new province of Veragua. With
-750 men and a fine fleet he set sail, bragging, I doubt not, to his
-Maestro del Campo, or whatever he was, Lope de Olano, of all that was
-to come of it; yet ere he was half-way they say his whole force were
-like to mutiny, because of his cruelty and harshness. To punish his
-wickedness and tyranny, a _furicano_ burst on him in the midst of his
-journey. The proud fleet was scattered past recall, and the haughty
-governor cast away. What miseries of hunger and cold and weariness
-he suffered none know, but at last he was found by Lope de Olano
-half-starved, having no food but palm-tree buds and such like
-wretched stuff, instead of all the dainties he had brought to fill
-his belly. The only thing that was hot changed in him was his
-cruelty and harshness, for never in all their sufferings would he
-bend a jot to his men.
-
-'All that was thus left of his navy came at last to a port which
-Columbus had once discovered. A mariner who had sailed with the "Old
-Admiral" said it was a fair place for a settlement, and conducted him
-thither, getting curt thanks for his pains, you may be sure. The old
-mariner was right; but he had forgotten the Indians, who so overdid
-their welcome that Nicuese made haste to depart thence, leaving
-twenty of his men behind.
-
-'Baffled and sullen, he sailed on to the next port, where he
-profanely cried, "In the name of God, let us stay here!" and hence
-yonder town, that is to be ours to-morrow, was called "Nombre de
-Dios." Then, having but a hundred men left out of his seven hundred
-and fifty, he laid the foundation of his city; and here, for a while,
-living miserably, without fit food or clothing, in wooden huts, he
-resisted the constant assaults of the Indians, till thirty more of
-his men were lost.
-
-'They dared not stir beyond their camp for food, fever was slowly
-eating out their hearts, and they were at the mercy of God, when one
-Calmenaras, putting in to the bay, found them. They were then of all
-men, it is said, the most miserable, being, as it were, dried up with
-extreme hunger, filthy beyond all speaking, and horrible to behold.
-
-'Yet through all Nicuese clung to his cruelty and harshness and the
-King of Spain's commission. Calmenaras took pity on him, and carried
-him to the new settlement at Darien, which as yet had no governor,
-that he might be set over the people there. But when they came
-thither the settlers remembered his tyranny and wickedness, and saw
-by his demeanour that, though all else was dried up in him, yet the
-devil was not. So they, being resolved to be rid of him, took an old
-rotten brigantine, which they caulked with iron, and set their
-would-be governor therein, with his seventy men, starved and
-fever-bitten.
-
-'In this, as their only hope of life, and being too sore sick to
-resist, they sailed; and the sea alone, that tells no tales, knows
-what their end was. Never more was a man of them heard or seen, and
-Nicuese was called ever after _Desdichado_.'
-
-'_Desdichado!_' cried Frank, as Mr. Oxenham ended his tale; 'and a
-right name, too; for surely the Lord made him luckless and suffered
-no angel to prosper him in his ways, because of his wickedness and
-cruelty, and turned away His face from yonder town which he founded,
-because He knew the wickedness that would be done there, and the
-sinews of wickedness that would come thence. Yes, lads, the Lord has
-deserted Nombre de Dios, and to-morrow, of His justice and mercy,
-will deliver it into the hands of His people.'
-
-Then one struck up that new Protestant ballad they loved so well:
-
- 'We will not change our credo
- For Pope, nor book, nor bell;
- And if the devil come himself,
- We'll hound him back to hell.'
-
-
-By this time it was dark night, and we gladly took to our oars again,
-rowing hard under the shore, that we might not be seen of the
-watch-house. So we continued till we recovered the point of the
-harbour, and there we lay to again, to wait for the first gray of
-dawn, when our captain purposed to deliver his assault.
-
-It was still full two hours to wait, and I could see how anxious
-Frank was as to how his men would get through them. For if it had
-been hard to keep them from their talk before, it was doubly so now,
-when no one might speak above his breath. Wearily an hour dragged
-away, and the men were growing more and more uneasy, shifting about
-and whispering a great deal as they watched nervously for the first
-glimmer in the east.
-
-'Would God it were day!' whispered Frank to me. 'How shall we ever
-pass another hour of this? The poor lads' courage is oozing out at
-their finger-ends with all this lingering.'
-
-'See, see!' said I; for even as he spoke a faint gray streak appeared
-on the horizon. 'There it is at last!'
-
-'Never a bit, lad,' answered Frank; 'it is only the moon rising.
-Still, it shall serve for dawn to-day. No one has seen the
-sand-glass but I.'
-
-There was a merry twinkle in his eye as he passed the word. 'Dawn,
-dawn,' he said, in low tones. 'Out oars, lads; yarely now, and still
-as mice, and God help our service.'
-
-How pleasant was the dull rattle of oars after our painful silence as
-we rowed round the point! All was gloom as we bore towards the town,
-save for a few lights that twinkled here and there, and one that
-moved slowly across the bay. As we came abreast of this we could see
-in the growing moonlight that it was on board of a ship of some sixty
-tons, which had just arrived. Her crew seemed soon to catch sight of
-us and to take alarm at our numbers; for we saw them cast off their
-gondola, which shot away immediately hard for the shore, like the
-ghost of some evil monster.
-
-'Not so fast, not so fast, my gallants!' cried Frank. 'Be not at
-such pains on our behalf. Come, my lads, we must save them this
-trouble, and carry the news ourselves. Now, smite for all that is in
-you!'
-
-The pinnace leaped under their sturdy strokes, and we headed to cut
-off the gliding shadow from the shore. It was a sharp struggle, for
-the Dons rowed well and their boat was light. Still, our sinews soon
-told. Seeing they were beaten, they stopped irresolute, and then,
-with some blaspheming cry, made over to the opposite side of the bay.
-
-'What, so rude?' laughed Frank. 'Will you not stay to fling us one
-little word of thanks for the labour we save you? Well, better
-manners to you, and a fair good-morrow. And now, lads, hard for the
-town!'
-
-We could soon see it in the gloomy light, sunk snug amongst the soft,
-forest-clad hills. I had hardly looked to see it so big; for, by the
-few scattered lights that twinkled far apart, I judged it was at
-least as large as Plymouth. As we drew near, a sandy beach showed
-dimly before us, sloping down from the nearest houses, which were
-scarce twenty yards from the water. There was no quay, nor any thing
-but a half-ruined platform, on which stood six great pieces gaping at
-us. Not a sign of life was to be seen, so without more ado we ran
-our pinnaces aground and leaped out into the water undiscovered.
-
-'Down with the culverins, my lads,' cried Frank, as quietly as might
-be. With that a rush was made at the platform, but even as we
-reached it up jumped a gunner, who must have been sleeping against
-one of the pieces, and ran off screaming into the town before we
-could stay him.
-
-We could hear his cries die away amongst the houses, and then for a
-few minutes all was again as silent as death. Still, we knew all
-secrecy was over now, and we went to our work with a will. Culverin
-and demi-culverin were tumbled off their carriages and rolled into
-the sand, and then to our captain's sharp orders we set about our
-other dispositions.
-
-There was a good deal to be done, getting the arms from the pinnaces,
-lighting our fire-pikes and matches, and getting into our companies.
-All had been well ordered beforehand, yet, quick as we were, before
-we had done we heard the troubled waking of the town.
-
-First came a low confused sound, rather felt than heard, and then
-scattered cries, with the brave blare of a trumpet. As the cries
-spread in the murmur, now on this side, now on that, a light flashed
-in the church tower, and the great bell began booming out a hurried
-alarm. Now it seemed that drums furiously beaten were running up and
-down. Farther and wider spread the cries, and louder rose the
-murmur. A scream of some terrified woman went shrilly up, then
-another, and another, and the murmur began to increase to the dull,
-mingled roar of a multitude suddenly alarmed. Far and near the
-clamour waxed. Shriek on shriek, and cry on cry followed incessant,
-till at last the whole town was filled with that strange and terrible
-sound which is like nothing else on earth; and above all boomed the
-bell.
-
-We were ready at last; so, leaving twelve to keep the pinnaces, we
-hastened, as had been arranged, to the mount on the east side of the
-town, which our captain had learned the year before it was their
-intention to strengthen with sundry pieces of ordnance. This it was
-necessary to our purpose that we should first hold with a party of
-our men, so, leaving half our company, of whom I was one, to guard
-the foot, Frank hastened up the hill with the rest.
-
-He seemed a long time gone, as we stood inactive, listening to that
-terrible tumult, of which we could see nothing, growing ever louder
-and ever wider amidst the crowded houses, and the great bell booming
-continually over all. Not a sound came from the mount above us, and
-we could tell nothing of what was happening to our comrades.
-
-At last we heard the clink of weapons coming down, and our captain
-ran to us with all his men bearing the joyful news that no ordnance
-had yet been mounted there, though all was prepared for it.
-
-'This is a most merciful dealing of God,' said Frank, 'for now, look
-you, we shall have all our men for the Plaza. Plague on them, how
-they squall! We will give them somewhat to squall over anon. Jack,
-take you Mr. Oxenham and fifteen of his company round by the King's
-Treasure-House, by the way you know, and enter the Plaza by the
-eastern end. I will go up with the main battle by the broad street.
-Give them plenty of music of drum and trumpet, and I will do the
-like, that they may see they are attacked from two sides, and
-increase our numbers for us with their fears.'
-
-Away went John Drake and Mr. Oxenham with their fifteen men, a drum,
-trumpet, and five of the blazing fire-pikes. We saw them disappear,
-yelling horribly, with much grizzly noise of their instruments, to
-the no little discomfort, I doubt, of those who still slept.
-
-In like manner we took our course by the lurid glare of our
-fire-pikes, with an equal or greater din of trumpet, drum, and arms,
-being forty-four men in all. The Plaza lay towards the upper part of
-the town, so that on coming to the top of the street, which, being
-very sandy, made us short of breath with our running, our captain
-called a halt.
-
-Creeping on under shelter of the houses, I got a sight within the
-square. In the midst was a goodly tree, and near to it a
-market-cross. Farther again to the right was the church, from which
-the great bell boomed continually. From the cross to the church I
-could see the glimmer of a long row of matches, by whose movement I
-judged there was a company of harquebusiers gathered there waiting
-for us, but I could see nothing of them because of the gloom that
-filled the place.
-
-In the farther corner to the left, where, they told me, the road to
-Panama left the square, rose a house much larger than the rest. Here
-by the light of sundry lanterns I could see a great throng collected,
-with several companies of soldiers. I should think there were a
-hundred matches or more burning there; wherefore, having made a
-complete discovery of the Plaza, I crept back to inform our captain.
-
-'Hark ye, my lads,' cried Frank, when he had heard my report. 'At
-the word we will advance into the square. Mr. Overy's crew with the
-gentlemen to the right, the rest with me to the left. Stand but for
-one volley, and then close! Forward now, in God's name!'
-
-A roar of small shot greeted us as we sallied into the square, and
-the bullets tore up the sand amidst our feet. I saw our trumpeter
-fall forward in the midst of a merry blast, and heard Frank utter a
-sharp cry. But there was no time to see what was happening. Already
-our arrows and bullets were making the Spaniards sing in the
-left-hand corner of the square. I discharged my pistol with the rest
-and then sprang forward by Harry's side, rapier and dagger in hand.
-
-Straight at the line of matches we dashed. Every moment I looked to
-see them belch their fire and hear a storm of hail about my ears.
-Ten more strides and we should be amongst them.
-
-'Plague on the fools!' cried Harry, who was leading.
-
-'What mountebank dispositions are these?' cried the Sergeant at his
-side.
-
-Not a man was there. It was but a string of matches hung from the
-church to the cross to terrify us, as if we had been Cimaroons.
-
-'Back, back,' cried Harry, 'back to aid the general.'
-
-With an angry roar at being so befooled we ran back under the broad
-branches of the tree in the middle of the Plaza, and so leaped out to
-help our comrades. Even as we did so I heard a volley at the end of
-the square before me and saw John Drake and Mr. Oxenham, with all
-their party, rush out into the Plaza and with a loud cry hurl
-themselves at the throng.
-
-Now we were all at hard push of pike crowding the amazed throng into
-the corner of the square. Yet we had work to do, for the Spanish
-soldiers held their ground well, in spite of the press. For a time
-the thing seemed to hang in a balance. I remember little but a wild
-turmoil, wherein I was at point and cut half mad with excitement, and
-all around were the butt ends of muskets whirling, and pikes and
-bills clattering, as they were thrust and parried.
-
-My ears were full of the din of the fight, the shouts and clang of
-weapons, and the screams of women flying out on the Panama road; and
-still, above all, the great bell boomed unceasing.
-
-Now they were giving way. Our twelve fire-pikes, being well armed
-with long steel heads, were doing their work above all the rest.
-None dared stand before the flaming weapons. Step by step they gave
-us ground, till suddenly the press broke up, and, flinging down their
-arms, they fell to running out of the Panama gate as hard as they
-could skelter.
-
-Away we went after them, driving them before us like a flock of
-sheep. Continually they cast away their weapons, which at last lay
-so thick that many of our men were hurt by them, not being able to
-avoid them in the darkness. So we left them to scamper out by their
-grand new gate, which they had set up to prevent the Cimaroons
-entering, little thinking the first use they should find for it would
-be to run out of to save their skins.
-
-Being thus in possession of the Plaza our captain made haste to set
-guards at the entrance of it, and sent a party to stay the bell,
-which still boomed on through it all; for we knew not how many
-soldiers might still be in the remoter parts of the town, to muster
-at its noisy summons. Then he called on a prisoner whom we had taken
-to lead a party of us to the governor's house.
-
-'What do you think of our venture now?' said Frank to me, his face
-beaming with triumph. 'Now you shall see where all the mules from
-Panama are unladen, and what they bring.'
-
-'That is well enough,' answered I; 'but will you not first look to
-your hurt?'
-
-'Hush, lad,' said he; 'it is nothing--a fly-bite.'
-
-'Nay, but your boot is bloody where the shot tore it,' I said.
-
-'I tell you it is nothing,' answered he testily. 'Hold your peace or
-we are undone.'
-
-I said no more, marvelling at the constancy of this man, who seemed
-to think nothing of a hurt, which, as far as I could see, was enough
-to have laid any other man on his back long ago.
-
-By this time we were conducted to a great archway in the tall house
-of which I have spoken, beneath which was tied a splendid jennet,
-ready saddled, as though for the governor's use. On one side were
-steps leading upwards, where candles burned and shed a bright light
-into a large cellar on the opposite side. I could see it was a
-chamber of great length, partly by aid of the candles and partly by
-the moonlight that glimmered in. Along the whole length of one side
-from floor to ceiling was a pale cold glimmer, which looked very
-strange to me. Several of our men were staring at it with wide eyes
-and mouths.
-
-'What is it?' said I.
-
-'What is it,' replied Frank; 'why, silver!'
-
-I could hardly believe it, yet so it was, a pile of silver bars, as I
-should judge, ten feet in breadth, twelve in height, and seventy in
-length. I was altogether amazed to see my dreams of the Indies more
-than realised, and hardly knew if I were waking or not, till I heard
-Frank, who had been questioning our prisoner at length, cry out to us:
-
-'Not a bar will I have touched,' said he. 'I brought you not here
-for that rubbish. In the King's Treasure-House there is better
-stuff--gold, lads, gold and pearls enough to fill all our pinnaces
-and more. So thither must we go, and not a bar of this shall be
-touched.'
-
-I think there were many who would have been well satisfied with the
-silver, and hardly came to obey Frank's orders, but he was so
-resolute in them that there was nothing for it but to do as he said
-and return to our strength, which was posted about the great tree
-under command of John Drake.
-
-As we neared them one came running out to say they could not break
-into the church or stop the ringing unless they fired the building,
-which they craved leave to do.
-
-'Nay, that you shall not,' said Frank; 'by yea and nay have I sworn
-never to injure church or woman, whatever come. Let him ring till he
-bring a thousand devils about us, I care not; but fire the house of
-God I will not, howsoever it be defiled with idolatry and
-superstition.'
-
-So the bell boomed on as loud as ever, being very distressful to hear
-so long, and giving me at least a strange feeling of evil at hand,
-which I would gladly have shaken off.
-
-When we came to our strength many of the men, who seemed to have been
-scattered about the Plaza, came running up to the tree. Amongst
-these I marked Sergeant Culverin, and saw he had a gay silken sash
-about him, though I took little note of it then, being more concerned
-with another matter.
-
-For we found most of the men in some alarm, for which I could not
-blame them, having that ominous sound of the bell in their ears
-continually. Moreover large masses of inky clouds were rolling up
-over the town, as though that booming were a witchcraft which was
-summoning some hellish means to overwhelm us. No wonder then, I say,
-that some of us had a sense of coming danger.
-
-It seems the first fear that beset them was for the pinnaces, since
-they had heard shots down by the shore; and next for themselves, lest
-they should be overwhelmed with soldiers and unable to escape, since
-they had heard news from a negro that 150 small-shot and pike-men
-were already come to the town from Panama. Therefore, to allay these
-fears, our captain sent down his brother and Mr. Oxenham to the
-pinnaces with their party to search into the matter, and then join us
-at the King's Treasure-House.
-
-'Thither we go now, lads,' cried Frank. 'They say it is strong, but
-I think there be those here who shall find a way in, since we know
-what its lining is.'
-
-By this time all the stragglers, not a few of whom came from the
-governor's house, were gathered in, and, much encouraged by our
-captain's cheerfulness, we all went off to the King's Treasure-House.
-But just as we neared the place the pall of louring turgid cloud that
-overhung us was rent asunder. A dazzling flash of lightning lit up
-the deserted town, and instantly an awful crash of thunder drowned
-the noise of the bell. A few great drops fell heavily on the thirsty
-sand, and then in a moment there fell on us such a deluge of rain as
-none can picture who have not been in the tropical regions.
-
-There was nothing but to run helter-skelter to cover, for the saving
-of our powder and bow-strings. The nearest shelter was a certain
-piazza or pent-house at the west end of the Treasure-House; and to
-this we hurried, to find, for our no small comfort, that Captain John
-Drake was already there with his party, whereby we knew the pinnaces
-were safe.
-
-The flare and crash of the storm was now almost unceasing, so that we
-could only hear now and again the hissing roar of the rain. Seeing
-that we had already suffered injury from the wet, and would have been
-undone entirely had we left our cover, we were forced to wait where
-we were till the storm abated. It was a great mishap that it fell
-so, for at our present post it was by no means possible to get into
-the Treasure-House, since on that side there was a wall of stone and
-lime, very strong and without openings, over which we might have
-broken our hearts entirely or ever we could have broken half-way in.
-
-Thus we were forced to be idle, and stand listening to the awful
-voices of the storm which the devilish spells of the Spaniards had
-brought upon us. Many there who had never seen so sudden or terrible
-a tempest could hardly be comforted by our captain's promise that it
-would soon be past. Once more they began to talk together, harping
-still on the strength of the place, on old stories of the mighty
-witches there used to be amongst the Indians, and, above all, on the
-report of the soldiers' arrival, which Jack and Mr. Oxenham had found
-to be true.
-
-'It was this way,' said Jack, as we gathered round in the pent-house.
-'When we came down to the platform we found the pinnace men alarmed
-for our safety, since they had heard so many shots, and parties of
-harquebusiers had been continually running down to them, crying,
-"_Que gente? que gente?_" "Then," said they, "we cried out we were
-English, whereat the soldiers discharged their pieces blindly and ran
-away." At last came a negro, who would not go away, though they
-fired at him three or four times, but ever he cried out for Captain
-Drake, and craved to be taken aboard. This at last they did, when he
-told them of the 150 soldiers who had come to guard the town against
-the Cimaroons.'
-
-Not knowing how many might still be in the town, and being broken in
-spirit, some with wounds and others with the terror of the storm,
-they began to talk openly of the danger of staying longer.
-
-'Look you,' cried Frank at last, 'what silly child's talk is this?
-Did I not ever say I would bring you to the Treasure-House of the
-world? Why, so I have. And do I not say I will bring you off safe?
-Why, so, by God's help, I will. Is it not for this you have toiled
-and endured so far? And now you are here at the door, will you run
-away for fear of a few score of _braggadocio_ Spaniards, who are
-shaking wellnigh out of their shoes for fear of you? Shame on you,
-lads! whom I thought were like-minded with me, and resolved to grow
-rich on these treacherous, false idolaters, come what may. Go all of
-you who will, and when you get back to England, tell them Frank Drake
-brought you to the mouth of the Treasure-House of the world, and you
-were afraid to fill your pockets! Tell them that, and blame not me
-if they cry you, "Out upon the fools!"'
-
-Not a man stirred, though I think there were many had a mind to. It
-was growing near dawn, and we knew that as soon as the Spaniards had
-gathered their wits together, and found out how small a number we
-were, they would return and make an end of us, if they could. It
-fell very fortunately that the storm now began to abate, so our
-captain, willing to save more murmuring and not desiring to allow the
-Spaniards too much time to pluck up heart, gave the word to move.
-
-'Stay you here, Jack,' said he to his brother, 'with Mr. Oxenham, to
-break open the Treasure-House, and carry down all the gold and pearls
-our pinnaces will hold. I with our strength will get back to the
-Plaza, and hold it till we have despatched all our business, and
-relieved these gallants of their great anxiety in keeping so much
-treasure.'
-
-As he spoke these cheerful words he stepped forward, and to our
-horror rolled over in the sand. His two brothers had hold of him in
-a trice, and Jack took his head on his knee. As I saw him lie
-helpless there, so pale and death-like, and his blood flowing so fast
-as to fill the very footprints we had made, it seemed that the great
-bell, which boomed still its unceasing tocsin, was no longer sounding
-an alarm or spell, but rather ringing out the knell of my friend's
-heroic spirit.
-
-'Frank,' said Jack firmly, though I could note a strange tremor in
-his voice, 'you are sore hurt; you must come to the boats.'
-
-'Not without the treasure,' answered our captain; 'not without
-something for the lads. It is nothing; only a scratch, that made me
-a little faint.'
-
-'No, Frank,' said Joseph Drake, 'you are sore hurt. Your boot is
-full of blood. You have lost enough to kill two men already. We
-will have no more of it.'
-
-Sergeant Culverin was now at our captain's feet. He had taken off
-his gay silk scarf and was very skilfully tying up Frank's leg, to
-stay the bleeding.
-
-'My hearty thanks, Sergeant,' said Frank, very feebly. 'That is it!
-Now I can walk and despatch our business.'
-
-'That you never can,' said Jack, 'nor shall try neither. You must
-come back to the boats, Frank.'
-
-'No, Jack, I will not,' answered our captain, so low we could hardly
-hear; 'not without gold for the lads.'
-
-'Ay, but you must,' urged his brother. 'We will not stay another
-moment for twice the gold in all the Indies. Your life, lad, is
-worth more than that. What say you, mariners?'
-
-The sailors all cried out that it was well said, that they had enough
-already, and not another finger would they stir till they knew their
-captain was past danger. So, in spite of all Frank's protests, his
-two brothers raised him in their arms as gently as women, while the
-Sergeant put a skilfully-contrived sling under his legs, that his
-hurt might pain him less. So, recovering him a little with some
-drink, we started to carry him down to the pinnaces.
-
-Still he would not be content, though we said we would only take him
-aboard to have his wound dressed and return. First to me, and then
-to another he pleaded; but all gave one answer, that they would not
-stoop to pick up gold if the street were strewn with it, so it
-endangered his life a jot--not only out of their love for him, but
-also in regard to the great riches he could bring them to if he lived.
-
-This last reason eased his mind a little; but he was more grieved
-than ever when our surgeon had searched his wound in the pinnace, and
-told him it stood with his life not to go ashore again. Nor would he
-be in anywise content till we had promised to take that bark which we
-had seen before we left the harbour.
-
-So as we rowed out whence we came the sun rose gloriously and the
-bell ceased its clamour; and that most high and noteworthy attempt
-against the Treasure-House of the world was ended.
-
-For such, indeed, it was in my judgment; and, not to speak more, lest
-modesty be strained, I hold that every partaker in it should deem
-himself fortunate. Not only did we seventy men, under our unmatched
-commander, take the town and hold it for nigh on two hours, but of a
-surety we should have plundered a hundredfold more than we did had it
-not been for our captain's most unhappy hurt, or even for that storm,
-whereby we lost half an hour of time, as many think not without
-reason, through the hellish spells of those who rang the bell.
-
-The Spaniards made shift to set one of the culverins on its carriage
-again before we were free of the haven, and barked at our heels a
-bit, yet could they not prevent us taking the ship, which we did
-without great resistance, and found it full of excellent wine, to our
-great content. This we accepted with much thanks for their loving
-care of us, and carried away to a certain island about a league to
-the westward, which is called the Isle of _Bastimentos_, or Victuals,
-and there we went a-land.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-'A very notable piece of service, sir,' said Sergeant Culverin to me
-the same afternoon, as we sat resting our weary limbs after a very
-excellent meal, which we made from hens, fruit, and the other good
-things on the island.
-
-'So it seems to me, Sergeant,' said I, 'though you know I have no
-experience of such matters; but how goes the general now?'
-
-'As well as we could wish,' answered the Sergeant. ''Tis a hurt
-wants no Galen or Paracelsus to its mending. Take that of me, sir; I
-have seen these things, and know. It is but a clean, pretty
-flesh-wound, and no harm done save the letting of so much blood,
-which I never saw lost in so large a measure and death kept off. A
-very tall man our general, sir, a very tall man.'
-
-'I am heartily glad to hear you say so, Sergeant,' I said, being ever
-willing to humour him for the great service he had done me. 'You
-have been acquainted with great captains in the Emperor's service,
-and know one when you see him.'
-
-'Indeed, sir, I do,' returned Culverin, very pleased: 'and I may tell
-you, at a word, he is one,--a very Gonsalvo, sir. Yet I marvel how
-he came by such skill in dispositions, being wholly unlearned in the
-very rudiments of war. Why, sir, I spake to him at Port Pheasant
-concerning our fort of timber, and, believe me, he knew not the
-difference betwixt counterfort and cavaliero, or counterscarp and
-argine. And as for horsemanship, he has no more practice or
-contemplation of it than his cook's boy; and yet a notable soldier!'
-
-'It is as you say, Sergeant,' I answered; 'and we must the more
-honour him that, being his own master, he is able by such excellent
-practice to show how soldierly have been his precepts; and I grieve
-sorely that his skill and valour has met with no reward to-day.'
-
-'No reward?' said Culverin. 'Has your worship seen the sail that
-lies before the general's bower, where is the common-stick?'
-
-'No, Sergeant; what do you mean?'
-
-''Tis naught; and yet there are some indifferent foolish toys
-gathered there that will repay some of the blood that was spilt.'
-
-'Why, how is this, Sergeant? Did not the general charge that no man
-should load himself save with what came from the Treasure-House.'
-
-'True, sir, so he did; but, as I was saying, saving his most
-excellent dispositions, he is unlearned in things warlike. If a man
-make war, look you, he must make it according to the honoured,
-ancient, universal customs and discipline of war, whereof the honest
-pillaging of a captured town is one; wherefore I made bold of my
-bitter experience to supply our general's sweet ignorance, and lead
-some of the lads, when occasion was, to certain indifferent
-well-furnished houses. If some thereafter made free with certain
-trifling bars of silver from the governor's house it was by no
-furthering of mine. All I did was out of niceness for our general's
-honour. What think you those Spanish _cabaleros_ would have thought
-of him if, when they had returned, they had found their houses
-unplundered? I warrant you, sir, they would have been sore grieved
-in their soldiership to think that a man who could deliver an assault
-so boldly against all their force and discipline was ignorant of the
-most common and ancient usage of the wars.'
-
-Here one came to summon me to the general's presence, so I heard no
-more, though I found afterwards it was even as the Sergeant said, and
-that, far from coming out of the town empty handed as I thought,
-almost every man had carried off something, which all being gathered
-in the common store according to custom, made a show which was no
-little content to us.
-
-Indeed, I think we were all very merry that afternoon, not only as
-seeing how easily we had captured the town, which bred in us no less
-courage for further attempts than hope of their success, but also
-because we had brought off our general safely, in comparison with
-which gain we held our loss of the gold is nothing, the more so as
-his hurt proved of no great account; nor was any other of our company
-more than slightly wounded, save our trumpeter, who had been slain on
-the spot.
-
-Thus we were in a gentle mood to receive the envoy from Nombre de
-Dios, which was the occasion of the general's summons to me. I found
-Frank with a cheerful countenance, seated in a kind of hammock, which
-the mariners had made for him from a piece of sail-cloth. His
-officers and gentlemen stood about him, to receive the envoy with as
-much state as we might, whereby, having brushed the dust from our
-clothes and made what shift we could, we displayed a tolerable front.
-
-Mr. Oxenham and Harry were sent to conduct the Spaniard to the
-presence, and we saw them return with the most point-device little
-gentleman I ever beheld. He was by his dress a captain of foot, and
-by his delicate and well-guarded complexion but late come out of
-Spain. His little black moustache was disciplined to the nicety of a
-hair, and his whole dress no less brilliant than his countenance, nor
-more fantastic than his bearing.
-
-He approached, making legs very sweetly to us all, and a profound
-congee to our general, which we returned as decently as we might.
-After an offering of commendations, so stuffed with unheard-of
-conceits as I can never remember again, he told us the occasion of
-his coming.
-
-'Of my mere goodwill, and as it were for my own unworthy honour, most
-admirable _cabaleros_,' said he, with an infinity of conceited
-gestures, 'I have conveyed myself festinately hither to your most
-honourable presence, moved thereto by the wholesome desire, with
-which my eyes were an hungered, to behold, view, regard, and
-contemplate the most redoubtable captain and his heroical gentlemen
-who have attempted so great and incredible a matter with so few,
-paltry, and inconsiderable valiant numbers; being more especially
-moved thereto when it was discovered by the most excellent shooting
-of your honourable arrows that you were Englishmen, and no Frenchmen
-as we apprehended, seeing that now we knew our foe would hold
-themselves after the ancient gentle discipline of the wars, and be
-content with an honourable courteous pillage of our treasure, instead
-of seeking vulgar and bloody cruelty upon our persons; and being most
-especially moved thereto because his excellency, our honourable
-governor, being assured that you were gentlemen Englishmen and no
-pirate French, gladly consented to my coming; and lastly, being most
-singularly especially moved thereto, because his excellency, having
-been informed by certain townsmen that they knew your honourable
-captain, having at divers times been most courteously pillaged and
-kindly used by him these two years past, charged me to inquire as
-follows:
-
-'_Imprimis_. Whether your honourable captain be the valiant Captain
-Drake or not?
-
-'_Item_. Whether your arrows, which have wounded many of our men, be
-poisoned or not?
-
-'_Item_. How the said wounds may be cured?
-
-'_Item_. What victuals or other necessaries you desire for the
-speeding of your voyage hence, which his excellency desires to
-furnish you withal, as far as he dare, having regard to his
-commission.'
-
-This and a very flood more of such-like desperate intemperance of
-phrasing he graciously voided upon us, the writing whereof, were I
-able to set it down, would devour more paper than I could ever find
-digestion for. When he was at a halt at last Frank sat up in his
-chair and, after a little pause, answered him thus courteously but
-very curt, because of his weakness, no less than his distaste for
-Spaniards.
-
-'I thank you for your courtesy,' said he, 'and I pray you, after you
-have partaken of a poor supper at our hands, to return to his
-excellency with my most honourable commendations, and inform him
-thus: I am the same Drake he means. It is never my manner to poison
-my arrows. The said wounds may be cured with ordinary surgery. And
-as for victuals, we have already more than enough out of the
-abundance which he has already so hospitably provided us withal in
-this Island of _Bastimentos_; while for necessaries, I want for none,
-save the special commodity which his country yields. Whereof not yet
-having enough to content myself and my company, I must unwillingly
-beseech his excellency to be at the pain of holding open his eyes for
-a space; since before I depart, if God lend me life and leave, I mean
-to reap some of your harvest, which you get out of the ground and
-send into Spain to trouble all the earth!'
-
-The little gallant seemed a good deal taken aback at this
-unlooked-for answer, but, recovering himself, promised to convey it
-to the governor treasured in the inmost sanctuary of his bosom.
-
-'And, if I may without offence move such a question,' he ended by
-saying, 'what should be the honourable cause of your worthy departing
-(seeing what are your sweet desires) from a town where is above 360
-tons of silver ready for the Plate Fleet, and much more gold in value
-in iron chests in the King's Treasure-House?'
-
-'Because,' said Harry, whom Frank motioned to speak, 'our captain was
-wounded, and we value his life beyond all the gold in the Indies.'
-
-'Then, most valiant _cabaleros_,' answered our pouncet-box, 'give me
-leave to say that, as I am a gentleman, the pre-eminent excellence of
-your reason in departing is hardly overbalanced by your unmeasured
-courage in attempting.'
-
-With that we fell to supper, during which we did all honour to our
-guest; all of us, but Frank, being much taken with his fantastic
-courtesy and pretty humours. Harry and Mr. Oxenham were particularly
-moved to him, and he to them, so that all supper-time they vied with
-each other in the extravagance of their compliments, till I thought
-the little gallant could swallow no more.
-
-When he took his leave at last our captain entreated him very
-courteously, and bestowed certain gifts as most likely to content
-him. So we conducted him to his boat to make our farewells.
-
-'I protest, _cabaleros_,' said he, a little flushed with a good share
-of the contents of our prize, 'I protest I have never been so
-honoured of any in my life.'
-
-'And give me leave to say,' answered Harry, 'I have never seen an
-embassy so admirably discharged.'
-
-'I kiss your hands,' said the Don, 'and, as I am a gentleman, shall
-joy no more, till I have the felicity of crossing rapiers with you
-upon your next attempt.'
-
-'Till then, by my soul's honour,' returned Harry, 'I, too, die; nor
-could I conceive greater honour than to colour my blade with such
-courtly blood as your excellency's.'
-
-'Nay, sir, I protest, as I am a gentleman, the honour would be mine.
-I could desire no higher distinction than to feel your point between
-these unworthy ribs.'
-
-'I pray heaven,' said Mr. Oxenham, 'your joy come not so soon as to
-prevent my poor flesh first kissing your very bright particular
-blade.'
-
-'I kiss both your hands, sir,' said the Don, 'and trust we may be all
-sweetly sorted to our most gentlemanly desires.'
-
-With such like compliment, and an infinite making of legs, we at
-length took leave of him, greatly entertained with his humours, and
-delighted with the renown which our captain had won by this and his
-former exploits.
-
-That evening our captain held a council to determine what further we
-should attempt, and thereto was called Diego, the negro whom we had
-brought from Nombre de Dios, that he might be questioned as to the
-present condition of the town.
-
-'Soldiers and gold all the same what little Don tells,' he said,
-grinning all over his good-humoured face. 'Nombre very full of
-soldiers, and Treasure-House very strong, all because of my people,
-the Cimaroons. I know better way to get gold from Dons than to burn
-fingers after it in Nombre.'
-
-'Say you so, Diego?' said Frank, in his kindly way, which always won
-the heart of these people. 'A very worthy tall fellow you seem. Let
-us hear about it, and I doubt not you shall hear of something good
-too.'
-
-'Yes, I know,' answered the black fellow, showing his white teeth
-from ear to ear. 'I know Captain Drake; so do Cimaroons. Spaniards
-beat Cimaroons; Captain Drake beats Spaniards. Mighty tall man
-Captain Drake amongst Cimaroons.'
-
-'Well, well, good Diego,' says Frank, very pleased, 'but what of the
-gold?'
-
-'Why, this way,' says the negro, looking very cunning;
-'Treasure-House very strong, best get gold before it done got to
-treasure-house.'
-
-'Yes, but how?' says Frank,
-
-'Why, easy as a fall,' says Diego, grinning with all his might. 'I
-go to Cimaroons, and say to chief, "Captain Drake wants
-gold."--"Mass! then bring his nobleness here," says the chief; so you
-go up through the woods with the Cimaroons, and they show you--and
-they show you,' he went on, hardly able to speak for glee, 'where to
-stop the great mule trains that come from Panama to meet the Plate
-Fleet.'
-
-With that he opened his wide mouth, laid his head back, and roared
-with laughter, rubbing his hands between his knees, and dancing an
-ungainly measure to the sound of his own merriment.
-
-This and other intelligences which we had from the negro, on further
-questioning him, bred in us great hope of making our voyage, though
-our other plans failed. For in all they agreed and confirmed what
-Captain Drake had learned on his two former voyages; which was that
-on the arrival of the Plate Fleet from Spain great quantities of
-gold, silver, and pearls came across the isthmus from Panama to
-Nombre de Dios, partly by _recuas_ or mule trains, and partly in
-frigates by way of the Rio de Chagres, which ran into the sea nigh to
-where we were from a place called Venta Crux, within six leagues of
-Panama.
-
-When therefore we had refreshed ourselves at the island two days, our
-captain sent a party under his brother John to search this river,
-with orders, after he had made full discovery of it, to join Captain
-Ranse and the ships at the Isles of Pinos, whither we presently set
-sail.
-
-It was our captain's intent now to attempt Carthagena before the
-garrison got wind of our being on the coast, but Captain Ranse was
-not willing to join us, thinking we stood in too great danger after
-we had discovered ourselves at Nombre de Dios. Frank was not sorry
-to dismiss him, I know, for at all times he very hardly endured to
-have another joined in command with him. Therefore, as soon as John
-Drake returned from his discovery, we parted company with Sir Edward
-Horsey's crew, and remained to make our voyage, if we could, without
-them, notwithstanding all the dangers they feared.
-
-Yet our captain would not altogether give up his desire to visit
-Carthagena, whither we sailed with all speed, though much delayed
-with light airs, calms, and want of hands; for, now that our company
-was divided between the ships and the pinnaces, each craft was
-under-manned. So it fell out that a Spanish pinnace preceded us a
-few hours, bringing news of our coming, and we found they had made so
-large a provision of horse, foot, and ordnance for our entertainment
-that, being unwilling to trouble them further, we craved them to
-bestow on us a great ship of Seville, of some two hundred and forty
-tons burthen, which we found well laden in the harbour, and this they
-did, though not so graciously as our moderation warranted.
-
-Having in this way, and more certainly by letters found in two other
-prizes which we took, learned that our presence was known all along
-the coast, it remained for us to take some course with our
-difficulties, which at last we did, and in such wise as gave me fresh
-proof, if any were wanting, of that extraordinary resolution in our
-captain which seemed to grow every day more constant and heroical.
-
-'There is no shift for it but the Cimaroons,' said Frank to me, as we
-lay off the islands of St. Bernardo, some three leagues from
-Carthagena. 'We must take to our pinnaces till we find them, and
-hide along the coast, so that the Spaniards may think we have
-departed, which I am resolved not to do till our voyage be made.'
-
-'But how can we continue longer on the coast?' said I. 'It may take
-us weeks to find the Cimaroons, and we have but little store of
-victuals.'
-
-'We can make provision with our pinnaces could we find some place to
-hide. There are plenty of victuallers to be taken all along the
-coast.'
-
-'That would be possible,' I answered, 'if we could properly man our
-pinnaces; but this we cannot do, not having hands enough in the ships
-as it is.'
-
-'And yet there is no other way,' said Frank, musing; and then,
-looking very hard at me, he went on after a pause: 'What a mercy it
-would be if one of our ships were taken from us!'
-
-'What do you mean?' asked I, aghast.
-
-'Why,' says he, 'then we should have enough men to man the pinnaces.'
-
-'True,' I answered; 'but how should we get back to England?'
-
-'God would send us means,' says he. 'A smart frigate or so would
-fall into our hands when we wanted it. Indeed, it would be a mercy
-if one ship were taken! Then we could make a store-house of the
-other, and make our voyage with the full-manned pinnaces.'
-
-'Perhaps it would be well,' I answered; 'but such a thing is not to
-be looked for.'
-
-'Cortez burnt his ships,' said Frank, as though he were thinking, and
-had not heard me. 'Why should not I destroy mine? Yet I think he
-cannot have loved his as I love mine, the smartest sailers that ever
-left Plymouth harbour.'
-
-'Frank,' cried I, 'this is madness; besides, your company would never
-permit it.'
-
-'Not permit it!' says he, with a sort of dull fire under his frown.
-'None of my company must talk so, Jasper. And yet I love the lads
-for their love of the ships; nor must a captain, who would be
-cheerfully followed, strain obedience further than is necessary. A
-great captain, as I trust by God's help to be ere I die, differs only
-from his fellows in that he is readily obeyed. Any man of ordinary
-wit can see what should be done, yet must he often abstain from
-commanding it because he knows how hardly he will be obeyed, and as
-often, if he do command it, find the labour of procuring obedience
-too great for his constancy. But your great captain fears not to
-command anything, seeing he is always cheerfully obeyed, and why,
-lad? Because by policy he shall cheat those under him into a
-cheerful willingness towards all he intends.'
-
-'Well,' said I, 'I will call you before all men a great captain, if
-to-morrow you can make your men cheerfully fire either of these
-ships.'
-
-'Then, lad,' says he, 'I pray you go fetch hither Tom Moone, the
-carpenter of the _Swan_. That is my own ship, and that is the one I
-must burn. To-morrow arise betimes and come with me fishing in the
-pinnace and you shall see how, by my policy, my brother and his crew
-shall willingly fire her.'
-
-I did all he said, and in the early morning we were off to the
-fishing, for about the island where we lay was a great store of
-fishes. As we passed the _Swan_ we fell aboard of her, and Frank
-cried out to his brother to come fishing with him. John Drake jumped
-up at once, willingly agreeing to follow us presently. We cast off,
-but before we had gone but a few strokes Frank asked us if the _Swan_
-did not sit very low in the water, which we saw at once that she did.
-
-'Ahoy, Jack!' sung out our captain then, 'what makes your bark so
-deep?'
-
-'Nay, I knew not that she was over deep,' says Jack, and called to
-the steward to see what water was in her.
-
-Presently there was a mighty splashing, and up comes the steward, wet
-to the waist, crying out that the ship was full of water. All was
-bustle in a moment, some of the crew rushing to the pumps and some
-splashing about the hold to search for the leak, Tom Moone being the
-most forward there.
-
-We fell aboard her again at once to offer our help. John Drake would
-have none of it, but only begged to be excused his attendance on his
-brother.
-
-'We have hands enough,' said he, 'and will have her free in a trice.
-We have not pumped these six weeks, so what strange chance has
-befallen to give us six foot of water in the night is more than I can
-tell. But I pray you go on with your fishing; we shall want some
-good stuffing come dinner-time, after our pumping.'
-
-Besides our captain and myself, there were none with us, I think, who
-had any suspicion of what this strange chance was, so that our men
-were not a little surprised to find on our return that, though out of
-their great love for their dainty bark the _Swan's_ company had
-wellnigh worked their lives out at the pumps, yet had they freed but
-a few inches of water.
-
-'What, so bad!' cried Frank to his brother, who looked over the side
-very weary. 'Nay, then, you shall have our help now, while you eat
-your dinner.'
-
-With that, acting his part better than I could have looked for in so
-plain and blunt a nature, he sprang on board, and with his own hands
-fell to work at one of the pumps with such good will that I thought
-to see it burst. All our company, set on by his example, worked no
-less hard; yet, though we continued in shifts till three in the
-afternoon, we had freed the water little more than a foot, nor could
-any man find where the leak was.
-
-Wearied out at last, John Drake, with his master and crew, gathered
-round Frank to consult him as to what order was to be taken, for up
-till now our general had not said a word, save to encourage men at
-the pumps, seeing that his brother was captain of the ship.
-
-'What shall we do, Frank?' said poor John Drake. 'We shall have to
-pump the whole North Ocean out of her before she is dry.'
-
-'Indeed, Jack,' says our captain, 'I cannot tell what order to take
-to save her.'
-
-'Well, I care not what comes of her,' says Jack desperately. 'I
-think the devil has got her for good and all. It is some hellish
-Indian witchcraft of these Spaniards. I am at my wits' end with her,
-so do what you will.'
-
-The whole company were plainly weary of their ship, no less than was
-their captain, and crowded round to hear what Frank would say, very
-hopefully; for they had all come to think there was no hole so deep
-or miry that he could not draw them out of it.
-
-'If you leave it so to me,' says Frank, 'I tell you there is only one
-way. The ship is dead, that is plain. It is my ship, and it is lost
-by no fault of master or mariner. If any is to blame it is I. You,
-Jack, I would have go aboard the admiral with your master and take
-command of her, and I will be content with a pinnace till I can
-capture you a smart frigate in place of this rotten tub, and
-incontinently we will fire her that the Spaniards may find their
-witchcraft has availed them nothing.'
-
-I think this advice astonished the company a good deal, but presently
-they were very content with it, saying it was most worthy of their
-general, who was always as ready to take blame on himself as to find
-resolute remedies for mishaps of others. There were a few who had
-sailed in her the two former voyages, and would gladly have made an
-effort to save her, being ashamed to lose her; but when her owner so
-boldly gave her up and took all blame on himself, they were very glad
-to be rid of her.
-
-In a few minutes the pinnaces were all laid aboard of her, so that
-every man might take from her whatever he wished, and thereupon poor
-John Drake, his eyes full of tears, fired her with his own hand.
-Poor Jack! my heart bled for him, but I knew it was the only saving
-of our venture.
-
-So it came about as Frank had said. Not only had the whole company
-been glad enough to destroy the ship of which they were so proud, not
-only had he got his way, hard as it seemed, but by his generosity to
-his brother, his hearty sharing of their labour, and his cheerful
-resolution through it all, he stood higher with the whole company
-than ever he did before.
-
-'Well, Frank,' said I, as we sailed away next day towards the Sound
-of Darien with the _Pasha_ and our fully-manned pinnaces, 'you have
-your will, but it was a sorry trick to play them.'
-
-'Nought but a bit of policy,' laughed he, 'such as all commanders
-must use at times.'
-
-'Save you, lad, from Machiavelli and all his works,' said I, 'for I
-think you are fast growing Italianate. But, tell me, how was it
-done?'
-
-'Why, with a spike-gimlet,' says he. 'Tom Moone pleaded hard for his
-beloved bark, so that my heart almost melted. Then he said he would
-get his throat cut; but I told him to be secret, to do it close to
-the keel at night, and lay something over the holes that the flow of
-the water should make no noise to betray him, and so it was done. It
-was a desperate piece of service, I know, but Tom Moone shall have
-cause to remember what he did for me at this pass.'
-
-And so indeed he had; for when Frank equipped his fleet for that
-renowned voyage in which he encompassed the world, he made this
-trusty carpenter captain of the _Canter_ or _Christopher_, as it was
-afterwards named.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-By the light of the flaming ship we had set sail. It was a moving
-sight to see this precious link with home a mass of shooting flame
-below a pall of lurid fire-flecked smoke. A sea of molten gold was
-her death-bed, and, as we sailed slowly onward before the gentle
-night wind, the fiery reflection stretched out after us till it faded
-to fitful gleams on the crests of the waves, as though they bore us
-farewell kisses from our lost ship.
-
-'A true swan is she to the end,' said Harry softly, as though moved
-by the scene. 'Beautiful she was in life, yet nothing in it was so
-beautiful as her departing from it.'
-
-We watched her burn down lower and lower, till she was nothing but a
-glowing ember on the dark plain of the sea, and then in a moment she
-was gone for ever. It was like losing an old friend, and there was
-not one for the next few days who did not feel oppressed with evil
-foreboding at the loss of that staunch craft that had brought such
-luck to our captain.
-
-We could not even lighten our hearts with the music, for Frank was
-very earnest to depart as secretly as we could, that the Spaniards
-might suppose us entirely gone from that coast by reason of the loss
-of our ship.
-
-Thus, attempting nothing that might betray us, we found on the fifth
-day a most fair haven in the Sound of Darien, where we could anchor
-the _Pasha_ out of all ken of the Spaniards, and refresh ourselves
-till such time as the storm we had raised all along the coast should
-be blown over.
-
-It was a place as fair as Port Pheasant, where a man might have been
-content to dwell all his days. A pretty town we built there, as
-Diego showed us how, of boughs and brakes and flowers, in a space
-which we cleared in the dense forest. Here our smith set up his
-forge, our fletcher his shop for the ordering of our bows and arrows,
-our butcher his block, and our shoemakers their lasts. Butts were
-erected for bow practice, a lawn made for our bowls, and ground
-prepared for quoits, leaping, wrestling, and all other sports that
-our captain could devise for making us forget our losses and breed a
-hopeful spirit for future attempts.
-
-Half of us worked while the others played, day and day about; but for
-me it was all play. For my work, having skill for it, was to hunt
-the livelong day up in the forest-clad hills for the hogs, conies,
-deer, and birds that lived half tame in their solitudes; or, rocked
-on those azure seas, to lure the strange fish that swarmed about the
-gilded rocks, with great pelicans and scarlet cranes for comrades at
-the sport.
-
-At such times, as I lay in some fairy glade above our little town, or
-half asleep in our little gondola, I could hearken to the merry
-tinkle of the anvil and the jolly laugh of the bellows mingling with
-the cries and songs of the mariners at their work and play; and,
-listening to the homely sounds, mellowed and transformed by the
-tropic glory of earth and sky and sea, I could fancy that the old
-life was gone with all its care and hideousness, being changed by the
-rich spirit of the West to one long May-day.
-
-In fifteen days our ship and pinnaces with this light labour were
-refitted, and our captain with two of the pinnaces set sail for Rio
-Grande in search of provisions and intelligences. I remained behind
-with John Drake to search the coast in the other pinnace, in order
-that if possible we might, by Diego's help, meet with the Cimaroons.
-
-For six days we rowed up and down the Main aloof the shore, but found
-no trace of those whom we sought. In these days I saw much of John
-Drake, being all day and night in the pinnace with him, and I came to
-love his simple, steadfast nature more than I ever had before, and
-wondered to see how great was his control over the men by the very
-earnestness of his worship of Frank, whose orders to him were as the
-command of a god, to be carried out at all costs. It seemed as
-though, when once he had a direction from his brother, all other
-thoughts were dismissed from his mind. Any possibility of a
-different course being good could never find a place in him.
-
-So day after day we rowed hopelessly along that lovely shore, in
-spite of the fearful heat. To every suggestion I could make he had
-but one answer.
-
-'Frank told us to row aloof the shore and find the Cimaroons,' he
-would say, 'and he knows best. Cheerily, men, now! As like as not
-we shall find them beyond the point ahead.'
-
-To me the thing seemed hopeless. To find a few negroes in that vast
-wilderness of forest by rowing along the shore appeared little better
-than a wild-goose chase. Still I believed in Frank almost as much as
-his brother did, and still more was encouraged by Diego, who
-continued to urge us on as he sat in the forepart, chin in hand,
-gazing fixedly into the forest.
-
-It was on the seventh day, as we were almost worn out with the
-growing heat of the sun, and all the shore was hushed before the
-coming fire of the noonday, that Diego suddenly leaped up and,
-casting both his hands above his head, gave forth a yell so loud and
-strident as almost to stop your heart.
-
-Again with his hand to his mouth he shot his fiendish call towards
-the shore, as though to summon a legion of devils to his side.
-
-'What is it, Diego?' cried Jack.
-
-'See, captain, see! There lie my people asleep. I can see. Up
-there on the hill. I can see a new hut.'
-
-To our eyes all was the same wild waste, of foliage, but he saw more,
-as we soon knew, for faintly out of the forest came an answering
-shout.
-
-'I knew Frank was right,' said Jack triumphantly. 'He knew where to
-find them.' And away we went to the shore. Sure enough Frank was
-right; for as our keel grated on the golden sand two pelicans rose
-lazily from where they had been standing, a bowshot to our right, and
-winged their solemn flight along the shore.
-
-Something we knew must have flushed them, but we could see nothing in
-the dense brakes. Diego hailed again, and then we saw a black face
-peep stealthily at us. Poor folk! they dared not come out, for all
-we had one of their kin with us. They had been too often betrayed to
-their tormentors by such means before.
-
-'_Que gente? que gente?_' cried the black head over his bent bow, as
-we could plainly see.
-
-'_Gente de Draque!_' cries Diego, leaping out of the boat and running
-towards them. '_Draque! Draque!_'
-
-So it was they always called our general, since his name came hard to
-their half-Spanish tongues. And what a name it was to them we soon
-saw. For, after a strange, discordant babbling between Diego and the
-Cimaroon, a loud cry went up in the bushes and out rushed some score
-of dancing yelling fiends. Never saw I greater delight or heartier
-welcome than in these poor folk. For a good space we could do
-nothing with them, for their dancing and leaping round us and
-embracing of our feet, especially Captain John's, to his great
-discomfort, being a plain, simple man, not used to homage.
-
-There was no peace for us till Diego begged that we should suffer
-them to bear us to their huts, which request our captain granted,
-leaving two men with the pinnace. Their joy was then complete, and
-each black fellow stood in front of one of our men, bending his back
-for him to mount, which at last we all did, seeing how earnest they
-were; and so, with no more ado with the biggest of us than if he had
-been a baby, they trotted off, laughing and singing up the steep path
-that led to their huts.
-
-We were soon set down in a little hamlet like our own town, but much
-prettier and more artfully constructed, because of their greater
-skill. Here each vied with another to set before us delicate fruits
-and fowls and a certain fermented liquor which they had, very
-pleasant to the taste and medicinable to the spirits. So like kings
-we lay in those leafy bowers feasting merrily, each with a grinning
-henchman or two to do his lightest bidding. Indeed I think, had we
-permitted, they would have crowned us with flowers, and seen us eat
-our banquet like that dainty gallant Horatius Flaccus with his boon
-companions.
-
-By the end of our dinner we were all like brothers with these merry
-folk, after the manner of English mariners, though I think half of
-our company could not understand two words of Spanish. Their chief
-was soon in close talk with John and me and Diego, and we broached
-our business to him. It is an easy embassy when both parties desire
-one thing. Our wish, no less than theirs, was for them to meet the
-general and arrange our comedy for the entertainment of the
-Spaniards. In a very short space it was agreed that we should leave
-two of our men with the chief and take two of his to the general, in
-token of pure good-will and amity between us, and that they should
-come down to a river which ran into the sea half-way between the
-haven where our ships lay and certain headlands towards Nombre de
-Dios, which we always called 'The Cahezas.' This river we called the
-'Rio Diego,' after our faithful Cimaroon ally.
-
-There was some difficulty in choosing our hostages, since every
-mariner there wished to stay, preferring the cheery homage and good
-fare of the Cimaroons to hard work and 'Poor John' in the pinnace.
-At last it was settled by lot, and we bore away again amidst the like
-rejoicings that had welcomed us, and with a fair wind came the same
-night to our ship.
-
-It seemed to all men a plain work of God for the encouraging of our
-allies that the very next day our general, with two frigates besides
-the pinnaces, came sailing into 'Port Plenty.' So he now named our
-haven, having seen by this first voyage how well we could supply
-ourselves from the victuallers that sailed to Nombre de Dios and
-Carthagena, and from the Indians about the Rio Grande, as well as
-from the Spanish storehouses thereon.
-
-'If a man may judge by this fair beginning,' said he when we came to
-speak of it, 'no name was ever better bestowed, for besides a great
-store of provision which we obtained from the river, I have taken
-five or six frigates and a bark, laden with live hogs, hens, maize,
-and other provision which we require. But I gave away all the
-prizes, except the two best, to the Spaniards for their pain in
-supplying us so bountifully; and there are those we kept.'
-
-He pointed to where the two captured frigates lay, and went on to
-tell me how he had obtained what was dearer to him than victuals, and
-that was divers opinions of himself that prevailed amongst the
-Spaniards. It was always his way while he kindly entertained his
-prisoners to get them to speak about himself, and if their answers
-were to his mind I think they often got off the more lightly. His
-enemies, for even that noble spirit has enemies in these backbiting
-times, set this down to a sordid love of flattery, but I know it was
-from no such cause. For love of merriment he did it, no less than to
-encourage his men, who joyed to hear the dread their captain begot
-amongst the Spaniards. No man ever knew better than he how to win
-the confidence and respect of his men, and this was one way he used
-to that end. And no man was ever more laughter-loving than he, and
-no jest did he love so much as to hear how he frightened the
-Spaniards. For those reasons and no other he was wont to question
-his prisoners, and I hold it foul slander to say that heroic
-navigator was pleased with sordid flattery.
-
-I remember well his first words were of this when, the same day that
-he returned to Port Plenty, I boarded his frigate with Jack.
-
-'Why, Jasper,' says he, taking my hand in his cheery way, 'you have
-missed a merry time in chasing Cimaroons, though God be praised that
-has so blessed your search. What think you they say of me, man? It
-is a jest worth more laughter than all the company could furnish in a
-month. Why, man, they say it is a devil. None but a devil or a
-saint, they swear, with but a handful of men could have quietly
-entered and held the Treasure-House of the mightiest emperor under
-the sun as we did. And since, being a "Lutheran dog," I am no saint,
-I must perforce be a devil, and you, my lad, an imp of Satan.'
-
-'By which sharp reasoning,' says Mr. Oxenham, 'they save their
-gentility when they run away.'
-
-'And like Christian gentlemen,' cried Harry, 'when the fiend appears
-cry, "Get thee behind me, Satan," and incontinently turn their backs.'
-
-'Yet,' said I, 'it seems to me that they would serve their gentility
-better by a more courteous appellation of their enemy.'
-
-'And so your true Castilian does,' says Frank. 'For all the wrong
-they have done me, yet I hold your true Castilian a gentleman and a
-man of honour, and no coward. Such a one I took off Tolu, and as we
-supped together on the good things which for our trouble in chasing
-him he had felt bound to bestow on us, he told a different tale, and
-set no horns on my head.'
-
-'No,' broke in Harry; 'it was all your most chastened, precise,
-five-foot-in-the-blade, good manners. "By your most high-bred
-courtesy," says he, "I now know for truth what gentlemen say of the
-valiant Captain Drake, whose felicity and valour are so pre-eminent
-that Sir Mars, the god of war, and Sir Neptune, the god of the sea,
-seem to wait on all his attempts, which same notwithstanding are
-eclipsed, overshadowed, and put out of countenance by the nobility
-and generosity of his carriage towards the vanquished, whereby defeat
-is made sweeter than victory." And with such like good report he
-continued to discharge his great pieces in the captain's honour all
-supper-time till we were wellnigh deafened with the thunders of his
-courtesy.'
-
-'It was a very high mass of worship,' said Mr. Oxenham, 'till, by
-this light, we began to doubt if we were not saints after all.'
-
-'God forbid,' says Frank; 'as you love salvation be an English devil
-rather than a Spanish saint.'
-
-'Well, here are our brother devils,' cried Harry, as the two
-Cimaroons we had brought were led forward by John Drake. 'Order
-yourselves, signors, to receive the embassy of the Prince of
-Darkness.'
-
-So the negroes came forward and testified of the joy their whole
-nation had at our captain's coming, because of the renown he had won
-amongst them by his proceedings at Nombre de Dios and in his two
-former voyages, and finally most respectfully told him how their
-chief waited for him at the Rio Diego, to see if haply it was his
-pleasure to use them against their common enemies.
-
-A council of war was held to consider how far we could trust these
-people, and what course we should take forthwith: whereat, after his
-usual manner, Frank listened very attentively to all our advices, and
-then took his own; which was forthwith to move our whole force up to
-the Rio Diego, where John Drake and I had discovered an excellent
-haven amongst the islands that were clustered there.
-
-I went on before with Frank in his pinnace to show him where we
-should meet with the Cimaroon chief, which we did very joyfully at
-the place appointed. The negroes' joy at meeting our captain was so
-great that it was long before we could get to any quiet speech with
-them, but at last we went aside with the chief into the leafy bower
-which served him for a house, and Frank told him how he wished his
-people to help us get gold and silver from the Spaniards.
-
-'Gold and silver!' said the negro, a giant in growth and strength who
-spoke good Spanish. 'Do you mean gold and silver?'
-
-'Yes, surely,' said Frank; 'what else could we want?'
-
-'Why, even that which we want,' said the negro.
-
-'And what is that?' Frank asked.
-
-'Revenge,' answered the negro, 'revenge for all the wrongs those
-hell-hounds have wreaked on us.'
-
-'Why, so do I,' said Frank cheerfully, 'and therefore will I take
-from them what I want most and what they love best, even gold and
-silver.'
-
-'Ah, but they love something better than that,' said the chief
-eagerly, as though clutching at a hope. 'They love life better. And
-we want something more than gold, we want blood--Spanish blood! To
-dip our arms in to the elbow, and our legs to the knees,' he went on,
-with the glare of a wild beast in his eyes. 'Help us to get that,
-captain, and you shall have all the gold and silver you can want.
-But for us it is not enough. What your wrongs have been I know not,
-but ours are such that gold and silver will not avenge them. Had you
-felt the lash curl round your ribs, had you seen your comrades
-tortured to new effort when they dropped to die of sickness and
-fatigue, had you seen a little part of what happens every day to my
-people, you would forget gold and silver, and all but blood, and
-never joy but when you saw it bubbling out from the rent your knife
-had made.'
-
-We were both shocked at the savageness of our new ally, and Frank
-told him in his plain blunt way that if they attempted anything
-together the prisoners must be his, as well as the gold, though in
-the fight they might kill as many as they would. The poor savage was
-sadly disappointed, and would, I think, have hardly agreed to it if
-Frank had not fed him with a picture of the havoc our arrows and
-small shot would make amongst their enemies, and how sorely they
-grieved over the loss of gold.
-
-'I know, I know,' said the Cimaroon sadly; 'and often we take gold
-from them, not from love of it, but in despite of them. So be it as
-you say, captain, for you we will follow to death against the
-Spaniards, whatever be your will. Yet had I known it was gold you
-wanted, there is plenty we have taken and sunk in the rivers which
-you might have had, but now they are so swollen with the rains that
-there is no coming at it. Nor can we take any till the dry season
-begins, for in the rainy months they do not carry any treasure by
-land, because the ways are so evil.'
-
-This was most unhappy news. It was nearly five months still before
-the dry season began. To attempt with our pinnaces to capture the
-gold frigates coming down the Chagres river was madness, seeing that
-since our coming we heard they were always guarded by two galleys.
-To wait five months was to run great risk not only of being attacked
-in strength by the Spaniards, but also by sickness, which is very
-rife in those regions during this time.
-
-Another council was held as soon as our strength joined us, and once
-more Frank heard willingly our opinions and followed his own, which
-was to make a lodgment in a hidden part of the coast, whence, that we
-might employ our leisure as well as gather provisions, we could from
-time to time sally out to annoy the Spaniards and satisfy ourselves.
-Our captain further resolved to establish magazines besides those we
-already had about Port Plenty, so that if one were discovered we
-might have others to supply us.
-
-To this end the _Pasha_ was brought in through the islands with great
-labour and much dangerous pilotage within a few bowshots of the Main,
-and there moored hard by a reasonable island, in such a place as even
-if she were discovered, which was wellnigh impossible, so shrouded
-was she by trees, no enemy could come at her by night or even by day
-without great risk of falling amongst shoals.
-
-Our island contained some three acres of good flat ground, which our
-captain next began to fortify, setting out, after the best manner
-used in the wars, a triangular fort made of timber and earth dug from
-the trench about it. Harry having, as I have said, no little skill
-in these matters was set over this work, Culverin being quartermaster
-under him. The Sergeant therefore was now in great spirits, for I
-think the ships, and still more the pinnaces, were as little to his
-mind as ever. His stiff back and large form could never accommodate
-itself to the straight quarters and uneasy motion to which he was
-condemned at sea. Now, it was a real pleasure to see his gaunt
-figure striding once more a-land, directing the Cimaroons, of whom
-another band had joined us, as nicely as though he were entrenching
-the Emperor's own camp.
-
-'Sea wars I will never decry again,' said he, when I went to give him
-joy, 'especially since Captain Drake is of that profession; yet for
-dignity, honour, and contemplation how can they compare to land wars?
-Truly, the world lost much, sir, when Captain Drake became a sailor.'
-
-'Yet he is an indifferent good sea-captain, Sergeant,' said I.
-
-'Yes, sir; too good, greatly too good,' said Culverin. 'Few men,
-look you, have been born with such soldiership. See, now, the care
-he bestows in fortifying his camp, after the true manner of Julius
-Cæsar, and yet he has never read a word of the _Commentaries_. It is
-there he shows it. For, saving your wisdom, your true soldiership is
-not valour, as many think. Valiant blades we have in plenty in every
-land. Your great soldier must know what to fear and when to fear,
-and so guard himself. To fear valiantly is your philosopher's stone
-of victory. Take that of me, sir.'
-
-I think we were all of Sergeant Culverin's opinion, except perhaps
-Mr. Oxenham. He was ever a reckless man who could not fear anything,
-and so, as all men know, was afterwards brought to his evil end on a
-Spanish gallows. But the rest of us were glad to see what care our
-general took that we should pass our five months in safety, and above
-all the Cimaroons, who saw in our preparations a sure token that we
-were resolved to stand by them.
-
-Nor did they leave us without testimony of their satisfaction. It
-was like fairyland to see how a little town built of Palmito boughs
-rose up as if by magic upon our island, with fair houses for all our
-company; and afterwards they so laboured at our fort that in two
-weeks the ordnance and artillery were all in position within it, and
-Frank was free to depart in search of victuals and intelligence.
-
-On the 7th of October he bid us farewell amidst a merry burst from
-our music, and bore away for Carthagena, leaving his brother John as
-governor of the fort over those who were left behind. Both Harry and
-I remained to assist him in governing the Cimaroons and completing
-our works. Had we but known the sorrow that was to come on us ere
-those two pinnaces returned, I think our parting would have been less
-blithe. But as it was we feared nothing; for our exploit at Nombre
-de Dios and all that had followed, no less than the constant report
-we had from the Cimaroons and our prisoners of the terror we had
-created, had bred in us a sort of reckless courage, as well as a
-laughing contempt for our enemies, which made us think that no
-attempt was too hard for us.
-
-I cannot wonder at it or blame any for their overweening confidence,
-seeing what our handful of unknown mariners had done against the
-mighty power of the King of Spain. Surely never had folly, for I
-hold contempt of a brave enemy no less, a better excuse. Would it
-had had a lighter punishment!
-
-It was on this wise that it came about. At the Cativaas Islands,
-some five leagues away from our fort, was a frigate laden with
-planks. She was a prize Frank's pinnaces had taken in the Rio Grande
-and left there till she should be wanted. But in a storm she was
-driven hard ashore and now lay disabled. Out of tenderness for his
-ordnance and crew Frank ordered that our first care should be to
-fetch away her timbers and planks, to make platforms for the former
-and good huts for the latter.
-
-For the rains still continued. The island was a slough of mire
-wherever we worked, and the bowers which the Cimaroons made us hardly
-availed to keep out the deluge of rain that fell every day.
-Therefore as soon as Frank was gone we set about our work, John Drake
-going himself to order the matter in the pinnace called _Lion_. I
-went with him and about half a crew besides.
-
-It was the second afternoon after Frank's departure that we were
-returning to our fort with a load of planks, when we descried a
-deep-laden frigate making for Nombre de Dios.
-
-'Will you not attempt her, Captain John?' said one of the men, a
-quartermaster called Allen.
-
-'Not I,' says Jack; 'though nothing would be more to my mind had we
-finished the work which our general set us to do.'
-
-'What matter of that?' cried Allen; 'it is but half an hour's work to
-make her ours. A pretty prize she will be for us, and I don't see
-why the rest should have all the sport and we all the labour.'
-
-'Well, it is just because the general so ordered it,' says Jack.
-'That is enough for me and enough for you.'
-
-'Nay, then,' said Allen, 'I know the general never meant us to be
-forbidden fair booty. What say you, lads?' and the men all said he
-was right, and that they were for attempting the frigate.
-
-'Then must you be mad,' cried Jack. 'You know not how the frigate is
-provided, while you are sure we are cumbered with planks and have no
-weapons.'
-
-'We have a rapier,' objected Allen, 'and a visgee, and a caliver, and
-that is enough for Englishmen against any yellow-livered Dons.'
-
-'But the rapier is broken, the visgee old and worn, and the caliver
-all a-rust,' said Jack. 'I tell you you are mad, and I will have no
-part with your madness. The general's orders are straight, and I
-would not depart from them were we twice as many, and twice as well
-armed.'
-
-But the men still murmured and continued to urge him to it, till I
-wondered to see how he could resist them, and loved him more than
-ever for his loyalty to his brother's commands.
-
-'Never mind, lads,' said Allen mockingly at last. 'We will go to the
-fort and wait till the general comes back. He knows how to show Dons
-what dirt they are under English feet, and he will make us amends
-when he hears how our voyage was spoilt, because our captain was
-afraid of a craft only three times his size.'
-
-Poor Jack! That was more than he could endure. It touched him in
-his one weak point, which Allen knew well enough. He was a lion in
-courage, but yet not brave enough to bear calmly any suspicion of
-cowardice.
-
-'What!' he roared. 'You dog! Dare you use me so? Then, by yea and
-nay, you shall have your will, and see who is afraid and who is not.'
-
-'Oh, never mark him, Jack!' I said, wishing to dissuade him from this
-wild attempt. 'Look not round at every cur that barks! Who doubts
-your courage is an ass!'
-
-'No, Jasper, hold your peace,' cried poor Jack, more furious than
-ever. 'Never shall they say to my brother that their voyage is lost
-by my cowardice. They shall run their heads into danger, but never
-shall they say mine was not there first. Give me the rapier. Allen,
-take you the visgee and stand by my side in the forepart if you are a
-man. Robert shall take the caliver, and Mr. Festing steer. And now,
-lads, overboard with the planks or we shall never catch her.'
-
-In a very short time the pinnace was clear, Jack was standing in the
-forepart with the broken rapier, and his pillow wrapped round his
-left hand for a warding gauntlet, for there was no buckler in the
-boat, and Allen stood by his side. We overhauled our chase very
-quickly, and were soon but a few boat-lengths from her. I could see
-she had taken measures to prevent our boarding, and was doubtless
-well prepared.
-
-'See, Jack,' I cried, 'she has close-fights all round her bulwarks;
-we shall never board.'
-
-'We shall board her or never another,' said he, with set teeth. 'It
-is too late to turn now. What I take in hand I carry through.
-Steady as she goes, and stand by to board!'
-
-In another moment we fell aboard of her. I saw Jack and Allen leap
-up on her close-fights. Then suddenly she was alive with belching
-flame. There was a roar, a cloud of smoke, a flash of pikes, and in
-the midst two bodies fell heavily back into the pinnace.
-
-'Shove off for your lives,' I cried, 'before they grapple.' For I
-could see the frigate was swarming with pikes and small shot.
-
-Those in the forepart seized their oars, some thrusting away from our
-enemies' side, while others swiped at the faces of those who were
-trying to grapple or stay our purpose with their long pikes and
-halberds. Amongst these I saw Jack rise painfully and work with a
-will. Once I saw a pike levelled straight at Allen as he too was
-shoving off, in spite of an awful wound in his head. I made sure he
-was gone, but Jack dashed his oar into the pikeman's face and fell
-backwards fainting with the effort.
-
-By good luck at that moment we fell free, and a few lusty strokes
-fetched us clear. With all our force we rowed out of danger of her
-small shot; but they neither saluted us again nor made anything of
-their triumph, believing, as I think, it was best not to tempt us to
-return.
-
-'Tell Frank how it was, lad,' said Jack, as I laid him down in the
-stern all covered with blood, and he opened his eyes.
-
-'Nay, lad,' said I, 'you shall tell him yourself.'
-
-'No, never, Jasper,' murmured he; 'my time is come. God has judged
-me for disobeying Frank's words; he always knew best. But Allen
-maddened me. Poor fellow! he is sore hurt. See to him, Jasper.
-'Tis a brave heart.'
-
-'First I must see to you,' I said, 'and mend your hurt a bit.'
-
-''Tis no good,' he said, more faintly still. 'Mine is past mending.
-I feel it. What will Frank say of me? Would my death had come any
-way but this! Yet they will not call me coward again, will they,
-Jasper?'
-
-His voice grew weaker and weaker, and a deadly pallor overspread his
-face.
-
-'Tell father how it was I disobeyed Frank,' he went on, with long
-spaces between the words. 'He will forgive me. He knows it always
-maddened me to be called coward. But what will Frank say? what will
-Frank say?'
-
-Again he urged me to go to the others and see if I could not remedy
-the evil his disobedience had brought on the company. I found Allen
-at death's door, cursing himself with his last breath for what he had
-brought on his valiant captain. Two or three others were hurt, but
-not grievously; and as soon as I had tended them a little I went
-again to Jack's side. I could see death written on his face, and
-gave him some wine to revive him.
-
-'Tell Frank how I grieved for my folly,' he said, speaking with great
-difficulty. 'And tell Joe never to swerve a hairsbreadth from the
-course Frank marks. And ask him to forgive me. And, Jasper, say a
-prayer for me; not for superstition, lad, but just for comfort's
-sake.'
-
-I had not prayed since that terrible night at the inn, which now
-seemed so long ago and so far away. Yet I could not refuse. So I
-knelt down, and all the mariners did likewise, uncovering
-respectfully. I prayed, as well as I could recall it, the prayer I
-heard on the old preacher's lips at my father's funeral, and repeated
-the beautiful words of his text, which I remembered so well.
-
-'Now sing a psalm,' said the dying man; 'just for comfort's sake--for
-comfort's sake.'
-
-So on that still and lonely tropic sea we raised with our rough
-voices a homely English hymn, to the deep diapason of the booming
-surf sounding outside the islands. As we ended he smiled, and I saw
-his lips moved. I leaned down to hear what he said.
-
-'Frank will forgive me,' the low murmur said, 'when you tell him how
-it was. He was always good to us, Frank was, and always knew best.
-He will understand. Frank always underst----'
-
-So his murmur ceased; and that brave youth, my friend, passed
-peacefully away as the sun went down. And within an hour Allen's
-soul followed his captain's.
-
-Next day we buried them both on the island, thinking much of the high
-hopes we had of our governor's greatness had he lived, and deeply
-lamenting the cheerful, steadfast spirit that was gone from amongst
-us. As for the simple Cimaroons, they were beside themselves with
-grief, and would have performed strange idolatrous ceremonies about
-his grave had we suffered it, but the sailors would not let them go
-near, save once a day to cover it with fresh flowers. This was their
-only comfort, save a sure hope that, now his brother was killed,
-Frank would be no longer content with gold, but would want to 'wash
-his elbows' in Spanish blood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-Wearily the weeks went by after John Drake's death. What with the
-miserable effect it had upon the whole company and the continual
-rains, it was all that Harry and I could do to keep the men in good
-heart. Indeed, our lives at that time were far from easy, not only
-in respect of our spirits, because of our grief, but also in respect
-of our bodies, because of the wet and cold, and, above all, the
-legions of a certain grievous insect, which the constant rain seemed
-to engender of the mud upon our islands.
-
-We had suffered from them all along the coast, but never so
-grievously as here. The Spaniards call them 'mosquitoes.' They are
-insects of the bigness and similitude of reasonable gnats, but for
-ferocity, persistence, and trumpeting past anything we know in
-England. We often marvelled for what purpose they could have been
-made, unless it were to punish Spaniards. Yet this reason halts, for
-a mariner who had sailed in a ship of the Muscovy Company reported to
-us that he had felt and seen them as bad, or worse, in the country of
-the Samoits and Permians upon the Muscovy Sea.
-
-Yet by constant work in strengthening our fort, and hunting with the
-Cimaroons on the Main, no less than by every pastime Harry could
-devise, we managed to keep in health till the general returned. It
-was towards the end of November that he came back, with a prize of
-some ninety tons, which, as well as his pinnaces, was laden with all
-manner of provisions, not forgetting several botijos of good Spanish
-wine.
-
-Like ourselves he had suffered much from wet and cold, as well as
-from want of meat, for he had found the whole coast thoroughly
-alarmed and prepared for his coming. Yet had he taken not a few
-prizes, and, what pleased him best, ridden out a storm which lasted
-many days in the harbour of Carthagena itself, in spite of all the
-Spaniards could do with horse, foot, ordnance, and treachery to drive
-him thence.
-
-But all the joy with which we might have talked over these things was
-marred, because Jack was no longer there to take his part. Of
-Frank's and Joseph's grief over the loss of their brother I will not
-speak. Yet I know how deep it was, though they said but little.
-Frank seemed to care no longer to jest over what the prisoners had
-said about him, and when alone was very stern, though outwardly with
-the men he would be cheerful as ever.
-
-It was all the harder to bear since we were now condemned more than
-ever to inaction. From what the general saw on his last-made voyage
-to Carthagena, and the intelligences he had from the prisoners, he
-was resolved to keep close, that the Spaniards might think us
-entirely gone, until we could hear of the coming of the Plate Fleet,
-when with better hope we could make our attempt by land against the
-_recuas_ that came to meet it.
-
-We were well able to lie still awhile, since our magazines were full,
-and there was no necessity for our putting to sea for intelligence,
-since the Cimaroons had spies out everywhere for the first tidings of
-the coming of the fleet.
-
-Frank's efforts to keep the men in good heart were redoubled, since,
-now that the rains were beginning to abate, he knew the sun would
-increase in power and draw all kinds of noxious humours and
-exhalations from the sodden earth; against which danger he held there
-was nothing so medicinable as a cheerful spirit.
-
-Till the end of the year things went well, though in spite of all we
-could do with daily worship, music, and sports, it was plain that
-crude and heavy humours were being engendered in us by the sudden
-change we underwent from cold to heat.
-
-Our surgeon was ever urging Frank to permit him to rid the men of
-these humours by strong purgations, but he would not consent to it,
-rather serving out more wine to those who seemed most oppressed. So
-we passed Christmas indifferently well; but, our merrymaking over,
-things went worse than ever, with constant quarrels and murmuring,
-which Frank bore with very patiently, knowing it was an infirmity of
-the flesh rather than the spirit.
-
-At last some lay down and would not be persuaded to any sport, and
-before the end of the day our surgeon pronounced ten of them to be
-sick of a calenture. Three days after half our company was down and
-several dead. In vain did Frank and the surgeon try every remedy
-they could devise. On the seventh day Joseph Drake was seized, to
-his brother's great grief.
-
-For some days our general had been very earnest to have made
-discovery of this terrible disease by ripping open one of those who
-had died, and now in hope to save his brother he openly proclaimed
-his intention, but in spite of their sufferings the company murmured
-so loudly at this profanation of their dead comrades that he was
-compelled to forego his desire.
-
-'They say I care not what indignity I set on them,' said Frank to me,
-when I told him what the men were saying, 'so long as I save my
-brother? Poor lads, they must be sorely sick in body and spirits to
-say that. They shall see yet how they are all brothers to me, and
-they shall have their way. Yet I would dearly love to make discovery
-of the strange matter. It is hard, very hard, to lose Joe as well as
-Jack.'
-
-Yet so he did, and two days after Joseph Drake breathed his last in
-his brother's arms. I saw tears drop from Frank's eyes as he bent
-over the fair curly head that lay on his knee, watching the bright
-young life go fitfully out. Joe had spoken last of his unhappy
-mother, seeming to lament he had not been more kind to her, and this
-memory had touched Frank, who was himself sick, more keenly than he
-could bear.
-
-So, as I say, he was weeping over his brother as he died. When the
-last glimmer of life was gone he laid the fair head on the pillow,
-and, kneeling down, prayed to God very earnestly that his brother
-might be the last to die. Nearly all the company were gathered round
-kneeling very respectfully as the general prayed. When he made an
-end they all cried 'Amen,' and most tried in vain to keep back a tear
-when they saw how tenderly their general leaned down and kissed the
-calm young face of his dead brother.
-
-All the time our rat-faced surgeon sat unmoved in the corner of the
-house where we were. He alone did not kneel, but sat with his case
-of knives on his knee, and never took his little round eyes off the
-general. He shifted uneasily when Frank stooped to give his farewell
-embrace to his brother, and looked more keenly than ever when he rose
-up to his feet with dry eyes and the old resolute look on his face.
-
-'Now, my lads,' said he, 'you may go. It is over. I thank you all
-heartily for your prayers. Your duty is done, but mine and Master
-Surgeon's is only begun. You would not let me do it before, and so
-we have come to this pass; but, by God's help, this day we will make
-an end. You thought I used you hardly when I would have done this to
-one of your mates. So I stayed my hand, knowing how abominable it is
-to unlearned men. Yet now you shall not hinder me, for between me
-and my brother's body no one has a right to stand. Go now, and ere
-long you shall know whether I hold my brotherhood to my father's son
-higher than my brotherhood to you, my company.'
-
-The rat-faced surgeon had opened his case, but the men still were
-loath to go, as though they would have stayed Frank from his purpose,
-and again the little black eyes looked keen and anxious at the
-captain.
-
-'Go, men!' cried Frank in a sharp, biting voice. 'It is I, Captain
-Drake, who bid you, and whom you know.'
-
-Slowly then they left. More than one stopped at the door to look
-round at the surgeon rolling up his sleeves and shudder, till Frank's
-set look sent them on their way. He beckoned me to stay; and indeed
-I think he had need of some one to support him in his terrible
-resolution. It is a fearful thing to use a body as we were about to
-do, but what must it have been to Frank thus to desecrate the mortal
-part of that fair youth he loved so well!
-
-It made me sick to see how eagerly the surgeon went to his work. As
-soon as we had stripped the corpse Frank drew from his pack a book he
-had often spoken to me about. It was _The Anglishman's Treasure, or
-the True Anatomy of Man's Body_, by Master Thomas Vicary. This he
-held open in his hand, and signed to the surgeon to begin.
-
-Over the terrible sight that followed let me draw the veil. To me it
-was as heroic a spectacle as ever Agamemnon presented at Aulis. It
-was a holy sacrifice by our general of his tenderest feelings. Yet
-when I think how detestable, inhuman, and sacrilegous in most men's
-eyes is the dissection of bodies, how it has ever been banned by the
-Church, how there are many who would have it altogether prevented by
-law, and how loathsome it is even in my eyes, who so well know its
-necessity, I hasten from the picture that fills my memory, since I
-have said enough for men to bear in mind this crowning act of Francis
-Drake's heroical resolution. Everything he did before and afterwards
-I think called for less from his noble nature than that. Many
-high-sounding acts he achieved before his death, in the face of
-danger and the heat of battle, with a constancy that will make true
-English hearts beat higher for all time; yet nothing stamps hero on
-his memory, to my thinking, like what that January afternoon he
-steadfastly endured on that fever-stricken isle, in cold blood,
-unshaken, unflinching, and almost unmarked. It was the first
-experiment in anatomy that our captain made that voyage. I cannot
-wonder it was also the last.
-
-Even the surgeon was more moved than he, and in order to purge the
-pestilent humours which he swore arose from the body and were the
-cause of the disease he took so strong a dose of his own compounding
-that he never spake again, nor did his boy, who also tasted the
-medicine, recover wholly till we reached England.
-
-Frank, therefore, became surgeon himself, and whether from the
-knowledge he had gained by his terrible experiment on his brother, or
-whether by using different remedies, or none at all, I know not, but
-certain it is that from that time no more died, and those that were
-sick began rapidly to mend.
-
-Still we had suffered heavy loss before it was all ended, and many
-were for giving up our voyage, protesting it was useless to attempt
-to 'make' it with so maimed a company. But Frank would not hear such
-counsel, and cheerfully encouraged them to endure a little longer.
-
-Our joy then may be judged when on the last day of January some of
-the Cimaroons, who ever since our first meeting with them had been
-continually ranging up and down the country to gather news, reported
-of a certainty that the Plate Fleet had put into Nombre de Dios.
-
-A pinnace was at once despatched to the outermost island of the
-Cativaas to confirm this report, whereby our general hoped to test
-how far our allies were worthy of trust, since he knew that if it
-were as they said, the victuallers would be seen flocking to the
-ships with supplies.
-
-Within a few days the pinnace returned bringing the joyful
-confirmation we desired, and something more which we very little
-desired, namely, thirteen Spanish prisoners, and amongst them the
-_Scrivano_ of Tolu and a black-eyed comely girl, his daughter. These
-had been taken on a frigate laden with victuals, which had been dealt
-with for the sake of getting certain news of the fleet.
-
-Nothing could have embarrassed us more in the last preparations we
-had now to make for our land journey. To release the prisoner was
-impossible, since they would have straightway spread the news which
-it was our business to conceal. While to keep them was to have them
-in constant danger of being cruelly massacred by the Cimaroons.
-
-Frank took every precaution that was possible. The prisoners were
-landed on 'Slaughter Island,' as we called it, since we had lost so
-many of our company there, so as to keep the Cimaroons from sight of
-them, and then speedily set on board our great Carthagena prize,
-which lay moored hard by the island.
-
-Here they were all brought before our general to be questioned. He
-received them in such state as we could make upon the poop, and
-presently encouraged them to fear nothing, for they seemed very ill
-at ease as not knowing what treatment they should get at our hands.
-In the midst of his speaking I saw the girl draw a knife from her
-breast, and with the suddenness of a cat spring upon Frank. In truth
-I think he must have been very near his death had not I seized her
-hand, being prepared by what I had seen, and held her.
-
-It was all I could do to keep her from him, for she writhed and
-struggled in a frenzy of passion and would not be pacified, till,
-much against our will, we were forced to bind her pretty hands behind
-her for the sake of peace, as though she had been a common mariner.
-Then she stood alone in the midst before Frank helpless, panting, and
-flushed, a passingly beautiful picture. Her luxuriant black hair was
-loosened in her struggles and fell all about her face, and her large
-dark eyes were flashing defiance at Frank as she drew herself up
-proudly before him, looking like some young tigress fresh caught from
-the forest in the plenitude of her wild youth and beauty.
-
-'Well, my beauty,' says Frank good-humouredly, 'this is strange
-woman's work! Why will you force on us such discourtesy as to fit
-you with such rude bracelets. Your pretty white arms were meant for
-other work than this.'
-
-'I know that,' she answered scornfully; 'but when men turn women,
-women must do men's work. You--you are men, and know not what it is
-for a woman to be amongst such curs as these, who cower to be kicked
-at the very sight of an Englishman, and let you heretic Lutheran dogs
-plunder good Catholics as you will and then whine to the Blessed
-Virgin to help their cowardice. Ah, if we had a few hearts like
-yours and mine then you should see!'
-
-'God forbid,' says Frank, 'that we meet many men like you, else
-surely will our voyage take more making than we bargained for.'
-
-'Ah, you are a man,' she said, 'and you know. I am glad I did not
-kill you now, though I vowed the first time I met him to attempt with
-my bodkin the life of the Dragon Francisco.'
-
-'Dragon Francisco is good,' laughed Frank. 'Were you twice as wild
-you should have your bracelets off for that! Loose her, Jasper; she
-will be quiet now.'
-
-'Ah,' she said again, as I undid her bonds, 'you are a man. It is
-long since I felt a man's hand.' With that she threw herself at the
-captain's feet, and, taking his rough hand in hers, kissed it
-ardently. Then without a word she walked away from where we sat, and
-quietly fell to twisting up the great masses of black hair that clung
-about her, which was a wonder to us all.
-
-Having got the intelligence we required from the prisoners, it
-remained but to set a guard over them, both to prevent their escape
-and to keep an eye on the Cimaroons. I think Mr. Oxenham would have
-very gladly undertaken this labour for the sake of those same
-lustrous dark eyes; but Frank would not have it so, and appointed me
-to it, bidding me treat the prisoners with all courtesy so far as I
-could, having regard to their safe-keeping.
-
-I did not much relish my wardship of the wild girl, though I think I
-was as much taken with her beauty and spirit as any of us. For Frank
-would not have her put under constraint, though he suffered me to
-keep the rest below hatches when night came on. So I allotted her
-the best place in the poop, and bade her good-night.
-
-As the night wore on my anxiety only increased, and, being unable to
-sleep, I went to walk on deck. It was a glorious tropic night, with
-the moon flooding the dark forests and studded islands and the
-slumbering sea with a brilliancy we do not know in the Old World. It
-was so beautiful that I bade the look-out man go to rest, saying I
-did not wish to sleep and would keep his watch for him. He seemed
-very surprised, but thanked me civilly and went below.
-
-As I watched alone on deck the Spanish girl kept constantly in my
-thoughts. Whatever way I tried to think my mind always came back to
-her, and her white skin and beautiful eyes, so flashing in anger, so
-soft in peace. I began to dread she would be the cause of
-contentions amongst us, and to long for the time when we should be
-well away on our land journey.
-
-I was sitting on the forecastle, and had been there perhaps for the
-space of half an hour, when, just as the Señorita was most vividly in
-my thoughts, I saw the poop door stealthily open and a strange figure
-appear. I knew in a moment who it was, in spite of her being so
-changed. It was plainly the Spanish girl, looking more beautiful
-than ever in the dress she had adopted. It was nothing more than the
-ordinary apparel which the Spanish mariners use in those seas,
-consisting of loose striped drawers reaching just above the knee, and
-an easy-fitting sleeveless shirt of white material, which she had
-girt tightly about her waist with a red scarf.
-
-Too amazed to act, I could only watch her ripe young figure, which
-her dress set off to its full beauty, creeping warily forward towards
-me. Very quietly I sunk lower into the shadow of the bulwarks to
-watch what she would do.
-
-Every now and again she looked round in some new and graceful posture
-to see if she were watched. At last she reached the foremast, to
-which was fixed the mutilated image of the Virgin and Child, and
-there she fell upon her knees and began to pray in a low earnest
-voice that I could just hear.
-
-'Holy Mother of God,' she said, 'for the last time I beseech thine
-aid to support me across the dark waters, to guide me through the
-forest, to bring me safely to Nombre de Dios, that thy loving
-worshippers may come at my word and destroy the heretics that would
-plunder the treasure which his most Catholic Majesty would devote to
-thy service, saving only, if it be not sin, Captain Francisco Draque,
-whom it were a pity to kill, and the sad-faced man who has warded me
-so courteously, and who, I think, is half in love with me.'
-
-Then she rose and walked with desperate quickness towards the side,
-but ere she had gone three steps I had leaped down into the waist,
-and she was struggling frantically in my arms. I was resolved to
-stay her from the wild purpose her brave spirit was bent on. As she
-writhed in my grasp I remember being rather afraid that she should
-fall into the hands of the Cimaroons than that we should be betrayed
-to the Spaniards.
-
-Like an eel she strove to get free, her dress giving her perfect
-freedom to strain every effort. So tenderly did I feel towards her
-for the sake of her heroic attempt that I was only thoughtful how not
-to hurt her, but it was misplaced kindness, for suddenly she slipped
-from my loosened grasp. In a moment she was at the bulwarks, poising
-herself for a spring into the water, when suddenly she gave a low cry
-of horror and sprang back into my arms as I rushed to her side.
-
-In an extremity of abject terror, to which her resolution was
-suddenly changed, she clung about me, trembling from head to foot.
-
-'Save me, Señor, save me!' she gasped, as she sank down clasping my
-knees wildly. 'O God, O Sancta Maria! see what is coming,--O God,
-what will they do to me! I cannot bear it. Save me, Señor, save me!'
-
-So distractedly did she cling to me that I was obliged to lift her in
-my arms before I could get to the side to see what had frightened
-her, and then I could not wonder how her courage had melted, for I
-saw a sight that made my blood run cold.
-
-Close to the ship and moving swiftly towards her swam over half a
-score of black woolly heads. The ghostly moonlight glittered white
-on the long wake that stretched behind each, and on their rolling
-eyes, and, worst of all, on a grizzly knife which each held in his
-grinning teeth. Like some hellish monsters engendered in the foul
-womb of the sea they came on with lusty strokes, silent, sure, and
-determined.
-
-There was no time to fetch my caliver or wake the guard had I been
-willing to do so. But this was far from my wish; for I feared, had
-they known the negroes' purpose and seen the terror of their pretty
-prisoner, they would have dealt more hardly with our allies than the
-general would have liked. Moreover, to be plain, I had a still
-stronger reason for what I did; for I could not bear to think that
-those rough men should see my beautiful captive so scantily yet
-withal so prettily clad as she was. So, drawing my rapier, I sprang
-to the gangway, for which they were making.
-
-'Back, back!' I cried, as low as I could for them to hear. 'The
-first man that tries to board has my blade through him.'
-
-That, I thought, dismayed them, for each as he swam up stopped
-without attempting to board, which they might easily have done; for
-the ship, being full of victuals, was very low in the water, and,
-moreover, two chains hung down the side by the gangway. I was in no
-little doubt how I could deal with them should they make any attempt,
-for I feared that my terrified Señorita would much hamper my
-movements, since she had followed me to the gangway. Therefore, to
-further dissuade them, I fell to showing them how ill the general
-would take what they did, seeing the prisoners were his.
-
-Even as I spoke I was much encouraged to feel the Señorita's arm
-steal round me and draw from its sheath the strong sailor's knife I
-always wore. I knew then the brave girl had recovered her spirit. I
-could not refrain from pressing the little hand as it closed round
-the hilt of the knife, to let her know how I marked her courage.
-
-My speech had small effect on the Cimaroons; for though they still
-held off, yet they seemed not to note my words, but only to glare
-horribly at the girl by my side. Wondering what next to do, I was
-all at once aware that most of them had disappeared. There was
-something so unearthly and magical in this sudden vanishing that my
-heart misgave me. While I could see my foes I did not fear but that
-I could deal with them as I wished; but now I was encompassed by
-unseen dangers, and in that ghostly moonlight, I say plainly, I was
-afraid.
-
-Nothing would have been more to my mind than to cry aloud and wake
-the sailors. Yet I set my teeth hard and gripped anew Harry's
-rapier. I felt he would have done as I hoped for courage to do, and
-I clung to my former resolution. Yet I saw it was useless to wait
-where I was, so, taking the Señorita's hand, I led her towards the
-poop. Half-way there she looked back, started, and clutched my arm.
-
-'Look, Señor, look,' she whispered, 'look at the forecastle.'
-
-I turned and saw the evil sight I dreaded. Black against the moonlit
-sky the wet, shining figure of a Cimaroon was climbing over the
-bulwarks where our head-fast ran out. I knew directly they must have
-dived to the cable and climbed up by it. In another minute they
-would all be aboard.
-
-Then I knew there was but one thing to do, and ran quickly under the
-poop-gallery with the Señorita.
-
-'Go in, Señorita,' said I, as soon as we reached the door. 'You must
-leave me to deal with these alone.'
-
-'No, Señor,' she answered, 'I will not leave. I am not afraid now.
-It was only for a moment. I will stay and fight them with you.'
-
-'There is no need,' said I; 'I am going to rouse the mariners.'
-
-Indeed, it was time. One after another I could see the black forms
-climb over the bulwarks, dripping and gleaming in the moonlight, and
-each with his bright knife. A hideous head, too, was glaring over
-the gangway, as though waiting for the rest. Still the Señorita
-would not go, but rather stepped out into the moonlight to be farther
-from the door, which I held open.
-
-'No! I will wait with you,' she said resolutely. 'Why should I not
-wait and fight beside the sailors when they come?'
-
-'Because, Señorita,' said I, growing desperate as I saw the wet,
-shining forms creeping athwart the forecastle, 'because they are
-rough men, and I would not have them see you as you are.'
-
-A crimson flush overspread her beautiful face. With wide astonished
-eyes and parted lips she met my gaze for a moment.
-
-'Ah!' she cried then, just as she had to Frank, 'you are a man!'
-Dropping the knife as she spoke, she sprang towards me, and before I
-was aware what she did she had taken my face between her soft little
-hands and kissed me on the lips. Then she was gone; and even as that
-fair vision passed I saw black forms dropping from the forecastle
-into the waist. Loudly then I shouted to my company, and ere the
-Cimaroons had advanced many paces one of the mariners came running up
-to me, and then another, and another, blowing up their matches.
-
-That was enough for the Cimaroons, who we afterwards found had no
-heart to stand before gunpowder. One of them uttered a loud cry, and
-then with one accord they all leaped into the sea. Lustily they made
-for the shore, and I had much ado to prevent my small-shot men and
-archers hastening their swimming, but at last I prevailed.
-
-After that I set a double watch, but we were no more disturbed that
-night. Next day I reported these things to the general, who so dealt
-with the Cimaroons, and took such order for a guard over the
-prisoners, that the Spaniards were no more molested till we departed
-on our land journey, though the negroes ceased not to urge him by
-every device they could think of to permit them to have at least a
-few to murder, or better than naught, the girl alone.
-
-As for me, I craved to be relieved of my charge, feeling that after
-what had passed it would be better for us both if the captive had
-another warder; but Frank only laughed, and said he could trust no
-one, not even himself, with that lump of Eve's flesh, unless it were
-a sober scholar like myself. With that answer, whereby he showed
-less knowledge of men than ordinary, I had to be content, and bear
-myself as soberly and scholarly towards my prisoner as I could make
-shift to do till the time came for our departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-A fortnight later, in a fair clearing on the summit of those
-forest-clad hills which separate the Atlantic Ocean from the South
-Sea knelt eighteen sunburnt, way-worn Englishmen. In their midst
-rose a giant-tree that reared its head high above all the dense
-growth around it. In its rugged bark steps had been cut that led
-upwards to a sort of bower high amidst the massive branches, which
-might have served as a watch-house to the little settlement that was
-about the glade.
-
-For all around where those gaunt men knelt were strong houses built
-in the manner of the Cimaroons, some thirty of whom knelt reverently
-outward of the Englishmen listening to the prayer which the
-thick-set, curly-bearded man in the centre offered up so earnestly.
-
-Earnestly, too, those seventeen others listened, as they knelt in the
-heart of the Spanish Main, with as stout an air of triumph on their
-youthful faces as though it were all their own. And no wonder it was
-so. For each man there had but just ascended to that silvan
-watch-tower, and there had seen to the northward the ocean whence he
-had come, and over against it, beyond the rolling slope of gorgeous
-tropic forest, that silent sea of mystery on which no Englishman had
-sailed stretched at his feet, as though waiting peacefully for him to
-come and take possession.
-
-[Illustration: SIR FRANCIS DRAKE]
-
-To our fancies, heated with the hundred tales we had heard of the
-inexhaustible treasure which came from that new-found sea whereof the
-wisest of the ancients were ignorant, it seemed to glitter like a
-boundless, unfathomable caldron of molten silver. From this, our
-first sight of it, it seemed but a little step with our elated
-spirits to enter and possess it; and so it was with uplifted hearts
-and throbbing pulse that, resting on our weapons, we kneeled and
-listened to Frank Drake's prayer.
-
-'O Almighty God,' he said, 'who has granted us of Thy great goodness
-that we should set our eyes at last on that great sea which for all
-the ages till now no man knew, but only Thou, and which, though Thou
-hadst kept it hidden as an inheritance for all mankind who served
-Thee aright, the Bishop of Rome has impiously taken upon himself to
-give to an idolatrous king and people: Grant to me now out of the
-plenty of Thy power and bounty life and leave to sail once, if only
-once, in an English ship in that sea. So shall I, thy servant, and
-such of those others here to whom Thou wilt vouchsafe the same, enter
-thereon to the advancement to Thy glory, and the confusion of the
-lewd priest and potentate who has usurped and abused the vineyard
-which Thou hadst prepared for Thy people.'
-
-So he ceased, and a deep 'Amen' mingled with the rustle of the breeze
-amongst the vines and canes. Then up sprang Mr. John Oxenham, and
-held on high his right hand.
-
-'Hearkye, lads,' he cried, very excited, 'you have heard the
-captain's prayer, and know his resolution. Now bear witness that by
-yea and nay I protest, as I am a gentleman, that, unless he beat me
-from his company, I will follow him, by God's grace, into that sea.'
-
-So one after another we all protested to the like intent, very
-earnest and eager for that time to come; and yet, resolute as we all
-were, how few ever made good our resolve, and notably Mr. Oxenham!
-Had he but been content to follow Frank, instead of faithlessly
-trying to be before him, who knows but he too might have died a
-knight with a golden collar, and not, as he did, like a felon with a
-necklet of Spanish hemp! But let that pass, for who knows better
-than I how hard it may be to keep a resolution which in the making
-seemed so easy? Such falling away we must openly condemn, for the
-sake of the state and reverence for the laws; yet no wise man will
-inwardly hasten to loathe sin, since he is well aware that until he
-has made trial he cannot tell how small a shock of temptation will
-lay his own honour in ruins.
-
-And surely the sight of that golden sea, whereof no man knew the
-bounds, was enough to turn any man's head. None of us were in haste
-to leave that glorious sight, feeling as though we could never gaze
-our fill. To us, the first of Englishmen, was unfolded the
-portentous secret which the Spaniards had kept so well. That night,
-then, we lay there to dream over the boundless visions to which our
-discovery gave birth.
-
-On the morrow, refreshed with our rest, and feeling each one of us a
-new man in the presence of that new ocean, we began our perilous
-descent towards Panama. And perilous indeed it was, though none of
-us now could think of danger or anything but the golden sea.
-
-We were, as I have said, but eighteen Englishmen. This little band
-was all we could muster for our attempt. Eight and twenty of our
-company were lying dead in graves already half hidden in brakes.
-Well-nigh half the rest were sick; and when these were set aside with
-a sufficiency of whole men to tend them, and above all to protect our
-ships and prisoners, eighteen were all we could spare.
-
-I had been appointed one of the number, seeing that I was still
-whole; yet it must be said I was hard put to it to go. For my
-prisoner coaxed me so prettily to stay and protect her, and pouted so
-sweetly with her full red lips when I would not be moved, that I more
-than once came near to yielding, and was not a little glad that we
-marched as soon as we did.
-
-Besides our eighteen we had with us thirty Cimaroons, who lightened
-the labour of our march not only by their ready bearing of our
-burdens, which they would not suffer us to touch, but also by their
-cheerful spirits. They seemed never to weary, and were ever laughing
-and singing, even when the way was steepest and the brakes most
-dense. They seemed, now that they were away from the Spaniards and
-we came to know them better, an altogether docile, childlike people,
-whom one could but love, for all their hidden fierceness, as one
-would a staunch and faithful hound.
-
-Pedro, their chief, who best knew the danger of our enterprise, had
-put it hard to the general that he should tarry at a certain town of
-theirs till a greater force of Cimaroons could be gathered. But this
-Frank would not hearken to. 'No, Pedro,' said he; 'the time speeds
-for "making" my voyage, and since I have enough I would not delay an
-hour though I might have twenty times as many.' A resolute answer
-which rejoiced and gave heart to us all.
-
-So on the morrow of our discovery of the South Sea we began our
-descent as we were towards Panama. It was our general's purpose to
-waylay a _recua_ as close as possible to Panama, where the Spaniards
-would least look for us, in case they had any wind of our still being
-on the coast. To this end we had made our toilsome march, going a
-good way about that we might not be descried, and so come down
-secretly upon the road which led from Panama to Venta Cruz, where, as
-I have said, the gold was embarked in frigates to be carried down the
-Rio Chagres to Nombre de Dios. We were the more moved to this course
-because of our uncertainty whether the _recuas_ went as yet all the
-way by land to Nombre de Dios. As we were now it mattered little;
-for by thus striking boldly across the Main we could deal with them
-before they reached the river, and thus save them the pain of
-disappointing us.
-
-Very warily now we pursued our painful way through the matted forest,
-in the order which Pedro besought us to adopt. First went, about a
-mile ahead of us, four Cimaroons, who best knew those trackless
-solitudes. For not a sign of a way was there, and even had there
-been one it would have been overgrown by the luxuriant brakes as fast
-as it was made. We had nothing further to direct us than the broken
-branches by which our guides marked the way we were to follow. How
-they could know their road amidst those wellnigh impenetrable woods,
-where they could not even see the sky above their heads, was more
-than I could tell. Mr. Oxenham said it was a special instinct which
-God had given them that they might the better be revenged upon the
-Spaniards who had so foully ill-treated them. How this may be I
-cannot say, but I know that Frank and most of the company said openly
-it was nothing short of a miracle, by which God showed His great love
-and tenderness towards us. For it is certain that without the aid of
-these poor folk we could never even have attempted the Spaniards by
-land.
-
-Our general was very earnest to show his gratitude for this mercy by
-burdening himself with care for their souls. For when he found that
-they seemed to have no religion, save a sort of idolatrous and
-superstitious reverence for the Cross, he would not rest till by
-continual urging them at our halts he brought them to lay it aside
-and learn in its stead the Lord's Prayer and certain plain doctrines
-as he thought sufficient for their low understanding.
-
-Great as was the skill of our guides in leading, it was little
-exceeding our vanguard's diligence in clearing the way. For in the
-front of our main body marched twelve Cimaroons, who with loving care
-made the way as easy as might be for us and their two chiefs, who
-were in company with us. Rearwards of all were twelve negroes more,
-bearing our burdens and watching against any danger that might
-threaten from the rear.
-
-So we marched stealthily through that eternal wilderness of brake,
-and vine, and flower, and massive overshadowing trees hour after
-hour, in perfect silence, save for the scolding of the frightened
-parrots overhead and the strident screaming of the fearless guans.
-To me that march gave a pleasure and present sense of strong life
-that I had never known before; nor did my content end there. For
-Harry felt the influence as strongly as I, and so there was bred
-between us one more piece of sympathy, which gave me yet further hope
-that I might win his love again. It seemed to bring back our
-boyhood, and almost in his old boyish way he came that night and sat
-beside me.
-
-'Is this not glorious work?' said he, as he stretched his weary limbs
-upon the flowers.
-
-'I could almost wish it would never end,' I answered. 'It lifts a
-man out of himself like nothing else I know.'
-
-'That is it,' he mused. 'Indeed, I think there is nothing which will
-keep a man so continually excited as silently stalking through a
-boundless forest like this, where a white man's foot has never trod
-before. As you pick your way at each step, that no stick may crack
-or stone roll; as cautiously you press through the boughs, that none
-may break or fly back noisily; as you strain your ear for the
-whispered order that is passed from your comrade, and peer ever
-forwards towards where the danger lies, then you know best the pure
-joy of living, the joy of the tiger leaping on his prey, the joy of
-the falcon stooping at his quarry.'
-
-'Well said! well said!' I cried, catching his enthusiasm. 'Even so I
-now at last can say, "I live and know my life. Now live I with the
-life of my father Adam, the son of God." Now know I that fable for a
-true allegory, and feel I have dominion over the beast of the field
-and the fowls of the air, which is called the inheritance of Adam.'
-
-'Truly what greater joy was his than we have now!' said Harry. 'The
-wild pigs and deer and pheasants are our meat, the bubbling brooks
-our wine-cups, the leafy boughs our roof, the flowers our beds. His
-inheritance is ours! 'Slight, it is a time to tempt a man to throw
-aside the fetters of his clothes and the burden of his arms, and rise
-up with nought but a spear as symbol of dominion, and live to his
-life's end a lord of beasts.'
-
-'It is you, Harry,' said I, 'whom I must thank that I too can know
-'this intense joy. It was your father's bringing-up of me that
-taught me to love the out-of-doors.'
-
-'Well, it is mock-modesty,' he answered, 'to say he knew not how to
-make a man. Indeed, I think Machiavelli did not much err when he
-praised the education of Achilles, for whom Chiron chose a master
-half-man, half-beast, that he might be acquainted with both, seeing
-that without the qualities of one the other will be of little
-duration. Such teachers we cannot come by now, yet we can make shift
-with one who forgets not that man is half a beast.'
-
-Such talk we had many times afterwards; and I call it a fortunate
-thing that our march drew to an end before we had quite run wild. On
-the second day after leaving the spot where we had viewed the South
-Sea we came out of the forests to a pleasant champaign country,
-overgrown with mighty grass, so rank that, as Pedro told us, the
-Spaniards had to burn it thrice a year, lest it grow so tall that the
-oxen cannot reach to feed on it; which will seem a wonder to those
-who know not the Western Wonderland, but it is none the less plain
-truth.
-
-Three days we passed through this marvel, suffering grievously from
-the heat after the cool shadows of the forest, yet being cheered many
-times by getting glimpses of Panama whenever we passed over the
-rolling hills that fell in our path. On the fourth day, being the
-14th of February, we had for our valentine the blue roadstead of
-Panama, with its burden of gold ships riding upon it.
-
-It was a sight to set every heart there beating faster,
-notwithstanding the many dangers and excitements through which we had
-passed since we heard the farewell guns from Plymouth platform.
-Indeed, it was now that our great peril began; for by hook or crook
-we had to reach undescried a great grove which lay apart in the midst
-of the champaign lands, about a league from the town.
-
-Our danger of discovery, which would mar all, was now very great; for
-the Cimaroons told us it was the custom of the ladies in Panama to
-send out fowlers in search of a certain delicate bird of which they
-were very fond. Should we fall in with but one of these men, which
-would be very easy in the tall grass, the alarm would be at once
-given, and our chance of gold gone--ay, and perhaps our lives with it.
-
-Frank therefore bade us break up our order, and, falling into small
-parties, grope our way as silently and stealthily as possible towards
-our goal. It was weary work, and anxious. The sun was blazing down
-upon us with intolerable power. Every few minutes we had to stop and
-listen.
-
-After going thus for a good space with infinite toil we struck a
-river bed, which was almost dry. This, to our great relief, the
-Cimaroons said we could follow safely, since it led straight to the
-grove. So in the end, by picking our way over the stones like cats,
-we came undescried to our hiding-place about three in the afternoon,
-and then disposed ourselves to rest, wellnigh exhausted.
-
-There was now nothing to do but lie there still as mice till the
-night fell; for the _recuas_ do not travel by day between Panama and
-Venta-Cruz, because the way lies wholly across the champaign country,
-where there is no shelter from the scorching fire of the sun.
-Moreover it was our captain's purpose, as soon as evening drew near,
-to send a negro in disguise into Panama to discover whether any
-_recuas_ were to be laden that night, and at what hour they were to
-start.
-
-As I lay with the rest, half-asleep after my weary march, Frank came
-to me and asked if I were too tired for half an hour's more work.
-
-'Not if you want it of me,' said I.
-
-'Well then,' says he, 'come with me to the edge of the grove, whence
-Pedro says we can descry Panama.'
-
-'But to what end?' I asked. 'We shall run great risk of discovery.'
-
-'Not if we are careful,' says he; 'and it is worth the risk.'
-
-'Why, what good will our intelligence be?' I asked, not wishing him
-to expose himself.
-
-'Not much now,' he answered, 'but, by God's help, some day I will
-serve Panama as I served Nombre de Dios. If God grants my prayer for
-life and leave, and we sail that sea, yonder harbour is where we must
-strike, if we get not our fill elsewhere; and now I have opportunity
-of learning how the town lies, I will not throw it away. It is thus
-I have sped so far, and thus I mean to continue. For I hold it not
-enough for a man to pray earnestly; he must show by fearless,
-ungrudging endeavour that he is in earnest, and leave nothing undone
-which may speed the granting of his prayer. God could do all this
-and more without my help, that I know well; but yet I think He loves
-best to help men who are ready to show they are in earnest in seeking
-His help.'
-
-So together we went and lay down where we could see the fair city,
-lying some little way from the harbour on either side of a goodly
-broad street that led northwards from the sea right through the
-houses. All was very still, because of the great heat that still
-prevailed. Yet we could see the convent nestling in its garden of
-palms, the tall spire of the church, the high bare walls of the
-King's Treasure-House, as big and strong as that at Nombre de Dios.
-And beyond all slumbered the gold ships in the roadstead.
-
-'A fair place! a goodly place!' said Frank in a whisper. 'Too fair
-and goodly for those that possess it. It should be ours, Jasper, and
-our Queen's; and so it shall be, at least for as long as its
-plundering will take, if I can come into that roadstead with but two
-stout well-manned ships. We shall see, we shall see. Let us come
-away. It is in the Lord's hands to deal with as He wills.'
-
-On our return to the strength we found the Cimaroons busy dressing
-our espial in the costume which the servants in Panama were
-accustomed to wear. He was a merry, shrewd fellow, who had served a
-master in the city formerly, and he bade us not to doubt that he
-would soon be back with all the intelligence we wanted.
-
-After his going was another space of anxious waiting, during which we
-refreshed ourselves with such victuals as we had with us. To every
-man was given a little _aqua vitæ_ for his comfort. I was surprised
-to see Sergeant Culverin drinking, as I thought a little too freely,
-from a private store he had. I went to him, and he respectfully
-offered me some.
-
-'No, Sergeant,' said I; 'if there is danger before us I would rather
-keep my head cool.'
-
-'As you will, sir,' he said. 'It may be well enough for a young man,
-but with an old soldier it is different.'
-
-'Then has not an old soldier as much need of a cool head as a young
-one?' I asked.
-
-'Yes, perhaps,' he answered; 'but a cool head is little use if your
-heart is cool too.'
-
-'Why, Sergeant,' said I, very surprised, 'your heart at least will
-not be faint when a fight is ahead.'
-
-'No, sir,' said he gravely, 'no man shall say that; and yet I like to
-go about with it that it shall not faint, and therefore I discipline
-it with a sufficiency of _aqua vitæ_.'
-
-'Well, Sergeant,' said I, still very puzzled at the signs of timidity
-on the part of the grim old soldier, 'you are the last I should have
-suspected of needing so base a crutch for his courage.'
-
-'Maybe my courage halts,' he answered sadly, 'maybe it does not.
-Once I never gave a thought to danger, but when a man has served much
-he knows. I do not think I have less courage than any man here, but
-I know what war is better than they. As you shall see more of war,
-sir, you shall see less of its glory and more of its horror. That is
-why I wished to come to England; and to be plain with you, I should
-never have run my head into this wild venture of Captain Drake's had
-it not been that my poor master---- but I crave your honour's pardon,
-I prattle impertinently.'
-
-'No matter, Sergeant,' said I; 'it is I who should crave your pardon.
-But tell me, do you think our danger so very great?'
-
-'Not perhaps if we succeed,' answered the Sergeant; 'but if we fail,
-where shall we retreat?'
-
-'But we must not think of that,' said I.
-
-'A young soldier need not,' said he sadly; 'but alas! an old soldier
-cannot choose but think of it, unless----'
-
-'Unless what, Sergeant?' I asked.
-
-'Unless, sir,' said he, grimly smiling, 'in the stead of the ardent
-spirit of youth, which in you burns up such doubt, a man may come by
-a sufficiency of this most courageous _agua ardiente_.'
-
-With that I left him, revolving much in my mind whether he or I were
-the braver man.
-
-It was not long before our espial came back. We gathered eagerly
-round him for his news, which as eagerly he gave, seeing he was so
-full of it that he was like to burst had he not got this relief as
-soon as he did. And no wonder, for he told us he had found the Plaza
-full of mules, which men were fitting with packs. On questioning
-these he found that two great _recuas_, with a little silver and much
-victuals, were about to start for the fleet that night; but what was
-better, and what caused his eagerness, was that, besides these, there
-was preparing to precede them a _recua_ for no less a man than the
-Treasurer of Lima himself,' who, being bent on returning to Spain by
-the first _adviso_ that sailed, was starting that very night for
-Nombre de Dios with all his servants and his daughter, together with
-one mule load of jewels and eight of gold!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-It was midnight. Silence and darkness had fallen on that grass-bound
-highway that joined the oceans. Not a breath stirred the tall
-herbage. All was still as death, save for the distant mingled voices
-of the tropic night. Yet on either side the way, some two leagues
-short of Venta Cruz, that reedy pasture might have been seen to nod
-from time to time with a strange unaccustomed motion.
-
-Save that, there was nothing to show a traveller that the sea of
-grass, through which his way led him, held stranger fish than all the
-rest of the wide expanse on either hand. Yet so it was. Strange
-fish, both black and white, lay there as still as serpents.
-
-For thither had our captain led us as the most fitting spot for our
-venture, being, as Pedro showed, the farthest from Spanish relief and
-most convenient for our retreat with the plunder. So there I lay at
-Frank's side, and about me half our band, cutting strange figures.
-For Frank had made us put on our shirts over our other clothes, so
-that we might know friend from foe in the coming struggle.
-
-Farther on, upon the other side of the way, was Mr. Oxenham, with
-Harry and the rest, so placed that he might stop the head of the
-Treasurer's _recua_ while we dealt with the tail. By this order,
-too, we might use our bows without fear of hurting our friends.
-
-Between Frank and me lay a Spanish soldier fast bound. Our two
-Cimaroon guides had captured him on our march from the grove where we
-had lain hid all the afternoon. From him we had gathered
-intelligence which confirmed all that our espial had told us. Before
-this Frank had been loath to believe our good luck, thinking so
-strange a chance savoured of a trap to undo us. But this soldier, as
-soon as he learned who our captain was, was so overjoyed at knowing
-he would be softly dealt with that he gave us full knowledge of how
-to proceed, which he was the better able to do seeing that he himself
-was one of those hired to guard the Treasurer. All this, he swore,
-was honest truth, as he was a gentleman soldier. He seemed to wish
-nothing so much as our success, which we better could understand when
-he craved in return for his intelligence that our captain would not
-only save him from the Cimaroons, but also deal with him as he had
-with others in like place, giving him sufficient of the plunder to
-keep him and his mistress. He courteously promised in addition to
-make our names famous throughout all Spain and the Indies if we did
-this; but I think Frank was not very earnest to have his trumpet
-blown by such false lips. And I noted that as we lay there he had
-his dagger ready to curb any desire our prisoner might have to alarm
-his master when he approached.
-
-It seemed hours that we lay there in the dim starlight. The tall
-grass about us hid everything from us but the white shirts of our
-comrades. We heard nothing but the drawing of our own breath, the
-beating of our own hearts, howsoever hard we strained our ears for a
-sound of the _recuas_. In truth, it could not have been past an hour
-before a puff of wind from the northward stirred the grass above us,
-and with it came the distant tinkle of bells.
-
-It was but a _recua_ from Venta Cruz, we knew, all of which we had
-resolved to let pass as only carrying merchandise for the city and
-Peru. Yet it made my heart beat faster for a while, till the breeze
-died again; and even as it ceased came another tinkle from the
-direction of the city. Every man moved to listen better, making the
-grass rustle, and Frank held up his hand to quiet them. The tinkling
-died away again as the _recua_ passed down to some hollow, where the
-sound of its bells was drowned to us.
-
-Night is day on this the most notable highway in the world, as I have
-shown, and great and rich is the traffic either way in the cool hours
-between sunset and dawn, when the Plate Fleet is lying in Nombre de
-Dios, and all the Spanish Main is stirring with the life, and hopes,
-and fears it brings.
-
-It was natural, then, to hear on the round stones with which years
-ago Pizarro had paved the way the clatter of a horse's feet coming up
-from Venta Cruz, and mingling with the rise and fall of the distant
-tinkling. As the sound drew near, Pedro, who had been lying with his
-head pressed against the ground, crawled towards us like a snake.
-
-'It is a _cabalero_,' whispered he.
-
-'How do you know that?' says Frank.
-
-'I can hear he has a page-boy running at his stirrup,' answered the
-Cimaroon, whose ears seemed to turn to eyes in the dark. 'It is easy
-to hear on the hard road. Listen!'
-
-'Well, whatever he be, let him pass,' said Frank, for so we had
-determined. Yet very gladly, I think, would Pedro have made a dash
-at the gentleman's throat.
-
-On came the horse at a gentle trot till, when he came about opposite
-Mr. Oxenham's party, we heard a plunging, as though he had taken
-fright at something, and immediately after he dashed past us at a
-false gallop on the way to the city.
-
-'Why has he changed his pace?' said Frank quickly.
-
-'For no reason that I can tell,' said Pedro, 'unless the others
-showed themselves.'
-
-'They can never have been so mad,' said Frank. 'And yet I think he
-must have seen them. Did the page come by us?'
-
-'No,' answered Pedro.
-
-'Did he go back?' asked Frank.
-
-'I could not hear,' said the Cimaroon.
-
-'Surely they must have shown themselves,' said Frank. 'Yet there is
-nothing for it but to lie still and wait.'
-
-I thought of Sergeant Culverin and his _agua ardiente_, but held my
-peace. Silently we lay again listening breathlessly to the sound of
-the galloping horse dying away in the distance towards Panama, and
-the growing clamour of the bells on either hand, not knowing how far
-we were descried, and being wholly unable to find out. Had the
-horseman seen anything, and would he warn the _recuas_ of their
-danger? As we listened the full jangling of the mule-bells ceased
-and gave place to a fitful tinkle. It was now the sound of mules at
-a standstill, which shook themselves or tried to lick the places
-where the flies had galled them. Faint cries of impatient men
-mingled with the broken sound, and at last we could not doubt but
-that they had stopped. Frank and Pedro looked at each other blankly.
-
-'They have surely been warned,' said Pedro.
-
-'Still we must wait,' said Frank, with his stern look settling hard
-on his resolute face. 'It is in God's hand. Peradventure the gold
-was well gotten by this Treasurer, and it is not His will that we
-should take it from him.'
-
-With this cold comfort we had to content ourselves and listen again.
-Very soon the bells towards Venta Cruz pealed full again, and in a
-few minutes Pedro knew they were returning. Our wits were now wholly
-bent towards the city. Would they come on and trust to the
-Treasurer's guard? That was all we could ask ourselves. The answer
-came before many minutes were past.
-
-Again the full jangle broke the stillness. They had moved again. As
-loud as ever it sounded, and our hopes beat high, but only for a
-short space. Lower and lower sank the sound, till we could hardly
-hear it. Pedro whispered to Frank, who held up his hand to calm some
-who had half risen, hoping for an order to pursue.
-
-It was plain they were fast losing patience, when suddenly the faint
-tinkling waxed again, till it burst out with a full-toned peal not
-half a mile from us. Then I knew it was but a deep hollow in the
-road that had kept the sound from us. Louder and louder it grew,
-till we could hear each bell sweet and distinct, for the Spaniards
-love to have them strong and full-toned for comfort on their long and
-dreary marches.
-
-I saw Frank's whistle, on which he always gave us the signal to
-attack, glisten in the starlight as he pulled it out. I drew my
-rapier silently. Now we could hear the men cursing their mules and
-beating them, as though they were in hot haste. Now they were
-abreast of us. Still we stirred not. Mule after mule we could hear
-go by, almost deafening us with the clang of their bells, though not
-a hair could we see in our dark lair. A whole train so passed, and
-then came another. Now was our time. The whistle gleamed at Frank's
-lips. I gripped my hilt hard. Shrilly went up the signal, clear
-above the jangling bells.
-
-In a moment we were on our feet, rushing through the grass breast
-high on two full trains of mules. Whether there were soldiers there
-we could not tell, yet no armour could I descry. There was no time
-to think. Already I heard Mr. Oxenham's voice shouting to the
-leading carriers to stop, and we were amongst them.
-
-Every one knocked over or seized the man in front of him. I rushed
-with Frank to the rear to stay any man escaping. We knew our other
-company had stopped the front _recua_, for the mules all began lying
-down, as is their wont when they are halted.
-
-They were soon all stretched peacefully in the way, and it was all
-over. Not a sign of resistance was there. We hardly knew what to
-make of it. There was not a Spaniard in all the train, much less a
-Treasurer and his daughter.
-
-'Hold that false Spaniard fast, Jasper,' cried Frank. 'If he has
-deceived us, as I fear he has, he shall rue the day.'
-
-So I clung to my charge, the prisoner we had brought along with us,
-while the rest made discovery of our capture. Bale after bale they
-cut, but no treasure was to be found. Nothing was in them but
-victuals for the fleet. Frank sent for the chief carrier to learn
-where the gold was, as we had little time to spare, and then we knew
-the worst.
-
-'Ah, most worthy _cabalero_,' said the chief carrier, who seemed a
-very tall, sensible fellow, 'they have played you a trick, for which
-none is to blame but yourself.'
-
-'But was not the Treasurer of Lima to pass first to-night?' asked
-Frank impatiently.
-
-'Since you know that I will tell you all,' answered the man. 'Sure
-enough he was to come with all his gold and family and jewels, but
-half-way hither a _cabalero_ met us in hot haste, saying he had seen
-something alive, half white, half black, rolling in the grass, and he
-feared there was danger. So he urged his Excellency to turn back and
-send on the victual _recuas_ to try and spring the trap, if there was
-one. We have done it, and crave indulgence, since it was but our
-orders, noble captain.'
-
-I saw Frank's face darken with anger in the flare of the torches we
-had now kindled. He turned quickly from the muleteer to us who stood
-by.
-
-'Mr. Oxenham,' said he sternly, in a firm low voice, 'it was one of
-your company that spoiled all, for it was ere he reached us that this
-discreet gentleman changed his pace. What does it mean?'
-
-'Sergeant,' said Harry, who now stepped forward, 'report yourself for
-punishment!'
-
-Very unsteadily the poor Sergeant came up and gave a reeling salute.
-He was plainly very drunk, yet to judge by his melancholy face
-sobered enough to know what he had done.
-
-'I could not help it, Captain Drake,' blurted the unhappy man. 'I
-had not seen a horse for nigh on a year. I could not choose but look
-when I heard him come. It would have been well, but the Cimaroon who
-was with me jumped on my back to pull me down, and so we rolled over,
-and the enemy's horse descried us.'
-
-'Enough,' said Frank sharply; 'you are a fool, and shall smart for
-your folly, but not now. We have other work. Go! You are Mr.
-Waldyve's prisoner.'
-
-With another salute a little more steadily he faced about and
-withdrew, crestfallen beyond all words. I could see Frank was
-consumed with anger, but yet he gave it not rein, for he had need of
-his calmness. That we were thus disappointed by the folly of one of
-our own company was bad enough when we had come so near to so great
-success, but there was worse beyond.
-
-Our case was a very desperate one, that was plain. We had failed,
-and nothing was left us but to escape as quickly as we could to our
-ships, or at least the forest, ere the Spaniards could gather a force
-to attack us. How far they had discovered us was our only doubt, and
-Frank again questioned the muleteer to find out what they knew of our
-numbers.
-
-'Nay, that I know not,' said the man. 'Yet I am persuaded that
-unless you make haste away they will be upon you with all the force
-they can muster. They have good reason to fear your strength, or
-otherwise his Excellency would have trusted to his own guard. I tell
-you this because I owe them a grudge for making me a cat's-paw.'
-
-'But why did he not trust to his guard?' asked Frank.
-
-'Why, for good reason enough. "What folk can these be?" he says to
-the gentleman that met us. "Well," says he, "there are only two who
-would have stomach for this wild stroke into the heart of
-Tierra-Firme, where no pirate has ever dared to set his foot before.
-I tell your Excellency it is Drake or the Devil." "Say rather the
-Devil Drake," says his Excellency, and thereupon very easily is
-persuaded to send me on instead of himself.'
-
-This answer after his own heart brought a smile to the general's face
-in spite of his anger, and helped him to calmly choose what course we
-should take. There were but two. One was to return by the terrible
-long and painful way we had come; the other the short way along the
-road through Venta Cruz. The former was the safest, but we were all
-wearied out and footsore. Moreover, though disappointed of the gold
-and jewels, we had some two loads of silver to carry. I know not if
-it were past our strength to attempt it, but I know that desperate as
-we were over our cruel failure it was long past our inclination.
-
-Pedro, who told us all this, stood waiting for an answer as the
-captain pondered. I knew what Frank was thinking of, for he
-presently looked hard at the Cimaroon. In success he doubted not
-their faith. In failure could he trust them? This was the last and
-greatest of our perils, enough in all to have crushed a heart less
-stout than his.
-
-'Pedro,' says he suddenly, still staring hard at the chief out of his
-wide blue eyes, 'will you give me your hand not to forsake me if I do
-it?'
-
-The Cimaroon knew what he meant; so did we all. He drew his muscular
-black frame to the full height very proudly before he answered.
-
-'Captain Drake,' says he then, 'you and I are chiefs who have sworn
-company. Rather would I die at your feet than leave you to your
-enemies, if you dare hold to it, as I know you dare.'
-
-With that they gripped hands, and Frank, turning cheerfully to the
-company, gave us his resolution.
-
-'Seeing we have failed, lads,' said he, 'we must even haste back to
-our ships as fast as we may, from which we have been too long absent
-already, that we may defend them in case they be attacked, and
-moreover to let things quiet down a bit till we can try again. For
-try again we will, since I am resolved not to leave this coast till
-our voyage be made. Well, there are two ways back--one the long and
-weary track by which we came, the other short and quick, but it lies
-through Venta Cruz.' He paused a moment to see the effect of his
-words, which seemed to catch the breath of those who listened, and
-they looked from one to the other as he went on. 'By the long way
-half of us will drop with fatigue, to be picked up by Spaniards. The
-short way is easy along the high road. The mules will carry us as
-far as the town, and then all we have to do is to force a passage. I
-am for the short way; who is for the long?'
-
-Not a man spoke, half of them being still breathless, I think, at the
-thought of this desperate expedient. Had any other man proposed it
-we should have set him down for a mad fellow, but we had all come to
-think that nothing was too hard for us under our heroic general, and
-not a man demurred.
-
-'Then we are all for the short way,' cried Frank. 'Mount then, and
-away! There is no time to lose, if we do not want the whole Panama
-garrison at our heels.'
-
-In a few minutes we were all ambling on our borrowed steeds on the
-road towards Venta Cruz, silent and oppressed with thinking of our
-forlorn attempt, yet each desperate and resolved to do his best. So
-we continued till within a mile of the town, where the road entered
-the forest again. A very perilous pass it looked, and Frank called
-on us to draw rein. The road was but from ten to twelve feet wide,
-and on either side a dense wall of tangled boughs and vines, reaching
-high above our heads, as thick as any well-kept Kentish hedge. For
-in that land the growth of the woods is so fast and rank that were it
-not that men were always at work shredding and ridding the way, it
-would be altogether lost and overgrown in one year. This constant
-cutting had made the leafy walls on either hand as dense as I have
-said, so that a man could hardly push through them without hurt.
-
-Just as we drew rein I saw dimly, from where I rode in front with
-Frank, that our two Cimaroons had stopped about half a flight ahead
-of us. We drew near, and saw they were snuffing the air through
-their widely-distended nostrils like hounds.
-
-'Small shot in the wood!' they said, as we came to them.
-
-'Where?' says Frank. 'Can you see them?'
-
-'No,' said the elder Cimaroon; 'but we can smell their matches. It
-is sure the wood is full of them on either hand.'
-
-We could neither see nor smell anything, but doubted not it was as
-these strangely gifted men had said. The Spaniards had been too
-quick for us; they were ready. Clearly it was to be no Nombre de
-Dios affair again.
-
-'What is to be done?' said I.
-
-'Why, go through with it,' said Frank. 'Now, lads, the wood is full
-of harquebusiers in ambush; we must force a passage. Hold your fire
-till their first volley is spent. Then one old English salute, and
-at them at push of pike in the old fashion!'
-
-Our prisoner and the _recuas_ were now turned away, with strict
-charge that none should follow us on pain of death. The Cimaroons
-divided the burden of the silver amongst them, and once more we
-pressed on.
-
-'Ho! stand!' suddenly comes out of the darkness, and a Spanish
-captain glittering in brilliant harness steps into the road.
-
-'Ho!' returns Frank, as though the road were his own, 'stand and
-declare yourself!'
-
-'_Que gente?_' says the Spaniard, very proud.
-
-'English,' says Frank, blowing up the match of his pistol; 'what
-would you?'
-
-'Gentlemen Englishmen,' cries the Spaniard, 'it pains me to be so
-discourteous as to deny you passage this way. In the name of his
-most Catholic and Puissant Majesty the King of Spain, I bid you yield
-yourselves; and promise you, on the word and faith of a Castilian and
-a gentleman soldier, in that case to use you with all courtesy.'
-
-'Most worthy captain,' says Frank, 'it is utter grief to me that we
-are in too great haste to grant you this favour, and are forced to
-inform you, notwithstanding your courteous offer, that for the honour
-of her most High and Mighty Majesty the Queen of England, Defender of
-the Faith, we must have passage this way.'
-
-A sharp crack from Frank's pistol was the fitting conclusion to his
-speech, and I saw the Spaniard reel. Then there was a roar in front
-of us. Long tongues of flame leaped from the thickets ahead on
-either hand. A hot iron seemed to sear my leg. Frank clapped his
-hand to his thigh, and the man on the other side of me fell forward
-with a terrible cry. Thick and fast their shot whistled by. The
-Cimaroons had entirely disappeared, and we took what shelter we could.
-
-The narrow road was now full of choking sulphurous smoke. We could
-see nothing but here and there the leaping flash of a harquebuss or
-the glimmer of a match. Almost as suddenly as it had begun their
-fire slackened, and then a merry trill went up, shrill and clear,
-from Frank's whistle.
-
-We were all out in the road again in a minute. Bow-strings were
-singing, and small shot barking, as arrows and slugs went tearing
-into the dense smoke. Then we knew our silence had done its work,
-and brought the enemy rashly out of their cover. Shrieks, groans,
-curses, followed our discharge, and gave us courage to advance, which
-we did at a run through the choking smoke. Still we could not come
-to push of pike. They seemed to be retreating before us.
-
-'Where are the Cimaroons?' said I, as I ran by Frank's side.
-
-'I know not,' he said; 'God grant they have not deserted us.'
-
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when an unearthly yell arose
-behind us, and Pedro bounded past towards the town. In a moment the
-air was rent with the horrible screams of his people. Encouraged, as
-I think, by hearing us advance, they had issued from the cover, where
-their horror of gunpowder had driven them. Howsoever they had feared
-before, they were now most terrible to behold.
-
-Like incarnate fiends they bounded on before us, leaping, dancing,
-casting up their arms, and all the while yelling, '_Yó pehó! Yó
-pehó!_' in most evil sort, and singing unearthly spells, after the
-fashion of their own savage warfare. Their frenzy seemed to give
-them more than human power; and even as they ran they leaped so high
-as I never saw before, nor all the while did they cease to discharge
-their deadly arrows and awful war-cries.
-
-Whether it were witchcraft or not I cannot tell, but very soon we
-were all as mad as they, and ran so fast that before the Spaniards
-reached the town gate we overtook many of them. They tried to make a
-stand, but it was to no purpose. The Cimaroons burrowed into the
-thickets like snakes, and drew them forth by the heels, never ceasing
-to yell their rhythmic '_Yó pehó! Yó pehó!_' Half of the enemy we
-now saw were monks, who kicked and screamed most lustily till they
-were speared by the maddened Cimaroons.
-
-Still a few pikemen boldly held their ground with the captain; and in
-this struggle a few more of us were wounded. The Cimaroons fought
-like demons. One close by me was run through with a pike, whereupon,
-so mad was he, that he drew himself along the shaft till he could
-reach the Spaniard who held it, and then stabbed his enemy to the
-death.
-
-Such a sight of frantic, wanton daring I never saw. It seemed to
-strike terror into our enemy; for incontinently with a cry of horror
-they fled, and we leaped after them so fast that all entered the town
-together--sailors, Spaniards, friars, and Cimaroons, in one confused
-throng.
-
-We gave them no time to recover their senses, but hustled them clean
-into the monastery, where we locked them up. In a very short space
-the town was fairly in our hands, and all quiet. Guards were set at
-the gate where we had entered, and also at the bridge at the other
-end of the town, whereby we should have to pass out over the river to
-continue our way. Then we had leisure to look to our wounds, which,
-though many, were slight, seeing that the enemy had but powdered us
-with hail-shot. The man who first fell by me was the only one of the
-company sorely hurt, and he died very soon after.
-
-Our business in the town occupied us about an hour and a half.
-Amongst other merchandise we dealt in were above a thousand bulls and
-pardons which had newly come out of Rome. With these the mariners
-made more sport than was needful, yet the church and all other things
-ecclesiastic were respected.
-
-We found some women there, moreover, with new-born infants, who had
-come thither because no Spanish child may safely be born in Nombre de
-Dios by reason of its pestilent airs. These were terribly affrighted
-by our presence, and would not be content till the general went to
-them himself as soon as he had leisure, to show it was indeed Francis
-Drake who had taken the town, whereby they were forthwith comforted,
-knowing that in his hands they were safe, as indeed they were, even
-from the fury of the Cimaroons, who very faithfully kept their word
-to the general, and hurt no one after the fight was done.
-
-Our dealings, though not large, brought us no little comfort for the
-loss of our Treasurer, and it was more heavily laden than when we
-entered that we continued our way, after blocking the bridge to
-prevent pursuit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-Of the terrible march we had ere we regained our ships I will not
-speak. Our spirits were at the lowest ebb by reason of our failure,
-for what we had seen in the governor's cellars at Nombre de Dios had
-so turned our heads that we counted the plunder we had got as
-nothing. Moreover our general was in a desperate hurry to reach the
-ships before evil befell them, and we therefore marched so rapidly
-that we had no time or strength to get proper victuals, and were
-always half fasting. Our boots were worn to tatters, our feet cut
-and blistered, our wounds galled us, the mosquitoes tormented us, and
-beneath all, as I say, rankled our failure.
-
-Under such a load of trouble I think we should have sunk had it not
-been for Frank, who never ceased to cheer us with new plans for the
-making of our voyage. What bred most wonder in me was the order he
-took to lighten our pains. For if one complained of his worn boots
-or his wound, Frank would always complain louder, and cry plague on
-the stones, the boots, the gnats, and everything. I knew his wound
-was slight and his feet whole, so asked him the reason of his words.
-
-'Why,' says he, 'see you not that the poor lads, however bad they be,
-will take some grain of courage if they think there is one who is
-worse and yet can go on? and moreover, where captain and men share
-alike you are most sure to find yourself marching in company content.'
-
-Yet for all this many fainted by the way, and then the Cimaroons
-would cease their valiant bragging, which otherwise was unceasing
-since our capture of Vera Cruz, and bear such as could not walk
-between two of them very loving and cheerful for two miles or more at
-a spell.
-
-The poor Sergeant, the cause of all our woe, plodded on in silence at
-Harry's heels. He looked like a man who would never joy again, and
-by no means could I win him to speech.
-
-Seven days we toiled thus to the mouth of a river called by the
-Cimaroons Rio Tortugas, and hither to our great joy came the master,
-Ellis Hixom, to whom our captain had sent, and took us off to Fort
-Diego in the pinnace.
-
-There was great joy at our meeting in spite of our little plunder,
-since they had begun to fear we were destroyed. They said they
-hardly knew us for the same men, except the captain, so haggard and
-thin and burnt we were, to say no more of the tatters to which the
-brakes and stones had turned our clothes. Hunger and toil and grief
-had doubtless made great havoc with us, and the fire of that terrible
-sun had burnt us well-nigh black.
-
-My Señorita, to whom I went for comfort soon after I got to the
-ships, seemed quite shocked to see me.
-
-'Madre de Dios, Señor!' she cried, clasping her little hands in
-terror. 'How you are changed! Ah! and you are wounded. It is well
-you have come back to me to be made yourself again. Indeed I am glad
-you are come back.'
-
-She held out her hands in such frank welcome that I felt half healed
-already, and sat down as she bade me on her own cushions.
-
-'Indeed I am glad you are come back to us,' she said again.
-
-'Then did not Master Hixom treat you well?' I asked.
-
-'Ah, I hate him,' she said, knitting her dainty brows. 'He is a
-stock, a stone, a log! He kept us well, but I hate him.'
-
-I never knew why she was so hot against him, but I could only smile
-to think she must have tried her coaxing on him as she had on me, but
-with less success. He was a flinty Puritan from Plymouth with a wife
-and children, who would not have unbent, I think, had Princess Helen
-herself put up her lips to him. She begged me to come and be her
-gaoler again, and I left her with such hope as it was not hard to
-give.
-
-That evening as I sat with others in the general's bower, talking
-over what next was to be attempted, we were surprised by Sergeant
-Culverin saluting in the doorway.
-
-'I come, Captain Drake, by your leave,' says he, holding himself very
-stiff, 'to report myself for punishment.'
-
-'I shall give you none,' says Frank, but looked very stern at him,
-for he was ever slow to forget a fault. 'You have suffered enough
-already with your wound, and what of your fault is unpunished is
-wiped out by your valiant bearing before Venta Cruz.'
-
-For indeed he had done wonders there, and had gotten a sore
-pike-thrust in the arm, from which he had suffered great pain
-unmurmuring on our pitiful march.
-
-'By your leave, Captain Drake,' said he, when Frank finished, 'I
-crave you allot some punishment to me. It was a most grievous breach
-of the discipline of the wars, and I shall joy no more till it be
-atoned. Moreover it will be an evil example to the youth of your
-company, and like to breed much discontent and danger to our voyage
-if I go unpunished. Therefore, for the love of soldiership, I pray
-you omit not this just dealing with me. The Signor John Peter
-Pugliano always held----'
-
-'Peace, enough!' said Frank. 'It shall be as you say, so you will
-spare us your Italian's wisdom. I reverence your soldiership, and
-adjudge you the honourable estate of an hour on the hobby-horse.'
-
-A rail was soon set up by some of the mariners, who were nothing
-loath to be revenged on the old soldier. On this he was speedily set
-with his hands bound behind him, and a harquebuss hanging to each
-foot. There he sat stiff and upright, as though he were in the
-emperor's tilting ground again. He gave no heed to the jeers of
-younger sailors, but sat grimly on uncomplaining.
-
-As I passed him presently I could see the pain was as much as he
-could bear, weak as he was from hunger and his wound. Just then one
-threw a tuft of grass at him. Then he looked round fiercely, but he
-only bit his lip to keep in the angry burst that was on his tongue,
-and stared grimly in front of him again.
-
-Then two or three began to whisper it was a sin that such a tall
-fellow who took his punishment so well should be tormented for what
-was after all but too deep a pull at his flask. So they went amongst
-the others, and the jeering ceased. Then they fell to encouraging
-him and watching the sand-glass, till at last, seeing how stiff and
-grim he still sat, they went in a body to Frank and would not be
-content till they had leave to take him down, which at last they did,
-in spite of his angry protesting that he would sit his punishment out.
-
-So their past toils and grief were fast forgotten, and all talk was
-of what was to be attempted next. Some were for attacking the
-treasure frigates which were sure to be moving on the coast now the
-Plate Fleets were in, but others counted this but folly, seeing how
-strong and well manned with soldiers were the wafters that convoyed
-them. Others, amongst whom was Mr. Oxenham, were for gathering fresh
-victuals from the provision ships, which were always unprotected,
-that we might thereby recover our sick and get sufficient strength
-for another attempt by land, which now was not to be thought of,
-seeing that all the Main was alarmed and half our company sick.
-
-Pedro was very earnest for us to attempt Veragua, a rich town between
-Nombre de Dios and Nicaragua, where his former master, Señor Pezoro,
-had the richest gold mine in all the north side, whence he won daily
-above £200 worth of gold. All this he stored in a great treasure
-house, to which Pedro promised he could lead us undescried through
-the woods and make us masters of the untold treasure therein. Every
-Cimaroon on the Main would further our attempt, he said, because this
-Pezoro was known to be worse than a devil to his slaves, and hated
-more than any man in all the Indies.
-
-But our general was loath to undertake so long a march, though sorely
-tempted by the greatness of the prize. Our company was too much
-broken by wounds and sickness to venture so far, so it was concluded
-to send forth two pinnaces, which were all we could man, to try what
-could be done. Mr. Oxenham took the _Bear_ eastwards towards Tolu to
-gather victuals, as he had wished, while the general took the
-_Minion_ to ply towards the west, and have dealings, if it were
-possible, in the treasure trade, which we knew to be great at this
-time from Veragua and Nicaragua to the Fleet.
-
-As for me, I was far too sick with my wound to join either; but not
-being quite so spent as some, was able to take my old charge of the
-prisoners. Being little able to walk, I was almost entirely in the
-ship with the Spaniards. Indeed I had little duty or pleasure
-elsewhere. Hixom, our master, was again set over those that
-remained, and, since Harry, Frank, and Mr. Oxenham were away in the
-pinnaces, there was no one amongst the mariners with whom I cared to
-converse so much as the courtly old Scrivano and his friends.
-
-And why should I not confess the rest since I have unfolded so much?
-Whether I did wrong I cannot tell. I had abandoned the guide whom
-all my life I had followed, because, as I thought, he had only led me
-astray. It was hard to trust to anything again. Often I would play
-with Harry's rapier and think. I know not if the quick, hard life I
-had been leading was to blame, but it would not say me Ay or No!
-
-After all my recent toil and labour it was so pleasant, to have her
-at my side, to look at and talk to. Pleasant, too, it was to see how
-she was bent on winning me, whether for her father's sake to earn him
-favour at my hands, or for very wanton love of winning a new kind of
-conquest, I cannot tell; pleasant, too, to mark how lovingly she
-sought to ease my pain and beguile the lagging hours, how tenderly
-she dressed my wound and smoothed my pillow when she bade me sleep.
-What wonder, then, if I gave myself up to the sweet beguilement!
-What wonder if, when she had set me to rest and no one was by, I drew
-the pretty face to mine and our lips met! I know not, I say, how I
-shall be blamed. She was so sweet and gentle and kind; I was so weak
-and weary. It was all I had to give; it was the payment most
-grateful to her. Well! well! It is long past now for good or ill.
-If any has been so diseased as I in body and spirit and so sweetly
-tended, lying as I did all day in the murmur and savour of a tropic
-spring in the midst of those jewelled seas, let him judge me.
-
-There were some among my prisoners who looked on with little ease and
-twirled their fierce moustaches, but the worldly old Scrivano would
-not have it otherwise.
-
-'Let them be,' he would say; 'it will not last for ever. A friend at
-court is worth winning.'
-
-It was when she told me this that I first knew a sweet fear that all
-she did might not be done in wantonness or even for the prisoners'
-sakes. Till then I had thought it was only in their behoof she was
-kind, and I trod my flowery path with a light heart. Now I began to
-doubt we were come to where thorns were hidden beneath the blossoms
-by the way, but it was still too fair and pleasant for me to stop.
-In my weakness I said there was still time enough.
-
-So we continued till near the middle of March, when Mr. Oxenham
-returned in great heart with a smart frigate laden with a good store
-of maize and live hogs and hens, which greatly rejoiced us, since we
-were pining for fresh food. I was nevertheless not so glad to see
-him back as I had hoped, since now the general was away there was
-none to prevent him coming on board my ship every day, where he
-talked so gaily with my Señorita, to her manifest content, that I
-wished in my heart his voyage had been less fortunate.
-
-I was overjoyed when Frank came back, not only because it put an end
-to Mr. Oxenham's visits, but also for the news he brought. Off the
-Cabeças he had met with a frigate of Nicaragua, which he had
-lightened of a pretty store of gold and her Genoese pilot. This man,
-who but a week before was at Veragua, had assured our general that
-the whole coast was palsied with fear of him. So fast had he moved
-and so suddenly struck that it seemed, so the man said, nothing less
-than magical, and none knew where their dreaded enemy would next
-appear. The plain truth was that, eschewing armour after the manner
-of English mariners, we marched more quickly than the Spaniards ever
-thought possible, and this greatly increased their fears.
-
-So from Nicaragua to Carthagena they lay shivering in their beds,
-never knowing if they should sleep the night in peace. Our pilot was
-only too glad to join his fortunes to ours on promise that his right
-should be done him, and had led our captain into Veragua harbour,
-where lay a frigate laden with above a million in gold, not daring to
-venture forth. But by a new order of watch which they had taken, the
-pinnace was descried and the attempt abandoned, since there lay a
-still better chance in the Chagres river.
-
-The galleys that were to waft the gold fleet, the Genoese said, were
-laid up at Nombre de Dios to be fitted. Thus there was nothing to
-protect the gold frigates but land soldiers, with whom Frank doubted
-not he could deal, if he gathered all his whole men together, and to
-this end he was now returned to join Mr. Oxenham.
-
-The frigate which the _Lion_ had captured, being a very smart one,
-fell in well with Frank's purpose. She was speedily careened, new
-tallowed, and launched again, as stout a man-of-war as any on the
-coast. All the best of our ordnance was set aboard of her, and as
-soon as Easter was past and the men refreshed Frank set sail with her
-and the _Bear_ for the Rio Chagres.
-
-Being willing to break from the dalliance in which I lived, I had
-craved to be taken with them, for I was fast mending since fresh meat
-had grown abundant. But Frank would not hear of it, and once more I
-was left alone with my prisoners, of which in my heart I fear I was
-glad.
-
-Sweet indeed were the days that followed. Every hour my strength
-seemed to grow, and since there was nothing to do after I had made my
-rounds amongst the sick, I wandered with my Señorita along the shore
-or in the woods wellnigh the livelong day, and was never weary. Yet
-what we spoke of I cannot tell. I can hardly recall a phrase she
-uttered, yet she chattered like the golden brook, where we loved best
-to sit, and I listened more willing and untiring than ever I did to
-the wisest voices of the ancients.
-
-Of herself and of me it seems to me now was all her talk, the empty
-prattle of a child; yet I sat and watched her ripe face and wanted no
-more. Ours was the life of the lazy pelicans and the scarlet cranes,
-and all the other shore fowl that breathed around us that tingling
-tropic life, and crowned with their presence the enchanting beauty of
-the scene.
-
-Once, and only once, I remember she wandered to deeper things. She
-spoke of the faith of her people, and how she longed sometimes to be
-a nun, and have done with love and be good again.
-
-'Are you a heretic?' she then said, suddenly looking at me very
-wistfully.
-
-'I trust not,' I said, smiling, for it seemed a strangely merry thing
-to me to see her serious.
-
-'Why do you laugh?' she said, pouting a little. 'My Padre says all
-Englishmen are Lutheran heretics and will go to torment. How can you
-laugh at that? It makes me very sad to think of you there, and to
-think I shall not find you in heaven when I come. Why will you be a
-heretic and pray to the devil?'
-
-'Ah, gentle Señorita,' I answered, 'never think of those things.
-Your pretty head must not wear such ugly thoughts. Forget it now; go
-and crown yourself with flowers as you did yesterday, and I will
-worship a true goddess and no devil, though something of a witch. So
-you shall see I am a true believer in your loveliness and no heretic.
-What would you more?'
-
-'Witch or not,' she answered, rising with a smile, 'I have tamed your
-tongue, my faithful worshipper, and brought it to a most gentle
-pacing; I may not choose but be carried now whithersoever it will
-amble with me.'
-
-''Twas but a sorry jade,' I said, as she rose and gathered some
-bright flowers that seemed to bend down to kiss her hand. 'Yet since
-you took the rein I think it can never stumble, nor ever falter or
-grow dull so long as it feels the gentle spurring of your eye.'
-
-'Save us now, worshipper, from your sharp and stinging comparisons,'
-she said, as she turned on me radiantly, her pliant figure entwined
-with a tender vine of rose-coloured flowers, and her glossy hair
-crowned with glowing blossoms, 'and send your goddess a daintier
-offering!'
-
-'Nay, goddess,' said I, 'it was a bright and glittering offering
-enough till your radiance put it out of countenance.'
-
-'Then must you offer me something brighter still,' she said, as she
-sat herself upon a great rock half hidden in flowers. 'See, your
-goddess is enthroned. To your knees, errant worshipper; I will
-endure no heretical postures.'
-
-So I knelt before her and offered her such dainty sweetmeat phrases
-as every pretty woman loves, so they be compounded to her taste and
-served so that she may taste without offence.
-
-In such wise my pretty plaything and I played together till the sun
-began to sink and I returned to my duties, wondering idly, as the
-wise Sieur de Montaigne tells us in his _Apology for Raymond Sebond_
-he did of his cat, whether she played with me or I with her; and
-wondering, too, still more to think how the magic of the west, or
-warfare, or whatsoever else it might be, had changed me. It was
-barely a year ago since I was alone with another woman, the first I
-ever knew. How different it was then, and yet perhaps how like, if
-we but knew the springs of our hearts! But enough of that! Let me
-not speak of those two with one breath.
-
-I seemed another man as I looked backward. Yet was there no miracle.
-For surely it is no more than natural that, when a man has burst the
-bonds in which he blindly bound down and tormented his soul, it
-should grow quickly to its proper shape if it finds itself planted in
-soil that is apt to its true nature.
-
-All too soon, as we thought, and yet perhaps not soon enough, Frank
-came back with the frigate and the pinnace in company with a goodly
-bark.
-
-'A fat prize at last,' I cried, as he rowed up to the ship, 'and I
-not there to see. Is our voyage made?'
-
-'Not yet,' said Frank, 'and yet I hope not far from it. Yonder is no
-prize, but a Frenchman with seventy good Huguenots aboard, whom we
-have admitted to our company. Let me present to you her captain,
-most worthy Monsieur Tetú.'
-
-He bowed with great ceremony and much spreading abroad of his hands,
-and I asked if he had any news from Europe, at which to my surprise
-he seemed very pained.
-
-'Yes,' broke in Frank, 'he has news. Would God he had not!'
-
-'Is the Queen married then?' I asked quickly, for it was always the
-first inquiry of strangers in those shifting times.
-
-'No!' answered Frank, 'nor like to be, it seems. Be pleased,
-Monsieur, to tell Mr. Festing what tidings you bring.'
-
-And with that the little French captain, with excited gesture and
-kindling eyes, poured into my scorched ears the black and awful tale
-of the Massacre of Paris on St. Bartholomew's day, on the occasion of
-the King of Navarre's marriage with the Princess Margaret. We could
-none of us speak for a while when he ended the relation of that most
-foul and detestable crime. I could only feel leap up in my heart a
-mad longing, like Frank's, to be revenged, and that speedily. It
-seemed to revive in me all my old detestation of the Papists, and the
-whole body of them, innocent and guilty alike, seemed again a cursed
-thing in my eyes.
-
-Many a better man than I was seized with the same mad rage when he
-knew that tale. How could we be otherwise? Yet I contained myself
-enough to express my pity to the French captain, who seemed well-nigh
-broken-hearted at the blot upon his country's fame.
-
-'Truly, Mr. Festing, it is hard to bear,' he said, with a bitterness
-that cut me to the heart. 'I never thought to see the day when I
-could say that those Frenchmen were happiest who were farthest from
-France. That is why I have sailed hither and turned my back on her.
-I wash my hands of her. She is France no longer, but rather Frenzy,
-and all Gaul is gall indeed.'
-
-His attempt at pleasantry touched me very deeply, for I knew how
-bitterly he felt the loss of his country, and I tried some apology.
-
-'You are kind, Mr. Festing,' he said, taking my hand very warmly,
-after the manner of his country. 'It is not France--my pure, simple,
-single-hearted France--that has done this. It is Italian practices
-that have over-mastered French simplicity. Truly, sir, Italy is an
-accursed land, that curses all it touches with its noisome humours.'
-
-He seemed a brave heart, and was a seaman in all his inches. For my
-part I conceived a great liking for him, though I think Frank would
-have been glad enough to be well rid of him and his company.
-
-'Yet I could not say him nay,' he said to me, 'when I saw his poor
-fellows more than half starved. Moreover he was so mighty civil, and
-said that five weeks ago he had heard of us and of our great
-dealings, as he pleased to put it, and ever since he had been
-seeking, desiring nothing so much as to meet with the gentlemen who
-had set the whole Spanish Main in a tremble. I was bound to relieve
-him with our spare victuals, and so was obliged to abandon our
-attempt on the Chagres river.'
-
-'And then you agreed to venture in company?' said I.
-
-'Yes,' said he. 'Yet I will not say it was without some jealousy and
-mistrust, for all his civility. Yet, seeing how earnest he was to be
-our friend, and how strong to hurt us if he were our enemy, we
-concluded to take him and twenty of his company and venture equally.'
-
-'And is it man for man and ton for ton again?' I asked.
-
-'No, lad, no,' answered Frank. 'That would never do. As I told our
-Monsieur, though his company was seventy and mine now but thirty-one,
-mine must weigh more than his, since in our purposed play the
-principal actors were not numbers of men, but rather their judgment
-and knowledge; to which arguments he agreed with the best grace he
-could. The more so as I showed him his great tonnage was no good in
-our present case.'
-
-'Then are we not to attempt the Chagres fleet?' said I.
-
-'No,' he answered; 'that is where they are looking for us. We must
-attempt the place where they last expect us.'
-
-'And where is that?' said I.
-
-'Where but knocking at the back door of Nombre de Dios,' he answered,
-laughing to see my surprise at this his wildest plan of all.
-
-'Now save you, Frank,' said I, 'from a very mid-summer madness! You
-will never get in there again, or at least get out again if you do.'
-
-'Oh,' says he, ''tis not so mad as that. We have no cause to go in.
-We will get the gold outside. The great _recuas_ are passing by road
-now the whole way. What is easier with our present help than to deal
-with one of them when it is all but home, and thinks all danger is
-over? Pedro will lead us thither, into the Rio Francisco and then a
-little march. I have already sent for the Cimaroons. Many times,
-Jasper, we have struck amiss. God has shown the Spaniards great
-mercy; yet now, I think, since He has sent us this French company,
-with tidings of this last most bloody dealing of the Italian priest
-against His faithful people of Paris, it is surely His will that we
-shall entreat these idolaters according to their iniquity; and so by
-His grace we will, and our voyage be made.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-In six days all was ready, and our Frenchmen sufficiently refreshed
-from the nearest magazines to undergo the labour of our desperate
-attempt. When the hour was come I went to take leave of my Señorita.
-
-'Sweet goddess!' said I, for she would not be otherwise named by me,
-'your faithful worshipper comes to crave your leave to depart.'
-
-'Madre de Dios!' she said, looking at me with wide, frightened eyes.
-'What new wild venture is this? When will this devil cease to
-torment my people and set us free?'
-
-'Does my goddess then so long to change her paradise?' I asked.
-
-'Yes,' she answered petulantly, 'for her worshipper loves her not and
-is faithless, or he would be content to stay here in paradise. But
-no,' she went on, starting suddenly up, 'you shall not go. I forbid
-it. You will be killed, and I--I shall be left with these rough men.
-You must stay and worship me.'
-
-'Nay, let me go and worship you,' said I. 'Lip-service is unworthy
-to offer at your shrine; I will go and bring you better offerings
-than that, so you will give me leave.'
-
-With such jesting talk I tried to win her free consent, that we might
-not mar the pleasant comedy we played. Still she would not give it,
-and I thought she but held it back in her wanton way, wishing for
-more. But at last her face quite altered, and she turned quickly on
-me.
-
-'Hold! hold!' she said. 'Your tongue has a devil. You and your
-captain are devils together. Go to him; but--oh, Gasparo, I have
-played too long--I have played till play has grown to earnest. Go!
-but come back to play no more. Come back to love me; or, Gasparo,'
-she continued, sinking her voice to an awe-hushed whisper, 'I know
-the devil will come into my heart, too, and drive me to do I know not
-what.'
-
-Just then Frank's whistle sounded a shrill call to embark. I could
-not think what to say or do. I bent over her to snatch a hasty kiss
-and go, since it was so we always parted now, but she shrank away.
-
-'No!' she said; 'the play is done. Our lips shall meet no more till
-they meet in earnest, till they meet in love. Go now, and the Holy
-Mother be with you!'
-
-An hour afterwards I was sailing merrily onwards, bearing room for
-the Cabeças. 'Our fleet was made up of the new-tallowed frigate and
-two pinnaces. In them were fifteen English, twenty French, and our
-Cimaroons; and who amongst them all was so tormented with his crowded
-thoughts as I, or rejoiced so much in the perilous nature of our
-enterprise?
-
-What would have happened to me and her I cannot dare to think, had it
-not been that my thoughts were occupied more and more fully each mile
-we sailed with the wild excitement of our new, most daring
-enterprise. By the time we had passed the Cabeças, where we left the
-frigate with a mixed guard, and were sailing with the pinnaces aloof
-the shore towards the Rio Francisco, all I had left behind was
-wellnigh lost in what was to come.
-
-Arrived at the river, which is but five leagues by sea from Nombre de
-Dios, we landed very quietly and dismissed the pinnaces, charging
-those that had guard of them to return to the Cabeças and be in the
-river again without fail in four days, which time, Pedro deemed, was
-all that we should want, since now the _recuas_ were coming daily
-from Panama, and the road by Nombre de Dios was not above seven
-leagues from the spot where we landed.
-
-So we started through the dense forest once more in our old order,
-yet in better heart than ever, in spite of our miscarriages. For now
-we knew what the danger was and feared it less. Besides, there was
-not one of us in whose heart did not burn a mad desire for revenge.
-The flame of anger which the news from Paris had kindled in all the
-company consumed every other thought, and none cared what came of him
-so long as he made shift to strike one good blow in return.
-
-A great part of our company had sailed under the Prince of Condé's
-commission in the old days in the narrow seas, and some even had
-served in French ships, whereby a sort of brotherhood had grown up
-between our mariners and the Huguenots--a kindliness which those now
-with us did not a little to keep warm by the very cheerful spirits
-with which they infected us. During all the voyage from Fort Diego
-they had made great light of our perils, and protested a very great
-readiness for the attempt. Indeed we found their courage very hot,
-out of their joy, as they ceased not to tell us, at marching under
-our captain, of whom they had heard so much since they had been on
-the coast, no less than from the natural disposition of their
-countrymen for attack, and all services where spirit is of more
-account than endurance.
-
-It was no small hardship to them to hold their peace, and our method
-of silent and catlike marching, in which, by use, we were now almost
-as skilful as the Cimaroons, was a great marvel to them, as was the
-discipline by which it was maintained to their captain. By no means
-could they come to the same stillness as we, whereat the Cimaroons
-conceived a great scorn of them, and would give no heed or trust to
-them. In answer the Frenchmen fell into a great distrust of them, as
-we burrowed deeper and deeper into the tangled forest and mazy
-ravines, protesting that it was madness to go on so, since, should
-the negroes prove false, we could never find the pinnaces again.
-
-This was true enough; but Frank gave them to understand such fears
-were groundless and must not be broached, since we had made long
-trial of the negroes' constancy, and if they feared that they should
-never have come. Moreover, he took such sharp order with them, by
-Monsieur Tetú's consent and furtherance, to have silence observed
-that in a very short space they were as firmly under his spell as any
-of us, and things went well again.
-
-Having come thus within a mile of the road on the second evening, we
-chose a place where we might lie and refresh ourselves all night,
-since the _recuas_ did not reach Nombre de Dios till morning. This
-was a perilous time for us, for the Frenchmen, being new to the
-trade, were, for the most part, too excited to sleep.
-
-Nor can I blame them, for we lay so near to that great town, wherein
-were now enough soldiers to have eaten our whole company at a
-sitting, that we could hear plainly what was passing there. As we
-lay in the brakes, still as mice, we could mark the lazy challenge of
-the watch and the noisy laughter of the guard at their cups, mingling
-with the busy din of the carpenters on the fleet. They had just
-begun work; for, because of the great heat, they do not work in the
-day, and all night long there came up from the harbour the sounds of
-saw, and axe, and hammer, as they wrought busily to get the fleet
-ready for sea.
-
-Soon after we came thither two _recuas_ passed out of the Panama gate
-and toiled up the hill to us with such a monstrous clanging of bells
-that we had much ado to keep the Frenchmen quiet, so moved were they
-at the sound. Soon they passed. We could hear their music die away
-towards the south, and then on that side all was still, and we fell
-to listening to the labour in the harbour again.
-
-Hour by hour the still night wore on. The Englishmen about me fell
-asleep, as well as some of the French, though I grieved to see the
-wine-flasks passing about amongst others more than gave hope of cool
-heads in the morning.
-
-Harry, who lay by my side, was one of the first to compose himself to
-rest. I saw him take out a little picture from his breast. I knew
-too well what it was. He kissed it lovingly, and then quietly
-stretched himself out and lay quite still. The Sergeant slept at his
-feet. Harry had craved leave for him to come and retrieve his
-reputation, saying well he was the least likely of all the company to
-get us descried again.
-
-It was in the first gray of the morning that I awoke, with Harry's
-hand on my shoulder and the faint sound of bells in my ears. His
-face was radiant, and he held up his finger to bid me listen. Close
-by lay a Cimaroon with his head uplifted, like a dog when he suddenly
-hears a strange tread at hand. His eyes were wide open, glistening
-and bloodshot, and his big white teeth gleaming as he listened
-intently. I could see he was greatly excited, and so was I to watch
-him. Suddenly he turned to me as though satisfied.
-
-'What is it?' I whispered.
-
-'The biggest luck ever men done got,' he answered. 'Hark! hark!'
-
-'Yes,' said I; 'I can hear it is a _recua_ from Panama, and a big one
-by the sound.'
-
-'A _recua_!' he answered scornfully. 'It is one, two, three
-_recuas_! Now you will have more gold and silver than all of us can
-carry away!'
-
-'And more soldiers than we can drive away perhaps,' whispered Harry;
-'but we must strike all the lustier, that is all.'
-
-Our talk was cut short by the word being passed that we should creep
-on to the edge of the road, which we did very quiet and quickly,
-being divided into two bands, under the general and Mr. Oxenham, as
-before, that we might strike head and tail again.
-
-By the time we were in our places I could not doubt that what the
-Cimaroon had said was right. The sounds from the town were hushed as
-the dawn brightened, and I could plainly hear such a clanging of
-bells as told me clearly there must be many more mules than I had
-ever heard together before.
-
-Nearer and nearer they drew; and the louder waxed the deep-toned
-music, so sweet in our ears, the quieter were we. Not a sign was
-there to tell of our presence, save now and again the dull snap of a
-bow being bent, or the low sound of breath as the matches of our
-small-shot men were blown up, or a gentle rustle of the brakes as a
-young hand moved nervously.
-
-Everything was at last drowned in the clash of the bells. Now they
-had quite passed Mr. Oxenham's party in the rear. Now the clank of
-arms was abreast of us. I saw Frank's whistle at his lips, once more
-its piercing note split the air, and we were all on our feet rushing
-down into the road, shouting, 'Drake! Drake!' like madmen.
-
-As I leapt down into it I could see a sight that made my heart bound.
-Some three hundred mules, laden with little leather bags, and all
-tied tail to tail, stretched along the road. In front glittered the
-morions and corselets of some score of soldiers, and at different
-points in the line and in the far rear, where our men were already
-engaged, were more. In front of all rode two or three officers in
-splendid armour.
-
-But there was no time to see more. In a moment I had discharged my
-pistol, and was hand to hand at it with the foot. Harry was by my
-side at like work, and I could see the Sergeant, sword in hand,
-making for one of the officers.
-
-At our first onset they fell back, being quite unprepared and
-dismayed with our shot and arrows. Half of them carried their
-morions in their hands, and none had their matches ready. So we were
-left to stop the mules, which all lay down quietly as before, but it
-was only a short respite.
-
-The balls and hail-shot were soon flying about our ears up the narrow
-road. Poor Captain Tetú rushed most valiantly upon them, sword in
-band, but was doubled up in the road before he came to his distance.
-For a while it was desperate work. In a confused mass we fought and
-struggled together, and the woods re-echoed with the explosions of
-the small shot and the frantic cries of 'Drake! Drake!' and
-'Santiago! Santiago!'
-
-I was hand to hand again with a soldier, who gave me stiff work, when
-I heard the plunging of a horse and the whistle of a blade behind me.
-I made sure my end had come, and turned to hear a thundering shout of
-'Drake,' and see Sergeant Culverin dash by into the thick of the foot.
-
-He seemed a new man. As he passed he slashed at my opponent and set
-me free. I could not even then but admire his splendid management of
-his frantic horse in the press. Hewing and slashing, he made
-straight for a mounted officer, who was fighting like a lion.
-Involuntarily I paused to watch and get my breath. Straight at him
-the Sergeant rode, and with a sudden check of the bit, made his
-stolen charger rear right up against the Spaniard, at his rein hand,
-so that he was wholly guarded from the officer's blade. Then as the
-horse descended the Sergeant's heavy 'schiavona' rang upon the
-Spaniard's morion. The officer reeled in his saddle, his sword
-dropped, and his horse turned and galloped madly out of the press
-towards the town.
-
-The old riding-master had been too much for the cavalier's skill.
-The victory of our horse seemed to paralyse the foot. Resistance
-ceased. They only thought of escape. Down the road, into the woods,
-anywhere, they fled to avoid us. 'Yó pehó! yó pehó!' seemed once
-more to people the air with fiends, as the leaping, yelling Cimaroons
-danced after them, almost as fast as the Sergeant rode.
-
-How far he would have continued his pursuit in the midst of his
-diabolic company I cannot tell, for Frank's shrill whistle called all
-back. Mr. Oxenham's work was done as soon as ours, for the Spaniards
-in the rear, having no officer to encourage them, were soon persuaded
-to leave the mules in his care. So that now all hands were wanted
-for the heaviest part of the task, which was to get our plunder into
-the forest.
-
-Like children we went at it, half-mad with joy over our extraordinary
-good fortune. After all our toil and all our failures we had
-succeeded at last, and that beyond all our hopes. We found our prize
-was one _recua_ of fifty mules and two of seventy. Every mule
-carried three hundred pounds' weight of silver, making in all some
-twenty-five tons, besides such store of jewels and yellow bars and
-quoits as made us have no eyes for the baser metal.
-
-'All hands now,' sang out Frank, 'to ease the mules, which must be
-sore weary, and yarely now! or the Spaniards will be taking pains to
-stay us doing the poor animals this kindness. And, Sergeant,' he
-said, as Culverin reined up, 'our horse shall go to the front to give
-us advertisement of their coming, that we may prepare a salutation
-for them.'
-
-'An honourable service, Captain Drake,' said the Sergeant, beaming
-with delight, 'for which I crave leave to thank you.'
-
-'Nay, Sergeant,' laughed Frank, 'it is yours of right. I marked how
-you took the weather of the cavalier. I never brought up to windward
-better myself. Away now, for we must work.'
-
-And indeed there was need. In spite of the huge loads the Cimaroons
-could carry, it was no light or speedy labour we had, especially
-since some were hurt. Yet the only sore wound we had was the French
-captain's, who was so grievously struck with hail-shot in the belly
-that he could not walk, in spite of most valiant endeavours.
-
-The whole time we worked we could hear the turmoil our visit had
-caused in the town. Trumpets were braying and drums beating up and
-down, as though the devil had broken loose, as perhaps they thought
-he had. We could not doubt that the soldiers we had relieved had
-given, after the manner of Spaniards, so monstrous and boasting an
-account of our numbers that the whole garrison was making ready to
-visit us.
-
-Indeed, as our last mule was eased, the Sergeant came galloping in to
-bring news of a mighty preparation of horse and foot on the march out
-of the Plaza, as he guessed by the notes of their trumpets. This
-great preparation was our saving instead of our undoing, for by the
-time the enemy's horse and foot reached the _recuas_ the foremost of
-us were already far in the woods, intent on burying some of our
-silver, which was over and above what we could carry. Being thus
-busy we could not receive them, and since they had no mind to follow
-us through the forest, we could not choose but disappoint them in
-their intention of saluting us.
-
-Some fifteen tons we buried, partly under fallen trees, partly in the
-bed of a river, and partly in the holes of land-crabs, whereof we
-found a colony, and begged of them this hospitality; and so, with
-some ten tons of silver and all the gold and jewels, we went on our
-way, the Cimaroons bearing loads which were a marvel to us all how
-they did not break their backs.
-
-At a fitting place the Cimaroons made a little house for the French
-captain, for by no means could he be persuaded to cumber us, so that
-we should carry less of the treasure. He stoutly protested that
-nothing but a rest would save his life. So, being unable to move him
-from his valiant resolve, we were compelled against our wills to
-leave him in charge of two of his men, who vowed they would not
-desert their captain while there was a spark of life left in him.
-
-We had not gone far when the Frenchmen began to cry out that one of
-their number was missing, and were for going back, thinking him to be
-lying wounded on the road. Upon this our captain made searching
-examination to find out how it should be, which he soon did from a
-Cimaroon.
-
-'I done see him,' said the negro. 'He done got too much pillage and
-too much wine, so he done go on before in a hurry to get to the
-ships. I think he done lost his way.'
-
-This indeed was true, as we had occasion afterwards to know. Our
-captain was angry at it, and would not stay longer, being in a great
-hurry to get to the pinnaces in the Rio Francisco before they were
-discovered by the Spaniards, as he doubted not they would endeavour,
-having been so outwitted by us.
-
-So we toiled on under our loads, through, a terrible tempest of rain
-and wind which overtook us, and made our march none the easier by
-reason of the swollen torrents and mire. Yet if we had heavy loads
-we had light hearts, and comforted ourselves with a hundred jests at
-our luck, no less than with a speedy hope of reaching our pinnaces.
-
-It was early on the second day that we came to the river, and all
-quickened their pace to be among the first to tell their comrades the
-news. Yet were our pains thrown away; for when we had passed out of
-the forest and reached the rendezvous not a sign of the pinnaces was
-to be seen, only the river rolling down in double volume, brown and
-swollen from the rain.
-
-'Where can they be?' said I to Frank.
-
-'Nay, lad, who can tell?' he said, looking very grave. 'Unless,' he
-added more cheerfully, 'the tempest has delayed them. The wind was
-westerly. Let us go and have a look out to sea. Maybe they are even
-now at hand.'
-
-In great anxiety we hurried to a place whence a great part of the
-coast could be descried, and the rest who were not too weary, seeing
-what the general did, followed. Eagerly, as the sea opened out
-before us, we scanned its glittering surface towards the Cabeças,
-whence our pinnaces were to come, and there, to our horror, we saw
-rowing, as though from the very spot, seven Spanish pinnaces, crammed
-with men in glittering harness!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-Certain men, whom misfortune and loss of riches have driven to seek
-comfort in philosophy, have devoured much paper and spilled an
-infinity of ink in dispraise of gold and silver, railing at those
-metals with a plentiful store of scornful epithets, to show their
-baseness and want of true value.
-
-Had any such been with us now they would have found a very plausible
-argument for their conclusions. Rolling in gold and silver, we were
-destitute; though oppressed with wealth, we were poorer than church
-mice. Willingly we would have given all we had, and more, for one
-smart, well-furnished frigate in the road.
-
-After the discovery of our forlorn state many were so moved that they
-cast away their gold, and, losing all hope of escape, gave themselves
-up to despair; and not without excuse. For we could not doubt but
-that our pinnaces had been taken, and that our stronghold at Fort
-Diego would be revealed by the torture of prisoners. Thus all hope
-of ever getting back to our homes was gone; and the greater part of
-the company, losing all heart, began to murmur and complain very
-bitterly against the captains who had brought them to such a pass. I
-can say no more of the depth to which our spirits sank, or the misery
-of that hour, than that it was one of those times when Frank Drake's
-nature rose to its greatest height. He leaped upon a log, and with
-his clear, cheerful voice addressed them without a note of fear or
-misgiving, where no one else could discern the smallest ray of
-encouragement or the forlornest hope of safety.
-
-'Shame on you! shame!' he cried. 'What faint-heartedness is this?
-If you miscarry, so do I. You venture no further than I. And is
-this a time to wail and fear? If it be, then is it also a time to
-hasten to prevent what we fear. If the enemy have prevailed against
-our pinnaces, which God forbid, yet all is not lost. Only half their
-work is done. They must have time to search and examine their
-prisoners as to where our strength lies; and then they will want some
-time to form their resolution, and quarrel who is to command. Ah!
-you know not Spaniards. Then they will want time to order a fleet
-twice or thrice as large as needful; item, time to come to our ships;
-item, time to resolve upon their method of attack; item, time to find
-stomach to deliver it. And before all this will be discharged we can
-get to our ships, if you will so resolve, like the men that you have
-at divers times shown yourselves.'
-
-'But how? how?' they cried, as he paused.
-
-'Why, now you speak like men,' he said, 'and give a captain heart to
-save you. By land, I think, we cannot come to them, though our Pedro
-would have us so try. It is sixteen days' journey thither, and
-before that the Spaniards will have struck. Yet by sea we may. See
-you those trees God has sent down the river for you by last night's
-storm? Of those we can make a raft; and four of us sail aloof the
-shore and call the ships hither. Of those four I shall be one; who
-will be the others?'
-
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when Harry had shouted 'I!'
-and then followed a clamour of 'I's' in English, French, and Spanish,
-as half the whites and all the blacks offered themselves when they
-understood what our captain's words should mean. Finally he chose
-Harry, as having spoken first, and two Frenchmen, who were great
-swimmers, because our fellow-venturers boldly claimed, as of right, a
-half-share in every danger as well as in all plunder.
-
-So from despair our captain's resolute words, so cheerfully spoken,
-raised them all in a short space to a lively hope; and all hands set
-eagerly to work to bind together some of the trees which the swollen
-river had brought down.
-
-Meanwhile, more grieved than I can say to think that Harry was going
-to what seemed almost certain death, in spite of what Frank had said,
-I went to him to try and dissuade him from his purpose.
-
-'Tush!' said he, 'what is there to fear?'
-
-'Nothing for you to fear, I know well,' I answered; 'it is not that.
-It is what I fear. I have a most evil foreboding that if you go on
-this venture we shall never see you again.'
-
-'Well, and what matter?' he laughed; 'a man must die once.'
-
-'Yes,' said I, 'but he need not rot to death in a Spanish prison, or
-die before his time. The Spanish shallops will be scouring all the
-coast, and must of a certainty pick you up like half-drowned rats ere
-ever you reach the Cabeças. Why should you do this when there is no
-need--you who of us all have most to live for?'
-
-'And what have I to live for,' he answered, with clouding brow, 'that
-others have not?'
-
-'You know! you know!' I said. 'Give me not the pain or shame of
-saying what. Nay, hear me then,' I went on, as I saw a bitter reply
-rising to his lips; and then, determined to leave no means untried to
-preserve him to the woman I had so cruelly wronged, I told him how I
-had gone back to Ashtead after that terrible night; how I had seen
-through the window his dear wife kissing his letter and weeping over
-his child; how I had marked a hundred signs whereby I knew her love
-for him was only the more pure and ardent for the trial it had
-undergone.
-
-God be praised! if it was He that put the burning words in my mouth
-with which I told my tale and pleaded my cause. Long had I kept it
-pent up in my heart, for want of courage to tell him, as well as for
-fear of increasing his grief and his hate for me; and now it flowed
-with the full strength of the gathered flood which his long coldness
-had frozen up in me.
-
-What joy was in my heart I cannot tell in words when, ere I had done,
-he seized my hand in his manly way and said, 'Have your will,
-brother! Go in my place. If we ever meet again we shall be brothers
-indeed once more, and brothers we should never have ceased to be had
-I known you as I should. Let what I do be a token to you. I know
-the danger of this service as well as you, and never did I think for
-any man I could turn back from such an attempt when I had offered
-myself and been chosen. To you, brother, and her, I sacrifice thus
-my honour in token of how high beyond all words I value this love you
-have both given me, who deserve it so little.'
-
-Bright shone the sun in my heart, bright as the mid-day fire over our
-heads, as to the music of a hearty cheer we dropped down the river in
-our frail bark. Frank was steering her with a rude oar which had
-been shaped from a young tree, the two Frenchmen stood by with poles
-in case of need, and I managed the biscuit-bag whereof we had made
-our sail.
-
-The Cimaroons had bitterly lamented not coming with us, but them
-Frank would have stay to succour those who remained, since there we
-had greatest need of them.
-
-'No,' he had said; 'stay here for a little while to conduct my
-company by land if I return not. Yet, if it please God that I shall
-once put foot in safety aboard my frigate, I will, God willing, get
-you all aboard, in despite of all the Spaniards in the Indies.'
-
-With this courageous speech he left the whole company in good heart,
-because they knew of a surety, since he had so passed his word, that
-if they were lost it would not be for want of the last effort of the
-man who best in all the world knew how to save them.
-
-Our voyage was evil enough to have damped any spirits less lifted
-with joy than mine, or less constant than Frank's. The whole time we
-were up to our waists in water as we sat, and as soon as we reached
-the open sea we found the swell so big that each wave surged up to
-our necks, and we had much ado to hold on. Moreover the sun so
-burned down upon us, all unprotected as we were, that what with the
-salt water and the scorching, we soon had little skin left that was
-not all blisters.
-
-Yet a very smart breeze was blowing from the westwards, so that we
-made good progress towards the Cabeças, and so kept up our spirits.
-It was as the sun was getting low that Frank suddenly cried to me,
-'Look! look! Jasper, ahead there off the point!'
-
-I looked where he pointed and saw two large pinnaces struggling to
-weather the headland with oars against the freshening breeze.
-
-'What shall we do?' said I. 'We must drive. We cannot stop. How
-shall we avoid them?'
-
-'Avoid them!' said Frank, with a merry laugh. 'Why, lad, they are
-our own, and if we can but make them see, we are saved.'
-
-'Yet perhaps they are prizes to Spaniards,' suggested one of the
-Frenchmen, 'and are manned by Spaniards.'
-
-'No, monsieur, no,' said Frank; 'you never saw Spaniards row like
-that. See how they labour, and yet I think they make no head. Pray
-God they be not cast away on the point!'
-
-Indeed as we drew nearer there seemed no small danger of this. The
-wind was shifting more and more on to the land as it freshened, and
-we could see they made a lot of leeway.
-
-'They will never do it,' said Frank; 'they are too short of hands.
-It is hard to be so near safety, yet so far.'
-
-Even as he spoke we saw them cease rowing and fall slowly under the
-lee of the point. In a few minutes they were out of sight, and we
-blankly confessed to ourselves that they must have resolved to ride
-out the rising gale and the night in the still water behind the point.
-
-It was a bitter disappointment to us, and our new-found joy at
-finding our pinnaces were still safe gave way to a new-found grief.
-So intent had we been in watching them that we had not noticed how
-the shifting wind was driving us a-land. Straight ahead of us was
-the dark forest-clad point against which the surf was booming and
-spouting sheets of white spray. It was plain we could never weather
-it, and that if we continued as we were we must almost certainly be
-dashed to pieces in the foaming breakers.
-
-Eagerly I watched, and tried to persuade myself our raft was bearing
-better room. Every tilt which the waves gave her I tried to fancy
-was a change of course, but still we drifted to leeward in spite of
-the rapid headway we made before the rising gale. All at once, as I
-watched, our head swung round to leeward and all chance was gone. I
-looked to see the cause and saw Frank very calm and stern with the
-helm hard up.
-
-'Now, if ever,' said he; 'pray God to help us. Nay, look not scared,
-Jasper. It is our only chance. We cannot weather the point, and all
-that is left is to try and beach the raft this side, and then, if we
-land alive and whole, make about the point to the pinnaces afoot.
-All which we can well do, if it please God to send us a big wave and
-a pleasant beach.'
-
-It was indeed a time for prayer. Soon close ahead we could see the
-breakers rolling in upon the shore rank after rank, a wilderness of
-boiling foam. I saw the two Frenchmen tighten their belts for the
-coming struggle. Each of them pulled out a great quoit of gold from
-his breast. Then they whispered together for a space and put them
-back. So I kept mine in spite of the danger, if we had to swim, and
-Frank kept his.
-
-In a few minutes we were at the edge of our peril. Frank steadied
-the raft before the wind like the master hand he was; a raging mass
-of foam seemed to rise beneath us and shoot us towards the shore.
-What was in front we could not see. Like an arrow we flew, nor ever
-rested till we crashed upon the beach.
-
-With that hoarse and terrible whistle with which the breakers on a
-shingly shore seem to draw their monstrous breath for a new effort to
-destroy, the wave that had borne us went screaming back. In a moment
-we had leaped on the rolling shingle and rushed up the beach as fast
-as our remaining strength and our shifting foothold would let us.
-
-Again the angry sea swept at us, but it was too late. As once more
-it retired, drawing its strident breath, we dug hands, feet, and
-knees into the moving stones till it was gone, and then once more got
-up and ran. Ere another wave had burst we were in safety, lying
-breathless upon a flowery bank.
-
-Frank was the first to move. I heard him mutter his words of
-thanksgiving for our safety, and then he called cheerfully to us in
-high spirit.
-
-'Up, lads, up,' he said; 'we must lose no time. See yonder light to
-windward; the gale will lessen in another hour, and the pinnaces as
-like as not will sail. We will go about the point now as quick as we
-can, and when we see them run our fastest, like men pursued, to give
-them a rattling fright, that they may prove their quickness to save
-us since they have been so slow hitherto. It is but fair dealing to
-put this jest on them for giving us such an evil sail.'
-
-This we did, and were no sooner come about the point than we saw the
-blessed sight of our two pinnaces anchored in a quiet cove. Away
-went Frank running towards them as hard as he could, and we after him
-crying at the top of our voices. They seemed terribly afraid to see
-their captain thus suddenly appear with but three followers, and made
-the greatest speed to take us aboard.
-
-At first Frank did not speak, but sat very solemn and stern, and we,
-taking our cue from him, did likewise; nor did they ask anything of
-what our running and sudden appearance might mean. Indeed they
-feared our news was too terrible for them to be in a hurry to hear it.
-
-'How does all the company?' said one at last.
-
-'Well,' said Frank sullenly, which made them all look more alarmed
-than ever, till he could bear it no longer, and, bursting into a loud
-laugh, he drew his golden quoit from his doublet.
-
-'Look there!' he cried, brandishing it in their faces. 'At last our
-voyage is made!'
-
-And so he told them how we had sped, and told the Frenchmen amongst
-them how their captain was left behind sore wounded, and comforted
-them by letting them know how two of his company remained with him,
-and how it was our intention to rescue him.
-
-'And tell me,' he said, 'how it was you discharged not the order I
-most straitly gave you to be in the Rio Francisco yesterday?'
-
-'We did our best,' said the commander. 'Yet the gale was so strong
-from the west that with all our rowing we could get no farther than
-this.'
-
-'Well, God be praised for His mercy,' said Frank. 'Surely is He
-wiser than man. Had you done as I said, you would have come to the
-river in the nick of time to be devoured by seven pinnaces from
-Nombre de Dios, which I doubt not were fitted out for that purpose.
-I think they have been driven in for fear of the gale, and will be
-out again as soon as it abates. Therefore we must make shift to
-continue our way with oars as soon as possible.'
-
-And this they cheerfully did before an hour was gone. Their short
-rest and our news seemed to make new men of them, so that, partly by
-infinite labour at the oars with our help, and partly by an abating
-of the wind, we came by morning into the Rio Francisco. There we
-took all our company and treasure aboard, and so sailed back to our
-frigate, and thence without mishap to our ships.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-Fort Diego was now all astir with preparations for our homeward
-journey. The first care was to divide our vast booty between
-ourselves and the Frenchmen; and I, being merchant to the expedition,
-was so entirely occupied in this that I had no leisure to visit my
-Señorita, of which it must be said I was secretly glad, for I knew
-not how to approach her.
-
-What little time I had, after my day's weighing and portioning and
-scheduling was done, I spent in Harry's company. These hours of
-extreme danger to which we had recently been exposed seemed to have
-changed the whole world to us. In his gratitude for the poor service
-I had sought to do him, in his joy to think how his wife still loved
-him, he seemed to forget all the past and to hold no pleasure so high
-as being in my company, that he might talk over the old happy days
-and build plans for spending our new-won wealth, so as best to
-delight her in the new happy days that were to come.
-
-My joy would have been complete had it not been that there still hung
-over my head the words which my Señorita had used when I bade her
-farewell. Each hour I felt more keenly I must go to her and tell her
-plainly that what she wished could never be. I had no doubt of that.
-To me she was but a plaything. That I was more to her was a thing of
-which I felt pure shame. I accepted all the blame of it, as a man
-should. Yet however rightly he may look at it, the task is none the
-lighter when that man has to go to a woman and tell her he loves her
-not. The stoutest heart will feel a coward then.
-
-It was not till the evening of the third day after our coming, when
-the plunder was all divided, and we had dismissed our French consorts
-with their share, that I found heart or leisure to approach her. As
-I neared the ship where the prisoners dwelt, and which had been
-hauled ashore for some time past, I could see her stretched lazily in
-her hammock. It was fastened between the mast and the bough of a
-tree which grew up hard by and spread its branches over the poop.
-Here it was that she loved to take her _siesta_, since it was a cool
-and shady place.
-
-As I mounted the poop my discomfort at finding her alone, and at
-knowing I could not now honestly avoid saying my say, was only
-increased by her beauty, which never had seemed so great in my eyes.
-Dressed in a soft loose robe of white, she lay back at full length in
-her hammock, a picture of womanly grace. One white arm, on which her
-head rested, was half buried in her lustrous hair. It had become
-dishevelled in her sleep, and now fell in rich dark masses about her
-face and neck, enhancing their dazzling whiteness like some frame of
-ebony in which is set a magic crystal. Her soft cheeks were flushed
-like those of a newly-wakened child, her ripe lips half parted, her
-dark-fringed eyelids almost closed. Her other arm lay across her,
-listlessly moving a fan of crimson feathers. Beyond that languid
-movement there was no sign of life or motion in her, save the rise
-and fall of the soft white robe as she drew her breath troublously,
-like one who is deeply moved.
-
-I could not choose but pause, fascinated by a picture whose luxuriant
-beauty surpassed even the tangled tropic growth that formed its
-background. But I was soon awakened from my dream, and that rudely
-too. From behind the mast, where I could not see, came the deep
-tones of a man's voice pleading very low and earnest. She did not
-raise her eyes even then, but I could fancy she drew her breath more
-hardly still.
-
-I could not hear the words, and started quickly forward lest I
-should. Of retreating I never once thought. My coward hesitation
-was turned to something akin to anger by that half-heard voice, and
-my only thought was to find out what bold man it was to whom my
-Señorita gave such familiar audience.
-
-She started as she saw me stride to her, but in a moment fell again
-into her listless attitude, and looked languidly at the man behind
-the mast. He started too, and I saw to my little ease it was Mr.
-Oxenham. We stared hard and stiffly at each other, saying nothing.
-He seemed disturbed by my coming, but hid his confusion by drawing
-himself to his full height, and gently twisting his well-grown
-moustache with one hand, while the other rested on his sword. So he
-stood looking at me and waiting, with eyebrows raised superciliously.
-
-'Has my worshipper no offering for his goddess?' said the Señorita's
-musical voice. 'I expected something richer than silence after so
-long an absence.'
-
-'Nay, silence is golden,' said Mr. Oxenham mockingly. 'What would
-you more? Mr. Festing brings his best.'
-
-I know not whether it were self-love or love of her that made their
-words hurt me so sore, but I know I had much ado to bridle my lips.
-
-'Truly, Señorita,' said I, 'silence is the most precious offering I
-have to give. Had I never laid on your altar aught less worthy than
-that, methinks I should have been a more loyal worshipper.'
-
-She met my gaze with her dark eyes wide open for a moment, and then
-dropped them again with a strange little laugh.
-
-'Save me, then,' she said, 'from loyal worshippers! Such barren
-heretic ritual I call no-worship.'
-
-'Name it as you will, lady,' I answered; 'my comfort must still be
-that "no-worship" is better than sacrilege. If I cannot be a
-worshipper, at least I will not profane the shrine.'
-
-She flushed a little higher at this, and looked at me again, half
-inquiring, half frightened, and then once more dropped her eyes.
-
-'Was this what you came hither to say, false worshipper?' she said,
-as though a little vexed.
-
-'No, lady,' I answered; 'I had much to say, and I came to crave that
-you would walk with me along the shore while I told my tale, but now
-I think it needs no telling.'
-
-'Shall he come with us, Señor?' she said to Mr. Oxenham, who still
-stood twirling the end of his moustache.
-
-'It is for my queen to command,' he said, 'whether I escort her or
-not.'
-
-'Then, my worshipper,' she said, after a moment's hesitation, 'for
-this day your attendance is excused;' and with a queenly gesture she
-held out her little hand for me to salute.
-
-It was hard to be dismissed so, although an hour ago I should have
-looked on any dismissal as the happiest thing that could befall me.
-Now it angered me. It flashed across my mind to turn roughly away
-from her, and refuse the caress she offered with such pretty
-insolence. Yet I hold, however ill a woman may treat a man, yet
-shall he never better his case by a rude behaviour toward her. So I
-took the little hand in my fingers, and put it to my lips with
-ceremonious courtesy, and so withdrew.
-
-I turned round at the poop-ladder to descend, and was surprised to
-see her gazing after me wistfully; but she looked away hurriedly when
-she saw my eyes upon her, and laughed merrily at something, as I
-suppose, that Mr. Oxenham said to her. I fancied her merriment
-seemed to ring a little false; but maybe that was only my fancy.
-
-My thoughts were very ill at ease as I sought my lodging. All had
-gone as I wished. The bonds wherein I had suffered myself heedlessly
-to be bound to her were unloosed. I was free, and that more easily
-than I had thought; yet somehow I did not feel released, but rather
-thrust out and cast away.
-
-Harry came in to me later, and fell, as usual, to talking of the joy
-of our return. Yet to-night it seemed wearisome to hear him. As he
-pictured the pleasures of his coming life, of the untold joy of
-living again at Ashtead with the wife whom he had lost a little while
-and found again, my old library rose up ever in my mind, very cold
-and dim and lonely, and I found it hard to share his content.
-
-As I listened to him my long, low chamber, with its gloomy rows of
-books, its uneasy settles, and its great stiff chair beside the
-hearth, became a vivid picture to me, as though I saw it. Each
-moment it grew more real and gloomy and lonely, till suddenly, I know
-not how, I seemed to see the beautiful form of the Señorita glowing
-in the great high-backed chair, and brightening the whole chamber
-with her sunny presence.
-
-I crushed the fancy as it rose, but to little purpose. Try as I
-would, I could not choose but picture it again and again, not only as
-Harry talked, but also afterwards as soon as I closed my eyes to
-sleep. There she always was, in that long, low room, which ever was
-to me the centre of my life, curled up so prettily in the grim old
-chair that it seemed quite proud and happy to hold the sweet burden
-in its rough old arms.
-
-As my wife I pictured her there; but all the while I clearly saw what
-folly it was. How could I, a scholar, wed a wayward piece of Eve's
-flesh like that, with her wild temper, her empty little head, her
-utter ignorance of all that made my life? In her whole nature there
-was not a note to sound in harmony with me. It was a mad folly even
-to think of it. I knew that; yet how she seemed to brighten the room
-as she sat curled up in the great chair by the hearth!
-
-With great vigour I threw myself into the work of preparation which
-was going forward, in order that I might forget my foolish fancy.
-There was plenty to do; for Frank had determined to thoroughly refit
-and furnish our frigate from the _Pasha_, which ship, being much
-worn, he purposed to give to the Spanish prisoners, that they might
-go whither they would. It was then his intention to move with the
-frigate and pinnaces to the Cabeças, and thence make an effort to
-recover Captain Tetú and the treasure we had left in the care of the
-land-crabs.
-
-In spite of all my sharp reasoning with myself, I became each day
-more wretched and distraught as our work neared completion and the
-day for dismissing our prisoners approached. Yet I was resolved not
-to see her.
-
-'At her shrine,' I said ever to myself, 'I cannot worship; if I go to
-her temple again it can only be for sacrilege.'
-
-So I went not near her again. But Mr. Oxenham, I think, was
-continually both on the ship and walking with my Señorita on the
-shore and in the woods, till the time came for the prisoners
-departing.
-
-It was about a fortnight after our return from capturing the
-_recuas_, when we had taken all we desired from the _Pasha_, and we
-no longer feared any danger from our hiding-place being revealed,
-that Frank announced to the prisoners that they were to be freed on
-the morrow, and entertained them in the fort by way of taking leave.
-
-That night I was captain of the watch. It was close on midnight, as
-feeling very sad and lonely I was looking out over the land-locked
-haven to where the _Pasha_ lay ready to sail on the morrow. The moon
-was rising in great beauty over the dark foliage of the island, and
-as it shed its light upon the peaceful waters I saw, to my surprise,
-the _Pasha's_ gondola being rowed toward the shore.
-
-I made quickly for the spot where it was likely to touch the beach,
-telling the guard to stand by and listen well for my whistle, as I
-suspected some design of the prisoners upon our treasure. Concealing
-myself in the brakes close to the sea, I waited, and very soon heard
-the boat grate on the stones. Then I stepped out to see what it
-might mean; and no less welcome sight could my eyes have seen.
-
-For there stood Mr. Oxenham helping the Señorita ashore. I knew it
-was she, though for some reason I cannot tell she was dressed in the
-sailor garb in which I had seen her the night of the Cimaroons'
-attempt upon the prisoners. Whether those two had some wild scheme
-of escape together, or whether she hoped to pass observation till Mr.
-Oxenham could conceal her and carry her home in the vice-admiral,
-which he was to command, I cannot tell.
-
-Maybe it was only a romantic fancy of hers to attempt her escape in
-this disguise, as she had heard of other women doing in old tales, or
-maybe, knowing well how dazzling was her beauty in that array, she
-thought thereby to charm her escort the more. This, indeed, I think
-it did, for as he lifted her out of the boat with great tenderness, I
-saw him kiss her very lovingly. Then all trace of love or respect
-for her seemed to leave me, and I felt quite calm as I stepped
-forward to do what seemed my plain duty, and passed them the
-challenge.
-
-'What! again?' said Mr. Oxenham fiercely. 'Why, what a meddler are
-you, that have not heart to love a fair wench, and will yet prevent a
-man that has!'
-
-She started away from him when she saw me. Had she clung to him for
-protection, I think I could hardly have kept as calm as I did.
-
-'Love or no love, Mr. Oxenham,' said I, 'it is no matter of that
-here. What you intend I know not, but it is against the general's
-plain orders that any prisoner should leave the _Pasha_ before she
-sails, and this lady I must see aboard again.''
-
-'What a pestilent meddler it is!' muttered Mr. Oxenham, drawing his
-sword. 'If you want her for your own, by heaven, you shall fight for
-her.'
-
-'Pray you be content, Mr. Oxenham,' I cried, giving ground, 'or I
-must summon the guard. What madness is this?'
-
-He pressed on so hard, crying fiercely to me to draw, that I saw an
-encounter could not be avoided; yet I would not whistle for the
-watch, half for her sake once more, seeing how she was clad and what
-men would say of her, half for shame of seeking help after Mr.
-Oxenham's blade was drawn on me.
-
-Hoping the better to worst him without doing great hurt, I took my
-cloak upon my left arm instead of my dagger and drew. He was coming
-at me with his buckler advanced, and his sword uplifted for a
-cross-blow like to the _mandritto sgualembrato_, but very
-unscholarly. So I fell from my draw to the good ward _di testa_, as
-Marozzo teaches, to receive his blow on my rapier, and hay!
-straightway in _punta reversa_ threatened my _imbroccata_ at his
-throat over his hand. He was cleverly ready for it with his buckler,
-so I lowered my ward suddenly _lunga e larga_, and throwing a
-resolute _staccato_, under his defence, compelled him to spring
-backwards out of distance.
-
-He came on again immediately with a good down-right fendant, as
-though he would have broken my ward by main force. I avoided it by a
-quick _passado_ to the right, pushing at the same time a _stoccata_
-which he took again on his buckler. But it was only a feint of mine
-to make him advance his defence, and so stop him recovering quickly.
-It served its purpose well. For I was able to cast my cloak over his
-blade before he could make his recovery, and so, passing my left leg
-forward, I seized his sword by the hilt. At the same moment I
-threatened an _imbroccata_ at his face, and while he raised his
-buckler to bear my thrust, gave his hilt-points such a mighty wrench
-with my left that, seeing he had not the Italian grip, I was able to
-tear his sword from his grasp.
-
-It was no fair encounter. He was a pretty swordsman at the old
-swashing sword and buckler play, but having been at sea all his
-manhood he had never had occasion to learn the new fence as I had,
-and would not, I think, if he had been able, for, like most
-Englishmen of that time, he greatly despised it. I could not but be
-sorry for him to see him stand at my mercy, as he now did, nor could
-I resent his angry words.
-
-'Curse on your foining Italian birdspit play,' said he savagely as I
-returned him his sword. 'Curse on your skewer scullion tricks. Did
-you fight like a man, you should not have won her. Still won her you
-have, and by that I abide. Take her, and rest you merry with your
-light-o'-love.'
-
-With that he took his sword, and, with a mocking salute to the
-Señorita, strode rapidly away. I looked for no less in him. For in
-all points of arms I had ever found him a most precise gentleman, and
-had no doubt, since he was worsted, he would honourably leave the
-field to me. So I slowly went to where my Señorita's fairy form
-leaned against the boat.
-
-'Lady,' said I, 'think not I deal hardly with you, but at a word you
-must indeed go back.'
-
-'No, no, Gasparo,' she said, sinking on her knees before me. 'Take
-me, for the love of Mary, take me, since you have gloriously won me.
-Indeed I do not love him. I did but use him to play upon your love
-and make it grow as great as mine. Tell me not I have killed it. I
-did but go with him because he promised to deliver me from my misery.
-It was only that I hoped to win you at last.'
-
-'Peace, peace, lady, as you value your honour,' said I, at my wits'
-end how to keep my resolution. 'This thing cannot be. The general
-would never suffer you to abide with us. It could only end in strife
-and dishonour. Indeed you must go back.'
-
-'Oh, Gasparo,' she pleaded, clasping my knees, 'you know not what you
-do. You love me, and know it not. You love me, and send me back to
-my misery, when we might know such joy together. You cannot tell
-what it is you condemn me to. You cannot tell the horror of a
-woman's life when she is wedded to one she loathes.'
-
-'Wedded?' cried I, aghast.
-
-'Yes,' she answered wildly. 'Have pity on me. Do not hate me for
-it. I did not tell you, nor did the others, because I pleaded with
-my father to pass for unwed, that I might the better win favour for
-them. So I said, but in truth it was that I might taste the joys I
-had never known. I was hardly out of childhood ere they wedded me to
-an old man for his wealth. He was bitter and cruel and ugly, an ape
-that I loathed. Yet I had no respite from his detested presence till
-he went to Lima on his affairs. Afterwards he wrote for me to join
-him. I was on my way thither when you captured me, and at last I saw
-my occasion to know for once what it was to be wooed. Oh Gasparo,
-hate me not for it, but rather pity me. I am beautiful; I know it.
-I was made for men to love, yet never knew what it was to be wooed by
-one true man. Pity me and have mercy. I cannot go back now.'
-
-Horror-struck to find, as it were, that my sin had followed me even
-to that far island in the West, where at least I might have hoped to
-be free, my courage almost forsook me. A destiny, such as one short
-year ago I might have laughed at as the last to be mine, seemed now
-for ever fastened upon me. Once more I grasped the hilt of Harry's
-sword for strength, and then firmly took the little hands in mine and
-freed myself.
-
-She stood up before me then, gazing in sad entreaty in my face as I
-implored her to go back. I showed her how, even were I willing to do
-as she wished, Frank would never permit it. I tried, as well as I
-could for shame, to show her how great was the sin she would bring
-upon her soul.
-
-'It is hopeless,' she said as I ceased. 'I see it is hopeless to
-move you. I must even return to the misery you have made doubly hard
-to bear. Farewell, Gasparo, farewell.'
-
-She held out her hand to me as she spoke. I took it coldly, my other
-hand on my sword. But that was not the end. With a sudden wild
-impulse she flung her arms about me, and my lips were tingling with
-one last passionate kiss. She had sprung into the boat and pushed
-off ere I hardly knew what she had done.
-
-'So, faint heart,' she cried, as she stood up beautiful in the
-moonlight, 'so I set my sign upon you. When another comes to whom
-you would give what you deny to me, may she taste my kiss still
-lingering there and learn, though you know it not, that you have
-loved before.'
-
-With difficulty she rowed herself back to the ship. I watched her
-shapely figure grow less and less across the moonlit water, till she
-was lost behind the dark hull, and I was alone once more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-I never saw my Señorita again. Early next morning the _Pasha's_
-anchors were hove up, and Mr. Oxenham went aboard to work her out
-through the tortuous channels by which she had entered more than six
-months ago.
-
-It took all one day and part of the next to get the ship free, and
-Mr. Oxenham did not quit her till she was quite clear of the shoals.
-What passed between him and my Señorita then I cannot say. Whether
-they found means whereby afterwards letters went between them I do
-not know, but when years after news of his end came I could not but
-think it might have been so; and, in spite of seeming contradictions
-in the varying reports that reached us, I have often wondered whether
-my Señorita were not the same fair lady for whose sweet sake, less
-than three years after, when he had won undying honour by having
-sailed the South Sea first of all Englishmen, he madly did that
-whereby he not only lost all the wealth he had taken there, but also
-his trusty company and his fair name, ay, and gave up his wasted life
-beside as a pirate on a Spanish gallows at Lima. But let that pass.
-I bear him no ill-will, and trust he rests in peace, as, for all his
-sins, his courageous spirit well deserves.
-
-For such a spirit indeed he had, and, next to the general, our whole
-company had conceived greater hope in him than in any other. So
-that, when a few days after the release of the prisoners we came with
-the frigate and the pinnaces to the Catenas, he was chosen to lead
-the attempt to recover the French captain and the buried treasure.
-For in spite of all Frank could say we would not suffer him to go,
-saying his life was too precious to us now to be risked on so
-dangerous a service, seeing he was the only man on whom we could
-count to carry us back to England.
-
-Mr. Oxenham undertook the desperate service with the same light heart
-wherewith he always faced the greatest perils, but was not rewarded
-according to his courage. For, on coming to the Rio Francisco, he
-found in most forlorn condition one of the men who had stayed behind
-with Monsieur Tetú. From him he had news that the brave captain had
-been taken half an hour after our departure, and his fellow a little
-later, because he would not cast away his treasure, and so could not
-run fast enough to escape.
-
-Moreover he told us that some two thousand Spaniards and negroes had
-been digging and ranting up the ground for the space of a mile, every
-way about the place where they must have learned from the prisoners
-that our treasure was buried. This Mr. Oxenham found to be true;
-for, notwithstanding the report, he still would go and see for
-himself, and was rewarded by the discovery of thirteen silver bars
-and some quoits of gold, which the Spaniards had not been able to
-find.
-
-At last, then, our voyage was indeed made, and all we wanted for our
-return homewards was another good stout frigate; and to this end the
-general resolved to beat the same covert we had always found so full
-of game--to wit, the coast beyond Carthagena, about the mouth of the
-Rio Grande.
-
-All were very merry over the near hope of our return, except, I
-think, myself. As for me, I could not but brood over what I had lost
-or escaped from, I knew not which to call it. I fear I was but a
-very doleful companion, and Harry, being now in great spirits with
-all the world, would not let me rest.
-
-'So your Señorita would not stay with you?' he said, with a twinkle
-in his eye that much belied his pretended seriousness.
-
-'I did not ask her,' I answered.
-
-'Not ask her!' said he, 'and wherefore not, in a devil's name? Why,
-lad, you were over ears in love with her.'
-
-'You are merry,' said I, a little testily I think, for it angered me
-that both he and she should say this, while I was for ever telling
-myself I could not be so foolish. 'I could as soon have loved one of
-those glistening butterfly-birds that are all sparkle and humming,
-and nothing of them beside.'
-
-'Well, what of that?' said he. 'Were I Pythagorean, I could find no
-better case for a true woman's soul than one of those same dainty,
-merry, little humming birds, that in these past months have so often
-beguiled us when there was little else to make us forget our
-troubles.'
-
-'True,' I answered. 'Such qualities will make a plaything, but never
-a wife.'
-
-'Well, I know not,' he said; 'but I think a wife is mostly what a
-husband makes her, and doubt if a man may not make as good a one out
-of a plaything as anything else.'
-
-He should have known, yet I could not think him right, nor do I now.
-I had no heart to pursue such talk then, so when he continued to
-rally me I hastily told him the truth.
-
-'Forgive me,' he said, growing serious directly, and putting his hand
-on my shoulder, 'if you can forgive such a brute-beast as I am to
-torment you thus. What a curst unbroken tongue is mine! You would
-have kept her marriage from me to shield her fame. Truly, lad, in
-comparison to you, I deserve no woman's love.'
-
-So he said, not knowing himself, for never was woman's love better
-bestowed than on him, yet he knew it not, and I verily believe, felt
-that he never could do enough for his wife to repay her generosity in
-marrying him. She thought no less, and often told me so. What
-wonder that their lives were happy!
-
-We fell in with our French consort again soon after this, and they
-bore us company till they heard we were going past Carthagena, but
-this they would not venture with us, since the whole Plate Fleet lay
-there with its well-armed wafters ready for sea.
-
-So we parted company once more at St. Bernardo, and then Frank stood
-in towards the city, and ran past with a large wind hard by the
-harbour's mouth, in sight of the whole fleet. Not one dared stir out
-after us, though we braved them with our music, and the Cross of St.
-George at our top, and all our silken streamers and ancients floating
-down to the water defiantly. Perhaps it was a bit of foolish
-bravado, but Frank laughed and rubbed his hands, and said it was
-worth another _recua_ to have done it, which the whole company
-agreed, being half mad to think how we had succeeded in our wild
-adventure in despite of the whole power of the Indies.
-
-The same night we fell in with a frigate of twenty-five tons, well
-laden with victuals, coming out of the river. We told the crew of
-our necessity, and used other persuasions to such good effect that at
-last they were content to go ashore, and leave their ship in our
-hands. Whereupon we returned to the Cabeças, and there, having
-rested seven days to careen our ships and prepare them for the voyage
-home, we bade farewell to our trusty Cimaroons, greatly contenting
-them with the iron-work of the pinnaces, which we broke up. To Pedro
-Frank presented a very goodly scimitar, which poor Monsieur Tetú had
-given him in return for his hospitalities at their first meeting. So
-greatly did the Cimaroon chief value this toy that he would not be
-content till Frank had accepted four great wedges of gold from his
-particular store.
-
-It was a private gift to our general, and I think it noteworthy, as
-showing his just dealings with his mariners and venturers, that he
-would not keep those wedges, but cast them into the common store.
-
-'Had not the venturers set me forth,' said he, 'and had not you, my
-lads, so truly borne your parts, I should never have had this
-present; wherefore I hold you should all enjoy the proportion of your
-benefits, whatsoever they be.'
-
-So we took our leave of the Spanish Main, and, bearing room for Cape
-Antonio, passed to Havana, where we took a bark, the last of all our
-captures, which had been many, indeed, both for numbers and humanity
-in dealing with them, past anything that had been seen before. For
-at that time there were above two hundred frigates belonging to the
-cities of the Spanish Main and the Islands, ranging from ten to one
-hundred and twenty tons. Most of these we dealt with during our
-stay, and some of them twice and thrice, yet of all the crews we
-captured we hurt not a single man, save in the heat of fight, nor did
-we burn or sink one ship save in act of war, nor keep any save for
-our bare necessity. And so it was that Frank won himself a name of
-terror along the whole Spanish Main, and therewith a reputation for
-kindliness and mercy, both of which were never forgotten, and stood
-him in good stead many a time in after years.
-
-He protested that God manifestly blessed him for the just
-chastisement, tempered with mercy, which he had inflicted on the
-idolaters; for that He so bountifully supplied us with rain for our
-necessities, and wind for our speeding, that we had no cause to touch
-at Newfoundland for our refreshing, but within twenty-three days we
-passed from the Cape of Florida to the Isles of Scilly, and on Sunday
-morning, the 9th day of August 1573, swaggered bravely into Plymouth
-harbour, amidst the thunder of our great pieces, the braying of our
-trumpets, and the gay fluttering of all our flags and streamers and
-ancients.
-
-It was a sight to make a man forget all his sorrows, to see the Hoe
-quickly brighten like a flower-bed with the Sunday clothes of the
-godly people of Plymouth, and yet not godly enough to stay with the
-preacher when they knew whose salutations were disturbing their
-prayers. So with one accord they left the poor man, and hurried off
-to hear the sermon Frank was preaching with his ordnance and his
-music.
-
-'Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into Heaven?' That was
-his text, and so well he expounded it with a sight of our ballast to
-all who came aboard, that I think there was hardly one that day who
-did not vow he would no longer stand still disputing and railing
-against Antichrist, but go forth and win gold for God out of the
-idolaters' treasure-house.
-
-Wild were the rejoicings in Plymouth, and there was no one to check
-them. The Queen's grace was in no mood just then to hide our
-achievement under a bushel. Nay, rather she liked nothing better
-than to flaunt it in Philip's eyes, to show him she had a power he
-little dreamed of to answer the late-discovered felonious practices
-of Spain against her glorious crown and life.
-
-Yet I tarried not longer than our business demanded, for Harry could
-not rest till he was at Ashtead again, nor would he depart thither
-without me. In vain I urged him to go alone and let me follow later,
-after he had seen his wife and all was smooth again.
-
-'No, lad,' said he; 'we fled together, let us return together. It
-was one cause drove us forth. That is ended and forgotten. If I can
-go back, it is because you also may go back. Therefore one must not
-go without the other.'
-
-So we rode together, Harry, the Sergeant, and I, and all the way to
-London it was for us a triumphal procession. The news of Frank's
-daring exploit had spread from town to town before us. The people
-were half wild at the tidings, and came gaping to see us with their
-own eyes, and hear from our own lips the truth of the tale that
-seemed too glorious to believe; to hear how Englishmen at last had
-trod that inviolate soil which seemed to give a magic and resistless
-power to Spain, their dreaded enemy, and had broken its mysterious
-spell for ever, and how we had so plenteously enriched ourselves out
-of their very heart-wells in despite of all their boasted power.
-
-It seemed a strange and merry thing to them. They could only laugh
-as though it were some rude jest we had put on the Spaniards, and
-make merry over Philip's and Alva's wry faces to think of a poor
-English captain quietly plucking their beards with one hand, and
-cutting their purses with the other. That looming shadow in the
-South which yesterday was a monster of terror, to-day was only a
-bogie to frighten babies withal. So they strutted about, boasting
-that though the King of Spain might set all the silly geese over the
-sea in a flutter with his _braggadocio_, yet one quacking of an
-English drake was enough to set him shivering on his throne.
-
-I trust we were more modest than they. Yet in those young days of
-England's growing strength I cannot blame her if she laughed and
-crowed like a lusty baby over each new step he learns to take.
-
-Our triumphal progress should have put us in good heart; yet, as we
-approached our journey's end, a weight seemed to settle on us both.
-As we rode from Gravesend each well-known object served to recall the
-misery of the day we saw them last; and for the first time, I think,
-Harry began to doubt whether it would be so easy to bring things back
-to the old track again.
-
-He had sent word forward that he was coming, but no more, not knowing
-what to write. Thus we could not tell how things stood at Ashtead,
-or even whether Mrs. Waldyve were there at all.
-
-It was afternoon before we reached Rochester, and we stayed at the
-'Crown' to dine, but did scant justice to the host's provision.
-Harry grew only more melancholy when we were alone.
-
-'Would I could tell if she would forgive me!' he said at last. 'How
-can I hope for it, who left her so basely in the midst of all her
-grief? Tell me again, Jasper, all you saw when you went back to
-Ashtead after that sad day.'
-
-So I told my tale again, and dwelt on those words she sang, giving
-him to hope for the best.
-
-'Yet I think I will tarry till to-morrow,' he said. 'It is late; I
-am weary. It will be too sudden for her at so late an hour. I will
-tarry, and send her word I am waiting here for her to bid me come.
-Maybe she is not there, and maybe grief has killed her.'
-
-He sank his voice very low as he uttered this new fear, and before I
-could tell what to answer him--for, God knows, I too had little heart
-for this meeting--the Sergeant came in and said the horses were
-ready. Harry looked at me, but I could give him no help. My shame
-was still quick within me, and my only desire was to put off the end,
-which I could not foresee, but only fear.
-
-'Sergeant,' said Harry at last, desperately, 'we think it too late to
-go on. We will lie here to-night, and come to Ashtead betimes
-to-morrow.'
-
-'Cry you mercy, sir,' said the Sergeant, in a rebellious burst. 'If
-you can be within two hours' ride of that peerless lady and not go to
-her, it is more than I have power or discipline for. So I crave
-leave to ride on alone with all speed.'
-
-'But how know you we are within two hours' ride of her?' said Harry
-weakly, under the Sergeant's rebuking glance.
-
-'Save your worship,' cried the Sergeant, 'is that what ails you?
-Then take it from me, you can ride thither without fear of not
-finding her, for my good friends the drawers tell me she has abode at
-home ever since your departing, though it is true that none have seen
-her abroad of late.'
-
-And with that the Sergeant brought us our rapiers and cloaks, and for
-very shame we were bound to take them and beat an honourable retreat
-along the line which, by accident or design, he had left open for us.
-
-So, without more ado, we rode out through the throng which had
-assembled to greet us when they heard we had come. The good people
-followed us up the street to the gates, and then fell to cheering us
-for two heroes, little thinking what sorry hearts those same heroes
-carried. So they cheered us, and Drake, and the Queen, as we rode
-out across the low land by the river, nor ceased till we began to
-climb the downs.
-
-The Medway lay glistening in its mazy channels below us as we topped
-the hill. Rainham church-tower rose dimly before us; on either hand
-the turf swept downward from the road, broken by clumps of trees in
-every hollow where they could find shelter from the wind. These and
-a score of other familiar landmarks seemed to bring the past very
-near, and only increased my fear that the short time we had been away
-could not avail to heal the fearful wound I had made.
-
-Gladly would I have turned off on the road which led to Longdene, as
-I had that first day I had seen Harry's wife, but I was resolved to
-go on to the end with him, not knowing how great his need might soon
-be of a comforter; for his doubts had infected me with a
-heart-sickness as sore as his own.
-
-The bright picture of her as she was that day faded away as the
-gables and turrets of Ashtead came in sight, and I gave way to
-wondering what she looked like now, and of what she thought within
-those dim walls. And that wondering ceased as we rode under the
-gateway and dismounted. I could only then think of my brother. He
-was deadly pale, and clutched at my arm as he trod the steps, and
-stopped like one about to faint.
-
-'Would she had come out to meet us,' he murmured, 'when she heard our
-horses in the court. She must have heard them.'
-
-I knew not what to say, but pressed his hand and put my arm through
-his to steady him up the steps. He made a great effort as he reached
-the top and threw open the door of the hall.
-
-There she stood in the lurid torch-light by the great hearth, as
-though just risen from her seat. She was pale and wild-eyed, and
-stood irresolute, gazing her heart out at him, with her white hands
-spread out a little in front of her as though the last spark of hope
-were dying within her, and she hardly dared to plead. Ah me! it was
-a picture of long-endured misery as I pray God I may never see again,
-and, still less, cause.
-
-Harry stood, it seemed so long, waiting for some sign from her, but
-she stood like a statue with no power to move. Then he advanced
-slowly towards her, and I followed into the hall.
-
-I had hardly stepped within when a sudden light came into her eyes as
-she caught mine. She had seen me then for the first time. She had
-seen me, and, God be praised, knew by my being there that all must be
-forgiven.
-
-With a little glad cry she sprang forward, and in a moment those two
-I loved so well, and had wronged so deeply, were locked lip to lip in
-each other's arms.
-
-I heard a stifled sob behind me, and turned to see the tears rolling
-down the Sergeant's bronzed face. Then we went forth that those two
-might be alone; but very soon they came and called me back, and fed
-me with such loving words as I could not have looked for had I been
-their greatest benefactor and not their curse.
-
-Their most gentle dealing with me quite unmanned me, so that I easily
-was persuaded to lie at Ashtead that night, but on the morrow I
-thought it best to go.
-
-Very dim and lonely was my library that night. My consuming grief
-was dead, drowned in their happiness and gentle usage of me. Yet it
-was very lonely. I tried to read, but each book I sought availed
-less to fasten my thoughts. So I sat musing on all that had befallen
-me those last months, and trying not to think how empty and sad my
-great chair looked without the sweet burden which, as it were, I had
-once seen nestling there.
-
-That fancy grew dim as the months wore on, and I was ever at Ashtead
-as of old playing with little Fulke, or hunting with Harry, or
-talking over old times with Sergeant Culverin, who quickly settled
-down as Harry's right-hand on his estate, and so continued till his
-honest spirit passed away. But with Mrs. Waldyve I read no more
-then, nor till years after, when, through my thrice-blessed
-friendship with Signor Bruno, a deep-set faith came to comfort my
-ripening years and hers.
-
-Indeed it was little I read at all, save in books of travel and
-cosmography. Study seemed a very poor and dry food to me at that
-time, the more so as there was no longer any one to urge me to it.
-Mr. Cartwright's strife was now nothing but a din of unmeaning words
-in my ears. Good Mr. Follet, my only other scholar friend, was dead,
-and his cherished 'Apology' still-born; for though he bequeathed the
-manuscript to me to set forth, I found its original obscurity and
-tangled learning (in so far as it was legible) so over-laid and
-involved and interlined with added matter from the four quarters of
-earthly and unearthly wisdom as to be past human understanding.
-
-Each day then I saw more clearly that all was changed with me, and
-grew to know that thenceforth, till age should bring me peace and
-studious quiet, my content could only be found at Frank Drake's side,
-or in such great and stirring work as his.
-
-And so it was, and not without good reward either, both in honour and
-riches. Yet there was nothing which my unworthy service earned of
-Her Majesty's grace and bounty that I valued higher than the loving
-welcome which was so plentifully bestowed on me at Ashtead each time
-I came home.
-
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of For God and Gold, by Julian Corbett
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: For God and Gold
-
-Author: Julian Corbett
-
-Release Date: May 20, 2020 [EBook #62184]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOR GOD AND GOLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- FOR<br />
- GOD AND GOLD<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JULIAN CORBETT<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- AUTHOR OF 'THE FALL OF ASGARD'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- London<br />
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED<br />
- NEW YORK : THE MACMILLAN COMPANY<br />
- 1900<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- All rights reserved<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-<i>First Edition 1887</i>
-<br /><br />
-<i>Reprinted 1900</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- FOR GOD AND GOLD<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- CALLING ON THIS AILING AGE TO ESCHEW THE SINS AND IMITATE<br />
- THE VIRTUES OF<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- MR. JASPER FESTING<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- SOMETIME FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE IN CAMBRIDGE, AND LATE AN OFFICER<br />
- IN HER MAJESTY'S SEA-SERVICE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY THIS SHOWING FORTH OF<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Certain noteworthy passages from his Life in the said University and<br />
- elsewhere, and especially his connection with the beginning of<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- The Puritan Party<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Together with a particular relation of his Voyage to<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Nombre de Dios<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Under that renowned Navigator<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THE LATE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- SIR FRANCIS DRAKE, KNIGHT<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- WRITTEN BY HIMSELF<br />
- <i>AND NOW FIRST SET FORTH</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-PREFACE
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not to be denied that the usual practice in ushering
-into the world a long-hidden manuscript has been to
-give some account of its existence in its former state,
-and of the manner in which it came to light. For
-sufficient reasons that course will not be followed in the
-present case.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Should any one in consequence be brought to doubt
-the genuineness of these memoirs, it is hoped that it will
-be sufficient to refer him to a curious little work entitled
-<i>Sir Francis Drake Revived</i>, which contains a very sprightly
-account of that renowned navigator's so-called Third
-Voyage to the Indies, being that in which he attempted
-Nombre de Dios, and which, as the title-leaf recites, is
-'faithfully taken out of the report of Master Christopher
-Ceely, Ellis Hixom, and others who were in the same
-voyage with him, by Philip Nichols, Preacher; Reviewed
-also by Sir Francis Drake himself before his death, and
-much holpen and enlarged by divers notes with his
-own hand here and there inserted, and set forth by Sir
-Francis Drake (his nephew), now living, 1626.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So closely do the present memoirs follow that account
-that it cannot reasonably be doubted that Mr. Festing
-was one of those 'others' who had a hand in Preacher
-Nichols's book, although neither he nor Mr. Waldyve are
-mentioned as being of the expedition. When we consider
-the circumstances under which they sailed, it is only
-natural to suppose that they made it a condition of their
-assistance that their names should be suppressed in the
-published narrative; and, in view of this supposition, it
-is not unworthy to be noted that Nichols makes no
-mention of a 'captain of the land-soldiers' or a
-'merchant' as sailing with Drake, although it is known
-that these officials formed part of all well-ordered
-expeditions to the Spanish Main.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course some small discrepancies will be found
-between the two accounts, but they are unimportant,
-and seem rather to confirm the general accuracy of
-Mr. Festing's memoirs than to cast any suspicion upon
-them. For instance, Nichols gives the name of the man
-who 'spoiled all' in the first attempt on the <i>recuas</i> as Pike,
-but there can be no doubt that, by an obvious word-play
-which would commend itself to an Elizabethan punster, the
-name of the infantry weapon was substituted for that of
-Culverin out of tenderness for the old Sergeant's memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such instances might be multiplied indefinitely, but
-it appears better to suffer the curious to note and
-comment upon them for themselves. Should any such
-be tempted to pursue the subject farther, he will find
-an interesting account of Signor Giampietro Pugliano
-in a letter of Sir Philip Sidney's, who describes the
-esquire of the Emperor's stables in much the same
-terms as those which Sergeant Culverin was in the
-habit of using.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fact, Mr. Festing's memoirs receive confirmation
-from contemporary sources too numerous to set out
-here. He mentions indeed only one event of any
-historical or biographical importance which has not
-been found either related or referred to by other
-trustworthy writers, and that is the piratical attack of
-Drake upon the Antwerp caravel&mdash;an exploit about
-which all parties concerned no doubt took good care to
-keep their own counsel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These considerations, it is felt, will be enough to carry
-conviction to what Mr. Festing would have called 'all
-honest kindly readers.' To the merciful dealing of
-such his memoirs are now therefore committed without
-further excuse, defence, or apology.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-J. C.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- THAMES DITTON,<br />
- <i>October</i> 1887.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-FOR GOD AND GOLD
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Erasmus, in his <i>Praise of Folly</i>, has uttered a sharp note
-against those scribbling fops who think to eternise
-their memory by setting up for authors, and especially
-those who spoil paper in blotting it with mere trifles
-and impertinences. Yet have I, that was none before,
-resolved to turn author, and set down certain passages
-in my life that I have thought not unworthy to be
-remembered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many who share my respect for him who is rightly
-called the honour of learning of all our time, forgetting
-therein, as it must be said, all tenderness for me, have
-marvelled openly that I listen not to his wisdom, but
-will still be spending paper, time, and candles upon
-such trifles and impertinences as he condemns. It were
-better, say they, for a scholar to take in hand some
-weighty matter of religion, or philosophy, or civil
-government.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But stay, good friends, till I bid you show me how
-it were better. Such treatises are ordnance of power;
-and are we sure that of late years scholars have not
-been forging too many weapons for dunces to arm
-themselves withal in these wordy wars that now be?
-A harquebuss is a dangerous toy in unskilled hands,
-and so I know may be a discourse of religion, or philosophy,
-or civil government to unlearned controversialists,
-of whom, God knows, there is a mighty company
-in this present time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, I pray you, consider whether Erasmus has not
-here a little dishonoured his scholarship and sounded
-his note false. Should he not rather have placed
-amidst all other folly that he praises these very trifles
-and impertinences also with which a scholar may seek
-to comfort his solitude?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am the more moved to the part I have chosen
-because it is not clear that all I have to tell shall be
-found wholly trifling and impertinent. Indeed I think
-it may contain something noteworthy, not in respect of
-myself, or even of that noble gentleman whose story
-this is as much as mine, but rather in respect of that
-very mirror and pattern of manhood who was my good
-friend in those days, though now with God, and whom
-of all I ever knew or heard of I honour as in courage
-unsurpassed, in counsel unequalled, and in constancy
-passing all I ever deserved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So much by way of preface or apology; and now,
-with a good wish on all honest, kindly readers, let me
-to my tale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As with many others, my life, it may be said, began
-with my father's death. Till then I had been kept in
-so great subjection that, save in my books, I had hardly
-lived. For he was an austere, grave man of the Reformation
-party, and one whom the fires of Mary's reign had
-hardened against all Popery, so that towards the end of
-his life he became what is now called a Puritan, ay, and
-that of a strict sort too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Outwardly to his great friends in the county he was
-still good company. For, not to speak more, because
-of the honour I bear him, he was a worldly man, and
-not one to use a shoe-horn to drag ill-fitting opinions on
-to men of quality, nor in any way to seek a martyr's
-crown. His chiding and severity were kept for me and
-his servants and tenants, who were all hard-pressed,
-though, in truth, not beyond what justice would warrant
-were mercy laid aside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a hard case for me, because of my mother I
-had not even a memory. The same hour that I was
-born she died, leaving my father alone in the world
-save for me. It was then that he most changed,
-they told me, but in no respect showed his grief so
-much as in misliking me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I think I loved him, for all his chiding and
-sharpness. Indeed I had so little else to love. At
-least I know that I was sobbing bitterly when my old
-nurse came to tell me that his short sickness had come
-suddenly to an end: for he had but a little time past
-been seized with a quartan ague, which carried off so
-many that same glorious year that our great Queen
-came to her throne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a cold, gray afternoon in January. I
-was sitting, hungry and forgotten, in my favourite
-nook in the dim old library. It was an ancient, low
-room, which my father had left standing when he had
-rebuilt the rest of the place in the new style soon after
-he had purchased it. It had been a house of Austin
-Canons which fell to the lot of some spendthrift courtier
-in King Henry's time, which gentleman, getting past
-his depth in my father's books with over much borrowing,
-was at last driven to release the place to him. So
-it was that the old monastery became our dwelling, but
-this, the Canons' refectory, was all that was left of the
-former buildings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At one end there was a deep recess, where I could
-sit and see the dreary darkness settling down on the
-distant Medway, and the Upchurch Marshes, and the
-Saltings. It was but a sad prospect at any time in
-winter, and made me sad, though I would never sit
-elsewhere with my books. I must have loved it because
-my father never came to chide me there, and because
-on that cold stone sill I could sit and sob undisturbed
-over the sorrows of men long dead, as I now sat sobbing
-over my own, when Cicely came hurriedly to me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Lord has taken him, Master Jasper,' she cried,
-as well as her sobs would allow. 'The Lord has taken
-him, before I could call you to see how sweet an ending
-he made. God-a-mercy on him, for he was a just and
-upright gentleman, and one that dallied not with mercy,
-and died a good Reformation man. Ay, that he did, and
-would see never a priest of them all, with their
-hocus-pocus and Jack-in-the-box, and their square caps and
-their Latins. When the end was coming he cried out,
-"God-a-mercy on me and all usurers," once or twice he
-did, for the usurers seemed to trouble him. So I opened
-the windows, and bade him not trouble himself with
-the rogues at such a time, but get on sweetly with his
-dying. That was a comfort to him, I know, for he grew
-quiet then, and passed away with but one more cry for
-mercy on them. May the rogues be better for a good
-man's prayers, that he shall pray no more! For 'tis
-all passed, 'tis all passed; and you are Squire of
-Longdene now, Master Jasper; and maybe your worship
-would like to see how your father lies.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I dried my tears then, for I had been dreading the
-summons to see him die, and felt glad that I was
-spared the sight. I was able to follow Cicely into the
-great chamber where he lay, and look bravely for the
-last time on the wise, hard face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was when I came out that I felt indeed my life
-had begun. For there stood old Miles, our steward,
-who had married my nurse, bowing respectfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A wise man has gone this day, sir,' he said, 'and
-a godly and a rich. May the Lord in His mercy give
-your worship strength to bear his loss and walk in his
-footsteps.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It lifted me up strangely to hear him speak thus;
-for I was but fourteen years old, and had never been
-called 'your worship' before, except sometimes on
-Saturdays by the Medway fisher lads, who knew I had
-groats in my wallet then. To hear Miles thus call me
-was a thing I could hardly understand. He who had
-barely a word for me, except to scold when he caught
-me bird-nesting in the orchard, or swear after me in
-breathless chase when I flew my hawk at his pigeons,
-as happened more than once when Harry came to see
-me and my father was away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is time I should tell of Harry, my friend and
-rival, my almost brother; for his life was, and, I thank
-God for His mercy, still is, in spite of all the wrong I
-did, so bound up in mine, that I cannot tell my tale
-without unfolding his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was the only son of Sir Fulke Waldyve, a gentleman
-of good estate and ancient family near Rochester,
-in Kent, and a good neighbour of ours. Ever since my
-father had come to live at Longdene, Sir Fulke and he
-had been fast friends. Not that they had much to make
-them so. For Sir Fulke was an old soldier and courtier
-of King Henry's day, and had named his only son after
-him as the pattern of manhood. From the like cause
-he swore roundly rasping Tudor oaths at all that
-displeased him, ay, and much that he loved too, from mere
-habit, but above all at Puritans and those who thought
-Reformation should go further than his idol King
-Henry had carried it. In all ways the knight was a
-man of the old time, while my father was held one of
-the new men, whom many thought to be ruining the
-country. He had been a wool merchant in London, and
-had made much money at trading and by other ways
-that merchants use.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even I used to wonder to see them so friendly, and
-used to watch them by the hour together through a hole
-I knew of in the yew hedge, as they sat drinking in our
-orchard after dinner in the summer-time. Sir Fulke
-was so round and red, with his curly beard and his
-sunburnt face and his merry blue eyes, and my father
-was so pale and spare and grave. I wondered how
-men could be so little alike, and wondered how it would
-have been with me if that rough old knight had been
-my father instead of the courtly merchant by his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By this light,' I have heard Sir Fulke burst out in the
-midst of their talk, 'I marvel every day what a God's
-name makes me love you, Nick. Your sour face should
-be as much a rebel in my heart as your damned French
-claret is in my stomach. Were it not that you are so
-good a tippler, I would say that at heart you were no
-better than a pestilent, pragmatical rogue of a Calvinist.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, Fulke,' my father would say quickly in his
-courtly way, being, as it seemed, in no way offended
-that the old knight should speak to him so roughly, for
-they always said my father, like other merchants who
-have thriven, was slow to take offence with men of
-ancient lineage and good estate; 'what matter that
-our outward seeming is different? That is only because
-our lots were cast differently. Not what we are, but
-what we love, is the talk of friends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, by God's power,' Sir Fulke would cry, 'you
-have hit it now most nicely, Nick. You love a long
-fleece, and so do I. You love a fair stretch of meadowland,
-and so do I. You love a well-grown tree, and so
-do I; ay, and, you rogue, you love a full money-bag,
-and so, by this light, do I. Mass, but I run myself out
-of breath with our likings, and sack must run me back
-again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed,' my father would answer, 'were it only our
-delights that we share, I think it would be bond enough,
-without a common sorrow to help it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, ay, Nick; that is it,' the old knight would
-murmur, sad in a moment, for Harry's mother, too, had
-died in childbed. 'But speak not of that. God rest
-her sweet soul! What is there divided that she could
-not bring together?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so they would fall into silence awhile, till Sir
-Fulke's eye was dry again, and his thoughts had
-wandered away from the beautiful woman whom, late
-in life, he had loved and married and lost, to some new
-plan he had for mending his estate upon which he
-wanted his friend's counsel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is little to be wondered at, then, that a great
-friendship grew up also between Harry and me. We
-were little more alike, I think, than our fathers. For
-on Harry descended all the sunny beauty of his mother.
-Indeed, afterwards, when as a page at Court he
-personated the Princess Cleopatra in a masque before the
-Queen's grace, an old lord who was in presence swore
-it must be the gentle Lady Waldyve alive again. He
-was lithe and active too, and of quick and nimble wit,
-and as long as I can remember could always give the
-fisher lads more than he took, either with fist or tongue.
-But more than all this, it was his gentle, loving spirit
-that won and kept my love in spite of all our boyish
-quarrels, ay, and of a greater thing than that. When I
-think of his noble nature, which never allowed him to
-turn a span's breadth from the path of honour, the
-lofty patience wherewith he bore my shortcomings, the
-tender sympathy I won from him in all my troubles, I
-can still kneel down and thank God that gave me such
-a friend to carry a light before me in the way a
-gentleman should walk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So what wonder then that I loved him as I loved no
-one else&mdash;save one, of whom I shall forbear yet to speak,
-until my tale compels me. Then I must, seeing it was
-surely God's will that tried me so sore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had Harry been other than he was, at the time at
-least of which I now speak, I must yet have loved him,
-for it was my father's will that I should.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jasper,' he would say to me sometimes when I
-had been reading at home, 'close your book and ride
-over to Ashtead to bid young Waldyve go a-hawking
-with you to-morrow. You must see more of him. For
-know, I would have you no merchant, or parson, or plain
-scholar, but a gentleman. You will have money, and
-he shall teach you how to spend it like a gentleman.
-Make him your friend, and be you his, or you shall smart
-for it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So away I would go blithely enough; for those days
-with Harry were the only happy ones I knew, though
-it must be said they often ended sadly with a rebuke
-and even chastisement from old Miles, till one day my
-father, seeing him, told him he would not have gainsaid
-any prank I played in company with Sir Fulke's son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This I told Harry next day he came, thinking to
-strangely delight him; but instead he looked grave,
-and swore one of his father's oaths that he would never
-fly hawk at Miles's pigeons again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was my friend Harry Waldyve when, in the
-first year of our most glorious Queen's reign, whom God
-bless with fullest measure, my father died, and I began
-my life.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was not till the morning after my father's death that
-Sir Fulke rode over from Ashtead with Harry. The
-old knight was redder in the face than ever. There
-were tears in his eyes, too, as he took my hand and sat
-down by the great hearth in the hall without speaking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for Harry, he threw his arms about my neck and
-shyly pressed into my hand his set of gilded hawk
-bells&mdash;the most precious thing he had. I had long envied
-him the toys, and his kindness set my tears flowing
-fast again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't grieve, Jasper,' he said. 'You must not grieve.
-Dad will be your father now. He said he would as we
-rode along. He told me to tell you he was your
-guardian now, and we are really brothers at last, Jasper.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked at Sir Fulke, but he only nodded his head.
-His face was very red, and I knew he could not have
-spoken without sobbing. So Harry and I talked on in
-low tones till the old knight found his voice. He
-spoke angrily at last, but I did not mind his chiding,
-for somehow I knew it was only to hide his grief, lest
-we boys should see his weakness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, I am your guardian, lad,' said he; 'and since
-I am, why, in God's name, did you not send for me
-before, instead of letting your father lie all night like
-a dog that none cares to bury?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please you, sir,' said I, 'Miles rode out an hour
-after he died, as I thought, to bring the news to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'An hour after his death!' cried Sir Fulke. 'On
-what devil's errand went he then, for he came not to me
-till six o'clock this morning?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whither rode Miles last night?' I asked then of
-Cicely, who was sobbing hard by. 'Know you, and has
-he come back?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I know not, your worships,' she said, 'save
-that he went to your worship, as he said, and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what, woman?' cried Sir Fulke testily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On an errand of his dead master's, please your worships,'
-whimpered Cicely; 'an errand, by your worship's
-leave, into Chatham.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what, o' God's name,' cried the knight, 'took
-him there?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I know not,' replied Cicely, with a look of
-that sort of humility, much used by her class, which is
-very near of kin to defiance. 'Unless it were to take
-order for his poor worship's funeral with the elect that
-be there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What say you?' roared Sir Fulke, 'you pestilent,
-canting scrag-end of Eve's flesh! What, by the fat of
-the fiend, has your Calvinistic knave of a husband to do
-with a gentleman's funeral? Knows he not, the dog,
-that it is I who shall order his master's affairs? Is this
-all that comes of Festing's boasted discipline? I told
-him he was wrong, he was always wrong; and here's the
-end of it. The elect, too,&mdash;the elect knaves, the elect
-devils! Do you think, you canting jade, that because
-Mary is dead you shall play what pranks you like with
-a gentleman's body? By this light, you misjudge
-Henry's and Mistress Anne's daughter if your thick
-heads think that.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time Sir Fulke had railed himself clean out
-of breath, and as he ceased we could hear the sound of
-horses' feet in the courtyard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Run, lads,' said Sir Fulke, 'and if that be Miles
-bring him before me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the door we went, and sure enough found Miles
-had returned, but not alone. Dismounting from their
-shabby jades were two men, dressed all in black. One
-of them I knew by sight, having seen him about
-Chatham and Rochester. He had a round, red face,
-with a shrewd, solid look in it, and dancing blue eyes full
-of merriment, which even now, though I think he tried to
-look as grave as he could, he was unable to get master of.
-His companion was a grave, dark-eyed man, of dull
-complexion, whose look repelled me as much as the
-other's attracted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Peace be on this house,' the two men chimed when
-they had finished tumbling off their horses, which they
-did in so clumsy a manner as even then, almost made
-me laugh. 'Peace; and be its sorrow comforted.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The red-faced man then came forward up the steps,
-and took my hand so kindly that I felt at once that I
-had found a new friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Master Festing,' said he, 'I know you, and desire
-your worship's better acquaintance. Me you know not,
-though I was your good father's friend. He would not
-have it so known; but let that pass. Know me for
-Master Drake, of Chatham, sometime preacher to his
-Majesty's fleet, and soon to be again, let us hope, now
-the evil times be overpast and joyful days be come
-again for all true Reformation men.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His black clothes were very shabby, and of
-old-fashioned cut, and there came with him up the steps
-and into the hall a savoury smell of tar and the
-sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, my lad,' went on Mr. Drake, for 'your worship'
-was quite out of tune with his kind, fatherly way,
-'this is an hour of sorrow for you, but one of joy for
-England. A weight is lifted from England's heart, and
-yours shall rise with hers. For, saving a decent grief
-for your father's loss, no true Englishman should weep
-when his country claps her hands and leaps with
-gladness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did not well understand him then, though I knew
-he meant to comfort me. For in those days we knew
-little of what was coming, when such words as
-Mr. Drake's would be on every one's lips. England was
-crushed and broken then, shuddering still under the
-curse of Rome and Spain. I was no more a prophet
-than the rest, and could ill understand why this little
-red-faced preacher should draw himself up in his
-shabby clothes, with glittering eyes, till he almost
-looked as though he had come out of my Plutarch, best
-loved of books. I was glad when he stopped and
-turned to his friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I had forgot,' said Mr. Drake. 'Be better
-acquainted with my right-worshipful and approved
-good friend, Mr. Death. One of the faithful flock,
-Mr. Festing, that through the bloody times, which now be
-past, has watched and prayed for England beyond the
-seas, in Frankfort; withstanding steadfastly all
-backsliders there, and helping Mr. Knox to file away the
-Popish rust that still clung to King Edward's
-service-book.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed to think that because my father had
-been a secret but active Puritan, I must be one too,
-and well versed in all those unhappy controversies
-with which the English exiles made their banishment
-doubly hard, and laid the seeds of many troubles that
-even now grow each day ranker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, that I did,' said Mr. Death, unfastening his
-hard lips, 'and should have prevailed at last against
-that bad, factious Erastian, Dr. Cox, had he not so
-traitorously procured us to be driven forth by the
-Gallios of that city.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If any man has dealt traitorously with you,
-Mr. Death,' said Harry, 'it were well you should come
-within and speak with my father, who is a Justice, and
-will see you righted, I doubt not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay,' echoed I, 'come within and speak with my
-guardian, who will surely welcome all my father's
-friends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our words had quite another effect to that which
-we had expected. For both the preachers stopped short
-before the door, looking hard at each other. Mr. Death
-seemed to grow more pale than before, and to be at a
-loss what to do. But Mr. Drake's face I saw grow to
-so stern a look of resolution as only in one other have
-I seen equalled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come, brother,' said he, 'we have a blow to strike,
-so let us strike quick and hard,' and with that he
-strode across the hall to where Sir Fulke was sitting,
-who sprang up fiercely when he saw the preachers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Drake!' cried he, 'what in the devil's name make
-you here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the devil's name I make nothing, Sir Fulke,'
-answered Drake unflinchingly; 'but come to stay you
-marring, in the devil's name, a dead man's wishes; and
-in God's name to charge you to deliver up to me the
-body of Nicholas Festing for burial.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I verily believe that had it been the sour-faced
-Mr. Death that had given their errand he would there and
-then have been sent forth with such a dish of blows
-seasoned with hot railing as would have kept him
-satisfied for many a day. But Sir Fulke, like King
-Henry and our blessed Queen, knew a man when he
-saw him, and surprised me by his quiet answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You open your mouth wide, Drake,' said he; 'by
-what authority do you expect me to fill it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Here is one,' answered Drake, 'that you will be the
-last to gainsay, if men know you for what you are,'
-and with that he took from his breast a paper and
-handed it to Sir Fulke. He carefully examined the
-signature and writing, and then gave it back to
-Drake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nicholas Festing wrote that, I doubt not,' said he;
-and then, looking Drake hard in the face, went on,
-'Read it to me, and read it truly, if you are a man.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Without wincing a jot under Sir Fulke's stare,
-Mr. Drake took the paper and read as follows:&mdash;'Know all
-men whom it may concern, and above all Sir Fulke
-Waldyve of Ashtead, knight, to whom I have given care
-of all my earthly affairs, that it is my last will that in
-all which concerns the spiritual and heavenly part of
-me no man shall meddle, save as my approved friend
-Mr. Drake, preacher, of Chatham, shall direct; and him
-I charge to deliver my soul to God, and my body to
-earth, after the manner of the reformed Church, and free
-from Popish, idolatrous, and superstitious ceremonies,
-saving always the laws of this realm. For I would
-have all men know that I die, as I have lived, in the
-purified and ancient Church of Christ, in testimony
-whereof, above all, I desire to be buried without jangling
-of bells, or mistrustful prayers, or conjuring with incense,
-as though my happy state with God were doubtful, and
-reverently laid in the earth, with thanks to God, in
-certain hope of a glorious resurrection.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment Sir Fulke looked at me, as though he
-would ask me to read the paper too, but almost
-immediately he stared hard again at Mr. Drake, and was
-satisfied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Enough,' he said, plainly much pained. 'How will
-you bury him?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By the rites in use amongst the true English
-remnant at Geneva,' croaked Mr. Death, who, seeing all
-danger was over, now came forward. 'There alone is
-found the true law of God, there alone has the
-threshing-floor been swept clean of&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Peace, fool,' said Sir Fulke sharply. 'If Nicholas
-Festing wishes to be put under the sod like a canting
-Calvinistical knave, by God's head, he shall be, saving
-always, as he said, the laws of this realm. I want no
-pestilent, heretical sermons from you, but only
-information to lay before the Council, whither I ride this
-very day, according to my duty as a Justice of the
-Queen's most excellent Majesty. And, look you, Drake,
-promise me to do nothing till I return.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My hand on that, Sir Fulke,' said Drake, heartily
-holding out a hand not unstained with pitch, which my
-guardian, after a moment's hesitation, took.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that the preachers departed, and Sir Fulke
-soon after followed them on his way to London, much
-saddened, as I think, to see what manner of man his
-friend had been.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether he was heard by the Council or not I cannot
-tell. Certain it is, however, that on his return he took no
-steps to prevent the funeral. I expect, if the truth
-were known, his zeal won little encouragement from the
-Council. For in the early days of our wise Queen's reign,
-in spite of an ordinance against using new doctrines or
-ceremonies without authority, and the proclamation
-against King Edward's service-book, which had been
-given out the month before, things were left to go on
-with as little mud-stirring as possible, until Parliament
-could be brought together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I doubt not the poor old knight lamented bitterly
-the high-handed days of his old master, King Henry;
-but he was helpless, and a day was fixed for the funeral
-to take place at our little church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well I remember that sunny January morning, and
-how I dreaded what was to come. At an early hour
-great numbers of people came flocking out of Rochester,
-Sittingbourne, and the villages around to Longdene.
-For, since this was but the first year of the Queen's
-reign, no one knew as yet of a certainty what order
-would be taken in ecclesiastical matters, and the news
-that a gentleman was to be buried after a new and
-reformed manner attracted many, since these things,
-being the first that had been seen in Kent, were
-accounted strange at the time, and somewhat boldly
-done, when as yet the old religion was still in force.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The people came rejoicing, with baskets of food, as
-though to a wedding or glutton mass rather than to a
-funeral. To me alone, in all that multitude, it was
-an occasion of sadness. It was the first time the
-people had had brought home to them that the days of
-England's shame and bondage were over, and when I
-looked upon the crowd, before the gate, eating and
-drinking and laughing, as they waited for the body to
-come forth, I began to know what Mr. Drake had meant,
-when he said that a weight was lifted from England's
-heart, though it only made heavier the load on mine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So brightly shone the sun, and so radiant were those
-happy people, scarce one of whom had not lost a friend
-or kinsman in poor Wyatt's mad attempt to do by force
-what God had now done so quietly by Mary's death,
-that I alone of all the world seemed sad, and in my
-utter loneliness I turned away and wept bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake was in the room, talking in high spirits
-to a knot of preachers who had just arrived. Many, I
-was told, had come down from London to do honour to
-the great occasion, as they called it, but I forget their
-names, if I ever knew them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Good Mr. Drake must have heard my sobs, for he
-came forward out of the gloomy throng and spoke to me
-very kindly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come, lad, come,' said he, with his tarry hand
-on my shoulder; 'have a stout heart. This is a proud
-day for you, a day of rejoicing in the Lord, that it is
-given you to bear witness of England's new life, and
-not, as was vouchsafed to me and others here, to bear
-witness of her slow cankering death. All England will
-praise you for this day's work. Ay, and beyond the
-seas too, many a poor Fleming, and Frenchman, and
-German who was losing heart will smile happily when
-he hears Nicholas Festing's name, and envy his son the
-part God gave him to play.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hearing Mr. Drake's words, the preachers gathered
-round us and vied with each other in giving me drafts
-of comfort, rather, as it seemed to me, for their own
-glorification in each other's eyes, by showing their
-cunning in the brewing of such phrases, than from any
-desire to console me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Affliction, Master Festing,' said a fat, pale-faced
-man, 'is the mustard of the spirit; for even as that
-excellent sauce maketh the stomach lusty to receive
-meat, so doth sorrow stir up the heart to a desire for the
-Word,' and with that he smacked his lips and looked
-towards the sideboard, which Cicely was already
-furnishing with meat against our return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rejoice, too, my boy, in your tears,' said Mr. Death,
-'for they be the water to drive the mill which
-shall grind in pieces the stumbling-blocks of your soul.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And groaning, sir,' said another, 'is the portion of
-the elect, who, being predestined to the eternal company
-of God, must not defile their spirit with the joy of the
-world, which fills the stomachs of the eternally damned.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Softly, softly, sir,' interposed a heady-looking man;
-'comfort the boy, if you will, but comfort him according
-to the Word.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And who are you,' retorted the other angrily, 'to
-teach me what is according to the Word, and what is
-not?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Brethren, brethren,' cried a mild, grave-looking
-man with a refined and scholarly face, 'I pray you
-remember on what errand you are. On a day of triumph
-like this, is it for the victors to quarrel? Moreover, it is
-time we departed. Mr. Drake, I pray you order our
-manner of proceeding.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that we started, to my no small joy, for I was
-longing to be alone in the old library again, and none of
-those men, save Mr. Drake, brought any comfort to my
-aching heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must have been a strange sight, when I come to
-think of it now, as we crossed the sunlit court and
-sallied out between the crowds of eager faces that lined
-the way. Instead of the throng of clerks in gay attire
-who used to precede the coffin at burials of persons of
-note, swinging censers, and singing for the soul of the
-departed, there were none but the black company of
-preachers in their gowns and Geneva caps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The people joined in behind me where I walked with
-Miles and Cicely, and the long line wound down to the
-church in the valley between the frosty hedgerows and
-the young woods my father had planted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I knew the little moss-grown church well, for it was
-a favourite resting-place for Miles's pigeons. They, I
-think, were the only living things that cared for it,
-except a few ill-tempered jackdaws and one or two old
-bent women, who came to mutter prayers upon their
-beads amongst the mouldering stones.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not think there had been a parson there since
-King Henry's time, certainly none that I could
-remember, except on rare occasions when one came out of
-Rochester to shiver through a homily or a funeral, as
-well as the jackdaws and the chilling damp would
-allow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a place all shunned for its ghostliness, unless
-they had a special call to go there, which indeed was
-seldom; for there was not even a door upon which the
-parish notices could be fixed. The wood had long ago
-gone to make fires, and the wide-spreading hinges, all
-bent and rusty, hung down with an air of mourning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the pigeons and the jackdaws quarrelled for the
-place. It was a pleasant spot for them. All that
-savoured of Popery, which was all the church contained,
-had been torn down, I think, in Edward's days. Rood-screen
-and all were gone&mdash;perhaps to cook a Reformation
-pot with the door. Thus the birds could fly in and out
-as they liked, and rest out of the way of stones and
-hawks, till Harry hustled them out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The little painted windows still remained. They
-were very Popish things, with the Virgin and I know
-not what saints upon them. But it did not matter,
-for the spiders and the ivy&mdash;good reformers they&mdash;had
-nearly hidden them from sight, so, as it was thought too
-costly to replace them with white glass, they had been
-allowed to remain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A grave had been prepared for my father at the end
-of the north aisle, where once was a chapel of
-St. Thomas, and where were still to be seen, moss-grown
-and time-stained, two or three tombs of the Abbots of
-Longdene. There was great difficulty, I remember, in
-getting the coffin so far, because the pavement was all
-loose, and in some part quite thrust out of place by the
-rats and the fungus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As many of the people as there was room for
-thronged in after us, and jostled each other for the best
-places with many a rude jest. Such irreverence was
-very hard for me to bear, but I do not wish to condemn
-them for it. It was done from no ill-will to me or my
-father, but only from that same exuberant spirit of
-joy which was beginning to fill all men's hearts when
-each day they saw more clearly that England's night
-was done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The preachers alone seemed in earnest; for they,
-good men, had suffered much, and this thing that we
-were now upon must have seemed too serious and
-heaven-sent for idle gaiety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was more at ease when the scholarly-looking
-gentleman began the service. His soft, full voice quieted
-the people directly, and the beautiful words he spoke
-kept them in rapt attention in spite of their crowding
-to see what was to be done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No wonder, for now they heard, many for the first
-time in God's House, the voice of prayer go up in their
-own sweet English tongue. The preacher began with a
-collect, in which he commended the dead man's soul to
-God, and prayed that his sins committed in this world
-might be forgiven him, that the gates of heaven might
-be opened to him, and his body raised up upon the last
-day. So lovely did the well-balanced, earnest words
-sound in our dear old speech that I saw tears in many
-an eye before he had done, and the amen, in which all
-joined at its end, was half choked with sobs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Incontinently they lowered then the coffin in the
-grave, and covered it with earth, while the old preacher
-read an epistle taken from 1 Thessalonians iv.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Deeper and deeper grew the silence, and less and less
-my pain, as the heart-stirring words fell upon the
-listening throng. 'I would not, brethren, have you ignorant
-concerning them which are asleep, that ye sorrow not,
-even as other which have no hope. For if we believe
-that Jesus is dead and is risen, even so them which
-sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the solemn periods marched on to the end.
-'Wherefore comfort yourselves one another with these
-words,' and therewith the white-haired scholar kneeled
-down, and began with a loud, full voice to sing in
-English the Paternoster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sound, as it seemed to me, like the rustle of angels'
-wings filled the mouldering church as the whole throng
-with one accord kneeled with the preacher and joined
-him as he sang, women and all. Neither I nor any
-there, I think, save the preachers, had heard such a
-thing before. And surely it was the sweet women's
-voices that made our singing sound so holy in my ears,
-and lifted up my heart with such a heaven-born content
-that at last I could feel indeed that it was not a day
-for sorrow, but one in which I too must rejoice with
-England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our Paternoster was followed by a sermon, in which,
-after a few words on death and eternal life, the preacher
-fell to exhorting the people to be earnest in carrying out
-the work, and not to be content with a pretended
-evangelical reformation, suffering such things to be obtruded
-on the Church as should make easy the returning back
-to Popery, superstition, and idolatry. They had seen,
-he said, in Germany the evil of suffering, under colour
-of giving small offence, many stumbling-blocks, which
-after the first beginnings were hard to get removed at
-least not without great struggling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But, indeed, I remember little of what the good man
-said; for I was but a boy then, and my mind would
-ever be fixing itself on the jagged ends of the rood-screen,
-which had been left sticking from the wall when it had
-been hewn away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pity it is,' I said to my thoughts, 'they were not clean
-rooted out. Even now they might wound a man's limbs
-who was passing unawares, and time will come when
-they will grow corrupt, and as they rot away make the
-arch unstable.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little I thought then how true a type those same
-poor beam-ends would prove of all that was to come on
-England ere many years were gone.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It would be wearisome for me to relate all that passed
-in the weeks that followed my father's funeral, even if
-I could. But indeed I remember little, except
-confusedly about men of law who came from London and
-had long speech with my guardian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the business of setting my father's affairs in order
-I too was a good deal mixed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You cannot know too soon,' Sir Fulke said to me,
-'what your estate will be. I am one who thinks a lad
-cannot learn too early to be a good steward, and so
-thought your father too, Jasper. So from the first I
-would see you have a say in your own affairs.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus it came about that I was always present when
-the lawyers came, and though at first I found it irksome,
-I soon began to take interest in my estate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet one event of these days I must relate, seeing
-that it was the beginning of things which afterwards
-played so great a part in my life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I rode into Rochester one day to see a man of law
-who dwelt there. As we descended the steep hill that
-leads from off the downs to the low-lying ground, the
-whole district was stretched out like a map below us.
-We could see straight before us the compact little city
-of Rochester, a mass of red roofs girded with a soft belt
-of trees, and crowding round the Cathedral and the great
-Castle, still grim and solid in its decay. About it ran
-the yellow river in one grand sweep from the bridge to
-where it turned again between Upnor Castle and the dock
-at the growing village of Chatham. Right in front of
-us, where the road was swallowed up between the two
-round towers of the city gate, was a great crowd. It was
-no strange thing to see, for hither were wont to gather
-the mariners from the fleet which rode between the
-bridge and Upnor and the workmen from the dockyard,
-that they might gossip and drink at the taverns which
-lined the way without the gate. To-day, however, it
-was a greater crowd than usual; so great indeed that we
-could not pass and had to draw rein.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, in the fiend's name,' cried Sir Fulke, 'brings
-all these stockfish gaping here to block a gentleman's
-path?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Tis Drake, 'tis preaching Drake,' said a
-good-humoured, weather-beaten sailor who stood by. And
-sure enough it was; for no sooner were the words out
-of our friend's mouth than Mr. Drake's jolly red face
-appeared above the heads of the crowd, as he mounted
-a stool close to the gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come, hearken, mariners,' he cried, 'hearken to
-the Word of God and the whistle of the Lord's
-boatswain. For the Word of God is like unto a capstan.
-You can turn it about and about till you tear up the
-anchor that binds you to earth. Come, then, my lads,
-and turn it about with me till you tear up the crooked
-anchor of sin, whereby the devil would moor you to
-the things of this world.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was as much as Sir Fulke could bear, and he
-cried out, 'What kennel preaching is this? Have you
-nothing better to liken the blessed Word of God to than
-a capstan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And wherefore should I not?' cried Drake, not
-noticing from whom the interruption came. 'What ell
-of tar-yarn is this, that will take upon him to reprove
-the similitudes of a preacher to her Majesty's navy?
-Wherefore, I pray you, should not the Word of God be
-likened to a capstan, when that blessed servant of the
-Lord, even Hugh Latimer, did not himself scruple to
-liken the Mother of God to a saffron-bag?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I'll grant you the similitude is right enough,'
-Sir Fulke called out again. 'For, by God's truth, it
-seems that a preacher nowadays can turn the Word
-about and about till he make it pull up anything he
-will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This sally produced a laugh from the rougher part of
-Drake's audience, and many began to cry out, 'What say
-you to that, master preacher? Has he not got you now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What have I to say to it?' said Drake, turning
-fiercely on them. 'Know you not your own trade, you
-lubberly, roeless sons of herrings? Know you not that
-when you man a capstan you go but one way, like asses,
-that you are, in a clay-mill? So it is with the Word.
-There is one right way, that shall profit you to turn it,
-and if you twist it another it shall spin you heels over
-ears in a heap, like the ungodly in the bottomless pit.
-My similitude was right enough, yet would I have
-defended it with greater courtesy had I known who
-challenged it. Make way, lads, make way for Sir Fulke
-Waldyve; for next under God you shall reverence our
-blessed Queen and all who hold her commission. Make
-way, and let me ask pardon for my discourtesy to our
-most worthy magistrate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Enough, Drake, enough,' said Sir Fulke good-humouredly;
-'you outrun me no less in courtesy than
-wit. Were all preachers such as you there would be
-little call from Injunctions against preaching without
-authority, but since such there be, I must even, in virtue
-of my office, bid you cease, and all this company disperse.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That they did contentedly, with three cheers for the
-old knight, who was well known, and loved as much
-as known, at Rochester.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake was bidden to the 'Crown' by my
-guardian to take a cup of wine; for it was always his
-custom to try and part in friendship with those whom
-he had had occasion to chide.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But what of the Injunctions about which you are
-so tender, Sir Fulke?' laughed Drake. 'You forget I
-am an ecclesiastical person, and may not haunt or resort
-to taverns or alehouses, <i>vide</i> Injunction No. 7.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Save for your honest necessities,"' returned Sir
-Fulke. 'So run the words; and your peace-making I
-hold, in my capacity of Justice, to be a most honest
-necessity. So come, with no more words, and save your
-tenderness for less honest occasions.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we went to the inn, and there they talked of the
-times quietly enough till the lawyer came in.
-Mr. Drake craved leave to carry me home with him when
-our business was done, that I might see his boys, of whom
-he seemed very proud, and fish with them on the morrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Fulke demurred at first, but when Mr. Drake
-urged that it would cheer me a little, and perhaps bring
-the colour back to me, for I was but very poorly after
-my days of sorrow, my guardian at last consented.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Towards evening, then, Mr. Drake came back for me,
-and we sallied out together, Sir Fulke crying out as
-we left that Mr. Drake was not to send me back with
-any pestilent Calvinistic ideas in my head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was surprised that we went across the road
-down to the landing-stage just below the bridge. For
-I knew not where Mr. Drake's house could be if we
-must go to it by water, but I did not say anything till
-we had taken his boat and were clear of the turmoil
-which the fast-ebbing tide caused as it fought its
-way angrily through the narrow arches of the noble
-bridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where is your house, Mr. Drake?' I asked, as we
-reached the stiller water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where is it, my boy?' answered he, chuckling to
-himself, as if vastly tickled by my question. 'Where,
-but on no man's land.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And where may that be?' asked I, not at all
-understanding his merriment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, in God's free tide-way, my lad,' said Mr. Drake,
-chuckling more heartily than ever. 'Where could an
-Englishman, and above all a Devonshire man, live better
-than there, where there are no landlords and no taxes,
-and every one is his own king? You will know it
-some day, I hope. Frank knows it. My boys know it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could not quite make out what he meant, and least
-of all who Frank was, and what he had to do with it.
-And no wonder, for then I did not know his strange
-habit of speaking of his sons as 'Frank and my boys.' I
-did not like to question him more, and was content
-to listen to him as he told me the names and services
-of the Queen's ships which we passed. There were
-a good many of them moored between the bridge and
-Upnor Castle, whereof some came to great renown
-afterwards, but then they were few and ill kept compared
-with what a man may see in the reach to-day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Clean past Chatham and the one little dock that it
-then had we went, till we made the reach that runs
-toward Hoo. Here Mr. Drake stopped rowing and
-pointed down the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look, Master Festing,' cried he. 'There she lies,
-there ride her jolly old bones over no man's land. That
-is my house, that is my castle, that is where I live with
-Frank, when he is at home, and my boys.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked to where he pointed, and saw an old hulk,
-after the fashion of King Henry VII.'s time, moored
-just out of the fair-way. A handsome vessel she must
-have been once, but was dismasted and plainly very
-old. I noted this to Mr. Drake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay,' he said, 'she is old, but trim and staunch yet.
-They say Cabot sailed in her to the Indies once; the
-first man who touched the mainland, let the Spaniards
-say what they will. I know it, and Frank knows it, and
-so do my boys, and we are proud of it, as we ought to
-be, for he sailed from England in an English ship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why do you live there?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' said he, 'I have a reason, and I may as well
-tell you now as later. I lived once near Tavistock, in
-beautiful Devon, on the banks of our sweet Tavy, and
-there I might be dwelling now, but that I began to smell
-the Word of God and know it from the stinking breath
-of the beast of Rome. Then the Lord sent me trials,
-which, I thank Him day and night, He gave me strength
-to bear. The Justices of Devon were, for the most part,
-very earnest for the old religion, and persecution grew
-hot for those who would not sign the Six Articles. I
-thank God I was one to whom He showed the filthy
-error of that first most pestilent and damnable doctrine
-concerning transubstantiation. For, look you, lad, they
-would have made us like unto themselves, who are
-worse than the cannibal savages of the Indies. They,
-in their devilish ignorance, do but eat the flesh of their
-enemies; but these, in their most pernicious self-will,
-would pretend to fill their lewd bellies with the flesh of
-their Redeemer. Even as I speak to you of it, lad, my
-words seem like poison that will blister my lips, and I
-shudder each time I think of it, that Christian men are
-found to set such wanton contumely upon their sweet
-Lord. Come what might, I was no man to sink my
-soul in the filth of such a hell-born superstition as
-that; so I rose up and fled from the destroyer hither
-to Kent, where I knew true men were to be found.
-Here God showed me yonder hulk, which I purchased
-with the store of money I had saved. There dwelt I
-in peace till, in the fulness of time, King Henry died,
-and the godly men who stood around the throne of his
-son made me a preacher to the Royal Navy. So I
-continued reaping plenteously in the harvest of the Lord,
-until Edward's death thrust England once more down
-into the black pit of papacy and superstition.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But the day has broken again, now,' I said,
-remembering his former words, and wishing to win him
-back to the genial mood from which he had talked
-himself. He had been getting more and more like a
-great boy as we neared the ship and he talked of his
-sons, and I was sorry to have made him gloomy by my
-foolish questions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So it has, lad, so it has,' he cried, looking up
-quickly with the twinkle in his eyes again. 'It is
-growing brighter every hour; you shall help to brighten
-it, with God's good will, and so shall Frank, so shall
-my boys. But here we are almost alongside.
-Ahoy! ahoy! ahoy!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one answered to his shout, but as we came close
-alongside we could hear a strange commotion in the
-waist of the ship, into which, however, we could not see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are about it again,' said Mr. Drake, with a
-chuckle; 'my boys are.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'About what?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fighting!' replied Mr. Drake, with increasing pride
-and delight. 'I know the sound. My boys fight as
-much as any man's sons in all Rochester. Not many
-days pass without them getting about it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But what do they fight about?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't bother your head with that,' replied
-Mr. Drake; 'they don't.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that we went aboard, and I saw the cause of
-all the hubbub. Stripped to the waist were two sturdy
-lads of about twelve and thirteen years of age. They
-were fighting furiously with their fists, to the great
-delight of nine other boys of all ages, varying from a
-little fellow not more than three years old to a lad of
-scarce less growth than the smaller of the two fighters.
-The onlookers were cheering each telling blow, and
-hounding on their brothers to further efforts. Each
-time the others shouted I noticed that the baby cried out
-too, as loudly as his little lungs would allow, and beat
-on the deck with an old sword-hilt, which seemed to
-be his favourite and only plaything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There, Master Festing,' said Mr. Drake to me,
-beaming all over his round face, 'there are boys for a
-father to be proud of. Well done, Jack! 'Tis Jack
-and Joe,' he went on. 'You could not have had better
-luck; they are pretty fighters both.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My answer was drowned in a fresh shout from the
-boys as they caught sight of their father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come on, dad, come on,' they cried. 'Jack is
-winning again, but you shall still see some good sport
-before 'tis ended.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They crowded round Mr. Drake to drag him by his
-cloak to where the two boys were still belabouring each
-other. Thither I think he would have gone, for he
-seemed as excited over it as the baby, but just then a
-thin, weary-looking woman, with eyes red with weeping,
-came running out of the cabin in the poop, and took
-Mr. Drake wildly by the arm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stop them, Ned,' she said, 'stop them, for God's
-sake; they have been fighting this hour. For what
-black sin has Heaven given me such sons?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tut, tut,' answered Mr. Drake; 'would you have a
-nosegay of milksops to call you mother? Rejoice that
-God has given us sons with whom, when the time is
-come, we shall not fear to speak with our enemies in
-the gate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know, I know,' she pleaded again; 'but stop
-them, Ned, this once. Look at their bloody faces; and I
-am so a-weary. Frank would stop them if he were here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, though he loves to see them fight,' answered
-her husband; 'I think sometimes he cares too much
-for you, and not enough for the cause. Still, for his
-sake, I will stop them. Peace, lads, peace!' he cried
-then; 'enough for to-day. It has been well fought,
-but now I bring you a visitor. Look to him, while I
-shift my boots within.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boys ceased fighting instantly, and after wiping
-their faces they shook hands, and then came up to
-where Mr. Drake had left me with the rest. John
-Drake, being the eldest there, welcomed me, but in a
-way that fell a good deal short of good manners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you fight?' said he, with a contemptuous look
-at my black broadcloth doublet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can fight with sword and buckler,' I answered,
-'a little.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you are a gentleman?' asked Joe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank is going to be a gentleman. He says so.
-He is going to make all of us gentlemen, too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who is Frank?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't you know Frank?' said Joe, while all the
-rest laughed at my ignorance. 'Frank is our brother,
-our eldest brother. He is a sailor now. He's 'prentice
-to a shipmaster, who trades to Zeeland and France.
-He will be a master soon, and have a ship of his own.
-He says so. And then he will sail with us against
-Calais, and win it back, and the Queen will make us
-gentlemen.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is much to do, and will take some doing,' said
-I, smiling, I am afraid; for I could not but be merry
-over the way they spoke of what a poor smack-lad was
-going to do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What are you grinning at?' cried Jack, firing up
-in a moment. 'Do you doubt Frank will do what he
-says? Take that, then,' and he struck me a hard blow
-on the chest that made me reel again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am sorry it made me angry to be struck so, for I
-returned his blow so heartily that, being younger than
-I, he was spun over on the deck somewhat heavily.
-Yet I think he did not mind, for when he picked himself
-up from where he fell, he came to me quite quietly
-and felt my arm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who would have guessed,' said he, 'that you could
-strike so shrewd a blow,&mdash;you with a pale face like
-that; but Frank could thrash you, and so he shall
-when he comes home, and then we will ask him to let
-you sail with us against Calais.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could not laugh at him any more, for I began to
-take a great liking to the sturdy lad, with his broad,
-flat face and curly hair, since I had knocked him down,
-and could quite forgive him for talking so big about his
-brother Frank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am sorry I struck so hard,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, sir,' answered he, 'be not sorry. It is not every
-one can fell me like an ox, and besides, dad says England
-will want strong arms ere long. Won't she, dad?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, that she will,' said Mr. Drake, who now came
-out from under the poop; 'and Mr. Festing will use
-his for her. But come to supper now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Art going to be a soldier, lad?' he said to me, as
-soon as we were seated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think I shall be scholar,' answered I. 'Sir
-Fulke says I am to go to Cambridge soon. It was my
-father's wish.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, he was a wise man,' said Mr. Drake, 'and
-doubtless knew best. But it seems to me that England
-will need pikes and swords sooner than books. Still,
-let that pass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't let him be a scholar, dad,' said Jack. 'He
-must be a sailor, and sail with us to the Indies, and
-find new kingdoms, like the Spaniards, and bring back
-a cargo of gold and pearls. Tell him about the Indies,
-dad.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Mr. Drake, with a right good will, fell to talking
-of the wonders of the West, and we twelve boys sat
-round him, open-eyed, greedily devouring his words,
-while he spoke of the gilded king that was there, who
-ruled over mountains of gold; and of the Indians that
-hunted fish in the sea, as spaniels did rabbits; and of
-the great whelks that were three feet across; and of
-trees with leaves so big that one could cover a man,
-and almonds as large as a demi-culverin ball. I know
-not what other wonders he related, just as he heard
-them from the mariners who came thence, but we all
-grew greatly excited by his tales, and went to bed to
-dream things yet stranger than the truth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was my first meeting with the Drake family,
-and fast friends we boys became, and though continually
-fighting amongst themselves for the lightest causes, they
-never offered to attack me again. Francis I never saw at
-this time. He was nearly always abroad, and when he
-returned it so happened that I could not get to see
-him. Still, whenever we got a day away from our
-grammar, Harry and I always slipped off with our crossbows,
-to sail with the Drakes in their boat and fish and
-shoot wild-fowl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those were our happiest days. So greatly did the
-Drake boys take to Harry, after a fight or two, and so
-much did we take to the sea, that all our old pleasures
-were forsaken, and the pigeons and the jackdaws were
-left in quiet possession of the crumbling old church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor were Mr. Drake's stories of the West the least
-cause of our love for the Medway and that aged hulk.
-Harry was never tired of questioning the old navy
-preacher about it, and soon we began to worry our old
-tutor to tell us more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For I must relate that I was now living almost
-entirely at Ashtead with Harry, that I might share
-with him the tutor whom Sir Fulke had secured for
-us. Poor old long-suffering Master Follet! How I
-wish I could know thee now! Surely when I look
-back to those days of patience, I know thou must have
-been the sweetest pedant that ever said his prayers to
-Aristotle. But then in my folly I knew thee not. I
-knew thee not for the gentle scholar thou wast, for the
-well-rounded compendium thou hadst made thyself of
-that old learning which is fast passing away,&mdash;the old,
-pure learning, which a man could seek so pleasantly
-when learning was books and naught but books, and he
-who knew them best was accounted wisest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If Eve had not tempted nor Adam sinned, God
-might have given us that richest gift&mdash;to see the hours
-of our youth, as they pass, with the eyes that we look
-back upon them withal when they are gone. Alas! such
-wit I lacked and knew thee not, my gentle
-master, nor the hours in which I was free to rifle the
-treasure-house of thy polished wisdom. Had I but
-known, I might have tasted, ere they were yet dead,
-the sweets of those days when he who sought wisdom
-and would be accounted wise might sit out his life in
-the window-seat of his library, drinking in the voice of
-the mighty dead, while the world without glimmered
-softly in through the painted lattices upon the folio
-before him, and wandered thence to kiss its sister volumes
-sleeping in the shelves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now that has changed, with much besides. Now
-must not a scholar be content with the light that comes
-softened and tender-hued through a library window if
-he would pass for wise amongst men. Now must he
-plunge out into the day and seek for the new wisdom
-amongst the haunts of thronging men, where the sunlight
-beats fierce and bright upon the world to show to
-him who fears not all its beauty, and all its baseness too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such wisdom was not our tutor's portion, and his
-want of it, instead of increasing our love for him, as
-now it would, was our chief ground of difference. We
-each day grew more full of the wonders of the West,
-not alone from what Mr. Drake told us, but also from
-what we heard direct from mariners, with whom groats
-could win us speech in Chatham and Rochester.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well I remember how he answered when, having
-drunk dry our other wells, we made bold to try what
-we could find in our tutor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad, my boys,' said he, with an anxious look
-in his delicate, wizened face and clear, brown eyes,
-'that you have come to me in your trouble; for I
-perceive you have been speaking with some ignorant
-fellows, who have filled your heads with the folly
-that is now everywhere afloat. Beware of it as you
-would beware the fiend. So strong is this madness
-that has seized on men, and even scholars (if indeed
-they still deserve the name), that in so great a place as
-Paris even Aristotle has been called in question.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He looked at us as he said this, pausing long with
-uplifted eyebrows to watch the effect which this
-announcement, to him so terrible, would have on us. I did
-not know what to say, so prayed him civilly to proceed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You may well be pained,' he continued, though it
-must be said that I don't think we were at all, 'but
-you will rejoice to hear that these things will not
-continue long. I have here a goad which will soon drive
-these dull-witted cattle back to the right path.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So saying he laid his hand on a bundle of manuscript,
-which we knew only too well, and leaning fondly
-over it read slowly, as though it were a sweetmeat in
-his mouth, the title-leaf at the top. Its name was in
-Greek, not because the work was written in that tongue,
-but merely out of a fashion used commonly amongst
-such men to increase their appearance of wisdom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a work,' the good old man said,&mdash;we had heard
-it a score of times before,&mdash;'upon which I am labouring,
-entituled, "'H Aristotéleia Apología; or, Ramus
-Ransacked, being a British Blast against Gaulish Gabies,
-wherein all the preposterous, fantastical opinions of late
-grown current amongst the Dunces of Paris are fully
-set forth, withstood, and refuted by Christoph: Follet."
-It begins with a sharp note against&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, please you, sir,' Harry interrupted,&mdash;and I was
-glad he did, for I saw the old man was running out of
-his course, as he always did when he got astride his
-'Apology,'&mdash;'were it not well first to show us how the
-knowledge of this New World, of which we were
-asking you, had so set things awry?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Knowledge of the New World, say you?' said our
-tutor, evidently a little pained. 'Know, my boys,
-there is no knowledge of this pretended New World.
-No man can know what does not exist: the New
-World does not exist, <i>ergo</i>, no man hath knowledge
-of it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Far be it from me to dispute your syllogism,' said
-I, for logic was his chief delight to teach us, 'yet,
-saving your premises, I have many times spoken with
-them that have been there and seen it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My boy, my boy,' answered Mr. Follet sadly, 'in
-what a perilous case do I find you! What hope can I
-have of your scholarship if you will set the eyes of
-moderns against the wits of the ancients? How can they
-have seen this New World of which they are so ready to
-prate? Had it existed, Aristotle would have written
-of it. Forget you for how many years, and for how
-many and great sages, the whole sum of human understanding
-has been contained within the compass of the
-writings of that great man, and will you seek to increase
-it by the babbling of drunken sailors?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, please you,' said Harry, 'the honest mariners
-who told me were not drunk.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The greater liars they, then,' answered Mr. Follet,
-a little testily. 'Or rather, I should say, the more
-pitiable their ignorance; for let me not be carried
-beyond good manners, which are a sweet seasoning of
-scholarship too often forgotten nowadays in the dishes
-men compound of their wits.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save you sir, for that most excellent conceited
-figure,' said Harry gravely; for the mad knave always
-knew how to bring his tutor back to a fair ambling pace
-when he grew restive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, lad, indeed I think it was not amiss,'
-answered Mr. Follet, with a complacent smile. 'It is
-an indifferent pretty trick I have, and one I could
-doubtless in some measure rear in you; but not if you
-suffer the vulgar to plant weeds in the gardens I am
-tilling with such labour, that I may in due course see
-you both bring forth a plenteous crop of the fruits of
-scholarship. If you have a desire to make yourself
-learned in cosmography, I myself, who have no small
-skill in it, will teach you. But listen no more to idle
-sailors' tales, whose only guide is experience, wherewith
-they foolishly seek to explain the hidden wonders of
-the world, seeing they have no skill to learn the truth
-from books.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is it Aristotle, then, alone we must read?' asked
-Harry, a little disheartened at the prospect before us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I will not say that,' answered our tutor. 'Though
-for the wise the Stagirite is all-sufficient, yet it cannot
-be denied but that there be some authors who, having
-reverently and afar-off walked in the footsteps of the
-master, have in a manner amplified, extended, and
-explained, and as it were diluted his vast learning, so as to
-make it more palatable, medicinable, and digestible to the
-unlearned, such as you and Jasper. Therefore, because
-of your weakness, I would suffer you to read the works
-of Strabo, Seneca, and Claudius Ptolemæus, amongst
-the ancients; and among the moderns, the <i>Speculum
-Naturale</i> of Vicenzius Bellovacensis, the <i>Liber
-Cosmographicus de Natura Locorum</i> of Albertus Magnus,
-together with certain works of our own Roger Bacon;
-but these with circumspection, and under my guidance,
-seeing he was a speculator who erred not from too
-little boldness, or too great respect for Aristotle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this we had to rest content, though I think
-Harry found little comfort in it, seeing that his love for
-books was never so great as mine. As for me, I laid
-aside my <i>Plutarch</i>, and devoured greedily all my tutor
-advised. Nor did I stop there; for, rummaging in the
-library at home, I found other works on cosmography,
-such as the <i>Imago Mundi</i> of Honoré d'Autun, and that
-of Cardinal Alliacus, together with not a few others
-which some abbot of the later times had collected, being,
-as I imagine, interested in the science.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In these I read constantly, and carried what I found
-there to Mr. Drake and his boys, and my friends amongst
-the sailors. Hour by hour I told them of the dread ocean,
-where was eternal night, with storms that never ceased;
-of the magic island of Antilia or Atlantis; of the
-marvellous hill in Trapobana, which had the property of
-drawing the nails from a ship which sailed near it, and
-so wrecking it; and, above all, of the Earthly Paradise,
-of which I loved best to muse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again and again I poured into their wondering ears
-the tale of that blessed land which lay beyond the
-Indies, the first region of the East, where the world
-begins and heaven and earth are hand in hand; the land
-where is raised on high a sanctuary which mortals may
-not enter, and which everlasting bars of fire have closed
-since he who first sinned was driven forth. I told them
-of the wonders of that land; how in it there was neither
-heat nor cold, and four great rivers went forth to fill the
-place with all manner of sweetness and water the Wood
-of Life, the tree whereof if any man eat the fruit he
-shall continue for everlasting and unchanged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some laughed at me, saying I was blinded by too
-much book-learning, but most of the mariners, and
-especially Drake's boys, listened with great respect, caring
-little, as I think, after the manner of seafaring folk,
-whether the tales they heard were true or not, so long
-as they were strange.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-So passed by the full days of my boyhood; I living,
-as I have said, chiefly at Ashtead in Harry Waldyve's
-company.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not alone in devouring grammar, and such dry
-bones of cosmography as Mr. Follet allowed us to pick,
-that our time was spent. Sir Fulke was not a man to
-keep boys wholly to such work. Although he had
-managed to acquire some show of skill in theology
-when King Henry brought it into fashion at Court, yet
-even that I soon saw had fallen into sad confusion in
-his mind, and in no sense was he a scholar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet in all such pastimes and pleasant labours as are
-used in open places and the daylight, which in respect
-of peace or war are not only comely and decent, but
-also very necessary for a courtly gentleman to use&mdash;in
-these he still showed the remains of his former high
-skill, or at least a happy trick of imparting to us his
-great knowledge of their mysteries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Almost every day he would have us out and exercise
-us under his own eye at riding, running at the ring and
-tilt, and in playing with weapons, being especially
-careful of our fence with the sword and spiked target.
-Like his master King Henry, he had a great love and
-skill for using the bow. This he taught us to use, and
-less willingly also the harquebuss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had little time for the sea&mdash;an element, as my
-guardian was wont to say, which sorted less with what
-pertained to a gentleman than the land. Yet he did
-not forbid it, and whenever he went up to the Court,
-which was not seldom, we laid aside awhile our courtly
-exercises, and were continually amongst the marshes
-and Saltings with Mr. Drake's boys, 'Isti dracones
-horrendi,' as Mr. Follet was wont to ease his mind by
-calling them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After Sir Fulke's returns from Court it was always
-our scholarship that had the upper hand. For he was
-wise enough to see how things were changing at Court,
-and came back overflowing with praises of the young
-Queen's beauty and learning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Slight, lads,' he would say, 'she puts you both to
-shame, and goes beyond all young gentlemen of her
-time in the excellency of her learning. I tell you it is
-a sight to make England weep for joy to see her stand
-up, so fair and courteous, and make her speech in Latin,
-or French, or Spanish, or Italian, to the jabbering
-foreigners that come. And as for the Greek; why,
-Mr. Roger Ascham tells me she reads more of it with him in
-a day at Windsor than any prebendary of the church
-doth Latin in a week; he should know, seeing he had
-the setting forward of all her most excellent gifts of
-learning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then must we be double courtiers, sir,' said Harry,
-'and court learning and the Queen as well, if we want
-to keep the Court, or the Queen shall have but
-half-courtiers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Half-courtiers or double courtiers,' said Sir Fulke,
-'I know that he who is out of learning will soon find
-himself out of Court.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then is he in an evil case,' laughed Harry, 'for he
-that is out of Court is out of his suit, and he that is out
-of his suit shall be shamed unless he quickly suit
-himself with another. Come, Jasper, let us get Mr. Follet
-to make us breeches to go to Court with.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And away he would run to his work, while Sir Fulke
-laughed at his boy's trick of turning words upside down.
-For he soon got the ways of that tripping wit which, it
-must be said, has since come to make far better passwords
-to places at Court than ever a hard-witted scholar
-could learn, did he read twice as much Greek as
-Mr. Ascham himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I say not this in envy, though I was too hard-witted
-ever to come by the trick. Harry's gifts were dearer
-to me than my own, and, God knows, I loved him
-for them, and never in my life envied him anything,
-except once, but for the present time let that pass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some three years after my father's death thus passed
-away before the sad day came when Harry and I were
-forced to separate, since our paths led diversely. It was
-high time that I should go to Cambridge, according to
-my father's wish. Sir Fulke's faith in scholarship was
-not large enough for him to suffer Harry to do the like.
-For him a place was found in the household of that
-most godly and warlike nobleman, Sir Francis Russell,
-Earl of Bedford, who was godfather to Frank Drake,
-since his renowned father, the first earl, being very earnest
-for the Reformation party, had been a good friend of
-Mr. Drake's when he lived at Tavistock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Since my father's death I had known no day so sad
-as that on which I took my departure for Cambridge in
-company with Mr. Follet, who at my charges was to
-install me safely in Trinity College.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry rode with us as far as Gravesend, where we
-were to take the river for London. Mr. Drake, too,
-joined us at Rochester, and, riding by my side on his
-shaggy cob, beguiled the way with much good advice as
-to how I should bear myself at the University.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am, in a great measure,' said he, 'out of my
-former opinion against your becoming a scholar, not only
-because of the excellent parts I can see in you, which
-it were a sin to swathe in a napkin, but also because
-you will find that certain stout hearts amongst the
-godly, to whom I have written concerning you, are fast
-getting the upper hand at Cambridge. So that, I doubt
-not, you shall find yourself set amongst many goodly
-plants, with whom you shall grow to bear fruit medicinable
-for the purging away of all the clogging papistical
-humours that still be left to fester in the stomach of
-Reformation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He were but a bitter tree,' laughed Harry, 'did he
-bear but purges.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A most wrong conclusion, my malapert Hal,' answered
-Mr. Drake; 'for your bitter pill is a sovereign
-sweetening of the inwards; and you shall find,
-moreover, that much fruit which grows at Court, though
-sweet in the mouth, is, for the most part, most bitter in
-the belly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then,' cried Harry, 'have I learnt a most notable
-piece of science, and can henceforth tell why courtiers'
-tongues are sweet and scholars' bitter. Still, I will be
-a courtier with a tongue tuned to sweet courtesy, and
-leave bitter railing to scholars.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Go, thou madcap,' chuckled Mr. Drake, whom
-Harry could never offend; 'go cry "Words, come and
-play with me," for surely thou wast born their
-play-fellow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake then fell to tell me, as he had a score of
-times before, that Trinity was the worthiest college in
-England, since it was that which his good friend, the
-renowned Earl of Bedford, had chosen for Frank's
-godfather, Lord Russell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So largely did he speak of this and of the shining
-light that the young Earl had proved himself there,
-that his talk carried us all the way to Gravesend, where,
-most sadly, we bade adieu to him and Harry. As the
-strong flowing tide carried us up the beautiful Thames
-my spirits grew lighter; for I was not without
-comfort to soften the grief of my first parting with my
-brother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I never attained to his wit and skill in courtly
-exercises, being in no way apt thereto either by birth
-or nature, so I may say, since all men know it, in things
-pertaining to scholarship he was but a child beside me.
-I know not if I was unduly proud of all I had attained
-to under Mr. Follet's guidance, yet of a surety I know
-he was unduly proud to bring me to Cambridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Were it not unworthy of a scholar, Jasper,' said the
-worthy man, as we sat in the tilt-boat that was carrying
-us to London, 'I could bring my heart to envy you
-the many and great delights that await you whither we
-are going. Most profitably have you attended to my
-precepts, and eschewing the light of experience, by which
-the vulgar walk, have trusted to books, which are the
-only true guide. Such well-fashioned vessels as I have
-made you it is now again the delight of <i>Alma Mater</i>
-to fill with her choicest nectar.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did she, then, once choose other vessels?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Alas, dear discipulus, yes,' answered Mr. Pellet, with
-a little flush on his wan cheek; 'and then it was that I
-was cast forth. It was when those Elysian days, whereof
-the memory is a sweet savour to me still, were ended&mdash;the
-days when it was my happy fortune to find a place
-amongst that unmatched garland of fellows and
-scholars with which Dr. Medcalfe crowned St. John's
-College when he was Master, and afterwards when I
-was chosen out to be a most unworthy member of the
-new-founded house of Trinity. It was an honour I had
-little hoped to win; for (not to speak too much, because
-of the love I still bear to my old and dear college) this
-royal Trinity which our glorious King Henry founded,
-that <i>colonia</i> of St. John's, that <i>matre pulchra filia
-pulchrior</i>, to which you, I hope most humbly and reverently,
-are about to belong, I hold, above all foundations,
-learned or unlearned, that the world has ever seen,
-to be the most noble, princely, and magnificent.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What made you, then, leave so honourable a state?'
-asked I as he paused, as if lost in musing on the glories
-of our college.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is soon told,' said he sadly. 'The days I speak
-of ended with the most precious life of our scholar king.
-It was there, if I may make free with the fine figure of
-my most worthy friend, Mr. Roger Ascham, that the
-Hog of Rome passed over the seas into that most
-fair garden of Cambridge, and set to to root out the fair
-plants that were growing there, and tread them under
-his cloven feet. Then the blighting breath of idolatry
-carried seeds of tares thither, which, taking root, throve
-most rankly amidst the pollution that beast had made,
-till ignorance choked out scholarship, and I fled.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely, sir,' said I, for much talk with Mr. Drake
-had increased the hot opinions that were born in me;
-'surely the breath of the beast of Rome is no better
-than the vapours from the mouth of hell.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Soft and fair, Jasper,' said the old scholar, 'soft
-and fair. Such words sit ill on a scholar's lips. Carry
-not the rancour of these present times into the holy
-shrine whither you go. The memory of the ruin that
-befell that fair-built fabric did somewhat carry me beyond
-the terms of good manners. Do not you follow me. As
-you love learning, help to guard the doors of yonder dear
-place against the savage turmoil of these shifting times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Must a scholar, then,' said I, 'forget his religion
-and what he owes to his God?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, not that, lad,' answered Mr. Follet, looking a
-little pained. 'Your most glorious college was, under
-the king's grace, as its charter recites, divinely appointed
-for the purpose of bringing the pure truth of Christianity
-into the realm, and repelling the nefarious and
-enormous abuses of the Roman papacy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then will I strive,' said I, 'with my college to do
-what King Henry said.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is well, lad,' answered my poor tutor, without
-losing his troubled look. 'Still there is no need to
-forget your scholarship in doing parson's work. By
-learning shall you withstand Rome more than by controversy
-and railing. Love a scholar when you meet him, though
-he hate not Rome. Love him for his learning's sake,
-and forget Rome. Such was the way in the old days,
-when good Dr. Medcalfe was Master of St. John's.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I saw how pained he was to think that the cargo
-he had laden with such care might be wrecked on the
-stormy seas which he could perceive ahead. So I said
-no more then, but contented myself with watching the
-multitudes of swans that came about us and the shipping
-which we passed, and with asking a hundred questions
-about the towns and villages on the banks, as well as of
-the great city which lay before, till by dark our sturdy
-rowers ceased their work at Paul's Chain, and we landed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We lay but one night in London, and came to Cambridge
-on the fourth day. There Mr. Follet at once
-carried me to Dr. Beaumont, that I might be entered at
-Trinity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Doctor, as I must call him, though at that time
-he was only admitted B.D., was a man of about forty
-years of age, of good breeding and presence. In my
-eyes he seemed a very great person indeed, and my
-respect for good Mr. Follet was never so great as when I
-saw with what honour and affection the Master of
-Trinity received him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have brought you a scholar, Beaumont,' said
-Mr. Follet, after very hearty commendations had passed
-between them, 'after my own heart; one who has
-imbibed the true principles of Aristotle, and is untainted
-with any new empiric heresy. I have taught him well
-in our own faith&mdash;to love learning, and despise
-experience as the common school-house of fools.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, Follet,' said Dr. Beaumont, laying his hand on
-my tutor's shoulder fondly, and speaking to him
-smilingly, as though he had been a child, 'happy are you
-to have kept your scholarship so pure. Let us hope your
-scholar will do no worse, though, God knows, these are
-tainting times, and Cambridge grows so full of railing
-that ere long, I think, there will be no room left for the
-gentle disputations of scholars.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that he dismissed us to his brother, Mr. John
-Beaumont, the Vice-Master; who showed me where my
-lodging was to be in King's Hall, not far from the great
-gateway of King Edward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How proud I felt as I sat that afternoon looking out
-upon the little court, for that was before Dr. Neville had
-pulled down the old buildings to make the present great
-court, which is now the envy of every college in
-Europe!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cambridge seemed to me a hall of Paradise, and
-Trinity its daïs. In spite of what Dr. Beaumont had
-said, I looked forward to dwelling in it as in a realm
-where the pure quintessence of learning should reign
-over a quiet band of brothers, who in the impassive
-contemplation of wisdom should have lost all hate, and
-fear, and sorrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly my meditation was disturbed by a loud
-shout, and I saw a number of students surge tumultuously
-out of an archway into the court. In their midst
-was an effigy with an ox's skull for a head, clearly made
-to counterfeit the devil. This they had clothed in a
-surplice, and crowned with a square cap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed to delight them beyond measure; for
-while one held the thing the rest danced round it,
-laughing and shouting, and singing ribald verselets
-against it. Gradually they drew near the window of
-one of the fellows, named Saunderson, who was University
-Reader in Logic, and fell to crying, 'Fasting Johnnie,
-Fasting Johnnie, come and welcome your master, who
-is here to speak with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Therewith Mr. Saunderson ran at them with a cudgel,
-but they drove him back, so that he could not come at
-the devil in the surplice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time the uproar had brought a number of
-students to the gate, and Mr. Saunderson, seeing amongst
-them a number of King's College men, cried out, 'To
-me, to me, all lovers of the old faith, and stay this
-sacrilege.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a rush from the gate at the effigy in
-answer to his call, and in a few moments I could see
-my college was being worsted. That was enough for
-me in the first blush of my pride, and, without thinking,
-I rushed down and out into the court, just in time to
-seize the effigy as it was being carried out of the gate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What followed beyond a wild turmoil, in which I
-was fighting like the Drake boys themselves, I cannot
-say, but soon I knew I was standing in the midst of
-the court with the tattered effigy in my hands and my
-fellow-students shouting round me as if their lungs
-must burst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At every pause in their shouting I could hear the
-voices of the Vice-Master and Mr. Saunderson railing at
-each other in a corner of the court with such good
-will, that every moment I thought it would come to
-blows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was feeling very proud of what I had done, though
-scarcely knew in the din what to do next, when all at
-once I saw a grave-looking young man standing in the
-gateway, which was now shut, and by his side my poor
-tutor looking at me as though his heart would break.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then at last it burst upon me what I had done. At
-one blow the fair fabric I had raised in my day-dreams,
-the oft-repeated resolution to lead the life of pure
-scholarship, to soar impassive on the wings of science
-above the little turmoils of the world&mdash;at one blow it
-was all gone. Ere one sun had set upon my new life
-I was the hero of a vulgar broil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In an agony of shame I cast down the detested
-cause of my grief, and, breaking passionately through the
-excited throng, fled to my rooms from the reproachful,
-heart-rending gaze of poor Mr. Follet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With my head buried in my arms I sat for some
-minutes sobbing in black despair at my table, when, as
-I thought, I heard him open my door and come towards
-me; but the step was young, firm, and resolute, as
-unlike as it could be to my dear old tutor's shuffle. A
-strong hand was laid gently on my shoulder, and I
-heard a deep, full-toned voice speaking to me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be of good heart, Mr. Festing,' it said; 'I know
-why you weep, and had I not long ago hardened my
-heart to the battle, I could weep with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked up, and saw the same gentleman who had
-been standing with my tutor in the gateway. He was
-a somewhat ungainly, ill-favoured young man of some
-eight and twenty summers, but yet I felt drawn to him,
-as much by reason of his kindly words as of a look there
-was in his face of fearless resolution, and pure-strained
-intellect, which a certain aspect of weary melancholy
-softened into what was to me a most sweet and lovable
-expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am Mr. Thomas Cartwright,' he went on, still
-looking sorrowfully upon me, 'new-made major-fellow
-of Trinity, with whom you are to share this lodging.
-I have brought this about by the kindness of the
-Master, because Mr. Drake had written to me
-concerning you, with very hearty commendations.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you a friend of Mr. Drake's, then?' asked I,
-feeling greatly comforted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Mr. Festing,' answered he; 'and also of that
-most high-wrought scholar, Mr. Follet. I know more
-of you than you know of me, and I know why you
-grieve. It is not hidden from me that you were minded
-to make sacrifice to the Lord of the good parts He
-has given you, and by long hours of patient study to
-make them worthy His acceptance. Yet rejoice that He
-has shown you at your very going forth what His will
-is with you. Rejoice that we can say this day, as
-surely as Samuel did to Saul, that He has appointed
-you to go up with us against the Amalekites and
-destroy them utterly. Such is His will; and while men
-hearkened to Him the strong tide of Reformation flowed
-on in full flood under His mighty breath, till its living
-waters bid fair to fill the length and breadth of
-Christendom with their cleansing sweetness. But men wearied
-of the work, and spared the best of the sheep, and of the
-oxen, and of the fatlings, and of the lambs, and destroyed
-them not. And now the Lord's ears are vexed with
-the bleating of the sheep and the lowing of the oxen
-amongst the people. He turns His face from them, and
-the tide is fast running back. Rise up, then, and do
-the work of the Lord. Think not of the treasure you
-have been laying up for Him; for, behold, to obey is
-better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of
-rams!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Must I then abandon all scholarship,' I asked,
-when he had finished, 'to join in the din of these bitter
-controversies?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What could the son of Nicholas Festing wish for
-better?' Mr. Cartwright replied. 'For what you call
-bitter controversy is battle under the banner of the
-Lord of Hosts against the Amalekite. Moreover, you
-need not lay aside scholarship, but you must labour
-thereat, even as I have done, to make of it a weapon
-wherewith at last you shall hew Agag in pieces before
-the Lord.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With such words he encouraged me not only then,
-but daily, till ere a term was half over I was as hot a
-young Puritan as any in Cambridge. I cannot blame
-myself that I so quickly made surrender to that
-remarkable young man, whom St. John's and my college
-were bidding against each other to possess, and who has
-since made so great a stir in England, becoming the
-very head and heart of the Puritan party.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had not even good Mr. Follet's influence to help
-me, for he left Cambridge a few days after to take up
-his place as tutor to Harry and one or two other young
-gentlemen about the Court, to whom he had been
-commended by his good friend Mr. Ascham, a man who at
-that time was the very oracle of the nobility on all such
-matters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was glad enough my tutor was spared any further
-sight of the ill-conditioned state of his university, and,
-above all, the hornets' nest which I soon found my
-unhappy exploit had stirred up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was some days after his departure that I was
-sitting at the window of my lodging pretending to read,
-but in truth listening to the Vice-Master and
-Mr. Cartwright, who were talking over Mr. Saunderson's recent
-expulsion from his fellowship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how think you the Vice-Chancellor will take
-it?' said Mr. Cartwright thoughtfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who cares how?' said Mr. Beaumont hotly. 'Who
-cares what a Romish mule like Baker thinks? If he
-cannot stomach it, so much the worse for his Cretan
-belly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yet I think he is like to take some order in the
-matter,' said Mr. Cartwright, 'seeing how sturdy a
-papist Saunderson was.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Doubt not he will talk big enough,' answered the
-Vice-Master. 'He thinks because he is Provost of
-King's he can lift up his head over Trinity men. Yet
-let him beware, or he shall find that Pharaoh will lift
-up the head of the King's Baker from off his shoulders,
-and good Protestant fowls shall eat the flesh from off
-him. And besides, what order can he take? For if we
-cannot expel a fellow for observing fasts and particular
-days, not to speak of using allegory and citing Plato
-when publicly discoursing on the Scriptures, we may
-just as well write ourselves heathen idolaters and
-Italian atheists at once.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this moment I heard the tramp of armed men
-below the window, and, looking out, I perceived the
-Proctor with the beadles and his watch in the court
-below halting at our staircase. At that time the
-Proctor's watch always went at night harnessed with
-good morions and corselets, for fear of the Mayor's
-constable and his men, but it was not common to see them
-so by day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Proctor demanded admittance in the
-Vice-Chancellor's name, and therewith entered the room with
-the beadles and two halberdiers, whose bright armour
-seemed strangely out of place in our dim and dusty
-lodging.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I arrest you, John Beaumont,' said the Proctor,
-'for brawling and other offences against the peace and
-dignity of our Lady the Queen and this University.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At whose suit?' asked the Vice-Master.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At Mr. Saunderson's,' he answered. 'Here is the
-warrant; I pray you come peaceably.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, I will come gladly enough!' said Mr. Beaumont,
-'if it were only to enjoy the discomfiture it will bring
-the King's Baker when Sir William Cecil hears of it.
-Thank God, we have a Chancellor who knows my
-brother and me for true men, and can make a traitor's
-ears tingle&mdash;ay, and his back too. Let my brother know
-all, Mr. Cartwright, and pray him write without delay
-to Sir William.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Proctor looked a little troubled at the mention
-of the great Secretary of State, but still he performed
-his task, and our Vice-Master was conducted to prison.
-And there indeed he lay till an answer came down from
-Sir William, with such a stinging reprimand for
-Dr. Baker that he was glad enough to release Mr. Beaumont
-and eat his humble pie, thanking God it was no worse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Were I to speak at greater length of Cambridge as it
-was at that time, I should have little else to tell save
-ringing the changes on what happened to me in the
-first week of residence. Factions and contentions were
-our only occupation; and while the seniors quarrelled
-the students brawled, and grew daily more inordinate
-and contemptuous of rules for their orderly governance,
-as well in behaviour as in religion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for learning, it was only part and parcel with our
-manners. Our only philosophy was controversy
-concerning the ordinances of the English Church; while
-in grammar we studied nothing so much as how to rail
-in Ciceronian Latin,&mdash;and cunning professors we had, at
-least for the railing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sharing Mr. Cartwright's lodging, I was more
-fortunate than most. Though very earnest in the
-controversies, he would not neglect his scholarship nor
-mine. Every morning he rose between three and four,
-not allowing himself more than five hours' sleep,
-whatever happened. I rose with him, out of my love of him
-and learning; and pushing my trundle-bed under his
-standing bedstead, to make room for my stool beside
-him, read with him out of the books we loved so well
-till nigh ten o'clock, when dinner was served in the
-Hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After that the disputations in the schools began,
-which I always attended with him, being proud to carry
-the books of the most brilliant scholar and popular
-orator in Cambridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Between that and supper-time I exercised my body,
-as I had promised Sir Fulke, chiefly in the
-fencing-school. For there was newly come to Cambridge at
-that time an Italian master of fence, to whom all the
-best gentlemen in the University resorted to learn the
-new foining rapier play, to the great discomfiture of the
-teachers of sword and buckler. Moreover, I rode out
-continually to the artillery butts or the Gog-Magog hills,
-till Mr. Cartwright persuaded me to abandon the evil
-company that gathered there daily for pastime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So things went with me and the University, till in
-the summer of the year of grace 1564 a great and
-notable thing for us came to pass.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was after hall one day, in the middle of July, that
-Mr. Cartwright came up to me with the great news.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our time has come at last, Jasper,' said he; 'this
-day the Vice-Chancellor has received a letter from
-Mr. Secretary with very sharp orders for the burying of our
-differences, seeing that the Queen's grace will make
-progress here early in August.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is news indeed,' said I; 'will there not be
-great things done for her entertainment?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is the way my content lies,' answered Mr. Cartwright,
-radiant. 'There will be disputations, great
-disputations, where we shall pour into her gracious ear
-the true wisdom of Reformation, and refute our
-backsliding, halting adversaries.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But it is always said,' I replied, 'that the Queen
-clings to ceremonies and superstitions.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So she does,' he said, 'and were it not that that
-godly man, Lord Robert Dudley, is ever at her side,
-things might go harder with the faithful than they do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly,' said I, 'our High Steward is very earnest
-for the truth, but how shall we prevail with her better
-than he?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God will give us strength, and words, and wisdom,'
-he answered excitedly. 'I shall stand forth in His might
-at the great disputation, and speak words of fire that
-the Lord shall whisper in my ears. She shall listen and
-know it is the word of God that she hears; and lo! she
-shall go forth from Cambridge henceforth thrice blessed,
-to search out and destroy utterly throughout the length
-and breadth of the land all that the people have
-disobediently saved from the destruction of Amalek.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But will she surely hearken?' I said, half pitying
-and half fearing to see him lifting up his voice like one
-of the prophets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, lad!' he cried, growing more and more excited,
-'I know she will. She is young and good and wise.
-She has been surrounded by evil councillors, but the
-Lord has bidden me go cry to her, that she may see
-the way of England's, ay, and the world's, salvation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not until the day after the Queen arrived,
-when she rode out of her lodgings at King's to visit the
-colleges, that my eyes were gladdened with the sight of
-that most sublime Princess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I took my stand in Trinity, near the door of the hall,
-to see her ride into it. I shall never forget that sight
-as she passed on erect upon her horse, in a black velvet
-gown and hat. It was before the present monstrous
-fashions had come into use, and her costume so set off the
-brilliancy of her complexion and the ruddy glow of her
-hair that she looked radiant as a goddess in the joy of
-her reception, and the full flush and beauty of youthful
-womanhood.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-067"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-067.jpg" alt="QUEEN ELIZABETH" />
-<br />
-QUEEN ELIZABETH
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As she rode on into the hall I fell upon my knees to
-worship what seemed to me, who had never spoken to
-and hardly seen a beautiful woman before, the most
-lovely sight my eyes had ever beheld.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all my lungs I shouted 'Vivat Regina Divina.' She
-heard my cry and smiled down upon me, and I, poor
-soul, like I know not how many more beside me that
-day, rose up over ears in love with my Queen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And why should I not? Could a gentleman have a
-more worthy love? Some speak of her littlenesses, and
-mumble over her womanly faults. I, for one, will not
-listen to them. I did not see them. I worshipped
-what I saw. What that was all men know.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What witnesses could I call in her defence were she
-arraigned before a Court of Perfect Womanhood! And
-those not her own subjects either&mdash;it is only natural
-that they should praise&mdash;but foreigners, as any may
-know who have heard, as I have, Signor Giordano
-Bruno, the wisest of all who in my time have travelled
-hither, and my good friend, exhaust his surpassing
-eloquence in praising her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hold her,' so I have heard him say, 'for a princess
-without peer or rival, a woman so gifted and favoured
-of Heaven, that whether for heroism or learning or
-sagacity, no soldier, or lawyer, or statesman in her
-kingdom is her equal. I tell you that the wisdom, the dignity,
-the statesmanship, the wit, the beauty of that most royal
-lady has won her a throne upon the steps of which must
-humbly take their place, Semiramis, Dido, Cleopatra,
-and all princesses of whom the world has boasted
-hitherto. See where she sits upon her lofty seat, with
-the eyes of Christendom fixed upon her in astonishment
-and admiration, wondering to see how, in her beauty
-and dignity, as by the mere force that shines from her
-glorious face, she kept back from her beloved kingdom
-for well-nigh thirty years the storm that surged and
-roared upon the face of Europe; and, when at last it
-burst in frantic fury on your shores, hurled it back with
-one majestic sweep of her arm, and bound it down once
-more to receive what it was her will to send.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Happy, happy for the world if thou, my peerless
-Queen, like the new sun-goddess Aphrodite that thou art,
-shouldst open thy girdle till it embraced not only
-England and Ireland, but the whole globe. Then under thy
-benignant universal rule it should deserve the title thou
-hast won for thine own realm amongst the wisest of
-other lands; then should it be named, as they have
-named England, 'the pattern of perfect monarchy,'
-'<i>domicilium quietatis et humanitatis</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such, at any rate, was Cambridge while the sun stayed
-with us; and such indeed was England by the side of
-other realms. So completely did the fair flowers of
-scholarship which blossomed in the sunbeams of her
-presence obscure the thorns beneath, that Cambridge indeed
-appeared the garden of learning that she thought it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a sight I am proud to have seen when she
-sat in great St. Mary's Church beneath her canopy, with
-the Doctors and Bachelors in due order around her upon
-the great stage that had been erected there for the
-disputations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely it is a second Sheba,' whispered Mr. Cartwright
-to me, as I stood by his side with the books he
-required for setting forth his arguments. 'She has
-come from the South to hear the wisdom of Heaven.
-Pray God he may give me this day some shred of the
-spirit of Solomon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would God, sir,' said I, 'you might turn her heart,
-though I fear the ungodly have sorely hardened it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why do you say that?' asked he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did she not last night,' I answered, 'listen to a play
-of Plautus in King's Chapel after evening prayer, and
-did they not use the rood-loft as a gallery for her
-women?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Better use it for that,' said Mr. Cartwright, 'than for
-the lewd mockery of God they hold there daily. What
-wonder the poor Queen is led astray in that pestilent
-slough of Papacy where she lodges. But peace now, for
-the Proctor calls on the Respondent to begin the act.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Thomas Byng of Peterhouse set forth the questions
-of the philosophy act. They were two, namely,
-'Monarchy is the best form of government;' and secondly,
-'The constant changing of the laws is dangerous.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When his oration was finished the masters who were
-called to the disputation came forward. Mr. Cartwright's
-opponent in this was Mr. Thomas Preston of
-King's, a man of very goodly presence and sufficient
-wit, though more fit for a courtier than a scholar, and at
-heart little better Reformation man than the rest of the
-King's fellows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He made a speech well wrought enough, and
-delivered with courtly gesture, and very trippingly, to the
-great pleasure of the Queen. Yet for fire, learning,
-persuasion, and all that pertains to true rhetoric and
-philosophy, it was, to my mind, but the chatter of a jay
-beside my Mr. Cartwright's speaking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could see the Queen was well pleased with what he
-said. It was like being in paradise with the angels for
-me to watch her beautiful face, wherein was delicately
-mirrored all the subtle perceiving qualities of her most
-polished mind, as each was stirred by the magic of my
-master's tongue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I look back to it now it seems to me like the
-shining surface of some tropic lake, wherein the great
-soul of God, that dwells in the trees and flowers and
-vines, is mirrored each moment more gloriously as the
-soft breath of heaven from time to time breaks up the
-reflected image.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I dwell on this because some have said, most wantonly,
-that Mr. Cartwright was so vexed at the favour
-the Queen afterwards showed to Mr. Preston that he
-thenceforward became a bitter enemy of the church she
-loved. I say it is a wanton lie to speak so. My master
-was too great a soul to harbour such littleness. His
-hatred of prelacy and superstitious forms was of older
-and firmer standing than that. If at that time he
-changed at all in opinion, it was that he saw too well
-there was no hope of winning the Queen, and that it
-was to Parliament and the people he must henceforth
-look.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was very silent as we left the church, and in
-spite of all I could say concerning the Queen's plain
-pleasure in his speech, I could see the melancholy of his
-face grow deeper and its resolution sterner. I know
-that he saw at once that he had failed, and perceived
-clearly before him the long life of toil and pain and
-bitterness through which he was thenceforth to fight his way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was very glad that evening as we sat together
-gloomily in our lodging to hear a knocking at the door.
-I went to open it, and found there a gentleman of the
-Court, tall of stature, but so wrapped in his cloak and
-shaded by a large Spanish hat that I could not tell
-who it was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is Mr. Cartwright within?' said the gentleman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would you have speech with him?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, and alone,' answered the gentleman. I knew
-not what to do, but Mr. Cartwright, who had started up
-at the sound of the stranger's voice, cried out at once to
-me that I should go.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I went out straightway to King's College to see the
-seniors and Court ladies go in to the play of Dido, which
-was being presented there that night, wherein Mr. Thomas
-Preston was playing a chief part.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In an hour's time I returned, but hearing voices still
-within my lodging, waited outside, where a lamp swung
-over the door. Very soon the voices ceased, and the
-gentleman came out. He seemed so occupied with his
-recent talk with Mr. Cartwright that he took no pains
-to conceal his face, and as he passed out by the lamp I
-could see it was none other than Lord Robert Dudley.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What said Lord Robert about it?' I asked when I
-went in, thinking he had certainly come from the Queen
-to speak with my master about his oration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How knew you it was Lord Robert?' said he
-quickly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I saw his face by the lamp-light,' said I, surprised
-at his sharpness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then tell no man what you saw,' he answered. He
-was silent a moment, and then, as though he thought
-best to tell me more, since I knew so much, or perhaps
-for very longing to speak with some one, he went on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He came not to speak of the oration,' said he, 'but
-of deeper matters, of things which nearly concern our
-Reformation. God grant he be a true man!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But is he not surely a true friend of ours?' I
-asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not, lad, I know not,' he said. 'He speaks
-fair enough, but I doubt there is too much wind under
-his cap for us to count too much on his steadfastness.
-Still, better a popinjay at Court than no friend at all.
-Things look black indeed if all he says be true. God
-knows what counsel is being breathed in the Queen's
-ears, but 'tis certain her right hand is held out to Spain.
-Since peace was made with France, I thought there
-would be leisure for England to complete the good work
-within herself; but now this dallying with Spain and
-the woman of Scotland of which I hear may mar all,
-and we perhaps shall have to fight the fight again.
-Heaven send these piracies&mdash;of which Mr. Drake writes
-to us, and of which Lord Robert speaks&mdash;may by God's
-help prosper, till they make a breach between His
-people and the spawn of antichrist, such as no Queen
-or King or embassy can heal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It surprised me to hear so godly a man as Mr. Cartwright
-speak of Heaven prospering piracy, but I
-was wont to believe all he said was right, and held my
-peace. He went on then to tell me how earnest her
-Majesty was that Lord Robert should marry the Queen
-of Scots, and how well she had received the new Spanish
-ambassador at Richmond, and many other evil signs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But surely, sir,' said I, 'in this she deserves the
-praise of our party, seeing that if the Queen of Scots
-had so godly a husband as our High Steward, all practices
-against the cause in Scotland would end, and a true
-succession be assured.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Speak not of it, lad,' Mr. Cartwright replied. 'It is
-but cozening of the Lord to dally thus with antichrist.
-England must have no part with the accursed thing.
-Rome and Reformation, there are these two, and no
-other; and we must choose between them. Pray, lad,
-and watch and toil by night and day, by thought and
-deed, that the choice may be the right. Above all, pray,
-as I have ever bid you, that we may see the Queen
-speedily matched to some godly Protestant lord, so that,
-being blessed with issue, she may keep the succession
-clear from all fear of Romish taint. Wrestle, lad, with
-the Lord for that. It is the only hope and safeguard
-of Reformation in England.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He uttered no more than we all thought then from
-the wisest and most wide-seeing to the most ignorant
-and bigoted. He, I think, saw it more plainly than
-many, and during the rest of the Queen's visit we spoke
-of little but these things, till I fully shared his thought
-that the tide of Rome, which, had begun to flow again,
-and had already covered so many fair Protestant
-provinces, was setting hard towards England; and each
-morn and night my prayers went up with those of all
-our party, and many a one beside, that the Queen might
-soon be wed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So moved was I by all this talk that I could take
-but little note of the disputations, plays, and pageants
-with which my university entertained the Queen, the
-more so as Mr. Cartwright took no more part in them.
-Still, I saw her every day, and dreamed of her every
-night, feeling I loved her more and more for the dangers
-that surrounded her, and that I would spare not even
-my life to ward her from her enemies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 10th of August, after a morning shower of
-degrees upon all the Court, the Queen left Cambridge,
-and I not long afterwards, being troubled with an ague,
-went home to Longdene.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Hail! man of learning,' cried Harry to me, as the
-day after my coming home I rode up to Ashtead. He
-was standing at the gate about to mount his horse as
-though for a journey. He had grown a man since I
-saw him, and looked handsomer and happier than I had
-ever seen him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hail! man of courts and camps,' I cried him back,
-'whither away so fast?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No whither, lad,' said he, 'since you are come, and
-whither I was going I will not tell you, till I hear first
-where your life-blood has gone. 'Slight, man, you look
-as pale and dry as a love-lorn stock-fish. What ails
-you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nought but a piece of an ague,' said I, feeling the
-sight of him like medicine to me, 'and perhaps a
-surfeit of weary wits.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, save us from universities, then,' answered he.
-'Courts and camps have their dangers, they say, but, 'fore
-heaven, I think your college is a very Castle Perilous
-beside them!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How will you make that good, most sapient
-brother?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, the maxim is good already, without my making.
-For, look you, in camp a man shall lose at most
-his life, and at Court his heart; but your college puts
-his spirits in danger, and to be spiritless is worse a
-thousand times than to be dead or even in love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I think you may be right, and in any case
-have enough spirits to share with me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, if you want spirits, come with me whither I
-was going, and I will show you a man who has enough
-to set a whole graveyard singing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, 'tis a very resurrection of spirits. Come, tell
-me who is your miracle man?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who is he? Why, who should he be but that man
-of men, that prince of good companions, Frank Drake?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, then I am for you; if it were only to keep peace
-amongst my members. For my ears have had so much
-of him that I think my eyes are like to fall out with
-them from pure jealousy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, 'tis a bargain, then; and we both go a-fishing
-with him in his bark.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In his bark? Is he then master already?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, that he is. Old Master Death mastered his old
-master, and now he is his own master and his bark's
-too. For he got that by the old dog's will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I am right glad to hear it. But tell me, is he
-all his brothers say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And more, and more, and more again! Why, man,
-he is my own Lord of Bedford with a Will Somers rolled
-into him, and who could be more of a man than that?
-But we can talk of this as we go along. First come
-within and see my father, while Lashmer gives your
-horse a bite, that we may ride forward.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lashmer, I had better say here, was son to Miles, my
-steward. He rode with me on this day, and henceforth
-became my body-servant and most trusty and trusted
-follower. He was a broad-faced, red-haired lad, but not
-very hard-featured, though his face was just of that
-honest Kentish sort that made one feel compelled to
-laugh by the mere looking at it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Fulke greeted me boisterously, as usual, with a
-hearty welcome well peppered with oaths, which, I must
-say, burnt my palate more them they used to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Art going fishing with Harry?' said my guardian,
-when our greeting was done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, sir,' cried Harry; 'we are going to catch Spanish
-mackerel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They both laughed heartily at this, I knew not why;
-but not having heard of such a fish as he named, I
-thought it was a jest of Harry's which my scholar's wits
-were too hard to see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you brought your snappers with you?' asked
-Harry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said I; 'a pretty case of short ones that were
-my father's, since Miles said the roads were far from
-safe. But will you shoot these fish?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, lad,' said Harry, and he and Sir Fulke both
-seemed to be strangling another laugh; 'but, as you
-say, one meets fellow-travellers now whom it is well to
-treat at a distance, so every gentleman rides with a
-brace of dags or so in his saddle.'
-'Blame yourselves for it,' said Sir Fulke. 'For since
-your new Reformation men have sent fish out of fashion,
-in spite of all Mr. Secretary can do with his acts and
-ordinances, fishermen have to fish ashore. The hundred
-of Hoo swarms with such folk, so that a man may hardly
-come to Gravesend in safety. There is never a lane in
-Kent which some of the valiant lubbers will not drag
-once in a week for any fin that's stirring. God knows
-what will become of the sea-service if gentlemen do not
-set the fashion for fishing again,' and therewith the old
-knight chuckled again till his face was redder than a
-doughty turkey-cock's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come, let us away,' said Harry, 'or Frank Drake
-will have a rod for me. He is testy as the devil if a
-man be late.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What!' said I, 'will he not bide a gentleman's
-time?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wait till you see him,' answered Harry. 'The sea,
-in Frank's company, is a mighty leveller of gentility.
-Here, take this; we shall be out all night.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So saying, he tossed me a cloak, and we set out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The way proved all too short, so much had we to tell
-each other. Harry was overflowing with the delights
-of the Court. He seemed able to talk for ever on the
-pageants and masques, in which, to my sorrow, he had
-taken a great share; for at Cambridge the men of our
-party began to look askance at such vanities.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It pleased me better to hear him speak of the grace
-and beauty of the Court ladies, who seemed to have
-been very kind to him. He spoke of them in a tone of
-chivalrous rapture, which made me sometimes long to
-have his gifts, that I too might please women, and know
-how to speak with them, and be thought worthy to be
-their squire. But I tried hard, when he spoke of such
-things with kindling eyes, to crush my chivalry, having
-well learnt my lesson that this, too, was a carnal
-vanity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Above all, he praised the Queen as one that shone
-like a ruby amongst pearls, and there I suffered myself
-to join his song. I think he was as much in love with
-her as I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Next to the Queen he spoke most of a little girl,
-called Anne St. John, who, from what he said, seemed
-rather his tyrant than his playfellow. She was ever
-with the Earl, either at Russell House or at Woburn,
-being a niece of the good Countess Margaret, his
-beloved wife, who died soon after Harry joined the
-Earl's household. My lord found great comfort, Harry
-said, in the child's pretty ways as much as in her beauty,
-for she had ruddy hair and deep brown eyes, like the
-Queen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was moreover much beloved by her cousins, the
-Earl's daughters, so that it came about that Harry saw
-her every day, and became her playfellow and willing
-servant. He made me laugh to hear him speak of her
-tyrannous ways and her jealousy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not what kind of woman she will grow,' he
-said; 'but now she is the sweetest toy a man could
-want, and wayward as a haggard. Yet my lord will
-often curb her in his dry, merry way, and she will be as
-thoughtful after it as a little Solomon. Were her pretty
-spirit in a colt I would not care to have his breaking;
-yet I think that any life which my lord will take in
-hand will never grow awry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he fell to speaking of his lord, Sir Francis Russell,
-Earl of Bedford, to whom he seemed as devoted as ever
-I was to Mr. Cartwright; above all, when he followed him
-to the north, on his being named Governor of Berwick
-and Warden of the East Marches, and saw how great
-a statesman and soldier he was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly,' said he, 'may I count myself fortunate in
-thus being able to go in the train of so famous a captain
-to the best school of arms in the country, as Berwick is
-held to be, not only because of the passages of arms
-that continually take place on the Border, but also by
-reason of the number of skilled and veteran soldiers
-that are gathered there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you had a plenitude of professors,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, and a plenitude of practice too,' he answered;
-'and that in all military sciences. For my lord's first
-care was to increase the strength of the defences of the
-place. So I saw all that craft, besides gunnery and
-weapon exercise, both in play and earnest. Furthermore,
-my lord took me for secretary when he rode during the
-summer with Sir John Foster to settle the limits of the
-marches, and there I learned much of the conduct of
-military councils and affairs, together with many other
-things that a prudent soldier should know and be silent
-about. Certes, I think I have as much valiant scholarship
-in six months as many come by in six years.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And no wonder,' said I, 'with such a godly and
-warlike tutor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay,' cried Harry, with enthusiasm, 'he is a very
-pattern of all valour, piety, and gentleness, and rightly
-called "the mirror of true honour and Christian nobility."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, I think he was right. For surely never was
-royal gift more wisely disposed than the wealth with
-which King Henry endowed Lord Russell and his father.
-Would God the whole of what he stripped from the
-monasteries had fallen into no worse vessels than those
-two! What a pattern of reformation, then, might
-England indeed have been to all the world, lifted far
-above the reach of even Papist sneer and cavil,&mdash;in very
-deed <i>domicilium quietatis et humanitatis</i>!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could fully share Harry's regret when he told me
-that he had left Berwick for good and all. But it was
-needful that he should be a short time with his father
-before setting forth on his travels into France and
-Italy&mdash;a course which the Earl had himself strongly
-urged, as being most necessary for the perfect shaping
-of a gentleman and the building up of a full-grown
-manhood, wherein, he held, there was no such hindrance
-either in court or camp or council as in youth to have
-known no travel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Talking thus together of the two years in which we
-had both passed into the dawn of manhood amidst such
-different scenes, we came to Rochester, where we left
-our horses in Lashmer's charge and took the boat, which
-two of Mr. Drake's boys had brought for Harry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It made a man of me again to be once more on the
-river, though I did not like to see Harry whisper to the
-two Drakes and see them nod and grin in reply. But
-I soon forgot this in chatting, as we did, chiefly of
-Frank and his boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look there!' cried the boys at last. 'Was ever
-such a dainty?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked and saw a smart-looking craft, such as is
-used in the Zeeland trade, but in better trim than
-most, lying at moorings close to Mr. Drake's hulk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boys gave us a lusty cheer as we ran alongside
-their home and I sprang on deck. Mr. Drake embraced
-me with such fervour and smell of tar that I was
-well-nigh undone, but John and Joseph tore me from him,
-crying, 'Come and see Frank, come and see Frank!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seizing each an arm, they dragged me to the cabin
-under the poop, where for the first time I saw that
-prince of captains, Francis Drake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah! how my heart is lifted up when I think of
-that September afternoon; when I contemplate the
-condition of two men that day about to enter into a
-life-long struggle which was to glitter with the most
-glorious deeds the world has seen: the one a plain
-rough mariner, in his coarse sailor's slops, sitting in a
-dingy cabin, intent on a rude map of the Indies, the
-meanest ship-master of an island queen; the other an
-emperor in purple and gold, seated on the loftiest throne
-in Europe, the most powerful monarch in the world,
-with the crowns of six kingdoms clustered on his
-brow, and the gold of two worlds pouring into his
-lap;&mdash;the one surrounded by rude fisher lads; the other
-surfeited with the homage of the most skilful captains,
-the proudest nobles, the most cunning councillors these
-modern times have bred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Surely no more notable example of God's power to
-humble pride and reward wickedness has ever been
-seen. Little could I guess then what his lot was to be,
-though when I looked on the man I might have known
-there was no task too great for Francis Drake to
-achieve.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-God never made a man, I think, more fitted for
-the work he was set to do. His stature was low, but
-though he was then not past twenty years old, his deep
-broad chest and massive limbs showed the strength that
-was to be his. His head well matched his body, being
-hard-looking and round and most pleasant to look on,
-because of the bright brown locks that curled thick and
-close all over it, and the round blue eyes that shone full
-and clear and steadfast from under his thick arched
-brows. His mouth, which was already slightly fringed
-with a light-coloured beard, was of a piece with the
-rest, wide and good-humoured, with full, well-formed,
-mobile lips, such as we look for in an orator, and withal
-firm and self-reliant. His colour, moreover, was fresh
-and fair, as of a man whom no sickness could take hold
-of; and his whole aspect so well-favoured and full of
-cheerful resolution as I could not wonder made his
-family set him up to be their idol.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am very glad to see you, Mr. Festing,' said he,
-rising up as I entered and holding out his hand very
-frankly. 'I am glad you are come. We want strong
-hands for our fishing. Jack has told me what kind of
-blow you can strike.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I have only a scholar's arm now,' I said.
-'Once I could pull an oar and tally on a drag-net
-indifferently well, but I doubt study has softened me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Arching his eyebrows still more, he looked at me
-with that expression which I grew to know so well, and
-which as much as anything, I think, made him the master
-of men he was. It was a look half inquisitive, half
-astonished, yet wholly good-humoured. It seemed to
-wonder if a man could be so foolish as to try to deceive
-or thwart him, and to be ready to laugh at the folly of
-such an attempt rather than to resent it. Though there
-was plainly something in my speech he did not understand,
-yet he was soon satisfied, and burst out into a
-boisterous laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Fore God,' said he, 'you are a merry wag,' and then
-laughed on so heartily that no man could help taking
-the fever, and I laughed too, though I knew no better
-than the stern-post where the jest was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, you may laugh,' said Mr. Drake, who had
-joined us. 'Frank knows how to fish, so do my boys.
-They will catch you now bigger fish than any man's
-sons in all Kent.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where is James?' asked I, not seeing Mr. Drake's
-fourth son. 'Will he not go with us?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Peace,' said Harry, as the preacher turned away, and
-the laughter was hushed. 'Don't you know?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let me tell him,' said Frank Drake, looking so stern
-as almost to seem another man. 'You must know, Mr. Festing,
-nigh a year ago he was 'prenticed in a ship that
-traded to Spain. We have no certain news of her, but
-very ugly tidings of what befell a crew that sailed in
-her company.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What tidings were those?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come away,' said Frank; 'dad forbids us to speak of
-it. "Avenge it, if you will," says he, "but speak not
-of it."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We went apart, and he told me one of those stories
-of which my ears were soon but too well filled: of a
-ship's crew seized in a remote port of Spain, and on
-pretext of some unruly conduct of one or two half-drunken
-men ashore, first thrown into prison, and then handed
-over to the officers of the Inquisition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Such, we fear, is Jim's fate,' said Drake, as he ended
-his story. 'It is most like he lies rotting now with his
-shipmates in some filthy dungeon, if worse has not
-befallen him at the hands of those hell-hounds. But
-come, let us not think of it. The tide has turned, and
-it is time we were away.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were soon aboard Frank Drake's boat, which was
-called the <i>Gazehound</i>. I could not help seeing how
-trim she was from stem to stern compared with other
-such craft engaged in the French and Zeeland trade.
-Nor could I but wonder at the ready despatch with
-which Frank's crew obeyed his orders. Indeed, we were
-hardly aboard a minute before we were running fast
-towards the sea, with a gentle breeze behind us, and the
-wicked river rushing recklessly along with us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know not whether it was some inward warning
-that made the Medway look so dark and cruel as it
-curled about our sides, or whether it was the effect
-on my worn brain of Frank Drake's fearful tale, which
-he told with fierce earnestness. Yet as the misty
-darkness deepened and the low waste of marsh on either
-hand began to be lost in the night, a sort of horror came
-over me, perhaps a part of my ague. It seemed that
-we, the river and ourselves, were rushing wildly on to
-some deed that we must hide from heaven. The curdling
-river seemed some huge snake, for whose help we
-had sold our souls. Rejoicing at its work and the folly
-of its dupe, it seemed to hiss in low laughter like a fiend's
-about us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I turned from where I looked over the side to break
-the spell. Harry and all the boys, with one or two of
-the crew, were gathered aft around Frank as he sat
-tiller in hand. I could see them all by the light of the
-lantern we carried. Frank was telling them another
-hideous story of Spanish treachery and cruelty to
-English mariners who had come to trade in the Canaries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His wide blue eyes were flashing in the excitement
-of his tale, and Harry and the Drake boys were no less
-excited than he. Even then I could see he had that
-wonderful gift of words by which afterwards at his
-will he could always raise or calm a storm amongst his
-followers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still the night deepened and the river grew darker
-and more devilish, as hand in hand with it we sped on
-through the darkness to our work. The flickering
-lantern cast strange lights and shadows upon the little
-group at the stern, till they seemed to be rather like
-some foul spirits than my good friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They cried to me to join them, but I said I was
-weary with a headache because of my sickness, and
-would sleep. I crept in then below the foredeck, and
-lay down upon a sail. There was something beneath
-it which made it an uneasy bed. I raised the canvas to
-see what it might be, and beheld some half-dozen longbows,
-quite new, and several sheaves of arrows. I think
-my sleep would have been easier had I not sought to
-remove the cause of my uneasiness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For now I began to guess the meaning of all the jests
-I had heard, and questioned Harry when soon after he
-came to lie beside me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What fish, Harry,' I asked, 'is this that you bring
-me to catch with pistols and long-bows?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A fish that swims from Antwerp,' answered Harry,
-laughing. 'Wait and you shall see, if we have luck or
-judgment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was little laughter in me as I lay there in the
-dim lantern light, with the sound of the wicked river
-whispering temptation in my ear. Was it that which
-seemed to take from me the power to rebuke in him
-what seemed to me no less than sin; or was it shame
-lest he should think that Cambridge had so softened and
-unmanned me that I no longer would follow wherever
-he led?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry must be right, thought I, and Frank Drake
-too! It must be right, yet would God I were in my
-trundle bed at Mr. Cartwright's side again! Surely
-Cambridge was sorely changing me. The great struggle
-of my life had begun, though I knew it not; the strife
-for the mastery of me between the inward man-made
-life of scholarship and vain hurry after God, and the
-strong, pure, out-o'-door life of England that God
-Himself had given me for my birthday gift.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Who shall say which is best? Not I, now I am old;
-but then, as I lay there beside Harry, in my vanity and
-blindness I said to myself: 'Surely his life is not of
-God; it is mine that is from heaven, the search after
-wisdom, the merciless war for truth, the exalting of the
-spirit and abasement of the body.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My lips were trembling with a prayer that he might
-be turned and grow like me, but then I opened my eyes
-to look at him through the dim lantern light, and my
-prayer died unborn. Surely that gently-breathing
-figure, lying so calm and careless there in all its manly
-beauty, surely that must be all God's work, and what
-came of it His work as well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So let me cease to resist, and let the hissing river
-hurry me on wheresoever it will with him.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was John Drake's rough voice that aroused me, as
-the soft morning light glimmered into the cabin where
-I had been sleeping.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rise quickly,' said he; 'the fish is in sight, and
-Frank says you must bear a hand, as it is a big one.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So great was that extraordinary man's hold already
-on me that it never once seemed strange that I should
-receive orders from him thus. I rose quickly, and
-buckled on my sword and pistols, well knowing what
-was coming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was not at all surprised to see Harry standing, bow
-in hand, by Frank, and all the rest armed with bows
-and pikes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good-morrow, Mr. Festing,' cried Drake. 'Heaven
-has sent the Antwerpers fortune to-day. Ere another
-hour or so they will be spared all further trouble for
-their cargo. See where she lies.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a lovely misty morning, such as one can only
-see in the Channel on a sunny autumn day. Nothing
-was in sight but the shadowy form of a good-sized
-caravel on our larboard bow, heavily laden, and toiling
-at a snail's pace across our course.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we drew nearer I could make out that she was
-at least twice, perhaps three times, our size, though I
-could see but few men on board her. Still my heart
-began to beat heavily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Steady now, lads,' cried Drake, as some of his
-brothers began to show signs of excitement; 'steady,
-or we shall get never a bite. Get up on the forecastle,
-Jack, and mend a bit of net; and do you, Mr. Waldyve,
-carol us out a French ditty for a bait. And, look you,
-not a glint and glimmer of weapon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, with nothing to show we were not an ordinary
-French fishing-boat, we bore towards the caravel so as to
-pass close under her stern to windward. They, seeing our
-purpose, and fearing some ill-dealing, no doubt, since those
-waters were even then winning an evil name, hailed us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still we held on without answer, till they hailed
-again, asking what countrymen we were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now for an English greeting!' cried Drake. 'It
-would be less than courtesy not to let them know our
-country since they ask so fairly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when our
-bows twanged and a little cloud of arrows swept over
-the caravel. With loud derisive cries our crew fitted
-fresh shafts. Thick and fast they flew, till the crew of
-the caravel dared not show themselves on deck. Every
-man hurried below to shelter himself, except him who
-was at the helm. Bravely he held on in spite of our
-shafts, till, with a shudder, I saw an arrow strike him
-under the arm. With a low cry he fell on his face
-across the tiller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The caravel hove up into the wind, and I saw the
-steersman turned helplessly head over ears as the
-helm swung round&mdash;a sickening sight to see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save you for a pretty tumbler!' cried Joe Drake,
-and all the rest but Frank and Harry laughed
-loud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Steady, lads, steady,' said he; 'look to your pikes,
-and gentlemen to their swords, or we shall some of us
-laugh the wrong side.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we fell aboard of her I drew my rapier. I can
-say without pride I was by this time no mean fencer,
-though a bungler beside Harry; yet so strange did my
-blade seem, now that for the first time I drew it in
-earnest, that I felt as though I had never handled one
-before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still, there was no time to think. Frank Drake
-sprang aboard, Harry after him, I after Harry. No
-sooner did our feet touch the deck than out of the after-cabin
-burst a half-dressed cavalier, rapier in hand. Some
-nine or ten men were at his back, armed with swords
-and daggers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a loud cry they ran upon us, the gentleman
-straight at me. He seemed mad with fury, for he made
-no shift to fence, more than to rush on with uplifted
-blade as though straightway to <i>arrebatar</i> with a
-wiping sweep, after the method of Carranza. I did
-but offer him my point <i>di intrare</i>, and he spitted
-himself or ever he came within his proportion. It was but
-murder. God forgive me for it when His will is! It
-made me sick to see my rapier half-hidden in his breast,
-as his sword-arm dropped, and for a moment he stood
-gnashing his teeth before he fell backward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I shut my eyes as the blade drew hard from the
-wound, and reeled against the bulwarks, feeling dizzy
-with horror and my sickness. When I opened my eyes
-again it was well-nigh all over. For, save for two of
-his servants, no one resisted after the gentleman fell.
-The rest were poor Dutch mariners who cared little
-who had the cargo they carried, so long as they kept
-their skins whole.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The serving-men were quickly overpowered, and the
-rest of the crew driven within the forecastle. Then
-Harry came up and slapped me on the back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well done, Jasper,' he said. ''Slight, it was a pretty
-thrust, a most scholarly <i>imbroccata</i>. Would that Sir
-Fulke had been here to see what his errant disciple can
-do! Perhaps he would rail less at your Italian bodkin-play,
-and would say, I doubt not, that they can teach
-something beside Latins at Trinity. But what is it, man?
-You look as if the blade were through you instead of him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hush, Harry!' I said. 'For God's sake, look to him,
-for I dare not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor lad!' answered my dear brother, who could
-always feel for me far more than for himself, 'you are
-too sick for this bloody work. I will do as you bid,
-though there is little hope for him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was no need, for as I turned to look upon
-my work again, I saw Frank Drake leaning over the
-bleeding Spaniard, and, as tenderly as a woman, trying
-to staunch the wound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It filled me with new wonder and love for this man
-to see how his fierce courage melted to gentleness as
-soon as the danger was over. I marvelled, too, to see
-how apt he was at surgery even then, though he had
-not yet attained to that great skill which afterwards he
-made it his duty to acquire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed to make war wondrous gentle to see him,
-and I was better able to give my help. We soon
-disposed the wounded man more easily, and went to
-minister to the helmsman, but, alas! he was stone dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile the others had bound the crew, and
-Frank Drake set about questioning them. I don't know
-whether it made any difference to him, but he was most
-instant to find out if the cargo were Spanish owned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While we were thus engaged there was a sudden cry
-of a sail in sight. Looking up, I could see a tall ship
-looming through the silver mist, and bearing down
-straight for us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stand by to cast off, lads,' cried Frank, cool and
-decided, 'till we see what she is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were all on board the <i>Gazehound</i> in a minute,
-and sat breathlessly waiting to see what our unwelcome
-neighbour might be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly she came down upon, us before the gentle
-breeze, looking so beautiful in the morning sun that I
-could hardly believe that she might contain a pirate's
-death for us all. The strain would have been more
-than I could have borne had it not been that my senses
-seemed dulled with horror of my deed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Afterwards I thought it strange that no one had
-urged Drake to let go the prize and run for it; but then
-all seemed to think that the course he had made up his
-mind to was the only one possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearer and nearer she drew, till the mist, which was
-very thick close down on the water and had till now
-hidden her hull, cleared a little, and we could see, I
-at least with sinking heart, the sunlight sparkle on the
-ordnance which protruded from her lofty forecastle, like
-the teeth of some savage hound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Culverins!' whispered Harry to me. 'They have
-point-blank range of five hundred paces, and we are
-within that of her already. There is no running now,
-whatever befalls. Heaven send she is a Queen's ship,
-and no Spaniard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What matters which,' said I, 'if we are pirates?
-You know well what grievous complaints they say the
-Spanish ambassador has made, and what orders the
-Queen has given the navy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, wait a little. See the trumpets on the poop;
-they are going to hail us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On she came, a glorious sight, with the sun glowing
-on her bulging sails and the perfect lines of her hull,
-that swept so gracefully from towering poop to lofty
-forecastle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly, as she drew level with us, her trumpets
-blared forth a loud flourish that rolled merrily away
-over the misty sea. The boatswain's pipe chirped out,
-and we could see the sailors stand by to go about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again the trumpets brayed a fuller call, and then a
-mass of red and gold aloft unfolded itself with royal
-languor, till there flashed in the sunlight, plain to see,
-the beautiful banner of our island Queen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A lusty cheer from all our crew greeted the welcome
-flag. As it died away we could hear the captain of the
-Queen's ship hailing us to know who we were, and what
-we did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The <i>Gazehound</i> of Chatham&mdash;Master Drake,'
-shouted Frank, springing on the poop,&mdash;and then, after
-a pause, 'aiding a Spanish caravel in distress.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We could hear a roar of laughter on board the ship
-at his words, and the captain's voice came rolling
-back:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well met, Master Drake, and a fair voyage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We gave her another cheer as we saw her keep on
-her course. She answered us with her hautboys and
-other music, which we listened to till it grew faint in
-the offing, and we were left alone to do our will upon
-our prize and prisoners.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we watched her sail away so gallantly, with her
-gay streamers and gilded poop glittering like some
-tropic bird in the sun, I asked Drake what she was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know her well enough,' said he, 'but we ask not
-the names of Queen's ships that find us at this work.
-Yet I will tell you. It is the <i>Minion</i>, and Captain
-David Carlet is in command of her. He is bound for
-Guinea with the <i>John Baptist</i> and <i>Merline</i>, both
-of London, so I know. They are going to try if they
-cannot draw a little for the Queen out of the Portugal's
-wells, like Mr. John Hawkins. Good luck go with
-them; but now we must to work.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After what I had seen of Drake's dealing with the
-cavalier I had so grievously hurt, I had no fear that
-the crew of the caravel would suffer at his hands any
-great cruelty, such as I had heard less noble spirits
-had inflicted in the fury of their revenge against the
-Inquisition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I went aboard the prize with the rest when Drake
-gave the order to rummage the cargo. We found that
-it consisted chiefly of silks and woollen goods. A few
-more inquiries soon showed us that they were Spanish
-owned, and, further, that the cavalier was a gentleman
-returning from secret service in the Netherlands to
-Spain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We quickly then completed our work. It was only
-to set some of the cargo on board the <i>Gazehound</i> in
-order to lighten the caravel enough to allow of her
-being run into Otterham Channel, one of those lonely
-tortuous inlets amongst the Saltings in the mouth of
-the Medway which we had all known so well since boyhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As soon as it was done Drake bade his brother and
-me carry the <i>Gazehound</i> back to Rochester, while
-he and Harry, with half our crew, and some of the
-Netherlanders who were freed for the work, made sail
-in the caravel to the spot whither he intended to take
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we parted company, and I with my charge came
-safely on the next morning's tide to our moorings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Spanish bales we stowed on board Mr. Drake's
-hulk. He was not at home, purposely, as I could not
-help thinking, to ease his conscience, if indeed our
-piracy went in any way against it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only poor Mrs. Drake was there, trying vainly to
-get her youngest boy away from the taffrail, outside of
-which he was recklessly climbing at the risk of a sudden
-grave in the rushing tide. She looked more wan and
-weary than ever when she saw what our cargo was,
-and soon seized an occasion to draw me into the cabin
-for a little comfort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Festing,' she said piteously, 'for God's sake,
-sir, stop them from this bloody work. They will die in
-a halter, every one of them. God pardon me for not
-bearing His punishment without complaint, but what
-sinful woman was ever chastised with twelve such rods?
-See, there is blood on your own doublet! Shun this
-sin, Mr. Festing, for sin it is. How will God ever give
-us back our dear James if we break His law daily thus?
-Surely he has been taken in judgment for his and his
-brothers' wickedness. Frank is as bad as the rest, and
-leads them on to it. But vengeance is the Lord's,
-Master Jasper, and not for preachers' sons, for all that
-men cry out about spoiling the Egyptians.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I tried hard to comfort the poor woman, feeling
-deeply for her. I could pity her the more heartily in
-her misery at the little care or kindness her sons showed
-for her, seeing I knew what it was to crave unsatisfied
-for a mother's love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had often come to me thus for comfort; yet I
-never found it a harder task than now, not only because
-of my own sense of sin, but also from my difficulty in
-understanding what she felt. At one moment she
-spoke of her boys as an infliction of Heaven; at another
-she seemed in terror that she should lose them; nor
-could I be sure whether her hatred of piracy came from
-a tenderness for them or the laws.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could only tell her how I had been drawn into it
-unawares, and would do all I could to turn them from
-further crime.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God bless you for your words, Master Jasper,' she
-said. 'What should I do if I lost my boys? I see
-them o' nights dangling in halters, and sometimes again
-lying in blood with Spanish blades at their hearts.
-Then I wake and pray God for comfort, till I sleep
-again; yet I only rise on the morrow to hear more talk
-of fights, and Spaniards, and wild work.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely,' said I, 'God has set them apart for some
-notable work in His service, seeing how they prosper in
-what they do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Maybe, maybe,' the poor woman answered. 'Yet
-more times I think it is the devil and not God who is
-their master; think of it, Master Jasper, twelve of
-them, and not one a godly preacher like their father.
-What will God say to me for that? It was my hope
-and comfort when little Willie came, bless his sweet
-heart, that he would be my own boy, and God's, till he
-fell in with the old sword-hilt, and loved it just like all
-the rest of them; and played all day with it like the
-others, and grew as heady and masterful as the worst of
-them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Mrs. Drake,' said I, 'I am as earnest as you
-to turn them to a better path. You and I must try,
-under God; yet, in truth, I know not which way to
-start.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will you not go to the Earl of Bedford?' she said
-eagerly. 'Did he hear what his godson did, I know
-he would stretch out his hand, and the Lord would
-prosper him. Truly, I thought when godly young
-Master Russell, as he was then, held my pretty
-curly-pated Frank at his baptism, that he would prove the
-firstfruits of a vineyard that should be savoury in the
-nostrils of the Lord. But He punished my pride, and
-lo! my vine bore nothing but thistles. Still, go to him,
-Master Jasper, and he will save them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But my lord is far away in Berwick,' said I, 'where
-I cannot reach him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then write to him letters,' she answered, 'or go
-inform Sir Fulke how they deal with his boy. He is a
-Justice, and will tell the Queen, and stop this ungodly
-breaking of the laws.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think this plan had come into my mind before;
-yet I had driven it away as one that sorted ill with
-my honour, and fearing to get the Drakes and Harry
-into some trouble. Now it looked less evil to me; for
-I think this poor weary mother had somewhat
-unmanned me. Without promising I said I would do
-all in my power, which seemed greatly to comfort her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I took my leave, and coming by boat to Rochester,
-where I found Lashmer, rode gloomily towards
-Longdene, much pondering what way my duty lay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time I reached the place where the roads to
-Longdene and Ashtead parted, I had made up my
-mind, as I knew from the first I should. The Puritan
-party at Cambridge was already growing marvellously
-grim-minded. There had been many who muttered
-secretly against the masques and comedies with which
-the university had entertained the Queen, and in many
-other things Mr. Cartwright and his friends, of whom I
-was one of the most loyal and devoted, began to show
-a growing faith in all that made life hard and mournful,
-no less than an ever-waxing mistrust of whatever was
-easy and pleasant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tried by this terrible test, my true duty, as I thought,
-was easy to see. I had an inborn English horror of
-tale-bearing. Here, then, was an occasion to wound the
-carnal scruple. I had a love for Harry that was the
-one bright light in my life, I had an admiration and
-belief in him that fed my hunger for guidance to a
-noble life. Here, then, was a time in which I might
-humble my earthly idol in the dust.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor lad, poor lad! I can look back now from the
-quiet spot whither God has led me, and see my youth
-as something apart from me. I can pity it now, ay,
-and grieve for it too, seeing that I know how many at
-this very hour are torturing themselves, even as did
-that youth, that was I, long ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When will one arise with tongue and pen of flame
-to show them what they do, that men may cease to mar
-what God in His wisdom and goodness has made so fair?
-Why will ye be so doting, good people? What blindness
-has seized you, so that you cannot understand the
-gift of life that He has given you? It is hard, I know,
-to fathom all its depths, and fully understand the
-voice with which it speaks to you; yet treat it not,
-therefore, like some poor, mad thing that must be laid
-by the heels and scourged and starved, till it grow so
-foul and ill-favoured that even the angels, who weep
-for the folly of mankind, shall turn from it with
-loathing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I may not rail at you, for I was no wiser as I
-rode that night up to Ashtead. I had started late
-from Rochester, and it had been dark an hour or more
-before I saw the crowded turrets and gables of my
-guardian's house faintly outlined against the starlit
-sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I drew rein at the foot of the gentle slope
-upon which the manor-house stood, I could hear the
-sound of many horses entering the gate above. It
-seemed strange to me that so large a company should
-be coming there at so late an hour, but I soon saw the
-cause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I entered the gate some serving-men were setting
-torches in the sconces round the court, and my
-bewildered eyes saw their lurid light fall on a whole
-train of packhorses which almost filled the place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank Drake together with some of his brothers
-and Harry were moving busily and silently amongst
-them. They had plainly just come in, and were setting
-about unloading the packs as though they had no spare
-time on their hands. Sir Fulke was standing on the
-steps of the hall looking at the busy scene below him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who's there?' cried he, suddenly catching sight of
-Lashmer and me dimly in the gateway. 'Where the
-devil is John Porter? Harry, quick to the gate;
-there are strangers!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank Drake and Harry whipped out their swords
-in a trice and sprang towards me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stand!' they cried together. 'Who are you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A friend!' cried I, riding out into the light and
-springing from my horse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mass!' said Drake, 'but I thought you were some
-of those rake-hells from Hoo that had got wind of our
-luck and wanted to cut a slice for themselves. Is my
-<i>Gazehound</i> safe?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said I, 'safe at her moorings, and the cargo in
-the hold of the hulk. And how fares it with the
-Don?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As well as man may,' answered Drake, 'with a hole
-such as you whipped through him. He lives; but no
-more.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God for your care of him, Mr. Drake,' said
-I. 'But tell me now, what means all this hubbub?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why,' answered Harry, 'only that our work took
-longer than yours, and had to be set about more secretly.
-Come and help unload the silk.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What!' cried I, aghast; 'the stolen cargo here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Blanda verba, blanda verba</i>, my scholar,' said Harry.
-'Our prize of war, you would say. Of course it is; and
-where could it be safer than in the cellars of the
-gentleman adventurer who fitted out the craft that
-captured it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely you jest,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I jest not,' answered Harry; 'it is plain open-air
-truth, and yet withal so good a jest as to want no
-bettering at my hands.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can see no jest in it at all,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know it well enough, lad,' cried Harry, putting
-his arm through mine in his old loving way. 'Many
-do not see it at first, but they come to it soon. You
-learn the lesson quick enough on the Scotch marches;
-but I could see you were so be-Cambridged that, if I
-told you all, you would never join the sport. You shall
-pardon me; for, in truth, I could not rest till I had
-uncolleged you a little.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know well, dear lad,' said I, for I could never
-resist him, for all my stern resolves, 'there is nothing I
-cannot forgive you. Yet, I pray you, bear with me a
-little now, for I think my sickness comes over me
-again, and I would go within and rest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Right willingly,' said he. 'Sir Fulke will see you
-lodged; for I must make another journey to Otterham
-Quay ere the sun is up, to bring on what is left of the
-caravel's cargo.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I left him and went within to sleep a fevered,
-troubled sleep, in which I saw the wounded cavalier
-grinning upon my sword again, till he sprang at last
-from off it, and, seizing Harry and the Drakes, swung
-them up on gibbets in a long ghastly row, while
-Mrs. Drake cried to me, who could not move, to save them.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-On the morrow, as I walked in the orchard after
-dinner with Frank Drake and Harry, for the rest were
-gone, I took occasion to inquire what they thought of
-piracy; for our adventure, and especially my own part in
-it, weighed no less heavily on my mind for my night's rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That was a shrewd thrust of yours, Mr. Festing,'
-said Drake, as our talk turned, naturally enough, on our
-adventure. 'But for you we might have had ugly work.
-I give you good thanks for it, and all the honour; ay,
-and if I had my way you should have the lion's share of
-the booty too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have my thanks, Mr. Drake,' said I, 'for your good
-words. Yet think me not churlish if I say they might
-be better bestowed. As for the thrust, it was none, for
-the Don spitted himself; as for the honour, let us talk
-of that when there is any in such work; and as for the
-booty, I will have none of it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your reasons, Mr. Festing, your reasons?' said
-Drake good-humouredly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For the honour,' answered I, 'it is a thing which I
-hold pirates have little part in; for the booty, I care not
-to share with water-thieves.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He turned sharp on me then and stopped in his walk
-with a flush in his face, looking hard at me with that
-strange, honest, searching look of his. I was ready to
-bite my tongue out; for I saw in a moment that my hot
-words had seared the unsullied spirit of a man whom
-nothing would bend to an act which he thought base, a
-man in all ways nobler than myself. God knows, I
-thought him wrong, and thought he led Harry wrong,
-but now I would have given half I had to have chosen
-kindlier words to say my say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You use hard words, and wrong ones too, Mr. Festing,
-saving your scholarship,' said Drake at last, proud as a
-Spaniard. 'I am no water-thief or pirate either. I
-shall tell you what a pirate is, not to speak more of
-water-thieves, which is a hard word that breaks no more
-bones than another. By the most ancient customs of
-the sea, sir, whereof be it your excuse that you are
-ignorant, a pirate is one who, without license from his
-prince or his prince's officers, in time of peace or truce
-doth spoil or rob those which have peace or truce with
-him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then how shall you justify yourself,' I asked, too
-cowardly to yield to him, 'seeing we have peace with
-Spain?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, but I say,' he answered, 'we have no peace with
-Spain, or truce either. Is it peace when they lay
-embargos on our ships, throw our mariners into prison, and
-burn and torture them in their streets? Is it peace
-when they shut our trade from their ports, and succour
-and defend our deadliest enemies?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That was well, perhaps, months ago,' said I, though
-it wanted all my courage to answer him, such force was
-in his eyes and voice, 'but now truce is made, and
-prisoners are released, the embargo lifted, and King
-Philip's ambassador received at Court.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how call you that truce?' he asked. 'They
-brand us heretics and Lutheran dogs, with whom
-they say openly no faith is to be kept; no mariner is
-safe from their rake-hell Inquisition in any port of
-Spain; they send a spy, whom they call ambassador, to
-search out the weakness and plot with the traitors of the
-land and practise on our poor young Queen, that they
-may bring on us again the curse of Rome, as they did in
-Mary's time. Call you that truce? Call it rather war,
-and worse than war, for it is dastards' warfare? Philip
-may cry truce to Bess, and Bess to Philip, but between
-the people of Spain and England there is, nor shall be,
-neither peace nor truce till one of us is crushed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet if all were as you say,' I persisted, more faintly
-now, for there was that in the man which no one could
-withstand when he was moved thus, 'if there be
-neither peace nor truce, you have no license from the
-Queen. Nor even her goodwill, since you must know
-what urgent orders she has issued against adventurers
-like yourself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know well enough,' he answered. 'For some
-reasons of state she has done this. Yet wait till you see
-the orders carried out, wait till you see such an
-adventurer punished, before you say I have not her license.
-Did you not see how the <i>Minion</i>, sailing under her
-own royal flag, passed us by when we were at the
-work; and was it not one of her Justices in constant
-communication with the Council who fitted me out?
-Is not that license enough?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, then you accuse the Queen's grace of bad faith
-to the Spaniard, and you are willing to abet her in her
-deceit.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Faith to those that keep faith, say I. To every
-Spaniard, and not the least the Spanish ambassador, Don
-Guzman de Silva, she is a heretic with whom to break
-faith is the path to heaven. To such must a man give
-fair words, as the poor Queen does, till she grow great
-enough to strike them straight on the mouth, as, under
-God, by our help she shall. And were all I have said
-too little excuse for what we do, I have even a higher
-and greater license than all; for, as dad says, and all
-pious men beside, I have God's own commission to prey
-on Antichrist and him who stands his champion, till
-the filthy breath of the beast shall cease to poison the
-earth. The Spaniard goes about to lead away the people
-after false gods and idolatry and superstition. Such
-men by the Word of God are worthy of death. Here in
-my Bible I hold license from the Great King to seek
-out and spoil and destroy His enemies. Shall I hold my
-hand so long as He shall prosper His servant? How
-are we to call that piracy and thieving which God has
-so clearly commanded?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then all at once came back to me Mr. Cartwright's
-words, and how he spoke of these rovers as doing the
-Lord's work and being prospered by Him. I do not
-think it was that which overcame me, but rather Frank
-Drake's presence. The recalling of my master's words
-was but an excuse to myself for yielding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Drake, you have prevailed,' said I. 'I crave
-your pardon; you are a better man than I, and a truer
-servant both to God and the Queen. Give me your
-pardon for my words; they were uncourteous and unjust.
-Forget that they were spoken, and let my memory
-of them be my punishment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, it is you, sir,' said he, holding out his hand,
-'it is you that have prevailed. I took you for a
-distempered, fastidious scholar, and now I know you for a
-true man. I desire your better acquaintance, Mr. Festing,
-and nothing better than that we may one day adventure
-together. At any rate, I trust that if you have a
-mind to it at any time, you will know where to look for
-a captain.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah,' said Harry, 'Jasper is more for stay-at-home
-book voyages than for a dainty feast of dry haberdine
-and "poor John" at sea; for I think,' the foolish lad
-added, 'he knows every cosmography book that was
-ever wrote.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say you so?' cried Drake. 'Then I pray you lay in
-a victualling of apples, and we three will aboard the
-arbour and make a dry voyage together.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we did, and talked over Drake's map till sunset,
-of half-known worlds and unfurrowed seas, and all
-the wonders with which the learning of the ancients
-and the fancies of the moderns had peopled them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I cannot say that from that moment I became Frank
-Drake's friend, for he was ever as slow in making a
-friendship as he was in parting with one. Yet before
-he sailed again I may boast we began to be to one
-another what we continued till his death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For in those days which followed we were always
-together, seeing that Harry had almost every day to
-ride forth with his father to bid farewell to some
-neighbour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had been much astonished at the learning Drake
-displayed in his first talk with me, and marvelled where
-a mariner could have gathered so great a store of
-knowledge. He had gladly assented when I bade him to
-Longdene, that we might study together the
-cosmography books that were in my library.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Day by day we pored together over their crabbed
-latinity, which I expounded for his better understanding,
-while he, as I could see by his shrewd questions
-and ruthless commentation, sucked the old pedants dry
-as herrings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah! sweet bulky tomes, how dear is the sight of
-you to my declining years, since that renowned
-navigator deigned to ask wisdom of you! Well may you
-stand so proudly in your ranks, mounting guard, as it
-were, over yonder table whereon he read in you. Best
-beloved to me you are of all my books, yea, though I
-have around me the choicest flowers of wit and scholarship,
-which in these latter years have blossomed so
-bounteously under the glorious rays of our most royal sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, you I love best; as much for the memory of
-my dear friend, which you enshrine, as for some mighty
-power that seems to lie still behind your great leather
-covers. Who knows how much you told him that
-listened to your voice with such a wise discernment?
-Who knows how much of fame he owed to what you
-whispered in his ear, unheard by me? Ay, and who
-can even tell how many of these new dainty fruits our
-sun would have had power to ripen, if he, untaught by
-you, had not first so deeply stirred and tilled our fallow
-English wit with his heroic and inspiring deeds?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How large and fair a place those weeks hold in my
-memory! Had their sands run out less quickly, how
-great a sorrow I might have been spared! For I cannot
-doubt that had I spent a very little longer time with
-Frank Drake, he would have made of me, there and
-then, a sailor like himself, and I should never have
-gone back to Cambridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the hours of our studies were numbered, and the
-day came at last when Harry must pass over to France
-in Drake's bark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a parting of double sadness; for not only was
-I to lose my two friends, but one of them, he that I
-accounted my brother, was going to a far country, where
-I feared I should lose him, both body and soul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For Harry, like most other young gentlemen in his
-case, had determined to pass into Italy&mdash;a country of
-which all our party had a most wholesome horror, not
-only as the very home and fount of papistry, but also
-because we held it no better than a foul Circean garden,
-full of all manner of enticements to pleasure and
-wantonness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The proverb, by which the Italians themselves would
-make of every Italianate Englishman a fiend incarnate,
-was ever on our lips. I knew how hardly a man of
-Harry's kidney could escape unsullied, seeing how little
-love he had for learning, in pursuit of which it was
-pretended he should travel to Padua and elsewhere, and
-which alone could save a man from the Italian taint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I perceived with great pain that since his return
-from Berwick Harry read nothing but the Morte
-d'Arthur, and such like wanton books of chivalry,
-wherein, as it seemed to me, those were accounted the
-noblest knights who slew most men for mere valour's
-sake, without any quarrel, and lived the most wanton
-lives.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I spoke long and earnestly to him on this, praying
-him rather to travel in Germany, and countries given
-up to God's true religion. He listened patiently, as he
-always did to my preaching, though I think he must
-have laughed in his sleeve, knowing how true and pure
-his heart was beside mine. Yet I could not turn him
-from his purpose, and had to bid him farewell with a
-sinking heart, which he tried to comfort by promising
-that for my sake, if for none other, he would come back
-unchanged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After Harry's departure Sir Fulke was so lonely
-that he prayed me stay with him, for a little space.
-And this I was glad enough to do, till letters came to
-me from Mr. Cartwright, wherein he told me of the
-growing heats of the controversies at Cambridge
-concerning conformity, and urged me to return to the
-standard, which thing I did in the beginning of the
-year of grace 1565.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is in no way my desire to overstrain patience by
-speaking of these matters, whereof so many have written
-at so great length, and better than I; nor do I wish to
-speak much of my life, save in so far as it was wrapped
-in those of my two dear friends who were now beyond
-the seas, Frank Drake, on his return from France, having
-sailed under Captain Lovell on his disastrous voyage
-to the Indies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suffice it to say that I remained at Trinity, working
-diligently, under Mr. Cartwright's guidance, to perfect
-myself in all manner of scholarship, that I might render
-myself well practised in the use of the most lethal
-weapons which he could forge for me in regard to the
-then present controversies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every day they and I grew more heated. Conformity
-was openly condemned in Trinity, till at last
-Mr. Cartwright persuaded the whole college, save three,
-to cast off the garb of Antichrist, and appear in chapel
-without surplices.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a day of great rejoicing in my college, for we,
-setting far too high our importance, as is the wont of
-scholars in places where they are gathered together,
-deemed we had accomplished little less than a second
-Reformation. Yet all it brought about was so sound a
-rating from the Chancellor, in which he was pleased to
-call us 'bragging, brainless heads,' with other pretty
-conceits, that many were glad to disclaim their part in
-the matter and blame Mr. Cartwright; so that, fearing
-the further displeasure of Mr. Secretary, and urged
-thereto by his friends, my master left Cambridge and
-went abroad, whither I would gladly have followed
-him, but he would not have it so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It were better,' he said, 'that you should abide here
-and take your degrees; and, moreover, I desire to leave
-behind me in the University some true and understanding
-friend, who will keep me informed of all that passes here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Being very glad to take upon myself so honourable
-an office I did as he wished, and Mr. Cartwright's
-encouragement to scholarship being thus withdrawn,
-my studies became almost entirely turned to theology,
-or rather to that unseemly scramble for scraps of
-divinity which passed for it in those days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was even appointed for a time to read the divinity
-lecture, as a gentleman reader without stipendium, and
-thus becoming always more fanatical, and being well
-known as being in Mr. Cartwright's confidence, I grew
-to be a marked man in Trinity, and in due course was
-elected fellow, to my great content, though I had no
-intention of taking orders, being a violent opponent of
-conformity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those were great days for us in Trinity, for we had,
-what men love best, a perfect content in the sense of
-our own bigness, at least whenever our ears were not
-tingling with a rating from my Lord Burleigh, our
-chancellor. We went on our ways like prophets, blindly
-swelling out our littleness with the vain wind of our
-own babbling, till we seemed to ourselves to tower like
-a giant at the head of Reformation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If any had told us then that Frank Drake, or even
-my Lord of Bedford, was doing more for the cause with
-his little finger than all our heads together, we should
-have laughed him to scorn. Yet now it is not clear to
-me that such a speech would not have had some show
-of reason.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the year 1567 Dr. Beaumont died, to my great
-sorrow, and we had set over us in his place Dr. Whitgift,
-Master of Pembroke Hall and Lady Margaret Professor
-of Divinity. He was a man from whom we hoped
-much, seeing that to a good disposition towards the
-Puritan party, a hatred of vestments, and very sound
-Calvinistic doctrine, he added a greater force of
-scholarship and eloquence than Dr. Beaumont ever had, and
-moreover was a better courtier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, I think Trinity could have had no better
-Master in those days. For although he seemed then to
-my hot head but lukewarm in the cause, yet now I can
-see how high he raised my college during the ten years
-of his mastership, which thing he achieved by a nice
-handling of his authority between the parties, whereby
-the turbulent spirits were pruned to a less rank growth,
-and the timid digged about and fostered to the plentiful
-production of sweet and peaceful fruit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such is the man as I see him now. Then it was
-different, for my hard zeal was always distasteful to
-him, and we were but sorry friends. So little indeed to
-my taste was the new spirit in the college, that on his
-constantly urging me to conform and take orders, I
-resigned my fellowship in fear of being deprived of
-it, as Mr. Cartwright was afterwards, and retired to
-Longdene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had the full consent of my master for this. He
-had recently returned to Cambridge, and found himself
-the man of greatest weight in the University, and like
-to be elected Vice-Chancellor had he been in priest's
-orders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It will be better in many ways,' said he, when I
-asked him his advice, 'that you should return to your
-estate; your influence will be more useful there. In
-Cambridge we have an abundance of labourers. It is
-men like yourself that we now require throughout the
-country. The cause needs urgently the support of the
-gentry, who for the most part are papist or half-reformed.
-Since Mr. Drake has got the vicarage of Upchurch you
-will have a stalwart fellow-worker. Go then, and do your
-best till the time is ripe for our great blow. I do not
-mean in any way to attack our present detestable and
-superstitious manner of church government until I am
-made Professor of Divinity, and can speak with all the
-authority of our great University. Meanwhile in your
-private study you can help me in my labour of grinding
-the weapons, that they may be sharp and ready in my
-hands when the hour is come.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though feeling not a little sad at leaving my dear
-college, perhaps never to return, I could not but rejoice
-when I reached home that I had taken Mr. Cartwright's
-advice; for I found my good old guardian most
-grievously sick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed very glad to see me, but yet I could fancy
-his manner was not so frank as of yore. It pained me
-not a little, for I could see by his pinched face that he
-was near to death's door. Nor could I understand why
-he should be so different, till after I had talked with him
-for some time, particularly of his spiritual state, we were
-interrupted by some one entering the room unbidden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I started to my feet when I saw at the door a young
-gentleman whom I had known at Cambridge. He had
-been a scholar of King's, and was one of those who
-took little trouble to disguise their love of papistry.
-He was dressed now in a cassock, and wore a small
-skull-cap to hide his tonsure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We saluted each other very stiffly, while Sir Fulke
-looked from one to the other in a frightened way, as
-though he expected us to fly at each other's throats.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Which of us shall remain, Sir Fulke,' said I, 'since
-there is no room for both?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Both, lad, both,' cried Sir Fulke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay,' said the Catholic gentleman, 'you must choose
-between us. If you would have me do my office let
-this gentleman depart. I cannot defile the mass by
-celebrating it in the presence of a heretic.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He said this in so soft and polished a manner that,
-though I felt my face flush, I would not let him have
-the advantage, but replied with my utmost politeness,
-speaking as though I had not heard him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It were better I should go, Sir Fulke,' I said; 'I
-cannot stay and stand by while a servant of Antichrist
-sullies your soul with superstition and idolatry even as
-it is knocking for entry at God's door.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the priest's turn to look angry then, but he
-only bowed to me again and was silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tush, lads,' broke in Sir Fulke, 'there is no need for
-squabbling over me. What matter, Jasper, if I have
-a bit of a mass in memory of the old days? I have been
-an arrant sinner too, and would ease myself of a load of
-sin with just a piece of confession. I have robbed the
-Church grievously, curse that mad knave Drake that
-led me to it, and been a great swearer, Heaven help
-me; ay, and you help me too, Jasper, since you know
-better prayers against swearing than the priests. You
-shall come and pray with me after he has done, lad, and
-then God will know it was my wish to make peace with
-Him and all men before I died. Come, lad, will you
-not? I have no son but you to smooth my pillow,
-since Harry is beyond the sea. Go now, and come again.
-You would not grudge me a bit of a mass like my fathers
-to die upon. May be they would be ashamed of me
-when I went to do homage with them up there, if I
-came amongst them unshriven and unhouselled.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely, sir,' I said, much melted at the old knight's
-words, 'you would depart in surer hope of Paradise if
-you please God in your death rather than your ancestors.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is right, lad,' said the dying man, 'and so I will.
-You shall come and help me. But there would be no joy
-in Paradise if my ancestors and the old gentry turned
-their backs upon me, and I had to go with the new men.
-Save your father, there never was one of them I could
-abide; and Mr. Carter says Nick will not be there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked at Mr. Carter, as Sir Fulke called him,
-though I knew it was not his name. He bowed again
-to me politely, and I repressed the angry burst that I
-had ready for him, being unwilling to cause Sir Fulke
-any further pain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sir Fulke,' said I, 'it was your good will to let my
-father be buried as he would. I have not forgotten that,
-and for your sake will this day forget my plain duty
-both to God and myself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that I left the room, and waited below in the
-hall till I was called up again. I found Sir Fulke at
-the mercy of God, and senseless. The Catholic
-gentleman was gone. So I knelt by the old knight's bed,
-and prayed long and earnestly to God that his opinions
-might be forgiven him, seeing they sprang of ignorance
-rather than perversity, though I had then, it must be
-said, little hope my prayers would be heard; and even
-as I prayed my guardian passed peacefully away.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-After Sir Fulke's death, and the stir which naturally
-followed, things grew very quiet with me. Almost my
-whole day was devoted to what Mr. Cartwright had
-called 'grinding the weapons' for his coming attack on
-prelatical government.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of my books I was very lonely. Mr. Drake
-was at this time almost always away on duty. Upnor
-Castle was full of Spanish prisoners, who had been
-seized in the neighbouring ports in pursuance of the
-Queen's recent order, whereby she sought to make
-reprisal for a like order issued by her loving
-brother-in-law the King of Spain. And that some recognition
-might be made for the labours of the Inquisition so
-generously bestowed on the English prisoners in Spain,
-Mr. Drake was ordered to preach at Upnor every day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed a great delight to the old navy preacher to
-go and rail before them at the Romish church, and it was
-no doubt most medicinable in his case, for never saw I
-a man more furious against Spain than he was at that
-time, and not without cause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank Drake had sold his bark, and sailed with his
-cousin, Mr. John Hawkins, in the great trading
-expedition which Sir William Garrard and Company had
-fitted out for the Guinea coast and the Indies. His
-kind old kinsman suffered him to venture his small
-savings with him, and had given him a petty officer's
-place in the fleet, out of pity for the wrongs he had
-suffered at Rio de la Hacha, under Captain Lovell, of
-which I have already spoken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were all rejoiced at his good fortune, for it was
-as pretty a sail of ships as ever left the coast. There
-was the great <i>Jesus of Lubeck</i>, Mr. Hawkins's admiral;
-the <i>Minion</i>, his vice-admiral; a smart bark of fifty
-tons, called the <i>Judith</i>; besides three others, the
-<i>Swallow</i>, the <i>William and John</i>, and the <i>Angel</i>. It
-was, moreover, no fast secret that the Queen's grace
-and many of the Council were sharers in the venture,
-so that it lacked not any kind of furniture, either of men
-or arms, and great things were expected from it for all
-concerned, even to the lowest mariner. Indeed I myself
-had adventured a moderate sum, being persuaded by
-Drake how profitable the negro trade had been and
-would be again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of this expedition nothing had now been heard for
-more than a year, and we began to grow anxious. At
-last a Spaniard who had put into Plymouth gave
-Mr. William Hawkins intelligence that his brother was on
-his way home, laden with the untold spoils of a town
-which he had sacked, and of prizes which he had taken
-on the seas. We hardly knew what to think of this,
-for such dealings were not at all to John Hawkins's
-liking. He was a wary, far-casting man, and I always
-thought looked on trading, especially in negroes, as
-more profitable than piracy, as indeed it was. Thus he
-had always laboured while in the Indies, by just dealing,
-that the planters and merchants should stand well
-with him and secretly support him, when, as happened
-sometimes, he was forced to carry a high hand over
-governors who refused to trade quietly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake was sure the report was all another
-Spanish lie, and was not surprised when, some time
-after, he heard that some Spanish mariners had been
-bragging over their cups that Hawkins and all his men
-had been entrapped and put to the sword far inland,
-and the whole undertaking brought to nought. I need
-not say with what alarm and anxiety these reports
-filled us, for they sounded far more like truth than the
-last. It in no way decreased our fear for Frank's
-safety when shortly afterward the Queen seized the
-treasure-ships of the Duke of Alva, which had been
-chased by privateers and pirates into Southampton,
-Plymouth, and Foy, and were still lying there, since the
-ship-masters knew not how to get through to the Netherlands.
-We could not doubt then that the Council had
-certain news that all we feared was true. Every one
-now gave up all hope, and thought only of revenge
-and reprisal, when tidings joyfully reached us that the
-<i>Judith</i>, one of the ships of the expedition, had put into
-Mount's Bay, crowded with twice her proper crew, and
-in command of 'Captain' Drake!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All kinds of rumours now arose of what had happened,
-mingled with news of how the Spaniards had laid
-an embargo on British ships in the Netherlands and in
-Spain, and imprisoned every Englishman they could
-clutch. The Queen replied undaunted with like boldness,
-and every prison along the coast was packed with
-Spanish sailors, and every town-hall with treasure and
-rich cargoes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such doings very soon caused it to be reported with
-greater certainty that the Council had certain news of
-Mr. Hawkins's death and the destruction of all his men,
-when to our great relief it was said that the <i>Minion</i>,
-with the general aboard and a half-starved crew, had
-come home. We were more hopeful now, but hungrier
-than ever for news. Mr. Drake brought us every kind
-of horrible tale from the Spanish prisoners at Upnor.
-I think they devised them in pure revenge for his
-preaching at them, and the more they lied the more he rated
-their idolatry and superstition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was some time before we heard the truth. Frank
-sent us letters (in which I noted that he wrote himself
-'Captain' Drake) saying that Mr. William Hawkins,
-Governor of Plymouth, had sent him up to inform the
-Council fully of what had occurred, and that he was
-detained in London upon that business. So things
-stood with us when one morning, a month or more after
-Sir Fulke's death, I was awakened by the sound of a
-gruff, loud voice, such as soldiers affect, in conversation
-with Lashmer's somewhat strident tenor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good master soldier,' cried Lashmer, 'I tell you he
-is still abed, and you cannot see him this two
-hours.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, by this bright honour, but I will see him,'
-said the other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yet I think you will not,' said Lashmer; 'and
-yet again, by this bright honour is a good oath, and a
-gentleman's oath, and one that may not be sworn to a
-lie or a thing that is not true, unless, indeed, there be
-provocation; for provocation, look you, master soldier,
-excuses many things. It is your great peacemaker.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, this is monstrous logic,' returned the bass,
-'and such as I never heard all the time I was
-sergeant-groom under the Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire
-of the Emperor's stables, a man of most fertile Italian
-wit. What need of the philosopher's stone, if by mere
-logic you can make of provocation a peacemaker?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, softly now, and I will show you,' answered
-Lashmer, whose talk served often to wile a dull hour,
-since he had been to Cambridge and gleaned I know
-not what stray scraps of learning that careless students
-had dropped in his way,&mdash;'I will show you how a man
-will come to swear the peace of another for some assault,
-or battery, or mayhem, or anything, and that other
-shall show provocation. Then shall no peace be sworn,
-and they shall be at one again. For it shall appear
-that he who battered the other did him no wrong,
-seeing there was provocation in it. So they that
-thought they had quarrel shall find by this same
-sweet provocation that they have none.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then must I provoke all men,' said the sergeant-groom,
-'if I would live at peace with them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, by this bright honour,' said Lashmer; 'then no
-matter how often you get a bloody coxcomb, yet shall
-you never have quarrel with any man.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then will I now most lovingly break your pate,'
-said the other, 'that you may stand my friend and bring
-me to your master. For my master, the most excellent
-esquire, Henry Waldyve, bade me spare no pains to see
-your master as soon as possible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether my servant's logic would have been put to
-this severe test I cannot say, for at Harry's name I
-sprang out of bed and cried from the window that I
-would see the messenger forthwith.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I hurried from my chamber to find Harry's servant
-discussing his morning ale with Lashmer. He rose to
-a stiff military position as I entered, and made me a
-most lofty salute with his Spanish hat. He was a tall,
-soldierly-looking man of about forty years of age, with
-a peaked beard and very fierce moustaches that had
-been nicely disciplined in the Spanish fashion to curl
-nearly up to his eyes. By his side hung a very terrible
-'schiavona,' which he wore instead of a rapier, after the
-fashion of the German <i>reiters</i>, considering, as he
-afterwards told me, that the broadsword was the only fit
-weapon for horsemen. It had a great steel closed hilt,
-presenting such a defiant tangle of rings, hilt-points,
-and twisted bars after the latest pedantic fancy as to
-make the beholder tremble to think what the blade
-must be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed his whole appearance was foreign. He wore
-a large ruff, a thing as new to me as his sword; and his
-doublet, which showed clearly the marks of a corselet
-often worn over it, was pinked and slashed in the
-furthest fantastic fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If you come on the part of Mr. Waldyve,' said I,
-receiving his salute, 'you are thrice welcome.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In truth I bring you, sir, that most excellent and
-soldierly young gentleman's most full and lovingly
-complete commendation. Know me, at your worship's
-service, as Alexander Culverin, sometime sergeant-groom
-under the Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire
-of the Emperor's stables, and now body-servant and
-master of the horse to that most proper gentleman
-Mr. Henry Waldyve.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this he said drawn up as stiff and soldierly as
-though he were mounting guard over the Emperor's
-own bedchamber. His presence much impressed my
-peaceful follower, though to me he was a thing to smile
-at lovingly; for somewhere in his face was a simple,
-kindly, almost childish look, that was strangely in
-contrast with his fiercely curling moustache, his loud, gruff
-voice, and his very warlike bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When came your master home?' I asked, for in
-truth I was greatly surprised to hear of his return so
-suddenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But a week ago,' said the Sergeant; 'since which
-time we have been lying at my Lord of Bedford's house
-in London; for Mr. Waldyve had matters to report to
-the Council ere he could come down here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And have you brought me any message from him
-beside his commendations?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Saving your worship's worship,' said the man, 'he
-would have you ride over at your worship's most early
-haste to Ashtead, since he would have some speech
-with you together with some poor soul, who, to judge
-by his most unhorsemanlike carriage, is a mariner or
-sailor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gave he the name of this same sailor?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That he did. A name he had that sorts well with
-one who splashes about all his life in that most base
-element called water. To be short with you, it is one
-Captain Drake, though I hold it most false heraldry to
-apply so dignified and soldierly a title to a seafaring
-man.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, we can talk of this as we go,' said I, in a
-mighty hurry now to be off. 'I will ride back with you
-now, if you will wait till Lashmer has saddled our
-horses.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I tarried but to eat my manchet and drink my bowl
-of ale, since I hold a morsel in the morning with a good
-draught, sweetened and defecated by all night standing,
-to be very good and wholesome for the eyesight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I mounted my horse I saw Culverin watching me
-with a most judicial air. I must own I felt no little
-comfort and gratitude to my guardian for his good
-training to see him nod a distinct though qualified
-approval to himself when he saw me in the saddle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Know you what business your master has with Captain
-Drake?' I asked as we rode out of my gates, my
-mouth watering for news.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, not I,' answered Culverin; 'yet I hope it will
-be none, since I hold it unseemly for a gentleman
-and a soldier to have near communication with
-sailors.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet Captain Drake,' I said, 'has great love and
-respect for land-soldiers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has he indeed?' replied the Sergeant, looking very
-pleased; 'a most notable sign of his good sense, and had
-he said horse-soldiers, it would have been a notable sign
-of his better sense.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How make you that good, Master Culverin?' asked
-Lashmer, whose hunger for an argument was by this
-time getting the better of his awe of the stranger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is good of itself, Master Lashmer,' said Sergeant
-Culverin. 'For when I was sergeant-groom under
-Signor John Peter Pugliano, esquire of the Emperor's
-stables, he was wont to say (and, mark you, he was a
-man of most fertile Italian wit) that soldiers were the
-noblest estate of mankind, and horsemen the noblest of
-soldiers. They were masters of war, he said, and
-ornaments of peace, speedy goers and strong abiders,
-triumphers both in courts and camps. In truth, your only
-salvation is to be a horse-soldier. Take that of me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seeing Lashmer was on the point of a desperate
-charge upon this monstrous position, I changed our
-subject quickly by asking news of Harry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was but three weeks ago, sir,' said Culverin, 'that
-we got your letters telling of Sir Fulke Waldyve's
-death. We were in winter quarters, whither we had
-gone when the campaign ended so ill for us with the fall
-of St. Jean d'Angely. Then we tarried not for drum or
-trumpet, but came straight homewards in the first ship
-that sailed. It was a pity it fell so. There was pretty
-warfare there, and most profitable for a gentleman to see.
-For, look you, sir, a soldier can learn more from defeats
-than victories. Take that of me. We were present all
-through last year's campaign, and rode in M. Ardelot's
-regiment when they drubbed us so soundly at Jarnac.
-After his death we were attached to the admiral himself,
-and so continued till our second rout at Moncontour. It
-was an evil time for the Huguenots, but a pretty
-schoolhouse for a scholar of arms, and my master was growing
-to be a most sweet soldier. I tell you, sir, his name
-was on every tongue in the army, so high a courage and
-discretion had he shown in all passages of arms we had
-made together.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah,' said I, 'there is little need to tell me that. I
-knew well what men would say of him when the time
-came to show what stuff was in him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so did I too, sir,' said he. 'As soon as ever
-he came to the Emperor's Court, and rode down to the
-tilting ground, I said to Signor John Peter Pugliano,
-esquire of the stables, "There is a soldier," said I; for
-his seat was as well as a man could sit. It won my
-heart, sir, to see him. From that hour I was his
-servant. I craved leave to direct his exercises under the
-esquire, and grew to love him as my own horse.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was it, then, pure love that made you follow him to
-England?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed, sir, I think it was. After he had been with
-us a year or so, he took it in his mind to see some
-service in the French wars. I begged to go in his train;
-for I loved him, and could not see him go to the wars
-without a proper following or some old dog to watch
-over him when dangers were thick.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you gave up your honourable post of sergeant-groom
-for his sake?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, sir, and willingly; for he promised to carry
-me to England with him after he had had his fill of
-fighting. My bowels yearned for the land I had not
-seen for twenty years. Indeed, sir, there's no man loves
-the smoke of his own country that hath not been singed
-in the flame of another soil. Take that from me, sir,
-saving your wisdom.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you are of English parentage, Sergeant Culverin?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, sir, though many think not, because of my
-name and a certain carriage that comes to men of travel;
-yet I am English born, sir, and never knew father or
-mother, save an English great piece on the Calais
-barbican.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then save you, Sergeant, from your kinsmen,' said
-I, thinking he was jesting, 'since the Moors call great
-pieces the "mothers of death." You and it are the only
-children I ever heard that they had.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are merry, sir, but I jest not,' said the Sergeant,
-drawing himself up very stiff on his horse. 'What I say
-is sober truth. The first human eyes that ever saw me,
-as I could ever hear, were just those of an old gunner,
-who found me one night in the mouth of his culverin.
-He, good soul, took care of me. "She is the only lass I
-ever loved," he was wont to say, "but I never thought
-she would be mother of a son to me." So he took me
-home, and his mates and he would have the priest
-kursten me "Culverin" after my mother, and "Alexander,"
-because they said I must be born to be a mighty
-soldier.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly, Sergeant,' said I, seeing how serious he was,
-though I had much ado to stop laughing, 'a most
-honourable and soldierly descent.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, sir, you may say that,' he answered, looking
-round at Lashmer, from whom came a sound of choking
-laughter. 'A most soldierly and royal parentage. She
-was as good a piece as ever was cast, and stamped, look
-you, with King Harry's own arms, rest his soul! To
-say no more, for modesty's sake, it is not one or two who
-have rued their ribald merriment at what I am telling
-you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with that he laid his hand upon the great steel
-hilt of his broadsword, and glared so terribly at
-Lashmer that I thought the poor lad would have fallen from
-his saddle from pure fear of the bristling of the
-Sergeant's fierce moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not think Lashmer ever laughed at Sergeant
-Culverin again, at least not in his face. Indeed it was
-not many who did; most men feared his sword too
-much, and those who knew him best, and were not
-afraid, loved him too well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think three men never greeted each other more
-warmly than Frank, Harry, and I when I reached
-Ashtead. It was like summer to see them again, yet I
-found them much altered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry seemed shocked by his father's death, and
-looked very sad in his black clothes. His face was
-bronzed, his short beard neatly trimmed to a point, and
-a scar scarce healed stretched across one temple. Yet I
-thought I never saw him look more manly, handsome,
-or lovable, in spite of the foreign look his travels had
-given him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Captain Drake, too, was changed. His eye was as
-bright and his ways as cheery as ever; yet when he was
-not speaking I could see in his face a harder and sterner
-look than there used to be. His dress, too, was very
-different to what he had worn in the old days; though
-plain, it was of good stuff, and cut according to the
-fashion. He wore, moreover, a smart rapier, and had
-the air of a gentleman, though without having lost his
-sailor-like looks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will want to know why I sent for you, Jasper,'
-said Harry, as soon as our greetings were over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, that do I not,' said I; 'so long as you sent for
-me, that is enough.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, but I had a good reason,' answered Harry. 'I
-met Captain Drake in London, whither he had come on
-business, as he will tell you. As he was coming hither
-to see his father at Upchurch we journeyed together,
-and he told me&mdash;tell him, Frank, what you told me, and
-then he will know why we sent for him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, lad,' said Captain Drake, setting himself down
-for a long tale, as sailors will, 'you remember how I
-wrote to you of the voyage which I made to Cape de la
-Vela in the Indies with Captain Lovell, the year after
-our brush with the caravel, and how it all ended in the
-wrong I suffered from the Spaniards at Rio de la Hacha
-for no cause but their accursed treachery?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, that I do,' said I; for he had written to me
-about it at Cambridge, and Mr. Drake, too, had told me
-fully of that most wicked dealing with his son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, that was well enough,' Drake went on; 'a
-plague on the false papist hearts; but what came after
-was worse.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And at one time we feared it was worse again,' said
-I; 'for we thought we had lost you as well as our
-venture. But how came it about? We looked for nothing
-but success under Mr. Hawkins.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And nothing but that should you have had,' said
-Drake. 'Merrily should we have singed the King of
-Spain's beard, and filled some most noble pockets beside
-our own, but that Jack Hawkins was over scrupulous
-with the traitors. Things went well enough at first, in
-spite of bad weather, especially for me; for off Cape de
-Verde we fell in with a Frenchman from Rochelle, who
-had taken a Portugal caravel. This Jack Hawkins
-chased and took, and made me master and captain of
-her. We called her the <i>Grace of God</i>, and a good name
-too, seeing how God graced our venture. For we
-drubbed the Portugals wherever we met them, and
-before we left the Guinea coast we had gathered as fine
-a cargo of black flesh as a merchant need wish to see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Being well filled up with what we sought, we sailed
-for the Indies. My luck stood by me still; for when
-Captain Dudley of the <i>Judith</i> died, Cousin Jack gave
-me his place, and made me full captain. We found
-traffic on the Main a bit hard, because the King of Spain
-had most uncourteously charged that no man should
-trade so much as a <i>peso</i>-worth with us. Yet negroes
-are dear to a Don's heart, and there are ways, lad, there
-are ways that none know better than old Jack. So we
-had reasonable trade at mighty good prices, both in
-black flesh and our other merchandise, till we came to
-Rio de la Hacha. We were but two ships when we
-anchored before the town&mdash;the <i>Angel</i> and my lady
-<i>Judith</i>. The rest had been sent to Curaçoa to make
-provision for the fleet. So they thought to try their
-scurvy tricks there again, and refused us water, thinking
-thereby to starve us into selling our negroes for half
-nothing. The Treasurer, who was in charge, had
-fortified the town and got some hundred or so of
-harquebusiers behind his bulwarks; so we could not land, but
-took a caravel in spite of all their shot, right under
-their noses, and rode there till our general came round
-in the <i>Jesus</i>. They soon found that an English cock
-could crow as loud and louder than a Spaniard. For
-old Jack set ashore two hundred small shot and
-pikemen, and took the town. It was no less than their
-discourtesy deserved, and they suffered no harm; for every
-man of them ran clean out of the place at the first bark
-of our snappers. I think it was only a little comedy to
-please the King of Spain; for Master Treasurer and all
-of them came in at night to trade, and before we left we
-had two hundred less black mouths to fill and a pretty
-store of gold and pearls in our hold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We had done such a brisk trade and no bones made
-all along the coast, after our persuasions at Rio de la
-Hacha, that when we came to Carthagena, our traffic
-being nearly done, we tried nothing against it, save that
-the <i>Minion</i> saluted the castle with a few shot from her
-great pieces, while we landed and took certain <i>botijos</i> of
-wine from an island, just to drink their health, leaving
-woollen and linen cloth there in payment. So we bore
-up for Florida; but being taken in a <i>furicano</i>, which I
-believe the Lord sent to guide us, we were driven into
-San Juan de Ulloa, the port of the city of Mexico, as you
-know. Now listen, lad; listen what God sent us. There
-in the port at our mercy&mdash;entirely in our power&mdash;were
-twelve galleons, laden with two hundred thousand
-pounds' worth of gold and silver. Two hundred
-thousand pounds! Think of it, if you can, without going
-mad, for I can't. Yet, in spite of God's plain guidance,
-as I told him again and again, Jack Hawkins set them
-all at liberty without touching a <i>peso</i>, fearing, as he
-said, the Queen's displeasure, the simple fool, if he
-touched the goods of her most loving brother-in-law!
-Ah! had we known how the brave Queen was going to
-deal with her loving brother-in-law's money in her own
-fair ports of Southampton and the West, Jack would
-have listened to me when I told how best to please her
-Grace!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, it was no good. Not a <i>peso</i> would he touch,
-but only asked leave to refit and victual; and now,
-lad, comes the worst of all. Next morning we saw open
-of the haven thirteen great ships, being the Plate fleet
-and its wafters&mdash;a sight to make an honest Protestant
-man's mouth water. Lord, Lord, Jasper! I cannot
-think of it with loving-kindness to Jack. Just see
-now, lad! We had complete command of the haven.
-Not a fly-boat, not a pinnace could enter or leave
-without our yea. To keep the Spaniards outside in the
-north wind was only the other way of saying present
-wreck to every rag and stick of them; and that meant
-wellnigh two millions loss to the Spaniards, and Heaven
-knows what gain to us in wreckage, and flotsam, and
-trifles we should have had for our trouble in saving
-crews.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did God ever show a greater mercy to His faithful
-people than that? I ask you, sir. You know better
-than I, because you are a scholar. Yet Jack Hawkins
-let his scruples stand before the plain will of God, and
-would make conditions with them. Would I could
-have told him what our lion-hearted Queen was doing
-in the narrow seas with her dear brother-in-law's
-belongings; but we did not know. Then he would have
-heard the voice of the Lord aright. But, as it was, he
-was stubborn, and let them all in on conditions of peace,
-and safe fitting and victualling for ourselves; to the
-which was passed the word of Don Martin Henriquez,
-Viceroy of Mexico, himself, who was with the fleet; a
-pox on him till this hand has squeezed him dry, and
-then the knave may go hang!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I need not tell the rest. You guess what came&mdash;what
-must have come. It was like night after day.
-Relying on all their solemn words and papistical oaths,
-no less than on the hostages they had given us, we
-laboured together two days peaceably to bestow the
-ships properly in the port and prepare ours for refitting.
-A good part of our ordnance we set ashore upon an
-island in the mouth of the port, which, by the
-conditions, was to be in our possession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On the third day after we had let them in, when
-we were about to set the carpenters to work, and were
-all dismantled, I could see things were going treacherously,
-in spite of their fine words. Soldiers were marching
-to and fro, and ordnance being bent upon us. Jack
-sent to inquire what it might mean, and Don Martin
-Henriquez passed his word of honour to protect us from
-treason.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Still the preparation went on, and Jack protested
-again&mdash;this time with much effect; for his messenger
-was seized, a trumpet blown, and in a moment all was
-in a roar and blaze. Out of the smoke that hid the
-quay and ships we could see the glitter of harness and
-pikes and halberds, and the glow of matches, as
-hundreds of soldiers rushed upon us and thrust out to the
-island in crowded long-boats. In a trice our men ashore
-were overcome and cut down, and our ships swarming
-with Spaniards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Lord, what a fight it was then! Tooth and nail,
-claw and heel, we went at them. Such a roar and din
-there was as my ears at least had never heard, till it
-lulled again, and not a Spaniard was left alive upon our
-ships. It was glorious work, but we had no time to
-think of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No sooner were we clear than we cut our headfasts
-and warped out on our sternfasts; but though that saved
-us from boarding again, it did little good; for the
-treacherous dogs were masters of the island and our
-great pieces, as well as of their own on the ships and
-the platform. Still, for a whole hour we made a great
-fight of it, in which we sunk two of their great ships
-and burnt another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By this time the <i>Jesus</i> was dismasted and an utter
-wreck. She, being the admiral, had aboard of her all
-our treasure&mdash;twelve thousand pounds in gold, lad,
-besides negroes and merchandise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was impossible to bring her off, so Jack resolved
-to abandon her, after taking out all she had. To this
-end we drew her off and set her in front of the
-<i>Minion</i>, to keep off the shot of the Spanish batteries,
-and so save our whole ship from destruction while we
-were at our work. For the <i>Minion</i> was the only ship
-we had now that would sail, except my <i>Judith</i>, which
-I had got safe off after the fight. But the Spaniards saw
-our game, and fired two other great ships of theirs, and
-loosed them down wind at us. They may call us
-cowards, Jasper, but it is a fearful thing to see two
-fireships a mass of roaring, crackling flames, and each
-twice and thrice as big as yourself, bearing down on
-you. Who can blame them if the crew of the
-<i>Minion</i> grew afraid and cast her off from the
-<i>Jesus</i>, in spite of all their captain or the general
-could say? So suddenly was it done that the general
-himself almost perished in trying to come aboard the
-<i>Minion</i>, and many were drowned in the attempt, and
-many left aboard the grand old <i>Jesus</i> with the treasure,
-to fall a prey to those rake-hell traitors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I quickly lay aboard the <i>Minion</i> with the <i>Judith</i>,
-and took out of her all I had room for; and so, at
-the mercy of God and looking for nothing but death,
-seeing how overladen we were and without proper
-provisions, I made my way home as speedily as I
-might. Jack takes it unkindly that I left him;
-yet, God knows, I did it for the best, trusting, by
-His help, to save my ship and all those aboard, if
-such a thing were possible to any man. Who knows,
-if I had tarried with the general, I should not have
-fared like him, and had to set half my crew ashore to
-suffer Heaven knows what miseries at the hand of
-Indians and wild beasts and Spaniards, which is worse.
-Ay, and to lose half the rest from famine and sickness.
-God be praised for His mercy to me, and judge between
-me and Cousin Jack.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Frank Drake ended his relation of that famous
-adventure in the port of San Juan de Ulloa, and fell
-to walking fiercely up and down the room where we
-sat. I knew not what to answer him; for I was almost
-as much moved as he, and firmly believed it was the
-will of God that they should have destroyed the two
-Spanish fleets. It is strange to look back upon now,
-yet I cannot wonder that I thought as I did, seeing
-what my masters had been at Cambridge, and, above
-all, in what a perilous case England then was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Never, I think, was reformation in greater danger
-than at that time. There were already constant rumours
-of the disquiet in the north. The rumblings of the
-Papist storm that was soon to burst from thence were
-making themselves heard. The Scots Queen sat fouling
-the nest to which she had flown for refuge, in our
-eyes like some unclean bird that bred new traitors
-every day, and Spain cried louder and France blustered
-more fiercely against the one stout heart which would
-not bend to Rome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Queen still stoutly held the Duke of Alva's
-treasure, which she had seized; our ports were closed
-to Spain, and those of Spain to us. Sir William
-Winter was fitting out his expedition to relieve Rochelle,
-with victuals, men, and furniture for the Huguenots.
-Papist prizes, Spanish, French, no matter what, were
-daily pouring into our ports upon the narrow seas, and
-Don Gueran de Espes, the Spanish Ambassador, was a
-prisoner in his own house in London. It was said at
-all hands that the times could not long endure the
-strain, and we looked for war to burst out every day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What wonder then, if, when the whole host of Anti-christ
-seemed to be gathering about us, I, like Francis
-Drake, saw the finger of God in the hurricane which had
-put it in our power to make so big a blow at His enemies,
-and read in the disaster that followed a judgment on
-those who spared to spoil the Egyptians? That was
-what the scholar Said to the sailor; ay, and honestly
-believed it too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have no doubt, Frank,' said I, 'it was the Lord's
-will that you had smitten and spared not. It was His
-plain and manifest mercy to you to put it in your
-power to bruise the serpent's head. Would God
-Captain Hawkins had listened with your ears!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is what I tell Harry, but he scorns it,' said
-Drake eagerly; and Harry, to my inquiring look, only
-laughed a little low laugh, so full of complete
-amusement that it made me shudder, and there rushed to
-my mind the horrid Italian proverb that we heard so
-often&mdash;<i>Inglese Italianato è Diavolo incarnato</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you not think, then,' I asked of Harry, 'that it
-is God's will that we should smite Antichrist and all
-his host?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, let that pass, lad,' said Harry, laying his
-hand gently upon my knee. 'I know not too well
-what God thinks of us; but it is my will, and
-England's will, that we should smite, as you say, the
-King of Spain, and that is why I sent for you. Ever
-since he came home Frank has been striving to get
-redress from Spain through the Council, but things
-have come to such a pass with embargoes and
-imprisoned ambassadors that all hope of that is at an
-end. So Frank is going to fry his own fish. Tell him
-what you are going to do, Frank.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Drake looked at Culverin and Lashmer, who had
-remained in the room, with that same strange stare of
-his, as though to see whether he might safely speak
-before them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall they go?' said Harry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' said Frank, after a pause, and the Sergeant
-saluted him, and Lashmer looked like a happy sheep.
-'They are neither men to blab, yet we must be close;
-for it would seem there is a Spanish ear grows on every
-village cross.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Therewith Frank Drake unfolded to us his mighty
-project, of which I think none but his heroic soul had
-yet dreamed&mdash;that glorious enterprise which, before
-a few more years were gone, was to make England's
-heart to leap with pride like a young stag, and set
-her fair body throbbing with the wild untamable life
-that was to make her what she is.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The time is past for child's play,' he cried, with
-glowing face, 'the time is past for nibbling at our enemy
-in the narrow seas, it is past for peaceable trade with
-them. If we are to live and dare worthily of our
-manhood, we must bite hard and deep in their vitals.
-Where is that, lad? Whence comes their life? Where
-but from the Indies? There lies the heart of Spain,
-the heart of Antichrist, open and unprotected, for a
-man who dares to try. I have seen and I know. They
-are no match for us. See what we did at San Juan
-de Ulloa. In spite of their numbers, in spite of their
-treachery, we saved two of our ships and they lost
-five of theirs, and all three times the <i>Minion's</i> size at
-least. I suffered there, but still I learnt a lesson which,
-by God's help, they shall rue the teaching of. But
-he who attempts this must not flinch or quail. Jack
-Hawkins is no man for it; but I can do it, lads, under
-God, I can; and if I do it, it shall be under no man's
-flag but my own.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank,' said I, 'I believe if there is a man in
-England can attempt this thing it is you. But be not hasty
-to throw away your life, which England needs. Think
-of those unknown seas for which you can get no
-pilot in England; think of the power of him you
-attack.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know, lad, I know,' answered Drake, as calm and
-confident as ever. 'I have thought of it. I will have
-a pilot, and that pilot shall be myself. It may take a
-year or two, but at last I will know those seas as well
-as any Spaniard of them all. Then I will strike, and
-let them see how I can revenge myself. Revenge is
-the Lord's, and by His chosen people He does His work.
-To you, and such as you, He looks to help me in this,
-and I have come to ask if you will join me in working
-the revenge of God.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Before we parted I had promised to help Frank, as
-far as my purse would go, to fit out a ship for the
-Indies, that he might make survey of the whole region,
-and find out when and how best to strike his blow,
-and haply pick up a prize or two to pay his
-fellow-adventurers a fair profit on their risk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry helped him too, but to a very small extent,
-for his travels had made a large hole in his purse, and
-he never had the heart to squeeze his tenants so hard
-as others would have done in like case. Frank's
-kinsmen, the Hawkins, still took what they called his
-desertion at San Juan de Ulloa so unkindly that he could
-get nothing from them, and while the disaster was fresh
-in men's minds a good many pockets were shut to him
-that a year ago would have run like a river at the very
-name of a venture to the Indies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still, by the next year&mdash;it was, I remember, soon after
-the bull for the Queen's deposition had been found affixed
-to Lambeth Palace&mdash;he sailed. It was, I think, in a great
-measure the fury with which that wanton insult to the
-Queen filled the country that helped Frank more than
-anything to get the money he wanted for his enterprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the whole of this time Harry was in London
-or elsewhere with the Court, and not more than once
-or twice for a few days at Ashtead. I do not know
-whether I felt more lonely when he was away and I
-was poring over my books at Mr. Cartwright's work,
-or when he came down on his hurried visits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each time I saw him his heart seemed farther away
-from me. Not that he was less kind than of old, but
-now his whole soul seemed wrapped up in the pageantries,
-the passages of arms, and, above all, the ladies of
-the Court. Of these he seemed never to tire of talking,
-though I wearied of listening.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was longing, as I used, to speak to him of all that
-was next my heart&mdash;of the great strife in which I laboured
-for the purifying of religion; of the solemnity of this
-present life, of which he seemed to take no heed; of
-the awful doom for all eternity, which I shuddered to
-see yawning before him. Yet I knew not how to win
-his ear. Whenever I tried to start such talk he was
-quick enough to see my intention and thwart it with a
-rattling jest or some whimsical conceit. Nor had I
-much heart for it, if the truth must be told; for I
-dreaded in speaking to him on such things to find he
-was more Italianate than I believed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So in his company I was lonely, and in his absence
-lonely. I strove to find comfort in my books, hunting
-daily in their inmost coverts. All was game that my
-net enclosed. No allusion was too fantastic, no phrase
-too ambiguous, no simile too conceited, no argument too
-fanciful for me. I swept them all up to feed
-Mr. Cartwright's great idea, no matter where I found them.
-Daily and all day I worked on, searching like some
-warrener for every unsuspected bolt-hole through which
-our adversaries might seek to escape. No sooner was
-one found than I was weaving cunning nets with terms
-and figures, premiss and consequence, to set across it,
-and entangle them in its wordy meshes as soon as ever
-they should try to give us the slip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I got little comfort from it all. For though my
-studies assured me of my own salvation, they also
-confirmed my dread and certainty of Harry's perdition.
-Never was my life more joyless than then. There was
-no one I cared to see except my servant Lashmer, and
-sometimes Mr. Drake, though I won a most godly name
-by entertaining all the preachers and such like that
-came my way. I was fast growing to be a morose
-misanthropic scholar, and an iron-bound Puritan to boot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I knew it not, but rejoiced to think how utterly
-I denied myself the joys of this world, and how dear in
-the sight of God my life must be. I shudder, too, to
-think that as the breach continued to widen between
-Harry and me, I began at last to find some sort of
-solace in what I saw in store for him hereafter, and
-though I prayed for him unceasingly my prayers were
-the prayers of the Pharisee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps it was a sort of jealousy, that he was so
-wicked and so happy, while I, God help me for my
-blindness, was so good and so miserable. I confessed
-it not to myself, yet indeed I think it was no different.
-For those were the days when I and half England beside
-were gathering up what we took in our ignorance for
-the manna of heaven, when in truth it was little better
-than a foul poison to our souls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now I must cry forgiveness for my tedious
-babbling of myself, if indeed my credit be not already
-cracked with over much borrowing of patience with no
-return of profit or pleasure. Yet, at the risk of earning
-ill-will, I have thought so much necessary for the proper
-understanding of what next befell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such, then, was I when one morning some time after
-Frank Drake had sailed I again heard Mr. Alexander
-Culverin crying out for me at the gate. This time he
-was at once shown to my presence by Lashmer, where,
-with a grave salute, he presented me with a letter from
-Harry. I opened it and read as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-DEAR LAD&mdash;After my most loving and hearty commendations,
-this is to crave you give me joy. A little pretty bird
-piped to me and witched my heart away or ever I felt it go. In
-despair I sang back the song I learned of her, and, the gods be
-praised, saw my way to steal her heart in payment for mine.
-Then, lest we should quarrel over the felonies, we agreed to love.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-Ere Diana sleeps and wakes again the compact will be sealed
-by Holy Church. Then look for your sister at Ashtead, which
-I pray you see well bestowed for her coming, for I am too busy
-and happy to leave her side.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-Yours from the seventh heaven of ecstacy, and higher than
-that again, HARRY WALDYVE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-See a mad lover! I had near forgot to tell you your sister's
-name. It is the name of names, even the name of the little
-ruddy-haired child that I knew, and yet knew not, while I was
-of my Lord of Bedford's household.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, this is news indeed, Sergeant,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, it is new, sir,' said Culverin; 'that is all that
-is to be said in its favour. I knew he would do it, I
-knew he would, if we stayed at Court so long. Not that
-I blame Mistress St. John. It was not her fault. How
-any lady amongst them all could sit and see him ride a
-tilt without doing the like is more than I can say; but I
-claim no cunning in the management of women, sir,
-saving your worship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So you think it was his riding that won her?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never doubt it, sir. That and how men spoke of
-his conduct in the wars. It was enough to turn any
-woman's head. I blame him, not her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why blame him, Culverin?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, sir, for good enough reason, because he has
-spoilt one of the prettiest soldiers and horsemen in
-Europe. For how can a man love his horse or even his
-weapon with a woman like that always about his elbow?
-It is not natural, sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But cannot a man love his horse and weapon all the
-better that he has something he loves to protect with
-them?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I think not, sir, saving your scholarship. I
-never knew one that could; and if there is one, certes,
-it is not Mr. Waldyve. He never loved a horse well
-enough before, that was where he always failed. He
-had no contemplation of horsemanship. In the exercise
-of it he was without match that ever I saw, save only
-Signor John Peter Pugliano himself. But his contemplation
-of it was naught. The Signor Esquire of the
-Emperor's stables always said so. He proved to him
-many times how it was a science to be preferred next to
-divinity. He gave him <i>La Gloria del Gavallo</i> to read,
-and <i>Orison Claudia</i> too, but it availed nothing. In
-pace, in trot, in gallop, in career, in stop, in manage he
-was a Centaur, but he could never see how peerless a
-beast a horse was; how it was the only serviceable
-courtier without flattery, the beast of most beauty,
-faithfulness, courage, and all the virtues. Why, sir, I have
-seen Signor John Peter Pugliano, when a man spoke
-slightingly of a horse, so belabour him with the richness
-and strength of his contemplation, that before he ended
-the wretch was like to weep that God had made him a
-man and not a horse. But it was never born or bred in
-Mr. Waldyve, and this is what has come of it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Still, men must marry now and then, Sergeant,
-though the Queen seems to think otherwise.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know, sir, I know; yet I hold marriage a poor
-distempered state that soldiers should leave to men of
-peace, saving your worship's presence. Still, it is not of
-that that I complain most. There is worse than that.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you mean? You told me of no ill fortune.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did I not, sir? Why, then, it is this. He has given
-her his bay horse, and sent me down for the roan&mdash;by
-this light, he has, sir, given that peerless quadruped to a
-woman! What man with contemplation enough to fill
-half a pepper-corn could have done the like?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I knew not how to console the poor soldier, so fell to
-asking him about Mistress St. John. He could tell me
-little, never having seen her except in the tilt-yard at
-Whitehall and Hampton Court, when, as he said, it was
-easy to know the little red-haired lady by her most free
-nodding at his master.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I had to rest content till she should come,
-meanwhile taking what pains I could to see that the
-work-people from Rochester carried out Harry's instructions.
-I found more comfort in the task than I could have
-believed, hoping that now my brother was coming to
-settle down at home things would go between us more
-as they used.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, so light did my heart grow as the time of
-their coming drew near, that I began to doubt whether
-it were not a sin for me take pleasure in the company
-of so carnally-minded a man as Harry, and to begin to
-think I ought wholly to eschew, as far as good manners
-would allow, the conversation of the wanton Court lady
-that I pictured his wife to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The day came at last, and, not a little doubting
-whether it were right, I rode out to Rochester to meet
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were already at the 'Crown' resting awhile
-when I alighted there. Harry rushed out and seized
-me by both hands, and then, throwing his arm about me
-in his old way, dragged me to see his wife.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wife! wife!' he cried, 'set a good face for our
-brother, whom you wanted so much to see. Here he is
-come to meet us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that I saw rise to greet me a little lady not
-much over twenty, with ruddy hair and brown eyes like
-the Queen's. In a moment the memory of my old boy's
-love at Cambridge came to my mind, but when I
-looked once more at the dainty little head and
-smiling face, set so prettily in her snow-white ruff, the
-memory was lost in the greater beauty of the present
-vision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beautiful as I had thought the Queen, yet she, I
-confessed, was more beautiful still, although so like. It
-was a more laughing face than the Queen's, and yet in
-her eyes, unlike the Queen's, there was that wistful look
-that all men love till they learn to fear it as own sister
-to discontent. Yet this I knew not then, having, as I
-say, known no woman all my life; and so my heart, that
-I had tried so sore to harden, was melted like wax at
-the soft music of her voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well met, brother,' she said, holding out her hand
-with a gay smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your desires upon you, lady,' I answered, taking
-her greeting with as little awkwardness as I could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A most gentle prayer, brother. And yourself
-shall begin its granting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I, lady?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, you. Yourself is my desire. Bestow on me yourself
-and call me "sister." All my life I have desired a
-brother, and Hal says, by your sweet leave, I am to be
-no more brotherless; so call me henceforth sister,
-brother Jasper.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, sister, shall I gain more than I bestow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, brother, it is I that gain. I have full report
-of all your scholarship and most excellent parts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Believe it not, sister, or you will wrong yourself.
-Harry will ever be making too long an inventory of my
-commendations. But he is a most false reckoner, and
-you must not take me by his tale.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Out upon you, lad,' said Harry. 'What a dry feast of
-modest phrases is that to set before your sister! Come,
-now, palm to palm is no greeting for brother and sister.
-A man would think you had never been to Court.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I drew back, feeling very country-bred, and
-blushed, and then a flush of sunset hue made her
-beauty radiant, and Harry laughed at us his rattling
-laugh, which his wife could only stop with kisses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That made her my sister indeed. At first I had
-thought her manner tainted with too much Court
-freedom, but now she seemed a most wise and modest
-lady, who might in deed as well as word be a true sister
-to me. So we talked together pleasantly enough till it
-was time to go, nor did we stop our tongues as we rode
-out towards Ashtead. And yet again, now I bethink
-me, it was I that talked and she that listened, while
-Harry smiled to see us such good friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I thinked he wondered, too, to hear me, and I am
-sure I marvelled at myself no less than that she should
-want to listen to my homily. Yet whenever my tongue
-ceased wagging, she had some little magic phrase or
-witch's glance to set it a-gallop again, and I felt I could
-talk to her till the sun grew cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a scholar,' she said, as we came to the place
-where our ways parted, 'that I have always desired to
-call "brother." Some one whose mouth would be all my
-books in little, just as was my Lord Bedford's when I
-was a little girl. And now methinks you have bestowed
-on me all my desire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed you wrong yourself and me. I am not such
-a one, though I think my master, Mr. Cartwright, is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, I have heard of him that he is a ripe scholar
-for all his wild doctrine; and now I know it, for I hear
-his pupil talk. I think Hal must speak no more than
-truth when he says you have read more books than
-Mr. Ascham himself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I tell you, sister, you must not mark his
-commendations, that are bred in love and not in reason.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, I cry you mercy. You must not tell a new-wed
-wife that love and reason are not one. That were
-a philosophy fit for none but monkish scholars. There
-I must school you, and you me in all else but that. So
-I will prove a most gentle scholar; and now farewell,
-my brother, since it is here our ways are parting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mark what a change had come over my life since I
-travelled the road but a few hours ago. I had ridden
-into Rochester from pure good manners, thinking to
-carry a cold greeting to Harry's wife, and so return to
-my books and loneliness. How differently had it fallen
-out! Since I left Longdene I had found a sister&mdash;a
-courtly and beautiful woman to whom I could talk, and
-who would talk kindly to me. I knew not what to
-think as I rode slowly along, with the shouts of the
-crowds which had gathered to welcome Harry and his
-wife coming faintly to my ears across the fields on the
-still evening air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It had been the first hot day of summer, and as the
-night fell I sat in my old corner in the library at the
-open lattice, watching the golden labyrinth that broke
-up the dark stretch of the marshes into a hundred
-fantastic shapes of gloomy hue wherever the intricate
-channels caught the glow of the dying sunset.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No less mazy and shapeless, no less gilded and
-gloomy, were my wandering thoughts. My man-born
-sense of stern duty cried to me that the carnal
-conversation of Harry and his wife was sin to be shunned, a
-temptation of the devil to drag me from the godly work
-on which I was set. But then, again, my God-born
-sense of beauty both in body and soul said, 'Go to
-them, and there your hunger shall be filled.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The labyrinth in the marshes had faded to a faint
-starlit glimmer here and there ere I had resolved my
-doubts. The whole host of heaven glittered down upon
-the sleeping world, and amidst them from either hand
-the <i>Lactea Via</i> seemed to show a fair path brightened
-with the light of God to the highest regions of His
-kingdom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I knelt upon the deep window-seat and thanked
-God that He had given me a lantern for my path, and
-prayed for strength not to swerve from the way He
-had shown. For I had resolved to face the danger at
-Ashtead, that I might save the two souls I loved so
-well from the certain perdition to which I saw them
-drifting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ah me! what cunning casuists are our desires!
-How subtly will the wantons weave a cloak of reasons
-round about their nakedness till we know them not,
-and follow whither they entice, taking them in their
-decent array for duty! So we march on after them to
-death and sin, with proudly lifted heads, as who should
-say, 'See a man who forsakes all to follow Christ.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not difficult with such a guide to find
-occasions for going to Ashtead. As the days of their
-married life wore on, and Harry tired of love-making, my
-visits grew frequent. He every day came to love his
-estate more and more, and was ever riding up and down
-it, with Sergeant Culverin at his heels, planning and
-altering and improving, just like his father. Nor could
-he do without a share in the country life around, and
-was always away whenever he could hear of a cock-fight
-or a bear-baiting within a reasonable distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come over and bear Nan company,' he would say
-at such times. 'Her bright wit misses the companionship
-of the Court, and will, I fear, grow dull and
-humorous unless you keep it clear. It is no little
-comfort to me that you can be by her with your learning.
-Her scholarship trod on the heels of mine when
-she was little more than a baby, and now it has slipped
-ahead where I can never catch it. So you must be a
-good brother, Jasper, and be to her what I cannot.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he would ride off, gallantly waving kisses to his
-pretty bride, and we were left alone to study
-cosmography together. She had begged me to teach it her,
-and so my great tomes got a second hallowing. I
-wondered daily more and more at her keen wit; her
-quickness at grasping what I had to tell was past all
-believing unless seen; yet would she never stay long
-at it, but would soon want waywardly to wander out
-into the garden and down amongst the woodlands to
-talk with me of whatever fancies had taken her playful
-thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a pretty sight then to see how everything
-loved her. The cows came trotting at her call, the
-colts in the meadows raced for her caress and jostled
-each other jealously, while her dogs squatted round
-with drooping ears, miserable that her favours were for
-others, but too mannerly to protest. Then all together
-would follow her along the fence to the end of the field,
-where, as she went from them, they would break into
-rough play, and disperse cheerily to their rhythmical
-cropping of the grass again, while the spaniels, more
-fortunate, leaped round her with mended spirits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each husbandman we came to would pause at his
-work and grin in silly happiness as she nodded him
-a merry 'god-den,' and the woodman's eyes almost
-brimmed with tears when she would not stop to hear
-the oft-told secrets of his art; and then when we came
-near the village the children started out of the brakes
-to peep at her, while the younger and braver ran crying
-after her with a present of gillifiowers or long purples,
-which their hot little hands had withered by long
-cuddling to a sickly faintness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The strangest and most difficult conquest which she
-made was Alexander. I remember well the day I saw
-it first. I was riding, as I often did, to Ashtead by
-way of the park, when as I topped a knoll I saw her
-wandering across the close-cropped turf with the old
-soldier at her heels, and a motley following of colts and
-cows and one short-winded hog. Now and again her
-dainty figure bent down to pick a flower, and as she
-stopped the colts stopped, and the cows and the hog,
-and the Sergeant stooped for a handful of all the flowers
-in reach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My wonder was increased when I saw Harry not far
-off overlooking the work of the woodmen, seemingly
-forgotten by his devoted follower. I cantered over to
-her, and, giving my horse to Lashmer, joined her in her
-walk. Soon we came to a woodman's cottage, whither
-she was carrying some simple drug, which her own
-learned little hands had compounded, for a sick child.
-Culverin and I remained without.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A most sweet and excellent lady,' sighed the
-Sergeant, as soon as she was out of hearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What! is your mind so changed?' said I. 'But a
-few months ago you had not a good word to throw at
-her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, that is getting on for a year now, sir,' he
-answered, 'and I did not know her as I do now. I did
-not dream what virtue was in her. Why, sir, there
-is not a colt here, take the wildest you will, that would
-not follow her up the turret stair. I never saw such
-management, except in Signor John Peter Pugliano.
-And then for contemplation, sir, I could not have
-believed it. It was but yesterday she told me horses
-were the only men for her heart, since there was nothing
-they would not do with coaxing.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-During all this time of which I write I had said
-nothing to Mrs. Waldyve about religion. I had
-persuaded myself, and that easily enough, that I must first
-make her my warm friend, and gain some influence
-with her by my teaching, and such other ways as I could
-think of. She, I think, avoided all mention of it too,
-since she really loved learning, and feared by speaking
-of things deeper to ruffle the happy calm in which we
-sailed together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not till after my little godson Fulke had been
-born, and Frank Drake had returned from the Indies,
-and was gone again to complete his discovery of those
-regions, that we came to talk of what was next my
-heart. Frank had been to see us, and Mrs. Waldyve
-was so taken with his manly, jolly ways, that when he
-was gone we often talked of him. I told her of his
-father and brothers, and their old strange life on the
-hulk, till one day she said she would like to go to
-Mr. Drake's church and hear him preach, for he made a
-discourse nearly every Sunday.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry, who of late had been made a Justice, laughingly
-gave us dispensation from attending our parish
-churches, and the next Sunday we rode over to
-Upchurch. Harry stayed at home, and Mrs. Waldyve rode
-pillion behind Culverin, thereby for the space of our
-ride making him the happiest man in Christendom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we neared Upchurch we overtook a man, who
-seemed a preacher, riding the sorriest nag I ever beheld.
-In passing him I saw it was none other than Mr. Death,
-the same who had come with Mr. Drake for the ordering
-of my father's funeral. He looked less sour than
-formerly, and wore an aspect of smug and well-fed content;
-but as he knew me not I passed on without speaking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake greeted us very warmly, and Mrs. Waldyve
-with great respect. He was in the churchyard
-talking with the godly farmers of the parish until
-it was time for the service. To-day the well-worn
-subject of the Queen's marriage, and all the danger that
-came of her delays, was set aside, and they had been
-discussing Mr. Strickland's Bill, which he had lately
-moved before Parliament for the abrogation of various
-religious ceremonies, and how the Queen's Grace had
-taken it so ill that she had put him in prison. They
-continued their talk after our greetings were done, while
-Mr. Drake drew me aside to ask what I thought of
-the new order of the Commission against reading, praying,
-preaching, or administering the sacraments in any
-place, public or private, without license. I condemned
-it so warmly, as will be easily guessed, for a piece of
-most wanton and sinful Erastianism, that the people in
-the churchyard gathered round to listen. I was in the
-midst of proclaiming it, on the authority of Mr. Cartwright,
-as a thing that should not and would not be
-borne, when little Willie Drake cried out from the
-skirts of the throng:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Father, father, there's a wolf in the fold!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A movement was made towards the church, and I
-could now see the Sergeant pointing out to his mistress
-the score of bad points of a beast tied up to the gate,
-which I at once recognised as Mr. Death's nag. Hoping
-to avert a storm, I begged them both to come with me
-into the church, which was now crowded; but the
-tempest had already burst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Death had got possession of the pulpit. It was
-a strong position, being only approached by the old
-rood-loft steps, which were cut through the solid pier of
-the chancel arch. The enemy was defending the narrow
-passage with the door, which he held tightly shut, and
-a smart fire of reasons, which he shot down at
-Mr. Drake from behind his barricada.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have no license, you have no license,' he was
-crying as we entered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, no license!' said Mr. Drake. 'I who was
-licensed preacher to the King's navy when you were
-still crying for the mass!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, but the Archbishop has revoked all licenses,
-and you have not renewed,' answered Mr. Death. 'The
-flock must be fed with the Word; you may not feed
-them, and I claim your pulpit.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'O Death, Death!' cried Mr. Drake, 'is that your
-sting? There was a time when you would brag that no
-Erastian prelate of them all should be your authority,
-but only the voice of God, that called you to the
-ministry. Is this all that has come of your loud
-shouting for the battle? O Death, Death! where is
-now your victory?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I care not for your roaring, Fire-Drake,' cried Death.
-'You are no preacher, being unlicensed; and I, being
-licensed, have authority in every pulpit in the diocese.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The people now began to cry out, some that they
-would hear him, and some that he should be plucked
-down and cast out of the church. Yet they all stood
-by, waiting to see how the two preachers would settle
-it; and they had not to wait long.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, if you fear not my roaring, Death,' said
-Mr. Drake, 'let us see what my claws will do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that he made a rapid <i>escalada</i>, and, seizing the
-garrison by the throat, plucked him forth by main force.
-Still no one interfered; so, wishing to end the scene, I
-whispered to Culverin to help Mr. Drake, which he did
-with great good-will, being, as he afterwards confessed,
-much taken by the valorous delivery of Mr. Drake's
-assault.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Death cried lustily for a rescue, but all to no
-purpose. Between the two strong men he was helpless.
-In spite of his feeble struggles, they ran him right out
-of the church to where his horse was tied. There they
-set him in the saddle, face to the tail, and, giving his
-jade a smart cut, sent him in an ungainly canter on the
-road to Rochester.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It pained me to think that Mrs. Waldyve should
-have witnessed such a scene the first time I had taken
-her to a Puritan church. She was looking shocked at
-what had occurred, and seemed in no way to share the
-merriment of the younger part of the congregation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us go,' she said; 'I have seen enough. It is
-terrible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But I prayed her to remain, pointing out that Mr. Drake
-was in no way to blame, and begging her to stay
-and see how reverent the people would be when he
-began to preach. Unwillingly, I think, she consented,
-more for fear of hurting me than from any desire she
-had to stay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile Mr. Drake, a little flushed and breathless
-from his victory, had taken his place in the pulpit, and
-was giving out a psalm to quiet the people. They sang
-it all together in pricksong very orderly, so that when
-it was done they were in a decent mood for the sermon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He preached from the words, 'The hireling fleeth,'
-in John x. 13, for the profit and confusion of that part
-of his flock which had given countenance to Mr. Death.
-After the manner of his kind, he rated them soundly
-for their treason, with text and parable and a score of
-quaint conceits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is this your gratitude?' he cried. 'Know you not
-your shepherd? I will tell you, then, what he is. He
-is one of those who, unlike the holders of other benefices,
-has stood by his flock and fed them, nor given their care
-to a poor, dumb, hireling curate, while he himself has
-gone riding round to other flocks to preach vain and
-new doctrines to them, that he may have in return plate
-and hangings and napery and money. I know you, what
-you are. Your stomachs have grown proud and dainty
-against the Word. You must have choice; you must
-have spicery; you must have a new cook every day.
-You will run to every hireling who will throw you new
-meat, and turn from the sound old hay of your shepherd,
-who folds and feeds you every night. Out upon you!
-Is this the way to appease the wrath of God, whereby
-the heart, the tongue, the hand of every Englishman is
-bent against another? No! But you care not what
-divisions be made, so long as your stomachs be tickled
-with new and dainty sauces. Are you mad, good people?
-Has a devil possessed you? Look, look towards the
-east! See you not the great roaring bull that the vile
-Italian out of Rome hath loosed against you? See you
-not the glitter of his brazen horns; smell you not the
-stench of his filthy breath; hear you not the clang of
-his iron hoofs? Ah! but wait and you will. Wait till
-the bringing forth of the bull-calves that he hath gotten;
-wait till you see them compass you in on every side;
-and wait till you see them grow fat as those of Bashan,
-on your faith and your consciences and your purity.
-Then you will see; then you will smell; then you will
-hear. In that hour you will cry to him who folded and
-fed you; but the foul waters of idolatry will have
-passed over his head and choked him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In such wise Mr. Drake continued very earnest for
-a good space, the people listening with bated breath,
-and from time to time a mutter of approval, ay, and
-here and there tears of repentance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many have marvelled to me at Captain Drake's
-eloquence, but I know whence it came, and if I knew
-not before I should have known that day. I have
-tried to write down some of what his father said, but
-even if it were rightly done, as I doubt it is not, yet
-could no one tell the force of his preaching, unless he
-had seen him hold spell-bound that throng which so
-short a while ago had been laughing at a rude jest and
-an unseemly brawl, in which he played the chief
-part.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I watched Mrs. Waldyve's face as he spoke on, and
-was, as it were, carried back to that day long ago when
-the Queen's grace was listening to the divinity act in
-Mary's Church at Cambridge. And no wonder, for
-never save then had I looked on a face so sweet and
-ever changing to new sweetness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her brown eyes were fixed wistfully upon the
-preacher, and she listened so intently that I could see
-the fire and humour and pathos of his words reflected
-as in a mirror upon her upturned face. Once or
-twice I could see her wince, as one in pain, when some
-too rude conceit or figure jarred upon her
-delicately-nurtured sense. Then she would look round to me as
-though to find what I thought of it, and, seeing my
-eyes fixed upon her, turn quickly to the preacher again
-with heightened colour, more beautiful than ever. I
-too tried to look away, at the painting of the murder of
-St. Thomas, half defaced and mouldering on the wall of
-the Becket Chapel; at the strange chamber under the
-tower, where it was said a hermit nun lived in solitude
-so long; at Mr. Drake's red face and ardent figure,
-but all was beyond my power. I had no eyes save to
-read with beating heart the living book at my side, nor
-ears save to hearken to the still voice which whispered
-in them, 'Lo, how the true spirit of the gospel is
-reawaking in her!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the Sunday set apart for the quarterly taking
-of the communion. When the sermon was done, and
-while the people sang another psalm, the wardens
-fetched into the nave the trestles and communion board
-from where it stood at the east end of the church.
-Then they spread upon it a fair white cloth, and
-Mr. Drake brought forth a loaf of bread and a skin of wine,
-with cups and platters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Waldyve watched them as though bewildered or
-afraid, not knowing what to do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jasper,' she whispered, 'we had better depart
-now. How can I receive the holy sacrament after this
-sort?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But again I exhorted her to stay, promising that all
-would be done most reverently, and according to the
-plain word of the gospel, with nothing added or taken
-away, so that whether or not it fell short of what her
-conscience would wish, yet there could be no offence in
-staying, as there clearly would be in going.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She answered me nothing, but gave way and obeyed
-like a little child, leaning on me, as though for support
-to body and soul, as we drew near to the table. It was
-then I knew that I had prevailed. I knew that my
-will had overcome hers, and that the hour was at hand
-for me to set about my crowning work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The people made way for us close to where Mr. Drake
-was seated at the table. Mrs. Waldyve knelt
-down, as she had been accustomed at Court. One or
-two old women, when they saw that, knelt too, in the
-old fashion of their courting days. I stood by her side,
-and the people thronged round, sitting or standing, as
-each thought best or could get accommodated. For to
-most this was a thing indifferent or adiaphoristic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Drake now broke the bread and poured out the
-wine, and then passed the cups and platters to the
-people. Mrs. Waldyve looked up to me for guidance,
-and I bent over her to whisper what she should do.
-So we took and ate the supper of the Lord together,
-while Mr. Drake, from where he sat, read comfortable
-texts from the Scriptures, and now and again offered an
-earnest prayer of his own making.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With another prayer <i>ex tempore</i> and a psalm the
-service ended, and we all went forth, leaving the wardens
-to set the table back again in the chancel. Mrs. Waldyve
-said nothing as we waited in the churchyard
-for Culverin to fetch the horses. So we stood in
-silence, side by side, under the spreading branches of the
-ancient yew tree, returning the greetings of the villagers
-as they filed out under the lych-gate, and watching the
-couples that broke off from the mass, the gossips in
-close talk over the sermon, the lovers sheepishly far
-apart. At last they were all dispersed amongst the
-trees and the black and white cottages that nestled
-amongst them; and we were left alone, looking out
-over the melancholy Medway, which seemed lost amidst
-the dreary Saltings and the inlets that ran up into the
-marshes. The Sergeant brought the horses at last, and
-Mr. Drake came to say 'Good-bye,' and so we went on
-our way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For shame I must forbear to speak of the pride that
-filled my heart as we rode home in silence. She was
-in deep thought, with eyes looking far away. Now
-and again she looked towards me as though to speak,
-but her lips only let pass a sigh. I knew well of
-what she thought, and did not disturb her meditation.
-I knew well how that strange change had come over
-her, which now I know not how to name. It was
-a thing that came, and still comes, to many, whether of
-high or low degree. Men such as I was then, when
-they see its signs so suddenly, and, as it were,
-miraculously appearing, say, 'Behold, another whom the Lord
-has called!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I say it is for very shame that I forbear, for now I
-know the coward that I was to play so upon a woman's
-passions. I see her now as some bright painted bird
-for which I lay in wait, spreading my nets in the way
-I had learnt by long and secret watching she would
-go, and setting gins for her, which I furnished with
-cunning baits, while she, trusting me, thought I did
-but feed her lovingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not till the afternoon that we spoke of it.
-We had been supping in the orchard, and Harry, finding
-us but dull companions, had fallen asleep in his
-chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jasper,' said Mrs. Waldyve, 'come, let us walk
-together. I must have private speech with you.' We
-rose and wandered down our favourite walk by the
-park, but to-day the colts had no caresses. 'It cannot
-be right, Jasper, it cannot be,' she burst out, as we
-entered the wood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What cannot be right?' asked I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It cannot be right,' she said, 'to cast away, as you
-have done, all the old holy rites of the Church.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is hard to part with them, I know,' I answered,
-'since from your childhood you have learned to love
-and hold them sacred. Yet for that very cause must
-you cast them away. Ere we can hope to see religion
-purified, we must first stifle all that deafening ritual
-that drowns the voice of God.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet,' she pleaded, 'why must we approach Him,
-as we did this day, without order, without ceremony,
-without any token of homage? If we offer it to the
-Queen, surely the more should we do so to the King of
-Heaven.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not deny,' said I, 'that what we saw to-day
-might have been done more decently. Yet remember
-how long popes and prelates and priests have stood
-between God and His people, and marvel not if, now
-that He has called us to the steps of His throne, we
-know not at first how to approach Him reverently.
-But He will teach us, when at last we can draw near
-and hear what He will whisper in our ear. But still
-there are many left between us and the throne, in spite
-of all that has been done. But the hour is coming
-when one I know will raise his voice like a clarion
-and bid them stand aside, in words they shall not dare
-to disobey. Then at last we shall be face to face with
-God, and know indeed what His will is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This and much more of like effect I told her out of
-my well-learnt lesson. She struggled ever more faintly
-against me, but I was strongly armed against all she
-could say. I told her of predestination, and what she
-should think of works done in the days of her unbelief.
-All the things she loved so well&mdash;ceremonies, vestments,
-and every relic of the ancient mass to which she clung&mdash;I
-condemned mercilessly with practised argument. I
-showed how Rome had abused the Christian faith, and
-how it could not be purified till every meretricious
-adornment by which worship had been turned to
-idolatry was cleansed away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She fell at last to imploring me to leave her something,
-but I told her, without pity, that no good could
-come of any unholy union of the gospel and papacy,
-such alluring schemes being only thought on by their
-inventors as an unstable place whence it was hard not
-to slip back to Antichrist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was an easy task I had. In the wilderness of
-doctrine, where she suddenly found herself, she seemed
-but to want a guide who would take her by the hand
-and lead her to rest. So it was but a short work to set
-her again on the path she once had trodden under the
-good Earl of Bedford's lead, and which she had deserted
-for the flowery mazes of the Court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It were tedious to tell step by step how we trode
-the sweet and dangerous way together. All will
-understand if they remember what we two were. I, from
-long sojourn at Cambridge, a monk, for with all its
-faults my university was then a most well-ordered
-monastery,&mdash;a monk who, as it were, was on a sudden
-released from his vows; she, a woman who, after a
-strictly ordered childhood, was set loose in a pleasure-loving
-Court, where her life was an ever-changing scene
-of exciting pleasure and gallantry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The change was too great for both of us. For myself
-I find no excuse, but for her much. Ere the first
-fires of her youth had burnt out she was overcome by
-the passionate love-making of the handsome soldier,
-who came covered with glory from the wars abroad to
-lay siege to her heart at home. What wonder if she
-loved before all that pattern of manhood and gentleness
-who so loved her, and thought she could feed on his
-love alone! What wonder that, when passion grew dull
-and she found how full of many things besides love a
-man's life is, and how full of things which, in spite of
-all her trying, proved but dull to what her life had
-been at Court, insensibly she was ready to open her
-heart to any excitement, even to me and my teaching!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If I had not been blinded by my own accursed pride
-and self-righteousness, I should have known by many
-marks which we passed whither our road led. I should
-have known when, after that first talk, we began to
-be silent in Harry's presence, though we could chatter
-well enough when he was not by. I should have
-known when we ceased to speak, and moved farther
-from each other whenever he came where we talked.
-I should have known when she spoke to me of her
-misery in being wed to so ungodly a husband, and
-begged me to speak earnestly to him that he might
-amend his ways.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is my one comfort of all that time that I still had
-manliness left to defend him with all my heart to her,
-and that I was spared that last depth of knavery, much
-used by craven gallants, who, that they may win a cheap
-and easy favour with a woman, will make her believe
-with a score of cunning lies that her husband is
-unworthy of her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though out of the deeps of my love for him I found
-a hundred excuses to offer her, yet I laboured when
-alone with him to turn his light heart to weightier
-things, well knowing it was useless, or who can tell
-whether I should have tried?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was as we rode home over the downs from hawking
-wild-fowl on the marsh-lands in the valley of the
-Medway that I first attacked him, and I well remember
-that my surprise was rather at how much he had
-thought than at what his thought was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was such a glorious afternoon as now, since I have
-known Signor Bruno, lifts my heart to God more truly
-than ever did psalms and prayers, much as I loved them
-and do still. The wide and marshy river stretched out
-below us far away to the low haze-clad lands of Hoo
-and the misty Thames. Water and woodland and field
-were bathed in sunshine which seemed, as it were, to
-melt all Nature into such full and tender harmony with
-its Creator, as I think, after all my many wanderings,
-can nowhere be seen in truer perfection than in our
-own dear England. Moved by the beauty which
-wrapped the land, Harry fell to praising it with a score
-of rich conceits, and I seized the occasion to broach the
-cask of divinity which I had brewed for him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely,' I broke in, 'surely should our lives be one
-long song of gratitude, set to a holy and solemn tune,
-to Him who made all this so fair for us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, lad, why?' asked Harry. 'You can only conceive
-this of God&mdash;that He is a perfected quintessence of all
-that is best and fairest in us, and therefore must our
-love of these things, and our joy in them, be but a grain
-of sand beside the mountain of His. His delight in
-the great banquet He has spread is for all eternity,
-while we can but gaze upon it for a little hour. No,
-lad, I cannot thank Him for these things, which are but
-the crumbs that fall from His table; but I worship it
-all, and Him in it, as I was taught in Italy. When will
-you leave looking for Him in holes which are only full
-of musty quibbles and the mouldering shreds of men's
-quarrels? Stand up, man, and see Him in yonder sky,
-in yonder woods, in yonder broad flowing river.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, Harry, Harry!' I cried, feeling my worst fears
-confirmed, 'have a care, or this Italian dreaming will
-run you into flat atheism.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, Jasper,' he answered, 'I fear you are only like
-the rest, and will brand me atheist and epicure because
-my voice is not raised in any controversy. Must I rail
-with Baius and howl with Brentius before you grant
-me faith? With whom shall I be saved, and with whom
-damned? Show me that first, lad, for I cannot tell.
-When I first set out upon my travels I strove awhile
-to study these things for love of you and Mr. Follet, yet
-in every land and every city where I came I found the
-same angry unrest where Antinomian roared against
-Pelagian, and Synergists bellowed between; where
-Lutheran and Calvinist and Papist, and who knows
-what other legion of sects beside, did battle one with
-another, and each against all, till Europe seemed to
-throb and ring again with their unchristly din, and the
-sweet voice of God could I nowhere hear.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, then, I fear you closed your ears in your
-impatience, or the true voice of our purified faith would
-have sounded clear enough above all the rest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, I tell you, Jasper, I opened my ears wide
-enough, but they were deafened with the clash of
-syllogism on syllogism, and lie on lie. My eyes were
-blinded with the glint of steel and the flash of fires.
-My nostrils were filled with the stench of railing breath.
-Then I cried, "Where, O God, shall thy spirit be found?
-Surely not on this earth, that men's tongues and pens
-have so befouled." But there was one under the sweet
-blue sky of Italy who whispered in my ears, "Turn
-thee to Nature and thou shalt find thy quest." I heard
-him and sought earnestly where he showed, and soon
-the whole world was bright with the spirit of God, and
-I was in the midst of it. Yes, lad, I turned from men
-and saw it shining in the limpid rays of the stars; I
-heard it in the waving grass and the laughter of the
-brooks; I perceived it in the sweet-smelling flowers.
-Will you then cry "Atheist" at me for whom God is
-everywhere, when for you and the like of you He lies
-but in a little dogma, nay, in the mangled shred of a
-dogma? Take it not unkindly that I speak so hot, but
-it makes me mad to think that men will so befoul the
-nest which God has given them, and think they do Him
-service.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed,' I answered, wishing to follow his mood, for
-I knew if I broke in as I would to another with my
-theology that he would only call me a Puritan and
-crack some kindly jest, 'I do not complain of your
-heat. There is doubtless much truth in what you say,
-for Luther himself wrote, "There is nought in Nature
-but a certain craving for God," yet he did not hold that
-mere contemplation of Nature will satisfy that craving.
-The beauty and fulness of Nature does but create the
-hunger which right doctrine alone will fill.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, if Luther is to guide us, remember who it was
-who taught that this very passion for God of which you
-speak, and which is far from what I mean, becomes the
-lust of the spirit. It is that which sets your wits awry.
-Beware of it, Jasper, as you avoid the devil. For I tell
-you, from the lust of the spirit to the lust of the flesh
-is but a little step. You shall see it shortest in a woman.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jest not, Harry, on things so solemn,' said I, not
-thinking even then that he could mean what he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I jest not,' he answered; 'it is sober truth, and if I
-did jest, wherefore not? Sometimes I think that jesting
-is your only earnest, and that there is nothing but
-that which is worth living for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At least you jest in earnest now,' I said, thinking
-to weather him on another tack. 'Even you must
-grant that there are other things but that worth the
-life-search&mdash;exempli gratia, Fame.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How do I know that?' he answered; 'for how shall
-Fame satisfy a man when he has got it? Why, look
-you, Fame is a thing begets hunger for itself faster than
-a dead dog breeds maggots. There was never a
-fame-glutton yet but went to his grave fasting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Tis because they hunger after earthly fame,' said I.
-'Seek something higher. If you cannot pursue God,
-yet at least you may search out wisdom. That is
-earnest enough.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wisdom! wisdom!' cried Harry. 'Why, what is
-that? In truth, I think that Folly is the only Wisdom,
-and there's no such profitable travelling as a voyage in
-the Ship of Fools. In a thousand times to one he who
-pursues Wisdom shall find he has no quarry but Folly,
-while he that runs merrily after Folly shall find on a
-sudden that he is carrying Wisdom in his hand. Who
-shall say, amidst the ruins of these broken times, where
-Folly shall be sought and where Wisdom shall be
-found?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know there is great confusion in the times,' said
-I, 'but still there is at least sure ground left for a
-scholar who will pursue diligently the arts and sciences.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who can tell even that?' answered Harry. 'Read
-Cornelius Agrippa, if you know him not. Read his
-<i>Vanity and Uncertainty of Arts and Sciences</i>, and you
-shall find wisdom there that will prove you, by most
-nice argument and sharp reasons, that knowledge is the
-very pestilence that puts all mankind to ruin, that
-chases away all innocence, condemns all truth, and
-places errors on the highest thrones.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Harry, Harry!' I cried in despair, 'you are
-Italianate past all praying for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, then, if you cannot pray with me, laugh with me,
-jest with me,' he answered. 'Are we not all the puppets
-and playthings that God has made for His laughter, while
-He sits at His feast. Let him who would be wise make
-haste to laugh at himself with God, and at all men with
-their little humours. Hola! Quester! Monk! hola,
-hola!' he shouted then to his hounds that stayed
-behind, and bringing his hand with a ringing clap upon
-his gelding's shoulder, broke gaily into a canter across
-the stretch of sheep-cropped turf that lay before us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What could I do with such a man? To me he was
-all and more than I had dreaded he would become
-when he travelled into Italy. In my eyes he was but
-one more added to the long list of atheists and epicures
-which that wicked and beautiful land has filled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still, I would not desist from my efforts to win him
-back to what I deemed the only true path. Amidst
-the ruins of his faith I searched for some unbroken
-stones, wherewith I might lay the foundations of a new
-sanctuary for his soul. I tried to make him see the
-horrors and dangers of the Popish religion, and so
-teach him to love and cling to our Christian faith as its
-most stalwart opponent. The last time that ever I
-attacked him was when I thought by dwelling on the
-idolatry of Rome to gain my end, seeing how wholly
-opposed it was to his own wide and spiritual
-conceptions. But it was all to little purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In so far,' he answered me, 'as Rome is the enemy
-of the Queen and of England, she is also my enemy.
-Since the bull of deposition was nailed on the gate of
-Lambeth Palace I have been her foe, ready to do all in
-my power to strike and thwart and humble her as I
-may find occasion, or the Queen's Grace bids me. Yet
-for Rome's faith I hate her not, though I may smile at
-it sometimes, as I do at others.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But surely, Harry,' I said, 'you must detest their
-damnable, idolatrous doctrines of the mass and saints
-and images. Even for your love of mankind you must
-loathe these chains, by which they drag men down into
-the dark pits of superstition.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rail not at idolatry, lad,' he answered. 'We are all
-idolaters. All men worship the idol which each sets up
-for himself in such manner as his mind, clogged with
-an imperfect shape, and, as it were, fettered and
-imprisoned in his visible body, can fashion it. Each has
-his own graven image, to which he bows. He thinks
-it is God, ay, and sometimes will almost persuade others
-so; yet it is nought but a little unshapely bit, that he
-laboriously has hewn from the great soul that dwells
-in his mind. There is but one escape from idolatry.
-We must worship the one universal God, who is formless
-and yet of every form, who is everywhere and in
-everything, who, as I say, is a spirit that breathes in the
-sweet scents of the flowers, in the sighing of the summer
-wind, in the twittering songs of the birds, in the kisses
-of lovers' lips.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the mangled philosophy he brought home
-from Padua, that lodestone of wit, to which then gathered
-all that was bold and learned and polished in thought
-throughout the length and breadth of Europe. What
-wonder that I, being untravelled, had no skill to win
-him from his opinions, and drew each day closer to the
-gentle spirit of her who so trustingly took me for her
-guide!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was early in the year of grace 1572, that Frank
-Drake came back from the second voyage which he
-made to discover the Spanish Indies. He came to see
-us soon after he landed, in most excellent heart. For
-not only was he the bearer of a modest return for our
-venture with him, but he also brought news that his
-discovery of those seas was now complete, and as happy
-in its omens as it was complete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heark ye, my lads,' said he, setting a hand on our
-knees as he sat between us, and speaking in a low
-excited voice. 'I have found the treasure-house of the
-world! I have found the well whence the Spaniards
-draw the life-blood that gives them all their strength
-to trouble Europe and champion Antichrist! Closer,
-my lads, while I whisper its name. Nombre de Dios it
-is called, "the Name of God," and in the name of God
-I will so rifle it and breed such terror in the place
-that thenceforth they shall rather call it Nombre de
-Diablo.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But how, Frank, bow?' we cried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, easily enough,' he answered. 'They sleep
-there in fatness and security, they grow soft and
-womanish with riches; and who can wonder? Since
-thither flow all the wealth of Peru, the gold of El
-Dorado, and the pearls of the Southern sea. Yet they
-protect it not, but lie secure in ease and wantonness,
-because they deem the land is theirs, since the vile
-Italian has given it to them; they deem it is theirs,
-because they think no man can sail thither save with
-their pilots: but we can and will by God's help. I know
-a safe place for rendezvous hard by, whence we may
-strike, as we will, swift and sudden before they are 'ware
-of us. Then we will show them whether the world is
-the Pope's to part and grant. They shall see the New
-World is for those that can occupy with a strong arm.
-Hey! 'twill be merry to think how the fat lazy hens will
-cluck and flutter when the hawk has struck and we are
-rolling home again, with golden wedges for ballast, and
-pearls to fill the cracks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, Frank,' said I, almost breathless at his gigantic
-project, 'how will you get money to furnish ships for
-so great a venture?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how many ships do you think I want?' exclaimed
-Drake. 'Do you think I am going to sail away
-with a whole fleet, like Jack Hawkins, with the Spanish
-Ambassador looking on and sending word before me?
-No, my lads, I know better than that now. I know
-the thing can be done, and I know how to do it. Just
-two ships is all I take.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What!' cried Harry, 'attack the Indies, attack the
-choicest possession of the greatest empire in the world
-with two ships? You must be mad.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Maybe, maybe, my lad,' laughed Drake. 'We shall
-see who is mad and who is sane before long; but now I
-mean to sail with just two ships and a pinnace or two
-for shore work. I have already bespoke in Plymouth
-the <i>Pasha</i>, of seventy tons, for my admiral, and then I
-will take again my little <i>Swan</i>, of twenty-five, for my
-vice-admiral. She is still staunch, and now knows her
-way to the Indies better than any ship that floats in
-English waters. Brother Jack is to be captain in her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, for God's sake, Frank,' said I, 'be not so hastily
-resolved. Think again what you do. It is not hens
-you fly at. It is a mighty eagle with claws of iron,
-whose wings stretch over the four quarters of the
-world.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You may say that too,' answered he. 'Yet remember
-that though the eagle lays her eggs in Jupiter's
-lap, still she escapes not requital for her wrong done to
-the emmet. The Spaniard has foully wronged me, and
-foully wronged one beside whom I am indeed but an
-emmet. It is the Lord's work to do what I say. It can
-be done, and I am going to do it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This he said quietly, without boasting, and with so
-determined an air of cheerful resolution that I knew no
-words of ours would turn him from his audacious
-purpose. So we listened, wondering more and more at
-the fire of his dauntless spirit, while he unfolded to us
-every detail of his plan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would God I could sail with you!' burst out Harry
-at last, with kindling eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why not, lad, why not?' cried Frank, smiting him
-on the back in his cheery sea fashion. 'Such lads as
-you I want. Not a man over thirty years old will I have.
-It is youth and fire we need. The oldest are too wary,
-and will not believe I know best. Say now, will you
-sail and take command of the land-soldiers?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would God I could!' answered Harry mournfully.
-'It will be a tale to be told beside the story of Æneas,
-and sung with the song of the Argonauts. But tempt
-me not, Frank; I am married now, and must stay to
-watch over my sweet Nan. My fighting days are over,
-save at England's need.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, as you will,' said Drake, very disappointed.
-'But you miss a glorious venture; and you will not go
-either, Jasper?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gladly I would,' said I, 'but each must to the work
-his hand finds to do, and mine, as you know, is here.
-My money, as far as my capacity goes, shall be with
-you, though for profit I would rather have seen it risked
-in a plain voyage to Guinea after negroes. Yet, since this
-is the Lord's work which you are on, you shall have
-what help my purse can yield. But for my body, the
-Lord has need of that here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was indeed so, as I thought, though had it been
-otherwise I doubt if then I should have had stomach for
-Frank's wild enterprise. Mr. Cartwright had already
-sounded his note against prelatical Church government
-and all its brood of evils, and had been deprived both of
-his professorship and his fellowship. Since that time
-he had been busy with his <i>Admonition to Parliament</i>.
-That clarion-blast, which was to wake a war in England
-which seems each day to grow in fierceness, was about
-to be blown, and seeing how much he looked to me to
-help him in his great work, and how stormy a controversy
-he foresaw it would raise, I felt I should not leave
-his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the reason I gave to myself, yet I think my
-resolve was dictated rather by distaste for the danger of
-so rash an expedition, and by the closer ties which
-bound me to England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would God I had had strength to give Frank another
-answer! What sin and misery I might then have been
-spared, and of how much sorrow brought on those I loved
-best should I have been guiltless! Yet it was fated
-that I should have another tale to tell, so let me hasten
-in shame to the end, which now came quickly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Frank left us our lives rolled on in the old ruts
-again, but deeper than before. Out of his great love for
-his wife, and his knightly devotion to her, Harry had
-made a sacrifice greater than we and he guessed in
-refusing Drake's offer; and seeking to forget it in an
-unceasing round of work and pleasure, he devoted his
-time more and more to his sheep and tenants and estate,
-and sought more, eagerly the assemblies of gentlemen
-where sport was to be had.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for his wife, she seemed to think now of nothing
-but good works amongst the poor and reading theology
-with me. Hour after hour she would pore over Genevan
-Latin, still her Puritanism grew sterner and sterner.
-Harry's hunting and bull-baiting and card-playing
-became more and more distasteful in her eyes, till at
-last I think it was all they could see of him; so that
-when he came home at nights it was little return he got
-for the love he was ready to lavish upon her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps he was to blame, though I can never see in
-his most noble life anything that is not praiseworthy.
-Perhaps if he could have given her a little more and his
-work a little less, she would have been readier to forgive
-the manly pleasures he loved in common with every
-other gentleman of spirit. Yet I think not. I doubt
-the poison which I, in my self-willed ignorance,
-administered for a wholesome physic was too strong and deadly
-for her high-wrought nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon she would bid none but the poor and preachers
-to Ashtead, where once she had loved so well to
-entertain very gallant parties of gentry from the country
-round, ay, and from London too. Nor would she go
-abroad to other houses, as she used, with Harry, since
-she had grown to hate the sports and ungodly conversation
-and gallantry that went forward at such times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Above all, there was one house which she hated. It
-belonged to a Popish gentleman, and was well known to
-me as a place where there was a great coming and going
-of strangers, who rode on North Country cobbles, and
-often spoke with a strong North Country burr. We had
-not yet forgotten the Catholic risings in the North.
-The Duke of Norfolk's treasonable practices with Rome
-for her Majesty's destruction had been but recently
-brought to light, and he was yet lying a convicted traitor
-in the Tower, but still unexecuted. Rumours were leaking
-out or being invented of other great Popish plots for the
-subversion of the realm and the making away with the
-Queen and her ministers. It was no wonder, then, that
-Harry's constant visits to the house of which I speak
-caused us no little anxiety, although now I know he
-went there bent only on pleasure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was one of these visits that brought about the end.
-I had ridden over to Ashtead one afternoon towards the
-end of April. The morning had been showery&mdash;a mirror
-of England's state at that time, as I thought to myself,
-a mixture of sunshine and tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To my great surprise, instead of finding Mrs. Waldyve
-bent over some Latin book as usual, she was sitting
-miserably crouched upon the window seat, wild-eyed
-and weary, as one that grieved sorely and could not
-weep. As soon as she heard my step she sprang up
-with a strange little laugh, and pressed my hand very
-hard as she spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Jasper,' she said, 'I am so glad you are come.
-I had need of you. Let us come to the orchard, where
-we can talk alone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We went out together and seated ourselves side by
-side, as we had done many times before, on the bowed
-limb of an ancient apple-tree which, as though overcome
-with years, rested, all gnarled and twisted, upon
-the flowery turf. It was one of the first warm days of
-spring. The grass was spangled over with primroses,
-the trees were laden with flowery frost, the choir of the
-birds was warbling its fullest love-notes, and all was
-bathed in the soft sunshine of the waning afternoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet there was nothing for me so beautiful as the
-woman who sat by my side, gazing far away over the
-mellow prospect of field and woodland and river, or so
-tuneful as the soft murmur that came in rhythmical
-whisper from her heaving breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a time we sat in silence, and while she gathered
-strength and calmness to speak, I watched the sunlight
-playing in her hair and, wondering, tried to read the
-thoughts that chased each other across her wistful face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jasper!' she said at last, turning suddenly on me,
-'whatever comes of it you will not think ill of me?
-Say you will not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I tried to calm and comfort her, and begged her to tell
-me what her trouble was; but I was afraid to speak
-much, for a strange fear of her seemed to come over
-me, and I could not think quietly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When he was going over there, you know where,
-Jasper,' she said, 'the voice of the Lord whispered to
-me that I must stay him. So I arose and begged him not
-to go. He patted my cheek, as though I were a child,
-and laughing, asked me of what I was afraid. Then
-I told him how we feared for his body, lest he should be
-drawn into some Popish plot, and, more than that, for
-his soul, lest he should be tempted to backsliding and so
-to utter perdition. And what think you he said,
-Jasper? I shudder to speak it. He patted my cheek,
-smiling again, and said, "Ah, Nan,' 'tis a pity you are
-grown such a prim little Puritan. But fear not; a
-Waldyve heart is loyal enough, and as for my soul, why,
-lass, God&mdash;if there is a God that marks these little
-coils&mdash;must be made of better stuff than to damn my soul for
-a frolic with a jolly papist or two." Then I knew what
-he was. I was stricken dumb, and he rode away.
-Jasper!' she went on, seizing my arm and leaning
-eagerly towards me, 'he is an atheist! I am married
-to an atheist! My son is an atheist's son! Oh, my
-God, what shall I do? He will grow up to mock God,
-like his father. He will learn to mock at my faith, like
-Hal. I know it. He will not care for me. Hal wins
-all to him. What shall I do? Counsel me, brother, for
-God's sake, or my heart will break. I have no friend
-but you. Thank God He sent you to me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know not what I said. I could not think of my
-words, only of her, as she leaned her lithe young
-figure on my arm and sobbed and sobbed again. A
-devil came into me with the sunshine, and the warbling
-of the birds, and the faint scent of the flowers, and at
-last I dared not speak for dread of what words the fiend
-had put on my tongue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we continued for a space, till suddenly her sobs
-ceased and she sprang up to her feet before me. I
-rose too, stepping a little back from her. I dared not
-go near, for her eyes were glittering, her cheeks flushed,
-and all in the reddening sun she was a vision too fair
-for my strength.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jasper,' she said quietly, but much excited and
-trembling, and looking at me very fixedly, 'there is
-but one way, and the Lord has shown it me. I must
-go away from here, from him, and take little Fulke
-away, or he and I and all will be lost for ever. Jasper,
-you must take us away.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I started, horror-stricken, to hear from her sweet
-mouth the very words which the devil had set on my
-own lips and which I had striven so hard to keep back.
-I knew then I could not resist much longer. It seemed
-to me that I must be speaking to a fiend who had
-taken her angel shape, and my courage for so hopeless
-a battle began to fail me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Brother,' it said, coming towards me, 'you will
-not fail me. Save me and my boy, your own godson,
-from perdition. Take me to where he is fostering, and
-thence whither you will. I care not, so long as I am
-away from this great trial.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her form was close to me; what seemed her little
-white hands were upon me; two wistful brown eyes
-like hers were looking up in my face in an agony of
-pleading. What could I do, what could I do? I had
-taken the soft form in my arms before I knew and
-passionately kissed the sweet upturned face. God
-forgive me for it, when His will is! I was tempted more
-than I could bear.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The ways were very foundrous, and night closed in
-upon us while we were still on our flight. Ere Harry
-had returned we had departed and were making for the
-farm to which little Fulke had been sent with his
-foster-mother. It was a good distance from Ashtead,
-being the farthest part of Harry's estate inland, and
-detached from the rest by a large space. For that
-reason it had been chosen by him for his boy, that he
-might be as far as possible away from the marshes,
-which were held to be pestilent in the spring.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mrs. Waldyve was riding pillion behind me. A sort
-of calm had settled upon us with the night, and I
-picked my way as well as I could through the mud,
-content to feel her soft arm about me, and know that
-it was her sweet form that leaned upon me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Darker and darker gathered the night, and deeper
-grew the mire. I could no longer see where my horse
-trod, and had to leave him with loosened rein to find
-his way as best he could. I think the unwonted weight
-upon his back must have wearied him, for all at once
-he stumbled, and we found him stuck up to the girths
-in a slough.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was nothing to be done but dismount and lift
-Mrs. Waldyve off. I sank almost over my boots as I took
-her in my arms, but managed nevertheless to set her
-safely on a firm bank by the side of the road. My next
-care was to get my horse clear, which at last, with great
-toil, I did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still, we were in a sorry plight. My horse had so
-laboured in the slough that by the time I had got him
-free he was strained and weary past all going. Moreover,
-the clouds had gathered above us in great masses,
-so that not only was the darkness almost impenetrable,
-but I had great fear of a heavy downpour of rain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know not what would have befallen us had it not
-been that I was aware of a little inn not far distant,
-which was used by travellers passing from Rochester
-towards Maidstone and Tunbridge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That I could reach it with my horse I did not doubt,
-but was fearful for Mrs. Waldyve. When, however, I
-told her how things stood with us I found her so
-resolved and courageous that I determined to set out
-forthwith, and in a shorter time than I had hoped we
-saw the lights of the inn in front of us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No sooner had we reached shelter than the rain
-came down in torrents. During the happy dream in
-which I had ridden, and afterwards in the labour with
-my horse, I had hardly realised what we were doing.
-I was reckless, not caring what came so long as I was
-with her on our journey, away from my old mournful
-life, as it now seemed to me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was clear we must pass the night in the inn. To
-go on was not to be thought of. I know not what
-Mrs. Waldyve thought, but to me it seemed quite
-natural and easy, though, I confess, it was with no
-little comfort that I found there were no travellers
-there besides ourselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps it is well I cannot write down each thing
-we said and all that passed that night; yet I would do
-it if I could. It seems to me now like a faint dream
-of some other man's life; and, try how I will, I can
-remember little but the bustling hostess setting our supper
-to a tune of chattering gossip, and after it was cleared
-leaving us with a cheery 'Good-night to your gentilities.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know we sat side by side in the great chimney corner,
-my arm about her, her hand in mine, talking low, with
-such soft speech as none but a villain would suffer to
-pass between him and another man's wife. I know the
-rain had ceased and the new-risen moon was shining
-gloriously in between the mullions of the broad low lattice
-window, almost darkening the dancing firelight, and
-making a large chequer pattern on the rush-strewn floor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How long we sat so I cannot tell, no more than how
-long we should have sat had we not heard the plash
-of horses' feet in the mud outside. The shadow of a
-cloaked horseman passed across the bright chequer
-pattern on the floor, and then another.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We heard them stop, and then a voice that made our
-hearts stand still hailed the house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hola, house! Hola, within!' it cried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What would ye, gentles?' cried the voice of the
-hostess.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Slight, to come in, woman. Open quickly,' said
-the traveller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Despatch, despatch, Jem,' cried the landlady. 'See
-you not it is a gentleman and his gentleman servant?
-In good time, your worship. My goodman is in bed.
-Be patient till he make shift, that we be not shamed,
-and he shall let you in. Will Ostler, Will Ostler, wake
-up, you loon, and take the horses! Was ever such luck?
-Mass! but I knew we should have travellers ever since
-last Tuesday, when I could not sleep for dreaming of
-green rushes, and that's for strangers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could not speak, or stir, or think, but only stand
-by the hearth and stupidly mark what the shrill voice
-of the hostess said. Yet I had strength to resolve,
-come what might, I would not draw my blade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed an age of silence, broken only by muttered
-words for a moment without, and then the door burst
-open, and Harry, covered with mud, strode in with his
-rapier drawn in his hand and his cloak about his left
-arm. Culverin followed at his heels, and, slamming the
-door after him, stood solidly in front of it, while Harry
-advanced towards us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There seemed no anger in his face, but rather sorrow
-and set purpose, as he came quickly forward. I stood
-where I was, hoping in a moment to feel his point and
-have an end to all; but Mrs. Waldyve made a sudden
-movement, half of horror, half as though to protect me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry stopped in a moment with lowered point, and
-looked at her with a face in which was such a constant
-love and unspeakable pain as tears my heart to this
-hour to think on. Then, setting hard his teeth, he
-lifted his rapier on high and flung it with all his might
-crashing through the window into the yard outside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I heard the clang of the broken glass. I heard the
-Sergeant's great broadsword come screaming from its
-sheath. I saw Harry stand trembling with set face,
-trying in vain to speak with steady voice; and the
-Sergeant, rigid as a column, at the door with his drawn
-sword, his naked dagger, and his bristling moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A choking sound came at last from Harry's lips, in
-which there seemed no trace of his own clear, ringing
-voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For God's sake, Jasper, bring her back. You know
-not what you do. You love her not as I do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was all. I think he would have said more, but
-could not. For a moment he seemed to struggle for
-words, and then turned and was gone. The Sergeant
-sheathed his sword with an angry clang, turned on his
-heel rudely, without a word or salute, and we were alone
-again in the moonlight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then there burst upon me in dazzling light, that
-seemed to scorch my very soul, the horror of my sin. I
-saw in a moment how blind I had been. A mad rage
-at Heaven and all that had made my life seized me.
-Was it for this I had striven, and denied myself, and
-lived the life of a monk, when others were dancing, and
-dicing, and drinking in full content? Was this, after
-all my toil and wasted youth, the place where my
-religion had brought me?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, in wild reaction, my long-pent thoughts, their
-bonds burst in sunder, ran riot through my brain, till I
-heard a horseman dash away through the mud. In hate
-of Heaven, in hate of myself, I went forth, not knowing
-what I did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cool night air and the pure, soft moonlight
-seemed to soothe my fever as I stepped into the yard.
-There lay Harry's rapier, where it had fallen, the hilt
-buried in the mire, the blade glittering like hope in the
-silver light.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know not how the fancy seized me, unless, unknown
-to myself, I was infected with a foretaste of that sweet
-sense which since has flowed in such full and tuneful
-flood from the honeyed lips of Mr. Spenser.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I know, as that rapier lay there so keen and
-shining, I saw in it a mirror of perfect courage and
-gentleness, wherein I could look for every rule of life.
-I saw in it, as it were, the embodied presentment of
-that noble spirit I had so foully wronged, and I clutched
-at it in forlorn hope to save me amidst the dark waste
-of waters that had flowed over every landmark I had
-known before, and every path I had painfully learned to
-tread.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yes, many may think it folly, yet to me it was the
-devoutest act of my life. I drew my own stained blade,
-and, setting my foot upon it, snapped it across, and
-then flung it into the mire as the weapon of a felon
-knight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I kneeled down, and picking up Harry's rapier,
-like a holy thing, I put it to my lips. For I had an
-oath to swear, and I swore it aloud on that unsullied
-blade, that, come what might, in joy and sorrow, by
-land and sea, in life and death, I would never, by the
-help of Harry's memory, do an act that would disgrace
-the weapon which he had hallowed by true faith, and
-love, and courtesy, and every knightly virtue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I kissed the blade again, and, rising up, I put it in
-my own scabbard. It fitted easily, as though it shunned
-not its new resting-place. As I looked up I was
-suddenly aware of Sergeant Culverin standing by my side.
-His posture was as different as could be from that in
-which I had last seen him. Soldierly he was as ever,
-yet the childlike look was on his face behind the fierce
-moustache, and he was saluting me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has your worship any use for me ere I go?' he
-said, very respectfully, and drawn up stiffly to his full
-height.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could have easily embraced the grim soldier for
-that salute and those words. In the depth of my
-degradation, when I so loathed myself that I felt I
-should never dare to look an honest man in the
-face again, I found this steadfast soul did not wholly
-despise me. It seemed to me he was a sign sent, I
-cannot say from God, for God was no more to me now,
-but sent by some mysterious power of good that by
-hazard I had conjured, to bid me hope my vow would
-be fulfilled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is your horse strong enough to go back to Ashtead?'
-said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, your worship,' he answered; 'and as far again
-in a good cause.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then set the pillion saddle on him,' said I. The
-Sergeant's childlike look grew very apparent and
-smiling as I spoke. I thought at first he was about to
-seize my hand, but he restrained himself and only rigidly
-saluted as he went to do my bidding. So, hopefully
-and with hardened heart, I went back to the guest
-chamber of the inn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had left the place where I had seen her last, and
-was sitting in the window, as though she had gone there
-to look after Harry or me, I knew not which. How
-beautiful she shone in the moonlight! I can think of
-it quietly now. The silver flood fell full upon her, and
-illumined her lovely face and form with so heavenly a
-radiance in the dark chamber that she seemed to me
-like some poor angel, weary of worship, who had strayed
-from heaven. It was as though the eye of some great
-spirit far away was turned upon her to draw her back
-to the realms she had left; as though she saw the golden
-gate whence she came, and, weighed down by the thick
-and cloying vapours of earth, knew not how to take
-wing back to the life she had loved and lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will you go back to-night,' said I, 'or wait for the
-morning?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started then from her reverie, and turned on me
-her sweet brown eyes, so wistfully and full of reproach
-as almost to undo me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Must we go back, Jasper?' she said at last, so
-submissively and in such beseeching tones that my head
-swam and my breath came thick. Many a struggle I
-have had in my changeful life, but never one like that.
-It was only my new guardian that won the strife for
-me. I clapped my hand to Harry's rapier, and, pressing
-it mighty hard, found strength to say firmly, 'Yes!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think she saw what I did, for she stood up with
-that stony calm which to me is far more terrible
-than the wildest passion. Once she pressed her
-little white hands to her eyes, and then drew them
-slowly away, while I stood watching and waiting for
-my answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We will go now, Jasper,' she said at last. 'You are
-right; we must go; but I can never have been to you
-what you have been to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her words cut me like the hangman's lash on the
-back of prisoner unjustly condemned. It was more
-than I could bear to see her. It was past my strength
-after these scourging words to choose the path that was
-so hard and bitter before the one that was so easy and
-sweet. I felt driven towards her. I sprang forwards
-to take her tender form in my arms, and cover her
-reproachful face with passionate kisses; to show her what
-she had done; to show her what she was to me&mdash;more
-than honour, more than duty, more than all the world;
-to show her that I loved her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was at her side with arms wide open to enfold her;
-in one last strife with myself I paused, and like a
-thunderclap to my strained wits the Sergeant's knock
-rattled out on the door, and I was saved. Clutching
-the rapier by my side once more, I turned to see the
-soldier's tall form appear in the doorway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your bidding is done, sir,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then help Mrs. Waldyve to the saddle,' said I;
-'we will walk by her side.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With hanging head, and never a glance to me, she
-went with tottering steps to the Sergeant, who lifted her
-with loving gentleness into the saddle. Then we set
-forward through the moonlight. Not a word was
-spoken as we toiled along; not a sound broke the
-stillness of the night, save the suck of our boots and the
-horse's feet in the mire. So in silence, each communing
-with his own thoughts, we came in the first gray
-glimmer of the dawn to Ashtead, and in silence parted.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-How the next day passed with me I cannot say. I
-spent it, I know, in my library, pacing up and down
-and thinking over and over again of all that had
-happened since last the sun rose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I remember angrily putting away the divinity books
-which lay on my table, and taking down others at
-random. But they would not speak to me as they used,
-or perhaps I could not hear them for the din of
-self-reproach in my head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many times I tried to think what lucky chance it
-was that brought Harry to the inn; but I could not
-guess, nor did I ever know, till the Sergeant told me he
-came there by hazard, on his way from the Popish
-gentleman's house, for a cup of spiced wine, because
-they were wet, and seeing in the stable my horse and
-his wife's pillion-saddle, had guessed the bitter truth,
-which the hostess speedily confirmed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a heavy night's rest had soothed me I arose at
-a late hour, and saw things more clearly. I took down
-my <i>Phædo Platonis</i>, and read in it till I began to see
-right from wrong again. Gradually it seemed to me
-that there was but one thing to do. I would ride over
-to Ashtead once more, see Harry, and tell him I was
-going away, I knew not for how long or where, but to
-some land in which I could learn the lesson his travels
-had taught him. So I would crave his pardon in years
-to come, and take my leave of all I loved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was towards evening that I slowly crossed the
-park and came to the little wicket that opened into the
-pretty Italian garden which Harry had made for his
-wife. There I tied my horse, as I had often done before,
-and entered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The terraces on either hand, where in grotesque
-solemnity the cognisance of his house frowned from
-many a half-hidden pedestal, were ablaze with the first
-flowers of spring. Celandine, fritillary, flower-de-luce,
-and all were there, like pretty laughing maids who
-knew their beauty and waywardly transgressed the
-trim stone mouldings, within which their luxuriance
-could not be content. From a wide-mouthed dragon's
-head the water spouted with a pleasant tinkle into the
-glassy basin that occupied the midst; the little trout
-that played there were springing merrily for the evening
-flies; whilst from the ivy and honeysuckle that was
-fast covering the enclosing walls, and from the blossom-laden
-pear trees in the orchard hard by, the birds were
-singing the requiem of the dying day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the end towards the house, between two vases that
-overflowed with woodruff, a flight of steps led upwards
-to the grassy terrace before Mrs. Waldyve's parlour.
-One lattice of her bow window was open, and as I
-mounted the steps I could hear the low sound of singing
-within. Very sad it came to me amidst the gay carolling
-of the birds; so sad, that I could not choose but go
-softly across the little velvet lawn and peep between
-the mullions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All, what a sight was there! Rocking herself to and
-fro in her chair miserably sat Mrs. Waldyve, with hair
-and dress disordered. Her face was pale, her eyes
-hollow with weeping, and on her knees slumbered her
-little son. As though there was no world but in that
-small peaceful face, she leant over it and now and again
-touched the tiny brow with her lips. Singing ever the
-same mournful song, she rocked herself and leaned over
-the baby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could hear the words she sang&mdash;some which her
-grief had made for her&mdash;and as I listened I cursed all
-in heaven and earth, and above all myself. For thus
-she sang a lullaby to her son:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Sleep, baby, sleep, for so thou canst,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thou hast no sins to shrive;<br />
- Lully, lully, my babe, hope is not dead,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Love keepeth hope alive.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Sleep, baby, sleep, he will come back,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Back, honey-sweet, to the hive;<br />
- Lully, lully, my babe, love is not dead,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thou keepest love alive.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Those words told me true what had befallen. I
-should have known well enough, even had it not been
-for the letter she held crushed in her hand, and kissed,
-as I watched her. It was easy to guess what it said,
-though I could not read the words. Years after I saw
-it again. She herself showed it me, long afterwards,
-when all was healed. It still bore witness then how
-she had crushed it in her grief; it was still blistered
-with her tears. And this is what was written
-there:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-To Mrs. WALDYVE, my own sweet Wife.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-You shall receive, dear wife, my parting words in these my
-parting lines. If I ever held your love, as indeed I think I
-did, it was by the poor things my sword had done. Now I go,
-I know not whither, to see if haply I may win it again to me
-beyond the seas, or at least forget a little of what I have lost.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-My love I leave you, though I know it is a little thing to
-you, yet hoping, when I am gone, you will find some place for
-it, if only it be when you kneel to pray for our boy.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-I would not that my last gift should be reproaches, dear
-Nan. Such are not for me, seeing it was by my own shortcoming
-that I could not keep your love. But first I send you
-all the thanks my heart can conceive or my pen express for your
-many cares and troubles taken for me, whom unworthy you
-strove to love.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-And secondly, I would commend to you my poor child, for
-his father's sake, whom in his happiest times I trow you loved
-and would have loved still had he been worthy.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-I cannot write much,&mdash;God knows how hardly I wrote even
-thus far. The everlasting, infinite, universal God, that is
-goodness itself, keep you and yours, have mercy on me, and teach
-me to forgive those who have wronged me; amongst whom,
-believe me, Nan, from my heart, I hold you not one. My wife,
-farewell. Bless my poor boy, pray your all-conquering prayers
-for him. My true God hold you both in His arms.&mdash;Your
-most loving, unworthy husband, HARRY WALDYVE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-From Rochester, <i>this</i> 30<i>th day of April</i> 1572.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-I cannot but rejoice that I then knew no more of
-that letter than that by her kissing of it it was from
-him, and by the words of her song that it told how he
-was gone. My heart was already so seared and torn
-with shame at my work that, had I known how pathetic
-was his farewell, how deep and noble his sorrow, how
-touching his self-reproaches, and his straining in the
-anguish of his misery after the lost faith of his
-childhood, I know not how I should have borne the
-pain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What to do now I could not think. To go in to her
-was impossible. As she sat there grieving with her
-baby upon her knees and the letter in her hand, she
-seemed to me a holy thing, more purely sanctified in her
-motherhood and grief to him she had lost than ever was
-vestal to her goddess. All faith and reverence I thought
-had left me, yet I could have worshipped that mother
-and child as devoutly as ever a poor Papist bowed before
-the Virgin's shrine. Still there was a holiness about
-them I dared not profane, even with my worship. I
-felt a thing too unclean even to stand on the steps of
-the altar where she was now enshrined, and I crept
-away like the guilty thief I was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hardly less difficult was it to go and leave her alone
-in the desert I had made of the fair garden, where but
-for me she might have dwelt so happily. To go was
-cowardly; it was sacrilege to stay. I had no guide to
-show me my way, no friend whom I could consult.
-Wearily, rather drifting than with any set purpose, I
-descended the steps, passed by the tinkling water,
-through the perfume-laden air, closed the wicket behind
-me, and so rode home, my errand undone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was gone! I knew not whither; and there was
-no one of whom I could seek counsel. I would have
-gone to Mr. Drake to tell him all and seek comfort, but
-the thought of the good man's hard Calvinism repelled
-me now. He would not understand. As for Mr. Cartwright,
-he was still less to be thought of. For very
-shame, I dared not confess to his holy ears the depth to
-which I had fallen, even could I have hoped for
-sympathy from him. No, there was none to ease me of
-my burden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was gone; and I must follow,&mdash;follow and bring
-him back to her, and then rid them for ever of my
-accursed presence. That was all I could think of. And
-on the morrow, after committing my affairs to old Miles's
-hands, I rode to Gravesend, and so came next day by
-river to London, whither I heard from the boatmen he
-had gone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have said, I came to London drifting, rather
-than with any set purpose. As soon as I had sought
-for Harry at my Lord of Bedford's, and at the lodging
-where he was wont to lie when in London, and found
-no news of him, I was at a loss what to do. I had no
-friends in London that I knew of, nor was I so much as
-acquainted with any there except my merchant and old
-Mr. Follet, who had a lodging in Warwick Court, where
-he was of easy access to his scholars, both those about
-the Court and those who were sons to wealthy citizens.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To him I was resolved to go, not so much in hope to
-hear of Harry, as trusting in my forlorn state to receive
-comfort from him, when I remembered how peaceful
-and content was his life, and yet without any comfort
-of religion that I was ever able to discover.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I found him polished and kindly and gentle as ever,
-and bound still in willing servitude to his 'Apology.' He
-welcomed me very warmly, refusing any denial that
-I would sup with him. Our first commendation over,
-he fell to asking me of my life and work, so that we
-easily came to talk of those deep matters wherein my
-trouble lay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot but rejoice, my dear Jasper,' said the old
-scholar, bending on me his intelligent, clear eyes, 'that
-you have come to your present state. It was always
-my desire that you should see that as a rule or touchstone
-of right living, nay, if you will, as a <i>virgula divina</i>,
-or divining rod, whereby to discover the pure water of
-life, religion is in no comparison with scholarship. So
-long as men shall pursue religion as a chief end, so long
-shall they be ever athirst and rage in these present
-fevers that now be. I hold there are three special
-points in education, or the leading forth of life, the
-same being, truth in religion, honesty in living, and
-right order in learning. I name them in the order in
-which the three are now commonly held, yet you know,
-as I do, that in order of excellence these points should
-be reversed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you would not have a scholar,' said I, 'lay
-aside religion altogether?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I see no need for that,' he answered. 'It was not
-so in the past golden days of scholarship, before
-Reformation violently killed the old kindly tolerance of the
-Romish Church. Side by side they could not exist, so
-Rome grew hard perforce, and Geneva as hard to
-withstand her. And so the good old days were ended, even
-the days when a man would first take heed that his
-order of learning was rightly governed according to the
-precepts of the immortal Stagirite, from which, secondly,
-would flow, by the bestowing of such leisure as
-remained, a sufficient honesty in living, the whole being
-sweetened and tempered with such truth of religion as
-came of itself, without straining, out of the other two.
-It is this straining after God that so troubles the world
-and burns up scholarship. They draw the Ardour of
-Heaven too near, whereby the inflammable principles,
-whereof He is in a great measure composed, so heat
-men's blood and set their stomachs on fire, that cool
-scholarship itself is set in a blaze, and serves but to feed
-the fires of controversy, whereby learning, honesty,
-and religion itself are fast being consumed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely, then, it were better,' said I, 'to shut out this
-disturbing element that makes life so turbid; better to
-deafen our ears to this note which sets all our harmony
-awry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Jasper,' answered Mr. Follet, 'that is
-impossible. That far-off note is your octavo, as
-Pythagoras taught. You, with your spiritual nature, will
-always hear it sounding in unison with that which you
-yourself are making as you live your Life. If there is
-discord in your ears, it is that you are sounding some
-other note awry between your fundamental earthly
-note and His in the empyrean. By your scholarship
-I judge your first harmony must be <i>dia-trion</i> to the orbit
-of Mercury, which is science; and thus, if you would
-have concord, your next must be <i>dia-pente</i> to the orbit of
-Mars, which is manhood and knightly adventure. So
-can you reach through your full <i>dia-pason</i> to God,
-and sound your third and just fifth in complete and
-peaceful harmony with the universe. So I would
-advise you, if the music of your life has seemed meagre.
-But, above all, beware of the fourth, which is the orbit
-of Venus, that shall bring you nothing but most jarring
-discord, wherein you shall find no rest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old man looked out at me from his clear
-eyes so shrewdly that, although I could only guess
-at his meaning, I felt he had divined the true cause of
-my discomfort. How far he had learned it I cannot
-say, yet I could not help calling to mind the many
-times I had written to him concerning my most pleasant
-studies with Mrs. Waldyve. I found in my old tutor
-a strange mingling of shrewd worldly knowledge and
-unreal speculation which drew me nearer to him than
-I had ever had wit to be in my boyhood. It is true I
-hoped to get little help from his medley of philosophies,
-yet his conversation fascinated me in spite of the
-half-mystic vagueness that seemed to be growing on him
-with his old age, and I stayed with him till a late
-hour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether right or wrong for others, his own way of
-thought had brought him to an old age of profound
-peace, most enviable to me in the tempestuous flood of
-doubt that had overwhelmed my life since the dams
-of my faith, which I had deemed so secure, had burst.
-Moreover, his whole discourse was so seasoned with
-spicery from the writings of the ancients, and above all
-his beloved Aristotle, that it was very pleasant to
-hear, though beyond what my memory will bear to
-write.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover I wished to speak with him about his
-'Apology,' which he had not once mentioned. No one
-but myself can truly know how great must have been
-his sympathy with my troubled state, or how much
-he must have denied himself to minister to it, when for
-two hours he never once spoke of his manuscript.
-At last, moved to pity because of his exceeding
-kindness, I asked him how it fared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bravely, bravely, my dear discipulus,' said he with
-beaming face. 'It has been long in getting set forth
-because of the great growth which it has attained by
-reason of the weighty arguments I continually found.
-Still the day for the great purging of scholarship is very
-near. I am near to finishing the Latin text, in which
-form I have been weightily advised the work should
-appear, although I had purposed otherwise for the
-glory of the English tongue. The Right Honourable
-the Earl of Bedford has promised to receive the
-dedicatory epistle, so that I doubt not, with so noble
-and learned a sponsor, my child shall find an honourable
-reception in the courts of science.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This and much more to like purpose he spoke till I
-took my leave, much comforted by his kindliness, yet
-little relieved of my inward sickness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lashmer, who had been passing the time of my visit
-with Mr. Follet's servant, came to my chamber as usual
-to untruss me when we reached our lodging. He
-seemed full of something, which after a little painful
-repressing he poured forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did your worship hear whither he had gone?'
-asked he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whither who had gone?' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was not your worship seeking news of Mr. Waldyve?'
-he asked again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certes, I was,' said I; 'but that is no concern of
-yours.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, sir, none,' he answered, 'save that I hold all
-that concerns you concerns your faithful servant; but
-since it is not so, let it pass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he fell into a sullen silence, till I, feeling he held
-news, could refrain no longer from asking what he
-meant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I meant nothing, sir,' said he. 'A gentleman's
-movements are nothing to me; but since I thought
-Mr. Follet would have told you whither he had gone, I
-made bold to inquire; for he was ever a most kind
-gentleman to me; but since there is offence in it, let it
-pass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But what made you think Mr. Follet should know
-this?' I asked sharply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, sir, I pray you let it pass. I have no longer
-desire to know what concerns me not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I have desire to know what you meant,
-sirrah.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, saving your displeasure, it was a foolish idle
-whim of mine, that am but a dunce and unlearned, to
-think that since Mr. Waldyve was with Mr. Follet
-yesterday he would have given your worship news of
-him. It was a stupid, foolish fancy, so I pray you let
-it pass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Waldyve with Mr. Follet yesterday, say you?'
-I cried, as soon as I recovered breath. 'Why, how
-know you this, Lashmer?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I know it not,' said he, making occasion of
-my anxiety to have revenge for my sharpness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a plague makes you say it then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, sir, because Mr. Follet's man knows it, and
-Mr. Follet's man told me how Mr. Waldyve was with
-his master for the space of two hours save a thimbleful
-of sand yesterday about supper-time, during all
-which time he had to wait, for good manners' sake,
-though like to die of a watery mouth for thinking of a
-roasted rabbit and a dish of prunes that were bespoke
-for him and two other blades at the "Portcullis" tavern
-hard by.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pace! pace! draw rein on your galloping tongue,
-good Lashmer, and tell me whither he has gone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I could, sir, but I cannot; nor Mr. Follet, nor
-Mr. Follet's man neither, for in truth he told none of them
-anything, save that they were not like to see him for a
-good space to come.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then leave me, Lashmer, and good-night. Go to
-your bed now, and find a kind thought for a heart-sick
-master.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Heaven save your worship, and pardon a malapert
-servitor,' said Lashmer, and left me to my thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-First, I think, I pondered over Mr. Follet's great
-tenderness with me, when as I felt he must have known
-all. Then I tried to come to conclusions with myself
-what I was to do. The more I pondered the more it
-seemed useless to search farther for Harry, and the more
-I dwelt on what Mr. Follet had said to me of sounding
-the note of Mars's orbit as a cure for my discords.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I felt shamed, moreover, to think that my old tutor
-knew all. I felt I could no more go back and face
-him; nay, I felt as though every one knew my shame,
-and a desire grew in me to fly far away from it all. I
-began to reason with myself as to what good end it
-would serve to find Harry, and now it seemed that even
-if I could find him I dared not face him. My bold
-resolves were melting to cowardice in the heat of my
-remorse, and utterly purposeless and alone I crept with
-a broken spirit to my bed.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Next day I stayed within all the morning. Harry
-was in London, and though I had come thither to
-seek him, I dared not stir abroad for fear of meeting
-him. I dined in my lodging, sending Lashmer to the
-tavern for a quart of claret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The food and the wine must have put new heart in
-me; for after they were done I sallied forth alone,
-resolved to prosecute my search. Still dreading success,
-I wandered eastward along the Strand. Many gallants,
-most splendid with new-fashioned hats and hose, were
-loitering along the way I went. I followed the stream,
-and so, passing Temple Bar and over the Fleet Bridge,
-I came through Ludgate before St. Paul's Church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I stood a while admiring the grandeur of the front
-and the lofty tower. For then, being untravelled, I was
-unlearned in architecture, and saw not how rude were
-its proportions and barbarous its ornament beside the
-new style.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many gallants went by me as I watched, laughing,
-and passed on into the church. Harry had often told
-me how it was a place of great resort, so I followed,
-thinking perhaps to find what I looked for and dreaded to see.
-The floor of the long and lofty nave was thronged
-with gallants and would-be gallants, strolling up and
-down, and laughing and talking with one another;
-while between the piers of clustered columns which
-supported the soaring roof-groins and dim triforium
-knots of men were gathered, who seemed for the most
-part to be merchants. From time to time I could see
-a bond or account-book fluttering white amidst their
-sober robes, but all was done with as little noise and
-bustle as could well be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For it must be known that Paul's was not then the
-den of thieves it is now. It was not so long since the
-Queen's proclamation had been issued against such as
-should transact business, or make any fray, or shoot any
-hand-gun or dag within the precincts. It was still had
-in memory, though little regarded, and the place was
-not wholly disorderly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet was it sufficiently out of order to see so gay a
-company glowing in their bright clothes of 'popinjay
-blue,' 'devil-in-the-head,' 'lusty gallant,' and I know
-not what other outlandish new-fashioned hues, and to
-hear their laughter rolling round the gray old walls,
-and the clink of their spurs and rapiers on the pavement,
-and the rustle of their silks and taffeta as they
-walked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wrapped as I was in myself, and shut off by my
-shame from all men, that thoughtless throng only made
-my sense of loneliness keener. Far more in sympathy
-with me than any creature there was the tall temple itself,
-which, stripped long since of all its altars and Popish
-adornments, seemed to look down in lofty contempt
-upon the irreverent crowd which insulted its ancient
-dignity. Solemn and sad and alone it seemed to wait
-in patient confidence for the day when their little
-paltry lives would have passed away to oblivion, and
-its days of worship would come again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That there were many there more loyal with their
-tongues than in ought else I could see as I went
-forward and came near Duke Humphrey's tomb. Here
-the proclamation seemed wellnigh forgotten. Round
-the battered effigy the throng was thicker and full of
-ruffling loud-voiced swaggerers, who, from their ruffianly
-carriage and most vile Smithfield oaths, made me think
-their gentility much belied the bravery of their clothes.
-It was a thing I then first noted, and have since much
-grieved over, that men of low station nowadays take to
-wearing garments of gentleman's cut, no matter how
-common or ill-made, so long as they be as good as their
-scrapings, or stealings, or borrowings will buy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not wishing to mingle with this lewd throng I
-turned aside between the columns, that I might so pass
-into the aisle and avoid them. But before I could
-carry out my purpose I felt myself hustled roughly into
-the aisle by some one who thrust violently by me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Body of Bacchus!' said a loud, gruff voice, 'know
-you not better, base countryman, than to hustle a
-gentleman so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I turned and saw glaring at me a tall ruffian whom
-I had noted in the throng. He was dressed in garish
-and faded garments very vilely pinked and guarded, and
-wore on his head a most desperate hat. As though to
-give him a warlike note, his clothes were thrown on
-in a slovenly way, and his moustache frounced out so
-shock and bristling that it seemed from each hair-end
-a crackling oath must start with every word he said. I
-felt little inclined for a brawl, least of all in that place,
-though to quarrel with any man would perhaps have
-been a comfort in my present state; so I civilly told
-him I was sorry to have stood in his way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, base minion!' said he very fierce, with a
-whole fusilada of oaths, 'think you to pass so lightly
-from a gentleman's wrath?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I pray you, sir, be content,' I replied as quietly as I
-could, for it seemed very silly to quarrel with such a
-mountebank. 'If I wronged your gentility it was
-unwittingly, and I crave your pardon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stay, rude rustic,' said he, stepping before me as I
-turned away, and clapping his hand to a rapier of
-extravagant length. 'This shall not serve you. Craving
-of pardons shall not serve you, nor your <i>pardonnez-mois</i>
-neither. A gentleman must have satisfaction by rule
-and circumstance, after the teaching of the inestimable
-Signor Rocco.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I found myself by this time hemmed in by a throng
-of his fellows, as ruffianly and hectoring as himself,
-none of whom I dare have sworn could ever have
-afforded so much as their noses inside Signor Rocco's
-'College,' so I thought best to make an end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come then, sir,' said I, 'to a fitting place, and I will
-presently give you your desire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, but first name your friends,' my opponent
-replied. 'For know, base scullion, that town-bred
-gentlemen fight by rule and circumstance, and not like
-two rams in field, without supporters.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, pretty shepherd,' cried the throng jeeringly,
-'name first your friend, if you want a gentleman to
-walk with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I now saw my evil case and what a trick was put on
-me, and knew not what to do. To draw my rapier, Harry's
-rapier, on this vermin was farthest from my thoughts.
-Yet the throng hustled me closer, and my bully
-swaggered and threatened loudly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have no friend here,' said I, 'unless any gentleman
-among you will stand by me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hark to the scurvy rustic,' they cried, in answer to
-my look around to them. 'A pox on your familiarity.
-You will get no friend here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, my dry-livered lubbers, that he will,' cried a
-clear jolly voice, and I turned to see Frank Drake and
-another gentleman break through the throng to my side.
-'What is it, Jasper? Stand back, ye lubberly porpoises,
-and give a seaman sea-room.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stand back, I pray you, gentlemen,' cried my bully
-very condescending; 'I knew not that I spoke with a
-friend of Captain Drake's.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or maybe you would not have spoken so loud, my
-pot-valiant Hercules,' said Frank's friend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is all the coil about, Jasper?' said Frank again,
-while my bully tried to outstare the gentleman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Tis nothing,' said I. 'He wanted two friends for
-me, to help give him satisfaction for having been at the
-pain of jostling me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Give him a tester, sir,' said Frank's friend, 'to buy
-sack withal. That is the best satisfaction for his most
-barrel-bellied worship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, gentlemen,' said my bully with great pomp,
-finding he could not outstare his new adversary, 'it is
-satisfaction enough to know the gentleman is a friend
-of the most valiant Captain Drake. I know of no
-quarrel here that a skin of muscadine will not assuage.
-I pray you, let me conduct you to a very honest tavern
-hard by where I am known, and where I will see you
-served with the best.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most courtly offered!' said the gentleman. 'And
-peradventure your most sweet honesty will see us served
-also with very honest dice and very honest cards. 'Tis
-a pity we are promised elsewhere, but so it is, and we
-must perforce pray your valourship to bestow on us
-instead a full measure of your most delectable absence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By the soul of Bacchus,' said the bully, swelling
-with contempt, 'were it not for the proclamation,
-blood should flow for this;' but we all laughed at him,
-and he strode away with his nose in the air, as proud
-as Alexander after Granicus. So we were rid of him
-and his fellows, who followed on his heels all growling,
-'Were it not for the proclamation,' and swearing like
-drovers between their teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A happy meeting, Jasper,' said Frank. 'Yonder go
-as arrant a lot of thieves as any in all London. Be
-better acquainted with my friend, Mr. John Oxenham.
-A fellow-adventurer, Oxenham, Mr. Festing, but not, to
-my grief, a shipmate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pity you will not sail with us, Mr. Festing,' said
-Mr. Oxenham with a winning courtesy of manner. 'A
-man who can stand up to a throng of swaggerers like
-that should try his hand on Spaniards.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, so he has,' cried Frank,' and to their cost; but
-now he will be doing nothing but ram home most
-portentous charges of words into paper ordnance with
-a quill rammer. Heaven knows what giants they will
-bring down when they go off!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We all laughed together, for I cannot say what it
-was to me to meet these two in the midst of my loneliness.
-I gladly accepted their invitation to a tavern,
-where we could talk in peace. For not only was I
-overjoyed to be with Frank again, but I was much taken
-with Mr. Oxenham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a tall, well-dressed man with a very handsome
-face, and such courageous eyes that I did not
-wonder they had daunted the Paul's man. 'Tis true I
-should have liked him better had it not been for an
-amorous look he wore over all his manliness. Yet who
-was I to judge him for that? His talk was very pleasant,
-for he had been a rover from his youth, and spoke of
-what he had seen freely, without boasting. We sat
-drinking a long time, and talked of the glories of the
-West and a sailor's life, for which he had conceived a
-romantic enthusiasm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, Mr. Festing,' burst out Mr. Oxenham at last,
-'it is a pity you will not sail with us to the West,
-since you are bent on travel. I envy you your learning
-in these things, but none who have not seen can picture
-their glory. Compared with them, to potter about Europe
-from one pestered town to another, from one crowded
-country to another, is like the paddling of a duckling in
-a puddle beside the everlasting flight of the god-like
-albatross, that never lights, not even for love. This old
-world is gray, and worn, and stifling. Over there it is all
-colour and sunlight and freedom; where the golden
-land brings forth without labour, and he who will may
-pass through and enjoy. Why, when once you come to
-that Paradise where all is so wide and fresh and lovely,
-you lift your hands in wonder, as you look back to this
-dull corner far away, that your life can ever have been
-so little as to come within the bounds of such a prison;
-you shall hardly believe there was ever room here for
-aught large enough to cause a moment's grief or joy for
-your expanded soul. There you can see Nature and
-know at last what beauty is. There at last you shall
-drink her fragrant breath, feel the richness of her warm
-embrace, revel in the azure and rose colour and golden
-sheen that make up her divine beauty, and lie in her arms
-to know at last what it means to say, "This is delight."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And think, lad,' cried Frank, who hardly, I think,
-can have seen with Mr. Oxenham's eyes, 'think that it
-is Spaniards who have ravished this rich beauty. It is
-these idolatrous hell-hounds of Antichrist who have
-possessed this Shulamite woman whom the Lord had
-reserved as a bride for his saints. It will be a glorious
-smiting of them. Their lust has made them sleepy
-and womanish. They are puffed up into silly security
-with their Spanish pride. Why, man, they will leave
-whole estates in charge of one slave, and send out
-trains of a hundred Indians or more laden with gold
-with but a single negro over them. I know it all now.
-I know every way in and out, and every course and time
-their ships will sail, and I know harbours, lad, where
-none could ever find us, where we can lie in wait and
-pounce out like cats on the good things that come by.
-And then they have not a walled town on the coast, that
-I know of. We can swoop down on the Dons and be
-away again, made men, or ever they have time to wake
-up out of their beds. Why will not men see what
-there is to be done, if they will only do? One such stroke
-as I have in mind will do more to undo Antichrist than
-all your thinking. Yet you scholars will not see it,
-but will not cease your idle disputing and dreaming till
-the angels shall come down and cry to you in voice of
-thunder, "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up
-into heaven?"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His words struck me very deep, and I began to see
-how idle was our scholars' contempt for men of action.
-So, with ever-growing interest, I listened as we talked
-together till long after supper, and Frank unfolded every
-detail of his plan in his honest practical way.
-Mr. Oxenham, moreover, ceased not to paint his glowing
-pictures not only of what was known of those regions,
-but also of the fairyland beyond, where no Christian had
-yet trod,&mdash;the unknown lands where he set my fancy
-playing with his till my imagination, on which I had
-already heaped so much that was inflammable from my
-books, was all on fire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for my reason, Frank's sound sense was enough
-to satisfy that, and his taunt at my standing still and
-gazing up into heaven while others were doing touched
-my pride nearly. What wonder, then, that when the
-time came to bid them good-night, when I saw before
-me my lonely lodging, when I pictured the blank
-morrow and all my life beyond, empty of hope or joy
-or fellowship, when they urged me once more most
-earnestly to sail with them, that I could not resist!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were pressing on me the very course in which
-I could follow Mr. Follet's strangely-worded advice
-more fully and nobly than I had ever dreamed. In
-place of my faith a sense of destiny seemed to have
-come to me, and to be speaking clearly in this chance
-meeting. If there was anything in man's harmony
-with the music of the spheres, sure it was the wild
-adventurous war-note of the universal gamut that I
-heard far off in the height of heaven sounding low and
-clear for my soul's response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My quest for Harry was forgotten, and with it whatever
-else tied me to the old life, which now began to
-seem but a body of death. For that strange voice had
-come over the wide ocean and whispered its witching
-summons in my ear also. I could not choose but obey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we three joined hands and drank a cup on my
-resolve, and one more was added to the throng who day
-by day were leaving all to taste the ripe lips of this
-New Helen in the West.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was arranged that I should go out as gentleman
-adventurer; and since I did not wish to be without
-place, and had some little knowledge of business, gained
-by always managing my own estate so as to make it
-yield the fullest return, I begged and got the office of
-merchant to the expedition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was soon tried in my new post, for Frank was
-earnest to get back to Plymouth to speed the fitting
-out of the ships and the building of the pinnaces, which
-we were to carry with us in pieces. So I was left to
-purchase the arms and other furniture which was still
-lacking. This had been the only occasion of his
-staying in London, which being left in my hands he was
-free to depart, and this he accordingly did, taking
-Mr. Oxenham with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From my constant fear of meeting Harry, which
-was greater than ever since I had resolved to fly, I
-stirred abroad no more than my business demanded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I was obliged often to go into the city, for there
-was still a great deal to be done. Money was in no
-way lacking, both by reason of the success of Frank's
-two former voyages, which had lined his pockets well,
-and of the support he got elsewhere. Nothing was to
-be wanting from the complete furniture of a man-of-war
-in either ship; and our captain, who, both on his
-person and his ship, would always have the best, had
-furnished me with a long schedule of muskets, calivers,
-targets, pikes, partisans, bows, and artificers' tools, as
-well as cloth and other provision for a whole year, all
-of which things I was bidden to purchase of different
-merchants as far as possible, that no wind of our preparations
-should be blown into the Spanish ambassador's ears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such time as I was not thus engaged I spent very
-profitably in Signor Rocco's new College of Fence in
-Warwick Lane. I had learned that Harry did not
-resort thither, so, since it was near my lodging, I was
-able to enjoy my best-loved pastime and see much
-excellent rapier-play that was new to me, whereby the
-pain of my delay in London was a little eased.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus by avoiding other public places, and above all
-Paul's, at the end of a fortnight I found my work
-complete without the meeting I dreaded; and with a
-lighter heart than I had borne for many a day I took
-ship at Radcliffe with all my lading, and so came to
-Plymouth after a slow passage on the afternoon of
-Friday, the 23d of May.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The three brothers, for Joseph Drake was of the
-expedition as well as John, received me with open
-arms, and much commended my pains when the arms
-and furniture came to be stowed on board. They
-informed me that as merchant I was to sail in the
-admiral with Frank, of which I was very glad.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-223"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-223.jpg" alt="PLYMOUTH" />
-<br />
-PLYMOUTH
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed that everything was prepared, and that, as
-they had only stayed for my coming, we were to weigh
-on the morrow. Nothing could have been more to my
-mind. So eager was I to leave my old life behind that
-I hardly accepted their invitation to go ashore to
-gather the men who were yet to come aboard. Yet I
-did at last for good-fellowship, and started with them
-to the sound of a demi-culverin and a flourish of our
-trumpets, for a signal to the mariners to embark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we rowed I saw another boat making for the
-<i>Swan</i>, which lay a good way from the <i>Pasha</i>. They
-hailed us as we passed, so that I knew they were some
-of our company; but I could not notice them much,
-for Frank just then took occasion to point out Mount
-Edgcombe to me and I looked the other way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our passage from tavern to tavern to beat up the
-stragglers was like a triumph. Indeed I think
-Plymouth was then, and maybe still is, flat drunk with
-the western wine. A crowd followed on our heels,
-cheering us as we went; the citizens came out from
-their suppers to pledge us lustily with brimming
-tankards; and as for smiles of hostesses and wenches
-in the taverns I had enough showered on myself alone,
-being a gentleman adventurer in the expedition, as
-would wellnigh satisfy a regiment of horse a whole
-campaign, as such things go now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What with these oglings and smirkings of the pretty
-Plymouth lasses and our constant pledgings, I could
-have been as jolly as any piece of tar-yarn there had
-it not been for the grievous sights I saw, and our pain
-therefrom in getting our men aboard, though I think a
-very willing crew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Most had pledged once or twice too often, and were
-for ever taking leave and never departing; some could
-not have gone if they had been willing, at least not on
-their own legs; others were in pledge, for commodities
-they had never seen, to cogging hosts, who held their
-boots or sword or breeches as security. Some even we
-could by no means come at, save by help of a magistrate's
-warrant to search some dishonest alehouse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank told me what I saw was of no account by the
-side of what sometimes happened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, lad,' said he, 'I have known it take two
-days and all the magistrates in the borough to gather a
-company, and then not see it done. Nay, it is not an
-unheard-of thing for this scandal to be the utter
-overthrow of a voyage, and general undoing of owners,
-victuallers, and company. Mine are all picked lads,
-or you should not have seen us come off so easily.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I marvel,' said I, and I still do, 'that some among
-our great lord-admirals have not taken order to end
-these things, which seem a great scandal to the reputation
-of our sea-service no less than an injury to the
-commonwealth, and ought to be reformed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is well enough,' answered Frank, 'and much
-to be wished; but to keep a mariner at such times
-from his ale is a thing more lightly attempted than
-easily accomplished.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Oxenham was little help to us. Indeed he had
-so many pouting lips to kiss in this his own fair town
-of Plymouth, and so many dainty waists to encircle, that
-I began to think nothing but a warrant or a file of
-pikes would ever get him aboard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still it was done at last, and the sun rose gloriously
-next morning upon us with our company complete. It
-was Whitsunday Eve, and the whole town seemed to
-have made holiday to bid us God-speed that sunny
-May morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a fair sight to see the hills around in their
-fresh spring garb crowding down to the harbour, which
-seemed to spread out its shining arms to embrace them.
-The Hoe was thronged with a great mass of people
-in their gayest clothes; every point beside was bright
-with colour, and a score of small fry were cleaving the
-clear waters about us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We stood off and on awhile to give them a good
-sight of us, and bid the fair town 'Farewell' with our
-great pieces and our music. I think Frank was very
-proud of his ships, and well he might be, for never can
-have been a smarter sight in Plymouth harbour than
-we were that day as we beat to and fro with our great
-flags of St. George at the main-tops, and our silk
-streamers down to the blue water, and now and again a
-white puff from our castles as we answered the ordnance
-from the platform saluting us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cheer after cheer went up from the shore folk between
-each discharge till we could no longer hear them,
-and stood out to sea, fairly started at last on that most
-memorable adventure. I say memorable, for surely never
-was so great a service undertaken with so small a
-power. We were, men and boys, all told, but seventy-three
-souls, being forty-seven in the admiral and twenty-six
-in the vice-admiral, under John Drake, and only one
-of us all that was not under thirty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wind was very favourable at north-east, and
-we stood on all that day and next night. In the
-morning when I came on deck I found we were going under
-easy sail, only a cable's length from our vice-admiral.
-A boat was towing alongside of us, and I saw that some
-one must have come aboard from the <i>Swan</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I went aft to our captain's cabin to see what it might
-mean. I knocked at the door. Frank's cheery voice
-bade me enter. I opened and went in. Heaven save
-me from such a moment again! My heart stood still,
-my brain swam, for there beside Frank sat Harry, with
-Sergeant Culverin at his back!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sprang to his feet as I shut the door behind
-me, and stood glaring at me with his hand on his
-rapier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sit down, Harry!' cried Frank; 'I will have no
-brawling here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry took no notice, but stood with his breath
-coming very fast and hard just as before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sit down, sir,' thundered our captain; 'wilt mutiny
-in my own cabin? Hark ye, sir, on my ship there is
-no difference between a gentleman and a cook's boy
-when it comes to giving orders. Sit down now, and
-take your hand from that weapon, or I shall presently
-take order to have you in irons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are right, Frank, quite right,' said Harry with
-an effort as he slowly sat himself down. 'But how can
-you have done us this unkindness?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank, Frank,' said I, finding voice at last, 'you
-know not what you have done.' With that I tottered
-to the seat on the opposite side of the table to Harry.
-I felt undone and crushed. My long grieving and much
-brooding on my shame had told on me more than I
-guessed. And now to find after my cowardly flight I
-had fallen into a trap a hundredfold more dreadful than
-that I had sought to escape, to find my new hopes
-shattered at a blow and this awful trial before me, was
-more than I could bear, and in utter broken despair I
-buried my face in my arms upon the table to hide my tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know well enough what I have done,' said Frank,
-after he had left us thus in silence for some moments.
-'Do you think that when two good lads, fast friends,
-come to me each separately from the side of one fair
-lady, haggard and woe-begone, and tell me that they
-want to journey they care not whither, so long as it be
-far from England, do you think then I know not what
-it means? Why, man, I have a score such aboard now.
-For though many think that the greater the thief and
-blasphemer the better the soldier, yet say I for my work
-give me, next to him who sails for love of God, the
-honest lad that sails for love of a lass. As I judge
-they are half and half aboard our ships now. So think
-you I could not read the old tale, when I saw it writ
-so plain? And had it not been so, I should yet have
-known; for there comes to me an honest worthy soldier
-who knew better than I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Captain Drake," says he, "here is a mighty
-storm blowing between two valiant gentlemen, who
-after long and loving consort have parted company,
-so that they cannot come together again without
-most nice navigation. I pray you take command,"
-says he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"How do they bear, Sergeant?" says I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Cry you mercy there, captain," says he; "I am no
-pilot of gentlemen's quarrels, yet I can give you certain
-just observations, whence peradventure you may take
-their bearings yourself."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Therewith Frank repeated the whole story as he had
-it from the Sergeant, till he came to Harry's flight from
-the inn. Then in a low earnest voice he told clearly, as
-though it were passing before his eyes, what the Sergeant
-had seen me do outside with Harry's rapier. I felt so
-shamed to hear it now that I would have stayed him,
-but felt I could not speak.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, gentlemen,' said our captain, when he ended the
-tale,' I knew it was a quarrel that might be healed, and
-knew nothing more sovereign in such a case than the
-lusty sea. I have known many so healed, when they
-get far away and see what a little thing it is they
-wrestled for, beside the prizes a brave lad can win over
-sea. That is what I have done, and I know I am right;
-and if you be true men, I would have you shake hands
-before you leave this cabin.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sound of Harry's hard breathing had ceased as
-Frank got on with his tale, and since he described the
-scene in the inn-yard I felt my brother's eyes had been
-fixed upon me. Now I heard him rise, and felt his hand
-laid upon my shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor lad,' said he very gently, 'poor lad! what
-fearful suffering, what a terrible war must have been in
-your good heart! Why did I not know it and help you
-to victory? You have won alone. I know it now, but
-God forgive me, with what carnage of your soul, which
-but for my folly I could have stayed. We have both
-sinned, and grievously we have both been punished; let
-us now lay down the scourge.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked up, hardly daring to face him. Yet when I
-saw his look was filled with pity I took courage. Rising
-to my feet I took his hands and pressed them hard, but
-I could not speak. So putting his arm through mine,
-he led me to the door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come,' said he, 'we will go talk together. While
-our captain finishes writing his instructions we will try
-to instruct each other how best to show ourselves
-worthy of her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think we both went out very humbled. Not only
-because Frank had so imperiously bent us to his will
-and shown us what children we were beside him, but
-also because he had compared us to the love-sick boys
-of the crew, and our story to their love squabbles. Yet
-how could we deny it was different? It was indeed
-hard to confess how little different it was, and, as I say,
-we both went out with our pride, the mainstay of
-quarrels, much humbled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had both, I know, tried honestly that our quarrel
-should end here, yet was the rent too wide and deep to
-be mended so easily. His arm seemed to sit uneasily
-in mine, and ere we had gone a few paces he took some
-excuse of a point coming untied to draw it away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like strangers at last we sat down and tried to talk,
-but it was very difficult. I would have given my
-tongue to have gone on with the tale where Frank ended,
-and to have told Harry how I had seen his dear wife
-mourning over her child for his loss. Yet half from
-shame to confess I had gone back to Ashtead, and half
-in fear of adding to his grief by telling him what
-abiding love he had left, I held my peace, and we fell to
-talking in false notes about the voyage, till, to our great
-relief, Harry was summoned to Frank's cabin to receive
-his orders for Captain John Drake. As soon as I was
-alone Sergeant Culverin came up to me with his
-elaborate salute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I trust you will forgive my freedom, your worship,'
-said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive, Sergeant!' I answered. 'I have nothing to
-forgive; I have only thanks for the good work you have
-done.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay,' said he, 'I did nothing; no more than that
-astrolabe with which Mr. Oxenham yonder is taking our
-position. I was but a poor instrument for Captain
-Drake to shape your courses withal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Still I must thank you, Sergeant, from my
-heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I pray you, sir, if you love me, say no more. Let
-us pass to other things. How does this most uncivil
-motion sort with your worship's stomach?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well enough, Sergeant; does it quarrel with yours?'
-I asked, for he looked a little pale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To be plain with you, sir, the sea and I are not so
-good friends as we hope to become. Last night was
-most evil to me in yonder fly-boat&mdash;<i>Swan</i>, they call it;
-yet for liveliness Sparrow would sort better with its
-nature. There was, moreover, a mariner of the watch
-who would increase my load by singing continually a
-most woeful, ancient ballad of pilgrims at sea. Thus it
-ran, sir:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- '"Thus meanwhile the pilgrims lie,<br />
- And have their bowlies fast them by,<br />
- And cry after hot Malvoisie,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Their health for to restore.<br />
- And some would have a salted toast,<br />
- For they might eat nor sodden nor roast;<br />
- A man might soon pay for their cost<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As for one day or twain."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And more very sickly stuff to like intent, sir, to a very
-doleful tune.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I fear, Sergeant,' said I, 'your voyage to the Indies
-will not be as pleasant as you could desire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed, sir,' said he, 'I wish we could fetch thither
-a-horseback, being, as I think, the only honourable
-manner of going for gentlemen. Still, since it has pleased
-God to put this shifty, rude, uncourtly sea betwixt us
-and the Indies, we must e'en make shift with a ship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am sorry for you, Sergeant,' I answered. 'A horse
-indeed would have been a conveyance you better understood.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, it is not so much that,' said the Sergeant.
-'For when I was sergeant-groom under the Signor John
-Peter Pugliano, esquire of the Emperor's stables, the
-word always went that a man who could manage a
-horse could manage anything, save it were a woman,
-by your worship's leave. So I think a ship will not
-come amiss to me, being in relation to a horse but a
-wet lifeless thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But yet, Sergeant,' said I, 'of a wholly different
-nature.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not that, sir,' said he. 'The ancients were
-wiser than we in these matters, saving your worship's
-learning, and, as I have been told, placed amongst their
-ensigns military the horse, as being sacred to the god
-Neptune as well as to Mars, and the symbol of
-immoderate fury of attack on sea as well as on land.
-Moreover in your tilting of one ship against another
-you have an image or imitation of the crowning glory
-of horsemanship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But we English do not use this method,' I answered,
-'and hold it only fit for Turks and Spaniards, and such
-like, who, having no skill in sailing and seamanship, are
-compelled to use galleys propelled with oars.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mass!' said Culverin, 'had I known that I should
-have sailed even less willingly than I did. What you
-say may be right, yet I hold that to sail with a lance
-at your bows is the more honourable and soldierly
-method. But let that pass. Doubtless by further
-contemplation I shall discover further similitudes
-between the horse and the ship. Since I hear what
-you say, sir, I see nothing in which they are alike save
-in respect of their prancing&mdash;a quality I would gladly
-forego in the present case, seeing that I am like to find
-little comfort in it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we spoke Harry came out of the captain's cabin,
-and Sergeant Culverin had to leave to accompany his
-master back to the <i>Swan</i>. My brother, good heart, did
-his best to bid me farewell as of old, but what between
-my shamefacedness to see his careworn look and damped
-spirit, and his own too recent sense of the great wrong I
-had done him, our leave-taking was cold and formal, for
-all he tried so hard to forgive.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Our wind held so fair and steady at north-east that on
-the ninth day we sighted Porto Santo in the Madeiras,
-and two days later the Canaries. So persuaded was
-our captain of a very good passage, and so earnest to
-give the Spaniards no inkling of our purpose, that he
-would not touch for water, but held on without once
-dropping anchor or striking sail till the thirty-fifth
-day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of the terrible shock my sudden meeting
-with Harry had given to my spirits, and in spite of
-my despair at being condemned to face my shame and
-sorrow for I knew not how many months, I could not
-but feel a calm grow over me as we proceeded. None can
-tell, save he who has tried it, what it is to a perturbed
-spirit to sail on day after day over those sunny seas
-with all the magic of the West before. Less and less I
-brooded over the old life, and more and more on the
-glory of the new, till, as Frank had said, the past
-seemed to grow small, and a faint hope arose in me that
-my crime was not too great for pardon, seeing that I
-knew how hard my brother would try to forgive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I employed myself in studying navigation and the
-Spanish tongue with Frank, nor were ship duties wanting,
-for it was ever our captain's way to have the gentlemen
-tally on a rope as well as the meanest mariner
-when need was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He hated nothing so much as idleness, and those
-who had no work had always to find play, which he
-himself was not slow in furnishing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know nothing,' he used to say, 'that breeds discontent
-and faint hearts like the union of these two,
-dullness and idleness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So with games, and music, and rummaging and
-cleaning arms, our spirits were kept up when they
-were like to sink for want of work. Frank was very
-earnest about this on our present voyage, for as we
-neared the Indies the hands, being young, began to
-frighten themselves with tales of the great strength and
-richness of the Indian cities, until, had it not been for
-Frank's care in stopping and preventing such idle talk
-with other inducements, they would have come to think
-Nombre de Dios as big as London and as strong as
-Berwick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor were we allowed to lose sight of the godly purpose
-of our enterprise. Prayers were ordered every day
-night and morning, which our captain read very
-earnestly, never forgetting a prayer to God for the
-Queen's Majesty, her most honourable council, and the
-speedy 'making' of our voyage, the same having a very
-good effect, for the half at least of the crew were as
-good Puritans as himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus it was in a very hopeful and godly state that,
-on the evening of the thirty-fifth day we saw the Isle
-of Guadeloupe towering on the horizon like a priceless
-jewel in the setting sun. With all our music and many
-a gay flourish of our trumpets we saluted it, and that
-night as we lay a-hull our musicians gave us a double
-portion of melody.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the first morning light we ran in and anchored
-off a little rocky island three leagues off Dominica,
-where we lay three days to refresh our men. And here
-we landed and wandered at will, to taste for the first
-time the surpassing loveliness of the tropics.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How shall I tell of those first days in the Indies?
-My pen seems a dumb dead thing when I think of
-it. Much as I had thought, and dreamed, and read of
-them, this waking, this seeing was far beyond all. On
-either hand the heights of Guadeloupe and Dominica
-towered serenely out of their soft beds of lustrous green.
-The glittering waters between were studded with island
-gems ablaze with every bright hue which God has made,
-that we may taste the glory which is to come. All
-about us was the hum of bright flies, the sparkle of
-feather and gorgeous flowers, and the rustle of the
-scented air through the crowded canes as it passed on
-to wave with dreamy motion the heavy crowns of the
-slender palms. And over all, with faint and soothing
-voice, there came in through the dense growth of vine
-and brake the deep-toned booming of the surf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such is the pale shadow that I have power to paint
-of the banquet on which our souls feasted as we lay in
-the deserted huts which the Indians, who came there
-to fish, had built. So rich and heavenly was that world
-that I could not wonder how men were led on to think
-that a little farther, only a little farther, must be a land
-where gold and gems would be as the sand and pebbles
-here, nay, where beyond some glittering hill they would
-see the open gates of Paradise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not only by the memory of all that beauty does the
-time live in my mind, but also because it was here I
-first had real speech with my wronged brother. As we
-lay in those Dryad's bowers our sorrow seemed so far
-away and little in this New World, so dim beside its
-dazzling glory, that it was for a time half forgotten
-amidst the thousand new things that crowded our
-thoughts. Like two Sileni we lay, as Mr. Oxenham
-had said, in the arms of lady Nature, and all that was
-sad melted in the glow of her luxuriant life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had no spirit for the revels of our comrades, for
-chasing the bright-hued birds, or plucking the gleaming
-flowers. We were both happier to lie looking over the
-sea where our dainty ships rocked, and dreamily talk
-over Harry's Italianate notions that rose unbidden here.
-Being to me now of undreamed-of interest, since my old
-faith was gone, they were a subject we could talk on
-more as we used to do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely,' I remember him saying, 'surely that
-Italian friar was right who told me that the soul was
-not in the body. Can you not feel here, Jasper, how
-great a thing it is? Can you not feel how there is
-something that binds you like a brother to all this
-music of bird and leaf and air and sea? What can it
-be but the great soul of the universe. That is it, and
-the friar was right. It is that great soul which is not
-in our bodies, rather are our bodies in the soul&mdash;the
-soul that is yours and mine and hers and God's.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So would our speech always come back to our sorrow
-and part us again. Yet were we too drunken with the
-western wine to feel the past too deeply. Thus, then,
-once or twice during our stay there we had speech of
-these things, and I began to hope still more that some
-day we might be the same again together, and, moreover,
-to feel that I was beginning to understand what
-it was he thought of the great universal secret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the third day after our coming to the island we
-sailed again, greatly refreshed, and in two days more we
-had sight of Tierra-Firme, being the high land above
-Santa Marta, but came not near the shore, that we
-might not be seen. So without sight of Carthagena
-we passed on, till on the 12th of July we dropped
-anchor off the haven whither we were bound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a spot our captain had noted on his voyage
-the last year, not only as being sheltered by two high
-points from the winds and a very commodious harbour,
-but also because no Spaniard had any dwelling between
-this place and Santiago de Tolu on the one hand and
-Nombre de Dios on the other, the nearest being at least
-thirty-five leagues distant. Moreover, there was an
-abundance of food there, both fish in the sea and fowls
-in the woods around, the most plentiful being certain
-birds like to our pheasants, which the Spaniards in
-those regions call guans and curassows. It was by
-reason of the great store of these delicate fowls that our
-captain named the place Port Pheasant.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-239"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-239.jpg" alt="Overhung with a dense growth of trees.--p. 239" />
-<br />
-Overhung with a dense growth of trees.&mdash;p. 239
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must be remembered we had our three pinnaces
-to set up, for in them we were to make our attack. It
-was most necessary then to have a hidden place for this
-work, and it was not a little his knowledge of this secret
-haven that gave our captain his great hopes of success.
-He judged no one knew it but himself and those who
-had been with him in his previous voyage. Being thus
-perfectly secure, Frank rowed in to see how best to
-bring the ships to moorings there, and I went in the
-boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No place could have been better fitted to our purpose.
-The headlands were but half a cable's length apart, and
-so overhung with a dense growth of brakes and trees,
-all strange to me, that little could be seen beyond save
-the climbing hills on the mainland. But as soon as we
-rowed in I could see what a paradise it was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before us opened a rounded haven, from eight to ten
-cables' length every way. The waves died languidly
-away towards the shore in ever-lessening ripples, as
-though hushed by the surpassing beauty of the place.
-Where, with loving whispers, they lapped the golden
-beach, they reflected a picture more dazzling than my
-eyes had ever seen. Heaped up in wild profusion was
-a tangled mass of every hue of green that clothed to the
-water's edge the gently swelling hills. Wherever the
-rocks could find a place to peep, their own rich colour
-was almost hidden by hanging bunches of scarlet flowers.
-Huge rough tree-trunks I could get a glimpse of here
-and there, with great sinews of rugged bark that stood
-boldly out from them, and were lost in the glowing
-brakes which covered the ground. In the branches
-fluttered birds that mocked the radiance of the flowers,
-while on every point the crested and bronze-hued
-pheasants plumed themselves, and screamed defiance
-one against the other. Lost to all else but this fairyland
-I was hardly plunged, as it were, into some delicious
-dream, when I was rudely awakened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Vast rowing, lads,' said Frank suddenly, in quick,
-hushed tones. 'Look! What's yonder?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His keen eye was the first to see it. I looked where
-he pointed, and in a moment my paradise was tumbled
-to earth. Away in the trees rose a thin blue cloud of
-smoke. There was no mistaking it; the hand of man
-must be there. 'Whose was it?' was what we each
-asked ourselves with melancholy foreboding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our captain, though as disappointed as any of us to
-see a cuckoo in his nest, seemed nothing daunted.
-Rowing back quickly to the ships, he ordered out our
-other boat, and manning both to their full holding, not
-forgetting muskets, bows, and pikes, returned speedily
-to land.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No sooner were we ashore than we could see many
-traces of men having been there very lately. There
-were black spots where fires had been, and marks of
-fresh clearing in the brakes. Setting ourselves in order,
-we cautiously went forward along a track that seemed
-to lead to the fire, Frank leading the way in spite of all
-our efforts to dissuade him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had not gone far before we came to a tree in the
-midst of the track, so great that four men at full stretch
-could not have girdled it about. I saw Frank stop
-suddenly and look up on the trunk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, Jack Garrett, Jack Garrett,' said he, 'what game
-is this you have been coursing with my hounds?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I followed his eyes and saw a leaden plate nailed to
-the tree, on which were graven these words:
-</p>
-
-<p><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-CAPTAIN DRAKE.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-If you fortune to come to this port, make hast away! For
-the Spaniards which you had with you here the last year have
-bewrayed this place, and taken away all that you left here.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
-I depart from hence, this present 7th of July 1572.
-</p>
-
-<p class="letter">
- Your very loving friend,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JOHN GARRETT.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'My thanks, Jack Garrett, for your kindly warning,'
-cried Frank. 'A true Plymouth man are you, though
-you did whistle away some of my best hounds. See
-what comes,' he continued, turning to me, 'of sparing
-these false Spaniards' lives. It is enough to make a
-man cut the throat of every prisoner he takes&mdash;a thing,
-by God's help, I will never do, whatever it cost me.
-May they have their reward for their treachery, though,
-by God's mercy, we are too well furnished to be hurt by
-the loss of any gear they stole.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where will you go now, then?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No whither, my lad,' said he. 'Here I purposed to
-set up my pinnaces, and here I will do it. The
-Spaniards are not here now, and if they keep away but
-two days, I shall order things so that, by God's help,
-they shall rue their coming, if that is their mind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was very cheerful and resolute with it all, and
-made us so too, yet I know he was sorely tried, by his
-frequent speaking of God's name, which was always his
-way at times when he felt need of all his courage,
-as indeed he did now; for though we found the
-place deserted, the fire we had seen being but the
-remains of Garrett's work, left perhaps as a signal to us
-to be on our guard, yet there was no telling when the
-Spaniards would be down on us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No time, therefore, was lost in carrying out our
-captain's resolve. Harry having, as I have said, a good
-knowledge of such matters, speedily marked out a piece
-of land about three-quarters of an acre in extent, of
-pentagonal form, with one side touching the shore. The
-whole crew then started cheerily to clear this, hauling
-the trees as they were felled with pulleys and hawsers,
-in such wise as to make a rampart all round, a look-out
-boat being despatched meanwhile to one of the points
-to watch for any disturbance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All that day we laboured at our fort, and most of
-the night too; yet next morning much still remained
-to be done when we saw our look-out boat rowing hard
-towards us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sail ho!' shouted the steersman, as soon as he was in
-hail. 'Three sail bearing hard down on us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Blister the fool's tongue!' said Frank beneath his
-breath, as he stood at my side and saw something like
-alarm in the younger mariners' faces, but he sang out
-cheerily, 'Good news, good news, my lads. Now we will
-trap them here, and never a breath of our coming shall
-reach Nombre de Dios.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man reported the three sail, as well as he could
-tell; a bark about the <i>Swan's</i> size, a caravel, and a
-smaller craft. All set to work cheerily to carry out
-Frank's order; for we were in excellent heart again, to
-see that our captain thought only of offence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some pieces of ordnance were removed from the
-ships, to be set by Harry and Mr. Oxenham in the best
-positions they could find for the defence of our fort.
-The ships were then warped over to the entrance of the
-haven, where they were moored on either hand close
-under the rocks, so that they could not be seen by a
-ship till she was well within. Each had a holdfast to
-the opposite point, that they might be warped across
-the mouth as soon as the enemy had passed in. All
-fires were extinguished, and the small-shot, gunners, and
-bowmen who were ashore at the fort were well concealed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we lay waiting in great anxiety for what was to
-come. Mr. Oxenham and Harry, by pouring out a fire
-of jests and comfortable speeches, kept up the youngsters'
-spirits as well as might be, though I think by their looks
-there was many a heart thumping hard, when we saw
-through the bushes a large Spanish shallop rowing in
-towards our haven.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the shallop came on a bark of some fifty tons
-and a caravel of Seville build, as Mr. Oxenham told us,
-hove to right opposite our entrance. The shallop came
-as far as between the points, and then, after stopping as
-though to discover the place thoroughly, rowed back to
-the ships.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was impossible to tell whether they had seen
-us or not; so, seeing what our aim was, we could but
-rejoice when we saw them all make sail and stand in.
-On they came, a pretty sight to see, swaggering in most
-gallantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last they were well inside, in full view of our
-ships, which yet did not move an inch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Something must be wrong,' whispered Mr. Oxenham
-to me. 'Why the devil does he not warp across,
-or at least give them a shot?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly there was a loud flourish of trumpets on
-board the admiral and the flag of St. George was run
-up, but still she did not stir.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Her holdfasts must have dragged,' said Mr. Oxenham;
-'I fear we are undone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A puff of smoke leaped forth from the strange bark,
-and we looked to see the admiral struck. The boom
-of the shot rolled across the still waters, waking strange
-echoes in that land-locked bay, and setting the guans
-a-screaming their ear-piercing cry. Ere the sounds
-died away a trumpet brayed answer to our admiral, and
-we saw the red cross flutter out from the stranger's top.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At first we thought it must be some treacherous
-Spanish stratagem, but all our fears were at rest when,
-as our ships answered the stranger's salute, we saw
-a boat put out from the bark and go abroad the
-admiral.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our fears and pains were all wasted; for she proved
-to be a bark from the Isle of Wight, belonging to Sir
-Edward Horsey, the Governor, 'Wild Ned Horsey,'
-so well known to us, not only for the mad stories of his
-ruffling youth and his piracies in the narrow seas during
-the old days, but also for the excellent disposition he
-made for the defence of the island, and above all for his
-notable services when he rode at the head of Clinton's
-horse during the late rising in the North.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a great gentleman now and high in the
-Queen's service, yet he could not wholly give up his
-old ways, and had fitted out this present ship, under
-Captain Ranse, to try what Popish prizes he could pick
-up on the high seas or amongst the Indies. He had
-'made' his voyage so far as to take a shallop off Cape
-Blanco, and, what was better, a caravel carrying <i>Advisos</i>
-to Nombre de Dios.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was thus able, when he heard our purpose, to
-confirm us from the papers he had seized that as yet
-the Spaniards had no knowledge of our coming. So
-very welcome and favourable for our purpose did this
-seem that Captain Ranse was desirous to consort with
-us in our venture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing could have been more to the minds of most
-of us than this, seeing he had thirty good and well-armed
-men with him, but Frank was little pleased with
-it, and would gladly have gone forward alone, save that
-he thought it better to put a good face on a bad matter
-and consent, seeing how Captain Ranse, if he were evilly
-disposed, might bring all our voyage to naught.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So they were received upon conditions which I,
-being a scholar, was appointed to draw, whereof having
-a copy I will set it forth, that men in like case hereafter
-may see how the Prince of Navigators ordered these
-things, since unhappy quarrels have many times arisen
-between captains who have sailed in consort, by reason
-of their not doing things orderly at the outset, after the
-ancient usages of the sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I sat in our council chamber, which had for its
-walls the rugged buttresses of one of those huge trees of
-which I have spoken, and for roof the vast spread of its
-branches, alive with screaming parrots, I could not but
-muse on dull-eyed lawyers far away in their dingy
-Temple; nor, as I wrote the dry note which contrasted
-so strangely with the splendour of our audacious project,
-could I but marvel over the might of our great Queen's
-peace, which in such humble shape could reach even
-here to aid her loving subjects in ordering the chivalrous
-brotherhood by which we hoped to add such glory to
-her name. And thus I wrote the words as Frank spoke
-them, plain and clear, that none might have to hunt for
-sense in a forest of sounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I, Francis Drake, general of the fleet appointed for
-these seas, to wit, the <i>Pasha</i>, of seventy tons and
-forty-seven men, and the <i>Swan</i>, of twenty-five tons and
-twenty-six men, together with three pinnaces unmanned,
-have consorted, covenanted, and agreed, and by these
-presents do consort, covenant, and agree, with James
-Ranse, of the <i>Lion</i>, fifty tons and thirty men, belonging
-to and being under the flag of the Honourable Sir
-Edward Horsey, Knight, together with a certain caravel
-to be hereafter measured, and a shallop, her prizes and
-consorts, to have, possess, enjoy, and be partaker with
-me and my fleet, and I with them, of all such lawful
-prize or prizes as shall be taken by me or them, or any
-of us jointly or severally, in sight or out of sight, ton for
-ton, and man for man, from this present 13th day of
-July 1572, till such time as we mutually determine the
-conditions contained herein.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was signed, sealed, and delivered, and all being
-settled we laboured together harmoniously&mdash;the
-carpenters at setting up the pinnaces, and the rest by
-spells at completing the fort, exercising in our weapons,
-the gathering of victuals, and many pastimes which
-our captain devised.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Just sixteen days after my ink was dry the great bell
-in the church of Nombre de Dios was calling men to
-complines as the sun went down. So it might have
-boomed over the waving forest and darkening sea any
-time the last fifty years or more. Yet I doubt if
-the people would have doffed their broad hats, or
-crossed themselves so peacefully to-night, had they
-known in what other ears it sounded besides their own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I doubt their prayers would have been more fervent
-that night had they been aware how the stars, that just
-began to glimmer, were looking down on four boats
-crowded with men, that were striking a-hull and
-dropping their grapples hard by the mouth of the Rio
-Francisco, scarce two leagues from the point of their
-bay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet there we lay in our three pinnaces and the
-shallop, seventy-three desperate souls, on the eve of our
-great attempt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The ships and the rest of the men had been left
-behind, under Captain Ranse, at the Isle of Pinos,
-twenty-five leagues away, and we had come on, each
-man with the comrades he chose, as far as could be. I
-was with Frank, Harry with Mr. Oxenham, the other
-pinnace being in charge of John Drake, and the shallop
-under John Overy, the master of the <i>Lion</i>. Everything
-had been done to encourage the more faint-hearted, and
-we were most excellently furnished with muskets,
-calivers, pikes, fire-pikes, targets, bows, and everything
-such an enterprise could need, apportioned to each man
-according to his skill and disposition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet many a heart must have beat anxiously as we
-lay waiting for the dark night, and would have done so
-still more had the mariners been aware of all that their
-commanders knew. For at the Isles of Pinos we had
-captured two small frigates from Nombre de Dios,
-wherein certain negroes were lading planks. From
-these men, being very kindly used, we heard that their
-countrymen, the Cimaroons, had fallen upon the town
-and nearly surprised it but six weeks ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These Cimaroons were African negroes who, having
-risen against their masters some eighty years ago, had
-fled into the woods, and now were become two nations,
-that lived in the country on either side of the way from
-Panama to Nombre de Dios, each under its separate
-king. For defence against these people our prisoners
-told us soldiers were expected from Panama and
-elsewhere, if they were not already come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing could have been worse for us; for now we
-knew that the town would be on the alert, and perhaps
-full of soldiers. Yet, wishing to make the best of a bad
-case, our captain freed these slaves and set them ashore,
-that they might seek their countrymen and bear them
-a good report of us, in case it might fall out that at a
-future time the help of the Spaniards' enemies might
-be welcome to us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We who knew these things kept them to ourselves,
-very thankful for our increased force. Frank, I know,
-saw how ill this fortune was for us, yet he was more
-cheerful and resolute than I had ever seen him when
-he called the boats about him, that he might say his
-last words to the crews.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come close,' said he, 'that I have not to speak too
-loud, and so be heard by any negroes in the woods,
-whereby those in the town might have notice of our
-coming, which I should much grieve at. For I am loath
-to put them to all the charge which I know they would
-willingly bestow for our entertainment, seeing that we
-come uninvited.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Putting them thus in cheerful heart, he went on to
-tell them of the vast wealth of the place, which was all
-open to them, seeing it was unwalled and little defended.
-Then he spoke again of all his wrongs, both at Rio de la
-Hacha and San Juan de Ulloa, and of the bitter
-cruelties of the Spaniards to English mariners whom
-they caught in Spain; and told them how he was now
-in certain hope of God's favour to win a recompense for
-all these things, since it had been vouchsafed to him to
-get so near his end utterly undiscovered and with so
-excellent a crew of men like-minded to himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This cheerful speech much comforted us all, and I
-saw Harry and the Sergeant lie back and go to sleep,
-being old hands at the work. But I could not close my
-eyes any more than the greater part of the men, who
-soon fell to talking of how strong such a place must be,
-till Frank, seeing how things were going, called on
-Mr. Oxenham, who was in the next boat to us, to tell the
-story of the founding of Nombre de Dios, to keep the
-men from thinking too much.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, my lads,' said he, sitting up on a barrel, 'it
-was the early days of the Indies then, when Don Nicuese
-was named at Carthagena governor, grand-admiral,
-captain-general, and I know not what <i>braggadocio</i> titles
-beside, of his new province of Veragua. With 750 men
-and a fine fleet he set sail, bragging, I doubt not, to his
-Maestro del Campo, or whatever he was, Lope de Olano,
-of all that was to come of it; yet ere he was half-way
-they say his whole force were like to mutiny, because
-of his cruelty and harshness. To punish his wickedness
-and tyranny, a <i>furicano</i> burst on him in the midst of his
-journey. The proud fleet was scattered past recall, and the
-haughty governor cast away. What miseries of hunger
-and cold and weariness he suffered none know, but at
-last he was found by Lope de Olano half-starved, having
-no food but palm-tree buds and such like wretched stuff,
-instead of all the dainties he had brought to fill his
-belly. The only thing that was hot changed in him
-was his cruelty and harshness, for never in all their
-sufferings would he bend a jot to his men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All that was thus left of his navy came at last to a
-port which Columbus had once discovered. A mariner
-who had sailed with the "Old Admiral" said it was a
-fair place for a settlement, and conducted him thither,
-getting curt thanks for his pains, you may be sure.
-The old mariner was right; but he had forgotten the
-Indians, who so overdid their welcome that Nicuese
-made haste to depart thence, leaving twenty of his men
-behind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Baffled and sullen, he sailed on to the next port,
-where he profanely cried, "In the name of God, let us
-stay here!" and hence yonder town, that is to be ours
-to-morrow, was called "Nombre de Dios." Then,
-having but a hundred men left out of his seven hundred
-and fifty, he laid the foundation of his city; and here,
-for a while, living miserably, without fit food or clothing,
-in wooden huts, he resisted the constant assaults of
-the Indians, till thirty more of his men were lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They dared not stir beyond their camp for food,
-fever was slowly eating out their hearts, and they were
-at the mercy of God, when one Calmenaras, putting in to
-the bay, found them. They were then of all men, it is
-said, the most miserable, being, as it were, dried up with
-extreme hunger, filthy beyond all speaking, and horrible
-to behold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet through all Nicuese clung to his cruelty and
-harshness and the King of Spain's commission.
-Calmenaras took pity on him, and carried him to the new
-settlement at Darien, which as yet had no governor, that
-he might be set over the people there. But when they
-came thither the settlers remembered his tyranny and
-wickedness, and saw by his demeanour that, though all
-else was dried up in him, yet the devil was not. So
-they, being resolved to be rid of him, took an old rotten
-brigantine, which they caulked with iron, and set their
-would-be governor therein, with his seventy men, starved
-and fever-bitten.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In this, as their only hope of life, and being too sore
-sick to resist, they sailed; and the sea alone, that tells
-no tales, knows what their end was. Never more was a
-man of them heard or seen, and Nicuese was called ever
-after <i>Desdichado</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Desdichado!</i>' cried Frank, as Mr. Oxenham ended
-his tale; 'and a right name, too; for surely the Lord
-made him luckless and suffered no angel to prosper him
-in his ways, because of his wickedness and cruelty,
-and turned away His face from yonder town which he
-founded, because He knew the wickedness that would
-be done there, and the sinews of wickedness that would
-come thence. Yes, lads, the Lord has deserted Nombre
-de Dios, and to-morrow, of His justice and mercy, will
-deliver it into the hands of His people.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then one struck up that new Protestant ballad they
-loved so well:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'We will not change our credo<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For Pope, nor book, nor bell;<br />
- And if the devil come himself,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We'll hound him back to hell.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By this time it was dark night, and we gladly took
-to our oars again, rowing hard under the shore, that we
-might not be seen of the watch-house. So we continued
-till we recovered the point of the harbour, and there we
-lay to again, to wait for the first gray of dawn, when our
-captain purposed to deliver his assault.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was still full two hours to wait, and I could see
-how anxious Frank was as to how his men would get
-through them. For if it had been hard to keep them
-from their talk before, it was doubly so now, when no
-one might speak above his breath. Wearily an hour
-dragged away, and the men were growing more and
-more uneasy, shifting about and whispering a great
-deal as they watched nervously for the first glimmer
-in the east.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would God it were day!' whispered Frank to me.
-'How shall we ever pass another hour of this? The poor
-lads' courage is oozing out at their finger-ends with all
-this lingering.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'See, see!' said I; for even as he spoke a faint gray
-streak appeared on the horizon. 'There it is at last!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never a bit, lad,' answered Frank; 'it is only the
-moon rising. Still, it shall serve for dawn to-day. No
-one has seen the sand-glass but I.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a merry twinkle in his eye as he passed
-the word. 'Dawn, dawn,' he said, in low tones. 'Out
-oars, lads; yarely now, and still as mice, and God help
-our service.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How pleasant was the dull rattle of oars after our
-painful silence as we rowed round the point! All was
-gloom as we bore towards the town, save for a few
-lights that twinkled here and there, and one that moved
-slowly across the bay. As we came abreast of this we
-could see in the growing moonlight that it was on board
-of a ship of some sixty tons, which had just arrived.
-Her crew seemed soon to catch sight of us and to take
-alarm at our numbers; for we saw them cast off their
-gondola, which shot away immediately hard for the
-shore, like the ghost of some evil monster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not so fast, not so fast, my gallants!' cried
-Frank. 'Be not at such pains on our behalf. Come,
-my lads, we must save them this trouble, and carry the
-news ourselves. Now, smite for all that is in you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The pinnace leaped under their sturdy strokes, and
-we headed to cut off the gliding shadow from the shore.
-It was a sharp struggle, for the Dons rowed well and
-their boat was light. Still, our sinews soon told.
-Seeing they were beaten, they stopped irresolute, and then,
-with some blaspheming cry, made over to the opposite
-side of the bay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, so rude?' laughed Frank. 'Will you not stay
-to fling us one little word of thanks for the labour we
-save you? Well, better manners to you, and a fair
-good-morrow. And now, lads, hard for the town!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We could soon see it in the gloomy light, sunk snug
-amongst the soft, forest-clad hills. I had hardly looked
-to see it so big; for, by the few scattered lights that
-twinkled far apart, I judged it was at least as large
-as Plymouth. As we drew near, a sandy beach showed
-dimly before us, sloping down from the nearest houses,
-which were scarce twenty yards from the water. There
-was no quay, nor any thing but a half-ruined platform,
-on which stood six great pieces gaping at us. Not a
-sign of life was to be seen, so without more ado we ran
-our pinnaces aground and leaped out into the water
-undiscovered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Down with the culverins, my lads,' cried Frank,
-as quietly as might be. With that a rush was made at
-the platform, but even as we reached it up jumped a
-gunner, who must have been sleeping against one of
-the pieces, and ran off screaming into the town before
-we could stay him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We could hear his cries die away amongst the houses,
-and then for a few minutes all was again as silent as
-death. Still, we knew all secrecy was over now, and we
-went to our work with a will. Culverin and
-demi-culverin were tumbled off their carriages and rolled
-into the sand, and then to our captain's sharp orders
-we set about our other dispositions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a good deal to be done, getting the arms
-from the pinnaces, lighting our fire-pikes and matches,
-and getting into our companies. All had been well
-ordered beforehand, yet, quick as we were, before we
-had done we heard the troubled waking of the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-First came a low confused sound, rather felt than
-heard, and then scattered cries, with the brave blare of
-a trumpet. As the cries spread in the murmur, now on
-this side, now on that, a light flashed in the church
-tower, and the great bell began booming out a hurried
-alarm. Now it seemed that drums furiously beaten
-were running up and down. Farther and wider spread
-the cries, and louder rose the murmur. A scream of
-some terrified woman went shrilly up, then another,
-and another, and the murmur began to increase to the
-dull, mingled roar of a multitude suddenly alarmed.
-Far and near the clamour waxed. Shriek on shriek,
-and cry on cry followed incessant, till at last the whole
-town was filled with that strange and terrible sound
-which is like nothing else on earth; and above all
-boomed the bell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were ready at last; so, leaving twelve to keep
-the pinnaces, we hastened, as had been arranged, to
-the mount on the east side of the town, which our
-captain had learned the year before it was their
-intention to strengthen with sundry pieces of ordnance.
-This it was necessary to our purpose that we should
-first hold with a party of our men, so, leaving half our
-company, of whom I was one, to guard the foot, Frank
-hastened up the hill with the rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed a long time gone, as we stood inactive,
-listening to that terrible tumult, of which we could see
-nothing, growing ever louder and ever wider amidst the
-crowded houses, and the great bell booming continually
-over all. Not a sound came from the mount
-above us, and we could tell nothing of what was
-happening to our comrades.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last we heard the clink of weapons coming down,
-and our captain ran to us with all his men bearing the
-joyful news that no ordnance had yet been mounted
-there, though all was prepared for it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is a most merciful dealing of God,' said Frank,
-'for now, look you, we shall have all our men for the
-Plaza. Plague on them, how they squall! We will
-give them somewhat to squall over anon. Jack, take
-you Mr. Oxenham and fifteen of his company round by
-the King's Treasure-House, by the way you know, and
-enter the Plaza by the eastern end. I will go up with
-the main battle by the broad street. Give them plenty
-of music of drum and trumpet, and I will do the like,
-that they may see they are attacked from two sides,
-and increase our numbers for us with their fears.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Away went John Drake and Mr. Oxenham with
-their fifteen men, a drum, trumpet, and five of the
-blazing fire-pikes. We saw them disappear, yelling
-horribly, with much grizzly noise of their instruments,
-to the no little discomfort, I doubt, of those who still
-slept.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In like manner we took our course by the lurid
-glare of our fire-pikes, with an equal or greater din of
-trumpet, drum, and arms, being forty-four men in all.
-The Plaza lay towards the upper part of the town, so
-that on coming to the top of the street, which, being
-very sandy, made us short of breath with our running,
-our captain called a halt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Creeping on under shelter of the houses, I got a sight
-within the square. In the midst was a goodly tree,
-and near to it a market-cross. Farther again to the
-right was the church, from which the great bell boomed
-continually. From the cross to the church I could see
-the glimmer of a long row of matches, by whose
-movement I judged there was a company of harquebusiers
-gathered there waiting for us, but I could see nothing
-of them because of the gloom that filled the place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the farther corner to the left, where, they told
-me, the road to Panama left the square, rose a house
-much larger than the rest. Here by the light of
-sundry lanterns I could see a great throng collected, with
-several companies of soldiers. I should think there
-were a hundred matches or more burning there; wherefore,
-having made a complete discovery of the Plaza, I
-crept back to inform our captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hark ye, my lads,' cried Frank, when he had heard
-my report. 'At the word we will advance into the
-square. Mr. Overy's crew with the gentlemen to the
-right, the rest with me to the left. Stand but for one
-volley, and then close! Forward now, in God's name!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A roar of small shot greeted us as we sallied into
-the square, and the bullets tore up the sand amidst our
-feet. I saw our trumpeter fall forward in the midst of
-a merry blast, and heard Frank utter a sharp cry. But
-there was no time to see what was happening. Already
-our arrows and bullets were making the Spaniards sing
-in the left-hand corner of the square. I discharged my
-pistol with the rest and then sprang forward by Harry's
-side, rapier and dagger in hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Straight at the line of matches we dashed. Every
-moment I looked to see them belch their fire and hear
-a storm of hail about my ears. Ten more strides and
-we should be amongst them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Plague on the fools!' cried Harry, who was leading.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What mountebank dispositions are these?' cried
-the Sergeant at his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a man was there. It was but a string of
-matches hung from the church to the cross to terrify
-us, as if we had been Cimaroons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Back, back,' cried Harry, 'back to aid the general.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With an angry roar at being so befooled we ran
-back under the broad branches of the tree in the middle
-of the Plaza, and so leaped out to help our comrades.
-Even as we did so I heard a volley at the end of the
-square before me and saw John Drake and Mr. Oxenham,
-with all their party, rush out into the Plaza and
-with a loud cry hurl themselves at the throng.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now we were all at hard push of pike crowding the
-amazed throng into the corner of the square. Yet we
-had work to do, for the Spanish soldiers held their
-ground well, in spite of the press. For a time the
-thing seemed to hang in a balance. I remember little
-but a wild turmoil, wherein I was at point and cut
-half mad with excitement, and all around were the butt
-ends of muskets whirling, and pikes and bills clattering,
-as they were thrust and parried.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My ears were full of the din of the fight, the shouts
-and clang of weapons, and the screams of women flying
-out on the Panama road; and still, above all, the great
-bell boomed unceasing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now they were giving way. Our twelve fire-pikes,
-being well armed with long steel heads, were doing
-their work above all the rest. None dared stand before
-the flaming weapons. Step by step they gave us ground,
-till suddenly the press broke up, and, flinging down
-their arms, they fell to running out of the Panama
-gate as hard as they could skelter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Away we went after them, driving them before us
-like a flock of sheep. Continually they cast away their
-weapons, which at last lay so thick that many of our
-men were hurt by them, not being able to avoid them
-in the darkness. So we left them to scamper out by
-their grand new gate, which they had set up to prevent
-the Cimaroons entering, little thinking the first use
-they should find for it would be to run out of to save
-their skins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Being thus in possession of the Plaza our captain
-made haste to set guards at the entrance of it, and sent
-a party to stay the bell, which still boomed on through
-it all; for we knew not how many soldiers might still
-be in the remoter parts of the town, to muster at its
-noisy summons. Then he called on a prisoner whom we
-had taken to lead a party of us to the governor's house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you think of our venture now?' said Frank
-to me, his face beaming with triumph. 'Now you shall
-see where all the mules from Panama are unladen, and
-what they bring.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is well enough,' answered I; 'but will you not
-first look to your hurt?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hush, lad,' said he; 'it is nothing&mdash;a fly-bite.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, but your boot is bloody where the shot tore it,'
-I said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I tell you it is nothing,' answered he testily. 'Hold
-your peace or we are undone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I said no more, marvelling at the constancy of this
-man, who seemed to think nothing of a hurt, which, as
-far as I could see, was enough to have laid any other
-man on his back long ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time we were conducted to a great archway
-in the tall house of which I have spoken, beneath
-which was tied a splendid jennet, ready saddled, as
-though for the governor's use. On one side were steps
-leading upwards, where candles burned and shed a
-bright light into a large cellar on the opposite side. I
-could see it was a chamber of great length, partly by
-aid of the candles and partly by the moonlight that
-glimmered in. Along the whole length of one side from
-floor to ceiling was a pale cold glimmer, which looked
-very strange to me. Several of our men were staring
-at it with wide eyes and mouths.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is it?' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is it,' replied Frank; 'why, silver!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could hardly believe it, yet so it was, a pile of
-silver bars, as I should judge, ten feet in breadth, twelve
-in height, and seventy in length. I was altogether
-amazed to see my dreams of the Indies more than
-realised, and hardly knew if I were waking or not,
-till I heard Frank, who had been questioning our
-prisoner at length, cry out to us:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not a bar will I have touched,' said he. 'I brought
-you not here for that rubbish. In the King's Treasure-House
-there is better stuff&mdash;gold, lads, gold and pearls
-enough to fill all our pinnaces and more. So thither
-must we go, and not a bar of this shall be touched.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think there were many who would have been well
-satisfied with the silver, and hardly came to obey
-Frank's orders, but he was so resolute in them that
-there was nothing for it but to do as he said and return
-to our strength, which was posted about the great tree
-under command of John Drake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As we neared them one came running out to say
-they could not break into the church or stop the
-ringing unless they fired the building, which they
-craved leave to do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, that you shall not,' said Frank; 'by yea and
-nay have I sworn never to injure church or woman,
-whatever come. Let him ring till he bring a thousand
-devils about us, I care not; but fire the house of God
-I will not, howsoever it be defiled with idolatry and
-superstition.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the bell boomed on as loud as ever, being very
-distressful to hear so long, and giving me at least a
-strange feeling of evil at hand, which I would gladly
-have shaken off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When we came to our strength many of the men,
-who seemed to have been scattered about the Plaza,
-came running up to the tree. Amongst these I marked
-Sergeant Culverin, and saw he had a gay silken sash
-about him, though I took little note of it then, being
-more concerned with another matter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For we found most of the men in some alarm, for
-which I could not blame them, having that ominous
-sound of the bell in their ears continually. Moreover
-large masses of inky clouds were rolling up over the
-town, as though that booming were a witchcraft which
-was summoning some hellish means to overwhelm us.
-No wonder then, I say, that some of us had a sense of
-coming danger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seems the first fear that beset them was for the
-pinnaces, since they had heard shots down by the
-shore; and next for themselves, lest they should be
-overwhelmed with soldiers and unable to escape, since they
-had heard news from a negro that 150 small-shot and
-pike-men were already come to the town from Panama.
-Therefore, to allay these fears, our captain sent down
-his brother and Mr. Oxenham to the pinnaces with
-their party to search into the matter, and then join us
-at the King's Treasure-House.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thither we go now, lads,' cried Frank. 'They say
-it is strong, but I think there be those here who shall
-find a way in, since we know what its lining is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time all the stragglers, not a few of whom
-came from the governor's house, were gathered in, and,
-much encouraged by our captain's cheerfulness, we all
-went off to the King's Treasure-House. But just as we
-neared the place the pall of louring turgid cloud that
-overhung us was rent asunder. A dazzling flash of
-lightning lit up the deserted town, and instantly an
-awful crash of thunder drowned the noise of the bell.
-A few great drops fell heavily on the thirsty sand, and
-then in a moment there fell on us such a deluge of rain
-as none can picture who have not been in the tropical
-regions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was nothing but to run helter-skelter to cover,
-for the saving of our powder and bow-strings. The
-nearest shelter was a certain piazza or pent-house at
-the west end of the Treasure-House; and to this we
-hurried, to find, for our no small comfort, that Captain
-John Drake was already there with his party, whereby
-we knew the pinnaces were safe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The flare and crash of the storm was now almost
-unceasing, so that we could only hear now and again the
-hissing roar of the rain. Seeing that we had already
-suffered injury from the wet, and would have been
-undone entirely had we left our cover, we were forced to
-wait where we were till the storm abated. It was a
-great mishap that it fell so, for at our present post it
-was by no means possible to get into the Treasure-House,
-since on that side there was a wall of stone and
-lime, very strong and without openings, over which we
-might have broken our hearts entirely or ever we could
-have broken half-way in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus we were forced to be idle, and stand listening
-to the awful voices of the storm which the devilish
-spells of the Spaniards had brought upon us. Many
-there who had never seen so sudden or terrible a
-tempest could hardly be comforted by our captain's
-promise that it would soon be past. Once more they began
-to talk together, harping still on the strength of the
-place, on old stories of the mighty witches there
-used to be amongst the Indians, and, above all, on the
-report of the soldiers' arrival, which Jack and
-Mr. Oxenham had found to be true.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was this way,' said Jack, as we gathered round
-in the pent-house. 'When we came down to the platform
-we found the pinnace men alarmed for our safety,
-since they had heard so many shots, and parties of
-harquebusiers had been continually running down to
-them, crying, "<i>Que gente? que gente?</i>" "Then," said
-they, "we cried out we were English, whereat the
-soldiers discharged their pieces blindly and ran away." At
-last came a negro, who would not go away, though
-they fired at him three or four times, but ever he cried
-out for Captain Drake, and craved to be taken aboard.
-This at last they did, when he told them of the 150
-soldiers who had come to guard the town against the
-Cimaroons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not knowing how many might still be in the town,
-and being broken in spirit, some with wounds and others
-with the terror of the storm, they began to talk openly
-of the danger of staying longer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look you,' cried Frank at last, 'what silly child's
-talk is this? Did I not ever say I would bring you to
-the Treasure-House of the world? Why, so I have.
-And do I not say I will bring you off safe? Why, so,
-by God's help, I will. Is it not for this you have
-toiled and endured so far? And now you are here at
-the door, will you run away for fear of a few score of
-<i>braggadocio</i> Spaniards, who are shaking wellnigh out
-of their shoes for fear of you? Shame on you, lads! whom
-I thought were like-minded with me, and resolved
-to grow rich on these treacherous, false idolaters, come
-what may. Go all of you who will, and when you get
-back to England, tell them Frank Drake brought you
-to the mouth of the Treasure-House of the world, and
-you were afraid to fill your pockets! Tell them that,
-and blame not me if they cry you, "Out upon the
-fools!"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a man stirred, though I think there were many
-had a mind to. It was growing near dawn, and we
-knew that as soon as the Spaniards had gathered their
-wits together, and found out how small a number we
-were, they would return and make an end of us, if they
-could. It fell very fortunately that the storm now
-began to abate, so our captain, willing to save more
-murmuring and not desiring to allow the Spaniards
-too much time to pluck up heart, gave the word to
-move.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stay you here, Jack,' said he to his brother, 'with
-Mr. Oxenham, to break open the Treasure-House, and
-carry down all the gold and pearls our pinnaces will
-hold. I with our strength will get back to the Plaza,
-and hold it till we have despatched all our business, and
-relieved these gallants of their great anxiety in keeping
-so much treasure.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he spoke these cheerful words he stepped forward,
-and to our horror rolled over in the sand. His two
-brothers had hold of him in a trice, and Jack took his
-head on his knee. As I saw him lie helpless there, so
-pale and death-like, and his blood flowing so fast as to
-fill the very footprints we had made, it seemed that the
-great bell, which boomed still its unceasing tocsin, was
-no longer sounding an alarm or spell, but rather ringing
-out the knell of my friend's heroic spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank,' said Jack firmly, though I could note a
-strange tremor in his voice, 'you are sore hurt; you
-must come to the boats.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not without the treasure,' answered our captain;
-'not without something for the lads. It is nothing; only
-a scratch, that made me a little faint.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Frank,' said Joseph Drake, 'you are sore hurt.
-Your boot is full of blood. You have lost enough to
-kill two men already. We will have no more of it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sergeant Culverin was now at our captain's feet. He
-had taken off his gay silk scarf and was very skilfully
-tying up Frank's leg, to stay the bleeding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My hearty thanks, Sergeant,' said Frank, very feebly.
-'That is it! Now I can walk and despatch our business.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That you never can,' said Jack, 'nor shall try
-neither. You must come back to the boats, Frank.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Jack, I will not,' answered our captain, so low
-we could hardly hear; 'not without gold for the lads.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ay, but you must,' urged his brother. 'We will not
-stay another moment for twice the gold in all the
-Indies. Your life, lad, is worth more than that. What
-say you, mariners?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sailors all cried out that it was well said, that
-they had enough already, and not another finger would
-they stir till they knew their captain was past danger.
-So, in spite of all Frank's protests, his two brothers
-raised him in their arms as gently as women, while the
-Sergeant put a skilfully-contrived sling under his legs,
-that his hurt might pain him less. So, recovering him
-a little with some drink, we started to carry him down
-to the pinnaces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still he would not be content, though we said we
-would only take him aboard to have his wound dressed
-and return. First to me, and then to another he
-pleaded; but all gave one answer, that they would not
-stoop to pick up gold if the street were strewn with it,
-so it endangered his life a jot&mdash;not only out of their
-love for him, but also in regard to the great riches he
-could bring them to if he lived.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This last reason eased his mind a little; but he was
-more grieved than ever when our surgeon had searched
-his wound in the pinnace, and told him it stood with his
-life not to go ashore again. Nor would he be in
-anywise content till we had promised to take that bark
-which we had seen before we left the harbour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So as we rowed out whence we came the sun rose
-gloriously and the bell ceased its clamour; and that
-most high and noteworthy attempt against the
-Treasure-House of the world was ended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For such, indeed, it was in my judgment; and, not
-to speak more, lest modesty be strained, I hold that
-every partaker in it should deem himself fortunate.
-Not only did we seventy men, under our unmatched
-commander, take the town and hold it for nigh on two
-hours, but of a surety we should have plundered a
-hundredfold more than we did had it not been for our
-captain's most unhappy hurt, or even for that storm,
-whereby we lost half an hour of time, as many think
-not without reason, through the hellish spells of those
-who rang the bell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Spaniards made shift to set one of the culverins
-on its carriage again before we were free of the haven,
-and barked at our heels a bit, yet could they not
-prevent us taking the ship, which we did without great
-resistance, and found it full of excellent wine, to our
-great content. This we accepted with much thanks
-for their loving care of us, and carried away to a certain
-island about a league to the westward, which is called
-the Isle of <i>Bastimentos</i>, or Victuals, and there we went
-a-land.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'A very notable piece of service, sir,' said Sergeant
-Culverin to me the same afternoon, as we sat resting
-our weary limbs after a very excellent meal, which we
-made from hens, fruit, and the other good things on the
-island.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So it seems to me, Sergeant,' said I, 'though you
-know I have no experience of such matters; but how
-goes the general now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As well as we could wish,' answered the Sergeant.
-''Tis a hurt wants no Galen or Paracelsus to its
-mending. Take that of me, sir; I have seen these things,
-and know. It is but a clean, pretty flesh-wound, and
-no harm done save the letting of so much blood, which
-I never saw lost in so large a measure and death kept
-off. A very tall man our general, sir, a very tall man.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am heartily glad to hear you say so, Sergeant,'
-I said, being ever willing to humour him for the great
-service he had done me. 'You have been acquainted
-with great captains in the Emperor's service, and know
-one when you see him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed, sir, I do,' returned Culverin, very pleased:
-'and I may tell you, at a word, he is one,&mdash;a very
-Gonsalvo, sir. Yet I marvel how he came by such skill in
-dispositions, being wholly unlearned in the very
-rudiments of war. Why, sir, I spake to him at Port
-Pheasant concerning our fort of timber, and, believe
-me, he knew not the difference betwixt counterfort and
-cavaliero, or counterscarp and argine. And as for
-horsemanship, he has no more practice or contemplation
-of it than his cook's boy; and yet a notable soldier!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is as you say, Sergeant,' I answered; 'and we
-must the more honour him that, being his own master,
-he is able by such excellent practice to show how
-soldierly have been his precepts; and I grieve sorely
-that his skill and valour has met with no reward
-to-day.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No reward?' said Culverin. 'Has your worship
-seen the sail that lies before the general's bower, where
-is the common-stick?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Sergeant; what do you mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Tis naught; and yet there are some indifferent
-foolish toys gathered there that will repay some of the
-blood that was spilt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, how is this, Sergeant? Did not the general
-charge that no man should load himself save with what
-came from the Treasure-House.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True, sir, so he did; but, as I was saying, saving his
-most excellent dispositions, he is unlearned in things
-warlike. If a man make war, look you, he must make
-it according to the honoured, ancient, universal customs
-and discipline of war, whereof the honest pillaging of a
-captured town is one; wherefore I made bold of my
-bitter experience to supply our general's sweet
-ignorance, and lead some of the lads, when occasion was,
-to certain indifferent well-furnished houses. If some
-thereafter made free with certain trifling bars of silver
-from the governor's house it was by no furthering of
-mine. All I did was out of niceness for our general's
-honour. What think you those Spanish <i>cabaleros</i> would
-have thought of him if, when they had returned, they
-had found their houses unplundered? I warrant you,
-sir, they would have been sore grieved in their soldiership
-to think that a man who could deliver an assault so
-boldly against all their force and discipline was ignorant
-of the most common and ancient usage of the wars.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here one came to summon me to the general's
-presence, so I heard no more, though I found afterwards
-it was even as the Sergeant said, and that, far from
-coming out of the town empty handed as I thought,
-almost every man had carried off something, which all
-being gathered in the common store according to custom,
-made a show which was no little content to us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, I think we were all very merry that afternoon,
-not only as seeing how easily we had captured
-the town, which bred in us no less courage for further
-attempts than hope of their success, but also because
-we had brought off our general safely, in comparison
-with which gain we held our loss of the gold is nothing,
-the more so as his hurt proved of no great account;
-nor was any other of our company more than slightly
-wounded, save our trumpeter, who had been slain on
-the spot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus we were in a gentle mood to receive the envoy
-from Nombre de Dios, which was the occasion of the
-general's summons to me. I found Frank with a
-cheerful countenance, seated in a kind of hammock,
-which the mariners had made for him from a piece of
-sail-cloth. His officers and gentlemen stood about him,
-to receive the envoy with as much state as we might,
-whereby, having brushed the dust from our clothes and
-made what shift we could, we displayed a tolerable front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Oxenham and Harry were sent to conduct the
-Spaniard to the presence, and we saw them return with
-the most point-device little gentleman I ever beheld.
-He was by his dress a captain of foot, and by his
-delicate and well-guarded complexion but late come
-out of Spain. His little black moustache was
-disciplined to the nicety of a hair, and his whole dress no
-less brilliant than his countenance, nor more fantastic
-than his bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He approached, making legs very sweetly to us all,
-and a profound congee to our general, which we
-returned as decently as we might. After an offering of
-commendations, so stuffed with unheard-of conceits as I
-can never remember again, he told us the occasion of
-his coming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of my mere goodwill, and as it were for my own
-unworthy honour, most admirable <i>cabaleros</i>,' said he,
-with an infinity of conceited gestures, 'I have conveyed
-myself festinately hither to your most honourable
-presence, moved thereto by the wholesome desire, with
-which my eyes were an hungered, to behold, view,
-regard, and contemplate the most redoubtable captain
-and his heroical gentlemen who have attempted so
-great and incredible a matter with so few, paltry, and
-inconsiderable valiant numbers; being more especially
-moved thereto when it was discovered by the most
-excellent shooting of your honourable arrows that you
-were Englishmen, and no Frenchmen as we apprehended,
-seeing that now we knew our foe would hold themselves
-after the ancient gentle discipline of the wars,
-and be content with an honourable courteous pillage of
-our treasure, instead of seeking vulgar and bloody cruelty
-upon our persons; and being most especially moved
-thereto because his excellency, our honourable governor,
-being assured that you were gentlemen Englishmen and
-no pirate French, gladly consented to my coming; and
-lastly, being most singularly especially moved thereto,
-because his excellency, having been informed by certain
-townsmen that they knew your honourable captain,
-having at divers times been most courteously pillaged
-and kindly used by him these two years past, charged
-me to inquire as follows:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Imprimis</i>. Whether your honourable captain be the
-valiant Captain Drake or not?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Item</i>. Whether your arrows, which have wounded
-many of our men, be poisoned or not?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Item</i>. How the said wounds may be cured?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Item</i>. What victuals or other necessaries you desire
-for the speeding of your voyage hence, which his
-excellency desires to furnish you withal, as far as he dare,
-having regard to his commission.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This and a very flood more of such-like desperate
-intemperance of phrasing he graciously voided upon us,
-the writing whereof, were I able to set it down, would
-devour more paper than I could ever find digestion for.
-When he was at a halt at last Frank sat up in his chair
-and, after a little pause, answered him thus courteously
-but very curt, because of his weakness, no less than his
-distaste for Spaniards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thank you for your courtesy,' said he, 'and I pray
-you, after you have partaken of a poor supper at our
-hands, to return to his excellency with my most
-honourable commendations, and inform him thus: I am the
-same Drake he means. It is never my manner to
-poison my arrows. The said wounds may be cured
-with ordinary surgery. And as for victuals, we have
-already more than enough out of the abundance which
-he has already so hospitably provided us withal in this
-Island of <i>Bastimentos</i>; while for necessaries, I want for
-none, save the special commodity which his country
-yields. Whereof not yet having enough to content
-myself and my company, I must unwillingly beseech
-his excellency to be at the pain of holding open his
-eyes for a space; since before I depart, if God lend me
-life and leave, I mean to reap some of your harvest,
-which you get out of the ground and send into Spain
-to trouble all the earth!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The little gallant seemed a good deal taken aback
-at this unlooked-for answer, but, recovering himself,
-promised to convey it to the governor treasured in the
-inmost sanctuary of his bosom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And, if I may without offence move such a question,'
-he ended by saying, 'what should be the honourable
-cause of your worthy departing (seeing what are your
-sweet desires) from a town where is above 360 tons of
-silver ready for the Plate Fleet, and much more gold in
-value in iron chests in the King's Treasure-House?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because,' said Harry, whom Frank motioned to
-speak, 'our captain was wounded, and we value his life
-beyond all the gold in the Indies.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, most valiant <i>cabaleros</i>,' answered our pouncet-box,
-'give me leave to say that, as I am a gentleman,
-the pre-eminent excellence of your reason in departing
-is hardly overbalanced by your unmeasured courage in
-attempting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that we fell to supper, during which we did all
-honour to our guest; all of us, but Frank, being much
-taken with his fantastic courtesy and pretty humours.
-Harry and Mr. Oxenham were particularly moved to
-him, and he to them, so that all supper-time they vied
-with each other in the extravagance of their compliments,
-till I thought the little gallant could swallow no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he took his leave at last our captain entreated
-him very courteously, and bestowed certain gifts as most
-likely to content him. So we conducted him to his
-boat to make our farewells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I protest, <i>cabaleros</i>,' said he, a little flushed with a
-good share of the contents of our prize, 'I protest I
-have never been so honoured of any in my life.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And give me leave to say,' answered Harry, 'I have
-never seen an embassy so admirably discharged.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I kiss your hands,' said the Don, 'and, as I am a
-gentleman, shall joy no more, till I have the felicity of
-crossing rapiers with you upon your next attempt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Till then, by my soul's honour,' returned Harry, 'I,
-too, die; nor could I conceive greater honour than to
-colour my blade with such courtly blood as your
-excellency's.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, sir, I protest, as I am a gentleman, the honour
-would be mine. I could desire no higher distinction
-than to feel your point between these unworthy ribs.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I pray heaven,' said Mr. Oxenham, 'your joy come
-not so soon as to prevent my poor flesh first kissing
-your very bright particular blade.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I kiss both your hands, sir,' said the Don, 'and
-trust we may be all sweetly sorted to our most
-gentlemanly desires.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With such like compliment, and an infinite making
-of legs, we at length took leave of him, greatly
-entertained with his humours, and delighted with the renown
-which our captain had won by this and his former
-exploits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That evening our captain held a council to determine
-what further we should attempt, and thereto was called
-Diego, the negro whom we had brought from Nombre de
-Dios, that he might be questioned as to the present
-condition of the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Soldiers and gold all the same what little Don tells,'
-he said, grinning all over his good-humoured face.
-'Nombre very full of soldiers, and Treasure-House very
-strong, all because of my people, the Cimaroons. I
-know better way to get gold from Dons than to burn
-fingers after it in Nombre.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say you so, Diego?' said Frank, in his kindly way,
-which always won the heart of these people. 'A very
-worthy tall fellow you seem. Let us hear about it, and
-I doubt not you shall hear of something good too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, I know,' answered the black fellow, showing
-his white teeth from ear to ear. 'I know Captain
-Drake; so do Cimaroons. Spaniards beat Cimaroons;
-Captain Drake beats Spaniards. Mighty tall man
-Captain Drake amongst Cimaroons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, well, good Diego,' says Frank, very pleased,
-'but what of the gold?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, this way,' says the negro, looking very cunning;
-'Treasure-House very strong, best get gold before
-it done got to treasure-house.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, but how?' says Frank,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, easy as a fall,' says Diego, grinning with all
-his might. 'I go to Cimaroons, and say to chief,
-"Captain Drake wants gold."&mdash;"Mass! then bring his
-nobleness here," says the chief; so you go up through the
-woods with the Cimaroons, and they show you&mdash;and
-they show you,' he went on, hardly able to speak for
-glee, 'where to stop the great mule trains that come
-from Panama to meet the Plate Fleet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that he opened his wide mouth, laid his head
-back, and roared with laughter, rubbing his hands
-between his knees, and dancing an ungainly measure to the
-sound of his own merriment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This and other intelligences which we had from the
-negro, on further questioning him, bred in us great hope
-of making our voyage, though our other plans failed.
-For in all they agreed and confirmed what Captain
-Drake had learned on his two former voyages; which
-was that on the arrival of the Plate Fleet from Spain
-great quantities of gold, silver, and pearls came across
-the isthmus from Panama to Nombre de Dios, partly
-by <i>recuas</i> or mule trains, and partly in frigates by
-way of the Rio de Chagres, which ran into the sea nigh
-to where we were from a place called Venta Crux, within
-six leagues of Panama.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When therefore we had refreshed ourselves at the
-island two days, our captain sent a party under his
-brother John to search this river, with orders, after he
-had made full discovery of it, to join Captain Ranse and
-the ships at the Isles of Pinos, whither we presently
-set sail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was our captain's intent now to attempt Carthagena
-before the garrison got wind of our being on the
-coast, but Captain Ranse was not willing to join us,
-thinking we stood in too great danger after we had
-discovered ourselves at Nombre de Dios. Frank was not
-sorry to dismiss him, I know, for at all times he very
-hardly endured to have another joined in command with
-him. Therefore, as soon as John Drake returned from
-his discovery, we parted company with Sir Edward
-Horsey's crew, and remained to make our voyage, if we
-could, without them, notwithstanding all the dangers
-they feared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet our captain would not altogether give up his
-desire to visit Carthagena, whither we sailed with all
-speed, though much delayed with light airs, calms, and
-want of hands; for, now that our company was divided
-between the ships and the pinnaces, each craft was
-under-manned. So it fell out that a Spanish pinnace
-preceded us a few hours, bringing news of our coming,
-and we found they had made so large a provision of
-horse, foot, and ordnance for our entertainment that,
-being unwilling to trouble them further, we craved them
-to bestow on us a great ship of Seville, of some two
-hundred and forty tons burthen, which we found well
-laden in the harbour, and this they did, though not so
-graciously as our moderation warranted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having in this way, and more certainly by letters
-found in two other prizes which we took, learned that
-our presence was known all along the coast, it remained
-for us to take some course with our difficulties, which
-at last we did, and in such wise as gave me fresh proof,
-if any were wanting, of that extraordinary resolution in
-our captain which seemed to grow every day more
-constant and heroical.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is no shift for it but the Cimaroons,' said
-Frank to me, as we lay off the islands of St. Bernardo,
-some three leagues from Carthagena. 'We must take
-to our pinnaces till we find them, and hide along the
-coast, so that the Spaniards may think we have departed,
-which I am resolved not to do till our voyage be made.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But how can we continue longer on the coast?' said
-I. 'It may take us weeks to find the Cimaroons, and we
-have but little store of victuals.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We can make provision with our pinnaces could we
-find some place to hide. There are plenty of victuallers
-to be taken all along the coast.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That would be possible,' I answered, 'if we could
-properly man our pinnaces; but this we cannot do, not
-having hands enough in the ships as it is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yet there is no other way,' said Frank, musing;
-and then, looking very hard at me, he went on after a
-pause: 'What a mercy it would be if one of our ships
-were taken from us!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you mean?' asked I, aghast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why,' says he, 'then we should have enough men to
-man the pinnaces.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True,' I answered; 'but how should we get back to
-England?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God would send us means,' says he. 'A smart
-frigate or so would fall into our hands when we wanted
-it. Indeed, it would be a mercy if one ship were taken!
-Then we could make a store-house of the other, and
-make our voyage with the full-manned pinnaces.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps it would be well,' I answered; 'but such a
-thing is not to be looked for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Cortez burnt his ships,' said Frank, as though he
-were thinking, and had not heard me. 'Why should
-not I destroy mine? Yet I think he cannot have loved
-his as I love mine, the smartest sailers that ever left
-Plymouth harbour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank,' cried I, 'this is madness; besides, your
-company would never permit it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not permit it!' says he, with a sort of dull fire under
-his frown. 'None of my company must talk so, Jasper.
-And yet I love the lads for their love of the ships; nor
-must a captain, who would be cheerfully followed, strain
-obedience further than is necessary. A great captain,
-as I trust by God's help to be ere I die, differs only from
-his fellows in that he is readily obeyed. Any man of
-ordinary wit can see what should be done, yet must he
-often abstain from commanding it because he knows
-how hardly he will be obeyed, and as often, if he do
-command it, find the labour of procuring obedience too
-great for his constancy. But your great captain fears
-not to command anything, seeing he is always cheerfully
-obeyed, and why, lad? Because by policy he shall
-cheat those under him into a cheerful willingness
-towards all he intends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' said I, 'I will call you before all men a great
-captain, if to-morrow you can make your men cheerfully
-fire either of these ships.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, lad,' says he, 'I pray you go fetch hither Tom
-Moone, the carpenter of the <i>Swan</i>. That is my own
-ship, and that is the one I must burn. To-morrow
-arise betimes and come with me fishing in the pinnace
-and you shall see how, by my policy, my brother and
-his crew shall willingly fire her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did all he said, and in the early morning we were off to
-the fishing, for about the island where we lay was a great
-store of fishes. As we passed the <i>Swan</i> we fell aboard
-of her, and Frank cried out to his brother to come fishing
-with him. John Drake jumped up at once, willingly
-agreeing to follow us presently. We cast off, but before
-we had gone but a few strokes Frank asked us if the
-<i>Swan</i> did not sit very low in the water, which we saw
-at once that she did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ahoy, Jack!' sung out our captain then, 'what
-makes your bark so deep?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, I knew not that she was over deep,' says Jack,
-and called to the steward to see what water was in her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Presently there was a mighty splashing, and up
-comes the steward, wet to the waist, crying out that
-the ship was full of water. All was bustle in a moment,
-some of the crew rushing to the pumps and some splashing
-about the hold to search for the leak, Tom Moone
-being the most forward there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We fell aboard her again at once to offer our help.
-John Drake would have none of it, but only begged to
-be excused his attendance on his brother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We have hands enough,' said he, 'and will have her
-free in a trice. We have not pumped these six weeks,
-so what strange chance has befallen to give us six foot
-of water in the night is more than I can tell. But I
-pray you go on with your fishing; we shall want some
-good stuffing come dinner-time, after our pumping.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Besides our captain and myself, there were none with
-us, I think, who had any suspicion of what this strange
-chance was, so that our men were not a little surprised
-to find on our return that, though out of their great love
-for their dainty bark the <i>Swan's</i> company had wellnigh
-worked their lives out at the pumps, yet had they freed
-but a few inches of water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, so bad!' cried Frank to his brother, who
-looked over the side very weary. 'Nay, then, you shall
-have our help now, while you eat your dinner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that, acting his part better than I could have
-looked for in so plain and blunt a nature, he sprang on
-board, and with his own hands fell to work at one of the
-pumps with such good will that I thought to see it
-burst. All our company, set on by his example, worked
-no less hard; yet, though we continued in shifts till
-three in the afternoon, we had freed the water little more
-than a foot, nor could any man find where the leak was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wearied out at last, John Drake, with his master
-and crew, gathered round Frank to consult him as to
-what order was to be taken, for up till now our general
-had not said a word, save to encourage men at the
-pumps, seeing that his brother was captain of the ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What shall we do, Frank?' said poor John Drake.
-'We shall have to pump the whole North Ocean out of
-her before she is dry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed, Jack,' says our captain, 'I cannot tell what
-order to take to save her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I care not what comes of her,' says Jack
-desperately. 'I think the devil has got her for good
-and all. It is some hellish Indian witchcraft of these
-Spaniards. I am at my wits' end with her, so do what
-you will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole company were plainly weary of their
-ship, no less than was their captain, and crowded round
-to hear what Frank would say, very hopefully; for
-they had all come to think there was no hole so deep or
-miry that he could not draw them out of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If you leave it so to me,' says Frank, 'I tell you
-there is only one way. The ship is dead, that is plain.
-It is my ship, and it is lost by no fault of master or
-mariner. If any is to blame it is I. You, Jack, I
-would have go aboard the admiral with your master
-and take command of her, and I will be content with a
-pinnace till I can capture you a smart frigate in place
-of this rotten tub, and incontinently we will fire her
-that the Spaniards may find their witchcraft has availed
-them nothing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think this advice astonished the company a good
-deal, but presently they were very content with it,
-saying it was most worthy of their general, who was always
-as ready to take blame on himself as to find resolute
-remedies for mishaps of others. There were a few who
-had sailed in her the two former voyages, and would
-gladly have made an effort to save her, being ashamed
-to lose her; but when her owner so boldly gave her up
-and took all blame on himself, they were very glad to
-be rid of her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes the pinnaces were all laid aboard
-of her, so that every man might take from her whatever
-he wished, and thereupon poor John Drake, his eyes full
-of tears, fired her with his own hand. Poor Jack! my
-heart bled for him, but I knew it was the only saving
-of our venture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it came about as Frank had said. Not only had
-the whole company been glad enough to destroy the
-ship of which they were so proud, not only had he got
-his way, hard as it seemed, but by his generosity to his
-brother, his hearty sharing of their labour, and his
-cheerful resolution through it all, he stood higher with
-the whole company than ever he did before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Frank,' said I, as we sailed away next day
-towards the Sound of Darien with the <i>Pasha</i> and our
-fully-manned pinnaces, 'you have your will, but it was
-a sorry trick to play them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nought but a bit of policy,' laughed he, 'such as all
-commanders must use at times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save you, lad, from Machiavelli and all his works,'
-said I, 'for I think you are fast growing Italianate.
-But, tell me, how was it done?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, with a spike-gimlet,' says he. 'Tom Moone
-pleaded hard for his beloved bark, so that my heart
-almost melted. Then he said he would get his throat
-cut; but I told him to be secret, to do it close to the
-keel at night, and lay something over the holes that the
-flow of the water should make no noise to betray him,
-and so it was done. It was a desperate piece of service,
-I know, but Tom Moone shall have cause to remember
-what he did for me at this pass.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so indeed he had; for when Frank equipped his
-fleet for that renowned voyage in which he encompassed
-the world, he made this trusty carpenter captain of the
-<i>Canter</i> or <i>Christopher</i>, as it was afterwards named.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-By the light of the flaming ship we had set sail. It was
-a moving sight to see this precious link with home a
-mass of shooting flame below a pall of lurid fire-flecked
-smoke. A sea of molten gold was her death-bed, and,
-as we sailed slowly onward before the gentle night
-wind, the fiery reflection stretched out after us till it
-faded to fitful gleams on the crests of the waves, as
-though they bore us farewell kisses from our lost ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A true swan is she to the end,' said Harry softly, as
-though moved by the scene. 'Beautiful she was in life, yet
-nothing in it was so beautiful as her departing from it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We watched her burn down lower and lower, till she
-was nothing but a glowing ember on the dark plain of
-the sea, and then in a moment she was gone for ever.
-It was like losing an old friend, and there was not one
-for the next few days who did not feel oppressed with
-evil foreboding at the loss of that staunch craft that had
-brought such luck to our captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We could not even lighten our hearts with the music,
-for Frank was very earnest to depart as secretly as we
-could, that the Spaniards might suppose us entirely gone
-from that coast by reason of the loss of our ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, attempting nothing that might betray us, we
-found on the fifth day a most fair haven in the Sound
-of Darien, where we could anchor the <i>Pasha</i> out of all
-ken of the Spaniards, and refresh ourselves till such
-time as the storm we had raised all along the coast
-should be blown over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a place as fair as Port Pheasant, where a man
-might have been content to dwell all his days. A pretty
-town we built there, as Diego showed us how, of boughs
-and brakes and flowers, in a space which we cleared in
-the dense forest. Here our smith set up his forge, our
-fletcher his shop for the ordering of our bows and arrows,
-our butcher his block, and our shoemakers their lasts.
-Butts were erected for bow practice, a lawn made for
-our bowls, and ground prepared for quoits, leaping,
-wrestling, and all other sports that our captain could
-devise for making us forget our losses and breed a
-hopeful spirit for future attempts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half of us worked while the others played, day and
-day about; but for me it was all play. For my work,
-having skill for it, was to hunt the livelong day up in
-the forest-clad hills for the hogs, conies, deer, and birds
-that lived half tame in their solitudes; or, rocked on
-those azure seas, to lure the strange fish that swarmed
-about the gilded rocks, with great pelicans and scarlet
-cranes for comrades at the sport.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At such times, as I lay in some fairy glade above our
-little town, or half asleep in our little gondola, I could
-hearken to the merry tinkle of the anvil and the jolly
-laugh of the bellows mingling with the cries and songs
-of the mariners at their work and play; and, listening
-to the homely sounds, mellowed and transformed by
-the tropic glory of earth and sky and sea, I could fancy
-that the old life was gone with all its care and
-hideousness, being changed by the rich spirit of the West to
-one long May-day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fifteen days our ship and pinnaces with this light
-labour were refitted, and our captain with two of the
-pinnaces set sail for Rio Grande in search of provisions
-and intelligences. I remained behind with John Drake
-to search the coast in the other pinnace, in order that
-if possible we might, by Diego's help, meet with the
-Cimaroons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For six days we rowed up and down the Main aloof
-the shore, but found no trace of those whom we sought.
-In these days I saw much of John Drake, being all day
-and night in the pinnace with him, and I came to love
-his simple, steadfast nature more than I ever had
-before, and wondered to see how great was his control
-over the men by the very earnestness of his worship of
-Frank, whose orders to him were as the command of a
-god, to be carried out at all costs. It seemed as though,
-when once he had a direction from his brother, all other
-thoughts were dismissed from his mind. Any possibility
-of a different course being good could never find
-a place in him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So day after day we rowed hopelessly along that
-lovely shore, in spite of the fearful heat. To every
-suggestion I could make he had but one answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank told us to row aloof the shore and find the
-Cimaroons,' he would say, 'and he knows best.
-Cheerily, men, now! As like as not we shall find them
-beyond the point ahead.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To me the thing seemed hopeless. To find a few
-negroes in that vast wilderness of forest by rowing
-along the shore appeared little better than a wild-goose
-chase. Still I believed in Frank almost as much as
-his brother did, and still more was encouraged by Diego,
-who continued to urge us on as he sat in the forepart,
-chin in hand, gazing fixedly into the forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was on the seventh day, as we were almost worn
-out with the growing heat of the sun, and all the shore
-was hushed before the coming fire of the noonday, that
-Diego suddenly leaped up and, casting both his hands
-above his head, gave forth a yell so loud and strident
-as almost to stop your heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again with his hand to his mouth he shot his fiendish
-call towards the shore, as though to summon a legion
-of devils to his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is it, Diego?' cried Jack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'See, captain, see! There lie my people asleep. I
-can see. Up there on the hill. I can see a new hut.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To our eyes all was the same wild waste, of foliage,
-but he saw more, as we soon knew, for faintly out of
-the forest came an answering shout.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I knew Frank was right,' said Jack triumphantly.
-'He knew where to find them.' And away we went
-to the shore. Sure enough Frank was right; for as our
-keel grated on the golden sand two pelicans rose lazily
-from where they had been standing, a bowshot to
-our right, and winged their solemn flight along the
-shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something we knew must have flushed them, but
-we could see nothing in the dense brakes. Diego hailed
-again, and then we saw a black face peep stealthily at
-us. Poor folk! they dared not come out, for all we
-had one of their kin with us. They had been too often
-betrayed to their tormentors by such means before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Que gente? que gente?</i>' cried the black head over his
-bent bow, as we could plainly see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Gente de Draque!</i>' cries Diego, leaping out of the
-boat and running towards them. '<i>Draque! Draque!</i>'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it was they always called our general, since his
-name came hard to their half-Spanish tongues. And what
-a name it was to them we soon saw. For, after a strange,
-discordant babbling between Diego and the Cimaroon,
-a loud cry went up in the bushes and out rushed some
-score of dancing yelling fiends. Never saw I greater
-delight or heartier welcome than in these poor folk. For
-a good space we could do nothing with them, for their
-dancing and leaping round us and embracing of our
-feet, especially Captain John's, to his great discomfort,
-being a plain, simple man, not used to homage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no peace for us till Diego begged that we
-should suffer them to bear us to their huts, which
-request our captain granted, leaving two men with the
-pinnace. Their joy was then complete, and each black
-fellow stood in front of one of our men, bending his
-back for him to mount, which at last we all did, seeing
-how earnest they were; and so, with no more ado with
-the biggest of us than if he had been a baby, they
-trotted off, laughing and singing up the steep path that
-led to their huts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were soon set down in a little hamlet like our
-own town, but much prettier and more artfully constructed,
-because of their greater skill. Here each vied
-with another to set before us delicate fruits and fowls
-and a certain fermented liquor which they had, very
-pleasant to the taste and medicinable to the spirits.
-So like kings we lay in those leafy bowers feasting
-merrily, each with a grinning henchman or two to do
-his lightest bidding. Indeed I think, had we permitted,
-they would have crowned us with flowers, and seen us
-eat our banquet like that dainty gallant Horatius
-Flaccus with his boon companions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the end of our dinner we were all like brothers
-with these merry folk, after the manner of English
-mariners, though I think half of our company could not
-understand two words of Spanish. Their chief was
-soon in close talk with John and me and Diego, and we
-broached our business to him. It is an easy embassy
-when both parties desire one thing. Our wish, no less
-than theirs, was for them to meet the general and
-arrange our comedy for the entertainment of the
-Spaniards. In a very short space it was agreed that
-we should leave two of our men with the chief and
-take two of his to the general, in token of pure
-good-will and amity between us, and that they should come
-down to a river which ran into the sea half-way
-between the haven where our ships lay and certain
-headlands towards Nombre de Dios, which we always called
-'The Cahezas.' This river we called the 'Rio Diego,'
-after our faithful Cimaroon ally.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was some difficulty in choosing our hostages,
-since every mariner there wished to stay, preferring the
-cheery homage and good fare of the Cimaroons to hard
-work and 'Poor John' in the pinnace. At last it was
-settled by lot, and we bore away again amidst the like
-rejoicings that had welcomed us, and with a fair wind
-came the same night to our ship.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed to all men a plain work of God for the
-encouraging of our allies that the very next day our
-general, with two frigates besides the pinnaces, came
-sailing into 'Port Plenty.' So he now named our
-haven, having seen by this first voyage how well we
-could supply ourselves from the victuallers that sailed
-to Nombre de Dios and Carthagena, and from the
-Indians about the Rio Grande, as well as from the
-Spanish storehouses thereon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If a man may judge by this fair beginning,' said he
-when we came to speak of it, 'no name was ever better
-bestowed, for besides a great store of provision which
-we obtained from the river, I have taken five or six
-frigates and a bark, laden with live hogs, hens, maize,
-and other provision which we require. But I gave away
-all the prizes, except the two best, to the Spaniards for
-their pain in supplying us so bountifully; and there are
-those we kept.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He pointed to where the two captured frigates lay,
-and went on to tell me how he had obtained what was
-dearer to him than victuals, and that was divers opinions
-of himself that prevailed amongst the Spaniards. It
-was always his way while he kindly entertained his
-prisoners to get them to speak about himself, and if their
-answers were to his mind I think they often got off the
-more lightly. His enemies, for even that noble spirit
-has enemies in these backbiting times, set this down
-to a sordid love of flattery, but I know it was from no
-such cause. For love of merriment he did it, no less
-than to encourage his men, who joyed to hear the dread
-their captain begot amongst the Spaniards. No man
-ever knew better than he how to win the confidence
-and respect of his men, and this was one way he used
-to that end. And no man was ever more laughter-loving
-than he, and no jest did he love so much as to
-hear how he frightened the Spaniards. For those
-reasons and no other he was wont to question his
-prisoners, and I hold it foul slander to say that heroic
-navigator was pleased with sordid flattery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I remember well his first words were of this when,
-the same day that he returned to Port Plenty, I boarded
-his frigate with Jack.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Jasper,' says he, taking my hand in his cheery
-way, 'you have missed a merry time in chasing Cimaroons,
-though God be praised that has so blessed your
-search. What think you they say of me, man? It is
-a jest worth more laughter than all the company could
-furnish in a month. Why, man, they say it is a
-devil. None but a devil or a saint, they swear, with but
-a handful of men could have quietly entered and held
-the Treasure-House of the mightiest emperor under the
-sun as we did. And since, being a "Lutheran dog," I
-am no saint, I must perforce be a devil, and you, my
-lad, an imp of Satan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By which sharp reasoning,' says Mr. Oxenham,
-'they save their gentility when they run away.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And like Christian gentlemen,' cried Harry, 'when
-the fiend appears cry, "Get thee behind me, Satan," and
-incontinently turn their backs.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet,' said I, 'it seems to me that they would serve
-their gentility better by a more courteous appellation
-of their enemy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so your true Castilian does,' says Frank. 'For
-all the wrong they have done me, yet I hold your true
-Castilian a gentleman and a man of honour, and no
-coward. Such a one I took off Tolu, and as we supped
-together on the good things which for our trouble in
-chasing him he had felt bound to bestow on us, he told
-a different tale, and set no horns on my head.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' broke in Harry; 'it was all your most chastened,
-precise, five-foot-in-the-blade, good manners. "By your
-most high-bred courtesy," says he, "I now know for truth
-what gentlemen say of the valiant Captain Drake, whose
-felicity and valour are so pre-eminent that Sir Mars, the
-god of war, and Sir Neptune, the god of the sea, seem
-to wait on all his attempts, which same notwithstanding
-are eclipsed, overshadowed, and put out of countenance
-by the nobility and generosity of his carriage
-towards the vanquished, whereby defeat is made
-sweeter than victory." And with such like good report
-he continued to discharge his great pieces in the
-captain's honour all supper-time till we were wellnigh
-deafened with the thunders of his courtesy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was a very high mass of worship,' said Mr. Oxenham,
-'till, by this light, we began to doubt if we
-were not saints after all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God forbid,' says Frank; 'as you love salvation be
-an English devil rather than a Spanish saint.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, here are our brother devils,' cried Harry, as
-the two Cimaroons we had brought were led forward
-by John Drake. 'Order yourselves, signors, to receive
-the embassy of the Prince of Darkness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the negroes came forward and testified of the joy
-their whole nation had at our captain's coming, because
-of the renown he had won amongst them by his
-proceedings at Nombre de Dios and in his two former
-voyages, and finally most respectfully told him how
-their chief waited for him at the Rio Diego, to see if
-haply it was his pleasure to use them against their
-common enemies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A council of war was held to consider how far we
-could trust these people, and what course we should
-take forthwith: whereat, after his usual manner, Frank
-listened very attentively to all our advices, and then
-took his own; which was forthwith to move our whole
-force up to the Rio Diego, where John Drake and I
-had discovered an excellent haven amongst the islands
-that were clustered there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I went on before with Frank in his pinnace to show
-him where we should meet with the Cimaroon chief,
-which we did very joyfully at the place appointed.
-The negroes' joy at meeting our captain was so great
-that it was long before we could get to any quiet speech
-with them, but at last we went aside with the chief
-into the leafy bower which served him for a house, and
-Frank told him how he wished his people to help us
-get gold and silver from the Spaniards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gold and silver!' said the negro, a giant in growth
-and strength who spoke good Spanish. 'Do you mean
-gold and silver?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, surely,' said Frank; 'what else could we
-want?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, even that which we want,' said the negro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what is that?' Frank asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Revenge,' answered the negro, 'revenge for all the
-wrongs those hell-hounds have wreaked on us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, so do I,' said Frank cheerfully, 'and therefore
-will I take from them what I want most and what
-they love best, even gold and silver.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, but they love something better than that,'
-said the chief eagerly, as though clutching at a hope.
-'They love life better. And we want something more
-than gold, we want blood&mdash;Spanish blood! To dip our
-arms in to the elbow, and our legs to the knees,' he went
-on, with the glare of a wild beast in his eyes. 'Help
-us to get that, captain, and you shall have all the gold
-and silver you can want. But for us it is not enough.
-What your wrongs have been I know not, but ours are
-such that gold and silver will not avenge them. Had
-you felt the lash curl round your ribs, had you seen
-your comrades tortured to new effort when they
-dropped to die of sickness and fatigue, had you seen a
-little part of what happens every day to my people, you
-would forget gold and silver, and all but blood, and
-never joy but when you saw it bubbling out from the
-rent your knife had made.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were both shocked at the savageness of our new
-ally, and Frank told him in his plain blunt way that
-if they attempted anything together the prisoners must
-be his, as well as the gold, though in the fight they
-might kill as many as they would. The poor savage
-was sadly disappointed, and would, I think, have hardly
-agreed to it if Frank had not fed him with a picture of
-the havoc our arrows and small shot would make
-amongst their enemies, and how sorely they grieved
-over the loss of gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know, I know,' said the Cimaroon sadly; 'and
-often we take gold from them, not from love of it,
-but in despite of them. So be it as you say, captain,
-for you we will follow to death against the Spaniards,
-whatever be your will. Yet had I known it was gold
-you wanted, there is plenty we have taken and sunk in
-the rivers which you might have had, but now they
-are so swollen with the rains that there is no coming
-at it. Nor can we take any till the dry season begins,
-for in the rainy months they do not carry any treasure
-by land, because the ways are so evil.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was most unhappy news. It was nearly five
-months still before the dry season began. To attempt
-with our pinnaces to capture the gold frigates coming
-down the Chagres river was madness, seeing that since
-our coming we heard they were always guarded by
-two galleys. To wait five months was to run great
-risk not only of being attacked in strength by the
-Spaniards, but also by sickness, which is very rife in
-those regions during this time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another council was held as soon as our strength
-joined us, and once more Frank heard willingly our
-opinions and followed his own, which was to make a
-lodgment in a hidden part of the coast, whence, that
-we might employ our leisure as well as gather
-provisions, we could from time to time sally out to annoy
-the Spaniards and satisfy ourselves. Our captain
-further resolved to establish magazines besides those
-we already had about Port Plenty, so that if one were
-discovered we might have others to supply us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To this end the <i>Pasha</i> was brought in through the
-islands with great labour and much dangerous pilotage
-within a few bowshots of the Main, and there moored
-hard by a reasonable island, in such a place as even if
-she were discovered, which was wellnigh impossible, so
-shrouded was she by trees, no enemy could come at her
-by night or even by day without great risk of falling
-amongst shoals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our island contained some three acres of good flat
-ground, which our captain next began to fortify, setting
-out, after the best manner used in the wars, a triangular
-fort made of timber and earth dug from the trench
-about it. Harry having, as I have said, no little skill
-in these matters was set over this work, Culverin being
-quartermaster under him. The Sergeant therefore was
-now in great spirits, for I think the ships, and still
-more the pinnaces, were as little to his mind as ever.
-His stiff back and large form could never accommodate
-itself to the straight quarters and uneasy motion to
-which he was condemned at sea. Now, it was a real
-pleasure to see his gaunt figure striding once more
-a-land, directing the Cimaroons, of whom another band
-had joined us, as nicely as though he were entrenching
-the Emperor's own camp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sea wars I will never decry again,' said he, when I
-went to give him joy, 'especially since Captain Drake
-is of that profession; yet for dignity, honour, and
-contemplation how can they compare to land wars?
-Truly, the world lost much, sir, when Captain Drake
-became a sailor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet he is an indifferent good sea-captain, Sergeant,'
-said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, sir; too good, greatly too good,' said Culverin.
-'Few men, look you, have been born with such soldiership.
-See, now, the care he bestows in fortifying his
-camp, after the true manner of Julius Cæsar, and yet
-he has never read a word of the <i>Commentaries</i>. It is
-there he shows it. For, saving your wisdom, your true
-soldiership is not valour, as many think. Valiant
-blades we have in plenty in every land. Your great
-soldier must know what to fear and when to fear,
-and so guard himself. To fear valiantly is your
-philosopher's stone of victory. Take that of me, sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I think we were all of Sergeant Culverin's opinion,
-except perhaps Mr. Oxenham. He was ever a reckless
-man who could not fear anything, and so, as all men
-know, was afterwards brought to his evil end on a Spanish
-gallows. But the rest of us were glad to see what care
-our general took that we should pass our five months in
-safety, and above all the Cimaroons, who saw in our
-preparations a sure token that we were resolved to stand
-by them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor did they leave us without testimony of their
-satisfaction. It was like fairyland to see how a little
-town built of Palmito boughs rose up as if by magic
-upon our island, with fair houses for all our company;
-and afterwards they so laboured at our fort that in two
-weeks the ordnance and artillery were all in position
-within it, and Frank was free to depart in search of
-victuals and intelligence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 7th of October he bid us farewell amidst a
-merry burst from our music, and bore away for
-Carthagena, leaving his brother John as governor of the fort
-over those who were left behind. Both Harry and I
-remained to assist him in governing the Cimaroons and
-completing our works. Had we but known the sorrow
-that was to come on us ere those two pinnaces returned,
-I think our parting would have been less blithe. But
-as it was we feared nothing; for our exploit at Nombre
-de Dios and all that had followed, no less than the
-constant report we had from the Cimaroons and our
-prisoners of the terror we had created, had bred in us
-a sort of reckless courage, as well as a laughing
-contempt for our enemies, which made us think that no
-attempt was too hard for us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I cannot wonder at it or blame any for their
-overweening confidence, seeing what our handful of
-unknown mariners had done against the mighty power of
-the King of Spain. Surely never had folly, for I hold
-contempt of a brave enemy no less, a better excuse.
-Would it had had a lighter punishment!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was on this wise that it came about. At the Cativaas
-Islands, some five leagues away from our fort, was a
-frigate laden with planks. She was a prize Frank's
-pinnaces had taken in the Rio Grande and left there
-till she should be wanted. But in a storm she was
-driven hard ashore and now lay disabled. Out of
-tenderness for his ordnance and crew Frank ordered that our
-first care should be to fetch away her timbers and planks,
-to make platforms for the former and good huts for the
-latter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the rains still continued. The island was a
-slough of mire wherever we worked, and the bowers
-which the Cimaroons made us hardly availed to keep
-out the deluge of rain that fell every day. Therefore
-as soon as Frank was gone we set about our work, John
-Drake going himself to order the matter in the pinnace
-called <i>Lion</i>. I went with him and about half a crew
-besides.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the second afternoon after Frank's departure
-that we were returning to our fort with a load of
-planks, when we descried a deep-laden frigate making
-for Nombre de Dios.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will you not attempt her, Captain John?' said one
-of the men, a quartermaster called Allen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not I,' says Jack; 'though nothing would be more
-to my mind had we finished the work which our general
-set us to do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What matter of that?' cried Allen; 'it is but half
-an hour's work to make her ours. A pretty prize she
-will be for us, and I don't see why the rest should have
-all the sport and we all the labour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, it is just because the general so ordered it,'
-says Jack. 'That is enough for me and enough for
-you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, then,' said Allen, 'I know the general never
-meant us to be forbidden fair booty. What say you,
-lads?' and the men all said he was right, and that they
-were for attempting the frigate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then must you be mad,' cried Jack. 'You know
-not how the frigate is provided, while you are sure we
-are cumbered with planks and have no weapons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We have a rapier,' objected Allen, 'and a visgee,
-and a caliver, and that is enough for Englishmen against
-any yellow-livered Dons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But the rapier is broken, the visgee old and worn,
-and the caliver all a-rust,' said Jack. 'I tell you you
-are mad, and I will have no part with your madness.
-The general's orders are straight, and I would not depart
-from them were we twice as many, and twice as well
-armed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the men still murmured and continued to urge
-him to it, till I wondered to see how he could resist
-them, and loved him more than ever for his loyalty to
-his brother's commands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never mind, lads,' said Allen mockingly at last.
-'We will go to the fort and wait till the general comes
-back. He knows how to show Dons what dirt they are
-under English feet, and he will make us amends when
-he hears how our voyage was spoilt, because our captain
-was afraid of a craft only three times his size.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Jack! That was more than he could endure.
-It touched him in his one weak point, which Allen
-knew well enough. He was a lion in courage, but yet
-not brave enough to bear calmly any suspicion of
-cowardice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What!' he roared. 'You dog! Dare you use me
-so? Then, by yea and nay, you shall have your will,
-and see who is afraid and who is not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, never mark him, Jack!' I said, wishing to
-dissuade him from this wild attempt. 'Look not round at
-every cur that barks! Who doubts your courage is an
-ass!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Jasper, hold your peace,' cried poor Jack, more
-furious than ever. 'Never shall they say to my brother
-that their voyage is lost by my cowardice. They shall
-run their heads into danger, but never shall they say
-mine was not there first. Give me the rapier. Allen,
-take you the visgee and stand by my side in the
-forepart if you are a man. Robert shall take the caliver,
-and Mr. Festing steer. And now, lads, overboard with
-the planks or we shall never catch her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a very short time the pinnace was clear, Jack
-was standing in the forepart with the broken rapier,
-and his pillow wrapped round his left hand for a warding
-gauntlet, for there was no buckler in the boat, and Allen
-stood by his side. We overhauled our chase very
-quickly, and were soon but a few boat-lengths from her.
-I could see she had taken measures to prevent our
-boarding, and was doubtless well prepared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'See, Jack,' I cried, 'she has close-fights all round
-her bulwarks; we shall never board.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We shall board her or never another,' said he, with
-set teeth. 'It is too late to turn now. What I take in
-hand I carry through. Steady as she goes, and stand
-by to board!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another moment we fell aboard of her. I saw
-Jack and Allen leap up on her close-fights. Then
-suddenly she was alive with belching flame. There
-was a roar, a cloud of smoke, a flash of pikes, and
-in the midst two bodies fell heavily back into the
-pinnace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shove off for your lives,' I cried, 'before they
-grapple.' For I could see the frigate was swarming
-with pikes and small shot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those in the forepart seized their oars, some thrusting
-away from our enemies' side, while others swiped at
-the faces of those who were trying to grapple or stay
-our purpose with their long pikes and halberds.
-Amongst these I saw Jack rise painfully and work with
-a will. Once I saw a pike levelled straight at Allen as
-he too was shoving off, in spite of an awful wound in
-his head. I made sure he was gone, but Jack dashed
-his oar into the pikeman's face and fell backwards
-fainting with the effort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By good luck at that moment we fell free, and a few
-lusty strokes fetched us clear. With all our force we
-rowed out of danger of her small shot; but they neither
-saluted us again nor made anything of their triumph,
-believing, as I think, it was best not to tempt us to
-return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell Frank how it was, lad,' said Jack, as I laid him
-down in the stern all covered with blood, and he opened
-his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, lad,' said I, 'you shall tell him yourself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, never, Jasper,' murmured he; 'my time is come.
-God has judged me for disobeying Frank's words; he
-always knew best. But Allen maddened me. Poor
-fellow! he is sore hurt. See to him, Jasper. 'Tis a
-brave heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'First I must see to you,' I said, 'and mend your
-hurt a bit.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Tis no good,' he said, more faintly still. 'Mine is
-past mending. I feel it. What will Frank say of me?
-Would my death had come any way but this! Yet
-they will not call me coward again, will they, Jasper?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His voice grew weaker and weaker, and a deadly
-pallor overspread his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell father how it was I disobeyed Frank,' he went
-on, with long spaces between the words. 'He will
-forgive me. He knows it always maddened me to be
-called coward. But what will Frank say? what will
-Frank say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again he urged me to go to the others and see if I
-could not remedy the evil his disobedience had brought
-on the company. I found Allen at death's door, cursing
-himself with his last breath for what he had brought on
-his valiant captain. Two or three others were hurt, but
-not grievously; and as soon as I had tended them a
-little I went again to Jack's side. I could see death
-written on his face, and gave him some wine to revive
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell Frank how I grieved for my folly,' he said,
-speaking with great difficulty. 'And tell Joe never to
-swerve a hairsbreadth from the course Frank marks.
-And ask him to forgive me. And, Jasper, say a prayer
-for me; not for superstition, lad, but just for comfort's
-sake.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had not prayed since that terrible night at the inn,
-which now seemed so long ago and so far away. Yet I
-could not refuse. So I knelt down, and all the mariners
-did likewise, uncovering respectfully. I prayed, as well
-as I could recall it, the prayer I heard on the old
-preacher's lips at my father's funeral, and repeated the
-beautiful words of his text, which I remembered so
-well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now sing a psalm,' said the dying man; 'just for
-comfort's sake&mdash;for comfort's sake.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So on that still and lonely tropic sea we raised with
-our rough voices a homely English hymn, to the deep
-diapason of the booming surf sounding outside the
-islands. As we ended he smiled, and I saw his lips
-moved. I leaned down to hear what he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Frank will forgive me,' the low murmur said, 'when
-you tell him how it was. He was always good to us,
-Frank was, and always knew best. He will understand.
-Frank always underst&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So his murmur ceased; and that brave youth, my
-friend, passed peacefully away as the sun went down.
-And within an hour Allen's soul followed his captain's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Next day we buried them both on the island, thinking
-much of the high hopes we had of our governor's
-greatness had he lived, and deeply lamenting the cheerful,
-steadfast spirit that was gone from amongst us. As
-for the simple Cimaroons, they were beside themselves
-with grief, and would have performed strange idolatrous
-ceremonies about his grave had we suffered it, but the
-sailors would not let them go near, save once a day to
-cover it with fresh flowers. This was their only comfort,
-save a sure hope that, now his brother was killed, Frank
-would be no longer content with gold, but would want
-to 'wash his elbows' in Spanish blood.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Wearily the weeks went by after John Drake's death.
-What with the miserable effect it had upon the whole
-company and the continual rains, it was all that Harry
-and I could do to keep the men in good heart. Indeed,
-our lives at that time were far from easy, not only in
-respect of our spirits, because of our grief, but also in
-respect of our bodies, because of the wet and cold, and,
-above all, the legions of a certain grievous insect, which
-the constant rain seemed to engender of the mud upon
-our islands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had suffered from them all along the coast, but
-never so grievously as here. The Spaniards call them
-'mosquitoes.' They are insects of the bigness and similitude
-of reasonable gnats, but for ferocity, persistence,
-and trumpeting past anything we know in England.
-We often marvelled for what purpose they could have
-been made, unless it were to punish Spaniards. Yet
-this reason halts, for a mariner who had sailed in a ship
-of the Muscovy Company reported to us that he had
-felt and seen them as bad, or worse, in the country of
-the Samoits and Permians upon the Muscovy Sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet by constant work in strengthening our fort, and
-hunting with the Cimaroons on the Main, no less than
-by every pastime Harry could devise, we managed to
-keep in health till the general returned. It was towards
-the end of November that he came back, with a prize of
-some ninety tons, which, as well as his pinnaces, was
-laden with all manner of provisions, not forgetting
-several botijos of good Spanish wine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like ourselves he had suffered much from wet and
-cold, as well as from want of meat, for he had found the
-whole coast thoroughly alarmed and prepared for his
-coming. Yet had he taken not a few prizes, and, what
-pleased him best, ridden out a storm which lasted many
-days in the harbour of Carthagena itself, in spite of all
-the Spaniards could do with horse, foot, ordnance, and
-treachery to drive him thence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But all the joy with which we might have talked
-over these things was marred, because Jack was no
-longer there to take his part. Of Frank's and Joseph's
-grief over the loss of their brother I will not speak. Yet
-I know how deep it was, though they said but little.
-Frank seemed to care no longer to jest over what the
-prisoners had said about him, and when alone was very
-stern, though outwardly with the men he would be
-cheerful as ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was all the harder to bear since we were now
-condemned more than ever to inaction. From what
-the general saw on his last-made voyage to Carthagena,
-and the intelligences he had from the prisoners, he was
-resolved to keep close, that the Spaniards might think
-us entirely gone, until we could hear of the coming of
-the Plate Fleet, when with better hope we could make
-our attempt by land against the <i>recuas</i> that came to
-meet it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were well able to lie still awhile, since our
-magazines were full, and there was no necessity for
-our putting to sea for intelligence, since the Cimaroons
-had spies out everywhere for the first tidings of the
-coming of the fleet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank's efforts to keep the men in good heart were
-redoubled, since, now that the rains were beginning
-to abate, he knew the sun would increase in power and
-draw all kinds of noxious humours and exhalations
-from the sodden earth; against which danger he
-held there was nothing so medicinable as a cheerful
-spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Till the end of the year things went well, though in
-spite of all we could do with daily worship, music, and
-sports, it was plain that crude and heavy humours were
-being engendered in us by the sudden change we
-underwent from cold to heat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our surgeon was ever urging Frank to permit him to
-rid the men of these humours by strong purgations, but
-he would not consent to it, rather serving out more
-wine to those who seemed most oppressed. So we
-passed Christmas indifferently well; but, our merrymaking
-over, things went worse than ever, with constant
-quarrels and murmuring, which Frank bore with very
-patiently, knowing it was an infirmity of the flesh
-rather than the spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last some lay down and would not be persuaded
-to any sport, and before the end of the day our surgeon
-pronounced ten of them to be sick of a calenture.
-Three days after half our company was down and
-several dead. In vain did Frank and the surgeon try
-every remedy they could devise. On the seventh day
-Joseph Drake was seized, to his brother's great grief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For some days our general had been very earnest to
-have made discovery of this terrible disease by ripping
-open one of those who had died, and now in hope to
-save his brother he openly proclaimed his intention,
-but in spite of their sufferings the company murmured
-so loudly at this profanation of their dead comrades
-that he was compelled to forego his desire.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They say I care not what indignity I set on them,'
-said Frank to me, when I told him what the men were
-saying, 'so long as I save my brother? Poor lads, they
-must be sorely sick in body and spirits to say that.
-They shall see yet how they are all brothers to me, and
-they shall have their way. Yet I would dearly love to
-make discovery of the strange matter. It is hard, very
-hard, to lose Joe as well as Jack.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet so he did, and two days after Joseph Drake
-breathed his last in his brother's arms. I saw tears drop
-from Frank's eyes as he bent over the fair curly head
-that lay on his knee, watching the bright young life go
-fitfully out. Joe had spoken last of his unhappy mother,
-seeming to lament he had not been more kind to her,
-and this memory had touched Frank, who was himself
-sick, more keenly than he could bear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, as I say, he was weeping over his brother as he
-died. When the last glimmer of life was gone he laid
-the fair head on the pillow, and, kneeling down,
-prayed to God very earnestly that his brother might be
-the last to die. Nearly all the company were gathered
-round kneeling very respectfully as the general prayed.
-When he made an end they all cried 'Amen,' and most
-tried in vain to keep back a tear when they saw how
-tenderly their general leaned down and kissed the calm
-young face of his dead brother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All the time our rat-faced surgeon sat unmoved in
-the corner of the house where we were. He alone did
-not kneel, but sat with his case of knives on his knee,
-and never took his little round eyes off the general.
-He shifted uneasily when Frank stooped to give his
-farewell embrace to his brother, and looked more keenly
-than ever when he rose up to his feet with dry eyes
-and the old resolute look on his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, my lads,' said he, 'you may go. It is over.
-I thank you all heartily for your prayers. Your duty
-is done, but mine and Master Surgeon's is only begun.
-You would not let me do it before, and so we have
-come to this pass; but, by God's help, this day we will
-make an end. You thought I used you hardly when I
-would have done this to one of your mates. So I
-stayed my hand, knowing how abominable it is to
-unlearned men. Yet now you shall not hinder me, for
-between me and my brother's body no one has a right
-to stand. Go now, and ere long you shall know whether
-I hold my brotherhood to my father's son higher than
-my brotherhood to you, my company.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The rat-faced surgeon had opened his case, but the
-men still were loath to go, as though they would have
-stayed Frank from his purpose, and again the little
-black eyes looked keen and anxious at the captain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Go, men!' cried Frank in a sharp, biting voice. 'It
-is I, Captain Drake, who bid you, and whom you know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slowly then they left. More than one stopped at
-the door to look round at the surgeon rolling up his
-sleeves and shudder, till Frank's set look sent them on
-their way. He beckoned me to stay; and indeed I
-think he had need of some one to support him in his
-terrible resolution. It is a fearful thing to use a body
-as we were about to do, but what must it have been to
-Frank thus to desecrate the mortal part of that fair
-youth he loved so well!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It made me sick to see how eagerly the surgeon went
-to his work. As soon as we had stripped the corpse
-Frank drew from his pack a book he had often spoken
-to me about. It was <i>The Anglishman's Treasure, or the
-True Anatomy of Man's Body</i>, by Master Thomas Vicary.
-This he held open in his hand, and signed to the surgeon
-to begin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the terrible sight that followed let me draw the
-veil. To me it was as heroic a spectacle as ever
-Agamemnon presented at Aulis. It was a holy sacrifice
-by our general of his tenderest feelings. Yet when I
-think how detestable, inhuman, and sacrilegous in most
-men's eyes is the dissection of bodies, how it has ever
-been banned by the Church, how there are many who
-would have it altogether prevented by law, and how
-loathsome it is even in my eyes, who so well know its
-necessity, I hasten from the picture that fills my memory,
-since I have said enough for men to bear in mind this
-crowning act of Francis Drake's heroical resolution.
-Everything he did before and afterwards I think called
-for less from his noble nature than that. Many
-high-sounding acts he achieved before his death, in the face
-of danger and the heat of battle, with a constancy that
-will make true English hearts beat higher for all time;
-yet nothing stamps hero on his memory, to my thinking,
-like what that January afternoon he steadfastly endured
-on that fever-stricken isle, in cold blood, unshaken,
-unflinching, and almost unmarked. It was the first
-experiment in anatomy that our captain made that voyage.
-I cannot wonder it was also the last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even the surgeon was more moved than he, and in
-order to purge the pestilent humours which he swore
-arose from the body and were the cause of the disease
-he took so strong a dose of his own compounding that
-he never spake again, nor did his boy, who also tasted
-the medicine, recover wholly till we reached England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank, therefore, became surgeon himself, and
-whether from the knowledge he had gained by his
-terrible experiment on his brother, or whether by using
-different remedies, or none at all, I know not, but
-certain it is that from that time no more died, and those
-that were sick began rapidly to mend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still we had suffered heavy loss before it was all
-ended, and many were for giving up our voyage,
-protesting it was useless to attempt to 'make' it with so
-maimed a company. But Frank would not hear such
-counsel, and cheerfully encouraged them to endure a
-little longer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our joy then may be judged when on the last day
-of January some of the Cimaroons, who ever since our
-first meeting with them had been continually ranging
-up and down the country to gather news, reported of a
-certainty that the Plate Fleet had put into Nombre de
-Dios.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A pinnace was at once despatched to the outermost
-island of the Cativaas to confirm this report, whereby
-our general hoped to test how far our allies were worthy
-of trust, since he knew that if it were as they said,
-the victuallers would be seen flocking to the ships with
-supplies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Within a few days the pinnace returned bringing
-the joyful confirmation we desired, and something
-more which we very little desired, namely, thirteen
-Spanish prisoners, and amongst them the <i>Scrivano</i> of
-Tolu and a black-eyed comely girl, his daughter.
-These had been taken on a frigate laden with victuals,
-which had been dealt with for the sake of getting
-certain news of the fleet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing could have embarrassed us more in the
-last preparations we had now to make for our land
-journey. To release the prisoner was impossible, since
-they would have straightway spread the news which it
-was our business to conceal. While to keep them was
-to have them in constant danger of being cruelly
-massacred by the Cimaroons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank took every precaution that was possible. The
-prisoners were landed on 'Slaughter Island,' as we
-called it, since we had lost so many of our company
-there, so as to keep the Cimaroons from sight of them,
-and then speedily set on board our great Carthagena
-prize, which lay moored hard by the island.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Here they were all brought before our general to
-be questioned. He received them in such state as
-we could make upon the poop, and presently
-encouraged them to fear nothing, for they seemed very
-ill at ease as not knowing what treatment they should
-get at our hands. In the midst of his speaking I
-saw the girl draw a knife from her breast, and with
-the suddenness of a cat spring upon Frank. In truth
-I think he must have been very near his death had
-not I seized her hand, being prepared by what I had
-seen, and held her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was all I could do to keep her from him, for she
-writhed and struggled in a frenzy of passion and would
-not be pacified, till, much against our will, we were
-forced to bind her pretty hands behind her for the sake
-of peace, as though she had been a common mariner.
-Then she stood alone in the midst before Frank helpless,
-panting, and flushed, a passingly beautiful picture.
-Her luxuriant black hair was loosened in her
-struggles and fell all about her face, and her large dark
-eyes were flashing defiance at Frank as she drew
-herself up proudly before him, looking like some young
-tigress fresh caught from the forest in the plenitude of
-her wild youth and beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, my beauty,' says Frank good-humouredly,
-'this is strange woman's work! Why will you force on
-us such discourtesy as to fit you with such rude
-bracelets. Your pretty white arms were meant for other
-work than this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know that,' she answered scornfully; 'but when
-men turn women, women must do men's work. You&mdash;you
-are men, and know not what it is for a woman to
-be amongst such curs as these, who cower to be kicked
-at the very sight of an Englishman, and let you heretic
-Lutheran dogs plunder good Catholics as you will and
-then whine to the Blessed Virgin to help their
-cowardice. Ah, if we had a few hearts like yours and
-mine then you should see!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God forbid,' says Frank, 'that we meet many men
-like you, else surely will our voyage take more making
-than we bargained for.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, you are a man,' she said, 'and you know. I
-am glad I did not kill you now, though I vowed the
-first time I met him to attempt with my bodkin the
-life of the Dragon Francisco.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dragon Francisco is good,' laughed Frank. 'Were
-you twice as wild you should have your bracelets off for
-that! Loose her, Jasper; she will be quiet now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah,' she said again, as I undid her bonds, 'you
-are a man. It is long since I felt a man's hand.' With
-that she threw herself at the captain's feet, and, taking
-his rough hand in hers, kissed it ardently. Then
-without a word she walked away from where we sat, and
-quietly fell to twisting up the great masses of black
-hair that clung about her, which was a wonder to
-us all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having got the intelligence we required from the
-prisoners, it remained but to set a guard over them,
-both to prevent their escape and to keep an eye on the
-Cimaroons. I think Mr. Oxenham would have very
-gladly undertaken this labour for the sake of those
-same lustrous dark eyes; but Frank would not have
-it so, and appointed me to it, bidding me treat the
-prisoners with all courtesy so far as I could, having
-regard to their safe-keeping.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I did not much relish my wardship of the wild girl,
-though I think I was as much taken with her beauty
-and spirit as any of us. For Frank would not have
-her put under constraint, though he suffered me to
-keep the rest below hatches when night came on. So
-I allotted her the best place in the poop, and bade her
-good-night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the night wore on my anxiety only increased,
-and, being unable to sleep, I went to walk on deck. It
-was a glorious tropic night, with the moon flooding the
-dark forests and studded islands and the slumbering
-sea with a brilliancy we do not know in the Old World.
-It was so beautiful that I bade the look-out man go to
-rest, saying I did not wish to sleep and would keep his
-watch for him. He seemed very surprised, but thanked
-me civilly and went below.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I watched alone on deck the Spanish girl kept
-constantly in my thoughts. Whatever way I tried to
-think my mind always came back to her, and her white
-skin and beautiful eyes, so flashing in anger, so soft in
-peace. I began to dread she would be the cause of
-contentions amongst us, and to long for the time when
-we should be well away on our land journey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was sitting on the forecastle, and had been there
-perhaps for the space of half an hour, when, just as the
-Señorita was most vividly in my thoughts, I saw the poop
-door stealthily open and a strange figure appear. I knew
-in a moment who it was, in spite of her being so changed.
-It was plainly the Spanish girl, looking more beautiful
-than ever in the dress she had adopted. It was nothing
-more than the ordinary apparel which the Spanish
-mariners use in those seas, consisting of loose striped
-drawers reaching just above the knee, and an easy-fitting
-sleeveless shirt of white material, which she had
-girt tightly about her waist with a red scarf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Too amazed to act, I could only watch her ripe young
-figure, which her dress set off to its full beauty, creeping
-warily forward towards me. Very quietly I sunk
-lower into the shadow of the bulwarks to watch what
-she would do.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every now and again she looked round in some new
-and graceful posture to see if she were watched. At
-last she reached the foremast, to which was fixed the
-mutilated image of the Virgin and Child, and there she
-fell upon her knees and began to pray in a low earnest
-voice that I could just hear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Holy Mother of God,' she said, 'for the last time
-I beseech thine aid to support me across the dark
-waters, to guide me through the forest, to bring me
-safely to Nombre de Dios, that thy loving worshippers
-may come at my word and destroy the heretics that
-would plunder the treasure which his most Catholic
-Majesty would devote to thy service, saving only, if it
-be not sin, Captain Francisco Draque, whom it were a
-pity to kill, and the sad-faced man who has warded me
-so courteously, and who, I think, is half in love with
-me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then she rose and walked with desperate quickness
-towards the side, but ere she had gone three steps I
-had leaped down into the waist, and she was struggling
-frantically in my arms. I was resolved to stay her
-from the wild purpose her brave spirit was bent on.
-As she writhed in my grasp I remember being rather
-afraid that she should fall into the hands of the
-Cimaroons than that we should be betrayed to the Spaniards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like an eel she strove to get free, her dress giving
-her perfect freedom to strain every effort. So tenderly
-did I feel towards her for the sake of her heroic attempt
-that I was only thoughtful how not to hurt her, but it
-was misplaced kindness, for suddenly she slipped from
-my loosened grasp. In a moment she was at the bulwarks,
-poising herself for a spring into the water, when
-suddenly she gave a low cry of horror and sprang back
-into my arms as I rushed to her side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In an extremity of abject terror, to which her
-resolution was suddenly changed, she clung about me,
-trembling from head to foot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save me, Señor, save me!' she gasped, as she sank
-down clasping my knees wildly. 'O God, O Sancta
-Maria! see what is coming,&mdash;O God, what will they
-do to me! I cannot bear it. Save me, Señor, save me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So distractedly did she cling to me that I was obliged
-to lift her in my arms before I could get to the side to
-see what had frightened her, and then I could not
-wonder how her courage had melted, for I saw a sight
-that made my blood run cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Close to the ship and moving swiftly towards her
-swam over half a score of black woolly heads. The
-ghostly moonlight glittered white on the long wake
-that stretched behind each, and on their rolling eyes,
-and, worst of all, on a grizzly knife which each held in
-his grinning teeth. Like some hellish monsters
-engendered in the foul womb of the sea they came on
-with lusty strokes, silent, sure, and determined.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no time to fetch my caliver or wake the
-guard had I been willing to do so. But this was far
-from my wish; for I feared, had they known the
-negroes' purpose and seen the terror of their pretty
-prisoner, they would have dealt more hardly with our
-allies than the general would have liked. Moreover,
-to be plain, I had a still stronger reason for what I
-did; for I could not bear to think that those rough
-men should see my beautiful captive so scantily yet
-withal so prettily clad as she was. So, drawing my
-rapier, I sprang to the gangway, for which they were
-making.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Back, back!' I cried, as low as I could for them to
-hear. 'The first man that tries to board has my blade
-through him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That, I thought, dismayed them, for each as he swam
-up stopped without attempting to board, which they
-might easily have done; for the ship, being full of
-victuals, was very low in the water, and, moreover, two
-chains hung down the side by the gangway. I was in
-no little doubt how I could deal with them should they
-make any attempt, for I feared that my terrified Señorita
-would much hamper my movements, since she had
-followed me to the gangway. Therefore, to further
-dissuade them, I fell to showing them how ill the general
-would take what they did, seeing the prisoners were
-his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even as I spoke I was much encouraged to feel the
-Señorita's arm steal round me and draw from its sheath
-the strong sailor's knife I always wore. I knew then
-the brave girl had recovered her spirit. I could not
-refrain from pressing the little hand as it closed round
-the hilt of the knife, to let her know how I marked her
-courage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My speech had small effect on the Cimaroons; for
-though they still held off, yet they seemed not to note
-my words, but only to glare horribly at the girl by my
-side. Wondering what next to do, I was all at once
-aware that most of them had disappeared. There was
-something so unearthly and magical in this sudden
-vanishing that my heart misgave me. While I could
-see my foes I did not fear but that I could deal with
-them as I wished; but now I was encompassed by
-unseen dangers, and in that ghostly moonlight, I say
-plainly, I was afraid.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing would have been more to my mind than to
-cry aloud and wake the sailors. Yet I set my teeth
-hard and gripped anew Harry's rapier. I felt he would
-have done as I hoped for courage to do, and I clung to
-my former resolution. Yet I saw it was useless to wait
-where I was, so, taking the Señorita's hand, I led her
-towards the poop. Half-way there she looked back,
-started, and clutched my arm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look, Señor, look,' she whispered, 'look at the
-forecastle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I turned and saw the evil sight I dreaded. Black
-against the moonlit sky the wet, shining figure of a
-Cimaroon was climbing over the bulwarks where our head-fast
-ran out. I knew directly they must have dived to
-the cable and climbed up by it. In another minute
-they would all be aboard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then I knew there was but one thing to do, and ran
-quickly under the poop-gallery with the Señorita.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Go in, Señorita,' said I, as soon as we reached the
-door. 'You must leave me to deal with these alone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Señor,' she answered, 'I will not leave. I am
-not afraid now. It was only for a moment. I will
-stay and fight them with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is no need,' said I; 'I am going to rouse the
-mariners.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, it was time. One after another I could see
-the black forms climb over the bulwarks, dripping and
-gleaming in the moonlight, and each with his bright
-knife. A hideous head, too, was glaring over the
-gangway, as though waiting for the rest. Still the
-Señorita would not go, but rather stepped out into the
-moonlight to be farther from the door, which I held open.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No! I will wait with you,' she said resolutely.
-'Why should I not wait and fight beside the sailors
-when they come?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, Señorita,' said I, growing desperate as I saw
-the wet, shining forms creeping athwart the forecastle,
-'because they are rough men, and I would not have
-them see you as you are.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A crimson flush overspread her beautiful face.
-With wide astonished eyes and parted lips she met my
-gaze for a moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah!' she cried then, just as she had to Frank,
-'you are a man!' Dropping the knife as she spoke,
-she sprang towards me, and before I was aware what
-she did she had taken my face between her soft little
-hands and kissed me on the lips. Then she was gone;
-and even as that fair vision passed I saw black forms
-dropping from the forecastle into the waist. Loudly
-then I shouted to my company, and ere the Cimaroons
-had advanced many paces one of the mariners came
-running up to me, and then another, and another,
-blowing up their matches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was enough for the Cimaroons, who we afterwards
-found had no heart to stand before gunpowder.
-One of them uttered a loud cry, and then with one
-accord they all leaped into the sea. Lustily they made
-for the shore, and I had much ado to prevent my small-shot
-men and archers hastening their swimming, but at
-last I prevailed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After that I set a double watch, but we were no more
-disturbed that night. Next day I reported these things
-to the general, who so dealt with the Cimaroons, and
-took such order for a guard over the prisoners, that the
-Spaniards were no more molested till we departed on
-our land journey, though the negroes ceased not to urge
-him by every device they could think of to permit them
-to have at least a few to murder, or better than naught,
-the girl alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for me, I craved to be relieved of my charge,
-feeling that after what had passed it would be better
-for us both if the captive had another warder; but
-Frank only laughed, and said he could trust no one, not
-even himself, with that lump of Eve's flesh, unless it
-were a sober scholar like myself. With that answer,
-whereby he showed less knowledge of men than ordinary,
-I had to be content, and bear myself as soberly and
-scholarly towards my prisoner as I could make shift to
-do till the time came for our departure.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A fortnight later, in a fair clearing on the summit of
-those forest-clad hills which separate the Atlantic
-Ocean from the South Sea knelt eighteen sunburnt,
-way-worn Englishmen. In their midst rose a giant-tree
-that reared its head high above all the dense growth
-around it. In its rugged bark steps had been cut that
-led upwards to a sort of bower high amidst the massive
-branches, which might have served as a watch-house to
-the little settlement that was about the glade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For all around where those gaunt men knelt were
-strong houses built in the manner of the Cimaroons,
-some thirty of whom knelt reverently outward of the
-Englishmen listening to the prayer which the thick-set,
-curly-bearded man in the centre offered up so earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Earnestly, too, those seventeen others listened, as
-they knelt in the heart of the Spanish Main, with as
-stout an air of triumph on their youthful faces as
-though it were all their own. And no wonder it was
-so. For each man there had but just ascended to that
-silvan watch-tower, and there had seen to the northward
-the ocean whence he had come, and over against it,
-beyond the rolling slope of gorgeous tropic forest, that
-silent sea of mystery on which no Englishman had
-sailed stretched at his feet, as though waiting peacefully
-for him to come and take possession.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-329"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-329.jpg" alt="SIR FRANCIS DRAKE" />
-<br />
-SIR FRANCIS DRAKE
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To our fancies, heated with the hundred tales we had
-heard of the inexhaustible treasure which came from
-that new-found sea whereof the wisest of the ancients
-were ignorant, it seemed to glitter like a boundless,
-unfathomable caldron of molten silver. From this, our
-first sight of it, it seemed but a little step with our
-elated spirits to enter and possess it; and so it was with
-uplifted hearts and throbbing pulse that, resting on our
-weapons, we kneeled and listened to Frank Drake's
-prayer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'O Almighty God,' he said, 'who has granted us of
-Thy great goodness that we should set our eyes at last
-on that great sea which for all the ages till now no man
-knew, but only Thou, and which, though Thou hadst
-kept it hidden as an inheritance for all mankind who
-served Thee aright, the Bishop of Rome has impiously
-taken upon himself to give to an idolatrous king and
-people: Grant to me now out of the plenty of Thy power
-and bounty life and leave to sail once, if only once, in
-an English ship in that sea. So shall I, thy servant,
-and such of those others here to whom Thou wilt
-vouchsafe the same, enter thereon to the advancement to Thy
-glory, and the confusion of the lewd priest and
-potentate who has usurped and abused the vineyard which
-Thou hadst prepared for Thy people.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he ceased, and a deep 'Amen' mingled with the
-rustle of the breeze amongst the vines and canes. Then
-up sprang Mr. John Oxenham, and held on high his
-right hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hearkye, lads,' he cried, very excited, 'you have
-heard the captain's prayer, and know his resolution.
-Now bear witness that by yea and nay I protest, as I
-am a gentleman, that, unless he beat me from his
-company, I will follow him, by God's grace, into that
-sea.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So one after another we all protested to the like
-intent, very earnest and eager for that time to come;
-and yet, resolute as we all were, how few ever made
-good our resolve, and notably Mr. Oxenham! Had he
-but been content to follow Frank, instead of faithlessly
-trying to be before him, who knows but he too might
-have died a knight with a golden collar, and not, as he
-did, like a felon with a necklet of Spanish hemp! But
-let that pass, for who knows better than I how hard it
-may be to keep a resolution which in the making
-seemed so easy? Such falling away we must openly
-condemn, for the sake of the state and reverence for the
-laws; yet no wise man will inwardly hasten to loathe
-sin, since he is well aware that until he has made trial
-he cannot tell how small a shock of temptation will lay
-his own honour in ruins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And surely the sight of that golden sea, whereof
-no man knew the bounds, was enough to turn any
-man's head. None of us were in haste to leave
-that glorious sight, feeling as though we could never
-gaze our fill. To us, the first of Englishmen, was
-unfolded the portentous secret which the Spaniards had
-kept so well. That night, then, we lay there to dream
-over the boundless visions to which our discovery gave
-birth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the morrow, refreshed with our rest, and feeling
-each one of us a new man in the presence of that new
-ocean, we began our perilous descent towards Panama.
-And perilous indeed it was, though none of us now
-could think of danger or anything but the golden sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were, as I have said, but eighteen Englishmen.
-This little band was all we could muster for our
-attempt. Eight and twenty of our company were lying
-dead in graves already half hidden in brakes. Well-nigh
-half the rest were sick; and when these were set
-aside with a sufficiency of whole men to tend them, and
-above all to protect our ships and prisoners, eighteen
-were all we could spare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had been appointed one of the number, seeing that
-I was still whole; yet it must be said I was hard put
-to it to go. For my prisoner coaxed me so prettily
-to stay and protect her, and pouted so sweetly with
-her full red lips when I would not be moved, that I
-more than once came near to yielding, and was not a
-little glad that we marched as soon as we did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Besides our eighteen we had with us thirty Cimaroons,
-who lightened the labour of our march not only
-by their ready bearing of our burdens, which they
-would not suffer us to touch, but also by their cheerful
-spirits. They seemed never to weary, and were ever
-laughing and singing, even when the way was steepest
-and the brakes most dense. They seemed, now that
-they were away from the Spaniards and we came to
-know them better, an altogether docile, childlike people,
-whom one could but love, for all their hidden fierceness,
-as one would a staunch and faithful hound.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pedro, their chief, who best knew the danger of our
-enterprise, had put it hard to the general that he should
-tarry at a certain town of theirs till a greater force of
-Cimaroons could be gathered. But this Frank would
-not hearken to. 'No, Pedro,' said he; 'the time speeds
-for "making" my voyage, and since I have enough I
-would not delay an hour though I might have twenty
-times as many.' A resolute answer which rejoiced and
-gave heart to us all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So on the morrow of our discovery of the South Sea
-we began our descent as we were towards Panama. It
-was our general's purpose to waylay a <i>recua</i> as close
-as possible to Panama, where the Spaniards would least
-look for us, in case they had any wind of our still being
-on the coast. To this end we had made our toilsome
-march, going a good way about that we might not be
-descried, and so come down secretly upon the road
-which led from Panama to Venta Cruz, where, as I
-have said, the gold was embarked in frigates to be
-carried down the Rio Chagres to Nombre de Dios. We
-were the more moved to this course because of our
-uncertainty whether the <i>recuas</i> went as yet all the way
-by land to Nombre de Dios. As we were now it mattered
-little; for by thus striking boldly across the
-Main we could deal with them before they reached the
-river, and thus save them the pain of disappointing us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very warily now we pursued our painful way through
-the matted forest, in the order which Pedro besought
-us to adopt. First went, about a mile ahead of us, four
-Cimaroons, who best knew those trackless solitudes. For
-not a sign of a way was there, and even had there been
-one it would have been overgrown by the luxuriant
-brakes as fast as it was made. We had nothing further
-to direct us than the broken branches by which our
-guides marked the way we were to follow. How they
-could know their road amidst those wellnigh
-impenetrable woods, where they could not even see the sky
-above their heads, was more than I could tell.
-Mr. Oxenham said it was a special instinct which God had
-given them that they might the better be revenged
-upon the Spaniards who had so foully ill-treated them.
-How this may be I cannot say, but I know that Frank
-and most of the company said openly it was nothing
-short of a miracle, by which God showed His great love
-and tenderness towards us. For it is certain that
-without the aid of these poor folk we could never even have
-attempted the Spaniards by land.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our general was very earnest to show his gratitude for
-this mercy by burdening himself with care for their souls.
-For when he found that they seemed to have no religion,
-save a sort of idolatrous and superstitious reverence for
-the Cross, he would not rest till by continual urging
-them at our halts he brought them to lay it aside and
-learn in its stead the Lord's Prayer and certain plain
-doctrines as he thought sufficient for their low
-understanding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great as was the skill of our guides in leading, it
-was little exceeding our vanguard's diligence in clearing
-the way. For in the front of our main body marched
-twelve Cimaroons, who with loving care made the way
-as easy as might be for us and their two chiefs, who
-were in company with us. Rearwards of all were
-twelve negroes more, bearing our burdens and watching
-against any danger that might threaten from the rear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we marched stealthily through that eternal wilderness
-of brake, and vine, and flower, and massive overshadowing
-trees hour after hour, in perfect silence, save
-for the scolding of the frightened parrots overhead and
-the strident screaming of the fearless guans. To me
-that march gave a pleasure and present sense of strong
-life that I had never known before; nor did my content
-end there. For Harry felt the influence as strongly as
-I, and so there was bred between us one more piece of
-sympathy, which gave me yet further hope that I
-might win his love again. It seemed to bring back
-our boyhood, and almost in his old boyish way he came
-that night and sat beside me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is this not glorious work?' said he, as he stretched
-his weary limbs upon the flowers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I could almost wish it would never end,' I answered.
-'It lifts a man out of himself like nothing else I know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is it,' he mused. 'Indeed, I think there is
-nothing which will keep a man so continually excited
-as silently stalking through a boundless forest like this,
-where a white man's foot has never trod before. As you
-pick your way at each step, that no stick may crack or
-stone roll; as cautiously you press through the boughs,
-that none may break or fly back noisily; as you strain
-your ear for the whispered order that is passed from
-your comrade, and peer ever forwards towards where the
-danger lies, then you know best the pure joy of living,
-the joy of the tiger leaping on his prey, the joy of the
-falcon stooping at his quarry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well said! well said!' I cried, catching his
-enthusiasm. 'Even so I now at last can say, "I live and
-know my life. Now live I with the life of my father
-Adam, the son of God." Now know I that fable for a
-true allegory, and feel I have dominion over the beast
-of the field and the fowls of the air, which is called the
-inheritance of Adam.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly what greater joy was his than we have now!'
-said Harry. 'The wild pigs and deer and pheasants are
-our meat, the bubbling brooks our wine-cups, the leafy
-boughs our roof, the flowers our beds. His inheritance
-is ours! 'Slight, it is a time to tempt a man to throw
-aside the fetters of his clothes and the burden of his
-arms, and rise up with nought but a spear as symbol of
-dominion, and live to his life's end a lord of beasts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is you, Harry,' said I, 'whom I must thank that
-I too can know 'this intense joy. It was your father's
-bringing-up of me that taught me to love the out-of-doors.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, it is mock-modesty,' he answered, 'to say he
-knew not how to make a man. Indeed, I think
-Machiavelli did not much err when he praised the
-education of Achilles, for whom Chiron chose a master
-half-man, half-beast, that he might be acquainted with
-both, seeing that without the qualities of one the other
-will be of little duration. Such teachers we cannot
-come by now, yet we can make shift with one who
-forgets not that man is half a beast.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such talk we had many times afterwards; and I call
-it a fortunate thing that our march drew to an end
-before we had quite run wild. On the second day after
-leaving the spot where we had viewed the South Sea
-we came out of the forests to a pleasant champaign
-country, overgrown with mighty grass, so rank that, as
-Pedro told us, the Spaniards had to burn it thrice a
-year, lest it grow so tall that the oxen cannot reach to
-feed on it; which will seem a wonder to those who
-know not the Western Wonderland, but it is none the
-less plain truth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Three days we passed through this marvel, suffering
-grievously from the heat after the cool shadows of the
-forest, yet being cheered many times by getting glimpses
-of Panama whenever we passed over the rolling hills
-that fell in our path. On the fourth day, being the
-14th of February, we had for our valentine the blue
-roadstead of Panama, with its burden of gold ships
-riding upon it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a sight to set every heart there beating faster,
-notwithstanding the many dangers and excitements
-through which we had passed since we heard the farewell
-guns from Plymouth platform. Indeed, it was now
-that our great peril began; for by hook or crook we had
-to reach undescried a great grove which lay apart in the
-midst of the champaign lands, about a league from the
-town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our danger of discovery, which would mar all, was
-now very great; for the Cimaroons told us it was the
-custom of the ladies in Panama to send out fowlers in
-search of a certain delicate bird of which they were very
-fond. Should we fall in with but one of these men,
-which would be very easy in the tall grass, the alarm
-would be at once given, and our chance of gold
-gone&mdash;ay, and perhaps our lives with it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank therefore bade us break up our order, and,
-falling into small parties, grope our way as silently
-and stealthily as possible towards our goal. It was
-weary work, and anxious. The sun was blazing down
-upon us with intolerable power. Every few minutes we
-had to stop and listen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After going thus for a good space with infinite toil
-we struck a river bed, which was almost dry. This, to
-our great relief, the Cimaroons said we could follow
-safely, since it led straight to the grove. So in the end,
-by picking our way over the stones like cats, we came
-undescried to our hiding-place about three in the afternoon,
-and then disposed ourselves to rest, wellnigh exhausted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was now nothing to do but lie there still as
-mice till the night fell; for the <i>recuas</i> do not travel by
-day between Panama and Venta-Cruz, because the way
-lies wholly across the champaign country, where there
-is no shelter from the scorching fire of the sun.
-Moreover it was our captain's purpose, as soon as evening
-drew near, to send a negro in disguise into Panama to
-discover whether any <i>recuas</i> were to be laden that night,
-and at what hour they were to start.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I lay with the rest, half-asleep after my weary
-march, Frank came to me and asked if I were too tired
-for half an hour's more work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not if you want it of me,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well then,' says he, 'come with me to the edge of
-the grove, whence Pedro says we can descry Panama.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But to what end?' I asked. 'We shall run great
-risk of discovery.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not if we are careful,' says he; 'and it is worth the
-risk.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, what good will our intelligence be?' I asked,
-not wishing him to expose himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not much now,' he answered, 'but, by God's help,
-some day I will serve Panama as I served Nombre de
-Dios. If God grants my prayer for life and leave, and
-we sail that sea, yonder harbour is where we must
-strike, if we get not our fill elsewhere; and now I have
-opportunity of learning how the town lies, I will not
-throw it away. It is thus I have sped so far, and thus
-I mean to continue. For I hold it not enough for a
-man to pray earnestly; he must show by fearless,
-ungrudging endeavour that he is in earnest, and leave
-nothing undone which may speed the granting of his
-prayer. God could do all this and more without my
-help, that I know well; but yet I think He loves best
-to help men who are ready to show they are in earnest
-in seeking His help.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So together we went and lay down where we could
-see the fair city, lying some little way from the harbour
-on either side of a goodly broad street that led northwards
-from the sea right through the houses. All was
-very still, because of the great heat that still prevailed.
-Yet we could see the convent nestling in its garden of
-palms, the tall spire of the church, the high bare walls
-of the King's Treasure-House, as big and strong as that
-at Nombre de Dios. And beyond all slumbered the
-gold ships in the roadstead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A fair place! a goodly place!' said Frank in a
-whisper. 'Too fair and goodly for those that possess it.
-It should be ours, Jasper, and our Queen's; and so it
-shall be, at least for as long as its plundering will take,
-if I can come into that roadstead with but two stout
-well-manned ships. We shall see, we shall see. Let
-us come away. It is in the Lord's hands to deal with
-as He wills.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On our return to the strength we found the Cimaroons
-busy dressing our espial in the costume which the
-servants in Panama were accustomed to wear. He was
-a merry, shrewd fellow, who had served a master in the
-city formerly, and he bade us not to doubt that he would
-soon be back with all the intelligence we wanted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After his going was another space of anxious waiting,
-during which we refreshed ourselves with such victuals
-as we had with us. To every man was given a little
-<i>aqua vitæ</i> for his comfort. I was surprised to see
-Sergeant Culverin drinking, as I thought a little too
-freely, from a private store he had. I went to him, and
-he respectfully offered me some.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, Sergeant,' said I; 'if there is danger before us I
-would rather keep my head cool.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you will, sir,' he said. 'It may be well enough
-for a young man, but with an old soldier it is different.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then has not an old soldier as much need of a cool
-head as a young one?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, perhaps,' he answered; 'but a cool head is little
-use if your heart is cool too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Sergeant,' said I, very surprised, 'your heart
-at least will not be faint when a fight is ahead.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, sir,' said he gravely, 'no man shall say that; and
-yet I like to go about with it that it shall not faint,
-and therefore I discipline it with a sufficiency of <i>aqua
-vitæ</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, Sergeant,' said I, still very puzzled at the
-signs of timidity on the part of the grim old soldier,
-'you are the last I should have suspected of needing so
-base a crutch for his courage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Maybe my courage halts,' he answered sadly, 'maybe
-it does not. Once I never gave a thought to danger,
-but when a man has served much he knows. I do not
-think I have less courage than any man here, but I
-know what war is better than they. As you shall see
-more of war, sir, you shall see less of its glory and more
-of its horror. That is why I wished to come to England;
-and to be plain with you, I should never have run my
-head into this wild venture of Captain Drake's had it
-not been that my poor master&mdash;&mdash; but I crave your
-honour's pardon, I prattle impertinently.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No matter, Sergeant,' said I; 'it is I who should
-crave your pardon. But tell me, do you think our
-danger so very great?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not perhaps if we succeed,' answered the Sergeant;
-'but if we fail, where shall we retreat?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But we must not think of that,' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A young soldier need not,' said he sadly; 'but alas! an
-old soldier cannot choose but think of it, unless&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Unless what, Sergeant?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Unless, sir,' said he, grimly smiling, 'in the stead of
-the ardent spirit of youth, which in you burns up such
-doubt, a man may come by a sufficiency of this most
-courageous <i>agua ardiente</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that I left him, revolving much in my mind
-whether he or I were the braver man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not long before our espial came back. We
-gathered eagerly round him for his news, which as
-eagerly he gave, seeing he was so full of it that he was
-like to burst had he not got this relief as soon as he did.
-And no wonder, for he told us he had found the Plaza
-full of mules, which men were fitting with packs. On
-questioning these he found that two great <i>recuas</i>, with
-a little silver and much victuals, were about to start for
-the fleet that night; but what was better, and what
-caused his eagerness, was that, besides these, there was
-preparing to precede them a <i>recua</i> for no less a man
-than the Treasurer of Lima himself,' who, being bent on
-returning to Spain by the first <i>adviso</i> that sailed, was
-starting that very night for Nombre de Dios with all
-his servants and his daughter, together with one mule
-load of jewels and eight of gold!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was midnight. Silence and darkness had fallen on
-that grass-bound highway that joined the oceans. Not
-a breath stirred the tall herbage. All was still as death,
-save for the distant mingled voices of the tropic night.
-Yet on either side the way, some two leagues short of
-Venta Cruz, that reedy pasture might have been seen
-to nod from time to time with a strange unaccustomed
-motion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Save that, there was nothing to show a traveller that
-the sea of grass, through which his way led him, held
-stranger fish than all the rest of the wide expanse on
-either hand. Yet so it was. Strange fish, both black
-and white, lay there as still as serpents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For thither had our captain led us as the most fitting
-spot for our venture, being, as Pedro showed, the farthest
-from Spanish relief and most convenient for our retreat
-with the plunder. So there I lay at Frank's side, and
-about me half our band, cutting strange figures. For
-Frank had made us put on our shirts over our other
-clothes, so that we might know friend from foe in the
-coming struggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Farther on, upon the other side of the way, was
-Mr. Oxenham, with Harry and the rest, so placed that he
-might stop the head of the Treasurer's <i>recua</i> while we
-dealt with the tail. By this order, too, we might use
-our bows without fear of hurting our friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Between Frank and me lay a Spanish soldier fast
-bound. Our two Cimaroon guides had captured him on
-our march from the grove where we had lain hid all the
-afternoon. From him we had gathered intelligence
-which confirmed all that our espial had told us. Before
-this Frank had been loath to believe our good luck,
-thinking so strange a chance savoured of a trap to undo
-us. But this soldier, as soon as he learned who our
-captain was, was so overjoyed at knowing he would be
-softly dealt with that he gave us full knowledge of how
-to proceed, which he was the better able to do seeing
-that he himself was one of those hired to guard the
-Treasurer. All this, he swore, was honest truth, as he
-was a gentleman soldier. He seemed to wish nothing
-so much as our success, which we better could understand
-when he craved in return for his intelligence that
-our captain would not only save him from the Cimaroons,
-but also deal with him as he had with others in
-like place, giving him sufficient of the plunder to keep
-him and his mistress. He courteously promised in
-addition to make our names famous throughout all
-Spain and the Indies if we did this; but I think Frank
-was not very earnest to have his trumpet blown by
-such false lips. And I noted that as we lay there he
-had his dagger ready to curb any desire our prisoner
-might have to alarm his master when he approached.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed hours that we lay there in the dim starlight.
-The tall grass about us hid everything from us
-but the white shirts of our comrades. We heard nothing
-but the drawing of our own breath, the beating of our
-own hearts, howsoever hard we strained our ears for a
-sound of the <i>recuas</i>. In truth, it could not have been
-past an hour before a puff of wind from the northward
-stirred the grass above us, and with it came the distant
-tinkle of bells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was but a <i>recua</i> from Venta Cruz, we knew, all of
-which we had resolved to let pass as only carrying
-merchandise for the city and Peru. Yet it made my
-heart beat faster for a while, till the breeze died again;
-and even as it ceased came another tinkle from the
-direction of the city. Every man moved to listen better,
-making the grass rustle, and Frank held up his hand to
-quiet them. The tinkling died away again as the <i>recua</i>
-passed down to some hollow, where the sound of its bells
-was drowned to us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Night is day on this the most notable highway in
-the world, as I have shown, and great and rich is the
-traffic either way in the cool hours between sunset and
-dawn, when the Plate Fleet is lying in Nombre de Dios,
-and all the Spanish Main is stirring with the life, and
-hopes, and fears it brings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was natural, then, to hear on the round stones
-with which years ago Pizarro had paved the way the
-clatter of a horse's feet coming up from Venta Cruz, and
-mingling with the rise and fall of the distant tinkling.
-As the sound drew near, Pedro, who had been lying with
-his head pressed against the ground, crawled towards us
-like a snake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a <i>cabalero</i>,' whispered he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How do you know that?' says Frank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can hear he has a page-boy running at his stirrup,'
-answered the Cimaroon, whose ears seemed to turn to
-eyes in the dark. 'It is easy to hear on the hard road.
-Listen!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, whatever he be, let him pass,' said Frank, for
-so we had determined. Yet very gladly, I think, would
-Pedro have made a dash at the gentleman's throat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On came the horse at a gentle trot till, when he came
-about opposite Mr. Oxenham's party, we heard a plunging,
-as though he had taken fright at something, and
-immediately after he dashed past us at a false gallop on
-the way to the city.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why has he changed his pace?' said Frank quickly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For no reason that I can tell,' said Pedro, 'unless
-the others showed themselves.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They can never have been so mad,' said Frank.
-'And yet I think he must have seen them. Did the
-page come by us?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' answered Pedro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did he go back?' asked Frank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I could not hear,' said the Cimaroon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely they must have shown themselves,' said
-Frank. 'Yet there is nothing for it but to lie still and
-wait.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I thought of Sergeant Culverin and his <i>agua ardiente</i>,
-but held my peace. Silently we lay again listening
-breathlessly to the sound of the galloping horse dying
-away in the distance towards Panama, and the growing
-clamour of the bells on either hand, not knowing how
-far we were descried, and being wholly unable to find
-out. Had the horseman seen anything, and would he
-warn the <i>recuas</i> of their danger? As we listened the
-full jangling of the mule-bells ceased and gave place to
-a fitful tinkle. It was now the sound of mules at a
-standstill, which shook themselves or tried to lick the
-places where the flies had galled them. Faint cries of
-impatient men mingled with the broken sound, and at
-last we could not doubt but that they had stopped.
-Frank and Pedro looked at each other blankly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They have surely been warned,' said Pedro.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Still we must wait,' said Frank, with his stern look
-settling hard on his resolute face. 'It is in God's hand.
-Peradventure the gold was well gotten by this Treasurer,
-and it is not His will that we should take it from him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this cold comfort we had to content ourselves
-and listen again. Very soon the bells towards Venta
-Cruz pealed full again, and in a few minutes Pedro knew
-they were returning. Our wits were now wholly bent
-towards the city. Would they come on and trust to the
-Treasurer's guard? That was all we could ask ourselves.
-The answer came before many minutes were past.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again the full jangle broke the stillness. They had
-moved again. As loud as ever it sounded, and our hopes
-beat high, but only for a short space. Lower and lower
-sank the sound, till we could hardly hear it. Pedro
-whispered to Frank, who held up his hand to calm
-some who had half risen, hoping for an order to
-pursue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was plain they were fast losing patience, when
-suddenly the faint tinkling waxed again, till it burst
-out with a full-toned peal not half a mile from us.
-Then I knew it was but a deep hollow in the road that
-had kept the sound from us. Louder and louder it grew,
-till we could hear each bell sweet and distinct, for the
-Spaniards love to have them strong and full-toned for
-comfort on their long and dreary marches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I saw Frank's whistle, on which he always gave us
-the signal to attack, glisten in the starlight as he pulled
-it out. I drew my rapier silently. Now we could hear
-the men cursing their mules and beating them, as though
-they were in hot haste. Now they were abreast of us.
-Still we stirred not. Mule after mule we could hear go
-by, almost deafening us with the clang of their bells,
-though not a hair could we see in our dark lair. A whole
-train so passed, and then came another. Now was our
-time. The whistle gleamed at Frank's lips. I gripped
-my hilt hard. Shrilly went up the signal, clear above
-the jangling bells.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a moment we were on our feet, rushing through
-the grass breast high on two full trains of mules.
-Whether there were soldiers there we could not tell, yet
-no armour could I descry. There was no time to think.
-Already I heard Mr. Oxenham's voice shouting to the
-leading carriers to stop, and we were amongst them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Every one knocked over or seized the man in front
-of him. I rushed with Frank to the rear to stay any
-man escaping. We knew our other company had
-stopped the front <i>recua</i>, for the mules all began lying
-down, as is their wont when they are halted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were soon all stretched peacefully in the way,
-and it was all over. Not a sign of resistance was there.
-We hardly knew what to make of it. There was not a
-Spaniard in all the train, much less a Treasurer and his
-daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hold that false Spaniard fast, Jasper,' cried Frank.
-'If he has deceived us, as I fear he has, he shall rue the
-day.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I clung to my charge, the prisoner we had brought
-along with us, while the rest made discovery of our
-capture. Bale after bale they cut, but no treasure was
-to be found. Nothing was in them but victuals for the
-fleet. Frank sent for the chief carrier to learn where
-the gold was, as we had little time to spare, and then
-we knew the worst.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, most worthy <i>cabalero</i>,' said the chief carrier,
-who seemed a very tall, sensible fellow, 'they have
-played you a trick, for which none is to blame but
-yourself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But was not the Treasurer of Lima to pass first
-to-night?' asked Frank impatiently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Since you know that I will tell you all,' answered
-the man. 'Sure enough he was to come with all his
-gold and family and jewels, but half-way hither a
-<i>cabalero</i> met us in hot haste, saying he had seen something
-alive, half white, half black, rolling in the grass,
-and he feared there was danger. So he urged his
-Excellency to turn back and send on the victual <i>recuas</i>
-to try and spring the trap, if there was one. We have
-done it, and crave indulgence, since it was but our orders,
-noble captain.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I saw Frank's face darken with anger in the flare of
-the torches we had now kindled. He turned quickly
-from the muleteer to us who stood by.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Oxenham,' said he sternly, in a firm low voice,
-'it was one of your company that spoiled all, for it was
-ere he reached us that this discreet gentleman changed
-his pace. What does it mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sergeant,' said Harry, who now stepped forward,
-'report yourself for punishment!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very unsteadily the poor Sergeant came up and gave
-a reeling salute. He was plainly very drunk, yet to
-judge by his melancholy face sobered enough to know
-what he had done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I could not help it, Captain Drake,' blurted the
-unhappy man. 'I had not seen a horse for nigh
-on a year. I could not choose but look when I heard
-him come. It would have been well, but the Cimaroon
-who was with me jumped on my back to pull me down,
-and so we rolled over, and the enemy's horse descried
-us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Enough,' said Frank sharply; 'you are a fool, and
-shall smart for your folly, but not now. We have other
-work. Go! You are Mr. Waldyve's prisoner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With another salute a little more steadily he faced
-about and withdrew, crestfallen beyond all words. I
-could see Frank was consumed with anger, but yet he
-gave it not rein, for he had need of his calmness. That
-we were thus disappointed by the folly of one of our
-own company was bad enough when we had come so
-near to so great success, but there was worse beyond.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our case was a very desperate one, that was plain.
-We had failed, and nothing was left us but to escape as
-quickly as we could to our ships, or at least the forest,
-ere the Spaniards could gather a force to attack us.
-How far they had discovered us was our only doubt,
-and Frank again questioned the muleteer to find out
-what they knew of our numbers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, that I know not,' said the man. 'Yet I am
-persuaded that unless you make haste away they will
-be upon you with all the force they can muster. They
-have good reason to fear your strength, or otherwise his
-Excellency would have trusted to his own guard. I
-tell you this because I owe them a grudge for making
-me a cat's-paw.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why did he not trust to his guard?' asked
-Frank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, for good reason enough. "What folk can
-these be?" he says to the gentleman that met us.
-"Well," says he, "there are only two who would have
-stomach for this wild stroke into the heart of Tierra-Firme,
-where no pirate has ever dared to set his foot
-before. I tell your Excellency it is Drake or the
-Devil." "Say rather the Devil Drake," says his Excellency,
-and thereupon very easily is persuaded to send me
-on instead of himself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This answer after his own heart brought a smile to
-the general's face in spite of his anger, and helped him
-to calmly choose what course we should take. There
-were but two. One was to return by the terrible long
-and painful way we had come; the other the short way
-along the road through Venta Cruz. The former was
-the safest, but we were all wearied out and footsore.
-Moreover, though disappointed of the gold and jewels,
-we had some two loads of silver to carry. I know not
-if it were past our strength to attempt it, but I know
-that desperate as we were over our cruel failure it was
-long past our inclination.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pedro, who told us all this, stood waiting for an
-answer as the captain pondered. I knew what Frank
-was thinking of, for he presently looked hard at the
-Cimaroon. In success he doubted not their faith. In
-failure could he trust them? This was the last and
-greatest of our perils, enough in all to have crushed a
-heart less stout than his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pedro,' says he suddenly, still staring hard at the
-chief out of his wide blue eyes, 'will you give me your
-hand not to forsake me if I do it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Cimaroon knew what he meant; so did we all.
-He drew his muscular black frame to the full height
-very proudly before he answered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Captain Drake,' says he then, 'you and I are chiefs
-who have sworn company. Rather would I die at your
-feet than leave you to your enemies, if you dare hold to
-it, as I know you dare.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that they gripped hands, and Frank, turning
-cheerfully to the company, gave us his resolution.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Seeing we have failed, lads,' said he, 'we must even
-haste back to our ships as fast as we may, from which
-we have been too long absent already, that we may
-defend them in case they be attacked, and moreover to
-let things quiet down a bit till we can try again. For
-try again we will, since I am resolved not to leave this
-coast till our voyage be made. Well, there are two
-ways back&mdash;one the long and weary track by which we
-came, the other short and quick, but it lies through
-Venta Cruz.' He paused a moment to see the effect of
-his words, which seemed to catch the breath of those
-who listened, and they looked from one to the other as
-he went on. 'By the long way half of us will drop
-with fatigue, to be picked up by Spaniards. The short
-way is easy along the high road. The mules will carry
-us as far as the town, and then all we have to do is to
-force a passage. I am for the short way; who is for the
-long?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a man spoke, half of them being still breathless, I
-think, at the thought of this desperate expedient. Had
-any other man proposed it we should have set him
-down for a mad fellow, but we had all come to think
-that nothing was too hard for us under our heroic
-general, and not a man demurred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then we are all for the short way,' cried Frank.
-'Mount then, and away! There is no time to lose, if
-we do not want the whole Panama garrison at our
-heels.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes we were all ambling on our borrowed
-steeds on the road towards Venta Cruz, silent and
-oppressed with thinking of our forlorn attempt, yet
-each desperate and resolved to do his best. So we
-continued till within a mile of the town, where the road
-entered the forest again. A very perilous pass it looked,
-and Frank called on us to draw rein. The road was
-but from ten to twelve feet wide, and on either side a
-dense wall of tangled boughs and vines, reaching high
-above our heads, as thick as any well-kept Kentish
-hedge. For in that land the growth of the woods is so
-fast and rank that were it not that men were always at
-work shredding and ridding the way, it would be
-altogether lost and overgrown in one year. This constant
-cutting had made the leafy walls on either hand as
-dense as I have said, so that a man could hardly push
-through them without hurt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just as we drew rein I saw dimly, from where I
-rode in front with Frank, that our two Cimaroons had
-stopped about half a flight ahead of us. We drew near,
-and saw they were snuffing the air through their
-widely-distended nostrils like hounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Small shot in the wood!' they said, as we came to
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where?' says Frank. 'Can you see them?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' said the elder Cimaroon; 'but we can smell
-their matches. It is sure the wood is full of them on
-either hand.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We could neither see nor smell anything, but doubted
-not it was as these strangely gifted men had said. The
-Spaniards had been too quick for us; they were ready.
-Clearly it was to be no Nombre de Dios affair again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is to be done?' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, go through with it,' said Frank. 'Now, lads,
-the wood is full of harquebusiers in ambush; we must
-force a passage. Hold your fire till their first volley is
-spent. Then one old English salute, and at them at
-push of pike in the old fashion!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our prisoner and the <i>recuas</i> were now turned away,
-with strict charge that none should follow us on pain of
-death. The Cimaroons divided the burden of the silver
-amongst them, and once more we pressed on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ho! stand!' suddenly comes out of the darkness,
-and a Spanish captain glittering in brilliant harness
-steps into the road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ho!' returns Frank, as though the road were his
-own, 'stand and declare yourself!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Que gente?</i>' says the Spaniard, very proud.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'English,' says Frank, blowing up the match of his
-pistol; 'what would you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gentlemen Englishmen,' cries the Spaniard, 'it
-pains me to be so discourteous as to deny you passage
-this way. In the name of his most Catholic and
-Puissant Majesty the King of Spain, I bid you yield
-yourselves; and promise you, on the word and faith of a
-Castilian and a gentleman soldier, in that case to use
-you with all courtesy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most worthy captain,' says Frank, 'it is utter grief
-to me that we are in too great haste to grant you this
-favour, and are forced to inform you, notwithstanding
-your courteous offer, that for the honour of her most
-High and Mighty Majesty the Queen of England,
-Defender of the Faith, we must have passage this
-way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sharp crack from Frank's pistol was the fitting
-conclusion to his speech, and I saw the Spaniard reel.
-Then there was a roar in front of us. Long tongues of
-flame leaped from the thickets ahead on either hand.
-A hot iron seemed to sear my leg. Frank clapped his
-hand to his thigh, and the man on the other side of me
-fell forward with a terrible cry. Thick and fast their
-shot whistled by. The Cimaroons had entirely
-disappeared, and we took what shelter we could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The narrow road was now full of choking sulphurous
-smoke. We could see nothing but here and
-there the leaping flash of a harquebuss or the glimmer
-of a match. Almost as suddenly as it had begun their
-fire slackened, and then a merry trill went up, shrill and
-clear, from Frank's whistle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We were all out in the road again in a minute.
-Bow-strings were singing, and small shot barking, as
-arrows and slugs went tearing into the dense smoke.
-Then we knew our silence had done its work, and
-brought the enemy rashly out of their cover. Shrieks,
-groans, curses, followed our discharge, and gave us
-courage to advance, which we did at a run through the
-choking smoke. Still we could not come to push of
-pike. They seemed to be retreating before us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where are the Cimaroons?' said I, as I ran by
-Frank's side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not,' he said; 'God grant they have not
-deserted us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when an
-unearthly yell arose behind us, and Pedro bounded past
-towards the town. In a moment the air was rent with
-the horrible screams of his people. Encouraged, as I
-think, by hearing us advance, they had issued from the
-cover, where their horror of gunpowder had driven
-them. Howsoever they had feared before, they were
-now most terrible to behold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like incarnate fiends they bounded on before us,
-leaping, dancing, casting up their arms, and all the
-while yelling, '<i>Yó pehó! Yó pehó!</i>' in most evil sort,
-and singing unearthly spells, after the fashion of their
-own savage warfare. Their frenzy seemed to give them
-more than human power; and even as they ran they
-leaped so high as I never saw before, nor all the while
-did they cease to discharge their deadly arrows and
-awful war-cries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether it were witchcraft or not I cannot tell, but
-very soon we were all as mad as they, and ran so fast
-that before the Spaniards reached the town gate we
-overtook many of them. They tried to make a stand,
-but it was to no purpose. The Cimaroons burrowed
-into the thickets like snakes, and drew them forth by
-the heels, never ceasing to yell their rhythmic '<i>Yó pehó!
-Yó pehó!</i>' Half of the enemy we now saw were monks,
-who kicked and screamed most lustily till they were
-speared by the maddened Cimaroons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still a few pikemen boldly held their ground with
-the captain; and in this struggle a few more of us were
-wounded. The Cimaroons fought like demons. One
-close by me was run through with a pike, whereupon,
-so mad was he, that he drew himself along the shaft
-till he could reach the Spaniard who held it, and then
-stabbed his enemy to the death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such a sight of frantic, wanton daring I never saw.
-It seemed to strike terror into our enemy; for
-incontinently with a cry of horror they fled, and we leaped
-after them so fast that all entered the town
-together&mdash;sailors, Spaniards, friars, and Cimaroons, in one
-confused throng.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We gave them no time to recover their senses, but
-hustled them clean into the monastery, where we locked
-them up. In a very short space the town was fairly
-in our hands, and all quiet. Guards were set at the
-gate where we had entered, and also at the bridge at
-the other end of the town, whereby we should have to
-pass out over the river to continue our way. Then we
-had leisure to look to our wounds, which, though many,
-were slight, seeing that the enemy had but powdered
-us with hail-shot. The man who first fell by me was
-the only one of the company sorely hurt, and he died
-very soon after.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our business in the town occupied us about an
-hour and a half. Amongst other merchandise we dealt
-in were above a thousand bulls and pardons which had
-newly come out of Rome. With these the mariners
-made more sport than was needful, yet the church and
-all other things ecclesiastic were respected.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We found some women there, moreover, with new-born
-infants, who had come thither because no Spanish
-child may safely be born in Nombre de Dios by reason
-of its pestilent airs. These were terribly affrighted by
-our presence, and would not be content till the general
-went to them himself as soon as he had leisure, to show
-it was indeed Francis Drake who had taken the town,
-whereby they were forthwith comforted, knowing that
-in his hands they were safe, as indeed they were, even
-from the fury of the Cimaroons, who very faithfully kept
-their word to the general, and hurt no one after the
-fight was done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our dealings, though not large, brought us no little
-comfort for the loss of our Treasurer, and it was more
-heavily laden than when we entered that we continued
-our way, after blocking the bridge to prevent pursuit.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXIV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Of the terrible march we had ere we regained our
-ships I will not speak. Our spirits were at the lowest
-ebb by reason of our failure, for what we had seen in
-the governor's cellars at Nombre de Dios had so turned
-our heads that we counted the plunder we had got as
-nothing. Moreover our general was in a desperate
-hurry to reach the ships before evil befell them, and we
-therefore marched so rapidly that we had no time or
-strength to get proper victuals, and were always half
-fasting. Our boots were worn to tatters, our feet cut
-and blistered, our wounds galled us, the mosquitoes
-tormented us, and beneath all, as I say, rankled our failure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under such a load of trouble I think we should
-have sunk had it not been for Frank, who never ceased
-to cheer us with new plans for the making of our
-voyage. What bred most wonder in me was the order
-he took to lighten our pains. For if one complained of
-his worn boots or his wound, Frank would always complain
-louder, and cry plague on the stones, the boots,
-the gnats, and everything. I knew his wound was
-slight and his feet whole, so asked him the reason of
-his words.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why,' says he, 'see you not that the poor lads,
-however bad they be, will take some grain of courage if
-they think there is one who is worse and yet can go
-on? and moreover, where captain and men share alike
-you are most sure to find yourself marching in company
-content.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet for all this many fainted by the way, and then
-the Cimaroons would cease their valiant bragging, which
-otherwise was unceasing since our capture of Vera
-Cruz, and bear such as could not walk between two of
-them very loving and cheerful for two miles or more at
-a spell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor Sergeant, the cause of all our woe, plodded
-on in silence at Harry's heels. He looked like a man
-who would never joy again, and by no means could I
-win him to speech.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seven days we toiled thus to the mouth of a river
-called by the Cimaroons Rio Tortugas, and hither to our
-great joy came the master, Ellis Hixom, to whom our
-captain had sent, and took us off to Fort Diego in the
-pinnace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was great joy at our meeting in spite of our
-little plunder, since they had begun to fear we were
-destroyed. They said they hardly knew us for the
-same men, except the captain, so haggard and thin and
-burnt we were, to say no more of the tatters to which
-the brakes and stones had turned our clothes. Hunger
-and toil and grief had doubtless made great havoc with
-us, and the fire of that terrible sun had burnt us
-well-nigh black.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My Señorita, to whom I went for comfort soon after
-I got to the ships, seemed quite shocked to see me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Madre de Dios, Señor!' she cried, clasping her little
-hands in terror. 'How you are changed! Ah! and
-you are wounded. It is well you have come back to
-me to be made yourself again. Indeed I am glad you
-are come back.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She held out her hands in such frank welcome that
-I felt half healed already, and sat down as she bade me
-on her own cushions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed I am glad you are come back to us,' she said
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then did not Master Hixom treat you well?' I
-asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, I hate him,' she said, knitting her dainty brows.
-'He is a stock, a stone, a log! He kept us well,
-but I hate him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I never knew why she was so hot against him,
-but I could only smile to think she must have tried
-her coaxing on him as she had on me, but with less
-success. He was a flinty Puritan from Plymouth with
-a wife and children, who would not have unbent, I
-think, had Princess Helen herself put up her lips to
-him. She begged me to come and be her gaoler again,
-and I left her with such hope as it was not hard to
-give.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That evening as I sat with others in the general's
-bower, talking over what next was to be attempted, we
-were surprised by Sergeant Culverin saluting in the
-doorway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I come, Captain Drake, by your leave,' says he,
-holding himself very stiff, 'to report myself for
-punishment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall give you none,' says Frank, but looked very
-stern at him, for he was ever slow to forget a fault.
-'You have suffered enough already with your wound,
-and what of your fault is unpunished is wiped out by
-your valiant bearing before Venta Cruz.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For indeed he had done wonders there, and had
-gotten a sore pike-thrust in the arm, from which he had
-suffered great pain unmurmuring on our pitiful march.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By your leave, Captain Drake,' said he, when Frank
-finished, 'I crave you allot some punishment to me. It
-was a most grievous breach of the discipline of the
-wars, and I shall joy no more till it be atoned.
-Moreover it will be an evil example to the youth of your
-company, and like to breed much discontent and
-danger to our voyage if I go unpunished. Therefore,
-for the love of soldiership, I pray you omit not this just
-dealing with me. The Signor John Peter Pugliano
-always held&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Peace, enough!' said Frank. 'It shall be as you
-say, so you will spare us your Italian's wisdom. I
-reverence your soldiership, and adjudge you the
-honourable estate of an hour on the hobby-horse.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A rail was soon set up by some of the mariners, who
-were nothing loath to be revenged on the old soldier.
-On this he was speedily set with his hands bound behind
-him, and a harquebuss hanging to each foot. There
-he sat stiff and upright, as though he were in the
-emperor's tilting ground again. He gave no heed to
-the jeers of younger sailors, but sat grimly on
-uncomplaining.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I passed him presently I could see the pain was
-as much as he could bear, weak as he was from hunger
-and his wound. Just then one threw a tuft of grass at
-him. Then he looked round fiercely, but he only bit
-his lip to keep in the angry burst that was on his
-tongue, and stared grimly in front of him again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then two or three began to whisper it was a sin
-that such a tall fellow who took his punishment so well
-should be tormented for what was after all but too
-deep a pull at his flask. So they went amongst the
-others, and the jeering ceased. Then they fell to
-encouraging him and watching the sand-glass, till at last,
-seeing how stiff and grim he still sat, they went in a
-body to Frank and would not be content till they had
-leave to take him down, which at last they did, in spite
-of his angry protesting that he would sit his
-punishment out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So their past toils and grief were fast forgotten, and
-all talk was of what was to be attempted next. Some
-were for attacking the treasure frigates which were sure
-to be moving on the coast now the Plate Fleets were in,
-but others counted this but folly, seeing how strong
-and well manned with soldiers were the wafters that
-convoyed them. Others, amongst whom was Mr. Oxenham,
-were for gathering fresh victuals from the provision
-ships, which were always unprotected, that we might
-thereby recover our sick and get sufficient strength for
-another attempt by land, which now was not to be
-thought of, seeing that all the Main was alarmed and
-half our company sick.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pedro was very earnest for us to attempt Veragua,
-a rich town between Nombre de Dios and Nicaragua,
-where his former master, Señor Pezoro, had the richest
-gold mine in all the north side, whence he won daily
-above £200 worth of gold. All this he stored in a great
-treasure house, to which Pedro promised he could lead
-us undescried through the woods and make us masters
-of the untold treasure therein. Every Cimaroon on the
-Main would further our attempt, he said, because this
-Pezoro was known to be worse than a devil to his
-slaves, and hated more than any man in all the Indies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But our general was loath to undertake so long a
-march, though sorely tempted by the greatness of the
-prize. Our company was too much broken by wounds
-and sickness to venture so far, so it was concluded to
-send forth two pinnaces, which were all we could man, to
-try what could be done. Mr. Oxenham took the <i>Bear</i>
-eastwards towards Tolu to gather victuals, as he had
-wished, while the general took the <i>Minion</i> to ply towards
-the west, and have dealings, if it were possible, in the
-treasure trade, which we knew to be great at this time
-from Veragua and Nicaragua to the Fleet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for me, I was far too sick with my wound to join
-either; but not being quite so spent as some, was able
-to take my old charge of the prisoners. Being little
-able to walk, I was almost entirely in the ship with the
-Spaniards. Indeed I had little duty or pleasure
-elsewhere. Hixom, our master, was again set over those
-that remained, and, since Harry, Frank, and Mr. Oxenham
-were away in the pinnaces, there was no one
-amongst the mariners with whom I cared to converse
-so much as the courtly old Scrivano and his friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And why should I not confess the rest since I have
-unfolded so much? Whether I did wrong I cannot
-tell. I had abandoned the guide whom all my life I
-had followed, because, as I thought, he had only led me
-astray. It was hard to trust to anything again. Often
-I would play with Harry's rapier and think. I know
-not if the quick, hard life I had been leading was to
-blame, but it would not say me Ay or No!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After all my recent toil and labour it was so pleasant,
-to have her at my side, to look at and talk to. Pleasant,
-too, it was to see how she was bent on winning me,
-whether for her father's sake to earn him favour at my
-hands, or for very wanton love of winning a new
-kind of conquest, I cannot tell; pleasant, too, to mark
-how lovingly she sought to ease my pain and beguile
-the lagging hours, how tenderly she dressed my wound
-and smoothed my pillow when she bade me sleep.
-What wonder, then, if I gave myself up to the sweet
-beguilement! What wonder if, when she had set me to
-rest and no one was by, I drew the pretty face to mine
-and our lips met! I know not, I say, how I shall be
-blamed. She was so sweet and gentle and kind; I
-was so weak and weary. It was all I had to give; it
-was the payment most grateful to her. Well! well!
-It is long past now for good or ill. If any has been so
-diseased as I in body and spirit and so sweetly tended,
-lying as I did all day in the murmur and savour of a
-tropic spring in the midst of those jewelled seas, let
-him judge me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were some among my prisoners who looked
-on with little ease and twirled their fierce moustaches,
-but the worldly old Scrivano would not have it otherwise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let them be,' he would say; 'it will not last for
-ever. A friend at court is worth winning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was when she told me this that I first knew a
-sweet fear that all she did might not be done in wantonness
-or even for the prisoners' sakes. Till then I had
-thought it was only in their behoof she was kind, and
-I trod my flowery path with a light heart. Now I
-began to doubt we were come to where thorns were
-hidden beneath the blossoms by the way, but it was
-still too fair and pleasant for me to stop. In my
-weakness I said there was still time enough.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we continued till near the middle of March,
-when Mr. Oxenham returned in great heart with a
-smart frigate laden with a good store of maize and live
-hogs and hens, which greatly rejoiced us, since we were
-pining for fresh food. I was nevertheless not so glad
-to see him back as I had hoped, since now the general
-was away there was none to prevent him coming on
-board my ship every day, where he talked so gaily with
-my Señorita, to her manifest content, that I wished in
-my heart his voyage had been less fortunate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was overjoyed when Frank came back, not only
-because it put an end to Mr. Oxenham's visits, but also
-for the news he brought. Off the Cabeças he had
-met with a frigate of Nicaragua, which he had lightened
-of a pretty store of gold and her Genoese pilot. This
-man, who but a week before was at Veragua, had
-assured our general that the whole coast was palsied
-with fear of him. So fast had he moved and so suddenly
-struck that it seemed, so the man said, nothing less
-than magical, and none knew where their dreaded enemy
-would next appear. The plain truth was that, eschewing
-armour after the manner of English mariners, we
-marched more quickly than the Spaniards ever thought
-possible, and this greatly increased their fears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So from Nicaragua to Carthagena they lay shivering
-in their beds, never knowing if they should sleep the
-night in peace. Our pilot was only too glad to join
-his fortunes to ours on promise that his right should
-be done him, and had led our captain into Veragua
-harbour, where lay a frigate laden with above a million
-in gold, not daring to venture forth. But by a new
-order of watch which they had taken, the pinnace was
-descried and the attempt abandoned, since there lay a
-still better chance in the Chagres river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The galleys that were to waft the gold fleet, the
-Genoese said, were laid up at Nombre de Dios to be
-fitted. Thus there was nothing to protect the gold
-frigates but land soldiers, with whom Frank doubted
-not he could deal, if he gathered all his whole men
-together, and to this end he was now returned to join
-Mr. Oxenham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The frigate which the <i>Lion</i> had captured, being a
-very smart one, fell in well with Frank's purpose. She
-was speedily careened, new tallowed, and launched
-again, as stout a man-of-war as any on the coast. All
-the best of our ordnance was set aboard of her, and
-as soon as Easter was past and the men refreshed Frank
-set sail with her and the <i>Bear</i> for the Rio Chagres.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Being willing to break from the dalliance in which
-I lived, I had craved to be taken with them, for
-I was fast mending since fresh meat had grown
-abundant. But Frank would not hear of it, and once
-more I was left alone with my prisoners, of which in
-my heart I fear I was glad.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sweet indeed were the days that followed. Every
-hour my strength seemed to grow, and since there was
-nothing to do after I had made my rounds amongst the
-sick, I wandered with my Señorita along the shore or
-in the woods wellnigh the livelong day, and was
-never weary. Yet what we spoke of I cannot tell.
-I can hardly recall a phrase she uttered, yet she
-chattered like the golden brook, where we loved best to sit,
-and I listened more willing and untiring than ever I
-did to the wisest voices of the ancients.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of herself and of me it seems to me now was all
-her talk, the empty prattle of a child; yet I sat and
-watched her ripe face and wanted no more. Ours was
-the life of the lazy pelicans and the scarlet cranes, and
-all the other shore fowl that breathed around us that
-tingling tropic life, and crowned with their presence
-the enchanting beauty of the scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once, and only once, I remember she wandered to
-deeper things. She spoke of the faith of her people,
-and how she longed sometimes to be a nun, and have
-done with love and be good again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you a heretic?' she then said, suddenly looking
-at me very wistfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I trust not,' I said, smiling, for it seemed a strangely
-merry thing to me to see her serious.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why do you laugh?' she said, pouting a little.
-'My Padre says all Englishmen are Lutheran heretics
-and will go to torment. How can you laugh at that?
-It makes me very sad to think of you there, and to
-think I shall not find you in heaven when I come.
-Why will you be a heretic and pray to the devil?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, gentle Señorita,' I answered, 'never think of
-those things. Your pretty head must not wear such
-ugly thoughts. Forget it now; go and crown yourself
-with flowers as you did yesterday, and I will worship a
-true goddess and no devil, though something of a witch.
-So you shall see I am a true believer in your
-loveliness and no heretic. What would you more?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Witch or not,' she answered, rising with a smile,
-'I have tamed your tongue, my faithful worshipper,
-and brought it to a most gentle pacing; I may not
-choose but be carried now whithersoever it will amble
-with me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Twas but a sorry jade,' I said, as she rose and
-gathered some bright flowers that seemed to bend down
-to kiss her hand. 'Yet since you took the rein I
-think it can never stumble, nor ever falter or grow
-dull so long as it feels the gentle spurring of your
-eye.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save us now, worshipper, from your sharp and
-stinging comparisons,' she said, as she turned on me
-radiantly, her pliant figure entwined with a tender vine
-of rose-coloured flowers, and her glossy hair crowned
-with glowing blossoms, 'and send your goddess a daintier
-offering!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, goddess,' said I, 'it was a bright and glittering
-offering enough till your radiance put it out of
-countenance.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then must you offer me something brighter still,'
-she said, as she sat herself upon a great rock half
-hidden in flowers. 'See, your goddess is enthroned.
-To your knees, errant worshipper; I will endure no
-heretical postures.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I knelt before her and offered her such dainty
-sweetmeat phrases as every pretty woman loves, so they
-be compounded to her taste and served so that she
-may taste without offence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In such wise my pretty plaything and I played
-together till the sun began to sink and I returned to
-my duties, wondering idly, as the wise Sieur de
-Montaigne tells us in his <i>Apology for Raymond Sebond</i> he
-did of his cat, whether she played with me or I with
-her; and wondering, too, still more to think how the
-magic of the west, or warfare, or whatsoever else it
-might be, had changed me. It was barely a year ago
-since I was alone with another woman, the first I ever
-knew. How different it was then, and yet perhaps
-how like, if we but knew the springs of our hearts!
-But enough of that! Let me not speak of those two
-with one breath.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I seemed another man as I looked backward. Yet
-was there no miracle. For surely it is no more than
-natural that, when a man has burst the bonds in which
-he blindly bound down and tormented his soul, it
-should grow quickly to its proper shape if it finds
-itself planted in soil that is apt to its true nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All too soon, as we thought, and yet perhaps not
-soon enough, Frank came back with the frigate and the
-pinnace in company with a goodly bark.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A fat prize at last,' I cried, as he rowed up to the
-ship, 'and I not there to see. Is our voyage made?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not yet,' said Frank, 'and yet I hope not far from
-it. Yonder is no prize, but a Frenchman with seventy
-good Huguenots aboard, whom we have admitted to
-our company. Let me present to you her captain, most
-worthy Monsieur Tetú.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He bowed with great ceremony and much spreading
-abroad of his hands, and I asked if he had any news from
-Europe, at which to my surprise he seemed very pained.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' broke in Frank, 'he has news. Would God
-he had not!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is the Queen married then?' I asked quickly, for it
-was always the first inquiry of strangers in those
-shifting times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No!' answered Frank, 'nor like to be, it seems. Be
-pleased, Monsieur, to tell Mr. Festing what tidings you
-bring.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with that the little French captain, with excited
-gesture and kindling eyes, poured into my scorched ears
-the black and awful tale of the Massacre of Paris on
-St. Bartholomew's day, on the occasion of the King of
-Navarre's marriage with the Princess Margaret. We
-could none of us speak for a while when he ended the
-relation of that most foul and detestable crime. I could
-only feel leap up in my heart a mad longing, like Frank's,
-to be revenged, and that speedily. It seemed to revive
-in me all my old detestation of the Papists, and the whole
-body of them, innocent and guilty alike, seemed again a
-cursed thing in my eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Many a better man than I was seized with the same
-mad rage when he knew that tale. How could we be
-otherwise? Yet I contained myself enough to express
-my pity to the French captain, who seemed well-nigh
-broken-hearted at the blot upon his country's
-fame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly, Mr. Festing, it is hard to bear,' he said, with
-a bitterness that cut me to the heart. 'I never thought
-to see the day when I could say that those Frenchmen
-were happiest who were farthest from France. That is
-why I have sailed hither and turned my back on her.
-I wash my hands of her. She is France no longer, but
-rather Frenzy, and all Gaul is gall indeed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His attempt at pleasantry touched me very deeply,
-for I knew how bitterly he felt the loss of his country,
-and I tried some apology.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are kind, Mr. Festing,' he said, taking my hand
-very warmly, after the manner of his country. 'It is
-not France&mdash;my pure, simple, single-hearted France&mdash;that
-has done this. It is Italian practices that have
-over-mastered French simplicity. Truly, sir, Italy is an
-accursed land, that curses all it touches with its noisome
-humours.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed a brave heart, and was a seaman in all
-his inches. For my part I conceived a great liking for
-him, though I think Frank would have been glad enough
-to be well rid of him and his company.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet I could not say him nay,' he said to me, 'when I
-saw his poor fellows more than half starved. Moreover
-he was so mighty civil, and said that five weeks ago he
-had heard of us and of our great dealings, as he pleased
-to put it, and ever since he had been seeking, desiring
-nothing so much as to meet with the gentlemen who
-had set the whole Spanish Main in a tremble. I was
-bound to relieve him with our spare victuals, and so
-was obliged to abandon our attempt on the Chagres
-river.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And then you agreed to venture in company?'
-said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said he. 'Yet I will not say it was without
-some jealousy and mistrust, for all his civility. Yet,
-seeing how earnest he was to be our friend, and how
-strong to hurt us if he were our enemy, we concluded
-to take him and twenty of his company and venture
-equally.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And is it man for man and ton for ton again?' I
-asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, lad, no,' answered Frank. 'That would never
-do. As I told our Monsieur, though his company was
-seventy and mine now but thirty-one, mine must weigh
-more than his, since in our purposed play the principal
-actors were not numbers of men, but rather their
-judgment and knowledge; to which arguments he agreed
-with the best grace he could. The more so as I showed
-him his great tonnage was no good in our present
-case.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then are we not to attempt the Chagres fleet?'
-said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' he answered; 'that is where they are looking
-for us. We must attempt the place where they last
-expect us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And where is that?' said I.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where but knocking at the back door of Nombre
-de Dios,' he answered, laughing to see my surprise at
-this his wildest plan of all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now save you, Frank,' said I, 'from a very
-mid-summer madness! You will never get in there again,
-or at least get out again if you do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh,' says he, ''tis not so mad as that. We have no
-cause to go in. We will get the gold outside. The
-great <i>recuas</i> are passing by road now the whole way.
-What is easier with our present help than to deal with
-one of them when it is all but home, and thinks all
-danger is over? Pedro will lead us thither, into the Rio
-Francisco and then a little march. I have already
-sent for the Cimaroons. Many times, Jasper, we have
-struck amiss. God has shown the Spaniards great
-mercy; yet now, I think, since He has sent us this
-French company, with tidings of this last most bloody
-dealing of the Italian priest against His faithful people
-of Paris, it is surely His will that we shall entreat these
-idolaters according to their iniquity; and so by His
-grace we will, and our voyage be made.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap25"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In six days all was ready, and our Frenchmen sufficiently
-refreshed from the nearest magazines to undergo
-the labour of our desperate attempt. When the hour
-was come I went to take leave of my Señorita.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sweet goddess!' said I, for she would not be otherwise
-named by me, 'your faithful worshipper comes
-to crave your leave to depart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Madre de Dios!' she said, looking at me with wide,
-frightened eyes. 'What new wild venture is this?
-When will this devil cease to torment my people and
-set us free?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Does my goddess then so long to change her
-paradise?' I asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' she answered petulantly, 'for her worshipper
-loves her not and is faithless, or he would be content to
-stay here in paradise. But no,' she went on, starting
-suddenly up, 'you shall not go. I forbid it. You
-will be killed, and I&mdash;I shall be left with these rough
-men. You must stay and worship me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, let me go and worship you,' said I. 'Lip-service
-is unworthy to offer at your shrine; I will go and bring
-you better offerings than that, so you will give me leave.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With such jesting talk I tried to win her free
-consent, that we might not mar the pleasant comedy we
-played. Still she would not give it, and I thought she
-but held it back in her wanton way, wishing for more.
-But at last her face quite altered, and she turned quickly
-on me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hold! hold!' she said. 'Your tongue has a devil.
-You and your captain are devils together. Go to him;
-but&mdash;oh, Gasparo, I have played too long&mdash;I have played
-till play has grown to earnest. Go! but come back to
-play no more. Come back to love me; or, Gasparo,'
-she continued, sinking her voice to an awe-hushed
-whisper, 'I know the devil will come into my heart,
-too, and drive me to do I know not what.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just then Frank's whistle sounded a shrill call to
-embark. I could not think what to say or do. I bent
-over her to snatch a hasty kiss and go, since it was so
-we always parted now, but she shrank away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No!' she said; 'the play is done. Our lips shall
-meet no more till they meet in earnest, till they meet in
-love. Go now, and the Holy Mother be with you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An hour afterwards I was sailing merrily onwards,
-bearing room for the Cabeças. 'Our fleet was made up
-of the new-tallowed frigate and two pinnaces. In them
-were fifteen English, twenty French, and our Cimaroons;
-and who amongst them all was so tormented with his
-crowded thoughts as I, or rejoiced so much in the
-perilous nature of our enterprise?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What would have happened to me and her I cannot
-dare to think, had it not been that my thoughts were
-occupied more and more fully each mile we sailed with
-the wild excitement of our new, most daring enterprise.
-By the time we had passed the Cabeças, where we left
-the frigate with a mixed guard, and were sailing with
-the pinnaces aloof the shore towards the Rio Francisco,
-all I had left behind was wellnigh lost in what was to
-come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Arrived at the river, which is but five leagues by sea
-from Nombre de Dios, we landed very quietly and
-dismissed the pinnaces, charging those that had guard of
-them to return to the Cabeças and be in the river again
-without fail in four days, which time, Pedro deemed,
-was all that we should want, since now the <i>recuas</i> were
-coming daily from Panama, and the road by Nombre de
-Dios was not above seven leagues from the spot where
-we landed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we started through the dense forest once more in
-our old order, yet in better heart than ever, in spite of
-our miscarriages. For now we knew what the danger
-was and feared it less. Besides, there was not one of us
-in whose heart did not burn a mad desire for revenge.
-The flame of anger which the news from Paris had
-kindled in all the company consumed every other
-thought, and none cared what came of him so long as
-he made shift to strike one good blow in return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A great part of our company had sailed under the
-Prince of Condé's commission in the old days in the
-narrow seas, and some even had served in French ships,
-whereby a sort of brotherhood had grown up between
-our mariners and the Huguenots&mdash;a kindliness which
-those now with us did not a little to keep warm by the
-very cheerful spirits with which they infected us.
-During all the voyage from Fort Diego they had made great
-light of our perils, and protested a very great readiness
-for the attempt. Indeed we found their courage very
-hot, out of their joy, as they ceased not to tell us, at
-marching under our captain, of whom they had heard so
-much since they had been on the coast, no less than from
-the natural disposition of their countrymen for attack,
-and all services where spirit is of more account than
-endurance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was no small hardship to them to hold their peace,
-and our method of silent and catlike marching, in which,
-by use, we were now almost as skilful as the Cimaroons,
-was a great marvel to them, as was the discipline by
-which it was maintained to their captain. By no means
-could they come to the same stillness as we, whereat the
-Cimaroons conceived a great scorn of them, and would
-give no heed or trust to them. In answer the Frenchmen
-fell into a great distrust of them, as we burrowed
-deeper and deeper into the tangled forest and mazy
-ravines, protesting that it was madness to go on so,
-since, should the negroes prove false, we could never
-find the pinnaces again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was true enough; but Frank gave them to
-understand such fears were groundless and must not be
-broached, since we had made long trial of the negroes'
-constancy, and if they feared that they should never
-have come. Moreover, he took such sharp order with
-them, by Monsieur Tetú's consent and furtherance, to
-have silence observed that in a very short space they
-were as firmly under his spell as any of us, and things
-went well again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having come thus within a mile of the road on the
-second evening, we chose a place where we might lie
-and refresh ourselves all night, since the <i>recuas</i> did not
-reach Nombre de Dios till morning. This was a perilous
-time for us, for the Frenchmen, being new to the trade,
-were, for the most part, too excited to sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nor can I blame them, for we lay so near to that
-great town, wherein were now enough soldiers to have
-eaten our whole company at a sitting, that we could
-hear plainly what was passing there. As we lay in the
-brakes, still as mice, we could mark the lazy challenge
-of the watch and the noisy laughter of the guard at their
-cups, mingling with the busy din of the carpenters on
-the fleet. They had just begun work; for, because of
-the great heat, they do not work in the day, and all
-night long there came up from the harbour the sounds
-of saw, and axe, and hammer, as they wrought busily to
-get the fleet ready for sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soon after we came thither two <i>recuas</i> passed out of
-the Panama gate and toiled up the hill to us with such
-a monstrous clanging of bells that we had much ado to
-keep the Frenchmen quiet, so moved were they at the
-sound. Soon they passed. We could hear their music
-die away towards the south, and then on that side all
-was still, and we fell to listening to the labour in the
-harbour again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hour by hour the still night wore on. The Englishmen
-about me fell asleep, as well as some of the French,
-though I grieved to see the wine-flasks passing about
-amongst others more than gave hope of cool heads in
-the morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry, who lay by my side, was one of the first to
-compose himself to rest. I saw him take out a little
-picture from his breast. I knew too well what it was.
-He kissed it lovingly, and then quietly stretched
-himself out and lay quite still. The Sergeant slept at his
-feet. Harry had craved leave for him to come and
-retrieve his reputation, saying well he was the least
-likely of all the company to get us descried again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in the first gray of the morning that I awoke,
-with Harry's hand on my shoulder and the faint sound
-of bells in my ears. His face was radiant, and he held
-up his finger to bid me listen. Close by lay a Cimaroon
-with his head uplifted, like a dog when he suddenly
-hears a strange tread at hand. His eyes were wide open,
-glistening and bloodshot, and his big white teeth
-gleaming as he listened intently. I could see he was
-greatly excited, and so was I to watch him. Suddenly
-he turned to me as though satisfied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is it?' I whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The biggest luck ever men done got,' he answered.
-'Hark! hark!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said I; 'I can hear it is a <i>recua</i> from Panama,
-and a big one by the sound.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A <i>recua</i>!' he answered scornfully. 'It is one, two,
-three <i>recuas</i>! Now you will have more gold and silver
-than all of us can carry away!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And more soldiers than we can drive away perhaps,'
-whispered Harry; 'but we must strike all the lustier,
-that is all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our talk was cut short by the word being passed
-that we should creep on to the edge of the road, which
-we did very quiet and quickly, being divided into two
-bands, under the general and Mr. Oxenham, as before,
-that we might strike head and tail again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time we were in our places I could not
-doubt that what the Cimaroon had said was right. The
-sounds from the town were hushed as the dawn brightened,
-and I could plainly hear such a clanging of bells
-as told me clearly there must be many more mules than
-I had ever heard together before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearer and nearer they drew; and the louder waxed
-the deep-toned music, so sweet in our ears, the quieter
-were we. Not a sign was there to tell of our presence,
-save now and again the dull snap of a bow being bent, or
-the low sound of breath as the matches of our small-shot
-men were blown up, or a gentle rustle of the brakes as
-a young hand moved nervously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everything was at last drowned in the clash of the
-bells. Now they had quite passed Mr. Oxenham's party
-in the rear. Now the clank of arms was abreast of us.
-I saw Frank's whistle at his lips, once more its piercing
-note split the air, and we were all on our feet rushing
-down into the road, shouting, 'Drake! Drake!' like
-madmen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I leapt down into it I could see a sight that made
-my heart bound. Some three hundred mules, laden with
-little leather bags, and all tied tail to tail, stretched
-along the road. In front glittered the morions and
-corselets of some score of soldiers, and at different points
-in the line and in the far rear, where our men were
-already engaged, were more. In front of all rode two
-or three officers in splendid armour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But there was no time to see more. In a moment I
-had discharged my pistol, and was hand to hand at it
-with the foot. Harry was by my side at like work, and
-I could see the Sergeant, sword in hand, making for
-one of the officers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At our first onset they fell back, being quite
-unprepared and dismayed with our shot and arrows.
-Half of them carried their morions in their hands, and
-none had their matches ready. So we were left to stop
-the mules, which all lay down quietly as before, but it
-was only a short respite.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The balls and hail-shot were soon flying about our
-ears up the narrow road. Poor Captain Tetú rushed
-most valiantly upon them, sword in band, but was
-doubled up in the road before he came to his distance.
-For a while it was desperate work. In a confused mass
-we fought and struggled together, and the woods
-re-echoed with the explosions of the small shot and the
-frantic cries of 'Drake! Drake!' and 'Santiago!
-Santiago!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was hand to hand again with a soldier, who gave
-me stiff work, when I heard the plunging of a horse and
-the whistle of a blade behind me. I made sure my
-end had come, and turned to hear a thundering shout
-of 'Drake,' and see Sergeant Culverin dash by into the
-thick of the foot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed a new man. As he passed he slashed at
-my opponent and set me free. I could not even then
-but admire his splendid management of his frantic
-horse in the press. Hewing and slashing, he made
-straight for a mounted officer, who was fighting like a
-lion. Involuntarily I paused to watch and get my
-breath. Straight at him the Sergeant rode, and with a
-sudden check of the bit, made his stolen charger rear
-right up against the Spaniard, at his rein hand, so that
-he was wholly guarded from the officer's blade. Then
-as the horse descended the Sergeant's heavy 'schiavona'
-rang upon the Spaniard's morion. The officer reeled in
-his saddle, his sword dropped, and his horse turned and
-galloped madly out of the press towards the town.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The old riding-master had been too much for the
-cavalier's skill. The victory of our horse seemed to
-paralyse the foot. Resistance ceased. They only thought
-of escape. Down the road, into the woods, anywhere,
-they fled to avoid us. 'Yó pehó! yó pehó!' seemed
-once more to people the air with fiends, as the leaping,
-yelling Cimaroons danced after them, almost as fast
-as the Sergeant rode.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How far he would have continued his pursuit in the
-midst of his diabolic company I cannot tell, for Frank's
-shrill whistle called all back. Mr. Oxenham's work
-was done as soon as ours, for the Spaniards in the rear,
-having no officer to encourage them, were soon persuaded
-to leave the mules in his care. So that now all
-hands were wanted for the heaviest part of the task,
-which was to get our plunder into the forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like children we went at it, half-mad with joy over
-our extraordinary good fortune. After all our toil and
-all our failures we had succeeded at last, and that
-beyond all our hopes. We found our prize was one <i>recua</i>
-of fifty mules and two of seventy. Every mule carried
-three hundred pounds' weight of silver, making in all
-some twenty-five tons, besides such store of jewels and
-yellow bars and quoits as made us have no eyes for the
-baser metal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All hands now,' sang out Frank, 'to ease the mules,
-which must be sore weary, and yarely now! or the
-Spaniards will be taking pains to stay us doing the poor
-animals this kindness. And, Sergeant,' he said, as
-Culverin reined up, 'our horse shall go to the front to
-give us advertisement of their coming, that we may
-prepare a salutation for them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'An honourable service, Captain Drake,' said the
-Sergeant, beaming with delight, 'for which I crave leave
-to thank you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, Sergeant,' laughed Frank, 'it is yours of right.
-I marked how you took the weather of the cavalier. I
-never brought up to windward better myself. Away
-now, for we must work.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And indeed there was need. In spite of the huge
-loads the Cimaroons could carry, it was no light or
-speedy labour we had, especially since some were hurt.
-Yet the only sore wound we had was the French
-captain's, who was so grievously struck with hail-shot
-in the belly that he could not walk, in spite of most
-valiant endeavours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whole time we worked we could hear the turmoil
-our visit had caused in the town. Trumpets were
-braying and drums beating up and down, as though the
-devil had broken loose, as perhaps they thought he had.
-We could not doubt that the soldiers we had relieved
-had given, after the manner of Spaniards, so monstrous
-and boasting an account of our numbers that the whole
-garrison was making ready to visit us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, as our last mule was eased, the Sergeant came
-galloping in to bring news of a mighty preparation of
-horse and foot on the march out of the Plaza, as he
-guessed by the notes of their trumpets. This great
-preparation was our saving instead of our undoing, for
-by the time the enemy's horse and foot reached the
-<i>recuas</i> the foremost of us were already far in the woods,
-intent on burying some of our silver, which was over
-and above what we could carry. Being thus busy we
-could not receive them, and since they had no mind to
-follow us through the forest, we could not choose but
-disappoint them in their intention of saluting us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some fifteen tons we buried, partly under fallen
-trees, partly in the bed of a river, and partly in the
-holes of land-crabs, whereof we found a colony, and
-begged of them this hospitality; and so, with some ten
-tons of silver and all the gold and jewels, we went on
-our way, the Cimaroons bearing loads which were a
-marvel to us all how they did not break their backs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At a fitting place the Cimaroons made a little house
-for the French captain, for by no means could he be
-persuaded to cumber us, so that we should carry less of
-the treasure. He stoutly protested that nothing but a
-rest would save his life. So, being unable to move him
-from his valiant resolve, we were compelled against our
-wills to leave him in charge of two of his men, who
-vowed they would not desert their captain while there
-was a spark of life left in him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We had not gone far when the Frenchmen began to
-cry out that one of their number was missing, and were
-for going back, thinking him to be lying wounded on
-the road. Upon this our captain made searching
-examination to find out how it should be, which he soon
-did from a Cimaroon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I done see him,' said the negro. 'He done got too
-much pillage and too much wine, so he done go on before in
-a hurry to get to the ships. I think he done lost his way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This indeed was true, as we had occasion afterwards
-to know. Our captain was angry at it, and would not
-stay longer, being in a great hurry to get to the pinnaces
-in the Rio Francisco before they were discovered by
-the Spaniards, as he doubted not they would endeavour,
-having been so outwitted by us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we toiled on under our loads, through, a terrible
-tempest of rain and wind which overtook us, and made
-our march none the easier by reason of the swollen
-torrents and mire. Yet if we had heavy loads we
-had light hearts, and comforted ourselves with a
-hundred jests at our luck, no less than with a speedy
-hope of reaching our pinnaces.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was early on the second day that we came to
-the river, and all quickened their pace to be among
-the first to tell their comrades the news. Yet were
-our pains thrown away; for when we had passed
-out of the forest and reached the rendezvous not a
-sign of the pinnaces was to be seen, only the river
-rolling down in double volume, brown and swollen from
-the rain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where can they be?' said I to Frank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, lad, who can tell?' he said, looking very grave.
-'Unless,' he added more cheerfully, 'the tempest has
-delayed them. The wind was westerly. Let us go and
-have a look out to sea. Maybe they are even now at
-hand.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In great anxiety we hurried to a place whence a
-great part of the coast could be descried, and the rest
-who were not too weary, seeing what the general did,
-followed. Eagerly, as the sea opened out before us, we
-scanned its glittering surface towards the Cabeças,
-whence our pinnaces were to come, and there, to our
-horror, we saw rowing, as though from the very spot,
-seven Spanish pinnaces, crammed with men in glittering
-harness!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap26"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Certain men, whom misfortune and loss of riches have
-driven to seek comfort in philosophy, have devoured
-much paper and spilled an infinity of ink in dispraise
-of gold and silver, railing at those metals with a plentiful
-store of scornful epithets, to show their baseness and
-want of true value.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had any such been with us now they would have
-found a very plausible argument for their conclusions.
-Rolling in gold and silver, we were destitute; though
-oppressed with wealth, we were poorer than church
-mice. Willingly we would have given all we had, and
-more, for one smart, well-furnished frigate in the road.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After the discovery of our forlorn state many were
-so moved that they cast away their gold, and, losing all
-hope of escape, gave themselves up to despair; and not
-without excuse. For we could not doubt but that our
-pinnaces had been taken, and that our stronghold at
-Fort Diego would be revealed by the torture of prisoners.
-Thus all hope of ever getting back to our homes was
-gone; and the greater part of the company, losing all
-heart, began to murmur and complain very bitterly
-against the captains who had brought them to such a
-pass. I can say no more of the depth to which our
-spirits sank, or the misery of that hour, than that it was
-one of those times when Frank Drake's nature rose to
-its greatest height. He leaped upon a log, and with his
-clear, cheerful voice addressed them without a note of
-fear or misgiving, where no one else could discern the
-smallest ray of encouragement or the forlornest hope of
-safety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shame on you! shame!' he cried. 'What faint-heartedness
-is this? If you miscarry, so do I. You
-venture no further than I. And is this a time to wail
-and fear? If it be, then is it also a time to hasten to
-prevent what we fear. If the enemy have prevailed
-against our pinnaces, which God forbid, yet all is not
-lost. Only half their work is done. They must have
-time to search and examine their prisoners as to where
-our strength lies; and then they will want some time
-to form their resolution, and quarrel who is to command.
-Ah! you know not Spaniards. Then they will want
-time to order a fleet twice or thrice as large as needful;
-item, time to come to our ships; item, time to resolve
-upon their method of attack; item, time to find stomach
-to deliver it. And before all this will be discharged
-we can get to our ships, if you will so resolve, like the
-men that you have at divers times shown yourselves.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But how? how?' they cried, as he paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, now you speak like men,' he said, 'and give a
-captain heart to save you. By land, I think, we cannot
-come to them, though our Pedro would have us so try.
-It is sixteen days' journey thither, and before that the
-Spaniards will have struck. Yet by sea we may. See
-you those trees God has sent down the river for you by
-last night's storm? Of those we can make a raft; and
-four of us sail aloof the shore and call the ships hither.
-Of those four I shall be one; who will be the others?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The words were hardly out of his mouth when Harry
-had shouted 'I!' and then followed a clamour of 'I's'
-in English, French, and Spanish, as half the whites and
-all the blacks offered themselves when they understood
-what our captain's words should mean. Finally he
-chose Harry, as having spoken first, and two Frenchmen,
-who were great swimmers, because our fellow-venturers
-boldly claimed, as of right, a half-share in every danger
-as well as in all plunder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So from despair our captain's resolute words, so
-cheerfully spoken, raised them all in a short space to a
-lively hope; and all hands set eagerly to work to bind
-together some of the trees which the swollen river had
-brought down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile, more grieved than I can say to think
-that Harry was going to what seemed almost certain
-death, in spite of what Frank had said, I went to him
-to try and dissuade him from his purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tush!' said he, 'what is there to fear?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nothing for you to fear, I know well,' I answered;
-'it is not that. It is what I fear. I have a most evil
-foreboding that if you go on this venture we shall never
-see you again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, and what matter?' he laughed; 'a man must
-die once.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said I, 'but he need not rot to death in a
-Spanish prison, or die before his time. The Spanish
-shallops will be scouring all the coast, and must of a
-certainty pick you up like half-drowned rats ere ever
-you reach the Cabeças. Why should you do this when
-there is no need&mdash;you who of us all have most to live
-for?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what have I to live for,' he answered, with
-clouding brow, 'that others have not?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know! you know!' I said. 'Give me not the
-pain or shame of saying what. Nay, hear me then,' I
-went on, as I saw a bitter reply rising to his lips; and
-then, determined to leave no means untried to preserve
-him to the woman I had so cruelly wronged, I told him
-how I had gone back to Ashtead after that terrible
-night; how I had seen through the window his dear
-wife kissing his letter and weeping over his child; how
-I had marked a hundred signs whereby I knew her love
-for him was only the more pure and ardent for the trial
-it had undergone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-God be praised! if it was He that put the burning
-words in my mouth with which I told my tale and
-pleaded my cause. Long had I kept it pent up in my
-heart, for want of courage to tell him, as well as for
-fear of increasing his grief and his hate for me; and
-now it flowed with the full strength of the gathered
-flood which his long coldness had frozen up in me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What joy was in my heart I cannot tell in words
-when, ere I had done, he seized my hand in his manly
-way and said, 'Have your will, brother! Go in my
-place. If we ever meet again we shall be brothers
-indeed once more, and brothers we should never have
-ceased to be had I known you as I should. Let what
-I do be a token to you. I know the danger of this
-service as well as you, and never did I think for any
-man I could turn back from such an attempt when I
-had offered myself and been chosen. To you, brother,
-and her, I sacrifice thus my honour in token of how
-high beyond all words I value this love you have both
-given me, who deserve it so little.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bright shone the sun in my heart, bright as the
-mid-day fire over our heads, as to the music of a hearty
-cheer we dropped down the river in our frail bark.
-Frank was steering her with a rude oar which had
-been shaped from a young tree, the two Frenchmen
-stood by with poles in case of need, and I managed
-the biscuit-bag whereof we had made our sail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Cimaroons had bitterly lamented not coming
-with us, but them Frank would have stay to succour
-those who remained, since there we had greatest need
-of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' he had said; 'stay here for a little while to
-conduct my company by land if I return not. Yet, if it
-please God that I shall once put foot in safety aboard
-my frigate, I will, God willing, get you all aboard, in
-despite of all the Spaniards in the Indies.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With this courageous speech he left the whole
-company in good heart, because they knew of a surety,
-since he had so passed his word, that if they were
-lost it would not be for want of the last effort of
-the man who best in all the world knew how to save
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our voyage was evil enough to have damped any
-spirits less lifted with joy than mine, or less constant
-than Frank's. The whole time we were up to our
-waists in water as we sat, and as soon as we reached
-the open sea we found the swell so big that each wave
-surged up to our necks, and we had much ado to hold
-on. Moreover the sun so burned down upon us, all
-unprotected as we were, that what with the salt water
-and the scorching, we soon had little skin left that was
-not all blisters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet a very smart breeze was blowing from the
-westwards, so that we made good progress towards the
-Cabeças, and so kept up our spirits. It was as the sun
-was getting low that Frank suddenly cried to me,
-'Look! look! Jasper, ahead there off the point!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I looked where he pointed and saw two large pinnaces
-struggling to weather the headland with oars against
-the freshening breeze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What shall we do?' said I. 'We must drive. We
-cannot stop. How shall we avoid them?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Avoid them!' said Frank, with a merry laugh. 'Why,
-lad, they are our own, and if we can but make them see,
-we are saved.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet perhaps they are prizes to Spaniards,'
-suggested one of the Frenchmen, 'and are manned by
-Spaniards.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, monsieur, no,' said Frank; 'you never saw
-Spaniards row like that. See how they labour, and yet
-I think they make no head. Pray God they be not
-cast away on the point!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed as we drew nearer there seemed no small
-danger of this. The wind was shifting more and more
-on to the land as it freshened, and we could see they
-made a lot of leeway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They will never do it,' said Frank; 'they are too short
-of hands. It is hard to be so near safety, yet so far.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even as he spoke we saw them cease rowing and
-fall slowly under the lee of the point. In a few minutes
-they were out of sight, and we blankly confessed to
-ourselves that they must have resolved to ride out the rising
-gale and the night in the still water behind the point.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a bitter disappointment to us, and our
-new-found joy at finding our pinnaces were still safe gave
-way to a new-found grief. So intent had we been in
-watching them that we had not noticed how the
-shifting wind was driving us a-land. Straight ahead
-of us was the dark forest-clad point against which the
-surf was booming and spouting sheets of white spray.
-It was plain we could never weather it, and that if we
-continued as we were we must almost certainly be
-dashed to pieces in the foaming breakers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eagerly I watched, and tried to persuade myself
-our raft was bearing better room. Every tilt which
-the waves gave her I tried to fancy was a change of
-course, but still we drifted to leeward in spite of the
-rapid headway we made before the rising gale. All at
-once, as I watched, our head swung round to leeward
-and all chance was gone. I looked to see the cause
-and saw Frank very calm and stern with the helm
-hard up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, if ever,' said he; 'pray God to help us. Nay,
-look not scared, Jasper. It is our only chance. We
-cannot weather the point, and all that is left is to try
-and beach the raft this side, and then, if we land alive
-and whole, make about the point to the pinnaces afoot.
-All which we can well do, if it please God to send us
-a big wave and a pleasant beach.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was indeed a time for prayer. Soon close ahead
-we could see the breakers rolling in upon the shore
-rank after rank, a wilderness of boiling foam. I saw
-the two Frenchmen tighten their belts for the coming
-struggle. Each of them pulled out a great quoit of gold
-from his breast. Then they whispered together for a
-space and put them back. So I kept mine in spite of
-the danger, if we had to swim, and Frank kept his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes we were at the edge of our peril.
-Frank steadied the raft before the wind like the master
-hand he was; a raging mass of foam seemed to rise
-beneath us and shoot us towards the shore. What was
-in front we could not see. Like an arrow we flew, nor
-ever rested till we crashed upon the beach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that hoarse and terrible whistle with which
-the breakers on a shingly shore seem to draw their
-monstrous breath for a new effort to destroy, the wave
-that had borne us went screaming back. In a moment
-we had leaped on the rolling shingle and rushed up
-the beach as fast as our remaining strength and our
-shifting foothold would let us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again the angry sea swept at us, but it was too
-late. As once more it retired, drawing its strident
-breath, we dug hands, feet, and knees into the moving
-stones till it was gone, and then once more got up and
-ran. Ere another wave had burst we were in safety,
-lying breathless upon a flowery bank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Frank was the first to move. I heard him mutter
-his words of thanksgiving for our safety, and then he
-called cheerfully to us in high spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Up, lads, up,' he said; 'we must lose no time. See
-yonder light to windward; the gale will lessen in another
-hour, and the pinnaces as like as not will sail. We
-will go about the point now as quick as we can, and
-when we see them run our fastest, like men pursued,
-to give them a rattling fright, that they may prove their
-quickness to save us since they have been so slow
-hitherto. It is but fair dealing to put this jest on them
-for giving us such an evil sail.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This we did, and were no sooner come about the
-point than we saw the blessed sight of our two
-pinnaces anchored in a quiet cove. Away went Frank
-running towards them as hard as he could, and we after
-him crying at the top of our voices. They seemed terribly
-afraid to see their captain thus suddenly appear with
-but three followers, and made the greatest speed to take
-us aboard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At first Frank did not speak, but sat very solemn
-and stern, and we, taking our cue from him, did likewise;
-nor did they ask anything of what our running and
-sudden appearance might mean. Indeed they feared
-our news was too terrible for them to be in a hurry to
-hear it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How does all the company?' said one at last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' said Frank sullenly, which made them all look
-more alarmed than ever, till he could bear it no longer,
-and, bursting into a loud laugh, he drew his golden quoit
-from his doublet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look there!' he cried, brandishing it in their faces.
-'At last our voyage is made!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he told them how we had sped, and told
-the Frenchmen amongst them how their captain was
-left behind sore wounded, and comforted them by
-letting them know how two of his company remained
-with him, and how it was our intention to rescue him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And tell me,' he said, 'how it was you discharged
-not the order I most straitly gave you to be in the
-Rio Francisco yesterday?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We did our best,' said the commander. 'Yet the
-gale was so strong from the west that with all our
-rowing we could get no farther than this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, God be praised for His mercy,' said Frank.
-'Surely is He wiser than man. Had you done as I
-said, you would have come to the river in the nick of
-time to be devoured by seven pinnaces from Nombre
-de Dios, which I doubt not were fitted out for that
-purpose. I think they have been driven in for fear of the
-gale, and will be out again as soon as it abates.
-Therefore we must make shift to continue our way with oars
-as soon as possible.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And this they cheerfully did before an hour was
-gone. Their short rest and our news seemed to make
-new men of them, so that, partly by infinite labour at
-the oars with our help, and partly by an abating of the
-wind, we came by morning into the Rio Francisco.
-There we took all our company and treasure aboard,
-and so sailed back to our frigate, and thence without
-mishap to our ships.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap27"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Fort Diego was now all astir with preparations for
-our homeward journey. The first care was to divide
-our vast booty between ourselves and the Frenchmen;
-and I, being merchant to the expedition, was so entirely
-occupied in this that I had no leisure to visit my
-Señorita, of which it must be said I was secretly glad,
-for I knew not how to approach her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What little time I had, after my day's weighing and
-portioning and scheduling was done, I spent in Harry's
-company. These hours of extreme danger to which
-we had recently been exposed seemed to have changed
-the whole world to us. In his gratitude for the poor
-service I had sought to do him, in his joy to think how
-his wife still loved him, he seemed to forget all the past
-and to hold no pleasure so high as being in my company,
-that he might talk over the old happy days and
-build plans for spending our new-won wealth, so as
-best to delight her in the new happy days that were to
-come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My joy would have been complete had it not been
-that there still hung over my head the words which my
-Señorita had used when I bade her farewell. Each
-hour I felt more keenly I must go to her and tell her
-plainly that what she wished could never be. I had
-no doubt of that. To me she was but a plaything.
-That I was more to her was a thing of which I felt
-pure shame. I accepted all the blame of it, as a man
-should. Yet however rightly he may look at it, the
-task is none the lighter when that man has to go to
-a woman and tell her he loves her not. The stoutest
-heart will feel a coward then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was not till the evening of the third day after our
-coming, when the plunder was all divided, and we had
-dismissed our French consorts with their share, that I
-found heart or leisure to approach her. As I neared
-the ship where the prisoners dwelt, and which had been
-hauled ashore for some time past, I could see her
-stretched lazily in her hammock. It was fastened
-between the mast and the bough of a tree which grew
-up hard by and spread its branches over the poop.
-Here it was that she loved to take her <i>siesta</i>, since it
-was a cool and shady place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I mounted the poop my discomfort at finding her
-alone, and at knowing I could not now honestly avoid
-saying my say, was only increased by her beauty, which
-never had seemed so great in my eyes. Dressed in a soft
-loose robe of white, she lay back at full length in her
-hammock, a picture of womanly grace. One white arm,
-on which her head rested, was half buried in her lustrous
-hair. It had become dishevelled in her sleep, and now
-fell in rich dark masses about her face and neck,
-enhancing their dazzling whiteness like some frame of
-ebony in which is set a magic crystal. Her soft cheeks
-were flushed like those of a newly-wakened child, her
-ripe lips half parted, her dark-fringed eyelids almost
-closed. Her other arm lay across her, listlessly moving
-a fan of crimson feathers. Beyond that languid movement
-there was no sign of life or motion in her, save the
-rise and fall of the soft white robe as she drew her
-breath troublously, like one who is deeply moved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could not choose but pause, fascinated by a picture
-whose luxuriant beauty surpassed even the tangled
-tropic growth that formed its background. But I was
-soon awakened from my dream, and that rudely too.
-From behind the mast, where I could not see, came the
-deep tones of a man's voice pleading very low and
-earnest. She did not raise her eyes even then, but I
-could fancy she drew her breath more hardly still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I could not hear the words, and started quickly forward
-lest I should. Of retreating I never once thought.
-My coward hesitation was turned to something akin to
-anger by that half-heard voice, and my only thought
-was to find out what bold man it was to whom my
-Señorita gave such familiar audience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started as she saw me stride to her, but in a
-moment fell again into her listless attitude, and looked
-languidly at the man behind the mast. He started too,
-and I saw to my little ease it was Mr. Oxenham. We
-stared hard and stiffly at each other, saying nothing. He
-seemed disturbed by my coming, but hid his confusion
-by drawing himself to his full height, and gently
-twisting his well-grown moustache with one hand, while the
-other rested on his sword. So he stood looking at me
-and waiting, with eyebrows raised superciliously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has my worshipper no offering for his goddess?'
-said the Señorita's musical voice. 'I expected
-something richer than silence after so long an absence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, silence is golden,' said Mr. Oxenham mockingly.
-'What would you more? Mr. Festing brings his best.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I know not whether it were self-love or love of her
-that made their words hurt me so sore, but I know I
-had much ado to bridle my lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Truly, Señorita,' said I, 'silence is the most precious
-offering I have to give. Had I never laid on your altar
-aught less worthy than that, methinks I should have
-been a more loyal worshipper.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She met my gaze with her dark eyes wide open for
-a moment, and then dropped them again with a strange
-little laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save me, then,' she said, 'from loyal worshippers!
-Such barren heretic ritual I call no-worship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Name it as you will, lady,' I answered; 'my comfort
-must still be that "no-worship" is better than
-sacrilege. If I cannot be a worshipper, at least I will
-not profane the shrine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She flushed a little higher at this, and looked at me
-again, half inquiring, half frightened, and then once
-more dropped her eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was this what you came hither to say, false
-worshipper?' she said, as though a little vexed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, lady,' I answered; 'I had much to say, and I
-came to crave that you would walk with me along the
-shore while I told my tale, but now I think it needs no
-telling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall he come with us, Señor?' she said to
-Mr. Oxenham, who still stood twirling the end of his
-moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is for my queen to command,' he said, 'whether
-I escort her or not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, my worshipper,' she said, after a moment's
-hesitation, 'for this day your attendance is excused;'
-and with a queenly gesture she held out her little hand
-for me to salute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was hard to be dismissed so, although an hour ago
-I should have looked on any dismissal as the happiest
-thing that could befall me. Now it angered me. It
-flashed across my mind to turn roughly away from her,
-and refuse the caress she offered with such pretty
-insolence. Yet I hold, however ill a woman may treat a
-man, yet shall he never better his case by a rude
-behaviour toward her. So I took the little hand in my
-fingers, and put it to my lips with ceremonious courtesy,
-and so withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I turned round at the poop-ladder to descend, and
-was surprised to see her gazing after me wistfully; but
-she looked away hurriedly when she saw my eyes upon
-her, and laughed merrily at something, as I suppose,
-that Mr. Oxenham said to her. I fancied her merriment
-seemed to ring a little false; but maybe that was
-only my fancy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My thoughts were very ill at ease as I sought my
-lodging. All had gone as I wished. The bonds wherein
-I had suffered myself heedlessly to be bound to her
-were unloosed. I was free, and that more easily than I
-had thought; yet somehow I did not feel released, but
-rather thrust out and cast away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry came in to me later, and fell, as usual, to
-talking of the joy of our return. Yet to-night it seemed
-wearisome to hear him. As he pictured the pleasures
-of his coming life, of the untold joy of living again at
-Ashtead with the wife whom he had lost a little while
-and found again, my old library rose up ever in my
-mind, very cold and dim and lonely, and I found it
-hard to share his content.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I listened to him my long, low chamber, with its
-gloomy rows of books, its uneasy settles, and its great
-stiff chair beside the hearth, became a vivid picture to
-me, as though I saw it. Each moment it grew more
-real and gloomy and lonely, till suddenly, I know not
-how, I seemed to see the beautiful form of the Señorita
-glowing in the great high-backed chair, and brightening
-the whole chamber with her sunny presence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I crushed the fancy as it rose, but to little purpose.
-Try as I would, I could not choose but picture it again
-and again, not only as Harry talked, but also afterwards
-as soon as I closed my eyes to sleep. There she
-always was, in that long, low room, which ever was to
-me the centre of my life, curled up so prettily in the
-grim old chair that it seemed quite proud and happy to
-hold the sweet burden in its rough old arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As my wife I pictured her there; but all the while
-I clearly saw what folly it was. How could I, a scholar,
-wed a wayward piece of Eve's flesh like that, with her
-wild temper, her empty little head, her utter ignorance
-of all that made my life? In her whole nature there
-was not a note to sound in harmony with me. It was a
-mad folly even to think of it. I knew that; yet how
-she seemed to brighten the room as she sat curled up in
-the great chair by the hearth!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With great vigour I threw myself into the work of
-preparation which was going forward, in order that I
-might forget my foolish fancy. There was plenty to do;
-for Frank had determined to thoroughly refit and
-furnish our frigate from the <i>Pasha</i>, which ship, being
-much worn, he purposed to give to the Spanish prisoners,
-that they might go whither they would. It was then
-his intention to move with the frigate and pinnaces to
-the Cabeças, and thence make an effort to recover
-Captain Tetú and the treasure we had left in the care
-of the land-crabs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of all my sharp reasoning with myself, I
-became each day more wretched and distraught as our
-work neared completion and the day for dismissing our
-prisoners approached. Yet I was resolved not to see
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At her shrine,' I said ever to myself, 'I cannot
-worship; if I go to her temple again it can only be for
-sacrilege.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I went not near her again. But Mr. Oxenham, I
-think, was continually both on the ship and walking
-with my Señorita on the shore and in the woods, till
-the time came for the prisoners departing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was about a fortnight after our return from capturing
-the <i>recuas</i>, when we had taken all we desired from
-the <i>Pasha</i>, and we no longer feared any danger from
-our hiding-place being revealed, that Frank announced
-to the prisoners that they were to be freed on the morrow,
-and entertained them in the fort by way of taking
-leave.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That night I was captain of the watch. It was close
-on midnight, as feeling very sad and lonely I was looking
-out over the land-locked haven to where the <i>Pasha</i>
-lay ready to sail on the morrow. The moon was rising
-in great beauty over the dark foliage of the island, and
-as it shed its light upon the peaceful waters I saw, to
-my surprise, the <i>Pasha's</i> gondola being rowed toward
-the shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I made quickly for the spot where it was likely to
-touch the beach, telling the guard to stand by and
-listen well for my whistle, as I suspected some design
-of the prisoners upon our treasure. Concealing myself
-in the brakes close to the sea, I waited, and very soon
-heard the boat grate on the stones. Then I stepped out
-to see what it might mean; and no less welcome sight
-could my eyes have seen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For there stood Mr. Oxenham helping the Señorita
-ashore. I knew it was she, though for some reason I
-cannot tell she was dressed in the sailor garb in which
-I had seen her the night of the Cimaroons' attempt
-upon the prisoners. Whether those two had some wild
-scheme of escape together, or whether she hoped to pass
-observation till Mr. Oxenham could conceal her and
-carry her home in the vice-admiral, which he was to
-command, I cannot tell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Maybe it was only a romantic fancy of hers to
-attempt her escape in this disguise, as she had heard of
-other women doing in old tales, or maybe, knowing well
-how dazzling was her beauty in that array, she thought
-thereby to charm her escort the more. This, indeed, I
-think it did, for as he lifted her out of the boat with
-great tenderness, I saw him kiss her very lovingly.
-Then all trace of love or respect for her seemed to leave
-me, and I felt quite calm as I stepped forward to do
-what seemed my plain duty, and passed them the
-challenge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What! again?' said Mr. Oxenham fiercely. 'Why,
-what a meddler are you, that have not heart to love a
-fair wench, and will yet prevent a man that has!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started away from him when she saw me. Had
-she clung to him for protection, I think I could hardly
-have kept as calm as I did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love or no love, Mr. Oxenham,' said I, 'it is no
-matter of that here. What you intend I know not, but
-it is against the general's plain orders that any prisoner
-should leave the <i>Pasha</i> before she sails, and this lady I
-must see aboard again.''
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a pestilent meddler it is!' muttered Mr. Oxenham,
-drawing his sword. 'If you want her for your
-own, by heaven, you shall fight for her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pray you be content, Mr. Oxenham,' I cried, giving
-ground, 'or I must summon the guard. What
-madness is this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He pressed on so hard, crying fiercely to me to
-draw, that I saw an encounter could not be avoided;
-yet I would not whistle for the watch, half for her sake
-once more, seeing how she was clad and what men
-would say of her, half for shame of seeking help after
-Mr. Oxenham's blade was drawn on me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hoping the better to worst him without doing great
-hurt, I took my cloak upon my left arm instead of my
-dagger and drew. He was coming at me with his
-buckler advanced, and his sword uplifted for a cross-blow
-like to the <i>mandritto sgualembrato</i>, but very
-unscholarly. So I fell from my draw to the good ward
-<i>di testa</i>, as Marozzo teaches, to receive his blow on my
-rapier, and hay! straightway in <i>punta reversa</i> threatened
-my <i>imbroccata</i> at his throat over his hand. He was
-cleverly ready for it with his buckler, so I lowered my
-ward suddenly <i>lunga e larga</i>, and throwing a resolute
-<i>staccato</i>, under his defence, compelled him to spring
-backwards out of distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He came on again immediately with a good down-right
-fendant, as though he would have broken my
-ward by main force. I avoided it by a quick <i>passado</i>
-to the right, pushing at the same time a <i>stoccata</i>
-which he took again on his buckler. But it was only
-a feint of mine to make him advance his defence, and
-so stop him recovering quickly. It served its purpose
-well. For I was able to cast my cloak over his blade
-before he could make his recovery, and so, passing my
-left leg forward, I seized his sword by the hilt. At the
-same moment I threatened an <i>imbroccata</i> at his face,
-and while he raised his buckler to bear my thrust, gave
-his hilt-points such a mighty wrench with my left that,
-seeing he had not the Italian grip, I was able to tear his
-sword from his grasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was no fair encounter. He was a pretty swordsman
-at the old swashing sword and buckler play, but
-having been at sea all his manhood he had never had
-occasion to learn the new fence as I had, and would not,
-I think, if he had been able, for, like most Englishmen
-of that time, he greatly despised it. I could not but be
-sorry for him to see him stand at my mercy, as he now
-did, nor could I resent his angry words.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Curse on your foining Italian birdspit play,' said he
-savagely as I returned him his sword. 'Curse on your
-skewer scullion tricks. Did you fight like a man, you
-should not have won her. Still won her you have, and
-by that I abide. Take her, and rest you merry with your
-light-o'-love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With that he took his sword, and, with a mocking
-salute to the Señorita, strode rapidly away. I looked
-for no less in him. For in all points of arms I had ever
-found him a most precise gentleman, and had no doubt,
-since he was worsted, he would honourably leave the
-field to me. So I slowly went to where my Señorita's
-fairy form leaned against the boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Lady,' said I, 'think not I deal hardly with you,
-but at a word you must indeed go back.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, no, Gasparo,' she said, sinking on her knees
-before me. 'Take me, for the love of Mary, take me,
-since you have gloriously won me. Indeed I do not
-love him. I did but use him to play upon your love
-and make it grow as great as mine. Tell me not I have
-killed it. I did but go with him because he promised
-to deliver me from my misery. It was only that I
-hoped to win you at last.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Peace, peace, lady, as you value your honour,' said
-I, at my wits' end how to keep my resolution. 'This
-thing cannot be. The general would never suffer you
-to abide with us. It could only end in strife and
-dishonour. Indeed you must go back.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Gasparo,' she pleaded, clasping my knees,
-'you know not what you do. You love me, and know it
-not. You love me, and send me back to my misery,
-when we might know such joy together. You cannot
-tell what it is you condemn me to. You cannot tell
-the horror of a woman's life when she is wedded to one
-she loathes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wedded?' cried I, aghast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' she answered wildly. 'Have pity on me. Do
-not hate me for it. I did not tell you, nor did the
-others, because I pleaded with my father to pass for
-unwed, that I might the better win favour for them.
-So I said, but in truth it was that I might taste the
-joys I had never known. I was hardly out of childhood
-ere they wedded me to an old man for his wealth. He
-was bitter and cruel and ugly, an ape that I loathed.
-Yet I had no respite from his detested presence till he
-went to Lima on his affairs. Afterwards he wrote for
-me to join him. I was on my way thither when you
-captured me, and at last I saw my occasion to know for
-once what it was to be wooed. Oh Gasparo, hate me
-not for it, but rather pity me. I am beautiful; I know
-it. I was made for men to love, yet never knew what
-it was to be wooed by one true man. Pity me and have
-mercy. I cannot go back now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Horror-struck to find, as it were, that my sin had
-followed me even to that far island in the West, where
-at least I might have hoped to be free, my courage
-almost forsook me. A destiny, such as one short year
-ago I might have laughed at as the last to be mine,
-seemed now for ever fastened upon me. Once more I
-grasped the hilt of Harry's sword for strength, and then
-firmly took the little hands in mine and freed myself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She stood up before me then, gazing in sad entreaty
-in my face as I implored her to go back. I showed
-her how, even were I willing to do as she wished, Frank
-would never permit it. I tried, as well as I could for
-shame, to show her how great was the sin she would
-bring upon her soul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is hopeless,' she said as I ceased. 'I see it is
-hopeless to move you. I must even return to the
-misery you have made doubly hard to bear. Farewell,
-Gasparo, farewell.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She held out her hand to me as she spoke. I took
-it coldly, my other hand on my sword. But that was
-not the end. With a sudden wild impulse she flung
-her arms about me, and my lips were tingling with one
-last passionate kiss. She had sprung into the boat and
-pushed off ere I hardly knew what she had done.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, faint heart,' she cried, as she stood up beautiful
-in the moonlight, 'so I set my sign upon you. When
-another comes to whom you would give what you deny
-to me, may she taste my kiss still lingering there and
-learn, though you know it not, that you have loved
-before.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With difficulty she rowed herself back to the ship.
-I watched her shapely figure grow less and less across
-the moonlit water, till she was lost behind the dark
-hull, and I was alone once more.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap28"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-I never saw my Señorita again. Early next morning
-the <i>Pasha's</i> anchors were hove up, and Mr. Oxenham
-went aboard to work her out through the tortuous
-channels by which she had entered more than six
-months ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It took all one day and part of the next to get the
-ship free, and Mr. Oxenham did not quit her till she
-was quite clear of the shoals. What passed between
-him and my Señorita then I cannot say. Whether they
-found means whereby afterwards letters went between
-them I do not know, but when years after news of his
-end came I could not but think it might have been so;
-and, in spite of seeming contradictions in the varying
-reports that reached us, I have often wondered whether
-my Señorita were not the same fair lady for whose
-sweet sake, less than three years after, when he had
-won undying honour by having sailed the South Sea
-first of all Englishmen, he madly did that whereby he
-not only lost all the wealth he had taken there, but also
-his trusty company and his fair name, ay, and gave up
-his wasted life beside as a pirate on a Spanish gallows
-at Lima. But let that pass. I bear him no ill-will,
-and trust he rests in peace, as, for all his sins, his
-courageous spirit well deserves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For such a spirit indeed he had, and, next to the
-general, our whole company had conceived greater hope
-in him than in any other. So that, when a few days
-after the release of the prisoners we came with the
-frigate and the pinnaces to the Catenas, he was chosen
-to lead the attempt to recover the French captain and
-the buried treasure. For in spite of all Frank could
-say we would not suffer him to go, saying his life was
-too precious to us now to be risked on so dangerous a
-service, seeing he was the only man on whom we could
-count to carry us back to England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Oxenham undertook the desperate service with
-the same light heart wherewith he always faced the
-greatest perils, but was not rewarded according to his
-courage. For, on coming to the Rio Francisco, he found
-in most forlorn condition one of the men who had stayed
-behind with Monsieur Tetú. From him he had news
-that the brave captain had been taken half an hour
-after our departure, and his fellow a little later, because
-he would not cast away his treasure, and so could not
-run fast enough to escape.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Moreover he told us that some two thousand Spaniards
-and negroes had been digging and ranting up the
-ground for the space of a mile, every way about the
-place where they must have learned from the prisoners
-that our treasure was buried. This Mr. Oxenham
-found to be true; for, notwithstanding the report, he
-still would go and see for himself, and was rewarded by
-the discovery of thirteen silver bars and some quoits of
-gold, which the Spaniards had not been able to find.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last, then, our voyage was indeed made, and all
-we wanted for our return homewards was another good
-stout frigate; and to this end the general resolved to
-beat the same covert we had always found so full of
-game&mdash;to wit, the coast beyond Carthagena, about the
-mouth of the Rio Grande.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All were very merry over the near hope of our return,
-except, I think, myself. As for me, I could not but
-brood over what I had lost or escaped from, I knew not
-which to call it. I fear I was but a very doleful
-companion, and Harry, being now in great spirits with all
-the world, would not let me rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So your Señorita would not stay with you?' he said,
-with a twinkle in his eye that much belied his pretended
-seriousness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I did not ask her,' I answered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not ask her!' said he, 'and wherefore not, in a
-devil's name? Why, lad, you were over ears in love
-with her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are merry,' said I, a little testily I think, for it
-angered me that both he and she should say this, while
-I was for ever telling myself I could not be so foolish.
-'I could as soon have loved one of those glistening
-butterfly-birds that are all sparkle and humming, and
-nothing of them beside.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, what of that?' said he. 'Were I Pythagorean,
-I could find no better case for a true woman's soul than
-one of those same dainty, merry, little humming birds,
-that in these past months have so often beguiled us
-when there was little else to make us forget our
-troubles.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True,' I answered. 'Such qualities will make a
-plaything, but never a wife.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I know not,' he said; 'but I think a wife is
-mostly what a husband makes her, and doubt if a man
-may not make as good a one out of a plaything as
-anything else.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He should have known, yet I could not think him
-right, nor do I now. I had no heart to pursue such
-talk then, so when he continued to rally me I hastily
-told him the truth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgive me,' he said, growing serious directly, and
-putting his hand on my shoulder, 'if you can forgive
-such a brute-beast as I am to torment you thus. What
-a curst unbroken tongue is mine! You would have kept
-her marriage from me to shield her fame. Truly, lad,
-in comparison to you, I deserve no woman's love.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So he said, not knowing himself, for never was
-woman's love better bestowed than on him, yet he
-knew it not, and I verily believe, felt that he never
-could do enough for his wife to repay her generosity in
-marrying him. She thought no less, and often told me
-so. What wonder that their lives were happy!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We fell in with our French consort again soon after
-this, and they bore us company till they heard we were
-going past Carthagena, but this they would not venture
-with us, since the whole Plate Fleet lay there with its
-well-armed wafters ready for sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we parted company once more at St. Bernardo,
-and then Frank stood in towards the city, and ran past
-with a large wind hard by the harbour's mouth, in sight
-of the whole fleet. Not one dared stir out after us,
-though we braved them with our music, and the Cross
-of St. George at our top, and all our silken streamers
-and ancients floating down to the water defiantly.
-Perhaps it was a bit of foolish bravado, but Frank laughed
-and rubbed his hands, and said it was worth another
-<i>recua</i> to have done it, which the whole company agreed,
-being half mad to think how we had succeeded in our
-wild adventure in despite of the whole power of the
-Indies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The same night we fell in with a frigate of twenty-five
-tons, well laden with victuals, coming out of the
-river. We told the crew of our necessity, and used
-other persuasions to such good effect that at last they
-were content to go ashore, and leave their ship in our
-hands. Whereupon we returned to the Cabeças, and
-there, having rested seven days to careen our ships and
-prepare them for the voyage home, we bade farewell to
-our trusty Cimaroons, greatly contenting them with the
-iron-work of the pinnaces, which we broke up. To
-Pedro Frank presented a very goodly scimitar, which
-poor Monsieur Tetú had given him in return for his
-hospitalities at their first meeting. So greatly did the
-Cimaroon chief value this toy that he would not be
-content till Frank had accepted four great wedges of
-gold from his particular store.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a private gift to our general, and I think it
-noteworthy, as showing his just dealings with his
-mariners and venturers, that he would not keep those
-wedges, but cast them into the common store.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Had not the venturers set me forth,' said he, 'and
-had not you, my lads, so truly borne your parts, I should
-never have had this present; wherefore I hold you should
-all enjoy the proportion of your benefits, whatsoever
-they be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we took our leave of the Spanish Main, and,
-bearing room for Cape Antonio, passed to Havana,
-where we took a bark, the last of all our captures, which
-had been many, indeed, both for numbers and humanity
-in dealing with them, past anything that had been seen
-before. For at that time there were above two hundred
-frigates belonging to the cities of the Spanish Main and
-the Islands, ranging from ten to one hundred and
-twenty tons. Most of these we dealt with during our
-stay, and some of them twice and thrice, yet of all the
-crews we captured we hurt not a single man, save in
-the heat of fight, nor did we burn or sink one ship save
-in act of war, nor keep any save for our bare necessity.
-And so it was that Frank won himself a name of terror
-along the whole Spanish Main, and therewith a reputation
-for kindliness and mercy, both of which were
-never forgotten, and stood him in good stead many a
-time in after years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He protested that God manifestly blessed him for the
-just chastisement, tempered with mercy, which he had
-inflicted on the idolaters; for that He so bountifully
-supplied us with rain for our necessities, and wind for
-our speeding, that we had no cause to touch at
-Newfoundland for our refreshing, but within twenty-three
-days we passed from the Cape of Florida to the Isles
-of Scilly, and on Sunday morning, the 9th day of
-August 1573, swaggered bravely into Plymouth harbour,
-amidst the thunder of our great pieces, the braying of
-our trumpets, and the gay fluttering of all our flags
-and streamers and ancients.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a sight to make a man forget all his sorrows,
-to see the Hoe quickly brighten like a flower-bed with
-the Sunday clothes of the godly people of Plymouth,
-and yet not godly enough to stay with the preacher
-when they knew whose salutations were disturbing their
-prayers. So with one accord they left the poor man,
-and hurried off to hear the sermon Frank was preaching
-with his ordnance and his music.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into
-Heaven?' That was his text, and so well he expounded it
-with a sight of our ballast to all who came aboard, that
-I think there was hardly one that day who did not
-vow he would no longer stand still disputing and
-railing against Antichrist, but go forth and win gold
-for God out of the idolaters' treasure-house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wild were the rejoicings in Plymouth, and there was
-no one to check them. The Queen's grace was in no
-mood just then to hide our achievement under a bushel.
-Nay, rather she liked nothing better than to flaunt it in
-Philip's eyes, to show him she had a power he little
-dreamed of to answer the late-discovered felonious
-practices of Spain against her glorious crown and life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet I tarried not longer than our business demanded,
-for Harry could not rest till he was at Ashtead again,
-nor would he depart thither without me. In vain I
-urged him to go alone and let me follow later, after he
-had seen his wife and all was smooth again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, lad,' said he; 'we fled together, let us return
-together. It was one cause drove us forth. That is
-ended and forgotten. If I can go back, it is because
-you also may go back. Therefore one must not go
-without the other.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So we rode together, Harry, the Sergeant, and I, and
-all the way to London it was for us a triumphal
-procession. The news of Frank's daring exploit had spread
-from town to town before us. The people were half
-wild at the tidings, and came gaping to see us with
-their own eyes, and hear from our own lips the truth of
-the tale that seemed too glorious to believe; to hear how
-Englishmen at last had trod that inviolate soil which
-seemed to give a magic and resistless power to Spain,
-their dreaded enemy, and had broken its mysterious
-spell for ever, and how we had so plenteously enriched
-ourselves out of their very heart-wells in despite of all
-their boasted power.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed a strange and merry thing to them. They
-could only laugh as though it were some rude jest we
-had put on the Spaniards, and make merry over Philip's
-and Alva's wry faces to think of a poor English captain
-quietly plucking their beards with one hand, and
-cutting their purses with the other. That looming
-shadow in the South which yesterday was a monster of
-terror, to-day was only a bogie to frighten babies withal.
-So they strutted about, boasting that though the King of
-Spain might set all the silly geese over the sea in a flutter
-with his <i>braggadocio</i>, yet one quacking of an English
-drake was enough to set him shivering on his throne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I trust we were more modest than they. Yet in
-those young days of England's growing strength I cannot
-blame her if she laughed and crowed like a lusty baby
-over each new step he learns to take.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Our triumphal progress should have put us in good
-heart; yet, as we approached our journey's end, a weight
-seemed to settle on us both. As we rode from Gravesend
-each well-known object served to recall the misery
-of the day we saw them last; and for the first time, I
-think, Harry began to doubt whether it would be so
-easy to bring things back to the old track again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had sent word forward that he was coming, but
-no more, not knowing what to write. Thus we could
-not tell how things stood at Ashtead, or even whether
-Mrs. Waldyve were there at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was afternoon before we reached Rochester, and
-we stayed at the 'Crown' to dine, but did scant justice
-to the host's provision. Harry grew only more
-melancholy when we were alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would I could tell if she would forgive me!' he said
-at last. 'How can I hope for it, who left her so basely
-in the midst of all her grief? Tell me again, Jasper, all
-you saw when you went back to Ashtead after that sad day.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So I told my tale again, and dwelt on those words
-she sang, giving him to hope for the best.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet I think I will tarry till to-morrow,' he said.
-'It is late; I am weary. It will be too sudden for
-her at so late an hour. I will tarry, and send her
-word I am waiting here for her to bid me come. Maybe
-she is not there, and maybe grief has killed her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He sank his voice very low as he uttered this new
-fear, and before I could tell what to answer him&mdash;for,
-God knows, I too had little heart for this meeting&mdash;the
-Sergeant came in and said the horses were ready. Harry
-looked at me, but I could give him no help. My shame
-was still quick within me, and my only desire was to
-put off the end, which I could not foresee, but only
-fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sergeant,' said Harry at last, desperately, 'we think
-it too late to go on. We will lie here to-night, and come
-to Ashtead betimes to-morrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Cry you mercy, sir,' said the Sergeant, in a rebellious
-burst. 'If you can be within two hours' ride of that
-peerless lady and not go to her, it is more than I have
-power or discipline for. So I crave leave to ride on
-alone with all speed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But how know you we are within two hours' ride of
-her?' said Harry weakly, under the Sergeant's
-rebuking glance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save your worship,' cried the Sergeant, 'is that what
-ails you? Then take it from me, you can ride thither
-without fear of not finding her, for my good friends the
-drawers tell me she has abode at home ever since your
-departing, though it is true that none have seen her
-abroad of late.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with that the Sergeant brought us our rapiers
-and cloaks, and for very shame we were bound to take
-them and beat an honourable retreat along the line
-which, by accident or design, he had left open for us.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, without more ado, we rode out through the throng
-which had assembled to greet us when they heard we
-had come. The good people followed us up the street to
-the gates, and then fell to cheering us for two heroes, little
-thinking what sorry hearts those same heroes carried.
-So they cheered us, and Drake, and the Queen, as we
-rode out across the low land by the river, nor ceased till
-we began to climb the downs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Medway lay glistening in its mazy channels
-below us as we topped the hill. Rainham church-tower
-rose dimly before us; on either hand the turf swept
-downward from the road, broken by clumps of trees in
-every hollow where they could find shelter from the
-wind. These and a score of other familiar landmarks
-seemed to bring the past very near, and only increased
-my fear that the short time we had been away could not
-avail to heal the fearful wound I had made.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gladly would I have turned off on the road which led
-to Longdene, as I had that first day I had seen Harry's
-wife, but I was resolved to go on to the end with him,
-not knowing how great his need might soon be of a
-comforter; for his doubts had infected me with a
-heart-sickness as sore as his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bright picture of her as she was that day faded
-away as the gables and turrets of Ashtead came in sight,
-and I gave way to wondering what she looked like now,
-and of what she thought within those dim walls. And
-that wondering ceased as we rode under the gateway
-and dismounted. I could only then think of my brother.
-He was deadly pale, and clutched at my arm as he trod
-the steps, and stopped like one about to faint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would she had come out to meet us,' he murmured,
-'when she heard our horses in the court. She must
-have heard them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I knew not what to say, but pressed his hand and
-put my arm through his to steady him up the steps.
-He made a great effort as he reached the top and threw
-open the door of the hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There she stood in the lurid torch-light by the great
-hearth, as though just risen from her seat. She was
-pale and wild-eyed, and stood irresolute, gazing her
-heart out at him, with her white hands spread out a
-little in front of her as though the last spark of hope
-were dying within her, and she hardly dared to plead.
-Ah me! it was a picture of long-endured misery as I
-pray God I may never see again, and, still less, cause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Harry stood, it seemed so long, waiting for some sign
-from her, but she stood like a statue with no power to
-move. Then he advanced slowly towards her, and I
-followed into the hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I had hardly stepped within when a sudden light
-came into her eyes as she caught mine. She had seen
-me then for the first time. She had seen me, and, God
-be praised, knew by my being there that all must be
-forgiven.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a little glad cry she sprang forward, and in a
-moment those two I loved so well, and had wronged
-so deeply, were locked lip to lip in each other's
-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I heard a stifled sob behind me, and turned to see
-the tears rolling down the Sergeant's bronzed face.
-Then we went forth that those two might be alone;
-but very soon they came and called me back, and fed
-me with such loving words as I could not have looked
-for had I been their greatest benefactor and not their
-curse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Their most gentle dealing with me quite unmanned
-me, so that I easily was persuaded to lie at Ashtead
-that night, but on the morrow I thought it best to go.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Very dim and lonely was my library that night.
-My consuming grief was dead, drowned in their happiness
-and gentle usage of me. Yet it was very lonely.
-I tried to read, but each book I sought availed less to
-fasten my thoughts. So I sat musing on all that had
-befallen me those last months, and trying not to think
-how empty and sad my great chair looked without the
-sweet burden which, as it were, I had once seen
-nestling there.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That fancy grew dim as the months wore on, and I
-was ever at Ashtead as of old playing with little Fulke,
-or hunting with Harry, or talking over old times with
-Sergeant Culverin, who quickly settled down as Harry's
-right-hand on his estate, and so continued till his honest
-spirit passed away. But with Mrs. Waldyve I read
-no more then, nor till years after, when, through my
-thrice-blessed friendship with Signor Bruno, a
-deep-set faith came to comfort my ripening years and
-hers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed it was little I read at all, save in books of
-travel and cosmography. Study seemed a very poor
-and dry food to me at that time, the more so as there
-was no longer any one to urge me to it. Mr. Cartwright's
-strife was now nothing but a din of unmeaning
-words in my ears. Good Mr. Follet, my only other
-scholar friend, was dead, and his cherished 'Apology'
-still-born; for though he bequeathed the manuscript to
-me to set forth, I found its original obscurity and
-tangled learning (in so far as it was legible) so
-over-laid and involved and interlined with added matter
-from the four quarters of earthly and unearthly wisdom
-as to be past human understanding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each day then I saw more clearly that all was
-changed with me, and grew to know that thenceforth,
-till age should bring me peace and studious quiet, my
-content could only be found at Frank Drake's side, or
-in such great and stirring work as his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so it was, and not without good reward either,
-both in honour and riches. Yet there was nothing
-which my unworthy service earned of Her Majesty's
-grace and bounty that I valued higher than the loving
-welcome which was so plentifully bestowed on me at
-Ashtead each time I came home.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE END
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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