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+The Project Gutenberg EBook The Battle Of The Strong, by G. Parker, v1
+#57 in our series by Gilbert Parker
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**EBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These EBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers*****
+
+
+Title: The Battle Of The Strong [A Romance of Two Kingdoms], Volume 1.
+
+Author: Gilbert Parker
+
+Release Date: August, 2004 [EBook #6230]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 10, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+
+
+
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BATTLE OF THE STRONG, PARKER, V1 ***
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net>
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BATTLE OF THE STRONG
+
+[A ROMANCE OF TWO KINGDOMS]
+
+By Gilbert Parker
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS:
+
+THE INVASION
+
+ELEVEN YEARS AFTER
+
+IN FRANCE--NEAR FIVE MONTHS AFTER
+
+IN JERSEY FIVE YEARS LATER
+
+DURING ONE YEAR LATER
+
+IN JERSEY--A YEAR LATER
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+This book is a protest and a deliverance. For seven years I had written
+continuously of Canada, though some short stories of South Sea life, and
+the novel Mrs. Falchion, had, during that time, issued from my pen. It
+looked as though I should be writing of the Far North all my life.
+Editors had begun to take that view; but from the start it had never been
+my view. Even when writing Pierre and His People I was determined that I
+should not be cabined, cribbed, and confined in one field; that I should
+not, as some other men have done, wind in upon myself, until at last each
+succeeding book would be but a variation of some previous book, and I
+should end by imitating myself, become the sacrifice to the god of the
+pin-hole.
+
+I was warned not to break away from Canada; but all my life I had been
+warned, and all my life I had followed my own convictions. I would
+rather not have written another word than be corralled, bitted, saddled,
+and ridden by that heartless broncho-buster, the public, which wants a
+man who has once pleased it, to do the same thing under the fret of whip
+and spur for ever. When I went to the Island of Jersey, in 1897, it was
+to shake myself free of what might become a mere obsession. I determined
+that, as wide as my experiences had been in life, so would my writing be,
+whether it pleased the public or not. I was determined to fulfil myself;
+and in doing so to take no instructions except those of my own
+conscience, impulse, and conviction. Even then I saw fields of work
+which would occupy my mind, and such skill as I had, for many a year to
+come. I saw the Channel Islands, Egypt, South Africa, and India. In all
+these fields save India, I have given my Pegasus its bridle-rein, and, so
+far, I have no reason to feel that my convictions were false. I write of
+Canada still, but I have written of the Channel Islands, I have written
+of Egypt, I have written of England and South Africa, and my public--that
+is, those who read my books--have accepted me in all these fields without
+demur. I believe I have justified myself in not accepting imprisonment
+in the field where I first essayed to turn my observation of life to
+account.
+
+I went to Jersey, therefore, with my teeth set, in a way; yet happily and
+confidently. I had been dealing with French Canada for some years, and a
+step from Quebec, which was French, to Jersey, which was Norman French,
+was but short. It was a question of atmosphere solely. Whatever may be
+thought of The 'Battle of the Strong' I have not yet met a Jerseyman who
+denies to it the atmosphere of the place. It could hardly have lacked
+it, for there were twenty people, deeply intelligent, immensely
+interested in my design, and they were of Jersey families which had been
+there for centuries. They helped me, they fed me with dialect, with
+local details, with memories, with old letters, with diaries of their
+forebears, until, if I had gone wrong, it would have been through lack of
+skill in handling my material. I do not think I went wrong, though I
+believe that I could construct the book more effectively if I had to do
+it again. Yet there is something in looseness of construction which
+gives an air of naturalness; and it may be that this very looseness which
+I notice in 'The Battle of the Strong' has had something to do with
+giving it such a great circle of readers; though this may appear
+paradoxical. When it first appeared, it did not make the appeal which
+'The Right of Way' or 'The Seats of the Mighty' made, but it justified
+itself, it forced its way, it assured me that I had done right in shaking
+myself free from the control of my own best work. The book has gone on
+increasing its readers year by year, and when it appeared in Nelson's
+delightful cheap edition in England it had an immediate success, and has
+sold by the hundred thousand in the last four years.
+
+One of the first and most eager friends of 'The Battle of the Strong' was
+Mrs. Langtry, now Lady de Bathe, who, born in Jersey, and come of an old
+Jersey family, was well able to judge of the fidelity of the life and
+scene which it depicted. She greatly desired the novel to be turned into
+a play, and so it was. The adaptation, however, was lacking in much, and
+though Miss Marie Burroughs and Maurice Barrymore played in it, success
+did not attend its dramatic life.
+
+'The Battle of the Strong' was called an historical novel by many
+critics, but the disclaimer which I made in the first edition I make
+again. 'The Seats of the Mighty' came nearer to what might properly be
+called an historical novel than any other book which I have written save,
+perhaps, 'A Ladder of Swords'. 'The Battle of the Strong' is not without
+faithful historical elements, but the book is essentially a romance, in
+which character was not meant to be submerged by incident; and I do not
+think that in this particular the book falls short of the design of its
+author. There was this enormous difference between life in the Island of
+Jersey and life in French Canada, that in Jersey, tradition is heaped
+upon tradition, custom upon custom, precept upon precept, until every
+citizen of the place is bound by innumerable cords of a code from which
+he cannot free himself. It is a little island, and that it is an island
+is evidence of a contracted life, though, in this case, a life which has
+real power and force. The life in French Canada was also traditional,
+and custom was also somewhat tyrannous, but it was part of a great
+continent in which the expansion of the man and of a people was
+inevitable. Tradition gets somewhat battered in a new land, and
+even where, as in French Canada, the priest and the Church have such
+supervision, and can bring such pressure to bear that every man must
+feel its influence; yet there is a happiness, a blitheness, and an
+exhilaration even in the most obscure quarter of French Canada which
+cannot be observed in the Island of Jersey. In Jersey the custom of five
+hundred years ago still reaches out and binds; and so small is the place
+that every square foot of it almost--even where the potato sprouts, and
+the potato is Jersey's greatest friend--is identified with some odd
+incident, some naive circumstance, some big, vivid, and striking
+historical fact. Behind its rugged coasts a little people proudly hold
+by their own and to their own, and even a Jersey criminal has more
+friends in his own environment than probably any other criminal anywhere
+save in Corsica; while friendship is a passion even with the pettiness
+by which it is perforated.
+
+Reading this book again now after all these years, I feel convinced that
+the book is truly Jersiais, and I am grateful to it for having brought me
+out from the tyranny of the field in which I first sought for a hearing.
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+A list of Jersey words and phrases used herein, with their English or
+French equivalents, will be found at the end of the book. The Norman and
+patois words are printed as though they were English, some of them being
+quite Anglicised in Jersey. For the sake of brevity I have spoken of the
+Lieutenant-Bailly throughout as Bailly; and, in truth, he performed all
+the duties of Bailly in those days when this chief of the Jurats of the
+Island usually lived in England.
+
+
+
+
+PROEM
+
+There is no man living to-day who could tell you how the morning broke
+and the sun rose on the first day of January 1800; who walked in the
+Mall, who sauntered in the Park with the Prince: none lives who heard and
+remembers the gossip of the moment, or can give you the exact flavour of
+the speech and accent of the time. Down the long aisle of years echoes
+the air but not the tone; the trick of form comes to us but never the
+inflection. The lilt of the sensations, the idiosyncrasy of voice,
+emotion, and mind of the first hour of our century must now pass from the
+printed page to us, imperfectly realised; we may not know them through
+actual retrospection. The more distant the scene, the more uncertain the
+reflection; and so it must needs be with this tale, which will take you
+back to even twenty years before the century began.
+
+Then, as now, England was a great power outside these small islands.
+She had her foot firmly planted in Australia, in Asia, and in America--
+though, in bitterness, the American colonies had broken free, and only
+Canada was left to her in that northern hemisphere. She has had, in her
+day, to strike hard blows even for Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. But
+among her possessions is one which, from the hour its charter was granted
+it by King John, has been loyal, unwavering, and unpurchasable. Until
+the beginning of the century the language of this province was not our
+language, nor is English its official language to-day; and with a pretty
+pride oblivious of contrasts, and a simplicity unconscious of mirth, its
+people say: "We are the conquering race; we conquered England, England
+did not conquer us."
+
+A little island lying in the wash of St. Michael's Basin off the coast of
+France, Norman in its foundations and in its racial growth, it has been
+as the keeper of the gate to England; though so near to France is it,
+that from its shores on a fine day may be seen the spires of Coutances,
+from which its spiritual welfare was ruled long after England lost
+Normandy. A province of British people, speaking still the Norman-French
+that the Conqueror spoke; such is the island of Jersey, which, with
+Guernsey, Alderney, Sark, Herm, and Jethou, form what we call the Channel
+Isles, and the French call the Iles de la Manche.
+
+
+
+
+Volume 1.
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+In all the world there is no coast like the coast of Jersey; so
+treacherous, so snarling; serrated with rocks seen and unseen, tortured
+by currents maliciously whimsical, encircled by tides that sweep up from
+the Antarctic world with the devouring force of a monstrous serpent
+projecting itself towards its prey. The captain of these tides,
+travelling up through the Atlantic at a thousand miles an hour, enters
+the English Channel, and drives on to the Thames. Presently retreating,
+it meets another pursuing Antarctic wave, which, thus opposed in its
+straightforward course, recoils into St. Michael's Bay, then plunges, as
+it were, upon a terrible foe. They twine and strive in mystic conflict,
+and, in rage of equal power, neither vanquished nor conquering, circle,
+mad and desperate, round the Channel Isles. Impeded, impounded as they
+riot through the flumes of sea, they turn furiously, and smite the cliffs
+and rocks and walls of their prison-house. With the frenzied winds
+helping them, the island coasts and Norman shores are battered by their
+hopeless onset: and in that channel between Alderney and Cap de la Hague
+man or ship must well beware, for the Race of Alderney is one of the
+death-shoots of the tides. Before they find their way to the main again,
+these harridans of nature bring forth a brood of currents which
+ceaselessly fret the boundaries of the isles.
+
+Always, always the white foam beats the rocks, and always must man go
+warily along these coasts. The swimmer plunges into a quiet pool, the
+snowy froth that masks the reefs seeming only the pretty fringe of
+sentient life to a sleeping sea; but presently an invisible hand reaches
+up and grasps him, an unseen power drags him exultingly out to the main--
+and he returns no more. Many a Jersey boatman, many a fisherman who has
+lived his whole life in sight of the Paternosters on the north, the
+Ecrehos on the east, the Dog's Nest on the south, or the Corbiere on the
+west, has in some helpless moment been caught by the unsleeping currents
+which harry his peaceful borders, or the rocks that have eluded the
+hunters of the sea, and has yielded up his life within sight of his own
+doorway, an involuntary sacrifice to the navigator's knowledge and to the
+calm perfection of an admiralty chart.
+
+Yet within the circle of danger bounding this green isle the love of home
+and country is stubbornly, almost pathetically, strong. Isolation, pride
+of lineage, independence of government, antiquity of law and custom, and
+jealousy of imperial influence or action have combined to make a race
+self-reliant even to perverseness, proud and maybe vain, sincere almost
+to commonplaceness, unimaginative and reserved, with the melancholy born
+of monotony--for the life of the little country has coiled in upon
+itself, and the people have drooped to see but just their own selves
+reflected in all the dwellers of the land, whichever way they turn.
+A hundred years ago, however, there was a greater and more general
+lightness of heart and vivacity of spirit than now. Then the song of the
+harvester and the fisherman, the boat-builder and the stocking-knitter,
+was heard on a summer afternoon, or from the veille of a winter night
+when the dim crasset hung from the roof and the seaweed burned in the
+chimney. Then the gathering of the vraic was a fete, and the lads and
+lasses footed it on the green or on the hard sand, to the chance
+flageolets of sportive seamen home from the war. This simple gaiety was
+heartiest at Christmastide, when the yearly reunion of families took
+place; and because nearly everybody in Jersey was "couzain" to his
+neighbour these gatherings were as patriarchal as they were festive.
+
+ ..........................
+
+The new year of seventeen hundred and eighty-one had been ushered in by
+the last impulse of such festivities. The English cruisers lately in
+port had vanished up the Channel; and at Elizabeth Castle, Mont Orgueil,
+the Blue Barracks and the Hospital, three British regiments had taken up
+the dull round of duty again; so that by the fourth day a general
+lethargy, akin to content, had settled on the whole island.
+
+On the morning of the fifth day a little snow was lying upon the ground,
+but the sun rose strong and unclouded, the whiteness vanished, and there
+remained only a pleasant dampness which made sod and sand firm yet
+springy to the foot. As the day wore on, the air became more amiable
+still, and a delicate haze settled over the water and over the land,
+making softer to the eye house and hill and rock and sea.
+
+There was little life in the town of St. Heliers, there were few people
+upon the beach; though now and then some one who had been praying beside
+a grave in the parish churchyard came to the railings and looked out upon
+the calm sea almost washing its foundations, and over the dark range of
+rocks, which, when the tide was out, showed like a vast gridiron
+blackened by fires. Near by, some loitering sailors watched the yawl-
+rigged fishing craft from Holland, and the codfish-smelling cul-de-poule
+schooners of the great fishing company which exploited the far-off fields
+of Gaspe in Canada.
+
+St. Heliers lay in St. Aubin's Bay, which, shaped like a horseshoe, had
+Noirmont Point for one end of the segment and the lofty Town Hill for
+another. At the foot of this hill, hugging it close, straggled the town.
+From the bare green promontory above might be seen two-thirds of the
+south coast of the island--to the right St. Aubin's Bay, to the left
+Greve d'Azette, with its fields of volcanic-looking rocks, and St.
+Clement's Bay beyond. Than this no better place for a watchtower could
+be found; a perfect spot for the reflective idler and for the sailorman
+who, on land, must still be within smell and sound of the sea, and loves
+that place best which gives him widest prospect.
+
+This day a solitary figure was pacing backwards and forwards upon the
+cliff edge, stopping now to turn a telescope upon the water and now upon
+the town. It was a lad of not more than sixteen years, erect, well-
+poised, having an air of self-reliance, even of command. Yet it was a
+boyish figure too, and the face was very young, save for the eyes; these
+were frank but still sophisticated.
+
+The first time he looked towards the town he laughed outright, freely,
+spontaneously; threw his head back with merriment, and then glued his eye
+to the glass again. What he had seen was a girl of about five years of
+age with a man, in La Rue d'Egypte, near the old prison, even then called
+the Vier Prison. Stooping, the man had kissed the child, and she,
+indignant, snatching the cap from his head, had thrown it into the stream
+running through the street. Small wonder that the lad on the hill
+grinned, for the man who ran to rescue his hat from the stream was none
+other than the Bailly of the island, next in importance to the
+Lieutenant-Governor.
+
+The lad could almost see the face of the child, its humorous anger, its
+wilful triumph, and also the enraged look of the Bailly as he raked the
+stream with his long stick, tied with a sort of tassel of office.
+Presently he saw the child turn at the call of a woman in the Place du
+Vier Prison, who appeared to apologise to the Bailly, busy now drying his
+recovered hat by whipping it through the air. The lad on the hill
+recognised the woman as the child's mother.
+
+This little episode over, he turned once more towards the sea, watching
+the sun of late afternoon fall upon the towers of Elizabeth Castle and
+the great rock out of which St. Helier the hermit once chiselled his
+lofty home. He breathed deep and strong, and the carriage of his body
+was light, for he had a healthy enjoyment of all physical sensations and
+all the obvious drolleries of life. A broad sort of humour was written
+upon every feature; in the full, quizzical eye, in the width of cheek-
+bone, in the broad mouth, and in the depth of the laugh, which, however,
+often ended in a sort of chuckle not entirely pleasant. It suggested a
+selfish enjoyment of the odd or the melodramatic side of other people's
+difficulties.
+
+At last the youth encased his telescope, and turned to descend the hill
+to the town. As he did so, a bell began to ring. From where he was he
+could look down into the Vier Marchi, or market-place, where stood the
+Cohue Royale and house of legislature. In the belfry of this court-
+house, the bell was ringing to call the Jurats together for a meeting of
+the States. A monstrous tin pan would have yielded as much assonance.
+Walking down towards the Vier Marchi the lad gleefully recalled the
+humour of a wag who, some days before, had imitated the sound of the bell
+with the words:
+
+"Chicane--chicane! Chicane--chicane!"
+
+The native had, as he thought, suffered somewhat at the hands of the
+twelve Jurats of the Royal Court, whom his vote had helped to elect, and
+this was his revenge--so successful that, for generations, when the bell
+called the States or the Royal Court together, it said in the ears of the
+Jersey people--thus insistent is apt metaphor:
+
+"Chicane--chicane! Chicane--chicane!"
+
+As the lad came down to the town, trades-people whom he met touched their
+hats to him, and sailors and soldiers saluted respectfully. In this
+regard the Bailly himself could not have fared better. It was not due to
+the fact that the youth came of an old Jersey family, nor by reason that
+he was genial and handsome, but because he was a midshipman of the King's
+navy home on leave; and these were the days when England's sailors were
+more popular than her soldiers.
+
+He came out of the Vier Marchi into La Grande Rue, along the stream
+called the Fauxbie flowing through it, till he passed under the archway
+of the Vier Prison, making towards the place where the child had snatched
+the hat from the head of the Bailly.
+
+Presently the door of a cottage opened, and the child came out, followed
+by her mother.
+
+The young gentleman touched his cap politely, for though the woman was
+not fashionably dressed, she was distinguished in appearance, with an air
+of remoteness which gave her a kind of agreeable mystery.
+
+"Madame Landresse--" said the young gentleman with deference.
+
+"Monsieur d'Avranche--" responded the lady softly, pausing.
+
+"Did the Bailly make a stir? I saw the affair from the hill, through my
+telescope," said young d'Avranche, smiling.
+
+"My little daughter must have better manners," responded the lady,
+looking down at her child reprovingly yet lovingly.
+
+"Or the Bailly must--eh, Madame?" replied d'Avranche, and, stooping, he
+offered his hand to the child. Glancing up inquiringly at her mother,
+she took it. He held hers in a clasp of good nature. The child was so
+demure, one could scarcely think her capable of tossing the Bailly's hat
+into the stream; yet looking closely, there might be seen in her eyes a
+slumberous sort of fire, a touch of mystery. They were neither blue nor
+grey, but a mingling of both, growing to the most tender, greyish sort of
+violet. Down through generations of Huguenot refugees had passed sorrow
+and fighting and piety and love and occasional joy, until in the eyes of
+this child they all met, delicately vague, and with the wistfulness of
+the early morning of life.
+
+"What is your name, little lady?" asked d'Avranche of the child.
+
+"Guida, sir," she answered simply.
+
+"Mine is Philip. Won't you call me Philip?"
+
+She flashed a look at her mother, regarded him again, and then answered:
+
+"Yes, Philip--sir."
+
+D'Avranche wanted to laugh, but the face of the child was sensitive and
+serious, and he only smiled. "Say 'Yes, Philip', won't you?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, Philip," came the reply obediently.
+
+After a moment of speech with Madame Landresse, Philip stooped to say
+good-bye to the child. "Good-bye, Guida."
+
+A queer, mischievous little smile flitted over her face--a second, and it
+was gone.
+
+"Good-bye, sir--Philip," she said, and they parted. Her last words kept
+ringing in his ears as he made his way homeward. "Good-bye, sir--Philip"
+--the child's arrangement of words was odd and amusing, and at the same
+time suggested something more. "Good-bye, Sir Philip," had a different
+meaning, though the words were the same.
+
+"Sir Philip--eh?" he said to himself, with a jerk of the head--"I'll be
+more than that some day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+The night came down with leisurely gloom. A dim starlight pervaded
+rather than shone in the sky; Nature seemed somnolent and gravely
+meditative. It brooded as broods a man who is seeking his way through a
+labyrinth of ideas to a conclusion still evading him. This sense of
+cogitation enveloped land and sea, and was as tangible to feeling as
+human presence.
+
+At last the night seemed to wake from reverie. A movement, a thrill, ran
+through the spangled vault of dusk and sleep, and seemed to pass over the
+world, rousing the sea and the earth. There was no wind, apparently no
+breath of air, yet the leaves of the trees moved, the weather-vanes
+turned slightly, the animals in the byres roused themselves, and
+slumbering folk opening their eyes, turned over in their beds, and
+dropped into a troubled doze again.
+
+Presently there came a long moaning sound from the tide, not loud but
+rather mysterious and distant--a plaint, a threatening, a warning, a
+prelude?
+
+A dull labourer, returning from late toil, felt it, and raised his head
+in a perturbed way, as though some one had brought him news of a far-off
+disaster. A midwife, hurrying to a lowly birth-chamber, shivered and
+gathered her mantle more closely about her. She looked up at the sky,
+she looked out over the sea, then she bent her head and said to herself
+that this would not be a good night, that ill-luck was in the air. "The
+mother or the child will die," she said to herself. A 'longshoreman,
+reeling home from deep potations, was conscious of it, and, turning round
+to the sea, snarled at it and said yah! in swaggering defiance. A young
+lad, wandering along the deserted street, heard it, began to tremble, and
+sat down on a block of stone beside the doorway of a baker's shop. He
+dropped his head on his arms and his chin on his knees, shutting out the
+sound and sobbing quietly.
+
+Yesterday his mother had been buried; to-night his father's door had been
+closed in his face. He scarcely knew whether his being locked out was an
+accident or whether it was intended. He thought of the time when his
+father had ill-treated his mother and himself. That, however, had
+stopped at last, for the woman had threatened the Royal Court, and the
+man, having no wish to face its summary convictions, thereafter conducted
+himself towards them both with a morose indifference.
+
+The boy was called Ranulph, a name which had passed to him through
+several generations of Jersey forebears--Ranulph Delagarde. He was being
+taught the trade of ship-building in St. Aubin's Bay. He was not beyond
+fourteen years of age, though he looked more, so tall and straight and
+self-possessed was he.
+
+His tears having ceased soon, he began to think of what he was to do
+in the future. He would never go back to his father's house, or be
+dependent on him for aught. Many plans came to his mind. He would
+learn his trade of ship-building, he would become a master-builder, then
+a shipowner, with fishing-vessels like the great company sending fleets
+to Gaspe.
+
+At the moment when these ambitious plans had reached the highest point of
+imagination, the upper half of the door beside him opened suddenly, and
+he heard men's voices. He was about to rise and disappear, but the words
+of the men arrested him, and he cowered down beside the stone. One of
+the men was leaning on the half-door, speaking in French.
+
+"I tell you it can't go wrong. The pilot knows every crack in the coast.
+I left Granville at three; Rulle cour left Chaussey at nine. If he lands
+safe, and the English troops ain't roused, he'll take the town and hold
+the island easy enough."
+
+"But the pilot, is he certain safe?" asked another voice. Ranulph
+recognised it as that of the baker Carcaud, who owned the shop. "Olivier
+Delagarde isn't so sure of him."
+
+Olivier Delagarde! The lad started. That was his father's name. He
+shrank as from a blow--his father was betraying Jersey to the French!
+
+"Of course, the pilot, he's all right," the Frenchman answered the baker.
+"He was to have been hung here for murder. He got away, and now he's
+having his turn by fetching Rullecour's wolves to eat up your green-
+bellies. By to-morrow at seven Jersey 'll belong to King Louis."
+
+"I've done my promise," rejoined Carcaud the baker; "I've been to three
+of the guard-houses on St. Clement's and Grouville. In two the men are
+drunk as donkeys; in another they sleep like squids. Rullecour he can
+march straight to the town and seize it--if he land safe. But will he
+stand by 's word to we? You know the saying: 'Cadet Roussel has two
+sons; one's a thief, t'other's a rogue.' There's two Rullecours--
+Rullecour before the catch and Rullecour after!"
+
+"He'll be honest to us, man, or he'll be dead inside a week, that's all."
+
+"I'm to be Connetable of St. Heliers, and you're to be harbour-master--
+eh?"
+
+"Naught else: you don't catch flies with vinegar. Give us your hand--
+why, man, it's doggish cold."
+
+"Cold hand, healthy heart. How many men will Rullecour bring?"
+
+"Two thousand; mostly conscripts and devil's beauties from Granville and
+St. Malo gaols."
+
+"Any signals yet?"
+
+"Two--from Chaussey at five o'clock. Rullecour 'll try to land at Gorey.
+Come, let's be off. Delagarde's there now."
+
+The boy stiffened with horror--his father was a traitor! The thought
+pierced his brain like a hot iron. He must prevent this crime, and warn
+the Governor. He prepared to steal away. Fortunately the back of the
+man's head was towards him.
+
+Carcaud laughed a low, malicious laugh as he replied to the Frenchman.
+
+"Trust the quiet Delagarde! There's nothing worse nor still waters.
+He'll do his trick, and he'll have his share if the rest suck their
+thumbs. He doesn't wait for roasted larks to drop into his mouth--what's
+that!" It was Ranulph stealing away.
+
+In an instant the two men were on him, and a hand was clapped to his
+mouth. In another minute he was bound, thrown onto the stone floor of
+the bakehouse, his head striking, and he lost consciousness.
+
+When he came to himself, there was absolute silence round him-deathly,
+oppressive silence. At first he was dazed, but at length all that had
+happened came back to him.
+
+Where was he now? His feet were free; he began to move them about. He
+remembered that he had been flung on the stone floor of the bakeroom.
+This place sounded hollow underneath--it certainly was not the bakeroom.
+He rolled over and over. Presently he touched a wall--it was stone. He
+drew himself up to a sitting posture, but his head struck a curved stone
+ceiling. Then he swung round and moved his foot along the wall--it
+touched iron. He felt farther with his foot-something clicked. Now he
+understood; he was in the oven of the bakehouse, with his hands bound.
+He began to think of means of escape. The iron door had no inside latch.
+There was a small damper covering a barred hole, through which perhaps he
+might be able to get a hand, if only it were free. He turned round so
+that his fingers might feel the grated opening. The edge of the little
+bars was sharp. He placed the strap binding his wrists against these
+sharp edges, and drew his arms up and down, a difficult and painful
+business. The iron cut his hands and wrists at first, so awkward was the
+movement. But, steeling himself, he kept on steadily.
+
+At last the straps fell apart, and his hands were free. With difficulty
+he thrust one through the bars. His fingers could just lift the latch.
+Now the door creaked on its hinges, and in a moment he was out on the
+stone flags of the bakeroom. Hurrying through an unlocked passage into
+the shop, he felt his way to the street door, but it was securely
+fastened. The windows? He tried them both, one on either side, but
+while he could free the stout wooden shutters on the inside, a heavy iron
+bar secured them without, and it was impossible to open them.
+
+Feverish with anxiety, he sat down on the low counter, with his hands
+between his knees, and tried to think what to do. In the numb
+hopelessness of the moment he became very quiet. His mind was confused,
+but his senses were alert; he was in a kind of dream, yet he was acutely
+conscious of the smell of new-made bread. It pervaded the air of the
+place; it somehow crept into his brain and his being, so that, as long as
+he might live, the smell of new-made bread would fetch back upon him the
+nervous shiver and numbness of this hour of danger.
+
+As he waited, he heard a noise outside, a clac-clac! clac-clac! which
+seemed to be echoed back from the wood and stone of the houses in the
+street, and then to be lifted up and carried away over the roofs and out
+to sea---clac-clac! clac-clac! It was not the tap of a blind man's
+staff--at first he thought it might be; it was not a donkey's foot on the
+cobbles; it was not the broom-sticks of the witches of St. Clement's Bay,
+for the rattle was below in the street, and the broom-stick rattle is
+heard only on the roofs as the witches fly across country from Rocbert to
+Bonne Nuit Bay.
+
+This clac-clac came from the sabots of some nightfarer. Should he make a
+noise and attract the attention of the passer-by? No, that would not do.
+It might be some one who would wish to know whys and wherefores. He
+must, of course, do his duty to his country, but he must save his father
+too. Bad as the man was, he must save him, though, no matter what
+happened, he must give the alarm. His reflections tortured him. Why had
+he not stopped the nightfarer?
+
+Even as these thoughts passed through the lad's mind, the clac-clac had
+faded away into the murmur of the stream flowing by the Rue d'Egypte to
+the sea, and almost beneath his feet. There flashed on him at that
+instant what little Guida Landresse had said a few days before as she lay
+down beside this very stream, and watched the water wimpling by.
+Trailing her fingers through it dreamily, the child had said to him:
+
+"Ro, won't it never come back?" She always called him "Ro," because when
+beginning to talk she could not say Ranulph.
+
+Ro, won't it never come back? But while yet he recalled the words,
+another sound mingled again with the stream-clac-clac! clac-clac!
+Suddenly it came to him who was the wearer of the sabots making this
+peculiar clatter in the night. It was Dormy Jamais, the man who never
+slept. For two years the clac-clac of Dormy Jamais's sabots had not been
+heard in the streets of St. Heliers--he had been wandering in France,
+a daft pilgrim. Ranulph remembered how these sabots used to pass and
+repass the doorway of his own home. It was said that while Dormy Jamais
+paced the streets there was no need of guard or watchman. Many a time
+had Ranulph shared his supper with the poor beganne whose origin no one
+knew, whose real name had long since dropped into oblivion.
+
+The rattle of the sabots came nearer, the footsteps were now in front of
+the window. Even as Ranulph was about to knock and call the poor
+vagrant's name, the clac-clac stopped, and then there came a sniffing at
+the shutters as a dog sniffs at the door of a larder. Following the
+sniffing came a guttural noise of emptiness and desire. Now there was no
+mistake; it was the half-witted fellow beyond all doubt, and he could
+help him--Dormy Jamais should help him: he should go and warn the
+Governor and the soldiers at the Hospital, while he himself would speed
+to Gorey in search of his father. He would alarm the regiment there at
+the same time.
+
+He knocked and shouted. Dormy Jamais, frightened, jumped back into the
+street. Ranulph called again, and yet again, and now at last Dormy
+recognised the voice.
+
+With a growl of mingled reassurance and hunger, he lifted down the iron
+bar from the shutters. In a moment Ranulph was outside with two loaves
+of bread, which he put into Dormy Jamais's arms. The daft one whinnied
+with delight.
+
+"What's o'clock, bread-man?" he asked with a chuckle.
+
+Ranulph gripped his shoulders. "See, Dormy Jamais, I want you to go to
+the Governor's house at La Motte, and tell them that the French are
+coming, that they're landing at Gorey now. Then to the Hospital and tell
+the sentry there. Go, Dormy--allez kedainne!"
+
+Dormy Jamais tore at a loaf with his teeth, and crammed a huge crust into
+his mouth.
+
+"Come, tell me, will you go, Dormy?" the lad asked impatiently.
+
+Dormy Jamais nodded his head, grunted, and, turning on his heel with
+Ranulph, clattered up the street. The lad sprang ahead of him, and ran
+swiftly up the Rue d'Egypte, into the Vier Marchi, and on over the Town
+Hill along the road to Grouville.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+Since the days of Henry III of England the hawk of war that broods in
+France has hovered along that narrow strip of sea dividing the island of
+Jersey from the duchy of Normandy. Eight times has it descended, and
+eight times has it hurried back with broken pinion. Among these
+truculent invasions two stand out boldly: the spirited and gallant attack
+by Bertrand du Guesclin, Constable of France; and the freebooting
+adventure of Rullecour, with his motley following of gentlemen and
+criminals. Rullecour it was, soldier of fortune, gambler, ruffian, and
+embezzler, to whom the King of France had secretly given the mission to
+conquer the unconquerable little island.
+
+From the Chaussey Isles the filibuster saw the signal light which the
+traitor Olivier Delagarde had set upon the heights of Le Couperon, where,
+ages ago, Caesar built fires to summon from Gaul his devouring legions.
+
+All was propitious for the attack. There was no moon--only a meagre
+starlight when they set forth from Chaussey. The journey was made in
+little more than an hour, and Rullecour himself was among the first to
+see the shores of Jersey loom darkly in front. Beside him stood the
+murderous pilot who was leading in the expedition, the colleague of
+Olivier Delagarde.
+
+Presently the pilot gave an exclamation of surprise and anxiety--the
+tides and currents were bearing them away from the intended landing-
+place. It was now almost low water, and instead of an immediate shore,
+there lay before them a vast field of scarred rocks, dimly seen. He gave
+the signal to lay-to, and himself took the bearings. The tide was going
+out rapidly, disclosing reefs on either hand. He drew in carefully to
+the right of the rock known as L'Echiquelez, up through a passage scarce
+wide enough for canoes, and to Roque Platte, the south-eastern projection
+of the island.
+
+You may range the seas from the Yugon Strait to the Erebus volcano, and
+you will find no such landing-place for imps or men as that field of
+rocks on the southeast corner of Jersey called, with a malicious irony,
+the Bane des Violets. The great rocks La Coniere, La Longy, Le Gros
+Etac, Le Teton, and the Petite Sambiere, rise up like volcanic monuments
+from a floor of lava and trailing vraic, which at half-tide makes the sea
+a tender mauve and violet. The passages of safety between these ranges
+of reef are but narrow at high tide; at half-tide, when the currents are
+changing most, the violet field becomes the floor of a vast mortuary
+chapel for unknowing mariners.
+
+A battery of four guns defended the post on the landward side of this
+bank of the heavenly name. Its guards were asleep or in their cups.
+They yielded, without resistance, to the foremost of the invaders. But
+here Rullecour and his pilot, looking back upon the way they had come,
+saw the currents driving the transport boats hither and thither in
+confusion. Jersey was not to be conquered without opposition--no army
+of defence was abroad, but the elements roused themselves and furiously
+attacked the fleet. Battalions unable to land drifted back with the
+tides to Granville, whence they had come. Boats containing the heavy
+ammunition and a regiment of conscripts were battered upon the rocks, and
+hundreds of the invaders found an unquiet grave upon the Banc des
+Violets.
+
+Presently the traitor Delagarde arrived and was welcomed warmly by
+Rullecour. The night wore on, and at last the remaining legions were
+landed. A force was left behind to guard La Roque Platte, and then the
+journey across country to the sleeping town began.
+
+With silent, drowsing batteries in front and on either side of them, the
+French troops advanced, the marshes of Samares and the sea on their left,
+churches and manor houses on their right, all silent. Not yet had a blow
+been struck for the honour of this land and of the Kingdom.
+
+But a blind injustice was, in its own way, doing the work of justice.
+On the march, Delagarde, suspecting treachery to himself, not without
+reason, required of Rullecour guarantee for the fulfilment of his pledge
+to make him Vicomte of the Island when victory should be theirs.
+Rullecour, however, had also promised the post to a reckless young
+officer, the Comte de Tournay, of the House of Vaufontaine, who, under
+the assumed name of Yves Savary dit Detricand, marched with him.
+Rullecour answered Delagarde churlishly, and would say nothing till the
+town was taken--the ecrivain must wait. But Delagarde had been drinking,
+he was in a mood to be reckless; he would not wait, he demanded an
+immediate pledge.
+
+"By and by, my doubting Thomas," said Rullecour. "No, now, by the blood
+of Peter!" answered Delagarde, laying a hand upon his sword.
+
+The French leader called a sergeant to arrest him. Delagarde instantly
+drew his sword and attacked Rullecour, but was cut down from behind by
+the scimitar of a swaggering Turk, who had joined the expedition as aide-
+de-camp to the filibustering general, tempted thereto by promises of a
+harem of the choicest Jersey ladies, well worthy of this cousin of the
+Emperor of Morocco.
+
+The invaders left Delagarde lying where he fell. What followed this
+oblique retribution could satisfy no ordinary logic, nor did it meet the
+demands of poetic justice. For, as a company of soldiers from Grouville,
+alarmed out of sleep by a distracted youth, hurried towards St. Heliers,
+they found Delagarde lying by the roadside, and they misunderstood what
+had happened. Stooping over him an officer said pityingly:
+
+"See--he got this wound fighting the French!" With the soldiers was the
+youth who had warned them. He ran forward with a cry, and knelt beside
+the wounded man. He had no tears, he had no sorrow. He was only sick
+and dumb, and he trembled with misery as he lifted up his father's head.
+The eyes of Olivier Delagarde opened.
+
+"Ranulph--they've killed--me," gasped the stricken man feebly, and his
+head fell back.
+
+An officer touched the youth's arm. "He is gone," said he. "Don't fret,
+lad, he died fighting for his country."
+
+The lad made no reply, and the soldiers hurried on towards the town.
+
+He died fighting for his country! So that was to be the legend, Ranulph
+meditated: his father was to have a glorious memory, while he himself
+knew how vile the man was. One thing however: he was glad that Olivier
+Delagarde was dead. How strangely had things happened! He had come to
+stay a traitor in his crime, and here he found a martyr. But was not he
+himself likewise a traitor? Ought not he to have alarmed the town first
+before he tried to find his father? Had Dormy Jamais warned the
+Governor? Clearly not, or the town bells would be ringing and the
+islanders giving battle. What would the world think of him!
+
+Well, what was the use of fretting here? He would go on to the town,
+help to fight the French, and die that would be the best thing. He
+knelt, and unclasped his father's fingers from the handle of the sword.
+The steel was cold, it made him shiver. He had no farewell to make. He
+looked out to sea. The tide would come and carry his father's body out,
+perhaps-far out, and sink it in the deepest depths. If not that, then
+the people would bury Olivier Delagarde as a patriot. He determined that
+he himself would not live to see such mockery.
+
+As he sped along towards the town he asked himself why nobody suspected
+the traitor. One reason for it occurred to him: his father, as the whole
+island knew, had a fishing-hut at Gorey. They would imagine him on the
+way to it when he met the French, for he often spent the night there. He
+himself had told his tale to the soldiers: how he had heard the baker and
+the Frenchman talking at the shop in the Rue d'Egypte. Yes, but suppose
+the French were driven out, and the baker taken prisoner and should
+reveal his father's complicity! And suppose people asked why he himself
+did not go at once to the Hospital Barracks in the town and to the
+Governor, and afterwards to Gorey?
+
+These were direful imaginings. He felt that it was no use; that the lie
+could not go on concerning his father. The world would know; the one
+thing left for him was to die. He was only a boy, but he could fight.
+Had not young Philip d'Avranche; the midshipman, been in deadly action
+many times? He was nearly as old as Philip d'Avranche--yes, he would
+fight, and, fighting, he would die. To live as the son of such a father
+was too pitiless a shame.
+
+He ran forward, but a weakness was on him; he was very hungry and
+thirsty-and the sword was heavy. Presently, as he went, he saw a stone
+well near a cottage by the roadside. On a ledge of the well stood a
+bucket of water. He tilted the bucket and drank. He would have liked to
+ask for bread at the cottage-door, but he said to himself, Why should he
+eat, for was he not going to die? Yet why should he not eat, even if he
+were going to die? He turned his head wistfully, he was so faint with
+hunger. The force driving him on, however, was greater than hunger--he
+ran harder. . . . But undoubtedly the sword was heavy!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+In the Vier Marchi the French flag was flying, French troops occupied it,
+French sentries guarded the five streets entering into it. Rullecour,
+the French adventurer, held the Lieutenant-Governor of the isle captive
+in the Cohue Royale; and by threats of fire and pillage thought to force
+capitulation. For his final argument he took the Governor to the
+doorway, and showed him two hundred soldiers with lighted torches ready
+to fire the town.
+
+When the French soldiers first entered the Vier Marchi there was Dormy
+Jamais on the roof of the Cohue Royale, calmly munching his bread. When
+he saw Rullecour and the Governor appear, he chuckled to himself, and
+said, in Jersey patois: "I vaut mux alouonyi l'bras que l'co," which is
+to say: It is better to stretch the arm than the neck. The Governor
+would have done more wisely, he thought, to believe the poor beganne, and
+to have risen earlier. Dormy Jamais had a poor opinion of a governor who
+slept. He himself was not a governor, yet was he not always awake? He
+had gone before dawn to the Governor's house, had knocked, had given
+Ranulph Delagarde's message, had been called a dirty buzard, and been
+sent away by the crusty, incredulous servant. Then he had gone to the
+Hospital Barracks, was there iniquitously called a lousy toad, and had
+been driven off with his quartern loaf, muttering through the dough the
+island proverb "While the mariner swigs the tide rises."
+
+Had the Governor remained as cool as the poor vagrant, he would not have
+shrunk at the sight of the incendiaries, yielded to threats, and signed
+the capitulation of the island. But that capitulation being signed, and
+notice of it sent to the British troops, with orders to surrender and
+bring their arms to the Cohue Royale, it was not cordially received by
+the officers in command.
+
+"Je ne comprends pas le francais," said Captain Mulcaster, at Elizabeth
+Castle, as he put the letter into his pocket unread.
+
+"The English Governor will be hanged, and the French will burn the town,"
+responded the envoy. "Let them begin to hang and burn and be damned, for
+I'll not surrender the castle or the British flag so long as I've a man
+to defend it, to please anybody!" answered Mulcaster.
+
+"We shall return in numbers," said the Frenchman, threateningly.
+
+"I shall be delighted: we shall have the more to kill," Mulcaster
+replied.
+
+Then the captive Lieutenant-Governor was sent to Major Peirson at the
+head of his troops on the Mont es Pendus, with counsel to surrender.
+
+"Sir," said he, "this has been a very sudden surprise, for I was made
+prisoner before I was out of my bed this morning."
+
+"Sir," replied Peirson, the young hero of twenty-four, who achieved death
+and glory between a sunrise and a noontide, "give me leave to tell you
+that the 78th Regiment has not yet been the least surprised."
+
+From Elizabeth Castle came defiance and cannonade, driving back Rullecour
+and his filibusters to the Cohue Royale: from Mont Orgueil, from the
+Hospital, from St. Peter's came the English regiments; from the other
+parishes swarmed the militia, all eager to recover their beloved Vier
+Marchi. Two companies of light infantry, leaving the Mont es Pendus,
+stole round the town and placed themselves behind the invaders on the
+Town Hill; the rest marched direct upon the enemy. Part went by the
+Grande Rue, and part by the Rue d'Driere, converging to the point of
+attack; and as the light infantry came down from the hill by the Rue des
+Tres Pigeons, Peirson entered the Vier Marchi by the Route es Couochons.
+On one side of the square, where the Cohue Royale made a wall to fight
+against, were the French. Radiating from this were five streets and
+passages like the spokes of a wheel, and from these now poured the
+defenders of the isle.
+
+A volley came from the Cohue Royale, then another, and another. The
+place was small: friend and foe were crowded upon each other. The
+fighting became at once a hand-to-hand encounter. Cannon were useless,
+gun-carriages overturned. Here a drummer fell wounded, but continued
+beating his drum to the last; there a Glasgow soldier struggled with a
+French officer for the flag of the invaders; yonder a handful of Malouins
+doggedly held the foot of La Pyramide, until every one was cut down by
+overpowering numbers of British and Jersiais. The British leader was
+conspicuous upon his horse. Shot after shot was fired at him. Suddenly
+he gave a cry, reeled in his saddle, and sank, mortally wounded, into the
+arms of a brother officer.
+
+For a moment his men fell back.
+
+In the midst of the deadly turmoil a youth ran forward from a group of
+combatants, caught the bridle of the horse from which Peirson had fallen,
+mounted, and, brandishing a short sword, called upon his dismayed and
+wavering followers to advance; which they instantly did with fury and
+courage. It was Midshipman Philip d'Avranche. Twenty muskets were
+discharged at him. One bullet cut the coat on his shoulder, another
+grazed the back of his hand, a third scarred the pommel of the saddle,
+and still another wounded his horse. Again and again the English called
+upon him to dismount, for he was made a target, but he refused, until
+at last the horse was shot under him. Then once more he joined in the
+hand-to-hand encounter.
+
+Windows near the ground, such as were not shattered, were broken by
+bullets. Cannon-balls embedded themselves in the masonry and the heavy
+doorways. The upper windows were safe, however: the shots did not range
+so high. At one of these, over a watchmaker's shop, a little girl was to
+be seen, looking down with eager interest. Presently an old man came in
+view and led her away. A few minutes of fierce struggle passed, and then
+at another window on the floor below the child appeared again. She saw a
+youth with a sword hurrying towards the Cohue Royale from a tangled mass
+of combatants. As he ran, a British soldier fell in front of him. The
+youth dropped the sword and grasped the dead man's musket.
+
+The child clapped her hands on the window.
+
+"It's Ro--it's Ro!" she cried, and disappeared again.
+
+"Ro," with white face, hatless, coatless, pushed on through the melee.
+Rullecour, the now disheartened French general, stood on the steps of the
+Cohue Royale. With a vulgar cruelty and cowardice he was holding the
+Governor by the arm, hoping thereby to protect his own person from the
+British fire.
+
+Here was what the lad had been trying for--the sight of this man
+Rullecour. There was one small clear space between the English and the
+French, where stood a gun-carriage. He ran to it, leaned the musket on
+the gun, and, regardless of the shots fired at him, took aim steadily.
+A French bullet struck the wooden wheel of the carriage, and a splinter
+gashed his cheek. He did not move, but took sight again, and fired.
+Rullecour fell, shot through the jaw. A cry of fury and dismay went up
+from the French at the loss of their leader, a shout of triumph from the
+British.
+
+The Frenchmen had had enough. They broke and ran. Some rushed for
+doorways and threw themselves within, many scurried into the Rue des Tres
+Pigeons, others madly fought their way into Morier Lane.
+
+At this moment the door of the watchmaker's shop opened and the little
+girl who had been seen at the window ran into the square, calling out:
+"Ro! Ro!" It was Guida Landresse.
+
+Among the French flying for refuge was the garish Turk, Rullecour's ally.
+Suddenly the now frightened, crying child got into his path and tripped
+him up. Wild with rage he made a stroke at her, but at that instant his
+scimitar was struck aside by a youth covered with the smoke and grime of
+battle. He caught up the child to his arms, and hurried with her through
+the melee to the watchmaker's doorway. There stood a terror-stricken
+woman--Madame Landresse, who had just made her way into the square.
+Placing the child, in her arms, Philip d'Avranche staggered inside the
+house, faint and bleeding from a wound in the shoulder. The battle of
+Jersey was over.
+
+"Ah bah!" said Dormy Jamais from the roof of the Cohue Royale; "now I'll
+toll the bell for that achocre of a Frenchman. Then I'll finish my
+supper."
+
+Poising a half-loaf of bread on the ledge of the roof, he began to slowly
+toll the cracked bell at his hand for Rullecour the filibuster.
+
+The bell clanged out: Chicane-chicane! Chicane-chicane!
+
+Another bell answered from the church by the square, a deep, mournful
+note. It was tolling for Peirson and his dead comrades.
+
+Against the statue in the Vier Marchi leaned Ranulph Delagarde. An
+officer came up and held out a hand to him. "Your shot ended the
+business," said he. "You're a brave fellow. What is your name?"
+
+"Ranulph Delagarde, sir."
+
+"Delagarde--eh? Then well done, Delagardes! They say your father was
+the first man killed. We won't forget that, my lad."
+
+Sinking down upon the base of the statue, Ranulph did not stir or reply,
+and the officer, thinking he was grieving for his father, left him alone.
+
+
+
+
+ELEVEN YEARS AFTER
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+The King of France was no longer sending adventurers to capture the
+outposts of England. He was rather, in despair, beginning to wind in
+again the coil of disaster which had spun out through the helpless
+fingers of Neckar, Calonne, Brienne and the rest, and was in the end to
+bind his own hands for the guillotine.
+
+The Isle of Jersey, like a scout upon the borders of a foeman's country,
+looked out over St. Michael's Basin to those provinces where the war of
+the Vendee was soon to strike France from within, while England, and
+presently all Europe, should strike her from without.
+
+War, or the apprehension of war, was in the air. The people of the
+little isle, living always within the influence of natural wonder and the
+power of the elements, were deeply superstitious; and as news of dark
+deeds done in Paris crept across from Carteret or St. Malo, as men-of-war
+anchored in the tide-way, and English troops, against the hour of
+trouble, came, transport after transport, into the harbour of St.
+Heliers, they began to see visions and dream dreams. One peasant heard
+the witches singing a chorus of carnage at Rocbert; another saw, towards
+the Minquiers, a great army like a mirage upon the sea; others declared
+that certain French refugees in the island had the evil eye and bewitched
+their cattle; and a woman, wild with grief because her child had died
+of a sudden sickness, meeting a little Frenchman, the Chevalier du
+Champsavoys, in the Rue des Tres Pigeons, thrust at his face with her
+knitting-needle, and then, Protestant though she was, made the sacred
+sign, as though to defeat the evil eye.
+
+This superstition and fanaticism so strong in the populace now and then
+burst forth in untamable fury and riot. So that when, on the sixteenth
+of December 1792, the gay morning was suddenly overcast, and a black
+curtain was drawn over the bright sun, the people of Jersey, working in
+the fields, vraicking among the rocks, or knitting in their doorways,
+stood aghast, and knew not what was upon them.
+
+Some began to say the Lord's Prayer, some in superstitious terror ran to
+the secret hole in the wall, to the chimney, or to the bedstead, or dug
+up the earthen floor, to find the stocking full of notes and gold, which
+might, perchance, come with them safe through any cataclysm, or start
+them again in business in another world. Some began fearfully to sing
+hymns, and a few to swear freely. These latter were chiefly carters,
+whose salutations to each other were mainly oaths, because of the extreme
+narrowness of the island roads, and sailors to whom profanity was as
+daily bread.
+
+In St. Heliers, after the first stupefaction, people poured into the
+streets. They gathered most where met the Rue d'Driere and the Rue
+d'Egypte. Here stood the old prison, and the spot was called the Place
+du Vier Prison.
+
+Men and women with breakfast still in their mouths mumbled their terror
+to each other. A lobster-woman shrieking that the Day of Judgment was
+come, instinctively straightened her cap, smoothed out her dress of
+molleton, and put on her sabots. A carpenter, hearing her terrified
+exclamations, put on his sabots also, stooped whimpering to the stream
+running from the Rue d'Egypte, and began to wash his face. A dozen of
+his neighbours did the same. Some of the women, however, went on
+knitting hard, as they gabbled prayers and looked at the fast-blackening
+sun. Knitting was to Jersey women, like breathing or tale-bearing, life
+itself. With their eyes closing upon earth they would have gone on
+knitting and dropped no stitches.
+
+A dusk came down like that over Pompeii and Herculaneum. The tragedy of
+fear went hand in hand with burlesque commonplace. The grey stone walls
+of the houses grew darker and darker, and seemed to close in on the
+dumfounded, hysterical crowd. Here some one was shouting command to
+imaginary militia; there an aged crone was offering, without price,
+simnels and black butter, as a sort of propitiation for an imperfect
+past; and from a window a notorious evil-liver was frenziedly crying that
+she had heard the devil and his Rocbert witches revelling in the prison
+dungeons the night before. Thereupon a long-haired fanatic, once a
+barber, with a gift for mad preaching, sprang upon the Pompe des
+Brigands, and declaring that the Last Day was come, shrieked:
+
+ "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me! He hath sent me to proclaim
+ liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that
+ are bound!"
+
+Some one thrust into his hand a torch. He waved it to and fro in his
+wild harangue; he threw up his arms towards the ominous gloom, and with
+blatant fury ordered open the prison doors. Other torches and candles
+appeared, and the mob trembled to and fro in delirium.
+
+"The prison! Open the Vier Prison! Break down the doors! Gatd'en'ale--
+drive out the devils! Free the prisoners--the poor vauriens!" the crowd
+shouted, rushing forward with sticks and weapons.
+
+The prison arched the street as Temple Bar once spanned the Strand. They
+crowded under the archway, overpowered the terror-stricken jailer, and,
+battering open the door in frenzy, called the inmates forth.
+
+They looked to see issue some sailor seized for whistling of a Sabbath,
+some profane peasant who had presumed to wear pattens in church, some
+profaner peasant who had not doffed his hat to the Connetable, or some
+slip-shod militiaman who had gone to parade in his sabots, thereby
+offending the red-robed dignity of the Royal Court.
+
+Instead, there appeared a little Frenchman of the most refined and
+unusual appearance. The blue cloth of his coat set off the extreme
+paleness of a small but serene face and high round forehead. The hair,
+a beautiful silver grey which time only had powdered, was tied in a queue
+behind. The little gentleman's hand was as thin and fine as a lady's,
+his shoulders were narrow and slightly stooped, his eye was eloquent and
+benign. His dress was amazingly neat, but showed constant brushing and
+signs of the friendly repairing needle.
+
+The whole impression was that of a man whom a whiff of wind would blow
+away; with the body of an ascetic and the simplicity of a child. The
+face had some particular sort of wisdom, difficult to define and
+impossible to imitate. He held in his hand a tiny cane of the sort
+carried at the court of Louis Quinze. Louis Capet himself had given it
+to him; and you might have had the life of the little gentleman, but not
+this cane with the tiny golden bust of his unhappy monarch.
+
+He stood on the steps of the prison and looked serenely on the muttering,
+excited crowd.
+
+"I fear there is a mistake," said he, coughing a little into his fingers.
+"You do not seek me. I--I have no claim upon your kindness; I am only
+the Chevalier Orvilliers du Champsavoys de Beaumanoir."
+
+For a moment the mob had been stayed in amazement by this small, rare
+creature stepping from the doorway, like a porcelain coloured figure from
+some dusky wood in a painting by Claude. In the instant's pause the
+Chevalier Orvilliers du Champsavoys de Beaumanoir took from his pocket a
+timepiece and glanced at it, then looked over the heads of the crowd
+towards the hooded sun, which now, a little, was showing its face again.
+
+"It was due at eight, less seven minutes," said he; "clear sun again was
+set for ten minutes past. It is now upon the stroke of the hour."
+
+He seemed in no way concerned with the swaying crowd before him--
+undoubtedly they wanted naught of him, and therefore he did not take
+their presence seriously; but, of an inquiring mind, he was absorbed in
+the eclipse.
+
+"He's a French sorcerer! He has the evil eye! Away with him to the
+sea!" shouted the fanatical preacher from the Pompe des Brigands.
+
+"It's a witch turned into a man!" cried a drunken woman from her window.
+"Give him the wheel of fire at the blacksmith's forge."
+
+"That's it! Gad'rabotin--the wheel of fire'll turn him back to a hag
+again!"
+
+The little gentleman protested, but they seized him and dragged him from
+the steps. Tossed like a ball, so light was he, he grasped the gold-
+headed cane as one might cling to life, and declared that he was no
+witch, but a poor French exile, arrested the night before for being
+abroad after nine o'clock, against the orders of the Royal Court.
+
+Many of the crowd knew him well enough by sight, but they were too
+delirious to act with intelligence now. The dark cloud was lifting a
+little from the sun, and dread of the Judgment Day was declining; but as
+the pendulum swung back towards normal life again, it carried with it the
+one virulent and common prejudice of the country--radical hatred of the
+French--which often slumbered but never died.
+
+The wife of an oyster-fisher from Rozel Bay, who lived in hourly enmity
+with the oyster-fishers of Carteret, gashed his cheek with the shell of
+an ormer. A potato-digger from Grouville parish struck at his head with
+a hoe, for the Granvillais had crossed the strait to the island the year
+before, to work in the harvest fields for a lesser wage than the
+Jersiais, and this little French gentleman must be held responsible for
+that. The weapon missed the Chevalier, but laid low a centenier, who,
+though a municipal officer, had in the excitement lost his head like his
+neighbours. This but increased the rage against the foreigner, and was
+another crime to lay to his charge. A smuggler thereupon kicked him in
+the side.
+
+At that moment there came a cry of indignation from a girl at an upper
+window of the Place. The Chevalier evidently knew her, for even in his
+hard case he smiled; and then he heard another voice ring out over the
+heads of the crowd, strong, angry, determined.
+
+From the Rue d'Driere a tall athletic man was hurrying. He had on his
+shoulders a workman's han basket, from which peeped a ship-builder's
+tools. Seeing the Chevalier's danger, he dropped his tool-basket through
+the open window of a house and forced his way through the crowd, roughly
+knocking from under them the feet of two or three ruffians who opposed
+him. He reproached the crowd, he berated them, he handled them fiercely.
+By a dexterous strength he caught the little gentleman up in his arms,
+and, driving straight on to the open door of the smithy, placed him
+inside, then blocked the passage with his own body.
+
+It was a strange picture: the preacher in an ecstasy haranguing the
+foolish rabble, who now realised, with an unbecoming joy, that the Last
+Day was yet to face; the gaping, empty prison; the open windows crowded
+with excited faces; the church bell from the Vier Marchi ringing an
+alarm; Norman lethargy roused to froth and fury: one strong man holding
+two hundred back!
+
+Above them all, at a hus in the gable of a thatched cottage, stood the
+girl whom the Chevalier had recognised, anxiously watching the affray.
+She was leaning across the lower closed half of the door, her hands in
+apprehensive excitement clasping her cheeks. The eyes were bewildered,
+and, though alive with pain, watched the scene below with unwavering
+intensity.
+
+Like all mobs this one had no reason, no sense. They were baulked in
+their malign intentions, and this man, Maitre Ranulph Delagarde, was the
+cause of it--that was all they knew. A stone was thrown at Delagarde as
+he stood in the doorway, but it missed him.
+
+"Oh-oh-oh!" the girl exclaimed, shrinking. "O shame! O you cowards!"
+she added, her hands now indignantly beating on the hus. Three or four
+men rushed forward on Ranulph. He hurled them back. Others came on with
+weapons. The girl fled for an instant, then reappeared with a musket, as
+the people were crowding in on Delagarde with threats and execrations.
+
+"Stop! stop!" cried the girl from above, as Ranulph seized a black-
+smith's hammer to meet the onset. "Stop, or I'll fire!" she called
+again, and she aimed her musket at the foremost assailants.
+
+Every face turned in her direction, for her voice had rung out clear as
+music. For an instant there was silence--the levelled musket had a
+deadly look, and the girl seemed determined. Her fingers, her whole
+body, trembled; but there was no mistaking the strong will, the indignant
+purpose.
+
+All at once in the pause another sound was heard. It was a quick tramp,
+tramp, tramp! and suddenly under the prison archway came running an
+officer of the King's navy with a company of sailors. The officer, with
+drawn sword, his men following with cutlasses, drove a way through the
+mob, who scattered before them like sheep.
+
+Delagarde threw aside his hammer, and saluted the officer. The little
+Chevalier made a formal bow, and hastened to say that he was not at all
+hurt. With a droll composure he offered snuff to the officer, who
+declined politely. Turning to the window where the girl stood, the new-
+comer saluted with confident gallantry.
+
+"Why, it's little Guida Landresse!" he said under his breath--"I'd know
+her anywhere. Death and Beauty, what a face!" Then he turned to Ranulph
+in recognition.
+
+"Ranulph Delagarde, eh?" said he good-humouredly. "You've forgotten me,
+I see. I'm Philip d'Avranche, of the Narcissus."
+
+Ranulph had forgotten. The slight lad Philip had grown bronzed, and
+stouter of frame. In the eleven years since they had been together at
+the Battle of Jersey, events, travel, and responsibility had altered him
+vastly. Ranulph had changed only in growing very tall and athletic and
+strong; the look of him was still that of the Norman lad of the isle,
+though the power and intelligence of his face were unusual.
+
+The girl in the cottage doorway had not forgotten at all. The words that
+d'Avranche had said to her years before, when she was a child, came to
+her mind: "My name is Philip; call me Philip."
+
+The recollection of that day when she snatched off the Bailly's hat
+brought a smile to her lips now, so quickly were her feelings moved one
+way or another. Then she grew suddenly serious, for the memory of the
+hour when he saved her from the scimitar of the Turk came to her, and her
+heart throbbed hotly. But she smiled again, though more gently and a
+little wistfully now.
+
+Philip d'Avranche looked up towards her once more, and returned her
+smile. Then he addressed the awed crowd. He did not spare his language;
+he unconsciously used an oath or two. He ordered them off to their
+homes. When they hesitated (for they were slow to acknowledge any
+authority save their own sacred Royal Court) the sailors advanced on them
+with drawn cutlasses, and a moment later the Place du Vier Prison was
+clear. Leaving a half-dozen sailors on guard till the town corps should
+arrive, d'Avranche prepared to march, and turned to Delagarde.
+
+"You've done me a good turn, Monsieur d'Avranche," said Ranulph.
+
+"There was a time you called me Philip," said d'Avranche, smiling. "We
+were lads together."
+
+"It's different now," answered Delagarde.
+
+"Nothing is different at all, of course," returned d'Avranche carelessly,
+yet with the slightest touch of condescension, as he held out his hand.
+Turning to the Chevalier, he said: "Monsieur, I congratulate you on
+having such a champion"--with a motion towards Ranulph. "And you,
+monsieur, on your brave protector"--he again saluted the girl at the
+window above.
+
+"I am the obliged and humble servant of monsieur, and monsieur,"
+responded the little gentleman, turning from one to the other with a
+courtly bow, the three-cornered hat under his arm, the right foot
+forward, the thin fingers making a graceful salutation. "But I--I think
+--I really think I must go back to prison. I was not formally set free.
+I was out last night beyond the hour set by the Court. I lost my way,
+and--"
+
+"Not a bit of it," d'Avranche interrupted. "The centeniers are too free
+with their jailing here. I'll be guarantee for you, monsieur." He
+turned to go.
+
+The little man shook his head dubiously. "But, as a point of honour, I
+really think--"
+
+D'Avranche laughed. "As a point of honour, I think you ought to
+breakfast. A la bonne heure, monsieur le chevalier!"
+
+He turned again to the cottage window. The girl was still there. The
+darkness over the sun was withdrawn, and now the clear light began to
+spread itself abroad. It was like a second dawn after a painful night.
+It tinged the face of the girl; it burnished the wonderful red-brown hair
+falling loosely and lightly over her forehead; it gave her beauty a touch
+of luxuriance. D'Avranche thrilled at the sight of her.
+
+"It's a beautiful face," he said to himself as their eyes met and he
+saluted once more.
+
+Ranulph had seen the glances passing between the two, and he winced.
+He remembered how, eleven years ago, Philip d'Avranche had saved the girl
+from death. It galled him that then and now this young gallant
+should step in and take the game out of his hands--he was sure that
+himself alone could have mastered this crowd.
+
+"Monsieur--monsieur le chevalier!" the girl called down from the window,
+"grandpethe says you must breakfast with us. Oh, but come you must, or
+we shall be offended!" she added, as Champsavoys shook his head in
+hesitation and glanced towards the prison.
+
+"As a point of honour--" the little man still persisted, lightly touching
+his breast with the Louis Quinze cane, and taking a step towards the
+sombre prison archway. But Ranulph interfered, drew him gently inside
+the cottage, and, standing in the doorway, said to some one within:
+
+"May I come in also, Sieur de Mauprat?"
+
+Above the pleasant welcome of a quavering voice came another, soft and
+clear, in pure French:
+
+"Thou art always welcome, without asking, as thou knowest, Ro."
+
+"Then I'll go and fetch my tool-basket first," Ranulph said cheerily, his
+heart beating more quickly, and, turning, he walked across the Place.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+The cottage in which Guida lived at the Place du Vier Prison was in
+jocund contrast to the dungeon from which the Chevalier Orvilliers du
+Champsavoys de Beaumanoir had complacently issued. Even in the hot
+summer the prison walls dripped moisture, for the mortar had been made of
+wet sea-sand, which never dried, and beneath the gloomy tenement of crime
+a dark stream flowed to the sea. But the walls of the cottage were dry,
+for, many years before, Guida's mother had herself seen it built from
+cellar-rock to the linked initials over the doorway, stone by stone, and
+every corner of it was as free from damp as the mielles stretching in
+sandy desolation behind to the Mont es Pendus, where the law had its way
+with the necks of criminals.
+
+In early childhood Madame Landresse had come with her father into exile
+from the sunniest valley in the hills of Chambery, where flowers and
+trees and sunshine had been her life. Here, in the midst of blank and
+grim stone houses, her heart travelled back to the chateau where she
+lived before the storm of persecution drove her forth; and she spent her
+heart and her days in making this cottage, upon the western border of St.
+Heliers, a delight to the quiet eye.
+
+The people of the island had been good to her and her dead husband during
+the two short years of their married life, and had caused her to love the
+land which necessity made her home. Her child was brought up after the
+fashion of the better class of Jersey children, wore what they wore, ate
+what they ate, lived as they lived. She spoke the country patois in the
+daily life, teaching it to Guida at the same time that she taught her
+pure French and good English, which she herself had learned as a child,
+and cultivated later here. She had done all in her power to make Guida
+Jersiaise in instinct and habit, and to beget in her a contented
+disposition. There could be no future for her daughter outside this
+little green oasis of exile, she thought. Not that she lacked ambition,
+but in the circumstances she felt that ambition could yield but one
+harvest to her child, which was marriage. She herself had married a poor
+man, a master builder of ships, like Maitre Ranulph Delagarde, but she
+had been very happy while he lived. Her husband had come of an ancient
+Jersey family, who were in Normandy before the Conqueror was born; a man
+of genius almost in his craft, but scarcely a gentleman according to the
+standard of her father, the distinguished exile and now retired
+watchmaker. If Guida should chance to be as fortunate as herself, she
+could ask no more.
+
+She had watched the child anxiously, for the impulses of Guida's
+temperament now and then broke forth in indignation as wild as her tears
+and in tears as wild as her laughter. As the girl grew in health and
+stature, she tried, tenderly, strenuously, to discipline the sensitive
+nature, bursting her heart with grief at times because she knew that
+these high feelings and delicate powers came through a long line of
+ancestral tendencies, as indestructible as perilous and joyous.
+
+Four things were always apparent in the girl's character: sympathy with
+suffering, kindness without partiality, a love of nature, and an intense
+candour.
+
+Not a stray cat wandering into the Place du Vier Prison but found an
+asylum in the garden behind the cottage. Not a dog hungry for a bone,
+stopping at Guida's door, but was sure of one from a hiding-place in the
+hawthorn hedge of the garden. Every morning you might have seen the
+birds in fluttering, chirping groups upon the may-tree or the lilac-
+bushes, waiting for the tiny snow-storm of bread to fall from her hand.
+Was he good or bad, ragged or neat, honest or a thief, not a deserting
+sailor or a homeless lad, halting at the cottage, but was fed from the
+girl's private larder behind the straw beehives among the sweet lavender
+and the gooseberry-bushes. No matter how rough the vagrant, the
+sincerity and pure impulse of the child seemed to throw round him a
+sunshine of decency and respect.
+
+The garden behind the house was the girl's Eden. She had planted upon
+the hawthorn hedge the crimson monthly rose, the fuchsia, and the
+jonquil, until at last the cottage was hemmed in by a wall of flowers;
+and here she was ever as busy as the bees which hung humming on the sweet
+scabious.
+
+In this corner was a little hut for rabbits; in that, there was a hole
+dug in the bank for a hedgehog; in the middle a little flower-grown
+enclosure for cats in various stages of health or convalescence, and a
+small pond for frogs; and in the midst of all wandered her faithful dog,
+Biribi by name, as master of the ceremonies.
+
+Madame Landresse's one ambition had been to live long enough to see her
+child's character formed. She knew that her own years were numbered, for
+month by month she felt her strength going. And yet a beautiful tenacity
+kept her where she would be until Guida was fifteen years of age. Her
+great desire had been to live till the girl was eighteen. Then--well,
+then might she not perhaps leave her to the care of a husband? At best,
+M. de Mauprat could not live long. He had at last been forced to give up
+the little watchmaker's shop in the Vier Marchi, where for so many years,
+in simple independence, he had wrought, always putting by, from work done
+after hours, Jersey bank-notes and gold, to give Guida a dot, if not
+worthy of her, at least a guarantee against reproach when some great man
+should come seeking her in marriage. But at last his hands trembled
+among the tiny wheels, and his eyes failed. He had his dark hour by
+himself, then he sold the shop to a native, who thenceforward sat in the
+ancient exile's place; and the two brown eyes of the stooped, brown old
+man looked out no more from the window in the Vier Marchi: and then they
+all made their new home in the Place du Vier Prison.
+
+Until she was fifteen Guida's life was unclouded. Once or twice her
+mother tried to tell her of a place that must soon be empty, but her
+heart failed her. So at last the end came like a sudden wind out of the
+north; and it was left to Guida Landresse de Landresse to fight the fight
+and finish the journey of womanhood alone.
+
+This time was the turning-point in Guida's life. What her mother had
+been to the Sieur de Mauprat, she soon became. They had enough to live
+on simply. Every week her grandfather gave her a fixed sum for the
+household. Upon this she managed, that the tiny income left by her
+mother might not be touched. She shrank from using it yet, and besides,
+dark times might come when it would be needed. Death had once surprised
+her, but it should bring no more amazement. She knew that M. de
+Mauprat's days were numbered, and when he was gone she would be left
+without one near relative in the world. She realised how unprotected her
+position would be when death came knocking at the door again. What she
+would do she knew not. She thought long and hard. Fifty things occurred
+to her, and fifty were set aside. Her mother's immediate relatives in
+France were scattered or dead. There was no longer any interest at
+Chambery in the watchmaking exile, who had dropped like a cherry-stone
+from the beak of the blackbird of persecution upon one of the Iles de la
+Manche.
+
+There remained the alternative more than once hinted by the Sieur de
+Mauprat as the months grew into years after the mother died--marriage;
+a husband, a notable and wealthy husband. That was the magic destiny de
+Mauprat figured for her. It did not elate her, it did not disturb her;
+she scarcely realised it. She loved animals, and she saw no reason to
+despise a stalwart youth. It had been her fortune to know two or three
+in the casual, unconventional manner of villages, and there were few in
+the land, great or humble, who did not turn twice to look at her as she
+passed through the Vier Marchi, so noble was her carriage, so graceful
+and buoyant her walk, so lacking in self-consciousness her beauty. More
+than one young gentleman of family had been known to ride through the
+Place du Vier Prison, hoping to get sight of her, and to offer the view
+of a suggestively empty pillion behind him.
+
+She had, however, never listened to flatterers, and only one youth of
+Jersey had footing in the cottage. This was Ranulph Delagarde, who had
+gone in and out at his will, but that was casually and not too often,
+and he was discreet and spoke no word of love. Sometimes she talked to
+him of things concerning the daily life with which she did not care to
+trouble Sieur de Mauprat. In ways quite unknown to her he had made her
+life easier for her. She knew that her mother had thought of Ranulph for
+her husband, although she blushed whenever--but it was not often--the
+idea came to her. She remembered how her mother had said that Ranulph
+would be a great man in the island some day; that he had a mind above all
+the youths in St. Heliers; that she would rather see Ranulph a master
+ship-builder than a babbling ecrivain in the Rue des Tres Pigeons, a
+smirking leech, or a penniless seigneur with neither trade nor talent.
+Guida was attracted to Ranulph through his occupation, for she loved
+strength, she loved all clean and wholesome trades; that of the mason,
+of the carpenter, of the blacksmith, and most of the ship-builder. Her
+father, whom she did not remember, had been a ship-builder, and she knew
+that he had been a notable man; every one had told her that.
+
+ .........................
+
+"She has met her destiny," say the village gossips, when some man in the
+dusty procession of life sees a woman's face in the pleasant shadow of a
+home, and drops out of the ranks to enter at her doorway.
+
+Was Ranulph to be Guida's destiny?
+
+Handsome and stalwart though he looked as he entered the cottage in the
+Place du Vier Prison, on that September morning after the rescue of the
+chevalier, his tool-basket on his shoulder, and his brown face enlivened
+by one simple sentiment, she was far from sure that he was--far from
+sure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+The little hall-way into which Ranulph stepped from the street led
+through to the kitchen. Guida stood holding back the door for him to
+enter this real living-room of the house, which opened directly upon the
+garden behind. It was so cheerful and secluded, looking out from the
+garden over the wide space beyond to the changeful sea, that since Madame
+Landresse's death the Sieur de Mauprat had made it reception-room,
+dining-room, and kitchen all in one. He would willingly have slept there
+too, but noblesse oblige and the thought of what the Chevalier Orvilliers
+du Champsavoys de Beaumanoir might think prevented him. Moreover, there
+was something patriarchal in a kitchen as a reception-room; and both he
+and the chevalier loved to watch Guida busy with her household duties: at
+one moment her arms in the dough of the kneading trough; at another
+picking cherries for a jelly, or casting up her weekly accounts with a
+little smiling and a little sighing.
+
+If, by chance, it had been proposed by the sieur to adjourn to the small
+sitting-room which looked out upon the Place du Vier Prison, a gloom
+would instantly have settled upon them both; though in this little front
+room there was an ancient arm-chair, over which hung the sword that the
+Comte Guilbert Mauprat de Chambery had used at Fontenoy against the
+English.
+
+So it was that this spacious kitchen, with its huge chimney, and paved
+with square flagstones and sanded, became like one of those ancient
+corners of camaraderie in some exclusive inn where gentlemen of quality
+were wont to meet. At the left of the chimney was the great settle, or
+veille, covered with baize, "flourished" with satinettes, and spread with
+ferns and rushes, and above it a little shelf of old china worth the
+ransom of a prince at least. Opposite the doorway were two great
+armchairs, one for the sieur and the other for the Chevalier, who made
+his home in the house of one Elie Mattingley, a fisherman by trade and by
+practice a practical smuggler, with a daughter Carterette whom he loved
+passing well.
+
+These, with a few constant visitors, formed a coterie: the huge, grizzly-
+bearded boatman, Jean Touzel, who wore spectacles, befriended smugglers,
+was approved of all men, and secretly worshipped by his wife; Amice
+Ingouville, the fat avocat with a stomach of gigantic proportions, the
+biggest heart and the tiniest brain in the world; Maitre Ranulph
+Delagarde, and lastly M. Yves Savary dit Detricand, that officer of
+Rullecour's who, being released from the prison hospital, when the hour
+came for him to leave the country was too drunk to find the shore. By
+some whim of negligence the Royal Court was afterwards too lethargic to
+remove him, and he stayed on, vainly making efforts to leave between one
+carousal and another. In sober hours, none too frequent, he was rather
+sorrowfully welcomed by the sieur and the chevalier.
+
+When Ranulph entered the kitchen his greeting to the sieur and the
+chevalier was in French, but to Guida he said, rather stupidly in the
+patois--for late events had embarrassed him--"Ah bah! es-tu gentiment?"
+
+"Gentiment," she answered, with a queer little smile. "You'll have
+breakfast?" she said in English.
+
+"Et ben!" Ranulph repeated, still embarrassed, "a mouthful, that's all."
+
+He laid aside his tool-basket, shook hands with the sieur, and seated
+himself at the table. Looking at du Champsavoys, he said:
+
+"I've just met the connetable. He regrets the riot, chevalier, and says
+the Royal Court extends its mercy to you."
+
+"I prefer to accept no favours," answered the chevalier. "As a point of
+honour, I had thought that, after breakfast, I should return to prison,
+and--"
+
+"The connetable said it was cheaper to let the chevalier go free than to
+feed him in the Vier Prison," dryly explained Ranulph, helping himself to
+roasted conger eel and eyeing hungrily the freshly-made black butter
+Guida was taking from a wooden trencher. "The Royal Court is stingy," he
+added. "'It's nearer than Jean Noe, who got married in his red
+queminzolle,' as we say on Jersey--"
+
+But he got no further at the moment, for shots rang out suddenly before
+the house. They all started to their feet, and Ranulph, running to the
+front door, threw it open. As he did so a young man, with blood flowing
+from a cut on the temple, stepped inside.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+It was M. Savary dit Detricand.
+
+"Whew--what fools there are in the world! Pish, you silly apes!" the
+young man said, glancing through the open doorway again to where the
+connetable's men were dragging two vile-looking ruffians into the Vier
+Prison.
+
+"What's happened, monsieur?" said Ranulph, closing the door and bolting
+it.
+
+"What was it, monsieur?" asked Guida anxiously, for painful events had
+crowded too fast that morning. Detricand was stanching the blood at his
+temple with the scarf from his neck.
+
+"Get him some cordial, Guida--he's wounded!" said de Mauprat.
+
+Detricand waved a hand almost impatiently, and dropped upon the veille,
+swinging a leg backwards and forwards.
+
+"It's nothing, I protest--nothing whatever, and I'll have no cordial, not
+a drop. A drink of water--a mouthful of that, if I must drink."
+
+Guida caught up a hanap of water from the dresser, and passed it to him.
+Her fingers trembled a little. His were steady enough as he took the
+hanap and drank off the water at a gulp. Again she filled it and again
+he drank. The blood was running in a tiny little stream down his cheek.
+She caught her handkerchief from her girdle impulsively, and gently wiped
+it away.
+
+"Let me bandage the wound," she said eagerly. Her eyes were alight with
+compassion, certainly not because it was the dissipated French invader,
+M. Savary dit Detricand,--no one knew that he was the young Comte de
+Tournay of the House of Vaufontaine, but because he was a wounded fellow-
+creature. She would have done the same for the poor beganne, Dormy
+Jamais, who still prowled the purlieus of St. Heliers.
+
+It was clear, however, that Detricand felt differently. The moment she
+touched him he became suddenly still. He permitted her to wash the blood
+from his temple and forehead, to stanch it first with brandied jeru-
+leaves, then with cobwebs, and afterwards to bind it with her own
+kerchief.
+
+Detricand thrilled at the touch of the warm, tremulous fingers. He had
+never been quite so near her before. His face was not far from hers.
+Now her breath fanned him. As he bent his head for the bandaging, he
+could see the soft pulsing of her bosom, and hear the beating of her
+heart. Her neck was so full and round and soft, and her voice--surely
+he had never heard a voice so sweet and strong, a tone so well poised,
+so resonantly pleasant.
+
+When she had finished, he had an impulse to catch the hand as it dropped
+away from his forehead, and kiss it; not as he had kissed many a hand,
+hotly one hour and coldly the next, but with an unpurchasable kind of
+gratitude characteristic of this especial sort of sinner. He was just
+young enough, and there was still enough natural health in him, to know
+the healing touch of a perfect decency, a pure truth of spirit. Yet he
+had been drunk the night before, drunk with three noncommissioned
+officers--and he a gentleman, in spite of all, as could be plainly seen.
+
+He turned his head away from the girl quickly, and looked straight into
+the eyes of her grandfather.
+
+"I'll tell you how it was, Sieur de Mauprat," said he. "I was crossing
+the Place du Vier Prison when a rascal threw a cleaver at me from a
+window. If it had struck me on the head--well, the Royal Court would
+have buried me, and without a slab to my grave like Rullecour. I burst
+open the door of the house, ran up the stairs, gripped the ruffian, and
+threw him through the window into the street. As I did so a door opened
+behind, and another cut-throat came at me with a pistol. He fired--fired
+wide. I ran in on him, and before he had time to think he was out of the
+window too. Then the other brute below fired up at me. The bullet
+gashed my temple, as you see. After that, it was an affair of the
+connetable and his men. I had had enough fighting before breakfast.
+I saw your open door, and here I am--monsieur, monsieur, monsieur,
+mademoiselle!" He bowed to each of them and glanced towards the table
+hungrily.
+
+Ranulph placed a seat for him. He viewed the conger eel and limpets with
+an avid eye, but waited for the chevalier and de Mauprat to sit. He had
+no sooner taken a mouthful, however, and thrown a piece of bread to
+Biribi the dog, than, starting again to his feet, he said:
+
+"Your pardon, monsieur le chevalier, that brute in the Place has knocked
+all sense from my head! I've a letter for you, brought from Rouen by one
+of the refugees who came yesterday." He drew from his breast a packet
+and handed it over. "I went out to their ship last night."
+
+The chevalier looked with surprise and satisfaction at the seal on the
+letter, and, breaking it, spread open the paper, fumbled for the eye-
+glass which he always carried in his waistcoat, and began reading
+diligently.
+
+Meanwhile Ranulph turned to Guida. "To-morrow Jean Touzel and his wife
+and I go to the Ecrehos Rocks in Jean's boat," said he. "A vessel was
+driven ashore there three days ago, and my carpenters are at work on her.
+If you can go and the wind holds fair, you shall be brought back safe by
+sundown--Jean says so too."
+
+Of all boatmen and fishermen on the coast, Jean Touzel was most to be
+trusted. No man had saved so many shipwrecked folk, none risked his life
+so often; and he had never had a serious accident. To go to sea with
+Jean Touzel, folk said, was safer than living on land. Guida loved the
+sea; and she could sail a boat, and knew the tides and currents of the
+south coast as well as most fishermen.
+
+M. de Mauprat met her inquiring glance and nodded assent. She then said
+gaily to Ranulph: "I shall sail her, shall I not?"
+
+"Every foot of the way," he answered.
+
+She laughed and clapped her hands. Suddenly the little chevalier broke
+in. "By the head of John the Baptist!" said he.
+
+Detricand put down his knife and fork in amazement, and Guida coloured,
+for the words sounded almost profane upon the chevalier's lips.
+
+Du Champsavoys held up his eye-glass, and, turning from one to the other,
+looked at each of them imperatively yet abstractedly too. Then, pursing
+up his lower lip, and with a growing amazement which carried him to
+distant heights of reckless language, he said again:
+
+"By the head of John the Baptist on a charger!" He looked at Detricand
+with a fierceness which was merely the tension of his thought. If he had
+looked at a wall it would have been the same. But Detricand, who had an
+almost whimsical sense of humour, felt his neck in affected concern as
+though to be quite sure of it. "Chevalier," said he, "you shock us--you
+shock us, dear chevalier."
+
+"The most painful things, and the most wonderful too," said the
+chevalier, tapping the letter with his eye-glass; "the most terrible and
+yet the most romantic things are here. A drop of cider, if you please,
+mademoiselle, before I begin to read it to you, if I may--if I may--eh?"
+
+They all nodded eagerly. Guida handed him a mogue of cider. The little
+grey thrush of a man sipped it, and in a voice no bigger than a bird's
+began:
+
+ "From Lucillien du Champsavoys, Comte de Chanier, by the hand of a
+ faithful friend, who goeth hence from among divers dangers, unto my
+ cousin, the Chevalier du Champsavoys de Beaumanoir, late Gentleman
+ of the Bedchamber to the best of monarchs, Louis XV, this writing:
+
+ "MY DEAR AND HONOURED Cousin"--The chevalier paused, frowned a
+ trifle, and tapped his lips with his finger in a little lyrical
+ emotion--"My dear and honoured cousin, all is lost. The France we
+ loved is no more. The twentieth of June saw the last vestige of
+ Louis's power pass for ever. That day ten thousand of the sans-
+ culottes forced their way into the palace to kill him. A faithful
+ few surrounded him. In the mad turmoil, we were fearful, he was
+ serene. 'Feel,' said Louis, placing his hand on his bosom, 'feel
+ whether this is the beating of a heart shaken by fear.' Ah, my
+ friend, your heart would have clamped in misery to hear the Queen
+ cry: 'What have I to fear? Death? it is as well to-day as to-
+ morrow; they can do no more!' Their lives were saved, the day
+ passed, but worse came after.
+
+ "The tenth of August came. With it too, the end-the dark and bloody
+ end-of the Swiss Guard. The Jacobins had their way at last. The
+ Swiss Guard died in the Court of the Carrousel as they marched to
+ the Assembly to save the King. Thus the last circle of defence
+ round the throne was broken. The palace was given over to flame and
+ the sword. Of twenty nobles of the court I alone escaped. France
+ is become a slaughter-house. The people cried out for more liberty,
+ and their liberators gave them the freedom of death. A fortnight
+ ago, Danton, the incomparable fiend, let loose his assassins upon
+ the priests of God. Now Paris is made a theatre where the people
+ whom Louis and his nobles would have died to save have turned every
+ street into a stable of carnage, every prison and hospital into a
+ vast charnel-house. One last revolting thing alone remains to be
+ done--the murder of the King; then this France that we have loved
+ will have no name and no place in our generation. She will rise
+ again, but we shall not see her, for our eyes have been blinded with
+ blood, for ever darkened by disaster. Like a mistress upon whom we
+ have lavished the days of our youth and the strength of our days,
+ she has deceived us; she has stricken us while we slept. Behold a
+ Caliban now for her paramour!
+
+ "Weep with me, for France despoils me. One by one my friends have
+ fallen beneath the axe. Of my four sons but one remains. Henri was
+ stabbed by Danton's ruffians at the Hotel de Ville; Gaston fought
+ and died with the Swiss Guard, whose hacked and severed limbs were
+ broiled and eaten in the streets by these monsters who mutilate the
+ land. Isidore, the youngest, defied a hundred of Robespierre's
+ cowards on the steps of the Assembly, and was torn to pieces by the
+ mob. Etienne alone is left. But for him and for the honour of my
+ house I too would find a place beside the King and die with him.
+ Etienne is with de la Rochejaquelein in Brittany. I am here at
+ Rouen.
+
+ "Brittany and Normandy still stand for the King. In these two
+ provinces begins the regeneration of France: we call it the War of
+ the Vendee. On that Isle of Jersey there you should almost hear the
+ voice of de la Rochejaquelein and the marching cries of our loyal
+ legions. If there be justice in God we shall conquer. But there
+ will be joy no more for such as you or me, nor hope, nor any peace.
+ We live only for those who come after. Our duty remains, all else
+ is dead. You did well to go, and I do well to stay.
+
+ "By all these piteous relations you shall know the importance of the
+ request I now set forth.
+
+ "My cousin by marriage of the House of Vaufontaine has lost all his
+ sons. With the death of the Prince of Vaufontaine, there is in
+ France no direct heir to the house, nor can it, by the law, revert
+ to my house or my heirs. Now of late the Prince hath urged me to
+ write to you--for he is here in seclusion with me--and to unfold to
+ you what has hitherto been secret. Eleven years ago the only nephew
+ of the Prince, after some naughty escapades, fled from the Court
+ with Rullecour the adventurer, who invaded the Isle of Jersey. From
+ that hour he has been lost to France. Some of his companions in
+ arms returned after a number of years. All with one exception
+ declared that he was killed in the battle at St. Heliers. One,
+ however, maintains that he was still living and in the prison
+ hospital when his comrades were set free.
+
+ "It is of him I write to you. He is--as you will perchance
+ remember--the Comte de Tournay. He was then not more than seventeen
+ years of age, slight of build, with brownish hair, dark grey eyes,
+ and had over the right shoulder a scar from a sword thrust. It
+ seemeth little possible that, if living, he should still remain in
+ that Isle of Jersey. He may rather have returned to obscurity in
+ France or have gone to England to be lost to name and remembrance
+ --or even indeed beyond the seas.
+
+ "That you may perchance give me word of him is the object of my
+ letter, written in no more hope than I live; and you can well guess
+ how faint that is. One young nobleman preserved to France may yet
+ be the great unit that will save her.
+
+ "Greet my poor countrymen yonder in the name of one who still waits
+ at a desecrated altar; and for myself you must take me as I am, with
+ the remembrance of what I was, even
+
+ "Your faithful friend and loving kinsman,
+
+ "CHANIER."
+
+ "All this, though in the chances of war you read it not till
+ wintertide, was told you at Rouen this first day of September 1792."
+
+
+During the reading, broken by feeling and reflective pauses on the
+chevalier's part, the listeners showed emotion after the nature of each.
+The Sieur de Mauprat's fingers clasped and unclasped on the top of his
+cane, little explosions of breath came from his compressed lips, his
+eyebrows beetled over till the eyes themselves seemed like two glints of
+flame. Delagarde dropped a fist heavily upon the table, and held it
+there clinched, while his heel beat a tattoo of excitement upon the
+floor. Guida's breath came quick and fast--as Ranulph said afterwards,
+she was "blanc comme un linge." She shuddered painfully when the
+slaughter and burning of the Swiss Guards was read. Her brain was so
+swimming with the horrors of anarchy that the latter part of the letter
+dealing with the vanished Count of Tournay passed by almost unheeded.
+
+But this particular matter greatly interested Ranulph and de Mauprat.
+They leaned forward eagerly, seizing every word, and both instinctively
+turned towards Detricand when the description of de Tournay was read.
+
+As for Detricand himself, he listened to the first part of the letter
+like a man suddenly roused out of a dream. For the first time since the
+Revolution had begun, the horror of it and the meaning of it were brought
+home to him. He had been so long expatriated, had loitered so long in
+the primrose path of daily sleep and nightly revel, had fallen so far,
+that he little realised how the fiery wheels of Death were spinning in
+France, or how black was the torment of her people. His face turned
+scarlet as the thing came home to him now. He dropped his head in his
+hand as if to listen more attentively, but it was in truth to hide his
+emotion. When the names of Vaufontaine and de Tournay were mentioned, he
+gave a little start, then suddenly ruled himself to a strange stillness.
+His face seemed presently to clear; he even smiled a little. Conscious
+that de Mauprat and Delagarde were watching him, he appeared to listen
+with a keen but impersonal interest, not without its effect upon his
+scrutinisers. He nodded his head as though he understood the situation.
+He acted very well; he bewildered the onlookers. They might think he
+tallied with the description of the Comte de Tournay, yet he gave the
+impression that the matter was not vital to himself. But when the little
+Chevalier stopped and turned his eye-glass upon him with sudden startled
+inquiry, he found it harder to keep composure.
+
+"Singular--singular!" said the old man, and returned to the reading of
+the letter.
+
+When he ended there was absolute silence for a moment. Then the
+chevalier lifted his eye-glass again and looked at Detricand intently.
+
+"Pardon me, monsieur," he said, "but you were with Rullecour--as I was
+saying."
+
+Detricand nodded with a droll sort of helplessness, and answered: "In
+Jersey I never have chance to forget it, Chevalier."
+
+Du Champsavoys, with a naive and obvious attempt at playing counsel,
+fixed him again with the glass, pursed his lips, and with the importance
+of a greffier at the ancient Cour d'Heritage, came one step nearer to his
+goal.
+
+"Have you knowledge of the Comte de Tournay, monsieur?"
+
+"I knew him--as you were saying, Chevalier," answered Detricand lightly.
+
+Then the Chevalier struck home. He dropped his fingers upon the table,
+stood up, and, looking straight into Detricand's eyes, said:
+
+"Monsieur, you are the Comte de Tournay!"
+
+The Chevalier involuntarily held the silence for an instant. Nobody
+stirred. De Mauprat dropped his chin upon his hands, and his eyebrows
+drew down in excitement. Guida gave a little cry of astonishment. But
+Detricand answered the Chevalier with a look of blank surprise and a
+shrug of the shoulder, which had the effect desired.
+
+"Thank you, Chevalier," said he with quizzical humour. "Now I know who I
+am, and if it isn't too soon to levy upon the kinship, I shall dine with
+you today, chevalier. I paid my debts yesterday, and sous are scarce,
+but since we are distant cousins I may claim grist at the family mill,
+eh?"
+
+The Chevalier sat, or rather dropped into his chair again.
+
+"Then you are not the Comte de Tournay, monsieur," said he hopelessly.
+
+"Then I shall not dine with you to-day," retorted Detricand gaily.
+
+You fit the tale," said de Mauprat dubiously, touching the letter with
+his finger.
+
+"Let me see," rejoined Detricand. "I've been a donkey farmer, a
+shipmaster's assistant, a tobacco pedlar, a quarryman, a wood merchant,
+an interpreter, a fisherman--that's very like the Comte de Tournay! On
+Monday night I supped with a smuggler; on Tuesday I breakfasted on soupe
+a la graisse with Manon Moignard the witch; on Wednesday I dined with
+Dormy Jamais and an avocat disbarred for writing lewd songs for a
+chocolate-house; on Thursday I went oyster-fishing with a native who
+has three wives, and a butcher who has been banished four times for not
+keeping holy the Sabbath Day; and I drank from eleven o'clock till
+sunrise this morning with three Scotch sergeants of the line--which is
+very like the Comte de Tournay, as you were saying, Chevalier! I am five
+feet eleven, and the Comte de Tournay was five feet ten--which is no
+lie," he added under his breath. "I have a scar, but it's over my left
+shoulder and not over my right--which is also no lie," he added under his
+breath. "De Tournay's hair was brown, and mine, you see, is almost a
+dead black--fever did that," he added under his breath. "De Tournay
+escaped the day after the Battle of Jersey from the prison hospital, I
+was left, and here I've been ever since--Yves Savary dit Detricand at
+your service, chevalier."
+
+A pained expression crossed over the Chevalier's face. "I am most sorry;
+I am most sorry," he said hesitatingly. "I had no wish to wound your
+feelings."
+
+"Ah, it is de Tournay to whom you must apologise," said Detricand
+musingly, with a droll look.
+
+"It is a pity," continued the Chevalier, "for somehow all at once I
+recalled a resemblance. I saw de Tournay when he was fourteen--yes,
+I think it was fourteen--and when I looked at you, monsieur, his face
+came back to me. It would have made my cousin so happy if you had been
+the Comte de Tournay and I had found you here." The old man's voice
+trembled a little. "We are growing fewer every day, we Frenchmen of the
+ancient families. And it would have made my cousin so happy, as I was
+saying, monsieur."
+
+Detricand's manner changed; he became serious. The devil-may-care,
+irresponsible shamelessness of his face dropped away like a mask.
+Something had touched him. His voice changed too.
+
+"De Tournay was a much better fellow than I am, chevalier," said he--"
+and that's no lie," he added under his breath. "De Tournay was a fiery,
+ambitious, youngster with bad companions. De Tournay told me he repented
+of coming with Rullecour, and he felt he had spoilt his life--that he
+could never return to France again or to his people."
+
+The old Chevalier shook his head sadly. "Is he dead?" he asked.
+
+There was a slight pause, and then Detricand answered: "No, still
+living."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"I promised de Tournay that I would never reveal that."
+
+"Might I not write to him?" asked the old man. "Assuredly, Chevalier."
+
+"Could you--will you--despatch a letter to him from me, monsieur?"
+
+"Upon my honour, yes."
+
+"I thank you--I thank you, monsieur; I will write it to-day."
+
+"As you will, Chevalier. I will ask you for the letter to-night,"
+rejoined Detricand. "It may take time to reach de Tournay; but he shall
+receive it into his own hands."
+
+De Mauprat trembled to his feet to put the question he knew the Chevalier
+dreaded to ask:
+
+"Do you think that monsieur le comte will return to France?"
+
+"I think he will," answered Detricand slowly.
+
+"It will make my cousin so happy--so happy," quavered the little
+Chevalier. "Will you take snuff with me, monsieur?" He offered his
+silver snuff-box to his vagrant countryman. This was a mark of favour
+he showed to few.
+
+Detricand bowed, accepted, and took a pinch. "I must be going," he said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+At eight o'clock the next morning, Guida and her fellow-voyagers, bound
+for the Ecrehos Rocks, had caught the first ebb of the tide, and with a
+fair wind from the sou'-west had skirted the coast, ridden lightly over
+the Banc des Violets, and shaped their course nor'-east. Guida kept the
+helm all the way, as she had been promised by Ranulph. It was still more
+than half tide when they approached the rocks, and with a fair wind there
+should be ease in landing.
+
+No more desolate spot might be imagined. To the left, as you faced
+towards Jersey, was a long sand-bank. Between the rocks and the sand-
+bank shot up a tall, lonely shaft of granite with an evil history. It
+had been chosen as the last refuge of safety for the women and children
+of a shipwrecked vessel, in the belief that high tide would not reach
+them. But the wave rose up maliciously, foot by foot, till it drowned
+their cries for ever in the storm. The sand-bank was called "Ecriviere,"
+and the rock was afterwards known as the "Pierre des Femmes."
+
+Other rocks less prominent, but no less treacherous, flanked it--the Noir
+Sabloniere and the Grande Galere. To the right of the main island were a
+group of others, all reef and shingle, intersected by treacherous
+channels; in calm lapped by water with the colours of a prism of crystal,
+in storm by a leaden surf and flying foam. These were known as the
+Colombiere, the Grosse Tete, Tas de Pois, and the Marmotiers; each with
+its retinue of sunken reefs and needles of granitic gneiss lying low in
+menace. Happy the sailor caught in a storm and making for the shelter
+the little curves in the island afford, who escapes a twist of the
+current, a sweep of the tide, and the impaling fingers of the submarine
+palisades.
+
+Beyond these rocks lay Maitre Ile, all gneiss and shingle, a desert in
+the sea. The holy men of the early Church, beholding it from the shore
+of Normandy, had marked it for a refuge from the storms of war and the
+follies of the world. So it came to pass, for the honour of God and the
+Virgin Mary, the Abbe of Val Richer builded a priory there: and there now
+lie in peace the bones of the monks of Val Richer beside the skeletons of
+unfortunate gentlemen of the sea of later centuries--pirates from France,
+buccaneers from England, and smugglers from Jersey, who kept their trysts
+in the precincts of the ancient chapel.
+
+The brisk air of early autumn made the blood tingle in Guida's cheeks.
+Her eyes were big with light and enjoyment. Her hair was caught close by
+a gay cap of her own knitting, but a little of it escaped, making a
+pretty setting to her face.
+
+The boat rode under all her courses, until, as Jean said, they had put
+the last lace on her bonnet. Guida's hands were on the tiller firmly,
+doing Jean's bidding promptly. In all they were five. Besides Guida and
+Ranulph, Jean and Jean's wife, there was a young English clergyman of the
+parish of St. Michael's, who had come from England to fill the place of
+the rector for a few months. Word had been brought to him that a man was
+dying on the Ecrehos. He had heard that the boat was going, he had found
+Jean Touzel, and here he was with a biscuit in his hand and a black-jack
+of French wine within easy reach. Not always in secret the Reverend
+Lorenzo Dow loved the good things of this world.
+
+The most notable characteristic of the young clergyman's appearance was
+his outer guilelessness and the oddness of his face. His head was rather
+big for his body; he had a large mouth which laughed easily, a noble
+forehead, and big, short-sighted eyes. He knew French well, but could
+speak almost no Jersey patois, so, in compliment to him, Jean Touzel,
+Ranulph, and Guida spoke in English. This ability to speak English--his
+own English--was the pride of Jean's life. He babbled it all the way,
+and chiefly about a mythical Uncle Elias, who was the text for many a
+sermon.
+
+"Times past," said he, as they neared Maitre Ile, "mon onc' 'Lias he
+knows these Ecrehoses better as all the peoples of the world--respe d'la
+compagnie. Mon onc' 'Lias he was a fine man. Once when there is a fight
+between de Henglish and de hopping Johnnies," he pointed towards France,
+"dere is seven French ship, dere is two Henglish ship--gentlemen-of-war
+dey are call. Eh ben, one of de Henglish ships he is not a gentleman-of-
+war, he is what you call go-on-your-own-hook--privator. But it is all de
+same--tres-ba, all right! What you t'ink coum to pass? De big Henglish
+ship she is hit ver' bad, she is all break-up. Efin, dat leetle privator
+he stan' round on de fighting side of de gentleman-of-war and take de
+fire by her loneliness. Say, then, wherever dere is troub' mon onc'
+'Lias he is there, he stan' outside de troub' an' look on--dat is his
+hobby. You call it hombog? Oh, nannin-gia! Suppose two peoples goes to
+fight, ah bah, somebody must pick up de pieces--dat is mon onc' 'Lias!
+He have his boat full of hoysters; so he sit dere all alone and watch dat
+great fight, an' heat de hoyster an' drink de cider vine.
+
+"Ah, bah! mon onc' 'Lias he is standin' hin de door dat day. Dat is what
+we say on Jersey--when a man have some ver' great luck we say he stan'
+hin de door. I t'ink it is from de Bible or from de helmanac--sacre moi,
+I not know.... If I talk too much you give me dat black-jack."
+
+They gave him the black-jack. After he had drunk and wiped his mouth on
+his sleeve, he went on:
+
+"O my good-ma'm'selle, a leetle more to de wind. Ah, dat is right--
+trejous! . . . Dat fight it go like two bulls on a vergee--respe d'la
+compagnie. Mon onc' 'Lias he have been to Hengland, he have sing 'God
+save our greshus King'; so he t'ink a leetle--Ef he go to de French,
+likely dey will hang him. Mon onc' 'Lias, he is what you call
+patreeteesm. He say, 'Hengland, she is mine--trejous.' Efin, he sail
+straight for de Henglish ships. Dat is de greates' man, mon onc' 'Lias
+--respe d'la compagnie! he coum on de side which is not fighting. Ah
+bah, he tell dem dat he go to save de gentleman-of-war. He see a
+hofficier all bloodiness and he call hup: 'Es-tu gentiment?' he say.
+'Gentiment,' say de hofficier; 'han' you?' 'Naicely, yank you!' mon onc'
+'Lias he say. 'I will save you,' say mon onc' 'Lias--'I will save de
+ship of God save our greshus King.' De hofficier wipe de tears out of his
+face. 'De King will reward you, man alive,' he say. Mon onc' 'Lias he
+touch his breast and speak out. 'Mon hofficier, my reward is here--
+trejous. I will take you into de Ecrehoses.' 'Coum up and save de
+King's ships,' says de hofficier. 'I will take no reward,' say mon onc'
+'Lias, 'but, for a leetle pourboire, you will give me de privator
+--eh?' 'Milles sacres'--say de hofficier, 'mines saeres--de privator!'
+he say, ver' surprise'. 'Man doux d'la vie--I am damned!' 'You are
+damned trulee, if you do not get into de Ecrehoses,' say mon onc' 'Lias
+--'A bi'tot, good-bye!' he say. De hofficier call down to him: 'Is dere
+nosing else you will take?' 'Nannin, do not tempt me,' say mon onc'
+'Lias. 'I am not a gourman'. I will take de privator--dat is my hobby.'
+All de time de cannons grand--dey brow-brou! boum-boum!--what you call
+discomfortable. Time is de great t'ing, so de hofficier wipe de tears
+out of his face again. 'Coum up,' he say; 'de privator is yours.'
+
+"Away dey go. You see dat spot where we coum to land, Ma'm'selle
+Landresse--where de shingle look white, de leetle green grass above? Dat
+is where mon onc' 'Lias he bring in de King's ship and de privator.
+Gatd'en'ale--it is a journee awful! He twist to de right, he shape to de
+left trough de teeth of de rocks--all safe--vera happee--to dis nice
+leetle bay of de Maitre Ile dey coum. De Frenchies dey grind dere teeth
+and spit de fire. But de Henglish laugh at demdey are safe. 'Frien' of
+my heart,' say de hofficier to mon onc' 'Lias, 'pilot of pilots,' he say,
+'in de name of our greshus King I t'ank you--A bi'tot, good-bye!' he say.
+'Tres-ba,' mon onc' 'Lias he say den, 'I will go to my privator.' 'You
+will go to de shore,' say de hofficier. 'You will wait on de shore till
+de captain and his men of de privator coum to you. When dey coum, de
+ship is yours--de privator is for you.' Mon onc' 'Lias he is like a
+child--he believe. He 'bout ship and go shore. Misery me, he sit on dat
+rocking-stone you see tipping on de wind. But if he wait until de men of
+de privator coum to him, he will wait till we see him sitting there now.
+Gache-a-penn, you say patriote? Mon onc' 'Lias he has de patreeteesm,
+and what happen? He save de ship of de greshus King God save--and dey
+eat up his hoysters! He get nosing. Gad'rabotin--respe d'la compagnie--
+if dere is a ship of de King coum to de Ecrehoses, and de hofficier say
+to me"--he tapped his breast--"'Jean Touzel, tak de ships of de King
+trough de rocks,'--ah bah, I would rememb' mon onc' 'Lias. I would say,
+'A bi'tot-good-bye.' . . . Slowlee--slowlee! We are at de place.
+Bear wif de land, ma'm'selle! Steadee! As you go! V'la! hitch now,
+Maitre Ranulph."
+
+The keel of the boat grated on the shingle.
+
+The air of the morning, the sport of using the elements for one's
+pleasure, had given Guida an elfish sprightliness of spirits. Twenty
+times during Jean's recital she had laughed gaily, and never sat a laugh
+better on any one's countenance than on hers. Her teeth were strong,
+white, and regular; in themselves they gave off a sort of shining mirth.
+
+At first the lugubrious wife of the happy Jean was inclined to resent
+Guida's gaiety as unseemly, for Jean's story sounded to her as serious
+statement of fact; which incapacity for humour probably accounted for
+Jean's occasional lapses from domestic grace. If Jean had said that he
+had met a periwinkle dancing a hornpipe with an oyster she would have
+muttered heavily "Think of that!" The most she could say to any one was:
+"I believe you, ma couzaine." Some time in her life her voice had
+dropped into that great well she called her body, and it came up only now
+and then like an echo. There never was anything quite so fat as she.
+She was found weeping one day on the veille because she was no longer
+able to get her shoulders out of the window to use the clothes-lines
+stretching to her neighbour's over the way. If she sat down in your
+presence, it was impossible to do aught but speculate as to whether she
+could get up alone. Yet she went abroad on the water a great deal with
+Jean. At first the neighbours gave out sinister suspicions as to Jean's
+intentions, for sea-going with your own wife was uncommon among the
+sailors of the coast. But at last these dark suggestions settled down
+into a belief that Jean took her chiefly for ballast; and thereafter she
+was familiarly called "Femme de Ballast."
+
+Talking was no virtue in her eyes. What was going on in her mind no one
+ever knew. She was more phlegmatic than an Indian; but the tails of the
+sheep on the Town Hill did not better show the quarter of the wind than
+the changing colour of Aimable's face indicated Jean's coming or going.
+For Mattresse Aimable had one eternal secret, an unwavering passion for
+Jean Touzel. If he patted her on the back on a day when the fishing was
+extra fine, her heart pumped so hard she had to sit down; if, passing her
+lonely bed of a morning, he shook her great toe to wake her, she blushed,
+and turned her face to the wall in placid happiness. She was so
+credulous and matter-of-fact that if Jean had told her she must die on
+the spot, she would have said "Think of that!" or "Je te crais," and
+died. If in the vague dusk of her brain the thought glimmered that she
+was ballast for Jean on sea and anchor on land, she still was content.
+For twenty years the massive, straight-limbed Jean had stood to her for
+all things since the heavens and the earth were created. Once, when she
+had burnt her hand in cooking supper for him, his arm made a trial of her
+girth, and he kissed her. The kiss was nearer her ear than her lips, but
+to her mind it was the most solemn proof of her connubial happiness and
+of Jean's devotion. She was a Catholic, unlike Jean and most people of
+her class in Jersey, and ever since that night he kissed her she had told
+an extra bead on her rosary and said another prayer.
+
+These were the reasons why at first she was inclined to resent Guida's
+laughter. But when she saw that Maitre Ranulph and the curate and Jean
+himself laughed, she settled down to a grave content until they landed.
+
+They had scarce reached the deserted chapel where their dinner was to be
+cooked by Maitresse Aimable, when Ranulph called them to note a vessel
+bearing in their direction.
+
+"She's not a coasting craft," said Jean.
+
+"She doesn't look like a merchant vessel," said Ranulph, eyeing her
+through his telescope. "Why, she's a warship!" he added.
+
+Jean thought she was not, but Maitre Ranulph said "Pardi, I ought to
+know, Jean. Ship-building is my trade, to say nothing of guns--I wasn't
+two years in the artillery for nothing. See the low bowsprit and the
+high poop. She's bearing this way. She'll be Narcissus!" he said
+slowly.
+
+That was Philip d'Avranche's ship.
+
+Guida's face lighted, her heart beat faster. Ranulph turned on his heel.
+
+"Where are you going, Ro?" Guida said, taking a step after him.
+
+"On the other side, to my men and the wreck," he said, pointing.
+
+Guida glanced once more towards the man-o'-war: and then, with mischief
+in her eye, turned towards Jean. "Suppose," she said to him archly,
+"suppose the ship should want to come in, of course you'd remember your
+onc' 'Lias, and say, 'A bi'tot, good-bye!"'
+
+An evasive "Ah bah!" was the only reply Jean vouchsafed.
+
+Ranulph joined his men at the wreck, and the Reverend Lorenzo Dow went
+about the Lord's business in the little lean-to of sail-cloth and ship's
+lumber which had been set up near to the toil of the carpenters. When
+the curate entered the but the sick man was in a doze. He turned his
+head from side to side restlessly and mumbled to himself. The curate,
+sitting on the ground beside the man, took from his pocket a book, and
+began writing in a strange, cramped hand. This book was his journal.
+When a youth he had been a stutterer, and had taken refuge from talk in
+writing, and the habit stayed even as his affliction grew less. The
+important events of the day or the week, the weather, the wind, the
+tides, were recorded, together with sundry meditations of the Reverend
+Lorenzo Dow. The pages were not large, and brevity was Mr. Dow's
+journalistic virtue. Beyond the diligent keeping of this record, he had
+no habits, certainly no precision, no remembrance, no system: the
+business of his life ended there. He had quietly vacated two curacies
+because there had been bitter complaints that the records of certain
+baptisms, marriages, and burials might only be found in the chequered
+journal of his life, sandwiched between fantastic reflections and remarks
+upon the rubric. The records had been exact enough, but the system was
+not canonical, and it rested too largely upon the personal ubiquity of
+the itinerary priest, and the safety of his journal--and of his life.
+
+Guida, after the instincts of her nature, had at once sought the highest
+point on the rocky islet, and there she drank in the joy of sight and
+sound and feeling. She could see--so perfect was the day--the line
+marking the Minquiers far on the southern horizon, the dark and perfect
+green of the Jersey slopes, and the white flags of foam which beat
+against the Dirouilles and the far-off Paternosters, dissolving as they
+flew, their place taken by others, succeeding and succeeding, as a
+soldier steps into a gap in the line of battle. Something in these
+rocks, something in the Paternosters--perhaps their distance, perhaps
+their remoteness from all other rocks--fascinated her. As she looked at
+them, she suddenly felt a chill, a premonition, a half-spiritual, half-
+material telegraphy of the inanimate to the animate: not from off cold
+stone to sentient life; but from that atmosphere about the inanimate
+thing, where the life of man has spent itself and been dissolved,
+leaving--who can tell what? Something which speaks but yet has no sound.
+
+The feeling which possessed Guida as she looked at the Paternosters was
+almost like blank fear. Yet physical fear she had never felt, not since
+that day when the battle raged in the Vier Marchi, and Philip d'Avranche
+had saved her from the destroying scimitar of the Turk. Now that scene
+all came back to her in a flash, as it were; and she saw again the dark
+snarling face of the Mussulman, the blue-and-white silk of his turban,
+the black and white of his waistcoat, the red of the long robe, and the
+glint of his uplifted sword. Then in contrast, the warmth, brightness,
+and bravery on the face of the lad in blue and gold who struck aside the
+descending blade and caught her up in his arms; and she had nestled
+there--in those arms of Philip d'Avranche. She remembered how he had
+kissed her, and how she had kissed him--he a lad and she a little child
+--as he left her with her mother in the watchmaker's shop in the Vier
+Marchi that day. . . . And she had never seen him again until
+yesterday.
+
+She looked from the rocks to the approaching frigate. Was it the
+Narcissus coming--coming to this very island? She recalled Philip--how
+gallant he was yesterday, how cool, with what an air of command! How
+light he had made of the riot! Ranulph's strength and courage she
+accepted as a matter of course, and was glad that he was brave, generous,
+and good; but the glamour of distance and mystery were around d'Avranche.
+Remembrance, like a comet, went circling through the firmament of eleven
+years, from the Vier Marchi to the Place du Vier Prison.
+
+She watched the ship slowly bearing with the land. The Jack was flying
+from the mizzen. They were now taking in her topsails. She was so near
+that Guida could see the anchor a-cockbell, and the poop lanthorns. She
+could count the guns like long black horns shooting out from a rhinoceros
+hide: she could discern the figurehead lion snarling into the spritsail.
+Presently the ship came up to the wind and lay to. Then she signalled
+for a pilot, and Guida ran towards the ruined chapel, calling for Jean
+Touzel.
+
+In spite of Jean's late protests as to piloting a "gentleman-of-war,"
+this was one of the joyful moments of his life. He could not loosen his
+rowboat quick enough; he was away almost before you could have spoken his
+name. Excited as Guida was, she could not resist calling after him:
+
+"'God save our greshus King! A bi'tot--goodbye!'"
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+A sort of chuckle not entirely pleasant
+Sacrifice to the god of the pin-hole
+What fools there are in the world
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BATTLE OF THE STRONG, PARKER, V1 ***
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