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Dex-artment of Physics
University of Toronto
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TALES OF THE MOOR.
THE SECOND VOLUME OF THE SERIES IS PREPARING
FOR PUBLICATION.
TALES OF THE MOOR
BY JOSIAS HOMELY.
CONTAINING
REGINALD ARNOLF,
TOM STIRLINGTON,
ETC.
LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, & CO.
CREWS, NEWTON-ABBOT.
MDCCCXLI.
CREWS, PKINTEH, KEWTON-ABBOT.
X'X D ^ ^ ^ -,;..
S7:?02l
TO
MRS. TEMPLER, of SANDFORD ORLEIGH,
THIS VOLUME IS
MOST RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED, WITH A FEELISli OF THE
DEEPEST GRATITUDE.
It is indeed a very slight token of such a feeling, but it
is the only one which circumstances enable the Author to
ofter. The chief object of these Tales is to inculcate
principles of Christian charity and general benevolence.
However feeble the effort, he therefore hopes that they
will not inappropriately appear under the protection of
the name of one so well known to practice the virtues
which he has humbly endeavoured, by fictitious illustra-
tion, to render amiable in the estimation of that numerous
body of the commimity who prefer receiving moral truth
in an aniusino; form.
PREFACE.
In submitting this volume to the attention of the
public, I beg most respectfully to offer my grateful
acknowleclo-ments to that numerous bodv of Patrons and
Subscribers whose valued support has encouraged me to
publication. I feel that to them an apology is due, because
the contents of this volume will be found to differ con-
siderably from what was at first proposed. The fact is,
that in re-^vi"iting them for the press, tempting opportu-
nities occurred of making the two stories of Reginald
Arnolf and Tom Stirlington much longer than they were
first intended to be : I yielded to the temptation, under
the impresssion that the additions were improvements,
and that the stories would be rendered thereby more
acceptable to my readers. This compels me to exclude
from the present volume numerous Detached Pieces
named in my first prospectus : these, however, it is my
intention (with some other Tales) to prepare for publica-
tion in a Second Volume, which will appear as soon as
circumstances will admit.
JOHN BRADFORD.
Pavilion Place, Newton-Abbot,
August 21st, 1841.
" I would not have the reader, upon the perusal of a
single paper, pronounce me incorrigible ; he may try a
second, which, as there is a studied difference in subject
and style, may be more suited to his taste : if this also
fails, I must refer him to a third, or even a fourth in case
of extremity. If he should still continue refractory, and
find me dull to the last, I must inform him, with Bayes
in the ' Rehearsal,' that I think him a very odd kind of
fellow, and desire no more of his acquaintance."
Oliver Goldsmith.
TALES OF THE MOOR.
INTRODUCTION.
THE CEMETERY.
" Lead me to yonder craggy steep. The murmur of
" the falhuo; streams ; the whistlino- winds rushin"; throuo;h
" the woods of my hills ; the welcome rays of the boun-
" teous sun — will soon awake the voice of song in my
" breast. The thoughts of former years glide over my
" soul like swift-shooting meteors o'er Ardven's gloomy
"vales."
EVIR-ALLAN.
Among the hills of central Devonshire,
There is a lonely forest burial-ground,
Where, resting in their solitude, the dead
Of many ages have returned to dust.
In days long number'd with the past, 'tis thought
There, in the centre of their hunting-grounds,
The chasers of the red Deer fell asleep,
And movdder'd into nothing, side by side ;
And the Moor-Shepherds gather'd to the fold
Prepar'd for all our kindred of the earth,
Ceas'd from their labours, and forgot their cares.
This solitary city of the dead
B
Is plac'tl upon the summit of a hill.
There, when bland spring is master of the vale,
Fierce winter holds his icy citadel,
And when the flow'rs are on the southern plains,
Seeking the uplands with the earliest dawn,
The plough-boy checks his song, surpris'd to find
The snow-flake lingering yet among the graves ;
And on the rude old Church, a place of prayer
For men of ancient days and ruder times.
How ancient or how rude is now U'i^aiown.
In sullen loneliness the fabric stands,
The storm sighs round it with a dirge like wail
When the fierce north-wind wanders in his might.
Forth from the caverns of his frozen home.
But e'en the sun-light of a summer dawn,
Shedding on all around a new-born joy.
Seems to invest it with a deeper gloom.
Its dark sepulchral sadness nought can cheer.
The men who rear'd the pile have long been dust.
No other work of human hands around ;
It stands their lonely monument, and seems
The solitary remnant of their works ;
The mouldering weir'd memorial of their faith.
The patient hands of those who work in stone
With persevering toil, from solid rocks
Have chisel'd all the frame-work into shapes
Of rustic symmetry and mouldings rude,
But so unlike whate'er for pomp or use.
Or purposes devout, men now construct.
It scarcely seems the work ot human hands.
Her airy legend superstition builds
On this foundation. Aged men still tell
An awful tale, (devoutly stUl believed,)
That when on pious purposes intent
Men first resolv'd to build a house to God
Far in the wilderness, a distant tor,
Which from that summit seems an azure cloud,
Was deem'd the spot most holy : and they there
Laid down the strong foundations, and had rear'd
Breast high the growing pile, but while they slept,
And darkness hung its sable curtain round.
The whole had disappeared! The floweiy turf,
Which they had left at night-foil soil'd and trench'd,
Now lay as smooth beneath the dapple dawn
As if no hand had e'er disturb'd its rest,
No foot of man e'er press'd its virgin green !
Confounded, to the hamlet they return'd,
" High heaven our jirotfer'd services rejects!"
They said, " His wonder working hand thus marks
" His high displeasure of our daring deed."
Till from the hill an aged Shepherd came
A\'ith trembling footsteps, though in eager haste —
" Be comforted my children," he exclaim'd,
" For he who guards the creeping thing which dwells
" Among the grass, has not forsaken us.
" Far in the moor the iiibric 1 have found ;
" Its firm foundation tlieic no mortal hand
" Has fix'd, nor thence can e'er remove. It i&-
" Gods chosen spot — to us the gate of heaven.
** Each stone is there replaced as left by you,
" But nought is added ; hasten to complete
" The work, which viewless messengers of heaven,
" Or spirits blest, once men, have thus begun."
He spoke — the treml)ling swains obeyed.
With faltering hands they rais'd the battlement j
Around the turret, and the sacred roof
Within, they built an altar to their God.
There, still, the living of that hamlet meet
For weekly prayer — around, their dead find rest.
To muse o'er death in. tliis lone solitude.
To steal, as 'twere, upon its dreamless sleep,
I oft have wandered from the haunts of men.
For death here wears no silly masquerade ;
Here pomp does not insult it, and here wealth
Has not its treasures lavish'd to procure
The grave derision of an epitaph ;
It wears the semblance of a calm repose,
A balmy slumber following days of toil,
This life's concluding blessing and its end.
The rustic mother leads her rosy boy.
On sabbath mornings, up the hill to prayer ;
Forth to the merry fields his father guides
His faltering sfcep&to teach him life's great aim —
Want, to o'erpower with unceasing toil.
On his yet careless brow the snows of age
Gently descend, and then he falls asleep.
One long submission to necessity —
His earthly lot. His Death is but the same.
Its quiet, calm, inevitable close.
And then he claims (fit resting place for him)
His lonely green, unhonour'd mound of earth,
'Tis all his country think they owe to him,
'Tis all at least his kindred can bestow.
A breathing worai among the breathless ; here
The stories of their sufferings and joys
Fall with a solemn interest on my heart.
I oft have witness'd, in this lonely spot.
The parting of the living and the dead ;
For here affection renders to the grave
The clay it could not rescue from its claim.
The Avidow'd, childless, fatherless, depart,
And leave the jewels of their hearts behind.
And I have followed to their lonely homes.
And mavk'd their alter'd fate, when death has claim'd
Their kindred. Thus, familiar to my mind
Are simple tales of separated love.
They are not for the heartless, thoughtless, proud,
Whose human sympathies, the pride of cast
Has blighted like the breath of pestilence,
But for the soul where meek affection dwells
Which sees itself reflected in the stream
Of human life, where'er it flows around.
6
THE MEETING.
As 1 journeyed one evening towards the Moorland
Cemetery, that I might be alone among the dead, an inci-
dent occured, which, althougli apparently trivial, was
destined to give, for a time, an entirely new direction to
my thoughts. At the foot of the hill on which stands the
old Church, there runs a rapid mountain brook, through
which a number of large stones or blocks of granite rock,
are so placed as to aflbrd to the traveller the means of
crossing it. At this place I found a youth of most
prepossessing appearance, cautiously reconnoitring the
ford, apparently doul)tful as to whether it could be
crossed in safety, or not. Having assured him that it
could be, and having set him the example, he sprung
over with the agililty of a young antelope.
How trivial a thing in the journey of life will knit
together or divide the hearts of men. Having offered to
the young traveller this trifling kindness, I felt as if I
had a right to be interested in him.
" Go you" said he, " towards the Church upon the
hill? if so, I should be glad to accompany youj I am
a stranger to the path."
" It is a sad and lonely place." said I, " for young hearts
to visit, whose hopes are fresh, and feelings unhackneyed
in the ways of men ; — it is, perhaps, the resting-place of
some one you have loved and valued ?"
An expression of deep sadness, like the shadow of a
vagrant cloud, passed for a moment over his finely-expres-
sive features, as lie said, " I liave, indeed, lov'd and valued
some who are resting there ; " and immediately recovering
his former expression of gaiety, he continued, *' My
business there to-day is not with the dead but with the
living. I go there to meet my brother, a sailor, who is
just returned to England after a long absence."
This explanation not only satisfied, but highly inter-
ested me; which feeling of interest was greatly increased
by the conduct of my young companion. He seemed
desirous of hiding from a stranger the deep emotions
which evidently occupied his heart, occasioned by the
anticipated meeting with his brother. He sometimes ad-
dressed me, with the greatest apparent gaiety, but would
stop short in the middle of a sentence, as if he had for-
gotten what it was his intention to have said, and then
laughing at his own confusion, would turn aside to hide a
tear, which I saw trembling on his dark blue eye. As we
ascended the hill, he stooped down several times to pluck
a beautiful wild flower, whicli he looked at with the
fondest admiration for a moment, and then would h.'t it
drop from his hand, as if he had forgotten its existence.
But this emotion grew too strong for concealment when we
reached the top of the hill, from whence we could look
down upon a valley covered with brushwood and low
stunted trees. Along the side of the hill which arose
beyond the wood on the opposite side, ran a narrow stripe
of rough and unprotected road, on which we could discern
a single dark spot. As it moved towards us it became
evident that it was a solitaiy traveller. My young com-
8
panion, clasping his trembling hands together, stood
motionless and speechless, watching it witli the most
intense interest, and the strongest emotion; the traveller
was, however, soon concealed from our view by the wood
of the valley. The short time which elapsed before he
again appeared emerging from the wood, was a time of
agonizing suspense to my young friend. But the moment
the traveller appeared, he sprung forward, exclaiming,
"Ernest, my brother!" which was replied to by an ex-
clamation expressive of the same fine feeling, " Oh, Julian,
ray own dear boy."
I withdrew to some distance, for I felt that the presence
of a stranger could not but be an improper intrusion at
such a moment. Still I was near enough to observe
them. After a short time, I was surprised to see them
turn aside and go into the burial-ground, the younger
brother resting heavily upon the arm of the elder, as if
he could scarcely have moved forward without its sup-
port. The elder, at first, erect and firm walked on, but
soon I saw his head drop heavily upon his hand, over-
come with powerful emotions. Suddenly they clasped
each other's hands and dropped upon their knees by the
side of a flower-covered grave —
IT WAS THE GRAVE OF THEIR MOTHER.
It was at this holy spot, these young hearts had agreed
that the tie of brotherhood should re-unite, after their long
separation.
As I stood observincf them, near the crate of the Ce-
metery, I was surprised to hoar a soft, ])laintive, dove-like
1)
murmur, which seemed to be uttered l)y some one liastilv
approachinoj through the wood, and in a short time, a
youth, of most singular appearance, sprung Ughtly over
the fence, and stood beside me. He looked earnestly
towards the brothers ; but, perceiving how they were
engaged, stood still, Avatching them apparently witli the
most intense delight. This gave me an opportunity of
observing him more particularly.
His age, if I judged correctly, might have been about
eighteen ; his figure slight for that age, but possessed of
that symmetrical proportion of parts, which gives to the
painter the most perfect notion of harmony, and helps to
impress the beholder with the idea of great activity or
power of action ; his countenance was pale — possessed
even of feminine remilaritv of features, and so delicate,
that it was rescued from the charge of effeminacy only
by its expression, which was at once so touching, and so
noble, that it commanded immediate interest, admiration,
and respect. This was greatly aided by the tender enthu-
siasm, but intense emotion, expressed by his full black
eyes, which caused a feeling I could scarcely account for
to thrill through my heart ; for, as he stood with clasped
hands, looking now at the brothers, and now into the in-
tcnninable blue of the heavens, I could not but feel that
there stood beside me a creature of the " Earth, earthy,"
but born to the coiitemi)lation of the Eternal — the Infinite.
In the haste of his flight, his hat had been removed from
his head, and his long black hair floated upon the gentle
breeze in unrestrained and beautiful ringlets. His dress
10
might not have been chosen to aid the effect of his ap-
pearance, for it was the ordinary dress of a respectable
youth of the middle class, yet it did greatly aid that
effect. The short round jacket, by leaving the figure
unencumbered with drapery, displayed its fine proportions
to the best advantage, and a small black silk kerchief,
brought once round his neck, confined by a single knot,
and then left to float, with his hair, upon the breeze, com-
pleted the picture. It was, altogether, such a face and
such a figure as the painter and the poet strive to imagine
when they would depict man in the full vigour of his
intellectual power, but with his primeval innocence yet
untarnished. As the brothers arose, and turned towards
us, he sprung forward to grasp their extended hands,
uttering again his soft plaintive cry, (which, though evi-
dently expressive of joy, sounded to me most sad and
touching,) while they both exclaimed — " Reginald ! poor
Reginald ! "
The three young men, (for such I ought to call them,
as Reginald, the last comer, was evidently the junior of
the party,) now came towards me. I thought they all
appeared a little ashamed of the strong feelings which
they had so lately exhibited. But I did vot feel ashamed
of THEM. I did not feel ashamed of the country which
had produced them. For the moment, I even thought
the better of poor human nature — that frail and erring
thing, which, in this vale of tears, wanders so far from
perfection and happiness, yet, even in its wildest wander-
ings, gives proofs that it contains within itself the seeds
11
of better things— and these, to me, are proofs that he
who has sown tlie seed will not abandon it — that the bud-
dings of the heart will flower another day — that the
blossoms of time will bring forth the fruits of Eternity.*
Julian Mortimer now proceeded to introduce me more
formally to his companions, and first to his brother. I
never saw so great a likeness, accompanied by so strong a
contrast, as there existed between them. Their features
seemed almost counterparts of each other; but the mild
expression upon the countenance of Julian, with its gentle
and tender blue eve — which looked as if it was alwavs in
search of something to admire and to love — was strongly
contrasted by the lofty and intrepid expression which
marked the countenance of his brother, who looked as if
he had grown familiar with danger, and could meet it
fearlessly.
I was surprised that their companion had not yet
spoken, and I looked at him, I fear, too inquiringly ; for
he turned away with an expression of great embarrass-
ment. Julian Mortimer observing this, with ready kind-
ness, explained.
* The three youths here introduced, are the Poets who will relate
the "Tales of the Moor." Ernest is the Poet of Romance
and of daring Adventure ; Julian the Poet of Domestic Life ;
Reginald the Poet of Nature and the Metaphysics ; while lorn
Stirlington will try to aid the cause of Virtue, by pointing the
finger of Ridicule at Vice and Folly. Tlaey will speak to the feelings
of the unenlightened — to the hearts of the untaught — and endea-
vour to prove that the perfection of human morals is contained in
the precept, " Do unto another as thou would'st he should do unto
thee."
12
" Our friend, Reginald Arnolf," said he, " is deaf and
dumb. We are all going to the house of our relative,
Mr. Aubrey, of the Barton House, where Reginald
resides."
"Aubrey?" said I; "my kind old friend. It was
my intention to visit him myself to-night, and to remain
at his house several days. Let us all go together,"
I was flattered to observe that this proposal was re-
ceived with apparent satisfaction by the brothers; and
Julian having communicated my intention to his dumb
friend, by signs rapidly made on his fingers, he smiled
delightedly, and gaily led the way.
We all met with a kind and cordial reception from Mr.
and Mrs. Aubrey, of the Barton House ; and an equally
friendly, though much more boisterous, greeting, from
Mr. Tom Stirlington, a wine merchant, residing in a
neighbouring town, who had married Mr. Aubrey's
daughter, and, with his wife, happened to be on a visit to
Barton House.
Having received a summons to the tea-table, which, on
account of the heat of the weather, was prepared in the
large ancient hall, we were delighted to find that our
company was augmented by the presence of several
ladies ; but as they will be introduced in one of the fol-
lowing tales, I forbear to name them here.
Tea being removed, it was proposed by Mrs. Aubrey,
and agreed to by the company, with much pleasure, that
we should hear the tale of Reginald Arnolf, or the
story of a Dumb Boy, as recorded by himself, shortly
13
after having finished his education at an institution for
the instruction of those thus bereft. It was read to the
party, with much feeling, by his attached young friend,
Julian Mortimer. Reginald himself sat close beside him,
and, by a glance of his quick eye, could ascertain what
particular passage was being read, and by a keen and
eager examination of the countenances of all present,
seemed anxiously endeavouring to read its effects on us.
14
REGINALD ARNOLF,
OR THE
STORY OF A DUMB BOY.
" Never did I feel assured of the strength of my own heart, and
trustful to subdue its human errors and its hourly sorrows, until I
saw bright before mc the Birthright and Eden of Immortality."
BULWER.
" If this is the beautiful creation that springs from ashes, let its
peace prosper with me." — Charles Dickens.
Lady, all hail ! The dumb boy knows your sign,*
'Tis loveliness, with kindness sweetly blended.
Say — Will the noble hear my simple tale.
And will my gratitude be sweet to you ?
The wealthy may not like to hear of want ;
And, writing to the generous and kind.
Why should I tell a tale to make you weep ?
Why should the precious peai-1-drop of a tear,
* YouK Sign. — The distinguishing mark by which the dumb arc
instructed to recognise a person they have once seen.
15
Born from the sweetness of your noble heart,
Be wasted on the desolate of soul ?
It is not for myself I ask a tear,
But for the many untaught orphan boys
Who wander through the world, to them a waste,
In all the loneliness of speechless grief.
Their desolation science has not reached —
Their bleeding hearts compassion has not soothed ;
Bewildered and confounded is the soul,*
Imprisoned in its tenement of clay,
Yet always agonised with active thought,
A keen, unsatisfied desire to know.
Their hearts' affections source of purest joys,
To those who hold life's intercourse of love,
Blighted, or turn'd to bitterness and pain.
They love — they have no voice to ask return ;
And love avoids th' infection of their woe.
Their speechless friendship meets with cold disdain.
* The Author has endeavoured, in this tale, to trace the develop-
ment of understanding and feeling in a child bred up in solitude, and
who, from his being deaf and dumb, must be supposed, up to the age
of maturity, to have received his impressions entirely from the sight.
In this introduction, therefore, he (Reginald Arnolf,) describes the
untaurjht dumb as being precisely in the same situation as he himself
was previous to his having received that education which brought
him into communion with his fellow creatures. To them much of
the most familiar phenomena of nature, and the most ordinary trans-
actions of life are as unexplained mysteries. They have no hinw-
Ud{]e of Death, nor can they conceive what it is. But this relation
will sliow how, with the knowledge of deatli, comes the natural, the
rational consolation— the remedy— THE HOPE OF IMMOR-
TALITY.
16
As if they were not kindred to their kind.
Th' accumulated hatred of the world
Has not one-half the power to crush the heart
When its first loves are bursting into bloom.
As has cold Apathy — the smooth disdain
And stern injustice of a silent scorn.
— I mark'd a rose-tree, in my native vale ;
The ruthless storms of Autumn pelted it,
And tore away its sear and yellow leaves :
And yet it seem'd to smile whene'er the sun
Look'd kindly down thro' fragments of the storm;
The Winter hung with icicles its stems,
And buried it at length in drifted snows.
It lived. The green vitality revived —
But when the Spring breath'd coldly on its floAvers
It died. The heart is like that bonny rose —
A chill'd affection is its deadliest bane.
An understanding blank — a blighted heart —
The untaught dumb boy's certain lot must be.
Where ignorance and povei-ty have met,
They are, alas ! the certain lot of man ;
But the gay peasant, in his useful cares.
Feels not the vacancy, but laughs and sings,
Though no one hears him save the patient beast,
The sharer of his gladness and his toil.
Not so the youth in lonely silence doom'd
To bear the ills of hopeless poverty.
His journey is upon a barren lieath.
17
Where murky clouds obscure the cheerless day.
The past hangs o'er him like a painful di'eam,
Where visions unexplained swift flitted by,
Yet left no record on the heart but fear ;
The Futui'e, wi*apt in darkness, is a blank ;
Time — to his eager heart — a tale half-told ;
Eternity, perhaps, a restless sleep.
For Hope — who points the way to better worlds,
Or better days in this — her magic lamp
For him has never trimm'd. His soul is dark.
Hope, like the sunbeam on a sepulchre,
Clothes even sadness with a gleam of joy ;
But Earth's idealities soon satiate.
There is no dreary waste, no wilderness.
So darkly desolate as that to which
A fullness of its joys leads on, if Hope
Ends with to-day, and with the breath expires.
Such is the paltry histoiy of pomp,
The nothingness of grandeur, when the heart
Rests on the flitting shadows of to-day,
And, as it darkens, sees no star of Hope
Gleam in the distance, through the coming night.
Oh, grandeur pines for Hope, and so does grief —
It is misfortune's sole inheritance !
Cut off" from life's absorbing cares — debarr'd
Its dissipating joys — that lonely Hope
Which speaks of lands where spirits meet in bliss,
And sweetly interchanging thought for thought.
18
Unite in love unfettered by the tongue,
Is, to the dumb and desolate of heart,
Like the soft ripple of the holy fount
To him who all day long has toil'd among
The burning sands which clothe the wilderness.
And, as the evening zephyrs wake from sleep.
Reaches the city of the sacred palms —
Fair Tadmor of the desert.*
— Giant boughs.
Of deep, enduring, never-changing green,
Hung o'er the waters, seem to whisper words
Of holy quietude, as sighs the breeze
Encumbered with the breath of many flowers.
The rippling fountain dashes forth a stream
Of orient pearls upon the chrystal pool,
Which, like a sheet of molten silver, lies
Reflecting back the twilight hues of heaven.
And th' sooth'd spirit of the care-worn man,
Fair Tadmor of the Desert. — This lovely city of antiquity
was built upon an oasis or fertile spot in the miflst of an arid, sandy
desert. It was 117 miles east from the shores of the Mediterrasean
on the one side, and 85 from the level banks of the Euphrates, on
the other. It could only, therefore, be approached by passing long
tracts of desert sands. But here the gushing forth of a noble stream
fertilized a little island, as it has been called, of very fruitful land,
covered by a grove of very luxuriant palms — hence it was called by
the Greeks " Palmyra," and by the Assyrians " Tadmor," both
names signifying, in their respective tongues, " The City of Palms."
This explains the comparison ; for the delight of reaching such a spot
after having endured all day the toil, the torturing heat, the insuf-
ferable thirst, occasioned by travelling on the desert, may be safeJij
left to the imagination of the reader.
19
That eager, wayward, restless, anxious thing.
Is, for a moment, hiish'd in that still calm ;
The toil and peril of the day are past —
Forgotten are to-morrow's crushino; cares —
His heart resigns itself to present joy ;
The placid happiness of silent prayer,
The sacred rapture of unspoken praise.
— So is it w4th the traveller, Avho toils
Along the weary wilderness of life,
Which here and there presents a tarnish'd flower,
Mockins: earth's barrenness with its faint smile,
Who hails the hope which settles on the tomb.
And points him onward to his place of rest.
Were this calm sunshine of the heart alone
The light w^iich springs from an immortal hope,
And the sole benefit that hope confers.
It were not wise to cast the boon aside ;
But its least value is that joy serene —
It is its sanctifying power to check
The heart, when wandering after joys unreal,
The gross yet unsubstantial source of pain,
With mundane or etemal bliss at wai-,
Which stamps it with inestimable worth.
— The wise Egj'ptians, men whose giant minds
First pierced the clouds of dark uncertainty,
*
•"First pierced the clouds, &c." — Herodotus asserts that
the Egyptian philosophers were the first who taught Ihe doctrine of
the immortality of the soul. The celebrated inscription at Sais,
20
And taught the eager sons of ancient Greece,*
Who, in the chambers of the pyramid,
Bow'd down to learn their hieroglyphic lore :
" That, as the Nile, the father of all streams
" Receives th' erratic waters of the fount,
" So spirits, emanating first from God,
" Embosomed in his being, rest in death."
— These placed a skeleton, with garlands crown'd.
And veil'd from sight by rich embroider'd robes.
Beside them at the banquet board. 'Twas well
That it was veil'd from vulgar view ; the face
Once hidden in the catacomb should not
To mortal sight be thoughtlessly exposed.
Those sacred remnants of a fallen shrine
Should speak their dreadful lessons to the few
Who can endure them well — with dauntless hearts,
Yet not with brute indifference and scorn.
'Twas well they crown'd with flow'rs th' painless brow
And hail'd Death's victim as his victor ! But
'Twas wiser still the monitor was there.
In all its native horrors, though disguised.
It did not pain the sense, but check'd the soul.
Lower Egypt, coupled with others, would lead us to suppose the
following as a summary of the ancient esoteric philosophy of the
Egyptian priests. I give it in the language of the inscriptions,
without comment. " I am whatever is, or has been, or will be; and
no mortal has hitherto drawn aside my veil. From me all things
came, to me all will return."
* " Sons of Infant Greece." — Orpheus, Thales, Pythagoras,
Democritus, Plato, &c., visited Egypt in search of knowledge. — See
Bnwker'H Historic Crittm Philosophice.
21
Well knew each reveller what awful form
The broider'd robe and flowery wreath conceal' d ;
So still and passionless while roared the feast —
So calm and tranquil at the council board —
Yet speaking stern, unutterable truths !
Could wanton folly's vain impertinence,
Or pride's still vainer insolence, intrude
Where sat the delegate of other times —
The stern ambassador from Death to Life ?
No ! Wisdom mark'd that strange companionship.
Happy the man who, with untrembling hand.
Can pluck th' blossoms strew'd around his path,
And meet life's duties with unshrinking soul,
Yet dares do either hand in hand with Death.
This calm reflection on mortality,
Is, to the pilgrim spirit, as a guide
To show the value and the real worth.
Or worthlessness, of all that tempts or tries
The ti-aveller upon th' chequer'd path
Which Destiny has mark'd for man on earth.
The poor dejected Dumb Boy knows it not.
He lives, not knowing he shall shortly die —
He dies, unknowing 'tis his lot to live
For ever, in that bright untroubled world.
Where, to the pure in heart, there is no grief;
Where man shall learn why here he suffered pain ;
And the crush'd roses of this stormy clime
Put forth their sweetness to a genial air,
And bloom in freshness, knowing no decay.
22
Ye privileged wealthy — God demands of you
To break the seal which binds the book of fate ;
To cause to be revealed the mystery,
To cause the Dumb Boy not to live in vain,
But to accomplish here his being's end.
Slowly unravell'd by Time's silent hand,
Th' unhoped-for secret how to reach the souls
Before deemed desolate, and, by a gulf
Impassable, cut off from intercourse,
Is your's, is mine, and may be all mankind's.
Will those who hold it have to give account
Why they send back those spirits to God's throne,
His name unknown to them. His will untaught?
I may not ask. Mercy herself Avill close
The grand account — / have no right to judge.
But this I know, and need not fear to speak :
You leave your offering at the altar's side —
'Tis yellow dust ! You have enough to spare ;
But 'tis a knowledge of Eternal Life,
Of hope immortal you confer on us.
But read my story, and in mine read their's
Who tread the wilderness with bleeding hearts,
Melting away in silent loneliness.
II.
My earliest home was in a Moorland glen,
In central Devonshire. A sheltered vale
In whose green bosom thousands of wild flow'rs
23
Were scattered by the fingers of young Spring,
While yet his victoiy remained in doubt.
And, on the pinions of the midniglit gale,
Th' snow-flake, child of Winter, would come back
And play in circles round the massy rocks
Which crown'd the summit of the bare bleak hills.
And oft these loveliest children of the Moors
Had from our valley scarcely passed away.
When Autumn blasts, with loud and fitful wail.
Pealed the last requiem of the fading year.
For in our vale the Summer linger'd long,
And, on the pinion of the first south wind.
After brief absence, joyously came back.
An amphitheatre of lofty tors,*
Rising abruptly, circled it around,
Save one green vista, hung with pendant woods,
Which wooed the sea-breeze of th' melting south,
And form'd the only pass into the dell.
There Nature's frolic hand had carelessly
Piled up a mighty precipice of rocks,
(Like rude materials of a new-made Avorld
Thrown bye superfluous,) and had formed a cave,
Which hands of men inured to rudest toil
Had shap'd into a hut, in years gone by,
*ToR, anciently spelt Torre, and often vulfrarly pronounced Tar,
means a rocky eminence. The following example will be sufficient
to explain. Belson-tor is an eminence of that description, on which
the Sun was worshipped by the Druids, under the name of Bel
or Belus. Belson-tor, therefore, literally means " The hill of the
Sun."
24
Where Celtic hunters dwelt, whose simple art
Copied the instinct of their hunted prey,
Which sought at night the shelter of the earth.
One rugged window fac'd the rising sun —
Its simple entrance led towards the south.
So void of form, seen from the neighbouring hills,
It might have seemed a portion of the rock.
The savage architect, with untaught skill,
Exhausted all his cunning on the cheat,
And found securitv beneath his guile.*
Nor let the pamper'd sons of milder times
Disdain this remnant of a noble race,
Beat by the treacherous Roman from the plain.
Their feet were on th' mountains — they were free !
Their altars were the lonely desert stones,
Their god the peerless, life-bestowing Sun,
• The huts or dwellings of the ancient inhabitants are to be found
in every part of Dartmoor, in a state g-enerally very imperfect, the
foundation stones and those forming the door-jams being all that
remain of these dwellings, with few exceptions. The huts are cir-
cular on the plan, the stones are set on their edge, and placed closely
together, so as to form a secure foundation for the superstructure,
whether that it were wattle, turf, stone, or other material. These
vestiges strikingly illustrate the descriptions which Diodorus Siculus,
and Strabo give of the halntntions of the Britons in their times.
In a very considerable proportion of examples, the door faces the
south. These habitations were, for the most part, placed in the
middle of a wood or valley, a confused parcel of huts, defended by
ramparts of earth. — See " Antiquities, i,-c., of Ohehampton." Rude
as the above description is, it evidently alludes to an ancient British
town. The habitations of hunters and Isolated families were, on the
contrary, such as described in the text — caverns rendered habitable
by a little rude architecture, in which the two great objects were
shelter at night, and concealment.
25
(Ever in victory, though all things else
The spoiler, Death, eonducteth to decay.)*
Despising compromise, disdaining life
If fettered by the Roman's chain — they swore,
With dreadful energy, and kept their oath,
That He, the conqueror of night and storms,
Should ne'er look down and see his children slaves.
But while the chieftain battled on the hills.
To keep that oath, the birthright of our isle,
Th' Cimbrian mother watch'd the wild dove's flight.
And mark'd where she had hid her unfledg'd young,
For there she knew fierce winter was a guest,
And not a conqueror — and there she nurs'd.
Cradled in moss and wrapt in softest furs,
Th' embryo hero, soldier of the Sun,
And freedom's warrior of a future day.
Land of green valleys and of fertile plains.
Of forest-covered hills, fair Devon, hail !
This THY first annals tell, and this thy sons,
Lock'd in their inmost hearts will ever feel.
Whate'er of crime or folly thou hast known —
Whate'er of dire calamity hast shared
In common with our country's common lot.
* " O thou who travellest above, round as the full-orbed hard
shield of the mighty ! O Sun — thou art in thy journey alone. The
oak falleth from the high mountain ; the rock and the precipice fall
under old age ; the ocean ebbeth and ttoweth ; and the moon is lost
above in the sky ; hut thou alone art for ever in victory, in the
rejoicing of thy own light-" — Ossiav's Carrickthura.
26
Thou ne'er hast nurs'd a race of willing slaves.*
We pass the treacherous Saxon's strife with scorn,
For here his treason never made him lord.
The red-hair'd Dane appeared and disappeared,
The robber of the land and of the sea.
Yet left unspoil'd the freedom of the moor.
The rugged outline of the Celtic hut
Appeared externally, but not within.
For here an anchorite of Norman race
Had scooped a spacious cell, with vaulted roof,
And, fashioned forth to face the rising sun,
A lofty window, arch'd and oriel form'd,t
That, ere the sunbeams touch'd th' green festoons
Of eglantine and ivy, clustering round.
With eyes directed to the dawning east.
Towards the city of the sepulchre.
Where fought the chosen warriors of the land —
• Beyond the reach of records is a settled g;looin which no in-
genuity can penetrate. Britain's fir:?! nnualswere recorded by her
enemies. And yet it is impossible to look back even on those, brief
and scanty as they are, without feoliiijjs of exultation. The warfare
of the Britons was simple — for they fought naked, defended onlv by
a wicker shield. They used chariots with scythes projectiiis: from
the wheels : but these were more calculated to astonish the rude than
to secure a victory over disciplined troops ; yet, srich was the deter-
mined spirit of the race, thai they nobly dared the first Cagsar and
his legionaries ; and, under all their disaiivantages, to a certain
extent succeeded in maintaining their independence. The Romans
made settlements on the sea coasts, but 7iever conquered Dartmoor,
nor the mountainous districts of Wales, nor any part of Scotland
north of the Solway.
t Forming a recess or rude oratoria.
27
He might petition for the victory
For those who battled with the Saracen,*
And rest to them who fell. And oft, 'twas said
By pilgrim palmers from the holy land,
That victories were won while thus he prayed.
The distant infidel his only foe,
The sweetness of his spirit was distilled
In boundless charity to all at home.
Meek, self-denying charity for all !
Man, in the madness of his furious pride,
Regards this quality in man with scorn ;
But angels deem it brotherhood to them,
Regarding it the surest proof that we,
The progeny of Earth, shall yet shake off
The fetters of our mother, and shall dwell
In the bright light, too brilliant for the sense.
And therefore darhness deem'd by some on earth —
The mole-eyed claimants of eternal death. f
* " Prayers for victory, and services for the dead."' — See Histories
of the Crusades.
t Of nil IliP doctrines which have been bronche'l concprniiisf the
inimorUility of the soul, nnne appear to nie to be move strikinfc and
beautiful than that of Lord Herbert, of Cheibury, which is (jiioted
b> Sir E. L. Buhver, in his " \ew Phoerlo." I do not quote Lord
Herberts exact words, but the substance of the passage alluded to
is as follows : — " As. previous to my birth into this world, Nature had
formed my eyes, and ears, and the organs of my other senses, not
intenrling- them for use whcie I then lay, but fitting them to appre-
hend ihe things which would occur in this world, — so, I believe,
since my coming into this world, my soul hath formed or produced
certain faculties, which are almost as useless in this life, as the above-
28
His faith the Hermit taught to wandering swains
And solitary pilgrims of the wilds —
Though not unmix'd with error ; yet his words
Brought consolation to the sorrowful,
And a dim glimmering of undying hopes
To men whose sole instruction came from him.
And thither came th' afflicted sons of toil
To seek for ease, and renovated health
When grim disease bow'd down their hardy strength.
For he had learnt the virtues of all herbs
Which fringe th' stream, grow in th' shelter'd brake,
Or creep along the upland's sunny side.
These, with meek blessings sanctified, he gave ;
And simple swains, with humble hearts, received ;
And even thought the fountain of the vale,
Which slak'd th' good man's thirst, had pow'rs to heal.
Unknown to Leech-craft, blest with sacred charms ;
And that his voice, so bland and musical
Chaunting his vesper hymn, had power to lull
The north wind in the madness of his might ;
For when the storm-beat shepherd left the hill,
Dismayed and wondering, and reach'd the vale,
Soon as the Solitary's voice he heard.
named senses were to me previous to my birth. These never rest or
•fix on any transitory or perishing object in this world, as extending
themselves to something further than can here be granted — and,
indeed, acquiescing only in the perfect — the Eternal— the Infinite."
— Of this beautiful theory, the story of the Dumb Boy, with its
episodes, is an attempted illustratiorf. But we wish to avoid swelling
tM« note to an inconvenient length ; we shall return to it again.
29
He found a still and boly quietude
Hung like a curtain round the sacred cell.*
Thus superstition weaves its mingled thread
Of piety and folly ; yet is it
Th' involuntary tribute of the heart
Which untaught nature offers to the good.
The shepherds have preserv'd the hermit's song ;
And still his meek and pious name revere,
Althoug-h their fathers have forsook his faith.
THE ANCHORITE'S EVENING HYMN
TO THE VIRGIN.
Virgin most beautiful ! in holy place,
Look from thy sapphire throne
Down on the sorrowful of erring race, —
Thou meek and blessed one.
Thou by the cross hast stood, and by the grave.
And wept as we do weep, powerless to save.
Handmaid most beautiful ! lady of love.
Whom every tongue shall bless ;
Whom once the Mighty One, the rich above,
Chose for thy lowliness.
* The valley open only to the south and the wind blowing from
the north, easily explains the supposed miracle and the foundation
of the legend.
30
Hence thou didst magnify His wondrous name
Who fill'd the hungry, cloth'd the proud with shame.
Virgin most merciful ! though brightly pure,
To frailty allied ;
Who, in our wilderness, didst once endure
The scorn of earth-born pride,
O teach us charity, that we may live —
Forgiving us, O teach us to forgive.
III.
The Hermit slept — and e'en his bones were dust,
When men of other faiths, alike sincere,
Arose. With stern fidelity of heart
They dared the dominating sect, and died
Claiming Man's noblest privilege — the right
Of private judgment on the will of God.
For this they gave their bodies to be burnt —
Yet burnt the men who differed from themselves.
Thus man has ever been a wolf to man,
E'en with the purest words upon his lips.
When power has pander'd to his lust and pride.
In those dread times, when persecution raged
Throughout the land, the good of ev'ry faith
Were smitten at the altar or the hearth.
Where'er or howsoe'er they worship'd God.
For sometimes Tyranny would persecute.
31
And sometimes curse with its vile aid, the cause
Which, left to man's unbiass'd sense of right,
Would lead him on to peace and charity.
A good old man, whose purity of faith
His foes discovered, by the fact too plain.
That his meek life adorn'd it, fled in haste
From the destrover to the wilderness.
The aged pilgrim, who had toil'd all day
With falt'ring steps beneath a summer's sun,
Reach'd, as the evening closed, the moorland hut.
Then a lone ruin in the forest dell.
The young companion of his flight, who held
His trembling hand, and look'd into his face
With eyes that smil'd, tho' tears were ling' ring there,
Would a yoimg shepherd of the forest seem,
If shepherd weeds could hide the loveliness
Of one more lovely than the fabled nymphs
Which haunt the forest with their huntress queen.
" Father," she said, " here have we shelter found.
Shelter is all we need — here let us rest.
We have refreshment for to-night, at least.
You have the Holy Book in which you read
Words of the Comforter : and I have still
My mother's wild Welsh harp, of varied song.
You oft have said its notes have power to charm
Away tlie cloud which dims the present hour ;
For they recal the days of many joys
To memory, though they're fled, and help the heart
:32
To rest upon the hours of many hopes,
Whicli, for the pure in heart, God has in store."
" Gertrude, my child, those hours of many hopes
Are not far distant," thus the ^ood man said.
" Why, like a tim'rous bird, ray child, have I
Fled to the desert, when the martyr's crown
Was just descending on my aching brow —
Good men and angels waiting to proclaim
Me more than conqueror through him I serve?
But that I longed to linger round thy path,
And fan those hopes into a quenchless flame,
Ere I depai't from earth, to be at rest.
Come, strike again thy harp of varied song,
And let its simple melody once more
Lull our worn hearts, or wearied souls, to rest."
Softly lier fingers touch'd the speaking chords.
As her meek heart breath'd forth her vesper song.
EVENING HYMN
OF THE
PERSECUTED PILGRIMS.
Lord of the Desert ! Mighty One
Who rul'st unseen, unheard,
Dost feed the flowers with thy dews,
Dost fill the forest bird ;
33
Receive the homage of our hearts,
Still trustful, though in fear,
Secure, in weakness, we repose.
For Tliou, our strength, art here.
Grim darkness fills the desert cave —
But Thou, our light, art here to save.
Lord of the Desert ! merciful
Are all thy ways to man,
Though men to men are merciless —
Whose lives are but a span ;
Save our destroyers from their guilt,
With snares our path who hem,
Let Thy protection shelter us.
And Thy forgiveness them.
Tinistful our wearied eyes we close,
Great guardian of the night's repose.
The peace, the persecutor never knows,
Descended on the pilgrims, and they slept.
But, ere the morn's dim grey had tum'd to light,
A hurried footstep through the cavern pass'd.
And broke the transient charm. Alarm'd, they rose,
Weak to resist, but mighty to endure.
"Footstep of darkness — echo of the night,
Whv dost thou wander where the feeble rest?"
34
Sternly the old man ask'd. A voice replied —
" Amolf of Heme brings tidings to his friend,
And God enable thee to meet them well.
Thy enemies have found thy last retreat — '
The pass is in their hands ; thy forfeit life
Thy recantation only can preserve."
" Father," the maiden cried, " there is one hope.
O turn not thus in anger from your child —
Behold me kneeling — kneeling at your feet,
That I may kiss them — wet them with my tears.
O, look upon me, see my agony.
And tear not from my heart that only hope."
With trembling hands he rais'd her from the ground,
And fondly bent his cheek to hers, and wept.
The stern defier of the tyrant — wept ;
The bigot's fearless conqueror, in tears
Shed the last weakness of a father's heart.
" Gertrude," he firmly said, " there is no hope,
Except in that which kills my hope in God.
To thee, young Arnolf, I bequeath my child ;
And to my native land, whate'er they be,
The consequences of my faithful life.
Thus faithful unto death. My task is done.
As on the thirsty flowers the dews descend,
The honey-blossom and the poison plant,
35
May God's compassion rest upon us all,
CoNDEMN'd of others, I WILL NONE CONDEMN'.*
The martyr pass'd through flames to his repose.
******
As to the thicket flies the trembling fawn,
Which sees its parent seized by ftirious hounds,
. So, from his death-scene, flew the heart-struck maid
Back to the valley of the hermitage.
And many days and many stormy nights
The villagers had sought for her in vain.
Arnolf remained in bonds. The vale, at length,
By accident, a moorland hunter sought.
There, by the fountain sat the forlorn maid,
Her long dark tresses waving heavily,
Wet and dishevell'd, to the moaning breeze ;
Her dimm'd eye wildly fix'd on vacant space,
Tearless, yet speaking grief no tears could ease ;
And in her hand, clench'd with convulsive grasp,
A remnant of the ashes of the pile
Was firmly clasp'd. The hunter paused, in doubt
Whether the dreadful spectacle was real —
Whether the maid was kindred yet to earth,
Or an unquiet ghost, whose cruel wrongs
Had broke the slumber of the sepulchre,
•"Dainnatus aliis, ipse neuiiiiem dumnat." — Grotins on the.
Denfh of Arminhi.*.
F 2.
36
(For so the Moorsman earnestly believed
The wrongs of life disturb the sleep of death ;
And cruel were the wrongs that maid had known.)
Unconscious of his presence, Gertrude sung,
With modulation sweet, her evening hymn ;
Then burst into a maniac laugh, and shriek'd —
" His aged locks ; his white — white, silvery hair —
Savage — they shall not burn my father's hair ! "
" O, every curse that follows wicked deeds
Awaits for those who did," the hunter said ;
" But none shall hurt one sacred lock of thine.
Until he tramples o'er the lifeless corpse
Of Hawke the Hunter."
" O the sky was red,"
In sad soliloquy the maid resumed,
" It blush'd with lurid anger when they flung
The old man to the roaring deadly flames !
But his white locks — O, they were beautiful !
I nurs'd them in my childliood ; 'twas my pride
To see them curling round his smiling face.
While his meek soul was blessing me —
To watch the glossy tinge of golden hue
Which shot across their deep and comely brown.
But darkness fell upon his spirit, care
And bitterness of soul, soon turn'd them white.
And then they tore him from my heart — yet on —
37
On — on — I followed to the last, and saw
The dark smoke passing through his aged locks,"
" My heart is weeping blood," old Hawke exclaim'd.
" Speak not of blood — the spirit of the fell,
The Powerful, will not allow it here.
He heard my shriek, here by the Hermit's cave.
'Twas He who gave me back my father's hair."
Here, to the hunter stretching forth her own.
She gave into his hands the sacred dust.
This precious relict on his bended knees
The aged swain received ; while burning tears,
Like water from the desert rock, flowed fast
O'er cheeks which tears had rarely wet before.
But, as he touched the maiden's profferd hand,
'Twas burnt and rigid, stiff and motionless.
Gently he led her to the hermit's fount.
To lave it in its healing waters cool ;
While she look'd wistfully upon her hand,
Or sadly look'd into the hunter's face.
Like an unconscious, unresisting child.
'' Go home with me," he said ; " and share with them
My children's portion — happier days may come ;
And night and morning thou shalt say thy prayers ;
And we will learn to add our prayers to thine."
f3.
38
She rested on his friendly arm and wept,
Unconscious of the meaning of his words ;
Whate'er it was, she saw 'twas kindly meant ;
And as the shower the sun-scorch'd plant revives,
So did her tears refresh her stricken heart.
And, as the mother guides her wayward child
From hidden danger, with the gentlest mien,
The rude old hunter led her from the vale.
Arnolf released, soon flew to claim his bride,
(But many months of dread suspense had pass'd
O'er the young lover, in his prison cell.^
Her mind its native energy had gain'd,
But settled sadness rested on her soul.
She knew, she valued, and return'd, his love ;
But, from the world she shrunk with cureless dread.
Their bridal mansion was the Hermit's cave —
And that became their dwelling-place, their home^
Its eastern oriel was their place of prayer —
Where Celtic mothers had adored the Sun;
Where Romish devotees had worn the rock
Keeping long vigils to their patron saints ;
The banish'd Protestants, whom love had join'd,
Bowed down in meek sincerity to pray.
Such is the progress of the human soul
In ev'ry age, in ev'ry land: mankind
Have felt their homage to the Cause of all
39
Was justly due — which they could only pay
According to the knowledge which they had.
Pause, child of dust — condemner of the weak !
What is the motive of thy furious zeal?
Is it to man thou'rt labouring to do good ?
Look on his errors with a brother's pain —
And on his sorrows with a brother's grief.
Is it to God — the Great unveil'd — the Good,
Thy trembling spirit struggles to display
Its anxious homage, and its pious zeal ?
Seek to acquire a knowledge of His will.
According to the means which He has given.
That knowledge of His will acquired — obey !
Thus shall thy life be filled with all the bliss,
Which in a space so brief can be contained ;
And Death shall rock thee like a child to sleep,
Tired of its sports and satisfied with joy.
Long did young Arnolf and his Gertrude live.
The precepts of the martyr in their hearts,
Were in their plain and humble lives displayed-
Save that they shunned his proselyting zeal.
They lived in solitude and died in peace.
rv.
Their sons were dark-hair'd shepherds of the moor,
Sturdy of limb, patient of toil, and brave.
Their hearth, the scene of hospitality
Became ; their cot, enlarged, a moorland farm.
40
They knew but this — they never had a foe,
And every human thing that cross'd their path
Bore, in their sight, the stamp of brotherhood.
They heard, indeed, of rank, and wealth, and war ;
Of mad contention, of deceit, and woe :
For these were oft by long-known beggars named,
And gave old Ralph the pedlar power to waste,
With stories of distress, the long dark night.
For many generations they remain'd
Thus simple, hardy, humble, poor, content.
*****
/
A mother of the vale — whose sons a storm
Had caiight, benighted on the hill, while there
Warm in the joys and perils of the chase —
Went forth at midnight with a flambeau lamp,
That its faint beams might guide them, or her voice
Might fondly warn them homeward. But the stream,
Swollen by the midnight rains, had filled the gorge.
The pass into the vaUey ; and her sons
Saw the light die among the boiling foam.
And heard her death-shriek echo thro' the dell.
And oft, in after times, they fondly deemed
Her warning voice pass'd by them on the breeze,
When secret danger lurk'd around their path.
And often, in the silent twilight hour
Which links the day and night together, they,
Returning from the upland with their spoil.
Invoked her, as their mother, in the pass,
And thought the echoing voice which made reply,
41
Spoke oracles of highest worth to them.
" Sons of the Echo," thence their youth were nam'd.
Tradition has preserved their chorus song.
CHORUS OF FOREST HUNTERS,
OR, SONG OF THE
SONS OF THE ECHO.
Queen of the valley,
Who dost dwell
In the wood echo's
Citadel.
The day's last light is on the mountain ;
The vesper star hangs o'er thy fountain.
Thou in thy cloudy car hast been
Where th' earth's fairest sights are seen.
Sprite of the Moorland — viewless voice.
Which way to wealth should be our choice ?
Speak, if thou hearest. Speak, O, speak.
Echo.
Speak, O, speak.
QUESTION.
Far o'er the waters are their lands
Whore gold is like the river sands ?
ANSWER.
The river sands !
42
QUESTION.
Where, in the groves of rich perfume,
Earth's fairest blossoms ever bloom ?
ANSWER.
Ever bloom !
QUESTION.
Where, in the deep night of the mine,
The flame like diamonds richly shine ?
ANSWER.
Richly shine !
QUESTION.
Who plucks them from their gloomy grave ?
The nobly free, or fettered slave ?
ANSWER.
Fettered slave !
CHORUS.
Carryl, Harold, Hubert bold.
What have we to do with gold ?
What with the woods of rich perfume ?
What with diamond cavern's gloom ?
No thoughts of these shall ever move us ;
Our wealth's at home, in hearts that love us.
Our wealth's at home — at home — at home.
None else shall move us.
In those we love, and those that love us.
43
V.
From these my father was descended ; but
Pursuit of wild adventure, or of gain,
Had drawn into the vortex of the world
His kindred of the vale ; and he alone,
In uncorrupted purity, retained
Their manly habits and their simple fame.
My own first feelings let me now recal.
The gradual opening of my infant mind,
Ere Education had dispell'd the cloud
Which hung upon my soul : that awful doubt,
That consciousness that nought was well explain'd,
Which made the common intercourse of life
Appear a dark bewildering mystery.
Where all the senses in sweet concord act,
Soon as the eye can sparkle at the light ;
As curls into a smile the infant lip —
The ear drink in the lullaby of love
Which the fond mother chaunts — the child beains
To lose its artless, simple childishness.
And ev'ry hour does make it less a child.
But, where one avenue to truth is closed,
One medium thro' which knowledge lights th' soul
Is dimm'd, the child's simplicity remains
Through youth's gay stages, on to manhood's bloom.
The thoughts and feelings of a child remain'd
With me to young maturity ; and thus
They are, as 'twere, engraven on my heart.
44
Our cot was sheltered by a lofty rock,
On whose rough sides, in gay festoons, were hung
Sweet honeysuckle coronals, entwined
On the wild-briar, with its simple rose.
And leaping gladly on from ledge to ledge
A little waterfall fell trickling down,
Like stream of falling diamonds, till 'twas lost
In its soft bed of snowv, dancing; foam.
This was the fountain of the Anchorite,
From which a streamlet dash'd along the vale.
Th' Avild flowers drank its Avaters, and imbib'd
A stronger fragrance and a livelier hue
From what they sipp'd. And thus along the dell,
E'en where its silvery waters were conceal'd,
Its wild, capricious course was traced
By fresher verdure and a deeper bloom.
The morning called me forth to sport all day
Among the bonny flowers which strew'd the dell ;
And evening found me with delight fatigued.
All day I saw no face but those I loved ;
At night their fondness hush'd me to repose.
Unknowing evil — dreaming not of care,
I knew no wish unsatisfied — no want
Or fear of want — / knew not I was dumb !
Or that I needed ought, to me denied.
But granted to the fortunate and gay.
Sometimes, indeed, I saw a falling tear
Veil the dark flashes of my father's eye,
45
AVhen pressing me in fondness to his heart.
And I \vas troubled with the dreadful thought
That I had pain'd him. Then his lips would move :
My mother's, too, would move in sad reply.
My own were motionless, or mov'd in vain!
My mother then would strive, with signs of love,
Some answer to her own impassioned looks
From me to draw, I knew not how to give.
She then would turn away in agony,
Of vain regret and disappointed love.
A shadow thus would cross my infant mind.
Leaving behind a dark bewildering doubt ;
But like the cloud which rides the summer breeze,
It flitted by — and all was bright again.
At length the guardian of our little flock.
My father, went one storaiy day to town.
The winter snows wei*e meltino- on the hills —
Th' first spring rains had swoU'n the troubled streams,
The beauteous fountain of the i-ock, enraged,
Rush'd down a cataract of boiling foam.
Years passed away, ere I could understand
What had befallen. But this the simple tale.
My father marshall'd on his fleecy charge,
With stem command, or checr'd them like a friend ;
Until, alarm'd, they rush'd into a stream,
And strove to pass an oft-accustomed ford.
Through which, in summer days, they plash'd along,
46
O'er shining pebbles, now the torrent's bed.
My father followed them and strove to save,
But, with his struggling charge, was swept away.
— The Dumb Boy's father never spoke again.
The color of my life was changed. Till then
I knew not sorrow — never heard of Death —
Or of his follower's grief, and want, and fear.
That direful day belongs not to the past —
'Tis present still — 'tis always with my soul,
Its memory will not die : like other days
Which come and go, and then are with the dead-
It does not fade. 'Tis burnt into my heart.
I can relate each strange, bewildering scene,
As one by one they struck my aching sight,
And froze my heart with terrors unexplained.
I watch'd my father winding down the vale.
The storm was raging fearfully. His flock,
With heads hung down, and slow, unwilling gait,
Well taught by instinct, slowly left the plain.
E'en bold old Rover, faithful to his task,
That else went forth with wild exulting bound,
Turn'd from the storm, and piteously look'd back.
My father only seemed unmov'd and stern.
My mother, busied with domestic cares,
Left me all day to count the lagging hours
When from the town mv father would return.
47
With joy I hail'd the twilight's gathering gloom.
His savory meal was smoking on the hearth ;
His well-dried garments waiting ; and his chair
Already occupied his favorite nook ;
A stool beside, that I might sit and rest
My head upon his knee. 'Twas ready all.
My mother, smiling at my eager looks,
Sign'd that my father now would soon be home,
. Parted my locks, and while her moving lips
Seem'd uttering holy words, impress'd my brow
With one long, sweet, impassioned kiss of love.
— Then starting wildly, flung me from her arms.
A stranger youth came rushing through the storm,
(I shut my eyes — the spectre still is here,)
With livid cheek, with pale and trembling lip.
Some tale of dread he told, I could not hear.
(I never wish'd for power to hear till then.)
My mother's agony, like scorpion stings,
Thrill'd thro' my quivering heart. I knew not why
The stranger's stoiy should have pain'd her so.
I fondly seiz'd her hand — she heeded not —
She flung me from her ! — rush'd into the storai —
I look'd, the stranger boy was also gone,
And I, bewildered and alarm 'd, alone.
— I look'd around — the cottage seem-d to smile
In cheerful blaze of fagots on the hearth
As it was wont to look at evening time.
When from the chase or from the field he came ;
48
And all was ready now for his return.
Then first some vague suspicion stung my soul,
That all was vain. — Mv heart felt lock'd in ice.
Soon through the twilight came a mournful train
Of men, with looks apjiall'd, who brought a bier.
Our friendly neighbours, thronging all around,
Who in the hamlet live, far down the stream.
My mother, in the dreadful interval, so changed,
That lonely, trembling, unobserv'd, I stood
And look'd into her face, and scarcely knew
The features love had graven on ray heart.
Her long dark tresses, not in comely bonds.
But floating wildly to the troubled breeze.
No tear was in her eye — but there was grief
No tears had power to mitigate ; 'twas fixed,
As if by fascination, on the bier,
Where lay some object dreadful to behold,
From which she had no power to turn away.
I mix'd among the crowd to look at it —
It was my father, liush'd in tranquil sleep !
I felt his dark brown locks, and they were wet.
His eyes were scarcely closed. His parted lips
Were motionless and pale, and pale his cheek.
But what I chiefly look'd for, still was there.
A smile of quiet happiness and peace —
Of mental rest, of sweet enduring love.
While that remain'd mv father was not chang'd !
49
Though fear of evils which I knew not of
Shot through my quivering heart — I lost not hope —
I never dreamt he would not wake a^ain.
Officious hands soon bore him from my sight.
Why came my mother not to comfort me ?
She knew no other could explain the scene.
And there I wander'd through the gazing crowd,
All looking on me with their dreadful eyes,
As if stern heaven had fix'd some mark on me,
Dividing me from sympathy and care.
One after one I took their trembling hands —
They shrunk with horror ; led them to the fire,
Show'd them the meal was waitinor his return ;
Then felt his garments — show'd them they were dry ;
But still they wept, and still they shrunk away.
Wearied, bewilder' d, and alarm'd, at length
I sat me down upon my little seat
To rest my head upon his chair, and wept.
Brief record of a day of lasting pain !
The day which shut out childhood from my mind,
With all its passionless and tranquil joys.
I sunk into a troubled fever'd sleep,
A child — and woke from it a care-struck Man.
The sun had mounted o'er the hills, his beams
Stream'd on my lonely couch, I woke,
(Some friendly hand had laid me on my bed.)^
50
A vague sensation of some evil change
Flasli'd tln-ough my mind — I rusli'd towards the vale.
Surprised, I found the fields, the stream, the flowr's>
Unchang'd and beautiful : the midnight storm
Had but refresh'd them ; and the morning sun
Look'd on his favorite children with a smile.
— There is no sadness of the soul so deep
As that which fills the heart condemn'd to look
In desolation on the scenes it once
Look'd on with fondness, when 'twas fill'd willi joy.
Nature is always beautiful, in calm or storm ;
But as it gains its beauty through the eye,
So all its pleasantness is from the heart ;
The varying, changeful weather of the mind,
Makes all things beautiful or all things sad.
The tranquil happiness which reigTi'd around,
Which oft, till now, had nurs'd my fairest dreams,
And lull'd my spirit like a soothing balm,
Oppress'd my heart. Again I sought the cot ;
But that which made it home no more was there.
My mother was forbidden from my sight ;
And of my father, all I knew was, that
Some dreadful mystery hung around his bed,
For there he slept, and all were weeping round.
Thus, many days in agonising doubt
Pass'd slowly by, and all was mystery still.
At length a friendly train of neighbour guests
Came thronging round the cottage, and I saw
They had prepared to move him from his bed.
51
Was now tlie hour my father would awake f
A mingled gleam of hope and agony,
Like an electric thrill, pass'd through my heart.
Onward we journey'd to the field of graves ;
My soul absorb'd in wonder, not despair.
The closing scene, as all I can describe.
The setting sun was sinking to the hill ;
The air was hush'd into a holy calm ;
A yellow lustre rested on the fields.
Clothing all earthly things in hues of heaven.
With solemn looks, all circled round the bier ;
And one, who seem'd a minister of good.
The vassal of some power, to me unknown,
Seem'd whisp'ring benedictions to the crowd.
The locks of age were bared — the curls of youth-
As if all felt the presence of some power
Mighty and Merciful, in whose dread hands
The destinies of trusting man were plac'd .
Perhaps the mighty Lord and cause of all !
His name to me unknown ; but Him my soul
Had look'd for and acknowledged in the dark ;
For simple nature never disbelieves
Or even doubts the Being of a God :
It is the wasted learning of the wise
Which to that climax of absurdity,
Conducts the vain, delighted to grow blind.
u2.
52
What ! would it all at last conclude in joy ?
Would some great power, descending from his throne,
Awake him from his frozen, dreadful sleep,
And give him to our arms ? My blood was fire !
And expectation turn'd to phrenzy now.
At last they placed him in the cruel grave,
And sign'd to me that I must go away.
What ! go away and leave my father there ?
I rush'd into his grave— I tried to speak —
My heart, I thought, had burst — my tortured brain
Could bear no more — and all around grew dark.
I fell into a deadly sleep ; and hours.
And nights, and days, unheeded pass'd.
A mass of images, disjoin'd and wild,
Floated before my fevered, aching sight.
— At times, old Rover, and the frighted flock
Rush'd by me furiously in wild alarm ;
— Then would my father hold his face to mine,
His bright eye fiU'd with love and tenderness,
And then a whirlwind hurl'd him from my sight ;
Then, as I stood beside our cottage hearth.
With deep impatience waiting his return.
My mother, stooping to caress and bless me —
Impenetrable darkness fell on all —
I, in the sable cloud, bewildered, lost !
And then would come the dreadful messenger ;
And, following him, the weeping, fear-struck crowd,
53
All gazing on me with their dreadful eyes,
As some fate-stricken, doom'd, and blighted thing^.
To shun these spectre visages, I turn'd.
And saw one gazing on me with unchanging love ;
It did not move — it did not turn away —
It settled, like a fix'd, substantial form.
A flood of recollections rush'd on me.
In that pale, pensive, lovely countenance,
Of watchful tenderness, I recognized
My mother's face — I rush'd into her arms :
O, how I long'd to speak to her, and hear
The soothing melody of her sweet words !
For, ah, our meeting eyes the truth had told,
That I was all to her — she all to me.
My health restored, our cot again became
A scene of sweet tranquility. The flowers
Of summer met the autumn blasts, and died.
Winter, with long dark nights and gusty storms,
Had held his surly rule, and pass'd away ;
And the spring flowers again were in their bloom ;
Sadness succeeded grief; we loved in peace.
Not now unknowing sorrow, as of yore ;
That happy ignorance could ne'er return,
But sweet affection sooth'd our soften'd pain:
When strangers visited our lonely cot.
And held my mother long in deep discourse,
She thaiik'd them with her smiles, then look'd on me,
And burst into an agony of grief.
G 3.
54
She sign'd to mc to say that they were good,
And meant us kindly, hut that we must jmrt.
O, what was good to me apart from her ?
— It was decreed. I with the strangers went,
To meet with crowds, but still to be alone :
For loneliness of heart was there my lot.
— My mother died — I saw her face no more.
I went to where bland Charity provides
Instruction for the destitute, and there
Soon learnt my lot to understand, and thus
To make brief record of my simple tale.
O, Immortality ! Life of the Soul !
Thou art no vision of the dreamer's mind,
Sprung from the care-fill'd heart — no fancied cure
For real evil — Life's realities
Are but the phantom's of the cheated sense.
Ideal mockeries, compared to thee.
The harmony or discord of the nerve
With strong delusion haunts the troubled brain,
But its unseen, retired inhabitant,
The seeming unsubstantial home of Thought,
Alone has substance.* Adamantine rocks
* Alone has substance. — Sir Humphrey Davy, when under
the influence of nitrous oxide, exclaimed to Dr. Kinglakc, "Nothing
exists but thouglits; the universe is composed of impressions, ideas,
pleasures, and pains !" The author, however, only means that no
material thing has an enduriny substance. A union of atoms gave
it existence, a separation of its atoms destroys — and the diamond of
the mine becomes like the bubble of the stream " a nonentity "
55
Melt like the vapours of a summer's morn ;
The heavens and the earth become as nought,
Their atoms separate, they are no more ;
E'en should their atoms perish at the word *
Of Him who bade them be, Thought will endure.
The holy impulses, the glowing love,
Called by Time's flitting objects into life,
Are for Eternity. Material things,
With their constituent particles, may pass ;
But from His presence never can depart
Those whom His love created to enjoy,
And wooed to love Him, as their greatest good.
That love is sweet reality. The sense,
The trembling heart, the half-material mind,t
* From what was recorded of the atomic philosophy of Leucippus,
the philosopher of Abdera, who flourished 428 years before Christ,
down to the recorded opinions of modern system-mongers, whether
we examine the Theism of Plato or the Atheism of Epicurus, or the
opinions of their followers, it is not easy for us to find any opinion
so satisfactory as that — The existence as icellas the arrangment
of the atoms or constituent particles of the universe is the result of
the will of Him who said "let there be light and there was light." —
What Reginald here glances at, aud will perhaps contend for more at
length at some future time, is that the annihilation of matter,
the agent created only to cause impressions on mind, would be
perfectly consistent with the perfections of the Deity. But the
anniliilation of miiul in its state of imperfection yet showing such vast
capabilities of perfection ; its destruction as an abortive intelligence,
would be inconsistent with the perfections of the moral governor of
the universe.
tTuE iiALi'-MATEUiAL MIND. — This Tcfcrs xiot to ihc 9 ubstame
but the/fW«/^V.«of the mind. It is evident that a large proportion
of our faculties, the animal propensities, have reference only to our
present state of existence. When therefore, we "shuffle ofl" the
mortal coil" these, in all probability, will remain with us only in fhch
56
With all their objects, give it birth and die j
Like flowers of the wilderness, they fade,
But, dying, shed their everlasting seed —
The spirit — germ of never-dying Thought.
Each baffled hope becomes a substance then ;
Love, like a banish'd angel, is recall'd
To dwell for ever in its seat of bliss ;
And Joy, a winged messenger of heaven,
But seen to vanish in this wilderness,
Becomes the fix'd companion of the soul.
Such is the Dumb Boy's destiny. He lov'd.
That love immortal might inform his mind :
The objects of it died, that he might know
His final, everlasting dwelling-place
is not among his kindred of the earth.
Lady, farewell, the Dumb Boy knows your sign,
'Tis loveliness with kindness sweetly blended.
effects. How beautiful is, then, the idea of Lord Herbert; that,
thus unencumbered, the nobler faculties of the soul may expand,
and display powers as wonderful as the eye and the ear did at our
birth into this world. That the faculties which even the lower
propensities have called into action are blossoms of eternity. The
mind does not die, like its kindred of the earth; it does not perish
with its first love, but struggles on to more than can here be granted —
to the enjoyment of the Pbrfect— the Infinite — the Eter-
NAI,.
57
LINES
Addressed to the senior boys of the West of England
Deaf and Dumb Institution, suggested by a visit
to that excellent and most interesting estab-
lishment.
I tried to read with care your silent looks —
They spoke intelligence and happiness.
I came to pity, but I found you blest
Beyond the common lot of those who dwell
Among life's cares and vanities. I thought
Of you as exiled and cut off, deprived
Of life's mild courtesies, communion sweet
Of mingling souls, and interchange of mind,
I deem'd creation's ever-varvinjj scenes.
To you a fair inexplicable blank —
And such you were, and such were nature's works
To you — till mild philanthrophy devised
(Taught by the sciences which serve the good,)
Th' means to wake your slumb'ring powers of thought,
And reach'd each forlorn spirit's loneliness.
Now as the sparkle of each speaking eye
Proclaims our thought made yours; as you record
58
With rapid hand upon the wall your own,
We hail the dawning of each deathless mind,
And welcome kindred spirits to the light
Of immortality and endless joy.
To think you happy, and to see you pleased,
Is the reward of those who do you good ;
And every hour of happiness you taste
Made happier, sweeter, by the good you learn,
Will be to them a source of future joy,
A pearl dropp'd into heaven's chancery.
Swift as the mind conceives, the silent hand
Records upon the wall the passing thought ;
But your's, unlike the mystic hand which wrote
The message of high wrath to Babylon,
When, sunk in sloth and luxury profane,
Her prince brought forth the golden vessels meant
To grace the temple services, to aid
In rights unholy to his gods obscene.
E'en while the Persian, at his hundred gates,
Waited to quench his revelry in blood.
Your's, though in silence moved, speaks to the eye
Of mild benevolence, a gentler truth —
A sweeter and a kinder message, sent,
Like the pluck'd olive leaf, to waken hope
Though travelling on the confines of despair!
— Fathers who deemed you in the living woihl
Dead to its joys and comforts, now behold
You link'd in sweet communion to your kiiul :
— Mothers, who saw with breaking hearts your eyes
59
Fix'd in mute eloquence of love on theirs,
And strove from your unconscious lips to draw
The answering sound in vain, here read the words
Of sweet affection, which you could not speak.
With meek delight, and are at length consoled.
In you we see the wonder-working hand
Of Him, who, in his bounty wise, bestows
The proper portion of his good on all.
And would not leave you hopeless, though bereft.
His stern rebuke the ruthless north wind hears.
When from the frozen caves he rushes forth
And locks the billows in his cold embrace,
Traversing wilds of never-melting snows;
Yet on our shores his reckless wing he folds.
And visits, with a harmless kiss, the rose,
Charsfed that he swell not with too rude a breath
The scarce fledg'd linnet's yet unpractised wing ;
Charm'd to a zephyr, he is taught to breathe
In gentlest whispers round the fresh clipp'd lamb :
Lambs of His sacred fold ! 'tis thus for you
God tempers keen affliction into good.
You know my sign ! In kindness think of me;
I shall retain remembrances of you;
I wish you good and hajjpy. Now farewell.
GO
AMUSEMENTS AT THE BARTON HOUSE.
" Sheltered from the blight, Ambition,
Fatal to the pride of rank."
Cunningham.
" Gay hope is their's, by Fancy fed.
Less pleasing when possest ;
The tear forgot as soon as shed,
The sunshine of the breast;
Their's buxom health, of rosy hue,
Wild wit, Invention ever new,
And lively cheer of vigour born ;
The thoughtless day, the easy night,
The spirits pure, the slumbers light,
That fly the approach of morn."
Gray.
Reginald's story being completed, a long pause ensued,
and it seemed as if each person present was occupied with
the emotions it had occasioned. Mrs. Aubrey was the
first to break silence. Although her looks had betrayed
great satisfaction at some passages of the tale which had
pleased her, it had greatly affected her, for it had recalled
to her remembrance scenes in which she had taken a deep
61
and melancholy interest. " Poor fellow," said she, " it
is dreadful to reflect that, in addition to his sufferings
occasioned by the death of his parents, he was haunted
for a year or two with a needless dread of poverty.
" And that dread was needless ?" said I, eagerly.
" Yes, indeed," said she. " His father and mother
lived in the retired manner he has described more from
choice than poverty. The estate they farmed was their
own ; and, from their frugal manner of life, every year
increased their store ; and a very short time before his
mother's death, a relation, who had made money abroad,
left her a very comfortable provision for herself and son.
She had just taken the necessary legal steps to secure
this property, and had made a will in which she had
appointed Mr. Aubrey and two neighbouring gentlemen
her son's guardians, when an accident deprived her of life,
Reginald being at the time at the institution. But I must
drop the subject ; see how eagerly he is watching my lips, .
he will find out what I am talking about, and it will
break his heart."
" It surprises me," madam, " said I, making an effort
to pass from the melancholy part of the subject, " that,
sincerely as he appears to be attached to you and Mr.
Aubrey, he does not name you in his tale as friends of
his early days."
" We were not much known to him in his childhood,"
she replied. " We resided in a distant part of the county
until the death of Mr. Aubrey's father, who, during his
lifetime, occupied the Barton House. He died at a great
G2
age, a short time previous to Mrs. Arnolf's deatli ; but
she was well known to us, having hcexi distantly related
to Mr. Aubrey. Her huslwnd — pei-haps you will be
surprised to hear — though a plain moor farmer, was a
well-informed man, although his studies were of a peculiar
kind — he had read a great deal of the controversial
divinity of past ages ; and I rather think his son must
have gained much of his antiquarian lore from records he
had made of the oral traditions of the country."
" It is not, madam," said I, " altogether a singular
instance, although such instances are now becoming very
rare. The old Protestant families of the county, from
whom the illustrious victims were selected to give their
testimony to what they believed to be the truth, in the
persecutions under Mary, esteemed it a religious duty of
the first importance carefully to instruct their descendants
in the faith of the Martyrs. Hence there survived among
them, even after some of them had fallen into poverty
and obscurity, a taste for such learning as you have
described. This was greatly aided by such families pos-
sessing larger collection of books than were then gener-
ally found in the possession of agricultural families.
These were, no doubt, calculated to perpetuate the preju-
dices as well as the faith of those who had contended in
the awful times of persecution, but they served to cherish
a love for contemplative habits and speculative studies,
where you would least expect to find them. However,
this accidental possession of the means of gratifying such
tastes, did not usually affect alike the different members
G3
even of tlie same family. Accordino- to tlicir natural
disposition?, one boy, perhaps, would be struck with the
love of learning (for such was the name given to it,)
while the others would remain mere fiddlers, wrestlers, or
fox-hunters. In such cases, however, the learned boy was
not considered, as might be expected, the flower of the
family — in many cases he has been considered as good for
but little, and his attachment to literature esteemed a
misfortune,"
" And very justly too," said Mr. Aubrey, " too much
of it to occupy a man's thoughts who has to make a
market of the productions of his hands, depend upon it
is not good ; and what earthly use is a vast deal of that
dismal stuff" you call antiquarian learning, a raking among
the bones of the dead to find out the vanities and follies
of past ages. As to that boy's story, Mrs. Aubrey thinks
it does him credit ; and it certainly does some credit to
his feelings ; but for my part I wish I had not heard it :
it is all very well for young people to indulge in those
dismal amusements, but melancholy thoughts are bad
companions for an old man to go to bed with. But,
Dinah," said he, addressing his daughter, a pretty rosy
maiden of the Moor, about seventeen, " was there not
something in it about a Harp ?"
Dinah, who perfectly understood the tendency of this
far-off" question, blushed deeply, and replied, " Certainly,
sir."
" Certainly there was," said Ernest Mortimer, starting
up, for he took the hint ; " there was something said
04
about 'A wild Welsh harp of varied song;' and Miss
Dinah's harp, sir, only needs to be moved a very little
out of that corner, and it will be all ready."
" Very good, very good," said the jovial old squire,
delighted at the prospect of changing the amusement ;
" Let us have a little music and a song or two : in the
mean time I shall go a little nearer to the chimney —
those gentlemen who like it will be so obliging as to join
me — we will try what a pipe and a jug of amber ale, to-
gether with music and singing, can do to drive this
melancholy story, and everything else that is melancholy
out of our heads to-night. "And, Dinah " he continued,
" Ernest is the stranger to-night, and seems, moreover,
much inclined to make himself useful to you, do try to
select a song which will be to his taste."
Dinah, as she took her place at the instrument, again
blushed deeply, as if her father had thus expressed aloud
what she had been thinking of. Earnest appeared to
understand the blush, for his eyes seemed to flash fire,
as he busied himself with the manuscripts of songs, and
selected for himself one the title of which seemed to
please him.
The only objection which I conceived there would be
to this kind of amusement was, that poor Reginald would
be excluded from all participation in it ; but I was mis-
taken : Mrs. Aubrey had informed him what was about to
take place, and, by supplying him with a manuscript of
the song to be sung, had put him in possession of the
substance of our entertainment ; he therefore sat keenly
G5
observing tlie manner of the singer, and the effects of
each passage of the song on us, and, as it proceeded, ac-
tually seemed to take as much interest in the thing as any-
one present.
After a short prelude, Dinah, with much sweetness,
sang the following
SONG.*
THE SAILOR'S WIFE to her SLEEPING INFANT.
The tempest cloud with sullen frown
Rides on the fierce-wing-'d blast of Nigrht,
And surges crested white with foam.
With restless rage and ruthless might
Break on the sea-beach rapidly :
* This juvenile production of the author's is inserted here in
consequence of its havina: had the good fortune 1o be very prettily
set to music, by Mr- Peter Foot, of Ashburton, Devon, who has suc-
ceeded in giving to his music a sweetness of expression, which, to a
certain extent, corrects Ihe deficiency of the lines. The author begs
to take this opportunity of explaining why so many of these lyrics
are introduced into the story. It is, with him, not so much a matter
of taste as of necessity. It was these songs, and other poems which
have already appeared in the periodicals, ichich he icas requested to
collect and re-puhlish ; the present volume, therefore, oices its origin
to that request. As many of these songs 7)iust appear in the work,
he conceives he can, by weaving them into the narrative, so arrange
them as to make them amusing, by their variety, — an advantage
which they would have entirely lost if they hiid been all placed to-
gether at the end. However slight the thread which unites them, or
however insigniiicant in themselves, like the shreds of paper which
form the ornaments of the tail of a boy's kite, they may look some-
what the better for being tied together. Those, therefore, who con-
demn the introduction of songs into a jirose narrative, will have the
kindness to remember that the songs arc not written for the story but
the story for the songs — at least the present chapter.
66
Yet, sweet my ))oy thy sleep sliall be,
No storm witliin thy guiltless breast.
And guardian angels wait on thee
To watch thy couch of harmless rest,
And guard the sleep of purity.
But anxious fears thy mother feels,
Which from her eyelids slumber chase,
As by thy side she weeping kneels
And gazes on thy infant face.
Unconscious, smiling placidly.
With fond delight I think I see
(Delight, though sore chastised with pain,)
The smile of him, who far at sea
Strives with the all-resistless main.
And tempest raging fearfully.
Hard toiling on the reeling deck,
No rest to-night thy father knows—
If, sinking with the shatler'd wreck,
Around his head the billows close,
Raging in might resistlessly ;
Still then on thee, my boy, he thinks,
His heart, disdaining selfish fears,
Still is his soul, as low he sinks,
For thee and for thy future years.
In prayer uplifted anxiously.
67
'' Now, Mr. Ernest Mortimer," said Mr. Aubrey,
who, whatever he might think of the song, certainly
spoke in a tone expressive of a sly satisfaction, at the
manner in which the pi-etty Dinah had executed it,
" Now Ernest, ray friend," said he, " since you left us
you have heard the songs of other lands : you have heard
the harpings, and the guitarings, and the semi-demi-
quaverings of the brilliant beauties of the continent, who
are said greatly to excel, in those accomplishments, the
fair daughters of Britain ; we wish to give you an oppor-
tunity of showing us how you have improved by that
advantage,"
" I have enjoyed that advantage," said Ernest, " it is
most true ; but I fear you will find, sir, that I have pro-
fited by it but little. However great may be the admira-
tion with which we hear the songs of foreign lands, it is
when absent from her that the songs of our native isle
find the most faithful and certain echo in our hearts. In-
stead, therefore, of a fresh importalion from Venice or
Naples, since your choice has fallen on me, I must offer
you a song altogether British, entitled
THE MEETING OF THE EXILES.*
Thy prOiTer'd hand though cold to nio,
Come, stranger, let me press,
And IViendly shall our greeting be,
Though in tlie wilderness.
* Music—" In the Merry Morn."
68
Thou canst not take the kinsman's part,
Thou canst not fill the dveavy void
Which dwells within the banish'd heart
Where hope and love have been destroy'd.
But thou hast wander'd far, like me,
From where thy kindred dwell,
And felt the cureless agony
Breath'd in a last farewell ; ^
It is enough, I take thy hand ;
I ask not friendship warm from thee,
But this I feel — the stranger's land
Is cold alike to thee and me.
Then pledge with me this rosy bowl,
And quaff right valiantly,
One feeling fills each fearless soul.
And this our pledge shall be —
The heart which bleeds but rarely bends,
And bravely onward to the close
Maintains its generous warmth for friends.
Its noble scorn for heartless foes.
"This is pressing us close, Julian," said Mr. Aubrey,
laughing ; " and we must not be unmindful of our Moor-
land reputation ; I think we must give them something of
our own: shall we have "My dwelling I've made with
the Brave and the Free ?"
Julian cheerfully complied, and gave the following
G9
SONG.
Let me tlwell on the hill, there the rude tempest daring,
Let me tread its rough side, though 'tis sterile and bare,
Though the keen winter blast is there fiercely careering.
No breath of the slave has e'er tainted the air ;
And the wild hunter's cabin my palace shall be,
For my dwelling I'll make with the brave and the free.
An aged man came to the porch of my dwelling,
In the heat of the noon where I sought to recline ;
Of the pleasures of wealth and of pomp was he telling —
Saying, sell but thy freedom, and wealth shall be thine.
Ah ! no, I replied, pomp is needless to me.
For my dwelling I've made with the brave and the free.
A fair maiden there came, with the smile of the lovely.
Though a tear like a pearl dimm'd the beam of her eye ;
With love's witching words 'twas her purpose to move me ;
Music dwelt on her lip, full of love was her sigh.
No, I cannot sell freedom to buy even thee.
For I've sworn that I'll dwell with the brave and the free.
Like the wild bird which floats on tlie breeze of the
mountain,
With its pinions unclipp'd and its voice unrestrain'd ;
Like the wild deer which sips at the gush of the fountain.
Will I live — and the yoke shall by me be disdain'd ;
And my last wish on earth, when I leave it, shall be,
Lay me gently to rest with the brave and the free.
70
The following morning tlie whole party assembled a1
the breakfast-table.
" I hope, sir," said Tom Stirlington, addressing Mr.
Aubrey, that Reginald's melancholy story has left no
permanent ill effects with you."
" Not the least," replied he ; " and I am now almost
ashamed of having been so much affected by it last night.
My excuse must be, that I knew the parties, and respected
them."
" If I mistake not," said the wine merchant, you have
no objection to the amusement of story telling — your ob-
jection is to that particular tale ?"
'' You are perfectly right," replied Mr. Aubrey ; "■ I
like the amusement, but I must confess to you that I would
rather hear a cheerful story than a sad one. Nothing is
more painful to me than to become interested for parties
during the progress of a tale, and to see them left in
irremediable difficulties and misfortunes at the end. I
might be pleased even with a story of distress, but it
must have a fortunate and happy conclusion."
" Then I think," replied Tom Stirlington, " I know a
story which would suit you exactly : it relates to the
adventures of a simple-minded creature, whose good-
humoured vanity, which aimed at general approbation,
had, at one time surrounded him with all the comical
distresses which usually cause so much misery to the
sufferer, but so much amusement to others ; and whose
destiny conducted him so well through them, that he is
now as happy as a good-tempered little blocldiead can be."
71
" That is the sort of thing I should like to hear," said
the squire. " After the l)usiness and amusements of the
day, we shall all re-assemble at the tea-table, perhaps
you will then have the goodness to relate it."
" With pleasure," said Tom Stirlington ; " but as I
have excited the curiosity of the company, allow me to
take advantage of that circumstance, by making the best
bargain I can. I will relate '■ Brother John, or the
Comforts of Neutrality,' on condition that my friends
Ernest and Julian ISIortimer, who are professed stoiy
writers, will follow it up by giving us something better."
" I will answer for them," said Mr. Aubrey ; " for T
think it impossible they canjiave any o))jection to such a
proposal. Now, ladies and gentlemen, I hope it is per-
fectly understood, and will be perfectly agreeable to all,
that we shall re-assemble to hear ^Ir. Stirlington's story
this evening at seven precisely."
As the company arose from table, I found that I was in
some danger of being left alone, as preparations were
making, by which I saw that the company would be sepa-
rated until the time Mr. Aubrey had mentioned.
The wine merchant had consented to what he evidently
considered a great condescension : he had agreed that his
far-famed and matchless horse Dragon-flv, (with whose
history and adventures the reader will shortly be better
acquainted), should enter into partnership with a stout
gelding of Mr. Aubrey's, and the both being attached to
a vehicle, very properly designated a "Sociable," in it he
should drive the vounsr ladies to a neighbouring town, (o
72
which he was going in quest of gain, and they in quest of
pleasure.
Mr. Aubrey and the young sailor were preparing, with
a great deal more bustle than the occasion required, for a
sporting excursion ; and this had led to the introduction
into the hall of a rabble rout of pointers, spaniels, and
curs of every description. During the confusion which
this had occasioned, my young friend and favorite, Julian
Mortimer, had made his escape.
Reginald still retained his seat at the table, apparently
occupied with deep and sad reflection — he was even
paler than usual, and a darker shade of melancholy rested
upon his beautiful features.
" Poor fellow," said Mrs. Aubrey, " the dark fit is
upon him ; the excitement of meeting his young friends,
yesterday, after their absence, and of having his story
read, has proved too much for him : lie will now wander
away to some melancholy place on the moor, and we shall
see no more of him for many hours."
" Well, Avell," said Mr. Aubrey, " let the boy follow
his own fancy."
" Certainly," she replied, " I acknowledge the pro-
priety of that, yet I cannot always do so without some
anxiety : when those fits of moody excitement come over
him he seems never to be pleased unless he is in danger,
and in situations which strike me with horror ; at such
times he will scale the dreadful crag over which rushes a
waterfall, that he may play with the waters as they gush
forth in all their fu^ry from tlie rock ; at another time he
73
will be seen on the very summit of a precipice, stretching
forth his arms over the ravine below, like a young eagle
about to take its flight."
" The common-sense view of the thing appears to me
to be this," continued Mr. Aubrey : "he is deprived of a
very large portion of the amusements which occupy the
thoughts of other young persons, and it is my opinion
that we ought to allow him to find amusement when and
how he can. You have already seen the consequences of
crossing him, when, in your weak fondness, you sent
Bolt, the ploughboy, to watch and take care of him : he
first motioned Bolt to go away and leave him alone ; but
Bolt, true to his trust, refused ; on which he soundly
thrashed the ploughboy, and sent him blubbering home
again."
The mention of this fact called forth a hearty laugh
from Ernest Mortimer, in which Mr. Aubrey as heartily
joined.
" It was the only time," said Mrs. Aubrey, " I ever
knew him do an unkind act, and bitterly did he repent of
it ; and bitterly did I regret the mistakes into which I had
fallen, by which I had unintentionally caused his suffer-
ings. It is very difficult to understand the feelings of a
creature so sensitive and yet so cut off" from the common
intercourse of life. I sent the ploughboy away for several
days, fearing his presence might irritate and vex him,
durino- which time he was restless and most miserj^ble — I
knew not what he wanted ; he searched every part of the
premises — every field on the estate; and nt last, on an
74
awfully stormy day, he wandered for many miles, alone,
across the moor, to the cottage of Bolt's father, where,
finding him, he forced him to accept all the money he
had in his possession, and seemed to ask his pardon in a
manner so touching, that poor Bolt was almost heart-
broken, and came back earnestly requesting me to take
the money Master Reginald had given him, and wept a
great deal more at their reconciliation than he had done
at their quarrel."
" I shall think the better of Bolt for it," said I, "as
long as I live."
This was touching upon a proud point with Mr.
Aixbrey ; he rested the end of his fowling-piece upon the
floor, and proudly drew his tall, athletic figure up to its
full height, and, with a smile of satisfaction, said — " Ah,
my friend, they are rough and uninstructed, ill-spoken,
and at times, no doubt, ill used ; but those who know
them best, know there are many genuine beauties in the
simple heai-ts of the Devonshire plougliboys."
By watching, unobserved, the hps and manner of the
different speakers, it was evident Reginald had become
aware that he was himself the subject of our conversation,
but was left in suspense as to its purport ; and his keen
black eyes seemed almost to flash fire as they wandered
with the most pathetic expression of anxious inquirj^,
from the face of one speaker to another.
This, Mrs. Aubrey observing, she hastened to relieve
his anxiety, and by signs rapidly made on her fingers,
said, " We all say you should not stay out long to-day ;
75
and that you should avoid all dangerous places ; and, for
my sake, I know you will do so."
Words can but faintly convey an idea of the touching
expression of his noble features, as he lifted his flame-like
eyes to hers in thankfulness. I, for a moment, turned
away : when I again looked around, the Dumb Boy had
flitted, like a noiseless shadow, from the room.
Mrs. Aubrey now leaving the room to attend to do-
mestic affairs, and tlie sporting gentlemen at the same
time taking their departure, I was left without even a cur
to keep me company. I strolled into the garden.
My attention was soon arrested by a beautifully-situated
summer-house, so placed as to command a view of a ro-
mantic and most picturesque valley, through which a
mountain stream rushed rapidly, brawling and foaming
among the blocks of granite rock, as if impatient of the
delay their obstruction occasioned ; the rushing sound of
its progress was heard on the hill like an incessant and
soothing murmur. The valley was considerably wider
down the stream than at the point on which the summer-
house stood, and opened so as to admit of a view of the
distant country. Its course was winding and irregular,
and hill after hill was seen to swell up on its sides in
every variety of fantastic form and every shade of per-
spective, until the last bold and lofty tor which crowned
the scene, from its great distance, was scarcely distin-
guished by the eye from a faint azure cloud. To enjoy
this scene more at my leisure, I entered the building, and
was agreeably surprised to find my young friend Julian
76
Mortimer there. His attention was so absorbed by a ma-
nuscript which he was reading, that he was not at first
aware of my approach. On perceiving me he appeared
so disconcerted at being thus discovered, that I was about
to retire : he, however, politely invited me to stay, saying
— " Since you have thus discovered me, I will take this
opportunity of asking your advice. By the arrangement
made this morning, both Ernest and myself will be
obliged to produce a story after the one to be related by
that most positive of all commercial men, Mr. Tom Stir-
lington. I own to you that I have ventured to write
poetry, but that, I fear, will be little to his taste, and will
give even less satisfaction to Mr. Aubrey. The only
prose tale I ever attempted to write is unfortunately one
of which Mr. Stirlington is himself the hero. In it I
have called him plain Tom Stirlington, and in other
respects spoken of him with far too much familiarity ;
and, what is still worse, I have placed some of the hu-
mourous traits of his genuinely excellent character in a
light truly ludicrous — all which will be embarrassing ;
but I must endeavour to disguise some of the events, and
change the names, before I can venture to produce it for
the amusement of the company. I for some time assisted
Mr. Stirlington in his counting-house, and went with him
on several journeys of business, by which I had opportu-
nities of seeing the various characters I shall mention, and
of becoming acquainted with the events I have recorded.
The real facts of the case, however, by your permission, I
will now read to you."
Accordingly he read the following story.
TOM STIRLINGTON,
OR THE
WINE MERCHANT OF THE WEST.
" HKK MERCHANTS ARE AS PRINCES AND HER TRAFFICKERS
ARE THE HONORABLE OF THE EARTH."
79
TOM STIRLINGTON,
OR THE
WINE MERCHANT OF THE WEST.
" Her Merchants are as Princes, and her Traffickers are the
honorable of the Earth."
CHAPTER I.
"Tliis life has joys for yon and I;
And joys that riches ne'er could buy;
And joys the very best.
There's a' the pleasures o' the heart — "
Burns.
Tom Stirlington is the son of a plain but wealthy
farmer, who, in the northern part of the County of
Devon, cultivates an estate, Avliich, together -with a
generous and hospitable disposition, he has inherited
from his forefathers.
I call the subject of this narrative plain " Tom Stir-
lington," for by that familiar name he is best known
throughout the county ; and those who know the people
80
of Devonshire well, will be convinced that their having
so universally dropped the appellations of ceremony, is
a high compliment paid to him ; for it may be regarded
as a proof of his having succeeded in pleasing the ma-
jority, and in gaining the approbation of all classes. The
term Muter is an appellation of politeness habitually
used, and deemed indispensable in the common inter-
course of life, and thus often wasted on the worthless and
obscure ; but the man who has been entirely un-Mister' d
throughout a whole county, can be neither the one nor the
other. Worthless he cannot be, for it is beyond all pro-
bability that a whole community should pride themselves
in claiming a familiarity with the undeserving ; in such
cases people Mister the wretch, and keep him at a dis-
tance. Obscure he cannot be, for then he would belong
to that unhappy class of exiles, the members of which are
known to the waiters at the road-side taverns, as genelmen,
eveiy valuable and important particular concerning them
being unkown, an expression of indifference, within the
bounds of civility but bordering on contempt, is therefore
selected. It is awful to reflect how many an honest heart,
already sinking under the cares of life, has had the cap-
stone added to his miseries by hearing himself designated
the genehnan in number six or number ten, as the case
may be. It grates upon the tortured ear — it casts a
gloomy shade over the care-sick soul — it convinces the
poor creature that, whatever his cares, he is here beyond
the reach of sympathy,
How lov'd, how valued once, avails him not,
To whom related, or by whom begot ;
81
though the title-deeds of the " bold Buccleugh" were in
his portmanteau — though the blood of all the Howartb
be in his veins, he must consent to be Sir^d and llister'd
into a kind of wishey-washey respectability, a thousand
times more irksome to be borne than even contempt —
because, however insufferable it may become, it cannot be
resented.
In describing a person, as much advantage can some-
times be gained by saying what he is not as by telling
what he is. Tom Stirlington, therefore, was not of that
class of unhappy outlaws above-named, for everybody
called him by his own proper name ; and, in his fortunate
case, that capricious and many-headed monster — the
public — by common consent, droi)ped that abominable
Mr., which has destroyed the peace of millions.
I am no enemy to the titles which distinguish rank — I
do not mean to condemn nor even to sneer at them ; they
prove that the individuals who bear them, or those from
whom they are descended, possess, or have possessed,
something of worth or ability to distinguish them from
the insignificant mass, and therefore their proper opera-
tion is to stimulate those who enjoy them to aim at a
higher moral excellence, a purer honor, a more disinter-
ested and lofty philanthropy: and, notwithstanding the
number of unfortunate exceptions, I am of oi)inion that
such is their actual operation in the formation of cha-
racter in a vast majority of instances in Great Britain, or,
to confine myself within the limits of my own knowledge,
at least amone; the " worthies of Devon." Yet, with all
K
82
my respect for titles, I am still of opinion that seldom has
a title added to a man's name conferred half so much
honor on him as is often tacitly allowed to him by the
dropping, by common consent, the usual appellative.
" A Prince can mak a belted knight
A marquis, duke, and a' that ;
But an honest man's aboon his might,
Guid faith he maunna fa' that.
For a' that, and a' that,
Their dignities, and a' that;
The pith o' sense and pride o' worth,
Are higher ranks than a' that,"
says Robert Burns, who was himself one of the lowly-
born aristocracy of intellect, who, dead or alive, has never
had his name profaned by the addition of the common-
place Mister.
When old Sir Anthony Absolute was offended with his
son, he did not threaten to disinherit him, but contented
himself with the more awful threat that he would never
call him Jack again. However whimsically it might
have been expressed, an awful threat it was, for a father
to tell his son that the familiarity of friendship (without
which the tie of relationship is but a galling bond,) should
cease between them for ever.
When the English people wanted an epitaph for John
Dryden, it was agreed that " his epitaph should be his
name alone ;" and the single word "Dryden" was in-
scribed upon his tomb. Lives there a wretch with heart
profane and soul so thoroughly steeped in the very essence
of vulgarity, who would have prefixed a Mister to it ?
How completely would the poetry of the allusion have
83
vanished — the very soul of the compliment would have
expired ; a national compliment, which amounted almost to
the sublime, would have been turned at once into the very
superlative degree of Tom-foolery. One's blood boils at
the very idea. The blockhead who Avould have inscribed
the word 3Ii.ster before the name of Dryden might as
well have tacked the words man-milliner to the tail of it.
Whether guided by these illustrious examples or not,
the people of this part of England have long been in the
habit of treating their especial favorites in a similar man-
ner. With the propriety of the thing I have nothing to
do : since I have taken u})on myself the office of their
chronicler, I am bound faithfully to record their manners
and their peculiarities. The idea, in the practice I have
mentioned, seems to be that as " True loveliness when
unadorned is then adorned the most," so true respecta-
bility Avhen the less flattered is then the most respected
and respectable.
Stirlington's general popularity has been by no means
gained by servility to the upper orders, or by a vagabond
good-fellowship only with the humblest. No man better
understands what arc his just claims to respect, and
no man is less likely to forego them. Although every
person feels at ease in his company, nobody, either his
superior or inferior in rank, would ever think of taking
an undue liberty with him. His self-respect just hits
the happy medium— which consists in yielding to every
man the just degree of respect to which he is entitled,
and lettinu: him see that the same measure of justice is
84
expected from himself; but with this "special obser-
vance" it cannot be denied that good humour is the pre-
vailing characteristic of Tom Stirlington's manner, and
good-nature the distinguishing feature of his character.
In comfortable circumstances — with a mind at ease,
though kept in a state of healthy activity by constant
employment — possessed of robust health and an exiibe-
rant flow of animal spirits, with a quick sense of the
ludicrous and a rich enjoyment of the ridiculous, it is
scarcely in a person's power, though his soul were steeped
in gall and bitterness, to refuse to enjoy the luxury of a
laugh with a man whose mirth appears to be the overflow-
ings of a heart at peace with itself and with all mankind,
especially when his character is of that genuine worth,
that any person may say this is a man on whose support I
may reckon with confidence whenever I want it for any
caiise which is really a good one.
Bred up in a farm-house in a retired village, associating
with the neighbouring agricultural families in his youth,
(a connexion he has never given up nor ceased to derive
pleasure from,) there is no doubt some of his habits, ways
of thinking, and tastes, may be attributed to that early
association : for Tom Stirlington is not composed of those
stiff" materials which can entirely resist the impression of
what old Mr. Chester* designates " the intensely vulgar
sentiments which are called the national character."
Among the predilections which he derived from this
* This of course alludes to that exquisitely-flrawn character the
antiquated dandy in " Barnaby Rudge."
85
source may be named, as pre-eminent, a great fondness
for horses, and of the field-sports in which they are em-
ployed, with the nsual unbounded confidence in his own
judgment as to their merits. It is a sociable and con-
vivial foible, which, whatever other ixnpleasantness it may
lead a man into, it never leads him to suspect his own
judgment. If the horse wins, or performs some extraor-
dinary feat, that is entirely to be attributed to the judg-
ment of the owner and the skill of the rider : if he breaks
down, fractures a limb or two of the owner's, or dislocates
the neck of an acquaintance, or any trifling blunder ot"
that kind, of course it is to be attributed solely to the
purest accident. Possessed of this by no means uncom-
mon infallibility of judgment, the leading articles of the
merchant's creed are — that to risk life and limb in the
chase is a mere secondary consideration compared to the
honor of being in at the death ; and that to drive a smart
" turn-out" on the road, with a horse of first-rate "blood,
pedigree, and paces," if not absolutely necessary to
human happiness, is, to a wealthy and respectable dealer
in the " rosy juice," at least, indispensable to felicity of
the highest order.
An excellent whip himself, his derision of the scare-
crows he sometimes meets upon the road pretendhuj to
use that much-degraded instrument, is immeasureable ;
when, as is usual, their conceit is in proportion to their
awkwardness. The "roasting" of a spooney of that
kind, or tlie fi-ightening a scarce-fledged dandy of the
counter into hysterics, wlio, perhaps, pretench to drive.
m
and thinks himself np to a thing or two, when a donkey
possessed of the spirit of a yonng gander would resent
the insult of his controul — this is rich fun to him. This
fancy, in his younger days, was carried out in a series of
practical jokes, irresistibly comical to the jokers, but
most tormenting inflictions on the poor creatures joked
upon ; and if ever he made an enemy it was by this
means. For although perhaps it is a pity that sage truth
should spoil a good joke, yet I believe it is a fact which
the united experience of mankind confirms — that the man
who has been injured mat/ forget his resentment, but the
fool that has been laughed at never will.
I will not, however, detain you by a longer description
of the foibles of his character, which may, perhaps, in
the estimation of some, cast a shade on the brightness of
that which is substantially excellent, but proceed with the
relation of some events which brought out the nobler
qualities of his heart.
When I spoke of Stirlington as the son of a plain
North Devon farmer, perhaps I led you into the error of
supposing that he was the founder of his present hand-
some fortune ; but that is not correct. In his youth he
was adopted by an uncle, his father's brother, who was a
substantial wine merchant in one of the large towns of the
county, which I shall not designate by name, but which,
perhaps, in the course of my story, you will more than
guess at. This uncle, Ralph Stirlington by name, being
a bachelor, had some years before bred up and hand-
somely ])rovided for Tom Stirlington's elder brother
87
Augustus Stirlington, Avho, at the time of Tom's joining-
his uncle's establishment, was settled as a wine merchant
at Lisbon, and had rapidly increased the fortune he had
derived from his uncle's bounty.
Stirlington went into town a rosy farmer's boy, but was
prepared for his future destination by a good education at
the grammar-school at , where his youthful asso-
ciates were of a rank rather superior to his own, though,
perhaps, many of them had not expectations near so good
as his were. I mention this fact because it had not only
a visible influence on his manners and address, but gave
him the advantage of establishing, early in life, not only
on a commercial but on a friendly footing, one of the
most respectable connexions in the county. His educa-
tion complete, by the time he had passed through the
necessary gradations of the wine vaults and the counting-
house, his uncle found himself able to indulcfe in the
quiet luxuries of a comfortable home, and placed him on
the driving-box, not a little vain of the personal recom-
mendations and high promise of his gay, good-humoured,
and decidedly handsome young representative. The only
objection to this arrangement, on the part of Mr. Ralph
Stirlington, v.as, that he found himself miiuis of the many
deep, rich peals of laughter with which he had been ac-
customed to digest his dinners, and deprived of Tom's
songs and jokes at suppei'-time, which had become, from
habit, as necessary to him as the glass of brandy and
water which he used to call his " nightcap" ; which glass
of brandy and water, be it recorded for the enlightenment
88
of the curious, was made according to the celebrated
recijie of the renowned Dutchman, Mynheer Von Dunck,
which was in the proportion of one quart of brandy to a
pint of water. " It is really wonderful," Mr. Ralph
Stirlington was accustomed to say, " that the knowing old
Dutchman did not turn tee-totaler, and exclude the water
altogether. Still his notion was not a bad one ; and there
is some comfort in following the example of a man so
celebrated."
Notwithstanding the consolation which he derived from
the " good familiar creature," the evenings of Tom's
absence passed heavily, and the mirthful energies of the
old man's heart were thus, as it were, kept bottled up for
a week together, only to be relieved on the nights of
Tom's return, when he would impose upon himself, the
weather being favourable, the heavy task of walking into
the country to meet him, for the purpose of being driven
back by him, and pass the evening in one continuous and
joyous roar at the comicalities Tom had picked up on
the road. Comicalities there are to be picked up on
every road if a traveller has but sense to observe them,
like Tom Stirlington, wit to express them, and good-
nature enough to avoid introducing into them the venom
of uncharitableness.
It had been, however, the custom of Mr. Ralph Stir-
lington for many years to relieve the monotony of his
town life, chiefly devoted to business, by coming down
annually to visit his friend Mr. Aubrey, here at the Bar-
ton House. To give to this yearly visit as much as
89
possible the dignity of a sporting excursion, it regularly
commenced on the 31st of August, that he might indulge
in the harmless delight, on the 1st of September, of shoot-
ing at partridges, not killing them, according to the hu-
mane and merciful pi'actice of town-bred sportsmen in
general. That his nephew should accompany him on
these occasions was a matter of the most positive neces-
sity, a thing not to be dispensed with. Necessary it was
on many accounts, one of which only 1 shall name here :
that is, it was needful to keep up the sporting reputation
of the family ; for, thanks to his early education, Tom
Stirlington was a very different shot from his imcle, and
although good Mr. Ralph was obliged to submit to the
degradation of eating birds of another person's killing, it
was a capital recover to be enabled to answer the banter
of his brother sportsmen, by saying " Well, well, it is
better that the hoy should have some skill in those things
than that I should waste much time in practising them."
Notwithstanding that Uncle Ralph frequently stated
that Tom had been, for some years, more than five feet
ten inches and a-half high, a hoy he still called him and
still considered him, until an accident which occurred in
this summer-house on a bright September evening awfully
undeceived him.
Here I may be permitted to observe, that good-tem-
pered uncles should go into such places as retired sum-
mer-houses with extreme caution; if they have a hobble
in their gait, it should by no means be diminished on such
occasions; and, whether they feel a tickling in their
90
throats or not, it would be advisable for them to cough
slightly ; otherwise it is impossible to imagine how unfit
the scene they may witness may be for the observation of
a staid old bachelor. Ralph Stirlington taking a walk
in the garden after dinner, being in a brown study, slowly
and softly approached the summer-house ; the door had
been cautiously closed, but, by the contrivance of some
imp of mischief, the latch had not caught, and it flew
noiselessly open at the slightest touch ; the evil genius of
the place presided also over the floor, for it was covered
with a thick garden matting: thus neither Angela Aubrey
nor Tom Stirlington, who stood looking out of that win-
dow which overlooks the vallev, the casements of which
were open, were aware of his approach. The lady's eyes
were fixed upon the stream below, dashing and foaming
along among the rocks, as intently as if the moor maiden
had never looked on mountain stream before. The gen-
tleman's left arm, with more fondness than ceremony,
clasped her slender waist — his right hand was employed
in lifting a fair hand of her's to his lips, and never did
Catholic, in penitence or in joy, kiss crucifix with half the
devotion and afiection with Avhich he kissed it. The lan-
guage he used I will not pretend to report — it consisted
of a few unconnected sentences, the general purport of
wliich was an inquiry if she really loved him. The only
answer he received was a faint and almost inarticulate
" yes."
" I know not," said Uncle Ralph to himself, " which
I had better do, laugh or cry ! "
91
Although this sentence was meant to be uttered inter-
nally, unfortunately the last word "cry" was uttered
aloud.
Tom Stirlington turned round electrified with surprise,
and the fair Angela, ^vith a faint shriek, sank upon the
bench, covering her face with her hands in much confusion.
" Hoity-toity ! fire and faggot ! " said the corpulent
wine merchant. " Here's goings on — here's conceal-
ments, intrigues, treasons, and gunpowder plots ! "
Tom Stirlington stammered out somethinq; about — " a
joke — an excellent good joke."
" Joke me no jokes, young man," said the senior
sternly. " I've been deceived — I've not been confided
in — I've been treated as nobody — is that a joke ? No
ansAvers — no impertinent replies. My excellent friend
Aubrey kept in the dark — the rights of hospitality
violated — is that a joke ? You have won the heart of
his daughter — is that a joke, you unnatural monster ?
You have wasted an immensity of time already by not
marrying her — surely you will allow that that is no joke.
Sir, you shall not joke with me upon serious subjects.
You shall marry her upon the spot — this very moment."
" With all my heart," said Tom Stirlington, who saw
that there was no safety but in yielding, or seeming to
yield, to the whim of the moment.
" Now there's some sense in that," said Uncle Ralj)!!,
sitting down a good deal conciliated ; and, resting his
hands upon his knees, with the most comical gravity \w.
proceeded to make the ibllowing i)roposal. " Now,
92
Tom," said he, "don't laugh — don't look impertinent,
but strive to go through this business with the appearance
of good sense with which you have begun it. Your un-
accountable shyness, your want of confidence in me, your
truest friend, — be quiet, I will not be interrupted nor
answered, — your want of confidence, and my stupidity in
not remembering you were no longer a boy, have been the
cause of the loss of much most precious time. The
thought of marrying you to a daughter of Aubrey's, now
it has once penetrated my thick head, will never allow me
to sleep more until the thing is completed. Hear me —
the parson of Crazycot has been sporting with us all day ;
to-be-sure, he has paid more attention to the pocket-
pistol than to the fowling piece ; he is still in the hall,
seated at the table where you left him when you sculked
off, you lucky dog, on this precious business. He is
monopolising all the conversation to himself, but with his
nose so close to a decanter of brown sherry that he seems
addressing it alone. By the blessing of Heaven, who
has protected its servant through a day of trial, he is yet
sober enough to perform the ceremony, but too drunk to
refuse. Let it be done at once."
Unfortunately, however, '* the law's delay," a pro-
verbial nuisance in this country, stood in the way of the
proposal. In addition to that, the third party, whose
presence would have been indispensable at the ceremony,
and whose consent would have been somewhat desirable,
the fair Angela, had taken advantage of the moment to
make her escape.
93
However, Uncle Ralph neither rested himself, nor
allowed anybody else to rest, until the ceremony was
indeed completed — the business transferred to Mr. Thomas
Stirlington — his own roomy mansion and well-furnished
wine vaults given up to him, with such an amount of
property, as astonished even Mr. Aubrey at his bounty.
" My good friend," said Ralph Stirlington, " call it
not bounty in me, that I do this for them ; the two great
blessings of my life have been that boy's affection and
your friendship. I have had some pleasure in gaining
wealth, because I have done it honestly ; and, reserving a
competency for myself, it shall be my pleasure to see the
boy and girl enjoy the rest.
CHAP. II.
"A living rose, blooming and unconscious of the thousand
cankers of earlh and air." — Bon Vivant.
Ten years, the tenth part of a century, is a period of
vast importance in human life ; for, to say nothing of the
many painful steps by which so large a portion of our
journey must have been accomplished, whether it has
been filled with joys or sorrows, or what is more usual,
some portion of both ; even though these have passed
94
away, and left not a '* wreck behind " for memoi-y to
dwell upon, and become a blank, as such a period may
have been to an antiquated bachelor, well off in the
world, whose joys are apt to fall into satiety, and whose
chief trouble is the want of care, as the reader will an-
ticipate was the case with Mr. Ralph Stirlington, yet it
is important, for it must have cut out a large portion of
an existence so ephemeral as the longest human life cer-
tainly is : but it is a privilege which story-tellers have
enjoyed from the time when the Archangel related the
story of the creation to Adam, in Paradise, to the present
day, that me can pass over such a period by one single
boimd, like that of the traveller in the seven-leagued
boots, and jump to another part of our history, as easily
as Caesar could plunge into the Rubicon and drown the
reputation of a soldier of the Commonwealth in Empire
and Infamy.
Ten years after the event related in the last chapter,
Ralph Stirlington was residing as a retired bachelor
at . The fingers of Time had played with his raven
locks, and the portion of them which remained had turned
into a vigorous iron-grey : in no other respect was his
personal appearance altered, for he had resisted the wear
and tear of doing nothing with an iron strength of con-
stitution truly remarkable. Still he was a bachelor much
puzzled ; for he had become so fond of Angela, that it
was most difficult for him to decide whether it was her or
Tom Stirlington who was his prime favorite, although it
was notorious to every one else, that their only child, a
95
pretty little black eyed girl, named Evelina, now in her
ninth year, had, to a certain extent, superseded both.
Tom Stirlington came upon the road in a fair time to
inherit not only the substantial respectability of the firm
but all the popularity it had gained by the facetious and
unassuming good humour of his uncle. This was by no
means likely to be diminished in his hands ; but there
was one part of the establishment which had been entirely
revolutionized by him. The stout old hack and heavy
and substantial vehicle which had conveyed the portly
person of the elder Mr. Stirlington from stage to stage
with slow but punctual regularity, had been exchanged for
a light and elegant modern stanhope, and a horse, which,
in the opinion of his owner, united ever}i;hing which can
be imagined as perfection in that noble animal. His
sire was of established reputation and untarnished pedi-
gree, and his dam had been bred by Tom's father, and
was by no means of plel)eian rank ; and, moreover, the
name of this fastest-trotting gig horse in the West of
England, be it known, was Dragon-fly.
The world may have produced such a curiosity as a
woman who was beautiful, but knew it not, or was not vain
of it ; diadems may have been placed on the brows of those
who were not dazzled by their glitter ; but for a man to
possess such a " turn-out" as this, and not to be vain of
it, would have proved, as Sam Slick words it, that there
was no such thing as "human natur" in his composition.
This little vanity was not displayed in words — l)y his
incessantly talking of his own exploits, or the feats of his
96
horse, but by his actually giving the " go-by," as the
phrase is, to everything upon the road ; by his actually
performing the feats which other persons boasted of; but
by one freak, which, in hands less skilful, would have
been of veiy questionable character : it consisted in
driving up full speed (trot of course,) to the door of a
Devonshire inn, stopping suddenly and turning nearly at
a right angle, again at full trot bolting down the rough
and narrow passage which usually forms the entrance to
such a place of entertainment.
Having performed this feat with even more than usual
rapidity, he rushed into the yard of the Green Dragon,
an inn situated in a town some miles west of the place
of his residence, so suddenly, that he surprised the land-
lady, a very tall, ungainly, savage-looking person, in
beating most cruelly, with a rod, a child of exquisite
beauty, who, just as he arrived, had sunk upon her knees
before her furious tormentor, and was most piteously
holding up her little hands, which were wounded and
bleeding, as a frail protection to her delicate and lovely
features.
On seeing this, Stirlington gave Dragon-fly so sudden
a check that he reared and capered about in the greatest
confusion and alarm ; then throwing the reins upon his
back, he sprang out of the vehicle at the imminent risk
of his life, flew to the spot, and wrested the weapon from
the furious woman with such an expression of deep in-
dignation and disgust, that she stood cowering before him
like a dismayed she wolf, and evidently expected, at first,
97
that he meant to take a fearful retribution for the injured
child by applying the rod to herself. The servants of the
house stood grinning at a distance, apparently expecting
the same thing, with no little satisfaction. Stirlington
did not, however, forget what was due to woman, even in
her most degraded form, as the perpetrator of a cowardly
act of cruelty, but repeating his expression of heartfelt
indignation, he flung the rod furiously into the air, and it
passed like an arrow over the adjoining buildings.
While this was passing, Margery, the chambermaid,
had rushed forward, and, with many expressions of sym-
pathy and condolence, had borne away the unfortunate
and now almost fainting child. Seeing this, the traveller
went into the commercial-room Avithout speaking to any
one ; for although he resolved from the first to sift the
thing to the bottom, he deemed it advisable to put a seal
upon his lips until he had regained his usual coolness.
Mrs. Bunce, the landlady, however, boiling with fury
and panting for revenge, having retired into the bar, and
having steadied her nerves with a glass of brandy and
water, made according to the Von Dunck recipe slightly
improved, proceeded to call around her the servants of the
house, in hopes to induce them to give such testimony as
would enable her to bring an action of assaidt.
Having seated herself in a large arm-chair, with the
dignity of an unfortunate princess in a tragedy, she said,
with a voice of most insinuating mildness — ''Will Ostler,"
addressing the official of that capacity, who was a tall
lanky man, with a dark, shrewd, determined-looking
98
countenance ; he lost, however, considerable height by a
curvature of the back, which made him what is called
round-shouldered, and by a bend in both his knees, which
caused them to be, like the Siamese twins, inseparable, while
his feet lay straggling abroad, and had decidedly parted
company for ever. The habitual expression of his counte-
nance was a leer of reckless humour, so that it was im-
possible for a person to look upon Will without laughing,
and feeling at the same time that Will was laughing at
him. This comicality of nature's own pattern was, how-
ever, on the present occasion, in an unusually sullen mood.
" Ostler Will," said Mrs. Bunce, *' I owe you a glass
of brandy and water, for I saw that you was a-comin' to
purteck me when that brute was a-strikin' me."
" Kip the brandy and water. Missus," said Will, " vor
I wasn't a-goin' to due no zich a thing."
"But you saw him strike me, Will?" said Mrs.
Bunce, sweetly.
"Nae, Missus," said Will, clenching his huge fist and
striking it heavily on the counter. " Nae ! I didn't ; but
I zeed you strike the poor cheeld sever'l times."
"Then, Bob Boots," said Mrs. Bunce, "lam sure
you did see him strike me ?"
The person thus addressed was a good-tempered, pud-
ding-faced, bullet-headed little man, whose nose, nature,
instead of making the most prominent feature of his face,
as is usual with the Caucasian race in general, had ren-
dered, in a frolic, the most insignificant ; while his mouth
was an immensity, literally stretched from ear to ear.
99
Bob began and ended every sentence with a sort of husky
laugh, which sounded Hke a repetition of the syllable
hick, uttered in rapid succession.
" Hick-hick-hick," said Bob, " he didn't strike you,
mum ; but, by Gosh, I think he wid if you hadn't let
alone the little maid when you did — hick-hick-hick."
Mrs. Bunce proceeded to question all her servants in a
similar manner, with a similarly unfavourable result, until
she came to Margery, a pretty little rosy-faced chamber-
maid, who stood in a corner, wiping her eyes.
"I'm sure," said Mrs. Bunce, with great fury, "it
will be of no use for me to ask of you — "
" No, Mem," said Margery, " it is of no use to ask
me to tell falsehoods to please anybody. Mr. Stirlington
did not strike you, the more's the wonder, considering what
a thunder-and-lightning passion he was in, and he being
so kind and merciful that no one dares even to ill-use a
mouse before him. And I am sure, Mem, if he knew
the rights of it, he would say that if people have other
people's children left to their charge, that they ought not
to be used as brute beasts, however faulty their parents
might be — and if there was property left with them — "
" Silence ! and be gone," said Mrs. Bunce, rising from
her seat with great rage. " Get along every one of you,
as a cowardly, whitc-liver'd, treacherous set of fools, who
would eat my bread and yet see me beaten to a mummy,
and take the part of those who injure me. Begone ! and
close the door after you, that I may see no more of yon,
vou infernal varments."
100
Left to herself, Mrs. Bunce again applied to the con-
solations of the brandy-bottle. " So," said she, " on
account of the nest of vipers with which I am sur-
rounded, I shall not be able to have my will with that
conceited, prating jack-an-ape, Tom Stirlington. But
I'll prick their hearts for it— I'll punish them ; and I'll
torment him some other way — I'll wait for time and
place — but I'll do it if it be not these twenty years. And,
this commercial coxcomb once gone, as to that child, I'll
flay her alive, though every jackass in my yard and
stables should rise up in rebellion against me — I'll flay
the little wretch alive."
Stirlington, who had mechanically thrown off" his
travelling garments, and seated himself by the fire, in the
commercial room, during the passing of the scene before
described remained occupied with painful reflection.
At first a feeling of indignation at the conduct of the
landlady overcame every other, but it soon subsided into
one of the deepest sympathy and anxiety for the child.
" She certainly was beautiful," said he, " if my recollec-
tion does not deceive me, very beautiful, and must be
nearly of the same age as my own poor little Effie, and
as innocent and helpless, and even more lovely — but no
matter, beautiful or not, she must be cruelly wronged.
It is impossible that a child of such tender years can
have done aught to deserve such treatment — no conduct
of hers can have furnished the shadow of a shade of an
excuse to justify it. What can I possibly do for her ?
How will it be possible for me to rescue her from the
101
execrable wretch who could use her in that manner?"
His heart promptly asked the question, but it was not
easily answered ; and he sat confounded and irresolute,
repeating; it to himself, so absorbed in his painful reverie
that he knew not he had a companion in the room, until
he was awakened from it by the timid pressure of a soft
little hand laid fearfully upon his own ; he turned round,
and the object of his reflections stood beside him.
The child was very plainly but neatly attired ; her
cheeks were pale from recent terror and sufiering, but
her beautiful lips retained the hue of a fresh-blown
moss rose. Her hair, which was a fair auburn, with
a slight golden tinge where the light shone strongly
on it, had evidently been re-arranged by some kind and
sympathizing hand. Her eyes, which were of the color
of the clear sky of a summer's night, were timidly raised
towards his own, with a mingled expression of hope, gra-
titude, and apprehension; and, speaking very slowly, with
a strons: foreiirn accent, she said — " You I vill tank — I
not afraid — " But tears of apprehension burst from her
beautiful eyes even while she thus expressed her confi-
dence in her unknown protector.
" God help thee, child, thou hast no cause to fear from
me," said Stirlington, soothingly ; but rising, as a sudden
fit of his indignation returned, pacing the room, he said,
" How execrable must have been the cruelty which
has brought a creature so young and innocent to look
with so much dread and doubt ujwn the face of a
stranger."
102
Turning again towards the child, he discovered that,
unaware of the meaning of his words, she had become
alarmed at his angry manner. Her little limbs trembled
— her features had now become so deadly pale that nought
retained its primitive color except the dark blue eye, and
that was fixed upon him with such an expression of dread
as the habitual endurance of cruelty alone could have called
up on the features of a child. She would have sunk to
the ground but for his timely support. Stirlington again
sat down, and soothing her by every method compassion
could suggest, she soon recovered.
" No — no," said the child, reassured. "■ I not afraid —
not afraid of you, signor." But anxiously looking
round the room, as if to ascertain that she was not over-
heard, she continued — *' I not vicked — I not scum of the
eart — but I no understand;" and, as if the more fully to
explain her meaning, she pointed with her little wounded
fingers to her forehead — " No, no. I no understand."
Her sympathising companion now observed that the
blood had been washed off from her fingers by some
kind hand, and little shreds of white cloth tied carefully
round them ; but across the forehead itself, white as the
drifted snow, on which every blue vein which approaches
the surface was faintly and delicately traced, from the
right eyebrow to the hair there extended, a red mark,
evidently caused by a recent blow, showing the reckless
cruelty or demon-like malice with which the child had
been corrected for an error which, according to her own
imperfect explanation, arose from her having misunder-
stood some direction given to her.
103
" Merciful Heaven," said Stirlington, " and hast thou
been thus treated because thou did'st not understand?"
" Yes, yes," exclaimed the child eagerly, " dat is so. I
no understand."
All this was so entirely out of the merchant's way of
business, that the further he proceeded in it the more he
felt confused. The rich man's ready solace for the ills of
povertj^, alone occurred to him. He put money into her
hand.
The child looked wistfully at it for a moment, and
then allowed her hand to drop by her side, as if it
contained what she had not sought, and did not value.
This he instantly observed ; and the conviction flashed
across his mind, and seemed to burn, as it were, through
his heart, that the child could not have been bred among
the lower classes entirely ; for, an eager desire to possess
money, is, perhaps, the most general characteristic of
children so bred, which is forced upon them by the ex
ample and necessities of those by whom they are sur-
rounded. She stood for a short time, with an expression
of confusion and disappointment, apparently labouring to
bring out some idea which she could not find words to
express : at last, fixing her sparkling eyes on him she
said, " You, kind signor ; but Rosabel no friend,"
" Then I will be thy friend, so help me G ! " ex-
claimed Tom Stirlington.
The child placed both her hands in his, which rested on
his knee — bent eagerly forward, and looked up into his face
with an expression of the most searching and anxious in-
104
quiiy, as if to make sure that she had not misunderstood the
meaning of his words. The scrutiny satisfied her — she
burst into a joyous laugh, which was, however, instantly
drowned in a flood of tears. As if she had now obtained
what she wanted, she replaced the money in the palm of
his hand, and closed his fingers upon it with her own
little wounded hands, and bent down as if to kiss them.
At that moment the sound of a hasty footstep in the
passage without, seemingly approaching the door, caught
her attention. Alarmed, she sprung into the middle of
the apartment, clasping her little hands together, and,
with an expression of great terror, stood watching the
door with trembling anxiety. The footsteps, however,
passed on : and the child, perceiving that she had escaped
the danger of detection, looked towards her new-made
friend for a moment, placed her finger lightly on her lip,
as if to enjoin him to silence, and glided quickly from the
room.
103
CHAP. III.
"There is an hour, a pensive hour:
(And oh, how soothing is its power ! )
It is when twilight spreads her veil
And steals along the silent dale.
There is a tear of sweet relief,
A tear -of rapture not of grief;
The feeling heart alone can know
What soft emotions bid it flow."
Felicia Hemans.
I said that Stirlington had resolved from the first to
investigate the matter, and extend his protection to the
injured child j but his interview with Rosabel herself had
changed what was but the cold resolution of justice into a
burning impatience and fixed determination not to rest
until he had done something towards accompHshing her
deliverance : yet he felt the strongest repugnance to open
any communication with the brutal landlady upon the
subject; and to seek information from her menial ser-
vants, unknown to herself, would be acquiring that wliich
he could not rely upon, by means he could not ap-
prove of. " But what," said he, " is to be done ? It is
now near dark, and Ijy daylight in the morning I must he
on my way to Cornwall. In the fortnight which will
-elapse, before I return, the old wretch will have completed
106
her cruelty, and have broken the heart of that sensitive
and lovely child. It is true I am ignorant of the facts of
the case ; but this is a point I cannot be deceived in — the
child must he innocent — at some time she must have
been tenderly and even genteelly bred — every tone, every
gesture, bespeaks it. But the punishment I saw her re-
ceiving, it is evident, from the child's manner, was not a
sudden ebullition of passion, but a portion of a system of
cruelty to which she has been subjected by the iron-
hearted wretch into whose hands she has fallen. I have
it!" said lie, starting up and pacing the room rapidly, like
one suddenly relieved from a great diificulty. " I will
write to Angela concerning it. Bred up at the Barton
House, not far distant, she knows the character of almost
every person in the town : I will request her to come
down and investigate the case, and judge for herself — and
if she deems it right she shall take the child under her
own protection. God of compassion I thank thee ! Once
under her care the child is safe." Saying this, he reached
the candles, which waited on the sideboard, hastily lighted
them, without summoning a servant, and proceeded at
once to carry his benevolent resolution into operation.
Mi's. Bunce, in the mean time, remained satisfied with
the comforts of the bar, considerably consoled, but so far
from being refreshed into good humour, that she sat in
her easy chair *' nursing her wrath to keep it warm," and
repeating her determination to seek the first opportunity
of revenging herself on Stirlington, as if she feared she
should forget it. As to her own servants, she was de-
107
lighted to think her means of making them miserable
depended only on her own will ; and, as to the child, tha
traveller once gone, she would be again in her power.
" Well, I hope," said she, " this bangs the height of
impudence, for this conceited commercial to come here
and breed a rebellion in my house by interfering about
what does not concern him ; but I'll match him for it —
I'll match the whole of them ; but for that little wretch
who has been the cause of all of it, won't I match her?
Ha, ha, ha, — won't I be revenged of her ? If she is not
black and blue by this day week let no one ever take my
word again."
Meanwhile, the servants were holding a council of war,
standing beside the kitchen fire. It was commenced by
ostler Will.
" Well, Margery," said he, " where's Missus?"
" Snug enough in the bar," said Margeiy.
" And there may she remain," said Will, with great
solemnity, " until zich times as the devil is empower'd to
claim his OAvn property."
" Amen," said Bob Boots.
" Now, Will," said Margery, " when I left the Barton
House, where I was brought up, you got me this place —
and the place isn't so bad if the missus was bearable ; and
you have behav'd like a father to me ever since, because
I have no father of my own ; but if she do behave to the
child as she have lately done, I'll leave the place and take
the dear little thing with me, though I beg the streets to find
bread for her. But what be'est a-crying for, you old fulc ? "
108
" Because Madge," said Will, " I know'd thy father,
a prime good-hearted old chap, who was killed in Wat-
terlue, and that was zaely the sort o' speech he wud a
made hiszel. Now, as to missus, if she ever due strike
the cheeld agane, when I'm there, if I don't break every
bone in her infurnal skin, I'll be d ."
The accusing spirit, who flew up to heaven's chancery
with the intended oath, grumbled all the way, at being
obliged to go on such a message, and even to this day it
is uncertain whether the recording angel took any notice
of it whatever.
Well," said Margery, " as to Mr. Stirlington, there's
no tea ordered — no bed bespoke ; I do think it's all on
account of his taking on so about poor little Rose."
" Never know'd un sarve his boss as he hath now in all
my life," said Will. " Man and boy I've know'd un on
the road vur twelve years. He draw'd down the reins on
his back, and left un cap'ring about the yard like a mad
thing, and never ax'd vur un since. Not that the boss
shall be the wuss us'd on that account."
" Hick-hick-hick," said Bob Boots, " wet feet— only
think o' that — after splashing about the yardj wet boots —
hick-hick — ^with all his purticklerness. I've roasted his
slippers to a cinder. Wet boots — my eye — hick-hick."
" It's all about the child," said Margery, exultingly.
" I'll tell you what I done. I made her as tidy as I
could, and put her silently into the commercial room."
"Well done," said Will, that was right — thy father
couldn't have acted up to the harticles of war better."
109
" Hick-hick-hick — By the great snake, " said Bob
Boots, " that was a purty fancy."
" To-be-sure it was right, Madge," said Will, " very
right — he can do something for the child, and no doubt
will. Thy father and I, Madge, were boys together. I
never went a sodg'ring as he did — good reason why —
(here Will cast a knowing glance at his legs) — but a man
may be crooked in his body yet straight in his mind.
And, to my mind, a man who'd zee a hinn'cent cheeld ill-
used is wuss than a wild Hotneytot — and, by all accounts
as we gits from furrin parts, that's a breed zumwhere
'tween the great American sea-sarpant and a Bengal
tiger."
Will was prevented from a further display of his learn-
ing, by Stirlington's bell being nmg furiously ; and, after
so long a delay, each of his humble admirers considered
it must be his or her important services he needed — they
all, therefore, hastened to answer this summons, and thus
entered the presence of the wine merchant in a body.
" William," said he, " I must have this letter taken to
the post-office immediately; if it is too late for the mail,
I must have a fleet horse and a tnistworthy rider to take
it to my house to-night."
" It shall be there to-night," said Will, " if I run all
the way with it myself," and immediately disappeared.
This important affair dispatched, Stirlington now al-
lowed himself to be surrounded by all the comforts which
the attendants considered he stood in need of; and at
daybreak was on his journey to Cornwall.
110
With this Cornish journey we have nothing to do, fur-
ther than to state that it occupied the period of a fort-
night, as had been anticipated. The evening had closed,
after a wet and stormy autumnal day, such as of all others
is calculated to make the traveller, whom darkness has
overtaken on the road, sigh for the light and warmth of
a comfortable home, when Dragon-fly dashed into the
well-lighted streets of , the place of Stirlington's
residence. At the comer of a street, with his head slightly
bent downwards and his right hand resting on his knee, in
an attitude of anxious attention, stood Bolt (formerly a
ploughboy in the employ of Mr. Aubrey, and now a
smart groom in the service of Mr. Stirlington.) He had
assumed the attitude above described on hearing the sound
of an approaching vehicle, to endeavour to recognize the
far-famed trot of the merchant's matchless steed.
I might as well take this opportunity of observing that
Bolt was now transformed into a smart, trim-looking
serving-man ; that he seemed inclined to unite all the
dandyism of his new profession with the simple good
humour and home-spun honesty of his former character.
His cheek still retained the rosy hue of the " Children
of the Moor," and Bolt was, altogether a good-looking
fellow, and the studied neatness of his apparel, and his
self-satisfied air showed him by no means unconscious of,
or inclined to undervalue, that advantage. Although he
had lost none of the ploughboy's good-hearted simplicity
and artlessness of soul, he had evidently been considerably
raised in his own estimation, by his promotion to the ser-
Ill
vice of the wine merchant. — I have been thus particular
in describing Bolt, for we shall often meet with him
again.
Dragon-fly was, no doubt, a favorite with his master,
but he stood ten times higher in the estimation of Bolt.
The pride and exultation with which he spoke of his
beauties, graces, and exploits, was truly amusing. The
stanliope arrived — Bolt touched his hat smartly and
respectfully to his master, but addressed his favorite only.
" So-ho, my poor fellow," said he, " I hope you have
had enough of it by this time — get up there with your
items — but we'll put you to rights, and no mistake. —
Stand still, will you ? — You shall remember the sabbath-
day with the best of 'em. — Can't you be quiet ? — Never
mind, we'll put you to rights, my lad, that we will."
Tom Stirlington, smiling at these whimsical greetings
between his famous steed and his superintendent of the
stables, (for to tell the truth they were both favorites, and
seemed mutually to recognize each other,) left his stan-
hope in the charge of Bolt, to be driven to the back part
of his premises, while he proceeded to the front, to keep
an engagement to which he had never been known to fail
of being punctual to a minute — it was his meeting with
his wife and daughter after an absence which had been
equally unpleasant to all three. Having consulted his
repeater under the lamp, he was pleased to find he was
punctual to the time when he knew he should be expected ;
and his quick, firm tread, ascending the steps which led
to his house, seemed to speak of an anticipated pleasure ;
112
and the joyous rattle of his latch-key, as it echoed through
the passage, bespoke the haste of expected delight. So
great was the confidence entertained by his household of
his punctuality, that, as the parlour door flew open and
displayed a well-lighted room, furnished in a style of
comfortable elegance, a servant was engaged in completing
the preparations for tea, by placing the boiling urn on the
table. Even at this joyous moment, which was to reward
him for the toil and anxiety of a fortnight, there was one
feeling of anxious suspense resting more heavily upon his
heart than probably he would have liked to have confessed
even to Angela. He entered the room, and it vanished
in a moment. By the side of his easy-chair, on which
hung his dressing-gown, and by which had been placed
his slippers, in affectionate anticipation of his arrival,
stood the beautiful orphan of the inn. She was very
neatly attired, with an appearance of blooming loveliness
which even he was not prepared to expect. She stood
motionless and trembling, her little hands folded on her
apron, with her expressive dark blue eyes fixed on his
countenance with that mingled look of liope and appre-
hension, and timid reliance upon his compassion, which,
on a former occasion, had shot into his soul.
A look of unutterable satisfaction rewarded his wife ;
but he spoke not a word. Without greeting the little
object of his compassion, he sank heavily into his seat.
He wished to hide his emotion by feigning more than
usual fatigue — it would not do : he passed the fingers of
his light hand twice across his eyes — a slight moisture
113
was effused. No matter — with it escaped every particle
of his fatigue — every remnant of his anxiety. Mrs. Stir-
lington knew her time, and affectionately took his hand.
Evelina, who had been alarmed by the unusual manner of
his entre, sprung into his arms, and as he eagerly kissed
the beautiful features of his child, she flung her arm
around the neck of the little sti-anger, and drew the lovely
face of the orphan close to her own.
That bright sunshine of the soul which is the reflection
of a generous deed settled in all its glory upon him.
But there was not much time to indulge in sentiment,
for a furious ringing of the house-bell was followed by
Bolt's hasty answer to the summons, and Uncle Ralph's
deep rich voice, demanding — " Is your master home?"
" Yes, sir, ten minutes," replied Bolt.
" Tom," said Mr. Ralph, entering the room, " you
have stolen a march upon me — I calculated on being here
before you. I fear we have spoiled an excellent mail-
coach driver by making a gentleman of you."
" Let us all have tea," said Bamaby Rudge's raven :
and, as if he had acted as master of the ceremonies on
the present occasion, the now happy company took their
places at the tea-table. One part of the arrangements
certainly surprised Tom Stirlington — but he is not the
only gentleman who has been taken by surprise at his
own table. Evelina, as was her usual custom, took her
place at the right side of Uncle Ralph, and, by his (Uncle
Ralph's) directions, the beautiful little stranger seated
herself at the other. That the child should be rescued
114
and protected, certainly he liad most anxiously desired —
but that she should be received into his house as one of
the family, and placed upon a footing of equality with
his own daughter, was not the thing he had at first in-
tended ; yet, in that capacity she had been received into
his house and remained for a fortnight. This is carrying
the thing rather too far, thought he, and I must speak to
Angela about it. Yet, when he looked round the table,
he felt an insuperable reluctance to begin the subject.
First, there sat the child herself, happy and beautiful,
perfectly unconscious that her presence was an intrusion,
receiving every kindness with an appearance of timid
gratitude, yet, with an elegance of manner which plainly
indicated that her earliest associations had been with
people of education and polished manners. His eye
next fell upon the gay and expressive countenance of
Evelina, whose bright smile and animated manner seemed
to indicate that in her new acquaintance she had received
the accession of a new delight. Moreover, what had been
done had certainly received the perfect sanction and au-
thority of Uncle Ralph, who, in his simple-hearted benevo-
lence, had never dreamt of any impropriety in the thing,
and now sat between the children as much pleased as
either of them ; and it was difficult to decide at which he
was most amused, the sprightly conversation of Evelina,
or the broken English in which the interesting little
stranger attempted to reply to it. Above all, there sat
his beloved Angela, apparently unconscious of any impro-
priety in Avhat had been done — perfectly satisfied with the
115
part ^e had herself taken in the transaction ; and, from
time to time, stealing, with her bright eye, glances at him,
which showed how proudly her very heart exulted in the
part which he himself had taken in it. " Pooh," said
Tom Stirlington to himself, — " what a fool a man's heart
sometimes makes of him ; but how much worse than a
fool must be the wretch who has never heard its whispers ?
Well, well — they are happy in their brief delusion — let
them be happy in it still. It shall not be said that the
first hour of my return was the time when their pleasure
was first darkened by my untimely scruples ; they enjoy
it, and I will enjoy it with them."
The conversation between the uncle and nephew was
now directed to the usual subject on such occasions. Old
acquaintances were inquired for — old anecdotes related —
the present state of things upon the road inquired into,
and detailed ; but all the laughable occurrences which had
come to the traveller's notice on his journey, as particu-
larly to Uncle Ralph's taste, were described and dwelt on.
Evelina, who inherited a large portion of the satirical
humour of her father, entered delightedly into all this ;
but fearful that Rosabel, from her imperfect knowledge of
English, would lose a great deal of the good things her
father was repeating, stopped him from time to time, that
she might explain them to her, and this she did with such
whimsicality of expression and oddity of manner, that
Tom Stirlington found his own comedy entirely surpassed,
and Uncle Ralph, overcome by the comicality of the
scene, found relief only in one roar of irrepressible
laughter.
116
CHAP. IV.
" We twa hae run about the braes,
And pu'd the gowans fine ;
But we've wand'red mony a weary foot,
Sin auld lang syne.
We twa hae padl't in the burn,
Frae mornin' sun till dine;
Rut seas between us braid hae roar'd
Sin auld lang syne." — Burns,
From the time when Tom Stirlington left the Green
Dragon to proceed on his Cornish journey, it will, no
doubt, have .been anticipated that he woidd in all proba-
bility find little Rosabel at his own house on his return ;
yet the reader may not have expected, any more than
himself, to find her at his own table, the companion of
his daughter. Some little explanation of that fact may
therefore be acceptable, and, moreover, desirable to be
here given, as it will serve to illustrate the characters of
the persons whose deeds and destinies we are endeavouring
to trace.
The letter despatched from the Green Dragon by tlie
mail, as before described, reached its destination on the
same evening. From the forcible and earnest manner in
which it detailed the facts of the case, it was well calcu-
lated to communicate to Mrs. Stirlington the feeling of
strong interest for the child, under the influence of which
117
it had been written : she accordingly arrived at the Green
Dragon about noon on the same day on which her lius-
band had left it. Margery — who, as before stated, had
been bred up in the house of her father — immediately
waited upon her. From her Mrs. Stirlington learnt the
few particulars which were known respecting the child's
real situation. She was the daughter of an itinerant
artist and picture-dealer, who had for some months lodged
at the Green Dragon. He had stopped there with his
wife about nine years before, when the child was three
months old. The chief part of the interval they had
spent upon the Continent : that would account for the
child's imperfect knowledge of English — besides, hei-
father scarcely allowed her to converse with any one, and
always spoke to her in a foreign tongue. About twelve
months before, on their return to this countiy, the mother
had been drowned. Mrs. Stirlington immediately remem-
bered the man as a very clever artist, whom her husband
had employed about the period of their marriage. Of
the mother she also knew something — for she had been
well bred up, and was respectably connected, in the North
of Devon. She had eloped from her friends with the
painter ; and, notwithstanding that act of folly, she was
universally pitied, as a person deserving a better fate than
she had found with a handsome and clever, but dissipated
and profligate husband. I'he story of her death was well
known to her, as was the fact that a short time after her
unfortunate marriage her family had all emigrated to
Canada. Margery went on to state that the pictuic
118
dealer came to the inn a few months ago — that he had
kept the child confined almost entirely to her own room,
but indulged himself in a continual course of drunken-
ness and gambling. That a young tradesman having ac-
companied him into the country, with considerable pro-
perty in his possesion — they were seen playing cards at a
road-side public house — that they parted company, the
young man being in a state of intoxication, the artist
pretending to go towards a neighbouring town, and the
tradesman to return home : on the road the young man
was waylaid and robbed. Suspicion having fallen upon
the artist, he had been committed for trial. There had
been pictures, and, Margery suspected, jewels of some
value, left in the hands of Mrs. Bunce. She, no doubt,
retained the child in her house with the expectation that
the father would be transported, and there would be no
one to demand a particular account of the property from
her.
The circumstances were of so painful a character that
they at first considerably damped Mrs. Stirlington's hope
of being enabled to benefit the child ; but, Margery having
carefully prepared her for the interview, introduced poor
Rosabel herself. The child's extreme beauty, disfigured
as it was by the marks of recent cruelty, her winning
manners, her gratitude for every kind word, and the
dread she appeared habitually to feel of Mrs. Bunce,
had the effect on her which the compassionate chamber-
maid anticipated it would have. Mrs. Stirlington re-
solved, therefore, to avail herself of her husband's per-
119
mission, and take the child into her owii house, at least
until his return, when he might himself decide as to her
future destination. To gain Mrs. Bunce's consent to that
arrangement was the only remaining difficulty. Mrs.
Stirlington had sufficient self command to conciliate that
vindictive woman with ladylike mildness ; she assigned
as a reason why she wished to remove the child to her
own house, for the present, a desire to show her a kind-
ness foi- the respect which she had entertained for her late
unfortunate mother ; and, having prudently concealed all
knowledge of the valuables left with Mrs. Bunce, by the
father, the landlady was induced to give a sort of sullen
consent.
Tom Stirlington had seen Rosabel, as he considered, at
the inn, in the capacity of a menial servant ; and he no
doubt anticipated that, if received into his own house, it
would be in that capacity she would be admitted there.
Mrs. Stirlington, however, aware that to that situation the
child had never belonged, nor could she with any degree
of propriety treat her as belonging to that rank, felt, that
however destitute she might have become by her father's
vices or misfortunes, she had no right, under the guise
of charity, to place on a footing with her servants
the daughter of a person whose original situation had
been but little inferior to her own. Between the kitchen
and the parlour there is a " great gulf;" but in the house
of a wealthy tradesman, like that which divides the happy
from the condemned, it contains no intermediate station.
Having introduced her into the house in the character of
120
a temporary visitor, it was not consistent with Mrs. Stir-
lington's sense of propriety, nor with that genuine good-
ness of heart which distinguished her character, to inform
her daughter that there existed, with respect to Rosabel,
certain humiliating circumstances which would degrade
her beneath her own rank : the children therefore met as
equals, in happy ignorance that there existed aught which
should repress the kindling of that affection for each
other, which, in childhood, is often as rapid in its growth
as transient in its duration. Evelina inherited a great
deal of her father's social good humour, and a natural
desire to be surrounded by those from whom she could
draw amusement, and towards whom the warm affections
of her heart might expand unchecked. This disposition in
the children was mutual ; but hitherto their little hearts
had been solitary — for Evelina's health had been, at
times, so imperfect, that she had been educated entirely
at home, and had therefore rarely met with companions
of her own age. The delight which the children took in
each other's society was therefore veiy great, and the ra-
pidity with which it ripened into the warmest affection was
very different from what might have been expected under
ordinary circumstances. There was, however, another
party to the transaction, whose whimsical, but simple-
hearted and genuine, good nature, at once decided the
little visitor's position in the family, at least until the
return of Stirlington from the west, who was no other
than Uncle Ralph. The good old gentleman had gone
into the country to spend a couple of days with a friend
121
when Tom Stirlington's letter arrived. On his return,
which was on the day after Mrs. Stirlinfjton's visit to the
Green Dragon, she called on him to acquaint him with
what had occurred. She had a heart at peace with itself,
for she could look back with satisfaction on the motives
by which she had been guided ; but she was aware that
her having taken into her house, even as a visitor for a
short time, the daughter of a suspected felon, was a case
on which difference of opinion might be expected to exist ;
that the majority would be against her ; and she had no
assurance that, when acquainted with all the circum-
stances of the case, even Tom Stirlington would entirely
approve of what she had done. In the anxious position
in which she stood, she saw the importance of securing
the alliance of Uncle Ralph. She felt that she had here
exercised benevolence in a manner which was unusual —
and there is a deference due to the usages of society,
which rarely admits of a woman choosing for herself a
line of conduct at variance with public opinion ; and
althouo;h she felt that the act was a commendable one,
there was a delicacy of feeling in Mrs. Stirlington Avhich
caused her to shrink from the censure and misrepresenta-
tion it might subject her to. Whimsical and eccentric as
Uncle Ralph might be, yet such was his acknowledged
"W'orth, that his countenance and support would be a great
defence to her ; and should he disapprove of the some-
what hasty step she had taken, perhaps his experience
might enable him to suggest some means by which it
could even now be remedied. We are as chaff upon the
122
stream of life, and the motion of one straw agitates all
those which come in contact with it. The method which
Mrs. Stirlington took to work upon the feelings of Uncle
Ralph, so that he might approve of what she had done,
was attended with such success, that she found herself
pledged beyond remedy to persevere in the course which
she had taken.
She opened the consultation by presenting to him her
husband's letter.
" It is a long epistle," said he ; " dreadfully badly
written — confoundedly blotted ; and I verily believe my
spectacles are too old for me — I can make nothing of it.
It appears to me that it is something about old mother
Bimce having beaten a girl. Is it so?"
" That is the subject," said Mrs. Stirlington timidly,
for she felt disappointed and alarmed at his coolness, so
unusual when his humanity was appealed to.
"Is there anything so rare in that?" said he. "I
never visited the house in my life without seeing that old
she bloodhound do some disgusting act of cruelty and
malice or other. Servants must be corrected. Such a
wretch as she is will no doubt do it violently and villa-
nously. But there is the law for their protection — what
is it to Tom, or to you, or any of us ?"
" It is a case of great tyranny," said she faintly, " of
most brutal cruelty."
" My dear Angela," said he, " so it may ; but is Tom
Stirlington, a commercial traveller, to turn knight-errant,
and go from stage to stage reforming the moral characters
123
of all the landladies upon the road ? Don Quixote
fighting with the windmills would be but a fool to him.
Ho-ho," continued he, " I see how it is : the girl was of
exquisite beauty — ha-ha-ha ! Why he grows quite senti-
mental. I'm afraid you will find that he gets your milli-
ner to lend him the stray volumes of a circulating library.
He certainly is studying romance in private. I dare say
we shall shortly find that old mother Bunce is some
wicked enchantress, and her persecuted handmaid, this
exquisite beauty, is some stray princess, dreadfully dis-
guised, of course."
"You will find, sir," said Mrs. Stirlington firmly,
" that she is neither, as you suppose, a servant of the
house nor a disguised princess, but one for whose desti-
tute and helpless situation you cannot fail to feel com-
passion— she is the grand-daughter of your old acquaint-
ance, Millwood, of Northfield Farm."
" Millwood, of Northfield !" said he, his tone of
indifference now changed to one of the deepest interest.
" Why, Angela ! he, and I, and your husband's father,
were boys together in the same parish — he was the first
shot in tlie county."
Angela now felt assured that the conversation had taken
the right turn. '* Yes, sir," she replied ; " and, I have
heard you say he had a horse, a very superior hunter,
which brouglit him in first at the death at the Barnstaple
Fair stag-hunts for many years — "
" Tom's father always being second," said Mr. Ralph,
with enthusiasm. " The horse poor Millwood rode was
124
called Blue-bottle. Why, Angela, Millwood and I have
bagged more game in one day than any other two men in
the hundred."
*' So I have heard," she said : wdiich was perfectly
correct, for she had frequently heard it from himself;
although she had heard also, from others, how very in-
significant was the share which Uncle Ralph could justly
claim of the sanguinaiy honors of that memorable day.
" Heai'd of it ! " said the elder. " My dear, you must
have heard of it — it was in all the newspapers of the
week ; the only time my name ever went into print except
in an advertisement. Poor Millwood ! his super-excel-
lent horse was Blue-bottle — his crack fowling-piece was a
regular Joe Manton — he had the best breed of spaniels
in the North of Devon. But we grow old as we go
on, and so passes aw^ay the glory of the world. What is
this mystery about the child?"
" She is the child of Millwood's only daughter, who,
some years ago, eloped with a portrait painter, and after-
wards went with him to the Continent."
" I have heard of the scoundrel," said he ; " and his
having so long escaped the gallows has always been to
me an unfathomable mystery. But this poor child is the
only one of Millwood's race who now treads the turf of
our native isle, the rest being all in America." — He held
the unread letter in his hand. — " What does Tom say
about it?"
" In that letter," she replied, " he recommended me to
go down and investigate the matter, as he had no time."
125
" He was right," said the merchant. '' I will never
call him a Quixote again as long as I live."
" I went down yesterday," said she.
" Bravo ! my girl, I thank thee."
" I fonnd Margery, the chambermaid, so disgusted
with the service of Mrs. Bunce, that she was about to
leave it. She had long been the only friend the poor
child had. I engaged the chambermaid for my own
house, and brought the child with me."
" Bravo ! again," shouted Uncle Ralph. " Angela,
thou hast Ions: been dear to me, as the wife of Tom Stir-
lington — dear to me on thy father's account — and ten
times dearer on thy own, but never wert thou half so dear
to me as at this moment."
" But," said she, " there are so many impleasant cir-
cimistances connected with the father — "
" Tlie more reason have we to take care of the child,"
was the reply.
" But I know not hoAv Stirlington would deem it proper
she should be treated in our house."
" Treated ! Angela ; why, with kindness, to-be-sure — if
not, he never deserves to have a house over his own im-
happy head again."
" Of that I feel perfectly assured," said Mrs. Stirling-
ton, colouring at the bare idea of his intending otherwise.
" If you feel assured ofthat, then," said the elder, "go
home and do it. Come, I will go with you ; come along :
come along."
126
In Uncle Ralph's opinion, the mere fact of her bein"^
unfortunate made no difference as to the treatment the
grand-daughter of an old friend should receive ; and Mrs.
Stirlington, Avho had sought a supporter and found a
leader, calmly yielded to the pressure of circumstances
until the return of her husband, as described in the last
chapter.
CHAP. V.
" But pleasures are like poppies spread,
You seize the flower, its bloom is shed ;
Or like th' snow-fall in the river,
A moment white, then melts for ever ;
Or like the borealis race,
That flit ere you can point their place ;
Or like the rainbow's lovely form.
Evanishing amid the storm."
Tam O'Shanter.
I described the evening of Stirlington's return as one
of unmingled satisfaction to the whole family, in which
the happiness of the little stranger was not forgotten. I
mentioned, however, as an exception, a slight feeling of
surprise, and of uncertainty as to the propriety of what
had been done with respect to Rosabel, which arose in the
127
mind of the merchant himself. This was dismissed for
the time, like a painful visitor ; and he was enabled to
yield himself up to the enjoyment of the moment, made
complete by witnessing the enjoyment of all around him.
On the following morning, however, we find him in his
green-house, bending over the beautiful exotics which it
contained with a delight almost infantine, or, at least with
that strong feeling of admiration for these loveliest chil-
dren of the earth, in which the stoutest hearts and noblest
minds are sometimes found to participate with childhood.
The blasts of autumn had passed by them, but had not
been allowed to breathe on them, they therefore retained
all the brilliancy of their summer beauty. He was alone ;
although Bolt deemed it desirable that he should attend
at a respectful distance, imder pretence of expecting
orders, but, in reality, to receive the reward of his vigi-
lance, by witnessing his master's satisfaction at the care
which he had taken of his favorites in his absence.
" Bolt has proved himself a cai-eful lad," said he j
" eveiything has been managed as it should have been,
but I must find fault with something, if it he only to
sJiom him how little I see to find fault with. Bolt,"
said he, speaking aloud — and in a moment the grand
vizier stood beside him : " I think that stand of geraniums
much too near the door."
" I believe, sir," said Bolt, regarding the arrangement
with great solemnity, " that it was placed there by your
own order."
128
" Veiy well, Bolt, very well, indeed," was the answer.
" I am much pleased to see that there is nothing to find
fault with except what has been done by my own orders.
Now had you not better prepare for church ? "
" Thank you, sir," said Bolt, with a smile of grateful
satisfaction ; and left the garden as proud as " Caesar
with a senate at his heels."
Kings and Princes are the distributors of ribbons and
garters, but it is the good hearted man, in all the relations
of life, who is the distributor of happiness."
" Yes," said Stirlington, thoughtfully, " the flowers of
the earth are beautiful, and those which kind Providence
has scattered around my path, are, to use a homely
phrase, in good order; but the most fragrant has its
thorn, and the most lovely some tarnish of imperfection.
And so is it with the joys of life : even those most bright
and pure have some feeling mingling even with their
birth to dim their splendour and to tarnish their beauty ;
and, from this common lot of the delights of human ex-
istence, the joys arising from the purest benevolence, are
not exempt. I am not decidedly satisfied with respect to
that beautiful and interesting child. If, however, I com-
mence the inquiry where such inquiries ought to com-
mence, and carry it into the chambers of my own heart,
I discern there no motive to find fault with. Angela,
also, has erred, no doubt from the best intentions, or
rather from her having misunderstood mine ; yet I must
speak to her about it. To retain the child in our own
129
house on a footing of equality with our daughter, would
be an act of generous folly, connected as she is, which
would be entirely inconsistent with that nice sense of pro-
priety which every one owes it, as a duty to society, to
set an example of respecting. However unpleasant it
may be to disturb their present pleasure, I must speak
to Angela about it."
At the moment he had formed for himself this prudent
resolution, he was interrupted from reflection by a sum-
mons to the breakfast-table.
With all his native excellence of heart, Tom Stirling-
ton was by no means a romantic man, and he certainly
was not entirely free from a dread of being laughed at
and called so. Many of his best jokes and keenest
satires had been directed against persons who had that
failing. Those who most enjoy a laugh at others, inva-
riably have the greatest dread of being laughed at them-
selves ; and he felt that the story related by the satirical
and malicious, would give them opportunities of reprisal
which it was desirable should be guarded against. The
confiding benevolence of Mrs. Stirlington, resting entirely
on purity of motives, caused her to overlook — and the
simple-hearted good will of Uncle Ralph, rendered him
profoundly unconscious of — the view which society would
take of the case. Stirlington therefore felt that the respon-
sibility of protecting the credit of the family, rested, in
a great measure, with himself.
These reflections rushed rapidly through his mind as he
passed from the garden to the parlour. He accordingly
130
entered the breakfast-room with a firm resolution (to quote
again his own words,) to speak to Angela about it.
Notwithstanding all the jests which the satiris^ and
the lamentations which the moralist, have uttered, to
prove the frailty of good intentions, and their worthless-
ness when too frail for execution — yet a man deserves
some credit for having come to a wise and prudent reso-
lution, although li€ may never carry il into practical
operation. Who can penetrate the veil which hangs over
a single moment ? Who can anticipate what it will bring
forth to alter the current of life ? That current of life is
a stream which man, in his pride, pretends to navigate,
but which usually bears him helplessly along, like the
leaf of autumn flung among the foam of the torrent.
He found Evelina reclining on a sofa — a deadly pale-
ness overspread her features, and that bright black eye
which had, on the previous evening, seemed to bespeak
the laughter of the inmost heart, was dimmed into a dull
heavy expression of languor and suffering. Mrs. Stir-
lington sat at the table, selecting for her every delicacy
which she thought could tempt her to take refreshment.
These were handed to her by the orphan of the inn, and
one by one received, but returned, with an imploring look,
which seemed to say, do not be angry with me because I
refuse your kindness.
" Poor Effie is far too ill to go to church," said her
mother.
" If she stays at home, who will be her nurse ? " said
Stirlington.
131
The little stranger clasped her hands, with that beau-
tiful attitude of anxious emotion, which I have before
attempted to describe, and fixed her eyes on his with that
peculiar expression which has often been before noticed
and which I have faintly attempted to describe by saying
it seemed a look of mingled hope and apprehension. She
thus stood, with her beautiful features beaming with some
proposal which she had not courage to make.
Evelina understood the meaning of her looks, and said,
" Yes, papa, Rosabel will be my nurse." i
This arrangement was accordingly agreed to.
On their return from the morning service, Mr. and
Mrs. Stirlington found Uncle Ralph at home, and some
unexpected visitors, who remained there the rest of the
day.
At an early hour on the following morning, Stirlington
commenced a journey into Somersetshire. On the next
Saturday night he returned to his home ; but the happi-
ness which, on the former Saturday, seemed to hover over
it, and which had so delighted his benevolent heart, dwelt
there no longer.
Who does not remember some moment in his life in
which he seems to himself to have lived years — in which
the joys and the sorrows of his past and future days seem
to have met ? These are, to the agitated spirit, distin-
guished from all other of the little points, the aggregate
of which sums up our earthly time. It is like the
meeting of the thunder-clouds which have slowly jour-
neyed on to their collision — they rush together — the bright
132
electric flame expires again in the deepest darkness. Such
is a moment of agitation in a life of quietude — and sucli
was this memorable evening to Ralph Stirlington.
The brilliantly lighted shops of were in the full
blaze of their magnificence — their Avindows were still
ornamented with those unrivalled productions which dis-
play at once the wealth, the manufacturing energies, the
patriotism, the cupidity, the vanities, and follies of a
people to whose character there is no ancient parallel nor
modern rival. The gay customer was still lounging
among the splendours of those temples of pleasure ; and
the care-worn man of business was still active in those,
to him, abodes of anxiety. The night presented that
aspect of gloomy horror, which, in the early autumn,
precedes a gathering tempest. At this unusual hour, and
in this impromising state of the weather, the portly figure
of Ralph Stirlington was seen to pass hastily before the
brilliantly illuminated windows of the principal street, and
to bury itself in the deeper shade of the avenue towards the
London road. Notwithstanding the haste with which he
advanced, he at times stopped, as if reluctant to proceed,
but, after a moment's pause, he would walk on again, as
if chiding himself for that brief delay. " How have I
longed," murmured he, " to hear the rattle of his wheels,
when, in his boyish days, I went out to meet him. How
have I enjoyed the hearty cheer with which he would hail
the first sight of the old man's hobbling progress. Old
fool ! old fool that I was, to think that those things could
always last ! Did I suppose that the world should be
133
filled witli joy for him and me only, but with sorrow and
anxiety for others ? Yet, even then, I did not forget
what was due to those whose lot it was to suffer. At
least," said he, and here he spoke aloud, " I am sure he
never did. There may be those who looked with envy on
his comforts, and will look with pleasure on his sorrows ;
but when they speak of want of sympathy with the dis-
tressed, no one will ever cast that into the teeth of Tom
Stirlington."
Here the old man stopped suddenly — grounded his
stout walking-cane on the road — rested both his hands on
it — bent down his venerable head, and burst into a flood
of tears.
A hard-hearted and thoughtless M-orld may laugh at
him for shedding them, at me for recording such an inci-
dent ; but precious are the tears of such a heart as his.
One, possessed of the most beautifully creative fancy
which has ever wandered among the cares of this life, has
imagined that the tear of penitence is an offering so ac-
ceptable to the Throne of Mercy, that it could open the
gates of Paradise to the banished, when presented there.*
The tear of penitence shows the longing of the spirit to
RETURX to the Author of all Good — the tear of a genuine
sympathy shows, that however it may have wandered in
darkness and error, that spirit has never entirely for-
saken him.
Absorbed in his feelings, the good old man stood resting
* Tlu' J'pii ;iii(l Paradise, in Tom Moort-'s l.ullah l{()iikli.
134
on his cane, unconscious, for a time, that the storm which
had long threatened had at last burst over him.
" I must return — I must return ! " at length said he ;
** and, perhaps, I shall do no good by staying here ; I
sent Bolt up to him yesterday — but if he do not cross
him at Chard, he will not return to-night, and to-morrow
will be too late. I ought to be the first to break it to
him — but I am not, I feel I am not, equal to the task — I
must return."
Musing in this manner, he returned to his own house,
satisfied to keep watch at the drawing-room window.
When the vehicle, containing Bolt and his master,
emerged from the darkness of the high road into the
lamp-light, Stirlington's capital horse was pushed to even
more than his usually rapid pace, but exhibited symptoms
of exhaustion and fatigue — showing the anxious impa-
tience with which even the favorite had been pressed, to
perform a journey of unusual length. Tom Stirlington
saw that several sympathising friends and old acquaint-
ances passed him in the street, but no one ventured to
hail him ; auguring the worst from that circumstance, he
kept on without noticing any one. A turn in the street
brought them in front of Mr. Ralph Stirlington's house,
and his nephew's heart seemed to sink within him as he
saw a bulky shadow passing heavily between the windows
and the lights upon the table ; as they approached, it
became evident tliat the party within had caught the
sound of the carriage : a slight twitchina; of the blind on
one side, showed that he M^ished to catch a glimpse of the
135
passing vehicle without being seen to do so. It was badly
managed. A pause of unutterable anguish shot into the
heart of Tom Stirlington. " Poor old man — poor old
man ! " said he ; ** in this moment, so dreadful to us both,
he is thinking only of me."
Here Dragon-fly began to caper about, as if his mas-
ter's emotion had been communicated to him ; which,
indeed, it is very likely, was in some measure the case,
from his unusual manner of driving.
There was nothing in the act of the impertinence of
vulgar familiarity, but it was an expression of the genuine
sympathy of a true but humble friend, when Bolt laid
his hand timidly on that of his master, and, by a gentle
pressure, seemed to solicit leave to take the reins into his
own hands. At any other time Bolt would as soon have
thought of seizing the reins of government ; and his
generous heart seemed ready to burst when the gentle
pressure was slightly returned, and the reins given up to
him.
But why are those trivial things recorded ? They are
the outpourings of generous hearts to each other — they
are recorded in the archives of heaven.
How completely mingled are the follies and sorrows —
the vanities and sufferings of life — its gravest cares and
its emptiest occupations. At the time when the heart-
stricken traveller was being thus conveyed through the
principal street, by his sympathising but humble attendant,
the night coaches were thundering onwards to their out-
ward journey, and the mirthful melody of their buglers
136
floated merrily upon the autumn breeze, as if in derision
of all the care and sorrow which might be within the
reach of its sound. The " in-sides" were drawing their
travelling-caps over their eyes, indulging in the hope that
now and then a brief and troubled sleep would relieve the
irksomeness of the journey ; and the " outsides" making
up their minds, as well as they could, to the tranquil
horror of an outside night. At the same time, the theatre
had dissforged its thouo-htless multitude : on the one side
a group of critics were discussing the merits of a " star,"
and eyes which were turned on the sorrowing father with
indifference, were ready to fill with tears at the imaginary
sorrows of a dramatic heroine : on the other side, a knot
of boys, who had lately been elevated to the seats of the
" gods," were rejoicing over the humours of a comic
song, as if they had found the " new delight."
The carriage stopped suddenly and silently at Stirling-
ton's own door, a quantity of turf having been spread
before it to deaden the sound of passing vehicles ; Bolt
sprung lightly to the ground, and stood at the head of his
favorite, but without offering a word of comfort or condo-
lence to him. At the top of the steps, holding the door
half open, with her face hidden in her apron, stood
Margery. Stirlington passed in without speaking. Bolt
sprung eagerly up the steps, and in an anxious whisper
exclaimed, " How is it, Margery — how is it ? "
" Oh, Bolt," said she, " that ever we should live to see
this day ! He is gone to the death-bed of his child."
137
CHAP. VI.
"The fleecy cloud on which I ride,
To Araby is bound."
Walter Scott.
So entirely have I been occupied with the homely joys
and sorrows of this excellent family, that I have only
been able to mention the name of one important member
of it, who will now claim our particular attention. I
stated that Tom Stirlington had an only brother, some
years older than himself, who, chiefly by the bounty of
his uncle, Mr. Ralph Stirlington, had been many years
established as a wine merchant, at Lisbon. The fortune
thus put into his hands had been greatly augmented by a
train of uninterrupted commercial success. During a
brief visit to this country, while a young man, he had mar-
ried the daughter of a gentleman of very ancient family
in the north of Devon ; but whose fortune, though re-
spectable, was scarcely equal to his family pretensions.
The great personal recommendations and gentlemanly
manners of Augustus Stirlington soon made him an ac-
ceptable lover to Mary Harfield ; although the stately old
squire, her father, at first looked extremelv stern at the
138
idea of marrying his daughter to the son of a man of
acknowledged worth, but still, to make the best of it, a
plain but wealthy farmer, living in a neighbouring village.
Family pride is a long-lived and obstinate vanity with
those whose conduct and ways of thinking it has once
been allowed to influence : but there is one idol before
which even this visionary demon bows down — it is
wealth ! The merit of the young man was undeniable ;
but, perhaps, even that might scarcely have over-ruled
the scruples of old Mr. Harfield had it not been backed
up by his Portuguese dollars. Be that as it may, the
nuptials were celebrated — the lovers made happy — and
Augustus Stirlington became, for a time, a resident at
Harfield House. In tracing the influence of circum-
stances on the formation of his character, I should not
omit to state, that although a young man of considerable
experience in the world, for his years, yet, at the time of
his marriage, Augustus Stirlington was still young enough
to receive fresh impi'essions from the circumstances by
which he was surrounded. Even the fondness of Mary
Harfield for him was expressed with that polish and deli-
cacy which distinguish the manners of those, who, from
their childhood, are surrounded by the refinements of
birth and station. It is true, that by the haughty old
squire he was treated with the most cordial kindness, yet
with a ceremonious respect, wbich, so far from leading to
familiarity, constantly reminded him (to use a dramatic
phrase,) of the necessity of acting up to the part which
he had been, by circumstances, called on to play. This,
139
operating upon a character by no means deficient of am-
bition and a little spoiled by the early possession of wealth,
caused him to assume a manner of guarded urbanity to-
wards the old friends of the family, which was the great-
est possible contrast to Tom Stirlington's hearty good
humour. His popularity, therefore, quickly declined ;
and even the members of his own family (his father in
particular,) began to regard him as one raised above their
own level. Persons who felt perfectly at ease in the com-
pany of Tom Stirlington, felt confounded and abashed in
the presence of the wealthy and highly-connected Lisbon
merchant ; and even his brother found his stately reserve
a check upon his own hilarity and good fellowship. At
Harfield House, Tom Stirlington was by no means at
home — his conversational stock-in-trade consisted chiefly
of counting-house and road-side anecdotes, which were
there out of place ; and, for the first time in his life, he
was made to feel almost ashamed of that character in
which he had so much and so justly prided himself, that
of a dashing and successful commercial man. The de-
parture, therefore, of Mr. Augustus Stirlington for the
Continent, with his blooming bride, was regarded as
something of a relief to all parties ; for, notwithstanding
their respect and regard for him, his residence in England
had brought people together whose tastes were difierent
and habits dissimilar. Mr. Harfield could return to his
favorite study of the genealogies and heraldic distinctions
of the " worthies of Devon" uninterrupted by persons
who took no interest in the matter, — honest John Stir-
140
lington could devote again his whole heart and soul to the
cultivation of his estate, — his son Tom was soon on the
road again, in excellent good humour, and not ashamed
of being so, — and Uncle Ralph returned to town, with
an entire fresh collection of sporting anecdotes, picked up
during his temporary residence in the country — a stock-
in-trade of which he stood considerably in need, the old
one having grown much the worse for wear. The sub-
stantial regard between the parties had never been, how-
ever, diminished ; this was especially true with respect to
the brothers — there was in both the same native goodness
of disposition, but their manners were different — the
grand aim of life was dissimilar, and the character was
moulded accordingly ; that ascendancy which an elder
bi'other sometimes gains over the younger, by a seniority
of years, was never entirely lost by Augustus Stirlington
over his brother — it was maintained in after life by the
superiority of his talents, and cheerfully yielded by Tom,
from that deference which he believed due to his more
extensive experience and knowledge of the world. The
correspondence, therefore, which was kept up between
them was an exchange of sentiments of the truest bro-
therly affection, and of the firmest friendship which the
tie of relationship could possibly be instrumental in
cementing. This union of the two brothers, divided by
the Bay of Biscay, was further strengthened, if possible,
by their common interest in one who became almost
equally dear to them both — Augustus Stirlington's eldest
son. While Tom Stirlington was yet an unmarried man.
141
and residing M^itli Uncle Ralph, Harfield Stirlington, the
youth above alluded to, had been sent to this country to
receive an English education, at the grammar school
at , under the superintendence of Tom Stirlington
and the guardianship of Uncle Ralph. Notwithstandino-
that his guardians decidedly became his playfellows in the
holidays, he made a very respectable progress at the
school, and grew up a handsome, lively, generous, but
spoiled boy ; and such he returned to Portugal, a short
time previous to Tom Stirlington's marriage.
Young, handsome, and wealthy, he was soon introduced
into the society of young men his equals in age and for-
tune, and became a Lisbon man of fashion, enecafrinsr in
those reckless adventures there esteemed so indispensable
to the character, with all the generous-hearted confidence
of a young Englishman stimulated by vanity and charmed
by novelty. A great deal of this, however, he had the
art to conceal from his father ; and his mother, who de-
lighted to see him well received in what she had been led
to consider the best company, and regarded his follies and
gallantries as the excusable excesses of early youth, aided
in the deception ; although, to do Mrs. Stirlington justice,
she herself was' little aware of the excess to which they
were carried.
The year after Harfield's return to Lisbon, a check
was, for a time, put upon his gaities, and a temporary
reformation effected in his conduct, by the death of his
only sister, to Avhom he was most sincerely attached, and
whose loss plunged his parents into the deepest affliction.
142
This melancholy event was followed, at no great distance
of time, by the death of their second son, just before his
intended departure for England to receive his education ;
and in a few years he was followed to the tomb by their
youngest son, a very promising little fellow, seven years
of age. This latter event took place just at the time
of Mrs. Stirlington giving birth to a daughter, who
proved so delicate that she was given up to the care of
Pietro and Ursula, two old servants who had married
and settled some leagues in the country, and whose
daughter, Cospetto, was Mrs. Stirlington's personal at-
tendant.
Such a dread had the fond bereft parents of the air of
the Portuguese metropolis, that they determined that their
fragile but lovely little blossom should remain almost
entirely at the beautifully-situated residence of honest
Pietro. It had the advantage of an elevated and
picturesque situation, some miles from the sea : it was
a spacious mansion, and had long been the family seat of
a very ancient but decayed family. The present owner,
Don Garcias de Toromendo, had, for some, time resided
entirely in Spain, whether to make his fortune or to con-
ceal his poverty was uncertain. Honest Pietro had been
bred on this estate 5 and when he quitted the service of
the English wine merchant, he found Don Garcias anxious
to let the mansion to some one who, in his absence, would
cultivate the estate and the extensive gardens ; and Pietro
was possessed of capital enough to undertake to do this
on his own account. Thus Don Garcias could preserve
143
the appearance of having his family mansion inhabited by
his own retainers. Tastes, however, widely differ upon
that subject : to have a household there who would trans-
mit him a yearly rent, was far more congenial to the taste
of Don Garcias de Toromendo than to keep an estab-
lishment at his own proper cost. Although certain
suites of apartments were retained especially for the
owner, a large part of the house was entirely in the pos-
session of Pietro ; several spacious and comfortable
apartments were therefore prepared by Ursula for the
use of invalids who might be recommended a temporaiy
absence from Lisbon. This enabled Mrs. Stirlinsfton,
who had remained in a weak state of health ever since
the death of her youngest son, occasionally to reside at
the Castello de Toromendo, (for having been formerly
a place of strength it was dignified by that name,) and
there at once to cultivate her own health and her little
daughter's affections. At times Mr. Stirlington also
was a frequent though a brief visitor. The mansion itself
was old, and partly ruinous, but it was surrounded by
magnificent gardens and pleasure-grounds, laid out ac-
cording to that style where Nature seems to preside and
Art appears only as her handnuiid, employed to soften
down her too luxuriant beauties — according to the plan of
the Moorish conquerors of Granada, the founders of the
Alambra, whose taste had at one time influenced that of
the whole peninsula.
It was Augustus Stirlinq-ton's favorite relaxation from
the cares of business to wander with his child through
144
these delightful solitudes, and muse of Old England and
her people, while she played among the flowers, so deli-
cately beautiful, that, to the fanciful, it might seem as if
one of the genii from the gardens of Irem still lingered
among those scenes of blooming magnificence and oriental
splendor. The bee, cloyed with the honey of its hive,
does not find it so intensely sweet as when it wanders
over the fields and finds it scantily scattered among the
blossoms of the heather bell. The father and the child
met only in their hours of pleasure, and they derived
nought but pleasure from such associations, the hold
which they took on each other's hearts was therefore
strengthened by the halo of light which imagination cast
around their intercourse, instead of being weakened be-
cause that intercourse was not more frequent.
But the most frequent visitor to the Castello de Toro-
mendo was Harfield Stirlington. Gay, reckless, and
dissipated, he was not depraved ; young, and yet untaught
by experience, as he was, while he fondly gazed upon
the beautiful features of his sister he at times almost
suspected that fashion was folly — that what was called
pleasure was a delusion — and that happiness dwelt with
innocence like hers. If thoughts like these did for a
moment intrude, they were of short duration, however,
with Harfield — they were soon drowned in the laughter
with which he would superintend her sports. One rich
source of amusement to him, was the volubility with
which she conversed with him in Portuguese, and her
hesitation, difficulty, and frequent blunders when required
145
to translate her own ideas into English : this was easily
accounted for — all day she conversed only with Pietro and
Ursula, and their servants, who spoke no English ; she
heard that language from her English relatives alone, who
were occasional visitors, and even they, in order to hold
pleasant intercourse with the child, were obliged to con-
verse with her in Portuguese.
One morning as Harfield Stirlington rode up'the avenue
which leads to the grand entrance of the Castello, to visit
his sister, followed by Fidato, as smart and roguish-looking
a liveried man as ever mingled in the intriques of Lisbon,
and, at some distance, by a trusty muleteer, leading an
extremely small white pony, which he intended as a
present for his sister, he was surprised to meet a caval-
cade of horsemen. A shoi't distance in front of them
rode a middle-aged chevalier, dressed in a military uni-
form, mounted on a spirited steed, which he managed
with the perfect address of a skilful horseman : mingling,
however, with the ease of his carriage was that haughti-
ness of bearing, aided by the stem, scornful expression of
his swarthy features, which might mark a man who had
had to battle with the world and had done so without one
particle of good will towards it; upon his dark com-
plexion might be traced the livid hue of disease and
suffering ; and his right hand was suspended by a sling.
His followers might be military men of inferior rank, or
of no rank at all, for though all were armed in an extra-
ordinary manner, they were very variously attired ; the
only one who wore a uniform similar to his own was a
146
very young cavalier, who rode next to him, upon a lively
steed, chaffing with impatience, which the rider rather
encouraged than repressed, as if the slow pace at which
the elder chevalier proceeded was equally irksome to both.
The avenue was of spacious width, and the party ascend-
ing it and the party descending seemed to meet each other
with equal surprise ; they appeared inclined, therefore, to
pass each other at a cautious distance : Harfield was,
however, near enough to observe that the look of sur-
prise with which the elder chevalier had at first regarded
him had changed into one of haughty and sullen displea-
sure ; still he seemed inclined to allow him to pass with-
out addressing him, and as Stirlington could by no means
divine how he should have incurred that displeasure by
appearing on grounds where he had hitherto been en-
couraged to consider himself at home, he was man of the
world enough to return the frown only by a look of care-
less defiance, and passed on. His attention was, however,
soon attracted by the sound of hoofs and the jingle of
military accoutrements, and on turning he perceived the
younger cavalier was rapidly approaching him ; on ob-
serving this he courteously turned to receive him.
" Go you to the Castello," said the stranger, " to in-
quire for Don Garcias de Toromendo ?"
There was nothing in the question itself offensive, but
the insolent air of assumed superiority with which it was
put rendered it so ; the young Englishman therefore re-
plied to it with an air of careless disdain, showing that he
perceived the offence but felt himself above it.
147
" I do not," said he, " go to visit Don Garcias, neither
have I the pleasure of his acquaintance."
" My uncle has then commissioned me," said the che-
valier, " to inquire what business brings you to the Cas-
tello."
" I go there," said Harfield, " to visit my sister, who
has for some time resided there."
"In apartments, I apprehend," said the nephew of
Don- Garcias, ' which, in my uncle's absence, the steward
has been allowed to let to strano;ers?"
" Certainly," said the Englishman ; " in apartments
hired from Pietro Gonzalo, whatever he may be."
The Portuguese bit his lip at the last insinuation, and
continued, in a tone of increased insolence, " You will
permit me to inform you, signor, that the apartments
which face the east, reserved for the proprietor, are at
present occupied by his family,"
" I thank you for the information," said Stirlington ;
" but I had no intention to intrude myself on the family
of Don Garcias;" and bowing carelessly in answer to
De Toromendo, he passed on to the Castello.
" Oh, signor," said Ursula, " here are surprising pro-
ceedings ! Don Garcias has been here for many days
with his young and beautiful wife, whom he married in
Spain. That terrible and vindictive Don Diego, his
nephew, is with him, and such a set of fierce-looking
ruffians, as appear to be only fit for the castello of a
bandit. God defend us ! and send them well away again,
say I.
148
" Silence ! and begone, old crone," said Pietro Gon-
zalo, who was bustling about with an air of the most
consequential importance, greatly raised in his own esti-
mation by having been placed at the head of Don Gar-
cias's establishment. " My master is accompanied, signor,
by several gentlemen of the first consequence, who are
engaged, like himself, in defending the rights of Don
Carlos, in Spain, against those who frame hateful consti-
tutions as an excuse for treason to their liege lord the
king. Yes, yes," said he, ''that is the cause — their
constitutions are mere cloaks for disloyalty, as Don Diego
has well explained to me, who hates a constitution as
much as he does an Englishman — that is to say, he can
endure neither the one nor the other."
The usual cringing servility of Pietro, changed into
this coarse insolence, convinced young Harfield that now
he had been flattered by his feudal lord and his nephew,
that all the obligations he was under to his father were
but as dust in the balance ; he saw that the pompous and
insolent blockheadism of Pietro was unmasked in grati-
tude, and felt immediately convinced that to leave his
sister there in such company, with only his protection,
was by no means commendable : but learning from Ur-
sula that Don Garcias and his companions were not likely
to return for more than a week, he resolved to remain for
a few days, as had been his original intention, to teach his
little sister to ride the beautiful pony he had brought her.
In the mean time he resolved to send the muleteer to
Lisbon with a letter, in wliich he would inform his mother
149
of the change which had taken place at the Castello, and
recommend her to take the necessary steps for the removal
of the child when he himself left it.
On the foUowino; mornin"; Harfield Stirlingion had
forgotten the existence of Don Garcias and the stupid
insolence of Pietro, and was resolved to give his little
sister her first lesson in her equestrian exei'cise. Fidato
had prepared the pony for the purpose, in a retired
walk at the end of the gardens, closely shaded from
the morning sun. The little pupil succeeded to ad-
miration, and her palfrey proved the most gentle and
docile little creature imaginable. As the pony had stop-
ped to enable Fidato to make some arrangement which
he deemed desirable, a large wolf-hound, lately arrived at
the Castello with Don Garcias, sprang over the fence and
rushed immediately at the pony, baying dreadfully ; be-
fore there was the slightest chance of its being prevented,
the pony rushed off at full speed, and the agonized bro-
ther and his frighted attendant saw him pass a turning in
the walk, the child still on her seat, but without the pos-
sibility of retaining it. Harfield rushed after ; but shortly
found her in the arms of a young and beautiful lady.
" She is safe, signor," said she, with much naivette ;
" she is quite safe. See, she fell on those roses ; she has
scarcely cruslied them — she is quite safe."
We must draw a veil over the progress of error. We
need not describe the easy conquest made by the lovely
Donna Teresa of a heart sufficiently susceptible and not
armed by those safeguards of morality which could lead
150
it even to shun the first temptation. Suffice it to say that
from this hour the young wife became to Harfield Stir-
lington an object of eager pursuit. He was aided by all
the talents of Fidato, who was intended by nature for a
clever lad, but who, by an early initiation into the vices
of Lisbon, had been made a villain.
Teresa had been bred up in a convent in Estremadura,
in Spain, to which she had been removed from her jia-
rental roof at an early age, and from which she had only
been taken to become the wife of Don Garcias. The
question as to whether she loved him or not had never
been asked her — she had never asked it of herself; for at
the time of her marriage she was mlling to submit to any
arrangement which promised change and a release from
the restraints of the nunnery. Through the skilful ma-
nagement of Fidato she now frequently met Harfield at
different parts of the gardens and grounds, all of which
meetings seemed to her as accidental as their first had
been. With respect to her husband, she now discovered
that she feared and hated him, and dreaded nought so
much as his return.
Of Harfield she at first entertained but little alarm, he
treated her with the most scrupulous respect, and adhered
most strictly to the promise given to Don Diego, not to
seek admittance into the apartments inhabited by the
family of Don Garcias. Under pretence of showing her
some ancient paintings on glass which he had seen in an
old neglected corridor, open to the visitors of Pietro, he
induced her to meet him there. One investigation of the
151
paintings did not satisfy tliem ; and this being a sort of
neutral ground, they frequently after met there, Harfield
having discovered that she coiild gain admittance to this by
a sliding panel, which would lead her from her own apart-
ments into the corridor unobserved by her own domestics.
When the muleteer arrived at Lisbon with Harfield's
letter, Mr. Stirlington had gone to Evora, where he was
detained a week, and Mrs. Stirlington being in a very
weak state of health, was unable to make the necessary
arrangements for the child's removal, and therefore was
content that she should remain at the Castello de Toro-
mendo until his return, under her brother's protection,
whose motives for thus withdrawing himself for a time
from the pleasures of the metropolis, she thought she could
not sufficiently admire. Time was thus gained for the im-
prudent intercourse to continue. Mrs. Stirlington's health
became daily so much worse, that Monsieur De la Motte,
a French physician who attended the family, declared that
a removal to her native country was now the only chance
of saving her life. It was therefore resolved that she
should remove to England, taking her little daughter
with her, and two female English domestics, leaving Cos-
petto, the daughter of Pietro, to superintend the house-
hold at Lisbon.
Soon after the departure of his mother and sister for
England, the indefatigable Fidato brought to Harfield the
fatally pleasing intelligence that Don Garcias was about
to set out with his nephew, Don Diego, to a distant part
of Portugal. Under pretence of ill health (in which de-
152
ception he was assisted by Monsieur De la Motte, the
physician before named,) he again took up his abode at
the Castello, in the apartments of Pietro Gonzalo. Diego,
however, unexpectedly returned to the Castello, and find-
ing that young Stirlington was residing there, suspected
the cause. He hated Teresa, because his uncle's marriage
with her had cut him off from the prospect of inheriting
the wreck of his fortunes, which, small as that might be,
was his only hope. He accordingly first alarmed the suspi-
cions of the husband, and then set such a Avatch upon the
lovers, that their clandestine and guilty intercourse was
discovered. Don Garcias, wounded and in ill health,
determined on a revenge which should at once gratify
his thirst for vengeance and conceal his dishonour from
the world. The proud and vindictive Diego eagerly
entered into his plans, as he hated both the victims, and
it would be most in accordance with his own views.
The Donna Teresa died suddenly at the Castello, and
Harfield Stirlington having returned to Lisbon, was as-
sassinated in the streets of that city as he returned from a
late party of pleasure. Before either of these events
took place, it was given out that Don Garcias de Toro-
mendo, and his nephew, Don Diego, had joined the army
of Don Carlos, in Spain. The bleeding corpse of his
boy was brought to the house of the despairing father on
the same day that letters arrived from Tom Stirlington,
stating that the vessel in which his wife and daughter had
embarked for England, had been wrecked on the coast of
Ireland, and that both had perished.
153
CHAP. VI.
" To do aught good will never be my task,
But ever to do ill my sole delight ;
And out of good still to find means of evil —
Which oft times may succeed, so as perhaps
Shall grieve him, if I fail not, and disturb
His inmost counsels from their destin'd aim."
Milton.
Although superstitious feelings have been ridiculed by
the witty, condemned by the wise, and proved by the philo-
sophical to have their origin in a heated imagination and
misguided fancy only, yet men of the strongest minds have
found it easier to laugh at them in others than to shake
themselves entirely free of them. Tom Stirlington slowly
and heavily ascended the stairs leading to his daughter's
chamber, the staircase being dimly lighted by the
shrouded lights in the vestibule and one shrouded lamp
at the head of the stairs. Perhaps the home of domestic
comfort never presents so chilling and depressing an ap-
pearance as when thus dimly but permanently lighted for
the night, showing that sorrow has banished rest from it
during the usual hours of repose. The silence which
reigned around Avas deathlike, only broken by the ticking
of the cloclf which stood on the stairs — passed a hundred
154
times unnoticed during the day, — it now claimed the un-
divided attention of the ear ; it seemed as if it was some
unearthly, restless thing, whose destiny it was to wake
while all around enjoyed the blessings of repose, and
whose task it was to measure forth and count the last
throbs of a heart expiring in agony. As he ascended the
stairs it struck one. The sound shot through the heart of
the sorrowing father.
" Is it indeed so?" said he. " Has the silent flight of
time again brought us to that awful day so fatal to our
family ? It is the 8th. of November ; and twelve months
ago on this fatal morning the bleeding body of poor Har-
field was laid at the feet of his distracted father : on the
same day arrived that dreadful intelligence which it was
my hard task to communicate to him, which, added to
the other harrowing event, crushed the noblest heart which
ever beat in human bosom. Poor Augustus! even at
this dreadful hour what are my sorrows when compared
with thine? Could I have thought that He, who, to
correct thy errors, deemed it needful to fill thy cup with
so much bitterness, would see nought to correct in me ?
Yes, the fatal hour is returned, and it is now my turn to
bear with manly resignation the trial it may bring."
This resolution was soon put to the test, for the door of
his daughter's room silently opened, and in a moment
Angela flew into his arms.
There is little of interest, and nothing of novelty, in
the anxieties of a sick chabmer, we will not, therefore,
detain the reader by a long description of them. Evelina
155
had remained for many hours in a tranquil and deathlike
sleep — her medical attendant, a sincere friend of the
family, sat beside her, watching with great anxiety the
time of her awaking : pale, and worn with fatigue and
confinement, watching the little sufferer also with an ap-
pearance of the deepest interest, sat poor Rosabel — Evelina
had scarcely allowed her out of her sight during her
illness ; and, anxious in everything to gratify her, Mrs.
Stirlington had consented that Rosabel should also keep
watch at this iinportant crisis. The little patient awoke —
recognized her father with a faint smile, and taking the
hand of Rosabel placed it in his, and immediately closed
her eyes, as if anxious again to seek the quietude of
repose.
While Tom Stirlington stood affected by this little inci-
dent, the medical man prepared to take his departure —
shook him heartily by the hand, and declared that from
the manner of her awaking, his hopes of her recovery
were greatly strengthened. His hopes proved to have
been well founded, for from that period she slowly re-
covered.
It is not, under these circumstances, matter of surprise
that many weeks passed away before the thought of any-
thing unpleasant, arising from their adoption of the little
stranger, recurred to the affectionate parents. Mrs. Stir-
lington had a great deal of her husband's genuine good-
ness of heart, but far less knowledge of the world, and
therefore was not so quick in anticipating its censures.
She seemed only anxious to forget the subject, and con-
156
tented herself by ordering that Rosabel's father should by
no means, at any time, ever be named in the presence of
either of the young ladies ; and because the subject was
a painful one to her, with far less curiosity than is
generally attributed to the fair sex, she remained unac-
quainted with all the particulars of Rosabel's history,
except what had been gathered at the inn.
As Evelina became convalescent, poor Rosabel's health
was found to have suffered considerably from the confine-
ment and want of regular rest, which Evelina's fondness
for her had imposed upon her, and which Mrs. Stirlington
had reluctantly consented to her enduring, from her strong
wish to keep her daughter pleased and tranquil. Air
and exercise were necessary for both. Tom Stirlington
evinced no surprise when told, at the breakfast-table one
morning, that they were about to take it togethei' ; but,
having gone into his office to prepare for his Cornish
journey, (the time for taking which had again arrived,)
he was visited, it must be acknowledged, with some slight
relapse of his old complaint, when he saw Bolt drive a
dashing phaeton up to the door, and Mrs. Stirlington get
into it, with both children, attired in elegant and costly
carriage costume — the young ladies being dressed ex-
actly alike. " Well," said he, " Angela is determined to
go the whole animal in this affair, for certain. It may
not be exactlv ri^ht ; but I scarcely know what to blame
in it. Psha, — 'tis an uno-rateful task to blame a beautiful
woman ; and I never saw Angela look more so tlian at
present. There, too, is little Eff., with the rich bloom
157
again upon her cheek and the bright sparkle again in her
laughing eye, assisting her little friend into the carriage
with a look which seems to say the drive would be no-
thing without her . Rose, too, receives the attentions of
Bolt with an air of easy elegance, which seems to indi-
cate that it appears to be nothing more than is due to her.
Who Uncle Ralph's disguised princess may at last tura
out to be, it is impossible to conjecture ; but one thing is
certain, that whether she be a disguised princess or not,
even the illustrious lady on the throne of England,
elegant and lovely as she is, need not to be ashamed to
acknowledge her. People will say I make a fool of my-
self, no doubt ; I half suspect that I do — but — but there
they go — may pleasure and happiness attend them all."
Stirlington's punctuality in matters of business Avas so
relied upon at the Green Dragon, that preparations on
rather an unusual scale were there made for his reception,
on the day when he was expected. Mrs. Bunce, since
his last visit, had had sundry misgivings of mind as to
the consequences of having given offence to her customei',
and had determined, if possible, to effect a reconciliation.
Accordingly, when Dragon-fly was seen dashing down
the street with even more than his usual rapidity, she was
seen standing at the door of the bar, dressed as if for an
unusual occasion ; her cap, to increase her native loveli-
ness to the utmost, adorned with an extra bob or two of
scarlet ribbon, her features made up into a smile which
approached the agreeable as near as they could possibly be
brought to it, her hands folded before her, as she stood
158
in an attitude to drop a respectful curtsey as the vehicle
should make its far-famed " bolt" down the passage : on
the other side of the entrance stood waiter, who had just
put the door of the commercial-room invitingly open,
with his hand reached to the yard bell ready to give the
signal of the expected arrival — which signal, however,
was needless, as Ostler Will stood at the bottom of the
passage, with his hands resting upon his knees and his
face turned round the corner of the butment behind which
he had thought proper to place himself that he might
witness, without personal risk, the merchant's favorite
exploit : Bob Boots, with a pair of slippers in one hand
and a boot-jack in the other, had di-awn himself up be-
hind a post on the other side of the passage, for the same
purpose. To the astonishment and dismay of them all,
Tom Stirlington kept his eyes perseveringly fixed on the
little tassels of white cotton which hung at the end of the
small triansfular nets with which Bolt had adorned the
ears of his favorite, and cast not a glance towards the inn :
Dragon-fly himself dashed on as if he regarded his
former place of rest and refreshment with contempt.
This drew them all to the front, to witness the conclusion
of so astounding a phenomenon. A little further down
the street, the crash of the vehicle rapidly turning was
heard, and in an instant it disappeared down the passage
of another, and hitherto considered inferior, establish-
ment ; in which bells were immediately heard to ring and
servants were seen hastily flitting to and fro with all that
bustle which forms so strong a contrast to the usual quiet
159
of a country inn, and to the experienced eye and ear are-
certain announcements of an important arrival.
Without speaking, Mrs. Bunce strode hastily into the
bar, where alone she found consolation on all occasions
which tried her temper. " This comes," said she, " of
his infernal pride — his diabolical insolence — his wanting
to make himself out as of more consequence than anybody
else : but I'll prick his heart for this — I'll make him re-
pent of interfering with what does not conceni him ; he
shall be fflad to leave me alone another time, without
showing; such airs as these."
Will Ostler, in the mean time, had retired into the
depths of his own dark dominions, the bend in his back
considerably increased, and his crooked knees even closer
together than ever : Bob Boots, with an expression of
features as near to serious as his broad flat countenance
could assume, slowly followed him ; he found him with a
broom in his hand, hard at work in dispersing the litter
and otherwise putting into disorder the neatly-prepared
stall intended for the reception of Dragon-fly.
" Hick-hick-hick, the snap's down," said Bob ; " the
snap's down, by the great snake, Will — the snap's down."
" It's no use 'pon earth. Bob Boots," said Will, sul-
lenlv, " vor you vor to go vor to ti-y vor to hindiver to
tell me better than what I knows. If you mean by
zayin' the snap's down, that old missus is done up — you'm
rio-ht — vor she's settled, all to immortal smash."
Here a long pause ensued ; for it is not easy even for
men of genius to keep up a conversation where no difl^er-
«nce of opinion exists.
160
" I b'lieve she rents the house," at length resumed Bob,
of old Mr. Aubrey out at the Barton ?"
" If living in a man's house from year to year and
never paying no rent at all be kall'd rentin' it, whey then
she do," said Will.
" Hick-hick-hick — Wine bill long's my leg," said Bob ;
" never settled since old Mr. Ralph's time, — snap's down,
by Gosh."
" If you mean by that," said Will, " that old Mr.
Aubrey wull put missus to trubbel 'cause Mr. Stirlington
have took a nifF about that little maid, you'm mistaken ;
or if you mean to go vor to zay that he's like them there
half-rav'nus half-starv'd kimmershells wot bring in zitch
bosses of that zort if man an' boss was put togither in a
zawpit they'd begin to eat one th' other, — if zich fules as
that git offended in one thing, they'll hact ungen'rous, and
untradesman-like in another ; but tis'n zo with Mr. Stir-
lington— they'm abuv zitch ways as that, the whole fam'ly
ov 'em. If-so-be you think he'll hinjer missus out of
revenge, you'm a true-born'd thoro'-bred jackass, and no
mistake : but here's th' point, Bob — mind me now — if he
leaves the house, there isn't a kimmershell-man on the
road will stop to 't — that's the moral on't."
" Didn't I zay that the snap's down?" said Bob.
" Yes, Bob," replied Will ; " but what's the use ov thy
zayin' it — thee cassn't tell me better than what I knows.
But look, Bob ; there goes Miss Deborah Mangleshape
into the bar, as vull ov malice and unchritableness as a
egg's vull o' meat. She's fine company vor missus !
They'll be snug enough together for the next hour or two j
161
and the old scratch himself might be proud to make one
of the party. Let you and me drink confusion to them
all three."
The lady thus announced was a maker, and for aught I
know a mender, of fashionable corsets. She was aware
that her having lost the favor of Tom Stirlington and his
influential family, must be the cause of much embarrass-
ment to Mrs. Bunce, and would, perhaps, at no distant
day be productive of absolute ruin to her, and had there-
fore called, to exult secretly over her distress and humili-
ation, in a friendly way.
Miss Deborah Mangleshape was not one of those who
carry their heads too high, for the whole length of her
interesting person elevated it not above four feet from the
ground ; but what nature had denied in altitude it had
supplied in breadth : upon her broad shoulders was
placed a large, round, bullet-shaped head, and confined
to them by a neck so short that it was entirely out of
sight — so that (to use Will Ostler's elegant comparison,)
with its large green gogling eyes and capacious mouth, it
seemed to turn like a turnip-lantern on a butter-churn.
" Hick-hick — what a queer dumpy little body 'tis,"
said Bob Boots ; " why she's every bit as thick as what
she's long — hick-hick."
" Yes," said Will, " and as vile in heart as what she's
comical in person. If twasn't vor the difference in the
leno;th ov 'em missus and her might rin together in a cur-
ricle. If the old Nick doesn't git the both ov 'em in
the long run he can't have sense enough to cany on his
162
own business. But come along Bob, while they'm en-
gaged in ill wishing — which is worse than witchcraft — let
thee and I try if the bands of friendship don't grow the
stronger the more they be wet."
Bristling with the accumulated finery of every descrip-
tion of frill, flounce, and furlielow, which the skill of her
dressmaker could introduce into a space so limited, the
amiable lady thus described presented herself at the door
of the bar, and inquired with a voice of most insinuating
sweetness if she might come in.
" Ha-ha-ha," said Mrs. Bunce, " come in, my dear !
by all means. I'm most happy to see you. What lucky
chance has gained me this favor ?"
Here the ladies most cordially shook hands. Mrs.
Bunce was perfectly well aware of the friendly motive of
her neighbour's visit, and therefore determined to hide all
appearance of chagrin under the mask of boisterous mer-
riment. " I'm quite alone you see, my dear ; and there-
fore I'm quite delighted that you have dropp'd in to help
me to enjoy my holiday, it is so rare a thing for me to be
alone : do pray be seated."
Miss Deborah now placed herself as nearly in a sitting
position as a lady of her height could do on a chair of
ordinary dimensions.
" Dear me !', said Mrs. Bunce, in malicious allusion
to her personal deficiency ; " is that chair too high ?
Would you prefer the stool, my dear?" Here she
pointed to a foot-stool so ridiculously low, that had the
lovely Miss Deborah accepted the proposal slie would
163
have seemed, to the eye of a stranger, to have fallen into
that situation into which persons are proverbially liable to
fall who attempt to sit on two stools.
Biting her lip with suppressed anger, she declined the
offer ; and Mrs. Bunce, perceiving that under pretence of
a polite attention to her guest's comfort she had had the
satisfaction of mortifying her vanity, became more cordial
than ever ; she discussed the scandal of the whole town
with so much rapidity and tact, that Miss Deborah panted
in vain for an opportunity of wounding her feelings in
any way, or coming to the subject of her visit : at last
she exclaimed,
" Well, mum ! if I stay here much longer you will be
the death of me ; you are so witty and agreeable, that I
shall laugh myself into convulsions ; and I never saw
you look so beautiful as in those splendid red ribbons —
they are becoming to a degree. What a clever man that
Dabbleclout the dyer is — he can make any soiled, worn-
out old thing look equal to new ; I declare, mum, he has
done that with your superlative fine ribbons." Here she
spread forth her hands in apparent delighted admiration
of the trimmings, but in reality exulting at the mortifica-
tion of the hostess on being reminded that the ribbons
had passed from disgrace to honor under the rosy fingers
of Dabbleclout the dyer.
Disguised as this piece of petty malice was, it was
entirely seen through by Mrs. Bunce, who gave her full
credit for the motive : she therefore replied to it sharply
and haughtily — " Leave my ribbons alone, my dear —
164
I have been too much used to the compliments of your
betters to take any notice of the like unto you."
With this she flounced out of the room, giving some
order to a servant, leaving her amiable visitor to digest
her politeness as she could.
" The like unto me ! hey," — grumbled Miss Deborah —
" the like unto me ! Well, I never. I know the time
when she vras one of the dirtiest servant wenches in the
town. She came here to live with the silly old landlord
just before he had a fit of the gout — she nursed him — it
lasted some months — by the time he got well it was time
for them to get married : the like unto me ! There's one
comfort — my character is not, like her red ribbons, a
soiled thing glossed over."
These reflections having passed through her mind, by
the time of Mrs. Bunce's return she was fully prepared
for mischief Accordingly she said, with the most inno-
cent look and the sweetest manner imaginable —
" Dear me, mum ; I'm surprised to find you so quiet,
you us'd to be all of a bustle when Mr. Stirlington was
here. I saw him drive in at our end of the town like
any madman, as usual. Really, mum, he ought to be
prosecuted ; and they say there is an act of parliament to
punish such ones for being furious."
" Then he ought to have been punished," said the land-
lady, " long ago : the violentness of his temper ought to
be put down by law. But I Avash my hands of him —
yoii need not, my dear, be afraid of finding him here,
kicking up an uproar in evejy corner of tlic house, as he
165
us'd to be — he dares not show his impudent face in my
house."
" Dear me ! how singular," said Miss Deborah, in
well-feigned astonishment.
" No, my dear," continued Mrs. Bunce, " he dares not
to come here ; he served me barbarously when he came
down on his last journey. However, I was so foolish as
to forgive him. My disposition is too tender and for-
giving; by half, my love ; but I was loath to hurt the
feelings of his wife, poor unhappy creature — for, my
dear, as I may tell you in confidence, it was all on ac-
count of that misbegotten little wretch, the child who was
left upon my hands by that cut-throat villain the portrait
painter — "
" Oh, I heard," said Miss Deborah, with great sweet-
ness and humility, " that his child and all his property
was left in your hands."
"Ha-ha-ha!" roared Mrs. Bunce with an hysterical
laugh, but wincing under the insinuation, as her fair
friend intended she should; " property indeed ! that beats
eveiything ! Where should such a vagabond as he get
property ? — ha-ha-ha ! My dear, I had a better opinion
of your sense."
"Dear me, mum," said Miss Mangleshape, "pray
don't be angry ; I merely said what eveiybody says — not
that I know anything of the matter myself: but what
right had Tom Stirlington to interfere about that vaga-
bond child ?"
166
" More right tluin people think of," said Mrs, Biince.
** Listen to me."
" Yes, mum," said Miss Deborah, eagerly.
" Come closer," said the landlady.
The amiable corset maker drew herself to the edge of
the seat, but even that would not do, it was not close
enousrh for Mrs. Bunce, so she slid down on the before
despised stool, on which she sat looking up to her enter-
tainer with eager and inquisitive looks, while she bent
over her, and, in an almost inaudible whisper, said —
" About that child, Stirlington has the right of a father.
She is a love-child of his own."
"The Lord purteckt us!" said Miss Mangleshape,
with great perturbation. " What a monster ! I wouldn't
trust myself in his company for five minutes. When a
hinnecent, hamiable young creature gets into the hands of
such ones, mum, the most virtuoustest resolutions are like
the snow before the sun."
" I dare say, my love," said Mrs. Bunce, soothingly,
" that you find them so. But, in regard to Stirlington,
believe me he is a monster in every point of view. My
heart aches for the poor milk-and-water, hen-hearted
thing, his wife. / would have plucked his heart out.
Only to think, my love, of his sending the poor thing
down here with a tale of a tub about her respect for the
child's mother : he forced her actually to take the base-
born little wretch into his own house, where she has ever
since been treated as one of the first cpuility. It was bu(
167
yesterday that a friend of mine was in town and saw her
driving through the streets with his own wife and
daughter."
"Merciful heaven!" said the maker of corsets; "the
sins of the flesh in our times beats plague, pestilence, and
famine ! "
" Yes, my dear. But so it was ; and I wonder not at
your virtuous indignation — one's blood boils to think how
law and gospel are put to open shame by such brutes :
yes, she was a-seen but yesterday a-riding through the
streets with his own wife and daughter, deck'd out even in
more finery than they were allowed to wear : 1 was told
that she was looking about her — that infamous child was —
as bold, and as impudent, and as brazen as brass itself;
and Stirlington's wife and daughter in comparison to her
were looking quite like a hinferior sort of people."
" Dear me, dear me !" said the fair Deborah, with a
deep groan ; " it must be tlie very abominations of the
wicked woman of Babylon, who sat upon the seven hills,
clothed with scarlet — with a knowing glance at Mrs.
Bunce's head-dress ; and yet " said she, " it makes me
laugh, too, to think of that Miss Angela Aubrey — she
was a beauty, as people used to call her, and as high-
minded as need to be, and now turn'd into a mere nursery
maid for this wine merchant's base children — ha-ha-ha, —
it makes me laiigh ; we shall see the downfjtll of more
than one of them — ha-ha-ha ! "
Here the landlady's laugh was a * ready chorus.' "
168
" I used to work for Miss Angela/' continued the
rectifier of the female figure, " when she lived out at the
Barton. I do some things for them still — for that is their
pride, Mrs. Bunce, their foolish pride, to have it said they
never desert an old servant or an old tradesperson : I
always am told to call upon her for orders when I go to
town. She looks very well, and seems very happy."
" All deception, my dear. Though the poor tame crea-
ture takes it so quietly, everybody knows she is dying of
a broken heart ; and so I am sure she ought to if she has
any heart to break."
" But do you think, Mrs. Bunce," said Miss Deborah,
" that she rightly knows the worst of it ? Do you think
she is aware that the little vagabond wretch is his own
daughter ? "
" If she does not," said Mrs. Bunce, " she ought to
be brought acquainted with it ; if she does know it, she
is as bad as he is."
" I'm going up to-morrow," said Miss Mangleshape :
" I shall call as usual for orders — I shall soon find out
whether she knows it or not. I'll be bound for it she
shall not die in ignorance."
" You are very right, my dear, very right," said Mrs.
Bunce. "But you surely are not going? Do, pray,
indulge me with a little more of your company."
" Really, mum," said the little dumpy corset maker,
fairly raised upon her legs, though not much higher than
before, " I must go — your company is so bewitching that
169
I have staved longer already than I oucjht ;" and shaking:
hands most cordially, the acquaintances separated, appa-
rently the vparmest friends on earth.
" So," said Mrs. Bunce, when her visitor had left,
" that little ugly lump of gall and bitterness will bring the
thing up to Stirlington's wife, will she ? Well, well, that
is something — it will make the poor silly thing repent of
having interfered in the matter at all. As to him, whether
she talces it quietly or not, it will sting him — ha-ha-ha ! —
sting him to the heart. I dare say I shall have the child
back again in a week," — here she clasped her hands with
demonlike energy, as the hope of vengeance rushed on
her mind. If so, shan't she suffer for all the mischief she
has done ? I won't care for the mischief itself if I can
but make her suffer for it. But whether I have that
comfort or not, this I know, that Deborah Mangleshape's
interfering with the matter at all will bring upon her the
vengeance of the whole family — her sole dependence is
on them and a few fools who follow their example. Poor
Deborah — ha-ha-ha ! — she, at least, will be like a snake
choked with its own poison."
Miss Deborah, as she moved rapidly towards home,
thus reflected upon the past and the future —
"Well, this n really glorious. I'll tell this to Mrs.
Stirlington ; it will tear her poor foolish heart to hear
it — but she will think it kind in me. Mr. Stirlington
cannot blame me for tolling what I have heard, as I
shall instantly say where I heard it ; but his vengeance
will fall on old Dame Bunco — ho will press for his bill —
170
Mr. Aubrey will come in for his rent ; then some folks
who have got a few pounds may get married and become
mistress of the Green Drasron ; and, instead of lookinor
down on the like unto me, old Mrs. Bonce may be re-
duced to the state from which she rose, or worse — ha-ha !
worse, and, like satan, the father of lies, be scorched
-scorched — scorched to death in her own flame."
CHAP. VII.
" O, had I but the wings of a dove, that I might fly away and be
at rest."
" He looks forward from the little inn of oar mortality to the
long summer journey which lies before him." — Bulwbk.
The brief winter of that beautiful climate had passed
over Lisbon as if it had only visited that fair city to give
warning that it was the time of its more terrific rule on
the hills of the north, and the spring was in all the fresh-
ness of its first rich bloom. Augustus Stirlington lay
reclining on a sofa in his library, apparently too weak
to quit the recumbent posture : at a table near the sofa
sat Anselmo Gilianez, a monk of the order of St. Francis.
The mother of Father Anselmo was a native of Ireland,
171
he had, therefore, been bred up among the EngHsh and
Irish residents at Lisbon, and had thus been acquainted
with Mr. Stirhngton from the time of his arrival there.
Though Ansehno Gilianez was more than twenty years
the senior of Augustus Stirhngton — though their ways of
thinking varied as much as might have been expected
from the natives of different conntries, whose occupations
were so widely dissimilar, and, above all, though their
faith differed more importantly than all the rest, they had
long been friends. A book lay on the table before the
Franciscan, and with that he seemed chiefly occupied,
although he from time to time directed a look of compas-
sionate interest towards the couch of his sick friend,
showing that it was there that his thoughts were princi-
pally engaged.
The apartment was a spacious and a splendid one, for
all the richest productions of the East and of the West
which could contribute to its splendor had been there
collected, and arranged with the purest taste. The life-
like statues which rested on their pedestals around might,
to the fanciful eye, appear to be the rightful inhabitants of
the room, and its owner their guest. Chosen and ar-
ranged with the purest taste, they exhibited, however, in
their possessor, a fondness for those objects which are
calculated to awaken grave, and even sad reflection,
rather than tor the gayer productions of the luxuriant
fancy. They seemed, therefore, fitting spectators of the
scene — tho. effect of which was greatly heightened by the
glowing tints reflected from the i-osc-colored draperies
172
partially shrouding the windows, which were open to the
balcony to admit the fresh evening breeze : the scarlet
draperies were so placed as partially to exclude the too
brilliant rays of the setting sun, and thus a kind of rosy
twilight was diffused through the apartment, which seemed
to communicate to the almost Uving marble all of life
except its activity. This apartment remained as it had
been arranged by the direction of Mrs. Stirlington, a few
days previous to her departure for England. Portraits of
her children had been hung around the room, and she was
enabled to complete the number by what was an invalu-
able addition in the estimation of the fond father, a very
striking resemblance of their youngest child, who was
about to accompany her to the land of his nativity : this
latter portrait had been completed a few days previous to
their departure. Although the sight of these in his lonely
moments, looking, as it seemed, upon him with their ap-
pearance of blooming beauty and happy innocence, was
to the bereft parent most painful ; yet he had never been
enabled to acquire sufficient resolution to order them to
be removed. The fear of encountering this sight had,
sometimes for days togethei", banished him from his
library ; yet he resolved that even every trivial ornament
should remain as directed by his wife : the only alteration
which he allowed was one brought about by a little
stratagem of Father Anselmo's. I'he good Franciscan
had observed that, even after returning cheerfulness had
seemed to indicate a temporary forgetfulness of his irre-
trievable loss, a sudden glance at tlie poi'trait of liis
173
adored wife, would recal all the sorrowful associations
connected with her loss to his mind with painful and
sometimes overwhelming force. During the absence of
Mr. Stirlington from home for a short time the benevo-
lent Franciscan had caused an elegant silk drapery to be
placed before it : the curtain at first seemed to annoy and
offend him, but respecting the friendly motive with which
it had been placed there he did not name it ; it was
allowed to remain — and from that time the resemblance
of the lovely features of Mary Harfield had remained as
closely veiled from human sight as those which had been
buried in the depths of the ocean.
Upon the present occasion the complexion of Augustus
Stirlington exliibited the paleness of mortal disease, yet
his features had lost nothing of their lofty expression, nor
his dark eye aught of its keen, stern look of firm decision
and intellectual vigour, Avhich bespeaks a man capable of
thinking for himself and determined to exert that privi-
lege. The conversation was commenced by him.
" Father," said he, " I am dying — surely though
slowly dying — the death struggle, though it may not
come immediately, Avill not be long delayed."
The good priest approached him in silence — in silence
the friends shook hands ; the benevolent features of the
kind-hearted Franciscan assumed an appearance of the
deepest sympathy and sadness, but the noble countenance
of Augustus Stirlington expanded into a bright, uncartlily
smile.
174
" I ask not pity, good Father Anselmo — I need it not
— I need it not ; two years ago I should have needed it —
then I was a man who had been raised, by a train of un-
interrupted success, to the lieight of my ambition — from
obscurity to wealth and greatness, and possessed of the
strongest hopes that there were those who would follow me
who would emulate all that had been commendable in my
life, inherit the proceeds of my success, and bless my
memory — but whose happiness would be for a time inter-
rupted by my departure. Oh, then it would have been
terrible to die."
" My son," said the monk, " I fear these thoughts are
far too agitating for you in your present weak state."
" No, father, no ; they ease my heart of the intolerable
load caused by a silence too long continued ; they have
ever been present with me, while you and others have
kindly exerted yourselves to make me forget them. I
could now arise, and, with imtrembling hand, pluck away
that friendly veil which hides the resemblance of those
features the shadow of which I have not so long dared to
look upon. The period of my loneliness — the night of
my desolation draws to a close ; I shall soon be with
them, or cease to regret them. Oh, father ! even you —
though you have numbered many years, cut off from the
endearments of life as you have been — know not how
easy is the flight of the spirit when the ties which have
bound it to the scene of its earthly pilgrimage have onc(!
been strong and have at last been all cut asunder."
175
"My son," said the priest, "there is an appointed
time for man once to die — the time unknown — the will
of Him who appoints it inscrutable ; but while life re-
mains it has its duties — we must not relinquish ourselves
to Death from mere unwillingness to live."
"Yet," said Mr. Stirlington, "that is the fatal, the
incurable disease which has brought me thus to the con-
fines of the grave; I am surrounded by wealth and
luxury only to feel their noisome insufficiencv — bv ease
and comfort only to feel the wearisomeness of leisure —
and my bosom is filled with cultivated aflfections, strength-
ened by habit and exercise, only that I may feel that the
world to me is a blank — that they have no object to fix
upon."
" But," said the friendly Franciscan, " there is the
green island of your birth, my son, and the finends of
your childhood."
Anselmo paused, for a shudder of agony seemed to
convulse the whole frame of the suffering man; but
covering his face with his hand, he remained some time
silent, —
"O God !" at length he exclaimed with a deep groan.
" thou alone knowest how I have longed to see them both,
the friends of my youth and the land of my nativity ; but
to them I shall never, never return ! How, in my deso-
lation, could I look upon the green pastures of Devon,
through wliich I once passed with so much pride, sur-
rounded by so much happiness ? Friends of my early
days ! how could I receive the incense of their affection
176
offered to a cold and broken lieai't ? No, father ; your
friendly hand must close my eyes, and not the hand of
kindred affection ; I must die in the tranquil despair of
loneliness."
" Speak not of despair, my son," said the monk com-
passionately, " it is a word which should not be upon the
lips of the departing "
" Father!" said Mr. Stirlington, suddenly raising him-
self into a sitting posture, " our faiths differ."
A thrill of compassion, amounting almost to horror,
shot through the heart of the sympathising priest, and a
convulsive shudder shook, for a moment, his every limb.
" Father," said Stirlington, " our faiths differ — but I
spoke not of hereafter when I spoke of despair ; the first
yearning of my heart, even in childhood, was after im-
mortality— the first conviction of my mind when reason
dawned upon it was as to its reality. Mine has been a
life of busy occupation, and not devoted to the tranquil
contemplations of the cloister ; but as I have journeyed
through the wilderness that conviction has still, like a
pillar of cloud, travelled on before me, and it turns into
a briofht liffht as the shadow of the tomb hovers over me."
" Prince of compassion, Redeemer of the earth, I thank
thee !" ejaculated the monk, crossing himself devoutly.
" But, good Anselmo," said the dying man, " the
controversies which have divided the hearts and the
opinions of men must not be discussed under the shadow
of the valley of death. You have been my friend in life,
and at this awful hour von will not desert me."
177
Here he held out his pale, cold, wasted hand to the
Franciscan.
None but the sincere in faith, whose sympathies the
blight of bigotry has not blasted, can tell how warm and
yet how bitter was the tear which Anselmo Gilianez shed
over it.
" My son," at length the monk resumed, " this agi-
tating conference must be brought to a close — it is too
much for you, and it betrays me into weakness which I
thought long self denial had excluded from my heart ;
but, I again repeat it, it is this despondency of life which
is depriving you of it."
** Yes, yes, father ; I know it — I feel it — it is the re-
luctance of the soul to enter upon the ordinary pursuits
of trifles which fatigue without exciting me : nothing to
wish for, nothing to hope, my torn and lacerated heart
seems unmlling to beat. But, father," he said — and here
he suddenly stood up, which the monk beheld with as
much astonishment as if a corpse had been suddenly re-
animated in his presence, " good father, and my sincere
friend — you say that my disease is a mental one — I be-
lieve it ; but it is not the less mortal on that account : —
yet," — (here he Hxed his eyes earnestly upon his com-
panion, and sunk his voice to a low, confiding whisper,) —
" being in the mind, it may have affected its own proper
orsran — mv brain is bewildered, — in the loneliness of the
nio-ht, on my sleepless pillow, there come to me dreams,
waking dreams, and althougli they relate to impossibili-
ties, my nerves feel re-strung and my heart reanimated.
178
Could Harfield, only Harfield, stand again beside me in
the graces of his fatal beauty, with that bland intelligent
smile which was printed on my heart when I dreamt that
he was untarnished with dishonour ; or had the assassin
but spared his heart and blighted his name, and had done
it wrongfully, I could go forth to battle with the world
by the side of my young champion as strong to repel its
injustice and to redress his wrongs as ever, ever in my
life I was. Or could but those lovely blue eyes which
seem to tremble as they look upon me from that picture
once more be fixed on mine — could I but once more sec
my last, my loveliest child — "
" But, my son," said the Franciscan, sorrowfully,
" these are impossibilities."
" I know it," he replied ; " the false creation of the
heart-oppressed brain ; and I have nothing to do but to
die — to welcome death, and calmly, gladly pass away."
As he said this, he suddenly sunk upon the sofa, in-
stantly deprived of the strength which a momentary
enthusiasm had supplied him with.
A slight tapping at the folding doors which opened into
an adjoining corridor now attracted the attention of Father
Anselmo, and he was far from displeased to find that it
was Monsieur Jacques De la Motte, the French physi-
cian, requesting permission to enter. The professor of
the healing art capered up to the sofa with many grima-
ces, followed by Ursula, often before named.
** Here is Signora Ursula," said he with the patronising
air of one who was often admitted to Mr, Stirlington's
179
retirement, and tlierefore thought himself entitled to ask
a favor for her. " Signora Ursula, monsieur, the wife of
Signor Pietro Gonzalo, magior-domo of the Castello de
Toromendo, and mother of the Signora Cospetto, the
superintendent of your own household, come to you with
the strangest of all imaginable petitions — it is no other
than that you should take upon yourself the office of a
priest, and hear a confession."
"A confession?" exclaimed the Franciscan, annoyed
at this ill-timed impertinence.
" Yes, holy father," replied the physician, " a confes-
sion of crimes so horrible, of offences so revolting, that
she, Cospetto I mean, will not place confidence even in
me."
"My daughter Cospetto, signor," said Ursula, ad-
dressing Mr. Stirlington, " believes herself to be dying :
there is something which presses heavily on her con-
science, but she will confess it only to you."
"To me!" exclaimed Mr. Stirlington, faintlv. "Of
what nature ca7i such a confession possibly be ? "
" May the holy San Nicholas defend us !" said Ursula :
" it is impossible to conjecture — she will give no hint to
me — she seems driven to distraction when I talk of her
confessing it to Pietro, her father, as is most natural she
should. Holy Virgin ! Mother of God ! defend us ; if
it should prove to be aught relative to the wicked ways
or the murder of Signor Harfield "
In an instant Mr. Stirlington stood on his feet : his
cheek, lately so deadly pale, burning with the crimson
180
glow of impatience — his weak frame seeming strung with
supernatural energy.
" Father," said he, " I am ready; lead the way, I will
go instantly, and hear it all — all, though each word be as
a scorpion sting to my tortured heart" — (and he here ad-
vanced a step or two, then paused.) — " Father," said he,
" lend me your friendly aid, I am still weak ; De la
Motte, your arm — I can go, however. Anselmo, look
not thus compassionately upon me ; De la Motte, there is
no cause for that look of alarm : but I must be quick —
haste, haste, delay is death. O God ! will this dreadful
task never be done, never, never complete?"
Here he rested heavily upon his supporters ; gradually
sunk into the friendly arms of Anselmo, and was again
laid on the sofa in a state of complete prostration and
utter helplessness.
De la Motte took two or three rapid turns through the
room, finishing each with a pirouette like that of an opera
^lancer, (for his whirligig brain was only excited to a state
of activity by motion so rapid that it would destroy all
power of thought in others,) talking to himself all the
while in French, English, and Portuguese, whichever
language most readily suggested itself, lie exclaimed —
" Mon Dieu ! By Gar ! Sacra ! San Nichole ! Diable !
Here is one dilemma ! here is one immergency — one, two
immergency ! Here are two patients, one dying to dis-
gorge a secret, the other will soon die unless he be allowed
to swallow it. Holy Virgin ! they must be brought to-
gether : there will be some dreadful agitation, but like the
181
mixture of the solution of an alkali and an acid it will go
off in an effervescence and leave them both flat enough ;
they will then be either within the reach of physic or be-
yond it for ever. Mon Dieu. Ursula, bring together all
the domestics in the house : haste ! haste ! There is no
bringing a secret out of purgatoiy : it is true the parties
may soon be both together there, but the disclosures they
make there will be lost to us. Diable! Make haste,
make haste."
De la Motte here busied himself in preparing a restora-
tive for Mr. Stirlington, which seemed to awaken him
from his apparently deathlike swoon ; but he lay pas-
sively looking on upon the preparations which the phy-
sician thought proper to make, while Anselmo chafed his
temples with a white napkin dipped in some fluid pre-
pared by De la Motte.
The preparations at last complete and the domestics
assembled, the folding doors leading to the corridor were
thrown open, and the sofa, mounted on rollers for such an
emergency, passed with a noiseless, and, to the patient,
almost imperceptible, motion over the rich carpets of the
libraiy and corridor, at the extremity of which it stopped
at the door of Cospetto's apartment.
Arrived there. Monsieur De la Motte made strenuous
efforts to enter, but was repelled politely but firmly by
Anselmo ; he therefore remained pacing the corridor with
great perturbation and ill-concealed resentment. — The
reader who participates in his curiosity must participate
in his disappointment, for the disclosures made by Cos-
182
petto must be told in the regular course of the narrative.
All that was known at the time was that Mr. Stirlinjrton,
having been conveyed to his own apartment, a conference
was held between the monk Anselmo, the French phy-
sician, and Lopez de Gama, the chief director of Mr.
StirHngton's commercial affairs ; that immediate inquiries
were set on foot after a young English seaman named
Ben Brackle, who had been at Lisbon when a boy and
had lately returned there on board a ship called tlie " Re-
solve;" it was ascertained that she had sailed for Smyrna
some weeks before : orders were immediately given that a
swift sailing vessel of Mr. Stirlington's should follow her
and bring him back with all possible dispatch to Lisbon ;
that upon this point the monk appeared most anxious, and
that the Frenchman declared that, dead or alive, the sailor
must be found and compelled to return — although strong
suspicions were entertained that the physician scarcely
knew why ; that Cospetto recovered, and was, as soon as
fit for removal, sent to the Castello de Toromendo, and
there kept from all intercourse with strangers by the
jealous care of her father, Pietro Gonzalo.
While half of Lisbon was set into a state of agitation
to apprehend him, and the other half were trying to define
why the wealthy merchant should despatch a ship on
purpose to bring back an obscure British seaman, and all
determined to conclude that it forboded something dark
and dreadful, Ben Brackle was resting thoughtlessly upon
the bulwarks of the " Resolve," not exactly thinking on
nothing, but on no particular thing long at a time ; some-
183
times a thouglit of his widowed mother would cross his
mind, and of her cottage-home in one of the quiet villages
in the north of Devon ; sometimes he thought what a pa-
radise the cottage would become when lighted by the bright
smile of the pretty Cospetto : but while his reflections thus
passed from the past to the future, he could not make up his
mind to think seriously of either, and he^fiUed up the va-
cancy by singing short snatches of the old songs of merry
England, of which, from its frequent repetion, the favorite
seemed to be
" The flag that's braved a thousand years
The battle and the breeze."
CHAP. VIII.
" The witch has raised the storm, and her ministers have done
their work." — Congkeve.
The amiable Miss Deborah Manglesliape, true to her
purpose, journeyed by the stage to the town in wliich
Mrs. Stirlington resided, the day after lier conversation
with Mrs. Buncc, which liad put her in possession, she
hoped, of the means of destroying Mrs. Stirlington's
peace of mind, under the guise of a humble, fawning
184
friendship, and of ruining her excellent friend Mrs.
Bunce by complying with her own request to tell the
story.
Every other business which she had in the town was
dispatched with hasty impatience. Mrs. Stirlington, to
her great comfort and delight, received the maker of
corsets in her dressing-room, to which Margery was soon
summoned to take part in a cabinet council, on matters
far too delicate and important to be here recorded. The
children, Evelina and Rosabel, were engaged in studies
proper for their age, in a closet which adjoined the
dressing-room, the door of which was open, but the
governess who attended them there, on account of their
ill health, was fortunately absent. Margery took every
opportunity which business admitted of to throw a little
gossip into the conversation respecting the news at the
town of her former residence : this gave Miss Deborah
a capital opening, and when she thought her fawning flat-
teries had sufficiently wrought on Mrs. Stirlington, she,
with great humility of manner, by which she strove to
disguiset the coarse vulgarity of the communication, and
many professions of regard and gratitude by which she
endeavoured to make her malicious design appear a
conscientious act of duty and disinterested regard, she
brought out the intelligence which she had the night
before received from Mrs. Bunce.
It was received by Mrs. Stirlington with painful sur-
prise, but dignified and indignant silence, with the excep-
tion of one brief sentence, in which she firmly but calmly
185
expressed her conviction of its entire falsehood, and de-
siring that she might be no further insulted by the subject,
she left the room. This, hoAvever, was not the temper in
which Mai-geiy was disposed to take the thing : with all
the privilege of a favorite, when her mistress had left the
room, she reproached the staymaker loudly with mis-
chievous intentions in coming there to repeat scandals
which she bluntly declared she knew to be entirely of Mrs.
Bunce's own invention. This provoked a reply ; which
brought a still louder and more angry answer; which
was, however, cut short by a piercing shriek uttered by
Evelina in the closet. Poor Rosabel had fallen senseless
on the floor.
The usual restoratives were resorted to, \vith the usual
beneficial effects ; but Mrs. Stii-lington, who had been
hastily summoned, observed that big pearly tears began
to force themselves under her silken eyelids, showing that
she had recovered a perfect consciousness of what had
occurred ; yet she kept her eyes still closed, as if she
feared to open them. Compassionating this state of
feeling in the delicately-minded and sensitive girl, she
resolved, with Evelina, to retire for a short time, leaving
her for the present to the kind attentions of Margeiy.
" Weep on — weep on, my darling child," said Margeiy,
compassionately wiping away her tears, " it will do you
good ; it will do me good to weep with you for company,
though it would do me more good to sec that ugly little
bundle of ill will, the staymaker, dipp'd in a horse-pond
and toss'd in a blanket, and Mrs. Buncc sharing in the
18G
same for air and exercise. Don't you be out of heart
Miss Rose — don't you be out of heart, my dear."
Rosabel suddenly rose up. " They liave left me !" she
exclaimed, " left me when I seemed to die ! They believe
it all ! — they will fling me to the street — I shall perish —
but I will die blessing them."
" Indeed, Miss Rose, you must not flurry yourself in
this way ; Missus and Miss Effie only went away that you
might be quiet and happy ; they will soon come back, and
all will be well again."
"Never, — never!" she exclaimed ; "oh, never. The
sweetness of our love is gone — they must not disgrace
themselves by loving me ; and when my heart is broken
they must not shed a tear over my grave."
"Hush, hush, my dear Miss," said Margery; "do please
to try to compose yourself, for I hear missus coming,
and she will be so vexed to see you take on in this way."
Mrs. Stirlington entered the room with a firm and
stately step ; and, to Margery's utter astonishment, attired
in a carriage-dress. She signified to Margery that she
might leave, and was instantly obeyed. A sudden cold-
ness seemed to spread itself round poor Rosabel's heart
as she observed her altered manner, and she sat observing
her with that look of mingled love and apprehension which
her wayward fortunes had often caused her lovely features
to assume.
Mrs. Stirlington observing this, her pity and regard for
the child overcame every other consideration, and as she
pressed a fond and motherlike kiss upon her throbbing
187
forehead, their tears mingled tipon her cheeks. Soon re-
covering, however, Mrs. Stirlington said —
" My dear Rosabel, what we have to-day heard is equally
painful to us all ; but I hope I can venture to expect
that my wishes, when known to you, will be strictly com-
plied with : that is, that you will never in any way allude
to this mischievous falsehood, or to any part of your early
history, to Evelina or to any one else ; all that is necessary
to be said to Evelina with respect to what we have heard
to-day, I have said myself — she is satisfied ; her respect
for your feelings will prevent her from naming it to you ;
your regard for hers, for mine, for Mr. Stirlington' s, will,
I trust, deter you from ever entering with her upon a
subject of conversation so improper. False, entirely false
as it is, it is still unfit to be spoken of, particularly in her
presence."
Poor Rosabel found this a great and kind relief, but she
could only press the hand of her generous patroness in
silence.
" I have never," continued Mrs. Stirlington, " alluded
to the persons with whom you were connected before you
came here, nor in any way to what had been your situ-
ation. Your knowledge of English was then so imper-
fect that you would scarcely have been able to gratify my
curiosity even if I had inquired. That is not now the
case ; and you arc now old enough to understand the
motives and wishes of your best friends. I shall ask you
no questions myself, that you may understand that while
you reside here I consider these things ought not to ho
188
spoken of to any one, but particularly to Evelina." —
(Poor Rosabel wept still in silence.) — " But," said Mrs.
Stirlington, dropping her voice to a tone of soothing
compassion, as if she herself suffered pain by being
obliged to make a communication which she knew would
give it, " I feel that now I have my husband's reputation
to protect — my daughter's estimation and place in society
to defend ; this I can only do, by showing to all the
world that I scornfully reject this most unfounded ca-
lumny, by treating you publicly with the most marked
respect, aa well as with that kindness Avhich first ray pity
for you suggested, and now my strong regard for you
will cause me to continue. But still, Rosabel, we must
part."
The child turned deadly pale — a convulsive trembling
seemed to pass through her whole frame, but she spoke
not a word.
" Be not alarmed, my poor child," said Mrs. Stirling-
ton, soothingly, " we will never, never forsake you : Mr.
Stirlington did not adopt you to desert you — he will ever
continue to you his protection ; but he must find suitable
means of doing so. I myself, my dear, dear Rose, while
you deserve it — which I know you always will — I will
ever be a friend, a mother to you."
Rosabel turned a look of most keen and eager inquiry
on the face of her kind and sympathising protectress, as
she asked —
" And Effie, will she — matf she still be my friend — my
sister?"
189
" Assuredly she may — assuredly she will/" said Mrs.
Stirlington.
" But I shall not see your kind face," said the child,
" though strangers may tell me that you still love me. I
shall not see him," — (here her voice became almost in-
audible, and she seemed to fear to attempt to speak the
name,) — " not see kim when he returns, and look into his
face that my eyes may say I thank him, though my lips
are silent — and Effie, dear Effie, I shall not be there to
laugh when she is gay, or sooth her when she is sorrowful."
" My dear Rosabel, these things have been pleasures to
us all — but they must not eontmue," said Mrs. Stirlington
firmly, although a tear stood in her kind, mild eye, while
she said it: "but Margery has by this time prepared
Evelina for our drive ; go up, that she may prepare you.
Bolt will soon bring round the phaeton — be sure you put
on the dress which is so much like Evelina's."
In the lobby, however, as they descended to enter the
carriage, they encountered Uncle Ralph. Mr. Ralph
Stirlington was no man of mystery himself, neither did
he like mysteries and concealments in others ; this Mrs.
Stirlington knew, and although she shrunk at first from
the disagreeable subject, she resolved to communicate to
him the unpleasant rumour she had heard. Sending the
children on to enter the carriage before her, she invited
him into the dining-room, and, with cheeks flushed with
indignation and wounded delicacy, disclosed to him the
communication she had just received from the amial)le
Deborah Mangleshape. To her great astonishment,
190
however, instead of that warm sympathy with her which
he usually evinced when aught occurred to hurt her
feelings — instead of that tremendous burst of indignation
with which he was accustomed to receive anything calcu-
lated to annoy his nephew — Mr. Ralph heard the fii'st
part of the communication with tolerable gravity, but as
she proceeded, was visited with simdry comical twinklings
of the eye and twitchings of the muscles of the face,
which gradually widened into a broad, hearty laugh, and
ended in a roar so long and loud, that he was obliged to
throw himself into an arm-chair and gdve vent to his
humour before he could recover breath to reply to his
mortified companion.
" The little princess," said he, " a child of his own ?
Well, 'tis an idea worth a butt of Oporto ! I never need
to stand a joke from him without a retort more as long as
I live. We will have a novel written upon it, Angela —
it shall be called * The Monster Unmasked,' or the ' Hen-
hearted Wife,' my dear. Capital ! capital ! It began in
romance, it has proceeded in mystery — bravo — and will,
no doubt, if old Mother Bunce has but fair play, end in
some direful disclosure, by which Tom Stirlington will
be proved to be some monster of iniquity, a real demon
of hypocrisy, who has all his life long played the good
fellow with a bad heart."
'• Really, sir, it pains me to hear you talk thus, though
it be but in jest," said she.
" What, feeling hurt ? looking serious ? Ha-ha-ha !
That is laughalde, indeed. Well, my dear, since you do
191
not like my manner of concluding the romance, we'll save
his life at the end, and finish by clearing his character —
we will take him into a court of justice — we will bring
an action of defamation &c., — we will engage council to
prove, by a train of evidence, that this much-injured
dealer in Burgundy and Champaign is as innocent as a
young forest buck pursued by a couple of staghounds of
the feminine gender, who have most viciously fixed their
fangs in his haunches."
" But one serious word," said she. " The carriage
waits ; you will not, I hope, disapprove of my intention
of taking the children together to all public places, that I
may prove, fully prove how scornfully I reject this un-
founded slander."
" Disapprove ! my dear. I admire, I respect your
motive. The more the merrier — I will go vrith you and
prove the same thing : come along — thy heart, my girl,
is the very counterpart of old Aubrey's ; but I can't help
laughing to see you look so serious ; why you look as
dismal as if a mad dog had bitten the whole pack.
Come along — let us all go together. But — ha-ha-ha, — I
have the whip-hand of Tom for life."
192
CHAP. IX.
" O 'tis a pleasure to angle for fair-faced fools ! Then that
hungry gudgeon, Credulity, will bite at anything. Why, let me
see; I have the same face, the same words and accents, when I
sjieak what is true and wheu I speak what is not. Dear dissimu-
lation is the only art not to be knoicn from nature."
Comedy of the Double Dealer.
During tlie prevalence of the noontide heat, so oppi-es-
sive in a hot summer's day in Portugal, two persons had
taken shelter from it in the ancient corridor, before named,
of the Castello de Toromendo — Monsieur Jacques de la
Motte, the French physician, and Pietro Gonzalo, the
custodian of the mansion.
The very small legs of the physician were engulfed in
an immense pair of riding-boots, to which were attached
a pair of spurs so enormous that it seemed matter of
wonder how limbs so delicate could wield weapons so
formidable. In his hand he held a riding-whip of the
same gigantic proportions ; it seemed as if the professed
opponent of death, the last enemy of mankind, had come
forth resolved on expedition and prepared to overcome
every obstacle which might oppose his progress. These
weighty preparations were, hoAvever strongly contrasted
193
with the other parts of his equipments. His waistcoat of
fine silk was emhroidered with every kind of gaudy
color which the looms of Marseilles could possibly mingle
together : his coat, of a bright pea-green, embraced his
slender person so closely, and was completed by a swallow-
tail so slender, that it might have figured in a Parisian
ball-room : his hair was arrang-ed on each side of his
head in two large bunches, to make the most of it : but
the crowning ornament of this singular figure, was a hat,
the narrow brim of which was curled up on each side,
which might have reminded the fanciful of a crop-eared
terrier, and the crown tapered as it ascended and grew
beautifully less towards the summit (to describe it geo-
metrically,) like the frustrum of a cone, or (in a more
homely phrase) like the bottom part of a broken sugar
loaf.
His companion, Pietro Gonzalo, was a dark, swarthy,
heavy-looking person, whose beetling forehead and large
eyebrows so completely overhung his black eyes that they
seemed to glare from under them with an expression
which was at once gloomy, sinister, and cowardly ; for
his glance, though expressive of the worst feelings was
never directed to the face of the person addressed.
" And so," said the Frenchman, " my excellent and
admired friend Pietro, this was the scene of their guilty
intercourse — and that is the dreadful sliding panel in the
wainscot which admitted the young deluded wife and
brought her to the arms of that deceitful profligate, Har-
field Stirlington."
194
Pietro answered with an assenting grin, but his beetle
brows at the same time seemed to contract into a deeper
frown.
"Pietro, my good friend, it was a very villanous
affair."
" Villanous ! yes, signor ; but what is that to these ac-
cursed heretics?" grumbled Pietro.
'^O, nothing, nothing," replied De la Motte: they
boast of their superior morality, but it is all hypocrisy.
They expect everything to bow down to their low-born
insolence — their commerce-created wealth; to that they
think our wives and daughters should be subservient."
" Never, never ! by San lago," exclaimed Pietro.
Rather than that thoughtless thing, my daughter, should
marry an Englishman, I would plunge a stiletto into her
disobedient heart."
"Right, right, my most penetrating and excellent
friend," said De la Motte. " Marry an Enghshman ?
Diable! It would be a pity that the pretty Cospetto
should be destroyed in that way. But then, my friend,
you must be careful of that horrible Pen Rattle, or Battle,
or whatever be his dreadful unpronouncible English name."
" Ben Brackle," said Pietro — " may purgatory receive
him ! what of him ? "
" He is bi'ought back."
" May lightning strike the accursed ship that did it/'
said Pietro.
" The ship dropped anchor in the Tagus this morning,
and to-night the criminal will be brought to the house of
195
the wine merchant to undergo his first examination. Now,
is my little favorite, the pretty Cospetto safe ? for, Signor
Pietro, you must still be on your guard, for they are such
daring villains those English, and fortune so often favors
their boldness that you cannot reckon upon one of them
as being subdued though he be at the foot of the gallows
or fettered to the guillotine. Is your daiighter safe ?"
"As safe as a prisoner can be in the secret apartments
of this castello---"
*' The secret apartments of this castello, my excellent
fi'iend," said De la Motte, interrupting him, " were not
safe enough to guard the honor of the Donna Teresa."
*' Then ! " exclaimed Pietro, turning pale with rage,
" she shall be safe if I chain her to the wall of the deep
dark dungeon, under the centre tower, which is cut into
the heart of the livins; rock."
** Pietro Gonzalo, you are indeed the most prudent and
exemplaiy of fathers ; but such bold, successful devils
are these English, that even your pious precautions may
foil," said the physician ; " but their stupidity is equal to
their pride and heretical wickedness — rhey put no one tu
the torture, my friend ; they will allow no criminal to be
proceeded against until they have obtained what they
foolishly call evidence or proof. Now, listen to me :
your daugliter knew, for a long time, of the crimes of
this seaman, her lover, but did not disclose them until she
believed herself to be dying : when, therefore, she comes
to take her part in this foolish English farce, of giving
evidence, no doubt she will give such testimony as will
save his life."
196
" Rather than she should do that," said Pietro, '' the
entrance to the dungeon of the castello, known only to
me, shall close upon her for ever."
Here there was a slight movement of the sliding panel.
Pietro looked towards it, but it was closed ; he sprung to
it, but it did not open on that side : he at last concluded
his fancy had deceived him.
" Pietro Gonzalo," resumed the physician, " you are
a most praiseworthy and pious father, for any fate is
better for the pretty Cospetto than to be the wife of an
Englishman, particularly that sailor, Ben Rattle, or Battle,
or Brackle, or whatever his heinous barbarian name may
be — the man is stained with so many crimes. By Gar !
Mon Dieu."
" But what crimes does the villain stand accused of?"
inquired Pietro.
*' Crimes, Pietro ? they are numerous, they are legions.
He is accused of every crime which the wit and ingenuity
of man, assisted by the agency of hell, could have in-
vented. It is supposed that he had formed a plan to
assassinate the Avealthy merchant ; to empty his well-
stored wine vaults, and to carry off his heavy money
coffers to the Gulf of Mexico ; that he was to become
the captain of a Rover of the Bay of Honduras ; and
Cospetto be turned into the queen of a pirate ship, and
rule with the black flag nailed to the mast over her head :
for I heard her say, in the ravings of her delirium, that
she had deeply, deeply wronged Mr. Stirlingtou, her
kind and good benefactor, as she called the haughty
Entrlishman."
197
" She shall remove to the dungeon this .very night,"
exclaimed the father. . ■
" Very right, Pietro, very ; until this danger is' passed
and the English sailor tortured to death ; but that I fear
the foolish prejudices of Mr. Stirlington will scarcely
allow. Then, Pietro, Cospetto muttered in her fevered
wanderings that he had certainly been concerned in the
death of Mrs. Stirlington and her child."
"But," said Pjetro, "how have all these things be-
come kno^A'n through Lisbon ?"
This question startled the physician for a moment, for
he knew that these reports, invented by himself, had been
spread by their author only : but, standing on the tips of
his toes, placing both hands behind him with his immense
riding-whip, in that attitude he balanced himself, looking
up to the ceiling, he seemed unwillingly to say —
" My dear friend Pietro Gonzalo, I am sorry — but I
told you that those Englishmen are as stupid as they are
proud. Mr. Stirlington, instead of placing full confi-
dence in me or any other person worthy of it, puts all his
confidence in the fat-witted monk, Anselmo, who, no
doubt, betrays him to all the old women of his community
— for a monastery of monks (San Francis excuse me,) is
but so many old women in disguise, — and thus all Lisbon
knows the secrets which the rich Englishman tliinks he
has so closely concealed. But, my excellent friend, I
must return to Lisbon to hear the results of the exami-
nation : 1 will give you notice — and at the first alarm you
will secure Cospetto in the secret dungeon."
198
" By San lago, I will," replied the deceived father, or
my life shall answer for it."
He was, however, mistaken. The moving of the panel
had been caused by Ursula ; who, knowing the French-
man's meddling disposition and his power of working
upon the dull but jealous mind of her husband, and
seeing them go towards the retired corridor, slie imme-
diately concluded that mischief was at hand ; she there-
fore had recourse to the sliding panel, which she had so
far removed as to be enabled to see and hear what passed,
unseen and unsuspected. On hearing her husband's de-
termination to confine his dauo-hter in the secret dungeon,
she was struck with horror, and immediately closed it.
She had received the keys of Cospetto's apartment, that
she might convey refreshment to her — thither she imme-
diately hastened, and communicated to her what she had
heard.
" Ben Brackle accused of crime !" said Cospetto in-
dignantly J '^ it is false — or, if accused, it is by that villain
Frenchman himself; and he is innocent as the saints in
heaven. Mother, I must now tell you, though my tongue
cleave to the roof of my mouth with horror. That
wretch De la Motte is striving to murder an innocent
man, who loves me, because he would himself betray me
to dishonor."
" Cospetto," said Ursula angrily, " why has not this
been before explained to Pietro thy father ? "
" Because," replied the weeping girl, " it was not
much trouble for me to refuse the comical old scarecrow,
199
and so I was not alarmed. Had I told Pietro my father
his proposals of infamy, he would have ruined us all by
planting a stiletto in his black and treacherous heart."
" True, true," said Ursula. " What can be done? O,
that dungeon — that dreadful dungeon."
" My kind, good mother," said Cospctto, folding her
arms around her, " you will surely never, never let me be
conveyed to it?"
" Alas ! my child, how shall I prevent it ?" said the
alarmed mother.
" By allowing me to escape," she said. ^' See, I will
knot together the sheets of yonder bed, and tie them to
the window, I shall seem to have escaped in that way."
" There is no alternative," replied Ursula ; " there is
no time to lose. Promise me that when you reach
Lisbon you will take refuge in the house of your former
master. There, there — God bless thee, my child. I
would rather suffer death than see the key of that dreadful
dungeon turned on thee by the cruel hand of thy enraged
father, who, if he had not been more stupid than Baalam's
ass, and all the tribe of asses which has descended from
him, would rather have thrashed the Frenchman out of
the castello with his own large whip than have consented
to such a thing."
Cospetto flew through the covered and shaded walks of
the gardens, till she reached the woods beyond them ; she
then hastily pursued her way along a path which led into
the depths of the forest beyond the domains of the Cas-
tello de Toromendo ; this she knew, if her memory did
200
not fail her antl night did not overtake her, would lead
her to Lisbon by a much shorter way than the high road.
At this time Monsieur De la Motte was mountino- his
mule at the entrance of the castello, the stirrup being held
by the obsequious Pietro. As he rode down the avenue
he murmured to himself — " The deep dungeon with tlie
secret entrance ! That is good. By Gar ! the stupid old
mule, the father, took it so well, that I had no need to
name it. When a woman comes up from under ground,
dead or alive, she is always a changed being from what
she went down. I must keep up the alarm of that honest
blockhead, Pietro, until the sailor is disposed of: I shall
then persuade him to release her ; she will take refuge
with my French cousin, at Lisbon — such relations are
easily found — then this girl, who has irritated me with an
impertinent refusal, called me to my face scarecrow — by
Gar, it was worse than that, it was old scarecrow — must
be made to gratify both my love and my vengeance —
ha-ha ! perhaps both — ha-ha. Mon Dieu ! that is one
beautiful thought — ha-ha ! "
201
CHAP. X.
" In what particular thought to work I know not ;
But, in the gross and scope of my opinion,
This bodes some strange eruption.
******
What might be toward, that this sweaty haste
Doth make the night joint labourer with the day,
Who is't that can inform me ? " Shakspeare.
While Jacques De la Motte exulted over the advantage
which he had gained, the present moment was, however,
one of considerable anxiety to him. Mortified that the
Friar Anselmo had alone been honored with the full con-
fidence of Mr. Stirhngton as to the real nature of Cos-
petto's disclosures, he had determined to lose nothing in
public estimation by that circumstance ; he had therefore
invented and industriously spread the most absurd ru-
mours, the authority for which he pretended to have
derived from Mr. Stirlington himself. In this he was
favored by the fact that Mr. Stirlington held no inter-
course with any one, and that Father Anselmo had, a
short time after the confession of Cospetto, gone on a
pilgrimage to a distant part of the country : the field was
therefore all his own, and offered to him a tempting op-
202
portunity to enjoy the temporary triumph of appearing to
be the only one in possession of the facts connected with
the mystery. Every wild conjecture of his disordered
imagination had therefore been recklessly spread abroad
as well authenticated truth ; and in his malicious deter-
mination to destroy the sailor Ben Brackle. his rival, he
had represented his destruction certain. The sailor having
been at length brought back, the facts of the case (of
which De la Motte was profoundly ignorant notwith-
standing his pretended knowledge,) would now be made
public, and the question seemed for the first time to strike
him whether the tissue of falsehoods which he had so
industriously woven to blacken the reputation, and, if
possible, to hasten the destruction of his rival, might not
prove injurious, nay, even destructive, to himself. But
De la Motte was a man of considerable practice, and ex-
perience had taught him that he could place very great
reliance on the bat-like instinct with which he could flit
between the meshes of his own inventions.
There are some minds so constituted that the excitement
of being surrounded by a tissue of falsehoods is all they
desire, or nearly so. The questions of danger or advan-
tage are with them merely secondary, and Avhat is so often
dignified with the appellation of their design, is, after all,
a mere yielding to this strange and grovelling propensity.
Of this character the Frenchman largely partook, for
although he had plunged into this affair with all the
recklessness of a desperate gambler, there was scarcely
anything in his design on Cospetto or his hatred of Ben
203
Brackle to counterbalance the danger with which his
falsehood surrounded him. The consciousness of the
folly of his proceedings which rushed upon the mind of
tlie physician, as he trotted down the avenue, brought
with it none of the usual depressing effects on the nerves
of the Gallic philosopher. In some men it might have
produced regret and shame — on the son of Galen it pro-
duced a few bars of an opera air, humm'd forth with all
the grimaces of a Parisian artiste. This brought him to
the high road, when suddenly remembring that he was far
from Lisbon, the scene of future mischief, he stuck both
spurs into the sides of his mule at once : this salutation
the animal only noticed by a sort of indignant snort and
by hobbling from one side of the road to the other, with-
out advancing a step ; it was followed by a heavy blow
of the immense whip, which caused her to place her both
front feet firmly on the ground and stand quite still.
" Thou ugly incarnation of the spirit of obstinacy ! "
exclaimed De la Motte ; " had Pythagoras lived in our
time, he would have proved that, by transmigi-ation, there
had passed into thee the heretical spirit of some English
old maid, grown grey and withered in the practice of that
sole virtue, resistance. Diable ! if so, there is as much
gloiy in overcoming thee as in immuring Cospetto, that
impertinent beauty, in the deep dungeon. I should be a
greater ass than thy sire to be overcome by either. Bah !"
With this he plied the spurs with such dexterity, and
rained such a shower of blows upon the mule with his
enormous whip, that alter a few moments apparently
204
passed in uneasy reflection, she started into an enraged
and furious gallop, looking all the time from side to side,
as if she sought some convenient spot on which she could
break her own neck in order to destroy her tormentor.
On this point, however, she deliberated too long, for the
physician soon drew up opposite the piazza in front of
Mr. Stirlington's house.
In the hall he encountered Fidato. " Well," said he to
the domestic, " what is now the state of affairs ? "
" The sailor is in the house, waiting for Mr. Stirlington
in the ante-room," said Fidato ; " but all things remain
yet in the greatest uncertainty."
" Of course," said De la Motte, with an air of knowing
importance, "there is the greatest uncertainty whether
this bloodthirsty English pirate shall die the death of a
dog and be hung, according to the barbarous custom of
the British ; or be guillotined, according to the better and
more refined taste of the glorious nation ; or die by the
torture, according to the more magnificent and noble
practice of Portugal."
" But, signor," said Fidato, " is there no uncertainty
as to his innocence ?"
" Innocence ! Mon Dieu ! it is one great impossi-
bility," replied the physician. " But, Fidato, I have
suffered much, even to-day, to try to collect some testi-
mony which might make it appear a little, a very little
in his favor : I rode this morning to the castello, under
the burning heat, which did penetrate my very brain — I
passed the time of siesta in the society of that most
205
respectable and stupid of all magior-domos, Pietro Gon-
zalo, the best and most tiresome creature upon earth — I
have returned upon a mule, a beast which exerts the most
singular sagacity in discovering the will of her rider only
that she may perpetually tliAvart it. The trouble I am
taking in this affair is wearing me to a skeleton. Such is
the romantic generosity of my disposition. But, Fidato,
before I proceed to take a part in the examination of this
criminal I must have refreshment."
" It shall be prepared for you immediately," said
Fidato.
" Then let it be immediately, Fidato ; and while it is
preparing I must hold a preparatory conference with the
sailors who brought him hither. Lead the way,"
The sleek Fidato, after a profound bow, obeyed, and
the professor of physic strutted after him with all the
assumed importance of a grand inquisitor about to inves-
tigate a state secret on which the existence of the Portu-
guese monarchy depended.
While De la Motte practised every kind of absurdity
to save appearances as long as possible before the do-
mestics, he was secretly muttering to himself all the
while —
" Mon Dieu ! this conduct is incomprehensible. Here
is this proud Englishman, now that by some strange
alteration in him, he is willing to live — really vastly re-
covering. Although he owes his improved health to me,
he has no gratitude — he will not let me know the secret ;
and to-day he will degrade me in the presence of his
206
domestics, by excluding me from the conference. Diable !
This is what these proud islanders call reserve. Bah !
It is one accursed peculiarity of their abominable nation."
Although De la Motte was carefully excluded even
from the ante-room, his ever-meddling propensity, like
the evil genius of the place, was destined to influence the
whole proceedings.
The captain and crew of the vessel which had gone up
the Mediterranean to bring Ben Brackle to Lisbon knew
nothing of the reasons which induced Mr. Stirlington to
send for him in such haste ; they only knew that a thing
unparalleled in the commercial history of the world had
taken place — that is, that a large merchant vessel had
been dispatched on such a voyage for no other purpose
but to bring back a common sailor ; for although advan-
tage had been taken of the voyage for commercial pur-
poses, by the directions of Lopez de Gama, no orders to
that effect had been given by the owner, and De Gama
was far too proud of his own wisdom not to take full
credit to himself for that act of prudence. They there-
fore had given full credence to the absurd rumours set
afloat by the meddling Fi-enchman. Tom Taplin, the
captain, however, carefully concealed this both from
Brackle and his captain when he arrived at Smyrna.
Ben having: been informed of the dang-erous state Cos-
jjetto was in, readily consented to return to Lisbon. The
captain of the " Resolve" being under great obligations
to Mr. Stirlington, and hoping that giving Ben up to him
would be a benefit to the lad himself, readily acquiesced.
207
It was not, therefore, until they were out of sight of land
on their return, and their supposed victim fully in their
power, that he was informed that he was a prisoner, that
he had been trepanned to go back to Portugal, accused of
the most direful offences, and to undergo a punishment
the most terrible.
Ben felt that he had conscious innocence on his side,
but that everything else was against him. Moneyless and
friendless, he was to be opposed to the princely merchant,
who might be, for what he knew, as cruel and as preju-
diced as he was wealthy and powerful. This would have
been nothine; had Ben had to meet his accuser in an
English court of justice, but was not to be regarded with-
out anxiety in a country where he had heard the most
terrific accounts of confessions having been extorted, even
from the innocent, by torture. Nor must it be forgotten
that Ben was in love. No one who has ever been afflicted
with that disease needs to be told how completely it min-
gles itself with all the other concerns of life. After
trying every possible and impossible conjecture, Ben at
length very gravely came to the conclusion that the whole
was a plot to remove him that his persecutor might the
more easily and with greater impunity destroy the honor
of his adored and beautiful Cospetto. Absurd as this
conclusion might appear, it must be acknowledged, in
Ben's justification, that he knew nothing of Mr. Stir-
lington, his character, or his situation, and that the
rumours which had been spread by De la Motte to for-
ward his own base designs on Cospetto, and which he
208
professed to have gained from Mr. Stirlington, were of
a character to give a shade of probability to such an
opinion.
Ben, under these circumstances, deemed it right to
submit to his fate until he should come into harbour. His
persecutors had no power over him but that of force
obtained by fraud ; and he resolved therefore to take the
first opportunity of escaping them, to remain concealed
until he could effect the liberation of Cospetto, and trust
to fortune for the means of reaching merry England.
He was alone in the ante-room. Ben Brackle was
rather above the common height, and remarkably well
formed ; of a dark complexion, which had been increased
by the warm sun of a southern climate ; his features,
however, were handsome and manly, but his age did not
exceed twenty ; he was dressed with a degree of care and
neatness which might argue that the advantage of his very
handsome personal appearance was by no means indifferent
to him, had not the expression of mingled indignation and
anxiety upon his sunburnt countenance shown that such
thoughts did not occupy his mind at present. His
jacket, of the royal blue, and of a make well calculated
to display to the best advantage his manly figure, was
adorned with a profusion of shining Avhite buttons, ar-
ranged in three rows in front, in the very extreme of
nautical dandyism, and was perfectly free from stain : as
were his white pantaloons, confined to his waist by a belt of
shining leather fastened by a sparkling buckle of polished
steel. Even his shoes (if this dignified chronicle can be
209
allowed to descend to particulars so minute,) — his shoes,
so low that they scarcely covered his toes, and left the
blue and w^hite striped stocking fully displayed, were pre-
pared as if they were intended to be flourished off in a
deck hornpipe rather than for so grave a business as that
in which poor Ben now considered himself engaged.
" I assure yer 'onor," said Tom Taplin to the French
pliysician, " that the lad's as smart a lad as was ever
brought to the gangway for frolicking with the gals — he's
come ashore, yer 'onor, rig'larly trick'd out — that is to say
titivated — which means, in course, rigg'd to perfection."
"Trick'd? titivated? rigg'd?" said De la Motte,
whose knowledge of English fell far short of the elegan-
cies of Tom Taplin's vocabulary ; " does that mean that
he is very dirty?"
" Quite the revarse to that, yer 'onor," replied Tom.
" It means as this — that the lad's dressed out fit to stand
as maid of 'onor to the Queen of the Cannibal Islands ;
and that means as this, yer 'onor, that it is a hindicatiou
of the lad's mind, that he's not asham'd of nothing of it,
that he will die hard, and that he will give trouble."
" Mon Dieu!" said the compounder of simples, *' what
fine heroic villains you English are ! It will be a singular
pleasure to superintend this lad's execution. A well pre-
pared skeleton of him will be a fine moral lesson for
posterity, by Gar,"
To die hard, certainly, as the captain said, was Ben
Brackle's intention — to give trouble he had no objec-
tion : but, as he stood alone in the ante-room, that cold
A A
210
depressing sensation which the lowly man is so apt to feel
on entering the presence of his superiors took possession
of him for a moment : the magnificence of the apart-
ment awed him — and even the silently retreating domestic,
closing the door with an air of cautious respect, seemed
to remind him of the unusual situation in which he stood;
but this depressing feeling of awe was soon followed by
one of bitterness and indignation, which very shortly
entirely overcame it.
" Is it not enough for this proud man," said he, " that
his ships are afloat in every quarter of the globe, and that
his house is like the palace of a nabob, that he can't allow
a poor sea-boy to earn a livelihood in toil and in danger
without being interfered with by him ? Ah ! it must be
so — there is but one way to explain it. He has decoyed
me from my ship — which was my home, my castle — and
from my good old captain, Avho was my friend and like a
father to me, and will now accuse me of crime, that I may
look like the villain he wishes me to be thought before
the people, who regard me as a wild beast ; all that he
may destroy me and worse than destroy the poor girl who
is still faithful to me — true as the needle to the pole — and
for that offence only locked up like a criminal by that
mulish old fellow her father : it is almost a pity that I
cannot belie my English nature and English breeding,
and grasp the stiletto of a Portuguese, and stab at once
at a heart so dark and villanous — "
He paused, for the door of the apartment silently
opened, and the venerable figure of Anselmo entered from
211
the library. The good father, it should be observed, had
but the day before returned fi'ora his pilgrimage, and
therefore had heard nothing of the reports which had
been circulated by De la Motte. He had surprised the
sailor in the attitude which he had naturally assumed as
he uttered the last sentence; he therefore looked anxiously
at his right hand, expecting to see there the murderous
stiletto. Satisfied, however, on that point, he cautiously
and silently closed the door. Ben Brackle, considering
him in all probability an agent in the villanous scheme
against him, turned upon him as he entered a look of such
scornful and indignant defiance, that he approached him
with the air of a man who had incautiously shut himself
into the den of a tiger.
The monk at length broke silence — saying gently —
" You are much agitated, my son, for which there is no
occasion. Mr. Stirlington will soon be ready to see you."
" And I am ready for him," replied Ben, " and for
you — and all the agents of darkness whom his wealth
enables him to command."
" This surprises me," said the friar, " I cannot fathom
its meaning. My son," he continued very mildly, " Mr.
Stirlington will himself explain everything. He wishes
to see you — "
" I know it ! " replied Ben fiercely. " They told me
so at Smyrna ; then they spoke of large rewards I was to
receive from him — fool that I was to believe them, for 1
had not earned them of him : they told me so again at
Malta — but then their tone was changed : now they speak
212
of torture, disgrace, and death ; but I scorn his treacheiy
and shall die defying his vengeance."
" You must calm this agitation, my son," said the
priest, "before you enter the presence of Mr. Stirlington;
he is far too weak to bear it."
" Too weak !" said Ben ; " too weak to hear the words
of his victim ? Too weak to witness the torture ? Then
why does he do so ? Why cannot you and his other
slaves bring forth the instruments and watch them while
they do their deadly work ? He can boast of his triumph
to Cospetto the same : and some one of less tender feel-
ings than himself can tell my poor old mother that her
boy has died the death of a criminal in a foreign land."
"A criminal?" exclaimed the friar. "Holy Virgin!
what does this mean ? Criminal didst thou say ?"
" So they call me," said Ben Brackle, gloomily.
The monk cast a keen and penetrating, and, as Ben
Brackle thought, a suspicious glance at him, which was
increased as the priest sternly demanded — " Of what
crime hast thou been guilty ?"
"None!" said Ben Brackle, firmly, while his cheek
reddened with mingled shame and indignation.
"Of what crim-e then art thou accused?" said An-
selmo.
" I know not," replied the sailor, despondingly ; " and
how I shall defend myself I know not."
The monk folded his arms in silence, walked thought-
fully across the room, and finally jiassed into the adjoining
corridor.
213
" This is a very mysterious affair," said he. " If this
youth be taken in his present angry and agitated condition
to Mr. Stirlington, it will be the death of him. He states
that he is accused of crimes, against which accusation he
knows not how to defend himself Of this Mr. Stirling-
ton knows nothing — I must prepare him for all this
before the sailor is allowed to see him."
" Father Anselmo again appeared at the door of the
ante-room and beckoned the mariner to follow him. Ben
Brackle obeyed in embarrassed silence.
The faint blush of the summer twilight was mingled
with the rays of the rising moon — but passing through
the painted glass of the arched windows, diffused over
the apartment a light so uncertain that the figure of the
monk was but dimly seen passing rapidly down the cor-
ridor. Ben Brackle as rapidly followed.
The friar paused before an apartment, the door of which
stood open, where Fidato was engaged in spreading a
[)lentiful repast under the superintendence of Monsieur
De la Motte. The physician calling loudly for some
luxury which the domestic had neglected to procure :
Fidato scampered off" to procure it, followed by his tor-
mentor.
Ben Brackle having cast a hasty glance around the
room, tumcd to inquire why he was brought there ; and,
to his surprise, found that he was alone, the monk having
glided silently from the apartment, and was in the act of
locking the door : Ben sprung hastily forward to prevent
214
this, exclaiming — " False-hearted, treacherous priest; why
ain I thus imprisoned here?" but the eclio of the Fran-
ciscan's footsteps hastily retreating througii the corridor
was the only answer he received.
Ben took a hasty turn or two through the room, in
great indignation. He was one of that class of politicians
who, when surrounded by persons whose motives they do
not understand, think they shall find safety only by
thwarting and opposing them at every move ; he there-
fore tried with all his strength and ingenuity to force the
door open ; yet slight, indeed, woidd have been the ad-
vantage he would have gained by so doing.
" Why did the treacherous old son of Beelzebub lock
me up in this sly way?" said he. " I should like to give
them a run for this deceitful trick ; a breathing will be of
service to the fat friar, and do no harm to that scara-
mouch of a doctor. Yet, after all, the prison they have
chosen for me is not the most uncomfortable in the world,
and, thanks to the Frenchman's management, there is no
danger of starvation. I wonder, now, if it would be any
great breach of good manners not to wait for compli-
ments ? That capon looks well — so does the ham ; by
jingo, upon the sideboard I see a dim vision of a de-
canter. It is a decanter, and filled with rare Oporto.
The merchant really must excuse me — I beg the French-
man's pardon — and as to the Friar, instead of saying grace
before meat, he may come and sing mass after it if he
likes. It would be horribly unmannerly, no doubt, to
215
have auglit to do with these French fricasees and nonsenses,
of which I shoukl not learn the names in a twelvemonth.
Tom Taplin, our captain, a great ungainly lubber, knew
what was just enough to keep life moving in me, and
thought short commons a proper preparation for the gal-
lows. Your health, Mr. Braclde. Thank you Master
Ben ; and confusion to the nest of varments by whom
you are surrounded. But, by jingo, the windows open
into a balcony ! "
While this dignified soliloquy went on, the capon had
become a perfect ruin — the ham had dwindled to a pre-
cious remnant ; and so often did Mr. Brackle think
proper to pledge Master Ben, that the bottle of port soon
went hence to be no more seen. On observing the fact last
mentioned by him, however, he started up, slung his hat
to his shoulder by a ribbon, as if to prepare for an emer-
gency, and in a minute was on the balcony. It was now
nearly dark, and a thick cloud obscured the moon. Ben's
resolution was taken in a moment — he sprung lightly over
the ti'cllis-work, and tying a strong silk handkerchief to
one of the bars, he was enabled to descend so as to grasp
the top of the capital of a pillar — in a moment his legs
clasped the polished shaft, and the work was done : he
slid gently down to the pedestal, from Avhence he vaulted
lightly to the ground : he then deliberately adjusted his
hat upon his head, and walked off with a slow and saun-
tering pace, as if he had just walked out for an evening
stroll : he soon, however, came to a dark narrow street,
down which he vanished wilh the rnpidify of lightning.
216
By this tliouglitlesi? proceeding on the part of the
sailor, after all the trouble which De la Motte and our-
selves have taken about it, the mysteries of our tale are
as far from an explanation as ever.
CHAP. XT.
"'The lon<? and short of it is,' said Ted ly, 'by my soul I
can't tell the right from the wrong.'"— Castle Rackrent.
A light and elegant desert was spread in the conserva-
tory, in Tom Stirlington's garden, on a bright and beau-
tiful summer afternoon. The company who had assembled
there were shaded from the summer heat by the deep
o-reen foliao-e of a luxuriant vine, which had been so
trained as to form a verdant canopy, excluding the sun-
beams, except when the breeze passed playfully between
the leaves and allowed a brilliant ray to shoot in for a
moment and immediately to pass away. The beautiful
and fragrant exotics filled the air with perfume, and by
their unobtrusive loveliness seemed to woo the imagina-
tion to pure and tranquil enjoyment. Among the profu-
sion of fruits, and flowers, and British and foreign
217
luxuries wliich spread the table, stood decanters of
sparkling wines of various hues and qualities, yet Mr.
Ralph Stirlington, who had filled for himself a bumper,
allowed it to remain untasted. Tom Stirlington's atten-
tion was so completely absorbed by letters which had that
day arrived from Portugal, that he had not yet paid the
customary compliment to his guest of filling a glass.
Mrs. Stirlington sat patiently turning over a book of
elegant ensfravinsfs, which, however, seemed to attract but
very little of her attention, for she stole from time to time
a glance, expressive of the greatest anxiety, to the un-
usually serious countenance of her husband.
Perhaps there is scarcely anything in the common
intercourse of life more depressing than to sit down with
one or two mirthful and laughter-loving companions, and
to find them for the time sad and serious. This was par-
ticularly felt by Mrs. Stirlington ; nor were her com-
panions entirely free from the infection. After a few
uneasy and impatient movements, Mr. Ralph made an
eff'ort to commence a conversation.
" Well, Angela," said he, " it is an old-fashioned
custom, but I must do myself the pleasure of drinking
your health, my dear ; although your husband has not
set me the example."
" I beg pardon," said Stirlington, hastily filling a glass;
and, after the customary compliment to his companions,
sipped a very little, and immediately again directed his
attention to the letters.
B B
218
Uncle Ralph having made this ineffectual attempt to
gain the attention of his nephew, addressed himself to
Mrs. Stirlington only, with the air of a man who was
determined not to be silent, however ill-timed his conver-
sation might be.
*' So, the children are gone to Teignmouth ?" said he.
" Yes, sir," she replied ; " I thought we should be
better without them, and they would be the better for the
drive. Bolt has taken them in the phaeton, and Margery
is gone to take care of them."
" The better ? to be sure they will," resumed he. " Two
prettier lasses you will not meet with in a day's march.
Tom Stirlington's is a promising family — princess and all."
Stirlington laid down his letter, and looked seriously at
his uncle ; who, on perceiving that he had at last com-
pelled him to attend to him, laughed heartily. On per-
ceiving, however, a blush of wounded feeling on the
countenance of Angela, he suddenly checked himself;
and Tom Stirlington said, very seriously —
"My dear uncle, may I entreat most seriously and
earnestly that I may hear no more of that ver^^, very dis-
agreeable invention of the enemy. Poor Augustus, even
in this letter, comments again and again on the indis-
cretion and the dishonour of Harfield : it is that disgrace,
that degradation of the English in a foreign land, which
has sunk into his soul, and will ultimately bring him to
the grave. For God's sake let him hear of nothing of
the sort here, in his own dear land, affecting the reputation
219
of his own family — for here he will shortly be, though I
fear only to die among us."
" Augustus here ? and to die!" exclaimed Mr. Ralph
with the greatest emotion ; " what can you mean?"
" After having so long and so strangely resisted all our
persuasions to come home, will he at last consent to do
so?" inquired Mrs. Stirlington.
" He will, indeed," said Stirlington sorrowfully ; " but
under (he influence of a delusion so strange that I fear
his sufferings have at length affected his understanding."
" Merciful Heaven ! forbid it," said Angela.
" My poor boy — my poor boy !" groaned Uncle Ralph,
*' who wound himself round my heart when it was young,
and then as joyous and unsuspecting as his own. Why
did I ever part with him, to banish him to a foreign land
for the sake of wealth and what is falsely called great-
ness?"
" You did that, my kind and generous uncle," said
Stirlington, " with the same motive which has guided
your conduct towards us in everything — a desire to sacri-
fice your own wishes, your own feelings, to our advantage.
But Augustus must be rescued from his present situation :
he appears to me to be surrounded by a set of persons
who are, perhaps, interested in deluding him, and his life
will very likely be destroyed by the agitation in which
they constantly keep him."
" I will go to Lisbon myself," said Uncle Ral[)h, " to
rescue him from such a nest of vipers."
220
" That will be needless, sir," replied Tom Stirlington.
The thing is this : an artful maid-servant, of the name of
Cospetto, has induced him to believe that his youngest
child, (who we know was drowned on the coast of Ireland
with her mother,) is still alive. She pretends to derive
her authority for this from a young English sailor, named
Ben Brackle, who was, we know, wrecked on board the
same vessel, but miraculously escaped. This man went,
after making the communication to the girl, up the Medi-
terranean ; but a vessel has been dispatched to bring him
back, and he is by this time at Lisbon, ready to take his,
no doubt, preconcerted part in the plot."
" But is there no probability of the child's having been
saved?" said Angela, eagerly.
" No, Angela," said Tom Stirlington, firmly, " not
the slightest."
"Your reasons?" said Mr. Ralph, in great pertur-
bation.
" First," he replied, " it is asserted that she was saved
by a vagabond ventriloquist, who had a child on board of
the same age. Is there the slightest probability that this
man would doom his own child to certain death to save
the child of another? Secondly, would the sailor, if
really in possession of such information, have told it to
Cospetto and left Lisbon without communicating it to my
brother, and claiming the rich rewards which awaited the
man who brought such information ? And, lastly, would
the mountebank have kept the child a burthen to himself,
221
when we would have ransomed her from liim at any
price ? "
" With every shilling I possessed in the world," said
Uncle Ralph.
" Certainly, sir ; and we must take human nature as it
is, and not be misled by the foolish fancy that such people
would act so manifestlv in contradiction to their own in-
terests. They will not be enabled to impose a fictitious
child upon him, for he would be able to recognise
her by a secret mark or sign, known only to himself, and
described in this letter to me, under the promise of the
strictest secresy. Under these circumstances I do not
think it right to undeceive him as to the probability of
finding his child in England or Ireland. The only way
to rescue him from the hands of these mercenaries who
are now playing upon his weakness, and to surround bim
by his truest and best friends, will be to endeavour to in-
duce him to come hither in search of her : for the conse-
quences of a final disappointment, now that the hope has
once entered into his heart, will be as sui-ely fatal at Lisbon
as it could possibly be in England."
This line of policy was agreed to. The reader is now
in possession of the nature of the disclosure made by Cos-
petto; the reasonableness of the anxious father's hopes
must be explained by Ben Brackle himself.
The consternation occasioned by the escape of Ben
Brackle, at the house of Mr. Stirlington may easily be
imyoincd ; but we must leave the parties assembled tliere
222
to draw their own conclusions and make their own com-
ments, and take a short moonlight ramble with the young
hero himself.
The moon had risen to her full height in the sky, the
clouds which had obscured her face in the early evening
had seemed to melt away before the persevering bright-
ness of her smile, and a flood of soft and silvery light
was flung over the forests which bordered on the domains
of the Castello de Toromendo, when Ben Brackle passed
swiftly along a dimly-lighted path which seemed to
lead into the deepest recesses of the woods. Ben's was
not a heart easily daunted, and yet it must be acknow-
ledged that his present prospects were by no means
encourasrinof.
" Well," said Ben, " It is no use for me to be down on
my luck; I have commenced my travels with a liglit
heart, and I am resolved to keep it up as long as I can ;
for I am heartily glad of the trouble I shall have given
the set of rascals from whom I have escaped ; and
I believe a light heart is the best of all travelling
companions, though I must own I have to begin my
travels ashore with some important deficiencies. I have
fortified my stomach with one substantial meal, but where
I am to get another is yet a glorious uncertainty. I'm in
a foreign land ; I have neither money, friends, nor cha-
racter : money is the root of all evil, and I'm not encum-
bered with a penny of it ; as to character, I have a capital
one to run away from ; as to friends, I hope I have got
223
rid of all my old ones in this country, and have therefore
a famous opportunity to look out for a fresh set."
In the last conclusion Ben Brackle was entirely mis-
taken ; for at the moment when he concluded himself free
from all old acquaintances, he was surprised to see a dark
shadowy figure rise up on one of the boughs of a lofty
tree, on which it had previously reclined, and now sat
attentivelv observintj him. Ben hesitated for a moment,
but at length hailed this singular apparition with a reso-
lute halloa, which was replied to only by a peal of
hearty laughter. The figure, however, flung itself from
bough to bough with the agility of a squirrel, and at last
descended on the path before him from a height which
seemed to threaten its destruction — the creature, however,
descended unhurt, and remained capering, or rather re-
bounding from the groimd like a tennis ball which had
been forcibly thrown on it, and concluded by throwing
himself on the ground, rolling rapidly over and over,
laughing all the while so loud that the forest echoes were
awakened by his mirth.
" What imp of the devil have we here ?" exclaimed
Ben Brackle.
" No imp — no devil, Don Brackle ; but a gentleman
you have long had the honor of being acquainted with/'
was the reply.
"Pablo Hermandez, by all that's comical!" said the
sailor. " Hast thou run away from the ship where we
were messmates ? Whither dost thou come from — and
whither art thou going?"
224
"Ben Brackle, my friend," said Pablo, "these are
questions of littlg moment at present ; and, besides, put in
most ungentlemanly haste. Now, I ask you no questions
— I heard thou wert in trouble — I see thou art escaped. It
is enough — with me in these forests thou art as safe as in a
fortress, until thou canst make sail for merry England."
" Bravo, by jingo," said Ben Brackle.
" Is it not very much bravo?" exclaimed the delighted
Pablo ; who, after having bounded from the ground with
two or three astonishing capers, treated himself to another
roll upon the grass and another fit of hearty laughter.
" But, Pablo," said the sailor, " you must a little
explain to me."
" Explain what ? " said Pablo ; " that being good for
anything — which a man must be on board ship — is an
insufferable bore ? — that I got tired of it, and determined
to cut such stupidity altogether ; that I ran away, and am
again a beggar, to which profession I was born and bred,
and for which by nature I was first intended. The case
at present stands thus : — I was sent here to keep watch
while our friends are preparing a feast in a neighbouring
glen ; there will be wine, mirth, and music — and of all
three thou art welcome to partake. There needs no fur-
ther explanation."
Whether Ben would at any time have raised a scruple
at accepting such an invitation is uncertain, but it is most
certain that he raised none at present, and he was soon in
the glen, surrounded by the most ragged and grotesque,
the merriest, and vilest company in Europe.
225
Wine having been procured, Pablo, who, to tell the
truth, Avas really very glad of his messmate's escape, and
proud of the recruit he had brought to the festival, be-
came very communicative. The company were arranged
in groups in various parts of the glen, and seemed to
have no common object but to make the most of the
present moment, and all to enjoy themselves in the way
that best pleased them, so that the conversation of the
sailor and his acquaintance proceeded without inter-
ruption.
" There are those, my friend," said Pablo, " who pride
themselves upon passing through life by what they call
the path of usefulness ; but it's a dull and dismal pil-
grimage. Let no one who regards his own happiness
ever take to work, say I ; but when I fell into the stupid
error of thinking I should like it, I was in love, Signor
Brackle — dismally, miserably in love, and crossed in my
expectations."
" Indeed," said Ben, absently ; for he found it difficult
to confine his attention to the discourse of his ragamuffin
friend : sometimes he thought, and could not help it, on
liis imprisoned Cospetto ; sometimes on his native home
and his widowed mother ; sometimes he reflected rather
sadly, but not despairingly, on his blackened reputation,
all the worst parts of which would be, he knew, confirmed
by his having deserted, and joined the ragged crew he
had here fallen in with.
"Yes, Don Benjamin," continued Pablo Hermandez,
" personal beauty, which molicii the fortunes of other men
c c
226
in such affairs, entirely viarr\l mine. She thought that
no one would pity me, with my round, regular, smiling
set of features; and she had had great offers, for she
was herself a verj' model of deformity — her beautiful
features were all drawn awry — she squinted with one eye
and was blind in the other — she had a hump on her back
— a withered arm — and was most interestingly lame,
owing to the shortness of one leg."
" Pablo," said Ben Brackle, " surely that was the
voice of some one in distress — a female."
" O, it's nothing — nothing, Signor Brackle," said his
companion. " But, as I was saying, she had had most
advantageous offers — she had refused a dwarf with a
hump between his shoulders — and had actually denied a
man without legs who played the guitar as he was trun-
dled about in a wheelbarrow."
" But," said Ben, " that fellow yonder is actually
dragging a female from the wood."
" Never mind, signor ; that is the way in which we
woo our charmers, and tliat is the way in which they
inflame our desires, by seeming to resist."
Here a piercing shriek was uttered by the female
alluded to. Ben Brackle was no longer in doubt — he
rushed forward and found his pretty Cospetto in the arms
of a ruffian.
That Cospetto should have lost her way in the woods —
that she should have met a scout of the beggarly party,
who, by promising to guide her to Lisbon, had decoyed
her to this den of tliieves — that he should have insulted
227
her there — that Ben Brackle should knock him down —
that the rescued girl should explain to her lover what it
was Mr. Stirlington wanted of him — that Ben should
perceive that he had therefore nothing to fear from him,
hut that the lovers had everything to hope — that as soon
as the first light of the morning began to glimmer through
the glades of the forest, they should agree to return to
Lisbon, to throw themselves at his feet and implore his
protection, are all events so natural, that no one will be
surprised to find Ben Brackle with Mr. Stirlington in his
library, on the morrow ; and therefore every one will
expect to find, in the next chapters, an explanation of the
mysteries of this mysterious tale.
CHAP. XII.
" Facts are chiels wba wiuna ding,
An downa be tlisputed."
Burns.
A certain lady once became greatly delighted with
Plutarch's Lives ; read them over and over again, and
extolled them as the most beautiful and ingenious of ro-
mances ; but having unluckily discovered that they were
all true, she cast them aside with utter contempt.
228
If we have catered for the taste of such a critic, by fol-
lowing the flights of De la Motte's fancy, or the more
coarse and bluntly-expressed falsehoods of Mrs. Bunce,
she will, perhaps, be amazingly discontented at the few
grains of truth which we shall be enabled to shake out of
such a heap of chaff. In such cases, when the mountains
have been in labour, it is in vain to be discontented with
the mouse which they may bring forth. We must pursue
the even tenor of our way, looking neither to the right
hand nor to the left. We can pay no attention to those
elderly spinsters who will neither allow us to confine our-
selves to the truth, nor to invent fictions after our own
fancy. It is in vain for the antiquated damsel on the
right to say — " Well, I never ! Who would have thought
such would have been the end of it ? What a mighty
fuss about nothing ! "
Nor for the lady on the left to reply — " It is pre-
cisely what I expected from the beginning ; and I have
only been annoyed by the ineffectual efforts which have
been made to conceal the end."
The fact is, we have taken our story for better for
worse ; and we think, like Oliver Goldsmith, that it is
quite enough for us to say that we have done the best we
could by it.
Cospetto was a shrewd, artful, Portuguese serving-girl.
She had heard the story of a shipwreck from Ben
Brackle, her lover ; she heard that a child belonging to a
lady, whose name Ben did not know, had been saved ;
she suspected that it might have been her master's child.
229
but she concealed her suspicions from Brackle for the
following reasons : — Her master was in too dangerous a
state to be trifled with by vague suspicions ; her speaking
of the thing would expose her clandestine engagement pre-
maturely to Pietro, and bring upon her his persecutions,
and upon Ben Brackle his vengeance. When Ben
returned from the Levant, and was prepared to marry her
and take her to England, affairs would be in a much more
favourable position : she therefore resolved to conceal
even from him her suspicions till then. Under the influ-
ence of the fear of death, she had changed her mind, as
before described.
This incident will give the reader an insight into the
character of Cospetto. It had nothing in it of the fear-
less candour and blunt honesty of her lover, but she had
much greater dexterity in the management of affairs. By
her advice, therefore, when they arrived at Lisbon, they
went directly to -the Franciscan monastery, and had an
interview with Father Anselmo, who readily consented to
prepare Mr. Stirlington for the meeting with the sailor,
by explaining the mistakes under which all had acted.
Mr. Stirlinsiton's indication at the conduct of the
Frenchman was immense ; and he resolved to see him no
more. Ben Brackle was now introduced into the library
as a person worthy of that gentleman's confidence.
" I must first express to you, young man," said Mr.
Stirlington, " my sincere regret that you have suffered so
much trouble and anxietv on rav account : the nature oi"
230
tlie business on which I wished to consult you I of course
was desirous to conceal until I had seen you."
"Yesterday I could have plunged a dagger into his
heart," said Ben to himself, " now I could die for him."
Addressing Mr. Stirlington, he continued — "I have
been far too hasty myself, sir ; I hope you will excuse
me."
" The part you have taken in the affair was perfectly
natural, and certainly not blameable."
Here he paused suddenly. After a moment, he spoke
quickly, in great agitation, as if it was by a desperate
effort he brought himself to the main subject of their
conference.
" You returned from Lisbon to Britain, I understand,
on board the ' Red-wing,' on her last voyage, and was
miraculously saved from the wreck?"
" It's quite correct, sir," said Ben. " My uncle was
master of her. When we sailed from Lisbon I was con-
fined to my berth, by illness ; I recovered very slowly, so
that I was a mere idler all the voyage, except tliat I did
little services for the passengers, who called me cabin-boy."
" Describe to me the passengers who were on board."
" I scarcely knew any of them by name," said Ben ;
'' a great part of the voyage had passed before I left my
berth, or saw any of them. Sailors are never veiy par-
ticular about names, but make up the deficiency by fancy
names of their own. For instance, sir, there was an old
Jew, that we always called Barabbas."
231
" Were there not women and children on board?" was
the next anxious question.
" A lady, with a beautiful little girl ; who was, I un-
derstood, the wife of some rich Englishman living at
Lisbon, but whose name I cannot tell. I have tried a
thousand times to remember whether I ever heard it or
not ; but if I ever did, I must have forgotten it long
before I so much wished to recal it. There was also on
board a man whom the sailors called ' Fire-eater," be-
cause he amused us with all kinds of sleight-of-hand, and
was a ventriloquist; he had on board a wife and a
daughter, who was just the same age as the lady's child."
"Were these children at all alike?" enquired Mr.
Stirlington — [from whom, of course, the questions all
came ; so the repetition of that fact may in future be
avoided].
" Seen at a distance, playing together upon the deck,
as they often did on fine days, they might appear so ; but
not near. It was understood that * Fire-eater' and his
family were in low circumstances ; but the lady was kind
to them, and the children were dressed not unlike each
othei' — but that was not the case at first, so I suppose it
was managed by the lady's kindness."
" But was the likeness so strong that you would mis-
take the one for the other?"
" Not for a moment, sir."
" You also knew the lady well ? Look around you,
and tell me if, among the various portraits in the room,
you see any likeness of her."
232
Ben commenced his scrutiny. He passed several
without pausing a moment ; at length he stopped before
one which seemed to puzzle and confound him. Mr.
Stirlington now stood beside him, observing with the most
intense interest the effect of this portrait upon him. After
a moment's hesitation, Ben said, decisively —
" It is like the lady, but not the lady herself."
A faint smile passed over the features of Mr. Stirling-
ton as the sailor gave this proof of his judgment. It
was the portrait of Mrs. Stirlington's mother — an excel-
lent likeness. The mother and daughter had strikingly
resembled each other.
But the calmness with which this cold, constrained
conversation had hitherto been carried on, was here
destined to be interrupted : for a portrait on the oppo-
site side of the room attracted the sailor's attention. He
sprung towards it — eagerly examined it for a moment,
and exclaimed —
"That is the lady's child, so help me God !'"
While this took place, Mr. Stirlington had hastily re-
moved the curtain which had so long concealed the
features of his late wife ; and Ben, turning round as he
uttered the last exclamation, continued in the same breath
most emphatically —
" And that, sir, is the lady herself ! "
All doubt of Ben Brackle's having had sufficient know-
ledge of the parties to render him a trustworthy evidence
on that point was at an end. Mr. Stirlington, who, in
order to ascertain that point, had hitherto suppressed his
233
emotion by a violent effort, became now so overcome by
it, that he was obliged to avail himself of the young
mariner's assistance to reach the sofa, on which he re-
clined, covering his face with his hand, apparently inca-
pable of continuing the inquiry.
" Sir," said Ben compassionately, *' had we not better
delay?"
" Delay is death ! " said he — suddenly rising to a
sitting posture. " Proceed — and as briefly as you can
inform me what took place at the shipwreck."
" The evening had began to close ; we were all con-
vinced that the ship must founder during the night. It was
resolved, as one last chance, that we should take to the
boats and make a desperate effort to get on shore before
dark. The lady had fainted in the cabin, and her child
sat weeping beside her."
A convulsive shudder passed through the frame of Mr.
Stirlington ; and the sailor paused in alarm.
"Sir," said he, '■ I fear you cannot bear this; but I
will be as brief as possible. My uncle came into the
cabin, inquiring loudly for the man we called ' Fire-eater,*
and, awful as the hour was, swore a heavy oath to find he
was not there, but had at such a moment left his wife and
child to the care of others. Yet, he said, the women and
children must be put on board the boats immediately :
the sailors seized the other woman and child ; my uncle
himself lifted the lady to carry her away, but the lady's
child fixed her trembling blue eyes on mine so piteously.''
234
The sailor paused for a moment overcome by his emo-
tion.
" Take wine," said Mr. Stirlington ; " you will find it
on the side-board. Kindbearted, generous fellow ; it is
impossible a youth of such genuine feelings can in any-
thing deceive me."
" Not for all the mines of Mexico and Peru," said
Ben ; " but I must be steady, though it is a sad story to
tell. At that dreadful moment a little thing occurred
which has fixed itself upon my memory — my heart ; and
although it may seem hardly worth while to relate such a
trifle, it may serve to take off our attention a little from
the most painful parts of what I have to relate. When
my father was dying of a lingering disease, at our village
in the north of Devon, he amused himself by rearing a
little bulfinch ; he taught it to whistle, and even to si>eak.
After his death, when I went to sea, I took this bird with
me ; and I loved it with a foolish, boyish fondness, which
was, perhaps, very silly, but I could not help it, for I
was then but a boy : I used to fancy that the spirit of my
father hovered over it ; I loved to shut my eyes while
he whistled and sung, and try to fancy myself in the little
flower garden, where he used to hang — this was no doubt
very silly and childish, and the ship's boys used to laugh
at me and tease my bird ; I have fought more battles on
account of that bird than for any other cause whatever
during my whole life : such strange fancies boys take up
with. Whoever teased my bird was an object of hatred
235
to me — whoever was kind to him I could do anything for
them. Fire-eater's daughter always teased him, and I
hated her ; the lady's little girl was as fond of him as
I was, and I loved her dearly. At this dreadful moment,
when all was terror and consternation around, when even
I had forgotten him, she clung to my neck, and, in her
broken English, said —
" Pretty bird — take away, cabin boy."
I sprung to' his cage — released him — gave him to her :
innocent, and not conscious of the extent of our danger,
she caressed him fondly ; as we came upon deck, with
her own pretty hand she flung him off upon the breeze,
and my poor favorite escaped from that scene of terror
and death by flight. I cannot describe to you with what
joy I saw him flit away over the raging, foaming waters,
and save his life ; and how heartily did I wish that the
poor child could do the same thing. Before I left the
cabin — I should have told you, sir, — seeing the little girl
was by no means fitly clothed to face the storm, every one
else having forgotten her, I hastily wrapped a shawl
around her, which I found lying by, and put upon her
head a little blue bonnet, which I now remember had
belonged to Fire-eater's daughter: I am firmly of opinion
it was that blue bonnet which saved her life."
" Give me but one proof," exclaimed Mr. Stirlington,
" that her life was saved, and my whole fortune is at your
feet."
" I saw her myself, ashore, alive and hearty, many
months after that," said Ben.
23G
"God of Mercy!" exclaimed he, "accept a father's
thanks, and compassionate the longings of a father's
heart. Sailor, I have wealth — thou shalt have thy
reward ; I have a little of strength, of life, remaining — it
must be all devoted to the recovery of my child. Prepa-
ration must be made for our immediate departure for
Ireland. Now, hand me the wine — sit down, partake of
it with me, thou art worthy — most worthy."
He cordially shook the sailor's hand, and Ben sat down.
" The little that remains to me of mental or bodily
energy," resumed Mr. Stirlington, " must not be wasted
by my being left to the agony of doubt, nor by recurring
at some future time to a subject of so harassing a kind :
you must describe to me at once how her life was saved."
" The women and children being in the first boat, as I
was to go in the second with the captain, he sent me
below for some papers which the poor old man thought
might be of consequence to him. As I was about to go
down, Fire-eater, who had all the time been below, rushed
upon deck. I thought I never saw so pale and cowardly
looking a villain in my life. Seeing that the first boat,
with his wife and child in it, was gone, with the most
dreadful oaths and execrations I ever heard, he took his
seat in the second. As I went down I heard the most
horrible shrieks and exclamations of despair issuing from
a small cabin which the Jew had occupied : I tried to
enter — it was locked, but the key was left on the outside ;
I opened it, and Barabbas the Jew rushed out, covered
with blood, exclaiming that Fire-eater had robbed^
237
attempted to murder him, and locked him up there to
perish. When in the boats, we found that we had quitted
a certain destruction in the ship for a veiy uncertain de-
liverance. Those in the first boat found it so difficult to
get on shore that we were close together — I saw her
capsize, and the little blue bonnet rise for a moment on
the billow, when our boat shared the same fate."
A cold depressing feeling of doubt and incredulity
seemed to spread itself around the anxious father's heart,
yet he seemed desirous to cling to hope, for he ex-
claimed—
" Yet you stated that you had, many months after, seen
my child alive?"
" I did, sir," said Ben Brackle. " It happened in this
manner : — I was found lifeless on the beach, half buried
in sand ; when restored to life, I had no recollection of
anything ; I remained for many weeks in a raging fever,
accompanied with delirium ; I never saw any of the
persons who escaped with me ; I was told that two
sailors besides myself had escaped, and a man who was
not a sailor, who had brought on shore a child appa-
rently dead, but who recovered. The sailors were gone
to sea ; and of the man with the child no one knew any-
thing. In this state of uncertainty, after I recovered, I
obtained employment and went to sea. It was many
months after that our brig was at anchor in Belfast har-
bour. Our wages were good, and as we were just come
into port, Bob Ranklin, a shipmate of my own age, and
myself, being troubled with a sailor's greatest encum-
238
brance — too much money — got leave to go ashore. We
had been a voyage together, were excellent friends, but
had frequently had a little sparring in jest, until we
began to feel in earnest, and had unfortunately never
fought it out : we drank and sang together at a public-
house until we came to that point where we could not
help shaking hands continually — one point above that is
sure to be a fight : having sworn eternal friendship to
each other until we had fairly picked a quarrel, we were
taken off by a messmate, older and more sober than our-
selves, to see a show, to prevent our fighting : at the
show we were told we should see the Emperor of all
Conjurors ; when we arrived at the spot, this Prince of
Magicians was Fire-eater ! and the lady's child was taking
money at the door."
" Merciful Heaven ! " said the horror-stricken parent,
" give me strength to bear this, and to rescue my child
from a situation so horrible."
" Amen," said Ben ; '' for depend upon it, sir, the
earth contains no villain equal to that conjuror. Well,
sir, I sprung forward — knelt down to kiss her pretty
hands, but she drew back from me alarmed, not knowing
me at first. Do you not know me ? said I. She looked
at me earnestly, but did not speak. Did you not know
pretty bird — pretty bird ? ' Yes, yes,' said she eagerly ;
* I know pretty bird — out on the sea — I know now —
cabin boy, cabin boy.' And then she extended her pretty
hands towards me, and burst into a flood of tears.
Fire-eater, who then called himself Dermody, and who
239
evidently recognized me, sprung forward and seized me
rudely by the collar, and demanded why I insulted his
child ? ' Yes,' said Bob Ranklin, ' you basely, grossly,
impudently insulted the child.' I denied it so indignantly
and perhaps so abusively that he replied to me with a
blow. I had been slicing an orange with a sailor's large
clasped knife, and it was still open in my hand ; I let it
drop and struck at him ; we fought until the police, who
had been called by Dermody, took us both into custody ;
the villain ventriloquist came forward and accused me of
having attempted to stab my companion evidently with
intent to kill, and produced the knife which I had in my
hand when the scuffle commenced as an undeniable proof;
the magistrates, or whatever they might be, who heard the
case, had difficulty to prevent the Irish mob from tearing
me to pieces, and I was marched off to prison amidst the
execrations of the multitude, and for the time was even
glad to take shelter there as a refuge from their violence."
" But did you see the child no more ?"
" Once, sir ; and but for a moment. The moon, at
midnight, shone brightly through the unglazed gratings
of my prison ; the window was too high to admit of my
seeing anything immediately beneath it, but there I heard
a light little footstep, and her own sweet voice say timidly,
'Cabin boy ?' I answered, to let her know that she was
right. In a moment I saw one little hand clasp the
grating of the window, presently her face was raised on
a level with it, then she lifted the other hand and dropped
something into the cell ; pronouncing in an accent of sweet
240
farewell, once more the words 'Cabin boy,' she instantly
descended. I anxiously called after her — she heeded
not — I saw her in the bright moonlight pass rapidly over
the rising ground opposite the window, like a shadow, and
disappeared in an instant. In the morning I was re-
leased, for Bob Ranklin being sober declared the story of
the intended assassination was a mere fabrication of the
mountebank's. Dermody being sought for to confirm
his testimony, it was found that the villain and all his
establishment had decamped about midnight, and had
gone no one knew whither. On looking after what she
had dropped into the cell, I found it was a small purse
containing a few sixpences (which had, perhaps, been
given to her by persons visiting the booth, who might
have been struck by her beauty) ; there was also in the
purse a seal. The purse and seal are both here."
Ben drew from his bosom a small canvas bag, which
had been suspended round his neck by a black ribbon,
and from it he drew a purse of beautiful bead-work.
Mr. Stirlington immediately recognized it as having
belonged to his late wife ; the seal he had for years worn
suspended to his own watch ; the impression was the well-
known crest of the Harfield family, engraven on a topaz.
It was the seal with which Mary Harfield had sealed her
first letters to him, and had been fondly claimed from him
at her departure for England, that her letters from thence
might remind him of their happiest days, their early loves.
But we must pursue that subject no further. Hurrah
for merry England !
241
CHAP. XIII.
"Active in indolence, abroad we roam
In qnest of happiness, wliich dwells at home."
Elphingston.
Mr. Stirlington, who, previous to Cospetto's communi-
cation, had allowed the powers of his once active mind to
fall into the inertness and lethargy of despondency, had,
by that communication, been raised to a better state of
feeling. From that time he manifested a desire to husband
his strength, and to use the means most likely to restore
his health, which he had before thought himself unequal
to and shunned.
Air and exercise, taken in the most monotonous or
the gloomiest manner, are productive of some little
variety and amusement, abstracting the thoughts from
the one unvarying and corroding sorrow which dwells
within. Thus, the good Father Anselmo observed with
much pleasure, on his return from his pilgrimage, that
his bodily health had greatly improved and much of his
mental energy returned; but, after the interview with
Ben Brackle described in the last chapter, his nerves
seemed strung with supernatural energy, and his whole
E E
242
soul filled with a degree of ardour which admitted of no
repose : it is true he had his hours of languor and ex-
haustion, but these were passed in the solitude of his
chamber : when seen by strangers he was actively engaged
in preparations for his journey to Great Britain, his
eye illumined with the fire of hope, and his cheek
glowing with a deeper and a richer tinge even than the
bloom of his boyish days ; yet Father Anselmo sighed
heavily as he noticed this change. Mr. Stirlington's first
care was to write to his brother and to request him to
meet him at Waterford in Ireland ; the ship which had
brouffht Ben Brackle to Lisbon was soon fitted out for
the voyage; Ben and Cospetto were soon ready to
embark, Father Anselmo having in the meantime joined
their hands with many hearty prayers for their welfare,
and Mr. Stirlington bestowed a handsome dower on the
roguish-looking little bride, who would have blushed
a great deal during the bridal ceremony if she could, but
Portuguese complexions sometimes do not admit of that,
and indeed Cospetto's did not require it.
The brothers met at Waterford. It being arranged
that Cospetto should for a time remain at the house of a
respectable Portuguese female who had like herself mar-
ried an English mariner. Augustus Stirlington, with his
brother and Ben Brackle commenced their journey to
the north of Ireland to begin their inquiries after the
child. Tom Stirlington, having heard the sailor's story,
considerably altered the opinion which he had expressed
in the conversation which he held in the conservatory
243
with Uncle Ralph upon the subject ; and although his
hopes were far from being so sanguine as his brother's, he
entered into the matter with all the natural warmth of his
active character. From the north of Ireland they traced
the fugitives to Dumfries, in Scotland. At that town it
appeared that Dermody had been guilty of some mis-
demeanour— that he had absconded for fear of the
consequences — his establishment had been broken up, and
all trace of hini appeared to be lost; at last, however,
they discovered an old woman at whose house Dermody
the ventriloquist had lodged while in that town ; she gave
a most interesting description of the child, and produced a
letter from her son, a dealer in tea settled at Crewkerne, in
Somersetshire, in which he stated that he had some time
ago seen her old lodger, Dermody, at that place with a
company of strolling players, performing the first parts in
tragedy with great applause, but passing under the more
theatrical name of Bernard Bloomfield. All these par-
ticulars were communicated to Mrs. Stirlington by letters
from her husband ; the last she received was from
Crewkerne, from which we shall make a short extract.
Crewkerne, Wednesday eve.
My dear Angela, — We amved here to-day, but find
that we are as far from the object of our search as ever.
The people here remember the actor who called himself
Bernard Bloomfield, and that he had a child with him
who passed as his daughter, but tlie child spoke very Httle
English, and he scarcely allowed her to converse with
244
any person. The theatrical company left this place more
than twelve months since. It appears they were on what
is called a sharing speculation, and that they are now
dispersed. By the merest accident I have, however,
met with a commercial acquaintance whom I have for
some years known on the road ; he states that many
months ago he certainl}^ saw the actor in Cornwall, where
he was delivering lectures on elocution, illustrating them
with imitations of celebrated actors and specimens of
ventriloquism. There is no other means of keeping poor
Augustus's hope alive than by consenting to prosecute
our inquiries in that direction, and with him to cease to
hope will be to cease to live. Although I confess to you
that I dread nearly as much his finding his child what
she is lihely to have become in the society she has kept as
his not finding her at all. It is dreadful to anticipate
(which he, however, does not seem to do,) how much of
their manners and their ways of thinking the poor child
may have become infected with : in fact, in such society
she must have become, I fear, a sort of person with whom
he, even in his youth, would have deemed it a degradation
to have conversed. This will wound liim to the soul. There
M'as always a degree of austerity in his morality, a nicety
of delicacy in his high sense of honor which I used to
laugh at as preposterous, but which, in his present state
of mind and of health, we must yield to ; this makes
me extremely regret that we have been so absorbed in
other matters of late that nothing has been done with
respect to little Rose. His impatience to recover his child,
245
will, however, cause his stay at our house to be very
brief at present ; during which time Rose can be kept out
of his sight by remaining in the apartments appropriated
to the children ; proper time can be taken to explain
everything respecting her on his return, but at present it
is needless to trouble him about her : to say nothing of
the malicious but truly ridiculous misrepresentations of
Mrs. Bunce (which, though false, would wound him
severely), I do not think that even the real facU of the
case would meet with his entire approval. My Angela
will, I know, communicate this to the delicately-minded
and affectionate child in such a manner as not to hurt her
feelings. I hope Uncle Ralph's gout is better than when
you wrote last ; if he is well enough it would be highly
desirable that he should have his first interview with
Augustus at our house : it will be a most trying one to
them both. We shall reach home on Friday evening
about six."
Mrs. Stirlington was a person of active spirit, possessed
of the best of feelings, but they did not absorb her atten-
tion from the practical performance of her social and
domestic duties. She had no ambition to aspire to any-
thing above her husband's real station in society, but at
the same time she was most careful in nothing to fall
below it ; entirely above the petty rivalries in dress,
equipage, and furniture, upon oidinary occasions, which
lead ladies to outvie each other in extravagance, she felt
246
that when her husband's wealthy and distinguished
brother should become for a time their guest, nothing
ought to meet his view which could bring to his mind a
sense of degradation, or look, on their parts, as acknow-
ledged inferiority ; she had therefore taken advantage of
her husband's absence (as the phrase goes) to put the
house in order. The principal apartments had all been
freshly painted and re-decorated, antiquated pieces of
furniture had been removed and replaced by others of a
more splendid and fashionable kind. These alterations had
been carried to an extent which had nearly driven Mar-
gery out of her wits with delight, and caused Bolt to look
on the improving appearance of all around with a degree
of pride and satisfaction which had never been excited
in him before except by the perfections of Dragon-fly. All
this, however, had rather a contrary effect on the young
ladies, Evelina and Rosabel. Such unusual preparations
for the reception of the expected visitor awed them, and
caused Evelina to look forward to the time of his arrival
with dislike, and poor Rosabel to expect it with a sort of
nameless dread which she could scarcely account for, but
which she could by no means overcome. This feeling of
anticipated unpleasantness which often casts a gloom over
the coming hour when there is least occasion for it, was
greatly increased in them both, and Rosabel's timid ap-
prehensions heightened into complete dismay when
informed of Tom Stirlington's request that Rose should
remain entirely in the study and not join the family
247
during his brother's visit. Feelings of this sort are pro-
duced by impressions made on the imagination — the most
trivial things increase or lighten them.
Six o'clock had nearly arrived — the girls were alone in
the drawing-room ; Mrs. Stirlington, busied in prepara-
tions for the expected arrival, was not yet there ; Evelina
was splendidly attired, as if prepared to receive company ;
poor Rose remained, for the first time when that was the
case, in the plain white frock which she would have worn
when with the governess or on any ordinary occasion. As
she employed herself in arranging her little friend's
beautiful dark ringlets, she said —
" IVow, my dear Effie, you do look so veiy — very
pretty."
" And you, my dear Rose, do look so very — ^very sad."
" Ah ! Effie ; your father is coming — he is nearly here ;
you will fly to meet him ; I must not fly to meet him
though I love him too ; he will press you to his heart —
he will call you his own — own dear Effie ; I shall be
alone — there is no one to take me to his heart and call me
his own Rosabel."
The girls started, for a carriage stopped at the door.
Evelina flew to the window, and poor Rosabel with a
light footstep but a heavy heart ascended to her destined
hiding place, and seated herself sorrowfully in the window
which faced the street.
Uncle Ralph only was in the vehicle which stopped at
the door, his gout having compelled him to use what
was, in his estimation, the most contemptible of all
248
modes of conveyance, a handsome carriage and pair.
In a moment Bolt and Margery were on the alert, with
all the subordinates of the household, to give him assist-
ance and help him into the drawing-room. They had
not made half the arrangements for his comfort which
their regard for the venerable old gentleman had
suggested, when a carriage and four stopped at the
door, and Ben Brackle sprung lightly from the dickey.
There was that hushed silence about the vehicle the
moment it stopped, which indicates that some grave
feeling occupies the mind of all belonging to it.
Tom Stirlington, pale and dejected, quickly alighted ;
the post-boys looked back with an expression of melan-
choly interest. Augustus Stirlington descended with
slow and fainting steps, assisted by his brother and the
sailor ; his face was deadly pale, but the expression of his
noble features bespoke a calm and solemn resignation;
his eye was turned upward, lighted with the dignity of
death ; he looked for a short time on the face of the old
mansion in which his early and happy hours had been
spent, as if blessing it, he pronounced but one word, and
that sounded most solemnly to all present.
"Home!" said he, "home — home!" and he was
almost carried to the drawing-room.
The meeting between him and Uncle Ralph was a sad
one — between him and Angela and her daug-hter most
harrowing ; Uncle Ralph wept like a child, and Margery
with trembling hand wiped the tears from the face of the
helpless old man ; Bolt fancied he concealed his tears by
249
bending over the flannels which he was tenderly adjusting-
round the old gentleman's feet. Augustus Stirlingtoa
was laid upon a sofa, and Ben Brackle, to whose atten-
tion he had become accustomed, holding a glass of water
to his lips, when a deadly silence fell on all around. It
was caused by the appearance of Rosabel, who silently and
unobserved had gained the centre of the room ; her little
hands were lifted up and spread out before her with an
expression of amazement — her eyes were wildly fixed
upon the countenance of the stranger — her face was
deadly pale — even her lips were white as marble — they
were moving rapidly, as if trying to pronounce words
which she had no power to utter.
Struck by the silence, Augustus Stirlington raised
himself slowly on the couch ; the child timidly retreated
to the door, where she clasped her little hands, uttered a
piercing shriek, exclaimed —
" It is — it must be ! " and fell lifeless on the floor.
The strength of his manliest days seemed for a moment
to have returned — Augustus Stirlington sprung foi'ward,
knelt down and caught her in his arms, exclaiming —
"My child! My lost child! The child of Mary
Harfield."
Ben Brackle sunk upon his knees beside them, and
exclaimed —
" It is the lady's child, so help me God !"
Evelina, not comprehending the scene, flew to her
little friend and threw her arms around her neck. The
muslin covering of her bosom became disordered, and the
E E
250
eye of the father rested on the secret mark. It was the
semblance oi a curled-up rose leaf, which had been
noticed at her birth, and gained for her the name of
Rosabel. There it now lay, fresh and beautiful as if the
fingers of young love had just plucked it from the
bowers of Elisium and flung it on its ivory resting place.
"Uncle — my brother!" said the father, " behold my
child — my own — own lost Rosabel!"
With that he struggled faintly to draw her nearer,
nearer, nearer to his heart, and fell lifeless by her side.
The usual restoratives were resorted to with immediate
success on Rosabel ; but the spirit of Augustus Stir-
lington had fled to that region where its errors will pass
away in the smile of its Maker as the vapour of the
morning melts before the sunbeam, and all that was good,
and noble, and godlike in his heart, will flourish to all
Eternity.
251
CHAP. XIV.
" Nothing so diflScult as a beginning,
Except, perhaps, the end."
Byron.
The interest of our tale is at an end. We have endea-
voured to draw a picture of real hfe, such as it exists in
our own days. We have read a few passages out of that
page of the book of hfe, which accident has opened to
ourselves. The original still remains for the perusal of
others. A few explanations are all that are now needed
of us : some of our characters we shall in all probability
meet again ; a few must inevitably get married ; the
rest are *' left for execution."
It is now evident that the travelling artist, whose real
name was Albert Drummond, first spoken of as the sup-
posed father of Rosabel, was the same person as Dermody
the ventriloquist and Bernard Bloomfield the tragedian.
The reason why he so often changed his name and occupa-
tion was, that in almost every place he went he was accused
of some breach of the known, the n-ritten, nay, the very
PRINTED laws of the land. If he was always accused
252
wrongfully, he must have been like Bob Acres in the
play " An Ill-used Gentleman." That point we will not
investigate at present.
Tom Stirlington resolved to see this man. He had been
sentenced to imprisonment for his offence; but it appearing
that he had been concerned in many other offences, the
partners of which were a})prehended and awaiting their
trial in London, he had been removed to the metropolis
to furnish information ag^ainst them.
" Yes, yes," said he, with the greatest sang froid,
"it is true enough I rescued the merchant's girl from
the waves instead of my own, by mistake ; but I found
about her person a casket of jewels of some value, which
her mother had hung about her neck. When the poor
little wretch lay panting at my feet, after I discovered my
mistake, I had a mind to fling her back again into the
sea ; but while I deliberated the Irish bog-trotters came
down. Before I had made up my mind they seized the
child with the jewels still about her. I claimed and kept
the child for the sake of the jewels ; we did very well
together, for the treasure lasted out ; however, I am glad
you have got her back again, and the remainder of the
baubles you will find in the hands of old Mother Bunce."
Tom Stirlington left him in disgust, for there could be
no doubt remaining as to the child's identity.
A very important change took place at the Green
Dragon : Mrs. Bunce, having turned tee-totaler, remained
up one night after the servants had retired to rest, to take
a little brandy and water for ^' 7)iedicmal purposes ;'' it
253
must have affected her head, liowever, for on ascending
the stairs she fell backward, and so severely injured her-
self that she was ever afterwards unfit for business. She
was found to be insolvent. Her friend, Miss Deborah
Mangleshape, made desperate efforts to get mari-ied and
take the Green Dragon, in neither of which she suc-
ceeded ; for although by her machinations and exposures
of Mrs. Bunce's circumstances, she succeeded in ruining
her — when the inn became vacant, it was found that
her money happened to be in a provincial bank, and one
gloomy afternoon at half-past four precisely the partners
thought proper to declare very politely to the public
that they meant to take a short holiday, by suspending
their payments : Miss Deborah is therefore at present
waiting in the union workhouse until their payments shall
be resumed. There, however, she enjoys the company of
her amiable friend Mrs. Bunce ; and they both enjoy the
supreme delight of tormenting each other continually.
Lopez de Gama was left to wind up Mr. Stirlington's
affairs at Lisbon : after De la Motte's exposure, having
become suspicious of his character, he found, on investi-
gation, that the physician had obtained certain sums of
money from the firm under false pretences ; he therefore
sent the officers of justice in quest of him, and the
physician scarcely had time to draw on his large boots,
mount the immense spurs, which, with the enormous
whip, were barely sufficient to overcome the obstinacy of
his nuile, and fly in great haste through the forests to the
Castello do Toromendo. In his alaiin he implored
254
Pietro Gonzalo to hide him for a time in the secret dun-
geon. Pietro, who had been informed of his attempts
upon the honour of his daughter, by Ursula, received his
proposal with a grim joy.
" Ha-ha," said De la Motte with great satisfaction,
" these English villains and their vagabond Portuguese
retainers may search for a long time before they will find
me now."
Pietro's features expanded into a hideous smile.
It proved to be perfectly correct.
Whether the magior-domo meant to starve the French-
man to death, is uncertain, and must remain so, for Pietro
died suddenly of apoplexy, and was found a corpse in the
garden of the castello, and no one but himself knew of
the physician's being in the dungeon.
Don Garcias and his nephew were shot by order of
Don Carlos, under suspicion of treason. The next heir
to the castello, intending to rebuild it, the dungeon was
discovered and opened ; a skeleton, with a large pair of
boots on, to which enormous spurs were attached, was
found in it ; the end of a large riding-whip was thrust
into its mouth, the wretch having attempted to prey upon
even that unpromising food in the agony of his last
hunger.
On a Sunday evening Tom Stirlington sat alone in his
drawing-room, Mrs. Stirlington and the young ladies
having gone out ; he wanted something to be brought to
him from the kitchen — he rang the bell, but to his sur-
prise no one answered it ; he tried it a second time, but
255
with the same success. There is an old saying, supposed
to have been founded on fact, that " Even King John was
obliged to wait while his drink was drawing," Now, it is
a self-evident truism, that with whatever state and dignity
a gentleman may be seated in his drawing-room, if he
wants an article which is in his kitchen, that if he rings
the bell and no person answers, there is but one alterna-
tive— he must either go without the article in question for
a time, or fetch- it himself. All the wranglers in all the
universities in the kingdom, with all the rhetoric and
logic that ever was or ever will be, cannot upset the fact
or alter the result ; so, however great might be the con-
flict between his dignity and his convenience, Tom
Stirlington resolved to fetch what he wanted himself.
He expected to find the kitchen deserted, and con-
cluded that Bolt and Margery were abroad attending to
their Sunday evening devotions. To his great surprise,
they were both in the kitchen, engaged in a conference, to
them so interesting, that they had neither of them heard
the bell. Bolt, however, stood at one end of the table
and she at the other, Bolt leaning eagerly towards her ;
but she had fairly turned her back upon him — had
drawn the comer of her apron up into a little purse
between her finger and thumb, and stood forming and
re-forming it into every imaginable shape that could be
thouo-ht of; her eyes never wandered from the corner of
her apron for a moment. Bolt had just finished his
proposal, and stood awaiting her reply.
256
" I tell you what, Bill Bolt," sobbed she ; " if I was
really fool enough to love you as much as you have the
vanity and impudence to think I do, it would be of no
kind of use whatever to preach up that sort of logic to
me ; I would rather lose my life than leave master and
missus, and the young ladies."
"Psha!" said Tom Stirlington.
A clap of thunder would have been but a fool to that
"psha," as Bolt himself afterwards candidly acknow-
ledged. As to Margery, the excess of her fright only
kept her from screaming aloud. Never were people
upon earth half so much confounded before nor since.
Tom Stirlington laughed heartily, took what he wanted,
and left the room.
" Now," said Margery, " that comes of your keeping
on so. Bolt ; I always told you how it would be ; now
it's all blown — he will go and tell missus for certain sure."
" And supposing as what that he does," said Bolt
manfully ; " it can't hurt ; they can't imprison us — they
can't transport us ; and I don't care what they do as long
as they don't part us."
Margery turned quickly round, looked at him fondly
for a moment, and exclaimed —
" Nor I either, to tell thee the truth, Bill."
But the moment she had said it, she darted towards the
<loor, intending to make her escape. Bolt prevented
this — caught her in his arms, It does not appear
necessary to proceed any further with the affair.
257
Tom Stirlington did worse than tell missus, he told Uncle
Ralph. Their destiny was instantly fixed — their fate was
sealed. If they had lived in the days when ''Cyrenius
was governor of Syria," and there had went out a decree
from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be married
instead of taxed, their fate could not have been more
certain. Uncle Ralph declared that the thing admitted of
no delay, and he was prevented from sending express for
his sporting friend, the parson of Crazycot, to perform
the ceremony at once, only by their putting their banns
in next day at the parish church. Through the bounty
of the Messrs. Stirlington, Mr. and Mrs. Bolt were
enabled to take possession of the Green Dragon Inn, for-
merly occupied by Mrs. Bunce ; and it is now acknow-
ledged to be one of the most comfortable and best
conducted commercial houses on the road.
Bolt makes an excellent landlord and a steady man of
business ; but, as it is my duty to state things as they are
and not as what they should be, I am sorry to be obliged
to record one slight deviation from that general rule.
Ben Brackle was about to go aboard to take the com-
mand of a large Portuguese trader, the joint property of
tlie Messrs. Stirlington, in which somehow or other Ben
had obtained a large share by way of encouragement — so
he and Cospetto went down to the Green Dragon on a
visit. At this time Ben and the landlord fairly bolted
over the ropes — they scampered off together to Bolt's
native village on the borders of the moor, and had such
G a
258
a "flare up" (as Ben called it) together that they kept
the whole hamlet in an uproar of mirth for a week.
Cospetto wiped her pretty eyes and tried to look sorrowful
at this ; but, as Margery said, there is no foreseeing such
things before they happen — there's no helping them when
they do take place, and therefore there is no wisdom in
saying much about them when they have passed away.
Will Ostler and Bob Boots were fixtures at the Green
Dragon. Will had been a friend and benefactor to Mar-
gery, after her father had been killed at Waterloo, when
she wanted a friend — she did not forget it ; and Will was
a most invaluable servant. I do not deny that Will
sometimes when they were alone forgot to say " missus,"
but that never happened before strangers ; on two or
three occasions he affectionately called her Madge to her
face, at which breacli of decorum Bob Boots was dread-
fully annoyed, but it happened after Bob and Will had
been trying their favorite experiment, which was — to
ascertain " whether the bands of friendship do in reality
grow the stronger the more they are wet."
Of Father Anselmo we heard no more. A friend of
ours was at Lisbon some time since, and went to the
Franciscan Monastery to inquire about him ; in the
cloisters of the convent he met two or three young
novices, of whom he asked for Father Anselmo. They
looked at each other — seemed to strive to refresh each
other's memory, but at last ended by declaring that they
knew nothing about liim. In the splendid church of the
259
Franciscans, hoAvever, he met an aged monk, who jour-
neyed by the assistance of a staflF, and of whose tonsure
a few white hairs alone remained. The venerable friar
at first but imperfectly understood the question; but
when he did comprehend it a momentary flash seemed to
light up his dim and aged eye ; he stood still — allowed
his staff to fall within his hands, and looked upwards
apparently engaged in mental devotion.
"Anselmo- Gilianez," at length he said, "has been
long at rest, my son;" and he waved his hand in the
direction of the cemetery, and slowly passed on.
The stranger went into the burial ground ; but for a
long time feared that he should, even there, find no
memento of the benevolent and friendly recluse ; but at
last he discovered a grave shaded by a large cypress tree,
which had evidently been long neglected and forgotten —
the turf had been rounded up, but the rains of many
winters had sunk it nearly to a level with the surrounding
sward ; it had been planted with flowers, but weeds had
grown up and choked them ; at the head, however, he
discovered a small and rudely-hewn broken stone — there
was a short inscription ; the letters had evidently not
been chiseled by an artist, but the feeble hand of some
old monk had inscribed them rudely with these words :
"to the memory of
my brother and the brother of all mankind,
ANSELMO GILIANEZ."
Ralph Stirlington sleeps with his fathers. The time,
the manner of his death, or any particulars concerning it,
260
I have not heart to record. May the resting place of
his dust be sacred ; may hearts like his long dwell around
it ; may their lives, like his, be a credit and a blessing to
the County of Devon ; and their united success long
prove the prosperity of the place of his late residence,
THE CITY OF EXETER.
i
261
DETACHED PIECES.
THE MOORLANDS.
I.
Away let me speed to the Moorland heath,
Where the blue sky's above and the green turf beneath :
From the baseness, the folly, the pride of men.
Away let me haste to the mountain glen ;
From their cureless hate or their false caress,
Let me fly to the stormy wilderness —
Where the rock-crown'd tors, in rude varied forms.
Lift their fearless brows to relentless storms —
Where the larch fir bends as the north winds moan.
And the snow-flake plays round the desert stone —
Where the osier is bending its leafless head,
'Till it brushes the turf of its native bed —
Where the bittern is heard, by the stunted wood.
To bewail her in cheerless solitude —
Where the lapwing inhabits the faithless fen.
And the fox and the martle have built their den —
Where the wild drake is laving its speckled breast
In the dark Moorland lake, its winter guest —
262
Where the hawk speeds in haste through the gusty sky,
Like a messenger sent on emergency.
If, in grief, my retreat — there no pitiless eye
Views th' sorrow 'twould scoff at insultingly ;
If, in joy — there alone I'd an altar raise.
Where no passion or pride dims the brightness of praise.
From delights that betray, and from cares that oppress.
There is peace in the storm of the wilderness.
II.
Again let me speed to the Moorland glen,
When Summer has walk'd o'er the tremulous fen,
And breathing delight in her sunny hours.
Has strew'd the earth with her fairest flow'rs;
When in freshness and beauty the forest is gay.
And the hare-bell has crept where the snow-flake lay —
When the woodbine frail, by his strength upborne,
Hangs her beauty forth on the sturdy thorn —
When spotted with fleeces the uplands appear,
And the hill-sheep have climb'd to their summer lair —
When tlie breezes are hush'd, and the evening still
Seems to blush with delight on the western hill —
When the lark's on the wing, and is gone on high
To her joyful sojourn in the summer sky.
And her vesper lay from her cloud is given.
To the tranquil earth like a thing of heaven —
263
And the grey plover's whistle at close of day
O'er the silent waste passes plaintively —
When the shepherd-boy's song cheers the flowery glen,
And the turf-ciitter's carol is heard in the fen ;
With the poor, but the free, let me cast in my lot,
The oppressor is vanquish'd, the proud are forgot,
While I raise my bold anthem of thankfulness,
Alone and afar in the wilderness.
WOLFERN OF WARSAW.
In a cave of the desert — a hermit's lone cell,
Two worshippers knelt at the close of the day ;
One aged — the hermit who dwelt in the dell.
One youthful and beauteous — a warrior so gay —
With tremulous accent the blessing was given.
As the sire's feeble hand press'd the brow of the boy-
To Poland I give — 'tis the stern will of Heaven —
My darken'd soul's comfort — its last beam of joy.
Go, haste to the onset ; thy war-shout shall be,
" Death only shall fetter the hand of the free."
Young Wolfern of Warsaw — brave, reckless, and gay,
Gave to Bertha a sigh, to fair freedom a song ;
Flew in haste to the conflict — " For Warsaw ! away.
Why heed ye the wrath on the Moscovite's tongue ?
264
Let the tramp of each steed press an enemy slain,
Though the blood of the rider be spilt on his mane ;
Let the serfs of the North feel the flash of your blade,
Till each white plume be sunk in the gore we have made.
For Warsaw and Freedom — our battle-cry be.
Death only shall fetter the hands of the free."
The morn woke in light on the Vistula's bank,
And blush'd as she look'd on that blood-mingled stream;
There he lay, like a firebrand quench'd, where he sank.
Sternly lovely in death, 'neath the morn's early beam.
Lone hermit, thy beauteous and brave had obey'd —
Met the slave of the Czar in the pride of his might :
See, the hireling, the Cossack, around him are laid,
But the soul of the warrior has fled in the fight.
Where he fell, raise his stone — let his epitaph be,
" Death only could fetter the hand of the free."
PATRONS AND SUBSCRIBERS
TO THE
TALES OF THE MOOR,
By JOSIAS homely.
His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
(The Right Hon. the Earl of Fortescue),
The Right Honorable the Earl of Devon.
Right Honorable Lady Rolle,
Right Honorable Lady Elizabeth Bulteel,
The Dowager Lady Kennaway,
Lady Plasket,
Mrs. Templer, Sandford Orleigh,
Mrs. Hippisley Tuckfield, Skobroke Park,
Mrs. Bastard, Buchland Court.
Mrs. Hole, Collypriest Cottage,
Rijrht Honorable Lord Viscount Courtenav, M. P
Right Hon. Lord Viscount Ebrington, M. P.
Right Honorable Lord Rolle,
Right Honorable Lord Poltimore,
Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, Bart., m.p.
Sir Ralph Lopez, Bart., M. P.
Sir William Templer Pole, Bart.
Sir John Kennaway, Bart.
Sir Diggory Forrest, Knt.
II
LITERAKY PATROXS.
Sir Edward Ljtton Buhver, M. P.
Charles Dickens, Esq. Dr. BoMrlug, m.p.
J. H. Hippisley, Esq. J. Fitzgerald Pennie, Esq.
The Riffht Rev. the Lordl Rev. — Watkins
Bishop of Exeter
The Very Rev. the Dean of
Exeter
Rev. T, Whipham, D.D.
Rev. Thomas Kitson
Rev. C. Woolston
Rev. F. Good
Rev. William Marsh
Rev. R. Skinner
The Honorable Mr. Justice Coleridsre
Rev. J. Taylor, Lydney^
Gloiice&ier
Rev. M. Loundes
Rev. John Penleays
Rev. H. Acton
Rev. B. W. S. Vallack
Rev. H. Bowden
Rev. G. Martin
*e.^
The Honorable Mr. Justice Pafteson.
George Templer, Esq, Sandford Orleigh,
Joseph G arrow. Esq, Torquay,
G. S. Curtis, Esq, Teujnmouth,
John Gaunter, Esq, Waye House,
Montague E. N. Parker, Esq, Whiteway,
James W. BuUer, Esq, Downes,
John C. Buhe<^.], Esq, Fleet,
John Sillifant, Esq, Ooomhe,
Charles Mallock, Esq, Cockington,
J. Belfield, Esq, Prbnley House,
G. Ley, Esq, Cochington,
Thomas Pinsent, Esq, Green-hill,
Capt. Alexander Gordon, r.s.m., Gibraltar
Capt. Studdy, Ipplepeti,
Capt. White, r.n., Buchfast Abbey,
W. Vallence, Esq, Liverpool,
— Eyre, Esq, Sandy Park,
G. M. Stooke, Esq, Little Bovey,
J. Atkinson, Esq, Bagtor-house,
J. Goodman Maxwell, Esq, Coham,
C. Gordon, Esq. Wiscomhe.
IT!
Major Hall, Exmouih
T. Hall, Esq, ditto,
Joseph Amesbury, Esq, Portland place, London,
G. E. Radford, Esq, Cheopside,
W. Vigor, Esq, Whitehill,
Thomas Wyer, Esq, Tavlstoch,
W. Cholmeley IVIorris, Esq, Fishleigh house
Capt. Maingay, r.n.
Thomas White, Esq, Pear tree.
Samuel Trehawke Kekewich, Esq., Peamore
NEWTON.
P. Pearse, Esq
John Vicarv, Esq
W. F. D'Aicy, Esq
J. Beechey, Esq
W. Flamank, Esq
John Martin, Esq
Robert Martin, Esq
A. Leslie, Esq
R. H. Wills, Esq
— Francis, Esq
John Mills, Esq
F. Hernaman, Esq
W. Bradford Esq
T. Sweeting, Esq.
F. Gillard, Esq
— Foster, Esq
W. C. Radlev, Esq
Mr. R. Rendell
E. Ford
A. Bearne
J. S. Bearne
L. Bearne
Buckland
Way
Elms
Crea.sv
Mr. Turner
. . N. Walke
. . W. Bickford
. . W. Doble
. . Rexford
. . W. Cruse
. . W. Evans
. . Heyward
. . Head
. . Thomas Way
. . Parker
. . Winter
. . David Phillips
. . Stitson
. . H. Hatchwell
. . Adams
. . William Tozer
. . Samuel Mathews
. . J. G. Stuart
. . J. Pinsent
. . E. Palk, jun.
, . Samuel Branscombe
. . John Chudleigh
. . William Vinning
. . E. Beazley
. . William Dokr
IV
Mr. L. Sweet
. C. Banfill
. James Biwdford
. George Stevens
. Westbrook
. T. Bickford
. John White
. S. Walke
. John Stockman
. John Beazley
. Collman
. Crocker
. Hopkins
. Morris
. Shilston
. W. Hearder
. Alsop
. T. Hatch
. T. Smerdon
. Grey
. W. P. Williams
. W. Creed
. W. Mills
. John Stevens
. Adams
. A. Chudleigh
. Metherell
. James Budd
. R. Goodenough
. William Palk
, Russell
. R. Phillips
. H. Carnell
. James Ford
. John Salter
. R. H. Allan
. Evens, senr.
. William Phillips
Mr. Thomas Payne
Thomas Cowell
John Neyle
Hill
Wills
Milward
N. H. Beazley
James Evans
Symons
N. Goodenough
Mayne
Quick
William Lane
White
Barry
T. Piatt
Bodley
Hill
Mrs. Wm. Baker,
Stranger
White
Beazley
Langworthy
Tozer
Miss Smallridge
Baker
Langworthy
E. Chudleigh
E. Syms
Cull
Buckland
M. Langworthy
KINGSTEIONTON.
Mr. George Hicks
J. Jewell
Hicks
Henry Stockman
Samuel Smaldridge
T. Spry
Mrs. Bartlett
ASHBURTON.
W. Jardine, Esq, m.p.
Robert Tucker, Esq
H. Hele, Esq
R. G. Abraham, Esq
J. Soper, Esq, m.d.
W. Cockey, Esq
George Gaunter, Esq
Richard Gaunter, Esq
Henry Gaunter, Esq
Solomon Tozer, Esq
R. Palk, Esq Jun.
J. Jennings, Esq
Thomas Gousins Esq
H. Jervis, Esq
Spaike Amery, Esq
J. Woodley, Esq
Mr. Doble
Hcneywill
W. Barons
P. Foot
T. Foaden
John Foaden
William Batten, senr
William Batten, junr
J. C. Hurst
Mr. J. Davy
Thomas Mathews
John Pearce
W. French
Sawdye
George Perkins
Bracewell
Passraore
H. G. Greagh
William Pennie, senr
Samuel Dawe
James Taprell
O. Farrell
J. Gribbie, jun
E. Husson
Thomas Mann
Searle, Tidivell
Phillips, BuUand
Mann, Gulliver
P. Evans
R. Bean
G. Gutcliffe
G. Gould
G. H. Mann
James Norris
The Ashburton Library
Mrs. Lyde
.. Gole
. . Waldron
Miss Monday
. . Stoodely
vr
BUCKFASTLEIGH.
J. Petherbridge, Esq
— Phillips, Esq
Mr. Thomas Sarell
. . Trelevan
. . C. Hamlyii, jun
. . William Giles
Mrs. Tielevan
Miss Furneaux
W. H. Halse, Esq, Brent
Mr. Holdsworth, Ivij-hridge
EXETER.
J. Milford, Esq City Banh
Wm. Kennaway Esq
G. W. Turner, Esq
W. H. Furlong, Esq
J. Blackall, Esq, m.d.
J. Edye, Esq
Thomas Owen, Esq
E. Force, Esq
T. Latimer, Esq
— Dewdney, Esq
J. Save!!, Esq
W. Beal, Esq
H. C. Miilett, Esq
W. Tombs, Esq
A. D. Moore Esq
^. Kemp, Esq
Mr. W. Mortimer
F. Burrington
E. Burrington
Samuel Burrington
Crofts
Durant
Mr. H. Elwortliy
Evans
G. L. Thomas
Adam Johnston
Henry Manley
T. Maithews
William England
S. Knowles
E. Flinders
E. Bremridge
Burnet
Veysey
Bradbear
Charles Mathews
Wm. Southwood, jun.
John Johnston
G. Bi'aund
J. Braund
G. M. Gould
G. Buckland
Amery
Thomas Hex
John Hex
S. Roach
S. Pearse
Garton
G. Lewis
Allen
C. Hunt
G. Cockram
Rewe
Mrs. Gabriel
.. Grey
. . Latimer
Miss Waite
.. Phillips
VII
W. H. Merry, Esq
H. Mathews, EsqBradninch
W. Adams, Esq., Witheridge
Joiin Clolciitcli Esq Wolver-
hampton
John Barter, Esq —
W. Curtis, Esq Grenock.
Mr. Barry, Barnstaple
Sherard Clay, Esq —
Incledon Bencroft, Esq —
C. Bahbidge, Esq —
Chas. Neltleton, Esq, Ply-
mouth
Mr. Coombes, jun. —
. . Saul —
Miss M. Crotch —
.. Ellis —
G. W. Webber, Esq, Laxin-
ceston
Mr. F. A. Payne, —
Proctor —
J. Ellis
Congdon —
Dvniond —
W
Cyres
Mrs. A. Gordon, Gibraltar
Mr. W. Rolstone, Chudle'ujh
. . H. James Chudleujh
Knighton
A. Hewish, ^roadcliM
S. Templeman
James Berry
J. Drew
R. Avent, London
T. Williamson —
Miss Humphreys
W. Drew, Esq. Huxham
Batting,iNM6'7i"/o7j St.
Mr. R. Frovo Teignmouth
Coldridge —
. . Birkinshaw —
. . Butchers —
. . Elliott —
TORQUAY.
I. Prowse, Esq
C. Kitson, Esq
William Prouse, Esq
Mr. Lear
. . G. E. Hearder
. . Wolfingdon
. . Syms
. . Pen gel ly
Mrs. Digweed
Mr. Caldwell, Totnes
. . R. Wilson —
. . J. B. Cannon, Tiverton
. . Wotton —
Wm. Paine, Esq —
Mrs. Symonds, Lyviington,
Hunts
Miss Svmonds, —
E. Boutcher Esq, Broad-
clist
Mrs. Gould, New-hall
Mr. W. A. Wreyford,i3r/5^o/
J. Dunnintj, — »
Wiiulrass
J. Soiithcombe, Stoford
C. Chalker, Dartmonth
G. P. Agar —
J. Crotch, Oheham-pton
W. H. Bushell, Esq —
H. Churchward, Esq —
J. Batten, Esq, Devovport
rin
C. J. GifFord, Esq, Cardiff
H. A. Vallack, Esq, Tor-
rington
J. Bennett, Esq, Chax-hill
A. Bailey Esq, Westbury
Thomas Harvey, Esq —
H. Bird, Esq. Gloucester
T.Nicholson, Esq, i^f/Hei/--
"W.Bro'wne,EsqA^e/t;Aa?w —
R. Merrick, Esq ditto. —
J. James, Esq, Lydney —
G. Damsell, Esq —
S. R. Strode, Esq —
J. Maddy, Esq —
Mr. J. Tamplin,jun —
. . Bickford, Exmouth
. . Dunning, Throwleiffh
. . Pedler, —
S. Whiteway, Esq, King-
steigntan
Miss Burrington, Darvlisk
Mr. Gould, Ashbury
. . Toleman, Dolfon
Mr. Tamlyn, Sheeptvash
. . Humphreys —
. . J. Chapman —
R. Rudle, Esq —
Mrs. Chas. Burdon, 'Burdon
Miss Harrington, Warden
. . Coham, Upcott Avenel
E, Walter, Esq, Lihyer
Mr. S. Heard, Audand
. . C. Snell, New-court
. . C. Tucker, Totleigk
. . J. Mallett, 3Iarland
. . L. Yeo, Holdsrvorthy
Mrs. Hearle —
Miss Meyrick —
Mrs. Kingdon, Bridgerule
. . Vanstone, "Buckland
Mr. T. Moor, Brighton
CREWS, PRINTER,
NEWTON-ABBOT.
PR Bradford, John
4J.61 Tales oi the moor
B/^BT35
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