<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small1">IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE EVIDENCE.</span></h2>
<p>There is no need for me to follow all the Crowner's doings, or
all that the juries thought and said, which was different altogether
from what they meant to think and say. And he found
himself bound to have two of them, with first right of inquest
to the baby because of the stamp on his pinafore. And here I
was, foreman of the jury, with fifteenpence for my services, and
would gladly have served on the other jury after walking all
that way, but was disabled for doing so, and only got ninepence
for testimony. With that, however, I need not meddle,
as every one knows all about it; only, to make clear all that
happened, and, indeed, to clear myself, I am forced to put
before you all that we did about that baby, as fully and emphatically
as the state of our doings upon that occasion permitted
me to remember it.</p>
<p>For the Coroner sate at the head of the table, in the great
parlour of the house; and the dead child came in on his board,
and we all regarded him carefully, especially heeding his coronet
mark, and then set him by the window. A fine young
boy enough to look at, about the age of our Bardie, and might
have been her twin-brother, as everybody vowed he was, only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
his face was bolder and stronger, and his nose quite different,
and altogether a brave young chap, instead of funny and delicate.
All this, however, might well have come from knocking
about in the sea so much.</p>
<p>I would have given a good half-crown to have bitten off my
foolish tongue, when one of the jurymen stood up and began
to address the Coroner. He spoke, unluckily, very good
English, and his Honour was glad to pay heed to him. And
the clerk put down nearly all he said, word for word, as might
be. This meddlesome fellow (being no less than brother
Hezekiah's self) nodded to me for leave to speak, which I could
not deny him; and his Honour lost no time whatever to put
his mouth into his rummer of punch, as now provided for all
of us, and to bow (whenever his mouth was empty) to that
Hezekiah. For the man had won some reputation, or rather
had made it, for himself, by perpetual talking, as if he were
skilled in the history and antiquities of the neighbourhood.
Of these he made so rare a patchwork, heads and tails, prose,
verse, and proverbs, histories, and his stories, that (as I heard
from a man of real teaching and learning who met him once
and kept out of his way ever after) any one trusting him might
sit down in the chair of Canute at King Arthur's table. Not
that I or any of my neighbours would be the worse for doing
that; only the thought of it frightened us, and made us unwilling
to hearken him much.</p>
<p>However, if there was any matter on which Hezekiah deserved
to be heard, no doubt it was this upon which he was
now delivering his opinions—to wit, the great inroad or invasion
of the sand, for miles along our coast; of which there are very
strange things to tell, and of which he had made an especial
study, having a field at Candleston with a shed upon it and a
rick of hay, all which disappeared in a single night, and none
was ever seen afterwards. It was the only field he had, being
left to him by his grandmother; and many people were disappointed
that he had not slept with his cow that night. This
directed his attention to the serious consideration, as he always
told us at first start, being a lover of three-decked words, of the
most important contemplation which could occupy the attention
of any Cambrian landowner.</p>
<p>"Show your land," cried a wag of a tailor, with none to cross
his legs upon; but we put him down, and pegged him down,
till his manners should be of the pattern-book. Hezekiah went
on to tell, in words too long to answer the helm of such a plain
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
sailor as I am, how the sweep of hundreds of miles of sand had
come up from the west and south-west in only two hundred
and fifty years. How it had first begun to flow about the
Scilly Islands, as mentioned by one Borlase, and came to the
mouth of Hayle river, in Cornwall, in the early years of
King Henry VIII., and after that blocked up Bude Haven,
and swallowed the ploughs in the arable land. Then at
Llanant it came like a cloud over the moon one winter night,
and buried five-and-thirty houses with the people in them.</p>
<p>An Act of Parliament was passed—chapter the second of
Philip and Mary—to keep it out of Glamorganshire; and good
commissioners were appointed, and a survey made along the
coast, especially of Kenfig. Nevertheless the dash of sand was
scarcely on their ink, when swarming, driving, darkening the
air, the storm swept on their survey. At the mouths of the
Tawey and Afan rivers the two sailors' chapels were buried, and
then it swept up the great Roman road, a branch of the Julian
way, and smothered the pillars of Gordian, and swallowed the
castle of Kenfig, which stood by the side of the western road;
and still rushing eastward, took Newton village and Newton
old church beneath it. And so it went on for two hundred
years, coming up from the sea, no doubt, carried by the perpetual
gales, which always are from the south and west—filling
all the hollow places, changing all bright mossy pools into hills
of yellow drought, and, like a great encampment, dwelling over
miles and leagues of land. And like a camp it was in this,
that it was always striking tent. Six times in the last few
years had the highest peak of sand—the general's tent it might
be called—been shifted miles away, perhaps, and then come
back towards Ogmore; and it was only the other day that,
through some shift or swirl of wind, a windmill, with its sails
entire, had been laid bare near Candleston, of which the last
record was in Court-rolls of a hundred and fifty years agone.<SPAN name="FNanchor_A_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</SPAN></p>
<p>Now all this, though Hezekiah said it, was true enough, I do
believe, having heard things much to the same purpose from my
own old grandfather. The Coroner listened with more patience
than we had given him credit for, although he told us that
brother Perkins should have reserved his learned speech for the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span>
second inquiry, which was to be about the deaths of the five
young men; for to him it appeared that this noble infant must
lay the blame of his grievous loss not on the sand but upon the
sea. Hezekiah replied, with great deference, that the cause in
both cases was the same, for that the movement of sand went
on under the sea even more than ashore, and hence the fatal
gulfing of that ship, the Andalusia, and the loss of his young
lordship.</p>
<p>The name he had given the ship surprised me; and indeed
I felt sure that it was quite wrong; and so I said immediately,
without any low consideration of what might be mine own
interest. But the Coroner would not hearken to me, being
much impressed now with the learning and wisdom of Hezekiah
Perkins. And when Hezekiah presented his card, beginning
with "horologist," and ending with the "king and queen," he
might have had any verdict he liked, if he himself had been
upon trial.</p>
<p>Therefore, after calling in (for the sake of form) the two poor
women who found the dead baby among the sea-weed, and had
sevenpence apiece for doing so, and who cried all the while that
they talked in Welsh (each having seen a dear baby like him
not more than twenty years ago), we came in the most unanimous
manner, under his lordship's guidance, to the following
excellent verdict:—</p>
<p>"Found drowned on Pool Tavan rocks, a man-child, supposed
to be two years old; believed to be a young nobleman, from
marks on pinafore, and high bearing; but cast away by a storm
of sand from the ship Andalusia of Appledore."</p>
<p>Now I was as certain, as sure could be, that half of this verdict
must be wrong; especially as to the name of the ship, and
her belonging to Appledore, which never yet owned any craft
of more than 200 tons at the utmost—a snow, or a brig at the
very outside. Nevertheless I was compelled to give in to the
rest of them, and most of all to the Coroner. Only I said, as
many who are still alive can remember, and are not afraid to
speak to, and especially my good friend Mr Lewis, "The ship
was not called the Andalusia; the ship was never from Appledore;
neither was she of British build. As an old seaman, it
is likely that I know more of the build of a ship than a lubber
of a clock-maker, or rather a clock-mauler."</p>
<p>But here I was put down sternly; and hearing of verdicts a
great deal worse, without any mischief come of them, I was
even content to sign the return, and have a new pipe of bird's-eye.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
And a bird's-eye view this gave me of them at the second
inquest wherein I had to give evidence; and was not of the
jury. They wanted to cross-examine me, because I had been
unpleasant, but of that they got the worst, and dropped it.
But as all our jurymen declared upon their oaths that the little
nobleman was drowned in a storm of sand, so they found that
the five young rabbiters came to their end of smothering through
a violent sea-tempest.</p>
<p>In the days of my youth such judgments perhaps would have
tried my patience; but now I knew that nothing ever follows
truth and justice. People talk of both these things, and
perhaps the idea does them good.</p>
<p>Be that according to God's will—as we always say when deprived
of our own—at any rate, I am bound to tell one little
thing more about each quest. And first about the first one.
Why was I so vexed and angry with my foolish tongue when
Hezekiah began to speak? Only because I knew full well that
it would lead to the very thing, which it was my one desire to
avoid, if possible. And this—as you may guess at once, after
what happened on the stairs—was the rude fetching and exposing
of the dear little maid among so many common fellows;
and to show her the baby-corpse. I feared that it must come
to this, through my own thoughtless blabbing about her "ickle
bother" in the presence of Hezekiah: and if ever man had a
hollow dry heart from over-pumping of the tongue, I had it
when Hezekiah came in; bearing, in a depth of fright and
wonder, and contempt of him, my own delicate Bardie. I had
set my back against the door, and sworn that they should not
have her; but crafty Perkins had stolen out by another door
while they humoured me. Now my pretty dear was awed, and
hushed beyond all crying, and even could not move her feet,
as children do, in a kicking way. Trying to get as far as
possible from Hezekiah's nasty face—which gave me a great
deal of pleasure, because she had never done the like to me,
unless I were full of tobacco—she stretched away from his
greasy shoulder, and then she saw old Davy. Her hands came
toward me, and so did her eyes, and so did her lips, with great
promise of kisses, such as her father and mother perhaps might
have been mightily tempted by; but nobody now to care for
them.</p>
<p>When Hezekiah, pretending to dandle this little lady in a
jaunty way, like one of his filthy low children, was taking her
towards that poor little corpse, so white in the light of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
window; and when he made her look at it, and said, "Is that
ickle bother, my dear?" and she all the time was shivering and
turning her eyes away from it, and seeking for me to help her,
I got rid of the two men who held me, nor hearkened I the
Coroner, but gave Hezekiah such a grip as he felt for three
months afterwards, and with Bardie on my left arm, kept my
right fist ready.</p>
<p>Nobody cared to encounter this; for I had happened to tell
the neighbourhood how the Frenchman's head came off at the
time when he tried to injure me; and so I bore off the little one,
till her chest began to pant and her tears ran down my beard.
And then as I spoke softly to her and began to raise her fingers,
and to tickle her frizzy hair, all of a sudden she flung both arms
around my neck, and loved me.</p>
<p>"Old Davy, poor ickle Bardie not go to 'e back pit-hole
yet?"</p>
<p>"No, my dear, not for ever so long. Not for eighty years at
least. And then go straight to heaven!"</p>
<p>"Ickle bother go to 'e back pit-hole? Does 'a think, old
Davy?"</p>
<p>This was more than I could tell, though inclined to think it
very likely. However, before I could answer, some of the jury
followed us, and behind them the Coroner himself; they insisted
on putting a question to her, and so long as they did not force
her again to look at that which terrified her, I had no right to
prevent them. They all desired to speak at once; but the clerk
of the Coroner took the lead, having as yet performed no work
toward the earning of his salt or rum. An innocent old man
he was, but very free from cleanliness; and the child being
most particular of all ever born in that matter, turned away with
her mite of a nose, in a manner indescribable.</p>
<p>He was much too dull to notice this; but putting back his
spectacles, and stooping over her hair and ears (which was all
she left outside my beard), he wanted to show his skill in babies,
of which he boasted himself a grandfather. And so he began
to whisper,—</p>
<p>"My little dear, you will be a good child—a very good child;
won't you, now? I can see it in your little face. Such a
pretty dear you are! And all good children always do as they
are told, you know. We want you to tell us a little thing about
pretty little brother. I have got a little girl at home not so old
as you are, and she is so clever, you can't think. Everything
she does and says; everything we tell her——"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Take ayay 'e nasty old man. Take ayay 'e bad old man;
or I never tis 'a again, old Davy."</p>
<p>She flashed up at me with such wrath, that I was forced to
obey her; while the old man put down his goggles to stare, and
all the jury laughed at him. And I was running away with her,
for her little breath was hot and short; when the Coroner called
out, "Stop, man; I know how to manage her." At this I was
bound to pull up, and set her to look at him, as he ordered me.
She sate well up in my arms, and looked, and seemed not to
think very highly of him.</p>
<p>"Look at his Honour, my dear," said I, stroking her hair as
I knew she liked; "look at his lordship, you pretty duck."</p>
<p>"Little child," began his Honour, "you have a duty to perform,
even at this early period of your very beginning life. We
are most desirous to spare your feelings, having strong reasons
to believe that you are sprung from a noble family. But in our
duty towards your lineage, we must require you, my little dear—we
must request you, my little lady—to assist us in our endeavour
to identify——"</p>
<p>"I can say 'dentify,' old Davy; tell 'e silly old man to say
'dentify' same as I does."</p>
<p class="pmb3">She spread her little open hand with such contempt at the
Coroner, that even his own clerk could not keep his countenance
from laughing. And his Honour, having good reason to
think her a baby of high position before, was now so certain
that he said, "God bless her! What a child she is! Take
her away, old mariner. She is used to high society."</p>
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