<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_LXIII">CHAPTER LXIII.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small1">POLLY AT HOME.</span></h2>
<p>Lest any one should be surprised that Sir Philip Bampfylde
could have paid two visits to this delightful neighbourhood,
without calling on our leading gentleman, and his own fellow-officer,
Colonel Lougher—in which case the questions concerning
Delushy would have been sifted long ago—I had better
say at once what it was that stopped him. When the General
thought it just worth while, though his hopes were faint about
it, to inquire into the twisted story of the wreck on our coast,
as given by the celebrated Felix Farley; the first authority he
applied to was Coroner Bowles, who had held the inquest.
Coroner Bowles told him all he knew (half of which was
wrong, of course, by means of Hezekiah) and gave him a letter
to Anthony Stew, as the most active and penetrating magistrate
of the neighbourhood. Nothing could have been more
unlucky. Not only did Stew baffle my desire to be more
candid than the day itself, by his official brow-beating, and the
antipathy between us—not only did Stew, like an over-sharp
fellow, trust one of the biggest rogues unhung—in his unregenerate
dissenting days, and before we gave him six dozen,
which certainly proved his salvation—(I am sorry to say such
things of my present good neighbour, 'Kiah; but here he is
now, and subscribes to it) Hezekiah Perkins, whose view of
the shipwreck, and learned disquisition on sand, misled the
poor Coroner and all of the Jury, except myself, so blindly,
that we drowned the five young men, and smothered the baby—not
only did Stew, I say, get thus far in bewilderment of
the subject, but he utterly ruined all chance of clearing it, by
keeping Sir Philip from Candleston Court!</p>
<p>If you ask me how, I can only say, in common fairness to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_431">[Pg 431]</SPAN></span>
Anthony Stew (who is lately gone, poor fellow, to be cross-examined
by somebody sharper even than himself—one to
whom I would never afford material for unpleasant questions,
by speaking amiss of a man in his power—especially when so
needless), in a word, to treat Stew as I hope myself to be
treated by survivors, I admit that he may not have wished to
keep Sir Philip away from the Colonel. But the former
having once accepted Stew's keen hospitality, and tried to eat
fish (which I might have bettered, had I known of his being
there), felt, with his usual delicacy, that he ought not to visit
a man at feud with the host whose salt—and very little else—he
was then enjoying. For Mrs Stew was more bitter of course
than even her husband against Colonel Lougher, and roundly
abused him the very first evening of Sir Philip's stay with
them. So that the worthy General passed the gates of the
excellent Colonel, half-a-dozen times perhaps, without once
passing through them.</p>
<p>Enough about that; and I need only say, before returning
to my own important and perhaps sagacious inquiries in
Devonshire, that the news, so hastily blurted out by Captain
Rodney Bluett, caused many glad hearts in our parish and
neighbourhood; but nevertheless two sad ones. Of these one
belonged to Roger Berkrolles, and the other to Moxy Thomas.
The child had so won upon both these, not only by her misfortunes
and the way in which she bore them, but by her
loving disposition, bright manner, and docility, that it seemed
very hard to lose her so, even though it were for her own good.
Upon this latter point Master Berkrolles, when I came to see
him, held an opinion, the folly of which surprised me, from a
man of such reading and history. In real earnest he laid
down that it might be a very bad thing for the maid, and
make against her happiness, to come of a sudden into high
position, importance, and even money. Such sentiments are
to be found, I believe, in the weaker parts of the Bible, such
as are called the New Testament, which nobody can compare
to the works of my ancestor, King David; and which, if you
put aside Saint Paul, and Saint Peter (who cut the man's ear
off, and rejected quite rightly the table-cloth), exhibit to my
mind nobody of a patriotic spirit.</p>
<p>As for Moxy, she would not have been a woman if she had
doubted about the value of high position, coin of the realm,
and rich raiment. Nevertheless she cried bitterly that this
child, as good as her own to her, and given her to make up for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_432">[Pg 432]</SPAN></span>
them, and now so clever to see to things, and to light the fire,
and show her the way Lady Bluett put her dress on, should
be taken away in a heap as it were, just as if the great folk
had minded her. She blamed our poor Bunny for stealing the
heart of young Watkin, who might have had the maid (according
to his mother's fancy) with money enough to restock the
farm, now things had proved so handsome. As if everybody
did not know that Bardie would never think twice of Watkin;
while his mother, hearing of the ships I had taken (as all over
the parish reported), had put poor Watkin on bread and water,
until he fell in love with Bunny! However, now she cried
very severely, and in a great measure she meant it.</p>
<p>Leaving all Newton, and Nottage, and Sker, and even
Bridgend to consider these matters, with a pleasing divergence
of facts and conclusions, I find it my duty, however repugnant,
to speak once more of my humble self. In adversity, my native
dignity and the true grandeur of Cambria have always united,
against my own feelings, to make me almost self-confident, or
at any rate able to maintain my position, and knock under to
nobody. But in prosperity, all this drops; extreme affability,
and my native longing to give pleasure, mark my deportment
towards all the world; and I almost never commit an assault.</p>
<p>In this fine and desirable frame of mind I arrived at Narnton
Court once more, sooner perhaps than Captain Bluett, having
so much further to go, burst in on his friends at Candleston;
although I have given his story precedence, not only on account
of his higher rank, but because of the hurry he was in. On the
other hand, my part seemed to be of a nice and delicate
character—to find out all that I could without making any
noise in the neighbourhood, to risk no chance, if it might be
helped, of exciting Sir Philip Bampfylde, and, above all things,
no possibility of arousing Chowne, till the proper time. For
his craft was so great that he might destroy every link of
evidence, if he once knew that we were in chase of him; even
as he could out-fox a fox.</p>
<p>When things of importance take their hinge, a good deal,
upon feminine evidence, the first thing a wise man always does
is to seek female instinct, if he sees his way to guide it. And
to have the helm of a woman, nothing is so certain as a sort of
a promise of marriage. A man need not go too very far, and
must be awake about pen and ink, and witnesses, and so on;
but if he knows how to do it, and has lost an arm in battle,
but preserved an unusually fine white beard, and has had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_433">[Pg 433]</SPAN></span>
another wife before, who was known to make too little of him,
the fault is his own if he cannot manage half-a-dozen spinsters.</p>
<p>My reputation had outrun me—as it used to do, sometimes
too often—for in the despatches my name came after scarcely
more than fifty, though it should have been one of the foremost
five; however, my wound was handsomely chronicled, and
with a touch of my own description, such as is really heartfelt.
Of course it was not quite cured yet, and I felt very shy about
it; and the very last thing I desired was for the women to
come bothering. Tush! I have no patience with them; they
make such a fuss of a trifle.</p>
<p>But being bound upon such an errand, and anxious to conciliate
them so far as self-respect allowed, and knowing that
if I denied myself to them, the movement would be much
greater, I let them have peeps, and perceive at the same time
that I really did want a new set of shirts. Half-a-dozen of
damsels began at once to take my measure: and the result will
last my lifetime.</p>
<p>But, amid all this glorification, whenever I thought of
settling, there was one pretty face that I longed to see, and to
my mind it beat the whole of them. What was become of my
pretty Polly, the lover of my truthful tales, and did she
still remember a brave, though not young officer in the Navy,
who had saved her from the jaws of death, by catching small-pox
from her? These questions were answered just in time,
and in the right manner also, by the appearance of Polly herself,
outblushing the rose at sight of me, and without a spot on
her face, except from the very smart veil she was wearing. For
she was no longer a servant now, but free and independent, and
therefore entitled to take the veil, and she showed her high
spirit by doing this, to the deep indignation of all our maid-servants.
And still more indignant were these young women,
when Polly demeaned herself, as they declared, with a perfectly
shameless and brazen-faced manner of carrying on towards the
noble old tar. They did not allow for the poor thing's gratitude
to the only one who came nigh her in her despairing hour
and saved her life thereby, nor yet for her sorrow and tender
feeling at the dire consequence to him; and it was not in their
power, perhaps, to sympathise with the shock she felt at my
maimed and war-beaten appearance. However, I carried the
whole of it off in a bantering manner, as usual.</p>
<p>Still there was one resolution I came to, after long puzzling
in what way to cope with the almost fatal difficulty of having
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_434">[Pg 434]</SPAN></span>
to trust a woman. So I said to myself, that if this must be
done, I might make it serve two purposes—first for discovery
of what I sought, and then for a test of the value of a female,
about whom I had serious feelings. These were in no way
affected by some news I picked up from Nanette, or, as she
now called herself, "The widow Heaviside." Not that my old
friend had left this world, but that he gave a wide berth to the
part containing his beloved partner. She, with a Frenchwoman's
wit and sagacity, saw the advantage of remaining in
the neighbourhood of her wrongs; and here with the pity now
felt for her, and the help she received from Sir Philip himself,
and her own skill in getting up women's fal lals, she maintained
her seven children cleverly.</p>
<p>After shedding some natural tears for the admired but fugitive
Heaviside, she came round, of course, to her neighbours'
affairs; and though she had not been at Narnton Court at the
time when the children were stolen, she helped me no little by
telling me where to find one who knew all that was known of
it. This was a farmer's wife now at Burrington (as I found
out afterwards), a village some few leagues up the Tawe, and
her name was Mrs Shapland.</p>
<p>"From her my friend the Captain shall decouver the everything
of this horrible affair," said Nanette, who now spoke
fine English. "She was the—what you call—the bonne, the
guard of the leetle infants. I know not where she leeves, some
barbarous name. I do forget—but she have one cousin, a jolly
girl, of the leetle name—pray how can you make such thing of
'Mary?'"</p>
<p>"What! do you mean Polly?" I asked; "that is what we
make of Mary. And what Polly is it then, Madame?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Paullee, the Paullee which have that horrible pest
that makes holes in the faces. 'Verole' we call it. The
Paullee that was in the great mansion, until she have the
money left, the niece of the proud woman of manage. You
shall with great facility find that Paullee." Of course I
could, for she had told me where I might call upon her, which
I did that very same afternoon.</p>
<p>And a pretty and very snug cottage it was, just a furlong, or
so, above the fine old village of Braunton, with four or five
beautiful meadows around it, and a bright pebbly brook at the
turn of the lane. The cottage itself, even now in November,
was hung all over with China roses, and honeysuckle in its
second bloom, which it often shows in Devonshire. And up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_435">[Pg 435]</SPAN></span>
at the window, that shook off the thatch, and looked wide-awake
as a dog's house, a face, more bright than the roses,
came, and went away, and came again, to put a good face
upon being caught.</p>
<p>Hereupon I dismissed the boys, who, with several rounds of
cheers, had escorted me through Braunton; and with genuine
thankfulness I gazed at the quiet and pleasing prospect. So
charming now in the fall of the leaf, what would it be in the
spring-time, with the meadows all breaking anew into green,
and the trees all ready for their leaves again? Also these
bright red Devonshire cows, all belonging to Polly, and even
now streaming milkily—a firkin apiece was the least to expect
of them, in the merry May month. A very deep feeling of
real peace, and the pleasure of small things fell on me; for a
man of so many years, and one arm, might almost plead to
himself some right to shed his experience over the earth, when
his blood had been curdling on so many seas.</p>
<p>The very same thought was in Polly's eyes when she ran
down and opened the door for me. The whole of this property
was her own; or would be, at least, when her old grandmother
would allow herself to be buried. That old woman
now was ninety-five, if the parsons had minded the register;
and a woman more fully resolved to live on I never had the
luck to meet with. And the worst of it was, that her consent
to Polly's marriage was needful, under the ancient cow-keeper's
will, with all of the meadows so described, that nobody could
get out of them. Hereupon, somehow, I managed to see that
a very bold stroke was needed. And I took it, and won the
old lady over, by downright defiance. I told her that she was
a great deal too young to have any right to an opinion; and
when she should come to my time of life, she would find me
ready to hearken her. She said that no doubt it was bred
from the wars for sailors to talk so bravely; but that I ought
to know better—with a fie, and a sigh, and a fie again. To
none of this would I give ear, but began to rebuke all the
young generations, holding to ridicule those very points upon
which they especially plume themselves, until this most excellent
woman began to count all her cows on her fingers.</p>
<p>"Her can't have them. No, her shan't have they," she
cried, with a power which proved that she saw them dropping
into my jaws almost; "her han't a got 'em yet; and why
should her have 'em?"</p>
<p>Into this very fine feeling and sense of possession I entered
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_436">[Pg 436]</SPAN></span>
so amiably, that amid much laughter and many blushes on the
part of Polly (who pretended to treat the whole thing as a joke),
the old lady put on her silver goggles, and set down her name
to a memorandum, prepared on the spur of the moment by me.
Whereupon I quite made my mind up to go bravely in for it,
and recompense Polly for all her faith, and gratitude, and
frugality, if she should prove herself capable of keeping counsel
also.</p>
<p>To this intent I expressed myself as elegantly as could be,
having led Polly out to the wooden bridge, that nobody else
might hear me. For that fine old woman became so deaf, all
of a sudden, that I had no faith in any more of her organs,
and desired to be at safe distance from her, as well as to learn
something more of the cows. Nor did I miss the chance; for
all of them having been milked by Polly, came up to know
what I had to say to her, and their smell was beautiful. So I
gave them a bit of salt out of my pocket, such as I always
carry when ashore, and offered them some tobacco; and they
put out their broad yellow lips for the one, and snorted and
sneezed at the other. When these valuable cows were gone
to have a little more grazing, I just made Polly aware of the
chance that appeared to be open before us. In short, I laid
clearly before her the whole of my recent grand discovery,
proving distinctly that with nothing more than a little proper
management, I possessed therein at least an equivalent for her
snug meadow homestead, and all the milch-cows, and the trout-stream.
Only she must not forget one thing, namely, that the
whole of this value would vanish, if a single word of this story
were breathed any further off than our own two selves, until
the time was ripe for it. Of course I had not been quite such
a fool as to give Nanette the smallest inkling of any motive on
my part beyond that pure curiosity, with which she could so
well sympathise. Also it had been settled between Captain
Bluett and myself, that a fortnight was to be allowed me for
hunting up all the evidence, before he should cross the Channel;
unless I took it on myself to fetch him.</p>
<p>Polly opened her blue eyes to such a size at all I told her,
that I became quite uneasy lest she should open her mouth in
proportion. For if my discovery once took wind before its
entire completion, there would be at least fifty jealous fellows
thrusting their oars into my own rowlocks, and robbing me of
my own private enterprise. Also Miss Polly gave way to a
feeling of anger and indignation, which certainly might be to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_437">[Pg 437]</SPAN></span>
some extent natural, but was, to say the least of it, in a far
greater measure indiscreet, and even perilous.</p>
<p>"Oh the villain! oh the cruel villain!" she exclaimed, in
a voice that quite alarmed me, considering how near the footpath
was; "and a minister of the Gospel too! Oh the poor
little babes, one adrift on the sea, and the other among them
naked savages! What a mercy as they didn't eat him! And
to blame the whole of it on a nice, harmless, kind-spoken,
handsome gentleman, like our Captain! Oh, let me get hold
of him!"</p>
<p>"That, my dear Polly, we never shall do, if you raise your
voice in this way. Now come away from these trees with the
ivy, and let us speak very quietly."</p>
<p>This dear creature did (as nearly as could be expected) what
I told her; so that I really need not repent of my noble faith
in the female race. This encouraged me; from its tendency to
abolish prejudice, and to let the weaker vessels show that there
is such a thing as a cork to them. Men are apt to judge too
much by experience on this subject; when they ought to know
that experience never does apply to women, any more than
reason does.</p>
<p>Nevertheless my Polly saw the way in and out of a lot of
things, which to me were difficult. Especially as to the manner
of handling her cousin, Mrs Shapland, a very good woman in
her way, but a ticklish one to deal with. And all the credit
for all the truth we get out of Mrs Shapland belongs not to
me (any more than herself), but goes down in a lump to poor
Polly.</p>
<p>To pass this lightly—as now behoves me—just let me tell
what Susan Shapland said, when I worked it out of her. Any
man can get the truth out of a woman, if he knows the way;
I mean, of course, so far as she has been able to receive it. To
expect more than this is unreasonable; and to get that much
is wonderful. However, Polly and I, between us, did get a
good deal of it.</p>
<p>Of course, we did not let this good woman even guess what
we wanted with her; only we borrowed a farmer's cart from
Bang, my old boy, who was now set up in a farm on his grandmother's
ashes; and his horse was not to be found fault with,
if a man did his duty in lashing him. This I was ready to
understand, when pointed out by Polly; and he never hoisted
his tail but what I raked him under his counter.</p>
<p>So after a long hill, commanding miles and miles of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_438">[Pg 438]</SPAN></span>
course of the river, we fetched up in the courtyard of Farmer
Shapland, and found his wife a brisk sharp woman, quite ready
to tell her story. But what she did first, and for us, at this
moment, was to rouse up the fire with a great dry fagot, crackling
and sparkling merrily. For the mist of November was
now beginning to crawl up the wavering valley, and the fading
light from the west struck coldly on the winding river.</p>
<p>In such a case, and after a drive of many miles and much
scenery, any man loves to see pots and pans goaded briskly to
bubbling and sputtering, or even to help in the business himself,
so far as the cook will put up with it. And then if a
foolish good woman allows him (as pride sometimes induces
her) to lift up a pot-lid when trembling with flavour, or give a
shake to the frying-pan in the ecstasy of crackling, or even to
blow on the iron spoon, and then draw in his breath with a
drop of it—what can he want with any scenery out of the
window, or outside his waistcoat?</p>
<p class="pmb3">Such was my case, I declare to you, in that hospitable house
with these good people of Burrington; nor could we fall to any
other business, until this was done with; then after dark we
drew round the fire, with a black-jack of grand old ale, and our
pipes, to hear Mrs Shapland's story.</p>
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