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<h2> CHAPTER XXVII. The Puritan's Prison. </h2>
<p>Hugh Calveley, it has already been intimated, was lodged in a vault
beneath the gateway. The place was commonly used as a sort of black-hole
for the imprisonment of any refractory member of the royal household, or
soldier on guard guilty of neglect of duty. Circular in shape, it
contained a large pillar, to which iron rings and chains were attached.
The walls were of stone, the roof arched with ribs springing from the
pillar that supported it, and the floor was paved. Window there was none;
but air was admitted through a small grated aperture in the roof; and thus
imperfectly ventilated, it will not be wondered at that the vault should
be damp. Moisture constantly trickled down the walls, and collected in
pools on the broken pavement; but unwholesome as it was, and altogether
unfit for occupation, it was deemed good enough for those generally thrust
into it, and far too good for its present tenant.</p>
<p>As the prisoner exhibited no violence, the thongs with which his hands
were bound were removed on his entrance to the vault, and he was allowed
the free use of his limbs. The breast-plate in which he was clad was taken
from him, and his vesture was again closely searched, but no further
discovery was made either of concealed weapon, or of any paper or letter
tending to show that he had accomplices in his dread design. The only
thing found upon him, indeed, was a small Bible, and this, after it had
been examined, he was permitted to retain. To the interrogatories put to
him by Master Dendy, the serjeant-at-arms, he returned the briefest
answers; and when he had said as much as he thought fit, he obstinately
refused to make further reply.</p>
<p>Incensed at his perversity, and determined to extort a full confession, in
order that it might be laid before the King, the serjeant-at-arms ordered
the manacles to be applied. But though the torture was exquisite, he bore
it with firmness, and without uttering a groan; maintaining the same
determined silence as before. Had he dared, Master Dendy would have had
recourse to severer measures; but having no warrant for any such
proceeding, he was obliged to content himself with threats. To these Hugh
Calveley replied by a grim smile of contempt; but as the serjeant-at-arms
was departing to make his report to Sir Thomas Lake, he said, "I have
something to disclose; but it is for the King's ear alone."</p>
<p>"Better reveal it to me," rejoined Dendy, halting. "I have it in my power
to render your situation far more tolerable, or to inflict greater torment
upon you. Make your choice."</p>
<p>"Deal with me as you please," returned Hugh Calveley sternly. "What I have
to say is to the King, and to the King only; and though you break every
bone in my body with your engines, and tear off my flesh with red-hot
pincers, you shall not force the secret from me."</p>
<p>Master Dendy looked at him, and felt disposed to place him in the dreadful
instrument of torture called Skeffington's irons, which was hanging
against the wall; but the consideration that had hitherto restrained him—namely,
that he was without authority for the step, and might be called to account
for it—weighed with him still; wherefore he contented himself with
ordering the prisoner to be chained to the pillar; and having seen the
injunction obeyed, he left him.</p>
<p>In this miserable plight Hugh Calveley remained for some hours, without
light and without food. How the time was passed none knew; but the two
yeomen of the guard who entered the vault found him on his knees absorbed
in prayer. They brought a lamp with them, and refreshments of a better
kind than those usually afforded to a prisoner, and set them before him.
But he refused to partake of them. The only favour he besought was
permission to read his Bible; and the lamp placed within reach, he was
soon deeply engrossed in the perusal of those pages from which, when
earnestly sought, consolation has ever been derived under the most trying
circumstances.</p>
<p>Sir Jocelyn had forborne to visit the prisoner from a fear that his
presence might be painful; but the office imposed upon him by the King
left him no alternative; and about midnight he descended to the vault, to
ascertain from personal inspection that Hugh Calveley was in safe custody.
The door was unlocked by the halberdier stationed at it, and the young man
found himself alone with the prisoner. He was inexpressibly shocked by the
spectacle he beheld, as he had no idea how severely the unfortunate
Puritan had been treated, nor of the sort of prison in which he was
confined.</p>
<p>Hugh Calveley, who was still intently reading the Bible, which he had
placed upon his knee while he held the lamp near it, to throw the light
upon its leaves, did not appear to be disturbed by the opening of the
door, nor did he raise his eyes. But, at last, a deep groan issuing from
the breast of the young man aroused him, and he held up the lamp to
ascertain who was near. On discovering that it was Sir Jocelyn, he knitted
his brow, and, after sternly regarding him for a moment, returned to his
Bible, without uttering a word; but finding the other maintained his post,
he demanded, almost fiercely, why he was disturbed?</p>
<p>"Can I do aught for your relief?" rejoined the young man. "At least, I can
have those chains taken off."</p>
<p>"Thou speakest as one in authority," cried Hugh Calveley, regarding him,
fixedly. "Art thou appointed to be my jailer?"</p>
<p>Sir Jocelyn made no answer, but averted his head.</p>
<p>"This only was wanting to fill up the measure of my scorn for thee,"
pursued the Puritan. "Thou art worthy of thine office. But show me no
favour, for I will receive none at thy hands. I would rather wear these
fetters to my death, however much they may gall my limbs, than have them
struck off by thee. I would rather rot in this dungeon—ay, though it
were worse than it is—than owe my liberation to thee. The sole
favour thou canst show me is to rid me of thy presence, which is hateful
to me, and chases holy thoughts from my breast, putting evil in their
place."</p>
<p>"Why should this be so, O friend of my father?" exclaimed Sir Jocelyn.
"And why should my presence be hateful to you? There is no man living whom
I would less willingly offend than yourself; and in all I have done, where
you have been concerned, I have had no free agency. Judge me not then too
harshly. I commiserate your situation from the depths of my heart, and
would relieve it were it possible."</p>
<p>"Then wherefore persist in troubling me?" rejoined Hugh Calveley. "Have I
not good cause for my dislike of you? You have disappointed the
expectations I had formed of you. You failed me when I put your
professions to the test. You thwarted my design at the moment when its
success was certain, and when the tyrant was completely in my power. But
for you I should not be here, loaded with these fetters; or if I were, I
should be consoled by the thought that I had liberated my country from
oppression, instead of being crushed by the sense of failure. What seek
you from me, miserable time-server? Have you not had your reward for the
service you have rendered the King? Is he not grateful enough? I have
served as your stepping-stone to promotion. What more can I do?"</p>
<p>"You can cease to do me injustice," returned Sir Jocelyn. "Honours,
procured as mine have been, are valueless, and I would rather be without
them. I sought them not. They have been forced upon me. Look at the matter
fairly, and you will see that all these consequences, whether for good or
ill, have sprung from your own desperate act."</p>
<p>"It may be so," rejoined the Puritan. "I will not dispute it. But though
ill has accrued to me, and good to you, I would not change positions with
you. You will wear the tyrant's fetters for ever. I shall soon be free
from mine."</p>
<p>"Have you nothing to say concerning your daughter?" demanded the young
man.</p>
<p>"Nothing," replied the Puritan, with an expression of deep pain, which,
however, he checked by a mighty effort. "I have done with the world, and
desire not to be brought back to it."</p>
<p>"And you refuse to be freed from your chains?"</p>
<p>"My sole desire, as I have said, is to be freed from you."</p>
<p>"That wish, at least, shall be granted," replied Sir Jocelyn, as, with a
sad heart, he departed.</p>
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