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<h2> CHAPTER XLIV </h2>
<h3> THE WAY OF THE WORLD </h3>
<p>Cliffs snow-mantled, and storm-ploughed sands, and dark gray billows
frilled with white, rolling and roaring to the shrill east wind, made the
bay of Bridlington a very different sight from the smooth fair scene of
August. Scarcely could the staggering colliers, anchored under Flamborough
Head (which they gladly would have rounded if they could), hold their own
against wind and sea, although the outer spit of sand tempered as yet the
full violence of waves.</p>
<p>But if everything looked cold and dreary, rough, and hard, and bare of
beauty, the cottage of the late lieutenant, standing on the shallow bluff,
beaten by the wind, and blinded of its windows from within, of all things
looked the most forlorn, most desolate, and freezing. The windward side
was piled with snow, on the crest of which foam pellets lay, looking
yellow by comparison, and melting small holes with their brine. At the
door no foot-mark broke the drift; and against the vaporous sky no warmer
vapor tufted the chimney-pots.</p>
<p>“I am pretty nearly frozen again,” said Mordacks; “but that place sends
another shiver down my back. All the poor little devils must be icicles at
least.”</p>
<p>After peeping through a blind, he turned pale betwixt his blueness, and
galloped to the public-house abutting on the quay. Here he marched into
the parlor, and stamped about, till a merry-looking landlord came to him.
“Have a glass of hot, sir; how blue your nose is!” the genial master said
to him. The reply of the factor can not be written down in these days of
noble language. Enough that it was a terse malediction of the landlord,
the glass of hot, and even his own nose. Boniface was no Yorkshireman,
else would he have given as much as he got, at least in lingual currency.
As it was, he considered it no affair of his if a guest expressed his
nationality. “You must have better orders than that to give, I hope, sir.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, I have. And you have got the better of me; which has happened
to me three times this day already, because of the freezing of my wits,
young man. Now you go in to your best locker, and bring me your very best
bottle of Cognac—none of your government stuff, you know, but a
sample of your finest bit of smuggling. Why did I swear at a glass of hot?
Why, because you are all such a set of scoundrels. I want a glass of hot
as much as man ever did. But how can I drink it, when women and children
are dying—perhaps dead, for all I know—for want of warmth and
victuals? Your next-door neighbors almost, and a woman, whose husband has
just been murdered! And here you are swizzling, and rattling your coppers.
Good God, sir! The Almighty from heaven would send orders to have His own
commandment broken.”</p>
<p>Mr. Mordacks was excited, and the landlord saw no cause for it. “What
makes you carry on like this?” he said; “it was only last night we was
talking in the tap-room of getting a subscription up, downright liberal. I
said I was good for a crown, and take it out of the tick they owes me. And
when you come to think of these hard times—”</p>
<p>“Take that, and then tell me if you find them softer.” Suiting the action
to the word, the universal factor did something omitted on his card in the
list of his comprehensive functions. As the fat host turned away, to rub
his hands, with a phosphoric feeling of his future generosity, a set of
highly energetic toes, prefixed with the toughest York leather, and
tingling for exercise, made him their example. The landlord flew up among
his own pots and glasses, his head struck the ceiling, which declined too
long a taste of him, and anon a silvery ring announced his return to his
own timbers.</p>
<p>“Accept that neighborly subscription, my dear friend, and acknowledge its
promptitude,” said Mr. Mordacks; “and now be quick about your orders,
peradventure a second flight might be less agreeable. Now don't show any
airs; you have been well treated, and should be thankful for the
facilities you have to offer. I know a poor man without any legs at all,
who would be only too glad if he could do what you have done.”</p>
<p>“Then his taste must be a queer one,” the landlord replied, as he
illustrated sadly the discovery reserved for a riper age—that human
fingers have attained their present flexibility, form, and skill by habit
of assuaging, for some millions of ages, the woes of the human body.</p>
<p>“Now don't waste my time like that,” cried Mordacks; and seeing him draw
near again, his host became right active. “Benevolence must be
inculcated,” continued the factor, following strictly in pursuit. “I have
done you a world of good, my dear friend; and reflection will compel you
to heap every blessing on me.”</p>
<p>“I don't know about that,” replied the landlord. It is certain, however,
that this exhibition of philanthropic vigor had a fine effect. In five
minutes all the resources of the house were at the disposal of this rapid
agent, who gave his orders right and left, clapped down a bag of cash, and
took it up again, and said, “Now just you mind my horse, twice as well as
you mind your fellow-creatures. Take a leg of mutton out, and set it
roasting. Have your biggest bed hot for a lot of frozen children. By the
Lord, if you don't look alive, I'll have you up for murder.” As he spoke,
a stout fish-woman came in from the quay; and he beckoned to her, and took
her with him.</p>
<p>“You can't come in,” said a little weak voice, when Mr. Mordacks, having
knocked in vain, began to prise open the cottage door. “Mother is so
poorly; and you mustn't think of coming in. Oh, whatever shall I do, if
you won't stop when I tell you?”</p>
<p>“Where are all the rest of you? Oh, in the kitchen, are they? You poor
little atomy, how many of you are dead?”</p>
<p>“None of us dead, sir; without it is the baby;” here Geraldine burst into
a wailing storm of tears. “I gave them every bit,” she sobbed—“every
bit, sir, but the rush-lights; and them they wouldn't eat, sir, or I never
would have touched them. But mother is gone off her head, and baby
wouldn't eat it.”</p>
<p>“You are a little heroine,” said Mordacks, looking at her—the
pinched face, and the hollow eyes, and the tottering blue legs of her.
“You are greater than a queen. No queen forgets herself in that way.”</p>
<p>“Please, sir, no; I ate almost a box of rush-lights, and they were only
done last night. Oh, if baby would have took to them!”</p>
<p>“Hot bread and milk in this bottle; pour it out; feed her first, Molly,”
Mr. Mordacks ordered. “The world can't spare such girls as this. Oh, you
won't eat first! Very well; then the others shall not have a morsel till
your mouth is full. And they seem to want it bad enough. Where is the dead
baby?”</p>
<p>In the kitchen, where now they stood, not a spark of fire was lingering,
but some wood-ash still retained a feeble memory of warmth; and three
little children (blest with small advance from babyhood) were huddling
around, with hands, and faces, and sharp grimy knees poking in for
lukewarm corners; while two rather senior young Carroways were lying fast
asleep, with a jack-towel over them. But Tommy was not there; that gallant
Tommy, who had ridden all the way to Filey after dark, and brought his
poor father to the fatal place.</p>
<p>Mordacks, with his short, bitter-sweet smile, considered all these little
ones. They were not beautiful, nor even pretty; one of them was too
literally a chip of the old block, for he had reproduced his dear father's
scar; and every one of them wanted a “wash and brush up,” as well as a
warming and sound victualling. Corruptio optimi pessima. These children
had always been so highly scrubbed, that the great molecular author of
existence, dirt, resumed parental sway, with tenfold power of attachment
and protection, the moment soap and flannel ceased their wicked
usurpation.</p>
<p>“Please, sir, I couldn't keep them clean, I couldn't,” cried Geraldine,
choking, both with bread and milk, and tears. “I had Tommy to feed through
the coal-cellar door; and all the bits of victuals in the house to hunt
up; and it did get so dark, and it was so cold. I am frightened to think
of what mother will say for my burning up all of her brushes, and the
baskets. But please, sir, little Cissy was a-freezing at the nose.”</p>
<p>The three little children at the grate were peeping back over the pits in
their shoulders, half frightened at the tall, strange man, and half ready
to toddle to him for protection; while the two on the floor sat up and
stared, and opened their mouths for their sister's bread and milk. Then
Jerry flew to them, and squatted on the stones, and very nearly choked
them with her spoon and basin.</p>
<p>“Molly, take two in your apron, and be off,” said the factor to the stout
fish-woman—who was simply full of staring, and of crying out “Oh
lor!”—“pop them into the hot bed at once; they want warmth first,
and victuals by-and-by. Our wonderful little maid wants food most. I will
come after you with the other three. But I must see my little queen fill
her own stomach first.”</p>
<p>“But, please, sir, won't you let our Tommy out first?” cried Jerry, as the
strong woman lapped up the two youngest in her woolsey apron and ran off
with them. “He has been so good, and he was too proud to cry so soon as
ever he found out that mother couldn't hear him. And I gave him the most
to eat of anybody else, because of him being the biggest, sir. It was all
as black as ink, going under the door; but Tommy never minded.”</p>
<p>“Wonderful merit! While you were eating tallow! Show me the coal-cellar,
and out he comes. But why don't you speak of your poor mother, child?”</p>
<p>The child, who had been so brave, and clever, self-denying, laborious, and
noble, avoided his eyes, and began to lick her spoon, as if she had had
enough, starving though she was. She glanced up at the ceiling, and then
suddenly withdrew her eyes, and the blue lids trembled over them. Mordacks
saw that it was childhood's dread of death. “Show me where little Tommy
is,” he said; “we must not be too hard upon you, my dear. But what made
your mother lock you up, and carry on so?”</p>
<p>“I don't know at all, sir,” said Geraldine.</p>
<p>“Now don't tell a story,” answered Mr. Mordacks. “You were not meant for
lies; and you know all about it. I shall just go away if you tell
stories.”</p>
<p>“Then all I know is this,” cried Jerry, running up to him, and desperately
clutching at his riding coat; “the very night dear father was put into the
pit-hole—oh, hoo, oh, hoo, oh, hoo!”</p>
<p>“Now we can't stop for that,” said the general factor, as he took her up
and kissed her, and the tears, which had vainly tried to stop, ran out of
young eyes upon well-seasoned cheeks; “you have been a wonder; I am like a
father to you. You must tell me quickly, or else how can I cure it? We
will let Tommy out then, and try to save your mother.”</p>
<p>“Mother was sitting in the window, sir,” said the child, trying strongly
to command herself, “and I was to one side of her, and Tommy to the other,
and none of us was saying anything. And then there came a bad, wicked face
against the window, and the man said, 'What was it you said to-day,
ma'am?' And mother stood up—she was quite right then—and she
opened the window, and she looked right at him, and she said, 'I spoke the
truth, John Cadman. Between you and your God it rests.' And the man said,
'You shut your black mouth up, or you and your brats shall all go the same
way. Mind one thing—you've had your warning.' Then mother fell away,
for she was just worn out; and she lay upon the floor, and she kept on
moaning, 'There is no God! there is no God!' after all she have taught us
to say our prayers to. And there was nothing for baby to draw ever since.”</p>
<p>For once in his life Mr. Mordacks held his tongue; and his face, which was
generally fiercer than his mind, was now far behind it in ferocity. He
thought within himself, “Well, I am come to something, to have let such
things be going on in a matter which pertains to my office—pigeon-hole
100! This comes of false delicacy, my stumbling-block perpetually! No more
of that. Now for action.”</p>
<p>Geraldine looked up at him, and said, “Oh, please, sir.” And then she ran
off, to show the way toward little Tommy.</p>
<p>The coal-cellar flew open before the foot of Mordacks; but no Tommy
appeared, till his sister ran in. The poor little fellow was quite dazzled
with the light; and the grime on his cheeks made the inrush of fresh air
come like wasps to him. “Now, Tommy, you be good,” said Geraldine;
“trouble enough has been made about you.”</p>
<p>The boy put out his under lip, and blinked with great amazement. After
such a quantity of darkness and starvation, to be told to be good was a
little too bad. His sense of right and wrong became fluid with confusion;
he saw no sign of anything to eat; and the loud howl of an injured heart
began to issue from the coaly rampart of neglected teeth.</p>
<p>“Quite right, my boy,” Mr. Mordacks said. “You have had a bad time, and
are entitled to lament. Wipe your nose on your sleeve, and have at it
again.”</p>
<p>“Dirty, dirty things I hear. Who is come into my house like this? My house
and my baby belong to me. Go away all of you. How can I bear this noise?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Carroway stood in the passage behind them, looking only fit to die.
One of her husband's watch-coats hung around her, falling nearly to her
feet; and the long clothes of her dead baby, which she carried, hung over
it, shaking like a white dog's tail. She was standing with her bare feet
well apart, and that swing of hip and heel alternate which mothers for a
thousand generations have supposed to lull their babies into sweet sleep.</p>
<p>For once in his life the general factor had not the least idea of the
proper thing to do. Not only did he not find it, but he did not even seek
for it, standing aside rather out of the way, and trying to look like a
calm spectator. But this availed him to no account whatever. He was the
only man there, and the woman naturally fixed upon him.</p>
<p>“You are the man,” she said, in a quiet and reasonable voice, and coming
up to Mordacks with the manner of a lady; “you are the gentleman, I mean,
who promised to bring back my husband. Where is he? Have you fulfilled
your promise?”</p>
<p>“My dear madam, my dear madam, consider your children, and how cold you
are. Allow me to conduct you to a warmer place. You scarcely seem to enter
into the situation.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, I do, sir; thoroughly, thoroughly. My husband is in his grave; my
children are going after him; and the best place for them. But they shall
not be murdered. I will lock them up, so that they never shall be
murdered.”</p>
<p>“My dear lady, I agree with you entirely. You do the very wisest thing in
these bad times. But you know me well. I have had the honor of making your
acquaintance in a pleasant manner. I feel for your children, quite as if I
was—I mean, ma'am, a very fine old gentleman's affection. Geraldine,
come and kiss me, my darling. Tommy, you may have the other side; never
mind the coal, my boy; there is a coal-wharf quite close to my windows at
home.”</p>
<p>These children, who had been hiding behind Mr. Mordacks and Molly (who was
now come back), immediately did as he ordered them; or rather Jerry led
the way, and made Tommy come as well, by a signal which he never durst
gainsay. But while they saluted the general factor (who sat down upon a
box to accommodate them), from the corners of their eyes they kept a
timid, trembling, melancholy watch upon their own mother.</p>
<p>Poor Mrs. Carroway was capable of wondering. Her power of judgment was not
so far lost as it is in a dream—where we wonder at nothing, but cast
off skeptic misery—and for the moment she seemed to be brought home
from the distance of roving delusion, by looking at two of her children
kissing a man who was hunting in his pocket for his card.</p>
<p>“Circumstances, madam,” said Mr. Mordacks, “have deprived me of the
pleasure of producing my address. It should be in two of my pockets; but
it seems to have strangely escaped from both of them. However, I will
write it down, if required. Geraldine dear, where is your school slate? Go
and look for it, and take Tommy with you.”</p>
<p>This surprised Mrs. Carroway, and began to make her think. These were her
children—she was nearly sure of that—her own poor children,
who were threatened from all sides with the likelihood of being done away
with. Yet here was a man who made much of them, and kissed them; and they
kissed him without asking her permission!</p>
<p>“I scarcely know what it is about,” she said; “and my husband is not here
to help me.”</p>
<p>“You have hit the very point, ma'am. You must take it on yourself. How
wonderfully clever the ladies always are! Your family is waiting for a
government supply; everybody knows that everybody in the world may starve
before government thinks of supplying supply. I do not belong to the
government—although if I had my deserts I should have done so—but
fully understanding them, I step in to anticipate their action. I see that
the children of a very noble officer, and his admirable wife, have been
neglected, through the rigor of the weather and condition of the roads. I
am a very large factor in the neighborhood, who make a good thing out of
all such cases. I step in; circumstances favor me; I discover a good
stroke of business; my very high character, though much obscured by
diffidence, secures me universal confidence. The little dears take to me,
and I to them. They feel themselves safe under my protection from their
most villainous enemies. They are pleased to kiss a man of strength and
spirit, who represents the government.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Carroway scarcely understood a jot of this. Such a rush of words made
her weak brain go round, and she looked about vainly for her children, who
had gladly escaped upon the chance afforded. But she came to the
conclusion she was meant to come to—that this gentleman before her
was the government.</p>
<p>“I will do whatever I am told,” she said, looking miserably round, as if
for anything to care about; “only I must count my children first, or the
government might say there was not the proper number.”</p>
<p>“Of all points that is the very one that I would urge,” Mordacks answered,
without dismay. “Molly, conduct this good lady to her room. Light a good
fire, as the Commissioners have ordered; warm the soup sent from the
arsenal last night, but be sure that you put no pepper in it. The lady
will go with you, and follow our directions. She sees the importance of
having all her faculties perfectly clear when we make our schedule, as we
shall do in a few hours' time, of all the children; every one, with the
date of their birth, and their Christian names, which nobody knows so well
as their own dear mother. Ah, how very sweet it is to have so many of
them; and to know the pride, the pleasure, the delight, which the nation
feels in providing for the welfare of every little darling!”</p>
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