<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0049" id="link2HCH0049"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XLIX </h2>
<h3> A BOLD ANGLER </h3>
<p>As if in vexation at being thwarted by one branch of the family, Cupid
began to work harder at the other, among the moors and mountains. Not that
either my lady Philippa or gentle Mistress Carnaby fell back into the
snares of youth, but rather that youth, contemptuous of age, leaped up,
and defied everybody but itself, and cried tush to its own welfare.</p>
<p>For as soon as the trance of snow was gone, and the world, emboldened to
behold itself again, smiled up from genial places; and the timid step of
peeping spring awoke a sudden flutter in the breast of buds; and streams
(having sent their broken anger to the sea) were pleased to be murmuring
clearly again, and enjoyed their own flexibility; and even stern mountains
and menacing crags allowed soft light to play with them—at such a
time prudence found very narrow house-room in the breast of young
Lancelot, otherwise “Pet.”</p>
<p>“If Prudence be present, no Divinity is absent,” according to high
authority; but the author of the proverb must have first excluded Love
from the list of Divinities. Pet's breast, or at any rate his chest, had
grown under the expansive enormity of love; his liver, moreover (which,
according to poets, both Latin and Greek, is the especial throne of love),
had quickened its proceedings, from the exercise he took; from the same
cause, his calves increased so largely that even Jordas could not pull the
agate buttons of his gaiters through their holes. In a word, he gained
flesh, muscle, bone, and digestion, and other great bodily blessings, from
the power believed by the poets to upset and annihilate every one of them.
However, this proves nothing anti-poetical, for the essence of that youth
was to contradict experience.</p>
<p>Jordas had never, in all his born days, not even in the thick of the
snow-drift, found himself more in a puzzle than now; and he could not even
fly for advice in this matter to Lawyer Jellicorse. The first great gift
of nature, expelled by education, is gratitude. A child is full of
gratitude, or at least has got the room for it; but no full-grown mortal,
after good education, has been known to keep the rudiments of
thankfulness. But Jordas had a stock of it—as much as can remain to
any one superior to the making of a cross.</p>
<p>Now the difficulty of it was that Jordas called to mind, every morning
when he saw snow, and afterward when he saw anything white, that he must
have required a grave, and not got it (in time to be any good to him),
without the hard labor, strong endurance, and brotherly tendance of the
people of the gill. Even the three grand fairy gifts of Lawyer Jellicorse
himself might scarcely have saved him, although they were no less than as
follows, in virtue: the tip of a tongue that had never told a lie (because
it belonged to a bullock slain young), a flask of old Scotch whiskey, and
a horn comfit-box of Irish snuff. All these three had stood him in good
stead, especially the last, which kept him wide-awake, and enabled him to
sneeze a yellow hole in the drift, whenever it threatened to ingulf his
beard. Without those three he could never have got on; but, with all the
three, he could never have got out, if Bat and Maunder of the gill had not
come to his succor in the very nick of time. Not only did they work hard
for hours under the guidance of Saracen (who was ready to fly at them if
they left off), but when at length they came on Jordas, in his last
exhaustion, with the good horse rubbing up his chin to make him warmer,
they did a sight of things, which the good Samaritan, having finer
climate, was enabled to dispense with. And when they had set him on his
legs again, finding that he could not use them yet, they hoisted him on
the back of Maunder, who was strong; and the whole of that expedition
ended at the little cottage in the gill. But the kindness of the
inhabitants was only just beginning; for when Jordas came to himself he
found that his off-foot—as Marmaduke would have called it—the
one which had ridden with a northeast aspect, was frozen as hard as a
hammer, and as blue as a pistol barrel. Mrs. Bart happened to have seen
such cases in her native country, and by her skillful treatment and
never-wearying care, the poor fellow's foot was saved and cured, though at
one time he despaired of it. Marmaduke also was restored, and sent home to
his stable some days before his rider was in a condition to mount him.</p>
<p>In return for all these benefits, how could the dogman, without being
worse than a dog, go and say to his ladies that mischief was breeding
between their heir and a poor girl who lived in a corner of their land? If
he had been ungrateful, or in any way a sneak, he might have found no
trouble in this thing; but being, as he was, an honest, noble-hearted
fellow, he battled severely in his mind to set up the standard of the
proper side to take. For such matters Pet cared not one jot. Crafty as he
was, he could never understand that Jordas and Welldrum were not the same
man, one half working out-of-doors, and the other in. For him it was
enough that Jordas would not tell, probably because he was afraid to do
so, and Pet resolved to make him useful. For Lancelot Carnaby was very
sharp indeed in espying what suited his purpose. His set purpose was to
marry Insie Bart, in whom he had sense enough to perceive his better, in
every respect but money and birth, in which two he was before her, or at
any rate supposed so. He was proud, as need be, of his station in life;
but he reasoned—if the process of his mind was reason—that
being so exalted, he might please himself; that his wife would rise to his
rank, instead of lowering him; that her father was a man of education and
a gentleman, although he worked with his own hands; and that Insie was a
lady, though she went to fill a pitcher.</p>
<p>For one happy fact the youth deserved some credit, or rather, perhaps, his
youth deserved it for him. He was madly in love with Insie, and his
passion could not be of very high spiritual order; but the idea of
obtaining her dishonorably never occurred to his mind for one moment. He
knew her to be better, purer, and nobler than himself in every way; and he
felt, though he did not want to feel it, that her nature gave a lift to
his. Insie, on the other hand, began to like him better, and to despise
him less and less; his reckless devotion to her made its way; and in spite
of all her common-sense, his beauty and his lordly style had attractions
for her young romance. And at last her heart began to bound, like his,
when they were together. “With all thy faults, I love thee still,” was the
loose condition of her youthful mind.</p>
<p>Into every combination, however steep and deep be the gill of its quiet
incubation, a number of people and of things peep in, and will enter, like
the cuckoo, at the glimpse of a white feather, or even without it, unless
beak and claw are shown. And now the intruder into Pet's love nest had the
right to look in, and to pull him out, neck and crop, unless he sat there
legally. Whether birds discharge fraternal duty is a question for Notes
and Queries even in the present most positive age. Sophocles says that the
clever birds feed their parents and their benefactors, and men ascribe
piety to them in fables, as a needful ensample to one another.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, this Maunder Bart, when his rather slow attention was
once aroused, kept a sharp watch upon his young landlord's works. It was
lucky for Pet that he meant no harm, and that Maunder had contemptuous
faith in him; otherwise Insie's brother would have shortly taken him up by
his gaiters, and softly beaten his head in against a rock. For Mr. Bart's
son was of bitter, morose, and almost savage nature, silent, moody, and as
resolute as death. He resented and darkly repined at the loss of position
and property of which he had heard, and he scorned the fine sentiments
which had led to nothing at all substantial. It was not in his power to
despise his father, for his mind felt the presence of the larger one; but
he did not love him as a son should do; neither did he speak out his
thoughts to anybody beyond a few mutters to his mother. But he loved his
gentle sister, and found in her a goodness which warmed him up to think
about getting some upon his own account.</p>
<p>Such thoughts, however, were fugitive, and Maunder's more general subject
of brooding was the wrong he had suffered through his father. He was
living and working like a peasant or a miner, instead of having horses,
and dogs, and men, and the right to kick out inferior people—as that
baby Lancelot Carnaby had—for no other reason, that he could find,
than the magnitude of his father's mind. He had gone into the subject with
his father long ago—for Mr. Bart felt a noble pride in his
convictions—and the son lamented with all his heart the extent of
his own father's mind. In his lonely walks, heavy hours, and hard work—which
last he never grudged, for his strength required outlet—he pondered
continually upon one thing, and now he seemed to see a chance of doing it.
The first step in his upward course would be Insie's marriage with
Lancelot.</p>
<p>Pet, who had no fear of any one but Maunder, tried crafty little tricks to
please him; but instead of earning many thanks, got none at all, which
made him endeavor to improve himself. Mr. Bart's opinion of him now began
to follow the course of John Smithies's, and Smithies looked at it in one
light only (ever since Pet so assaulted him, and then trusted his
good-will across the dark moors), and that light was that “when you come
to think of him, you mustn't be too hard upon him, after all.” And one
great excellence of this youth was that he cared not a doit for general
opinion, so long as he got his own special desire.</p>
<p>His desire was, not to let a day go by without sight and touch of Insie.
These were not to be had at a moment's notice, nor even by much care; and
five times out of six he failed of so much as a glimpse or a word of her.
For the weather and the time of year have much to say concerning the
course of the very truest love, and worse than the weather itself too
often is the cloudy caprice of maiden mind.</p>
<p>Insie's father must have known what attraction drew this youth to such a
cold unfurnished spot, and if he had been like other men, he would either
have nipped in the bud this passion, or, for selfish reasons, fostered it.
But being of large theoretical mind, he found his due outlet in giving
advice.</p>
<p>It is plain at a glance that in such a case the mother is the proper one
to give advice, and the father the one to act strenuously. But now Mrs.
Bart, who was a very good lady, and had gone through a world of trouble
from the want of money—the which she had cast away for sake of
something better—came to the forefront of this pretty little
business, as Insie's mother, vigorously.</p>
<p>“Christophare,” she said to her husband, “not often do I speak, between
us, of the affairs it is wise to let alone. But now of our dear child
Inesa it is just that I should insist something. Mandaro, which you call
English Maunder, already is destroyed for life by the magnitude of your
good mind. It is just that his sister should find the occasion of
reversion to her proper grade of life. For you, Christophare, I have
abandoned all, and have the good right to claim something from you. And
the only thing that I demand is one—let Inesa return to the lady.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mr. Bart, who had that sense of humor without which no man
can give his property away, “I hope that she never has departed from it.
But, my dear, as you make such a point of it, I will promise not to
interfere, unless there is any attempt to do wrong, and intrap a poor boy
who does not know his own mind. Insie is his equal by birth and education,
and perhaps his superior in that which comes foremost nowadays—the
money. Dream not that he is a great catch, my dear; I know more of that
matter than you do. It is possible that he may stand at the altar with
little to settle upon his bride except his bright waistcoat and gaiters.”</p>
<p>“Tush, Christophare! You are, to my mind, always an enigma.”</p>
<p>“That is as it should be, and keeps me interesting still. But this is a
mere boy and girl romance. If it meant anything, my only concern would be
to know whether the boy was good. If not, I should promptly kick him back
to his own door.”</p>
<p>“From my observation, he is very good—to attend to his rights, and
make the utmost of them.”</p>
<p>Mr. Bart laughed, for he knew that a little hit at himself was intended;
and very often now, as his joints began to stiffen, he wished that his
youth had been wiser. He stuck to his theories still; but his practice
would have been more of the practical kind, if it had come back to be done
again. But his children and his wife had no claim to bring up anything,
because everything was gone before he undertook their business. However,
he obtained reproach—as always seems to happen—for those
doings of his early days which led to their existence. Still, he liked to
make the best of things, and laughed, instead of arguing.</p>
<p>For a short time, therefore, Lancelot Carnaby seemed to have his own way
in this matter, as well as in so many others. As soon as spring weather
unbound the streams, and enlarged both the spots and the appetite of trout
(which mainly thrive together), Pet became seized, by his own account,
with insatiable love of angling. The beck of the gill, running into the
Lune, was alive, in those unpoaching days, with sweet little trout of a
very high breed, playful, mischievous, and indulging (while they provoked)
good hunger. These were trout who disdained to feed basely on the ground
when they could feed upward, ennobling almost every gulp with a glimpse of
the upper creation. Mrs. Carnaby loved these “graceful creatures,” as she
always called them, when fried well; and she thought it so good and so
clever of her son to tempt her poor appetite with them.</p>
<p>“Philippa, he knows—perhaps your mind is absent,” she said, as she
put the fifth trout on her plate at breakfast one fine morning—“he
feels that these little creatures do me good, and to me it becomes a
sacred duty to endeavor to eat them.”</p>
<p>“You seem to succeed very well, Eliza.”</p>
<p>“Yes, dear, I manage to get on a little, from a sort of sporting feeling
that appeals to me. Before I begin to lift the skins of any of these
little darlings, I can see my dear boy standing over the torrent, with his
wonderful boldness, and bright eagle eyes—”</p>
<p>“To pull out a fish of an ounce and a half. Without any disrespect to Pet,
whose fishing apparel has cost 20 pounds, I believe that Jordas catches
every one of them.”</p>
<p>Sad to say, this was even so; Lancelot tried once or twice, for some five
minutes at a time, throwing the fly as he threw a skittle-ball; but
finding no fish at once respond to his precipitance, down he cast the rod,
and left the rest of it to Jordas. But inasmuch as he brought back fish
whenever he went out fishing, and looked as brilliant and picturesque as a
salmon-fly, in his new costume, his mother was delighted, and his aunt,
being full of fresh troubles, paid small heed to him.</p>
<p>For as soon as the roads became safe again, and an honest attorney could
enter “horse hire” in his bill without being too chivalrous, and the ink
that had clotted in the good-will time began to form black blood again,
Mr. Jellicorse himself resolved legitimately to set forth upon a legal
enterprise. The winter had shaken him slightly—for even a
solicitor's body is vulnerable; and well for the clerk of the weather it
is that no action lies against him—and his good wife told him to be
very careful, although he looked as young as ever. She had no great
opinion of the people he was going to, and was sure that they would be too
high and mighty even to see that his bed was aired. For her part, she
hoped that the reports were true which were now getting into every honest
person's mouth; and if he would listen to a woman's common-sense, and at
once go over to the other side, it would serve them quite right, and be
the better for his family, and give a good lift to his profession. But his
honesty was stout, and vanquished even his pride in his profession.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />