enchanting vision, I had seen Miss Fairthorn smiling as she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span>
came to me, through a lovely meadow enamelled with primrose,
and cowslip, and bluebell, herself of course the fairest of all the
flowers. And when I approached her, behold, she was led by
this same dog, old Regulus, who conducted her gracefully to
my longing arms, by means of the long gold chain which had
reposed on the stately bosom of Mrs. Jenny Marker. I am
not superstitious—as everybody vows when recounting his
dreams—but still it did seem strange.</p>
<p>“Lave it arl to me,” Mrs. Tapscott went on, as she saw my
hesitation. “Nort for ’e to do, but to gie me a zhillin’, vor to
buy the stuff, and nobody no wiser. Then goo avore zunrise,
and vetch old Ragless. Putt ’un in a barg, and keep ’un znug
in thic there old root-ouze. My stars and garters, what a bit
o’ vun ’twill be!”</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br/> <small>A DOG VIOLATE.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">A great</span> observer of these latter days has advised us to abstain
from deep research into the origin of our own names. Otherwise
we might become convinced of a lamentable want of
lofty tone among those, without whom we could not have been
here, to show our superiority. A vein of fine thought is at
once set flowing; but for “Ragless” it would have flowed in
vain, as dogs have no surname to dwell upon.</p>
<p>His case was a strange one, and not without interest.
Nobody in our parish had any knowledge of his ancestry,
although he had won very high repute by biting many people
who got over it. Any other dog would have become the victim
of an injudicious outcry; but “Ragless,” by making some
other good bites, established his legal right to do it, and was
now considered a very wholesome dog, though he might have
a temper of his own. But even if he had, who was to blame?</p>
<p>Some seven, or it may have been eight years since, Miss
Coldpepper was “rolling in her carriage” down Feltham hill,
when the coachman pulled up very sharply, and just in time to
save mishap. All the boys in the village were let loose from
school, and with one accord had found a genial pastime, which
they were pursuing with the vigour of our race. They had got<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
a poor dog, with no father, or mother, or even policeman to
defend him, and they had put him in a barrel near a garden-gate,
and tacked in the head so that no escape was left. This
being done to their entire satisfaction, what remained except to
roll him down the hill? And this they were doing with a
lofty sense of pleasure, and shouts that almost drowned the
smothered howls from within, when the carriage came upon
them, and very nearly served them right. “Let them have
the whip,” cried the lady with due feeling, when the footman
had jumped down and reported all the facts; but the ring-leaders
had vanished, and the boys who tasted lash were some
innocent little ones who had only helped in shouting. “Hand
him in to me,” was her next order; and the poor trembling
animal saw pity in her eyes, and gave her face a timid lick,
which made his fortune. No claimant being found for him,
the lady took him home, and aptly called him “Regulus,”
which the servants very promptly converted into “Ragless,”
reasoning well that the Italian greyhound wore a coat, but this
dog had none, save the bristles wherewith Nature had
endowed him. In the course of time he superseded every
other dog, and probably every human being, in the affection of
Miss Coldpepper.</p>
<p>If the early portion of his life had been unhappy, fortune
had now made him ample amends, and he should have been in
amity with all mankind. But whether from remembrance of
his youthful woes, or cynical perception of our frailties and
our frauds, Regulus never acquired that sweetness, which we
look for in dogs, so much more than in ourselves. His
standard of action was strict duty beyond doubt, but a duty
too strictly limited, and confined to two persons—himself,
and his mistress. With the rest of creation he was cheerfully
at war, though tolerably neutral towards the cook, when she
could bid high enough for his consideration. These things
made him deeply respected.</p>
<p>In person however, he was not quite a dog to arouse any
vast enthusiasm. He belonged to the order of the wiry-coated
terriers, if he was a terrier at all; for in him all the elements
were so duly mingled, that Nature could only proclaim him a
dog. The colour of ginger and that of cinnamon were blended
together in his outward dog; and he went on three legs, quite
as often as on four, as much from contempt of the earth
perhaps as from feelings of physical economy. There was
nothing base about him; he had fine teeth, and he showed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
them, but never made insidious assault on anybody. When he
meant to bite, he did it quickly, and expressed his satisfaction
afterwards.</p>
<p>To seduce such a sentry, was an enterprise worthy of him,
who in sweet love’s service, and dispensing its mournful
melodies, enchanted the son of Echidna. And it may have
been this sense of difficulty, and a sporting desire to conquer it,
which led me to follow up the joke, and try my hand at a job,
which had beaten the deepest dog-stealers of Seven Dials.</p>
<p>All day long, I hoped to get at least a glimpse, or if bad luck
would not allow that, to hear at any rate something of that
young lady, without whom my life must grow old and barren.
For this was no school-boy affair of the fancy, nor even a light
skit of early manhood, such as fifty young fellows have out of
fifty-one, and go their way quickly after some other girl. I had
never been given to such fugitive sport; I was now in the
prime of my years almost, and though I might have looked at
maidens, and thought what pretty things they were, none had
ever touched my heart till now. And “touched” is by no
means the proper word to use; it should be said plainly, that
all my heart was occupied, and possessed to its deepest fibre by
a being far better, and sweeter, and nobler than its outer and
bodily owner; and that this must abide so to its very latest
pulse; as you will truly find, if you care to hear about it.</p>
<p>Not a word came to me about those things which destroyed
all my attention to any other; and the dusk had stopped work—which
was my only comfort—and I sat all alone that Wednesday
evening trying to get through a little bread and cheese,
but glancing more often from our old window at the gloomy
rush of the river, which was still in high flood though some
little abated. Uncle Corny was gone, to try to get some money
from people who had thriven on his hard-won fruit, and Mrs.
Tabby Tapscott had left the house early, upon some business of
her own. The house-door was open, for we had not many
rogues, till the railway came some years afterwards; and the
evening was of those that smell of beehives, and cornstacks,
and horses upon their way home. At last, when I had made
up my mind to be forgotten by every one, in came Tabby, as
bright as a bun.</p>
<p>“Oh fai, oh fai!” she cried; “whatever be ’e doing of?
Atin’ no zupper, and zittin’ as if ’e was mazed a’most. Look
’e zee what the Lord hath zent ’e! I was vorced to go arl the
way to Hampton for ’un, for year of they long tongues to Zunbury.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
If this wun’t vetch Measter Ragless, arl I can zay is her
bain’t a dog. Putt ’un down in zellar, when I’ve larned ’e how
to use ’un.”</p>
<p>From beneath her shawl she produced a little box, which she
opened in triumph, and the room was filled at once with a very
peculiar odour quite unknown to me. It was pungent rather
than pleasant, and it made me sneeze as well as laugh.</p>
<p>“You be up there by vaive o’clock, when the daisies’ eyes be
openin’, and goo to the zide door I tould ’e of”—Mrs. Tapscott
knew all the household ways at Coldpepper Hall, through
a niece of hers who was kitchen-maid, “and vang this by the
coord out o’ heelin’, wi’out titchin’ of ’un with thy vingers, and
drag ’un athort the grass and the pilm to backzide o’ the zhrubbery,
and then you step out o’ zight in a lew cornder. Ould
dog be put out at zix o’clock riglar, and ’tis liable he’ll hurn
straight to ’e. Then let ’un ate a hummick, and kitch ’un up
vittily, and pop ’un into barg, and carr ’un home here, and I’ll
zhow ’e what to do with ’un. But mind as her don’t scammel
’e. Her be turble itemy.”</p>
<p>She gave me many other minute directions, and made me
laugh so that my spirits rose, with the hope of an interesting
little farce, to relieve the more tragic surroundings. I undertook
briskly to play my part, looking on the matter as a harmless
joke; though I came to think in course of time that the
cruel theft I suffered from might partly be a just requital for
this wicked robbery. And yet it was absurd and senseless, to
make such comparison.</p>
<p>Without disturbing Uncle Corny, who slept very heavily, I
was up before daylight on the Thursday morning, and set out
with the box and bag on my felonious enterprise. Coldpepper
Hall, or Manor, as it was called indifferently, stood back upon
some rising ground at a distance from the river, and was
sheltered well by growth of trees. There was nothing very
grand about it, and it leaned on stucco more than stone; but
there was plenty of room both within and without, and any one
getting inside the doors might say to himself, with some comfort
flowing into him—“I am sure that I need never be in any
hurry here.”</p>
<p>The sun meant to get up a little later on, when I jumped
the palings of this old demesne, at a place where of right there
should have been a footpath, but the owner of the Manor had
stopped it long ago, perceiving the superior claims of quietude.
Nobody had cared to make a fuss about it, but enough of ancestral<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
right remained to justify me in getting over. Every
window of the house was still asleep, and I gazed at it with
humble reverence, not as the citadel of the Coldpeppers, but as
the shrine of my sacred love. Then I chose a place of ambush
in a nest of hollies, and approaching the sallyport of Regulus,
drew a slow trail from it across the dewy grass to my lurking-place,
and there waited calmly.</p>
<p>Sweet visions of love from the ivory gate now favoured me
with their attendance, partly perhaps because love had not
allowed me to sleep out my sleep. Far as I am from any claim
to the merits of a classical education, I had been for some years,
off and on, as a day boy at Hampton Grammar-school, and could
do a bit of Virgil pretty well, and an ode or two of Horace.
Whenever Uncle Corny came across a Latin name he would
call for me; and take it altogether, I had long been considered
the most learned young man in Sunbury. Even now I remembered,
though most of it was gone, the story of the Nymph who
placed her son in ambuscade for Proteus, and the noble description
of Regulus on parole, waving off the last kiss of his wife
and babes. Grimly he set his manly visage on the ground;
and my Regulus was doing the very same thing now.</p>
<p>Fat Charles had opened the door with a yawn, and sent
forth that animal of Roman type, to snuff the morning air, and
perform his toilet, and pay his orisons in general. Luxurious
days had told their tale; it was too plain that Capua had
corrupted Sabine simplicity. Regulus moved with a listless
air, his desire to find whom he might bite lay dormant, and no
sense of iniquity pricked his ears, or lifted the balance of his
tail. “Let the world wag,” was the expression of his eyes,
“I get whatever I want in it, and would wag to it also, if I
were not too fat.” It appeared too certain that if I meant to
catch him, I should have to go and bag him where he stood.</p>
<p>But suddenly down went his nose, and his bristles flew up,
and every line of his system grew stiff as wire. He had lit on
my trail near a narrow flower-border, and it presented itself
with a double aspect. Was it the ever-fresh memory of a cat—not
a cat of every-day life of course, but a civet-cat, a musk-cat,
a cat of poetic, or even fabulous perfume? Or was it the
long-drawn sweetness of a new ambrosial food, heaven-sent to
tempt his once lively, but now vainly wept-for appetite?
Whatever it might be, the line of duty was marked, and
beyond evasion.</p>
<p>Those of our race who have made a study of dogs, for the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span>
sake of example, declare that the best and most noble of them
follow quest with their noses well up in the air. Regulus
failed in this test of merit; he spread his nostrils affably
within an inch of where the worms lay, pricked his hairy ears,
which were of divers colours, and with the stump of his tail
as the loftiest point of his person, ran a bee-line towards me.
In accordance with his fame, I made ready for a bite; but to
my surprise he paused, when he came point-blank upon me,
and seemed taken aback, as with some wholly new emotion.
Regardful of the teaching of my Nymph, I offered him a
portion of the magic sop, and while he was intent upon it
slipped a stout potato-sack over his head, tumbled him in with
a push in the rear, and shouldered him.</p>
<p>Taking the path across the fields, I got home without meeting
any one, and found Tabby waiting for me near the root-house,
which was simply the trunk of a grand old oak, with a
slab of elm fitted as a door to it. No one was likely to visit
this old storehouse at the present time of year, and the loudest
wailing of the largest dog might be carried on in the strictest
privacy. But I meant him to be happy there, and so he was—to
some extent.</p>
<p>For he seemed to resign himself, as if recalling his early
adventure in the barrel, and regarded his later prosperity as a
dream; and probably the charm of the drug he had swallowed
acted benignly upon his nerves. At any rate he allowed himself
to be secured by a chain and a fold-pitcher, and even
licked my hand instead of snarling and showing his teeth.
Every arrangement was made for his comfort, and he lay down
as happy as a lotus-eater.</p>
<p>After breakfast, I took a little turn in the village, and there
had the pleasure of seeing fat Charles, the Coldpepper footman,
nearly trying to run, and looking sadly out of breath. He
carried a leading strap, with no dog to it, and under his arm
was a bundle of papers. As I approached him with kind
inquiries, he drew forth his roll and requested me to read,
while he was recovering his breath a little. My face must
have turned as red as his—for this was the first theft I ever
committed, except of some apples from a rival grower, a curmudgeon
who would not tell us what they were—and I felt
very queer as I read the following, written in round hand and
with many capitals.</p>
<p>“Reward of one guinea!—Lost, stolen, or strayed, a large
brindled terrier, known as ‘Regulus,’ the property of Miss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>
Coldpepper of Coldpepper Manor. He is very hard of hearing,
and a little fond of snapping. Any person bringing him home
will receive the above reward, and no questions asked. Any
one detaining him will be prosecuted, with the utmost rigour
of the law.”</p>
<p>Charles had a score perhaps of these placards, written in
sundry hands, and spelt in divers manners, as if all the household
had been set to work.</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Kit,” he cried, for every one called me that;
“there is the devil to pay, up to the ’All, and no mistake! And
all of it blamed on me, as innocent as the babe unborn, and
more so, for only obeying of my horders. What did I do, but
just turn the brute out—for a brute he is and no mistake, though
wholesome in his bite, because it is his nature to; and no one
round these parts would be tough enough in the legs to come
forrard with a view of making off with him—then I shut the
door to, for his quarter hour airing, as laid down in written
horders issued every night. And my hair stood on end when
he never come back, the same as his does, when he flies at you.”</p>
<p>“But surely, Charles, some of you must have some suspicion?”
I asked, with astonishment at my own vice, and wondering
what I should come to, though not far enough gone as yet to
look at him; “why should the dog go from such a good home?”</p>
<p>“Because he’ve had enough of it, or we of him at any rate.
He ain’t been stolen, sir; the dog have that knowledge of the
world, that all Seven Dials couldn’t lay a tack to him. And
everybody knows what our Missus is. A guinea! Who’d steal
a dog for a guinea? Let alone a dog who’ll make a pepper-caster
of you. No, no, I always said Old Nick would come for
’un, some blessed morning; and I’m jiggered if he haven’t!
But bless my soul, you mustn’t keep me loitering like this, sir.
Mother Cutthumb wouldn’t have one, to stick up in her dirty
old window, Lord knows why. Do’e take one, and stick on
your Uncle’s wall; or a couple if you will, that’s a dear young
man. There’ll be thirty more ready, by eleven o’clock.”</p>
<p>It occurred to me that some of them perhaps had been
written by a certain lovely warm hand, which had the most
delicious way with it that could ever be imagined of stealing
in and out of muff or glove, and of coming near another hand
(as coarse as a crumpet) in a sort of way that seemed to
say—“Now wouldn’t you like to touch me?”</p>
<p>“Who on earth can have written all these?” I asked.
“Mr. Charles, why you must have done most of them yourself.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Never a blessed one; Lord save you, I’ve a’ been on my
poor legs, all the morning! Every maid that could fist a few
was ordered in. But the young leddy fisted them four at the
bottom.”</p>
<p>Making due allowance for his miscreant coarseness, I slipped
away the lowest four, and two others; those two I stuck up on
the outer face of Uncle Corny’s red-brick wall; but the other
four never were exhibited to the public, nor even to myself,
except as a very private view. And every one of them belongs
to me at the present moment. The footman thanked me warmly
for this lightening of his task, and hurried on towards Rasp the
baker, and the linendraper.</p>
<p>So far as my memory serves, Uncle Corny got very little
work out of me that day. I was up and down the village, till
my conscience told me that my behaviour might appear suspicious;
and I even beheld the great lady herself, driving
as fast as her fat steeds could travel, to get her placards
displayed all around in the villages towards London. Although
she was not very popular, and the public seemed well pleased
with her distress, I felt more than half inclined to take her
dear love back, and release him at his own door after dark.
But Tabby Tapscott said, and she had a right to speak,—“Don’t
’e be a vule now, Measter Kit. Carr’ the job droo,
wanst ’a be about ’un.” And just before dark I met Mrs. Marker,
and somebody with her, who made my heart jump. They had
clearly been sent as a forlorn hope, to go the round of the
shops where the bills had been posted. I contrived to ask
tenderly whether the dog was found.</p>
<p>“Not he, and never will be,” replied the housekeeper.
“There are so many people who owe the cur a grudge. Why,
he even flies at me, if I dare to look at him. Miss Kitty, tell
Mr. Kit what your opinion is.”</p>
<p>“I fear indeed that somebody must have shot him with an
air-gun. I am very fond of dogs, when they are at all good
dogs; but very few could praise poor Regulus, except—except
as we praise mustard. And I heard of a case very like it in
London.”</p>
<p>Her voice was so silvery sweet, and she dropped it (as I
thought) so sadly at that last word, that I could not help saying,
although I was frightened at my own tone while I said
it,—</p>
<p>“Surely you are not going back to-morrow? Do say that
you are not going to leave us all to-morrow.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />