<h3> CHAPTER VI </h3>
<p>'Hail! man of learning,' cried Harry to me, as the
day after my coming home I rode up to Ashtead. He
was standing at the gate about to mount his horse as
though for a journey. He had grown a man since I
saw him, and looked handsomer and happier than I had
ever seen him.</p>
<p>'Hail! man of courts and camps,' I cried him back,
'whither away so fast?'</p>
<p>'No whither, lad,' said he, 'since you are come, and
whither I was going I will not tell you, till I hear first
where your life-blood has gone. 'Slight, man, you look
as pale and dry as a love-lorn stock-fish. What ails
you?'</p>
<p>'Nought but a piece of an ague,' said I, feeling the
sight of him like medicine to me, 'and perhaps a
surfeit of weary wits.'</p>
<p>'Well, save us from universities, then,' answered he.
'Courts and camps have their dangers, they say, but, 'fore
heaven, I think your college is a very Castle Perilous
beside them!'</p>
<p>'How will you make that good, most sapient
brother?'</p>
<p>'Nay, the maxim is good already, without my making.
For, look you, in camp a man shall lose at most
his life, and at Court his heart; but your college puts
his spirits in danger, and to be spiritless is worse a
thousand times than to be dead or even in love.'</p>
<p>'Well, I think you may be right, and in any case
have enough spirits to share with me.'</p>
<p>'Nay, if you want spirits, come with me whither I
was going, and I will show you a man who has enough
to set a whole graveyard singing.'</p>
<p>'Why, 'tis a very resurrection of spirits. Come, tell
me who is your miracle man?'</p>
<p>'Who is he? Why, who should he be but that man
of men, that prince of good companions, Frank Drake?'</p>
<p>'Nay, then I am for you; if it were only to keep peace
amongst my members. For my ears have had so much
of him that I think my eyes are like to fall out with
them from pure jealousy.'</p>
<p>'Well, 'tis a bargain, then; and we both go a-fishing
with him in his bark.'</p>
<p>'In his bark? Is he then master already?'</p>
<p>'Ay, that he is. Old Master Death mastered his old
master, and now he is his own master and his bark's
too. For he got that by the old dog's will.'</p>
<p>'Well, I am right glad to hear it. But tell me, is he
all his brothers say?'</p>
<p>'And more, and more, and more again! Why, man,
he is my own Lord of Bedford with a Will Somers rolled
into him, and who could be more of a man than that?
But we can talk of this as we go along. First come
within and see my father, while Lashmer gives your
horse a bite, that we may ride forward.'</p>
<p>Lashmer, I had better say here, was son to Miles, my
steward. He rode with me on this day, and henceforth
became my body-servant and most trusty and trusted
follower. He was a broad-faced, red-haired lad, but not
very hard-featured, though his face was just of that
honest Kentish sort that made one feel compelled to
laugh by the mere looking at it.</p>
<p>Sir Fulke greeted me boisterously, as usual, with a
hearty welcome well peppered with oaths, which, I must
say, burnt my palate more them they used to.</p>
<p>'Art going fishing with Harry?' said my guardian,
when our greeting was done.</p>
<p>'Yes, sir,' cried Harry; 'we are going to catch Spanish
mackerel.'</p>
<p>They both laughed heartily at this, I knew not why;
but not having heard of such a fish as he named, I
thought it was a jest of Harry's which my scholar's wits
were too hard to see.</p>
<p>'Have you brought your snappers with you?' asked
Harry.</p>
<p>'Yes,' said I; 'a pretty case of short ones that were
my father's, since Miles said the roads were far from
safe. But will you shoot these fish?'</p>
<p>'No, lad,' said Harry, and he and Sir Fulke both
seemed to be strangling another laugh; 'but, as you
say, one meets fellow-travellers now whom it is well to
treat at a distance, so every gentleman rides with a
brace of dags or so in his saddle.'
'Blame yourselves for it,' said Sir Fulke. 'For since
your new Reformation men have sent fish out of fashion,
in spite of all Mr. Secretary can do with his acts and
ordinances, fishermen have to fish ashore. The hundred
of Hoo swarms with such folk, so that a man may hardly
come to Gravesend in safety. There is never a lane in
Kent which some of the valiant lubbers will not drag
once in a week for any fin that's stirring. God knows
what will become of the sea-service if gentlemen do not
set the fashion for fishing again,' and therewith the old
knight chuckled again till his face was redder than a
doughty turkey-cock's.</p>
<p>'Come, let us away,' said Harry, 'or Frank Drake
will have a rod for me. He is testy as the devil if a
man be late.'</p>
<p>'What!' said I, 'will he not bide a gentleman's
time?'</p>
<p>'Wait till you see him,' answered Harry. 'The sea,
in Frank's company, is a mighty leveller of gentility.
Here, take this; we shall be out all night.'</p>
<p>So saying, he tossed me a cloak, and we set out.</p>
<p>The way proved all too short, so much had we to tell
each other. Harry was overflowing with the delights
of the Court. He seemed able to talk for ever on the
pageants and masques, in which, to my sorrow, he had
taken a great share; for at Cambridge the men of our
party began to look askance at such vanities.</p>
<p>It pleased me better to hear him speak of the grace
and beauty of the Court ladies, who seemed to have
been very kind to him. He spoke of them in a tone of
chivalrous rapture, which made me sometimes long to
have his gifts, that I too might please women, and know
how to speak with them, and be thought worthy to be
their squire. But I tried hard, when he spoke of such
things with kindling eyes, to crush my chivalry, having
well learnt my lesson that this, too, was a carnal
vanity.</p>
<p>Above all, he praised the Queen as one that shone
like a ruby amongst pearls, and there I suffered myself
to join his song. I think he was as much in love with
her as I.</p>
<p>Next to the Queen he spoke most of a little girl,
called Anne St. John, who, from what he said, seemed
rather his tyrant than his playfellow. She was ever
with the Earl, either at Russell House or at Woburn,
being a niece of the good Countess Margaret, his
beloved wife, who died soon after Harry joined the
Earl's household. My lord found great comfort, Harry
said, in the child's pretty ways as much as in her beauty,
for she had ruddy hair and deep brown eyes, like the
Queen.</p>
<p>She was moreover much beloved by her cousins, the
Earl's daughters, so that it came about that Harry saw
her every day, and became her playfellow and willing
servant. He made me laugh to hear him speak of her
tyrannous ways and her jealousy.</p>
<p>'I know not what kind of woman she will grow,' he
said; 'but now she is the sweetest toy a man could
want, and wayward as a haggard. Yet my lord will
often curb her in his dry, merry way, and she will be as
thoughtful after it as a little Solomon. Were her pretty
spirit in a colt I would not care to have his breaking;
yet I think that any life which my lord will take in
hand will never grow awry.'</p>
<p>So he fell to speaking of his lord, Sir Francis Russell,
Earl of Bedford, to whom he seemed as devoted as ever
I was to Mr. Cartwright; above all, when he followed him
to the north, on his being named Governor of Berwick
and Warden of the East Marches, and saw how great
a statesman and soldier he was.</p>
<p>'Truly,' said he, 'may I count myself fortunate in
thus being able to go in the train of so famous a captain
to the best school of arms in the country, as Berwick is
held to be, not only because of the passages of arms
that continually take place on the Border, but also by
reason of the number of skilled and veteran soldiers
that are gathered there.'</p>
<p>'Then you had a plenitude of professors,' said I.</p>
<p>'Ay, and a plenitude of practice too,' he answered;
'and that in all military sciences. For my lord's first
care was to increase the strength of the defences of the
place. So I saw all that craft, besides gunnery and
weapon exercise, both in play and earnest. Furthermore,
my lord took me for secretary when he rode during the
summer with Sir John Foster to settle the limits of the
marches, and there I learned much of the conduct of
military councils and affairs, together with many other
things that a prudent soldier should know and be silent
about. Certes, I think I have as much valiant scholarship
in six months as many come by in six years.'</p>
<p>'And no wonder,' said I, 'with such a godly and
warlike tutor.'</p>
<p>'Ay,' cried Harry, with enthusiasm, 'he is a very
pattern of all valour, piety, and gentleness, and rightly
called "the mirror of true honour and Christian nobility."'</p>
<p>Indeed, I think he was right. For surely never was
royal gift more wisely disposed than the wealth with
which King Henry endowed Lord Russell and his father.
Would God the whole of what he stripped from the
monasteries had fallen into no worse vessels than those
two! What a pattern of reformation, then, might
England indeed have been to all the world, lifted far
above the reach of even Papist sneer and cavil,—in very
deed <i>domicilium quietatis et humanitatis</i>!</p>
<p>I could fully share Harry's regret when he told me
that he had left Berwick for good and all. But it was
needful that he should be a short time with his father
before setting forth on his travels into France and
Italy—a course which the Earl had himself strongly
urged, as being most necessary for the perfect shaping
of a gentleman and the building up of a full-grown
manhood, wherein, he held, there was no such hindrance
either in court or camp or council as in youth to have
known no travel.</p>
<p>Talking thus together of the two years in which we
had both passed into the dawn of manhood amidst such
different scenes, we came to Rochester, where we left
our horses in Lashmer's charge and took the boat, which
two of Mr. Drake's boys had brought for Harry.</p>
<p>It made a man of me again to be once more on the
river, though I did not like to see Harry whisper to the
two Drakes and see them nod and grin in reply. But
I soon forgot this in chatting, as we did, chiefly of
Frank and his boat.</p>
<p>'Look there!' cried the boys at last. 'Was ever
such a dainty?'</p>
<p>I looked and saw a smart-looking craft, such as is
used in the Zeeland trade, but in better trim than
most, lying at moorings close to Mr. Drake's hulk.</p>
<p>The boys gave us a lusty cheer as we ran alongside
their home and I sprang on deck. Mr. Drake embraced
me with such fervour and smell of tar that I was
well-nigh undone, but John and Joseph tore me from him,
crying, 'Come and see Frank, come and see Frank!'</p>
<p>Seizing each an arm, they dragged me to the cabin
under the poop, where for the first time I saw that
prince of captains, Francis Drake.</p>
<p>Ah! how my heart is lifted up when I think of
that September afternoon; when I contemplate the
condition of two men that day about to enter into a
life-long struggle which was to glitter with the most
glorious deeds the world has seen: the one a plain
rough mariner, in his coarse sailor's slops, sitting in a
dingy cabin, intent on a rude map of the Indies, the
meanest ship-master of an island queen; the other an
emperor in purple and gold, seated on the loftiest throne
in Europe, the most powerful monarch in the world,
with the crowns of six kingdoms clustered on his
brow, and the gold of two worlds pouring into his
lap;—the one surrounded by rude fisher lads; the other
surfeited with the homage of the most skilful captains,
the proudest nobles, the most cunning councillors these
modern times have bred.</p>
<p>Surely no more notable example of God's power to
humble pride and reward wickedness has ever been
seen. Little could I guess then what his lot was to be,
though when I looked on the man I might have known
there was no task too great for Francis Drake to
achieve.</p>
<p>God never made a man, I think, more fitted for
the work he was set to do. His stature was low, but
though he was then not past twenty years old, his deep
broad chest and massive limbs showed the strength that
was to be his. His head well matched his body, being
hard-looking and round and most pleasant to look on,
because of the bright brown locks that curled thick and
close all over it, and the round blue eyes that shone full
and clear and steadfast from under his thick arched
brows. His mouth, which was already slightly fringed
with a light-coloured beard, was of a piece with the
rest, wide and good-humoured, with full, well-formed,
mobile lips, such as we look for in an orator, and withal
firm and self-reliant. His colour, moreover, was fresh
and fair, as of a man whom no sickness could take hold
of; and his whole aspect so well-favoured and full of
cheerful resolution as I could not wonder made his
family set him up to be their idol.</p>
<p>'I am very glad to see you, Mr. Festing,' said he,
rising up as I entered and holding out his hand very
frankly. 'I am glad you are come. We want strong
hands for our fishing. Jack has told me what kind of
blow you can strike.'</p>
<p>'But I have only a scholar's arm now,' I said.
'Once I could pull an oar and tally on a drag-net
indifferently well, but I doubt study has softened me.'</p>
<p>Arching his eyebrows still more, he looked at me
with that expression which I grew to know so well, and
which as much as anything, I think, made him the master
of men he was. It was a look half inquisitive, half
astonished, yet wholly good-humoured. It seemed to
wonder if a man could be so foolish as to try to deceive
or thwart him, and to be ready to laugh at the folly of
such an attempt rather than to resent it. Though there
was plainly something in my speech he did not understand,
yet he was soon satisfied, and burst out into a
boisterous laugh.</p>
<p>''Fore God,' said he, 'you are a merry wag,' and then
laughed on so heartily that no man could help taking
the fever, and I laughed too, though I knew no better
than the stern-post where the jest was.</p>
<p>'Yes, you may laugh,' said Mr. Drake, who had
joined us. 'Frank knows how to fish, so do my boys.
They will catch you now bigger fish than any man's
sons in all Kent.'</p>
<p>'Where is James?' asked I, not seeing Mr. Drake's
fourth son. 'Will he not go with us?'</p>
<p>'Peace,' said Harry, as the preacher turned away, and
the laughter was hushed. 'Don't you know?'</p>
<p>'Let me tell him,' said Frank Drake, looking so stern
as almost to seem another man. 'You must know, Mr. Festing,
nigh a year ago he was 'prenticed in a ship that
traded to Spain. We have no certain news of her, but
very ugly tidings of what befell a crew that sailed in
her company.'</p>
<p>'What tidings were those?' asked I.</p>
<p>'Come away,' said Frank; 'dad forbids us to speak of
it. "Avenge it, if you will," says he, "but speak not
of it."'</p>
<p>We went apart, and he told me one of those stories
of which my ears were soon but too well filled: of a
ship's crew seized in a remote port of Spain, and on
pretext of some unruly conduct of one or two half-drunken
men ashore, first thrown into prison, and then handed
over to the officers of the Inquisition.</p>
<p>'Such, we fear, is Jim's fate,' said Drake, as he ended
his story. 'It is most like he lies rotting now with his
shipmates in some filthy dungeon, if worse has not
befallen him at the hands of those hell-hounds. But
come, let us not think of it. The tide has turned, and
it is time we were away.'</p>
<p>We were soon aboard Frank Drake's boat, which was
called the <i>Gazehound</i>. I could not help seeing how
trim she was from stem to stern compared with other
such craft engaged in the French and Zeeland trade.
Nor could I but wonder at the ready despatch with
which Frank's crew obeyed his orders. Indeed, we were
hardly aboard a minute before we were running fast
towards the sea, with a gentle breeze behind us, and the
wicked river rushing recklessly along with us.</p>
<p>I know not whether it was some inward warning
that made the Medway look so dark and cruel as it
curled about our sides, or whether it was the effect
on my worn brain of Frank Drake's fearful tale, which
he told with fierce earnestness. Yet as the misty
darkness deepened and the low waste of marsh on either
hand began to be lost in the night, a sort of horror came
over me, perhaps a part of my ague. It seemed that
we, the river and ourselves, were rushing wildly on to
some deed that we must hide from heaven. The curdling
river seemed some huge snake, for whose help we
had sold our souls. Rejoicing at its work and the folly
of its dupe, it seemed to hiss in low laughter like a fiend's
about us.</p>
<p>I turned from where I looked over the side to break
the spell. Harry and all the boys, with one or two of
the crew, were gathered aft around Frank as he sat
tiller in hand. I could see them all by the light of the
lantern we carried. Frank was telling them another
hideous story of Spanish treachery and cruelty to
English mariners who had come to trade in the Canaries.</p>
<p>His wide blue eyes were flashing in the excitement
of his tale, and Harry and the Drake boys were no less
excited than he. Even then I could see he had that
wonderful gift of words by which afterwards at his
will he could always raise or calm a storm amongst his
followers.</p>
<p>Still the night deepened and the river grew darker
and more devilish, as hand in hand with it we sped on
through the darkness to our work. The flickering
lantern cast strange lights and shadows upon the little
group at the stern, till they seemed to be rather like
some foul spirits than my good friends.</p>
<p>They cried to me to join them, but I said I was
weary with a headache because of my sickness, and
would sleep. I crept in then below the foredeck, and
lay down upon a sail. There was something beneath
it which made it an uneasy bed. I raised the canvas to
see what it might be, and beheld some half-dozen longbows,
quite new, and several sheaves of arrows. I think
my sleep would have been easier had I not sought to
remove the cause of my uneasiness.</p>
<p>For now I began to guess the meaning of all the jests
I had heard, and questioned Harry when soon after he
came to lie beside me.</p>
<p>'What fish, Harry,' I asked, 'is this that you bring
me to catch with pistols and long-bows?'</p>
<p>'A fish that swims from Antwerp,' answered Harry,
laughing. 'Wait and you shall see, if we have luck or
judgment.'</p>
<p>There was little laughter in me as I lay there in the
dim lantern light, with the sound of the wicked river
whispering temptation in my ear. Was it that which
seemed to take from me the power to rebuke in him
what seemed to me no less than sin; or was it shame
lest he should think that Cambridge had so softened and
unmanned me that I no longer would follow wherever
he led?</p>
<p>Harry must be right, thought I, and Frank Drake
too! It must be right, yet would God I were in my
trundle bed at Mr. Cartwright's side again! Surely
Cambridge was sorely changing me. The great struggle
of my life had begun, though I knew it not; the strife
for the mastery of me between the inward man-made
life of scholarship and vain hurry after God, and the
strong, pure, out-o'-door life of England that God
Himself had given me for my birthday gift.</p>
<p>Who shall say which is best? Not I, now I am old;
but then, as I lay there beside Harry, in my vanity and
blindness I said to myself: 'Surely his life is not of
God; it is mine that is from heaven, the search after
wisdom, the merciless war for truth, the exalting of the
spirit and abasement of the body.'</p>
<p>My lips were trembling with a prayer that he might
be turned and grow like me, but then I opened my eyes
to look at him through the dim lantern light, and my
prayer died unborn. Surely that gently-breathing
figure, lying so calm and careless there in all its manly
beauty, surely that must be all God's work, and what
came of it His work as well.</p>
<p>So let me cease to resist, and let the hissing river
hurry me on wheresoever it will with him.</p>
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