<h2> CHAPTER XV </h2>
<p>——What seem’d its head,<br/>
The likeness of a kingly crown had on.<br/>
—PARADISE LOST.<br/></p>
<p>Sodor, or Holm-Peel, so is named the castle to which our Julian directed
his course early on the following morning, is one of those extraordinary
monuments of antiquity with which this singular and interesting island
abounds. It occupies the whole of a high rocky peninsula, or rather an
island, for it is surrounded by the sea at high-water, and scarcely
accessible even when the tide is out, although a stone causeway, of great
solidity, erected for the express purpose, connects the island with the
mainland. The whole space is surrounded by double walls of great strength
and thickness; and the access to the interior, at the time which we treat
of, was only by two flights of steep and narrow steps, divided from each
other by a strong tower and guard-house; under the former of which, there
is an entrance-arch. The open space within the walls extends to two acres,
and contains many objects worthy of antiquarian curiosity. There were
besides the castle itself, two cathedral churches, dedicated, the earlier
to St. Patrick, the latter to St. Germain; besides two smaller churches;
all of which had become, even in that day, more or less ruinous. Their
decayed walls, exhibiting the rude and massive architecture of the most
remote period, were composed of a ragged grey-stone, which formed a
singular contrast with the bright red freestone of which the window-cases,
corner-stones, arches, and other ornamental parts of the building, were
composed.</p>
<p>Besides these four ruinous churches, the space of ground enclosed by the
massive exterior walls of Holm-Peel exhibited many other vestiges of the
olden time. There was a square mound of earth, facing, with its angles to
the points of the compass, one of those motes, as they were called, on
which, in ancient times, the northern tribes elected or recognised their
chiefs, and held their solemn popular assemblies, or <i>comitia</i>. There
was also one of those singular towers, so common in Ireland as to have
proved the favourite theme of her antiquaries; but of which the real use
and meaning seems yet to be hidden in the mist of ages. This of Holm-Peel
had been converted to the purpose of a watch-tower. There were, besides,
Runic monuments, of which legends could not be deciphered; and later
inscriptions to the memory of champions, of whom the names only were
preserved from oblivion. But tradition and superstitious eld, still most
busy where real history is silent, had filled up the long blank of
accurate information with tales of Sea-kings and Pirates, Hebridean Chiefs
and Norwegian Resolutes, who had formerly warred against, and in defence
of, this famous castle. Superstition, too, had her tales of fairies,
ghosts, and spectres—her legions of saints and demons, of fairies
and of familiar spirits, which in no corner of the British empire are told
and received with more absolute credulity than in the Isle of Man.</p>
<p>Amidst all these ruins of an older time arose the Castle itself,—now
ruinous—but in Charles II.‘s reign well garrisoned, and, in a
military point of view, kept in complete order. It was a venerable and
very ancient building, containing several apartments of sufficient size
and height to be termed noble. But in the surrender of the island by
Christian, the furniture had been, in a great measure, plundered or
destroyed by the republican soldiers; so that, as we have before hinted,
its present state was ill adapted for the residence of the noble
proprietor. Yet it had been often the abode, not only of the Lords of Man,
but of those state prisoners whom the Kings of Britain sometimes committed
to their charge.</p>
<p>In this Castle of Holm-Peel the great king-maker, Richard, Earl of
Warwick, was confined, during one period of his eventful life, to ruminate
at leisure on his farther schemes of ambition. And here, too, Eleanor, the
haughty wife of the good Duke of Gloucester, pined out in seclusion the
last days of her banishment. The sentinels pretended that her discontented
spectre was often visible at night, traversing the battlements of the
external walls, or standing motionless beside a particular solitary turret
of one of the watch-towers with which they are flanked; but dissolving
into air at cock-crow, or when the bell tolled from the yet remaining
tower of St. Germain’s church.</p>
<p>Such was Holm-Peel, as records inform us, till towards the end of the
seventeenth century.</p>
<p>It was in one of the lofty but almost unfurnished apartments of this
ancient Castle that Julian Peveril found his friend the Earl of Derby, who
had that moment sat down to a breakfast composed of various sorts of fish.
“Welcome, most imperial Julian,” he said; “welcome to our royal fortress;
in which, as yet, we are not like to be starved with hunger, though
well-nigh dead for cold.”</p>
<p>Julian answered by inquiring the meaning of this sudden movement.</p>
<p>“Upon my word,” replied the Earl, “you know nearly as much of it as I do.
My mother has told me nothing about it; supposing I believe, that I shall
at length be tempted to inquire; but she will find herself much mistaken.
I shall give her credit for full wisdom in her proceedings, rather than
put her to the trouble to render a reason, though no woman can render one
better.”</p>
<p>“Come, come; this is affectation, my good friend,” said Julian. “You
should inquire into these matters a little more curiously.”</p>
<p>“To what purpose?” said the Earl. “To hear old stories about the Tinwald
laws, and the contending rights of the lords and the clergy, and all the
rest of that Celtic barbarism, which, like Burgesse’s thorough-paced
doctrine enters at one ear, paces through, and goes out at the other?”</p>
<p>“Come, my lord,” said Julian, “you are not so indifferent as you would
represent yourself—you are dying of curiosity to know what this
hurry is about; only you think it the courtly humour to appear careless
about your own affairs.”</p>
<p>“Why, what should it be about,” said the young Earl “unless some factious
dispute between our Majesty’s minister, Governor Nowel, and our vassals?
or perhaps some dispute betwixt our Majesty and the ecclesiastical
jurisdictions? for all which our Majesty cares as little as any king in
Christendom.”</p>
<p>“I rather suppose there is intelligence from England,” said Julian. “I
heard last night in Peel-town, that Greenhalgh is come over with
unpleasant news.”</p>
<p>“He brought me nothing that was pleasant, I wot well,” said the Earl. “I
expected something from St. Evremond or Hamilton—some new plays by
Dryden or Lee, and some waggery or lampoons from the Rose Coffee-house;
and the fellow has brought me nothing but a parcel of tracts about
Protestants and Papists, and a folio play-book, one of the conceptions, as
she calls them, of that old mad-woman the Duchess of Newcastle.”</p>
<p>“Hush, my lord, for Heaven’s sake,” said Peveril; “here comes the
Countess; and you know she takes fire at the least slight to her ancient
friend.”</p>
<p>“Let her read her ancient friend’s works herself, then,” said the Earl,
“and think her as wise as she can; but I would not give one of Waller’s
songs, or Denham’s satires, for a whole cart-load of her Grace’s trash.—But
here comes our mother with care on her brow.”</p>
<p>The Countess of Derby entered the apartment accordingly, holding in her
hand a number of papers. Her dress was a mourning habit, with a deep train
of black velvet, which was borne by a little favourite attendant, a deaf
and dumb girl, whom, in compassion to her misfortune, the Countess had
educated about her person for some years. Upon this unfortunate being,
with the touch of romance which marked many of her proceedings, Lady Derby
had conferred the name of Fenella, after some ancient princess of the
island. The Countess herself was not much changed since we last presented
her to our readers. Age had rendered her step more slow, but not less
majestic; and while it traced some wrinkles on her brow, had failed to
quench the sedate fire of her dark eye. The young men rose to receive her
with the formal reverence which they knew she loved, and were greeted by
her with equal kindness.</p>
<p>“Cousin Peveril,” she said (for so she always called Julian, in respect of
his mother being a kinswoman of her husband), “you were ill abroad last
night, when we much needed your counsel.”</p>
<p>Julian answered with a blush which he could not prevent, “That he had
followed his sport among the mountains too far—had returned late—and
finding her ladyship was removed from Castletown, had instantly followed
the family hither; but as the night-bell was rung, and the watch set, he
had deemed it more respectful to lodge for the night in the town.”</p>
<p>“It is well,” said the Countess; “and, to do you justice, Julian, you are
seldom a truant neglecter of appointed hours, though, like the rest of the
youth of this age, you sometimes suffer your sports to consume too much of
time that should be spent otherwise. But for your friend Philip, he is an
avowed contemner of good order, and seems to find pleasure in wasting
time, even when he does not enjoy it.”</p>
<p>“I have been enjoying my time just now at least,” said the Earl, rising
from table, and picking his teeth carelessly. “These fresh mullets are
delicious, and so is the Lachrymæ Christi. I pray you to sit down to
breakfast, Julian, and partake the goods my royal foresight has provided.
Never was King of Man nearer being left to the mercy of the execrable
brandy of his dominions. Old Griffiths would never, in the midst of our
speedy retreat of last night, have had sense enough to secure a few
flasks, had I not given him a hint on that important subject. But presence
of mind amid danger and tumult, is a jewel I have always possessed.”</p>
<p>“I wish, then, Philip, you would exert it to better purpose,” said the
Countess, half smiling, half displeased; for she doated upon her son with
all a mother’s fondness, even when she was most angry with him for being
deficient in the peculiar and chivalrous disposition which had
distinguished his father, and which was so analogous to her own romantic
and high-minded character. “Lend me your signet,” she added with a sigh;
“for it were, I fear, vain to ask you to read over these despatches from
England, and execute the warrants which I have thought necessary to
prepare in consequence.”</p>
<p>“My signet you shall command with all my heart, madam,” said Earl Philip;
“but spare me the revision of what you are much more capable to decide
upon. I am, you know, a most complete <i>Roi fainéant</i>, and never once
interfered with my <i>Maire de palais</i> in her proceedings.”</p>
<p>The Countess made signs to her little train-bearer, who immediately went
to seek for wax and a light, with which she presently returned.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile the Countess continued, addressing Peveril. “Philip does
himself less than justice. When you were absent, Julian (for if you had
been here I would have given you the credit of prompting your friend), he
had a spirited controversy with the Bishop, for an attempt to enforce
spiritual censures against a poor wretch, by confining her in the vault
under the chapel.” [*]</p>
<p>[*] Beneath the only one of the four churches in Castle Rushin, which<br/>
is or was kept a little in repair, is a prison or dungeon, for<br/>
ecclesiastical offenders. “This,” says Waldron, “is certainly one<br/>
of the most dreadful places that imagination can form; the sea<br/>
runs under it through the hollows of the rock with such a<br/>
continual roar, that you would think it were every moment breaking<br/>
in upon you, and over it are the vaults for burying the dead. The<br/>
stairs descending to this place of terrors are not above thirty,<br/>
but so steep and narrow, that they are very difficult to go down,<br/>
a child of eight or nine years not being able to pass them but<br/>
sideways.”—WALDRON’S <i>Description of the Isle of Man, in his<br/>
Works</i>, p. 105, folio.<br/></p>
<p>“Do not think better of me than I deserve,” said the Earl to Peveril; “my
mother has omitted to tell you the culprit was pretty Peggy of Ramsey, and
her crime what in Cupid’s courts would have been called a peccadillo.”</p>
<p>“Do not make yourself worse than you are,” replied Peveril, who observed
the Countess’s cheek redden,—“you know you would have done as much
for the oldest and poorest cripple in the island. Why, the vault is under
the burial-ground of the chapel, and, for aught I know, under the ocean
itself, such a roaring do the waves make in its vicinity. I think no one
could remain there long, and retain his reason.”</p>
<p>“It is an infernal hole,” answered the Earl, “and I will have it built up
one day—that is full certain.—But hold—hold—for
God’s sake, madam—what are you going to do?—Look at the seal
before you put it to the warrant—you will see it is a choice antique
cameo Cupid, riding on a flying fish—I had it for twenty zechins,
from Signor Furabosco at Rome—a most curious matter for an
antiquary, but which will add little faith to a Manx warrant.</p>
<p>“My signet—my signet—Oh! you mean that with the three
monstrous legs, which I supposed was devised as the most preposterous
device, to represent our most absurd Majesty of Man.—The signet—I
have not seen it since I gave it to Gibbon, my monkey, to play with.—He
did whine for it most piteously—I hope he has not gemmed the green
breast of ocean with my symbol of sovereignty!”</p>
<p>“Now, by Heaven,” said the Countess, trembling, and colouring deeply with
anger, “it was your father’s signet! the last pledge which he sent, with
his love to me, and his blessing to thee, the night before they murdered
him at Bolton!”</p>
<p>“Mother, dearest mother,” said the Earl, startled out of his apathy, and
taking her hand, which he kissed tenderly, “I did but jest—the
signet is safe—Peveril knows that it is so.—Go fetch it,
Julian, for Heaven’s sake—here are my keys—it is in the
left-hand drawer of my travelling cabinet—Nay, mother, forgive me—it
was but a <i>mauvaise plaisanterie</i>; only an ill-imagined jest,
ungracious, and in bad taste, I allow—but only one of Philip’s
follies. Look at me, dearest mother, and forgive me.”</p>
<p>The Countess turned her eyes towards him, from which the tears were fast
falling.</p>
<p>“Philip,” she said, “you try me too unkindly, and too severely. If times
are changed, as I have heard you allege—if the dignity of rank, and
the high feelings of honour and duty, are now drowned in giddy jests and
trifling pursuits, let <i>me</i> at least, who live secluded from all
others, die without perceiving the change which has happened, and, above
all, without perceiving it in mine own son. Let me not learn the general
prevalence of this levity, which laughs at every sense of dignity or duty,
through your personal disrespect—Let me not think that when I die——”</p>
<p>“Speak nothing of it, mother,” said the Earl, interrupting her
affectionately. “It is true, I cannot promise to be all my father and his
fathers were; for we wear silk vests for their steel coats, and feathered
beavers for their crested helmets. But believe me, though to be an
absolute Palmerin of England is not in my nature, no son ever loved a
mother more dearly, or would do more to oblige her. And that you may own
this, I will forthwith not only seal the warrants, to the great
endangerment of my precious fingers, but also read the same from end to
end, as well as the despatches thereunto appertaining.”</p>
<p>A mother is easily appeased, even when most offended; and it was with an
expanding heart that the Countess saw her son’s very handsome features,
while reading these papers, settle into an expression of deep seriousness,
such as they seldom wore. It seemed to her as if the family likeness to
his gallant but unfortunate father increased, when the expression of their
countenances became similar in gravity. The Earl had no sooner perused the
despatches, which he did with great attention, than he rose and said,
“Julian, come with me.”</p>
<p>The Countess looked surprised. “I was wont to share your father’s
counsels, my son,” she said; “but do not think that I wish to intrude
myself upon yours. I am too well pleased to see you assume the power and
the duty of thinking for yourself, which is what I have so long urged you
to do. Nevertheless, my experience, who have been so long administrator of
your authority in Man, might not, I think, be superfluous to the matter in
hand.”</p>
<p>“Hold me excused, dearest mother,” said the Earl gravely. “The
interference was none of my seeking; had you taken your own course,
without consulting me, it had been well; but since I have entered on the
affair—and it appears sufficiently important—I must transact
it to the best of my own ability.”</p>
<p>“Go, then, my son,” said the Countess, “and may Heaven enlighten thee with
its counsel, since thou wilt have none of mine.—I trust that you,
Master Peveril, will remind him of what is fit for his own honour; and
that only a coward abandons his rights, and only a fool trusts his
enemies.”</p>
<p>The Earl answered not, but, taking Peveril by the arm, led him up a
winding stair to his own apartment, and from thence into a projecting
turret, where, amidst the roar of waves and sea-mews’ clang, he held with
him the following conversation:—</p>
<p>“Peveril, it is well I looked into these warrants. My mother queens it at
such a rate as may cost me not only my crown, which I care little for, but
perhaps my head, which, though others may think little of, I would feel it
an inconvenience to be deprived of.”</p>
<p>“What on earth is the matter?” said Peveril, with considerable anxiety.</p>
<p>“It seems,” said the Earl of Derby, “that old England who takes a
frolicsome brain-fever once every two or three years, for the benefit of
her doctors, and the purification of the torpid lethargy brought on by
peace and prosperity, is now gone stark staring mad on the subject of a
real or supposed Popish plot. I read one programme on the subject, by a
fellow called Oates, and thought it the most absurd foolery I ever
perused. But that cunning fellow Shaftesbury, and some others amongst the
great ones, having taken it up, and are driving on at such a rate as makes
harness crack, and horses smoke for it. The King, who has sworn never to
kiss the pillow his father went to sleep on, temporises, and gives way to
the current; the Duke of York, suspected and hated on account of his
religion, is about to be driven to the continent; several principal
Catholic nobles are in the Tower already; and the nation, like a bull at
Tutbury-running, is persecuted with so many inflammatory rumours and
pestilent pamphlets, that she has cocked her tail, flung up her heels,
taken the bit betwixt her teeth and is as furiously unmanageable as in the
year 1642.”</p>
<p>“All this you must have known already,” said Peveril; “I wonder you told
me not of news so important.”</p>
<p>“It would have taken long to tell,” said the Earl; “moreover, I desired to
have you <i>solus</i>; thirdly, I was about to speak when my mother
entered; and, to conclude, it was no business of mine. But these
despatches of my politic mother’s private correspondent put a new face on
the whole matter; for it seems some of the informers—a trade which,
having become a thriving one, is now pursued by many—have dared to
glance at the Countess herself as an agent in this same plot—ay, and
have found those that are willing enough to believe their report.”</p>
<p>“On mine honour,” said Peveril, “you both take it with great coolness. I
think the Countess the more composed of the two; for, except her movement
hither, she exhibited no mark of alarm, and, moreover, seemed no way more
anxious to communicate the matter to your lordship than decency rendered
necessary.”</p>
<p>“My good mother,” said the Earl, “loves power, though it has cost her
dear. I wish I could truly say that my neglect of business is entirely
assumed in order to leave it in her hands, but that better motive combines
with natural indolence. But she seems to have feared I should not think
exactly like her in this emergency, and she was right in supposing so.”</p>
<p>“How comes the emergency upon you?” said Julian; “and what form does the
danger assume?”</p>
<p>“Marry, thus it is,” said the Earl: “I need not bid you remember the
affair of Colonel Christian. That man, besides his widow, who is possessed
of large property—Dame Christian of Kirk Truagh, whom you have often
heard of, and perhaps seen—left a brother called Edward Christian,
whom you never saw at all. Now this brother—but I dare say you know
all about it.”</p>
<p>“Not I, on my honour,” said Peveril; “you know the Countess seldom or
never alludes to the subject.”</p>
<p>“Why,” replied the Earl, “I believe in her heart she is something ashamed
of that gallant act of royalty and supreme jurisdiction, the consequences
of which maimed my estate so cruelly.—Well, cousin, this same Edward
Christian was one of the dempsters at the time, and, naturally enough, was
unwilling to concur in the sentence which adjudged his <i>aîné</i> to be
shot like a dog. My mother, who was then in high force, and not to be
controlled by any one, would have served the dempster with the same sauce
with which she dressed his brother, had he not been wise enough to fly
from the island. Since that time, the thing has slept on all hands; and
though we knew that Dempster Christian made occasionally secret visits to
his friends in the island, along with two or three other Puritans of the
same stamp, and particularly a prick-eared rogue, called Bridgenorth,
brother-in-law to the deceased, yet my mother, thank Heaven, has hitherto
had the sense to connive at them, though, for some reason or other, she
holds this Bridgenorth in especial disfavour.”</p>
<p>“And why,” said Peveril, forcing himself to speak, in order to conceal the
very unpleasant surprise which he felt, “why does the Countess now depart
from so prudent a line of conduct?”</p>
<p>“You must know the case is now different. The rogues are not satisfied
with toleration—they would have supremacy. They have found friends
in the present heat of the popular mind. My mother’s name, and especially
that of her confessor, Aldrick the Jesuit, have been mentioned in this
beautiful maze of a plot, which if any such at all exists, she knows as
little of as you or I. However, she is a Catholic, and that is enough; and
I have little doubt, that if the fellows could seize on our scrap of a
kingdom here, and cut all our throats, they would have the thanks of the
present House of Commons, as willingly as old Christian had those of the
Rump, for a similar service.”</p>
<p>“From whence did you receive all this information?” said Peveril, again
speaking, though by the same effort which a man makes who talks in his
sleep.</p>
<p>“Aldrick has seen the Duke of York in secret, and his Royal Highness, who
wept while he confessed his want of power to protect his friends—and
it is no trifle will wring tears from him—told him to send us
information that we should look to our safety, for that Dempster Christian
and Bridgenorth were in the island, with secret and severe orders; that
they had formed a considerable party there, and were likely to be owned
and protected in anything they might undertake against us. The people of
Ramsey and Castletown are unluckily discontented about some new regulation
of the imposts; and to tell you the truth, though I thought yesterday’s
sudden remove a whim of my mother’s, I am almost satisfied they would have
blockaded us in Rushin Castle, where we could not have held out for lack
of provisions. Here we are better supplied, and, as we are on our guard,
it is likely the intended rising will not take place.”</p>
<p>“And what is to be done in this emergency?” said Peveril.</p>
<p>“That is the very question, my gentle coz,” answered the Earl. “My mother
sees but one way of going to work, and that is by royal authority. Here
are the warrants she had prepared, to search for, take, and apprehend the
bodies of Edward Christian and Robert—no, Ralph Bridgenorth, and
bring them to instant trial. No doubt, she would soon have had them in the
Castle court, with a dozen of the old matchlocks levelled against them—that
is her way of solving all sudden difficulties.”</p>
<p>“But in which, I trust, you do not acquiesce, my lord,” answered Peveril,
whose thoughts instantly reverted to Alice, if they could ever be said to
be absent from her.</p>
<p>“Truly I acquiesce in no such matter,” said the Earl. “William Christian’s
death cost me a fair half of my inheritance. I have no fancy to fall under
the displeasure of my royal brother, King Charles, for a new escapade of
the same kind. But how to pacify my mother, I know not. I wish the
insurrection would take place, and then, as we are better provided than
they can be, we might knock the knaves on the head; and yet, since they
began the fray, we should keep the law on our side.”</p>
<p>“Were it not better,” said Peveril, “if by any means these men could be
induced to quit the island?”</p>
<p>“Surely,” replied the Earl; “but that will be no easy matter—they
are stubborn on principle, and empty threats will not move them. This
stormblast in London is wind in their sails, and they will run their
length, you may depend on it. I have sent orders, however, to clap up the
Manxmen upon whose assistance they depended, and if I can find the two
worthies themselves, here are sloops enough in the harbour—I will
take the freedom to send them on a pretty distant voyage, and I hope
matters will be settled before they return to give an account of it.”</p>
<p>At this moment a soldier belonging to the garrison approached the two
young men, with many bows and tokens of respect. “How now, friend?” said
the Earl to him. “Leave off thy courtesies, and tell thy business.”</p>
<p>The man, who was a native islander, answered in Manx, that he had a letter
for his honour, Master Julian Peveril. Julian snatched the billet hastily,
and asked whence it came.</p>
<p>“It was delivered to him by a young woman,” the soldier replied, “who had
given him a piece of money to deliver it into Master Peveril’s own hand.”</p>
<p>“Thou art a lucky fellow, Julian,” said the Earl. “With that grave brow of
thine, and thy character for sobriety and early wisdom, you set the girls
a-wooing, without waiting till they are asked; whilst I, their drudge and
vassal, waste both language and leisure, without getting a kind word or
look, far less a billet-doux.”</p>
<p>This the young Earl said with a smile of conscious triumph, as in fact he
valued himself not a little upon the interest which he supposed himself to
possess with the fair sex.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the letter impressed on Peveril a different train of thoughts
from what his companion apprehended. It was in Alice’s hand, and contained
these few words:—</p>
<p>“I fear what I am going to do is wrong; but I must see you. Meet me<br/>
at noon at Goddard Crovan’s Stone, with as much secrecy as you<br/>
may.”<br/></p>
<p>The letter was signed only with the initials A. B.; but Julian had no
difficulty in recognising the handwriting, which he had often seen, and
which was remarkably beautiful. He stood suspended, for he saw the
difficulty and impropriety of withdrawing himself from the Countess and
his friend at this moment of impending danger; and yet, to neglect this
invitation was not to be thought of. He paused in the utmost perplexity.</p>
<p>“Shall I read your riddle?” said the Earl. “Go where love calls you—I
will make an excuse to my mother—only, most grave anchorite, be
hereafter more indulgent to the failings of others than you have been
hitherto, and blaspheme not the power of the little deity.”</p>
<p>“Nay, but, Cousin Derby—” said Peveril, and stopped short, for he
really knew not what to say. Secured himself by a virtuous passion from
the contagious influence of the time, he had seen with regret his noble
kinsman mingle more in its irregularities than he approved of, and had
sometimes played the part of a monitor. Circumstances seemed at present to
give the Earl a right of retaliation. He kept his eye fixed on his friend,
as if he waited till he should complete his sentence, and at length
exclaimed, “What! cousin, quite <i>à-la-mort!</i> Oh, most judicious
Julian! Oh, most precise Peveril! have you bestowed so much wisdom on me
that you have none left for yourself? Come, be frank—tell me name
and place—or say but the colour of the eyes of the most emphatic she—or
do but let me have the pleasure to hear thee say, ‘I love!’—confess
one touch of human frailty—conjugate the verb <i>amo</i>, and I will
be a gentle schoolmaster, and you shall have, as father Richards used to
say, when we were under his ferule, ‘<i>licentia exeundi</i>.’”</p>
<p>“Enjoy your pleasant humour at my expense, my lord,” said Peveril; “I
fairly will confess thus much, that I would fain, if it consisted with my
honour and your safety, have two hours at my own disposal; the more
especially as the manner in which I shall employ them may much concern the
safety of the island.”</p>
<p>“Very likely, I dare say,” answered the Earl, still laughing. “No doubt
you are summoned out by some Lady Politic Wouldbe of the isle, to talk
over some of the breast-laws: but never mind—go, and go speedily,
that you may return as quickly as possible. I expect no immediate
explosion of this grand conspiracy. When the rogues see us on our guard,
they will be cautious how they break out. Only, once more make haste.”</p>
<p>Peveril thought this last advice was not to be neglected; and, glad to
extricate himself from the raillery of his cousin, walked down towards the
gate of the Castle, meaning to cross over to the village, and there take
horse at the Earl’s stables, for the place of rendezvous.</p>
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