<h2> CHAPTER XLIII </h2>
<p>He came amongst them like a new raised spirit<br/>
To speak of dreadful judgments that impend,<br/>
And of the wrath to come.<br/>
—THE REFORMER.<br/></p>
<p>The astonishment of Julian at the unexpected apparition of Bridgenorth,
was instantly succeeded by apprehension of his father’s violence, which he
had every reason to believe would break forth against one, whom he himself
could not but reverence on account of his own merits, as well as because
he was the father of Alice. The appearance of Bridgenorth was not however,
such as to awaken resentment. His countenance was calm, his step slow and
composed, his eye not without the indication of some deep-seated anxiety,
but without any expression either of anger or of triumph. “You are
welcome,” he said, “Sir Geoffrey Peveril, to the shelter and hospitality
of this house; as welcome as you would have been in other days, when we
called each other neighbours and friends.”</p>
<p>“Odzooks,” said the old Cavalier; “and had I known it was thy house, man,
I would sooner had my heart’s blood run down the kennel, than my foot
should have crossed your threshold—in the way of seeking safety,
that is.”</p>
<p>“I forgive your inveteracy,” said Major Bridgenorth, “on account of your
prejudices.”</p>
<p>“Keep your forgiveness,” answered the Cavalier, “until you are pardoned
yourself. By Saint George I have sworn, if ever I got my heels out of yon
rascally prison, whither I was sent much through your means, Master
Bridgenorth,—that you should pay the reckoning for my bad lodging.—I
will strike no man in his own house; but if you will cause the fellow to
bring back my weapon, and take a turn in that blind court there below,
along with me, you shall soon see what chance a traitor hath with a true
man, and a kennel-blooded Puritan with Peveril of the Peak.”</p>
<p>Bridgenorth smiled with much composure. “When I was younger and more
warm-blooded,” he replied, “I refused your challenge, Sir Geoffrey; it is
not likely I should now accept it, when each is within a stride of the
grave. I have not spared, and will not spare, my blood, when my country
wants it.”</p>
<p>“That is when there is any chance of treason against the King,” said Sir
Geoffrey.</p>
<p>“Nay, my father,” said Julian, “let us hear Master Bridgenorth! We have
been sheltered in his house; and although we now see him in London, we
should remember that he did not appear against us this day, when perhaps
his evidence might have given a fatal turn to our situation.”</p>
<p>“You are right, young man,” said Bridgenorth; “and it should be some
pledge of my sincere goodwill, that I was this day absent from
Westminster, when a few words from my mouth had ended the long line of
Peveril of the Peak: it needed but ten minutes to walk to Westminster
Hall, to have ensured your condemnation. But could I have done this,
knowing, as I now know, that to thee, Julian Peveril, I owe the
extrication of my daughter—of my dearest Alice—the memory of
her departed mother—from the snares which hell and profligacy had
opened around her?”</p>
<p>“She is, I trust safe,” said Peveril eagerly, and almost forgetting his
father’s presence; “she is, I trust, safe, and in your own wardship?”</p>
<p>“Not in mine,” said the dejected father; “but in that of one in whose
protection, next to that of Heaven, I can most fully confide.”</p>
<p>“Are you sure—are you very sure of that?” repeated Julian eagerly.
“I found her under the charge of one to whom she had been trusted, and who
yet——”</p>
<p>“And who yet was the basest of women,” answered Bridgenorth; “but he who
selected her for the charge was deceived in her character.”</p>
<p>“Say rather you were deceived in his; remember that when we parted in
Moultrassie, I warned you of that Ganlesse—that——”</p>
<p>“I know your meaning,” said Bridgenorth; “nor did you err in describing
him as a worldly-wise man. But he has atoned for his error by recovering
Alice from the dangers into which she has plunged when separated from you;
and besides, I have not thought meet again to entrust him with the charge
that is dearest to me.”</p>
<p>“I thank God your eyes are thus far opened!” said Julian.</p>
<p>“This day will open them wide, or close them for ever,” answered
Bridgenorth.</p>
<p>During this dialogue, which the speakers hurried through without attending
to the others who were present, Sir Geoffrey listened with surprise and
eagerness, endeavouring to catch something which should render their
conversation intelligible; but as he totally failed in gaining any such
key to their meaning, he broke in with,—“‘Sblood and thunder,
Julian, what unprofitable gossip is this? What hast thou to do with this
fellow, more than to bastinado him, if you should think it worth while to
beat so old a rogue?”</p>
<p>“My dearest father,” said Julian, “you know not this gentleman—I am
certain you do him injustice. My own obligations to him are many; and I am
sure when you come to know them——”</p>
<p>“I hope I shall die ere that moment come,” said Sir Geoffrey; and
continued with increasing violence, “I hope in the mercy of Heaven, that I
shall be in the grave of my ancestors, ere I learn that my son—my
only son—the last hope of my ancient house—the last remnant of
the name of Peveril—hath consented to receive obligations from the
man on earth I am most bound to hate, were I not still more bound to
contemn him!—Degenerate dog-whelp!” he repeated with great
vehemence, “you colour without replying! Speak, and disown such disgrace;
or, by the God of my fathers——”</p>
<p>The dwarf suddenly stepped forward and called out, “Forbear!” with a voice
at once so discordant and commanding, that it sounded supernatural. “Man
of sin and pride,” he said, “forbear; and call not the name of a holy God
to witness thine unhallowed resentments.”</p>
<p>The rebuke so boldly and decidedly given, and the moral enthusiasm with
which he spoke, gave the despised dwarf an ascendancy for the moment over
the fiery spirit of his gigantic namesake. Sir Geoffrey Peveril eyed him
for an instant askance and shyly, as he might have done a supernatural
apparition, and then muttered, “What knowest thou of my cause of wrath?”</p>
<p>“Nothing,” said the dwarf;—“nothing but this—that no cause can
warrant the oath thou wert about to swear. Ungrateful man! thou wert
to-day rescued from the devouring wrath of the wicked, by a marvellous
conjunction of circumstances—Is this a day, thinkest thou, on which
to indulge thine own hasty resentments?”</p>
<p>“I stand rebuked,” said Sir Geoffrey, “and by a singular monitor—the
grasshopper, as the prayer-book saith, hath become a burden to me.—Julian,
I will speak to thee of these matters hereafter;—and for you, Master
Bridgenorth, I desire to have no farther communication with you, either in
peace or in anger. Our time passes fast, and I would fain return to my
family. Cause our weapons to be restored; unbar the doors, and let us part
without farther altercation, which can but disturb and aggravate our
spirits.”</p>
<p>“Sir Geoffrey Peveril,” said Bridgenorth, “I have no desire to vex your
spirit or my own; but, for thus soon dismissing you, that may hardly be,
it being a course inconsistent with the work which I have on hand.”</p>
<p>“How, sir! Do you mean that we should abide here, whether with or against
our inclinations?” said the dwarf. “Were it not that I am laid under
charge to remain here, by one who hath the best right to command this poor
microcosm, I would show thee that bolts and bars are unavailing restraints
on such as I am.”</p>
<p>“Truly,” said Sir Geoffrey, “I think, upon an emergency, the little man
might make his escape through the keyhole.”</p>
<p>Bridgenorth’s face was moved into something like a smile at the swaggering
speech of the pigmy hero, and the contemptuous commentary of Sir Geoffrey
Peveril; but such an expression never dwelt on his features for two
seconds together, and he replied in these words:—“Gentlemen, each
and all of you must be fain to content yourselves. Believe me, no hurt is
intended towards you; on the contrary, your remaining here will be a means
of securing your safety, which would be otherwise deeply endangered. It
will be your own fault if a hair of your head is hurt. But the stronger
force is on my side; and, whatever harm you may meet with should you
attempt to break forth by violence, the blame must rest with yourselves.
It you will not believe me, I will permit Master Julian Peveril to
accompany me, where he shall see that I am provided fully with the means
of repressing violence.”</p>
<p>“Treason!—treason!” exclaimed the old Knight—“Treason against
God and King Charles!—Oh, for one half-hour of the broadsword which
I parted with like an ass!”</p>
<p>“Hold, my father, I conjure you!” said Julian. “I will go with Master
Bridgenorth, since he requests it. I will satisfy myself whether there be
danger, and of what nature. It is possible I may prevail on him to desist
from some desperate measure, if such be indeed in agitation. Should it be
necessary, fear not that your son will behave as he ought to do.”</p>
<p>“Do your pleasure, Julian,” said his father; “I will confide in thee. But
if you betray my confidence, a father’s curse shall cleave to you.”</p>
<p>Bridgenorth now motioned to Peveril to follow him, and they passed through
the small door by which he entered.</p>
<p>The passage led to a vestibule or anteroom, in which several other doors
and passages seemed to centre. Through one of these Julian was conducted
by Bridgenorth, walking with silence and precaution, in obedience to a
signal made by his guide to that effect. As they advanced, he heard
sounds, like those of the human voice, engaged in urgent and emphatic
declamation. With slow and light steps Bridgenorth conducted him through a
door which terminated this passage; and as he entered a little gallery,
having a curtain in front, the sound of the preacher’s voice—for
such it now seemed—became distinct and audible.</p>
<p>Julian now doubted not that he was in one of those conventicles, which,
though contrary to the existing laws, still continued to be regularly held
in different parts of London and the suburbs. Many of these, as frequented
by persons of moderate political principles, though dissenters from the
Church for conscience’ sake, were connived at by the prudence or timidity
of the government. But some of them, in which assembled the fiercer and
more exalted sects of Independents, Anabaptists, Fifth-Monarchy men, and
other sectaries, whose stern enthusiasm had contributed so greatly to
effect the overthrow of the late King’s throne, were sought after,
suppressed, and dispersed, whenever they could be discovered.</p>
<p>Julian was soon satisfied that the meeting into which he was thus secretly
introduced was one of the latter class; and, to judge by the violence of
the preacher, of the most desperate character. He was still more
effectually convinced of this, when, at a sign from Bridgenorth, he
cautiously unclosed a part of the curtain which hung before the gallery,
and thus, unseen himself, looked down on the audience, and obtained a view
of the preacher.</p>
<p>About two hundred persons were assembled beneath, in an area filled up
with benches, as if for the exercise of worship; and they were all of the
male sex, and well armed with pikes and muskets, as well as swords and
pistols. Most of them had the appearance of veteran soldiers, now past the
middle of life, yet retaining such an appearance of strength as might well
supply the loss of youthful agility. They stood, or sat, in various
attitudes of stern attention; and, resting on their spears and muskets,
kept their eyes firmly fixed on the preacher, who ended the violence of
his declamation by displaying from the pulpit a banner, on which was
represented a lion, with the motto, “<i>Vicit Leo ex tribu Judæ.</i>”</p>
<p>The torrent of mystical yet animating eloquence of the preacher—an
old grey-haired man, whom zeal seemed to supply with the powers of voice
and action, of which years had deprived him—was suited to the taste
of his audience, but could not be transferred to these pages without
scandal and impropriety. He menaced the rulers of England with all the
judgments denounced on those of Moab and Assyria—he called upon the
saints to be strong, to be up and doing; and promised those miracles
which, in the campaigns of Joshua, and his successors, the valiant Judges
of Israel, supplied all odds against the Amorites, Midianites, and
Philistines. He sounded trumpets, opened vials, broke seals, and denounced
approaching judgments under all the mystical signs of the Apocalypse. The
end of the world was announced, accompanied with all its preliminary
terrors.</p>
<p>Julian, with deep anxiety, soon heard enough to make him aware that the
meeting was likely to terminate in open insurrection, like that of the
Fifth-Monarchy men, under Venner, at an earlier period of Charles’s reign;
and he was not a little concerned at the probability of Bridgenorth being
implicated in so criminal and desperate an undertaking. If he had retained
any doubts of the issue of the meeting, they must have been removed when
the preacher called on his hearers to renounce all expectation which had
hitherto been entertained of safety to the nation, from the execution of
the ordinary laws of the land. This, he said, was at best but a carnal
seeking after earthly aid—a going down to Egypt for help, which the
jealousy of their Divine Leader would resent as a fleeing to another rock,
and a different banner, from that which was this day displayed over them.—And
here he solemnly swung the bannered lion over their heads, as the only
sign under which they ought to seek for life and safety. He then proceeded
to insist, that recourse to ordinary justice was vain as well as sinful.</p>
<p>“The event of that day at Westminster,” he said, “might teach them that
the man at Whitehall was even as the man his father;” and closed a long
tirade against the vices of the Court, with assurance “that Tophet was
ordained of old—for the King it was made hot.”</p>
<p>As the preacher entered on a description of the approaching theocracy,
which he dared to prophesy, Bridgenorth, who appeared for a time to have
forgotten the presence of Julian, whilst with stern and fixed attention he
drunk in the words of the preacher, seemed suddenly to collect himself,
and, taking Julian by the hand, led him out of the gallery, of which he
carefully closed the door, into an apartment at no great distance.</p>
<p>When they arrived there, he anticipated the expostulations of Julian, by
asking him, in a tone of severe triumph, whether these men he had seen
were likely to do their work negligently, or whether it would not be
perilous to attempt to force their way from a house, when all the avenues
were guarded by such as he had now seen—men of war from their
childhood upwards.</p>
<p>“In the name of Heaven,” said Julian, without replying to Bridgenorth’s
question, “for what desperate purpose have you assembled so many desperate
men? I am well aware that your sentiments of religion are peculiar; but
beware how you deceive yourself—No views of religion can sanction
rebellion and murder; and such are the natural and necessary consequences
of the doctrine we have just heard poured into the ears of fanatical and
violent enthusiasts.”</p>
<p>“My son,” said Bridgenorth calmly, “in the days of my non-age, I thought
as you do. I deemed it sufficient to pay my tithes of cummin and aniseed—my
poor petty moral observances of the old law; and I thought I was heaping
up precious things, when they were in value no more than the husks of the
swine-trough. Praised be Heaven, the scales are fallen from mine eyes; and
after forty years’ wandering in the desert of Sinai, I am at length
arrived in the Land of Promise—My corrupt human nature has left me—I
have cast my slough, and can now with some conscience put my hand to the
plough, certain that there is no weakness left in me where-through I may
look back. The furrows,” he added, bending his brows, while a gloomy fire
filled his large eyes, “must be drawn long and deep, and watered by the
blood of the mighty.”</p>
<p>There was a change in Bridgenorth’s tone and manner, when he used these
singular expressions, which convinced Julian that his mind, which had
wavered for so many years between his natural good sense and the insane
enthusiasm of the time, had finally given way to the latter; and, sensible
of the danger in which the unhappy man himself, the innocent and beautiful
Alice, and his own father, were likely to be placed—to say nothing
of the general risk of the community by a sudden insurrection, he at the
same time felt that there was no chance of reasoning effectually with one,
who would oppose spiritual conviction to all arguments which reason could
urge against his wild schemes. To touch his feeling seemed a more probable
resource; and Julian therefore conjured Bridgenorth to think how much his
daughter’s honour and safety were concerned in his abstaining from the
dangerous course which he meditated. “If you fall,” he said, “must she not
pass under the power and guardianship of her uncle, whom you allow to have
shown himself capable of the grossest mistake in the choice of her female
protectress; and whom I believe, upon good grounds, to have made that
infamous choice with his eyes open?”</p>
<p>“Young man,” answered Bridgenorth, “you make me feel like the poor bird,
around whose wing some wanton boy has fixed a line, to pull the struggling
wretch to earth at his pleasure. Know, since thou wilt play this cruel
part, and drag me down from higher contemplations, that she with whom
Alice is placed, and who hath in future full power to guide her motions,
and decide her fate, despite of Christian and every one else, is—I
will not tell thee who she is—Enough—no one—thou least
of all, needs to fear for her safety.”</p>
<p>At this moment a side-door opened, and Christian himself came into the
apartment. He started and coloured when he saw Julian Peveril; then
turning to Bridgenorth with an assumed air of indifference, asked, “Is
Saul among the prophets?—Is a Peveril among the saints?”</p>
<p>“No, brother,” replied Bridgenorth, “his time is not come more than thine
own—thou art too deep in the ambitious intrigues of manhood, and he
in the giddy passions of youth, to hear the still calm voice—You
will both hear it, as I trust and pray.”</p>
<p>“Master Ganlesse, or Christian, or by whatever name you are called,” said
Julian, “by whatever reasons you guide yourself in this most perilous
matter, <i>you</i> at least are not influenced by any idea of an immediate
divine command for commencing hostilities against the state. Leaving,
therefore, for the present, whatever subjects of discussion may be between
us, I implore you, as a man of shrewdness and sense, to join with me in
dissuading Master Bridgenorth from the fatal enterprise which he now
meditates.”</p>
<p>“Young gentleman,” said Christian, with great composure, “when we met in
the west, I was willing to have made a friend of you, but you rejected the
overture. You might, however, even then have seen enough of me to be
assured, that I am not likely to rush too rashly on any desperate
undertaking. As to this which lies before us, my brother Bridgenorth
brings to it the simplicity, though not the harmlessness of the dove, and
I the subtilty of the serpent. He hath the leading of saints who are moved
by the spirit; and I can add to their efforts a powerful body, who have
for their instigators the world, the devil, and the flesh.”</p>
<p>“And can you,” said Julian, looking at Bridgenorth, “accede to such an
unworthy union?”</p>
<p>“I unite not with them,” said Bridgenorth; “but I may not, without guilt,
reject the aid which Providence sends to assist His servants. We are
ourselves few, though determined—Those whose swords come to help the
cutting down of the harvest, must be welcome—When their work is
wrought, they will be converted or scattered.—Have you been at York
Place, brother, with that unstable epicure? We must have his last
resolution, and that within an hour.”</p>
<p>Christian looked at Julian, as if his presence prevented him from
returning an answer; upon which Bridgenorth arose, and taking the young
man by the arm, led him out of the apartment, into that in which they had
left his father; assuring him by the way, that determined and vigilant
guards were placed in every different quarter by which escape could be
effected, and that he would do well to persuade his father to remain a
quiet prisoner for a few hours.</p>
<p>Julian returned him no answer, and Bridgenorth presently retired, leaving
him alone with his father and Hudson. To their questions he could only
briefly reply, that he feared they were trepanned, since they were in the
house with at least two hundred fanatics, completely armed, and apparently
prepared for desperate enterprise. Their own want of arms precluded the
possibility of open violence; and however unpleasant it might be to remain
in such a condition, it seemed difficult, from the strength of the
fastenings at doors and windows, to attempt any secret escape without
instantaneous detection.</p>
<p>The valiant dwarf alone nursed hopes, with which he in vain endeavoured to
inspire his companions in affliction. “The fair one, whose eyes,” he said,
“were like the twin stars of Leda”—for the little man was a great
admirer of lofty language—“had not invited him, the most devoted,
and, it might be, not the least favoured of her servants, into this place
as a harbour, in order that he might therein suffer shipwreck; and he
generously assured his friends, that in his safety they also should be
safe.”</p>
<p>Sir Geoffrey, little cheered by this intimation, expressed his despair at
not being able to get the length of Whitehall, where he trusted to find as
many jolly Cavaliers as would help him to stifle the whole nest of wasps
in their hive; while Julian was of opinion that the best service he could
now render Bridgenorth, would be timeously to disclose his plot, and, if
possible, to send him at the same time warning to save his person.</p>
<p>But we must leave them to meditate over their plans at leisure; no one of
which, as they all depended on their previous escape from confinement,
seemed in any great chance of being executed.</p>
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