<h2> CHAPTER XLVII </h2>
<p>High-reaching Buckingham grows circumspect.<br/>
—RICHARD III.<br/></p>
<p>Before giving the reader an account of the meeting betwixt Buckingham and
his injured Sovereign, we may mention a trifling circumstance or two which
took place betwixt his Grace and Chiffinch, in the short drive betwixt
York Place and Whitehall.</p>
<p>In the outset, the Duke endeavoured to learn from the courtier the special
cause of his being summoned so hastily to the Court. Chiffinch answered,
cautiously, that he believed there were some gambols going forward, at
which the King desired the Duke’s presence.</p>
<p>This did not quite satisfy Buckingham, for, conscious of his own rash
purpose, he could not but apprehend discovery. After a moment’s silence,
“Chiffinch,” he said abruptly, “did you mention to any one what the King
said to me this morning touching the Lady Anne?”</p>
<p>“My Lord Duke,” said Chiffinch, hesitantly, “surely my duty to the King—my
respect to your Grace——”</p>
<p>“You mentioned it to no one, then?” said the Duke sternly.</p>
<p>“To no one,” replied Chiffinch faintly, for he was intimidated by the
Duke’s increasing severity of manner.</p>
<p>“Ye lie, like a scoundrel!” said the Duke—“You told Christian!”</p>
<p>“Your Grace,” said Chiffinch—“your Grace—your Grace ought to
remember that I told you Christian’s secret; that the Countess of Derby
was come up.”</p>
<p>“And you think the one point of treachery may balance for the other? But
no. I must have a better atonement. Be assured I will blow your brains
out, ere you leave this carriage, unless you tell me the truth of this
message from Court.”</p>
<p>As Chiffinch hesitated what reply to make, a man, who, by the blaze of the
torches, then always borne, as well by the lackeys who hung behind the
carriage, as by the footmen who ran by the side, might easily see who sat
in the coach, approached, and sung in a deep manly voice, the burden of an
old French song on the battle of Marignan, in which is imitated the German
French of the defeated Swiss.</p>
<p>“<i>Tout est verlore<br/>
La tintelore,<br/>
Tout est verlore</i><br/>
Bei Got.”<br/></p>
<p>“I am betrayed,” said the Duke, who instantly conceived that this chorus,
expressing “all is lost,” was sung by one of his faithful agents, as a
hint to him that their machinations were discovered.</p>
<p>He attempted to throw himself from the carriage, but Chiffinch held him
with a firm, though respectful grasp. “Do not destroy yourself, my lord,”
he said, in a tone of deep humility—“there are soldiers and officers
of the peace around the carriage, to enforce your Grace’s coming to
Whitehall, and to prevent your escape. To attempt it would be to confess
guilt; and I advise you strongly against that—the King is your
friend—be your own.”</p>
<p>The Duke, after a moment’s consideration, said sullenly, “I believe you
are right. Why should I fly, when I am guilty of nothing but sending some
fireworks to entertain the Court, instead of a concert of music?”</p>
<p>“And the dwarf, who came so unexpectedly out of the bass-viol——”</p>
<p>“Was a masking device of my own, Chiffinch,” said the Duke, though the
circumstance was then first known to him. “Chiffinch, you will bind me for
ever, if you will permit me to have a minute’s conversation with
Christian.”</p>
<p>“With Christian, my lord?—Where could you find him?—You are
aware we must go straight to the Court.”</p>
<p>“True,” said the Duke, “but I think I cannot miss finding him; and you,
Master Chiffinch, are no officer, and have no warrant either to detain me
prisoner, or prevent my speaking to whom I please.”</p>
<p>Chiffinch replied, “My Lord Duke, your genius is so great, and your
escapes so numerous, that it will be from no wish of my own if I am forced
to hurt a man so skilful and so popular.”</p>
<p>“Nay, then, there is life in it yet,” said the Duke, and whistled; when,
from beside the little cutler’s booth, with which the reader is
acquainted, appeared, suddenly, Master Christian, and was in a moment at
the side of the coach. “<i>Ganz ist verloren</i>,” said the Duke.</p>
<p>“I know it,” said Christian; “and all our godly friends are dispersed upon
the news. Luckily the Colonel and these German rascals gave a hint. All is
safe—You go to Court—Hark ye, I will follow.”</p>
<p>“You, Christian? that would be more friendly than wise.”</p>
<p>“Why, what is there against me?” said Christian. “I am innocent as the
child unborn—so is your Grace. There is but one creature who can
bear witness to our guilt; but I trust to bring her on the stage in our
favour—besides, if I were not, I should presently be sent for.”</p>
<p>“The familiar of whom I have heard you speak, I warrant?”</p>
<p>“Hark in your ear again.”</p>
<p>“I understand,” said the Duke, “and will delay Master Chiffinch,—for
he, you must know, is my conductor,—no longer.—Well,
Chiffinch, let them drive on.—<i>Vogue la Galère!</i>” he exclaimed,
as the carriage went onward; “I have sailed through worse perils than this
yet.”</p>
<p>“It is not for me to judge,” said Chiffinch; “your Grace is a bold
commander; and Christian hath the cunning of the devil for a pilot; but——However,
I remain your Grace’s poor friend, and will heartily rejoice in your
extrication.”</p>
<p>“Give me a proof of your friendship,” said the Duke. “Tell me what you
know of Christian’s familiar, as he calls her.”</p>
<p>“I believe it to be the same dancing wench who came with Empson to my
house on the morning that Mistress Alice made her escape from us. But you
have seen her, my lord?”</p>
<p>“I?” said the Duke; “when did I see her?”</p>
<p>“She was employed by Christian, I believe, to set his niece at liberty,
when he found himself obliged to gratify his fanatical brother-in-law, by
restoring his child; besides being prompted by a private desire, as I
think, of bantering your Grace.”</p>
<p>“Umph! I suspected so much. I will repay it,” said the Duke. “But first to
get out of this dilemma.—That little Numidian witch, then, was his
familiar; and she joined in the plot to tantalise me?—But here we
reach Whitehall.—Now, Chiffinch, be no worse than thy word, and—now,
Buckingham, be thyself!”</p>
<p>But ere we follow Buckingham into the presence, where he had so difficult
a part to sustain, it may not be amiss to follow Christian after his brief
conversation with him. On re-entering the house, which he did by a
circuitous passage, leading from a distant alley, and through several
courts, Christian hastened to a low matted apartment, in which Bridgenorth
sat alone, reading the Bible by the light of a small brazen lamp, with the
utmost serenity of countenance.</p>
<p>“Have you dismissed the Peverils?” said Christian hastily.</p>
<p>“I have,” said the Major.</p>
<p>“And upon what pledge—that they will not carry information against
you to Whitehall?”</p>
<p>“They gave me their promise voluntarily, when I showed them our armed
friends were dismissed. To-morrow, I believe, it is their purpose to lodge
informations.”</p>
<p>“And why not to-night, I pray you?” said Christian.</p>
<p>“Because they allow us that time for escape.”</p>
<p>“Why, then, do you not avail yourself of it? Wherefore are you here?” said
Christian.</p>
<p>“Nay, rather, why do <i>you</i> not fly?” said Bridgenorth. “Of a surety,
you are as deeply engaged as I.”</p>
<p>“Brother Bridgenorth, I am the fox, who knows a hundred modes of deceiving
the hounds; you are the deer, whose sole resource is in hasty flight.
Therefore lose no time—begone to the country—or rather,
Zedekiah Fish’s vessel, the <i>Good Hope</i>, lies in the river, bound for
Massachusetts—take the wings of the morning, and begone—she
can fall down to Gravesend with the tide.”</p>
<p>“And leave to thee, brother Christian,” said Bridgenorth, “the charge of
my fortune and my daughter? No, brother; my opinion of your good faith
must be re-established ere I again trust thee.”</p>
<p>“Go thy ways, then, for a suspicious fool,” said Christian, suppressing
his strong desire to use language more offensive; “or rather stay where
thou art, and take thy chance of the gallows!”</p>
<p>“It is appointed to all men to die once,” said Bridgenorth; “my life hath
been a living death. My fairest boughs have been stripped by the axe of
the forester—that which survives must, if it shall blossom, be
grafted elsewhere, and at a distance from my aged trunk. The sooner, then,
the root feels the axe, the stroke is more welcome. I had been pleased,
indeed, had I been called to bringing yonder licentious Court to a purer
character, and relieving the yoke of the suffering people of God. That
youth too—son to that precious woman, to whom I owe the last tie
that feebly links my wearied spirit to humanity—could I have
travailed with <i>him</i> in the good cause!—But that, with all my
other hopes is broken for ever; and since I am not worthy to be an
instrument in so great a work, I have little desire to abide longer in
this vale of sorrow.”</p>
<p>“Farewell, then, desponding fool!” said Christian, unable, with all his
calmness, any longer to suppress his contempt for the resigned and
hopeless predestinarian. “That fate should have clogged me with such
confederates!” he muttered, as he left the apartment—“this bigoted
fool is now nearly irreclaimable—I must to Zarah; for she, or no
one, must carry us through these straits. If I can but soothe her sullen
temper, and excite her vanity to action,—betwixt her address, the
King’s partiality for the Duke, Buckingham’s matchless effrontery, and my
own hand upon the helm, we may yet weather the tempest that darkens around
us. But what we do must be hastily done.”</p>
<p>In another apartment he found the person he sought—the same who
visited the Duke of Buckingham’s harem, and, having relieved Alice
Bridgenorth from her confinement there, had occupied her place as has been
already narrated, or rather intimated. She was now much more plainly
attired than when she had tantalised the Duke with her presence; but her
dress had still something of the Oriental character, which corresponded
with the dark complexion and quick eye of the wearer. She had the kerchief
at her eyes as Christian entered the apartment, but suddenly withdrew it,
and, flashing on him a glance of scorn and indignation, asked him what he
meant by intruding where his company was alike unsought for and undesired.</p>
<p>“A proper question,” said Christian, “from a slave to her master!”</p>
<p>“Rather, say, a proper question, and of all questions the most proper,
from a mistress to her slave! Know you not, that from the hour in which
you discovered your ineffable baseness, you have made me mistress of your
lot? While you seemed but a demon of vengeance, you commanded terror, and
to good purpose; but such a foul fiend as thou hast of late shown thyself—such
a very worthless, base trickster of the devil—such a sordid
grovelling imp of perdition, can gain nothing but scorn from a soul like
mine.”</p>
<p>“Gallantly mouthed,” said Christian, “and with good emphasis.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Zarah, “I can speak—sometimes—I can also be
mute; and that no one knows better than thou.”</p>
<p>“Thou art a spoiled child, Zarah, and dost but abuse the indulgence I
entertain for your freakish humour,” replied Christian; “thy wits have
been disturbed since ever you landed in England, and all for the sake of
one who cares for thee no more than for the most worthless object who
walks the streets, amongst whom he left you to engage in a brawl for one
he loved better.”</p>
<p>“It is no matter,” said Zarah, obviously repressing very bitter emotion;
“it signifies not that he loves another better; there is none—no,
none—that ever did, or can, love him so well.”</p>
<p>“I pity you, Zarah!” said Christian, with some scorn.</p>
<p>“I deserve your pity,” she replied, “were your pity worth my accepting.
Whom have I to thank for my wretchedness but you?—You bred me up in
thirst of vengeance, ere I knew that good and evil were anything better
than names;—to gain your applause, and to gratify the vanity you had
excited, I have for years undergone a penance, from which a thousand would
have shrunk.”</p>
<p>“A thousand, Zarah!” answered Christian; “ay, a hundred thousand, and a
million to boot; the creature is not on earth, being mere mortal woman,
that would have undergone the thirtieth part of thy self-denial.”</p>
<p>“I believe it,” said Zarah, drawing up her slight but elegant figure; “I
believe it—I have gone through a trial that few indeed could have
sustained. I have renounced the dear intercourse of my kind; compelled my
tongue only to utter, like that of a spy, the knowledge which my ear had
only collected as a base eavesdropper. This I have done for years—for
years—and all for the sake of your private applause—and the
hope of vengeance on a woman, who, if she did ill in murdering my father,
has been bitterly repaid by nourishing a serpent in her bosom, that had
the tooth, but not the deafened ear, of the adder.”</p>
<p>“Well—well—well,” reiterated Christian; “and had you not your
reward in my approbation—in the consequences of your own unequalled
dexterity—by which, superior to anything of thy sex that history has
ever known, you endured what woman never before endured, insolence without
notice, admiration without answer, and sarcasm without reply?”</p>
<p>“Not without reply!” said Zarah fiercely. “Gave not Nature to my feelings
a course of expression more impressive than words? and did not those
tremble at my shrieks, who would have little minded my entreaties or my
complaints? And my proud lady, who sauced her charities with the taunts
she thought I heard not—she was justly paid by the passing her
dearest and most secret concerns into the hands of her mortal enemy; and
the vain Earl—yet he was a thing as insignificant as the plume that
nodded in his cap;—and the maidens and ladies who taunted me—I
had, or can easily have, my revenge upon them. But there is <i>one</i>,”
she added, looking upward, “who never taunted me; one whose generous
feelings could treat the poor dumb girl even as his sister; who never
spoke word of her but was to excuse or defend—and you tell me I must
not love him, and that it is madness to love him!—I <i>will</i> be
mad then, for I will love till the latest breath of my life!”</p>
<p>“Think but an instant, silly girl—silly but in one respect, since in
all others thou mayest brave the world of women. Think what I have
proposed to thee, for the loss of this hopeless affection, a career so
brilliant!—Think only that it rests with thyself to be the wife—the
wedded wife—of the princely Buckingham! With my talents—with
thy wit and beauty—with his passionate love of these attributes—a
short space might rank you among England’s princesses.—Be but guided
by me—he is now at deadly pass—needs every assistance to
retrieve his fortunes—above all, that which we alone can render him.
Put yourself under my conduct, and not fate itself shall prevent your
wearing a Duchess’s coronet.”</p>
<p>“A coronet of thistle-down, entwined with thistle-leaves,” said Zarah.—“I
know not a slighter thing than your Buckingham! I saw him at your request—saw
him when, as a man, he should have shown himself generous and noble—I
stood the proof at your desire, for I laugh at those dangers from which
the poor blushing wailers of my sex shrink and withdraw themselves. What
did I find him?—a poor wavering voluptuary—his nearest attempt
to passion like the fire on a wretched stubble-field, that may singe,
indeed, or smoke, but can neither warm nor devour. Christian! were his
coronet at my feet this moment, I would sooner take up a crown of gilded
gingerbread, than extend my hand to raise it.”</p>
<p>“You are mad, Zarah—with all your taste and talent, you are utterly
mad! But let Buckingham pass—Do you owe <i>me</i> nothing on this
emergency?—Nothing to one who rescued you from the cruelty of your
owner, the posture-master, to place you in ease and affluence?”</p>
<p>“Christian,” she replied, “I owe you much. Had I not felt I did so, I
would, as I have been often tempted to do, have denounced thee to the
fierce Countess, who would have gibbeted you on her feudal walls of Castle
Rushin, and bid your family seek redress from the eagles, that would long
since have thatched their nest with your hair, and fed their young ospreys
with your flesh.”</p>
<p>“I am truly glad you have had so much forbearance for me,” answered
Christian.</p>
<p>“I have it, in truth and in sincerity,” replied Zarah—“Not for your
benefits to me—such as they were, they were every one interested,
and conferred from the most selfish considerations. I have overpaid them a
thousand times by the devotion to your will, which I have displayed at the
greatest personal risk. But till of late I respected your powers of mind—your
inimitable command of passion—the force of intellect which I have
ever seen you exercise over all others, from the bigot Bridgenorth to the
debauched Buckingham—in that, indeed, I have recognised my master.”</p>
<p>“And those powers,” said Christian, “are unlimited as ever; and with thy
assistance, thou shalt see the strongest meshes that the laws of civil
society ever wove to limit the natural dignity of man, broke asunder like
a spider’s web.”</p>
<p>She paused and answered, “While a noble motive fired thee—ay, a
noble motive, though irregular—for I was born to gaze on the sun
which the pale daughters of Europe shrink from—I could serve thee—I
could have followed, while revenge or ambition had guided thee—but
love of <i>wealth</i>, and by what means acquired!—What sympathy can
I hold with that?—Wouldst thou not have pandered to the lust of the
King, though the object was thine own orphan niece?—You smile?—Smile
again when I ask you whether you meant not my own prostitution, when you
charged me to remain in the house of that wretched Buckingham?—Smile
at that question, and by Heaven, I stab you to the heart!” And she thrust
her hand into her bosom, and partly showed the hilt of a small poniard.</p>
<p>“And if I smile,” said Christian, “it is but in scorn of so odious an
accusation. Girl, I will not tell thee the reason, but there exists not on
earth the living thing over whose safety and honour I would keep watch as
over thine. Buckingham’s wife, indeed, I wished thee; and through thy own
beauty and thy wit, I doubted not to bring the match to pass.”</p>
<p>“Vain flatterer,” said Zarah, yet seeming soothed even by the flattery
which she scoffed at, “you would persuade me that it was honourable love
which you expected the Duke was to have offered me. How durst you urge a
gross a deception, to which time, place, and circumstance gave the lie?—How
dare you now again mention it, when you well know, that at the time you
mention, the Duchess was still in life?”</p>
<p>“In life, but on her deathbed,” said Christian; “and for time, place, and
circumstance, had your virtue, my Zarah, depended on these, how couldst
thou have been the creature thou art? I knew thee all-sufficient to bid
him defiance—else—for thou art dearer to me than thou thinkest—I
had not risked thee to win the Duke of Buckingham; ay, and the kingdom of
England to boot. So now, wilt thou be ruled and go on with me?”</p>
<p>Zarah, or Fenella, for our readers must have been long aware of the
identity of these two personages, cast down her eyes, and was silent for a
long time. “Christian,” she said at last, in a solemn voice, “if my ideas
of right and of wrong be wild and incoherent, I owe it, first, to the wild
fever which my native sun communicated to my veins; next, to my childhood,
trained amidst the shifts, tricks, and feats of jugglers and mountebanks;
and then, to a youth of fraud and deception, through the course thou didst
prescribe me, in which I might, indeed, hear everything, but communicate
with no one. The last cause of my wild errors, if such they are,
originates, O Christian, with you alone; by whose intrigues I was placed
with yonder lady, and who taught me, that to revenge my father’s death,
was my first great duty on earth, and that I was bound by nature to hate
and injure her by whom I was fed and fostered, though as she would have
fed and caressed a dog, or any other mute animal. I also think—for I
will deal fairly with you—that you had not so easily detected your
niece, in the child whose surprising agility was making yonder brutal
mountebank’s fortune; nor so readily induced him to part with his
bond-slave, had you not, for your own purposes, placed me under his
charge, and reserved the privilege of claiming me when you pleased. I
could not, under any other tuition, have identified myself with the
personage of a mute, which it has been your desire that I should perform
through life.”</p>
<p>“You do me injustice, Zarah,” said Christian—“I found you capable of
the avenging of your father’s death—I consecrated you to it, as I
consecrated my own life and hopes; and you held the duty sacred, till
these mad feeling towards a youth who loves your cousin——”</p>
<p>“Who—loves—my—cousin,” repeated Zarah (for we will
continue to call her by her real name) slowly, and as if the words dropped
unconsciously from her lips. “Well—be it so!—Man of many
wiles, I will follow thy course for a little, a very little farther; but
take heed—tease me not with remonstrances against the treasure of my
secret thoughts—I mean my most hopeless affection to Julian Peveril—and
bring me not as an assistant to any snare which you may design to cast
around him. You and your Duke shall rue the hour most bitterly, in which
you provoke me. You may suppose you have me in your power; but remember,
the snakes of my burning climate are never so fatal as when you grasp
them.”</p>
<p>“I care not for these Peverils,” said Christian—“I care not for
their fate a poor straw, unless where it bears on that of the destined
woman, whose hands are red in your father’s blood. Believe me, I can
divide her fate and theirs. I will explain to you how. And for the Duke,
he may pass among men of the town for wit, and among soldiers for valour,
among courtiers for manners and for form; and why, with his high rank and
immense fortune, you should throw away an opportunity, which, as I could
now improve it——”</p>
<p>“Speak not of it,” said Zarah, “if thou wouldst have our truce—remember
it is no peace—if, I say, thou wouldst have our truce grow to be an
hour old!”</p>
<p>“This, then,” said Christian, with a last effort to work upon the vanity
of this singular being, “is she who pretended such superiority to human
passion, that she could walk indifferently and unmoved through the halls
of the prosperous, and the prison cells of the captive, unknowing and
unknown, sympathising neither with the pleasures of the one, nor the woes
of the other, but advancing with sure, though silent steps, her own plans,
in despite and regardless of either!”</p>
<p>“My own plans!” said Zarah—“<i>Thy</i> plans, Christian—thy
plans of extorting from the surprised prisoners, means whereby to convict
them—thine own plans, formed with those more powerful than thyself,
to sound men’s secrets, and, by using them as a matter of accusation, to
keep up the great delusion of the nation.”</p>
<p>“Such access was indeed given you as my agent,” said Christian, “and for
advancing a great national change. But how did you use it?—to
advance your insane passion.”</p>
<p>“Insane!” said Zarah—“Had he been less than insane whom I addressed,
he and I had ere now been far from the toils which you have pitched for us
both. I had means prepared for everything; and ere this, the shores of
Britain had been lost to our sight for ever.”</p>
<p>“The dwarf, too,” said Christian—“Was it worthy of you to delude
that poor creature with flattering visions—lull him asleep with
drugs! Was <i>that</i> my doing?”</p>
<p>“He was my destined tool,” said Zarah haughtily. “I remembered your
lessons too well not to use him as such. Yet scorn him not too much. I
tell you, that yon very miserable dwarf, whom I made my sport in the
prison—yon wretched abortion of nature, I would select for a
husband, ere I would marry your Buckingham;—the vain and imbecile
pigmy has yet the warm heart and noble feelings, that a man should hold
his highest honour.”</p>
<p>“In God’s name, then, take your own way,” said Christian; “and, for my
sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her tongue,
since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the privilege of
her own will. Who would have thought it? But the colt has slipped the
bridle, and I must needs follow, since I cannot guide her.”</p>
<p>Our narrative returns to the Court of King Charles at Whitehall.</p>
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