<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> <br/><br/> THE<br/> <br/> ROYAL REGIMENT<br/> </h1>
<p class="t3">
AND<br/>
<br/>
OTHER NOVELETTES<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3b">
BY<br/></p>
<p class="t2">
JAMES GRANT<br/></p>
<p class="t4">
AUTHOR OF "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE LORD HERMITAGE,"<br/>
"VERE OF OURS," ETC.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3">
LONDON<br/>
GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS, LIMITED<br/>
BROADWAY, LUDGATE HILL<br/>
GLASGOW, MANCHESTER, AND NEW YORK<br/>
<br/>
1879<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t2">
LONDON:<br/>
BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LIMD., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3b">
JAMES GRANT'S NOVELS.<br/></p>
<p class="t3">
<i>Price 2s. each. Fancy Boards.</i><br/></p>
<p>THE ROMANCE OF WAR.<br/>
THE AIDE-DE-CAMP.<br/>
THE SCOTTISH CAVALIER.<br/>
BOTHWELL.<br/>
JANE SETON: OR, THE QUEEN'S ADVOCATE.<br/>
PHILIP ROLLO.<br/>
THE BLACK WATCH.<br/>
MARY OF LORRAINE.<br/>
OLIVER ELLIS; OR, THE FUSILEERS.<br/>
LUCY ARDEN: OR, HOLLYWOOD HALL.<br/>
FRANK HILTON: OR, THE QUEEN'S OWN.<br/>
THE YELLOW FRIGATE.<br/>
HARRY OGILVIE; OR, THE BLACK DRAGOONS.<br/>
ARTHUR BLANE.<br/>
LAURA EVERINGHAM; OR, THE HIGHLANDERS OF GLENORA.<br/>
THE CAPTAIN OF THE GUARD.<br/>
LETTY HYDE'S LOVERS.<br/>
CAVALIERS OF FORTUNE.<br/>
SECOND TO NONE.<br/>
THE CONSTABLE OF FRANCE.<br/>
THE PHANTOM REGIMENT.<br/>
THE KING'S OWN BORDERERS.<br/>
THE WHITE COCKADE.<br/>
FIRST LOVE AND LAST LOVE.<br/>
DICK ROONEY.<br/>
THE GIRL HE MARRIED.<br/>
LADY WEDDERBURN'S WISH.<br/>
JACK MANLY.<br/>
ONLY AN ENSIGN.<br/>
ADVENTURES OF ROB ROY.<br/>
UNDER THE RED DRAGON.<br/>
THE QUEEN'S CADET.<br/>
SHALL I WIN HER?<br/>
FAIRER THAN A FAIRY.<br/>
ONE OF THE SIX HUNDRED.<br/>
MORLEY ASHTON.<br/>
DID SHE LOVE HIM?<br/>
THE ROSS-SHIRE BUFFS.<br/>
SIX YEARS AGO.<br/>
VERE OF OURS.<br/>
THE LORD HERMITAGE.<br/>
THE ROYAL REGIMENT.<br/>
THE DUKE OF ALBANY'S OWN HIGHLANDERS.<br/>
THE CAMERONIANS.<br/>
THE DEAD TRYST.<br/>
THE SCOT'S BRIGADE.<br/>
VIOLET JERMYN.<br/>
JACK CHALONER.<br/>
MISS CHEYNE OF ESSILMONT.<br/>
THE ROYAL HIGHLANDERS.<br/>
COLVILLE OF THE GUARDS.<br/>
DULCIE CARLYON.<br/>
PLAYING WITH FIRE.<br/>
DERVAL HAMPTON.<br/>
LOVE'S LABOUR WON.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3b">
CONTENTS.</p>
<p class="t3b">
THE ROYAL REGIMENT.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER I.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0101">
THE RUTHVENS OF ARDGOWRIE</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER II.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0102">
THE FATAL DAY OF THE RUTHVENS</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER III.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0103">
THE CABINET OF SCINDIA</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER IV.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0104">
"PONTIUS PILATE'S GUARDS"</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER V.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0105">
AURELIA DARNEL</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER VI.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0106">
COLONEL SMASH</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER VII.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0107">
"LOVE WAS YET THE LORD OF ALL"</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER VIII.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0108">
THE INSURRECTION</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER IX.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0109">
THE ABDUCTION OF AURELIA</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER X.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0110">
THE END GROWING NEAR</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER XI.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0111">
ST. EUSTACHE STORMED</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER XII.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0112">
CONCLUSION</SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap02">
THE SECRET MARRIAGE</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap03">
THE STUDENT'S STORY</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap04">
CLARE THORNE'S TEMPTATION</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap05">
THE GREAT SEA SERPENT</SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3b">
MILITARY "FOLK LORE."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER I.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0601">
THE RED COAT; A FEW NOTES CONCERNING ITS ORIGIN AND HISTORY</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER II.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0602">
FURTHER NOTES ON ITS HISTORY AND ON REGIMENTALS</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER III.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0603">
FAMOUS AND ANCIENT BANNERS</SPAN></p>
<p class="t3">
CHAPTER IV.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap0604">
FAMOUS AND ANCIENT CANNON</SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap07">
STORY OF A MERCHANT CAPTAIN</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap08">
THE STORY OF RENÉE OF ANGERS</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap09">
ANNA SCHONLEBEN</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#chap10">
LAURA WENLOCK'S CHRISTMAS EVE</SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0101"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE ROYAL REGIMENT. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> CHAPTER I. <br/><br/> THE RUTHVENS OF ARDGOWRIE. </h3>
<p>"Thank Heaven, then I am not too late!"
exclaimed Roland Ruthven, as he sprung on the horse
that awaited him at the door of the hotel where he had
arrived but an hour before; "there is no message for
me specially?"</p>
<p>"None, sir," said the mounted groom, touching his
hat, and shortening his gathered reins.</p>
<p>"My father——"</p>
<p>"Is living still, Master Roland; but that is all, I
fear," replied the old man, with a sigh.</p>
<p>"Come on then, Buckle, old fellow; I think the grey
nag knows my voice, though I have not been on his
back for four years."</p>
<p>And spurring his horse, "Master Roland," as the
grey-haired groom still called him, though he was nearer
thirty than twenty years of age, and had held Her
Majesty's commission for ten of them, departed at a
rasping pace that soon left the stately streets, the spires
and shipping of Aberdeen far behind them.</p>
<p>The royal residence at Balmoral had barely as yet
been thought of, and railways had not then penetrated
into the valley of the Dee; thus, all anxious as Roland
Ruthven was to learn details of the perilous illness of
the fine old soldier his father—the only kinsman he
had in the world—at whose summons he had crossed
two thousand miles and more of sea, he could only trust
now to the speed of his horse, and without further
questioning old Bob Buckle the groom, rode at a hard
and furious gallop along the old familiar ways that led
towards his home among the mountains, behind which
the bright sun of a glorious evening—one of the last in
June—was sinking.</p>
<p>Closely rode the old groom behind him, marvelling to
find that the little golden-haired boy, whom he had first
trained to ride a shaggy Shetlander, had now become a
dark-whiskered, tall, and handsome man, well set up by
infantry drill, and with all that air and bearing which
our officers, beyond those of all other European armies,
alone acquire, developed in chest and muscle by every
manly sport; and he could recall, but with a sigh, how
like "Master Roland" was now, to what the old dying
Laird his father had been at the same age, when his
regiment, the Royal Scots, was adding to its honours in
the Peninsula—more years ago than he cared to
reckon now.</p>
<p>And vividly in fancy too, did Roland Ruthven see
before him the figure and face of that handsome old
man, ere the latter became lined with care and thoughts
and even his voice seemed to come distinctly to his ear,
as the familiar objects of the well-remembered scenery
came to view in quick succession, and at last Ardgowrie,
the home of his family, rose before him in the distance,
its strong walls shining redly in the setting sun.</p>
<p>Situated among luxuriant woods, in all their summer
greenery, Ardgowrie presents the elements common to
most of the northern mansions of the same age and
kind—a multitude of crow-stepped gables encrusted
with coats of arms, conical turrets, and angular dormer
windows, giving a general effect extremely rich and
picturesque, as their outlines cut the deep blue of the
sky.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding its age, Ardgowrie is unconnected
with the usual memories of crime and violence which
form the general history of an old Scottish feudal
fortalice, and yet it stands in the glorious valley of the
Dee, between the central highlands and the fruitful
lowlands, where in former ages it has been said "that the
inhabitants of the two districts, thus joined by a common
highway, were as unlike each other in language, manners
and character as the French and the Germans, or the
Arabs and the Caffres."</p>
<p>"At last!" exclaimed Roland, with a sigh of satisfaction,
as he spurred his horse down a long and rather
gloomy avenue of genuine old Scottish firs, dignified
and magnificent trees, with massive trunks of dusky
red, and foliage of bronze-like hue. "Ardgowrie at
last!" he added, as he reined up at the stately entrance
of his home, for to this moment had he looked forward
with intense anxiety during the long voyage from
America, while his affectionate heart had beat
responsive to every throb of the mighty engines of the
great Atlantic steamer.</p>
<p><i>Home!</i> How much does that word contain to the exile
or the wanderer! "What a feeling does that simple
word convey to his ears, who knows really the blessings
of a home," says an Irish writer, who found his grave
in a far and foreign land; "that shelter from the world,
its jealousies and its envies, its turmoils and
disappointments, where like some land-locked bay the still,
calm waters sleep in silence, while the storm and
hurricanes are roaring without."</p>
<p>The sound of hoofs in the avenue brought a number
of domestics to welcome him home in the kindly old
Scottish way, and he had to shake hands with all,
especially with Gavin Runlet, the white-haired butler, Elspat
Gorm, the old Highland housekeeper, who had donned
her best black silk, with the whitest of "mutches," in
honour of the occasion: and then, too, came, though
last, certainly not the least in his own estimation, with
eyes keen as those of an eagle, and massive red beard,
a thick-set sturdy figure, and bare limbs brown and
hairy as those of a mountain deer, the family piper,
Aulay Macaulay, whose boast it was that he came of the
Macaulays of Ardencaple, and was a worthier scion of
the clan than the historian of the same name.</p>
<p>Aulay had his pipes under his left arm, but no note of
triumph or salute could come from them, when the
Laird was in his dire extremity, and a great hush
seemed over all the household. He had been a piper
of the Royal Scots during the campaign in Burmah, and,
like Bob Buckle and several others of the grand old
regiment, had found a home with their loved Colonel
at Ardgowrie.</p>
<p>"Well, Elspat, old friend," said Roland, as he leaped
from his foam-flecked horse and tossed the reins to Bob
Buckle, "how is my father to-night?"</p>
<p>"The doctor will tell you better than I," replied the
old domestic, quietly, and with bated voice; "he has,
thank Heaven, fallen asleep after a restless day, and, as
sleep is like life to him——"</p>
<p>"Let him not be disturbed. I shall see him when he
wakens," said Roland, as the servants fell back at his
approach, and the butler and housekeeper led the
way to the dining-room, where a repast awaited him,
and at which they attended upon him in all the fussiness
of affection and reverence as the future head of the
house.</p>
<p>"Ewhow! but I am glad to see you here again,
Master Roland," exclaimed Elspat, with whom we need
not trouble the reader much. "Ewhow!" she continued,
stroking his thick dark brown hair, as she had
been wont to do in his boyhood, "we have had an eerie
time o't wi' the Laird in his illness, and last night I
thought the worst was close at hand."</p>
<p>"Why, Elspat? why?" asked Roland, pausing over
the liver wing of a chicken, while Runlet filled his glass
with sparkling Moselle.</p>
<p>"Because the dogs in the kennel howled fearfully."</p>
<p>"Where was the keeper?"</p>
<p>"A' the keepers in the world wouldna quiet them!"
she replied, shaking her old head.</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Dogs can see and ken when death enters a house."</p>
<p>"Death!—is my father's case so bad?" asked Roland,
growing very pale, and setting down his glass.</p>
<p>"Bad—it couldna weel be worse," said she, in a
broken voice, as she began to weep; "but the doctor—"</p>
<p>"Is in the house, I understand. Tell him that I am
here. Oh, Elspat, have I crossed the broad Atlantic
only to face death and sorrow?"</p>
<p>"Death and sorrow!" she added, shaking her head,
"and I dread the fifth of August—it has aye been a
fatal day to the Ruthvens. It was on that day your
lady mother died, and on that day your uncle Philip,
that should have been Laird, went forth and returned no
more!"</p>
<p>Roland started impatiently to his feet, and something
of a disdainful smile crossed his handsome face.</p>
<p>There is something grand and noble in the position
of such a young man as he was—the descendant and
representative of a long line of stainless ancestry, having
the sense of carrying out its destiny in the future, and
being the transmitter to other times and generations of
its lofty traits and distinction.</p>
<p>No gamblers, "legs," or turf transactions ever
degraded the line of Ardgowrie (pigeons there may have
been, but never hawks), which, in a collateral branch,
represented the attainted Earls of Gowrie and Lords of
Ruthven, and if Roland had any weakness it was family
pride, which he inherited from his father, who had left
nothing undone to develop it; and with it grew the
idea and conviction, that death were better than for a
Ruthven to do aught that was dishonourable.</p>
<p>The second article of Roland's faith, like that of his
father, was a profound veneration for the old Royal
Scots, in which so many of the Ruthvens had lived and
died, that they deemed it quite a family regiment, and
many knew of no home out of it, and many, too, in
battle or otherwise, had found their graves under its
colours in all parts of the world.</p>
<p>As his father's son, Roland was a favourite with both
battalions of the Royal Regiment, and he was the life
and soul of the mess, and the most popular man in it.</p>
<p>In friendly rivalry with his chief chum and
brother-sub, Hector Logan, of Loganbraes and that ilk (of
whom more anon), he was the "show man" of the
Royals. None occupied the box-seat of the regimental
drag, or tooled the team to race-meetings or elsewhere,
in a better style than Roland; in the cricket field, when
stumps were down, and the runs were growing few, his
batting and bowling were the last hope of the regimental
eleven; and at hurdle-racing or steeple-chasing he was
ever ready to ride any man's horse, however desperate
the leaps or wild the animal, if he had not entered one
for himself. Moreover, his good figure and social
qualities, his known wealth and high spirit, made him
a prime favourite with the other sex wherever the
regiment went, and none could see any man's wife or
daughter more adroitly or gracefully through a crush
at the Opera, or anywhere else, than Roland Ruthven of
the Royal Scots.</p>
<p>In all this he was exactly what his proud old father
had been before him; but the latter indulged in
aspirations that never occurred to Roland.</p>
<p>That even at this remote time Queen Victoria might
restore the earldom of Gowrie to his family after the
lapse of two hundred and forty years, had been the
dearest hope of the old Colonel's life, especially in his
latter years. It was a child's whim; yet other titles,
such as Mar, Perth, and Kellie, had been restored, he
was wont to say.</p>
<p>With all his long service he had failed to win great
laurels as an officer, and now his hopes were centred
on his only son; but as yet the fields of the Crimea had
not been fought, and great wars seemed to have become
things of the past.</p>
<p>Though ever kind, loving, and affectionate to Roland,
the latter found that in his latter years his father had
become somewhat of a stern, moody, and morose man,
almost repellant to his county neighbours, whom as
years went on he seemed to avoid more and more, and
of this peculiarity Roland was thinking as the doctor, a
spruce and dapper little personage, entered with his
professional smile, and warmly welcomed him home,
adding,—</p>
<p>"I have but to deplore the occasion of it, my dear sir."</p>
<p>"But what is his ailment, doctor?"</p>
<p>"I can scarcely say—it seems to be a general break
up of the whole system."</p>
<p>"At his years that can scarcely be."</p>
<p>"He has been sorely changed since you were last at
Ardgowrie, my dear sir; and there seems—there
seems——"</p>
<p>The doctor paused, and played nervously with his
watch-chain.</p>
<p>"There seems what?" asked Roland, bluntly.</p>
<p>"Something that I scarcely like to hint at."</p>
<p>"How, sir?"</p>
<p>"Well, if you will pardon my saying so, he seems to
suffer more from illness of the mind than of the body."</p>
<p>"Of the mind?" asked Roland, haughtily.</p>
<p>"Yes; as if some secret preyed upon him. I have
watched him closely from time to time, for the last few
years, and such, my dear sir, is my firm conviction."</p>
<p>"Your idea seems to me incomprehensible, doctor."</p>
<p>"There is a skeleton in every house," said the other
with a simper.</p>
<p>"Sir, you forget yourself," exclaimed Roland, with
haughty surprise. "What skeleton could be in ours?"</p>
<p>"Pardon me—I used but a proverb. Your father is
awake now," he added, as a distant bell rang. And
Roland, considerably agitated and ruffled by what had
passed, repaired at once to the sick chamber.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0102"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER II. <br/><br/> THE FATAL DAY OF THE RUTHVENS. </h3>
<p>The affectionate and filial heart of Roland was wrung
by the wan and haggard aspect of his father, who
looked as grim and pale as that other Patrick Ruthven,
whose ghastly visage in his helmet had so appalled the
luckless Mary on the night that Rizzio was slain; but
the old man's eyes brightened, his colour came back for
a time, and his strength even seemed to rally as his son
embraced him.</p>
<p>"You have lost no time in attending my summons,
Roland," said he, retaining the latter's hand within his
own.</p>
<p>"I left Montreal by the first steamer, my dear
father, but I got away with difficulty."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"A revolt among the colonists is daily expected; but
when I mentioned your illness, the Colonel at once
obtained leave for me from the General at Halifax."</p>
<p>"Dear old Geordie Wetherall! I remember him a
sub in his first red coat, when we were ensigns together,
in the "rookery," as we called it, in Edinburgh
Castle. Ah, few of the Royals of that day are surviving
now. They have nearly all gone before me to the
Land o' the Leal! But in fancy I can see them all yet."</p>
<p>Then, though ailing nigh unto death, true to his old
instincts, almost the first questions he asked of Roland
were about their old regiment, its strength and
appearance, of the officers and rank and file; and then he
sighed again, to think that none remembered him save
old Geordie Wetherall, a veteran of the conquest of
Java; and all these questions Roland had to answer,
ere he could lure his father to speak of himself, and
when the latter did so, his spirit fell, his colour faded,
and the momentary lustre died out of his eyes, though
the glassy glare of illness still remained.</p>
<p>"I hope the alleged danger of this mysterious illness
is exaggerated," said Roland, tenderly and anxiously;
"and that ere I return to the regiment, I shall see you
well and strong—ay, perhaps taking your fences as of
old with Bob Buckle at your back."</p>
<p>The old Laird of Ardgowrie smiled sadly, and turned
restlessly on his pillow—and a handsome man he was,
even in age, with a wonderful likeness to his son,
having the same straight nose and mouth clean cut and
chiselled, "the prerogative of the highly born," as
Lever has it—for Patrick Ruthven belonged to the
untitled noblesse of Scotland, the lineage of some of whom
stretches far back into the shadowy past.</p>
<p>"I am lying in my last bed save one, Roland," said
the sufferer, in low concentrated voice; "we have not
all died in our beds, we Ruthvens of that ilk, but it
shall be said that all have died with honour except——"</p>
<p>"Except <i>who</i>, father?"</p>
<p>The old man trembled as if with ague, and closed his
eyes, as he said hoarsely—</p>
<p>"I cannot tell you—in time you will know all!"</p>
<p>"You have been a good soldier to the Queen, father."</p>
<p>"But a bad servant to her Master."</p>
<p>"Do not speak thus!" said Roland, imploringly.</p>
<p>"The heart knoweth its own bitterness; and I have
been bad, evil, wicked—false!"</p>
<p>"This is some fancy."</p>
<p>"It is <i>not</i>!" said Patrick Ruthven, emphatically.</p>
<p>"Then can I make amends?"</p>
<p>"You may, if it is not too late, my poor Roland.
Oh, my God!"</p>
<p>These mysterious words filled the listener with
genuine grief and alarm. Was it all some hallucination?
What did they import or refer to? For much
in his father's moody and wayward life, in his latter
years especially, seemed to corroborate them, and to
hint that there was "a skeleton in the house," as the
doctor had ventured to say.</p>
<p>"I will have no clergyman about me," said the
sufferer, petulantly and almost passionately, in reply to
some remark of Roland's.</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"I hope to make my peace with God alone. The
Reverend Ephraim Howie, to whom I gave the living
of Ardgowrie! What can he, or such as he, do for
me now?"</p>
<p>"Oh, father!"</p>
<p>"No one ever prospered who grew rich by fraud, it
has been said—yet have I, in a manner, prospered,"
added the old man, as if communing with himself.</p>
<p>"You, father?" exclaimed Roland, whose blood
seemed to grow very cold.</p>
<p>"Yes—I."</p>
<p>"How—how?"</p>
<p>"I cannot—dare not tell you. Hush!" he added,
glancing stealthily about, as Mr. Runlet, the butler,
placed two shaded candles, in massive antique silver
holders, on the toilet table, and withdrew, and Roland
thought—</p>
<p>"Poor old man—his mind wanders!"</p>
<p>"My mind is <i>not</i> wandering."</p>
<p>"I never said so, father."</p>
<p>"But you seem to think so—I can read it in your
eyes. I have been successful in life, and leave at death
a handsome fortune to one who has <i>no</i> right to it—<i>you</i>,
my son—you whom I love better than my own soul!"
he exclaimed, in a broken voice that seemed full of
tears, and a great horror began to possess the heart of
the listener.</p>
<p>"Oh heaven—heaven! he is mad!"</p>
<p>"Would that I had died at the head of the Royals,
when I led them at Nagpore!"</p>
<p>Intense perplexity mingled with the natural grief of
Roland, for the whole tenor of this interview was so
utterly beyond all that he could have anticipated.</p>
<p>In a half fatuous manner, the patient was muttering
to himself, and in great agony of mind, Roland listened
intently.</p>
<p>"Live it down, people say—I have lived it down—it
was never known indeed! Poor Philip—poor
Philip! One may live down a lie, but not the truth—it
is the truth that hurts—that never may be lived
down. I ever thought a day of retribution would come,
and it is coming—fast!"</p>
<p>"Retribution for what?" asked Roland, in a low
but passionate voice.</p>
<p>"Could I face the malevolence of the vulgar on one
hand, and the scorn of my equals on the other?—no—oh
no!" continued his father, speaking in a low voice,
and at long gasping intervals, as if to himself. "It
has been truly said, that 'manner and tone of voice
may be made to give stabs, only less sharp and cowardly
than vile and baseless calumny.... There is no
insolence like the insolence of the well-born and
well-bred; and the most vulgar and purse-proud wife of the
most purse-proud plutocrat is altogether inferior in her
capacity to inflict pain and give offence to the patrician
lady of title.' I have been spared all that—for I cast
the die in secret!"</p>
<p>"What die?" asked Roland imploringly.</p>
<p>The old man regarded him wildly, as if for a time he
had forgotten his presence.</p>
<p>"When I am dead and gone—dead and gone, dear
Roland, you will know all."</p>
<p>"Why not now?"</p>
<p>"Because I—even hovering on the brink of eternity—blush
to tell you. Oh, what a thing it is for a father
to cower like a very craven before his only son, and yet,
Roland, you know how I have loved you. When I am
gone and buried, Roland, open the old Indian cabinet that
I found on the day when the Royals stormed Scindia's
fortress of Neembolah—read the sealed packet you will
find there—and—and pray for me."</p>
<p>These were almost the last coherent words his father
spoke; and he uttered them with the veins in his
temples throbbing, and as if the most bitter of all
emotions, self scorn, wrung his heart, and then he seemed
to sink fast. But he lingered for some days after this,
and though his words, manner, and injunction, filled
Roland with grief and intense curiosity, he resolved to
obey him to the letter and not open the cabinet till
end came, and the doctor assured him it was near now.</p>
<p>"Under what hallucination can the poor old man be
labouring?" thought Roland, as he sat alone in the
stately dining-room—a veritable hall—and thought
how proud he who was about to pass away to a dark
and narrow home, had been of Ardgowrie and all its
details and surroundings—its stately park where the
deer made their lair among the green ferns, its dark
blue loch full of pike, and the pine plantations where
the pheasant pea-fowl were thick as the cones that lay
around them.</p>
<p>Daily by the sun, nightly by the moon, for many
centuries, had the same shadows of the quaint old
house been cast on the same places, and it was now an
epitome of a proud historic past. It had entertained
more than one king of Scotland, and everything in the
old mansion was on a grand scale, from the portraits
by Jamesone and Vandyck (who married a Ruthven of
Gowrie, by the way) to the massive cups won in many
a race that glittered on the sideboard. Above the
latter, a splendid full-length of the "bonnie Earl" who
was wont to flirt with Anne of Denmark in Falkland
Woods, and who on the 5th of August, 1600, perished
in the famous conspiracy, had its place of honour; and
among other portraits of later times, was one by Sir
Watson Gordon of the present proprietor, in his uniform
as a field officer of the Royal Scots.</p>
<p>The massive mantelpiece of the early Stuart times
ascended to the ceiling. It was an exact copy of the
famous one in Gowrie House at Perth, and over it in
Gothic letters was the same remarkable and apposite
legend borne by the former:—</p>
<p class="poem">
"Truths long concealed at length emerge to light,<br/>
And controverted facts are rendered bright."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>But Roland now perceived with genuine wonder, that
the couplet had been chiselled completely away, and
the stone frieze was now smooth and bare.</p>
<p>"By whose orders was this done, Runlet?" he asked
with angry surprise.</p>
<p>"Those of the Laird, your father," replied the
butler.</p>
<p>"When?"</p>
<p>"Just before his last illness."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"I cannot say, Mr. Roland, but he has done some
queer things of late," he added with diffidence.</p>
<p>On that mantelpiece were cut the Ruthven arms,
bars and lozenges, within a border flowered and
counter-flowered, crested with a goat's head, and above them
hung the tattered colours of Ruthven's battalion of the
1st Royal Scots—one of four—which had borne them
in triumph from the plains of Corunna to the gates of
Paris, covered with trophies, among which are still
the cross of St. Andrew and the crowned thistle of
James VI.</p>
<p>Off the dining hall opened a long and lofty corridor
hung with moth-eaten tapestries of russet and green
hues and with trophies of arms, each having its
history; such as the helmet of Sir Walter Ruthven who
died by the side of King David at the battle of Durham;
the sword of Sir William who became hostage for
King James I.; the pennon of the Master of Ruthven
who fell at Flodden, and weapons of later wars, with
trophies of the chase, heads and skulls of lions shot in
Africa, tigers in Bengal, bears in Russia, of elephants
from the miasmatic Terrai of Nepaul—spoils wherever
his father had served; and of noble deer from the
forests of the adjacent hills.</p>
<p>From all these objects and the drooping colours of
the grand old regiment, Roland's eyes would wander
again and again to settle on the cabinet of Scindia, and
he would marvel <i>what</i> it contained—if indeed it
contained any secret whatever!</p>
<p>With a fond, proud and yet sad smile he looked at
the portrait of more than one fair ancestress, and
thought,</p>
<p>"The girl I left behind me is fairer than them all!"</p>
<p>For in Montreal he had left Aurelia Darnel de
St. Eustache, whom we shall meet in time. A kind of
half-flirtation—something even more tender and taking
had subsisted between them, and but for his sudden
summons home, it would have assumed greater
proportions and had a firmer basis; he would have
explained to her the nature and extent of his love for
her, and obtained some pledge or promise from her,
with the consent of her mother, for father she had none
now; and when Elspat Gorm spoke apprehensively of
the 5th of August, as being "the fatal day of the
Ruthvens," he would think, with a smile,</p>
<p>"I hope not, as it was on the evening of that day, I
first met Aurelia at our ball in Montreal! Would that
I could tell the poor old man who is passing away, of
my love, and gain his permission to address her; for
she must know of my love for her and will await my
return; but I would that he could see her, even as I
in memory see her now!"</p>
<p>And before him came a mental vision of a very
beautiful girl, whose dark hair and long black lashes
contrasted with the pale delicacy of her skin, her pencilled
eyebrows rather straight than arched, a calm loveliness
in her face when, in repose, but a brightness over it all,
when she was animated, when her soft eyes lighted up
and her lips became tremulous.</p>
<p>"Aurelia!" he whispered to himself, and marvelled
if the time would ever come, when he would bring her
hither to be the queen of his life, and of beautiful
Ardgowrie.</p>
<p>Day by day, his father was sinking, and all the
powers of medicine could do nothing for him; his
ailment was not old age but a passing away of the powers
of life. The old Highland housekeeper, Elspat, had
much contempt for the nostrums of the doctor, and
believing her master to be under the spell of a
gipsy-woman whom he had sent to prison for theft,
maintained that he would never be cured, until the parings
of his finger nails and a lock of his hair were buried in
the earth with a live cock, a remnant of ancient
Paganrie, which the reign of Victoria still finds
prevailing in some parts of the Highlands.</p>
<p>So, as she fully expected, the morning of the 5th of
August, saw the old Laird expire peacefully, after
playing fatuously with the coverlet, and muttering that
he could "hear the drums of the Royal beating the old
Scots March," and the lamenting wail of Macaulay's
pipe was heard on the terrace without, as Roland
closed his father's eyes, and, crushed with natural
grief, knelt by the side of his bed, and Elspat placed a
plate containing a little salt on his breast.</p>
<p>In due time, amid the lamentations of his tenantry,
and while the pipes woke the echoes of the glen, by the
March of Gilliechriost (or of the Follower of Christ), one
of the oldest airs in existence, he was laid in his last
home, in the Ruthven aisle of Ardgowrie kirk, and
Roland found himself alone in the world.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0103"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER III. <br/><br/> THE CABINET OF SCINDIA. </h3>
<p>Yes, Roland felt himself, most terribly alone now—far
from the merry mess and the daily companionship
of his brother officers, in that great old mansion,
wherein for centuries generations of his ancestors were
born and had died, and which stood amid such wild and
desolate, yet beautiful scenery.</p>
<p>Expected though his father's death had been, by
Roland, the shock of the event when it did occur, was
so great, that it was not until two days after the
funeral, and when his legal agents and advisers,
Messrs. Hook and Crook, writers to Her Majesty's
Signet, came to consult him on certain matters
concerning the estate, that he bethought him of the old
cabinet found by the Royals in Scindia's fortress, and he
sprang up with a start to execute the last commands of
his father the old Colonel.</p>
<p>In the latter's desk he found the key—one of very
curious workmanship, and as he put it into the lock a
singular sense of some great and impending evil—a
sense which had never impressed itself upon him so
vividly before—came over him, and seemed to whisper
to him to be prepared!</p>
<p>Prepared for what?</p>
<p>He had seen the old cabinet years ago; it was about
four feet square, formed of ebony inlaid with the finest
ivory and mother-of-pearl with many elaborate ornaments,
and even some precious stones, and it had been
a gift from old Patrick Ruthven to his bride.</p>
<p>With vivid painfulness too, there came before Roland,
the last expression of his father's face, and more than
all, his eyes with their restless feverish expression, and
strangely lustrous glare.</p>
<p>The doors of the beautiful cabinet unfolded and
displayed two rows of drawers, the handles of which were
chased silver, and with nervous haste, Roland opened
these in quick succession.</p>
<p>Therein he found old muster-rolls, reports and
memoranda connected with the First Royal Scots;
letters and orders from brother-officers who had found
their graves in every quarter of the globe;
complimentary addresses from generals and magistrates, and all
his father's medals and orders. There too were letters
from his mother in their lover-days, faded and brown;
letters of the lost uncle Philip, and letters from Roland
himself, even those he had written as a schoolboy, with
the now withered and dry locks of hair belonging to
those who had been loved and had long since departed.</p>
<p>All the little relics and souvenirs that the poor old
man had treasured most in life were there; but what
could the secret be, that he had so strangely and with
such evident emotion and pain referred to, thought
Roland, as in nervous haste and sorrow he drew out
each tiny drawer in succession—sorrow, for the hands
that had touched and the eyes that had seen them last
were cold and still now in yonder dark old vault.</p>
<p>At last he found a packet carefully sealed with his
father's crest, a goat's-head embossed; but directed to
no one.</p>
<p>He tore it open, and found within the cover, a legal
document tied with red tape, and a page or two written
by the hand of his father, and bearing the latter's
signature.</p>
<p>Both these papers Roland read quickly, but he had
to do so again and again ere his startled mind could
take in their contents.</p>
<p>The first was the last will and testament of his
grandfather General Roland Ruthven, and the latter
was a confession written by his father concerning it.</p>
<p>"My God—oh that this could ever be the case!"
exclaimed Roland in a broken and hollow voice, as he
read them. Philip, the elder brother, had in some
mysterious manner incurred the high displeasure of the
general, who bequeathed his entire estate and fortune
to Patrick, the younger; but, repenting, had executed
a second will superseding the first; and this will,
Roland's father had found and <i>suppressed</i>, while, with a
curse upon their father's name and memory, Philip
believing himself to be disinherited, went forth into the
world and was heard of no more!</p>
<p>Philip who had never loved him, continued the old
man's tremulously written confession, was gone he
knew not where, beyond all trace, so that rumour even
said he was dead; and to denounce himself then as the
possessor of the second will, was to cut away the ground
from under his own feet, when on the very eve of
marriage with a girl, whose family would not permit
her to marry a penniless younger son—so he had
deemed himself thus not intentionally guilty, and that
no one's interests suffered by his silence.</p>
<p>If he had followed the dictates of the highest
principles, he would at once have made the document
known; but where was Philip? As time went on
Patrick Ruthven became conscience-struck, and he now
charged Roland with the task of making some amends
if possible, by discovering the lost man or his heirs, if
lie had any.</p>
<p>A bitter bequest indeed!</p>
<p>With a painfully throbbing heart, and hands that
trembled, Roland laid the documents down and strove
to collect his thoughts. The first dull and stunning
emotion, of confusion and unreality past, he looked
dreamily around him to see if he was not undergoing a
species of nightmare; but no! There was the stately
old dining-hall, the spacious Scottish fireplace with its
silver fire-dogs, and here were the ebony cabinet of
Scindia, with the suppressed will, and the signed
confession of his father.</p>
<p>It was a terrible shock to Roland Ruthven to find
that his father—his father of all men in the world!—whom
through all the years of his life he had looked
up to with love and reverence, and who seemed ever to
him and to all who knew him, the model of chivalrous
honour, should have acted thus, and he actually wept
over the event!</p>
<p>Again and again he read the confession that on one
hand Philip had never loved him, had exasperated the
general; and on the other, there was the chance—nay,
the certainty—of a marriage being marred by the
production of the will which was now dated nearly forty
years back.</p>
<p>"Justice must be done, at all risks and hazards—but
justice to whom?" thought Roland.</p>
<p>Ardgowrie seemed no longer his; as if touched by
an enchanter's wand, it seemed already to have passed
away, wood, wold, and mountain, by this cruel
discovery. He felt homeless in a splendid home, his
worldly prospects ruined, and Aurelia Darnel, the only
girl he had ever loved, utterly lost to him!</p>
<p>Why not destroy the will?</p>
<p>But no—oh no! Roland felt his cheek crimson, as
something seemed to whisper of this in his ear, and
then he recalled his dead father's remorseful injunctions
to himself.</p>
<p>He looked up at the portrait of the lost and disinherited
Philip—the outcast son of a patrician race, as
limned by the President of the Scottish Academy.</p>
<p>It represented a handsome young man, in a red hunting
coat and cap, with regular but rather pale features, dark
blue eyes and well defined eyebrows, with a pleasant
smile that actually, to Roland's then distempered fancy,
seemed to light up, as he looked on the portrait.</p>
<p>Roland wiped the beady perspiration from his brow,
and a moan as if of pain escaped him, but again and
again he muttered—</p>
<p>"Justice shall be done—justice if it be not too
late—oh Heaven—too late!"</p>
<p>He stepped to the sideboard, filled a silver hunting
cup with sherry, drained it at a draught, and taking up
the two fatal documents, locked the Indian cabinet, and
prepared to join Messrs. Hook and Crook, who were
busy with certain accounts and papers in the library.</p>
<p>Of lawyers, Roland, as a soldier, had ever a wholesome
dread, and he shrank from the horror of disclosing
this trickery on the part of his father even to them,
whose lives were too probably but one long and tangled
yarn of trickery and deceit; but again, he muttered that
justice must be done.</p>
<p>His assumed coolness deserted him, his face became
livid, and his eyes sparkled with a strange light, when
he spoke to them of the papers he had found, and laid
them before their legal eyes.</p>
<p>Then his proud pale face flushed scarlet, his dark
eyebrows were knitted nearly into one, and his nether
lip quivered with suppressed emotion and intense
mortification, and in some degree the lawyers were also
excited, but amazement was what they chiefly felt.</p>
<p>"What did Mr. Ruthven intend to do?"</p>
<p>"Justice," said he hoarsely.</p>
<p>"But to whom?"</p>
<p>"That is precisely what I have been asking of myself."</p>
<p>"This will revoking the former disposition, is fully
forty years old; but it has never been recorded," said
Mr. Hook.</p>
<p>"And none know of its existence, save ourselves,"
added Mr. Crook suggestively; "and it is a dreadful
thing to lose so fine an estate—so noble a heritage—by
one stroke of a pen!"</p>
<p>"But I quite agree with the young Laird, that some
attempt should be made to do justice, and endeavour to
trace out Mr. Philip or his heirs," said Mr. Hook,
seeing in futurity a pyramid of three-and-fourpences and
six-and-eightpences.</p>
<p>"To advertise for the lost one would degrade my
father's name!" exclaimed Roland passionately.</p>
<p>"How else are we to go about it, my dear sir?"
asked Mr. Hook, pulling his nether lip reflectively;
"but enquiries might be made——"</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Well—a rumour did go about at one time that
your uncle had married in Jamaica, Mexico, or
somewhere."</p>
<p>"I never heard of it."</p>
<p>Neither had Mr. Hook, but he only threw out the
hint to suggest difficulty and complication, and in his
simplicity Roland rapidly adopted it.</p>
<p>"Prosecute enquiries in both places," said he;
"spare no money—collect and pay in the rents as
usual—though not a penny of them shall come to me!
You understand me, gentlemen?"</p>
<p>They could better have understood his quietly putting
alike the will and confession into the fire.</p>
<p>Why had not his father done so, and spared Roland
this season of shame and humiliation, of disappointment
and sudden poverty?</p>
<p>But his plans were adopted with decision and rapidity.</p>
<p>"All the old servants will be retained as usual,
gentlemen," said he, after a painful pause, during
which a swelling seemed to have risen in his throat,
"but no new ones will be engaged, and the whole
revenue of the estate shall be paid into the bank for the
benefit of the real heir, or of his children, if they can
be found. I leave all in your hands."</p>
<p>"But you must have some little income out of the
estate!" said the astounded lawyers simultaneously.</p>
<p>"Not a penny until I am proved to be indubitably
the last and only Ruthven of Ardgowrie and that ilk!"
exclaimed Roland with emotion.</p>
<p>"My dear sir, you can't live on your pay," suggested
Mr. Hook.</p>
<p>"I will try."</p>
<p>"No one does now-a-days. Nor will you be able
to marry."</p>
<p>"I do not mean to marry," said Roland, whose
voice fairly broke as he thought of Aurelia Darnel;
"but perhaps you may help me with a few pounds till
I get exchanged into a regiment in India, for
meantime I must rejoin the Royals."</p>
<p>By this discovery in the Indian cabinet, Roland now
learned bitterly why the old legend above the
mantel-piece had become obnoxious to his father's eye, and
been obliterated by his order!</p>
<p>He looked at his family motto—the strongly apposite
and ancient motto of the Ruthvens—<i>Facta Probant</i>, and
muttered—</p>
<p>"That of Argyle would suit me better now!"</p>
<p>He felt that under pressure of the sudden change in
his circumstances, that to avoid surmises and explanations
which it would be impossible to make, his wisest
mode of action would be to effect an exchange into some
other regiment where he was unknown; but his own
honour at that time of expected peril required that he
should rejoin the Scots Royals, and he could not yet
bring his heart to quit them, for the corps had been the
home of his family for many generations, quite as much
as their ancestral abode of Ardgowrie.</p>
<p>Moreover, he was well up the list of lieutenants now.
He could recall the emotions with which he first
joined them in all the freshness of boyhood, and felt, as
a writer says, how "the first burst of life is a glorious
thing; youth, health, hope and confidence, and all the
vigour they lose in after years: life is then like a
splendid river, and we are swimming with the stream—no
adverse waves to weary, no billows to buffet us, we
hold on our course rejoicing."</p>
<p>But all pride of birth, of race, and name had gone
completely out of Roland Ruthven for the time.</p>
<p>Cards of condolence poured in upon him from the
county people, but he returned none; neither did he
pay any visits; he felt himself a species of usurper.</p>
<p>"A morose fellow he has become," some said;
"just like his father in his latter years—moping and
melancholy."</p>
<p>A letter from his friend Hector Logan roused him a
little, and made him think of returning at once to the
regiment. It was full of the mess gossip and barrack
news generally, and about a ball "where <i>la belle</i> Aurelia
had appeared with a new and very remarkable admirer,
a Colonel Ithuriel Smash, of the United States army.
If the row with the colonists comes off," continued
Logan, "some of us may lose our chance of picking
up a handsome heiress—for heiresses here are to be
had for the asking, some think; I don't. But a girl
like Aurelia Darnel, with a stray forty thousand pounds,
and having also the frankness and good taste to accept
a nice fellow with whom to spend it, is just the kind of
girl for my complexion. Logan Braes and that ilk,
sound very well; but my pedigree is a powersight
longer than my rent-roll."</p>
<p>The letter concluded by urging him to rejoin, as an
outbreak among the colonists was daily expected.</p>
<p>Apart from Aurelia Darnel, concerning whom a
change had come over his future now, he felt in every
way the necessity for action, and for returning to
America, and he felt, too, as if he would go mad, if he
lingered longer in Ardgowrie.</p>
<p>Aurelia! could he go back to the charm of her
society again, with that horrible secret in his mind—the
secret the cabinet had contained, and which made
him a penniless man! Yet, his thoughts would wander
again and again to the girl he had left beyond the broad
Atlantic, and doubts rather than hopes, fear rather
than joy, crowded upon him, all born of recent events.</p>
<p>Perhaps absence might already have erased all
memory of him, and he was forgotten; and who was
this new dangler—"admirer," Logan called him, with
the atrociously grotesque name? He had left her,
without any declaration of his love, and dared he make one
now? Left her, at that period, when, as Lever says,
"love has as many stages as a fever; when the
feeling of devotion, growing every moment stronger, is
chequered by a doubt lest the object of your affections
should really be indifferent to you—thus suggesting all
the torturing agonies of jealousy to your distracted
mind. At such times as these a man can scarcely be
very agreeable to the girl he loves; but he is a
confounded bore to a chance acquaintance."</p>
<p>Aurelia Darnel was one of the wealthiest girls in
Montreal. Could he speak to her of love <i>now</i>? No—no!
It was not to be thought of, and in going back, he
would avoid her, and devoutly hoped that the expected
"row" would come off, and the Royal Scots would have
to take the field.</p>
<p>The two last days of his residence at Ardgowrie he
spent in solitude beside the Linn of Dee. There
was something soothing to his soul in the wild turmoil
of the rushing torrent, from whence, the body of
any living thing that finds its way into it, can <i>never</i> be
recovered.</p>
<p>What a change had come over Roland Ruthven, since
last, in boyhood, and just before he joined the Royals,
he had gazed into those black and surgy depths which
fascinate the eye and render the brain giddy, where the
dead white of the foam contrasts so strongly with the
sombre tints of the turbulent cauldron, and the still
blacker uncertainties of the caverns beneath the rocks,
as the Dee, there terrible, yet beautiful thunders over
the Linn on its passage to the German Ocean.</p>
<p>Roland felt keenly the change that had come over
him, since last he heard the familiar roar of his native
stream; a new life, with the regiment had been opened
to him; but a blight had fallen upon it now. Out of
many a passing flirtation, his love for Aurelia stood
prominently forth on one hand; on the other was his
father's sore temptation (he could scarcely give it a
harder name); yonder grand old house, with all its
turrets amid the stately woods, no longer his; his
future wasted, his love denied him, and his inheritance
lost!</p>
<p>It was a conviction hard to adopt and bear, yet
Roland adopted and bore it bravely, and turning his
back, as he certainly believed, for ever on Ardgowrie,
departed to rejoin his regiment.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0104"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER IV. <br/><br/> "PONTIUS PILATE'S GUARDS." </h3>
<p>"Welcome back Ruthven!" cried Hector Logan.</p>
<p>"Ruthven, my hearty, how goes it with you?"</p>
<p>"Glad to see you with us again, though regret that
you have crape on your arm."</p>
<p>Such were the greetings of Roland on his first
appearance at mess, when he rejoined, warmly welcomed
by all; even the usually stolid visages of the
mess-waiters brightened as he took his seat.</p>
<p>"A fresh cooper of wine to drink the health of Roland
Ruthven," exclaimed the President, who, though a young
sub, had seen powder burned with the Royals in Burmah.
"Welcome back to the Guards of Pontius Pilate!"</p>
<p>He had not been very long absent, but after all he
had undergone at Ardgowrie it was a relief to Roland to
hear the old "shop" talk again—the old regimental
jokes and news, who was for guard to-morrow, who was
on detachment; a moose-hunting party bound for the
shore of the St. Lawrence; how the last time "the
Darnel's phaeton was tooled by Logan, the horses "come
home with devil a thing but the splinter bar at their
heels; the expected "row" with the colonists; the ball or
race that was coming off; the buttons of this corps, the
facings or epaulettes of that corps, and so forth.</p>
<p>His old chum, Hector Logan, a tall and very handsome
fellow, and some others, could see by the deepened
lines between Roland's dark eyebrows, that something
even more than his father's death affected him; and
also, that his old flow of brilliant conversation was gone.
They could detect that "something was wrong—a
screw loose somewhere," but could not conceive what
it was.</p>
<p>Ere he rejoined he had commissioned Logan to sell
his horses—even to Royal Scot, with whom he was
wont to ride over the raspers everywhere; to withdraw
his name from several races and subscription lists;
and he had every way curtailed his expenses—shorn
down everything to the great surprise of more than one
heedless young fellow, and of the mess in general.</p>
<p>"What the deuce does it all mean?" they asked of
one another.</p>
<p>"What is up, Ruthven?" asked Logan seriously;
"is there anything wrong? Your father dies, leaving
you a fine old estate totally unencumbered—a deuced
deal more than we can say for many old estates—and
you sell off your horses, dogs, and so forth——"</p>
<p>"How do you know it is unencumbered?" asked
Roland, with some sharpness of manner. "It is
loaded—heavily loaded, indeed!" he added, bitterly,
as he thought of the long-hidden <i>will</i>.</p>
<p>"Are you going in for a new excitement—that of
being poor?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Hector, you don't know who it is you chaff! Are
the Darnels in Montreal?" he asked, after a pause.</p>
<p>"Yes;" I saw la belle Aurelia yesterday in busy
Paul Street, close to the Hôtel-Dieu; I knew her at
once by the long glossy ringlet, the
<i>suivez-moi</i>—come-follow-me-lads—that hung down her back."</p>
<p>"How your tongue runs on, Hector!"</p>
<p>"Pardon me; I forgot that you were hit in that
quarter."</p>
<p>"Positively, Hector, I'll punch your head."</p>
<p>"A fellow always makes a fool of himself about some
girl or woman at some time, and it is your case now,
though I must admit that Aurelia Darnel is one of the
most attractive girls I have seen, and does credit to your
taste, Roland. Now that you are Laird of Ardgowrie
you'll make great running in that quarter."</p>
<p>"Aurelia is too rich to care a straw even about
Ardgowrie."</p>
<p>"I don't know that, Ruthven."</p>
<p>But the latter was in no mood for jesting, especially
on such a subject, and abruptly spoke of something else;
for now, with all his intense longing to see Aurelia once
more, he actually dreaded the thought of meeting her.</p>
<p>"Better that I should avoid her, but in doing so,
what will she think of me?" he pondered, while
manipulating a cigar (we had not yet fought in the Crimea,
thus cigarettes were as yet unknown among us). "To
see her again will be but torture. What course ought I
to follow—must I pursue, when, penniless as I know
myself to be <i>now</i>, her love is denied me! I must quit
even the dear old regiment in time, and begin a life of
exile in India."</p>
<p>The latter conviction, which had come strongly home
to the heart of Roland Ruthven, filled him with sincere
regret, for he loved the Royals, and was proud of them.
A regiment, old in history, is, says some one (Kinglake,
we think), like the immortal gods, ever young and
ever glorious.</p>
<p>And great, indeed, in fame, rich in glory, and old in
history, are the First Royal Scots—the most ancient
regiment in the world, for their traditions go back in an
unbroken line to the twenty-four Scottish Guards of
Charles III. of France; thence to the Scottish Garde du
Corps which saved the life of St. Louis in 1254 in
Palestine, and fought in all the wars of France, at
Agincourt, the conquest of Naples, and at Pavia, where
they were nearly cut to pieces; even Francis was taken
prisoner.</p>
<p>In after years there were engrafted on them the
remains of those gallant Scottish bands which served in
Bohemia under Sir Andrew Gray, and under Sir John
Hepburn in all the wars of Gustavus Adolphus, and as
the regiment of the Lords Douglas and Dunbarton—Dunbarton
of "the druns"—they returned to Scotland
after the Restoration, and now at this day their standards
are so loaded by embroidered trophies, that the blue
silk—the national colour of Scotland—is nearly hidden,
while the <i>mere list</i> of the battles and sieges in which
they have been engaged—ever with glory and honour—occupy
ten closely printed pages of the War Office
Records. Even their rivals for three hundred years, the
famous Regiment de Picardie, could not equal this,
though in the French service they were wont to quiz
the Royals as having been "the Guards of Pontius
Pilate who slept upon their posts."</p>
<p>In all the armies of Europe we can find no parallel
to their annals, for there is nothing like it in the
military history of any other country.</p>
<p>Among all our noble British Infantry—that infantry
which, as Bonaparte said, "never knew when it was
beaten," and which, as Green tells us in his "History
of the English People" was first created when William
Wallace of Elderslie, drew up his Scottish spearmen,
in those solid squares before which the united chivalry
of England and Aquitaine went down: Amid all our
"unconquerable British Infantry," we say, none have
such a brilliant inheritance of glory as the old Royal
Regiment.</p>
<p>Hence it was that Roland Ruthven, whose family had
served with it for three or four generations, looked
forward with extreme reluctance and regret to the coming
time when, by exchange or otherwise, he would be
compelled to serve in the ranks of another; and that the
time was not a distant one was rendered fully evident
by letters which he had received from his legal agents,
Messrs. Hook and Crook, W.S., Edinburgh.</p>
<p>These assured him that they had obtained some certain
knowledge of the movements and marriage of his uncle
Philip, and of his having left heirs. They had traced
him to Jamaica, and would ere long send proofs of the
said marriage, and of there being an heir to Ardgowrie.</p>
<p>"An heir to Ardgowrie!" muttered Roland, through
his clenched teeth. Half expected though the tidings
were, they sounded like a species of death-knell to him
now.</p>
<p>"You look disturbed, old fellow," said Hector Logan,
as Roland crushed up and then tore the letter to
pieces.</p>
<p>"I am disturbed!" said he.</p>
<p>"What are these—lawyer's letters?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Hector."</p>
<p>"Hah—a lawyer I always look upon as a species of
rook with a devil of a long bill. You'll get over it, I
hope," he added, rolling the leaf of his cigar round his
finger.</p>
<p>"I have got over it already," replied Roland; but
his looks belied his words; "but it is hard to have
one's first and dearest hopes blighted," he continued,
thinking of Aurelia Darnel; "disappointments, however,
I suppose we get used to, like the eels to the
skinning."</p>
<p>"Can I help you, Ruthven? Logan Braes are not
exactly like the Bank of England; but if a few
hundreds——"</p>
<p>"You cannot help me, old fellow—thanks."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"I cannot, and may not, tell you; it is a family
trouble—a secret, and a sore one."</p>
<p>Some days elapsed before—under the alteration of
his circumstances—he could summon up courage to
visit the Darnels; but he felt the imperative necessity
of doing so, after all the hospitality he had received;
and then, he would gradually cease to go near them,
whatever view might be taken of his changed conduct;
but after all that had passed between himself and
Aurelia one visit was necessary, and then—what next?</p>
<p>He shivered as he thought of it with sorrow and
shame.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0105"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER V. <br/><br/> AURELIA DARNEL. </h3>
<p>At the usual hour for an afternoon visit Roland
Ruthven, in his blue undress uniform, with the
handsome gilt shoulder scales then worn (mufti was
forbidden), left his sword in the entrance hall, and was
duly ushered into the handsome and spacious drawing-room
of the Chateau de St. Eustache, as Mrs., or rather
Madame, Darnel's abode was named, for she was a
French Canadian, a widow and the heiress of one of
those seigneuries which are in so many instances in
possession of the families endowed with them by the
kings of France.</p>
<p>Over these seigneuries they formerly exercised the
rights of <i>haute, moyenne, et basse justice</i>; but these have
become obsolete since Wolfe carried the British colours up
the heights of Abraham, and they are now reduced to
the right of building a mill, at which the vassal must
grind his corn at a fixed rate, and a fine if he desires to
sell the load which he holds from his overlord.</p>
<p>Much of the reserve and pride of the old noblesse of
France still hover about these Canadian seigneurs, and
Madame Darnel possessed these characteristics in a very
high degree.</p>
<p>Neither she nor Aurelia were in the room, so Roland
had a little time to collect his thoughts.</p>
<p>How much had happened—how altered were all his
views and hopes of life—since last he had sat on that
particular sofa, and beheld the view from these windows!</p>
<p>He had come hither from the barracks on foot, as he
had sold off all his horses now, and he thought sadly—could
it be otherwise—of the stable court at Ardgowrie,
with all its excellent stalls fitted with enamelled mangers
and encaustic tiles, and the artistic devices on the iron
heel posts, and for holding the pillar reins.</p>
<p>This visit over, he thought he would go moose-hunting
with Logan and some others: activity out of doors
being the best cure for love according to certain writers.
"Men try wine and cards," says Yates, "both of which
are instantaneous but fleeting remedies, and leave them
in a state of reaction, when they are doubly vulnerable;
but shooting or hunting, properly pursued, are thoroughly
engrossing while they last, and when they are over
necessitate an immediate recourse to slumber from the
fatigue which they have induced."</p>
<p>But while making these resolutions Roland, like one
in a dream, watched the view from Madame Darnel's
windows: Montreal, the largest of the three elevations
near the city so named—its base surrounded by country
houses, with orchards and gardens, and its summit
covered with foliage; the city itself, with its lofty
edifices of dark limestone or of painted wood, its
churches, monasteries, its glittering spire, its shipping,
and the St. Lawrence winding far away in the distance,
till he was roused by the rustle of a silk dress, and
Aurelia Darnel stood before him, and her hand was in
his.</p>
<p>"Miss Darnel!"</p>
<p>"Mr. Ruthven!"</p>
<p>The latter was the less self-possessed of the two.</p>
<p>"I knew, Mr. Ruthven, that you would come to
Montreal again," said Aurelia, with one of her brightest
smiles.</p>
<p>"Were it but for a moment like this, I should have
come," said Roland, under the charm of her presence,
forgetting the <i>rôle</i> he intended to adopt; "and your
mamma?"</p>
<p>"Is, unfortunately, from home; need I say how
sorry we were for the sad occasion which hurried you
away."</p>
<p>Roland coloured with pain, vexation, and sorrow;
and before him seemed to stand that horrible "last
will and testament," which beggared him! Aurelia
Darnel, who had occupied his entire thoughts since he
left Montreal, was beside him now; but he had only
common places, the merest platidudes to offer her. His
innate pride, tenacity, and over-sensitiveness, now that
he was poor, and she was rich—he little knew how
rich—tied up his tongue, and the love, he trembled to
avow, remained unspoken.</p>
<p>We have already partially described Aurelia Darnel
and the character of her beauty. She was a girl of
talent, with many accomplishments. Her French, of
course, was perfect, as she inherited it from her mother;
she played brilliantly, with a soft yet dashing touch;
she could sing little <i>chansons</i> in the most seductive way,
and was full of those pretty graces and mannerisms
which are peculiar to continental girls; she had, too, a
way of looking down, drooping her long dark eyelashes,
that was often the cause of more tenderness and
admiration in those she meant to dazzle, than when
she looked up, or straight forward.</p>
<p>Offers she had had in plenty, and for two seasons
she had been the reigning belle of Montreal. By a
subtile perception, Roland had been distinctly conscious
that she preferred him to any other man of her
acquaintance, and that her eye brightened and her smile
sweetened at his approach.</p>
<p>He had ever felt a strange joy in her society, and a
pride in being seen with her, for is it not something to
excite envy and jealousy by being the favoured partner
of the acknowledged belle of every ball! In
attractiveness her tone and manner were quite different to
all that Roland had met before, and yet he had moved
in the best society everywhere.</p>
<p>Though but a few months had elapsed since he saw
Aurelia last, her figure seemed to have attained more
roundness than before, and her soft features a more
decided character; most winning and shy was her
smile, most graceful her carriage, and sweet was her
voice when she welcomed him to Montreal again.</p>
<p>"It is eight whole months since I had the pleasure
of seeing you last, Miss Darnel," said he, after a rather
awkward pause.</p>
<p>"Eight months—yes, true."</p>
<p>"A gap in life—in my life at least."</p>
<p>"Filled up by sadness?"</p>
<p>"Exceeding sadness, and much mortification,"
said he.</p>
<p>"I was but a little girl when papa died, yet I can
remember what a wrench it was. In losing your
father—"</p>
<p>"I lost more than him."</p>
<p>"More!"</p>
<p>She looked up at him inquiringly; could he tell her
all he had lost—his heritage—his grand old baronial
home, a princely estate—even honour itself, for thus,
in his over-sensitiveness, did Roland view the matter of
the long-hidden will!</p>
<p>"If matters remain quiet here among the colonists,
Miss Darnell, I mean to leave the regiment."</p>
<p>"Leave the Scots Royals—the Royal Regiment!"
she exclaimed with surprise; "I thought it was the
second home of your family; I have often heard you
say so."</p>
<p>"It can no longer be mine."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"For reasons that I cannot tell—even to you."</p>
<p>"Ah, pardon me; but what do you mean to do?"</p>
<p>"Soldier still—of course."</p>
<p>"But where?"</p>
<p>"In India."</p>
<p>"In India!" she exclaimed, with a depth of interest
that made Roland's heart beat wildly; "oh, how far,
far away!"</p>
<p>"Far away from you;—oh, Miss Darnel—Aurelia!" His
heart was rushing to his head.</p>
<p>At that moment a visitor, Colonel Smash, of U.S. army,
was announced, and Roland withdrew, leaving
unsaid all that he ought to have said—that she
expected him to say, and what he would have said, but
for the secret of that accursed cabinet of Scindia.</p>
<p>Could she have looked into his heart and read his
thoughts, through the window which Vulcan wished
had been placed in every human breast!</p>
<p>Both Aurelia and Madame Darnel had a right to
expect something more to develop itself from the visit
of Roland; but he felt himself a very craven, and
retired, leaving her with the most absurd of her many
admirers, Colonel Ithurial Smash, a long-legged,
hard-featured, and most ungainly New Yorker, whose rivalry
was too contemptible for Roland's consideration,
though he did marvel whether one could "possibly
parade a fellow," for interrupting one's conversation
with his cousin—for in this degree of relationship the
"Colonel" somehow stood to Aurelia Darnel.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0106"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER VI. <br/><br/> COLONEL SMASH. </h3>
<p>After this, many days elapsed, and Roland, having
ever before him the last crushing communication of
Messrs. Hook and Crook, never went near the Chateau
de St. Eustache, much to the surprise of Logan, whose
mind was sorely exercised on that subject, and on some
new and unwonted peculiarities of temper and system
which he discovered in his old friend and once jolly
comrade.</p>
<p>Aurelia, too, felt some surprise at his protracted
absence, and that she never saw him at the promenades
and public places where she had been wont to see him
before.</p>
<p>She was thinking could he have fallen in love with
some one else—she always thought he loved <i>her</i>—some
one in Scotland where he had been? If so, what business
had he to come to her and talk, and act, and look,
too, as if he were free and fetterless? Could he have
been playing with her, making a fool of her all along?
How coldly and quietly he had talked about going to
India, too.</p>
<p>Ah no! could she have seen Roland Ruthven at that
very time! He was kissing, looking at, smoothing
out, and caressing a tiny kid glove, which he had
begged from her at that very ball where they first met,
on the 5th of August—the fatal day of the Ruthvens,
as Elspat Gorm was wont to call it.</p>
<p>"Roland, old fellow," said Logan, dropping into his
quarters one evening when he was dressing for mess,
"what is up—you look like the ace of spades? Never
saw a fellow so changed in all my life."</p>
<p>"One day you may know all, Hector—meantime,
don't worry me," replied Roland, with the hair brushes
suspended in action above his thick head of dark
brown hair, while Logan smoked and talked. His
toilet table bespoke taste and that wealth which he no
longer possessed, with its ivory-handled brushes having
on them the Ruthven arms; his dressing-case of silver-gilt,
with gold-topped essence bottles in nests of blue
velvet; rings, jewelled studs, and sleeve-links, lay there
scattered about, with pipe heads of rare fashion and
costly material.</p>
<p>"You are not using that girl well, Roland—you
know what I mean; before you went on leave you were
like her shadow, and now——"</p>
<p>"I can't get over my scruples about—about——"</p>
<p>"What, in the name of heaven?"</p>
<p>"Well, about making up to a girl who has a fortune—a
very handsome income, at all events—when I am
so out at the elbows."</p>
<p>"Out at the elbows—are you mad?"</p>
<p>"The thing would look ill—yet I could make a little
running with her," said Roland, with a dreary attempt
to be lively.</p>
<p>"I should think so. Ruthven of Ardgowrie out at
the elbows—why, man alive, what the devil has come
to you? You could marry Miss Darnel without
exciting anybody but her special admirers. There is no
'establishment' to break up; no fair denizen of such
a villa as is proverbial at St. John's Wood to tear her
dyed locks, and demand a monetary kind of 'loot'—so
I say again, what the deuce has come to you?"
asked Logan, with genuine surprise.</p>
<p>"That which I cannot tell."</p>
<p>"Even to me?" asked the other reproachfully.</p>
<p>"Even to you, old fellow, just yet."</p>
<p>"This passes my comprehension."</p>
<p>"The misfortune that has befallen me passes mine."</p>
<p>"She is a delightful girl, Roland," said Logan, after
a pause, during which he had been reflectively
preparing another cigar; "she never misses fire in the
way of a repartee or a brilliant rejoinder."</p>
<p>"In that I agree with you," replied Roland, quietly.</p>
<p>"How cold you are."</p>
<p>"I am far from feeling so, any way," said Roland,
with a sigh.</p>
<p>"Can't make you out, by Jove! In the Chateau de
St. Eustache, unless I am very much mistaken, you
have gone in for some very effective bits of flirtation, in
which the inconstant moon played no inconsiderable
part."</p>
<p>"Flirtation, Logan? I never could flirt with Aurelia
Darnell."</p>
<p>"Indeed!" said the other incredulously; "why?"</p>
<p>"Because I love her too sincerely."</p>
<p>"Yet you never go near that house where you have
often acted almost as host to the whole garrison, and
where that horrible Yankee Colonel has the field all to
himself."</p>
<p>"Oh! he is a cousin of some sort—but what the
devil is he to me?"</p>
<p>"Well—he is a good shot I hear."</p>
<p>"A shot—d—n him!" said Ronald, with considerable
irritation of manner; "I would think very little
of parading him on the other side of the Canadian
frontier."</p>
<p>"I don't doubt that, Ronald, old man; but he has
fought several duels, and successfully I hear."</p>
<p>"With double-barrelled rifles, at two hundred yards'
distance, each man posted behind a tree, and dodging
every way to dodge the other's fire. Well, I would
meet him that way if he wished it. I have asked the
Colonel to mess."</p>
<p>"To mess?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"That fellow! What will the Colonel and others
think? Your reason is, I suppose, to keep up a
connecting link with the Chateau?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps so," said Roland, wearily; and, sooth to
say, that was his sole reason.</p>
<p>"Well, if with the rental of Ardgowrie, you
can't——"</p>
<p>"Please not to speak of Ardgowrie," said Roland
impatiently, as he thrust himself into his shell-jacket;
"there go the drums for mess."</p>
<p>It was impossible that Aurelia could have any regard,
even, amenity, for this horrible American cousin, the
Colonel; yet if she had, Roland felt that the changed
circumstances of his own fortune tied up his tongue and
would render his attentions an interference; yet it was
scarcely possible for him to look on such a dangler or
admirer with total indifference.</p>
<p>The Colonel, of whom we shall have more to relate
anon, came duly to mess, where his appearance and
bearing caused some speculation, and not a little secret
mirth among Roland's brother officers, who were all
men of a very good style and tone.</p>
<p>Lean, wiry, and powerfully made, he was above the
middle height, had sharp aquiline features of an
exaggerated type, that might not have been bad but for a
chronic expression of vulgar suspicion and 'cuteness
that played about his eyes, giving him a rather hangdog
look; moreover, he had lost three front teeth in a
row in Arkansas. He was closely shaven all save a
long square goatee imperial that quivered when he spoke.
Then he had a nervous way of clutching his hat and
banging it against his thigh, with a curious but
unmeaning energy. His clothes were loosely made, and
he wore enormous cuffs, collar and studs. Every way,
he looked, as Logan said, "like a man you would rather
drink with than fight with, any day."</p>
<p>The Colonel had of course the usual American ideas
about equality, and "the sovereign people," with
considerable contempt for the little island, from whence
"the Britishers came."</p>
<p>Doubtless he had never seen such a dinner-table us
the mess of the Royals before, with all its massive and
magnificent silver trophies, epergnes, and goblets—even
the White House could not equal it; thus his utter
bewilderment excited as much amusement as his
<i>gaucherie</i>, for he picked his teeth with a silver fork,
rinsed his mouth with the contents of his finger-glass,
and so forth; but he made good use of his time in more
ways than one, as we shall show.</p>
<p>"Strike me ugly, but this is a fine set of fixings! and
that one in particular," he added, tapping with his
knife a magnificent vase presented to the corps by its
colonel, the late Duke of Kent.</p>
<p>As a friend of the Darnels, Roland was very attentive
to "the Colonel," who was very loquacious on the
subject of the local excitement among the Canadians of
the Lower Province, then agitated by factious men
who sought to dictate to the Government measures
which were not deemed conducive to the welfare of the
State, were actually preparing to rise in arms, and
counted on the sympathy and support of American
filibusters and all manner of desperate and broken
fellows from beyond the frontier.</p>
<p>During the summer of that year, and while Roland
had been in Scotland, the House of Assembly had
refused to proceed in its deliberations until the demand
for a total alteration of the legislative powers was
complied with; and this was followed by the appearance of
many of the colonists in arms, and by serious violations
of the law.</p>
<p>On these matters, and the prospects of a row with the
authorities, "the Colonel" was more loquacious than
became a guest at a regimental mess; but more than
once his phraseology excited the risibility of even the
waiters. When offered wine, he asked if he "couldn't
get some egg-nogg." He described the dry goods store
he had once kept at Baltimore, and of the two clubs
there, of which he was chairman, the "black snakes"
and the "plug uglies," and Roland's bewilderment
grew very great to think that such a man as this could
be even an acquaintance, far less some remote kinsman
of Aurelia Darnel.</p>
<p>Like all Americans, he boasted a good deal and had
a sovereign contempt for every other constitution in the
world save that of the United States, draining all kinds
of wine in quick succession, and ever and anon announcing
that he "was dry as thunder," till Roland felt as
one in a fever for having such a guest, and saw the
commanding officer regarding him with a rather
mingled expression of face.</p>
<p>In short, it proved in the end that Colonel Smash was
a spy of the intended insurgents, and contrived to glean
up a considerable amount of information as to the
positions and strength of the Queen's troops in Lower
Canada, all of which he duly committed to his notebook.</p>
<p>He sat late, or early rather, and never left the mess
table till the sweet, low notes of the old Scottish
reveille were waking the echoes of the lonely
barrack-square when he went forth, as Logan said, "like an
inveterate soaker, without a hair of his coat being
turned."</p>
<p>Assisted by Roland, through the medium of cigars
and brandy-and-water, Logan was going over the books
of his company, to wit, the ledger, day-book, and the
acquittance roll, which is rendered every month to the
commanding officer—an investigation to Hector of a
very solemn nature, whereat there was much occasional
anathematising, twisting of the moustache, appealing
glances cast to the ceiling, a secret totting off of sums
under the table, much rubbing of the chin, and many
references to a ready-reckoner—when they were
interrupted by the adjutant, who came clattering in with
sword and belt on, and his face full of importance.</p>
<p>"What's the row?" asked Logan, looking up.</p>
<p>"Row enough!" replied the adjutant, laughing;
"these colonial beggars are up in arms, and four
companies of ours have to take the field to-morrow in the
direction of Chambly, with some cavalry, a howitzer,
and two six-pounders!"</p>
<p>"Bravo—anything is better than <i>this</i> sort of work!"
exclaimed Logan, tossing the books aside. "At what
hour do we fall-in?"</p>
<p>"Immediately after the men have breakfasted."</p>
<p>Roland looked at his watch; the November evening
was darkening fast; he borrowed the adjutant's horse,
gave a few instructions rapidly to his servant, and in a
few minutes more was spurring in the direction of the
Chateau de St. Eustache.</p>
<p>Come what might of it, he had resolved to see once
more Aurelia Darnel, and bid her farewell.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0107"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER VII. <br/><br/> "LOVE WAS YET THE LORD OF ALL." </h3>
<p>Many mails had come to headquarters without any
fresh intelligence from Messrs. Hook and Crook
concerning the lost or rival heir to Ardgowrie, and Roland
Ruthven had gathered a little courage from that
circumstance, and with it even love strengthened in his heart
as he rode on.</p>
<p>What a credit such a wife, such a girl, such a brilliant
young matron, as Aurelia would be, representing at
balls, dinners, and everything, the married ladies of the
regiment! She would be the veritable Queen of the
Scots Royals! But that could not—might not be, so
far as Roland was concerned if the heir of his uncle
were actually found; and in this mingled mood of mind
he spurred onward the adjutant's horse, in a mode that
must rather have surprised that quiet quadruped, to bid
Aurelia, it might be, a last farewell.</p>
<p>With all the advantages of a highly cultivated mind,
trained in one of the best West End educational
establishments, she possessed all the attractive manners of a
French girl, with the honest fearlessness of an English
one, innocent of worldly trickery and the deceits of
society, and yet she was a girl well calculated to shine
amidst that charmed circle.</p>
<p>Roland had shown her innumerable attentions, but,
as we have elsewhere said, till he could arrange with
his father as to his future he had spoken no word
distinctly of love to her yet; and now he dared not!</p>
<p>The polite or politic coldness he had displayed of late,
was thus very different to the bearing towards her
which the girl, from his past conduct, had every right
to expect. She was piqued and rather prepared for a
flirtation with Logan or any one else; and thus at
balls or elsewhere a lot of men were always hovering
about her, among whom was too often the obnoxious
Colonel Smash, the low state of whose exchequer would
have made an alliance with the heiress of St. Eustache a
very pleasant speculation.</p>
<p>Roland, with his pay only, or little more—the sum
he accorded to himself out of the rents of Ardgowrie,
and meant to refund—felt that he had no right to ask
her hand, or seek to lure her from amid objects and
associations endeared to her by taste and her earlier
years, and, more than all, from the luxuries by which
she was surrounded.</p>
<p>And yet it was with him, as it is with some others,
barriers to his hopes and wishes only made these wishes
and hopes all the more keen; and thus whenever he
left her he would pause and commune with himself
from time to time, conning over her words and her
glances, as if to glean therefrom whether he was
indifferent to her or not.</p>
<p>The doubts and fears that agitated Roland's heart
were painful and poignant; had he been as he ought to
have been, Laird of Ardgowrie, fortalice and manor,
wood and mountain, with what honest confidence would
he have told her of the love he dared not speak of
<i>now</i>!</p>
<p>Yet it was so sweet to dream on; for the artless
simplicity of Aurelia's manner, and the freshness of her
untutored heart, had led him to know and feel that the
greatest personal attractions may be second to excelling
qualities in the girl one loves.</p>
<p>When he entered the familiar drawing-room, with its
air of culture and wealth, pictures, statuettes, and
bronzes, and saw from the windows the familiar view
he might now be looking upon for the last time,
Aurelia did not hear him announced. She was alone,
seated at the piano, and singing one of those <i>Chansons
Canadiennes</i>, as they are named, which she had learned
from her mother, for among the French Canadians of
all ranks there linger yet the <i>chansons</i>, <i>refrains</i>, and
<i>barcarolles</i>, brought from Brittany and La Vendée by
their ancestors three hundred years ago; and when
Roland suddenly appeared by her side, she started, and
arose, surprise mingling with her smile of pleasure, as
the hour was an unusual one for a visit.</p>
<p>"I do not ask you to resume your singing, Miss
Darnel," said Roland, in a voice that lacked all
firmness, "as I have but a few minutes to remain with you,
and these may, perhaps, be the last we shall ever spend
together."</p>
<p>Her glance drooped, then she lifted her long, silky and
most killing lashes, and Roland gazed with unconcealed
tenderness into her eyes, which were of that deeply dark
blue, which at times and in some lights, especially by
night, seem almost black.</p>
<p>"You are, then, going to India?" she asked, in a
breathless voice.</p>
<p>"No, Miss Darnel; and yet I am come to say good-bye."</p>
<p>"Good-bye?"</p>
<p>"We take the field to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Against whom?" she asked, growing very pale;
"the Insurgents?"</p>
<p>"Yes—the French malcontents and others, I am
sorry to say."</p>
<p>"And to-morrow—oh, that is sudden indeed—mamma
is from home—and—and——"</p>
<p>Roland could see how her bosom heaved; his heart
was rushing to his head, and he drew nearer to her. A
black velvet riband, that hung down her back from her
delicate white neck, was awry; he put it straight, and
then trembled. No one surpassed Roland Ruthven in
confidence with women, or at a little bout of <i>persiflage</i>
with a jolly flirting girl; but now he was very silent
and sad.</p>
<p>The frill of lace that encircled her neck was ruffled in
one place, and by a delicate and almost caressing touch
he smoothed it as her own brother might have done;
then his hands stole softly downward and took each, of
hers, while his heart beat like lightning.</p>
<p>"Miss Darnel."</p>
<p>She was trembling now, and her sweet face quivered.</p>
<p>"Aurelia."</p>
<p>"Well, Mr. Ruthven."</p>
<p>"I am about to leave, it may be for ever."</p>
<p>"Do not say so!" she said, almost imploringly, while
her eyes filled with tears.</p>
<p>"If anything in this world could make me feel like
the Roland Ruthven of a year ago, hopeful, trustful,
and happy, it is to see that I am not indifferent to you.
Aurelia—my love—my darling!"</p>
<p>She looked at him wistfully for a moment, and ere
her white eyelids drooped, a long kiss came, and then a
silence, full of happiness most strangely blended with
an emotion of intense gratitude, while his arm went
round her, and her face was nestled in his neck, and he
began, at broken intervals, much that was soft
nonsense; but "it was the nonsense which every woman
loves to hear from one man (at least) during her life-time."</p>
<p>Then suddenly, while still retaining her hands, and
looking at her with infinite tenderness, he told of his
great love for her, but how poverty had tied his
tongue—poverty brought upon him through a will executed
by his grandfather, which deprived him of all he
possessed in the world, save his sword, for now the lost
heir of Ardgowrie had been found, and no doubt by
this time knew of his good fortune.</p>
<p>Roland had to repeat this more than once ere she
quite understood him, for Aurelia felt as one in a
dream—but a dream of happiness, for "is there any other
time," says some one, "like that, when the knowledge
comes upon you, that you are singled out, that you
are admired most, that one other person is happy
only when near you, that eyes are watching for your
eyes, that a hand is waiting to touch your hand, when
every speech has a new meaning, every word a bewildering
significance."</p>
<p>"And you do love me?" she asked, in a low cooing
whisper that filled his heart with rapture; he could only
utter a deep sigh, and kiss her again.</p>
<p>"And you are poor—Roland?"</p>
<p>"As I have told you," he replied, his heart thrilling
again at her utterance of his Christian name for the
<i>first</i> time.</p>
<p>"Well—I am rich—all <i>I</i> have is yours; I am my
own mistress, and mamma loves me too well, and you
also, to thwart our wishes."</p>
<p>"Darling Aurelia—it is incredible—that—that——"</p>
<p>Roland knew not what he was about to say, so solved
the difficulty with a long caress, from which Aurelia
suddenly started back, as she now perceived they had
a listener.</p>
<p>Unseen by both, Colonel Ithuriel Smash had been
standing in the archway of the outer drawing-room,
with a curiously malignant expression on his very
marked visage, for he had evidently overheard and overseen
the whole interview. His presence occasionally at the
Château de St. Eustache was only tolerated by Madame
Darnel because he was penniless, his store in 75th
Avenue having been sold up; and now he was fostering,
on the strength of a very remote relationship, some
very bold views with regard to Aurelia.</p>
<p>"Jerusalem, apple-sauce, and earthquakes, my young
Britisher, but you make yourself quite at home in the
house of my kinsman!" exclaimed the Colonel, who
had concocted an effervescing drink in a long tumbler,
and was leisurely stirring it with the jack-knife used
by him for cutting his pig-tail tobacco; "I wonder
blood has not been shed about you before this, Miss
Aurelia Darnel."</p>
<p>"Blood!" exclaimed Roland, swelling with indignation.</p>
<p>"Jerusalem! but it may be shed soon."</p>
<p>"But, that I am under orders for Chambly to-morrow,
I might condescend to punish your insolence and your
daring intrusion!"</p>
<p>Roland pressed the hand of Aurelia again, and in
doing so deftly slipped a ring upon her engaged finger;
he then kissed her deliberately and withdrew (just as
the servants came in with lights), exchanging with
Smash one of those unmistakable glances that is
expressive of—and rivets for life—a hate that dies not,
fired by the secret instinct of mutual enmity; yet
Roland despised himself for having a foe so ignoble.</p>
<p>That night, without delaying an hour, Colonel
Ithuriel Smash took his departure in the direction of
<i>Chambly</i>!</p>
<p>Of so little importance had his presence been, that
Aurelia never missed him as she sat alone, in a dream
of joy that was not unclouded with anxiety for the cause
of Roland's departure, and yet it was that event which
brought the joy to pass, by laying bare the secret heart
of each.</p>
<p>So the girl smiled fondly to herself, as she gazed at
and kissed again and again her engagement-ring; and
it seemed as if her former life had passed away and a
new one of greater sunshine and brightness had begun;
and long she sat there looking dreamily at the lovely
moon (shining over the spires of Montreal), round as
the shield of Fingal, her sweet face wreathed with
smiles that no eyes could see, unless they were those
of the old man who dwelleth therein.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0108"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER VIII. <br/><br/> THE INSURRECTION. </h3>
<p>Roland's heart was brimming with happiness and
gratitude for the love and generosity of Aurelia Darnel,
and it seemed actually to dance in his breast joyously,
when, next morning, the four companies detailed for
service marched from Montreal, with the colours flying,
the bayonets fixed, and the band playing the old
regimental quick-step of the pre-Revolution days, varied by
the pipes,—</p>
<p class="t3">
"Dumbarton's drums beat bonnie O,"<br/></p>
<p>in memory of the Colonel, that loyal and gallant Earl,
who followed his royal master into exile and died at
St. Germains.</p>
<p>A hundred times Roland asked himself, why had he
not tested the great love of Aurelia before? why had he
lost so much time and so much happiness? A little
time—the insurrection ended, and he would be by her
side again, as he had somewhat needlessly assured her
in a passionate little farewell note, dispatched that
morning.</p>
<p>A little time? Alas, the first day of absence seemed
to consist of at least seventy-two hours!</p>
<p>The force which now took the field by order of
Lieutenant General Sir John Colborne (afterwards Lord
Seaton), G.C.B., Colonel of the Cameronians, a
wounded veteran of the Peninsular war, consisted of
detachments of the 24th, 32nd, and 66th Regiments,
with one howitzer, under the Hon. Colonel Charles Gore,
son of the Earl of Arran, and afterwards Deputy
Quartermaster-General in Canada, who marched towards
St. Denis and St. Charles, with orders to arrest
certain armed traitors who were alleged to be in these
villages.</p>
<p>At the same time, Colonel Wetherall, with his four
companies of the Royal Scots Regiment, Captain
David's troop of Montreal Cavalry, a detachment of
the 66th, and two six-pounders, was to move on the
last-named village to assist a magistrate in executing the
warrants.</p>
<p>The month was November, the weather severe, and
the roads bad; the men were in heavy marching order,
with knapsacks, great coats and blankets, camp-kettles,
and with the arms and ammunition of the day, making
up a load of seventy-five pounds twelve ounces per
man; but all were in the highest spirits. Anything
seemed better than moping in barracks, and when the
music ceased as they marched "at ease," they made
the forests resound to their merry choruses.</p>
<p>All parts of the country thereabout which have not
been cleared for cultivation are covered with timber,
and he alone, says a traveller, who has visited these
regions of interminable forest can form an adequate
idea of their dreariness, yet there the red oak, the
white pine, the beech, elm, cedar, and maple mingle
their branches <i>ad infinitum</i>.</p>
<p>Here and there a lonely clearing was passed, where,
amid lofty trees devoid of lateral branches, their stems
or stumps scorched and blackened by fire, stood the log
hut of a settler, who, with his wild-looking brood, came
forth to gaze with wonder, perhaps hostility, at the
passing troops.</p>
<p>In autumn these magnificent forests assume hues
of every shade—yellow, brown, and red—under sunsets
which present the most glorious assemblages of clouds.
But winter was the season now; the leaves had fallen;
the humming-birds and fire-flies had departed, and the
wild fowl had taken refuge on the lakes or the
St. Lawrence.</p>
<p>The force under Colonel Wetherall crossed the
Richelieu River by the upper ferry at the village of
Chambly, where, in the days of the monarchy, the French
had a strong palisaded fort; but the nature of the roads
and the unfavourable weather seriously impeded his
march, while information having reached him that the
rebels in arms at St. Charles had been greatly increased
in numbers, and had with them a number of lawless
American or Yankee "sympathisers," under his late
guest, Colonel Smash, whom he remembered at the
mess, eating peas with his knife and wiping his mouth
with the back of his hand; so he made a halt at
St. Hilaire, until he could be joined by a fifth company
of the 1st Royal Scots under Hector Logan.</p>
<p>On that night it was evident that the country was
alarmed. Instead of the stillness usual to the time, the
clanging of church bells was heard at intervals, with
the barking of dogs, the report of firearms occasionally,
the blowing of conches and horns, red alarm-fires blazed
up on the dark summits of the distant hills; and more
than once horsemen in hot haste dashed past the
advanced sentinels without responding to their challenge,
and as the troops, as yet, were only acting in support of
the civil power, they could not fire upon these strangers.</p>
<p>This was the night of the 24th November, and to
Roland, like many others, it was a sleepless one, as he
commanded an out-picket and had to visit his sentinels
every hour.</p>
<p>On one side of his post rolled the mighty river,
reflecting in its ripples the star-spangled sky; on the
other, stretched away into darkness and utter obscurity
the vast dingles of an American forest, planted and grown
by nature.</p>
<p>His mind was full of that last evening with Aurelia
and all its sweet details. On his odious rival he scarcely
bestowed a thought, and he felt happier than an
emperor in his palace, as he lay there, with his cloak
around him, his sword and pistols at hand, his head
pillowed on a pine-log, and all oblivious of the
rattlesnakes, which there are six feet long. Near him was
Robert Bruce, one of his sentinels, treading softly to
and fro, with bayonet fixed, and singing to himself the
old Scottish barrackroom ditty:—</p>
<p class="poem">
"Poor Willie was landed at bonnie Dumbarton,<br/>
Where the stream from Loch Lomond runs into the sea,<br/>
While at home in sweet Ireland, he left Mary Martin,<br/>
With a babe at her breast and a child at her knee."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The night passed in quietude, apart from the
alarming sounds mentioned; on the 25th November the
march was resumed, and on coming within a mile of
St. Charles, puffs of white smoke spirted out of the
dark jungly brushwood on the opposite side of the
river, as the rebels daringly opened a straggling fire
upon Her Majesty's troops. A Royal Scot was struck
down by Roland's side, and several were wounded.</p>
<p>Rifle shots were also fired from a barn in front.</p>
<p>"Push on, Logan!" exclaimed Colonel Wetherall;
"push on and storm that place at the point of the
bayonet!"</p>
<p>Logan advanced with his company at a rush; his
powerful arm burst in the door; the place was taken, all
in it bayoneted or put to flight, and then it was set in
flames, the whole affair occupying little more than the
time we take to narrate the episode.</p>
<p>Near St. Charles were more than fifteen hundred
insurrectionists under Papineau and Colonel Smash, posted
in a strong and closely stockaded work from which they
opened a sharp and serious fire, the echoes of which the
adjacent forest repeated with a thousand reverberations,
while the whole place seemed enveloped in white smoke,
streaked with flashes of red fire.</p>
<p>The Royals responded with several rounds well thrown
in; but they had stormed too many such, works in
Burmah, the land of stockades, to linger in attacking
this one.</p>
<p>A breach was beaten in by axe and hammer, and
cannon shot together. In three minutes the place was
carried by storm and its occupants bayoneted, shot
down, or put to flight; but not before seventeen of
the Royals, and four of the 66th were killed, and a
great number wounded, while Colonel Wetherall and
Major Warde had their horses shot under them, and
Roland's cheek was grazed by a rifle shot.</p>
<p>The mingled curses and imprecations, yells of agony
and rage, seemed to fill the air, when the roar of the
firing died away, and the prisoners were disarmed and
secured. "Every officer and man behaved nobly," says
the dispatch of Colonel Wetherall. "Major Warde
carried the right of the position in good style, and
Captain George Mark Glasgow's Artillery did good
execution; he is a most zealous officer; and Captain
David's troop of Montreal Cavalry rendered essential
service during the charge."</p>
<p>The murder of stray soldiers from time to time, and
particularly that of George Weir, a young lieutenant of
the 32nd Cornish Light Infantry, who was bound to a
cart, and hacked to pieces with his own sword, by
certain miscreants (among whom Ithuriel Smash was
supposed to be one), now began to infuse in the minds
of the troops much of that rancour which adds to the
severity of a civil strife.</p>
<p>After the stockade had been uprooted and destroyed,
the troops returned to St. Hilaire and remained in
cantonments for three days. There a dragoon of the
Montreal Cavalry arrived with the mail, which brought
from Aurelia Darnel the first letter she had ever
addressed him, and the sight of her hand-writing raised
Roland at once to the seventh heaven of delight. We
know not whether he kissed it, but think it extremely
probable that he did, if no one was near.</p>
<p>As the contents of love-letters are of interest to the
recipients thereof alone, and the said contents, with all
their half-fatuous endearments and double diminutives,
are at times rather grotesque, the reader need not be
troubled with that of Aurelia, save in one part thereof.</p>
<p>"I told dearest mamma of all that had passed between
us, shewed her our engagement ring, and added,
that as soon as leisure permitted, you would write to
her on that subject. She was agitated, the dear old
soul, and tearful at the fear of losing me; but kissed
me many times, and said she was certain we would be
happy together, and that she loved you with all her
heart. Oh, think of that, Roland! But we shall have
mamma to live with us, won't we dearest, when I am
your own—your very own? She will be a comfort to
us both, and not at all like the proverbial 'mother-in-law'
of the novel and play. But I must now conclude,
as we are both on the eve of starting for our Seigneury
of St. Eustache, where the French people are taking up
arms; but they love mamma so much, that she hopes
she may prevail upon them to refrain from breaking the
Queen's peace. So adieu till I write you from there,
dearest, dearest," &c., &c.</p>
<p>And then, of course, there was a postscript, containing
"cartloads of kisses."</p>
<p>Had she told Madame Darnel about the long-hidden
will and his changed circumstances?</p>
<p>Roland rather supposed not; she was generous and
loving enough, in her love and joy to have forgotten all
about the matter!</p>
<p>Roland found an entire day's occupation in reading
again and again the letter of Aurelia, nor was it fairly
consigned to that breast-pocket in his uniform which
contained her glove, till the warning drum beat on the
28th, when the troops marched to attack another body
of the rebels, who had taken post at Point Oliviere, and
had actually constructed there an abatis of felled trees
for the purpose of cutting off the retreat of Wetherall's
entire force!</p>
<p>But when the Royals came in sight, with their
brass-drums beating and fixed bayonets gleaming bright and
keen in the cold winter sun, and deployed from the
line of march with coolness and confidence into
companies for attack, after exchanging a few shots, the
rebels lost all heart, and fled, with the loss of their
cannon, which Roland captured at the head of his
company, sword in hand, together with twenty-five prisoners,
and then rescued his captain, a brave fellow, who in
the first advance got entangled among the branches of
the abatis and ran thus the serious risk of being shot
down helpless; and for all this, Roland was elaborately
and honourably mentioned in Colonel Wetherall's dispatch
to Sir John Colborne.</p>
<p>On the same day the Colonel's force returned to Chambly
with the captured guns and prisoners; but though elated
by their success every officer and man was suffering greatly
from the heavy and chill rain which turned into mud
the wretched roads that were already knee-deep in snow.</p>
<p>Meanwhile tidings reached them that the Queen's
forces, under Colonel Gore, had encountered such
formidable obstruction, and opposition, and, moreover,
endured so much from the severity of the Canadian
winter, which had set in with all its bitterness, that
they had been compelled to fall back from St. Denis,
and retire.</p>
<p>Marching was now laborious work, for when frost
came, the troops had to wear <i>creepers</i>, or plates of
spikes strapped to their feet.</p>
<p>The snow lay so deep that one might almost imagine
no power of the sun would ever melt it; and, at times,
when the leafless trees are coated on every branch and
twig with ice, whole forests seem to be turned into
crystal, when the rays of light produce ten thousand
prisms, and most wonderful is the effect if there is a
slight breeze to set them in motion.</p>
<p>Wetherall had partially, by his great success, arrested
the rebellion in his own quarter; but it was in all its
strength elsewhere, and the troops had many severe and
harassing duties to perform amid the frost and snow
of a very severe winter. It has justly been said that
the British officer is essentially a dandy, that "the
neatly and closely cropped hair, the well-trimmed
mustache, the set up figure, the spotless gloves,
boots bright as a mirror, and the general air of
dandyism are the outward symbols of those qualities which
make men good soldiers."</p>
<p>It no doubt is so. The set up figure remained, but
in Canada at that particular juncture, the dandyism
had nearly departed, as much as it did in the Crimea.</p>
<p>Amid these duties, Roland could have no letters
from Aurelia; neither could he write, for the postal
arrangements were completely suspended, or could only
be carried on by parties of armed men.</p>
<p>At last there came a day—one of horror—and Roland
never forgot it!</p>
<p>"Look here, old fellow," said Logan, with a bright
expression on his handsome face, bringing him a copy
of the <i>Montreal Gazette</i> some weeks old; "as Byron
says, 'pleasant 'tis to see one's name in print—'"</p>
<p>"Even in the 'Army List?'"</p>
<p>"Yes, and proud was I when first I saw my name
there," said Logan.</p>
<p>"Well, whose name is in print now?"</p>
<p>"Yours."</p>
<p>"Mine!" A sickening thought occurred to Roland
of the story of the concealed will, Ardgowrie, and the
discovered heir or heirs, for though he had schooled
himself to face the idea, it was a bitter one; therefore,
it was only a relief to his mind to find, that the matter
referred to, was the fact that he was favourably
mentioned and thanked in General Orders by Sir John
Colborne, commanding Her Majesty's forces in Canada.
"for his gallantry displayed on the 28th of November
last, at the abatis of Point Oliviere."</p>
<p>As he read it he thought of Aurelia, and the pleasure
such a notice would afford her; and was carelessly
running his eyes over the columns of the paper, when
they caught her name—<i>her name</i>—and mentioned in a
way that made his blood turn alternately cold as ice,
and hot as fire!</p>
<p>When proceeding in her sledge, with her daughter
Aurelia, Madame Darnel had been stopped and
surrounded near her own seigneury "by a band of rebels
under the notorious Colonel Smash, for whose arrest
a reward is now offered."</p>
<p>The old lady had been subjected to such violence,
that she had fainted and been borne to the house of
the curé insensible, while her beautiful daughter was
brutally carried off by the "Yankee Sympathiser,"
and was now, if alive, a helpless prisoner in his hands
at St. Eustache.</p>
<p>Roland was petrified with grief and dismay by
intelligence, so deplorable—so terrible! Logan, full
of just anger and great indignation, was speaking to
him, but Roland knew not what he said.</p>
<p>The former was recalling the views "the Colonel"
had with regard to Aurelia; he recalled, too, his
eavesdropping, his rancorous hatred, threats, and jealousy;
he recalled, also, the whole character and bearing of
the man, and when he thought of the soft, gentle, and
beautiful Aurelia being helpless in his power, at such
a time, when the whole of Lower Canada was rent by
civil dissension, outrage, and bloodshed, and when the
Queen's troops were menaced everywhere, the heart of
Roland seemed to die within him!</p>
<p>Again and again had Roland thought, while angry
pride mingled with love and gratitude, that in
marrying Aurelia, he would deprive her of no luxury to
which she had been accustomed,—horses and carriages
in summer, the sledge in winter, a dressing maid, or
the thousand and one little things which wealth can
procure, because <i>she</i> had that; but he had longed to
make her mistress of Ardgowrie!</p>
<p>Now—now, when he had lost her, perhaps for ever,
how pitiful and minor seemed all such considerations.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0109"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER IX. <br/><br/> THE ABDUCTION OF AURELIA. </h3>
<p>In the main, the newspaper report was correct.</p>
<p>Madame Darnel, with the amiable object in view
stated in the letter of Aurelia, had been proceeding
with her toward her own estate, which was near the
pleasant and well-built village of St. Eustache, in Lower
Canada. It consisted then of about a hundred houses,
a handsome church and parsonage, and is situated near
the mouth of the river Du Chine.</p>
<p>Her sledge was a handsome and fashionable one;
the day was clear and bright, the snow, though deep,
was frozen hard, and the sledge glided along
delightfully. It was drawn by two fine horses, with showy
harness, set off by high hoops with silver bells on the
saddles, with rosettes of ribbon and streamers of
coloured horse-hair on the bridles; and Aurelia—her
charming face flushed and pinky with frosty air, a cosy
boa round her slender neck, her hand, through gloved,
inserted in a sable muff,—was enjoying to the utmost
the gay jingle of the bells, the nice crisp sound of the
runners of the sledge, when suddenly and involuntarily
a shrill scream broke from her, when at a turn of the
road near the river, where the cuttings in the
banked-up snow lay deep between two rows of picket-fencing, a
musket was fired, and their driver fell forward, a corpse,
shot through the head, and the vehicle was surrounded
by a mob of men.</p>
<p>Infuriated or sullen, but all ruffianly in aspect, these
men nearly all wore fur caps, with large flaps down
their cheeks, enormous pea jackets or blanket coats
patched and tattered, with India-rubber shoes, or moose-skin
mocassins, or thick cloth boots with high leggings.</p>
<p>All were armed with pikes, pitch-forks, swords, and
pistols; many had fowling pieces; many more had
muskets and bayonets, and wore cross-belts stolen from
Government armouries or stripped from the slain; and
some carried their ammunition in hunting pouches and
shot bags.</p>
<p>One who seemed the leader wore a huge coat of
buffalo hide, and looked like some great wild animal,
for of the human face, nothing was visible, but a long
blue nose and a pair of red and blood-shot eyes.</p>
<p>"Jerusalem and ginger nuts, but that was a shot
well put in!" exclaimed this personage, whose voice
there was no mistaking, and the two horrified and helpless
creatures found that they were in the hands of that
gang of the insurgents—the most dastardly and
lawless—led by Ithuriel Smash.</p>
<p>Their first emotions on finding themselves in the
centre of such a savage throng, were undoubtedly those
of extreme terror and shrinking delicacy; but Madame
Darnel for a time forgot her naturally womanish
apprehensions, collected the powers of her mind, and
throwing up her veil, confronted the whole band, which
mustered more than a hundred men.</p>
<p>Among that mob were many on whom Aurelia and
her mother had conferred countless acts of kindness and
charity in sickness and health; but, like low-born and
ungrateful cowards, they hung back now, when they
should have rushed to her defence.</p>
<p>Certainly, to some of the French insurgents, the
appeal of Madame Darnel, a handsome woman about
forty years of age, with an intelligent and sweet expression
in her well-cut features, and every way a person of
refinement and delicacy, was not without a little effect;
but the announcement of Smash that her daughter was
his affianced wife who "intended to slope with one of
the 'tarnal Britishers," against whom they were in
arms, deprived poor Aurelia of all sympathy, and a roar
of menace escaped his hearers.</p>
<p>"Is this conduct your return for my kindness and
charity to a creature so immensely beneath me?" asked
Madame Darnel.</p>
<p>"As whom?" asked Smash.</p>
<p>"You, fellow!"</p>
<p>"D—n your cussed impudence! Now then, Aurelia,
come along, white face. You look as if you required a
box of our New York 'Never-say-die or Health-restoring
pills,'" said Smash; and a shriek burst from
the girl as his coarse fingers with their long spiky nails
grasped her tender arm, and she was literally torn away
from her horrified mother, who fainted, and was borne off
by some of the better disposed to the house of the curé.</p>
<p>Followed by the armed rabble, the helpless Aurelia
incapable of all resistance, was dragged through the
village of St. Eustache, and taken a literal prisoner, or
victim, to her mother's house which adjoined, the
seigneury of the Darnels, wherein Colonel Smash had
established his headquarters.</p>
<p>For a moment or two she thought to conciliate her
chief captor.</p>
<p>Tears big and bright were welling in her dark blue
eyes; her bonnet and veil had been torn off, and her
dark hair all unconfined rolled over her back and
shoulders, as she stood with clasped hands and pleading
looks before the so-called Colonel.</p>
<p>"Do shake hands with me," she condescended in her
first fear to say; "shake hands, Ithuriel—let us be
friends, and send me back to mamma, or bring her
here."</p>
<p>"Friends—friends be darned!" roared Ithuriel, whose
plug of pigtail dropped out of his lantern jaws, after
which he proceeded to air it on the point of his jack
knife, while eyeing her with mingled malevolence and
admiration, and seated himself on a table. "You won't
give me a kiss, I suppose; but I can take as many as I
like, I reckon; and you look as if you scarcely
remembered me—Ithuriel Alcibiades Smash. Strike me ugly,
but that's a bad compliment. But," added the bantering
ruffian, "I calculate I'll survive it! Flirtation
and courtship are two very different things, Miss
Aurelia, and I ain't disposed to flirt with you, as you'll
find out before long."</p>
<p>Smash did not yet molest her; but she knew not what
he might do if he imbibed much brandy, as he had a
bottle beside him, and was helping himself liberally
to the contents thereof, while he talked; and she eyed
him with fast-growing alarm.</p>
<p>That he had shot the poor sledge-driver, an old and
faithful domestic whom she had known from childhood,
Aurelia never doubted; and that deed added to her
unfathomable loathing and horror of him. She shivered
in his presence, and shuddered whenever he drew near
her. She glanced wildly at the room door, but escape
was hopeless. He saw the glance and laughed aloud.</p>
<p>Was she acting in a melo-drama with the ruffian, as
the heavy villain of the piece? Was it all a dream?
It almost seemed so, the whole situation with all its
contingent horrors and future uncertainties, appeared so
new, so unnatural and unreal! He seemed to read her
thoughts, for he said,—</p>
<p>"Was it not to spite that tarnation Britisher, who
used to come into the room with an opera hat under his
arm, like a roasted fowl with its gizzard, I might give
you a little time to think of marrying me."</p>
<p>"Marry <i>you</i>!" exclaimed Aurelia in a peculiar tone,
that filled him with rage and caused him to indulge in
much language that was "more pagan than parliamentary"
till he roused her scorn and anger.</p>
<p>"Coarse fool, and worse than fool! how dare you
use language that is unfit for me to hear?"</p>
<p>"'Guess your Britisher will never see his wretched
little island again—too many rifle bullets flying for
that," said he irrelevantly, as he saw how every
reference to Roland affected her. "You encouraged that
'ere Britisher," continued the Colonel, still airing his
quid on his jack knife.</p>
<p>"Encouraged—how dare you say so?"</p>
<p>"Dare—there is no daring in it, my dear. Who
commands here—you or I?"</p>
<p>"Sir, you presume upon your relationship in some
way with mamma, to talk to me thus, surely."</p>
<p>"I presume only on my own love for you, and would
keep you, a daughter of Canada, as I would a daughter
of America, from the contamination of that 'tarnal
red-coated British slave!"</p>
<p>Still, as yet, save when dragging her to the house—her
own father's house—he had not laid hands on her.
With all his roughness and innate brutality, he felt
that there was an undefinable something in the grand
hauteur, the excessive delicacy, the tone of refinement,
in the general aspect and bearing of Aurelia, that
quelled, while it secretly "riled" him.</p>
<p>He noticed the very expression of her nostrils, the
quiver of her proud lip and the flash of her dark blue
eye—the flash of scorn and loathing when she replied
to him, and he quailed under it—he, the utter
American rowdy! But this emotion began to die as he
drained another bumper of stiff brandy and water, and
he took to blustering and swearing again.</p>
<p>"Do not use language such as this—and to me,"
said Aurelia, putting her trembling hands to her ears;
"surely you do not know the nature of oaths."</p>
<p>"Don't I? I calculate I've sworn enough to sink a
seventy-four-gun ship," said he, with a mocking laugh;
"but surely," he added, drawing nearer her, and adopting
a coaxing tone and bearing, "in time you'll forget
all about that fellow, and see the necessity of quietly
becoming Mrs. Ithuriel Smash, when you cannot make
a <i>better of it</i>."</p>
<p>The girl's heart seemed to give a great bound, and
then to die within her, at these words, the look that
accompanied and the dreadful inference to be deduced
from them.</p>
<p>"Anyhow, I calculate that I shan't forget the evening
I saw you and that yaw-haw beast of a Britisher
giving each other such nice tokens of your mutual
good-will—he giving you what he calls his heart—and
you making a free gift of the whole seigneury of
St. Eustache! If once he comes within the reach of my
rifle...!"</p>
<p>The Colonel was unable to express what would
happen then. He clenched hands and set his great
yellow teeth with such force, that his quid slipped down
his throat and nearly choked him.</p>
<p>Two or three days were passed by Aurelia in extreme
misery and captivity, and almost hourly she was warned
by Smash that his patience would soon be exhausted,
and he would "send for the parson."</p>
<p>She secluded herself in her own room, and found for a
little time a temporary protector in Papineau, one of the
rebel leaders, a dapper little French colonist, who had
now come to concert measures for the defence of the
village, and urged that the young lady must not be
intruded upon.</p>
<p>"Snakes alive! man, don't I tell you she is to be my
wife?" roared Smash.</p>
<p>"<i>Mon Dieu</i>, my dear Colonel, that may be so,"
replied Papineau, taking a pinch in the old Parisian
fashion; "win the heiress, but woo her gently. A
lady can only receive in her own apartment a clergyman
or a doctor."</p>
<p>"And a hairdresser," added the barber of the village
who was there, armed to the teeth.</p>
<p>"By Jerusalem, then, I'll go as a hairdresser and
scalp her, if she gives me more trouble! I'll teach
her that I'm half-horse, half-alligator!" exclaimed
Smash, who by this time was intoxicated to a dangerous
extent.</p>
<p>A violent illness—the fever of great fear—had
prostrated Madame Darnel.</p>
<p>Separated from the latter, Aurelia was without the
little protection her presence might have afforded. She
was glad to keep beside the female domestics of the
seigneury, from among whom she was often haled
forth shrieking to endure the extraordinary
love-speeches of Smash; at last the women quitted the
house in terror, and she was left there alone—alone
with a man whom she now loathed with a fear
indescribable!</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0110"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER X. <br/><br/> THE END GROWING NEAR. </h3>
<p>The sea was frozen now for miles upon miles along
the coast, there were no electric cables as yet, and
inland all postal communication was cut off by
concurrent events. No news came to Roland from
Messrs. Hook and Crook, and for all that he knew to the
contrary, the newly-found heirs might have eaten their
Christmas pudding and drunk the new year in, at
Ardgowrie!</p>
<p>But Roland gave not a thought to such matters now!
He had become changed in appearance, too; he was
thinner, and two or three lines appeared about his eyes,
where none had been visible before; and times there
were when he thought himself going mad with the
bitter strain upon his thoughts.</p>
<p>He had but a wild, clamorous craving and gnawing
at the heart—a fierce longing to quit Chambly and
set out for St. Eustache. But Roland Ruthven was a
soldier of the Queen, and was chained to his post.
His place was with the colours of the Royal Scots.</p>
<p>The cold at this time was intense; in the village
market-place were masses of beef, sheep, and deer
frozen hard as they had been for months, having been
killed when the severe weather first set in. There, too,
were plucked fowls, fish of all kinds frozen hard, and
eels as stiff as walking-sticks. Even the milk was sold
by the pound, and the loaves of bread, frozen hard
the moment they left the oven, had to be literally sawn
into slices, and half-and-half grog froze.</p>
<p>The snow was deeper than it had ever been seen by
that proverbial party who is to be found everywhere,
"the oldest inhabitant," and military operations were
out of the question. Guards, when relieving others,
frequently took over the arms of the old guard being
unable to carry their own; and once Roland found a
sentinel frozen dead, hard and stiff and pale as the
snow around him, in his sentry-box, with his glazed
eyes glaring horribly out of their sockets. He was
Robert Bruce, already mentioned, who, poor fellow,
would sing upon his post no more.</p>
<p>But amid all this, the mess often thought and talked
of punkahs, of Bengal curries, green chillies, devilled
biscuits, and other "up-country" memories, as if the
very mention of such things would keep them warm!
And at that merry mess-table Roland always felt
himself to be now—how different from past times!—the
skeleton at the banquet.</p>
<p>But there comes an end to all things, and relief
came ere long to the agonised mind of Roland. He
was seated in his billet—a miserable wood-cutter's hut
at Chambly,—when, one morning, Hector Logan burst
in upon him like a gale of wind, bringing a tempest of
snow with him.</p>
<p>"News for you, Ruthven!" he cried, shaking himself
like a Newfoundland dog; "splendid news! We
are to march at once."</p>
<p>"For where?"</p>
<p>"St. Eustache, my boy."</p>
<p>"St. Eustache!" exclaimed Roland, starting to his feet.</p>
<p>"St. Eustache it is. I have just seen the Colonel
with the General's order in his hand."</p>
<p>"Thank God!" exclaimed he, with great fervour;
"we shall soon gain tidings now—you know of
<i>whom</i>?"</p>
<p>"True, old fellow!"</p>
<p>"Yes—and vengeance too, perhaps!" added Roland,
but his heart sank at the thought of how unavailing
might be all human vengeance <i>now</i>!</p>
<p>Never did soldier prepare to take the field with
greater alacrity than Roland Ruthven. The chances of
Fate or of war might have compelled him to remain
where he was, like Tantalus, in his pool, or to move in
some other direction than St. Eustache!</p>
<p>It all came to pass thus.</p>
<p>The severity of the weather had abated a little, and
even while it lasted rapine and outrage had reigned
supreme in the disaffected districts. Sir John Colborne,
on the 13th December, with all his disposable forces,
set out on his march from Montreal, and Wetherall's
little column was to join him on the way to St. Eustache
to seize that place and scour the country about the Lake
of the Two Mountains, where the insurgents under
Papineau, Smash, and others had barbarously driven
out all the loyal inhabitants, leaving many of them to
perish miserably among the snow; and a vast extent of
country was ravaged and pillaged.</p>
<p>Sharing Roland's anxiety, Hector Logan was in the
highest spirits, when the troops moved off and turned
their backs on Chambly, as they devoutly hoped, for
ever.</p>
<p>Evening was approaching when the march began,
without music, and the drummers had their drums slung
behind them. The soldiers had their buff belts above
their great coats. The musket-locks had been inspected
and fresh ammunition served to all, which, as the men
said to each other smilingly, "looked like business."</p>
<p>"No 'beauty and the bowl' for us to night, Roland,
by Jove," said Logan, as he set his face to the fierce
northern blast, which came sweeping from the Pole
itself over half a world of snow, rasping the cheek like
the roughest file.</p>
<p>Roland commanded the advanced guard, which consisted
of two sections, with detached files, and as they
were penetrating into disturbed districts, Colonel
Wetherall repeated to him the usual orders and cautions
to be observed when entering defiles or hollow-ways,
ascending hills, with flank objects, and so on, and never
did the young officer feel more sternly zealous in his life.</p>
<p>After proceeding some miles, just as the moon rose
and the guard entered a hollow-way, where the cutting
in the drifted snow was deep, Roland heard his first
advanced file challenge some one and cock his musket.
Then a man on horseback appeared, who replied in
broken English.</p>
<p>Roland drew his sword, and on hurrying to the front
found that his next advanced files had stopped the stranger,
who appeared to be a peasant—a French settler. He
wore an old-fashioned <i>capote</i> and mocassins of cow-hide;
and had a rifle slung across his back.</p>
<p>"You are a Frenchman, I perceive?" said Roland.</p>
<p>"Monsieur l'officier," replied the man, saluting him,
"je suis Canadien."</p>
<p>"Why are you armed?"</p>
<p>"For my own protection, monsieur."</p>
<p>"That may or may not be. Where do you live?"</p>
<p>"My farm is on the Rivière de Chine."</p>
<p>"Has it been burned?"</p>
<p>"No, monsieur."</p>
<p>"That in itself looks suspicious," said Roland, while
the stranger glanced uneasily at the dark mass of the
grey-coated and cross-belted column, now descending
the slope in the moonlight.</p>
<p>"From whence came you last?" asked Roland.</p>
<p>"The village of St. Eustache, monsieur."</p>
<p>Roland's heart leaped; it was with difficulty he
could ask the next question.</p>
<p>Did he know aught of a young lady who was in the
hands of Mie insurgents?</p>
<p>"Mademoiselle Darnel—yes, monsieur. She is still
in the house of the Seigneur with Colonel Smash, or
perhaps in the church which is fortified. She is married
to him, people say—or, rather, <i>he</i> has married <i>her</i>,"
added the fellow, with a grin, which nearly tempted
Roland in his then mood of mind to run him through
the body.</p>
<p>He felt sick, sick at heart; but in a little time he
would know all—the worst!</p>
<p>"Corporal Burns," said he, with a voice strangely
broken, as the listening soldiers told, "take this
fellow, with a file of men, to the rear. The Colonel
may wish to question him. Forward, lads!" he added,
as the peasant was taken, in great tribulation of mind,
towards the column, and once more the march of the
advanced guard was resumed, and Roland Ruthven
tramped on, so full of agitating thoughts that he never
knew his cigar had been cold and out for half an hour
or more.</p>
<p>The junction was duly effected with the column of Sir
John Colborne; the Royal Scots Regiment, the Montreal
Rifles, and Globinsky's Volunteers, were formed in one
brigade under Colonel Wetherall. The latter force was
dispatched through the forests that border the upper
road leading to the point to be attacked, with orders to
drive back and disperse all pickets and parties of the
insurgents, while the remainder of the brigade crossed
the Ottawa, or Grande Rivière, on the ice on the 14th
of December.</p>
<p>There along the Ottawa, the then snow-covered
country is undulating, thickly covered with fine wood,
except on the western bank of the river, where for some
twelve miles have been laid out townships, chiefly
occupied by Irish, and American settlers. Below that
of Chatham the old French Seigneuries begin.</p>
<p>The advance on the enemy's stronghold now began
from several points.</p>
<p>In Roland's heart much of the ardour and fierce
excitement incident to the march had died away, or rather
taken the form of unspeakable anxiety and grief,
especially when on the 14th of December he saw before
him St. Eustache, with its wooden houses and orchards
of bare apple-trees, the cold winter sunlight tipping the
spire of the church, and the vanes of the large white
house, wherein Roland knew that she might be, though
the man taken over night informed Colonel Wetherall
that it was not improbable she might be in the church,
which the rebels considered the key of their position.</p>
<p>"Patience—patience!" he muttered, "patience yet
awhile!"</p>
<p>No magistrate being with the troops, Sir John
Colborne, while still at a little distance from the place,
resolved to send forward an officer with the printed
proclamation. For this service Roland at once
volunteered. Tying a white handkerchief to the blade of his
sword, in token of truce, he borrowed his friend the
adjutant's horse, and galloped forward to the first line
of stockades or outer defences, behind which the dark
forms of armed rebels were seen clustering thick as bees,
and at the windows of the seigneur's house.</p>
<p>The whole troops watched with anxiety the brief
parley that seemed to ensue; then it was suddenly cut
short by a lamentable crime. A stream of smoke came
from the window of a house, the report of a musket
rang out on the clear frosty air, Roland's horse was
seen to rear, with its rider lying back on the crupper,
but his knees still in the stirrups, to all appearance a
corpse, as Nolan's was borne back from Balaclava!</p>
<p>A shout of rage burst from the Royals; the artillery
opened, and all pressed forward to the attack, intent on
dire vengeance, at a well-ordered rush.</p>
<p>By barricades, palisades, trenches, and loopholing
the houses, the church, and its presbytery, Papineau,
Smash, and their bands of rebels, had left nothing
undone to render St. Eustache a somewhat formidable post;
and they were encouraged by the knowledge that other
bodies of their compatriots had fortified themselves at
St. Benoit and elsewhere.</p>
<p>These preparations had, luckily for poor Aurelia,
occupied much of her ungainly suitor's time, but he
found himself at full leisure on the eventful 14th of
December, and he began his system of annoyance
again.</p>
<p>"The Colonel" had never sacrificed much to the
graces, and his late occupations in St. Eustache had
effectually prevented him from doing so at all; thus his
appearance was every way the reverse of prepossessing.</p>
<p>In her own house, surrounded by familiar objects,
though havoc and wanton destruction were visible on
every hand, Aurelia had after a time gathered a fictitious
courage, for was she not at home! But what struck
her as curious was, that in this fellow's strange
love-making he had never spoken of <i>love</i>, for, sooth to say,
he knew not what, in its purer sense, the sweet emotion
meant; and by partial successes, particularly the failure
of Colonel Gore's column before St. Denis, he was now
so swelled and inflated with pride that he threatened to
explode like a Woolwich torpedo, and ever and anon he
would say to Aurelia,—</p>
<p>"Snakes! I could scarcely expect you to marry me
right off the reel, slick at once; but I may grow weary
of giving you time, so listen to me!" (here he registered
one of his awful oaths) "rather than that blazing
Britisher should succeed, I'd job my bowie into you!"</p>
<p>If St. Eustache were attacked, and the Queen's troops
defeated, then indeed did Aurelia know that one way or
other her fate would be sealed. Indeed, it might be
sealed either way!</p>
<p>Cold though the season—it could not well be colder—so
hot was the constitution of the Colonel (or his
"coppers," as he phrased it), that he was always
compounding curious effervescing drinks in long tumblers
from the contents of Madame Darnel's cellars; but on
the morning in question he said—</p>
<p>"Aurelia, my dear, I have a bumper of that old
mydeary, which belonged to your dad, old Darnel!
Snakes! but it <i>is</i> the stuff. Not the mixtour of hickory
and Jamaikey rum we get in New York," he added,
draining a tumbler of the late Mr. Darnel's most
cherished Madeira, much to the alarm of his shrinking
listener, as intoxication always added, if possible, to the
Colonel's vulgarity.</p>
<p>"Ah—ah!" said little M. Papineau, regarding him
with a smile, snuff-box in hand, "the ancient Persians—if
we are to believe history—never undertook any great
matter, and never discoursed of aught that referred to
policy or public interest, till they were at least, as the
sailors say, three sheets in the wind, and you seem to be
of their opinion. And now I must go round our posts."</p>
<p>And, bowing with mock courtesy to Aurelia, he took
his sword and pistols, and withdrew, stuffing them into
the belt that girt his buffalo coat.</p>
<p>Afraid almost to close her eyes at night, the poor girl
had now an unslept, wild, and hunted look in them,
with black circles round them; her face was deadly
pale, and her once beautiful dark silky hair, never
dressed now, was twisted in one great uncombed mass
at the back of her head. Smash saw all this plainly
enough, but he was pitiless as a Canadian bear, and
only muttered,—</p>
<p>"Darn, me, but I'll tame her yet, and break her
spirit or her heart!"</p>
<p>A little cry escaped her—a cry of joy, but more she
dared not utter, for lo! from the windows of the room
she could see, advancing over the waste of far extending
snow through which the great Montreal road lay, the
dark masses of the approaching troops, dark because all
were in their grey overcoats; but the fixed bayonets
glittered like a grey steely forest; the bright colours,
crimson, blue, and gold, were waving in the sun, here
and there the rays of the latter were reflected from a
brass drum.</p>
<p>The heads of the infantry columns halted, and a
distant flash or gleam seemed to pass along the ranks
as the arms were "ordered" and the men stood "at
ease;" the artillery were all well to the front, unlimbered
and wheeled round, the horses untraced and taken to the
rear, and while one solitary officer was seen galloping
towards St. Eustache, a ferocious interjection escaped
Ithuriel Smash, and a roar of voices burst over all the
place, when some thousand men grasped their
arms—weapons of every description.</p>
<p>How wildly with hope beat the heart of Aurelia at
this moment! But she closed her ears to the cries she
heard around her, from the colonists and their American
sympathisers.</p>
<p>"Sacré Anglais! Blood for blood!"</p>
<p>"Down with the Red slaves of Queen Victoria!"</p>
<p>"Death to the island savages!"</p>
<p>"We'll whip the 'tarnal Britishers into the sea!"</p>
<p>And so forth, the phrases only alike in their spirit of
ferocity. Meanwhile the solitary and adventurous
officer was coming galloping on. At last he drew near
that portion of the rudely-constructed works or fortifications
(that connected all the houses and gardens of
St. Eustache) which was immediately overlooked by the
windows of the room in which she was compelled to
remain with Ithuriel Smash, who, on the officer reining
in his horse and waving his flag of truce, threw up a
sash to hear what he had to say.</p>
<p>"Listen, my good people," he cried, displaying a
paper, "to the proclamation of Lieutenant-General Sir
John Colborne, G.C.B. and G.C.H., Commander-in-Chief
of all Her Britannic Majesty's forces in Canada:—</p>
<p>"Our Sovereign Lady the Queen chargeth and
commandeth all the persons here assembled in Eustache,
immediately to disperse themselves, and peaceably
depart to their habitations, or to their lawful business,
upon the pains contained in the Acts made in the
27th year of King George the Third, to prevent
tumultuous risings and assemblies."</p>
<p>A yell of scorn and defiance responded to the reading
of this brief document. Meanwhile a moan escaped
Aurelia, and a fierce chuckle Colonel Smash; and so
occupied was the former in looking at her lover, that
she took no heed of the Colonel, who softly and silently
locked a musket, took aim, and fired.</p>
<p>Then a piercing shriek escaped Aurelia, as Roland,
to all appearance dead or dying, prostrate backward on
the crupper of his horse, was borne by it to the
rear.</p>
<p>"Jerusalem and earthquakes!" said the assassin,
laughing. "No need to waste a second bullet now!"</p>
<p>"Oh Father in Heaven, but this is too much—too
much!" cried Aurelia, as she fell on her knees and
covered her face with her hands.</p>
<p>"Is it?" said the ruffian, with another fiendish
laugh, while proceeding to reload. "Now I think the
game is in my own hands in more ways than one,
Aurelia Darnel. We've dug up the war-hatchet, and
ain't going to smoke the painted calumet of peace
now!"</p>
<p>She fell prone on her face in a swoon, and thus
Ithuriel Smash had to leave her, to come round as best
she might, as other work was cut out for him now, as
the troops were closing up fast on every hand, and already
the guns of Glasgow's artillery had begun to knock
everything in the village to pieces.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0111"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XI. <br/><br/> ST. EUSTACHE STORMED. </h3>
<p>We have no intention of keeping the reader in
suspense.</p>
<p>The shot fired at Roland had missed him, and only
barked a tree; for though he was so close, recent
potations had rendered "the Colonel's" aim a very
unsteady one; but his intended victim, inspired by a
sudden idea born of his own coolness and decision of
purpose, gripped the horse with his knees, and,
feigning death to escape further firing, fell back on the
crupper of his saddle, and in this way was carried
safely to the rear, followed by the yells and derisive
laughter of the insurgents.</p>
<p>Believing their favourite officer slain, a shout of
rage burst from the Royals, and every man made a
forward step in eager anticipation of the order to advance.</p>
<p>"A flag of truce fired on!" exclaimed old Sir John
Colborne, starting in his stirrups with honest grief and
indignation. "Forward, Wetherall, to the attack and
lead your column up the central street!"</p>
<p>"I have escaped, General, by a miracle and a ruse,"
said Roland, reining in his horse and sitting erect in his
saddle, to the surprise of all who saw him; "and now
I shall rejoin my company."</p>
<p>He resigned the steed to its owner, and the attack at
once began—indeed it had begun, for the artillery had
already opened fire, and stone and timber were alike
going crashing down beneath it.</p>
<p>Covered by the Montreal Rifle Corps, the First Royals
advanced, steadily firing up the central street, and
seized all the most defensible houses. Logan was
then despatched by Colonel Wetherall, with orders to
bring up some of the artillery; but he was driven
back by the fire of the rebels from the lower windows
of the church of St. Eustache, till the officer
commanding the artillery had promptly conceived where
his services were wanted, and galloping into the village
by the rear, endeavoured to blow or burst open the
door of the sacred edifice, but completely failed to do
so, so dense and heavy was the barricade of earth
behind it; but some companies of the Royals and Rifles
from the neighbouring houses opened a terrible fire of
musketry upon the occupants of the church, whose
shrieks and yells came through the windows, which
were almost instantly divested of every vestige of glass.</p>
<p>After an hour of heavy cross-firing, and the door still
defying every effort of our troops, the Scots Royals
attacked the presbytery, which was full of men, forced
an entrance, led by their officers, sword in hand, and now
ensued a terrible scene, for they bayoneted nearly every
man in the place, and then set it in flames, while scores
of desultory combats were going on in the streets
without.</p>
<p>There, in many places, streams and pools of crimson
blood dyed the pure white snow; in others, by repeated
footsteps and struggles, it was trod to slush and snowy
mire, wherein the dead and dying lay weltering—the
breath of the latter, in many instances their last
respiration, curling away like steam upon the frosty air
of the keen Canadian winter day, while on all hands
were heard strange cries, oaths, and yells.</p>
<p>"Vive la République Canadien! A bas les Anglais!"
cried the French Colonists.</p>
<p>"A bas la Reine! A bas la Ligne!"</p>
<p>"Vive Papineau!"</p>
<p>"Down with British rule; death to old Colborne
and his red-coats!"</p>
<p>Such were the shouts on one side; on the other, only
the din of the heavy file firing, and at times that ringing
united cheer, the import or instinct of which there is
no mistaking.</p>
<p>By this time the smoke of the blazing presbytery had
enveloped the whole church, which, as a wooden edifice,
it was supposed would soon catch fire. Now Roland
remembered the supposition of the French peasant, that
Aurelia might be there, and we may imagine the
sensations with which he beheld the dark smoke-wreaths
eddying around its taper spire!</p>
<p>"Carry the church by storm!" was now the order
of Sir John Colborne; and while a straggling fire was
poured upon the column, from the house of the
seigneur and others, Wetherall ordered his grenadiers—we
had such soldiers still—to lead the van, the post
of honour and peril being ever theirs by traditional
right.</p>
<p>The blood of all the troops was fairly up, and as the
column went forward surging and storming, and firing
with the bayonets pointed upward at an angle, the soldiers
of the Royal Regiment raised the shout of "Scotland
for ever!"—a <i>cri de guerre</i> first used by the Greys at
Waterloo, and last by the Duke of Albany's Highlanders
at the storming of Kotah in 1858.</p>
<p>Pouring in by the shattered windows, leaping over
every obstacle, and plunging like a torrent among the
armed crowd within the church, the Royals made a terrible
havoc, and among those who fought here was Roland,
as yet untouched, and amid all the carnage and mad
confusion around him, having but one thought in his
heart.</p>
<p>At the same time, some other of the battalion
companies, led by Major Ward and Captain Bell (afterwards
Sir George and colonel of the regiment in 1868),
a Peninsular officer who in this war commanded the
fort and garrison of Coteau du Lac, an important post
on the frontier, and received the thanks of Sir John
Colborne for his exertions in recovering all the
24-pound guns and 4000 shot from the bottom of the
river, and getting them in position amid the winter
snows to face the rebels—led these and other officers
we say, the rest of the Royals gradually fought their
way into the church by the rear, and bayoneting all
who resisted, set it on fire, and the corpses were
consumed in the flames.</p>
<p>One hundred and eighteen men taken prisoners.</p>
<p>"<i>Quartier! Quartier! Je me livre a vous!</i>" (I yield
myself up to you) was now the cry of the French
colonists.</p>
<p>"Quarter for the love of God, and her Majesty the
Queen!" echoed the British rebels, on finding that all
was over.</p>
<p>Papineau, if there, was nowhere to be found; and
Smash, though seen often, had disappeared.</p>
<p>In the apartment where we left her, Aurelia Darnel
had heard all the dreadful uproar around her—the
myriad horrible sounds of a combat on which she
dared not look, and she lay in a corner, gathered, as it
were, in a heap, though on her knees, unable even to
form a prayer, stunned, crushed, and bewildered, with
but one thought—"Roland dead!"</p>
<p>Steps, sounds rather, drew near the room; the door
was flung open and Ithuriel Smash, pale as death,
bleeding from more than one wound in his body, and
with a dreadful rattle-snake expression in his eyes—an
expression of agony, madness, and rage, staggered in;
then he fell on his hands, and came crawling slowly,
panting and groaning, towards her, leaving a track of
his own blood—"the trail of the serpent" behind him
on the floor.</p>
<p>His long knife was clenched in his teeth; his
murderous intention was plain—to slay her would be his
last effort, and in the corner where she crouched,
Aurelia could not escape him!</p>
<p>She uttered a low wail of despair, ending in an
involuntary shriek for help—help for the love of God!
And help came.</p>
<p>Poetic and dramatic justice would require that the
obnoxious Colonel Smash should perish by the hand of
Roland; but responsive to her cry, there burst into
the room, Logan of Logan Braes and a few of the Royals,
by whom he was speedily bayoneted like a reptile or
mad dog, and he died, biting at the bayonets, like a
dog or a savage.</p>
<p>Logan tenderly raised the half-dead girl from the
floor, and in a few minutes after, the caressing arms of
Roland, caressing and reassuring, were around her—and
she felt safe then—doubly safe with him and her mother.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0112"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER XII. <br/><br/> CONCLUSION. </h3>
<p>With the civil war in Canada, our story has little
more to do.</p>
<p>Suffice it that for a brief time, Roland Ruthven,
after seeing Madame Darnel and her daughter safe in
their chateau of St. Eustache at Montreal, had again to
join the troops, who advanced to St. Benoit, where, so
great was the terror excited by the recent victorious
assault, that no opposition was offered, and the rebels
sent delegates to say humbly, that they would, without
conditions, lay their arms down, and they were conveyed
under escort to Montreal, to meet the meed of their
crimes.</p>
<p>The good result of all these operations was the return
of the colonists to their homes, and the disappearance
of all armed parties of insurgents. About the same
season, however, in the following year, when the deep
snows of the Canadian winter began to fall, there was a
second rising in Lower Canada; but it was again
crushed by the energy and gallantry of Sir John
Colborne at Napierville, and for these and other
services, the Queen created the fine old soldier a peer of
Great Britain.</p>
<p>Prior to these events some startling changes occurred
in the history of the two principal characters in our
little narrative.</p>
<p>The Darnel estate at St. Eustache was utterly destroyed;
the mansion had been ruined or burned, the lands
ravaged, and the circumstances of the once wealthy
widow were sorely impaired; her horses, carriages, and
many other luxuries had to be dispensed with and
economy become the new order of the day; but now,
safe at her own home at Montreal, all the beauty and
gaiety of Aurelia returned, and after all she had
undergone, even poverty seemed, a slight matter to
face—as yet.</p>
<p>"O Roland darling!" said she, with a little laugh,
as they stood together in a window of the château one
evening in the spring, looking towards Montreal
steeped in the sunset, and where the greenery of the
woods was deepening faster than it ever does in
Britain at the same season, vegetation maturing with
wondrous rapidity the moment the snow disappears;
"O, Roland—I am poor as yourself now, and yet you
still talk of marrying me and going to India; but
could I take my poor mamma there?"</p>
<p>Roland's loving countenance fell.</p>
<p>"You lost your noble estate by a will; I my
seigniory—or nearly all of it—by civil war; our fortune
is ruined."</p>
<p>"Yet—we must not—cannot part, after all—after all!"</p>
<p>"Oh no—no!" murmured the girl, fondly and
plaintively, with her sweet face pillowed on his breast.</p>
<p>Next day Roland arrived with a face full of such
excitement, wonder, and so many varying expressions,
that Aurelia knew not what to make of him and his
incoherences for some time at least.</p>
<p>That morning the regimental postman brought him a
letter, the first words of which, however much expected,
made a lump rise in his throat.</p>
<p>It was from his legal agents, Messrs. Hook and
Crook, Writers to the Signet, and dated from
Edinburgh:—</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"DEAR SIR,"—(It used to be <i>my</i> dear sir once) "We
beg to acquaint you, with much regret, that we have
now traced out and learned authentically who are <i>the
heirs of the marriage of your deceased uncle</i>, the late
Mr. Philip Ruthven, eldest son of General Roland Ruthven,
who went to Jamaica."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Roland felt very sick as he read, and paused; then
summing up courage, he resumed the obnoxious epistle,
and read on.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"From the latter place that gentleman went to
Canada, where he married a lady of Montreal, by whom
he had several children, all of whom are dead save one,
Miss Aurelia Darnel de St. Eustache" ("Oh, my God!"
thought Roland, "what miracle is this?"), for he took
the name of Darnel to please the family of his wife,
who was the daughter of a wealthy French seigneur.</p>
<p>"We regret to be the medium of such very bad
news, but of course are now taking the usual legal
measures to execute the will of the late General
Ruthven, according to your own instructions."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>So Aurelia was his cousin, the daughter of the lost
Philip, who had quitted Scotland in disgust, never to
return, and she was the heiress of Ardgowrie!</p>
<p>And he—what was he? For weal or woe her
affianced husband. It was all like the plot of a drama;
and some time elapsed before Roland could realise the
whole situation; but there was the prosaic letter of the
lawyers, which, under <i>other</i> circumstances, might have
seemed to cut his very heart-strings.</p>
<p>Now how innocuous it was!</p>
<p>Another hour found him by the side of Aurelia, and
to attempt to record all the explanations and loving
incoherences, astonishment and joy of <i>that</i> particular
interview would be a difficult task indeed; but even
while speaking to her, and while her voice was in his
ear, Roland seemed to see before him the cabinet of
Scindia, with the now baffled secret it contained.</p>
<p>If Roland had now, in a modified sense, to blush at,
and feel shame, for his father's duplicity in the matter
of the will—a duplicity born of the various emotions
we have already described, dislike between brothers,
temptation offered on one hand, the dread of losing the
ambitious girl he loved on the other—and then the total
disappearance of Philip, he had to blush before one
who had accepted him as a husband when their positions
were very different, when all the odds of wealth and
landed property were, as once again, in her favour,
and he was still the penniless soldier with his sword
alone.</p>
<p>And Roland, as he looked on Aurelia again, recalled
the youthful portrait of his lost uncle Philip at
Ardgowrie, and saw, or thought he saw, how closely she
resembled it.</p>
<p>We have little more to add.</p>
<p>The Darnel estates, we have said, were ruined; but
Ardgowrie was yet in all its baronial glory; to Ardgowrie
they would go, and sell the former, so it was all
settled ere the Canadian summer came swiftly on; thus
the reader may be assured that they were married long
before the month of August, so old Elspat Gorm's
"fatal day" of the Ruthvens was fully evaded. Nor
need we add, though we do so, that jolly Hector Logan
was groomsman, and old General Colborne gave the
bride away.</p>
<p>In winning Aurelia, Poland regained his inheritance,
but he never left the old Royal Regiment, or returned
finally to Ardgowrie, till he had, like his father before
him, been long a popular colonel of the corps.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE SECRET MARRIAGE. </h2>
<p>In famous old Cornwall, known as "the Land of
Tin," in the days of Solomon—the land of Druid
Cromlechs and Celtic circles, of those mysterious
sarcophagi named Kistvaens, wherein lie the bones of a race
unknown—the land of many wondrous relics of a
vanished past, lies the scene of the following events.</p>
<p>Not far from that part of the coast which is washed
by the British Channel stands Restormel Court, at the
time of our story—a few years ago—the seat of Sir
Launcelot Tredegarth Tresilian, Bart., a proud old
gentleman, whose chief, if not only failing was an inordinate
pride of family; and hence whose principal regret was,
that though he had heirs to succeed him in his estate,
there was none to follow him in his title, which had
been bestowed upon him by the late King William IV. for
certain political services. His two sons had been
killed in the service of the country. One had fallen in
Central India and the other in the Crimea, and as the
baronetcy was limited by diploma "to the heirs male of
his own body," he had to rest him content with the
knowledge that he was the first and last baronet of
Restormel Court.</p>
<p>Occupying the site of a castle demolished by the
French when they landed in Cornwall during the reign
of Henry VI., the latter is an edifice much older than it
looks.</p>
<p>The whole house was an epitome of the past; trophies
of war and the chase—coats of mail and stags'
horns—decorated the hall, and some of the rooms had remained
untouched since the days of the "Virgin Queen," hung
with tapestry, which was lifted to give entrance; hearths
intended for wood alone, and andirons—heraldic
griffins—to support the logs; and there were curious cabinets,
Cromwellian chairs, and carved <i>prie-Dieu</i> of all kinds.</p>
<p>On one evening in autumn, the present lord of Restormel
Court was lingering over his wine—some choice
old Madeira, which had been carefully iced for him by
the butler—in company with his two nephews, the
eldest of whom was understood to be, and acknowledged
by himself and all, as his future heir.</p>
<p>Sir Launcelot, verging then on his eightieth year, was
a pale, thin, and wasted-looking man. He was toying
with his wine-glass, and from time to time contemplating
his wasted white hands, on each of which a diamond
glittered; and then he looked at his nephews, who were
intently conversing near the fire.</p>
<p>They were both men about thirty-eight and forty
years of age respectively. Arthur Tresilian, the eldest,
and ever the prime favourite, was remarkably handsome,
with fine, regular features.</p>
<p>His brother, Basset Tresilian, who followed the legal
profession with success in London, was less athletic, but
quite as striking in figure.</p>
<p>Somehow people, especially in Cornwall, did not like
Mr. Basset Tresilian; and his periodical visits to the
Court added no brightness to the circle usually to be
met there.</p>
<p>"Well, boys" (for though men, the old baronet, by
force of habit, called them boys still), "fill your glasses,
and don't leave me to drink alone. Egad! in my time
fellows didn't shirk their wine as you do; but it is all
cigars and odious pipes now. Well, Basset, what does
he say? Is he inclined to follow the example you so
boldly set him some sixteen years ago, and take unto
himself a wife?"</p>
<p>"I cannot say, sir. It is of a horse we were talking."</p>
<p>"A horse—pshaw! You were wise to marry young,
Basset. <i>I</i> did so!" said Sir Launcelot.</p>
<p>"I have had no reason to repent me thereof," replied
Basset, complacently. "My family are charming;
Mona is a fine girl in face and figure."</p>
<p>"Quite a Tresilian—eh?" said the old man, proudly.</p>
<p>"And your nephew, Lance, is as handsome a boy
as any in London. I have, indeed, prospered every
day since I placed the marriage hoop on Marion's
finger."</p>
<p>"Egad! you sing your own praises well, nephew
Basset," said the baronet, after a pause. "But you,
Arthur—why have you not imitated this fine example?
I cannot last for ever, and I don't want my estates to go
begging for owners."</p>
<p>Arthur coloured with too evident vexation.</p>
<p>"They cannot beg far, dear uncle," he replied,
"while I have the good fortune to be your heir; and,
then, Basset——"</p>
<p>"His sons, you would say?"</p>
<p>"Yes," replied the other, with a faint voice; for
Basset was regarding him so keenly that he felt his
colour deepen.</p>
<p>"What is the booby blushing for?" asked Sir
Launcelot, laughing. "Blushing at forty! By Jove!
I was cured of it at fourteen! Will you ride with—I
mean, drive over with me to Carn Mornal to-morrow?
My friend Trelawny has three fine daughters, and I
should like you to make their acquaintance. Tresilian
and Trelawny would quarter well on a shield; or would
it be <i>impaled</i>? Will you go, Arthur?"</p>
<p>"I regret to say it is impossible, sir."</p>
<p>"When—why?"</p>
<p>"I have been a whole month at the Court, and am
now due at a friend's house near—near London."</p>
<p>"London again? The last time you started for
London, Trelawny gave me some hints that you never
went in that direction so far as the borders of Devonshire.
I can't understand your total indifference to the
society of ladies, and this resolute celibacy at your time
of life. D—n it, sir, it don't look well! and I only
hope you hav'n't conceived some unworthy attachment—I
mean unworthy the name of Tresilian."</p>
<p>"I have not, sir," replied the other, almost angrily
for he still felt the keen legal eye of Basset upon him.
"I shall never, I hope, do anything unworthy of the
name we bear in common."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Arthur boy. Give me your hand."</p>
<p>"And now, uncle—leaving you and Basset to the
Madeira—I'll smoke a cigar in the stable, and look at
that horse I mean to take away with me to-morrow."</p>
<p>And anxious to close a conversation, the subject of
which pained him deeply, Arthur Tresilian left the
stately dining-room, and strolled over the beautiful
lawn towards the stable court.</p>
<p>"Can Basset suspect me? Does he know anything?
No! no!—he cannot! My poor Diana!" he muttered,
"still this humiliating concealment, and no hope save
through the death of that poor old man. Accursed be
this silly pride of birth!"</p>
<p class="t3">
* * * * *</p>
<p>"How long papa has been away from us—a whole month!"</p>
<p>"When will papa be home, mamma dear? The
cottage seems so dull without him!"</p>
<p>Such were the questions two handsome boys—one
was now quite a lad of eighteen—asked of a lady on
each side of whom they stood caressingly, while she
hastily read a letter which had just come by post.</p>
<p>"In four days, dearest boys, he returns to leave us
<i>no more</i>!" she exclaimed, with joy, as she fondly
kissed them both, and once more turned to her letter.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"RESTORMEL COURT, Sept. 8.</p>
<p>"MY DARLING DIANA,—My uncle, Sir Launcelot, is
gone, poor man! He was found dead abed by his valet
this morning. No cause is assigned but old age, yet
he was hearty as a brick last night over his Madeira,
rallying Basset and me. Well, he has gone, with all his
overstrained and old-fashioned ideas of birth, and all
that sort of thing. And now for our marriage, dearest—now
all justice can be done to you, my much enduring
one! I am the sole heir to Restormel, and your Arthur
after me. I have written to the curate of H——,
Jersey, for the attested copy of our marriage left with
him, and expect it by return of post. Kiss our boys for
me, and believe me, dearest Diana, your affectionate
husband,</p>
<p>"ARTHUR."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Yet she remarked that it was addressed, as usual.
"Mrs. Lydiard, Carn Spern Cottage," forgetting that
she was unknown by any other name.</p>
<p>"It is well named Carn Spern—the Carn of Thorns—for
in some respects, with all our happiness, such has
it been to me; but now—now all that is at an
end! and blessed be God therefor! Yet it is through
death—the death of an old man, however—a very old man!
My boys—my innocent boys!—they are so young—they
must never know our secret! Yet—how to explain to
them the change of name from Lydiard to Tresilian?
I must be silent as yet, and consult dear Arthur about
this."</p>
<p>And now to go back a little way in the private life of
Arthur Tresilian. The favourite nephew and acknowledged
heir of his paternal uncle, he had ever been
supplied by the latter with a handsome allowance.
When travelling or sojourning for a time in Jersey, he
had there made the acquaintance of Diana Lydiard,
then a girl barely done with her schooling. Her rare
beauty fascinated him; but, unfortunately, she was the
daughter of one who, at Restormel Court, would have
been deemed as a mere tradesman. Arthur knew that
he should mortify, offend, and disoblige irrevocably
the proud old Sir Launcelot if he made such a
<i>mésalliance</i> as to marry Diana Lydiard openly; for he
knew that his uncle's immense fortune was entirely
at his own disposal, and that he was quite capable of
cutting him off with the proverbial "shilling" and
leaving the whole to Basset—the careful, plodding, and
thrifty Basset.</p>
<p>So they were married; but wherever they went they
passed as Mr. and Mrs. Lydiard, the maiden name of
Diana. The marriage was duly registered in his name
in the book of the little Jersey church, and an attested
copy of it was lodged with the incumbent who performed
the ceremony.</p>
<p>Arthur Tresilian took his girl-wife to the Continent,
as he could then with a safe conscience write home
for remittances.</p>
<p>Amid these wanderings two boys were born to
them—Arthur and Ralf, whom she so named after her
father, and each boy seemed a reproduction of either
parent: for the eldest had all the personal attributes of
the father—was bluff, bold, and manly; while the latter
had all the dark beauty and gentleness of his mother.
On the education of these boys Arthur Tresilian spared
nothing, and both were already highly accomplished.
Everywhere they had the best masters money could
procure; but no profession was decided on for Arthur,
the eldest, as the <i>false name</i> and the expected wealth
raised alike doubts and objections as to what should be
done.</p>
<p>Diana Lydiard was the daughter of a tradesman—true;
but amid the love she bore her husband, and the
luxuries by which his wealth enabled him to surround
her, she had ever felt her position to be anomalous,
and with it the pride that struggled against shame—a
shame that at times became blended with vague fear
and sorrow for the future.</p>
<p>And now for the last three years the secret family
of Arthur Tresilian had been settled in a little
sequestered spot named Carn Spern, near Trevose Head, a
rocky cape that juts into the sea westward of Padstow,
and some thirty miles or so distant from Restormel
Court. There he was known simply as Mr. Lydiard,
and by the frequency of his absence was supposed to
be a commercial traveller; but as the little family lived
quietly, made few acquaintances, and incurred no debts,
their lives glided by unnoticed and uncared for by all
save the poor, to whom the charity of Mrs. Lydiard
was a proverb, and something more solid too.</p>
<p>Through some unseen agency a whisper of an
alleged improper connection formed by Arthur did
reach the ears of Basset Tresilian, and through him,
those of old Sir Launcelot, and in the fury and indignation
of the latter, his lofty and aristocratic scorn, he
had a foretaste of what awaited him, and the three
beings he loved most on earth, if the reality became
known.</p>
<p>And now the proud old man was dead, and all necessity
for concealment was at an end. Arthur Tresilian
succeeded to Restormel Court, with thirty thousand
pounds a year; Basset to eight thousand pounds, the
baronet's gold repeater, and all the legal works in his
library.</p>
<p>"It is well the boys have gone to fish, I have so
much to say to you, Diana darling," said Arthur, as
he flung his hat away, and clasped his little wife to his
breast. "And about the resumption of our name,
Diana, they must simply be told that I have succeeded
to an estate which requires a change in our designation."</p>
<p>"Excellent, Arthur."</p>
<p>"To-morrow I must start for St. ——."</p>
<p>"For Jersey?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Diana, I am anxious personally to get the
attested copy of our marriage certificate by the curate
who married us, or a new one from the records. I shall
fill up the time of absence by writing my will in your
favour and the boys, to make all sure, for one never
knows what may happen. When you see me again, Di,
both documents shall be snug in this old pocket-book
my father gave me."</p>
<p>And laughingly he tapped the heirloom, a handsome
scarlet and gilt morocco book, on the boards of which
were the Tresilian arms, surmounted by a griffin, stamped
in gold.</p>
<p>"A strange little episode, almost a romantic one, has
occurred during your absence, dear," said Mrs. Tresilian,
for so we must now call her; "Arthur has
quite fallen in love with a young lady, whom he has
met riding her pony among the green lanes near Padstow."</p>
<p>"Arthur—that mere boy. It won't last long, Di."</p>
<p>"I hope not, and so will you, perhaps, when I tell
who she is, and the risk we have run: Mona Tresilian!"</p>
<p>"What, my brother Basset's daughter?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Arthur."</p>
<p>"But the girl has gone to London with him, and
that will end the affair. And now to-morrow, darling,
I must leave you by the train for Falmouth, whence I
shall take the steamer to Jersey. When I return the
carriage shall be sent on here for you and our two dear
little fellows, as I wish you to enter Restormel Court
in the state that befits you, though my uncle's
hatchment still hangs above its <i>porte cochère</i>."</p>
<p>Next day she was alone once more, and he had sailed
hopefully on his errand.</p>
<p>The hour she had pined for during eighteen years—never
so much as after the birth of her boy Arthur—when
she should sink the dubious name of Lydiard and
be acknowledged as the wife of Arthur Tresilian, had
come at last, and a thrill of the purest joy filled her
heart. In her anxiety for her children's future she felt
small sorrow for the death of the octogenarian. How
should she feel more?</p>
<p>His absurd pride had kept her under a species of
cloud for eighteen years, as a person unknown to the
world, and as one even now to be recognised with
wonder—yea, perchance with doubt.</p>
<p>The period of her life so longed for, not for its
wealth, but when she and her children should take
their place in the world as Tresilians, had come at last.
There are times when an hour seems long. Oh, then,
how long must days, and weeks, and months, appear,
when they roll into years? All time passes inexorably,
however. While she sat reflecting thus her eldest son
was engaged elsewhere, but not, as she thought, with
his fishing-rod.</p>
<p>"And you are going to London with your papa?"
said he to a fair-haired and blue-eyed girl, who was
clad in deep mourning, and who had pulled up her pony
in one of the grassy and shady lanes near the
unsavoury old fishing town of Padstow.</p>
<p>"Yes, and we leave by the train to-night."</p>
<p>"And I shall see you——"</p>
<p>"Perhaps never again, Arthur," replied the girl,
with her face full of smiles and tears, for she was less
affected than her lover. "I shall never forget you,
Mr. Lydiard, or all the pleasant walks and meetings we
have had, by these green lanes, by the Bray-hill above
the sea, and ever so many places more."</p>
<p>"And you call me Mr. Lydiard? Oh, Mona, can
you leave me so coldly?" he asked, sadly; "may I not
write to you in London?"</p>
<p>"Ah, good heavens, no!" she exclaimed, with all a
school-girl's terror. "What would mamma say? And
then there is papa!"</p>
<p>It was delightful to have a lover; but not delightful
that the fact should come to the ears of such a papa as
Mr. Basset Tresilian.</p>
<p>"Then I have no hope?"</p>
<p>"Yes, you have," said she, playfully tickling his face
with her riding switch.</p>
<p>"Oh, name it, Mona!"</p>
<p>"I have an uncle named Tresilian down here in this country."</p>
<p>"He who succeeded to Restormel Court, or some such place?"</p>
<p>"Exactly, Arthur—the same."</p>
<p>"Well?" asked Arthur, little thinking that she
referred to his own and well-loved father.</p>
<p>"Papa thinks we shall spend our Christmas holidays
with him.—he is so jolly!—and, somehow, it will go
hard with me if I don't get an invitation for Mr. Arthur
Lydiard."</p>
<p>An expression of thanks and quietude spread over
the young man's face, mingled with great sadness, for
she added,—</p>
<p>"I must go now—must leave you, Arthur."</p>
<p>"Oh, Mona! Mona! it seems so hard to lose you
now!"</p>
<p>"My darling Arthur!" exclaimed the girl, giving
way to a shower of tears, as his arms encircled her
slender waist, and she permitted her soft, bright face
to fall upon his shoulder. But at that moment they
were rudely interrupted.</p>
<p>Arthur felt himself seized by the arm and thrust
violently aside by a grave and stern-looking man about
forty years of age. This person was in mourning, and
instinct told the lover that he must be Mona's father.
He seized her pony by the bridle, and—after darting a
furious glance at Arthur, a glance not unmingled with
surprise, as he saw in his face a likeness to some one,
he knew not whom—led the young lady away through
a wicket in a thick beech-hedge and shut it. Ere he
did so, however, he turned and said to Arthur,—</p>
<p>"Whoever you are, young fellow, let such tomfoolery
cease. This young lady leaves to-night for
London. Attempt to write to, or follow her, at your
peril; and I may add that we shall dispense with the
pleasure of your distinguished society at Restormel
Court in the Christmas week."</p>
<p>Arthur's spirit was proud and fiery. He made a
spring towards the little gate, but checked himself; he
felt that he dared not confront, in wrath, the father of
the girl he loved, and so he turned sadly and hopelessly
away, like a good, simple-hearted lad as he was, to tell
his mother all about it, for he concealed nothing from
her; but, somewhat to his surprise and chagrin, instead
of sympathising with his disappointment, or betraying
indignation at the "flinty-hearted father," she laughed
merrily, smiled, and kissed him, thrusting at the same
time into her bosom a letter she had just received from
her husband.</p>
<p>"But I shall never see her more, mamma," urged
Arthur, piteously.</p>
<p>"You shall, Arthur—you shall! be assured of that.
Did your own mamma ever deceive you?"</p>
<p>"No, no, never!" replied Arthur, hopefully.</p>
<p>"And she is to be at Restormel—is that the name of
the place?"</p>
<p>"Yes, mamma; Restormel Court—a grand place,
they say."</p>
<p>"At Christmas? Well, Arthur, and you shall be
there too, or your mamma is no true prophetess."</p>
<p>Diana's husband had reached Jersey in safety, and
gone to the little secluded church of St. ——, where
they had offered their mutual vows to heaven on that
eventful morning, so well remembered still, when their
only witnesses were the parish clerk and sexton.</p>
<p>"The poor old curate"—so ran his letter—"you
remember his thin, spare figure, with a long black, rusty
coat, diagonal shovel hat, gaiters, and white choker—has
gone to his last home under the old yew-tree that
for centuries has guarded the burial-ground. By a
destructive fire in the vestry the whole of the marriage
registers, and some of the baptismal ditto, have perished
before the copies thereof were transmitted to
headquarters—wherever that may be; but I have, most
fortunately, oh, my Diana! by the special providence
of heaven, secured <i>the attested copy</i> of our marriage
lines, which the old curate made at my request from
the now defunct register. It was found among his
papers by his successor, and is now in my possession—in
the old scarlet pocket-book, together with my will,
which I have carefully drawn up in favour of you and
our boys, and signed before witnesses. I mean to
spend two days here with an old friend, and shall
return by the steamer <i>Queen Guinevère</i>, which leaves
Jersey for Falmouth on Friday, and which, by-the-bye,
has on board a large sum in specie coming from France
to England."</p>
<p>"Friday? On Saturday I shall see him!" thought
the wife in her heart, with a sigh of relief, and a
prayer of thanks to heaven. "The register of their
marriage had perished! <i>What if the attested copy had
been lost?</i> Oh, what then would have been the fate,
the future, of their idolized sons—her tall and handsome
Arthur, her merry little dark-eyed Ralf?"</p>
<p>Thursday passed; Friday, too; then came Saturday,
but no Arthur Tresilian, or Lydiard, as she had to call
him still at Carn Spern. There came tidings, however,
that the <i>Queen Guinevère</i> had left Jersey duly, but had
never reached Falmouth. Great was the anxiety, grief,
and terror of the little family at Carn Spern; for there
had been a severe storm in the Channel, and many ships
had been driven ashore about the Lizard and Land's
End; but none of these were steamers, and a whisper
began to spread abroad that the <i>Queen Guinevère</i> must
have foundered and gone down at sea, or some trace of
her would have been found upon the coast. But all
doubts were speedily resolved, when, on the third day
after she was due at Falmouth, Derrick Polkinghorne,
coxswain of the Padstow life-boat, discovered her
shattered hull sunk and wedged in a chasm of the rocks
near the lighthouse on Trevose Head. How she had
come to be stranded there on the other side of Cornwall
was a mystery to all, unless she had been blown by
the late tempest completely round the Land's End, and
been forced to run for shelter by St. Ives and Ligger
Bay. Much wreckage and many bodies were cast on
the beach; but, though none of them proved to be that
of Arthur Tresilian—or Mr. Lydiard, as he was called—no
doubt remained in the anguished mind of Diana that
he had perished, and she at once wrote to his brother
Basset, announcing the event, her existence, and the
legal claims of herself and her children.</p>
<p>All this complication proved very startling to Basset.
He knew nothing of his brother's Jersey journey,
though he always suspected his secret ties; but,
ignoring the latter, he at once put his household in
super-mourning, and took possession of Restormel Court as
his own, leaving, however, no means untried to prove
the death by drowning of Arthur Tresilian, though
the name of Lydiard was borne on the list of
passengers.</p>
<p>The following day saw Diana and her sons, attired
in deepest mourning, at the Court, requesting an
audience with Mr. Basset Tresilian—her close cap and
concealed hair, her long crape weepers, and face deadly
with pallor, announcing her recent widowhood, which
Basset viewed with a sneer, as with a haggard eye she
looked at the stiff ancestral portraits, the cedar carvings
of the stately library, the blazing fire, the gleaming
tiles, and picturesque furniture of white and gold and
crimson velvet.</p>
<p>She announced with quiet dignity, yet not without
doubt and much perturbation, that she came as the
widow of the late Mr. Tresilian, to claim her place, and
the places of his children, at Restormel Court. He
replied, calmly—</p>
<p>"You have proofs, I presume, of all this, Mrs.—Mrs. Lydiard?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Tresilian, sir!" said she, while her Arthur, in
silence and bewilderment, recognised an uncle in the
father of his Mona.</p>
<p>Alas! Diana had neither the certificate nor the will;
both had gone down into the deep, with her hapless
husband. She had, however, the letter referring to
those documents: but Basset, after a furtive glance
at the fire, tossed it hack to her contemptuously,
saying—</p>
<p>"I have heard of you before, madam—years ago, too.
My brother is drowned, and you are now poor. I dislike
death and poverty, and all that sort of thing; but
I'll do what I can in the way of Christian charity, and
have your hulking boys bound to trades. But you must
leave this place at once; the ladies of my family must
not come in contact with—such as you."</p>
<p>She rose, and left the stately house mechanically,
with one hand on Arthur's arm and the other on the
neck of Ralf; and she looked at them in agony—the
latter her little pet, the other the stately king of the
playing fields, and captain of the school eleven, to be
tradesmen!</p>
<p>Deep in the hearts of both boys sank their mother's
grief; but deepest in the heart of Arthur, who felt
himself called upon to do something—he knew not
what.</p>
<p>He spent hours and days upon the solitary rock above
where the wreck lay, looking at the spot with haggard
eyes. Oh, if that shattered hull had a voice—had the
dead that came ashore the power of utterance, the
secret of his father's fate might be revealed; but three
months had passed, and who could doubt it now? One
morning early, as he came to the accustomed spot,
under the grim shadow of Trevose Head, he found the
puffins scared away, and the solitude invaded by
others—one of whom he knew well, Derrick Polkinghorne, a
bold and hardy native of the Scilly Isles, where people
spend so much of their time on the boisterous ocean
that for one who dies abed nine are drowned; and, by
order of Lloyd's agent, he was preparing a diving bell
to examine the wreck, as much specie was known to be
on board of her.</p>
<p>"Mornin', Muster Lydiard," said he, for he and
Arthur had frequently boated together; "that's a smart
yacht outside the Lines. Sir Launcelot Tresilian's she
was—Master Basset's now."</p>
<p>"What is her name?"</p>
<p>"<i>The Bashful Maid</i>."</p>
<p>"She sails like a duck!"</p>
<p>"She does. Ah, there's ne'er a craft out o' Cowes
like that 'ere <i>Bashful Maid</i>!—'specially when she's got
a dandy rigged astarn; then she hugs the wind beautiful!
Just goin' down to 'ave a squint at this here
wreck."</p>
<p>"Take me with you, Derrick; for heaven's sake do!"
implored the lad.</p>
<p>"What on earth do you want down there?"</p>
<p>"Only a scrap of paper, perhaps, Derrick."</p>
<p>"Then you ain't like to find it, you ain't."</p>
<p>"I should like to see the deck my father stood on
last."</p>
<p>"I understand that, I does. Come, then. I wonders
as he went to sea in that craft, for last time she left
Falmouth the rats rushed out of her in thousands; and
they never does that for nothin'. But as for finding
paper here, you'll be like them as mistook the mild reflex
of the lunar horb for a remarkably fine Stilton. But
here we goes; and now take care on yourself."</p>
<p>With a thrill of awe and horror, oddly not
unmingled with delight and a sense of novelty, Arthur
took his place beside Derrick on the seat that was placed
across the bell, which at once began to descend. Light
was admitted by convex lenses, through which were seen
the long trailing weeds, the creeping things of ocean,
and now and then the sea-green faces of the blackening
dead!</p>
<p>They passed downward into the water, which surged
against the sides of the bell, and rippled over the lenses
till they were close to the bulged wreck. Her starboard
bow was completely smashed upon the rocks; the cargo
had been washed out, and was still oozing forth by
degrees. Already barnacles and weeds were growing on
it, and dreary, dreary and desolate looked that shattered
hull at the bottom of the sea; and Arthur surveyed it
with tears of the keenest grief.</p>
<p>"Suppose a shark stuck its nose into the bell?" said
Polkinghorne.</p>
<p>"I don't care if one did," said Arthur.</p>
<p>"A dead body? and, by Jove, here's one coming in
grim earnest. On his face, it's a man. Women allus
floats on their backs; how's that, Muster Lydiard?"</p>
<p>"My name is——" but he checked himself, for now
a corpse, which Derrick had roused with his pole, came
slowly athwart the stage at the bottom of the bell, and
remained there.</p>
<p>Suddenly a cry escaped Arthur! The grey great coat
upon it, all sodden and studded with weeds and limpets,
he recognised as one usually worn by his lost father,
and, longing to know more, he implored Derrick to
examine it; for himself, he dared not move, or breathe,
or think! Oh, could it be, that those poor remains,
half devoured by fish, and floating face downward in
the sea, were all that remained of his handsome and
beloved father?</p>
<p>"Hold on, lad, shut your eyes; and I'll soon see,"
cried the resolute diver, as he lowered himself to the
loathsome task of examining the remains.</p>
<p>Arthur dared not look; but ere long a cold metal
watch was placed in his hand.</p>
<p>"It is not papa's," said he, with a sigh of relief, that
ended in a cry of horror, for as those in charge of the
bell began to raise it, the water surged within it and
dashed about the corpse, which came against him again
and again, till Derrick, who was investigating its
pockets, thrust it with his pole out of the bell, which in
another minute was suspended over the sunny surface of
the sea.</p>
<p>"See, Muster Lydiard, I've found a pocket-book into
that ere poor fellow's overcoat," said Derrick.</p>
<p>"It is my papa's!" shrieked the lad; "his old scarlet
book, with his arms and crest upon it."</p>
<p>And in that book, safe and dry, were the lost will and
certificate of marriage.</p>
<p>"But, oh," moaned the lad, when he had told his
mother this startling occurrence, as he sank half sick
upon her breast, "if that was poor papa I saw, he came
from his grave in the sea, mamma, with those papers
for you!"</p>
<p>But the body was soon known to be that of a channel
pilot.</p>
<p>Ere the end of that week Basset Tresilian had to
change his tone, and Diana and her sons took legal
steps to make her the mistress and them the masters of
Restormel Court. So autumn drew towards winter;
but ere the sad widow quitted Carn Spern, one night a
carriage drew up, a man alighted, full of bustle and
excitement; a well-known voice was heard, and Arthur
Tresilian, the elder, was clasped in the arms of his
half-fainting wife.</p>
<p>Washed overboard from the steamer, he had been
picked up by a vessel bound for Cuba; his coat had
been donned by the pilot, so there was an end of all the
sorrow and mystery.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE STUDENT'S STORY. </h2>
<p>It is a ghastly tale I have to tell, in some respects;
but so far as regards its close, I have some reason to
congratulate myself, and to feel, that "All is well that
ends well."</p>
<p>It is almost an old story now, though I was an actor
in it; but the world is ever reproducing itself in some
form or fashion. Was there not an instance, in the
August of 1870, of a resurrection taking place at
Harrington, when all that quiet locality was startled
from its propriety by the discovery of a body cast in
its shroud beside its grave, which had been violated to
procure the jewellery with which the deceased had been
interred? My adventure, however, refers to the regular
old "body-snatching" times, before unclaimed subjects
were supplied to the anatomical theatres from our public
hospitals, and when houseless ruffians of the lowest and
vilest type made a livelihood by their loathsome and
almost nameless trade.</p>
<p>I had graduated at the great medical school of
Edinburgh, after a hard tussle with Hunter and Fyfe's
Anatomies, Bell on the Bones, the cell theories of
Schwan, and even grappling with some of the abstruse
and now exploded speculations of Gall and Spurzheim.
I had mastered all; I had been solemnly "capped" in
the old Academia Jacobi VI. Regis Scotorum, by the
Reverend Principal L—— (now in his grave); I had
undergone all the jollity of the graduation dinner, and
with <i>Frederick Mortimer, M.D.</i>, duly figuring on my
portmanteau, found myself, with my college chum, Bob
Asher (who, by the way, had <i>not</i> passed), sailing from
the harbour of Leith for London, in the Royal Adelaide,
one of the only two steamers which then plied between
these ports.</p>
<p>Though "plucked" for the third time, poor Bob was
in no way cast down. With him, study at Edinburgh
had been all a sham. He had duly "matriculated,"
and sent the ticket as a proof thereof to his father, who
duly paid for classes he never attended, and expensive
books he never read. But Bob had always plenty of
money then, at least, while I had barely wherewith to
pay my class fees and lodgings in Clerk-street, a quiet
place near the University.</p>
<p>At last I had the letters "M.D." appended to my
name—those magical letters which open the secrets of
households, the chambers of the fairest, the purest, and
most modest and refined to the perhaps hitherto wild,
and it may be "rake-hell" student, who is thereby
transformed suddenly into a member of the learned
profession, and a grave and responsible member of society.</p>
<p>A comfortable home, board, and washing, with forty
pounds per annum whereon to enjoy the luxuries of
this life, were the inducements which drew me back to
London, where I became duly inducted as assistant to
Dr. Crammer, in Bedford-street, Strand, one of those
old-fashioned practitioners who always had a lighted
crimson bottle flaming over the door by night, and had
a dingy little room off the entrance hall, with a skull or
two on a side table, snakes in "good spirits" on the
mantleshelf, and which by its appurtenances seemed
laboratory, surgery, and library in one.</p>
<p>The doctor's practice was more fashionable, however,
than one might have expected from his locality, and
many a patient of his I visited in the statelier regions
of Piccadilly and those pretty villas that face
Buckingham Palace and the Green Park. Dr. Crammer
was a fussy and pompous little man, with a bald head,
an ample paunch, and a general exterior like that of
the well-known Mr. Pickwick. He was vain of his
aristocratic practice, and more vain of none than of the
family of Sir Percival Chalcot, whose eldest daughter
was said to be one of the handsomest girls in London,
and whose son was in the Household Brigade.</p>
<p>I flattered myself then that I had rather a taking
manner and gentlemanly exterior; and that old Crammer
was a little vain of me as an assistant, especially
after I passed at Apothecaries' Hall—an absurdity
necessary then for graduates of the Scotch Universities,
who otherwise, in London, were liable to imprisonment.</p>
<p>I soon remarked, however, that he never sent me to
the baronet's. Every visit there he made in person,
and by himself; every dose of medicine, however
infinitesimal, was conveyed there by his own hand; for
he liked to have it to say to a friend <i>en passant</i>, "I am
just going to," or, "have come from Sir Percival
Chalcot. Lady Chalcot is unwell;" or, "Miss Gertrude
over-danced herself at the Palace last night." So
that great house, near where now the stately arch is
overtopped by that hideous statue of Wellington, was to
me as a sealed book. I soon ceased to think about it, and
gave all my attention and skill to the smaller fry in the
neighbourhood of the Strand; and between St. Clement's
and St. Martin's there is scope enough, heaven knows!</p>
<p>One day a professional visit had taken me farther
westward than usual, and I was sitting wearily on a
seat in Hyde Park, near the statue of Achilles, watching
the occasional carriages rolling past—I say occasional,
for it was an hour or two before the fashionable
time—when a cry roused me, and I saw a spirited
horse coming along the drive at a terrific pace. Its head
was down, and it had evidently the bit between its
teeth; while the reins, which had escaped the hand of
the rider, a lady, were dangling between, the forelegs.
She seemed a skilful horsewoman, and kept her saddle
well. I saw her floating skirt, her streaming veil, her
pale face, and wild, imploring glance as she came on.</p>
<p>One or two men attempted to catch the bridle, but
were instantly knocked over.</p>
<p>I leaped the iron railing, and by the greatest good
fortune contrived to snatch the reins, to gather them
together at the same instant, to twist the curb behind the
horse's jaw, thus arresting his progress; and then, with
a strength I did not think myself possessed of, to bear
it furiously back upon its haunches. At the same
moment that I thus mastered it, I was conscious of
hearing something snap; a dreadful pain shot through
my left arm, which hung powerless by my side; but
the lady who was both young and beautiful, with a
charmingly minute face, and large dark hazel eyes
gave me a glance expressive of intense relief and
gratitude.</p>
<p>"Thank you, sir—thank you. Oh, how shall I ever
sufficiently thank you?" she muttered hurriedly with
pallid lips.</p>
<p>"It was well done, miss—splendidly done of the
gentleman," said her old gray-haired groom, who
came up at a rasping pace. "Another instant and the
blind brute would have dashed you ag'in yonder gate."</p>
<p>"My papa shall thank you for this, sir; at present I
am unable to speak," she added.</p>
<p>So also was I; but she knew not the extent of the
injury I had suffered, as she bowed and rode away, her
horse being now led by the groom, who had taken its
bridle; while I was left there with my broken limb,
and without any clue as to who she was, save her
handkerchief, which I had picked up on the walk, and
in a corner of which was the single letter "G."</p>
<p>For a time I felt very faint; but at that juncture
Bob Asher drove past in his phaeton, and took me
home. Old Crammer set the bone, which progressed
favourably, and after a few days I was able to go
abroad a little, with my arm in a leather case and black
sling.</p>
<p>The face of the girl I had saved—a haunting face,
indeed—dwelt in my memory; and now that danger
was past, I thought of the episode with pleasure, for I
had scarcely a female friend in London; and I
wondered in my heart if she ever thought of the
humble pedestrian to whom she owed so much, and who
had so suffered in her cause. I could scarcely flatter
myself that she did so, for she was evidently by her air
and bearing, and by the mettle of the horses ridden by
herself and her groom, one of the "upper ten thousand;"
one in wealth, if not in rank and position, far above an
assistant to a sawbones in the Strand. She might be
married, too; yet she had nothing of the matron in her
appearance.</p>
<p>But often, when I had the opportunity, I went back
to the place where I had checked that furious horse, and
looked, but in vain, for it and its bright-eyed rider; so
I kept the little lace-edged handkerchief as a <i>souvenir</i>
of the occurrence.</p>
<p>About a fortnight after this, Crammer was summoned
to attend the deathbed of an aunt at Gravesend—one
from whom he had some monetary expectations
that were not to be neglected. The whole <i>onus</i> of our
practice thus for a time fell on me, and I was worked
very hard. Among many other visits to pay, was one
at the house of Sir Percival Chalcot, from whom a
message came for Crammer, urging his attendance without
delay. Ordering the little "pill-box," as we called his
brougham, I drove off in state to explain about his
absence, and offer <i>my</i> professional services.</p>
<p>A tall servant, in showy livery, with the invariable
whiskers and calves of his fraternity in London, ushered
me along the marble vestibule up a stately staircase,
adorned by pictures and statuary, into a beautiful little
library, where Sir Percival, a tall, thin, and
aristocratic-looking old gentleman, received me politely, but
somewhat pompously, and with an air of puzzle and surprise.</p>
<p>"It was Doctor Crammer I most particularly wished
to see," said he; "and he may be absent some days,
you say? Very awkward—especially as he, and he
alone, knows the general constitution of my family. I
dislike to consult a young man on the nervous disorder
of a young lady, but I may mention to you that my
eldest daughter has been engaged for a year past to a
friend; the settlements are all drawn out most satisfactorily,
I assure you; everything has been adjusted for
the marriage, even to the line of their continental tour;
but for the last three months she has sunk into exceedingly
low spirits. She suffers from nervous depression,
and at times is quite listless. Now, I think that
something bracing—some system of tonics—you understand?"</p>
<p>"Sir Percival, could I see Miss Chalcot?"</p>
<p>"Well—yes, certainly; that, of course, will be
necessary first."</p>
<p>"What is her age, may I ask?"</p>
<p>"Twenty. Please to follow me."</p>
<p>He led me into a magnificent drawing-room, through
the festooned curtains of which I saw another beyond with
the buhl and marqueterie tables, easy chairs, couches,
mirrors, and glass shades, peculiar to such apartments.
There was a pleasant odour of flowers and perfume;
and there, seated on a low folding-chair, was a young
lady, in a maize-coloured silk dress, the tint of which
well became her rich dark beauty. On the soft carpet
we approached unheard, or, if noticed, she never deigned
to move, and I could observe the superb development
of her figure, which looked more like the maturity of
twenty-eight than twenty.</p>
<p>Her attitude was expressive of perfect listlessness;
a book lay on her knee, but her eyes were bent on
vacancy. The purity of her profile was most pleasing;
her eyelashes were long and black, and curled at the
tips. The masses of her dark chestnut-coloured hair
were looped up on her head in such a manner as to
show the delicacy and contour of her throat and cheek,
the complexion of which was pale and clear. Her nose
was straight, with nostrils deeply curved; and the lips
were full, as if with a fixed pout.</p>
<p>"It is the doctor, my dear girl," said Sir Percival.</p>
<p>But she only raised her shoulders and eyebrows a
little, and became again, still and quiet.</p>
<p>"Gertrude, dearest, 'tis the doctor. I told you that
I should send for him."</p>
<p>"He is welcome," replied the girl, as she raised her
large, dark, and at that time sullen-looking eyes to
mine; and then added, "But this is not Dr. Crammer,
papa."</p>
<p>"It is his assistant, Dr.—Dr.—Colliner."</p>
<p>"Oh, papa!" she exclaimed, suddenly starting to
her feet, as the whole expression of her face changed;
"it is the gentleman who saved me in the Park, when
that horrid animal——and your arm, sir—was it
injured on that occasion? Oh, I hope not!"</p>
<p>"It was broken——"</p>
<p>"Oh, good heavens!—and for me!"</p>
<p>"In such a cause I should have risked the arms of
Briareus, had I possessed them!" said I, with enthusiasm.</p>
<p>"Permit me to thank you, sir," said the baronet,
stiffly and grandly. "I always thought that the
gentleman who had rendered my family a service so
important would have done us the honour to have left his
card, at least."</p>
<p>"But I knew not whom I had aided, sir, or where to
call."</p>
<p>"Most true," said Miss Chalcot; "I left you in such
rude haste; but, then, I was so alarmed!"</p>
<p>"And now, Miss Chalcot, permit me to feel your pulse."</p>
<p>I put my fingers on the delicate wrist. Her pulse
was going like lightning for a time; then it became
intermittent; then feeble, as the old listless expression of
inquietude stole over her fine face again, as her mind,
probably by the object of my visit, reverted to its old
train of thought, whatever it was.</p>
<p>Sir Percival regarded us dubiously over the point of
his high, thin, aristocratic nose. I was evidently too
young, perhaps too goad-looking, or had too great an
air of <i>empressement</i> about me, to suit his ideas of a
medical adviser for his daughter, so he said, coldly and
loftily—</p>
<p>"Without disparagement to you, sir, I think I should
rather have Crammer's opinion, Dr.—-Dr. Lorimer."</p>
<p>"Mortimer," I suggested, mildly.</p>
<p>"Ah, yes! If he don't come soon to town, I'll have
Clarke or Cooper to see her."</p>
<p>"Then I shall bid you good morning," said I, assuming
my hat; but turning again to the daughter, while
he was ringing the bell for the servant—he of the calves
and whiskers—to order the "pill-box," I said, "I have
often gone to the scene of your accident, at <i>the same hour</i>,
to look for you. Pardon me saying this; but your face
so dwelt in my memory."</p>
<p>"At the same hour—it was about <i>two</i> in the
afternoon," said she, with a bright smile.</p>
<p>"Yes—good evening, Dr. Short," blundered the baronet.</p>
<p>My name was evidently not worth his committal to
memory.</p>
<p>And I drove away, feeling happy in the consciousness
that I had seen her again, and that, though <i>engaged</i>,
as I had been told, I should see her again where
we first met, for her bright glance of intelligence told
me <i>that</i>.</p>
<p>Her father had shown pretty pointedly—with all his
punctilio, almost rudely—that he had no further use for
my professional services; but I felt deeply smitten by
the beauty of the girl. I strove in vain to thrust her
image from my thoughts, and recalled again and again
the galling information that she was the betrothed bride
of some beast—I rated him "a beast"—unknown; but
strove in vain; and found myself going to sleep that
night in my den above the surgery in Bedford Street,
with her laced handkerchief under my pillow, like a
lover of romance, with all the roar of the prosaic Strand
in my ears.</p>
<p>Next afternoon—Crammer was dutifully at his rich
aunt's funeral—saw me in the park, and occupying the
same seat from whence I started to arrest the runaway
horse. Every fair <i>equestrienne</i> I saw in the distance
made my heart beat quicker; but how joyous were its
emotions—how high its pulses—when, exactly at the
hour of two, I saw her come trotting slowly along the
walk, accompanied by the same old groom, and draw
up, with her little gauntletted glove tight on the bridle
rein, just before me. I came forward, and, after
raising my hat, presented my hand, which I felt to be
trembling.</p>
<p>"Somehow, I thought you would be here," said she,
with charming frankness, "and how is your arm?
Better still, I trust."</p>
<p>"I shall have the splints off to-morrow, Miss Chalcot."</p>
<p>"That is good—I'm so thankful! Do you know
that though this is only the third time we have met,
Dr. Mortimer, I feel quite as if we were old friends?
You must have thought my reception of you rather
ungracious yesterday."</p>
<p>"Nay; but for what does your papa think you
require medical advice? You seem perfectly well."</p>
<p>Her face fell—her features, or the expression of
them, changed as I spoke.</p>
<p>"That is my secret. No doctor can cure me, or
'minister to a mind diseased;' not that mine is precisely
so," she added, with a merry, ringing laugh. "Neither
papa nor mamma can understand me. I lack decision
and firmness, I fear. Dark women are imagined to be
fiery, and all that sort of thing; but it is the fair little
women of this world who possess the firmest will and
greatest strength of character."</p>
<p>"But you are subject to low spirits, your papa
hinted."</p>
<p>"Not naturally; but for a year past my heart has
begun to fail me in hopes of the future, why, or how,
I cannot tell you; and now, dear Dr. Mortimer, good
morning," and away she trotted, with a pleasant smile
and a graceful bow, leaving me rooted to the spot
with admiration of her beauty, the craving to see her
again strong in my heart, and conflicting with the
fear that she was fickle, and wearied of her engagement,
or had conceived a fancy for some one else, a year
ago.</p>
<p>From that period she had begun to date her emotions
of sadness.</p>
<p>A year ago, I had been a hard student in my little
den in Clerk Street, Edinburgh, a dim shadow in the
distance now.</p>
<p>"Go it, old boy," said Bob Asher, who came suddenly
upon me a-foot—the phaeton was gone now—"that's
not one of old Crammer's patients surely. You
are getting on, Fred, and if you wish to continue doing
so always talk most to the women, and middle-aged
ones; flatter the young girls, but on the sly only; and
make a most fatherly fuss with the babies, however
ugly or squally, at all times."</p>
<p>Rashly heedless of what the old groom might think
or report on the subject, I had an interview there
almost daily, for a few brief minutes; at times it was
but a bow and a smile, if she was accompanied by
friends, or more especially by her brother; and it went
hard with me but I made my professional visits and
old Crammer's practice suit my plans—if plans I
had—for I had given myself up to the intoxication
of—yes, of loving Gertrude Chalcot, though she seemed
placed above me by Fate as far as the planets are above
the earth; but with the conviction came reflections that
were not in my mind when the charm of her presence
absorbed every other thought and feeling.</p>
<p>When I was alone came calmer thoughts. She was
engaged, though to whom I knew not, and she might
just be amusing herself with me for the time, while I
was laying at her feet the purest love of an honest
and affectionate heart.</p>
<p class="poem">
Why did I love her? Curious fool, be still!<br/>
Is human love the fruit of human will?<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Engaged to another—whose ring was doubtless on
her finger—another, who had the privilege of kissing
and caressing her, while I had but a formal interview,
a park rail between, and the eyes of an observant old
groom upon us. I felt as jealous as a Turk or Spaniard
at the idea. One day I briefly implored her to meet me
a-foot in another part of the park. She agreed to do so,
and we had the opportunity of an explanation. I shall
never forget how charming my dark-eyed and dark-haired
beauty looked in a yellow crape bonnet—that
tint ever so suitable to a brunette—with violet flowers
between it and her pure complexion.</p>
<p>In language that was broken, but which the emotions
of my heart inspired, I told her of the enchantment her
society was to me; of the love that was becoming a
part of my nature, the love that had been so almost
ever since I had seen her, and led me to treasure her
handkerchief (which I then drew from my breast); but,
I added, that as she was plighted to another—more than
all, as she was so rich and I so poor, I had come to the
bitter resolution of seeing her no more, and quitting
England for some distant colony.</p>
<p>"You love me then?" she asked, calmly, and with
downcast eyes.</p>
<p>"Love you! Oh, words cannot tell you how fondly,
Gertrude."</p>
<p>"Then I, too, am the victim of circumstances. By
the manoeuvres of mamma, who is a great matchmaker,
in the very year of my <i>début</i> in London she contrived,
I scarcely know how, to have me engaged to a man for
whom I cared nothing then, and, oh, how much less
now! A young girl of eighteen, his presence dazzled,
his attentions flattered me, and that was the whole
matter. I tolerated him. I have done all I can to
delay the marriage for many months by feigning
illness; but papa and mamma say that to make a regular
break off will prove such an <i>esclandre</i> in society. Yet
is my life, all my future, to be sacrificed for the myth
we call society? I foresee too clearly what my fate will
be, to pass through existence unloving and unloved;
but it is heaven's will, or rather mamma's pleasure."</p>
<p>"Oh, that I were rich, Gertrude, or that men could
not stigmatise me as an adventurer and fortune-hunter,
as they will be sure to do, if I—I——"</p>
<p>"Did what?"</p>
<p>"Proposed the alternative."</p>
<p>"Fear nothing, Fred, but speak. I need advice."</p>
<p>The sound of my name on her lips, the intense sweetness
of her eyes and sorrow of her air, rendered me
blind to all but her beauty, her love, and the passion
that was in my own heart, and oblivious of those who
might be passing near—and afterwards we had soon
cruel reason to believe that we were not only seen, but
watched, as it was quite unusual for her to be out a-foot
and alone—I told her that if she would rely upon my
affection and honour, on the love with which she had
already inspired me, it would be the duty of my life to
render hers happy; that I would save her from the
delusive snare called "society," and the thraldom of her
proud old father and calculating mother. Of course, I
didn't call them so to her. I spoke with boldness,
decision, and facility, for love and passion lent me
power. I looked into her eyes and saw an answering
light; but she answered, pale and trembling the while—</p>
<p>"You are poor, you say, my dear Fred. Now papa
is rich, and ambitious of being richer. Alas! you
must be satisfied with——"</p>
<p>"What?—your friendship? Oh, Gertrude, can you
speak so coldly, and to me?"</p>
<p>Her tears fell fast.</p>
<p>"You overrate my powers of endurance. To be your
friend, and even that only in secret,—to see you, after
your avowal to me, the wife of another perhaps, rendering
all my existence hereafter a blank."</p>
<p>"I do not mean that, Fred. Alas! I know not what
I do mean," she added, weeping so bitterly that my
heart was pained.</p>
<p>"Mean—say that you will be mine, and not the wife
of this mysterious other."</p>
<p>"To-morrow I shall be here again—to-morrow shall
end all!"</p>
<p>She held up her sweet face; no one seemed near.
With the speed of thought I pressed my lips to hers—for
the first and the last time on this side of the
grave, as it proved—and we separated in a tumult
of joy.</p>
<p>Next day I kept my appointment without fail, but
not without difficulty, as I had a long and troublesome
operation to perform in a totally different direction, near
Wimpole Street. I waited till I could linger no
longer, and quitted the park slowly, filled by doubts
and dread, and by the hope that visitors—something
unavoidable—anything but illness, caprice, or change of
mind—had prevented my bright Gertrude from meeting me.</p>
<p>If her beauty, humility, and sweetness dazzled and
won me on one hand, her father's insolent hauteur—for,
like her brother, the Guardsman, he always "cut me
dead" in the street—piqued me on the other. I was
a gentleman by birth and education as well as either,
and what was more, I was the graduate of an ancient
university; yet I disdained to risk being stigmatised as
a fortune-hunter, which would surely be said of me, as
Gertrude had some eight thousand pounds yearly of her
own. But the girl loved me, and the conviction of that
rendered me blind to everything.</p>
<p>The morning of the second day brought me a note
from her, dated from St. George's Place.</p>
<p>A note!</p>
<p>We had met again and again by arrangement, but
never had I got a note from her, and I read and kissed
it a score of times, and committed many other absurdities
while studying the bad writing, which somehow
seemed totally unlike that of a lady; but then poor
Gertrude had never ventured to write to me before.</p>
<p>It contained but three lines, saying that she was
unable to meet me as usual, for reasons I should learn
if I would call, and see her after luncheon time, as papa
and mamma had left town, and she should be quite
alone.</p>
<p>The boldness of this proceeding was so altogether
unlike her, and so strange, that my mind became filled
with vague fears of some impending calamity, and I
counted every moment till, with a heart, the pulses of
which certainly beat fast, I rang the sonorous bell at
the door of the lofty house in St. George's Place, <i>then</i> a
more fashionable locality than now, for the house itself.
is changed into a public building. I had never before
entered it but once, though many a promenade I had
made before its stately plate-glass windows, in hopes of
obtaining a glimpse, however brief, of her I loved so
dearly.</p>
<p>"Jeames"—he of the calves and whiskers—opened
the door rather wider, I thought, than before, and his
usually stolid and stupefied visage wore a strange
expression. That might all have been fancy, for <i>he</i> could
not know the secrets of his mistress. I warily did not
ask for her; but on giving my card, inquired for "Sir
Percival Chalcot, or either of the ladies," certain that
she I wanted alone was "at home."</p>
<p>The tall loafer in livery bowed, and ushered me up
the great staircase once again; but instead of opening
the door of the glittering drawing-room, where I
expected to be met by the beaming face, the tender eyes,
and radiant figure of her I loved, I was shown into the
library, and found myself face to face with the baronet
himself.</p>
<p>He looked as high-nosed and aristocratic as ever,
and, moreover, as grim and pale and stern as death.
He barely acknowledged my somewhat bewildered bow—I
felt conscious that I had not been sent for
professionally—and instead of asking me to be seated, he
took a chair himself, and left me standing opposite.
Folding one leg over the other, and putting the tips of
his fingers together, as he lay back, and mostly looked
up to the ceiling—</p>
<p>"Sir," said he, "my son has, doubtless, informed
you in his note of this morning that I wished to see
you?"</p>
<p>"Your son, Sir Percival—I received no note from
him!" I replied, in utter bewilderment. "If Miss
Chalcot is indisposed——"</p>
<p>"Do not dare to name Miss Chalcot, fellow! She is
by this time in France."</p>
<p>"In France?" I repeated faintly, and with a sinking
heart.</p>
<p>"Yes; and beyond the reach of beggarly adventurers
and <i>chevaliers d'industrie</i>."</p>
<p>(So the letter had been a forgery by the brother—a
lure for me.)</p>
<p>"Listen to me, sir, and attend," said the old man,
gravely and calmly, "for it is the last time I shall
ever degrade myself by addressing so contemptible a
trickster!"</p>
<p>"Trickster, Sir Percival!" I exclaimed. "Your
injurious language——"</p>
<p>"I said trickster," he continued, with a mock bow.
"All has now been discovered; the secret meetings in
the Park, the artful plans you have laid to worm yourself
into the affections of a silly and <i>wealthy</i> young girl,
luring her heart from the man—the gentleman, I mean—she
is to marry; causing the delay of that marriage;
making scandal and gossip even among the menials of
my own household. Miss Chalcot, sir, has been sent to
the Continent, and I hereby inform you that if you
venture to follow, to trace, to speak with, or to write to
her, THIS is but a small instalment of what is in store
for you!"</p>
<p>And ere I could think or act, the savagely-proud
old man had snatched up a heavy riding-whip that lay
at hand, and dealt me two severe cuts fairly across
the face, almost laying it open, as if with a sword
blade.</p>
<p>"Madman!" I exclaimed; "dare you strike me?"</p>
<p>"I <i>have</i> struck you twice, sir," said he, with a
disdainful smile, as he reseated himself.</p>
<p>"You are old, and your white hairs protect you;
but you have a son, and I'll have him out at Chalk
Farm"—it was really Chalk Farm <i>then</i>—"and—and—but,
oh heaven!—he is the brother of Gertrude!"</p>
<p>"Bah! I thought so, you presumptuous beggar!
Go—go! or I shall chastise you again. Go, I
say! and remember well my words and my warning!"</p>
<p>I was trying to say something—I know not what—when
the door opened and his son appeared with
several servants, and before I could speak, I was thrust,
dragged, beaten by many clenched hands, and forcibly
expelled—yea, literally spurned—into the public
street—I, Frederick Mortimer, M.D., &c., &c.</p>
<p>Right well did they know—old Chalcot and his son—that
the very magnitude and depth of the insult to
which they subjected me would protect them, and that,
for her sake, they might have torn me limb from limb
without revenge on my part. Yet every nerve and fibre
tingled with shame and passion as I crossed the street,
and while endeavouring to conceal my discoloured and
lacerated face by my handkerchief, sought the seclusion
of the park opposite, going to the very place where I
was wont to meet my lost Gertrude, and where the
charm of her presence seemed to hover still.</p>
<p>But where was she?</p>
<p>There I remained for some hours, in a state difficult
to conceive. The insults to which I had been subjected
drove me to the verge of insanity. My situation was
unique, and I cannot now analyse or describe all the
emotions that surged through my brain—memory
furnishes nothing that will connect them. But there were
rage and shame, grief, hatred, and love, and sorrow.
It was here but yesterday she had said, prophetically,
"To-morrow should end all!"</p>
<p>And all was <i>ended, indeed</i>!</p>
<p>France!—she was in France; there would I follow
her, and yet be revenged upon them all. I started up
to seek old Crammer, and resign my situation as his
assistant.</p>
<p>The afternoon was far advanced, and many a patient
must have been sorely neglected by that time. But
what cared I if the world had burst like a bomb-shell
beneath my feet? I sought the house in Bedford
Street, with the red bottle in the fanlight, to find that
its crimson glow paled beside the hue of Crammer's
face. He was literally boiling and choking with
indignation at me.</p>
<p>He had received due intimation of my "insolence
and presumption" from Sir Percival; was desired to
send in his account, and appear at the house no more.
Thus his most aristocratic patients were lost to him for
ever.</p>
<p>Ere I could speak, he took the initiative, and
dismissed me, and that night found me in a humble
residence, near the Temple, with, a few pounds in my purse,
my worldly goods a portmanteau and a few medical
books ("Bell on the Bones,") seeking to soothe my
thoughts by the aid of an execrable cigar and a little
weak brandy and water.</p>
<p>The bright bubble had burst! I had lost Gertrude,
and she, being facile, or having little will of her own,
on finding that she had lost me, would too probably
make peace with her own family by fulfilling the
engagement that was so odious to her.</p>
<p>As this conviction forced itself upon me, I could have
wept; then I would start up, and mutter of going to
France ere it might be too late; but I had no money,
and travelling in those pre-railway times was not the
cheap luxury it is now. Moreover, I knew not how or
where to seek her; and while doubts grew thus, and
time went on, I might lose her for ever.</p>
<p>The result of all this was that the next day saw me
in a raging fever, and months elapsed ere I was
convalescent. For some time after sense returned I knew not
where I was, or what had happened to me. Close by a
table sat a familiar figure in his shirt-sleeves, smoking,
and occasionally taking a pull at a pint of stout. These
pleasures he varied by reading aloud from a medical
work, on pharmacy apparently, and breaking into a
scrap from a song, thus:—</p>
<p>"'<i>Plumbi subacet</i>: an aqueous solution of the salt
produced with the acetate and oxide of lead. A dense,
clear liquid. Colourless, odourless, and slightly
alkaline in taste. Produces a white coating on
glass.' <i>Plumbi subacet</i>—that's the ticket!</p>
<p class="poem">
"'He was a jolly old cock, and he cared not a d—n<br/>
For the laws or the new police,<br/>
And he thought mighty little of taking a lamb,<br/>
If he only fancied the fleece.'<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"'<i>Sodæ chloratæ</i>: a solution of carbonate of soda,
after the absorption of chlorine gas. A clear liquid,
and colourless. Odour——'"</p>
<p>"Bob—Bob Asher!" said I, in a faint voice, and he
started at once to my bedside; and from him I got a
history of how ill I had been, and how he had been my
chief attendant; how sore trials had come upon himself,
and that, by his father's failure, he was at the lowest
ebb now for funds, but had betaken himself to study,
and meant to pass now.</p>
<p>"But who the deuce is this Gertrude of whom you
have been raving for weeks past? Not she 'of
Wyoming'—eh, Fred?"</p>
<p>I told him my story, and he was excessively indignant.</p>
<p>"Why, death alive!" said he, "Chalcot is only a
baronet, and in the civil line of precedence—that is
pretty like a full corporal in the army—the second round
of the long ladder of rank. I'd have chucked the old
beggar over his own window!"</p>
<p>"Not if you loved his daughter, Bob," said I mournfully.</p>
<p>"Well, no, perhaps."</p>
<p>"And you are reading up?"</p>
<p>"Hard, Fred. I am doing the 'Modified Examination'
in pharmacy, and think I shall pass now."</p>
<p>I had been three months ill. Three months! Bob
told me that the Chalcots' town house was still shut up,
and no one knew in what part of the Continent they
were travelling. Our separation seemed confirmed
now. The dread of never again beholding that sweet
face, with the bright eyes and the pretty crape bonnet,
grew strong within me, and the idea that she might
already have become the wife of another added to my
torture of mind.</p>
<p>But lack of funds compelled me bestir myself anon,
and through Bob's kind offices, and my own known skill
while attending in the hospitals, I was fortunate enough
to obtain temporary employment with Professor
Sir —— ——, then the most celebrated anatomical
lecturer in England, as an under demonstrator, my
duties, as I may inform the uninitiated, consisting to a
great extent in the preparation of the various subjects
for minute dissection prior to his lectures; and during
the hot weather in London, I know of no task more
nauseous, repulsive, or typhoid in its chances and
nature. However, such work is as necessary for the
progress of science and the conservation of life and
health in others as the terrible task of procuring the
necessary subjects was then—when the tables of
anatomical theatres and dissecting-rooms depended mostly,
if not solely, on the results of felony—often of
murder—and the abduction of the tenants of the tear-bedewed
grave—an abduction in many instances, happily, never
known to relatives.</p>
<p>The duties assigned to me at the rooms of Sir —— ——
brought me in contact, under cloud of night, with wretches
whose character was revolting, and caused me to shudder.
Scores of bodies were brought me—valued at from five
to twenty guineas each.</p>
<p>Use and wont is everything, and by me at that time
they were viewed as coolly and callously as we may the
fish that lie on marble slabs in the curer's window.</p>
<p>Weary with a long day's work at the dissecting-room,
I had retired to my little lodgings, and thinking
sadly over the bright past that could come no more, I
felt disposed to ask heaven, upbraidingly, why I had
ever been cast under the spell of Gertrude, when I was
startled by the unusual sound of carriage-wheels
stopping before my humble place. There were steps on
the rickety stairs, and to my astonishment the professor
entered, and shutting the door, said he wished to speak
to me alone, as he had suddenly "an expedition" to
suggest to me—one that would require decision and
care to carry out, as so many morbid and vulgar
rumours of violated graves were abroad, and the
suspected, if caught, had but small chance of mercy from
the mob.</p>
<p>"But, Sir —— ——, surely you don't expect me to
go on such an errand?" I asked, with an incredulous
smile.</p>
<p>"By Jove, but I do!" said he, laughing. "I have
frequently done so, when a student here, in many a fetid
London burying ground, now closed up or built over;
but this is a most particular case—a subject we must
positively have for demonstration, and, if possible to
skeletonize afterwards."</p>
<p>"Is it peculiar, then?"</p>
<p>"Most peculiar!"</p>
<p>My curiosity was excited.</p>
<p>"Where is the burying-ground?" I asked.</p>
<p>"At R——, eight miles from town. No 'outrage,'
as they call it, has occurred there. The place is
unwatched and open. Would go with you myself—but
two, you see—should be just in the way. Yesterday an
old woman was buried there. Cholera, they say, caused
her death; but anything is called cholera now. She
was fifty-eight years old, and known well in the
neighbourhood for a singular malformation of the spinal
column, and I must have that portion of her for my
museum; but as the old dame will not be very heavy
you may as well bring the whole of her. Young Phosfat,
so long my assistant, who has the practice there, has
written me all about it. Take a trap and Bob Asher
with you—he's game for anything—to-morrow afternoon,
and, if you can, manage the matter without fuss. We'll
call her an old Dutch woman in the class, say she came
pickled in a cask from Holland."</p>
<p>The whole affair was a little exciting, so the high
spirits of Bob Asher, who had frequently been engaged
in such affairs in the churchyards of Edinburgh,
decided me at once. We hired a dog-cart, took large
overcoats with us, as the nights were chilly, a cloak, a
coil of rope, heavy sticks, and even a brace of pistols for
an extreme emergency, which I prayed devoutly might
not occur, and we soon left London behind us.</p>
<p>Tom Phosfat was duly prepared by a letter from the
professor for our arrival. He was a bachelor, and made
us thoroughly welcome, so we had supper and a glass of
grog with him: I should rather say several glasses of
grog—too many for the work we had to do. However,
we set out at midnight for the churchyard, which stood
apart from the village, on the borders of a wide waste
common, dark, secluded among trees, and lonely.</p>
<p>The night was gloomy and starless, and not a sound
was heard—not even a withered leaf whirled by the
passing wind—as we left the horse and trap under the
shadow of a high hedge and vaulted over the low churchyard
wall. My heart beat quickly, all the more so that
Tom's brandy had been pretty potent.</p>
<p>The mouldering tombstones, half sunk in the long
reedy grass, and tossing nettles, studded all the
mournful place. God's acre seemed very solemn that night.
The lonely old church, old as the days of the third
Edward, half hidden by ivy, and spotted by lichens,
raised its square Norman tower against the vapour-laden
sky, and quaint heads and demon faces were peeping out
of the mouldings and gargoyles upon us.</p>
<p>"You know the grave, Phosfat?" said I.</p>
<p>"Yes—hush—this must be it. There is no other
new one in the ground," stuttered Tom, who had
imbibed too much.</p>
<p>"This seems the burial place of wealthy people,"
said Bob Asher. "The old dame must have had money
and to spare."</p>
<p>"By Jove, it is open!" said I, in a low whisper.</p>
<p>"It has not been quite filled up—boards are over
it; only some branches and soil thrown in. How is
this?"</p>
<p>"The bricking of the vault has been postponed till
to-morrow," said Bob Asher, shovelling out the <i>débris</i>.
"We have no time to lose, Fred. Shall we break open,
the top of the coffin, and use the rope to pull up the
subject by the neck? That was the way with Knox's
fellows in Edinburgh."</p>
<p>"Nay," said I, "by such a process the spinal column
may be disturbed; and that won't suit the professor's
purpose."</p>
<p>"Look round, and listen well; here goes then," and
half turning the coffin on its side, Bob and Tom, by
inserting their shovels under the lid, burst it up with a
hideous jarring sound, and then the ghostly tenant was
seen, enveloped in a shroud of white from head to foot;
and even to us, prepared as we were for it, that figure
had something horrible in its angular rigidity. Muffling
<i>it</i> in the dark cloak, I cast it over my shoulder, and
deposited it in a sitting position—the <i>rigor mortis</i> had
passed away apparently—between the seat and splash-board
of the trap. My companions meanwhile rearranged
the grave and coffin as we had found them.
Voices and lights now scared us. Phosfat was so tipsy
that I had to leave Bob Asher to take care of him; and
casting our shovels and rope into a clover field, I drove
at a break-neck pace towards London, intensely anxious
to reach the professor's house before day should dawn,
lest the police or a passer-by might detect something
weird in the person who was my companion.</p>
<p>It seemed to me that we had not proceeded a mile
townward, between hedgerows, when the waning moon,
hitherto invisible, began to glimmer over Hampstead
Heath, shedding a ghostly farewell ray upon the silent
country, where not a dog barked.</p>
<p>A strange sound, like the murmur of a voice, came
to my ears at times. Was it a pursuit? I looked
anxiously back, and even pulled up for an instant.
Behind all was silent—but, oh, almighty heaven! what
was this?</p>
<p>The old woman was moving—-her feeble hands
essayed to lift the cloth that covered her face! A wild
spasm of terror contracted my heart; and any one but
a medical man, I am assured, would have abandoned
the trap and an adventure so terrible; but the idea of a
recovery from trance immediately flashed upon my mind,
and my first thought was, the professor would not get
the prized vertebræ after all. I lifted the almost
inanimate woman beside me, and felt that she was warm,
fleshy too, and had a returning pulse, which the motion
of the trap accelerated. I uncovered her face that
she might respire, and a wild cry escaped me—a cry
that rang far over the heath.</p>
<p>Heavens! Was I going mad outright? She was
Gertrude!—Gertrude Chalcot!—pale as death could
make her, yet living still, her hazel eyes lurid and
sunken, her dark hair falling about her face.</p>
<p>All that followed was like a swift nightmare: the
drive to town, muffled in my overcoat and cloak; the
abandonment of the trap in the street; her conveyance
in secret to my lodgings, and placing her cosily in my
own bed till I could get her other quarters and attendance.
Luckily, Bob Asher, and the professor too, came
about mid-day, or I should soon have been fit for
Hanwell.</p>
<p class="t3">
* * * *</p>
<p>How all this came to pass was very simple. Unwedded
still, she had returned with her family to England in
wretched health; her illness took a more serious form,
and would seem to have culminated in a species of
trance, with the medical technicalities of which it might
be wearisome to trouble the reader. Suffice it, that the
alarm of cholera was abroad, and the local terror at
R—— induced her interment, as, perhaps, in too many
other cases, hastily and prematurely; hence the vault
being left unfinished, permitted her to respire, and our
adventure—a mistake by the way—ended in her rescue,
though a great horror of what her fate might have been
filled my heart, and for a long period we were compelled
to conceal from her the awful place in which she was
found.</p>
<p>Under our united care she recovered fast. But my
space is short.</p>
<p>Sweet is the union of lovers after a separation; but,
with all its charm, much that was sad, startling, and
even terrible, mingled with ours. She was mine now.
Not even that proud and cruel father, who had so fiercely
spurned me, could dispute the claim, I thought. Mine—oh,
how strangely and how terribly mine!</p>
<p>The close of the year saw us married, Bob Asher
acting as groomsman with great <i>éclat</i>. Sir —— ——
took me as a partner, and for a month I went with my
bride to Baden. There, one day, at the <i>table d'hôte</i>, she
found herself face to face with her own parents. The
alarm, the consternation, the scene, proved frightful;
but all ended in a complete reconciliation, and Christmas-day
saw us all happy at Chalcot Park, and I felt, on
seeing my blooming Gertrude, in all the splendour of
her beauty, opening the yearly ball, that I could with a
whole heart forgive even her father for his pride and
fury on the day that saw us separated.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CLARE THORNE'S TEMPTATION. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> CHAPTER I. </h3>
<p>"After all that has been, and is no more—after all
that has passed between us, but never can pass again,
why are we fated to meet—and <i>here</i>?" wailed the
girl, Clare Thorne, in her heart (for though a wedded
wife, she was but a girl yet, being barely in her
twentieth year), as she suddenly saw, with strangely-mingled
emotions of joy, fear, and sorrow, the face of
Fred Wilmot.</p>
<p>It was on a Sunday morning early, ere the East
Indian sun was quite up, and in the cantonment church
of Mirzapatam, a few miles from the Jumna, that this
unexpected recognition took place.</p>
<p>The girl heard not the voice of the preacher, her
husband Cecil Thorne, the chaplain of the station; she
forgot for a time where she was, and her thoughts
fled—fled away from that strange-looking cantonment church,
with its long punkahs pulled by nut-brown coolies (who
watched with amazement "the white man's poojah")
moving alike over the head of the preacher and his
congregation, when even at that early hour the air was
breathless, and when the ring-necked paraquets, green
pigeons, and other birds twittered in and out at the
open jalousies—fled home, while her heart seemed to stand
still—home to a quaint old English church in beautiful
Kent, with its low broad Norman arches, its stained
glass windows, its sculptured effigies, above which old
iron helmets hung, and spiders spun their dusty webs
undisturbed—for there it had been that she had last
seen the face she now looked on, breathlessly, the face of
her first love and <i>then</i> betrothed, Fred Wilmot, ere
misfortune separated them, and a cruel fate sent her to
Central India, to become the wife of the Reverend
Cecil Thorne.</p>
<p>On the preceding day a new regiment had marched
in, but she knew not till that moment at the morning
sermon, that among its officers was Lieutenant Frederick
Wilmot, till she saw him with his men, in his braided
white kalkee uniform, carrying under one arm his pith
helmet, encircled by a blue veil, and looking with his
lithe form, embrowned face, dark grey eyes and heavy
moustache, handsomer than ever, and so unlike her
husband, Cecil Thorne, in his flowing white Indian
cassock.</p>
<p>Square in figure, grave, massive, and commanding in
form, the latter was a man, who, though all kindness
and gentleness, seldom smiled and never laughed, and
was one all unsuited to the volatile Clare; yet she had
married him for a home; though knowing that every
thought and impulse of her mind were at variance with
his, and had given herself to him because she was
heart-sick with the struggle for daily bread as a governess,
and feared her hopeless future when left alone in
India. A few years before—for he was much her
senior—Cecil Thorne had been a hard-working curate
on £80 per annum in one of the most squalid parts of
the English metropolis, and was thankful to accept from
the Bishop of Calcutta the post he held at the remote
and sun-baked station of Mirzapatam. He was a good
man, truly a soldier of Heaven, and among the sick and
the dying, did many a task of mercy, from which even
the doctors, and all, save the sisters of charity, shrank,
especially in the times of famine and cholera.</p>
<p>Intent on his sermon, he saw not the glance of
mutual recognition between Clare and Wilmot, the
grave bow exchanged, and the paleness that came over
the two young eager faces, whose troubled gaze sought
each other from time to time, as their thoughts went
back to their past—</p>
<p class="poem">
"The love that took an early root,<br/>
And had an early doom."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"Why are we fated to meet again, and <i>here</i>?" was
the ever-recurring thought of Clare, as she strove to fix
her eyes on the grave face of her husband and listen to
his eloquence, but she heard it not.</p>
<p>Her face was not a beautiful one, but it was sweet,
earnest, and most winning in all its varying expressions.</p>
<p>India had paled it already, but the light of her dark
hazel eyes, the warm tint of her rosebud lips, and her
rich brown hair, almost black in hue, were all
unchanged as when Wilmot had covered them with kisses
and caresses, in the sad hour of their severance that
seemed so long ago.</p>
<p>In due time the service was over, the congregation
dispersing and departing on horseback or in buggies,
while the new regiment, to the clangour of its band,
was marching into its lines, and Fred Wilmot, she
knew, was with it. Fearful that he might address her
ere the column was formed, she remained nervously in
her seat, striving to pray for strength of purpose, or for
her past dull content, and then, when she deemed herself
safe, drove home alone, for her husband, though hot
the coming noon, had sick and other visits to pay.</p>
<p>Clare feared that Wilmot might call at their bungalow
on the following day, as every one calls on every
one else on arriving at a new station in India; so she
resolved to take her horse and be out of his way in the
cool of the evening, and also early on the following
morning, but to evade him always in the narrow European
circle at Mirzapatam she knew would be impossible.</p>
<p>That day her husband was long absent on his parochial
duties, and Clare was not sorry; she wanted time
for thought—but thought only took the line of
refining, and a comparison of what was now the
inevitable, with what might have <i>been</i>.</p>
<p>Clare was formed by nature for excitement, society,
music, and gaiety, she did not like to be left to mope as
a parson's wife "in the station to which the Lord had
called her," as her husband constantly phrased it; and
she had been wont to writhe under his advice as to how
she was to comport herself, what she was to wear and
not to wear, and to avoid the groups of young officers
about the "Band Stand," and all risk of <i>gup</i> or gossip.
His intense goodness, his awful sense of propriety, even
his fervid piety, had bored and wearied the young wife
ere their dull honeymoon was well over; for though a
good girl in every way, Clare was not pious, as
Mr. Thorne understood piety. She went, per order, to
church twice on Sunday, but flatly refused to teach
"little niggers" in the mission schools, and he groaned
in spirit over her contumacy. The excitement she
wished, was not to be found in visiting old Hindoo
women and teaching naked little boys that the precepts
of Menou, the lawgiver, were idolatry.</p>
<p>"Oh dear, for what did you marry me, Cecil?" she
asked one evening impatiently, when she heard the
strains of military music coming from the forbidden
band-stand, and knew that all the little gaiety of the
place was centred there.</p>
<p>"To be a helpmate to me, Clare," he replied
gravely, "and to share with me, so far as becomes my
wife, my labours in the vineyard of our Divine Master.
In our little Bengali church are regular Sabbath
services and weekly prayer-meetings; there are four
<i>patshalas</i> or elementary schools; but to not one of these
have you gone; there are much evangelistic work and
colportage work to be done, yet you assist in them not,
and will not even sing the hymns I have translated from
the <i>Tembavani</i>."</p>
<p>"If I did, Cecil—dear Cecil, would you let me go
even once a week to the military promenade—I do so
love the band?" she asked, with her eyes full of tears.</p>
<p>"No; such frivolity becomes not my wife," was the
firm reply.</p>
<p>Repiningly she obeyed his dictum in every respect,
and when other ladies ventured to remonstrate with her,
Clare, to do her justice, ever upheld her husband, and
treated him with respect and honour.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0402"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER II. </h3>
<p>Next day, ere the sun had risen, Clare Thorne,
attended by Chuttur Sing, her native groom, went forth
for her morning ride while the air was yet cool and
delicious, and in every European she saw dreading to meet
Wilmot, left the station behind her at a canter. She
was clad in a light brown holland habit, trimmed with
red braid; she wore a broad hat and long feather, and
looked strikingly handsome.</p>
<p>Once or twice she looked back to the cantonment, and
murmured to herself how strange it was to think that
he should be there—he, after all! The civilians'
bungalows were built on the little hills, where a puff of
wind might be caught; but the barracks and sepoy lines
occupied the centre of an arid and unsheltered plain,
where never came a breath of wind to fan the withered
cheek, or to drive away the fever and sickness for ever
lingering there. As usual, the <i>site</i> of the cantonments
was a blunder, and there our soldiers were doomed to
languish, swelter, and perish by cholera or sunstroke, for
the barracks had been built, and being so, had to be
occupied.</p>
<p>"Poor Brown is down with cholera this morning." "Poor
Brown! another told off to die. There
are four doctors with him; but all in Europe couldn't
give him another day in this world." Such were
usually the first morning greetings in Mirzapatam when
the bugles blew "the assembly." "And Smith of the
1st Bengal died about gun fire." "But that trump,
Thorne, the chaplain, never left him till, with his own
hands, he had closed his eyes." "When is the
funeral?" "In orders, for sunset—the cool of the
evening; <i>cool</i> at Mirzapatam!"</p>
<p>"Would Wilmot escape, or be going forth soon on a
gun-carriage, as so many went, from that horrible
barrack!" thought Clare, as she rode on towards the
Jumna, where she knew the country grew beautiful;
and she shivered as she thought of the life she led
now.</p>
<p>Though her husband was chaplain to a military
station, officers seldom or never, except when on duty,
entered his bungalow; so the male visitors there
consisted only of eurasian and native catechists,
colporteurs, and teachers. To Clare it was an intolerable
existence, and as she saw, when fever abated, the gay
and happy lives led by the other ladies of the garrison,
she repined sorely, and thinking of all these things, she
rode slowly toward the Jumna.</p>
<p>Down from the Ghaut of Etawah the river was rolling
in its beauty amid the most wondrous greenery in the
world. There were oleanders (the pride of the jungles)
sending forth their delicious perfumes from clusters of
pink and white blossoms; the baubool, with its bells of
gold, the sensation plant, and thousand others all growing
together, while the <i>byahs</i>, or crested sparrows, looked
like clouds of gold as they floated in flocks over these
and the waters of the river. Yet, lovely though the
scene, the English girl, as she reined up her horse,
thought she would rather have looked upon the Weald
of her native Kent!</p>
<p>The same idea was in the heart of another, who was
slowly approaching her, an officer in undress, with
pith-helmet and loose white patrol jacket. He urged his
horse close to Clare, and a little exclamation escaped
her.</p>
<p>"Oh, fatality!" she murmured, on finding herself
face to face with Fred Wilmot; and fatality it seemed
indeed, that they should by chance have chosen the
same hour and the same pathway, amid the many that
diverged from the breathless cantonments. He sprang
from his horse, and grasping the bridle with one hand,
presented the other to her.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Thorne—Clare!" said he, in a broken voice,
and as he uttered her name there came into his face a
light, an almost divine tenderness, such as she had
never seen in it, even in their sweet past time—the
light of love, the joy of a great passion.</p>
<p>"I <i>am</i> Mrs. Thorne, and we must remember that now,
Fred," said she; but without drawing back her hand.
None was near but Chuttur Sing, who certainly thought
he would not have liked to have seen <i>his</i> wife <i>tête-à-tête</i>
with the <i>sahib-logue</i>, in that solitary place, for to the
Bengalees the ease of European society is an enigma
they fail to understand.</p>
<p>"Till I saw you yesterday, I knew not in what part
of India you were," said Wilmot, with his gaze fixed
eagerly upon her now pallid face, "and now they tell
me that you are the wife of that man—our chaplain, a
morose and gloomy fellow——"</p>
<p>"My husband, Mr. Wilmot," said Clare, now withdrawing
her hand, and shortening her gathered reins.</p>
<p>"<i>Mr.</i> Wilmot!" he exclaimed, almost reproachfully.</p>
<p>"My husband!" she repeated, with sorrowful emphasis.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, Clare. I am not likely to
forget the fact," said he, with deep dejection; "but
changed though the relations—broken the tie—between
us, may I not be still your friend? I—I," he continued,
in a voice so pathetic that her soul was moved, "I who
was once so much dearer than any friend could be?"</p>
<p>"We must forget all that—friends? No, it is impossible!
Better not—better not—oh, what fatality sent
you here!" she added, restraining with difficulty her
tears, and aware that the black-beady eyes of Chuttur
Sing were upon her—Chuttur Sing of the spindle legs
and huge red turban.</p>
<p>"You have not forgotten the past, then, Clare?"</p>
<p>"No—but I have sought to love my husband as a
wife should."</p>
<p>"Sought?" he asked, inquiringly.</p>
<p>"Well—I have striven."</p>
<p>"But oh, Clare, we can neither love nor forget at
will," said he. "May I come to visit you?"</p>
<p>"No—decidedly no!"</p>
<p>"Why, Clare?"</p>
<p>"My husband!" she replied, firmly enough.</p>
<p>"He knows nothing of our past—he never heard of
me. Think how dear we were to each other,
Clare—how much we have to remember."</p>
<p>"All the more reason to study the art of forgetting,"
replied Clare, whose hot tears were falling fast now,
"and to show the necessity for your not coming near
our bungalow."</p>
<p>"But if all our fellows, from the colonel down to the
youngest sub, leave their cards for you and Mr. Thorne,
save me, what will he think?"</p>
<p>"I cannot say," sighed Clare, wearily.</p>
<p>"I must come, then, to avoid remark. May I?"</p>
<p>"If you must, you may."</p>
<p>"Thanks, Clare—thanks; may I escort you home?"</p>
<p>"No—oh no—let us return separate," said she,
nervously, and they parted, she urging her horse at a
hand-gallop back to the arid plain, where the lines of
Mirzapatam were now quivering, and to all appearance
vibrating, in the hot rays of the uprisen sun.</p>
<p>So when Fred Wilmot called that evening at the
Rev. Mr. Thorne's bungalow, he was cordially received
by that gentleman, and by his wife politely, as
a—stranger! Clad in a thin dress, through which her
delicate arms and the contour of her bosom were
apparent, she was reclining in a long-armed Indian cane
chair, with all her dark-brown hair cast loose over her
back and shoulders, just as her ayah had left it for
coolness; and very charming and girlish she looked,
especially when her colour heightened. The fragrant
odour of the recently wetted <i>tatties</i>, or window-screens,
pervaded a large uncarpeted drawing-room. An hour
and more was passed in pleasant conversation. No
reference whatever <i>could</i> be made to the past, so from
that hour each of those <i>two</i> felt that the game of
duplicity was beginning. The piano—which had its
feet immersed in saucers of water to save it from
creeping insects—was more than once resorted to; and
Mr. Thorne was surprised to find how many airs and
duets his wife and the new comer knew in common. He
could little dream how often they had practised them
<i>together</i>, in that sweet Kentish village so long ago, it
seemed now. That night Fred Wilmot slept little. He
had more than the mosquitos to keep him awake, while
in the verandah without the <i>wallah</i> pulled drowsily at
the cord of the punkah.</p>
<p>"Innocent, pure and artless as ever—poor Clare—poor
darling!" thought he; "oh, what avail my money
and position now—now that she is that sombre fellow's
wife—yet all men speak well of him here. What are
her dark eyes, her rich hair, her sweet English beauty
to me now!"</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0403"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER III. </h3>
<p>Clare Thorne's life had been so dull, that one can
scarcely wonder if she found the advent of Wilmot
at the cantonment, and his visits, most welcome,
though they filled her with a vague alarm—an
undefined fear of violating trust and propriety. We have
said that the Thornes had few visitors; this arose from
the distaste the chaplain had of society and the general
gravity of his demeanour; but Fred Wilmot cared little
for all that; it was not him he came to see.</p>
<p>No thought of evil was in the innocent heart of
Clare; nor was there in the heart of Wilmot, to do him
justice, though he abandoned himself to the perilous
charm of seeking the society of the girl who once loved
him so well—from whom he had been separated, and
who felt with him in common "that <i>death</i> in life, the
days that are no more." A little time the regiment
would be moving further up country, and all would then
be at an end. Meanwhile both were playing with edged
tools!</p>
<p>Clare and her husband could not understand each
other. His nature, which with all his apparent gloom
was a passionate one, had no outlet save his great love
for her, and his greater for religion. For him the dull
routine of his daily life was enough; but Clare longed,
like the girl she was, for amusement, excitement,
display, society, and yet in gay British India she was
condemned by this good and amiable, but fervid ascetic,
to lead a life which, to one of her temperament, was one
of unspeakable martyrdom.</p>
<p>She might, perhaps, under better auspices, have
forgotten her first love in time, and learned to like, as
much as she respected, her husband, had he only made
some allowance for her weakness and foibles, and not
judged her so hardly and set before her a standard of
excellence which she was unable to attain.</p>
<p>But the crisis of her life was coming fast to Clare
Thorne.</p>
<p>Her husband began to dislike the frequent visits and
the somewhat brotherly familiarity of Wilmot with his
wife; there was something in it undefinable. It was
the reverse of flirtation, for his demeanour was grave,
respectful and sympathetic, and in these elements the
danger seemed to lie. Clare's bearing and tone were
irreproachable; yet a suspicion, at which he blushed,
was roused in the honest heart of Cecil Thorne.</p>
<p>"If it should be!" he muttered, with his firm white
teeth clenched. Then he would watch and dissemble;
but even that seemed a stain on his own rectitude.
Thus one day he said, abruptly:</p>
<p>"Clare, that officer—Mr. Wilmot, has been here
again. I see his music strewed all over the piano."</p>
<p>"Well, Cecil?"</p>
<p>"I forbid his visits—that is all!"</p>
<p>"Forbid his visits!" repeated Clare, startled, crushed,
and blushing crimson; "then you must tell him so
yourself."</p>
<p>"Why, madam?"</p>
<p>"He is an old friend of my family, and—and——"</p>
<p>"You, and he too, never said a word of this before!"</p>
<p>"I thought you knew it," faltered Clare, who found
that she had made a sad mistake.</p>
<p>"Old friend—he is about five-and-twenty only. What
brought him here to-day?"</p>
<p>"To give us these tickets for the garrison ball."</p>
<p>"Ball—you know I never go to balls."</p>
<p>"But may I?"</p>
<p>"No—you may <i>not</i>!"</p>
<p>Poor Clare repined bitterly and wept profusely, but not
for the first time in her life, and her husband, who knew
that all Mirzapatam was on tip-toe about the forbidden
ball, eyed her with a lowering expression. But he knew
that he must exert his authority, or scandals might
ensue, and he felt that Wilmot must cross his threshold
no more. Indeed, the ball-tickets were returned to
him, and when next he visited the abode of Mr. Thorne,
that gentleman, who never did things by halves, and
who deemed he had a duty to perform to religion, to
himself, and society, gave the young officer a pretty
distinct hint that his visits could be dispensed with, and
Fred retired, his heart swollen with rage, mortification,
and sorrow.</p>
<p>Shame and anger mingled with the sorrow of Clare.
How tiresome of him to go on this way to her in their
present abode, of all places in the world! Scandal—the
thing he dreaded—would be sure to come of it. A
great gloom now fell upon Clare, and the ball—girl-like—the
forbidden ball rankled in her heart; Thorne
supposed this gloom was caused by the banishment of
Wilmot only; but that had merely something to do
with it.</p>
<p>Was she, that he loved and trusted, wronging him
cruelly in her heart? Was he nursing a traitress in
his bosom? Sooth to say, the hitherto placid and
plodding Cecil Thorne began to think, and sometimes
say, all manner of desperate things to his scared and
shrinking little wife, whose changed manner he
attributed to Wilmot's influence, and he cursed the hour
that ever the new regiment marched into Mirzapatam.</p>
<p>Loving his wife as he did, he would rather have seen
her lying in her grave and himself reading the burial
service over her, than living as a disgraced woman.
Then, if there was great sorrow, there would be no
shame, and she would be gone where never more
dishonour could menace, or shame assail her.</p>
<p>"Clare, child," said he, "my little wife is my all to
me. The soul that sinneth shall pay the wages of
sin."</p>
<p>"But I have not sinned!" she exclaimed, passionately.</p>
<p>"As yet," said he, pointedly and coldly; "thank
Heaven, my eyes were opened in time! Think of what
would be my misery and our conjoint dishonour—I, a
priest of the Church! Think of how our once happy
home might have been desecrated and the bitterness of
a love that is slighted!"</p>
<p>"You make too much or too little of all this!"</p>
<p>"I do not!"</p>
<p>"Oh, Cecil—Cecil—my dear husband—I have no
forgiveness to ask of you; I only seek your pity."</p>
<p>"I <i>do</i> pity you," he replied, grimly, and thought the
while,</p>
<p>"She can speak to me thus—with that fellow's kisses
fresh upon her lips!" For he had undefined suspicions
that Wilmot saw her yet, from time to time.</p>
<p>"How tiresome—how absurd is this jealousy!"
thought Clare; yet her own conscience told her it was
neither absurd nor mistaken <i>now</i>; and all this passed
on the night of the forbidden ball!</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0404"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER IV. </h3>
<p>Mr. Thorne's suspicions were right; they <i>had</i> been
meeting, without design at first; ample though the
cantonment, how could it be otherwise?</p>
<p>"Dear, good Fred," she said, one day, as they met
among the baubool trees near an old ruined tomb—the
tomb of Abu Mirza—"I want you to help me—you
alone can do so."</p>
<p>"In what way?" he asked, looking at her in his old
tender manner.</p>
<p>"To be good and proper—to keep in the straight
path of propriety, and avoid all chance of scandal."</p>
<p>"You are quoting some sermon of Thorne's now."</p>
<p>"I am not—I mean it; we must speak no more;
<i>will</i> you help me?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said he, in a choking voice; "yes—if I
can," and his mode of beginning was pressing her to
his heart, and covering her face with kisses.</p>
<p>From this it may be inferred that the threads of the
old, old story had become strong as cables again! She
had been rent from Wilmot by Fate, and revenge at
Fate made him selfish to her and pitiless to all,
especially to her husband, who had, by forbidding his visits,
at once given their intimacy a colouring it did not then
possess. Now things were said that they had never
said before, and wild schemes of plainly running away
together—where, it mattered not—were more than
openly hinted at by Wilmot. Be it sinful or not, she
felt that she loved him better than her own life; his
was the only mind that could hold dominion over hers;
yet it was one infinitely inferior to that of Cecil Thorne;
and his was the only hand whose touch thrilled the
smallest fibres of her frame. She worshipped Wilmot,
who, as he gazed into her eyes, could read there the
struggle that was passing between conscience and
passion, and how the latter was certain to triumph.</p>
<p>"Trust me—trust me," he whispered in her ear.</p>
<p>"I will trust you—I will, Freddy!" she replied,
choked in tears.</p>
<p>"My own darling—to be my own at last—-and after
<i>all</i>!"</p>
<p>Clare knew what scandal and gossip were in England;
but "gup" in India was fiercer, deeper, more
trumpet-tongued, and already in fancy she saw every
public print teeming with the story of her elopement
and her husband's shame.</p>
<p>"He thinks too much of the other world to care
much for this, or me!" she thought; but in that she
wronged Thorne, who loved her dearly and devotedly,
though in a cold and undemonstrative way, while
Wilmot was all passion and energy.</p>
<p>"Oh, the scandal—the scandal we shall give!" said
she, wringing her hands.</p>
<p>"Scandals die!" said he; "the world goes too fast
now-a-days for anything—even for a wonder—-to live
long; and we shall seek a land where none shall know
our names or the miserable story of our past."</p>
<p>"Oh, Fred!" wailed the girl, "I was brought up
by my mother, in the careful avoidance of all evil, all
that was sinful and unholy; and now I am sinking into
an ocean of unholiness in loving you, better than I love
my own soul!"</p>
<p>"Do not thus upbraid yourself, my innocent darling,"
said he, in a quiet but passionate tone.</p>
<p>"Innocent? Oh, my God! who will call me innocent,
good, or pure to-morrow? Yet, the life I bear
maddens me."</p>
<p>"That life will soon be a thing of the past. I am
wealthy now, my darling; the bar that poverty put
between us is removed. I can give you a home like a
palace, in any part of Europe, far, far away from this
breathless India; and once my wife——"</p>
<p>"Oh—Wilmot!"</p>
<p>"My darling—-I will give you all the love a human
heart can render you—the dearest of love and a new
life."</p>
<p>"But not with that which makes life alone worth
having."</p>
<p>He regarded her passionately, anxiously, and entreatingly.</p>
<p>She felt that if she hesitated—deliberated—she
would be lost, and must become, in any land, even
though unknown, a social outlaw, a virtual outcast.
All this rushed upon her mind, though she said it not,
and with all its minor details of mortification and
bitterness, as she lay with her face hidden on the breast
of Wilmot.</p>
<p>He smiled fondly, yet sadly, down upon her bent
head, and clasped her trembling fingers in his stronger
hands, and turning up her white and desperate little
face, he dared, in the excess and blindness of his
passion, to call on heaven to hear that she would never
have cause to regret the step she was about to take.</p>
<p>And so they separated with reluctance, though in
haste, aware that when they met again it would be to
part no more!</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0405"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER V. </h3>
<p>Fred Wilmot had obtained a year's leave from the
general commanding at Mirzapatam, and had taken all
his measures for their mutual flight.</p>
<p>He was to meet her at evening gun-fire, near the old
ruined tomb in the baubool grove, when Aloodeen, his
native valet, would bring his buggy. In this they
would proceed to the branch line that joined the greater
line at Allahabad, from whence they could take the
great Peninsular Railway to Calcutta, long before
reaching which all traces of them would be lost!</p>
<p>It was early morning when the scheme was planned;
a whole day was to elapse ere it could be put in operation;
yet it seemed to pass with frightful rapidity to
Clare, who felt like one in a dream, or as if it was some
other person, and not herself, who was to meet Wilmot
at the tomb of Abu Mirza.</p>
<p>Her silence, her pre-occupation, her nervousness,
more than all, the whiteness of her little face, could not
fail to attract the attention of her husband who, with
unwonted tenderness, bent over her, and, taking her
cheeks between his hands, said,—</p>
<p>"Look up, little woman—why, what is the matter
with you?"</p>
<p>She closed her eyes, which dared not meet his earnest,
honest, and searching gaze.</p>
<p>He then took her little hands caressingly in his, and
felt, with alarm, that though the atmosphere without
was stifling, they were icy cold and trembling.</p>
<p>"Is there anything wrong, Clare? What is the
matter with you, my darling little wife?"</p>
<p>Still she was silent, for her tongue clove to the roof
of her mouth, and she could only sigh in her heart
secretly.</p>
<p>"Oh, heaven—what am I to do? Avoid the temptation—flee
the sin—yea, even confess all—ere it be too late!"</p>
<p>Then she thought of her husband's frigidity of
manner, his intense sense of morality, religion, purity,
and rectitude, and her timid heart died within her.</p>
<p>"God help us, child," said Cecil Thorne, "I hope
that no illness has seized you."</p>
<p>He thought wildly over the several fever and cholera
beds he had been beside of late, and the strong man
felt his soul die within him with fear, as he saw
alternately the wistfulness and wild excitement in his
wife's eyes.</p>
<p>"A doctor must be summoned," he exclaimed; "qui
hi—hollo, there, Chuttur Sing!"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Cecil, dearest," said she, with something
between a sob and a hysterical laugh; "it is only the
heat that affects me—and the thunder," she added, as
a peal went hustling through the sultry air overhead.</p>
<p>A storm came on; the rain fell in torrents, and Clare,
while in the act of selecting the garments and necessaries
she would have to take with her, and while carefully
selecting and putting aside, for some <i>other</i> and
worthier wife, it might be, the few jewels her husband's
moderate means had enabled him to give her (Delhi
bracelets of champac-work, and so forth), actually began
to hope that, if the tempest of falling rain continued,
the very flight for which she was preparing might be
arrested, ere it was too late, and thus that her sore
temptation might pass away!</p>
<p>The innocent words, the tender anxiety and trusting
goodness of the man she was about to abandon and
deceive, and the knowledge, that in time to come, there
would be an amount of grief, shame, and sorrow for
her, that would be known in its degree but to God and
himself, wrung her heart, and filled her eyes with hot and
blinding tears.</p>
<p>But the storm passed; the thunder died away beyond
the hills that look down on the Jumna; the rain cooled
the atmosphere, and the arid soil around the sun-baked
cantonment soon absorbed it, to the last huge, warm
drop that had fallen; and Clare knew that her lover
would be truly, tenderly, and inexorably awaiting her
at the old tomb, when the time of their fatal tryst
came.</p>
<p>The cantonment ghuries—little gongs that hung near
the guard-house doors—clanged the hours in succession,
and in one more Clare knew that the sun would set.
She was alone, for her husband was away, attending
some sick beds; when he returned, she knew that her
place would be vacant, and that she could never look
upon his grave, earnest, and handsome face again. She
sunk on her knees beside her bed, buried her face in
her cold hands, and while she shivered in the agony of
her conflicting thoughts, she prayed for strength to avoid
her temptation, or that she might die in her mingled
remorse and yearning love.</p>
<p>But her prayer was unheard: the hour came, and
saw her, with a little travelling bag in her hand,
stealing like a culprit from her husband's home, and
taking the most unfrequented path to the tomb of Abu
Mirza, the tiny white marble dome of which was glistening
in the last rays of the sun above the golden bloom
of the baubool trees. The brain of Clare seemed to
reel; her temples felt on fire; all within her soul and
around her seemed a mass of chaos, she could arrange,
disentangle nothing; and almost in despair gave up the
attempt to do so; but not the fatal design of meeting
her former lover; for the die was cast!</p>
<p>In the distance she could hear the soldiers' children
and some of the Christianised natives singing in the
Mission School; their united voices came through the
open windows on the calm pure air of the Indian night,
and she could hear her husband accompanying them on
an indifferent harmonium, so earnestly and humbly in
the service of his Master, in the hymn he had translated
from the <i>Tembavani</i>:—</p>
<p class="poem">
"Whilst Thee, with tongues of splendour,<br/>
The orbs of heaven praise,<br/>
Whilst groves to Thee their voices,<br/>
With tongues of brilliance raise:<br/>
Whilst Thee, with tongues of joyance<br/>
All gay wood-warblers sing;<br/>
Whilst praise to Thee, wood-flowerets,<br/>
From tongues of fragrance fling:<br/>
And whilst with tongues of clearness,<br/>
The water-floods applaud Thee,<br/>
With the tongue that Thou hast given,<br/>
Shall I not daily laud Thee?"<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"Poor Cecil—how unworthy I am of you!" thought
she, and tears started to her eyes afresh as she thought
of him and the <i>morrow</i>!</p>
<p>Her heart gave a convulsive leap and she stood still
for a moment as the evening gun boomed over the
cantonments when the sun set, and then the darkness
fell instantly, as it always does in India where there is
no twilight, and she saw Fred Wilmot instantly
approach her, but from what point she scarcely knew.
He was attired in plain clothes, for travelling evidently,
but he was bareheaded, and she could see that his face
looked most startlingly pale, that also pain and
bewilderment were in it, and that he scarcely seemed to see
her. Something in his looks and manner rooted Clare
to the spot.</p>
<p>"Fred—Fred—Wilmot!" she cried, in a low voice,
but, without stopping, he gave her one sad glance
expressive of pity and love, sorrow and pain, and passing
on towards the tomb, left her alone—alone and
bewildered, while a new sense of great fear that she could
not analyse, caused her to rush towards the house she
had so lately quitted.</p>
<p>At the door she met her husband, full of excitement
and agitation.</p>
<p>"You abroad, Clare," he exclaimed, with grave
surprise; "have you then heard what has happened—ah,
your white face tells me that you have?"</p>
<p>"What has happened, Cecil?" she asked, in a low,
breathless voice.</p>
<p>"Poor Wilmot—God forgive me if I have wronged
him!—has just been murdered and robbed by his native
servant, a Patan scoundrel named Aloodeen."</p>
<p>"Murdered?"</p>
<p>"Yes—-just as the sunset gun was fired."</p>
<p>In a swoon Clare fell at his feet like one who was
dead.</p>
<p>He had been stabbed to the heart! Who, or what
was it in his likeness that Clare had seen at the place
they were to meet? She was saved from her great
temptation—saved to remain a sorrowing and innocent
wife. She never again saw the face of Wilmot, even in
a dream, though often in the years to come she decked
his lonely grave with flowers.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE GREAT SEA SERPENT. </h2>
<p>From all we have read and heard of a singular sea-monster
that has been seen from time to time in various
parts of the ocean, it is difficult to doubt that some such
creature, or creatures rather, may exist; though the
reiterated allegations of "old salts," that they <i>do</i> exist,
may be but a relic of that dark superstition known as
serpent-worship, which once prevailed over a great part
of the world, and which still lingers in India, particularly
among the Nagas, and of which snake-charming is
a remnant.</p>
<p>How long this singular worship lingered in Western
Europe we may gather from the "Atlas Geographus,"
published in 1711, which says, "there are <i>still</i> remains
of this idolatory" in Lithuania, where the Boors keep
adders in their houses, and pay them profound respect
while professing Christianity; and also, that few
families in Samogitia, are without serpents as
household gods.</p>
<p>Some years before this time, Sigismund, Baron of
Herbestein, tells us, in his commentaries on Muscovy,
that at Troki, eight miles from Wilna, his host
acquainted him, that he had chanced to buy a hive of
bees from one of the serpent-worshippers, whom he
persuaded, with much reluctance, to worship the true
God and kill his serpent. A short time after, in
passing that way, he found the poor fellow miserably
tortured and deformed, his face wrinkled and twisted
away; and inquiring the cause, he answered, "That
this judgment had come upon him for killing his god,
and that he would have to endure greater torments if
he did not return to his former worship."</p>
<p>In the sacred writings, but more particularly in the
8th chapter of Jeremiah and the 58th Psalm, are
allusions to the taming or keeping of serpents; and
Dr. Thomas Shaw found the same superstition prevailing in
Barbary in 1757 (Travels).</p>
<p>Indian serpent-charming to this day, as we have
said, is no doubt a remnant of that form of worship
which spread all over the world, it may be from some
dim tradition of the serpents of Eden and of Aaron's
rod, that we have the Scandinavian <i>jormagundr</i>, among
the fictions of the Edda, and to which Scott refers
as—</p>
<p class="poem">
"That sea-snake, tremendous curled,<br/>
Whose monstrous circle guards the world."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The serpent and the circle were alike the emblem of
eternity, and Odin was supposed to have at times the
power of taking the aspect of the former; and a remnant
of the same superstition is still to be found in Scotland
in the knot-work upon Celtic crosses and Highland
dirk-hilts.</p>
<p>In June, 1721 (as we are told in the "Historical
Register" for the following year, sold by T. Norris, at
the <i>Looking-Glass</i> on London Bridge), there appeared a
terrible snake off the coast of Naples, not far from the
Ponte-della-Maddalena, under which the river Sebeto
flows into the sea, and it devoured a fisherman in
presence of many of his friends, who had barely time to
effect their escape.</p>
<p>The latter, fearing that the presence of this monster
might destroy their fishery, and anxious to avenge their
companion, made several weapons (harpoons?) of iron,
and large hooks, and, putting to sea on the 6th of June
in strong boats, discovered the great fish, and baited
their lines with large pieces of horse-flesh, and ran a
strong rope with a slip from the stem to the stern of a
ship.</p>
<p>Rushing furiously at the boat, the snake was caught
into the slip-knot, and ultimately drawn on shore, when,
on being measured, it was found to be "twenty
Neapolitan palms long. His mouth was excessively wide,
having three rows of teeth in the form of a saw in the
upper jaw, and but one row in the under. He weighed
sixteen <i>coutares</i>, or about four hundred-weight. In the
stomach were found the skull of a man, two legs, part
of the backbone and ribs."</p>
<p>These were supposed to have been portions of the
unfortunate fisherman, whom he had devoured some days
before. By order of the Council of Health it was
burned, lest it might infect the air.</p>
<p>The writer adds, that Johnson (to whom we shall refer
presently) mentions similar fish—one that weighed
eight hundred-weight; another that weighed four
thousand pounds, and in the stomach of which was
found a man, in a complete suit of armour!</p>
<p>It is a curious fact that recent scientific research has
revealed the existence in the sea, at the greatest depths,
of most minute and wonderfully formed organisms, the
beauty and rarity of which necessarily secure our
admiration; but instances of animals of enormous size being
met with beyond those already known, are few and far
between. This fact may be accounted for by the
circumstance, that while it is easy to construct instruments
for capturing the smaller creatures living in the deep, it
is a very different matter to entrap and secure an
unseen monster, whose very size must endow him with
enormous strength. The whale, so far as we know, is
the largest denizen of the deep. Whether it is possible
that it can be equalled by giants of some other order or
race, is the point which public curiosity is very keen to
have settled.</p>
<p>The appearance of great snakes at sea is recorded by
more than one old voyager; but it would seem to have
been only of late years that the idea of their existence
has been generally confined to one, familiar to us all as
the "Great sea-serpent."</p>
<p>In <i>Opuscula Omnia Botanic Thomæ Johnsoni</i>, 1629,
we have an account of a great serpent captured off
Sandwich by two men, who found it stranded among the
shoal water by the sea-shore. It is described as being
fifty feet long, and of a fiery colour. We are also told
that they conveyed the carcase home, and after <i>eating</i> it,
stuffed the skin with hay, to preserve it "as a perpetual
remembrance of the fact."</p>
<p>In David Crantz's "History of Greenland," published
in 1766, we have an extract (illustrated by a drawing)
concerning the <i>kraken</i>, from the narrative of a Captain
Paul Egede, supposed to be the brother of a famous
Danish missionary of the same name. The kraken, it
is however necessary to remark, is the northern name
for a giant cuttle-fish, the existence of such a monster
being now a matter of scientific fact.</p>
<p>"On the 6th of July, 1734," says this old seaman,
"as I was proceeding on my second voyage to
Greenland, in the latitude of the Cape of Good Hope, a
hideous monster was seen to raise its body so high
above the water that its head overtopped our main-sail.
It had a pointed nose, and spouted out water like a
whale; instead of fins it had great broad flaps like
wings; its body seemed to be grown over with
shell-work, and its skin was very rugged and uneven; when
it dived into the water again, it threw up its tail, which
was like that of a serpent, and was at least a whole
ship's length above the water; we judged the body to
be equal in bulk to our ship, and to be three or four
times as long."</p>
<p>Eric Pontoppidan, Bishop of Bergen, celebrated in
his days as a naturalist, though he never actually saw it
or met any one who <i>had</i> seen it, believed implicitly in
the great sea-serpent existing somewhere; and in his
writings has a good deal to tell us about its ways and
habits; and it is upon record that Sir Lawrence de
Ferry, commander of the old castle of Bergen, not only
saw the monster, but shot at it on the high seas,
wounded it, was pursued by it, in its pain and fury, so
closely that he narrowly escaped with his life.</p>
<p>In 1801 there was cast ashore on the coast of
Dorsetshire a snake twenty-eight feet in length and twenty
feet in circumference; but this has since been alleged to
have been a Basking-shark; and the same has been said
of a great snake-like carcaso that was beaten to pieces
by a tempest, and cast ashore on one of the Orkney Isles
in the autumn of 1809, and some fragments of which,
the <i>Scots Magazine</i> for that year states, were lodged in
the Museum of the Edinburgh University.</p>
<p>A very distinct description of the sea-serpent occurs
in Dr. Hooker's <i>Testimony</i> respecting it, and communicated
to Dr. Brewster's <i>Journal of Science</i>. About half-past
six o'clock on a cloudless evening at sea, the doctor
heard suddenly a rushing noise ahead of the ship, which
at first he supposed to be a whale spouting, but soon
found to be a colossal serpent, of which he made a
sketch as it passed the vessel at fifty yards' distance,
slowly, neither turning to the right nor left. "As soon
as his head had reached the stern, he gradually laid it
down in a horizontal position with his body, and floated
along like the mast of a vessel. That there was
upwards of sixty feet visible, is shown by the circumstance
that the length of the ship was a hundred and twenty
feet, and that at the time his head was off the stern, the
other end had not passed the main-mast.... His
motion in the water was meandering, like that of an
eel; and the wake he left behind him, was like that
occasioned by a small craft passing through the water....
The humps on his back resembled in size and
shape those of a dromedary."</p>
<p>Dr. Hooker states further, that the description
precisely accorded with that of a serpent seen five years
before by Captain Bennett of Boston. At a later period,
three officers in Her Majesty's service—namely, Captain
Sullivan, Lieutenant Maclachlan, and Ensign Malcolm
of the Rifle Brigade—beheld a similar creature gambolling
in the sea near Halifax; but they asserted that it
was at least one hundred and eighty feet in length, and
thicker than the trunk of a moderately sized tree. Nor
must we forget the official account which was
transmitted in 1848 to the Lords of the Admiralty, by
Captain Peter M'Quhae of Her Majesty's ship <i>Dædalus</i>,
past which, he and his crew saw the great sea-serpent
swimming merrily—a document which produced, or
provoked, a learned paper in the <i>Westminster Review</i>; while
Professor Owen asserted that what was seen from the
deck of the <i>Dædalus</i>, would be nothing more than a
large seal borne rapidly southward on a floe or iceberg.</p>
<p>Recently, the appearances of the serpent have been
amusingly frequent and clearly detailed. He has been
seen in the north seas and the south seas, and in many
places nearer home; in the Frith of Forth, off Filey
Bay and the North Foreland, off Hastings and the Isle
of Arran, the Menai Strait and Prawle Point; and in
1875, a battle between it and a whale was viewed from
the deck of the good ship <i>Pauline</i> of London, Captain
Drevar, when proceeding with a cargo of coals from
Shields to Zanzibar, destined for Her Majesty's ship
<i>London</i>. When the <i>Pauline</i> reached the region of the
trade-winds and equatorial currents, she was carried out
of her course, and after a severe storm, found herself
off Cape Roque, where several sperm-whales were seen
playing about her. While the crew were watching them,
they suddenly beheld a sight that filled every man on
board with terror. Starting straight from the bosom of
the deep, a gigantic serpent rose and wound itself twice
in two mighty coils round the largest of the whales,
which it proceeded to crush in genuine boa-constrictor
fashion. In vain did the hapless whale struggle, lash
the water into foam, and even bellow, for all its efforts
were as nothing against the supernatural powers of its
dreadful adversary, whose strength "may be further
imagined," says a leader in the <i>Daily Telegraph</i>, "from
the fact that the ribs of the ill-fated fish were distinctly
heard cracking one after the other with a report like
that of a small cannon. Soon the struggles of the
wretched whale grew fainter and fainter; its bellowings
ceased, and the great serpent sank with its prey beneath
the surface of the ocean."</p>
<p>Its total length was estimated at fifty yards, and its
aspect was allowed to be simply "terrific." Twice
again it reared its crest sixty feet out of the water, as if
meditating an attack upon the <i>Pauline</i>, which bore away
with all her canvas spread. Her crew told their terrible
story. But critics there were who averred that what
they had seen was no serpent at all, but only a
bottle-nosed whale attacked by grampuses!</p>
<p>In a letter to the London prints concerning this affair,
we have another description of our old friend the
serpent, as he appeared off St. David's Head, to John Abes,
mate of a merchantman, in 1863. "I was the first
who saw the monster, and shouted out. A terrible-looking
thing it was! Seen at a little distance in the
moonlight, his two eyes appeared about the size of <i>plates</i>,
and were very bright and sparkling." All on board
thought his length about ninety feet; but as he curled
and twirled rapidly, it was a difficult matter to
determine. Captain Taylor ordered him to be noosed
lasso-fashion with a rope, which John Abes tells us he got on
the bowsprit to throw, but in the attempt threw himself
overboard. "The horror of my feelings at the moment
I must leave you to imagine," continues this remarkable
epistle (which is dated from Totterdown, Bristol,
September 19, 1875). "The brute was then within a
few yards of me, with its monstrous head and wavy
body, looking ten times more terrible than it did on
board the brig. I shiver even now when I think of it.
Whether the noise made by throwing the ropes over to
save me scared him, I cannot say; but he went down
suddenly, though not more so than I came up. After a
few minutes he appeared some distance from us, and
then we lost him."</p>
<p>When next we hear of the sea-serpent after his
adventure off Cape Roque, he was beheld by the crew of
no less a ship than Her Majesty's yacht the <i>Osborne</i>, the
captain and officers of which, in June, 1877, forwarded
an official report to the Admiralty, containing an
account of the monster's appearance off the coast of
Sicily on the 2nd of that month. "The time was five
o'clock in the afternoon. The sea was exceptionally
smooth, and the officers were provided with good
telescopes. The monster had a smooth skin, devoid of
scales, a bullet-shaped head, and a face like an alligator.
It was of immense length, and along the back was a
ridge of fins about <i>fifteen</i> feet in length and <i>six</i> feet
apart. It moved slowly, and was seen by all the ship's
officers."</p>
<p>This account was further supplemented by a sketch in
a well-known illustrated paper, from the pencil of
Lieutenant W. P. Hynes of the <i>Osborne</i>, who, to the above
description, adds, that the fins were of irregular height,
and about forty feet in extent, and "as we were passing
through the water at ten and a-half knots, I could only
get a view of it 'end on.'" "It was about fifteen or
twenty feet broad at the shoulders, with flappers or fins
that seemed to have a semi-revolving motion. From
the top of the head to the part of the back where it
became immersed, I should consider about fifty feet, and
that seemed about a third of the whole length. All
this part was smooth, resembling a seal."</p>
<p>In the following month, the Scottish prints reported,
that when the Earl of Glasgow's steam-yacht <i>Valetta</i>
was cruising off Garroch Head, on the coast of Bute,
with a party of ladies and gentlemen on board, an
enormous fish or serpent, forty feet in length and about
fifteen in diameter, suddenly rose from the sea. Under
sail and steam the <i>Valetta</i> gave chase. A gentleman on
board speared it with a salmon "leister;" on which
the serpent dived, and after a time reappeared with the
iron part of the weapon sticking in its back. The
monster scudded along for some minutes, again dived,
and was not seen afterwards. There is little doubt,
however, that the animal which figured in this instance
was a very large basking-shark (<i>Selache maxima</i>).</p>
<p>An animal of exactly similar shape and dimensions
was reported as being seen in the subsequent August by
twelve persons in Massachusetts Bay; and soon after on
three different occasions in the same quarter by the crew
of a coasting vessel.</p>
<p>In May, 1877, the "sea-serpent" would seem to
have shifted his quarters to the Indian Ocean, which it
must be remarked is the habitat of the true sea-snakes.
On the 21st of that month, in latitude 2° north and
longitude 90° 53' east, the monster was alleged to have
been seen by the crew of the barque <i>Georgina</i>, bound
from Rangoon to Falmouth. It seemed to be about
fifty feet long, "grey and yellow in colour, and ten or
eleven inches thick. It was on view for about twenty
minutes, during which time it crossed the bow, and
ultimately disappeared under the port quarter." A
second account of this affair stated, that "for some days
previously the crew had seen several smaller serpents, of
from six to ten feet in length, playing about the vessel."</p>
<p>Strange as all these stories seem, it is difficult to
suppose they are all quite untrue, for, nautical
superstition apart, we have the ready testimony of various
men of education and veracity. That there is only one
serpentine monster in the ocean, is an idea which the
great disparity in the various descriptions would seem
to contradict; and certainly the most astounding aspect
presented by this supposed and most ubiquitous animal,
was his form and size when seen by the officers of the
Queen's yacht off the coast of Sicily; though it is
somewhat singular that these gentlemen made no attempt to
kill or capture the mighty fish, or whatever it was they
saw.</p>
<p>By way of conclusion to these remarks we may briefly
summarise the chief facts presented by "sea-serpent
tales" as they appear under the light of scientific
criticism. There is, it must firstly be remarked, nothing in
the slightest degree improbable in the idea that an
ordinary species of sea-snake, belonging to a well-known
group of reptiles, may undergo a gigantic development
and appear as a monster serpent of the deep. The
experience of comparative anatomists is decidedly in
agreement with such an opinion. Largely developed
individuals of almost every species of animals and plants
occasionally occur. Within the past few years new
species of cuttle-fishes—of dimensions compared with
which the largest of hitherto known forms are mere
pigmies—have been brought to light. And if huge
cuttle-fishes may thus be developed, why, it may be
asked, may not sea-snakes of ordinary size be elevated,
through extraordinary development, to become veritable
"leviathans" of the deep? That there is a strong
reason for belief in the veracity of sea-serpent tales, is
supported by the consideration of the utter want of any
motive for prevarication, and by the very different and
varied accounts given of the monsters seen. That the
appearances cannot always be explained on the supposition
that lifeless objects, such as trees, sea-weed, &c.,
have been seen, is equally evident from the detailed
nature of many of the accounts of the animals, which
have been inspected from a near distance. And it may
also be remarked that in some cases, in which largely
developed sea-snakes themselves may not have appeared,
certain fishes may have represented the reptilian
inhabitants of the ocean. As Dr. Andrew Wilson has
insisted, a giant tape-fish viewed from a distance would
personate a "sea-serpent" in a very successful manner;
and there can be no doubt that tape-fishes have
occasionally been described as "sea-serpents."</p>
<p>On the whole, if we admit the probability of
giant-developments of ordinary species of sea-snakes, or the
existence (and why not?) of enormous species of sea-snakes
and certain fishes <i>as yet unknown to science</i>, the
solution of the sea-serpent problem is not likely to be
any longer a matter of difficulty.*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* Since writing the above, the <i>Daily News</i>, of September, 1878,
reported the appearance of the serpent, "twenty metres long and
two-thirds of a metre in diameter,"
off Aalesund, on the coast of Norway.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0601"></SPAN></p>
<h2> MILITARY "FOLK LORE." </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> CHAPTER I. <br/><br/> THE RED COAT; A FEW NOTES CONCERNING ITS<br/> ORIGIN AND HISTORY.<br/> </h3>
<p>"<i>Red</i>, of the colour of blood, one of the primitive
colours," we are told by Walker; "red-coat, a name of
contempt for a soldier," he adds unpleasantly below;
but Colonel James in his Military Dictionary renders
it more probably, as "the familiar term for a British
soldier."</p>
<p>Colonel Mackinnon (in his "History of the Coldstream
Guards") and other writers have attributed the
introduction or adoption of the British uniform to
William III.; but there are sufficient proofs of its having
been common alike to England and to Scotland long
before the revolution in 1688.</p>
<p>That red was originally deemed a warlike colour,
though now worn only by the British and, till the Holstein
war, by the Danish troops, there is abundant evidence.*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* The red of the Danish army was darker than ours. In 1702, their
cavalry, line, and militia, wore iron-grey, with green stockings; but
there were some exceptions. The first named force had buff coats,
and in warm weather rode with hats, their helmets hanging at their
saddle bows. Lobat's dragoons were clad in red, lined with white;
the regiment of Jutland wore white, lined with red, red breeches and
black cravats; and the Queen's own Guards wore fine
scarlet.—<i>Travels in the Retinue of the English Envoy, in</i> 1702.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Bellona, the sister of Mars, is depicted by ancient
painters and described by the poets as being clad in
garments stained with blood, and the planet which
bears the name of the warlike god is known by its
ruddy appearance. This hue arises simply from the
atmosphere, and hence the bards of classical antiquity
named the planet after the god of battles. To show
that in savage lands some of those old ideas still prevail,
Colonel James Grant in his "Walk Across Africa," with
the gallant and lamented Speke, mentions that his
valet Uledi told him, "that in his native country of
Uhiao, the people imagined that all foreigners eat
human flesh, and that cloth was dyed <i>scarlet</i> with
human blood."</p>
<p>In heraldry, <i>gules</i> is the vermilion colour in the arms
of commoners; but without elaboration, our present
object is to trace the origin and the gradual adoption of
our national uniform, "the old red rag (as our soldiers
call it) that tells of England's glory."</p>
<p>The colour was deemed eminently martial and
war-like by the Romans, among whom the <i>paludamentum</i>,
the military robe or cloak of a general, was scarlet,
bordered with purple. Juvenal (vol. vi.) mentions officers
clad in a scarlet dress, and according to Livy, such was
also the attire of the lictors who attended the consul in
war.</p>
<p>Scarlet is mentioned among the colours used by the
Britons for dyeing their skins in the time of Julius
Cæsar; but their favourite herb was glastum, or woad,
called <i>glas</i> by the Celts, <i>i.e.</i>, blue, that they might look
dreadful in battle.</p>
<p>The <i>red</i> uniform of the British Army was adopted
simply from the circumstance, that it was the royal
colour of the kingdoms of England and Scotland, centuries
before the union of the crowns or of the countries;
red and blue being the royal livery of England, red and
yellow the royal livery of Scotland. In the latter
country, red has ever been the judicial colour, worn by
the Lords of Council and Session, the magistrates of
Edinburgh and other cities, as well as by the students
of some of the universities.</p>
<p>The Royal Crowns of England and Scotland were
always lined with scarlet, though James IV. for a time
adopted imperial purple. The surcoat of the Knights of
the Garter is crimson; and in the apparel of those of
the Bath we find the surcoat, breeches and stockings all
red, as directed at the revival of the Order by George
I. in 1725.</p>
<p>Scarlet faced with blue was the uniform of the City
Guard of Edinburgh, a corps which existed from the
days of Flodden until those of Waterloo.</p>
<p>In England, scarlet and blue had long been the two
chief colours of the cloth directed for the array of the
king's troops; in the time of the Crusades the English
wore white crosses; but Henry VIII. had troops in
white with a red cross. From the commencement of
the fourteenth century the Scots wore blue surcoats with
white St. Andrew's crosses thereon. Scotch and English
soldiers were wont in those days to taunt each other as
<i>Blue-coat</i> and <i>White-coat</i>.</p>
<p>The Memoirs of Kirkaldy of Grange record an instance
of this kind in a sham fight.</p>
<p>In the afternoon of the 2nd March, 1571, a party of
Sir William Kirkaldy's soldiers were marched from
Edinburgh Castle, which they approached again at
8 p.m., with white English surcoats over their armour.
On drawing near they were challenged thus:</p>
<p>"Who are ye that trouble the Captain in the silence
of night?"</p>
<p>"The army of the Queen of England," replied the
mock assailants with a discharge of arquebusses. Blank
volleys promptly responded from the walls, during which
they freely bestowed upon each other the taunts and
scurrility which the Scots and their Southern
neighbours used in battle as liberally as hard blows.</p>
<p>"Begone, ye lubbards! Away, <i>Blue-coats</i>!</p>
<p>"I defy thee, <i>White-coat!</i> dyrt upon your teeth!
Hence, knaves, to your mistress—her soldiers shall not
come here," &c. The cannon were then discharged,
upon which the mock Englishmen took to flight, after
an hour's skirmish in the dark, which filled the
peaceable portion of the citizens with dismay, and drew forth
some prophetic remarks from John Knox, who heard the
clamour from his house in the Netherbow.</p>
<p>The favourite colours of the House of Tudor were
green and white. At the battle of St. Aubyn, Sir
Edward Wydeville was slain, at the head of a vast
body of Bretons, whom, to deceive the enemy, he had
clad in <i>white</i> English doublets with red St. George's
crosses thereon.</p>
<p>White and red were the colours worn by Richard II. as
his livery, and during his reign they were favourites
with his courtiers and the citizens of London, a large
company of whom, headed by the mayor, all wearing
these, the king's colours, met him and the queen on
Blackheath, and conducted them in state to the Palace
of Westminster. At the coronation of Henry IV. we
find the English peers wearing a long scarlet tunic,
called a <i>houppelande</i>, with a cape above it; the knights
and esquires present wore the same kind of tunic, but
without the cape.</p>
<p>In 1432, when Henry IV. returned from France, he
was met at Eltham by the Lord Mayor of London, who
was arrayed in crimson velvet with a baldrick of gold,
attended by three henchmen dressed in suits of red
spangled with silver, and by the aldermen wearing
gowns of scarlet with purple hoods. Then in 1535 we
find Henry VIII. donning a crimson velvet jerkin with
purple satin sleeves, and among the items of his
voluminous wardrobe are enumerated, "a cloke of
skarlette with a brodegarde of right crymson velvette; a
dublette of carnacion coloured sattin embrowdered with
damaske gold; a jacquette of the same," and several
other "dubieties" and "clokes" of similar sanguinary
hues; and during his reign we find the first decided
approach to the uniform of the future British Army.</p>
<p>"Henry VIII. passed to Bulloigne with an army
divided into three battalions," says a curious work,
printed at London in 1630.* "In the vantguard were
12,000 footmen and 500 light-horsemen, cloathed in
blew jackets, with red guards. The middleward (where
the King was), consisted of 20,000 footmen, clothed
with red jackets and yellow guards. In the rereward
was the Duke of Norfolk, and with him an army like
in number and apparell to the first, saving that therein
served 1000 Irishmen, <i>all naked</i>, save their mantles
and their thicke-gathered skirts." This indicates a
costume like that of the Highlanders.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* "Relations of the most famovs kingdoms, throwout the world."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>On this occasion, in 1544, Henry was attended by
his Body-Guard of Pensioners, each of whom "was
accompanied by three mounted men-at-arms, dressed in
suits of <i>red and yellow damask</i>, the plumes of themselves
and steeds being of a like colour." ("Account of the
Gentlemen-at-arms.") In battle they wore complete
armour, their horses being "barded from counter to
tail," <i>i.e.</i>, with a spiked frontlet for the head, criniere
to guard the mane, a poitrinal or breast-plate, and a
croupiere or buttock-piece.</p>
<p>Contemporaneously we find his nephew, James V. of
Scotland, having a body-guard established in 1532,
consisting of 300 men of Edinburgh, clad in scarlet
doublets faced with blue, with blue bonnets, gilt
partizans and daggers.</p>
<p>Henry's "Bulleners," as they were named, were
conspicuous in their scarlet dress at the battle of Pinkie, in
1547, where they were commanded by the Lord Gray,
and where they were driven back in confusion, leaving
the staff of the royal standard in the hands of the Scots.
In Patten's quaint account of this battle, he mentions,
incidentally, that "Sir Miles Patrick being nigh, espied
one in a <i>red doublet</i>, whom he took thereby to be an
Englishman."</p>
<p>In a letter of Sir John Harrington's, we find the pay
and clothing of Queen Elizabeth's troops in Ireland
detailed at some length, but the colours are not stated.
For an officer in winter, "a cassock of broad cloth,
with bays, and trimmed with silk lace, 27<i>s.</i> 6<i>d</i>. A
doublet of canvas, with silk buttons, and lined with
white linen, costing 14<i>s.</i> 5<i>d</i>. Two shirts, three pairs
of kersey stockings, three pairs of shoes of neat's leather,
at 2<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> per pair, and one pair of Venetians, of broad
Kentish cloth with silver lace, at 15<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>"</p>
<p>On the 23rd July, 1601, 1500 of her men arrived
from England, clad in <i>red cassocks</i>, to share in the siege
of Ostend.—(History of the Siege.) Of these, says
Stowe, 1000 were Londoners, and they are now represented
by Her Majesty's 3rd Foot, or Kentish Buffs.</p>
<p>We find no trace of the national colours at the
coronation of Charles I. as King of Scotland, in 1633, at
Edinburgh, where he was escorted by the Gentlemen
Pensioners, under the Earl of Suffolk, and the Yeomen
of the Guard, under the Earl of Holland. We are told
by Spalding that he was accompanied by "his ordinary
English Guards, clad in his livery, having <i>brown velvet</i>
coats, side (<i>i.e.</i>, close) to their hough, and beneath with
boards of black velvet, and His Majesty's armes wrought
in raised and embossed work of silver and gold upon
the back and breast of ilk coat. This was the ordinary
weed of His Majesty's Foot Guards." Those furnished
by Edinburgh were clad in "white satin doublets, black
velvet breeches, silk stockings, hats, feathers, and scarfs.
These gallants had dainty muskets, pikes, and gilded
partizans." On this auspicious occasion, all the
Scottish peerage wore their usual robes of crimson velvet.
In this King's reign, David Ramsay, who was an officer
of Gustavus Adolphus, when appearing to fight a duel
with Lord Reay, wore a coat of scarlet (according to
Sanderson's "History of England"), so thickly laced
with silver that the ground of the cloth was scarcely
visible.</p>
<p>Singularly enough, scarlet was early adopted among
the grim Scottish Covenanters. At the battle of
Kilsythe, where Montrose routed their troops with great
slaughter, we find that "the red-coat musketeers"
were cut to pieces by Viscount Aboyne and his Gordons.
It may be worth mentioning here that the chequer on
the bonnets of our Highland regiments was first adopted
by the clans under Montrose, as significant of the
<i>fess-cheque</i> of the House of Stuart. The great Marquis
wore scarlet at his barbarous execution in Edinburgh,
in 1650; and in the course of that year we find Sir
James Balfour recording, in his "Memorialls of Church
and Staite," that an English ship was made a prize by
the Scots, who found in her "eleven hundred elles of
broad clothe, seven hundred suites of made clothes, and
als many <i>read cottes</i>, 250 carabines, 500 muskets, with
powder and matches," being supplies for the troops of
Cromwell, several of whose regiments appear, however,
to have been clad in blue.</p>
<p>Balfour, at this period, mentions on several occasions
the "four-tailled" coats of the Scottish infantry
and artillery, which must have been something like
the old Highland doublet now worn by our Highland
corps.</p>
<p>At the Restoration, when forces were established in
England and Scotland, each country having its separate
guards, line, and artillery, scarlet was the colour almost
uniformly adopted, save in one instance, when the King
clothed in blue, faced with red, the Royal Regiment of
English Horse Guards, which was embodied on the 26th
August, 1661, under Aubrey, Earl of Oxford. These
colours it still retains; but a corps of marines raised
about the same time, oddly enough, wore yellow
coats—the old Dutch uniform.*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* William III. had a regiment of Dutch Horse in London, styled the
Blue Horse Guards; they returned to Holland on the 20th March,
1689, after which the present Oxford Blues got that appellation
permanently.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>On the 2nd April in the same year, 1661, the
Scottish Life Guards rode through the city of
Edinburgh "in gallant order," says Nicol the Diarist,
"their carbines upon their saddles, and swords drawn
in their hands. It pleased His Majesty to clothe their
trumpeters and the master of the kettle-drum in very
rich apparel." Colours were presented, and soon after
the King gave to each gentleman a buff coat.</p>
<p>In February, 1683, General Sir Thomas Dalzell
obtained from the Privy Council at Edinburgh a licence
permitting the manufacturers at Newmills "to import
2536 ells of <i>stone-grey</i> cloth from England," for his
dragoon regiment, the <i>Scots Greys</i>, which had been
raised two years before—hence their costume, as well
as their grey horses, may have led to their present
well-known appellation. This grey cloth cost five shillings
an ell.</p>
<p>In May of the same year, Colonel John Grahame of
Claverhouse imported from England 150 ells of red
cloth, 40 ells of white, and 550 dozen of buttons, for
the use of the Life Guards, and the Council ordained
that the uniform of the Scottish infantry should be "of
such a dye as shall be thought fit to distinguish sojours
from other skulking and vagrant persons, who have
hitherto imitated the uniform of the King," and red was
the dye so universally adopted that in 1685 we find
300 ells of it ordered by Captain Patrick Grahame for
the City Guard of Edinburgh.</p>
<p>The Cavalier trooper, Captain Crichton, writes of the
Scottish cavalry in <i>red</i> in 1676; and in 1684 we find
that the dress of the Coldstream Guards was a red coat
lined with green, red stockings, red breeches, and white
sashes.* "The colonel and other officers, when on duty,
to wear their gorgets."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* Royal Orders, &c.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>In Sir Patrick Hume's account of Argyle's descent
upon Scotland (printed in Rose's Observations upon the
historical works of Mr. Fox), among the Scottish forces
led by the Earl of Dumbarton, he says, "wee saw in
view a regiment of red-coat foot, too strong for us to
attacque." This was the Scots Royals, or 1st Regiment
of the Line. Before the victorious charge at Killiecrankie,
Viscount Dundee is said to have substituted a
green for a scarlet uniform over his buff coat; and the
former colour is yet considered ominous to those of his
name who wear it.*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* Browne's "History of the Highlands."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Some years before the Revolution, Grenadier
companies had been added to the English and Scottish
establishments.</p>
<p>Charles II. having resolved to introduce hand-grenades,
on the 13th April, 1678, issued a warrant
for a company of one hundred men to be added to the
Holland regiment, under the command of Captain John
Bristoe, to be armed with those explosives, and to be
styled Grenadiers. A similar company was soon added
to every other corps in both countries. These soldiers
carried fusils with bayonets, hatchets, and swords.
Their uniform was different from that of the musketeer
and pikeman; the two latter had round hats with broad
brims turned up on one side, the former a fur cap with
a lofty crown; they also wore cravats "of fox tailes."</p>
<p>"In 1678," says Evelyn in his Diary, "were brought
into the service a new sort of soldiers called Grenadiers,
who were dextrous at flinging hand-grenades, every one
having a pouch full; they wore furred caps with coped
crowns like Janizaries, which made them look very
fierce, and some had hoods hanging down behind.
Their clothing being pybald, yellow, and red." Such
was the origin of our "British Grenadiers" of immortal
memory!</p>
<p>According to Fosbroke, after throwing the grenade,
on receiving the words "Fall on," they rushed on the
enemy with hatchets, which they wore in addition to
muskets, slings, swords, and daggers.</p>
<p>The Scottish Government, in 1702, raised a corps of
Horse Grenadier Guards, afterwards incorporated with
the United forces, and now represented by the Life
Guards.</p>
<p>Towards the close of the 17th century, the clothing of
the British troops varied; hence, we find, that in the
year 1685, when the North Lincolnshire (now 10th)
Regiment of Foot was raised by John, Earl of Bath, it
wore blue coats, which were lined with red, and the
men had waistcoats, breeches, and stockings all of red,
and round Cavalier hats with broad brims, which were
turned up on one side, and ornamented with red
ribbons. The companies of pikemen* alone wore red
worsted sashes. Shortly after the Revolution in 1688,
the 10th Foot were clothed in scarlet, like the rest of
the British Infantry.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* The <i>last</i> pike perhaps used in the British Service we saw carried
by a sergeant of Captain Wyatt's Company of the Royal Artillery in
1835, when marching for embarkation for Britain, out of Signal Hill
Barracks in Newfoundland.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>In 1687, the "old Tangier Regiment," or, Queen's
Own Foot (now the 2nd Regiment), which was raised
in 1661, for the defence of that portion of Africa which
was ceded to Britain as the dowry of the Infanta of
Portugal, wore a red frock coat with skirts turned back,
loose green knickerbockers, white stockings, black
broad-brimmed hats, looped up on one side, and shoes
with rosettes. In the buff belts were long rapiers and
fixing daggers, while a collar of bandoliers was worn
across the chest.</p>
<p>William III. ordained in 1698, "that no person
whatsoever should presume to wear scarlet or red cloth
for livery, except such as are in His Majesty's service,
or the Guards," yet, for all that, scarlet was, and is
still, the livery of more than one noble family in Scotland.</p>
<p>The 3rd, or Kentish Buffs, were so called from the
circumstance of their being the first corps whose
accoutremeuts were made of leather prepared from the
hide of the buffalo. Their waistcoats, breeches, and
facings were, however, all of the same buff colour in
1665, according to Captain Grose. For nearly the same
reason, the 31st, or Huntingdonshire Foot, raised in
1702, call themselves the "Young Buffs." In the
Army List, the 78th Highlanders are styled the
Ross-shire Buffs; and in some old lists, the 56th, or
West Essex Regiment, raised in 1755, figured by their
pet name of <i>Pompadours</i>, their facings being then, as
now, purple, the favourite colour of Madame's gown and
fontange. While on the subject of uniform and
equipment, we may mention that in the Memoirs of Sergeant
Donald Macleod, "who having returned wounded, with
the corpse of General Wolfe, was admitted an out-pensioner
of Chelsea in 1759, and is now* in his 103rd
year," we have an absurd statement to the effect, that
when he enlisted in the 1st Royal Scots, "as a boy in
the Scottish service under King William III.," they
were accoutred with steel caps, bows and arrows (?).
He might as well have added scalp locks and war paint.
Singular to say, this nonsense has been reproduced by
Miss Strickland in her Life of Queen Anne. Long prior
to the time given, the regiment wore its orthodox red
coat, faced and lined with blue, and was armed with
good match-lock muskets, the "cocked lunts" of which
revealed their whereabouts, in the dark, to Monmouth's
cavalry on the night before the battle of Sedgemoor.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* 1791. Published by Sewell, Cornhill.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Of old, the London militia, though all dressed in
scarlet, were known by their facings, and not by
numbers.</p>
<p>In the list of officers, commissioned for the City, on
the 24th December, 1698, we have those of the orange,
yellow, white, red, green, and blue regiments; and
concerning these corps the following interesting
proclamation was posted up throughout London, when the
Highlanders under Prince Charles were advancing on
Derby.</p>
<p>"Notice is hereby given, that every officer and
soldier in the six regiments of militia, without waiting
for beat of drum, or any other notice, do, immediately
on hearing the said signals, repair with their arms and
the usual quantity of powder and ball, to their respective
rendezvous; the red regiment upon Tower-hill, the
<i>green</i> regiment in Guildhall-yard, the <i>yellow</i> in
St. Paul's Churchyard, the <i>white</i> at the Royal Exchange,
the <i>blue</i> in Old Fish-street, and the <i>orange</i> in West
Smithfield."*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* In 1759 this corps was ordered by its Colonel to adopt blue
clothing.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>It is hence that in Foote's humorous farce, "The
Mayor of Garratt," Major Sturgeon is made to say
that he had served under Jeffery Dunstable, knight,
Lord Mayor of London, and Colonel of the <i>yellow</i>.</p>
<p>Prince Charles Edward was partial to the national
uniform, and frequently wore it. He is represented in
red, in the miniature which he gave to his secretary,
Murray of Broughton, one of nine painted on copper, as
gifts to his principal adherents. His Life Guards,
under Lord Elcho, wore blue faced with red; but, in
his small and gallant army, the Duke of Perth's
regiment, wore scarlet uniforms. (Vide Spalding Club
Miscell., vol. i.)</p>
<p>A scarlet uniform worn by Cardinal York, before he
took holy orders, and probably when he commanded a
body of French and Irish troops at Dunkirk, in 1745,
is now preserved at Inzievar House, Fifeshire, having
been preserved by Edgar of Keithwick, who was long
attached to the last of the Stuarts, in the capacity of
secretary.</p>
<p>Like the light cavalry, most of the militia corps
would seem to have been originally dressed in blue.
According to an old ballad, the Lothian regiment were
so clad at the Battle of Bothwell-bridge in 1679.</p>
<p>The uniform of the first-named force has frequently
varied. In 1784, the clothing of the 17th, and similar
corps, was changed from scarlet to blue. They wore
blue in the Peninsula, and in 1830 were clad in scarlet
again, when the moustache, which they and other corps
had adopted, was ordered to be shaved off. (Records of
the 17th Lancers.)</p>
<p>The old Scottish Guard of the French kings wore
hoquetons of white, "in token of their unspotted
fidelity," but the other Scottish troops in the French
service, the Gendarmes Écossais, who took precedence
of all the household troops, and the Infanterie Écossais,
which took rank after the 12th regiment of the old
French line, wore blue, while scarlet was the dress of
the Irish brigades of the Louis' in later years.</p>
<p>Our Chasseurs Brittaniques, a foreign corps, consisting
in some instances, of deserters from every army in
Europe, wore the national uniform, and thus, when on
duty, frequently caused confusion and mistakes by their
ignorance of the English language.</p>
<p>In 1742, the coats and breeches of the line were
tightened, and the hats were looped up on three sides,
and in that year, the 7th, or South British Fusiliers,
and the 21st, or North British Fusiliers, figured in the
high conical cap which came into vogue with the
Prussian tactics. Their coats had no collars, the skirts
were buttoned back and faced with blue. Numbers
were first put on the coat buttons in 1767.</p>
<p>Red and yellow being, as we have stated, the royal
livery of Scotland, the facings of Scottish regiments
have generally been of the latter colour, and many that
now wear blue, had yellow when first embodied.</p>
<p>The whole infantry of the East India Company wore
the national colour, and it is greatly to be regretted that,
on the commencement of our Volunteer movement, the
Government did not enforce the adoption of scarlet,
instead of permitting the endless varieties of silly
colours and costumes now worn by many corps throughout
the United Kingdom.</p>
<p>The statistics of European wars show us that the
French, who are clad in <i>blue</i>, suffered a greater loss in
proportion than the British, who wear <i>red</i>, when under
fire. An old Peninsula officer, whose letter is before us,
mentions, "When our Light Company, and the company
of the 60th Rifles (green), attached to our brigade,
were skirmishing on the same ground (against the
enemy), the latter lost more than we did, although
composed chiefly of Germans, who are proverbially cautious
skirmishers. This is an important subject. I saw, at
the Battle of Vittoria, the wonderful effect of the
imposing appearance of the British line on the enemy.
After they had been driven from their position and
completely scattered, many glorious attempts were made
by their officers to rally them on some heights behind
the ridge on which our line was advancing. It
became an object with the officer commanding the Light
Companies, which were scattered in pursuit, to get
them arrayed for the attack of a column which formed
on one of those heights at some distance in our front,
and thus became a rallying point to the thousands who
were flying from the ridge in helpless confusion.</p>
<p>"Before we had a sufficient number of the pursuers
collected to attack this formidable column, it broke and
bolted, its soldiers disappearing among the racing mobs
who threw away their arms and fled towards the
Pyrenees. While wondering what had caused so sudden
a panic among men who, but a moment before, seemed
ready to adhere until death to their officers, we—the
skirmishers—looked back to the ridge, and saw a sight
which I shall never forget. The whole British line
crowned the mountains, from wing to wing, looking
like a wall of fire, their bayonets glittering in the sun,
as they moved steadily, silently, and presenting a
glorious picture of power and order. This sight it was
which struck the enemy to the heart, and made him fly
from his new position in sudden panic. No army,
although double the number, if clad in sombre uniform,
could ever make such an appearance, or produce such
an effect as this."*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* At the commencement of the Volunteer movement, this letter was
addressed to the author of this paper, who was then actively engaged
in the formation of a corps now wearing grey.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Our uniforms have frequently varied according to the
climate in which corps have been stationed. The kilt
has generally proved too warm for Indian service, and
white trousers are substituted. In the Caffre war the
74th Highlanders wore short dark blouses, tartan
tunics, and hummal bonnets, <i>i.e.</i>, without feathers. In
Canada the King's Dragoon Guards lately wore busbies
of fur, blue pea-jackets, and long boots lined with sheepskin
in winter. The Ashanti uniform is still remembered.</p>
<p>Save the Blues, all our cavalry wore scarlet, until
the middle of George III.'s reign, when blue was
adopted for the Light corps; but silver-grey, with red
facings, was worn by all dragoons, while serving in
India, until 1820. Eleven years after, scarlet was
resumed for all corps except the Horse Guards and
Hussars; but blue was ordered again for all Lancers
and Light Dragoons in 1840.</p>
<p>Blue has always been worn by the Royal Regiment
of Artillery, which was first embodied in England in the
year 1750, by Colonel William Belford, who commanded
that arm of the service at the battle of Culloden, four
years before. The facings, vests, and breeches were all
scarlet.</p>
<p>Hussars were first introduced in our service in 1793,
and Lancers after the battle of Waterloo; but so early
as 1794 we had a corps of Lancers, named the British
Uhlans, formed out of the remains of the French
Royalist army, and which, with the Hussars of Choiseul,
Salm, and Rohan, perished in the fatal expedition to
Quiberon in 1796.</p>
<p>Uniform has ever been considered a badge alike of
honour and service; thus, in the <i>Gazette</i> for June, 1867,
we find that Her Majesty was graciously pleased to
permit a retired Captain of the Edinburgh, or Queen's
Own Regiment of Militia, "to retain his rank and <i>wear
his uniform</i> in consideration of his long service in that
corps."</p>
<p>We have had the pleasure of knowing more than one
brave veteran officer, who treasured affectionately "the
old red rag," in which he had followed Picton, Grahame,
or the Iron Duke, and in which he had been wounded
on the glorious fields of Spain or in the crowning victory
of Waterloo; and in every age there has been some
eccentric enthusiast who stuck manfully to fashions that
had departed.</p>
<p>In 1808, many an old officer would as soon have cut
off his head as his pigtail when the Horse Guards
ordered the army to be shorn of that remarkable
appendage. Old Sir Thomas Dalyell, of Binns (first
Colonel of the Scots Greys), who rode yearly to London
to kiss the hand of King Charles II., adhered to the
close-sleeved doublet of the days of James VI. This,
with his portentous vow-beard (which he had sworn
never to cut after the execution of Charles I), "when he
was in London never failed to draw after him a great
crowd of boys, who constantly attended him at his
lodgings, and followed him with huzzas as he went to
Court and returned from it. As he was a man of
humour, he would always thank them for their civilities
when he left them at the door to go to the King, and
would let them know exactly at what hour he intended
to come out again and return to his lodgings." (Memoirs
of Captain Crichton, the Cavalier Trooper.)</p>
<p>General Preston, who commanded the same regiment
in the Seven Years' War, and who died colonel of it, at
Bath in 1785, was the last British officer who wore a
buff coat. An officer who served with him records that
at the capture of Zerenberg, Preston received more than
a dozen of sword-cuts, which fell harmlessly on his
"buff-jerkin."</p>
<p>Old Colonel Charles Donellan, who commanded the
48th, and was wounded at Talavera (mortally, we
believe), was the last officer who adhered to the antique
three-cornered Nivernois hat; and there was a General
Cameron, in the same campaign, who adhered to the
Highland bonnet, and never would adopt the cocked hat.</p>
<p>At Dettingen, George II. appeared in the same red
coat which he had worn when serving under
Marlborough. Thackeray says, "On public occasions he
always displayed the hat and coat he wore on the
famous day of Oudenarde, and the people laughed, but
kindly, at the odd old garment, for bravery never
goes out of fashion." At Minden, in 1759, we find the
luckless Lord George Sackville leading the cavalry in
the same red coat which he had worn as a youth at
Fontenoy; and the same sentiment has prevailed in the
humbler ranks of the service.</p>
<p>An aged soldier, named Robert Ferguson, who died
at Paisley in 1811, in his ninety-seventh year, preserved
to the last, as a precious relic, the old red coat of the
22nd Foot (Handysides, wherein Sterne's father was a
captain), in which he had been wounded at the battles
of Dettingen and Fontenoy, just as future years may see
some veteran preserving the faded and perhaps
blood-stained tunic which he wore with Raglan at Sebastopol,
or with Havelock at Lucknow.</p>
<p>We have thus attempted to trace the history of that
scarlet uniform, which is so inseparably connected with the
past, the present, and the future glory of the British
Isles. It is the garb which first fires the enthusiasm
and ambition of our youth, and is ever kindly and
affectionately remembered by our white-haired veterans
in old age, for there is something almost filial in the
emotion with which an old soldier recalls the uniform,
the facings, and badges of his regiment, whatever its
number might have been, from the 1st Royal Scots to
the Rifle Brigade. There is not a battle-field,
honourable to Britain, or a portion of the globe where our
drums have beaten, but where it has formed the shroud
of many a noble and gallant heart—so all honour, say
we, to "the old Red Coat, that tells the tale of England's
glory!"</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0602"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER II. <br/><br/> FURTHER NOTES ON ITS HISTORY AND ON REGIMENTALS. </h3>
<p>In the preceding chapter, the origin of the British
uniform was plainly deduced from the fact of scarlet being
the Royal livery alike of England and of Scotland, and
hence its adoption as a general national colour. To
these notes we purpose to add a few more on the
gradual progress of badges and distinctions in the
service.</p>
<p>The red cross of St. George was the general badge of
England from the Crusades, till the time of Edward IV.,
and by an act of the Scottish Parliament passed in
1385, during the reign of Robert III., every soldier was
ordained "to wear a white St. Andrew's Cross on his
back and breast, which, if his surcoat was white, was
to be broidered on a circle or square of black cloth."</p>
<p>In the time of Henry VIII., a red St. George's cross
on a white surcoat was adopted as the distinguishing
badge of English troops; and in an order to raise men
for the service of Mary I., in the northern counties, she
directs, that "they be clothed in whyt, with
redde-crosses on ye arme, in ye olde maner."</p>
<p>These red crosses were destined to figure soon after,
at the battle of Ancrum in 1544, when, as the ballad
has it, the stream</p>
<p class="poem">
"Ran red with English blood,<br/>
For the Douglas true and the bold Buccleugh,<br/>
'Gainst keen Lord Evers stood."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>When the English were routed, 700 Scottish outlaws
of broken border clans, who had joined them, threw
aside their red crosses, and joining their countrymen,
made a merciless slaughter of the fugitives with axe
and spear, shouting to each other the while,
"Remember Broomhouse!"</p>
<p>Love of the sanguinary colour seems to have spread
rapidly, and so, as some one has it, "no true Englishman
can either fight, or hunt, to his satisfaction, save
in a red coat," but badges were speedily added thereto.</p>
<p>Stowe records in his Survey of London, that "Robert
Neville, Earl of Warwick, with 600 men all in red
jackets, embroidered with <i>ragged staves</i> before and
behind, was lodged in Warwicke Lane; in whose house
there was oftentimes six oxen eaten at a breakfast, and
every tavern was full of his meat, for he that had any
acquaintance in that house, might have as much of
sodden or roasted meat as he could prick and carry
away on a long dagger."</p>
<p>The proposal that the medical officers of all
European armies should wear one great distinguishing
badge, by which their profession might be known, is
not a new one, for we find Ralph Smith, in the time of
Elizabeth, after telling us that military "surgeons
should be men of sobrietie, of good conscience, and
skillfull in that science, able to heal all scars and
wounds, especially to take out a pellet, &c., must wear
their Baldricke, whereby they may be known in time of
slaughter, as it is their charter in the field."</p>
<p>In this reign the Cavalry wore scarlet cloaks; but in
the stirring times of Cromwell, with red and blue, a
reddish-brown was much used by both horse and foot;
hence he says in one of his letters, "I had rather have
a plain russet-coated captain, that knoweth what he
fights for, and loves what he knowes, than that which
you call 'a gentleman,' and is nothing else."</p>
<p>Of all the colours for uniforms, the most absurd were
some of those adopted by our Rifle Volunteers, in their
too wary desire to be unseen. A battalion of the
Italian Legion, raised during the Crimean war, was
clad in silver grey; and it was admitted by all
competent judges to be the colour best adapted for riflemen,
and, moreover, when handsomely laced and trimmed, it
was very becoming. This was the favourite colour of
the Indian Light Cavalry.</p>
<p>When contrasted with the tight tunics, tiny shackos,
and plain trousers of the present day, the equipment of
a corps of the last, or the preceding century, in its
amplitude and variety, must have presented a very
different and very picturesque aspect. On the 8th, or
King's Own Regiment, being raised for King James, by
Richard, Lord Ferrars, the captains were armed with
pikes, the lieutenants with partisans, the ensigns with
half-pikes, the sergeants with halberds; thirty rank
and file of each company were pikemen, seventy-three
were musketeers, and all carried swords. The
waistcoats and breeches were yellow; the uniform, scarlet
lined with yellow; the stockings and cravats white;
the hats were <i>à la</i> cavalier, turned up on one side, and
ornamented with flowing yellow ribbands. (Records
8th Foot.)</p>
<p>Ten years before this time, each company consisted of
thirty pikes, sixty muskets, and ten men armed with
light fusils, and "the tallest men were always culled
out as pikemen." (<i>Bruce on Military Law</i>, 1717.)</p>
<p>The following description of a deserter, from the
22nd Foot, in those days, is rather amusing, as to
costume:—</p>
<p>"Run away, out of Captain Soames' Company, in his
Grace the Duke of Norfolk's regiment of Infantry,
quartered at Newport, in Shropshire; Roger Curtis, a
barber surgeon, a little man with short black hair, a
little curled; round visage, fresh-coloured, in a light
coloured coat, with gold and silver buttons, red plush
breeches and white hat; he lived formerly at Downham
Market, in Norfolk. Whoever will give notice to
Francis Baker, agent to the said regiment, in Hatton
Garden, so that he may be secured, shall have two
guineas reward."*</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* "London Gazette," 1689.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>A spectator of the Camp of the Household Brigade,
on Putney Heath, in October, 1694, describes the three
regiments of Guards as wearing scarlet, of course; the
1st, faced with blue; the 2nd, or "Cole-stream," with
green; the 3rd Scots, with white; the officers being
distinguished by white scarves worn over the left
shoulder, and fringed with the colour of the regimental
facings. The Holland Regiment (Buffs), are described
as wearing red, faced with flesh-colour; the Queen's
or Tangier Regiment, red, faced with sea-green; the
Lord Admiral's Regiment of Marines, raised in 1664
(and afterwards incorporated by William III., with
the 2nd Foot Guards), in doublets and breeches of
yellow.</p>
<p>Until the reign of Her present Majesty, red was worn
by all the drummers and buglers of the regiment of
Artillery; but although, from the earliest period, it was
deemed the great national colour of our forces, it is
somewhat remarkable that it was not adopted by the
English or Irish Militia, until the year 1759, and a
song of that period begins:—</p>
<p class="poem">
"Ye mounseers, give ear, we have nothing to fear,<br/>
For the Militia are now clothed in RED, Sirs!<br/>
They have hearts that are stout and will never give out,<br/>
With Rockingham bold at their head, sirs!<br/>
You may brag and may boast, upon your own coast,<br/>
And parade it from Dunkirk to Calais;<br/>
But have a care now, how you venture too far,<br/>
In your flat-bottomed boats to make sallies."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Long denied a militia force, in dread of Jacobite
influences, Scotland had none from 1746 till the close of
the last century, when, ten years after the death of her
"Bonnie Prince Charlie," ten battalions were raised,
and their colours and insignia (most of which are now
deposited in the Castle of Edinburgh) were designed by
the Court of the Lyon King of Arms, then Robert, Earl
of Kinnoull, with whom the applications for such were
lodged.</p>
<p>In our former chapter, the uniforms of the Irish and
Scottish regiments which belonged to the French Line,
during the last century, were referred to. These corps
(according to the "Liste Historique des Troupes de
France," 1758,) were numbered as the 92nd, 93rd,
94th, 98th (Gardes de Jacques II.), 99th, and 109th,
all Irish; the 107th Royal Écossais under the Duke of
Perth, and the 113th Écossais under Lieutenant-General
Lord Ogilvie, who died in Scotland in 1803.</p>
<p>The two Scottish regiments wore coats and vests of
blue, and their hats were bound with gold. All their
Irish brother exiles wore scarlet, with white vests
generally, and carried on their colours black or yellow
crosses, with the "Couronne d'Angleterre," which had
no braver or more bitter enemies, as the terrible day of
Fontenoy attested; and where they seem to have acted
true to the spirit of the Fenian song:</p>
<p class="poem">
"Oh, if the colour we must wear.<br/>
Is England's cruel red,<br/>
Let it remind us of the blood<br/>
That Ireland has shed!"<br/></p>
<p>And when our troops landed at Cancalle Bay in 1758,
they were surprised to find themselves stoutly opposed
by entire battalions in scarlet; and no wonder was it
that they were so, for it was the Irish Brigade, whose
ranks were manned and officered by the sons and
grandsons of the adherents of King James, the same gallant
Irish Brigade which was welcomed to the British
Establishment in 1794, and, unfortunately, was soon after
reduced.</p>
<p>In our service, the White Horse of Hanover is borne
on the colours of the 3rd Dragoons, the 7th, 14th,
23rd, and 27th Foot, &c. This badge is as old in
history as the Welsh Dragon of the 10th Hussars and
12th Lancers, having been the ancient cognisance of
Saxony or Westphalia,—a White Horse, on a field
<i>gules</i>—borne for centuries by the House of Brunswick.
Henry the Proud, Duke of Bavaria, in consequence of
his marriage in 1123, with Gertrude, the lineal
descendant of Wittekind, last of the Saxon Kings, assumed
the armorial bearing of that Sovereign, if a barbarian
so weak and savage deserve the title. The banner of
Wittekind originally bore a black horse, which, on his
compulsory conversion to Christianity, under the sword
of Charlemagne, was changed to white, as emblematic
of his new and purer faith. Hence our White Horse of
Hanover and its motto <i>Nec Aspera Terrent</i>, which
appears on the colours of the regiments above mentioned.
It made its appearance in our service about the
same time as the hideous black leather cockade, so long
retained in loyal opposition to the White Rose of the
Stuarts, and which is seen now only on the hats of footmen.</p>
<p>But the badge borne for the longest period in
succession by the same unbroken body of men, is
undoubtedly the St. Andrew's Cross of the 1st Royals, who
represent alike the Scottish Guard of St. Louis (the
comrades of "Quentin Durward" under Louis XI.), and the
Green Brigade of Scots, who served Gustavus Adolphus,
a corps whose almost fabulous antiquity was long a jest
in the French service, as well as our own, being twitted
in both as the Guards of Pontius Pilate, who slept on
their post.</p>
<p>A very remarkable instance of love of the "Old Red
Coat" occurred when the Scots Greys marched from
Carlisle in April, 1766. A troop-quartermaster named
Robert Mackenzie, then in his eighty-eighth year, was
left behind, totally prostrated by age and infirmity. He
was born in Scotland in 1688, had joined the Greys in
1705, when Lord John Hay was colonel, and was
proverbially known as "the oldest soldier in the service."</p>
<p>The sound of the trumpets had scarcely died away
homeward on the north road, when the hand of death
came on the old enthusiast, and feeling that the hour of
his dissolution was come, he insisted on being clad in
his full uniform, his boots were drawn on, his sword
girt about him, and thus accoutred, he expired, of sheer
"disappointment at his inability to proceed. He was
carried to his grave by six invalids; the pall being
supported by six sergeants of recruiting parties in the
town, and the Cumberland Militia fired six platoons at
his interment."</p>
<p>An old enthusiast of a similar kind, though of higher
rank, was the amiable General Charles O'Hara, the
comrade of Granby and Ligonier, Lieutenant-Colonel of
the 22nd, somewhere before 1788, and who, in the first
year of the present century, died Governor of Gibraltar.
He was the last British officer who adhered to the
uniform of the Minden days, and to that remarkable style
of cocked hat introduced by the great Austrian Marshal,
with its tall straight feather and large black rosette on
the dexter side; hence O'Hara was known in the
service as "the last of the Kevenhullers."</p>
<p>At Gibraltar "he was buried with all the honours
due to his rank," wrote an officer of the 29th, who was
present. "I had never before seen the funeral of a
general officer. There was his horse—the well-known
charger oh which we had so often seen him mounted—bearing
the boots and spurs of his departed master; on
the coffin lay other mournful insignia, the sword, the
sash, and not the least prominent memorial, the Kevenhuller
hat, with its tall, unbending feather, and I gazed
on it for the last time."</p>
<p>He was succeeded in his command by the father of
her present Majesty.</p>
<p>But in the quaint adherence to the costume of a past
age, there are few cases like one recorded by O'Keefe,
the player, whose recollections were published in 1826,
and who mentions that in his day, there was an aged
captain, John Desbrissay, who walked about the streets
of Dublin, "unremarked," in the Cavalier dress of the
reign of Charles II. This, however, was before the
time of the notorious Wilkes. This eccentric veteran
lived in Corkhill, Dublin, and his name appears in the
Army Lists for 1747, as agent for the 5th Horse, 5th
Royal Irish Dragoons, 12th Foot, and several other
corps stationed in Dublin.</p>
<p>County designations were not given until 1786, but
numbers had been introduced, and badges, pretty
generally adopted for all corps of Horse and Foot, on
their colours, buttons, or belt-plates, prior to the first
year of George the Third's reign.</p>
<p>In 1759, when Colonel John Hale (who came to
London with the news of Wolfe's fall, and the conquest
of Canada) raised the 17th Light Dragoons (now Lancers),
it was ordered that "on the front of the men's
caps, and on the left breast of their uniform, there was
to be a death's head and cross-bones over it, and under
the motto, 'or glory;'" and this grim device (the
badge of the famous Black Brunswickers in later times)
they still retain, like the old Pomeranian Horse,
who, since the days of Gustavus Adolphus, have worn
skulls and cross-bones on their high fur caps, and in
Sweden are now known as the King's Own Hussars.</p>
<p>It was not until 1764 that the swords of the Grenadiers
were abolished, and the arms of the foot soldier
were confined to the musket and bayonet; and it was
in that year when the officers and men of our cavalry
first wore the epaulette (in lieu of the old aiguilette)
on the left shoulder; at the same time, the jack-boots
were abolished, and the horses were ordered to have
long tails. The 8th Light Dragoons, however, had
long the peculiar favour of wearing cross-belts for the
pouch and sword. Having annihilated a corps of
Spanish Horse at Almenara in 1710, and equipped
themselves with the Spanish belts as trophies, they wore
them in memory of that event until January, 1776,
when they were abolished, and, at the same time the
helmets were substituted for the cocked hats.*—("Records,
4th and 8th Hussars.")</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* It was in 1794 that the Blues resumed for a time the cuirasses,
which the Corps had not worn since their march to Salisbury in
1688.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Singularly enough, the 90th Light Infantry (still
affectionately remembered in Scotland as Sir Thomas
Graham's Perthshire Greybreeks), when serving under
Abercrombie, in Egypt, wore helmets of brass, and
being taken for dismounted Dragoons, were vigorously
charged by the French cavalry at the battle of Alexandria.
In the <i>mêlée</i>, their Lieutenant-Colonel, old Lord
Hill of gallant memory, received a ball on his helmet,
which brought him to the ground, though it failed to
penetrate the brass metal, of which it was composed.</p>
<p>In these brief memoranda on uniforms and equipment,
to enter elaborately on the dress of our Highland
regiments, or its antiquity and advantages, would take
up too much space.</p>
<p>Apart from written history, song, or tradition, there
are in Scotland many records of vast age carved in
stone, such as the Cross at Dupplin and the tomb at
Nigg—both works prior to the eighth century,—which
represent the Caledonian Warriors kilted to the knee,
exactly like our Highland regiments now; and on the
last-named memorial, the figure has a purse or sporran.</p>
<p>The first regiments of Highlanders embodied were
two battalions raised, among other Scottish levies, by
the government of Mary Queen of Scots, in 1552, to
aid Henry II. of France in his wars. Each man would
seem to have provided his own kilt or tartans, as the
Scottish Privy Council ordain that they shall be
"substantiouslie accompturit, with jack and plait, steilbonett,
sword and buckler, new hose and new doublett of canvouse,
at the least, and sleeves of plait or splints, with
one speir of sax ell long or thereby." These men were
chiefly drawn from the same glens, and by the same
noble family, which in later years enrolled the 92nd
Gordon Highlanders of Egyptian and Peninsular fame.</p>
<p>The early Highland corps were remarkably jealous
of any alteration or innovation in their costume, real
or fancied, and hence a dangerous mutiny broke out
among the West Fencibles, in Edinburgh Castle, in
1778, in consequence of some changes that were
proposed, particularly in the adoption of a cartridge-box,
which they oddly alleged "no Highland regiment had
ever worn before." A portion of the battalion was
ultimately surrounded on Leith Links (where they had
flung their pouches mutinously at the feet of the
General), and compelled, by the 10th Light Dragoons,
to adopt them at the point of the sword; but the
remainder in the Castle broke out into open revolt, raised
the drawbridge, and threatened to turn the guns on
the city; nor did the matter end, until one Fencible
was sentenced to be shot, and another to receive a
thousand lashes, punishments which were, however,
commuted.</p>
<p>In the following year occurred the dangerous mutiny
at Leith, when seventy recruits for the 42nd and 71st,
on a rumour being mischievously spread that they had
been betrayed into a Lowland corps, which wore trousers,
fought with the South Fencibles, till forty-five of
them were shot down and bayonetted.</p>
<p>In 1811 we had two Greek regiments raised in the
Ionian Isles, the 1st and 2nd Light Infantry, which
were kilted, and wore the full Albanian costume.</p>
<p>All these various distinctions in uniform, badges, and
insignia which we have briefly noted, and others, such
as the Sphinx of Egypt, the Tiger of India, the Lion
of Nassau, the Dragon of China, the Eagle of France,
the Elephant of Assaye,* the Castle and Key of Gibraltar
(<i>Montis insignia Calpe</i>), and all the other noble
emblems borne on the colours of our various regiments,
are the historical HERALDRY of the service, and are
worthy of the highest consideration.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="footnote">
* The 74th and 78th Highland Regiments are entitled to carry a
third colour for Assaye. The antelope was bestowed on the 6th Foot,
in the war of the Spanish Succession, with the motto <i>vi et armis</i>,
which they seem to have relinquished till 1878, though it used to be
painted on the knapsacks, as on an old one possessed by the Corps in
1825, remained to testify. The Scots Greys, who forgot their old motto
"SECOND TO NONE," resumed it in 1871. The origin of it seems scarcely
known; but Colonel Darby Griffith, who so gallantly led the Greys at
the battles of Balaclava, Inkermann, and the Tchernaya, in a letter to
the author on the subject, says, "It is well authenticated that the
Greys were raised in Scotland before the 1st Dragoons were raised in
England, as also were the Coldstream before the Grenadier Guards.
The English Regiments were accorded the No. 1, as taking precedence;
but as a kind of atonement, both the Coldstream and the Scots Grey
have the motto 'SECOND TO NONE.' Aldershot, 15th May, 1865."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>They are eminently calculated to produce the <i>esprit de
corps</i>, a just pride and honourable rivalry; and, by the
past glories they represent, to inspire in our army that
heroic virtue of which the elder Pitt spoke so eloquently
in Parliament, when he said of our troops, in the debate
upon pay:—</p>
<p>"To the virtue of the British Army we have hitherto
trusted; to that virtue, small as the army is, we must
still trust; and without that virtue, the Lords, the
Commons, and the people of England may intrench
themselves behind parchment up to the teeth; but
the sword will find a passage to the vitals of the
constitution!"</p>
<p>Hence it is, that even the lace, the buttons, and other
insignia of a corps are so carefully shorn from the
uniform of the unhappy soldier who is disgraced, and
rendered incapable of bearing arms again; and when
writing of those things, perhaps we cannot do better
than close this article by an anecdote which records one
of the most startling instances of wholesale disgrace
that ever occurred in a European army.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t3b">
THE DEGRADATION OF THE REGIMENT OF ABO.</p>
<p>In all armies corps have frequently been punished <i>en
masse</i>, by being sent on foreign service or hazardous
duty out of their turn, for the crimes of individuals, for
general discontent, or for mutiny. Some have been
exterminated, like the Janizzaries and the Mamelukes;
decimated, like the Chapelgorris, or Red Caps, a
battalion, of 800 Guipuzcoan Volunteers, famous in the
army of the Queen of Spain; or, like that Carlist
Regiment, which, for sundry acts of sacrilege, was formed
in line, and had every tenth file, with his coverer, taken
out and shot.</p>
<p>In the "Art of War, 1720," we are told that during
the campaign in Holland, a captain, and his entire
company, belonging to an Italian regiment, were
hanged in line for desertion at Emerich, in the Duchy
of Cleves; and in later times, in our own service, the
6th Royal Irish Dragoons, a fine old corps, consisting
originally of nine troops, embodied under Colonel
James Wynne, in the winter of 1688, with the Harp
and Garter on their colours,—a corps that was
brigaded with the Greys on the extreme right in the
campaigns of Marlborough, and which, after serving
with characteristic bravery in all our wars till those
of the French Revolution, was disbanded in 1798 (for
alleged sympathy with the Irish Insurgents), when
General Lord Rossmore was their colonel; and since
when, as a mark of the royal displeasure, their place
and number remained vacant in the Army List for sixty
years, until the present 5th Royal Irish Lancers were
embodied in 1858; but in no instance was there ever
a wholesale disgrace inflicted on a corps such as that to
which the King of Sweden, Gustavus III., subjected
the unfortunate Regiment of Abo.</p>
<p>When in the year 1788 he suddenly attacked Russia,
victory remained undecided in a naval engagement
between his fleet under the Duke of Sudermania and that
of the Empress under the Scoto-Russian Admiral Greig,
and his nobles who served in the Marine refused to act
further in a war, which seemed to have no cause but
the will of the King. Gustavus was inflamed by this
opposition; he wished an object on which to vent his
wrath and pride, and soon found one in the Regiment
of Abo.</p>
<p>A brief armistice had ensued, during which he
summoned a diet at Stockholm, where, on the 22nd
February, 1789, by a preponderance of three inferior
states, a declaration placed in his hands unlimited
power, and he still resolved to prosecute the hopeless
war against Russia.</p>
<p>In the army, at the head of which he placed himself,
was this Regiment of Finlanders from Abo, a province
which comprehends a part of Eastern Bothnia and the
Aland Isles, whose inhabitants are a hardy and
industrious race. The regiment fought with all the
hereditary bravery of the old Finns, and served at the capture
of several small towns; but the arms of Gustavus were
unsuccessful by land, where his measures were
disconcerted by an event which he could not have foreseen.</p>
<p>After making all his preparations to storm the strong
fort and town of Fredericksham, which had been
ceded to the Empress Elizabeth in 1743, and the
repossession of which would have opened to him the
gates of the Russian capital, his officers, and chiefly
those of the Finnish Regiment of Abo, flatly refused
to pass the frontier, alleging as a reason, "that the
constitution of the Swedish kingdom would not permit
them to be accessory to foreign war which the nation
had not sanctioned."</p>
<p>This put an end to what was named the Finland
Expedition; it gave the enemy time to put themselves
in a perfect state of defence, and filled Gustavus with
fresh fury; but despite the attempts of the Russians
to intercept him, he reached Borgo, an old seaport in
the district of Nyeland, where he established his
headquarters, and where his first act was to assemble the
whole Swedish Army, under arms, on the 8th of June,
1789, in front of the town, and along the margin of
the river, which there flows into the Gulf of Finland.</p>
<p>A hollow square of contiguous close columns of
Horse, Dragoons and Infantry was then formed; the
whole were ordered to prime and load with
ball-cartridge. The Artillery were unlimbered and loaded
with round and cannister shot, in case of resistance,
though none, save a very few, knew precisely what was
about to ensue.</p>
<p>Then the fated Regiment of Abo, which had taken
so marked a part in the defection before Fredericksham,
was marched in a solid close column of companies
into the centre of this vast hollow square, with
its colours flying; and a hum of expectation and
surprise, not unmixed with dismay, pervaded the whole
assembled masses.</p>
<p>By Gustavus, a king whose ruling passions were
heroism and selfishness, vanity and ambition, they
were ordered to "ground their arms," which were at
once taken away, with all their swords, bayonets, and
accoutrements.</p>
<p>They were then ordered to strip off their regimental
coats, and appear in their shirts and breeches. The
officers were deprived of their epaulettes and
commissions, and were cashiered on the spot.</p>
<p>Their colours were then rent from the poles and torn
to pieces, the poles being broken under foot, while the
drums were defaced by persons appointed to do so.</p>
<p>The whole battalion then passed from the right of
companies out of the hollow square by single files,
while a general hiss was maintained by the whole
army until the last man had quitted it; and the
united sound of this unpleasant expression of contempt
rising into the still air, by the sea-shore, is said to
have had a very singular and remarkable effect on
those who heard it.</p>
<p>Though thus broken up and disbanded, the Corps
was not set adrift; for the whole of the privates were
drafted into the different battalions of the Artillery,
and long after the fiery Gustavus had perished by the
hand of the regicide Ankerström, it was a bitter taunt
in the Swedish army to have belonged to "the
degraded Regiment of Abo."</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0603"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER III. <br/><br/> FAMOUS AND ANCIENT BANNERS. </h3>
<p>In all ages and in all armies, the greatest veneration
has ever been manifested by soldiers for their ensigns
and standards, as being the veritable representation
and embodiment of the national glory and honour, or
it might be of a righteous cause. In the ages of
classical antiquity, the religious care taken of these
emblems was extraordinary. The soldiers worshipped
them, and swore by them, as some European troops still
do. The Roman Legionaries incurred certain death if
they lost them in battle; and Livy tells us, that to
animate them, the standards were sometimes thrown among
the enemy, that they might be recaptured at all hazards.</p>
<p>In all armies at the present day, regimental
standards are consecrated by a religious ceremony,
have the highest military honours paid to them, and
when too old for use, are solemnly deposited in a
church, or sometimes burned, or buried with all the
honours of war; and by the Queen's Regulations
(Section VII.) are finally marched from their last
parade, to the air of "Auld lang Syne."</p>
<p>Among the most famous banners of antiquity, may
be enumerated the Labaram of Constantine, the
Oriflamme of France, those of Otho IV., of Philip
Augustus, of Bayard, Joan of Arc, and Mahomet.</p>
<p>Like most ancient banners, the origin of the Labaram
was alleged to be miraculous, and surrounded by fables,
though the reign of Constantine was so glorious, that it
required not the meretricious aid of prodigy. When
on his march against Maxentius, he is said to have
seen in the heavens a cross of flame like the Greek
letter X inverted in the form of a square cross, and in
Greek around it, the words <i>Conquer by this</i>. Eusebius
further relates, that next night, the Saviour appeared
to him, and ordered him to make a military standard,
in the form of the cross he had seen, which he did, and
was always successful in war. Its name has not
unfrequently been written Laborum, to signify that the
cross should put an end to the <i>labours</i> and persecutions
of the Christians; and it was supposed the guards to
whom this miraculous banner was intrusted, were
always invulnerable in battle.</p>
<p>At the battle of Bouvines, the imperial standard of
Otho IV., like that of the English—the banner of
St. John of Beverley on the field of Northallerton—was
hoisted from a frame, raised on four wheels. Upon it
was painted a dragon, above which was a gilded eagle.
On that day the royal standard of France was a gilded
staff, with a white silk colour, powdered with
fleurs-de-lis, which had become the national arms. "The old
crowns of the kings of Lombardy," says Voltaire, "of
which there are very exact prints in Muratori, are
mounted with this ornament, which is nothing more
than the head of a spear, tied with two other pieces of
crooked iron."</p>
<p>The banner used by the Chevalier Bayard, when he
gallantly took command of Mézieres, and defended it
against 40,000 Spaniards under Charles V., is still
preserved in the Hôtel de Ville of that place.</p>
<p>Joan of Arc, bore with her in all her battles and
sieges a consecrated banner, which was believed to be
miraculous, and was revered as holy. It was white
silk, and bore a figure representing the Supreme Being,
grasping the world, and surrounded by fleurs-de-lis.
Clad in white armour, with this standard in her hands,
she entered Orleans on the 29th of April, 1429, in the
face of a vastly superior English force, and lodged it
with herself, in the house of Jacques Bouchier. She
had previously declared, at the moment when Dunois,
repulsed, was sounding the retreat, that when her
standard touched the city wall, the assailants should
enter. "It was touched. The assailants burst in.
On the next day the siege was abandoned and the
force which had conducted it withdrew in good order
to the north." Joan bore this standard, also, at the
capture of Jargeau, when Suffolk was taken prisoner
and his garrison put to the sword, and it was in her
hand, at her crowning glory, the coronation of Charles
VII. at Rheims. She stood with it before the high
altar, says Lord Mahon. "It had shared the danger,"
she observed, "and it had a right to share the
honour."—(Monstrelet, &c.)</p>
<p>When tried as a witch and heretic by the Bishop of
Beauvais and other tools of the English, they asked her
"why she put trust in her standard, which had been
consecrated by magical incantation?" But she replied
that she put trust alone in the Supreme Being, whose
image was impressed upon it. Then they demanded
why she carried in her hand that standard at the
anointment and coronation of Charles at Rheims; and again
she answered, that the person who shared the danger
was entitled to share the glory.</p>
<p>But the most famous banner in Europe or Asia
at one time was undoubtedly that of the Knights of the
Temple. It was formed of cloth, striped black and
white, called in old French <i>Bauseant</i>, a word which
became the battle cry of the Templars. It bore on it the
red cross of the order, with the humble and pious
inscription, <i>Non nobis, Domine, sed nomini tuo, da gloriam</i>
(Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy name
give the glory!)</p>
<p><i>Bauseant</i> was in old French the name for a piebald
horse, or a horse marked black and white (Roquefort-Ducange,
&c.); and the word is still preserved and used
in its original sense in Scotland as <i>bawsent</i>, as any reader
of Burns's poems may remember. At the commencement
of a battle the Marshal took the standard of the
order from the sub-marshal, and unfurled it in the
name of God. He then named from five to ten of the
brotherhood to surround and guard it; one of these he
made a knight-preceptor, who was to keep close by him
with another banner furled on a spear, to be instantly
displayed if any mishap befell the <i>Bauseant</i>. In the
event of the Christians being defeated, the Templar,
under penalty of expulsion from the order, was not to
quit the field so long as the banner of the order was
flying; should no other red-cross flag be seen, he was
at liberty to join that of the Hospitallers, and was only
to retire, as well as he could, when the <i>Bauseant</i> and
every other Christian banner should have disappeared.</p>
<p>In "Ivanhoe" Scott spells the name of the banner
<i>Beauseant</i>.</p>
<p>In referring to the banner of the Templars, it is
impossible to forget that one so often displayed against the
Christians, the standard of the Prophet Mahomet, the
unfurling of which was so frequently threatened at the
commencement of the Russo-Turkish war, a ceremony
which only takes place on gravest emergencies or
occasions of state.</p>
<p>The origin of this standard is remarkable. When
the Prophet lay on his death-bed at Medina, while his
mind was full of his projected conquest of Syria, he
summoned the chiefs of his host around him to hear his
last orders and wishes. While listening to his dying
utterances in silence and awe, Ayesha, the most beautiful
and best beloved of his wives, rushed into the room,
and, tearing down a green curtain which screened one
end thereof, threw it before the chiefs, and desired them
to display it as the holy banner of Islam, and this was
actually done in many subsequent wars against the
Christians and others. By some it was said to have been the
curtain that hung before the apartments of Ayesha;
and it has been permanently lodged in the Seraglio at
Constantinople, and is generally brought forth on the
occasion of a new sultan being girt with the sword of
Osman, or Othman; but it may shrewdly be doubted
whether this banner—the present <i>Tanjak-Sherif</i>—is the
same that was unfurled at Bedr, and which was upheld by
nine hundred and fifty of Mahomet's disciples against the
whole power of Mecca, at Ohod, a mountain northward
of Medina, when Hamza, the uncle of the Prophet, fell.</p>
<p>Though unvarying faith and tradition carry it back to
the days of Mahomet, there can be little doubt that it is
the identical banner which, in 1683, Kara Mustapha,
nephew of the great Cuprogli, hoisted on the walls of
Vienna, though that city was not completely conquered.
Its display is always attended with much pomp and
ceremony. When unfurled it is always handed to the
Scheik-ul-Islam, or Grand Mufti, who combines in his
own person the supreme power of the law with the
highest office of religion, who mounted on a caparisoned
steed, and, attended by the Sultan, bearing a drawn
scimitar, rides in procession through the streets of
Constantinople, escorted by the <i>Ulemas</i>, whose duty it is to
proclaim that war has been declared against the unbelievers.
The scheik then assigns it to the Commander-in-chief,
whose duty it is to see that it is always borne
in front in battle.</p>
<p>It is a veritable banner of blood, denying mercy to
man, woman, and child, on the display of which, as the
Koran has it, "the earth will shake, the mountains
sink into dust, the seas blaze with fire, and the hair of
children grow white with anguish;" but for more than
three generations it has never been brought forth in
hostility—at least, not since the Empress Catharine
sought to reinstate the Christian Empire at Constantinople.
Upon it is the dubious motto, "All who draw
the sword in the cause of Faith shall be rewarded with
temporal advantages."</p>
<p>The Turks and Tartars were wont to make use of
horses' tails for their ensigns, and the number of these
denoted the rank of their commanders—the Sultan
having seven, and the grand vizier only three, &c.</p>
<p>The alleged origin of the holy banner of Persia is
curious. It is said that during a battle which lasted
three days between Saade and Rustam, the usurper—the
same who assassinated the reforming Sophi in
1499—the standard of the monarchy was captured, a
circumstance that caused excess of grief on one side and
of joy on the other—one party feeling that their <i>prestige</i>
had departed, and the other—that of the usurper—deeming
it a sure presage of future victory. This war-like
relic was simply the leathern apron of a blacksmith,
who in some remote time had been the William Wallace
of Persia, for the mastery of which the Saracens so long
contended with the Turks; but the badge of heroic
poverty was disguised, and almost concealed, by the
profusion of gems which covered it.</p>
<p>Undoubtedly, the banner which had the most distinct
and glorious history was the Oriflamme of France, first
adopted in person by Louis VI. in 1110, and which
continued to be borne by the French sovereigns, in
addition to the Royal Standard, down to the time of
Charles VII., and the accounts of which have been
entirely overlooked by British historians and antiquaries.
Before the time of Louis VI., the Comtes de Vexin were
bound by the charter of their lands, which they held of
the Abbey of St. Denis, to protect the domains of the
latter, and accordingly, on the approach of any danger
or invasion, they assembled their vassals and appeared
before the Abbey, where they received its banner, or
gonfanon, which was borne before them in battle in
defence of the lands of the church. At a later period
the county of Vexin having been annexed to the crown,
the kings of France followed the pious example of the
ancient counts, to whom they had succeeded, and thus,
in time, the oriflamme, as a royal standard of France,
supplanted that which had been hitherto borne, the
alleged cloak of St. Martin, of Tours—or rather the
half thereof, as, according to the Bollandists, he gave
the other portion to a shivering beggar at the gate of
Amiens.</p>
<p>He to whom the care of the banner was confided
at the head of the army, had the title of
<i>Porte-Oriflamme</i>, and had the command of its chosen guard,
noble chevaliers and men-at-arms. He was ever a man
of prudence and approved valour, and his post led to
higher honours. We find in history, under Charles
V. of France, a gentleman styled Marshal of France, who
was its bearer. It was an office for life, and for death
too, as his oath obliged him to perish, rather than
abandon the <i>Oriflamme</i>.</p>
<p>Louis IX. lost it on his expedition to Egypt, as it fell,
for a time, into the hands of the infidels; and "the
Oriflamme has not been in use in our armies,"
says the <i>Dictionnaire Militaire</i>, 1758, "since the English
were absolute masters of Paris, after the death of
Charles VI."</p>
<p>The Oriflamme was of flame-coloured silk—hence
its name—uncharged, and divided at the lower
extremity into three portions ending in green tassels.
It was hung from a cross-yard, with two cords of silk
and gold to keep it from swinging in the wind, on the
march, or when in battle.</p>
<p>The first <i>named</i> in history as its bearer is Anscieu
Seigneur de Chevreuse, in 1294, under Philip le Bel.
He had predecessors in the time of Louis le Gros; but
René Moreau is the last who, in 1450, was commissioned
with the real dignity of <i>Porte-Oriflamme</i>. Though
usually, till the first Revolution, lodged at St. Denis, it
was occasionally left for a time in the custody of its
bearers; hence the families of D'Harcourt and Beavron
long affirmed that they were in possession of the real
Oriflamme, as successors of Pierre de Villiers de Lisle
Adam, who had been its bearer, and whose daughter
married the brave Jean Garencière.</p>
<p>Louis VII. took it with him in his voyage to the
Bosphorus and his march through Hungary and
Thrace. Philip Augustus had it displayed in 1183, in
the war against Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders;
Galois, Seigneur de Montigne, bore it at the battle of
Bouvines, and Louis VIII. unfurled it in the war against
the Albigeois in 1226.</p>
<p>Louis IX. had it with him in the war against
Henry III. of England in 1262, and, as stated, in his
crusade against the infidels in Egypt; De Chevreuse
bore it under Philip in 1304; and the bearers were
successively, Raoul, surnamed <i>Herpin</i>, Seigneur d'Erquery
in 1315; Miles de Noyers de Vilbertin in 1328; Geoffry
Lord of Charny in 1355; Arnoul d'Andrehon in 1388;
the Seigneur de L'Isle Adam in 1372; Sire de la
Trimoille and Guillaume de Bordes in 1383; Pierre
d'Aumont, surnamed <i>Hutin</i>, in 1397; and Guillaume
Martel de Bocqueville in 1414.</p>
<p>Louis XI. received the banner from the hands of
Cardinal d'Alby in 1465, in the ancient church of
St. Catharine <i>du Val des Écoliers</i> at Paris, prior to the
war against the Burgundians, and after that, we hear
no more of the famous Oriflamme, which must have
perished at the sack of St. Denis in 1793; but a
modern red-flag supplies its place behind the altar there,
at the present day.</p>
<p>The so-called Raven-banner of Hubba the Dane,
which was captured near Northam in Devonshire, when
he was slain in battle by the Saxons, in 869, and where
his tomb is still shown, was simply a stuffed black bird,
probably of the raven species, which remained quiet
when defeat was at hand, but clapped its wings
vigorously before a victory.</p>
<p>The royal ensign of the West Saxons was a golden
dragon; and thus we hear often of the Dragon of
Wessex in the fierce old fights during the time of the
Heptarchy.</p>
<p>It was not until after the Synod of Oxford, in 1220,
that the Red Cross of St. George supplanted the
martlets of St. Edward, up to that date the patron of
England. The Scottish Cross of St. Andrew has a
fabulous history exactly similar to that of the <i>Labaram</i>
of Constantine, and dating back to the ninth century;
but in neither England nor Scotland has a banner of
any antiquity been preserved, unless we may enumerate
as such the banner given to the citizens of Edinburgh
by Margaret of Oldenburg, Queen of James III., in
1482, and still preserved there, under the local name
of the Blue Blanket, or Banner of the Holy Ghost, on
the displaying of which, not only the craftsmen of
Edinburgh, but those of all Scotland, were bound to
appear in arms, under the Convener of the Trades. The
fragment of it that remains, shows that its colour was
blue, crossed by the white saltire of St. Andrew.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap0604"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER IV. <br/><br/> FAMOUS AND ANCIENT CANNON. </h3>
<p>History shows us that in past ages there has ever
and anon been in most countries a fancy for forging
or casting ponderous cannon, even as there has been
often in a spirit of rivalry, a fancy for building great
ships; and the result has very generally been that, in
both instances, there has been a mistake; for the great
ships have been almost invariably cast away, and the
great guns have proved useless, even for battery
purpose; and it is not improbable that such may be the
result eventually with our "Woolwich Infants" and
our eighty-one ton guns.</p>
<p>Though cannon are mentioned as having been used
in a sea fight between a Moorish King of Seville and
a King of Tunis in the 13th century, they first marked
the inauguration of a new era in war when Edward III. of
England brought with him to the field of Cressi in
1346, five small pieces, made by whom is quite
unknown; but there can be little doubt that they were
constructed in the mode of all early cannon, of iron bars
fitted together, hooped with rings and charged with
stone shot—not iron balls.</p>
<p>Prior to Cressi, however, cannon had undoubtedly
been used in sieges. In 1338 there was one used at
Cambrai from which cross-bows were discharged, and
several small guns of the same kind were used in the
following year at the investment of Quesnoy; again at
the siege of the then Moorish town of Algesiras, near
Gibraltar, in 1342; and old annals tell us of the
overwhelming terror their explosion excited among the
enemy.</p>
<p>Iron balls were first cast in the reign of Louis XI. in
1461; but stone were in common use for a hundred
years later.</p>
<p>As time went on, cannon, though primitively formed
as described, increased in size that prodigious balls
might be expelled from them against walled places, in
imitation of the ancient machine which they had
superseded; thus they soon became of enormous bore, until
they attained the dignity of bombardes, like Mons Meg in
Edinburgh Castle; but the difficulty of managing these
pieces, and the growing knowledge that iron shot of
much less weight could be impelled further by the use
of better powder, gradually introduced the cast metal
cannon used at the present day.</p>
<p>The five little cannon used at Cressi, to the wonder
of the French who had <i>none</i>, were doubtless the same
that Edward used at the siege of Calais in the following
year.</p>
<p>In 1366 the Venetians, when besieging a town now
named Chioggia in Lombardy, had with them two
small pieces of artillery having leaden balls, worked by
Germans, according to Le Blond's "Elements of War,"
dedicated to Louis of Lorraine; and battering guns were
used by the Turks against the Christians at Constantinople
in 1394; but the great bombardes were at their
zenith when, in 1451, Mahomet II. began his march
against the same city, with fourteen gigantic guns,
which threw stone shot seventy-eight inches in
circumference, weighing 800 lbs. In the siege, traces of
which remain to this day, the Christians are supposed
to have been without cannon, as they omitted to
demolish the great bridge of boats which was constructed
by the Turks and conduced so much to the reduction of
the city.</p>
<p>For more than four centuries the guns of Mahomet
II. protected the Dardanelles—the gate of the Eastern
Empire; and, as an old traveller relates, that as they
were shotted when fired on holidays, land was usually
to be had very cheap on the opposite side of the straits.</p>
<p>Though practically these great pieces of artillery have
given place to Krupp and other guns, they still remain
on their old sites; but cannon of this description can
only be discharged with effect when the object passes
their line of fire, as they are not mounted on carriages
but built into a wall. Some of those at the Dardanelles
carry balls 26½ inches in diameter, and lie flat on a
paved terrace near the level of the water, where they
opened on our fleet in 1808, when Admiral Sir John
Duckworth forced the passage of the Straits.</p>
<p>By a granite shot from one of these, when the fleet
returned, <i>H.M.S. Royal George</i> had her whole cutwater
carried away; by another, the mainmast of the Windsor
Castle was cut in two like a fishing-rod; another carried
away the wheel of the <i>Repulse</i>, at the same moment
killing and wounding twenty-four men, and rendering
the ship so unmanageable, that but for the noble
seamanship of her crew, she must have gone on shore.</p>
<p>A granite ball burst through the bows of the <i>Active</i>,
and rolling aft destroyed all in its career, till it was
brought up abreast of the main hatchway; a second
tore away the whole barricade of her forecastle and fell
into the sea to starboard; a third lodged in the bends
abreast of the main-chains, and then tumbled overboard.
("Duckworth's Dispatches," &c.)</p>
<p>Baron de Tott tells us that he had seen one of these
guns, which had been cast in the reign of Amurath,
fired. Its ball weighed eleven hundredweight, and
required a charge of powder amounting to 330 pounds.
At the distance of 800 fathoms he saw this enormous
globe divide into three pieces, which crossed the strait
and rebounded from the rocks opposite.</p>
<p>One of these guns was sent to Woolwich, in exchange
for an Armstrong breech-loader, and bears the
inscription—</p>
<p class="t3">
"<i>Help o Allah! Mahomet Khan, the son of Murad!</i>"</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Louis XII. of France had a bombarde cast which is
said to have thrown a ball of 500 lbs. from the Bastile
to Charenton; but the guns of these times were destitute
of trunnions, dolphin-rings, or breech-buttons.</p>
<p>Another enormous cannon of Mahomet II. is still to
be seen, at Negroponte, used at its capture by him from
the Venetians in 1470. It defends the south side of
Kastro, and is the most remarkable monument there.</p>
<p>There is now preserved in the Castle of San Juliao da
Barra, ten miles from Lisbon, a gun that was captured
at the siege of Diu, on the southern coast of Gujirat, in
1546, by a gallant Portugese cavalier, Dom John de
Castro, which is destitute of the appliances named, and is
of some remarkable metal. It bears upon it a Hindoo
inscription, to the effect that it was cast in 1400. It is
20 feet 7 inches long; its external diameter at the
centre is 6 feet 3 inches, and it discharges a ball one
hundredweight.</p>
<p>In ancient times there was a fondness for bestowing
upon these great guns some peculiar and dignified name.
Twelve brass cannon cast in 1503 for Louis XII., being
all of remarkable size, he named after the greatest peers
of France. The Spaniards and Portuguese named them
after certain saints; thus, when the Emperor Charles
V. departed to attack Tunis, his bombardes were named
after the Twelve Apostles.</p>
<p>In the Malaga there is still an 80-pounder of great
antiquity named the "Terrible." Two very curious
60-pounders in the arsenal at Bremen are each named
"The Messenger of Bad News;" an 80-pounder at Berlin,
now in the Royal Arsenal, is named "The Thunderer;"
at Milan there is a 70-pounder called the "Pimontelle"
(or the little spicer); and another at Bois le Duc is styled
<i>Le Diable</i>. A third in the Castle of St. Angelo at Rome,
made of the nails which fastened the copper-plates
composing the roof of the ancient Pantheon, bears upon it
this inscription—</p>
<p class="t3">
"<i>Ex clavis trabalibus porticus Agrippæ.</i>"<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Many of the cannon of the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries were remarkable for their beautiful and ornate
character. A decorated Spanish cannon now preserved
in the Paris Museum, is a fine example of these florid
pieces, which were always cast of brass or mixed
metal.</p>
<p>Diego Ufano, in his treatise on Artillery, published in
1614, shows us the metallic mixtures of copper, tin,
and brass, and the proportions of these, then used for
cast pieces of cannon.</p>
<p>The Russian arsenals are very rich in great and
ancient cannon and others of historical interest.</p>
<p>In front of the first arsenal at the Kremlin, are ranged
a wonderful memorial of Napoleon's terrible retreat
from Moscow, in the shape of no less than 875 pieces
of captured ordnance; of these 365 are French, 189
are Austrian, 123 are Prussian, and the remainder bear
the royal insignia of Italy, Naples, Bavaria, Saxony,
Westphalia, Hanover, Spain, Würtemberg, Holland, and
Poland. Many of these (says Sutherland Edwards) are
inscribed with pretentious names that contrast strongly
with their present humble position, such as the
"Invincible," the "Conqueror," the "Eagle," and so forth.
In front of the second arsenal is a wonderful collection
of colossal cannon, ranged in a long line, with the
shortest in the centre; thus their muzzles present a
complete arc. The largest of these is a 4800-pounder,
weighing, however, only forty tons! It has never
been fired, and is only remarkable as a piece of
casting.</p>
<p>An inscription on it tells that it was cast by the
Russian master-founder named Chokoff, in 1586, by
order of the Czar Feodor, who in that year conquered
Siberia (the way to which was discovered by the
Cossack warrior Jermack), and of whom a clever
representation, on horseback, with crown and sceptre, appears
close to the muzzle. Beside it are six other large pieces,
the smallest of which weighs nearly four tons.—("The
Russians at Home.")</p>
<p>About the end of the fifteenth century the following
guns were in universal use:—</p>
<p style="margin-left: 10%"><br/>
The Cannon-Royal . . . . . 48 pounder.<br/>
" Bastard-Cannon . . . . 36 "<br/>
" Half-Carthoun . . . . 24 "<br/>
" Culverin . . . . . . . 18 "<br/>
" Demi-Culverin . . . . 9 "<br/>
" Falcon . . . . . . . . 6 "<br/>
" Saker . . . . . . 6, 5, 8 "<br/>
" Basilisk (also). . . . 48 "<br/>
" Serpentine . . . . . . 4 "<br/>
" Aspik . . . . . . . . 2 "<br/>
" Dragon . . . . . . . . 6 "<br/>
" Syren . . . . . . . . 60 "<br/>
" Falconet . . . . . 3, 2, 1 "<br/>
" Moyenne . . . . . . . 12 ounces<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>By the middle of the seventeenth century, the largest
cannon generally used in the field were 24-pounders,
or others like the culverins of Nancy (18-pounders), so
called from being first cast in that city; while the
smallest were 6 and 3-pounders.</p>
<p>Mortars were first used to expel red-hot balls and
large stones, long ere shells were known. They are
believed to have been of German origin, and were used
at the siege of Naples by Charles VIII. in 1435; but
shells were first thrown out of them at the siege of
Wachtendonk in Gueldres, by the Count of Mansfield.
Shells were first invented by a citizen of Venloo, who, at a
festival in honour of the Duke of Cleves, contrived,
unfortunately, by the explosion of them, to reduce nearly the
whole city to ashes. Maltus, an English engineer, first
taught the French how to use them at the siege of
La Motte in 1634. (Le Blond.)</p>
<p>The howitzer differs from the mortar, being mounted
on a field carriage, like a gun; the chief difference
being that the trunnions of the first are at the end, and
of the other in the middle. The invention of the
howitzer is subsequent to that of the mortar, as from
the latter it originated.</p>
<p>The first man who invented the spiking of artillery
was Gaspar Vimercalus of Bremen, who thus nailed up
the artillery of Sigismund Malatesta.</p>
<p>Rifled cannon are by no means a modern invention,
and can be traced far back into antiquity, as the
<i>arquebuse-rayée</i> of the French.</p>
<p>No kind of gun has been more universally known
and used all over Europe and America than the
carronade, or "smasher," as it was called. Cast at the
Carron Works in Scotland (hence their name), they were
the invention of General Robert Melville, an officer who
served under Lord Rollo of Duncrub, at the capture of
Dominica in the West Indies. Peculiarly constructed,
and having a chamber for powder like a mortar, they
were shorter and lighter than ordinary cannon.</p>
<p>Cast in mighty numbers for more than seventy years
at Carron, they were employed by the fighting and
mercantile marine of all Europe and America, till the
time of the Crimean War. The first of them was
presented by the Carron Company to the family of General
Melville, with an inscription on the carriage, which
records that the guns were cast "for solid, ship, shell
or carcase shot, and were first used against the French
fleet in 1799."</p>
<p>Mr. Smiles, in his "Industrial Biography," tells us
that when cannon came to be employed in war, the
vicinity of Sussex to the Cinque Ports gave it an
advantage over the iron districts of the north and west
of England, and for a long time the iron works of that
county had a monopoly in the manufacture of guns.
The stone balls were hewn from quarries at Maidstone
Heath. An old mortar, which lay on Bridge Green,
near Frant, is said to have been the <i>first</i> used in
England. The chamber was cast, but the tube
consisted of hooped bars.</p>
<p>In the Tower are some old hooped guns of the date
of Henry VI. The first cast-iron cannon of English
make were made at Buxtead in Sussex, in 1543, by
Ralph Hogge, master founder, whose principal assistant
was Pierre Baude, a Frenchman. About the same
time, Hogge employed Peter Van Collet, a Flemish
gunsmith, who, according to Stowe, "caused to be made
certain mortar pieces, being at the mouth from eleven to
nine inches wide, for the use whereof the said Peter
caused to be made certain hollow shot of cast iron,
stuffed with fyrwork, whereof the bigger sort has screws
of iron to receive a match to carry fire, to break in
small pieces the said <i>hollow shot</i>, whereof the smallest
piece hitting a man would kill or spoil him."</p>
<p>This is undoubtedly the parent of the explosive shell
which has been brought to such terrible perfection in
the present day. Many of Baude's brass and iron guns
are still preserved in the Tower; and perhaps from his
foundry came that very beautiful gun which bears the
name of Henry VIII., 1541, and is preserved now at
Southampton.</p>
<p>Two old English guns are at present in the ducal
castle of Blair, whither they had been brought by the
Athole family when Lords of the Isle of Man.</p>
<p>One is inscribed thus:—</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="quote">
"Henricus Octavus; Thomas Scymoure Knighte, Receyvour of the
Peel, was Master of the King's Ordynans, when John and Robert
Owyn made this pese. Anno dni., 1544."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The other has the legend:—</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p class="quote">
"Henry, Earle of Derbye, Lord of this Isle of Man, being here in
May, 1577; named <i>Dorothe</i>. Henry Halsall, Receyvour of the Peele,
bought this pese, 1574."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>This was the fourth Earl of Derby, a K.G., and he
had named the gun from his mother Dorothy, who was
daughter of Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk.</p>
<p>The old brass gun, popularly known as Queen Anne's
Pocket Pistol, was once called Queen Elizabeth's,
according to Colonel James. It was cast at Utrecht in 1544,
and is a 12-pounder, twenty feet long, finely
ornamented with figures in bas-relief.</p>
<p>Scotland, which is rich in military and historical
antiquities of all kinds, can also boast of several ancient
cannon, extant or in her annals.</p>
<p>In 1430, James I. had cast for him in Flanders a
cannon of brass, called the Lion of Scotland, bearing
this inscription:—</p>
<p class="poem">
"Illustri Jacobo Scottorum principe digno,<br/>
Regni magnified, dum fulmine castra reduco<br/>
Factus sum sub eo, nuncupar ego Leo."<br/></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"This," says Balfour in his <i>Annales</i>, "was the first
canon or bombard of any strength or bignes, that ever
was in Scotland." Among several ancient guns in the
armory of the Grants of Grant in Strathspey, is one of
singular beauty, covered with figures of men on
horseback, and animals of the chase. It is four feet two
inches long, and seems to have been a Moyenne or
wall piece, and is inscribed:—</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>"Dominus . Johannes . Grant . Miles . Vicecomes de Invernes . Me
fecit . in Germania, 1434."</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The most ancient gun made in Britain is undoubtedly
that bombarde known as Mons Meg in Edinburgh
Castle. An inscription on the <i>new</i> stock, cast at
Woolwich in 1835, states that the gun "is <i>believed</i> to have
been forged at <i>Mons</i>, in 1486." But this is proved
now to have been a gross mistake, an assertion which
is utterly without warrant, as an elaborate "History of
Galloway" shows from proofs indisputable that it was
made by a smith of that county, in 1455, for the service
of James II. (then besieging the Castle of Threave),
at a place still named Knockcannon. It weighs six
tons and a half, is composed of malleable iron bars
hooped together, and its balls, which are all of
Galloway granite, are twenty-one inches in diameter.</p>
<p>Two of these shots fired from it compelled the castle
to surrender in the summer of 1455, and <i>both</i> were
found in 1841 amid the ruins—one in the wall, the
other in the draw-well; and both lay in a <i>direct line</i>
from Knockcannon to the breach in the huge donjon
tower. For his work, M'Kim received the forfeited
lands of Mollance, pronounced in Scottish parlance,
<i>Mowance</i>, and hence the tradition of "Meg" being
forged at <i>Mons</i>. In 1497, it accompanied the Scottish
army into England in the cause of Perkin Warbeck; to
the siege of Dumbarton in 1489, and many other scenes
of strife. In 1681, the gun burst, when firing a royal
salute for James Duke of Albany, as two of the
fractured hoops still show. On these occasions, like the
old bombardes of the Dardanelles, it was generally
<i>shotted</i>, as the Royal Treasurer's Accounts contain many
entries of payments, for "finding and carrying <i>her</i>
bullet from Wardie Mure to the Castell."</p>
<p>In 1509—thirty-four years before Ralph Hogge
began to cast guns in Sussex—James IV. employed
Robert Borthwick, his master gunner, to <i>cast</i> a set of
brass ordnance for Edinburgh Castle. Seven of these
were named by the king the <i>sisters</i> of Borthwick—being
all alike in size and beauty. They were
inscribed—-</p>
<p class="t3">
"<i>Machina sum, Stoto Borthweick Fabricata Roberto.</i>"<br/></p>
<p class="noident">
With ten other brass field-pieces, these guns were all
taken by the English at the battle of Flodden, where
Borthwick was killed, and the Earl of Surrey, who saw
them, asserted that there were none finer in the arsenals
of King Henry. Several of these guns were retaken
by the Scots from the Earl of Hereford's army in 1544,
and were long preserved in the Castle of Edinburgh, on
the walls of which, in the siege of 1573, were a number
of guns that bore the crowned salamander, the badge of
Francis I., and had perhaps been brought from France
by the Regent Duke of Chatelherault.</p>
<p>An old cannon named <i>Dundee</i>, which had been used
in war by the Viscount of that name, was long
preserved in the Castle of Kilchurn; but has now
disappeared.</p>
<p>In the heart of British India there was, singular to
say, found an antique Scottish cannon, which is now
shown in Edinburgh, and the story of which is
remarkable. At the siege of Bhurtpore in 1826, among the
guns on the ramparts was one of great calibre and
destructive power, popularly known among our soldiers
by the absurd name of "Sweet-lips," which was taken
at the point of the bayonet by H.M. 14th Foot.</p>
<p>Beside it was found a Scottish brass cannon, an
18-pounder, inscribed:—</p>
<p class="t3">
"<i>Jacobus Menteith me fecit, Edinburgh, Anno Dom.,</i> 1642."<br/></p>
<p>It at once attracted the attention of Captain (afterwards
Colonel) Lewis Carmichael, an old Peninsular officer,
then aide-de-camp to Sir Jasper Nicolls. On the day
before the storm, with six grenadiers of the 59th and four
Ghoorkas, he had made a gallant dash into one of the
breaches, to reconnoitre it for the desperate work that
was to come, and he asked for the old Scottish cannon
as a reward. It was at once given, by order of the
Governor-General, and he brought it with him to
Edinburgh, where it is preserved in the Museum of
Antiquities, with several other ancient guns, some of
which belonged to Sir Andrew Wood of Largo, Admiral
of James III., and captain of <i>the Yellow Frigate</i>; but
how it came to be so far up country in India, among
the Jauts, it is difficult to conjecture, unless it had
belonged to one of the ships of the old and ill-fated
Scottish East India Company, which was ruined by the
enmity and treachery of William of Orange.</p>
<p>British India has produced many pieces of ordnance,
great in calibre and remarkable in history; among
them may be enumerated the great gun of Hyder and
Tippo, and the enormous cannon found at Agra, when
that place was captured by Lord Lake in 1803. It
had trunnions, and was furnished with four rings, two
at the breech and two at the muzzle. It was of brass,
says Thorne, "and for magnitude and beauty stands
unrivalled. Its length was 14 feet 2 inches; its
calibre 23 inches; the weight of its ball, when of cast
iron, 1500 lbs.; and its whole weight 86,600 lbs., or a
little above 38 tons."</p>
<p>Though called brass, it was, according to common
report, composed of a mixture of precious metals. The
<i>Shroffs</i>, or native bankers, were of that opinion, as they
offered £12,000 for it, merely to melt down. Lord Lake
preferred to send it as a trophy to Britain, and proceeded
to have it transported to Calcutta on a raft. It proved
too heavy for the latter, and capsizing sunk in the waters
of the Ganges.</p>
<p>Another curious piece of ordnance, locally known as
<i>Jubbar Jung</i>, fell into our hands at Ghuzuee in 1842.
It was of brass and beautifully ornamented; it carried
64-pound shot, and these being of hammered iron
whizzed as they passed through the air. It made some
havoc among the tents of our 40th Regiment, and the
Huzarehs, followers of Ali, who joined General Nott at
the siege, implored him to destroy "Jubbar Jung," for
which they appeared to entertain a deep religious
horror.</p>
<p>There are at this hour cannon at Bejapore, beside
which our "Woolwich Infants" and Armstrong 100-ton
guns sink into insignificance. One of these, called
the <i>Mulk-e-Meidan</i>, or "Sovereign of the Plains," cast
by Roomi Khan, "the Turk of Roumelia," or first
Monarch of Bejapore, an Ottoman of Constantinople,
weighs forty tons; and, to crown all, Major Rennell
mentions an old iron cannon at Dacca, which threw a
shot 465 pounds in weight!</p>
<p>The last great gun actually used was King Theodore's
huge bombarde at Magdala in 1868, for which
he had an enormous number of stone balls made, and
which he believed to be the Palladium of Abyssinia.
It was shattered to pieces among his troops, on their
first attempt to use it.</p>
<p>The last and most remarkable invention in artillery
is a much needed fire-arm, which may supersede our
boasted steel mountain ordnance, "the jointed gun"
of Sir William Armstrong, which can be unscrewed
into three separate pieces, each of which is light enough
for conveyance on the back of a horse, and when put
together form a powerful and long-range cannon,
similar to the present field-piece.</p>
<p>Such a gun would have been invaluable in Ashantee,
or among the mountains of Abyssinia; and the want of
some such fire-arm was sorely felt at times during the
Indian mutiny, especially about its close, when our
moveable columns pursued the rebels in the deserts of
Bekaneer, where the gun carriages of even the flying
artillery at times sunk axle deep in the dry heavy
sand, rendering them almost useless for service.</p>
<p>In Europe, this is peculiarly the age of enormous
cannon. "Armour of two feet in thickness," says a
recent writer, "and guns of one hundred tons in
weight being now accomplished facts, and ships
already bigger than the <i>Inflexible</i> being already in
hand, we may well ask ourselves, <i>What will be the next
step?</i>"</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN></p>
<h2> STORY OF A MERCHANT CAPTAIN. </h2>
<p>About the time of the accession of George III. to
the throne, few domestic events made a greater sensation
in the papers and periodicals of the day than the
adventures and fate of a sea-captain named George Glass,
especially in connection with a mutiny on board the
brig <i>Earl of Sandwich</i>. This remarkable man, who was
one of the fifteen children of John Glass, noted as the
originator of the Scottish sect known as the Glassites,
was born at Dundee in 1725. After graduating in the
medical profession, he made several voyages, as surgeon
of a merchant-ship (belonging to London), to the Brazils
and the coast of Guinea; and in 1764, he published, by
Dodsley, an interesting work in one volume quarto,
entitled <i>The History of the Discovery and Conquest of the
Canary Islands, translated from a Spanish manuscript</i>.</p>
<p>He obtained command of a Guinea trader, and made
several successful voyages, till the war with Spain broke
out in January, 1762. Having saved a good round
sum, he equipped a privateer, and took command of
her as captain, to cruise against the French and
Spaniards; but he had not been three days at sea,
when his crew mutinied, and sent him that which is
called in sea-phraseology a round-robin (a corruption
of an old French military term, the <i>ruban rond</i>, or
round ribbon), in which they wrote their names in a
circle; hence none could know who was the leader.</p>
<p>Arming himself with his cutlass and pistols, Glass
came on deck, and offered to fight, hand to hand,
any man who conceived himself to be wronged in any
way. But the crew, knowing his personal strength, his
skill and resolution, declined the challenge. He
succeeded in pacifying them by fair words; and the capture
of a valuable French merchantman a few days after
put them all in excellent humour. This gleam of good
fortune was soon after clouded by an encounter with an
enemy's frigate, which, though twice the size of his
privateer, Glass resolved to engage; and for two hours
they fought broadside to broadside, till another French
vessel bore down on him, and he was compelled to strike
his colours, after half his crew had been killed and he
had received a musket-shot in the shoulder.</p>
<p>He remained for some time a French prisoner of war
in the Antilles, where he was treated with excessive
severity; but upon being exchanged, he resolved to
embark the remainder of his fortune in another privateer
and "have it out," as he said, with the French and
Dons. But he was again taken in action, and lost
everything he had in the world.</p>
<p>On being released a second time, he was employed by
London merchants in several voyages to the West Indies,
in command of ships that fought their way without
convoy; and according to a statement in the <i>Annual
Register</i>, he was captured no less than <i>seven</i> times. But
after various fluctuations of fortune, when the general
peace took place in 1763, he found himself possessed of
two thousand guineas prize-money, and the reputation
of being one of the best merchant captains in the Port
of London.</p>
<p>About that time a Company there resolved to make
an attempt to form a settlement on the west coast of
Africa, by founding a harbour and town midway
between the Cape de Verd and the river Senegal. In
the London and other papers of the day we find many
statements urging the advantage of opening up the
Guinea-trade; among others, a strange letter from a
merchant, who tells us he was taken prisoner in a battle
on that coast, and that when escaping he "crossed a
forest within view of the sea, where there lay elephants'
teeth in quantities sufficient to load one hundred ships."</p>
<p>In the interests of this new Company Glass sailed in
a ship of his own to the coast of Guinea, and selected
and surveyed a harbour at a place which he was certain
might become the centre of a great trade in teak and
cam woods, spices, palm oil and ivory, wax and gold.
Elated with his success, he returned to England, and
laid his scheme before the ministry, among whom were
John Earl of Sandwich, Secretary of State, and the Earl
of Hillsborough, Commissioner of Trade and Plantations.</p>
<p>With truly national patience and perseverance he
underwent all the procrastinations and delays of office,
but ultimately obtained an exclusive right of trading to
his own harbour for twenty years. Assisted by two
merchants—the Company would seem to have failed—he
fitted out his ship anew, and sailed for the intended
harbour; and sent on shore a man who knew the
country well, to make propositions of trade with the
natives, who put him to death the moment they saw
him.</p>
<p>Undiscouraged by this event, Captain Glass found
means to open up a communication with the king of the
country, to lay before him the wrong that had been
done, and the advantages that were certain to accrue
from mutual trade and barter. The sable potentate
affected to be pleased with the proposal, but only to the
end that he might get Glass completely into his power;
but the Scotsman was on his guard, and foiled him.</p>
<p>The king then attempted to poison the whole crew by
provisions which he sent on board impregnated by some
deadly drug. Glass, by his previous medical knowledge,
perhaps, discovered this in time; but so scarce had food
become in his vessel, that he was compelled to go with
a few hands in an open boat to the Canaries, where he
hoped to purchase what he wanted from the Spaniards.</p>
<p>In his absence the savages were encouraged to attack
the ship in their war-canoes; but were repulsed by a
sharp musketry-fire opened upon them by the remainder
of the crew, who, losing heart by the protracted absence
of the captain, quitted his fatal harbour, and sailed for
the Thames, which they reached in safety.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the unfortunate captain, after landing on
one of the Canaries, presented a petition to the Spanish
governor to the effect that he might be permitted to
purchase food; but that officer, inflamed by national
animosity, cruelly threw him into a dark and damp
dungeon, and kept him there without pen, ink, or paper,
on the accusation that he was a spy. Being thus utterly
without means of making his case known, he contrived
another way of communicating with the external world.
One account has it that he concealed a pencilled note in
a loaf of bread which fell into the hands of the British
consul; another states that he wrote with a piece of
charcoal on a ship-biscuit and sent it to the captain of
a British man-of-war that was lying off the island, and
who with much difficulty, and after being imprisoned
himself, effected the release of Glass. The latter, on
being joined by his wife and daughter, who had come in
search of him, set sail for England in 1765, on board
the merchant brig <i>Earl of Sandwich</i>, Captain Cochrane.</p>
<p>Glass doubtless supposed his troubles were now over;
but the knowledge that much of his property and a great
amount of specie, one hundred thousand pounds, belonging
to others, was on board, induced four of the crew to
form a conspiracy to murder every one else and seize
the ship. These mutineers were respectively George
Gidly, the cook, a native of the west of England; Peter
M'Kulie, an Irishman; Andrew Zekerman, a Hollander;
and Richard H. Quintin, a Londoner. On three
different nights they are stated to have made the attempt,
but were baffled by the vigilance of Captain Glass,
rather than that of his country man, Captain Cochrane; but
at eleven o'clock at night on the 30th of September, 1765,
it chanced, as shown at their trial, that these four
miscreants had together the watch on deck, when the
<i>Sandwich</i> was already in sight of the coast of Ireland; and
when Captain Cochrane, after taking a survey aloft, was
about to return to the cabin, Peter M'Kulie brained him
with "an iron bar" (probably a marline-spike), and
threw him overboard.</p>
<p>A cry that had escaped Cochrane alarmed the rest of
the crew, who were all dispatched in the same manner
as they rushed on deck in succession. This slaughter
and the din it occasioned, roused Captain Glass, who
was below in bed; but he soon discovered what was
occurring, and, after giving one glance on deck, hurried
away to get his sword. M'Kulie, imagining the cause
of his going back, went down the steps leading to the
cabin, and stood in the dark, expecting Glass's return,
and suddenly seized his arms from behind; but the
captain, being a man of great strength, wrenched his
sword-arm free, and on being assailed by the three other
assassins, plunged his weapon into the arm of Zekerman,
when the blade became wedged or entangled. It was
at length wrenched forth, and Glass was slain by
repeated stabs of his own weapon, while his dying cries
were heard by his wife and daughter—two unhappy
beings who were ruthlessly thrown overboard and
drowned.</p>
<p>Besides these four victims, James Pincent, the mate,
and three others, lost their lives. The mutineers now
loaded one of the boats with the money, chests, and so
forth, and then scuttled the <i>Sandwich</i>, and landed at
Ross on the coast of Ireland. But suspicion speedily
attached to them; they were apprehended, and,
confessing the crimes of which they had been guilty, were
tried before the Court of King's Bench, Dublin, and
sentenced to death. They were accordingly executed
in St. Stephen's Green, on the 10th of October, 1765.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN></p>
<h2> THE STORY OF RENÉE OF ANGERS. </h2>
<p>Though it occurred so long ago as the time of
Henry IV. of France, the story we are about to relate
formed one of the most remarkable <i>causes célèbres</i> before
the Parliament of Paris, when Renée Corbeau, a young
demoiselle of Angers, in Normandy, by her eloquence
in a court of justice, and by her singular self-sacrifice,
saved the life of a false and dastardly lover, to whom
she was devotedly attached.</p>
<p>In the year 1594, when Henry IV., justly surnamed
the Great (though his passions betrayed him into errors
and involved him in difficulties), was on the throne of
France, a young man named M. Pousset, a native of
Tees, an old episcopal city of Normandy, was studying
the Civil and Canon Law at the University of Angers,
in those days a famous seat of learning. While thus
engaged, M. Pousset was introduced to Mademoiselle
Renée Corbeau, the daughter of a citizen. She is
described as having been a girl of great beauty of
person and with great modesty of manner, though witty
and lively in spirit, <i>folatré et caressante</i>, and full of
nameless graces. Everyone loved and admired Renée,
and when but a youth Pousset sighed for her. He soon
learned to love her passionately, and we are told "that
he no longer lived but to see and converse with her."</p>
<p>She in turn became deeply attached to Pousset, who
proposed marriage, and gave her, in writing, a
document to that effect, though her parents were in
circumstances so limited that he dared not consult his own
(who were people of wealth, rank, and ambition) on
this important subject. So the lovers dreamed on, and
on the faith of the written promise, Renée, it would
appear, yielded too far, and fell, as her mother Eve fell
before her; and then repentance came when too late.</p>
<p>The unfortunate Renée had, in time, to make a
confidante of her mother, who in her grief and anger
revealed all to M. Corbeau. He heaped the most bitter
reproaches on their daughter, but agreed that some
plan should be adopted to bring Pousset, who was now
studiously absenting himself, to reason and a sense of
justice. It was arranged that he and Madame Corbeau
should feign a journey to a little country mansion they
possessed not far from Angers, and that Renée should
press Pousset to visit her, when they should take
advantage of the occasion to surprise him; a project
which was executed with complete success.</p>
<p>Thrown completely off his guard by this unexpected
stratagem, the lover said with much apparent candour:</p>
<p>"Monsieur Corbeau, be not alarmed for the error
which our love for each other has led us into; but
pardon us, I beseech you. My intentions are still most
honourable, and I shall be but too happy to espouse
your daughter."</p>
<p>The incensed Corbeau was somewhat comforted by
this prompt promise of reparation, and sent immediately
for a notary, his friend, who lived close by. The latter
drew up a formal contract of marriage in legal form,
and to this, with Renée, M. Pousset appended his
signature and seal, after which he took a tender farewell
of the weeping girl, and retired with the view of,
reluctantly, breaking the matter to his family; but so
true is it that "affection is the root of love in woman,
and passion is the root of love in man," that from the
hour in which he signed the—to him—fatal contract,
all his regard for Renée evaporated.</p>
<p>Her beauty and her sorrow alike failed to impress
him now, and the faithless Pousset repented him so
bitterly of what he angrily deemed a legal entanglement,
that he hastened to Tees and unfolded the whole of the
affair to his father in a story artfully coloured and
fashioned to suit himself.</p>
<p>M. Pousset the senior, who possessed a magnificent
estate, never doubted but that his amiable and facile
<i>son</i> had been entrapped by an artful girl and her
parents, and sternly told him that he could never
approve of his marriage with one whose portion was
so small, and desired him to commit her, the contract,
and the whole affair, to oblivion. While the document,
signed and sealed existed, this, however, proved
impossible; so young Pousset, either by his father's
advice or his own inclination, took refuge in the bosom
of the Church, and was somewhat too speedily ordained
sub-deacon, and then deacon, thinking thereby to
vitiate the power of the contract, and to create for life
an invincible barrier between himself and Renée.</p>
<p>With all the grief and horror a tender and affectionate
heart could feel when love is so repaid by black
perfidy, she heard these tidings, and her soul seemed to
die within her; but her old father, who was filled with
just indignation, and whose sword the ordination of
Pousset kept in its scabbard, raised a civil action against
him before the principal court at Angers for having
deluded, and then declined, to marry his daughter in
the face of the notary's contract.</p>
<p>The recreant was compelled to appear; but he
appealed against the order, and denied the jurisdiction
of the court; hence the cause was brought before the
Parliament of Paris. Before this tribunal, then, were
brought the wrongs of Renée Corbeau, and the whole
affair seemed so cruel and odious to the judges—especially
the fact of Pousset having taken holy orders (and
thereby degraded them) to evade the contract of
marriage—that they condemned him to espouse Renée
or lose his head by the sword of the executioner.</p>
<p>He urged that the sanctity of holy orders utterly
precluded the former reparation. On this the court
unanimously declared that he must undergo the latter.
He was accordingly replaced in the Bastile; the priest
who was to attend in his last moments came to prepare
him for death, and as all sentences were summarily
executed in those days, already the headsman awaited
him.</p>
<p>The heart of the poor girl, who loved him still, was
now wrung with new anguish and pity, and she accused
herself of being the cause of his approaching doom.
Crushed by that dreadful conviction, in her anxiety to
save him, or at least have his sentence mitigated in
some manner, she conceived the idea of taking all the
guilt of his position upon <i>herself</i>.</p>
<p>Hastening to the old Palais de Justice, she entered
the great hall, the centre of which was then occupied
by the famous marble table which Victor Hugo describes
as being of a single piece, so long, and so broad
and thick, that it was doubtful if in the world there
was such another block of marble. Imploring the
astonished judges to hear her, she knelt before them,
and while scarcely daring to raise her eyes from the
floor, she told them in trembling accents that in
condemning her lover-husband, for such she deemed him,
they had forgotten that she too was culpable; that by
his death she would be sunk into sorrow and covered
with ignominy; and that while seeking to avenge her,
or repair her honour, they would bring upon her the
opprobrium of all France!</p>
<p>The judges listened in bewildered silence, while in a
low and still more tremulous voice, Renée continued
thus:</p>
<p>"Messieurs—I will no longer conceal my crime.
Remorse of conscience now forces me to declare that,
thinking you might compel M. Pousset to marry me, I
concealed the fact that I snared him into loving
me—that I loved him first, and was thus the source of all
my own sorrow! You deem it a crime that he took
refuge in holy orders to avoid the fulfilment of his
contract; yet, messieurs, that was not <i>his</i> doing, but
resulted from the will of a proud and avaricious father,
who is, in that matter, the real criminal. Spare him
then, I implore you—spare him to the world, if not to
me! He has declared that his orders preclude his
marrying me; and for that declaration you ordain that
he must die. Oh, what matters his asserting that he
would formally espouse me if he could; and because he
cannot, you condemn him to die, after giving him <i>a
choice</i>. Who here can doubt that he would marry me
in spite of his deacon's orders? Though I am but a
weak and foolish girl, I know that we may yet be
wedded, could we but obtain the dispensation of his
Holiness Clement VIII. Daily we expect in Paris his
Legate, who possesses sovereign powers. At his feet I
will solicit that dispensation; and oh, be assured,
messieurs, that my love and my prayers will obtain it.
Suspend your terrible sentence, then, till he arrives."</p>
<p>After a pause, during which she was overcome with
agitation, she spoke again:</p>
<p>"Think of all he has endured since his sentence has
been delivered, and of all that I am enduring now!
Should I have among you but a few voices for me,
ought these not to win me some favour of humanity
over the rest, though they be more in number! but
alas! should all be inflexible, permit me, in mercy
at least, to die with him I love, and by the same
weapon."</p>
<p>It is recorded that the unhappy Renée's prayer met
with a very favourable reception, and that the remarkable
tone of her self-accusation, of having "ensnared"
M. Pousset, gave a new colour to his alleged crime.
"The judges," we are told, "lost not a word of her
oration, which was pronounced with a clear sweet
voice, and her words found a ready echo in their hearts,
while the wonderful charms of her person, her tears
and her eloquence, were too powerful not to melt, if
they failed to persuade, men of humanity."</p>
<p>She was requested to withdraw while they consulted,
and the First President, M. Villeroy, after collecting
their votes, found himself enabled to grant a <i>respite</i> for
six months, that a dispensation might be obtained if
possible; and on this being announced, the plaudits
of assembled thousands made the roof of the Palais
de Justice ring in honour of Pousset's best advocate,
Renée Corbeau.</p>
<p>Ere long the Roman Legate (Cardinal de Pellevé)
came to Paris; but, on hearing the ugly story of
Pousset, he conceived such indignation against him,
for the whole tenor of his conduct, that he constantly
turned a deaf ear to every application in his
favour. Soon the last month of the respite drew to
a close, and the fatal day was near when Pousset must
be brought forth to die!</p>
<p>The unexpected hostility of the Legate cast Renée
once more into despair, an emotion all the more
terrible that the announcement of M. Villeroy had
given her brilliant, perhaps happy, hopes. These,
however, did not die. She obtained an audience of
Henry IV. soon after he had stormed the town of
Dreux and made his public entry into Paris, and, as
he was cognisant of her miserable story, on her knees
at his feet she once more sought an intercession for her
doomed lover, if he could be termed so still.</p>
<p>Henry had too often felt the passion of love not to be
moved by the singular beauty of the suppliant, by her
sorrow, and the eloquence with which affection endowed
her. He raised her from the floor and besought her to
take courage, as he would now be her friend and
advocate.</p>
<p>The Cardinal de Pellevé could not decline the prayer
of such an intercessor as Henry the Great, and, as the
luckless Pousset had not received the higher orders of
the priesthood, his Eminence granted a dispensation in
the name of Clement VIII. The marriage ceremony
was duly performed, in fulfilment of the contract signed
at Angers, and Renée Corbeau and the lover she had
rescued "lived ever after in the most perfect union;
the husband ever regarding his wife as his guardian
angel, who had saved his life and honour."</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ANNA SCHONLEBEN. </h2>
<p class="t3">
THE BAVARIAN POISONER.</p>
<p>This singular wretch, a woman of a nature so
fiendish, and with whom the destruction of human life
by secret poisoning became a veritable passion, was
beheaded in the ancient city of Nuremberg, in Bavaria,
in April, 1810, after a protracted trial, that brought to
light the long catalogue of her iniquities.</p>
<p>It would appear that she was born in Nuremberg in
1760, during the reign of Maximilian Joseph—the
same who concluded the famous treaty with Maria
Theresa—and was left an orphan by the death of both
her parents in 1765; but, as she was the heiress to
some property, she remained under guardianship, and
was carefully educated till her nineteenth year, when she
was married—against her inclination, it is asserted—to
a notary named Zwanziger.</p>
<p>Young, pretty, and accustomed to much gaiety in the
house of her wealthy guardian, the lonely life she felt
herself condemned to pass in the house of her husband
formed an unpleasant contrast, all the more so, as
Zwanziger, when not absent on business, devoted his
whole time to the bottle and became a confirmed
bibber.</p>
<p>Anna meanwhile strove to forget her gloom and her
griefs by novel reading, her favourite works being the
"Sorrows of Werter" and those of Pamela; but the
dissipation of Zwanziger, his neglect of his profession,
on one hand, and his lavish extravagance on the other,
soon brought them to wretchedness and ruin; and she,
having considerable personal attractions, though she
appeared hideous and repulsive at the time of her
arraignment, "now attempted to prop the falling
establishment by making the best use of them;" and amid
this miserable state of affairs, Zwanziger died suddenly,
leaving her to continue her life, which was now one of
deception and licentiousness, alone.</p>
<p>Her fortune wasted, her prospects blasted, she became
filled with a hatred of mankind, and with rage and
bitterness at her fate. All the better sympathies which
her nature may have possessed in girlhood faded out,
and their place was taken by a stern and grim resolution
to better her now destitute condition at all risks
and hazards.</p>
<p>It does not seem to be clearly known when the idea
of systematic poisoning occurred to her, but it was
eventually suspected that she had disposed of her
husband by this means, and before she was received as
housekeeper into the family of Herr Justiz-Amptman
Glaser. She had then spent many years as a wanderer,
was fifty years of age, and without a trace of her former
charms.</p>
<p>This was in 1808, when Glaser was residing at Pegnitz
in Upper Franconia, but was living apart from his wife.
Anna Schonleben (for she seldom seems to have taken
her husband's name), having her own ends in view,
adopting the rôle of friendship, effected a reconciliation
between Glaser and his wife, who returned to his home,
and within a month after was seized by a sudden and
mysterious illness, of which she died in the greatest
agony.</p>
<p>As there was no appearance of Glaser wishing her
to take the place of the deceased, Anna quitted his
service for that of the Herr Justiz-Amptmann Grohmann,
who was unmarried and only in his thirty-eighth year.
He was in delicate health; thus she had every opportunity
for studying to please him, by care, attention,
and an affectionate regard for his comforts; but age was
against her; her apparently unremitting attention won
her no favour from Herr Grohmann, who received all his
medicines from her own hands, and among them some
dose, suggested by revenge, as he died on the 8th of
May, 1809, "his disease being accompanied by violent
internal pains of the stomach, dryness of the skin,
<i>erbrechen</i>," &c.</p>
<p>She acted her part so well, she appeared so inconsolable
for his loss, and won among his friends a character
so high and valuable as a careful and gentle sick-nurse,
that she was almost immediately received into the
household of the Kammer-Amptmann Gebhard, in that
capacity. On the 13th of May, only five days after the
death of Grohmann, Madame Gebhard was delivered of
a baby. Both mother and child were doing well till
the 16th, when the former was seized with precisely
the same symptoms before named, and after seven days
of agony—during which she frequently asserted that
she had been poisoned—she expired.</p>
<p>The funeral over, the widower found himself unable
to manage his household and family, and not unnaturally
thought he could not do better than retain in his
service, for that purpose, Anna Schonleben, who had
nursed his wife, as she had done his deceased friend, in
their last hours; so she remained in his house invested
with all the authority of <i>haushalterin</i>, though some of
his friends hinted at the inexpediency of having as an
inmate one whom some fatality seemed to attend.</p>
<p>Gebhard laughed at this as superstitious; but there
was one friend, in particular, who recurred to this
matter again and again so pertinaciously—though upon
what grounds he never precisely explained—that he
came to the resolution of acting upon his advice, and to
Anna he broke the subject of her impending dismissal,
but as gently as possible, for she had acquired a certain
ascendancy over him.</p>
<p>She merely expressed her surprise and regret, and
the subsequent day was fixed for her departure to Bayreuth;
but prior to that event she resolved on a terrible
revenge. She arranged all the rooms as usual, and
filled the <i>salzfasten</i> in the kitchen, saying the while,
that "it was always the custom for those who left to fill
it with salt for those who came in their place;" and
when the droski for her conveyance came to the door,
she took in her arms the infant child of Gebhard—the
infant whose mother she had poisoned, and which was
now five months old—and while feigning to caress it,
she placed between "its boneless gums" a soft biscuit
soaked in milk.</p>
<p>Then she drove away, but she had not been gone an
hour, when the child and every servant in the house
became seized with spasms, pains, and violent sickness.
In this instance none, however, died; but Gebhard,
recalling the advice of his friend, now became full of
alarm and suspicion. The <i>salzfasten</i>, which Anna
Schonleben had been seen so fussily to fill, was
examined, and a great quantity of arsenic was found
to be mixed with the salt. The barrel from which the
latter was taken was also submitted to chemical analysis,
and arsenic was found therein.</p>
<p>It now came suddenly to the knowledge or memory
of the simple and confiding Kammer-Amptmann, that
on one occasion, in the August of 1809, two gentlemen
who had dined with him, were seized by the same
symptoms as his servants ere the cloth was well off
the table; that one of the servants, named Barbara
Waldmann, with whom she had frequent quarrels, was
seized in the same fashion after taking a cup of coffee
from her hands; that she had once offered a lad named
Johann Kraus a glass of brandy in the cellar, which he
declined on seeing something white permeating through
it; that on another occasion, the deliverer of a message
to whom she had given a glass of white Rosenhourr,
was sick and ill for days after, barely escaping death;
and, though last not least, Herr Gebhard remembered
that on the occasion of a dinner party, given on the 1st
of September, after partaking of the wine which <i>she</i>
brought from the cellar, he and all his guests, five
in number, were seized by the usual spasms and
sickness.</p>
<p>Gebhard and others were astonished now, that the
series of sudden deaths and violent illnesses occurring to
all who took anything from the hand of the woman
Schonleben, had not excited their suspicions before.
The bodies of those who had died were quietly
exhumed; the contents of the stomach of each were
subjected to chemical analysis, and the conclusion come
to was that two of them at least had been poisoned by
arsenic; and reports were drawn up and depositions
made, while the culprit, all unaware of the Nemesis
that was about to overtake her, was living at Bayreuth,
from whence she had the hardihood to write to the
Kammer-Amptmann more than one letter, in which she
bitterly reproached him for his base ingratitude in
dismissing from his service one who had been as a mother
to his motherless child.</p>
<p>It is supposed that the object of these epistles was
to procure her reinstatement in his household, but on
the 19th of October, to her consternation, she was
suddenly arrested, and on being searched, three packets
of poison—two being arsenic—were found upon her
person. After being brought to trial, she protested
her innocence, and acted with singular obstinacy and
ingenuity combined, till the 16th of April, 1810, when
she fairly broke down, and admitted having murdered
Madame Glaser by two doses of poison; but the
moment the confession left her lips, according to
Feuerbach, she fell as if struck by a thunderbolt, and in
strong convulsions was removed to her dungeon, under
sentence of death.</p>
<p>It is stated, that she had committed and attempted so
many murders, that they had lost all character of
horror to her; that she merely viewed them as petty
indiscretions, or the punishing of those who offended her
or who stood in her way, till at last, to poison became
almost a pastime or a passion; hence, when the poison
taken from her at Bayreuth was shown to her some
weeks afterwards, in the old castle of Plassenburg at
Culmbach, her eyes sparkled and her whole frame
seemed to vibrate with delight, as if she saw again, in
that deadly white drug, an old and valued friend
or servant; but she admitted, that fly-powder was
what she chiefly used to revenge herself upon her
fellow-servants by mixing it with their beer; and that
prior to quitting the house of Gebhard she had
frequently poisoned the coffee, wine, and beer of such
guests as she chose to dislike. She declared openly,
that her death was a fortunate thing for many people,
as she felt certain she could not have left off poisoning
as long as she lived.</p>
<p>She steadily ascended the scaffold, bowed to the
people, with a smile on her old, wrinkled, and, then,
hideous face, laid her head on the block, and without
shrinking or moving a muscle, had it struck off by the
axe of the public <i>scharfrichter</i>, or executioner; and so
ended this German <i>cause célèbre</i>.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN></p>
<h2> LAURA WENLOCK'S CHRISTMAS EVE. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> CHAPTER I. </h3>
<p>"It cannot be that you are about to be married!"
exclaimed Jack Westbrook passionately as he held the
girl's hands half forcibly and gazed into her shrinking
eyes; "I will not believe it—even from your own
lips."</p>
<p>But the girl, silent and sad, hesitated to reply.</p>
<p>The glory of an April sunset lay over all the sweet
Kentish landscape; a little tarn between two white
chalk cliffs shone like molten gold, with black coots
swimming, and the pearly clouds reflected on its
surface; the emerald green buds were bursting in their
beauty in the coppice and hedgerows, where the linnet
and the speckled thrush were preparing their nests;
the unclosing crocus and the drooping daffodil were
making the cottage gardens gay; and every where,
there were coming "fresh flowers and leaves to deck
the dead season's bier."</p>
<p>It was a period of the opened year when unconsciously
the human heart feels hopeful and happy, even the
hearts of the old and the ailing; but the souls of those
two who lingered, near the old Saxon lichgate, roofed
with ancient thatch and velvet moss, and by the old
worn stile that led to the village church of Craybourne,
were sad indeed; they were on the eve of parting,
and—for ever!</p>
<p>"It cannot be, Laura, that you are about to be
married, after all," repeated Jack Westbrook, a
soldier-like young fellow, not much over five and twenty,
dark, handsome and clad in that kind of grey tweed
suit, which looks so gentlemanly when worn by one of
good bearing and style, and such Jack certainly was.</p>
<p>"It is but too true—too true, Jack," replied Laura,
while her tears fell fast, and she strove to release her
trembling hands from her lover's passionate clasp.</p>
<p>Laura Wenlock was more than merely handsome;
in her soft face there was a singular and piquante
charm, a loveliness that was more penetrating and of
a higher order than mere regularity of feature, as its
expression varied so much—a charm that would have
delighted an artist, while it would have baffled his
powers to reproduce it. Her eyes were violet blue; her
hair was auburn, shot with gold, and ruddy golden it
seemed ever in the sunshine.</p>
<p>"You don't mean to say that you are about to marry
<i>for</i> money?" said Westbrook impetuously.</p>
<p>"Far from it, Jack—oh! don't think so meanly—so
basely of me," urged Laura piteously.</p>
<p>"What then?"</p>
<p>"<i>With</i> money—sounds different, doesn't it, Jack,
dear?" said the girl with a sob and a sickly smile.</p>
<p>Westbrook gnawed his thick brown moustache, and
eyed her gloomily, then almost malevolently and, anon;
pleadingly, for his fate was in her hands.</p>
<p>"From all I have heard," said he, "I feared it would
come to this; but oh, no, no, surely it cannot be—that
I am now to lose you!"</p>
<p>"It must be; the fatal papers have already been
prepared."</p>
<p>"The settlements!"</p>
<p>"Yes; debts beyond what we could ever have anticipated,
have overtaken my father, and you know that
his vicarage here at Craybourne is a poor one, Jack, a
very poor one, and his poverty would be the ruin of
my two brothers. My marriage will be the saving of
them all—the Colonel is so rich."</p>
<p>"Philip Daubeny, of Craybourne Hall?"</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Laura, with averted eyes</p>
<p>"I saw him struck down by the sun on the march
between Jehanumbad and Shetanpore; and I would,
with all my heart, he were there still!"</p>
<p>"Don't say so, Jack," urged the girl; "Colonel
Daubeny is good, and brave, and generous—oh, most
generous! God knows, Jack, if you would take me as
I am, without a shilling, I would become your wedded
wife to-night," added Laura, blinded with tears; "but
you want me to wait for you, Jack, and I cannot wait,
for the fate of those over there—at home—is in my
power," continued Laura, turning towards the old
thatched vicarage, the lozenged casements of which
were glittering in the sunshine between the stems of
the trees.</p>
<p>"To wait, of course," said he, huskily, and relinquishing
her hands in a species of sullen despair; "I
have but little to live on just yet, since I had to sell
out of the Hussars after that infernal loss on the Oaks,
and, of course, I cannot supply you with equipages and
luxuries as Daubeny can do. But do have patience
with me, Laura."</p>
<p>"I cannot—I cannot!" wailed the girl; "the
dreadful <i>why</i> I have told you a thousand times."</p>
<p>"You never loved me truly."</p>
<p>"You wrong me; no one has ever been more dear to
me than you, Jack."</p>
<p>He laughed bitterly.</p>
<p>"Yet you will marry Philip Daubeny? Have you
thought how shameful is a mercenary marriage?"</p>
<p>"I have, indeed, God knows how deeply, how bitterly
and prayerfully, in the silent night, when none could
see my tears, save Him! Take back your ring, dear
Jack, and let us part friends;" and drawing the
emblem from her tiny finger, she touched it with her
trembling lips, and restored it to him.</p>
<p>"Friends!" he exclaimed, bitterly and scornfully,
while in his fine dark eyes there shone a flash of light,
where evil seemed to rival love and sorrow, as he flung
the golden hoop, with its pearl cluster, into the tarn,
and left her without another word or glance! He
strode away down the sequestered path that led to the
churchyard stile, crushing, as if vengefully, under his
feet the wayside flowers, the tender blossoms and
sprays of spring; and the girl watched him till his
retreating figure disappeared in the shady vista of the
lane.</p>
<p>Then she interlaced her slender fingers over her
auburn hair and cast her eyes upwards, full of sorrow
and intense compunction for the pain she had been
compelled to inflict; but there was no despair in her
expression, nor was there in her heart, we hope.</p>
<p>"God bless you, dear—dear Jack; you will forget
me in time. All is over now!" she murmured.</p>
<p>But the memory of Westbrook's harassed face, and
the winning sound of his voice haunted her in the
hours of the night as she lay feverish, restless, in a
passion of bitter weeping; and full of sad and terrible
thoughts, tossing from side to side, sleepless on her
pillow.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap1002"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER II. </h3>
<p>The marriage day came, and the chimes were ringing
merrily in the old square tower of the little vicarage
church, scaring the swallows from their nests amid the
leaves and the clustering ivy, and, aware of the event,
numbers of the parishioners and of Colonel Daubeny's
tenantry, in their holiday attire, were toiling up the
steep and picturesque pathway that led through shady
dingles to the quaint edifice which overlooked the Cray.
The humble old-fashioned organ gave forth its most
joyous notes; and what was wanting in splendour or
decoration in a church so old and rural, was amply
made up by the masses of flowers, many of them the
rarest exotics from the conservatories of Colonel
Daubeny, and these garlanded the round chancel arch and the
short dumpy Saxon pillars, while the altar in its deep
recess was gay with them; when Laura, leaning on the
arm of her father, the old thin-faced and silver-haired
Vicar, and followed by her six bridesmaids, all lovely
little girls, relatives of both families, dressed alike, and
attended closely, too, by her two brothers, the thoughtless
lads, whom she had sacrificed herself to serve and
advance in life, was led slowly up the church, the
cynosure and admiration of every eye, for all the people
knew and loved her.</p>
<p>The gift of the bridegroom—a handsome, grave, and
manly-looking fellow, whose hair, though only in his
fortieth year, Indian service had slightly streaked with
grey, and whose best man was his old chum and
comrade, Charlie Fane—her bridal dress, priceless with
satin and lace, shone in the successive rays of
sunlight as she passed the painted windows, her bridal
veil floated gracefully and gloriously around her, by
its folds hiding the ashy pallor of her charming face,
and her eyes that were aflame with unshed tears, and
trembled to look up, lest they should encounter those
of Jack Westbrook, full of upbraiding and bitterness;
but Jack was at that moment miles away occupying
his mind with very different matters, though he well
knew what was then being enacted at Craybourne
Church.</p>
<p>She stood and knelt as one in a dream side by side
with Philip Daubeny at the altar rail before her father,
and it certainly <i>did</i> strike the former with something of
alarm rather than surprise, that when she was ungloved
by a fussy and blushing little bridesmaid, and when she
placed her hand steadily and without a tremor in his,
it was icy and cold, as that of Lucy Ashton on her
ill-omened bridal morn.</p>
<p>She uttered all the words of the service in a low and
distinct voice, yet never once were her dark blue eyes
raised to those of the earnest and generous Philip
Daubeny, whose glances, moderated of course by the
knowledge that they were so closely observed, were
full of love and tenderness; and, in truth, even at that
solemn moment, Laura felt that though he had her
highest respect and her genuine esteem, she did not love
him, and could only pray to Heaven, in her silent heart,
that the time might come when she should do so as a
wedded wife.</p>
<p>Laura bore up nobly. If she clung to her husband's
arm, and thus sent a thrill to his heart as they quitted
the gloomy fane, with its earthy odour, for the
sunshine of the churchyard, where the cheers of assembled
hundreds greeted them, it was only because she felt
weak, and wondered when the time would come that
would see her laid in yonder vault, where all the
Daubenys of past ages lay—the vault, with its ponderous
door, mildewed and rusty, and half-hidden by huge
fern leaves and churchyard nettles—and on reaching
the Vicarage she nearly fainted, greatly to the terror of
Daubeny and the anxiety of all.</p>
<p>Avoiding the former, she clung to her father.</p>
<p>"Kiss me, papa," she said again and again. "Kiss
me, papa; are you pleased with me—pleased with your
poor Laura now?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my darling, yes," replied the old Vicar, folding
her in his arms. He had heard much of Jack Westbrook:
but thought that, so far as himself and his
family were concerned, "matters were now, indeed,
ordered for the best" in her marriage with the Squire of
Craybourne.</p>
<p>A man of the world—one who had seen twenty years
of dangerous military service in the East—Phil Daubeny
was one of whom any woman might be proud, handsome,
wealthy, and well-born, and all thought that
Laura was as happy in her choice as in her heart;
but the image of Jack Westbrook, of whom he knew
<i>nothing</i>, stood—and was for a time fated to stand—as a
barrier between her and the man she had vowed to
"love, honour, and obey;" and most earnestly in her
soul did she pray, as the carriage bore her from her
beloved home for ever, that never more in this world
might Westbrook's path cross hers; but not that she
feared evil would come of it, for Laura was too wifely,
too pure, and too good for such an idea to occur to her.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap1003"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER III. </h3>
<p>Amid the congratulations of friends, under the
radiant smiles of her husband, even when her head
nestled on his shoulder and his strong arm went
lovingly round her; amid all the innumerable gaieties
of Paris, of Brussels—a new world to her—this ghost
seemed morbidly to haunt her; yet the honeymoon
glided away, and the second month found them, amid
all the charms of midsummer, located in their luxurious
home at Craybourne Hall, from the upper oriels of
which she could see the smoke, from the old clustered
chimneys of the Vicarage, curling about the leafy
coppice.</p>
<p>Daubeny had missed something responsive, he knew
not what, in his wife, whose general listlessness, with
a certain far-seeing expression of eye, began to pain and
bewilder him. He kept his thoughts to himself; yet
his brave and loving nature craved ever for some secret
sympathy which Laura failed to accord him, and so
there gradually began to yawn between them a chasm
which neither could define, and the existence of which
they would stoutly have denied. To Daubeny it became
a source of keen and growing misery. But one night
the scales fell from his eyes.</p>
<p>Finding himself alone and idle in London, he turned
into the back stalls of the opera. The piece had not
commenced; the orchestra were at the overture; the
gas was somewhat low; and by some heedless fellows
who were sitting in front of him he heard <i>his own name</i>
mentioned once or twice in conversation, and was
compelled to listen, thereto.</p>
<p>"Jack Westbrook has got over it all now," one said.
"Of course the <i>sting</i> of wounded self-esteem, at being
thrown over for rich old Phil Daubeny, rankled for a
time. The fair Laura was his first love—never saw
such a pair of spoons in all my life, don't you
know—privately engaged, and all that sort of thing."</p>
<p>"And now I have no doubt she will flirt with any
man who will flirt with her. Of course, it is always the
way—and she don't care for Daubeny, poor devil!"</p>
<p>"I don't think she <i>will</i> flirt," said the first speaker.</p>
<p>"Bah! every woman has some weak point, if you can
only find it out."</p>
<p>"Most men, too, I suspect; but the fair Laura is clad
in the armour of virtue."</p>
<p>"Jack Westbrook might find some weak points in
that armour, too; and he won't drop out of the hunt,
perhaps."</p>
<p>Then followed a reckless laugh that stung the soul of
Daubeny to madness. The Opera stalls were no place
for that which is so abhorrent in "society"—a scene;
so instead of dashing their heads together, as he felt
inclined to do, he softly left the place just as the
overture ceased and the act-drop rose; and he went forth in
a tempest of that kind of rage which always becomes
the more bitter for having no immediate object to
expend itself on; and even the speed of the night
express seemed a thousand degrees too slow as it bore
him homeward to Craybourne Hall. She had been
engaged, had a lover—her first lover, too—and all
unknown to him!</p>
<p>He had both seen and heard of Westbrook; but not
in this character. Her first love—her only love! How
many uncounted kisses had, of course, been exchanged,
of which he knew naught (and had no business with
then)? How much of the bloom had been worn off the
peach ere it became his? He was full of black wrath,
and saw much now that he saw not before, and could
quite account for all her coldness. Yet, although he
knew it not, the girl who had always esteemed was now
learning to <i>love</i> him as she had never even loved Jack
Westbrook!</p>
<p>Late though the hour—the first of morning—he
proceeded at once to his wife's dressing-room, where she
was awaiting his return in a charming blue robe that
made her fair beauty look more charming still, for there
were colour and brightness in her face and a love-light
in her eyes at his approach, till the abruptness of his
entrance and the set sternness of his white visage
startled her.</p>
<p>"Philip!"</p>
<p>"Can it be true what I have heard to-night, Laura,
that you loved Westbrook, of the Hussars," he
demanded, "and, while loving him, married me for my
money, and what I might do for the old Vicar and his
sons? Is it truth that, when he gave you to me at the
altar of yonder church, your marriage vow was a black
lie and your false heart teemed with love for another?
Speak!" he thundered out; but she could only lift her
timid eyes to him imploringly, and spread her little
white hands in deprecation of the coming malediction.
Her voice was gone. "Your silence affirms all I have
heard," he continued, in accents that trembled with
jealousy and sorrow. "Oh, God, what a fool and dupe
I have been!"</p>
<p>"I know not what you have heard, Philip; but, as
He hears me, I have been a true and faithful wife to
you."</p>
<p>"In playing a part you did not feel," he cried
scornfully, "but I will aid your play no more. From this
hour we meet never again on earth. Here, in this
house, for which you sold yourself, I shall leave you,
with all its luxuries, till such time as a more regular
separation can be brought about; and the sole sorrow
of my heart is now, that I cannot leave you free to wed
this fellow Westbrook, the cause of all your
incompatibility and coldness to me."</p>
<p>He flung away, and left her in a gust of fury.</p>
<p>"Philip, Philip!" she exclaimed, but she heard the
hall door close; and then, as his steps died away in the
distance, she fell on the floor, overcome by her sudden
and terrible emotions—startled, shocked, and
conscience-stricken.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap1004"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER IV. </h3>
<p>Days passed on—days of sorrow, anxiety, and futile
watching for a footfall that came no more. Whither
he had gone she knew not, nor could she discover, and
she was left to her tears and unavailing grief, amid the
splendour of Craybourne Hall. She saw now how
erring she had been; that, while nursing a mere
fancy, she had lost the true love of a good and generous
man, whose last words had been the first harsh ones he
had ever addressed to her.</p>
<p>Gone! gone! She felt how much she really loved
him now, and all the more that a secret tie was coming,
and must come ere Christmas, to bind them stronger
together. She must let him know of this dear hope;
but how? <i>Where</i> had he gone? To death, perhaps,
and she might have a child in her bosom that Philip
could never, never see!</p>
<p>The weeks became months, and the heart of the
strangely-widowed wife grew sick and heavy as lead
with hopeless waiting, watching, and agonising
yearning—dead even to the speculations of those around her,
to whom the absence of her husband seemed, of course,
most unaccountable, if not unkind and cruel.</p>
<p>But for the sake of her child she wished that she
might die when it saw the light. Surely, then, Philip
would forgive her when he saw its little face, and she was
laid within the vault, the mildewed and rusted door of
which she had regarded with a shudder on her marriage
morning—the vault where all the dead Daubenys lay.</p>
<p>So in the fulness of time her baby was born—a little
fairy boy—and her father named it Philip, for him who
was still so strangely absent, and hot and burning were
the tears with which Laura bedewed its tiny face as it
nestled in her bosom; and amid the new emotions
awakened by maternity she prayed God to forgive her
for having longed to die; for no baby in the world
could be like hers, that lay so round and soft and
warm in her white bosom, and was fast growing so
like papa!</p>
<p>But where was he wandering? Why was he not
with her? Surely he would return <i>now</i>? Yet the days
still rolled monotonously on, and winter drew nigh.
The trees in Craybourne Chase were leafless; the fern,
amid which the deer made their lair, was turning red,
and the uplands became powdered with snow.</p>
<p>"To what a dreary and dreadful Christmas do I look
forward, papa!" she exclaimed to the sorrowing old
Vicar, "and I do so love him! Philip, Philip, come
back to me, and do not leave me thus to die!" she
would wail, ever and anon, in her helplessness.</p>
<p>And now there came a day which she was fated never,
never to forget! Her husband's firm friend and old
comrade, who had been his groomsman, the
stout-hearted and gallant Charlie Fane, arrived at
Craybourne with a face as white as the snow in the Weald
of Kent—the bearer of terrible tidings, which he had
heard that morning at the club, and these he had to
break—he knew not <i>how</i>—to Laura, though they had
been broken abruptly enough to himself.</p>
<p>Jack Westbrook had raised his head from the
morning paper just as Fane entered the room,</p>
<p>"By Jove! look here, Charlie!" exclaimed Westbrook
in an excited tone, "there has been a dreadful accident
to the train between Paris and Calais, and among the
killed—mangled out of all shape—the report says, is
Colonel Philip Daubeny, a British officer. His
card-case was found in his pocket."</p>
<p>"My God! Poor Laura, poor Phil!" exclaimed Fane,
as he took the paper in his trembling hands, and in ten
minutes after was <i>en route</i> for Craybourne Hall.</p>
<p>"Poor devil!" thought Westbrook, as he lit a cigar;
"who knows but I may get the reversion of the widow,
with her tin, after all?"</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="chap1005"></SPAN></p>
<h3> CHAPTER V. </h3>
<p>It was Christmas Eve at Craybourne Hall, as elsewhere
all over the Christian world; but the stillness
as of death reigned there, and Laura, a widow now in
heart indeed, lay tossing restlessly on her laced pillow,
fighting, as it were, with the grim King, and forgetful
even of her infant. Never had that old hall, ever since
the Tudor days, seen a more sorrowful Christmas Eve.
All the landscape around it wore a shroud of ghastly
white. The Cray was frozen in its bed, and all the
shrubs and trees seemed turned to crystal, that
sparkled with diamond lustre in the light of the moon
and stars. Over the snowy waste the Christmas bells
in the old Vicarage church rang out "Peace on
Earth—Peace on Earth, and goodwill towards men;" but
there was no peace—peace of the heart, at least—in the
stately hall; yet such a winter had not been seen for
years, and great things, the old Kentish folks said,
were sure to occur, for never had the holly been so
covered with scarlet berries. What a Christmas for
Laura!</p>
<p>In her chamber, dimly-lit and closely watched, she
lay helpless and stunned by the depth of her woe, and
honest Charlie Fane, who had seen much of human
suffering in his time, watched her like a brother; and,
in that chamber, there was no sound heard but the
sighs of the sufferer and the chimes of the distant bells.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a noise of feet and voices in the
corridor without. A figure entered—was it the phantom
of Philip Daubeny?</p>
<p>No! the strong grasp that tightened on the hand of
Fane forbade that idea; and, in a moment more, the
husband, looking pale and rather worn, was bending
over the wife who had fainted in his arms. In Philip's
face there was no sternness now, but passionate love,
pity, and tears, and agony, too, till Laura revived.</p>
<p>"Not killed—not even injured, Philip?" exclaimed Fane.</p>
<p>"No, thank Heaven! but a poor fellow was to whom
I lent my Ulster when hurrying homeward. Do you
forgive me, darling Laura—forgive my cruel
desertion?"</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, my love—my own Philip—all—all! And
is the little fellow not a darling too—and so like you,
Philip?" said the broken, half-hushed voice.</p>
<p>And as Philip, with a bursting heart, hung over his
wife and child, he could hear more merrily than ever
the joyous bells that told of the promise given 1800
years ago to the Chaldean shepherds as they watched
their flocks by night in Judæa.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p class="t4">
BRADBURY, AGNEW, & CO. LIMD., PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/><br/></p>
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