<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<p class="p2">There is a long, mysterious thrill, a murmur
rather felt than heard, a shudder of profundity,
which traverses the woodland hollows at the sunʼs
departure. In autumn most especially, when the
glory of trees is saddening, and winter storms are
in prospect, this dark disquietude moves the wood,
this horror at the nightfall, and doubt of the
coming hours. Touched as with a subtle stream, the
pointlets of the oak–leaves rise, the crimped fans
of the beech are fluttered, and lift their glossy
ovals, the pendulous chains of the sycamore swing;
while the poplar flickers its silver skirts, the tippets
and ruffs of the ivy are ruffling, and even the
three–lobed bramble–leaf cannot repress a shiver.</p>
<p>Touched with a stream at least as subtle, we,
who are wandering among the dark giants, shiver
and shrink, we know not why; and our hearts
beat faster, to feel how they beat. The cause is
the same both for tree and for man. Earthly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
nature has not learned to count upon immortality.
Therefore all her works, unaided, loathe to be undone.</p>
<p>Whether it were this, or his craving for his
dinner, that made Sir Cradock Nowell feel chilled,
as he waited under the shuddering trees for his
friend John Rosedew—far be it from me to say, because
it may have been both, sir. And the other
cause to which he always ascribed it—after the
event—to wit, a divine afflatus of diabolical presentiment,
is one we have no faith in, until we own
to nightmare. Anyhow, there he was, for upwards
of an hour; and no John Rosedew came up the
hill, which Sir Cradock did not feel it at all his
duty to descend, on the very safe presentiment of
the distress <i>revocare gradum</i>.</p>
<p>Meanwhile John Rosedew was speeding merrily,
according to his ideas of speed (which were relative
to the last degree), along a narrow bridle–way,
some two miles to the westward. It would be a
serious insult—so the parson argued—to the understanding
of any man who understood a horse,
and now John Rosedew had owned Coræbus very
nearly nine months, and though he had never
owned a horse before, surely by this time he could
set papers in the <i>barbara celarent</i> of the most recondite
horse–logic—or was it dialectics?—an
insult it would be to that Hippicus who felt himself
fit now to go to a fair and discuss many points
with the jockeys, if anybody suggested to him that
Coræbus ought to trot.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Trot, sir”! cried John Rosedew, to an imaginary
Hippodamas, “hasnʼt he been trotting for
nearly an hour to–day, sir? Quite an <i>equus tolutarius</i>.
And upon my word, I only hope he is not
so sore as I am”. Then he threw the reins over
the ponyʼs neck, and let him crop some cytisus.</p>
<p>“Coræbus, have no fear, my horse, you shall not
be overworked. Or if Epirus or Mycenæ be thy
home and birthplace—<i>incertus ibidem sudor</i>—thrice
I have wiped it off, and no oaten particles in it;
<i>urit avenœ</i>, so I suppose oats must dry the skin.
‘Ad terramque fluit devexo pondere cervix’, a line
not to be rendered in English, even by my Cradock.
How fine that whole description, but made up from
alien sources! Oh how Lucretius would have
done it! Most sad that he was not a Christian”.</p>
<p>A believer was what John Rosedew meant. But
by this time he was beginning to look upon all his
classical friends as in some sort Christians, if they
only believed in their own gods. Wherein, I fear,
he was far astray from the text of one of the
Articles.</p>
<p>Cob Coræbus by this time knew his master
thoroughly; and exercising his knowledge cleverly,
made his shoes last longer. If the weather felt
muggy and “trying”—from an equine view of probation—if
the road was rough and against the
grain, even if the forest–fly came abroad upon
business, Coræbus used (in sporting parlance) to
“shut up” immediately. This he did, not in a
defiant tone, not in a mode to provoke antagonism;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>
he was far too clever a horse for that; but with
every appearance of a sad conviction that his
master had no regard for him. At this earnest
appeal to his feelings, John Rosedew would
dismount in haste, and reflect with admiration
upon the weeping steeds of Achilles, or the mourning
horse of Mezentius, while he condemned with
acrimony the moral conveyed by a song he had
heard concerning the “donkey wot wouldnʼt go”.
Then he would loosen the girths, and, remonstrating
with Coræbus for his want of self–regard,
carefully wipe with his yellow silk pocket–handkerchief
first all the accessible parts of the cob that
looked at all uncomfortable, and then his own
capacious forehead. This being done, he would
search around for a juicy mouthful of grass, or
dive for an apple or slice of carrot—Coræbus at
the same time diving nasally—into the depths of
his black coat pocket, where he usually discovered
his lunch, which he had altogether forgotten.
While the horse was discussing this little refreshment,
John would put his head on one side, and
look at him very knowingly, revolving in his mind
a question which very often presented itself, whether
Coræbus were descended from Corytha or Hirpinus.</p>
<p>However this may have been—and from his
“staying qualities” one would have thought him
rather a chip from the old block of Troy—he was
the first horse good John Rosedew had ever called
his own; and he loved and admired him none the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
less for certain calumnies spread by the envious
about seedy–toes, splints, and spavins. Of these
crimes, whatever they might be, the parson found
no mention in Xenophon, Pliny, or Virgil, and he
was more than half inclined to believe them clumsy
modern figments. As for the incontestable fact
that Coræbus began to whistle when irrationally
stimulated beyond his six miles an hour, why, that
John Rosedew looked upon as a classical accomplishment,
and quoted a line from Theocritus.
Very swift horses were gifted with this peculiar
power, for the safety of those who would otherwise
be the victims of their velocity, even as the express
train always whistled past Brockenhurst station.</p>
<p>After contemplating the animal till admiration
was exhausted, and wondering why some horses
have hairy, while others have smooth ankles, he
would refresh himself with a reverie about the
Numidian cavalry; then declaring that Jem Pottles
was “impolitiæ notandus”, he would pass his
arm through the bridle, and calling to mind the
Pæon young lady who unduly astonished Darius,
pull an old book from some inner pocket, and
stroll on, with Coræbus sniffing now and then at
his hat–brim.</p>
<p>To any one who bears in mind what a punctual
body Time is, this account of the rectorʼs doings
will make it not incredible that he was often late
for dinner. But he never lost reckoning altogether
in his circumnavigation, because his leisure did not
begin till he had passed the “Jolly Foresters”; for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
there he must be by a certain hour, or Coræbus
would feel aggrieved, and so would Mrs. Cripps,
who always looked for him at or about 1.30 P.M.
For some mighty fine company was to be had by a
horse who could behave himself, in the stable of
the “Jolly Foresters”, about middle–day on a Wednesday.
Several high–stepping buggy–mares, one
or two satirical Broughamites, even some nags who
gave a decided tone to the neighbourhood, silver–hamed
Clevelands, and champ–the–bit Clydesdales:
even these were not too proud—that they left for
vulgarian horses—to snort and blow hard at the
“Forestersʼ” oats, and then eat them up like winking.
To this select circle our own Coræbus had
been admitted already, and his conversational
powers admired, when he had produced an affidavit
that his master was in no way connected with
trade.</p>
<p>Coræbus now bade fair to be spoiled by all this
grand society. Every Wednesday he came home
less natural, more coxcombical. He turned up his
nose at many good horses, whom he had once respected,
fellows who wandered about in the forest,
and hung down their chins when the rain came!
And then he became so affected and false, with an
interesting languor, when Amy jumped out to
caress him! Verily, friend Coræbus, thou shalt
pay out for this! What call, pray, hast thou to
become a humbug, from seeing how men do
flourish?</p>
<p>John Rosedew awoke quite suddenly to the laws<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
of time and season, as the hazel branches came
over his head, and he could see to read no longer.
The grey wood closed about him, to the right hand
and to the left; the thick shoots of the alder, the
dappled ash, and the osier, hustled among the
taller trees whose tops had seen the sunset; tufts
of grass, and blackberry–tangles, hipped dog–roses
leaning over them, stubby clumps of buckthorn,
brake–fern waving six feet high where the ground
held moisture—who, but an absent man, would
have wandered at dusk into such a labyrinth?</p>
<p>“ʼActum est’ with my dinner”, exclaimed the
parson aloud, when he awoke to the situation;
“and what, perhaps, is more important to thee, at
least, Coræbus, thine also is ‘pessum datum’. And
there is no room to turn the horse round without
scratching his eyes and his tail so. Nevertheless,
this is a path, or at one time must have been so;
‘semita, callis, tramesʼ—that last word is the one
for it, if it be derived from ‘traho’ (which, however,
I do not believe)—for, lo! there has been a
log of wood dragged here even during a post–diluvial
period: we will follow this track to the
uttermost; what says the cheerful philosopher:—‘<i>παντοίην
βιότοιο τάμοις ὁδόν</i>’. Surely a gun, nay, two,
or, more accurately, two explosions; now for some
one to show us the way. Coræbus, be of good
cheer, there is supper yet in thy <i>φάτνῃ</i>, not <i>ἐϋξέστῳ</i>;
advance then thy best foot. Why not?—seest
thou an <i>ἔιδωλον</i>? Come on, I say, mine horse—Great
God!—— ” And he was silent.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Tired as he was, Coræbus had leaped back from
the leading rein, then cast up his head and
snorted, and with a glare of terror stood trembling.
What John Rosedew saw at that moment was
stamped on his heart for ever. Across his narrow
homeward path, clear in the grey light, and seeming
to creep, was the corpse of Clayton Nowell,
laid upon its left side, with one hand to the heart,
the wan face stark and spread on the ground, the
body stretched by the final throe. The pale light
wandered over it, and showed it only a shadow.
John Rosedewʼs nerves were stout and strong, as
of a man who has injured none; he had buried
hundreds of fellow–men, after seeing them die;
but, for the moment, he was struck with a mortal
horror. Back he fell, and drove back his horse;
he could not look at the dead manʼs eyes fixed
intently upon him. One minute he stood shivering,
and the ash–leaves shivered over him. He was
conscious somehow of another presence which he
could not perceive. Then he ran up, like a son of
God, to what God had left of his brother. The glaze
(as of ground glass) in the eyes, the smile that
has swooned for ever, the scarlet of the lips turned
out with the chalky rim of death, the bulge of
the broad breast, never again to rise or fall in
breathing—is there one of these changes we do
not know, having seen them in our own dearest
ones?</p>
<p>But a worse sight than of any dead man—dead,
and gone home to his Father—met John Rosedewʼs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
quailing eyes, as he turned towards the
opening. It was the sight of Cradock Nowell,
clutching his gun with one hand, and clinging
hard with the other, while he hung from the bank
(which he had been leaping) as a winding–sheet
hangs from a candle. The impulse of his leap
had failed him, smitten back by horror; it was
not in him to go back, nor to come one foot
forward. The parson called him by his name,
but he could not answer; only a shiver and a
moan showed that he knew his baptism. The living
was more startled, and more startling, than the
dead.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span></p>
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