<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
<p class="p2">With an even step, and no frown on his forehead,
nor glimpse of a tear in his eyes, young
Cradock walked to his own little room, his “nest”,
as he used to call it; where pipes, and books, and
Oxford prints—no ballet–girls, however, and not
so very many hunters—and whips, and foils, and
boxing–gloves—<i>cum multis aliis quæ nunc describere
longum est; et cui non dicta</i> long ago?—were handled
more often than dusted. All these things,
except one pet little pipe, which he was now come
to look for, and which Viley had given him a year
ago, when they swopped pipes on their birthday
(like Diomed and the brave Lycian), all the rest
were things of a bygone age, to be thought of no
more for the present, but dreamed of, perhaps, on
a Christmas–eve, when the air is full of luxury.</p>
<p>Caring but little for any of them, although he
had loved them well until they seemed to injure
him, Cradock proceeded with great equanimity to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</SPAN></span>
do a very foolish thing, which augured badly for
the success of a young man just preparing to start
for himself in the world. He poured the entire
contents of his purse into a little cedar tray, then
packed all the money in paper rolls with a neatness
which rather astonished him, and sealed each roll
with his amethyst ring. Then he put them into a
little box of some rare and beautiful palm–wood,
which had been his motherʼs, laid his cheque–book
beside them (for he had been allowed a banking
account long before he was of age), and placed
upon that his gold watch and chain, and trinkets,
the amethyst ring itself, his diamond studs, and
other jewellery, even a locket which had contained
two little sheaves of hair, bound together with
golden thread, but from which he first removed,
and packed in silver paper, the fair hair of his
mother. This last, with the pipe which Clayton
had given him, and the empty purse made by
Amyʼs fingers, were all he meant to carry away,
besides the clothes he wore.</p>
<p>After locking the box he rang the bell, and
begged the man who answered it to send old Hogstaff
to him. That faithful servant, from whom he had
learned so many lessons of infancy, came tottering
along the passage, with his old eyes dull and heavy.
For Job had gloried in those two brothers, and
loved them both as the children of his elder days.
And now one of them was gone for ever, in the
height of his youth and beauty, and a whisper was
in the household that the other would not stay.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</SPAN></span>
Of him, whom Job had always looked upon as his
future master (for he meant to outlive the present
Sir Cradock, as he had done the one before him),
he had just been scoring upon his fingers all the
things he had taught him—to whistle “Spankadillo”,
while he drummed it with his knuckles;
to come to the pantry–door, and respond to the
“Whoʼs there”?—“A grenadier”! shouldering a
broomstick; to play on the Jewʼs–harp, with variations,
“An old friend, and a bottle to give him”;
and then to uncork the fictitious bottle with the
pop of his forefinger out of his mouth, and to
decant it carefully with the pat of his gurgling
cheeks! After all that, how could he believe Master
Crad could ever forsake him?</p>
<p>Now Mr. Hogstaffʼs legs were getting like the
ripe pods of a scarlet–runner (although he did not
run much); here they stuck in, and there they
stuck out, abnormally in either case; his body
began to come forward as if warped at the small
of the back; and his honest face (though he drank
but his duty) was Septemberʼd with many a
vintage. And yet, with the keenness of love and
custom, he saw at once what the matter was, as he
looked up at the young master.</p>
<p>“Oh, Master Crad, dear Master Crad, whatever
are you going to do? Donʼt, for good now, donʼt,
I beg on you. Hearken now; doʼee hearken to an
old man for a minute”. And he caught him by
both arms to stop him, with his tremulous, wrinkled
hands.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“O Hoggy, dear, kind Hoggy! you are about
the only one left to care about me now”.</p>
<p>“No, donʼt you say that, Master Crad; donʼt
you say that, whatever you do. Whoever tell you
that, tell a lie, sir. It was only last night Mrs.
Toaster, and cook, and Mrs. OʼGaghan, the Irishwoman,
was round the fire boiling, and they cried
a deal more than they boiled, I do assure you they
did, sir. And Mr. Stote, he come in with some
rabbits, and he went on like mad. And the maids,
so sorry every one of them, they canʼt be content
with their mourning, sir; I do assure you they
canʼt. Oh, donʼt ’ee do no harm to yourself, donʼt
’ee, Mr. Cradock, sir”.</p>
<p>“No, Hoggy”, said Cradock, taking his hands;
“you need not fear that now of me. I have had
very wicked thoughts, but God has helped me
over them. Henceforth I am resolved to bear my
trouble like a man. It is the part of a dog to run,
when the hoot begins behind him. Now, take this
little box, and this key, and give them yourself to
Sir Cradock Nowell. It is the last favour I shall
ask of you. I am going away, my dear old friend;
donʼt keep me now, for I must go. Only give
me your good wishes; and see that they mind
poor Caldo: and, whatever they say of me behind
my back, you wonʼt believe it, Job Hogstaff, will
you”?</p>
<p>Job Hogstaff had never been harder put to it in
all his seventy years. Then, as he stood at the
open door to see the last of his favourite, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</SPAN></span>
thought of the tall, dark womanʼs words so many
years ago. “A bonnie pair ye have gat; but yeʼll
ha’ no luck o’ them. Tak’ the word of threescore
year, yeʼll never get no luck o’ ’em”.</p>
<p>Cradock turned aside from his path, to say
good–bye to Caldo. It would only take just a
minute, he thought, and of course he should never
see him again. So he went to that snuggest and
sweetest of kennels, and in front of it sat the king
of dogs.</p>
<p>The varieties of canine are as manifold and distinct
as those of human nature. But the dog, be
he saturnine or facetious, sociable or contemplative,
mercurial or melancholic, is quite sure to be one
thing—true and loyal ever. Can we, who are less
than the dogs of the Infinite, say as much of ourselves
to Him? Now Caldo, as has been implied,
if not expressed before, was a setter of large philosophy
and rare reflective power. I mean, of
course, theoretical more than practical philosophy;
as any dog would soon have discovered who tried
to snatch a bone from him. Moreover, he had
some originality, and a turn for satire. He would
sit sometimes by the hour, nodding his head impressively,
and blinking first one eye and then the
other, watching and considering the doings of his
fellow–dogs. How fashionably they yawned and
stretched, in a mode they had learned from a
pointer, who was proud of his teeth and vertebræ;
how they hooked up their tails for a couple of
joints, and then let them fall at a right angle,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</SPAN></span>
having noticed that fashion in ladies’ bustles, when
they came on a Sunday to talk to them; how they
crawled on their stomachs to get a pat, as a provincial
mayor does for knighthood; how they
sniffed at each otherʼs door, with an eye to the
rotten bones under the straw, as we all smell
about for the wealthy; how their courtesy to one
another flowed from their own convenience—these,
and a thousand other dog–tricks, Caldo, dwelling
apart, observed, but did not condemn, for he felt
that they were his own. Now he hushed his bark
of joy, and looked up wistfully at his master, for
he knew by the expression of that face all things
were not as they ought to be. Why had Wena
snapped at him so, and avoided his society, though
he had always been so good to her, and even
thought of an alliance? Why did his master order
him home that dull night in the covert, when he
was sure he had done no harm? Above all, what
meant that moving blackness he had seen through
the trees only yesterday, when the other dogs
(muffs as they were) expected a regular battue,
and came out strong at their kennel doors, and
barked for young Clayton to fetch them?</p>
<p>So he looked up now in his masterʼs face, and
guessed that it meant a long farewell, perhaps a
farewell for ever. He took a fond look into his
eyes, and his own pupils told great volumes. Then
he sat up, and begged for a minute or two, with a
most beseeching glance, to share his masterʼs fortunes,
though he might have to steal his livelihood,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</SPAN></span>
and never get any shooting. Seeing that this
could never be, he planted his fore–paws on Cradockʼs
breast (though he felt that it was a liberty)
and nestled his nose right under his cheek, and
wanted to keep him ever so long. Then he
howled with a low, enduring despair, as the footfall
he loved grew fainter.</p>
<p>Looking back sadly, now and then, at the tranquil
home of his childhood, whose wings, and
gables, and depths of stone were grand in the
autumn sunset, Cradock Nowell went his way
toward the simple Rectory: he would say good–bye
there to Uncle John and the kind Aunt
Doxy; Miss Rosedew the younger, of course,
would avoid him, as she had done ever since.
But suddenly he could not resist the strange
desire to see once more that fatal, miserable spot,
the bidental of his destiny. So he struck into a
side–path leading to the deep and bosky covert.</p>
<p>The long shadows fell from the pale birch stems,
the hollies looked black in the sloping light, and
the brown leaves fluttered down here and there as
the cold wind set the trees shivering. Only six
days ago, only half an hour further into the dusk,
he had slain his own twin–brother. He crawled
up the hedge through the very same gap, for he
could not leap it now; his back ached with weakness,
his heart with despair, as he stayed himself
by the same hazel–branch which had struck his gun
at the muzzle. Then he shivered, as the trees did,
and his hair, like the brown leaves, rustled, as he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</SPAN></span>
knelt and prayed that his brotherʼs spirit might
appear there and forgive him. Hoping and fearing
to find it there, he sidled down into the dark wood,
and with his heart knocking hard against his ribs,
forced himself to go forward.</p>
<p>All at once his heart stood still, and every nerve
of his body went creeping—for he saw a tall, white
figure kneeling where his brotherʼs blood was—kneeling,
never moving, the hands together as in
prayer, the face as wan as immortality, the black
hair—if it were hair—falling straight as a pall
drawn back from an alabaster coffin–head. The
power of the entire form was not of earth, nor
heaven; but as of the intermediate state, when we
know not we are dead yet.</p>
<p>Cradock could not think nor breathe. The
whole of his existence was frozen up in awe. It
showed him in the after time, when he could
think about it, the ignorance, the insolence, of
dreaming that any human state is quit of human
fear. While he gazed, in dread to move (not
knowing his limbs would refuse him), with his
whole life swallowed up in gazing at the world
beyond the grave, the tall, white figure threw its
arms up to the darkening sky, rose, and vanished
instantly.</p>
<p>What do you think Cradock Nowell did? We
all know what he ought to have done. He ought
to have walked up calmly, with measured yet
rapid footsteps, and his eyes and wits well about
him, and investigated everything. Instead of that,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</SPAN></span>
he cut and ran as hard as he could go; and I
know I should have done the same, and I believe
more than half of you would, unless you were too
much frightened. He would never turn back
upon living man; but our knowledge of Hades is
limited. We pray for angels around our bed; if
they came, we should have nightmare.</p>
<p>Cradock, going at a desperate pace, with a
handsome pair of legs, which had recovered their
activity, kicked up something hard and bright
from a little dollop of leaves, caught it in his hand
like a tennis–ball, and leaped the hedge <i>uno impetu</i>.
Away he went, without stopping to think, through
the splashy sides of the spire–bed, almost as fast,
and quite as much frightened, as Rufus Huttonʼs
mare. When he got well out into the chase, he
turned, and began to laugh at himself; but a
great white owl flapped over a furze–bush, and
away went Cradock again. The light had gone
out very suddenly, as it often does in October, and
Cradock (whose wind was uncommonly good) felt
it his duty to keep good hours at the Rectory. So,
with the bright thing, whatever it was, poked anywhere
into his pocket, he came up the drive at
early tea–time, and got a glimpse through the
window of Amy.</p>
<p>“Couldnʼt have been Amy, at any rate”, he said
to himself, in extinction of some very vague ideas;
“I defy her to come at the pace I have done.
No, no; it must have been in answer to my desperate
prayer”.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Amy was gone, though her cup was there, when
Cradock entered the drawing–room. “Well”, he
thought, “how hard–hearted she is! But it cannot
matter now, much. Though I never believed she
would be so”.</p>
<p>Being allowed by his kind entertainers to do
exactly as he pleased, poor Cradock had led the
life of a hermit more than that of a guest among
them. He had taken what little food he required
in the garret he had begged for, or carried it with
him into the woods, where most of his time was
spent. Of course all this was very distressing to
the hospitable heart of Miss Doxy; but her brother
John would have it so, for so he had promised
Cradock. He could understand the reluctance of
one who feels himself under a ban to meet his
fellow–creatures hourly, and know that they all are
thinking of him. So it came to pass that Miss
Eudoxia, who now sat alone in the drawing–room,
was surprised as well as pleased at the entrance of
their refugee. As he hesitated a moment, in doubt
of his reception, she ran up at once, took both his
hands, and kissed him on the forehead.</p>
<p>“Oh, Cradock, my dear boy, this is kind of
you; most kind, indeed, to come and tell me at
once of your success. I need not ask—I know by
your face; the first bit of colour I have seen in
your poor cheeks this many a day”.</p>
<p>“Thatʼs because I have been running, Miss
Rosedew”.</p>
<p>“Miss Rosedew, indeed; and <i>now</i>, Cradock!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</SPAN></span>
Aunt Eudoxia, if you please, or Aunt Doxy, with
all my heart, now”.</p>
<p>He used to call her so, to tease her, in the happy
days gone by; and she loved to be teased by him,
her pet and idol.</p>
<p>“Dear Aunt Eudoxia, tell me truly, do you
think—I can hardly ask you”.</p>
<p>“Think what, Cradock? My poor Cradock; oh,
donʼt be like that”!</p>
<p>“Not that I did—I donʼt mean that—but that
it was possible for me to have done it on purpose”?</p>
<p>“Done what on purpose, Cradock”?</p>
<p>“Why, of course, that horrible, horrible thing”.</p>
<p>“<i>On purpose</i>, Cradock! My poor innocent!
Only let me hear any one dream of it, and if I
donʼt come down upon them”.</p>
<p>An undignified sentence, that of Aunt Doxyʼs,
as well as a most absurd one. How long has she
been in the habit of hearing people dream?</p>
<p>“Some one not only dreams it, some one actually
believes that I did it so”.</p>
<p>“The low wretch—the despicable—who”?</p>
<p>“My own father”.</p>
<p>I will not repeat what Miss Rosedew said, when
she recovered from her gasp, because her language
was stronger than becomes an elderly lady and the
sister of a clergyman, not to mention the Countess
of Driddledrum and Dromore, who must have been
wholly forgotten.</p>
<p>“Then you donʼt think, dear Aunt Eudoxia,
that—that Uncle John would believe it”?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What, my brother John! Surely you know
better than that, my dear”.</p>
<p>“Nor—nor—perhaps not even cousin Amy”?</p>
<p>“Amy, indeed! I do believe that child is perfectly
mad. I canʼt make her out at all, she is so
contradictory. She cries half the night, I am sure
of that; and she does not care for her school,
though she goes there; and her flowers she wonʼt
look at”.</p>
<p>Seeing that Cradockʼs countenance fell more
and more at all this, Miss Rosedew, who had long
suspected where his heart was dwelling, told him
a thing to cheer him up, which she had declared
she would never tell.</p>
<p>“Darling Amy is, you know, a very odd girl
indeed. Sometimes, when something happens very
puzzling and perplexing, some great visitation of
Providence, Amy becomes so dreadfully obstinate,
I mean she has such delightful faith, that we are
obliged to listen to her. And she is quite sure to be
right in the end, though at the moment, perhaps,
we laugh at her. And yet she is so shy, you can
never get at her heart, except by forgetting what
you are about. Well, we got at it somehow this
afternoon; and you should have heard what she
said. Her beautiful great eyes flashed upon us,
like the rock that was struck, and gushed like it,
before she ended. ‘Can we dare to think’, she
cried, ‘that our God is asleep like Baal—that He
knows not when He has chastened His children
beyond what they can bear? I know that he,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</SPAN></span>
who is now so trampled and crushed of Heaven, is
not tried thus for nothing. He shall rise again
more pure and large, and fresh from the hand of
God, and do what lucky men rarely think of—the
will of his Creator’. And, when John and I
looked at her, she fell away and cried terribly”.</p>
<p>Cradock was greatly astonished: it seemed so
unlike young Amy to be carried away in that
style. But her comfort and courage struck root
in his heart, and her warm faith thawed his despair.
Still he saw very little chance, at present, of doing
anything but starving.</p>
<p>“How wonderfully good you all are to me!
But I canʼt talk about it, though I shall think of
it as long as I live. I am going away to–night,
Aunt Doxy, but I must first see Uncle John”.</p>
<p>Of course Miss Rosedew was very angry, and
proved it to be quite impossible that Cradock
should leave them so; but, before very long, her
good sense prevailed, and she saw that it was for
the best. While he stayed there, he must either
persist to shut himself up in solitude, or wander
about in desert places, and never look with any
comfort on the face of man. So she went with
him to the door of the book–room, and left him
with none but her brother.</p>
<p>John Rosedew sat in his little room, with only
one candle to light him, and the fire gone out as
usual: his books lay all around him, even his best–loved
treasures, but his heart was not among them.
The grief of the old, though not wild and passionate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</SPAN></span>
as a young manʼs anguish, is perhaps more pitiable,
because more slow and hopeless. The young tree
rings to the keen pruning–hook, the old tree groans
to the grating saw; but one will blossom and bear
again, while the other gapes with canker. None of
his people had heard the rector quote any Greek or
Latin for a length of time unprecedented. When
a sweet and playful mind, like his, has taken to
mope and be earnest, the effect is far more sad
and touching than a stern manʼs melancholy. Ironworks
out of blast are dreary, but the family
hearth moss–grown is woeful.</p>
<p>Uncle John leaped up very lightly from his
brooding (rather than reading), and shook Cradock
Nowell by the hand, as if he never would let him
go, all the time looking into his face by the light of
a composite candle. It was only to know how he
had fared, and John read his face too truly.
Then, as Cradock turned away, not wanting to
make much of it, John came before him with
sadness and love, and his blue eyes glistened
softly.</p>
<p>“My boy, my boy”! was all he could say, or
think, for a very long time. Then Cradock told
him, without a tear, a sigh, or even a comment,
but with his face as pale as could be, and his
breath coming heavily, all that his father had said
to him, and all that he meant to do through it.</p>
<p>“And so, Uncle John”, he concluded, rising to
start immediately, “here I go to seek my fortune,
such as it will and must be. Good–bye, my best
and only friend. I am ten times the man I was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</SPAN></span>
yesterday, and shall be grander still to–morrow”.
He tried to pop off like a lively cork, but John
Rosedew would not have it.</p>
<p>“Young man, donʼt be in a hurry. It strikes
me that I want a pipe; and it also strikes me
that you will smoke one with me”.</p>
<p>Cradock was taken aback by the novelty of the
situation. He had never dreamed that Uncle
John could, under any possible circumstances, ask
him to smoke a pipe. He knew well enough that
the rector smoked a sacrificial pipe to Morpheus, in
a room of his own up–stairs; only one, while chewing
the cud of all he had read that day. But
Mr. Rosedew had always discouraged, as elderly
smokers do, any young aspirants to the mystic
hierophancy. It is not a vow to be taken rashly,
for the vow is irrevocable; except with men of
no principle.</p>
<p>And now he was to smoke there—he, a mere
bubble–blowing boy, to smoke in the middle of
deepest books, to fumigate a manuscript containing
a lifeful of learning, which John could no more
get on with; and—oh Miss Eudoxia!—to make
the hall smell and the drawing–room! The oxymoron
overcame him, and he took his pipe: John
Rosedew had filled it judiciously, and quite as a
matter of course; he filled his own in the self–same
manner, with a digital skill worthy of an ancient
fox trying on a foxglove. All the time, John
was shyly wondering at his own great force of
character.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Now”, said John Rosedew, still keeping it
up, “I have a drop of very old Schiedam—Schnapps
I think, or something—of which I want your
opinion; Crad, my boy, I want your opinion, before
we import any more. I am no judge of that sort
of thing; it is so long since I was at Oxford”.</p>
<p>Without more ado, he went somewhither, after
lighting Cradockʼs yard of clay—which the young
man burnt his fingers about, for he wouldnʼt let
the old man do it—and came back like a Bacchanal,
with a square black–jack beneath his arm,
and Jenny after him, wondering whether they had
not prayed that morning enough against the
devil. It was a good job Miss Amy was out of
the way; the old cat was bewitched, that was
certain, as well as her dear good master. Miss
Doxy was happy in knowing not that she was
called “the old cat” in the kitchen.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</SPAN></span></p>
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