<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1 class="p4">CRADOCK NOWELL</h1>
<p class="pc2 mid">A Tale of the New Forest.</p>
<p class="pc4 reduct">BY</p>
<p class="pc1 large"><i>RICHARD DODDRIDGE BLACKMORE</i>,</p>
<p class="pc4">“You have said: whether wisely or no, let the forest judge.”</p>
<p class="pc4 mid">IN THREE VOLUMES.</p>
<p class="pc1 mid">VOL. II.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="pc4 xlarge">CRADOCK NOWELL</p>
<p class="pc4">——◆——</p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER I.</h2>
<p class="p2">It was a Tuesday evening when Cradock Nowell
and Amy Rosedew signed and sealed, with the
moonʼs approval, their bond to one another. On
the following day, Dr. Hutton and wife were to
dine at Kettledrum Hall; and the distance being
considerable, and the roads so shockingly bad—“even
dangerous, I am told, to gentlemen who
have dined <i>with me</i>, sir,” said Kettledrum, in his
proudest manner—they had accepted his offer,
and that of Mrs. Kettledrum, which she herself
came over to make, that they should not think of
returning until after breakfast on Thursday. In
consequence of her husbandʼs hints, Rosa felt the
keenest interest in “that Mrs. Kettledrum. Leave
her to me, dear Rufus. You need not be afraid,
indeed. Trust me to get to the bottom of it.”
And so she exerted her probing skill upon her to
the uttermost, more even than ladies usually do,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
when they first meet one another. Of course,
there was no appearance of it, nothing so ill–bred
as that; it was all the sweetest refinement, and
the kindest neighbourly interest. They even became
affectionate in the course of half an hour,
and mutual confidence proved how strangely their
tastes were in unison. Nevertheless, each said
good–bye with a firm conviction that she had
outwitted the other. “Poor thing, she was so
stupid. What a bungler, to be sure! And to
think I could not see through her!”</p>
<p>But the return–match between these ladies, which
was to have come off at Kettledrum Hall—where,
by–the–by, there appeared a far greater performer
than either of them—this interesting display of
skill was deferred for the present; inasmuch as
Rosa was taken ill during the mysteries of her
toilet. It was nothing more serious, however, than
the “flying spasms,” as she always called them, to
which she had long been subject, and which (as
she often told her husband) induced her to marry
a doctor.</p>
<p>Rufus administered essence of peppermint, and
then a dose of magnesia; but he would not hear
of her coming with him, and he wanted to stop
at home with her, and see that she sat by the
fire. She in turn would have her way, and insisted
that Rue should go, “for he had made himself
such a very smart boy, that she was really
quite proud of him, and they would all be so disappointed,
and he was taller than Mr. Kettledrum,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
she felt quite sure he was.” The bearing of that
last argument I do not quite perceive, but dare not
say that she erred therein, and to Rue it was quite
conclusive. So Ralph Mohorn was sent for, the
pony–carriage countermanded, and Rufus set forth
upon Polly, whose oats were now restricted.</p>
<p>Kettledrum Hall stood forth on a rise, and made
the very most of itself. Expansive, and free, and
obtrusively honest, it seemed to strike itself on the
breast (as its master did) with both gables. A
parochial assessment committee, or a surveyor for
the property–tax, would have stuck on something
considerable, if they had only seen the outside of
it. Look at the balustrade that went (for it was
too heavy to run) all along the front of it, over the
basement windows. No stucco, either; but stone,
genuine stone, that bellied out like a row of Roman
amphoræ, or the calves of a first–rate footman.
After that, to see the portico, “decempedis metata,”
which “excipiebat Eurum”—not Arcton in this
climate. No wonder—although it was rotten inside,
and the whole of it mortgaged ten fathom
deep—that Bailey Kettledrum hit his breast, and
said, “Our little home, sir!”</p>
<p>“Your great home, you mean,” said Rufus;
“what a noble situation! You can see all over the
county.”</p>
<p>They had come to meet him down the hill, in
the kindest country fashion, Mr. and Mrs. Kettledrum,
like Jack and Jill going for water.</p>
<p>“Not quite that,” replied Kettledrum; “but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
we saw you with my binocular, between two and
three miles off, and became so anxious about Mrs.
Hutton, that I said to my wife, ‘Put your bonnet
on;’ and she only said, ‘Bailey, put your hat on;’
nothing more, sir, I assure you; nothing more, sir,
upon my honour.”</p>
<p>Rufus could not see exactly why there should
have been anything more, but he could not help
thanking them for their kindness, and saying to
himself, “What nice people! Quite an agricultural
life, I see, in spite of that grand mansion.”</p>
<p>“Now,” said Mr. Kettledrum, when Polly had
been committed to one of the stable–boys—but
Rufus still wanted to look at her, for he never
grew tired of admiring anything that belonged to
him, and he knew they wouldnʼt do her legs right—“now,
Dr. Hutton, you have come most kindly,
according to your promise, so as to give us an hour
or two to spare before the dinner–time. Shall we
take a turn with the guns? I can put my hand
on a covey; or shall we walk round the garden,
and have the benefit of your advice?”</p>
<p>Rufus looked in dismay at his “choice black
kerseymeres;” he had taken his “antigropelos” off,
and was proud to find not a flake on them. But
to think of going out shooting! He ought not to
have dressed before he left home, but he hated
many skinnings. And he could only guess the
distance from the lodge to this place. So he voted
very decidedly for a walk in the kitchen–garden.</p>
<p>Into this he was solemnly instituted, and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
beauties all pointed out to him. What a scene of
weeds and rubbish! How different from Bull
Garnetʼs dainty and trim quarters, or from his own
new style of work at Geopharmacy Lodge!
Rotten beansticks crackling about, the scum of
last summerʼs cabbages, toad–stools cropping up
like warts or arums rubbed with caustic, a fine
smell of potato–disease, and a general sense of
mildew; the wall–trees curled and frizzled up with
aphis, coccus, and honeydew; and the standards
scraggy, and full of stubs, canker, and American
blight, sprawling, slouching, hump–backed, and
stag–headed, like the sick ward of a workhouse
fighting with tattered umbrellas.</p>
<p>“Ah,” said Rufus, at his wits’ end for anything
to praise, “what a perfect paradise—for the songsters
of the grove.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” replied Mr. Kettledrum, “you should
hear the Dook admire it. ‘Kettledrum, my boy,’
he said, when he dined with me last Friday, ‘there
is one thing I do envy you—no, sir, neither your
most lady–like wife, nor yet your clever children,
although I admit that neither of them can be paralleled
in England—but, Kettledrum, it is—forgive
me—it is your kitchen–garden.’ ‘My kitchen–garden,
your grace,’ I replied, for I hate to brag
of anything, ‘it is a poor thing, my lord Dook,
compared to your own at Lionshill.’ ‘May I
be d—d,’ his grace replied, for I never shall break
him of swearing, ‘if I ever saw anything like it,
dear Kettledrum, and so I told the Duchess.’ And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
after all, you know, Dr. Hutton, a man may think
too little of what it has pleased God to give him.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Rufus to himself, “Iʼm blessed if
<i>you</i> do. But I donʼt like you any the worse for a
bit of brag. I have met great brags in India,
and most of them honest fellows. But I must peg
him down a bit. I must, I fear; it is my duty as
an enlightened gardener.”</p>
<p>“But you see, now,” said Bailey Kettledrum,
smacking his lips, and gazing into profundity,
“you see, my dear sir, there is nothing ‘ab omni
parte beatum;’ perhaps you remember the passage
in the heroic epistles of—ah, Cicero it was, I believe,
who wrote all those epistles to somebody.”</p>
<p>“No doubt of it,” said Rufus Hutton, who
knew more of Hindustani than of Latin and
Greek combined; “and yet St. Paul wrote
some.”</p>
<p>“Not in Latin, my dear sir; all St. Paulʼs
were Greek. ‘Nihil est,’ I now remember, ‘ab
omni parte beatum.’ I donʼt know how it scans,
which I suppose it ought to do, but that isnʼt my
look–out. Perhaps, however, you can tell me?”</p>
<p>“Iʼm blowed if I can,” said Rufus Hutton, in
the honesty of his mind; “and I am not quite sure
that it has any right to scan.”</p>
<p>“Well, I canʼt say; but I <i>think</i> it ought,”—he
was in the mists of memory, where most of the
trees have sensitive roots, though the branches are
not distinguishable. “However, that canʼt matter
at all; I see you are a classical scholar. And,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
Hutton, I like a classical scholar, because he can
understand me. But you see that these trees are
rather—ah, what is the expression for it——?”</p>
<p>“Cankered, and scabby, and scrubs.”</p>
<p>“That is to say—yes, I suppose, they would
crop the better, if that be possible, for a little root–pruning.”</p>
<p>“You have gathered the fruit for this year, I
presume?”</p>
<p>“Well, no, not quite that. The children have
had some, of course. But we are very particular
not to store too early.”</p>
<p>“I really donʼt think you need be.”</p>
<p>“Why, many people say, ‘let well alone;’ but
my gardener talks of making——”</p>
<p>“A jolly good bonfire of them, if he knows anything
of his business. Then drain the ground,
trench, and plant new ones.”</p>
<p>Mr. Kettledrum looked quite thunderstruck;
he caught hold of a tree to help him, and a great
cake of rotten bark, bearded with moss, came away
like the mask of a mummer. It was slimy on the
under side, and two of his fingers went through it.</p>
<p>“Nice state of things,” said Rufus, laughing.
“I suppose the Dook likes lepers?”</p>
<p>“Why, my dear sir, you donʼt mean to say——”</p>
<p>“That I would leave only one of them, and I
would hang the head–gardener upon it.”</p>
<p>That worthy was just coming round the corner,
to obtain the applause of a gentleman well known
to the <i>Gardenerʼs Chronicle</i>; but now he turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
round abruptly, and scratched his head, and
thought of his family.</p>
<p>When Rufus came down and entered the drawing–room,
he was perfectly gorgeous; for although
he had been in full dress for the main, he knew
better than to ride with his Alumbaggah waistcoat
on. There was nothing in all the three presidencies
to come up to that waistcoat. It would
hold Dr. Hutton and Rosa too, for they had stood
back to back and tried it. And Rufus vainly
sighed for the day when his front should come out
and exhaust it. He stole it, they say, from a
petty rajah, who came to a great durbar with it,
worn like an Oxford hood. At any rate, there it
was, and the back of Cashmere stuff would fit
either baby or giant. But the front, the front—oh,
bangles and jiminy! it is miles beyond me to
describe it.</p>
<p>All simple writers, from Job and Hesiod downwards,
convey an impression of some grand marvel,
not by direct description of it, which would be
feeble and achromatic, but by the rebound, recoil,
and redouble, from the judgment of some eye–witness.
If that eye–witness be self–possessed,
wide–awake, experienced, and undemonstrative, the
effect upon the readerʼs mind is as of a shell which
has struck the granite, burst there, and scattered
back on him. So will I, mistrusting the value of
my own impressions, give a faint idea of Rufus his
waistcoat, by the dount of it on that assembly.</p>
<p>The host was away for the moment somewhere,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
perhaps blowing up the butler, for his wife was
telling her sister how nervous and even fidgety
her beloved Bailey was growing; but Mr. Corklemore
was there, and came forth to salute the great
Rufus, when his heavy eyes settled upon the waistcoat,
and all his emotions exploded in a “haw” of
incredulous wonder. Mrs. Kettledrum rose at the
same instant, and introduced her sister.</p>
<p>“My sister, Dr. Hutton, whom I have so earnestly
longed to make acquainted with dear Mrs.
Hutton, Mrs. Nowell Corklemore; Mr. Corklemore,
I know, has had the pleasure of meeting you.
Georgie, dear, you will like her so—oh, goodness
gracious me!”</p>
<p>“I donʼt wonder you are surprised at me, Anna,”
exclaimed Mrs. Corklemore, with wonderful presence
of mind. “How stupid I am, to be sure!
Oh, Nowell, why didnʼt you tell me? How shameful
of you! But you never look at me now, I
think.” And she swept from the room in the
cleverest manner, as if something wrong in her
own dress had caused her sisterʼs ejaculation.</p>
<p>“Excuse me one moment,” said Mrs. Kettledrum,
taking her cue very aptly; and she ran out,
as if to aid her sister, but in reality to laugh herself
into hysterics.</p>
<p>After all there was nothing absurd, <i>per se</i>, in
Rufus Huttonʼs waistcoat, only it is not the fashion,
just at present, to wear pictorial raiment; but the
worthy doctor could not perceive any reason why
it should not be. He was pleased with the prospect<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
of creating a genuine sensation, and possibly
leading the mode; and having lost all chance of
realizing these modest hopes at Nowelhurst, why,
he must content himself with a narrower stage for
his triumphs. He had smuggled it from home,
however, without his wifeʼs permission: he had
often threatened her with its appearance, but she
always thought he was joking. And truly it required
some strength of mind to present it to
modern society, although it was a work of considerable
art, and no little value.</p>
<p>The material of it was Indian silk of the very
richest quality. It had no buttons, but golden
eyelets and tags of golden cowries. The background
of the whole was yellow, the foreground
of a brilliant green, portraying the plants of the
jungle. On the left bosom leaped and roared an
enormous royal tiger, with two splendid jewels,
called “catʼs–eyes,” flashing, and a pearl for every
fang. Upon the right side a hulking elephant
was turning tail ignominiously; while two officers
in the howdah poked their guns at the eyes of the
tiger. The eyes of the officers in their terror had
turned to brilliant emeralds, and the blood of the
tramping elephant was represented by seed rubies.
The mahout was cutting away in the distance,
looking back with eyes of diamonds.</p>
<p>Beyond a doubt, it required uncommonly fine
breeding, especially in a lady, to meet that waistcoat
at a dinner–party, and be entirely unconscious
of it. And perhaps there are but few women in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
England who would not contrive to lead up to the
subject, quite accidentally, of course, before the
evening was over.</p>
<p>The ladies came back as grave as judges; and
somehow it was managed (as if by the merest
oversight) that Dr. Hutton should lead to dinner,
not the lady of the house, whom, of course, he
ought to have taken, but Mrs. Nowell Corklemore.
He felt, as he crossed the hall with her, that the
beauty of his waistcoat had raised some artistic
emotion in a bosom as beautiful as its own. Oh,
Rufus, think of Rosa!</p>
<p>Let none be alarmed at those ominous words.
The tale of Cradock Nowellʼs life shall be pure as
that life itself was. The historian may be rough,
and blunt, and sometimes too intense, in the opinion
of those who look at life from a different
point of view. But be that as it will, his other
defects (I trust and pray) will chiefly be deficiencies.
We will have no poetical seduction, no
fascinating adultery, condemned and yet reprieved
by the writer, and infectious from his sympathy.
Georgiana Corklemore was an uncommonly clever
woman, and was never known to go far enough to
involve her reputation. She loved her child, and
liked her husband, and had all the respect for herself
which may abide with vanity. Nevertheless
she flirted awfully, and all married women hated
her. “Bold thing,” they called her, “sly good–for–nothing;
and did you see how she ogled?
Well, if I only carried on so! Oh, if I were only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
her husband! But, poor man, he knows no better.
Such a poor dear stick, you know. Perhaps that
is what makes her do it. And nothing in her at
all, when you come to think of it. No taste, no
style, no elegance! When <i>will</i> she put her back
hair up? And her child fit to put into long–clothes!
Did you observe her odious way of
putting her lips up, as if to be kissed? My dear,
I donʼt know how <i>you</i> felt; but I could scarcely
stay in the room with her.”</p>
<p>Nevertheless the ladies did stay, and took good
care to watch her, and used to say to her afterwards,
“Oh, if I were only like you, dear! Then
I need not be afraid of you; but you are—now
donʼt tell stories—<i>so</i> clever, and <i>so</i> attractive. As
if you did not know it, dear! Well, you <i>are</i> so
simple–minded. I am always telling my Looey
and Maggie to take you for their model, dear!”</p>
<p>On the present occasion, “Georgie Corklemore,”
as she called herself, set about flirting with Rufus
Hutton, not from her usual love of power, nor
even for the sake of his waistcoat, but because she
had an especial purpose, and a very important
one. The Kettledrum–cum–Corklemore conspiracy
was this—to creep in once more at Nowelhurst
Hall through the interest of Dr. Hutton. They
all felt perfectly certain that Cradock Nowell had
murdered his brother, and that the crime had been
hushed up through the influence of the family.
They believed that the head of that family, in his
passionate sorrow and anger, might be brought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
to their view of the subject, if he could only be
handled properly; and who could manage that
more adroitly than his first cousin once removed,
the beautiful Mrs. Corklemore? Only let her get
once invited, once inducted there, and the main difficulty
after that would be to apportion the prey
between them. They knew well enough that the
old entail expired with the present baronet; and
that he (before his marriage) held in fee pure and
simple all that noble property. His marriage–settlement,
and its effects, they could only inkle of;
but their heart was inditing of a good matter, and
Mr. Chope would soon pump Brockwood. Not
quite so fast, my Amphictyonics; a solicitor thirty
years admitted (though his original craft may not
be equal) is not to be sucked dry, on the surprise,
even by spongy young Chope. However, that was
a question for later consideration; and blood being
thicker than water, and cleaving more fast to the
ground, they felt that it would be a frightful injustice
if they were done out of the property.</p>
<p>Only two things need be added: one that Sir
Cradock had always disliked, and invited them but
for appearance’ sake; the other, that they fairly
believed in the righteousness of their cause, and
that Rufus Hutton could prove it for them, as the
principal witness tampered with.</p>
<p>Mrs. Corklemore was now, perhaps, twenty–five
years old, possibly turning thirty; for that lustrum
of a ladyʼs life is a hard one to beat the bounds of;
at any rate, she had never looked better than she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
did at the present moment. She was just at the
age to spread open, with the memory of shyness
upon them (like the dew when the sun is up), the
curving petals of beauty. Who understands the
magnetic current? Who can analyze ozone? Is
there one of us able to formularize the polarity of
light? Will there ever be an age when chemists
metaphysical will weigh—no more by troy
weight, and carat, as now the mode is, but by
subtle heart–gas—our liking for a woman? Let us
hope there never will be.</p>
<p>That soft Georgiana Corklemore, so lively, lovely,
and gushing, focussed all her fascinations upon
Rufus Hutton. She knew that she had to deal
with a man of much inborn acuteness, and who
must have seen a hundred ladies quite as fair as
Georgie. But had he seen one with her—well,
she knew not what to call it, though she thoroughly
knew how to use it? So she magnetized him with
all her skill; and Rufus, shrewdly suspecting her
object, and confiding in a certain triarian charge, a
certain thrust Jarnacian, which he would deliver
at the proper moment, allowed her to smile, and to
show her white teeth and dimples of volatile velvet
(so natural, so inevitable, at his playful, delightful
humour), and to loose whole quiverfuls of light
shafts from the arch flash under her eyelids. What
sweet simplicity she was, what innocent desire to
learn, what universal charity. “How dreadful, Dr.
Hutton! Oh, please not to tell me of it! How
could any ladies do it? I should have fainted at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
once, and died half an hour afterwards.” She
turned up her large mild eyes, deeply beaming with
centralized light, in a way that said, “If I died, is
there any one who would think it a very, very
great pity?”</p>
<p>Rufus had been describing historically, not dramatically,
the trials of the ladies, when following
their regiment during a sudden movement in the
perils of the mutiny. With a manʼs far stiffer
identity, he did not expect or even imagine that
his delicate listener would be there, and go
through every hour of it. But so it was, and without
any sham; although she was misusing her
strange sympathetic power. Mrs. Nowell Corklemore
would have made a very great actress; she
had so much self–abandonment, such warm introjection,
and hot indignant sympathy; and yet
enough of self–reservation to hoop them all in with
judgment. Meanwhile Mrs. Kettledrum, a lady of
ordinary sharpness, like a good pudding–apple—Georgie
being a peach of the very finest quality—she,
I say, at the top of the table was watching
them very intently—delighted, amused, indignant;
glad that none of her children were there to store
up Auntieʼs doings. As for Mr. Corklemore, he
was quite accustomed to it; and looking down
complacently upon the little doctor, thought to
himself, “How beautifully my Georgie will cold–shoulder
him, when we have got all we want out
of the conceited chattering jackanapes.”</p>
<p>When the ladies were gone, Mr. Bailey Kettledrum,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
who had no idea of playing dummy even to
Mrs. Corklemore, made a trick or two from his own
hand.</p>
<p>“Corklemore, my dear fellow, you think we are
all tee–totallers. On with the port, if you please,
‘cessantem Bibuli Consulis amphoram,’ never shall
forget that line. The bibulous consul, eh! Capital
idea. Corklemore, you can construe that?”</p>
<p>“Haw! Perhaps I canʼt. Really donʼt know;
they beat a heap of stuff into me when I was a
very small boy; and it was like whipping—ha,
haw, something like whipping——”</p>
<p>“Eggs,” said Rufus Hutton, “all came to
bubbles, eh?”</p>
<p>“Not at all, sir, not at all; you entirely misunderstand
me. I mean that it was similar to—to
the result produced by the whipping of a top.”</p>
<p>“Only made your head go round,” said Mr.
Kettledrum, winking at Rufus; and thenceforth
had established a community of interest in the
baiting of “long Corklemore.” “Well, at any
rate,” he continued, “Hutton is a scholar—excuse
my freedom, my dear sir; we are such rustics
here, that I seldom come across a man who appreciates
my quotations. You are a great acquisition,
sir, the very greatest, to this neighbourhood. How
can we have let you remain so long without unearthing
you?”</p>
<p>“Because,” said Rufus to himself, “you did not
happen to want me; when are you going to offer
to introduce me to ‘the Dook<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>?’”</p>
<p>“And now, gentlemen,” continued Mr. Kettledrum,
rising, swelling his chest out, and thumping
it athletically, “it is possible that I may be wrong;
I have never been deaf to conviction; but if I am
wrong, gentlemen, the fault is in yourselves. Mark
me now, I am ready, such is the force of truth, I
am ready here at my own board (humble as it is)
once for all to admit that the fault is in yourselves.
But the utterance I swell with, the great thought
that is within me, is strife—no, I beg your pardon—is—is—rife
and strongly inditing of a certain
lady, who is an honour to her sex. I rise to the
occasion, friends; I say an honour to her sex, and
a blessing to the other one. Gentlemen, no peroration
of mine is equal in any way to the greatness
of the occasion; could I say, with Cicero, ‘Veni,
vidi, vici,’ where would be my self–approval? I
mean—you understand me. It is the privilege of
a man in this blessed country, the first gem of the
ocean—no, I donʼt mean that; it applies, I believe,
to Scotland, and the immortal Burns—but this, sir,
I will say, and challenge contradiction, a Briton,
sir, a Briton, never, never, never will be free! And
now, sir, in conclusion, is there one of you, let me
ask, who will not charge his eyes, gentlemen, and
let his glass run over——”</p>
<p>“Haw,” cried Mr. Corklemore, “charge his
glass, come, Kettledrum, and let his eyes run over—haw—I
think that is the way we read it, Dr.
Hutton.”</p>
<p>“Gentlemen, I sit down; finding it impossible<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
to obtain an adequate bearing, I close my poor
attempt at cleansing my bosom of the perilous
stuff, sir—you know the rest—the health of Mrs.
Hutton, that most remarkable children—excuse
me, most remarkable woman, whose children, I am
quite convinced, will be an honour to their age and
sex. Port of ‘51, gentlemen; a finer vintage
than ‘47.”</p>
<p>He had told them that it was ‘34, but both knew
better; and now “in vino veritas.”</p>
<p>At last Mr. Bailey Kettledrum had hit the weak
point of Rufus, and, what was more, he perceived
it. Himself you might butter and soap for a
month, and he would take it at all its value; but
magnify his Rosa, exalt the name of his Rosa, and
you had him at discretion.</p>
<p>“Remarkable, sir,” he inquired, with a twinkle
of fruity port stealing out from his keen little eyes,
“you really do injustice; so many ladies are remarkable——”</p>
<p>“Haw, well, I never heard——”</p>
<p>“Confound you, Corklemore,” said Kettledrum
to him aside, “can you never hold your tongue?
Sir,”—to Rufus—“I beg your pardon, if I said
‘remarkable;’ I meant to say, sir, ‘<i>most</i> remarkable!’
The most remarkable lady”—this to Corklemore,
in confidence—“I have ever been privileged
to meet. ‘What children,’ I said to my wife,
but yesterday, ‘what children they will be blest
with!’ Oh, heʼs a lucky dog. The luckiest dog
in the world, my boy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>However, they were not so very far from the
sloping shores of sobriety when they rejoined the
ladies, and made much of the small Misses Kettledrum,
tidy children, rather pretty, and all of the
pink ribbon pattern. After some melting melodies
from soft Georgieʼs lips and fingers, Mrs. Kettledrum
said,</p>
<p>“Oh, Dr. Hutton, do you ever play chess? We
are such players here; all except my poor self; I
am a great deal too stupid.”</p>
<p>“I used to play a little when I was in India.
We are obliged to play all sorts of games in India.”
Dr. Hutton piqued himself not a little on his skill
in the one true game. At a sign from their mother,
the small Kettledrums rushed for the board most
zealously, and knocked their soft heads together.
Mrs. Corklemore was declared by all to be the only
antagonist worthy of an Indian player, and she sat
down most gracefully, protesting against her presumption.
“Just to take a lesson, you know; only
to take a lesson, dear. Oh, please, donʼt let any
one look at me.” Rufus, however, soon perceived
that he had found his match, if not his superior, in
the sweet impulsive artless creature, who threw
away the game so neatly when she was quite sure
of it.</p>
<p>“Oh, poor me! Now, I do declare—Isnʼt it
most heartbreaking? I am such a foolish thing.
Oh, can you be so cruel?”</p>
<p>Thrilling eyes of the richest grey trembled with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
dewy radiance, as Rufus coolly marched off the
queen, and planted his knight instead of her.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Corklemore, can I relent? You are far
too good a player.” The loveliest eyes, the most
snowy surge, in the “mare magnum” of ladies,
would never have made that dry Rue Hutton, well
content with his Rosa, give away so much as the
right to capture a pawn in passing.</p>
<p>Now observe the contrariety, the want of pure
reason, the confusion of principle—I am sorry and
ashamed, but I canʼt express these things in English,
for the language is rich in emotion, but a
pauper in philosophy—the distress upon the
premises of the cleverest womanʼs mind. She had
purposely thrown her queen in his way; but she
never forgave him for taking it.</p>
<p>A glance shot from those soft bright eyes, when
Rufus could not see them, as if the gentle evening
star, Venus herself, all tremulous, rushed, like a
meteor, up the heavens, and came hissing down on
a poor manʼs head.</p>
<p>She took good care to win the next game, for
policy allowed it; and then, of course, it was too
late to try the decisive contest.</p>
<p>“Early hours. Liberty Hall, Liberty Hall at
Kettledrum! Gentlemen stay up, and smoke if
they like. But early hours, sir, for the ladies.
We value their complexions. They donʼt. That I
know. Do you now, my dearest? No, of course
you donʼt.” This was Mr. Kettledrum.</p>
<p>“Except for your sake, darling,” said Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
Kettledrum, curtseying, for the children were all
gone to bed ever so long ago.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Georgie, coming forward, because
she knew her figure would look well with three
lamps upon it; such a figure of eight! “my
opinion is never worth having, I know, because I
feel so much; but I pronounce——” here she stood
up like Portia, with a very low–necked dress on—“gentlemen,
and ladies, I pronounce that one is
quite as bad as the other.”</p>
<p>“Haw!” said Nowell Corklemore. And so
they went to bed. And Rufus Hutton wondered
whether they ever had family prayers.</p>
<p>When all the rest were at breakfast, in came
Mrs. Corklemore, looking as fresh as daybreak.</p>
<p>“Oh, I am so ashamed of myself. What a
sluggard you will think me! What is it in the
divine song of that great divine, Dr. Watts?
Nowell, dear, you must not scold me. I cannot
bear being scolded, because I never have tit for tat.
Good morning, dearest Anna; how is your headache,
darling? Oh, Dr. Hutton, I forgot! No
wonder I overlooked you. I shall never think
much of you again, because I beat you at chess so.”</p>
<p>“Game and game,” said Rufus, solemnly, “and
I ought to have won that last one, Mrs. Corklemore;
you know I ought.”</p>
<p>“To be sure, to be sure. Oh, of course I do.
But—a little thing perwented him—his antagonist
was too good, sir. Ah, weʼll play the conqueror
some day; and then the tug of war comes. Oh,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
Anna, I am so conceited! To think of my beating
Dr. Hutton, the best player in all India.”</p>
<p>“Well, darling, we know all that. And we
must not blame you therefore for lying in bed till
ten oʼclock.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” said Rufus, with a groan, “do look at
ladies’ logic! Mrs. Corklemore gained one game
out of two—only because I was—ah–hem, I mean
by her very fine play—and now she claims absolute
victory; and Mrs. Kettledrum accepts it as a
premise for a negative conclusion, which has nothing
on earth to do with it.”</p>
<p>But Rufus got the worst of that protest. He
tilted too hard at the quintain. All came down
upon him at once, till he longed for a cigar. Then
Mrs. Corklemore sympathized with him, arose, their
breakfast being over, and made him a pretty curtsey.
She was very proud of her curtseys; she
contrived to show her figure so.</p>
<p>“Confound that woman,” thought Rufus, “I
can never tell when she is acting. I never met her
like in India. And thank God for that same.”</p>
<p>She saw that her most bewitching curtsey was
entirely thrown away upon him; for he was thinking
of his Rosa, and looking out for the good
mare, Polly.</p>
<p>“Dr. Hutton, I thank you for your condescension,
in giving me that lesson. You let me win that last
game out of pure good nature. I shall always
appreciate it. Meanwhile I shall say to every one—ʼOh,
do you know, Dr. Hutton and I play even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>?’
taking very good care meanwhile never to play
again with you. Shocking morality! Yes, very
shocking. But then I know no better, do I,
Nowell, dear?”</p>
<p>“Haw! Well, Georgie, I am not so sure of
that. My wife is absolute nature, sir, simple,
absolute—haw—unartificial nature. But unartificial
nature is, in my opinion—haw—yes, a very
wise nature, sometimes.”</p>
<p>“Haw!” said his wife, exactly like him, while
everybody laughed. Then she stood upon tiptoe to
kiss him, she was so unartificial, even before the
company. All the pretty airs and graces of a fair
Parisian, combined with all the domestic snugness
of an English wife! What a fine thing it is to
have a yoke–mate with a playful, charming
manner!</p>
<p>“Good–bye, Dr. Hutton. We are on the wing,
as you are. I fear you will never forgive me for
tarnishing your laurels so.”</p>
<p>Tarnishing laurels! What wonderful fellow so
ingeniously mixed metaphors?</p>
<p>“Now or never,” thought Rufus Hutton; “she
has beaten me at chess, she thinks. Now, Iʼll have
the change out of her. Only let her lead up to it.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Corklemore, we will fight it out, upon
some future occasion. I never played with a lady
so very hard to beat.”</p>
<p>“Ah, you mean at Nowelhurst. But we never
go there now. There is—I ought to say, very
likely, there are mistakes on both sides—still there<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
seems to exist some <i>prejudice</i> against us.—Anna,
dear, you put a lump of sugar too much in my tea.
I am already too saccharine.”</p>
<p>“Well, dear, I put exactly what you always tell
me. And you sent your cup for more afterwards.”</p>
<p>“Matter of fact animal—how can she be my
sister?” Georgie only muttered this. Rufus
Hutton did not catch it. Mr. Garnet would have
done so.</p>
<p>“Now is the time,” thought Rufus again, as she
came up to shake hands with him, not a bit afraid
of the morning sun upon her smooth rich cheeks,
where the colour was not laid on in spots, but
seemed to breathe up from below, like a lamp
under water. Outside he saw pet Polly scraping
great holes in the gravel, and the groom throwing
all his weight on the curb to prevent her from
bolting homewards. “Hang it, she wonʼt stand
that,” he cried; “her mouth is like a sea–anemone.
Take her by the snaffle–rein. Canʼt you see, you
fool, that she hasnʼt seven coats to her mouth, like
you? Excuse my opening the window,” he apologized
to Mrs. Corklemore, “and excuse my speaking
harshly, for if I had not stopped him, he would
have thrown my horse down, and I value my
Polly enormously.”</p>
<p>“Especially after her behaviour the other night
in the forest. It is the same with all you gentlemen;
the worse you are treated, the more grateful
you are. Oh yes, we heard of it; but we
wonʼt tell Mrs. Hutton<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“No, indeed, I hope you wonʼt. I should be
very sorry for her to get even a hint of it.”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” laughed Georgie, “to be sure
we will keep the secret, for ever so many reasons;
one of them being that Dr. Hutton would be
obliged to part with Miss Polly, if her mistress
knew of her conduct. But I must not be so
rude. I see you want to be off quite as much
as fair Polly does. Ah, what a thing it is to
have a happy home!”</p>
<p>Here Mrs. Corklemore sighed very deeply. If
a woman who always has her own way, and a
woman who is always scheming, can be happy,
she, Georgie, must be so; but she wanted to stir
compassion.</p>
<p>“Come,” she said, after turning away, for she
had such a jacket on—the most bewitching thing;
it was drawn in tight at her round little waist,
and seemed made like a horseʼs body–clothes, on
purpose for her to trot out in,—“come, Dr. Hutton,
say good–bye, and forgive me for beating
you.” Simple creature, of course she knew not
the “sacra fames” of chess–players.</p>
<p>“We must have our return–match. I wonʼt
say ‘good–bye’ until you have promised me that.
Shall it be at my house?”</p>
<p>“No. There is only one place in the world
where I would dare to attack you again, and
that is Nowelhurst Hall.”</p>
<p>“And why there, more than anywhere else?”</p>
<p>“Because there is a set of men there, with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
which I can beat anybody. I believe I could
beat Morphy, with those men at Nowelhurst.
Ah! you think me, I see, grossly and stupidly
superstitious. Well, perhaps I am. I do sympathise
so with everything.”</p>
<p>“I hope we may meet at Nowelhurst,” replied
Rufus, preparing his blow of Jarnac, “when they
have recovered a little from their sad distress.”</p>
<p>“Ah, poor Sir Cradock!” exclaimed the lady,
with her expressive eyes tear–laden, “how I have
longed to comfort him! It does seem so hard
that he should renounce the sympathy of his relatives
at such a time as this. And all through
some little wretched dissensions in the days when
he misunderstood us! Of course we know that
you cannot do it; that you, a comparative stranger,
cannot have sufficient influence where the dearest
friends have failed. My husband, too, in his
honest pride, is very, very obstinate, and my sister
quite as bad. They fear, I suppose,—well, it
does seem ridiculous, but you know what vulgar
people say in a case of that sort—they actually
fear the imputation of being fortune–hunters!”
Georgie looked so arrogant in her stern consciousness
of right, that Rufus said, and for the
moment meant it, “How absurd, to be sure!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Georgie, confidentially, and in the
sweetest of all sweet voices, “between you and
me, Dr. Hutton, for I speak to you quite as to
an old friend of the family, whom you have
known so long”—(“Holloa,” thought Rufus, “in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
the last breath I was a ‘comparative stranger!’”)—“I
think it below our dignity to care for such
an absurdity; and that now, as good Christians,
we are bound to sink all petty enmities, and
comfort the poor bereaved one. If you can contribute
in any way to this act of Christian charity,
may I rely upon your good word? But for the
world, donʼt tell my husband; he would be so
angry at the mere idea.”</p>
<p>“I will do my best, Mrs. Corklemore; you may
rely upon that.”</p>
<p>“Oh, thank you, thank you! I felt quite sure
that you had a generous heart. I should have
been so disappointed—perhaps, after all, we shall
play our next game of chess at Christmas with the
men I am so lucky with. And then, look to yourself,
Dr. Hutton.”</p>
<p>“I trust you will find a player there who can
give me a pawn and two moves. If you beat him,
you may boast indeed.”</p>
<p>“What player do you mean?” asked Georgie,
feeling rather less triumphant. “Any Indian
friend of yours?”</p>
<p>“Yes, one for whom I have the very greatest
regard. For whose sake, indeed, I first renewed
my acquaintance with Sir Cradock, because I bore
a message to him; for the Colonel is a bad correspondent.”</p>
<p>“The Colonel! I donʼt understand you.” As
she said these words, how those eyes of hers, those
expressive eyes, were changing! And her lovely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
jacket, so smart and well cut, began to “draw”
over the chest.</p>
<p>“Did you not know,” asked Rufus, watching her
in a way that made her hate him worse than when
he took her queen, “is it possible that you have
not heard, that Colonel Nowell, Clayton Nowell,
Sir Cradockʼs only brother, is coming home this
month, and brings his darling child with him?”
Now for your acting, Georgie; now for your self–command.
We shall admire, henceforth, or laugh
at you, according to your present conduct.</p>
<p>She was equal to the emergency. She commanded
her eyes, and her lips, and bosom, after
that one expansion, even her nerves, to the utmost
fibre—everything but her colour. The greatest
actor ever seen, when called on to act in real life,
can never command colour if the skin has proper
spiracles. The springs of our heart will come up
and go down, as God orders the human weather.
But she turned away, with that lily–whiteness, because
she knew she had it, and rushed up enthusiastically
to her sister at the end of the room.</p>
<p>“Dear Anna, darling Anna, oh, I am so delighted!
We have been so wretched about poor
Sir Cradock. And now his brother is coming to
mind him, with such delightful children! We
thought he was dead, oh, so many years! What a
gracious providence!”</p>
<p>“Haw!” said Nowell Corklemore.</p>
<p>“The devil!” said Bailey Kettledrum, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
Rufus caught the re–echo, but hoped it might be a
mistake.</p>
<p>Then they all came forward, gushing, rushing,
rapturous to embrace him.</p>
<p>“Oh, Dr. Hutton, surely this is too good news
to be true!”</p>
<p>“I think not,” said Rufus Hutton, mystical and
projecting, “I really trust it is not. But I thought
you must have heard it, from your close affinity,
otherwise I should have told you the moment I
came in; but now I hope this new arrival will heal
over all—make good, I mean, all family misunderstandings.”</p>
<p>“Colonel Clayton Nowell,” said Mr. Nowell
Corklemore, conclusively, and with emphasis, “Colonel
Clayton Nowell was shot dead outside the
barracks at Mhow, on the 25th day of June, sir, in
the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred
and fifty–six. Correct me, sir, if I am wrong.”</p>
<p>“Then,” said Rufus, “I venture to correct you
at once.”</p>
<p>“Shot, sir,” continued Corklemore, “as I am, I
may say—haw,—in a position to prove, by a man
called Abdoollah Manjee, believed to be a Mussulman.
Colonel Clayton Nowell, sir, commanding
officer in command of Her Majestyʼs Companyʼs
native regiment, N<sup>o</sup>· One hundred and sixty–three,
who was called,—excuse me, sir, designated, the
‘father of his regiment,’ because he had so many
illegitimate—haw, I beg your pardon, ladies—because<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
of his—ha, yes,—patriarchal manners, sir,
and kindly disposition,—he—haw, where was I?”</p>
<p>“I am sure I canʼt say,” said Rufus.</p>
<p>“No, sir, my memory is more tenacious than
that of any man I meet with. He, Colonel
Clayton Nowell, sir, upon that fatal morning, was
remonstrated with by the two—ah, yes, the two
executors of his will—upon his rashness in riding
forth to face those carnal, I mean to say, those incarnate
devils, sir. ‘Are you fools enough,’ he
replied, ‘to think that <i>my</i> fellows would hurt
<i>me</i>? Give me a riding–whip, and be ready with
plasters, for I shall thrash them before I let
them come back.’ Now isnʼt every word of that
true?”</p>
<p>“Yes, almost every word of it,” replied Rufus,
now growing excited.</p>
<p>“Well, sir, he took his favourite half–bred—for
he understood cross–breeding thoroughly—and he
rode out at the side–gate, where the heap of sand
was; ‘Coming back,’ he cried to the English
sentry, ‘coming back in half an hour, with all my
scamps along of me. Keep the coppers ready.’
And with that he spurred his brown and black
mare; and no man saw him alive thereafter, except
the fellows who shot him. Haw!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Rufus Hutton, “one man saw him
alive, after they shot him in the throat, and one
man saved his life; and he is the man before
you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“What you, Dr. Hutton! What you! Oh, how
grateful we ought to be to you.”</p>
<p>“Thank you. Well, I donʼt quite see that,”
Rufus replied, most dryly. Then he corrected
himself: “You know I only did my duty.”</p>
<p>“And his son?” inquired Georgie, timidly, and
with sympathy, but the greatest presence of mind.
She had stood with her hands clasped, and every
emotion (except the impossible one of selfishness)
quivering on her sweet countenance; and now she
was so glad, oh, so glad, she could never tell you.
“His poor illegitimate son, Dr. Hutton? Will he
bring the poor child home with him? How glad
we shall be to receive him!”</p>
<p>“The child he brings with him is Eoa, dear
natural odd Eoa, his legitimate daughter.”</p>
<p>“Then you know her, Dr. Hutton; you could
depose to her identity?”</p>
<p>A very odd question; but some women have
almost the gift of prophecy.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes! I should rather think so. I have
known her since she was ten years old.”</p>
<p>“And now they are coming home. How pleasant!
How sweet to receive them, as it were from
the dead! By the overland route, I suppose, and
with a lac of rupees?”</p>
<p>“No,” said the badgered Rufus, “you are wrong
in both conjectures. They come round the Cape,
by the clipper–ship <i>Aliwal</i>; and with very few
rupees. Colonel Nowell has always been extravagant,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
a wonderfully fine–hearted man, but a hand
that could never hold anything—except, indeed, a
friendʼs.”</p>
<p>By the moisture in Rue Huttonʼs eyes, Georgie
saw that her interests would fare ill with him, if
brought into competition with those of Colonel
Nowell. Meanwhile Polly was raving wild, and it
took two grooms to hold her, and the white froth
dribbling down her curb was to Rufus Hutton as
the foam of the sea to a sailor. He did love a
tearing gallop, only not through the thick of the
forest.</p>
<p>“Good–bye, good–bye! I shall see you soon.
Thank you, I will take a cheroot. But I only
smoke my own. Good–bye! I am so much obliged
to you. You have been so very kind. Mrs.
Hutton will be miserable until you come over to
us. Good–bye; once more, good–bye!”</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton, you see, was a man of the world,
and could be false “on occasion.” John Rosedew
could never have made that speech on the back of
detected falsehood. Away went Polly, like a gale
of wind; and Rufus (who was no rogue by nature,
only by the force of circumstances, and then could
never keep to it), he going along twenty miles an
hour, set his teeth to the breeze, which came down
the funnel of his cigar as down a steamerʼs chimney,
stuck his calves well into Pollyʼs sides, and felt
himself a happy man, going at a rocketʼs speed, to
a home of happiness. All of us who have a home
(and unless we leave our heart there, whenever we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
go away, we have no home at all), all of us who
have a hole in this shifting sandy world—the sand
as of an hour–glass—but whence we have spun
such a rope as the devil can neither make nor
break—I mean to say, we, all who love, without
any hems, and haws, and rubbish, those who are
only our future tense (formed from the present by
adding “so”)—all of us who are lucky enough, I
believe we may say good enough, to want no temporal
augment from the prefix of society, only to
cling upon the tree to the second aorist of our
children, wherein the root of the man lurks, the
grand indefinite so anomalous; all these fellows,
if they can anyhow understand this sentence,
will be glad to hear that Rufus Hutton had a jolly
ride.</p>
<p>Rosa waited at the gate; why do his mareʼs
shoes linger? Rosa ran in, and ran out again, and
was sure that she heard something pelting down
the hill much too fast, for her sake! but who
could blame him when he knew he was coming
home at last? Then Rosa snapped poor Jonahʼs
head off, for being too thick to hear it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, a mighty senate was held at Kettledrum
Hall, Mrs. Corklemore herself taking the
curule chair. After a glimpse of natural life, and
the love of man and woman, we want no love of
money; so we lift our laps (like the Roman
envoy) and shake out war with the whole of
them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Fools who think that life needs gilding—life,
whose flowing blood contains every metal but
gold and silver—because they clog and poison it!
Blessed is he who earns his money, and spends it
all on a Saturday. He looks forward to it throughout
the week; and the beacon of life is hope, even
as God is its pole–star.</p>
<hr>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />