<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<p class="p2">Dr. Huttonʼs baby was getting better, and
Rosa, who had been, as the nurse said, “losing
ground so sadly, poor dear,” was beginning to pick
up her crumbs again. Therefore Rufus, who (in
common with Rosa and all the rest of the household)
regarded that baby as the noblest and
grandest sublimation of humanity, if not as the
final cause of this little worldʼs existence, was beginning
now to make up his mind that he really
might go to London that week, without being (as
his wife declared he must be, if he even thought
about it) cruel, inhuman, unfatherly, utterly void
of all sense of duty, not to say common affection.
And she knew quite well what he wanted. All he
wanted was to go and see Mr. Riversʼs peach–trees
in blossom, as if that was such a sight as her baby.
Yes, <i>her</i> baby, maʼs own darling, a dove of a
dumpling dillikins; to think that his own pa should
prefer nasty little trees without a hair on them,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
and that didnʼt even know what bo meant, to the
most elegant love of a goldylocks that ever was,
was, was!</p>
<p>Master Goldylocks had received, from another
quarter, a less classical, and less pleasing, but perhaps
(from an objective point of view) a more
truthful and unprismatic description of the hair it
pleased God to give him.</p>
<p>“Governorʼs carrots, and no mistake,” cried
Mrs. OʼGaghan the moment she saw him, which,
of course, was upon his first public appearance—catch
Biddy out of the way when any baby, of
any father or mother she had ever heard of, was
submitted even to the most privileged inspection—”knew
he must have ‘em, of course. You niver
can conquer that, maʼam, if your own hair was
like a sloe, and you tuk me black briony arl the
time. Hould him dacent, will ye, nurse? Not
slot his head down that fashion! He donʼt want
more blood in his hair, child. Oh yes, I can see,
maʼam! Niver knowed more nor two wi’ that red–hot
poker colour, colour of the red snuff they calls
‘Irish blackguard’ in the top of a hot shovel;
and one of the two were Mr. Hutton, maʼam,
saving your presence to spake of it; and the other
were of Tim Brady, as were hung at the crossroads,
near Clonmel, for cutting the throat of his
grandmother.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mary, take her away. What a horrid
woman!”</p>
<p>Here Mrs. OʼGaghan was marched away, amid<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
universal indignation, which she could not at all
understand. But she long had borne against Rufus
Hutton the bitterest of all bitter spites (such as
only an Irishwoman can bear), for the exposure
of her own great mistake, and the miserable result
which (as she fully believed) had sprung from all
his meddling. And yet she was a “good–hearted”
woman. But a good heart is only the wad upon
powder, when a violent will is behind it.</p>
<p>Not to attach undue importance to Biddyʼs prepossessions,
yet to give every facility for a verdict
upon the question, I am bound to state what an
old–young lady, growing every month more satirical,
because nobody would have her, yet quite
unconscious that the one drawback was the main
cause of the other (for all men hate sarcastic
women),—how tersely she expressed herself.</p>
<p>“Ridiculous likeness! Was he born with two
cheroots in his mouth?”</p>
<p>But a lady, who would marry for ever because
she was so soft and nice, came to see darling baby
again, the moment she was quite assured that he
was equal to the interview, having denied herself
from day to day, although it had affected her appetite,
and was telling upon her spirits. Neither
would she come alone—that would be too selfish:
she must make a gala day of it, and gratify her
relatives. So Mrs. Hutton had the rapture of
sitting behind her bedroom curtain, and seeing no
less than three carriages draw up in a thundering
manner, while Rufus was in the greatest fright<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
that they would not find room to turn, but must
cut up his turf. Luckily the roller was in the
way; or else those great coachmen, who felt themselves
lowered by coming to a place of that size,
would have had their revenge on the sod. The
three carriages were, of course, that of Nowelhurst
Hall in the van (no pun, if you please), with two
noble footmen behind it, and Georgie in state
inside. Then the “Kettledrum rattletrap,” as
the hypercritical termed it, with Mr. Kettledrum
driving, and striking statuesque attitudes for the
benefit of the horses, and Mrs. Kettledrum inside,
entreating him not to be rash. Last of all the
Coo Nest equipage, a very neat affair, with Mr.
Corklemore inside, wanting to look at his wife in
the distance, and wondering what she was up to.</p>
<p>“Oh, such shocking taste, I know,” cried
Georgie, directly the lower order were supposed
to be out of hearing, “horribly bad taste to come
in such force; but what could we do, Dr. Hutton?
There was my sister, there was my husband, there
was my own silly self, all waiting, as for a bulletin,
to know when baby would receive. And so, at
the very first moment, by some strange coincidence,
here we are all at once. And I do hope
darling Rosa will allow <i>some</i> of us to come in.”</p>
<p>“Jonah,” shouted Rufus Hutton, going away
to the door very rudely (according to our ideas,
but with Anglo–Indian instincts), “see that all
those men have beer.”</p>
<p>“Plaise, sir, there bainʼt none left. Brewer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
hainʼt a been since you drank.” As every one in the
house heard this, dear Georgie had some revenge.</p>
<p>However, babe Rufus received his ovation; and
the whole thing went off well, as most things do
in the counties of England, when plenty of good
wine produces itself. Lunch was ready in no time;
and, as all had long ago assented to Mrs. Corklemoreʼs
most unselfish proposition that she, as privileged
of pet Rosa, should just steal up–stairs for
a minute, and then come down again—after giving
notice, of course, that dear baby should have all
his lace on—the pleasant overture of the host was
accepted with little coyness—</p>
<p>“Let us suppose that we have dined: because
the roads are so very bad. Let us venture upon a
light dessert. I have a few pears, even now in
April, which I am not altogether afraid to submit
to the exquisite taste of ladies,—‘Madame Milletʼ
and ‘Josephine.’ May we think that we have
dined?”</p>
<p>As the company not only thought, but felt that
they had made an uncommonly good dinner, this
little proposal did pleasant violence to their sense
of time. It would be so charmingly novel to think
that they had dined at three oʼclock! Oh, people
of brief memory! For Kettledrum Hall and Coo
Nest loved nothing better than to dine at two;
which, perhaps, is two hours too late, according to
nature <i>versus</i> fashion.</p>
<p>“For such an occasion as this,” said Rufus,
under all the excitement of hospitality multiplied<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
by paternity, “we will have a wine worth talking
of. Clicquot, of course, and Paxarette for the
ladies, if they prefer it; which perhaps they will
do because it is sweeter than port. But I do hope
that some will deign to taste my 1820, Presidentʼs
unrefreshed.”</p>
<p>Georgieʼs pretty lip came out, like the curl of an
opening convolvulus; to think of offering her sweet
wine, when choice port was forthcoming. There
are few better judges of a good glass of port than
Mrs. Nowell Corklemore.</p>
<p>“Port, sir, for my wife, if you please. She
likes a rather dry wine, sir, but with plenty of
bouquet. There is no subject, I may say, in
which she has—ha, haw—a more profound
capacity.”</p>
<p>“My dear Nowell, why you are perfectly calumnious.
Thank you, no champagne. It spoils the
taste of—your beautiful water. How dreadfully
we were alarmed in Ringwood. We all but drove
over a child. What a providential escape! I
have scarcely yet recovered it. It has made me
feel so nervous. What, Dr. Hutton, port for a
lady, at this time of day, and not ordered medically!”</p>
<p>Thereupon, of course Rufus prescribed it, till
Georgie, being quite overcome by the colour, as
the host himself decanted it, capitulated at last for
“strictly half a glass.”</p>
<p>After a little, the ladies withdrew, to see double
perfections in the baby, and Mrs. Hutton, who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
knew quite well what they had been doing, while
she was discussing arrowroot, received them at first
rather stiffly. But she had no chance with Georgie,
who entered beautifully into the interesting room,
and exclaimed with great vivacity—</p>
<p>“Oh, dear Mrs. Hutton, as the little boys say,
‘here we are again.’ And so glad to get away,
because your husband is so hospitable, and we
thought of you all the time. I wanted so much
to bring you a glass of that very exquisite—let
me see, I think it must have been port, though
I never know one wine from another—only I
feared it might seem rude, if I had ventured to
propose it. Of course Dr. Hutton knew best.”</p>
<p>“Of course he didnʼt,” said Rosa, pettishly;
“he never thought about it. Not that I would
have taken it; oh dear no! Ladies cannot have
too little wine, I think. It seems to make them so
masculine.”</p>
<p>“Well, dear, you know best. Very likely you
heard us laughing. I assure you we were quite
merry. We drank his health ‘three times threeʼ—donʼt
they call it about a baby? And I was
nearly proposing <i>yours</i>; only a gentleman ought
to do that. Oh, it was so interesting, and the wine
superb—at least, so said the gentlemen; I do wish
they had brought you some, dear.”</p>
<p>“I am very glad they did not. It is so very
lowering to a fine sense of the ideal. I heard you
laughing, or making some noise; only I was so
absorbed in these lovely poems. ‘To my Babe’ is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
so very beautiful, so expressive, so elevating! I
feel every single word of it. And this sonnet
about the first cropper! And the stanzas to his
little red shoes, terminating with ‘pinch his nose!’
You have had so many husbands, dear; you must
know all about it.”</p>
<p>“My darling child, how I feel for you! But,
in all probability, he will come up when both decanters
are empty; let him find you in a good
temper, dear.”</p>
<p>But this (which must have grown into a row,
for Georgie had even more spirit than tact, and
Rosa was equal to anything), all this evil was
averted, and harmony restored by the popping in
of nurse, who had not taken her half–crowns yet,
but considered them desirable, and saw them now
endangered.</p>
<p>“Goldylocks, Goldylocks! Oh, bring him here,
nurse. Skillikins, dillikins! oh, such a dove!
And if nobody else cares for poor mamma, he has
got so much better taste, hasnʼt he?”</p>
<p>Goldylocks very soon proved that he had; and
Georgie, having quite recovered her temper, admired
him so ecstatically, that even his mother
thought her judgment was really worth something.</p>
<p>“Give him to me; I canʼt do without him. O
you beautiful cherub! Kicklewick, I am sure you
never saw any one like him.”</p>
<p>“That indeed I never did, maʼam,” answered
nurse Kicklewick, holding her arms out, as if she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
must have him back again; “many a fine child I
have seen, and done for to my humble ability,
maʼam, since the time I were at Lord Eldergunʼs;
and her ladyship said to me—ʼKicklewick,’ says
she——”</p>
<p>“Oh, his love of a nosey–posey! Oh, then his
bootiful eyes, dick, dock! And then his golden
hair, you know, so lovely, chaste, and rare, you
know! Will um have a dancey–prancey?”</p>
<p>And Georgie, forgetting all dignity, went
through a little Polish dance, with the baby in her
arms, to his very grave amazement, and the delight
of all beholders.</p>
<p>Although of the genuine Hutton strain, he was
too young to crow yet, nevertheless he expressed
approval in the most emphatic water–colours.
Mrs. Huttonʼs heart was won for ever.</p>
<p>“Oh, darling, I am so obliged to you. He has
positively popped two bubbles. A thing he never
did before! How can I ever repay you?”</p>
<p>“By letting me come over and dance him twice
a week. Oh, that I only had a boy!—because I
do love boy–babies so.”</p>
<p>“One would think that you must have had fifty,
at least, before you were five–and–twenty! How
on earth do you understand him so? I only know
half what he means, though I try for hours and
hours.”</p>
<p>“Simply by sympathizing with him. I feel all
his ideas come home to me, and I put them into
shape<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“You are the loveliest creature I ever saw.”
And, indeed, Georgie did look very well, for it was
not all mere humbug now, though perhaps it was
at first. “Oh, no wonder baby loves you. Kicklewick,
isnʼt it wonderful?”</p>
<p>“Indeed, then, and it would be, maʼam,” replied
Mrs. Kicklewick, rapturously—for now she had
four half–crowns in her pocket—“only for it beinʼ
nature, maʼam. Nature it is as does it, as must
be. Nothing else no good again it. And how I
should like to beʼlong of you, maʼam, when your
next time come, please God. Would you mind to
accept of my card, maʼam, unpretenshome but in
good families,—Sarah Kicklewick, late to Lord
Eldergun, and have hopes to be again, maʼam, if
any confidence in head–footman. ‘Mrs. Kicklewick,’
he says, and me upon the bridge, maʼam,
with the wind a blowinʼ——”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said Georgie, “and the water
flowing; how clearly you describe it!”</p>
<p>But we must cut her short, even as she cut
nurse Kicklewick. Enough that she won such
influence over the kind but not too clever Rosa,
that Rufus Huttonʼs plans and acts, so far as they
were known to his wife, were known also to his wifeʼs
best friend. But one thing there was which Mrs.
Corklemore could not at all understand,—why
should he be going to London so, and wanting to
go again, in spite of domestic emergencies? She
very soon satisfied herself that Rosa was really in
the dark upon this point, and very indignant at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
being so. This indignation must be fostered and
pointed to a practical end. Mrs. Kettledrum, of
course, had been kept in the background all this
time, and scarcely allowed to dandle the baby, for
fear of impairing her sisterʼs triumph.</p>
<p>“How wonderfully kind and thoughtful of
you!” said Rosa, as Georgie came in again.
“Have you really brought me a glass of wine?
And no one else in the house to suppose that I
ought to have any nourishment! How can I
thank you, Mrs. Corklemore?”</p>
<p>“No more ‘Mrs. Corklemore,’ if you please. I
have begun to call you ‘Rosaʼ—it is such a pretty
name—and you must call me ‘Georgie,’ darling.
Every one does who loves me.”</p>
<p>“Then I am sure all the world must. Dearest
Georgie, how did you get it? I am sure I would
not touch it, only for your sake.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I did such a shameful thing. Such a
liberty I never took before! I actually sent the
servant to say, with Mrs. Corklemoreʼs compliments,
that she felt the effect of the fright this
morning, and would like another glass of port, but
would not touch it if any of the gentlemen left the
table even for a moment. And they actually sent
me a dock–glass, in pleasantry, I suppose: but I
am very glad they did.”</p>
<p>“I will take some, if you take half, dear.”</p>
<p>“Not a drop. My poor weak head is upset in a
moment. But you really need it, dear; and I can<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
so thoroughly feel for you, because the poor Count,
when my Flore was born, waited on me with such
devotion, day and night, hand and foot.”</p>
<p>“And I am sure Mr. Corklemore must do the
same. No husband could help adoring you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, he is very good, ‘according to his lights,’
as they say. But I have known him let me cough
three times without getting up for the jujubes.
And once—but perhaps I ought not to tell you: it
was so very bad.”</p>
<p>“Oh, you may safely tell me, dear. I will never
repeat it to any one.”</p>
<p>“He actually allowed me to sneeze in the carriage
without saying that I must have a new fur
cloak, or even asking if I had a cold.”</p>
<p>“Oh dear, is that all? I may sneeze six times
in an hour, and my husband take no notice, but
run out and leave the front door open, and prune
his horrid little trees. And then he shouts for his
patent top–dressing. He thinks far more of dressing
them than he does of dressing me.”</p>
<p>“And donʼt you know the reason? Donʼt cry,
sweet child; donʼt cry. I have had so much experience.
I understand men so thoroughly.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, I know the reason. I am cross to him
sometimes. And of course I canʼt expect a man
with a mind like his——”</p>
<p>“You may expect any man to be as wise as
Solomon, if you only know how to manage him. It
is part of the law of nature<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“Then I am sure I donʼt know what that means:
except that people must get married, and ought to
love one another.”</p>
<p>“The law of nature is this. Between a wife
and a husband there never must be a secret, except
when the lady keeps one. Now, your husband
is, to some extent, a rather superior man——”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, to the very greatest extent. No one
of any perception can help perceiving that.”</p>
<p>“Then he is quite sure to attempt it; to reserve
himself, upon <i>some</i> point, in an unsympathetic
attitude. This is just what you must not allow.
You have no idea how it grows upon them, and
how soon it supplants affection, and makes a married
man a bachelor.”</p>
<p>“Oh, how dreadful! But I really do think,
dear, that you must be wrong this once. My husband
has never kept anything from me; anything,
I mean, which I ought to know.”</p>
<p>“Then he told you about that poor wild Polly?
How very good and kind of him!”</p>
<p>“Polly! What Polly? You donʼt mean to
say——”</p>
<p>“No, no, dear, nothing of that sort! Only the
mare running away with him at night through the
thickest part of the forest.”</p>
<p>“My Polly that eats from my hand! Run away
with Rufus!”</p>
<p>“Yes, your Polly. A perfect miracle that both
of them were not killed. But, of course, he must
have told you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>Then, after sundry ejaculations, Rosa learned all
about that matter, and was shocked first, and then
thankful, and then hurt.</p>
<p>“And now,” said Mrs. Corklemore, when the
sense of wrong was paramount, “he has some
secret, I am almost sure, about our sad affair at
Nowelhurst. And I am sure, even if you were
not his wife, dear, he need not conceal any matter
of that sort from the daughter of Sir Cradock
Nowellʼs old friend, Mr. Ralph Mohorn.”</p>
<p>“I will tell you another thing,” answered Rosa,
shaking all her pillows with the vehemence of her
emotions, “whether he ought or not, he shall not
do it, Georgie, darling. As sure as I am his
lawful wife I will know every word of it before I
sleep one wink. If not, he must take the consequences
upon both his wife and child.”</p>
<p>“Darling, I think you are quite right. Only
donʼt tell me a word of it. It is such a dreadful
matter, it would make me so unhappy——”</p>
<p>“I will tell you every single word, just to prove
to you, Georgie, that I have found the whole of
it out.”</p>
<p>After this laudable resolution, Rosa may be left
to have it out with Rufus. It requires greater skill
than ours to interfere between man and wife, even
without the <i>tertium quid</i> of an astounding baby.</p>
<table id="t01" summary="t01">
<tr>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
<td class="tdc">✸</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p class="p1">The ides of March were come and gone, the
balance of day and night was struck; and Sleep,
the queen of half the world, had wheeled across<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
the equator her poppy–chintzed throne, or had got
the stars to do it for her, because she was too lazy.
Ha, that sentence is almost worthy of a great
stump–orator. All I mean to say is, that All Foolsʼ
Day was over. Blessed are the All Fools who
begin the summer (which accounts for its being a
mull with us); and blessed be the All Saints
who begin the winter, and then hand it over to
Beelzebub.</p>
<p>“In April she tunes her bill.” Several nightingales
were at it, for the spring was early, and right
early were many nests conned, planned, and contracted
for. Blessed birds, that never say, “What
are your expectations, sir?” or “How much will
you give your daughter?”—but feather their nests
without waiting for an appointment in the Treasury.
Nest–eggs, too, almost as sweet as those of
addled patronage, were beginning to accumulate;
and it took up half a birdʼs time to settle seniority
and precedence among them, fettle them all with
their heads the right way, and throw overboard
the cracked ones. Perhaps, in this last particular,
they exercised a discretion, not only unknown to,
but undreamed of, by any British Government.</p>
<p>It was nearly dark by this time, and two
nightingales, across the valley, strove in Amoibæan
song till the crinkles of the opening leaves fluttered
with soft melody.</p>
<p class="ppq2 p1">“In poplar shadows Philomel complaineth of her brood,<br/>
Her callow nestlings plunderʼd from her by the ploughman rude:<br/>
From lonely branch all night she pours her weeping musicʼs flow,<br/>
Repeats her tale, and fills the world with melody and woe.”</p>
<p class="pr4"><i>Georg.</i> iv. 511.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="p1">Mr. Garnet heeded neither crisp young leaf nor
bulbul; neither did his horse appear to be a judge
of music. Man and horse were drooping, flagging,
jaded and bespent; wanting only the two things
which, according to some philosophers, are all that
men want here below—a little food, and a deal of
sleep.</p>
<p>Bull Garnet was on his return from Winchester,
whither he now went every week, for some reason
known only to himself, or at least unknown to his
family. It is a long and hilly ride from the west
of Ytene to Winton, and to travel that distance
twice in a day takes the gaiety out of a horse, and
the salience out of a man. No wonder then that
Mr. Garnet slouched his heavy shoulders, and let
his great head droop; for at five–and–forty a
powerful man jades sooner than does a slight one.</p>
<p>Presently he began to drowse; for the stout
grey gelding knew every step of the road, and
would take uncommonly good care to avoid all
circumambience: and of late the rider had never
slept, only dozed, and dreamed, and started. Then
he muttered to himself, as he often did in sleep,
but never at home, until he had seen to the fastening
of the door.</p>
<p>“Tried it again—tried very hard and failed.
Thought of Bob, at last moment. Bob to stand,
and see me hang—and hate me, and go to the
devil. No, I donʼt think he would hate me, though;
he would say, ‘Father could not help it.’ And
how nice that would be for me, to see Bob take
my part. To see him with his turn–down collars<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
standing proudly up, and saying, ‘Father was a bad
man—according to your ideas—I am not going to
dispute them—but for all that I love him, and so
my children shall.’ If I could be sure that Bob
would only think so, only make his mind up, his
mind up, his mind up—for there is nothing like it—whoa,
Grayling, what be looking at?—and take
poor little Pearl with him, I would go to–morrow
morning, and do it over at Lymington.”</p>
<p>“Best do it to–night, govʼnor. No time like the
praysent, and us knows arl about it.”</p>
<p>A tall man had leaped from behind a tree, and
seized Bull Garnetʼs bridle. The grey gelding
reared and struck him; but he kept his hold, till
the muzzle of a large revolver felt cold against
his ear. Then Issachar Jupp fell back; he knew
the man he had to deal with, how stern in his fury,
how reckless, despite the better part of him. And
Issachar was not prepared to leave his Loo an
orphan.</p>
<p>“No man robs me,” cried Mr. Garnet, in his
most tremendous voice, “except at the cost of my
life, and the risk of his. I have seven and sixpence
about me; I will give it up to no man.
Neither will I shoot any man, unless he tries to
get it.”</p>
<p>“Nubbody wants to rob you, govʼnor, only to
have a little rattysination with you. Possible you
know me now?”</p>
<p>Bull Garnet fell back in his saddle. He would
rather have met a dozen robbers. By the voice he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
recognised a man whom he had once well known,
and had good cause to know;—through his outrage
upon whom, he had left the northern counties;
the man whom he had stricken headlong down a
coal–shaft, as the leader of rebellion, the night after
Pearl was christened, nigh twenty years ago.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know you; Jupp your name is. Small
credit it is to know you.”</p>
<p>“And smarler still to know you, Bull Garnet.
Try your pistol thing, if you like. You must have
rare stommick, I should think, to be up for another
murder.”</p>
<p>“Issachar, I am sorry for you. Do you call it
a murder to keep such a fellow as you off?”</p>
<p>“No, I dunna carl that a murder, because I be
arl alive. But I do carl a murder what you did to
young Clayton Nowell.”</p>
<p>“Fool, what do you know of it? Let go my
horse, I say. You know pretty well what <i>I</i> am.”</p>
<p>“I know you haʼnʼt much patience, govʼnor, and
be arlways in a hurry.”</p>
<p>Jupp hesitated, but would not be beaten, whatever
might be the end of it.</p>
<p>“I am in no hurry now, Jupp; I will listen to
all you have to say. But not with your hand on
my bridle.”</p>
<p>“There goeth free then. Arl knows you be no
liar.”</p>
<p>“I am glad you remember that, Issachar. Hold
the horse, while I get off. Now throw the bridle
over that branch, and I will sit down here. Come<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
here into the moonlight, man; and look me in the
face. Here is the pistol for you, if you bear me
any revenge.”</p>
<p>Scarcely knowing what he did, because he had
no time to think, Jupp obeyed Bull Garnetʼs orders
even to the last—for he took the pistol in his hand,
and tried to look straight at his adversary; but his
eyes would not co–operate. Then he laid the pistol
on the bank; but so that he could reach it.</p>
<p>“Issachar Jupp,” said Mr. Garnet, looking at
him steadily, and speaking very quietly; “have
you any children?”</p>
<p>“Only one—a leetle gal, but an oncommon
good un.”</p>
<p>“How old is she?”</p>
<p>“Five year old, plase God, come next Valentineʼs
Day.”</p>
<p>“Now, when she grows up, and is pure and
good, would you like to have her heart broken?”</p>
<p>“Iʼd break any coveʼs head as doed it.”</p>
<p>“But supposing she were betrayed and ruined,
made a plaything, and then thrown away—what
would you do then?”</p>
<p>“God Almighty knows, man. I canʼt abide to
think of it.”</p>
<p>“And if the—the man who did it, was the
grandson of the man who had ruined your own
mother, lied before God in the church to her, and
then left her to go to the workhouse, with you
his outcast bastard—while he rolled in gold, and
laughed at her—what would you do then, Jupp<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>?”</p>
<p>“By the God that made me, Iʼd have my revenge,
if I went to hell for it.”</p>
<p>“I have said enough. Do exactly as you please.
Me you cannot help or harm. Death is all I long
for—only for my children.”</p>
<p>Still he looked at Issachar, but now without a
thought of him; only as a man looks out upon the
sea or sky, expecting no return. And Issachar
Jupp, so dense and pig–headed—surly and burly,
and weasel–eyed—in a word, retrospectively British—gazing
at Bull Garnet then, got some inkling of
an anguish such as he who lives to feel—far better
were it for that man that he had never been
born.</p>
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