It was a sultry summer evening in
the old days, when Walter Wyatt came to the house
of his forefathers. It was in a quiet valley of
Sussex, with the woods standing very steeply on the
high hillsides. Among the woods were pleasant
stretches of pasture, and a little stream ran hidden
among hazels beside the road; here and there were
pits in the woods, where the men of ancient times had
dug for iron, pits with small sandstone cliffs, and
full to the brim of saplings and woodland plants.
Walter rode slowly along, his heart full of a happy
content. Though it was the home of his family
he had never even seen Restlands that was
the peaceful name of the house. Walter’s
father had been a younger son, and for many years
the elder brother, a morose and selfish man, had lived
at Restlands, often vowing that none of his kin should
ever set foot in the place, and all out of a native
malice and churlishness, which discharged itself upon
those that were nearest to him. Walter’s
father was long dead, and Walter had lived a very
quiet homely life with his mother. But one day
his uncle had died suddenly and silently, sitting
in his chair; and it was found that he had left no
will. So that Restlands, with its orchards and
woods and its pleasant pasture-lands, fell to Walter;
and he had ridden down to take possession. He
was to set the house in order, for it was much decayed
in his uncle’s time; and in a few weeks his mother
was to follow him there.
He turned a corner of the road, and
saw in a glance a house that he knew must be his;
and a sudden pride and tenderness leapt up within
his heart, to think how fair a place he could call
his own.
An avenue of limes led from the road
to the house, which was built of ancient stone, the
roof tiled with the same. The front was low and
many-windowed. And Walter, for he was a God-fearing
youth, made a prayer in his heart, half of gratitude
and half of hope.
He rode up to the front of the house,
and saw at once that it was sadly neglected; the grass
grew among the paving-stones, and several of the windows
were broken. He knocked at the door, and an old
serving-man came out, who made an obeisance. Walter
sent his horse to the stable; his baggage was already
come; and his first task was to visit his new home
from room to room. It was a very beautiful solidly
built house, finely panelled in old dry wood, and had
an abundance of solid oak furniture; there were dark
pictures here and there; and that night Walter sate
alone at his meat, which was carefully served him by
the old serving-man, his head full of pleasant plans
for his new life; he slept in the great bedroom, and
many times woke wondering where he was; once he crept
to the window, and saw the barns, gardens, and orchards
lie beneath, and the shadowy woods beyond, all bathed
in a cold clear moonlight.
In the morning when he had breakfasted,
the lawyer who had charge of his business rode in
from the little town hard by to see him; and when
Walter’s happiness was a little dashed; for though
the estate brought in a fair sum, yet it was crippled
by a mortgage which lay upon it; and Walter saw that
he would have to live sparely for some years before
he could have his estate unembarrassed; but this troubled
him little, for he was used to a simple life.
The lawyer indeed had advised him to sell a little
of the land; but Walter was very proud of the old
estate, and of the memory that he was the tenth Wyatt
that had dwelt there, and he said that before he did
that he would wait awhile and see if he could not
arrange otherwise. When the lawyer was gone there
came in the bailiff, and Walter went with him all over
the estate. The garden was greatly overgrown
with weeds, and the yew hedges were sprawling all
uncut; they went through the byre, where the cattle
stood in the straw; they visited the stable and the
barn, the granary and the dovecote; and Walter spoke
pleasantly with the men that served him; then he went
to the ploughland and the pastures, the orchard and
the woodland; and it pleased Walter to walk in the
woodpaths, among the copse and under great branching
oaks, and to feel that it was all his own.
At last they came out on the brow
of the hill, and saw Restlands lie beneath them, with
the smoke of a chimney going up into the quiet air,
and the doves wheeling about the cote. The whole
valley was full of westering sunshine, and the country
sounds came pleasantly up through the still air.
They stood in a wide open pasture,
but in the centre of it rose a small, dark, and thickly
grown square holt of wood, surrounded by a high green
bank of turf, and Walter asked what that was.
The old bailiff looked at him a moment without speaking
and then said, “That is the Red Camp, sir.”
Walter said pleasantly, “And whose camp is it?”
but it came suddenly into his head that long ago his
father had told him a curious tale about the place,
but he could not remember what the tale was.
The old man answering his question said, “Ah,
sir, who can say? perhaps it was the old Romans who
made it, or perhaps older men still; but there was
a sore battle hereabouts.” And then he went
on in a slow and serious way to tell him an old tale
of how a few warriors had held the place against an
army, and that they had all been put to the sword
there; he said that in former days strange rusted weapons
and bones had been ploughed up in the field, and then
he added that the Camp had ever since been left desolate
and that no one cared to set foot within it; yet for
all that it was said that a great treasure lay buried
within it, for that was what the men were guarding,
though those that took the place and slew them could
never find it; “and that was all long ago,”
he said.
Walter, as the old man spoke, walked
softly to the wood and peered at it over the mound;
it was all grown up within, close and thick, an evil
tangle of plants and briars. It was dark and even
cold looking within the wood, though the air lay warm
all about it. The mound was about breast high,
and there was a grass-grown trench all round out of
which the earth had been thrown up. It came into
Walter’s head that the place had seen strange
things. He thought of it as all rough and newly
made, with a palisade round the mound, with spears
and helmets showing over, and a fierce wild multitude
of warriors surging all round; the Romans, if they
had been Romans, within, grave and anxious, waiting
for help that never came. All this came into his
mind with a pleasant sense of security, as a man who
is at ease looks on a picture of old and sad things,
and finds it minister to his content. Yet the
place kept a secret of its own, Walter felt sure of
that. And the treasure, was that there all the
time? buried in some corner of the wood, money lying
idle that might do good things if it could but get
forth? So he mused, tapping the bank with his
stick. And presently they went on together.
Walter said as they turned away, “I should like
to cut the trees down, and throw the place into the
pasture,” but the old bailiff said, “Nay,
it is better left alone.”
The weeks passed very pleasantly at
first; the neighbours came to see him, and he found
that an old name wins friends easily; he spent much
of the day abroad, and he liked to go up to the Red
Camp and see it stand so solitary and dark, with the
pleasant valley beneath it. His mother soon came,
and they found that with her small jointure they could
indeed live at the place, but that they would have
to live very sparely at first; there must be no horses
in the stable, nor coach to drive abroad; there must
be no company at Restlands for many a year, and Walter
saw too that he must not think awhile of marriage,
but that he must give all his savings to feed the
estate.
After awhile, when the first happy
sense of possession had gone off, and then life had
settled down into common and familiar ways, this began
to be very irksome to Walter; and what made him feel
even more keenly his fortune was that he made acquaintance
with a squire that lived hard by, who had a daughter
Marjory, who seemed to Walter the fairest and sweetest
maiden he had ever seen; and he began to carry her
image about with him; and his heart beat very sharply
in his breast if he set eyes on her unexpectedly;
and she too, seemed to have delight in seeing Walter,
and to understand even the thoughts that lay beneath
his lightest word. But the squire was a poor man,
and Walter felt bound to crush the thought of love
and marriage down in his heart, until he began to
grow silent and moody; and his mother saw all that
was in his heart and pitied him, but knew not what
to do; and Walter began even to talk of going into
the world to seek his fortune; but it was little more
than talk, for he already loved Restlands very deeply.
Now one day when Walter had been dining
with the Vicar of the parish, he met at his table
an old and fond man, full of curious wisdom, who took
great delight in all that showed the history of the
old races that had inhabited the land; and he told
Walter a long tale of the digging open of a great
barrow or mound upon the downs, which it seemed had
been the grave of a great prince, and in which they
had found a great treasure of gold, cups and plates
and pitchers all of gold, with bars of the same, and
many other curious things. He said that a third
of such things by rights belonged to the King; but
that the King’s Grace had been contented to
take a rich cup or two, and had left the rest in the
hands of him whose land it was. Then the old
scholar asked Walter if it were not true that he had
in his own land an ancient fort or stronghold, and
Walter told him of the Red Camp and the story, and
the old man heard him with great attention saying,
“Ay, ay,” and “Ay, so it would be,”
and at the last he said that the story of the treasure
was most likely a true one, for he did not see how
it could have grown up otherwise; and that he did
not doubt that it was a great Roman treasure, perhaps
a tribute, gathered in from the people of the land,
who would doubtless have been enraged to lose so much
and would have striven to recover it. “Ay,
it is there, sure enough,” he said.
Walter offered to go with him to the
place; but the old Vicar, seeing Walter’s bright
eye, and knowing something of the difficulties, said
that the legend was that it would be ill to disturb
a thing that had cost so many warriors their lives;
and that a curse would rest upon one that did disturb
it. The old scholar laughed and said that the
curses of the dead, and especially of the heathen dead,
would break no bones and he went on to
say that doubtless there was a whole hen-roost of
curses hidden away in the mound upon the downs; but
that they had hurt not his friend who had opened it;
for he lived very delicately and plentifully off the
treasure of the old prince, who seemed to bear him
no grudge for it. “Nay, doubtless,”
he said, “if we but knew the truth, I dare say
that the old heathen man, pining in some dark room
in hell, is glad enough that his treasure should be
richly spent by a good Christian gentleman.”
They walked together to the place;
and the old gentleman talked very learnedly and showed
him where the gates and towers of the fort had been adding
to Walter, “And if I were you, Mr. Wyatt, I would
have the place cleared and trenched, and would dig
the gold out; for it is there as sure as I am a Christian
man and a lover of the old days.”
Then Walter told his mother of all
that had been said; and she had heard of the old tales,
and shook her head; indeed when Walter spoke to the
old bailiff of his wish to open the place, the old
man almost wept; and then, seeing that he prevailed
nothing, said suddenly that neither he nor any of
the men that dwelt in the village would put out a
hand to help for all the gold of England. So Walter
rested for awhile; and still his impatience and his
hunger grew.
Walter did not decide at once; he
turned the matter over in his mind for a week.
He spoke no more to the bailiff, who thought he had
changed his mind; but all the week the desire grew;
and at last it completely overmastered him. He
sent for the bailiff and told him he had determined
to dig out the Camp; the bailiff looked at him without
speaking. Then Walter said laughing that he meant
to deal very fairly; that no one should bear a hand
in the work who did not do so willingly; but that
he should add a little to the wages of every man who
worked for him at the Camp while the work was going
on. The bailiff shrugged his shoulders and made
no reply. Walter went and spoke to each of his
men and told them his offer. “I know,”
he said, “that there is a story about the place,
and that you do not wish to touch it; but I will offer
a larger wage to every man who works there for me;
and I will force no man to do it; but done it shall
be; and if my own men will not do it, then I will
get strangers to help me.” The end of it
was that three of his men offered to do the work, and
the next day a start was made.
The copse and undergrowth was first
cleared, and then the big trees were felled and dragged
off the place; then the roots were stubbed up.
It was a difficult task, and longer than Walter had
thought; and he could not disguise from himself that
a strange kind of ill-luck hung about the whole affair.
One of his men disabled himself by a cut from an axe;
another fell ill; the third, after these two mishaps,
came and begged off. Walter replaced them with
other workers; and the work proceeded slowly, in spite
of Walter’s great impatience and haste.
He himself was there early and late; the men had it
in their minds that they were searching for treasure
and were well-nigh as excited as himself; and Walter
was for ever afraid that in his absence some rich
and valuable thing might be turned up, and perhaps
concealed or conveyed away secretly by the finder.
But the weeks passed and nothing was found; and it
was now a bare and ugly place with miry pools of dirt,
great holes where the trees had been; there were cart
tracks all over the field in which it lay, the great
trunks lay outside the mound, and the undergrowth
was piled in stacks. The mound and ditch had
all been unturfed; and the mound was daily dug down
to the level, every spadeful being shaken loose; and
now they came upon some few traces of human use.
In the mound was found a short and dinted sword of
bronze, of antique shape. A mass of rusted metal
was found in a corner, that looked as if it had been
armour. In another corner were found some large
upright and calcined stones, with abundance of wood-ashes
below, that seemed to have been a rude fireplace.
And in one part, in a place where there seemed to
have been a pit, was a quantity of rotting stuff,
that seemed like the remains of bones. Walter
himself grew worn and weary, partly with the toil and
still more with the deferred hope. And the men
too became sullen and ill-affected. It surprised
Walter too that more than one of his neighbours spoke
with disfavour of what he was doing, as of a thing
that was foolish or even wrong. But still he worked
on savagely, slept little, and cared not what he ate
or drank.
At last the work was nearly over;
the place had been all trenched across, and they had
come in most places to the hard sandstone, which lay
very near the surface. In the afternoon had fallen
a heavy drenching shower, so that the men had gone
home early, wet and dispirited; and Walter stood,
all splashed and stained with mud, sick at heart and
heavy, on the edge of the place, and looked very gloomily
at the trenches, which lay like an ugly scar on the
green hilltop. The sky was full of ragged inky
clouds, with fierce lights on the horizon.
As he paced about and looked at the
trenches, he saw in one place that it seemed as if
the earth was of a different colour at the side of
the trench; he stepped inside to look at this, and
saw that the digging had laid bare the side of a place
like a pit, that seemed to have been dug down through
the ground; he bent to examine it, and then saw at
the bottom of the trench, washed clear by the rain,
something that looked like a stick or a root, that
projected a little into the trench; he put his hand
down to it, and found it cold and hard and heavy,
and in a moment saw that it was a rod of metal that
ran into the bank. He took up a spade, and threw
the earth away in haste; and presently uncovered the
rod. It was a bar, he saw, and very heavy; but
examining it closely he saw that there was a stamp
of some sort upon it; and then in a moment looking
upon a place where the spade had scratched it, he
saw that it was a bright yellow metal. It came
over him all at once, with a shock that made him faint,
that he had stumbled upon some part of the treasure;
he put the bar aside, and then, first looking all
round to see that none observed him, he dug into the
bank. In a moment his spade struck something hard;
and he presently uncovered a row of bars that lay
close together. He dragged them up one by one,
and underneath he found another row, laid crosswise;
and another row, and another, till he had uncovered
seven rows, making fifty bars in all. Beneath
the lowest row his spade slipped on something round
and smooth; he uncovered the earth, and presently
drew out a brown and sodden skull, which thus lay beneath
the treasure. Below that was a mass of softer
earth, but out of it came the two thigh-bones of a
man.
The sky was now beginning to grow
dark; but he dug out the whole of the pit, working
into the bank; and he saw that a round hole had been
dug straight down from the top, to the sandstone.
The bones lay upon the sandstone; but he found other
bones at the sides of where the gold had lain; so
that it seemed to him as though the gold must have
been placed among dead bodies, and have rested among
corruption. This was a dim thought that lurked
in an ugly way in his mind. But he had now dug
out the whole pit, and found nothing else, except a
few large blurred copper coins which lay among the
bodies. He stood awhile looking at the treasure;
but together with the exultation at his discovery there
mingled a dark and gloomy oppression of spirit, which
he could not explain, which clouded his mind.
But presently he came to himself again, and gathering
the bones together, he threw them down to the bottom
of the pit, as he was minded to conceal his digging
from the men. While he did so, it seemed to him
that, as he was bending to the pit, something came
suddenly behind him and stood at his back, close to
him, as though looking over his shoulder. For
a moment the horror was so great that he felt the
hair of his head prickle and his heart thump within
his breast; but he overcame it and turned, and saw
nothing but the trenches, and above them the ragged
sky; yet he had the thought that something had slipped
away. But he set himself doggedly to finish his
task; he threw earth into the holes, working in a
kind of fury; and twice as he did so, the same feeling
came again that there was some one at his back; and
twice turning he saw nothing; but the third time,
from the West came a sharp thunder-peal; and he had
hardly finished his work when the rain fell in a sheet,
and splashed in the trenches.
Then he turned to the treasure which
lay beside him. He found that he could not carry
more than a few of the bars at a time; and he dared
not leave the rest uncovered. So he covered them
with earth and went stealthily down to the house;
and there he got, with much precaution, a barrow from
the garden. But the fear of discovery came upon
him; and he determined to go into the house and sup
as usual, and late at night convey the treasure to
the house. For the time, his trove gave him no
joy; he could not have believed it would have so weighed
on him he felt more like one who had some
guilty secret to conceal, than a man to whom had befallen
a great joy.
He went to the house, changed his
wet clothes, and came to supper with his mother.
To her accustomed questions as to what they had found,
he took out the coins and showed them her, saying
nothing of the gold, but with a jesting word that
these would hardly repay him for his trouble.
He could scarcely speak at supper for thinking of what
he had found; and every now and then there came upon
him a dreadful fear that he had been observed digging,
and that even now some thief had stolen back there
and was uncovering his hoard. His mother looked
at him often, and at last said that he looked very
weary; to which he replied with some sharpness, so
that she said no more.
Then all at once, near the end of
the meal, he had the same dreadful fear that he had
felt by the pit. It seemed to him as though some
one came near him and stood close behind him, bending
over his shoulder; and a kind of icy coldness fell
on him. He started and looked quickly round.
His mother looked anxiously at him, and said, “What
is it, dear Walter?” He made some excuse; but
presently feeling that he must be alone, he excused
himself and went to his room, where he sate, making
pretence to read, till the house should be silent.
Then when all were abed, at an hour
after midnight, he forced himself to rise and put
on his rough clothes, though a terror lay very sore
upon him, and go out to the garden, creeping like a
thief. He had with him a lantern; and he carried
the barrow on his shoulders for fear that the creaking
of the wheel should awake some one; and then stumbling
and sweating, and in a great weariness, he went by
woodpaths to the hilltop. He came to the place,
and having lit his lantern he uncovered the bars,
and laid them on the barrow; they were as he had left
them. When he had loaded them, the same fear struck
him suddenly cold again, of something near him; and
he thought for a moment he would have swooned; but
sitting down on the barrow in the cool air he presently
came to himself. Then he essayed to wheel the
barrow in the dark. But he stumbled often, and
once upset the barrow and spilled his load. Thus,
though fearing discovery, he was forced to light the
lantern and set it upon the barrow, and so at last
he came to the house; where he disposed the bars at
the bottom of a chest of which he had the key, covering
them with papers, and then went to bed in a kind of
fever, his teeth chattering, till he fell into a wretched
sleep which lasted till dawn.
In his sleep he dreamed a fearful
dream; he seemed to be sitting on the ground by the
Camp, holding the gold in his arms; the Camp, in his
dream was as it was before he had cleared it, all grown
up with trees. Suddenly out from among the trees
there came a man in rusty tarnished armour, with a
pale wild face and a little beard, which seemed all
clotted with moisture; he held in his hand a pike or
spear, and he came swiftly and furiously upon Walter
as though he would smite him. But it seemed as
though his purpose changed; for standing aside he
watched Walter with evil and piercing eyes, so that
it seemed to Walter that he would sooner have been
smitten. And then he woke, but in anguish, for
the man still seemed to stand beside him; until he
made a light and saw no one.
He arose feeling broken and ill; but
he met his mother with a smile, and told her that
he had determined to do what would please her, and
work no more at the Camp. And he told the men
that he would dig no more, but that they were to level
the place and so leave it. And so they did, murmuring
sore.
The next week was a very miserable
one for Walter; he could not have believed that a
man’s heart should be so heavy. It seemed
to him that he lay, like the poor bones that he had
found beneath the treasure, crushed and broken and
stifled under the weight of it. He was tempted
to do wild things with the gold; to bury it again in
the Camp, to drop it into the mud of the pool that
lay near the house. In fevered dreams he seemed
to row himself in a boat upon a dark sea, and to throw
the bars one by one into the water; the reason of
this was not only his fear for the treasure itself,
but the dreadful sense that he had of being followed
by some one, who dogged his footsteps wherever he went.
If ever he sate alone, the thing would draw near him
and bend above him; he often felt that if he could
but look round swiftly enough he would catch a glimpse
of the thing, and that nothing that he could see would
be so fearful as that which was unseen; and so it came
to pass that, as he sate with his mother, though he
bore the presence long that he might not startle her,
yet after a time of patient agony he could bear it
no more, but looked swiftly behind him; he grew pale
and ill, and even the men of the place noticed how
often he turned round as he walked; till at last he
would not even walk abroad, except early and late
when there would be few to see him.
He had sent away his labourers; but
once or twice he noticed, as he went by the Camp,
that some one had been digging and grubbing in the
mire. Sometimes for an hour or two his terrors
would leave him, till he thought that he was wholly
cured; but it was like a cat with a mouse, for he
suffered the worse for his respite, till at last he
fell so low that he used to think of stories of men
that had destroyed themselves, and though he knew
it to be a terrible sin to dally with such thoughts,
he could not wholly put them from him, but used to
plan in his mind how he could do the deed best, that
it might appear to be an accident. Sometimes
he bore his trouble heavily, but at others he would
rage to think that he had been so happy so short a
while ago; and even the love that he bore to Marjory
was darkened and destroyed by the evil thing, and
he met her timid and friendly glances sullenly; his
mother was nearly as miserable as himself, for she
knew that something was very grievously amiss, but
could not divine what it was. Indeed, she could
do nothing but wish it were otherwise, and pray for
her son, for she knew not where the trouble lay, but
thought that he was ill or even bewitched.
At last, after a day of dreadful gloom,
Walter made up his mind that he would ride to London
and see to the disposing of the treasure. He
had a thought often in his mind that if he replaced
it in the Camp, he would cease to be troubled; but
he could not bring himself to that; he seemed to himself
like a man who had won a hard victory, and was asked
to surrender what he had won.
His intention was to go to an old
and wise friend of his father’s, who was a Canon
of a Collegiate Church in London, and was much about
the court. So he hid the treasure in a strong
cellar and padlocked the door; but he took one bar
with him to show to his friend.
It was a doleful journey; his horse
seemed as dispirited as himself; and his terrors came
often upon him, till he was fearful that he might
be thought mad; and indeed what with the load at his
heart and the short and troubled nights he spent,
he believed himself that he was not very far from
it.
It was with a feeling of relief and
safety, like a ship coming into port, that he stayed
his horse at the door of the college, which stood
in a quiet street of the city. He carried a valise
of clothes in which the bar was secured. He had
a very friendly greeting from the old Canon, who received
him in a little studious parlour full of books.
The court was full of pleasant sunshine, and the city
outside seemed to make a pleasant and wholesome stir
in the air.
But the Canon was very much amazed
at Walter’s looks; he was used to read the hearts
of men in their faces like a wise priest, and he saw
in Walter’s face a certain desperate look such
as he had seen, he said to himself, in the faces of
those who had a deadly sin to confess. But it
was not his way to make inquisition, and so he talked
courteously and easily, and when he found that Walter
was inclined to be silent, he filled the silence himself
with little talk of the news of the town.
After the meal, which they took in
the Canon’s room for Walter said
that he would prefer that to dining in the Hall, when
the Canon gave him the choice Walter said
that he had a strange story to tell him. The
Canon felt no surprise, and being used to strange stories,
addressed himself to listen carefully; for he thought
that in the most difficult and sad tales of sin the
words of the sufferer most often supplied the advice
and the way out, if one but listened warily.
He did not interrupt Walter except
to ask him a few questions to make the story clear,
but his face grew very grave; and at the end he sate
some time in silence. Then he said very gently
that it was a heavy judgment, but that he must ask
Walter one question. “I do not ask you
to tell me,” he said very courteously, “what
it may be; but is there no other thing in which you
have displeased God? For these grievous thoughts
and fears are sometimes sent as a punishment for sin,
and to turn men back to the light.”
Then Walter said that he knew of no
such sin by which he could have vexed God so exceedingly.
“Careless,” he said, “I am and have
been; and, father, I would tell you anything that
was in my heart; I would have no secrets from you but
though I am a sinner, and do not serve God as well
as I would, yet I desire to serve Him, and have no
sin that is set like a wall between Him and me.”
He said this so honestly and bravely, looking so full
at the priest, that he did not doubt him, and said,
“Then, my son, we must look elsewhere for the
cause; and though I speak in haste, and without weighing
my words, it seems to me that, to speak in parables,
you are like a man who has come by chance to a den
and carried off for his pleasure the cubs of some forest
beast, who returns and finds them gone, and tracks
the robber out. The souls of these poor warriors
are in some mansion of God, we know not where; if
they did faithfully in life they are beaten, as the
Scripture says, with few stripes; but they may not
enjoy His blessed rest, nor the sweet sleep of the
faithful souls who lie beneath the altar and wait
for His coming. And now though they cannot slay
you, they can do you grievous hurt. The Holy
Church hath power indeed over the spirits of evil,
the devils that enter into men. But I have not
heard that she hath power over the spirits of the dead,
and least of all over those that lived and died outside
the fold. It seems to me, though I but grope
in darkness, that these poor spirits grudge the treasure
that they fought and died for to the hands of a man
who hath not fought for it. We may think that
it is a poor and childish thing to grudge that which
one cannot use; but no discourse will make a child
think so; and I reckon that these poor souls are as
children yet. And it seems to me, speaking foolishly,
as though they would not be appeased until you either
restored it to them, or used it for their undoubted
benefit; but of one thing I am certain, that it must
not be used to enrich yourself. But I must ponder
over the story, for it is a strange one, and not such
as has ever yet come before me.”
Then Walter found fresh courage at
these wary and wise words, and told him of his impoverished
estate and the love he had to Marjory; and the priest
smiled, and said that love was the best thing to win
in the world. And then he said that as it was
now late, they must sleep; and that the night often
brought counsel; and so he took Walter to his chamber,
a little precise place with a window on the court;
and there he left him; but he first knelt down and
prayed, and then laid his hand on Walter’s head,
and blessed him, and commended him to the merciful
keeping of God; and Walter slept sweetly, and was scared
that night by no dismal dreams; and in the morning
the priest took him to the church, and Walter knelt
in a little chapel while the old man said his mass,
commending therein the burden of Walter’s suffering
into the merciful hands of God; so that Walter’s
heart was greatly lightened.
Then after the mass the priest asked
Walter of his health, and whether he had suffered
any visitation of evil that night; he said “no,”
and the priest then said that he had pondered long
over the story, which was strange and very dark.
But he had little doubt now as to what Walter should
do. He did not think that the treasure should
be replaced now that it was got up, because it was
only flying before the evil and not meeting it, but
leaving the sad inheritance for some other man.
The poor spirit must be laid to rest, and the treasure
used for God’s glory. “And therefore,”
he said, “I think that a church must be built,
and dedicated to All Souls; and thus your net will
be wide enough to catch the sad spirit. And you
must buy a little estate for the support of the chaplain
thereof, and so shall all be content.”
“All but one,” said Walter
sadly, “for there goes my dream of setting up
my own house that tumbles down.”
“My son,” said the old
priest very gravely, “you must not murmur; it
will be enough for you if God take away the sore chastening
of your spirit; and for the rest, He will provide.”
“But there is more behind,”
he said after a pause. “If you, with an
impoverished estate, build a church and endow a priest,
there will be questions asked; it will needs be known
that you have found a treasure, and it will come,
perhaps, to the ears of the King’s Grace, and
inquisition will be made; so I shall go this morning
to a Lord of the Court, an ancient friend of mine,
a discreet man; and I will lay the story before him,
if you give me leave; and he will advise.”
Walter saw that the priest’s
advice was good; and so he gave him leave; and the
priest departed to the Court; but while he was away,
as Walter sate sadly over a book, his terrors came
upon him with fresh force; the thing drew near him
and stood at his shoulder, and he could not dislodge
it; it seemed to Walter that it was more malign than
ever, and was set upon driving him to some desperate
deed; so he rose and paced in the court; but it seemed
to move behind him, till he thought he would have
gone distraught; but finding the church doors open,
he went inside and, in a corner, knelt and prayed,
and got some kind of peace; yet he felt all the while
as though the presence waited for him at the door,
but could not hurt him in the holy shrine; and there
Walter made a vow and vowed his life into the hands
of God; for he had found the world a harder place
than he had thought, and it seemed to him as though
he walked among unseen foes. Presently he saw
the old priest come into the church, peering about;
so Walter rose and came to him; the priest had a contented
air, but seemed big with news, and he told Walter
that he must go with him at once to the Court.
For he had seen the Lord Poynings, that was his friend,
who had taken him at once to the king; and the king
had heard the story very curiously, and would see
Walter himself that day. So Walter fetched the
bar of gold and they went at once together; and Walter
was full of awe and fear, and asked the priest how
he should bear himself; to which the priest said smiling,
“As a man, in the presence of a man.”
And as they went Walter told him that he had been
visited by the terror again, but had found peace in
the church; and the priest said, “Ay, there is
peace to be had there.”
They came down to the palace, and
were at once admitted; the priest and he were led
into a little room, full of books, where a man was
writing, a venerable man in a furred gown, with a comely
face; this was the Lord Poynings, who greeted Walter
very gently but with a secret attention; Walter shewed
him the bar of gold, and he looked at it long, and
presently there came a page who said that the king
was at leisure, and would see Mr. Wyatt.
Walter had hoped that the priest,
or at least the Lord Poynings, would accompany him;
but the message was for himself alone; so he was led
along a high corridor with tall stands of arms.
The king had been a great warrior in his manhood,
and had won many trophies. They came to a great
doorway, where the page knocked; a voice cried within,
and the page told Walter he must enter alone.
Walter would fain have asked the page
how he should make his obeisance; but there was no
time now, for the page opened the door, and Walter
went in.
He found himself in a small room,
hung with green arras. The king was sitting in
a great chair, by a table spread out with parchments.
Walter first bowed low and then knelt down; the king
motioned him to rise, and then said in a quiet and
serene voice, “So, sir, you are the gentleman
that has found a treasure and would fain be rid of
it again.” At these gentle words Walter
felt his terrors leave him; the king looked at him
with a serious attention; he was a man just passing
into age; his head was nearly hairless, and he had
a thin face with a long nose, and small lips drawn
together. On his head was a loose velvet cap,
and he wore his gown furred; round his neck was a jewel,
and he had great rings on his forefingers and thumbs.
The king, hardly pausing for an answer,
said, “You look ill, Master Wyatt, and little
wonder; sit here in a chair and tell me the tale in
a few words.”
Walter told his story as shortly as
he could with the king’s kind eye upon him;
the king once or twice interrupted him; he took the
bar from Walter’s hands, and looked upon it,
weighing it in his fingers, and saying, “Ay,
it is a mighty treasure.” Once or twice
he made him repeat a few sentences, and heard the
story of the thing that stood near him with a visible
awe.
At last he said with a smile, “You
have told your story well, sir, and plainly; are you
a soldier?” When Walter said “no,”
he said, “It is a noble trade, nevertheless.”
Then he said, “Well, sir, the treasure is yours,
to use as I understand you will use it for the glory
of God and for the peace of the poor spirit, which
I doubt not is that of a great knight. But I
have no desire to be visited of him,” and here
he crossed himself. “So let it be thus bestowed and
I will cause a quittance to be made out for you from
the Crown, which will take no part in the trove.
How many bars did you say?” And when Walter
said “fifty,” the king said, “It
is great wealth; and I wish for your sake, sir, that
it were not so sad an inheritance.” Then
he added, “Well, sir, that is the matter; but
I would hear the end of this, for I never knew the
like; when your church is built and all things are
in order, and let it be done speedily, you shall come
and visit me again.” And then the king
said, with a kindly smile, “And as for the maiden
of whom I have heard, be not discouraged; for yours
is an ancient house, and it must not be extinguished and
so farewell; and remember that your king wishes you
happiness;” and he made a sign that Walter should
withdraw. So Walter knelt again and kissed the
king’s ring, and left the chamber.
When Walter came out he seemed to
tread on air; the king’s gracious kindness moved
him very greatly, and loyalty filled his heart to the
brim. He found the priest and the Lord Poynings
waiting for him; and presently the two left the palace
together, and Walter told the priest what the king
had said.
The next day he rode back into Sussex;
but he was very sorely beset as he rode, and reached
home in great misery. But he wasted no time,
but rather went to his new task with great eagerness;
the foundations of the church were laid, and soon
the walls began to rise. Meanwhile Walter had
the gold conveyed to the king’s Mint; and a message
came to him that it would make near upon twenty thousand
pounds of gold, a fortune for an earl. So the
church was built very massive and great, and a rich
estate was bought which would support a college of
priests. But Walter’s heart was very heavy;
for his terrors still came over him from day to day;
and he was no nearer settling his own affairs.
Then there began to come to him a
sore temptation; he could build his church, and endow
his college with lands, and yet he could save something
of the treasure to set him free from his own poverty;
and day by day this wrought more and more in his mind.
At last one day when he was wandering
through the wood, he found himself face to face in
the path with Marjory herself; and there was so tender
a look in her face that he could no longer resist,
so he turned and walked with her, and told her all
that was in his heart. “It was all for
the love of you,” he said, “that I have
thus been punished, and now I am no nearer the end;”
and then, for he saw that she wept, and that she loved
him well, he opened to her his heart, and said that
he would keep back part of the treasure, and would
save his house, and that they would be wed; and so
he kissed her on the lips.
But Marjory was a true-hearted and
wise maiden, and loved Walter better than he knew;
and she said to him, all trembling for pity, “Dear
Walter, it cannot be; this must be given faithfully,
because you are the king’s servant, and because
you must give the spirit back his own, and because
you are he that I love the best; and we will wait;
for God tells me that it must be so; and He is truer
even than love.”
So Walter was ashamed; and he threw
unworthy thoughts away; and with the last of the money
he caused a fair screen to be made, and windows of
rich glass; and the money was thus laid out.
Now while the church was in building and
they made all the haste they could Walter
had days when he was very grievously troubled; but
it seemed to him a different sort of trouble.
In the first place he looked forward confidently to
the day when the dark presence would be withdrawn;
and a man who can look forward to a certain ending
to his pain can stay himself on that; but, besides
that, it seemed to him that he was not now beset by
a foe, but guarded as it were by a sentinel.
There were days when the horror was very great, and
when the thing was always near him whether he sate
or walked, whether he was alone or in company; and
on those days he withdrew himself from men, and there
was a dark shadow on his brow. So that there grew
up a kind of mystery about him; but, besides that,
he learnt things in those bitter hours that are not
taught in any school. He learnt to suffer with
all the great company of those who bear heavy and unseen
burdens, who move in the grip of fears and stumble
under the load of dark necessities. He grew more
tender and more strong. He found in his hand
the key to many hearts. Before this he had cared
little about the thoughts of other men; but now he
found himself for ever wondering what the inner thoughts
of the hearts of others were, and ready if need were
to help to lift their load; he had lived before in
careless fellowship with light-hearted persons, but
now he was rather drawn to the old and wise and sad;
and there fell on him some touch of the holy priesthood
that falls on all whose sadness is a fruitful sadness,
and who instead of yielding to bitter repining would
try to make others happier. If he heard of a
sorrow or a distress, his thought was no longer how
to put it out of his mind as soon as he might, but
of how he might lighten it. So his heart grew
wider day by day.
And at last the day came when the
church was done; it stood, a fair white shrine with
a seemly tower, on the hill-top, and a little way
from it was the college for the priests. The Bishop
came to consecrate it, and the old Canon came from
London, and there was a little gathering of neighbours
to see the holy work accomplished.
The Bishop blessed the church very
tenderly; he was an old infirm man, but he bore his
weakness lightly and serenely. He made Walter
the night before tell him the story of the treasure,
and found much to wonder at in it.
There was no part of the church or
its furniture that he did not solemnly bless; and
Walter from his place felt a grave joy to see all
so fair and seemly. The priests moved from end
to end with the Bishop, in their stiff embroidered
robes, and there was a holy smell of incense which
strove with the sharp scent of the newly-chiselled
wood. The Bishop made them a little sermon and
spoke much of the gathering into the fold of spirits
that had done their work bravely, even if they had
not known the Lord Christ on earth.
After all was over, and the guests
were departed, the old Canon said that he must return
on the morrow to London, and that he had a message
for Walter from the king, who had not failed
to ask him how the work went on, that Walter
was to return with him and tell the king of the fulfilment
of the design.
That night Walter had a strange dream;
he seemed to stand in a dark place all vaulted over,
like a cave that stretched far into the earth; he
himself stood in the shadow of a rock, and he was aware
of some one passing by him. He looked at him,
and saw that he was the warrior that he had seen before
in his dream, a small pale man, with a short beard,
with rusty armour much dinted; he held a spear in his
hand, and walked restlessly like a man little content.
But while Walter watched him, there seemed to be another
person drawing near in the opposite direction.
This was a tall man, all in white, who brought with
him as he came a strange freshness in the dark place,
as of air and light, and the scent of flowers; this
one came along in a different fashion, with an assured
and yet tender air, as though he was making search
for some one to whom his coming would be welcome;
so the two met and words passed between them; the
warrior stood with his hands clasped upon his spear
seeming to drink in what was said he could
not hear the words at first, for they were spoken
softly, but the last words he heard were, “And
you too are of the number.” Then the warrior
kneeled down and laid his spear aside, and the other
seemed to stoop and bless him, and then went on his
way; and the warrior knelt and watched him going with
a look in his face as though he had heard wonderful
and beautiful news, and could hardly yet believe it;
and so holy was the look that Walter felt as though
he intruded upon some deep mystery, and moved further
into the shadow of the rock; but the warrior rose and
came to him where he stood, and looked at him with
a half-doubting look, as though he asked pardon, stretching
out his hands; and Walter smiled at him, and the other
smiled; and at the moment Walter woke in the dawn
with a strange joy in his heart, and rising in haste,
drew the window curtain aside, and saw the fresh dawn
beginning to come in over the woods, and he knew that
the burden was lifted from him and that he was free.
In the morning as the old Canon and
Walter rode to London, Walter told him the dream;
and when he had done, he saw that the old priest was
smiling at him with his eyes full of tears, and that
he could not speak; so they rode together in that
sweet silence which is worth more than many words.
The next day Walter came to see the
king: he carried with him a paper to show the
king how all had been expended; but he went with no
fear, but as though to see a true friend.
The king received him very gladly,
and bade Walter tell him all that had been done; so
Walter told him, and then speaking very softly told
the king the dream; the king mused over the story,
and then said, “So he has his heart’s
desire.”
Then there was a silence; and then
the king, as though breaking out of a pleasant thought,
drew from the table a parchment, and said to Walter
that he had done well and wisely, and therefore for
the trust that he had in him he made him his Sheriff
for the County of Sussex, to which was added a large
revenue; and there was more to come, for the king
bade Walter unhook a sword from the wall, his own sword
that he had borne in battle; and therewith he dubbed
him knight, and said to him, “Rise up, Sir Walter
Wyatt.” Then before he dismissed him, he
said to him that he would see him every year at the
Court; and then with a smile he added, “And
when you next come, I charge you to bring with you
my Lady Wyatt.”
And Walter promised this, and kept his word.