I dare say that I had already read
my uncle’s letter a hundred times, and I am
sure that I knew it by heart. None the less I
took it out of my pocket, and, sitting on the side
of the lugger, I went over it again with as much attention
as if it were for the first time. It was written
in a prim, angular hand, such as one might expect from
a man who had begun life as a village attorney, and
it was addressed to Louis de Laval, to the care of
William Hargreaves, of the Green Man in Ashford, Kent.
The landlord had many a hogshead of untaxed French
brandy from the Normandy coast, and the letter had
found its way by the same hands.
‘My dear nephew Louis,’
said the letter, ’now that your father is dead,
and that you are alone in the world, I am sure that
you will not wish to carry on the feud which has existed
between the two halves of the family. At the
time of the troubles your father was drawn towards
the side of the King, and I towards that of the people,
and it ended, as you know, by his having to fly from
the country, and by my becoming the possessor of the
estates of Grosbois. No doubt it is very hard
that you should find yourself in a different position
to your ancestors, but I am sure that you would rather
that the land should be held by a Bernac than by a
stranger. From the brother of your mother you
will at least always meet with sympathy and consideration.
’And now I have some advice
for you. You know that I have always been a
Republican, but it has become evident to me that there
is no use in fighting against fate, and that Napoleon’s
power is far too great to be shaken. This being
so, I have tried to serve him, for it is well to howl
when you are among wolves. I have been able to
do so much for him that he has become my very good
friend, so that I may ask him what I like in return.
He is now, as you are probably aware, with the army
at Boulogne, within a few miles of Grosbois.
If you will come over at once he will certainly forget
the hostility of your father in consideration of the
services of your uncle. It is true that your
name is still proscribed, but my influence with the
Emperor will set that matter right. Come to
me, then, come at once, and come with confidence.
’Your
uncle,
‘C.
Bernac.’
So much for the letter, but it was
the outside which had puzzled me most. A seal
of red wax had been affixed at either end, and my uncle
had apparently used his thumb as a signet. One
could see the little rippling edges of a coarse skin
imprinted upon the wax. And then above one of
the seals there was written in English the two words,
’Don’t come.’ It was hastily
scrawled, and whether by a man or a woman it was impossible
to say; but there it stared me in the face, that sinister
addition to an invitation.
‘Don’t come!’ Had
it been added by this unknown uncle of mine on account
of some sudden change in his plans? Surely that
was inconceivable, for why in that case should he
send the invitation at all? Or was it placed
there by some one else who wished to warn me from
accepting this offer of hospitality? The letter
was in French. The warning was in English.
Could it have been added in England? But the
seals were unbroken, and how could any one in England
know what were the contents of the letter?
And then, as I sat there with the
big sail humming like a shell above my head and the
green water hissing beside me, I thought over all that
I had heard of this uncle of mine. My father,
the descendant of one of the proudest and oldest families
in France, had chosen beauty and virtue rather than
rank in his wife. Never for an hour had she given
him cause to regret it; but this lawyer brother of
hers had, as I understood, offended my father by his
slavish obsequiousness in days of prosperity and his
venomous enmity in the days of trouble. He had
hounded on the peasants until my family had been compelled
to fly from the country, and had afterwards aided
Robespierre in his worst excesses, receiving as a
reward the castle and estate of Grosbois, which was
our own. At the fall of Robespierre he had succeeded
in conciliating Barras, and through every successive
change he still managed to gain a fresh tenure of the
property. Now it appeared from his letter that
the new Emperor of France had also taken his part,
though why he should befriend a man with such a history,
and what service my Republican uncle could possibly
render to him, were matters upon which I could form
no opinion.
And now you will ask me, no doubt,
why I should accept the invitation of such a man a
man whom my father had always stigmatised as a usurper
and a traitor. It is easier to speak of it now
than then, but the fact was that we of the new generation
felt it very irksome and difficult to carry on the
bitter quarrels of the last. To the older emigres
the clock of time seemed to have stopped in the year
1792, and they remained for ever with the loves and
the hatreds of that era fixed indelibly upon their
souls. They had been burned into them by the
fiery furnace through which they had passed.
But we, who had grown up upon a strange soil, understood
that the world had moved, and that new issues had
arisen. We were inclined to forget these feuds
of the last generation. France to us was no longer
the murderous land of the sans-culotte and
the guillotine basket; it was rather the glorious queen
of war, attacked by all and conquering all, but still
so hard pressed that her scattered sons could hear
her call to arms for ever sounding in their ears.
It was that call more than my uncle’s letter
which was taking me over the waters of the Channel.
For long my heart had been with my
country in her struggle, and yet while my father lived
I had never dared to say so; for to him, who had served
under Conde and fought at Quiberon, it would have seemed
the blackest treason. But after his death there
was no reason why I should not return to the land
of my birth, and my desire was the stronger because
Eugenie the same Eugenie who has been thirty
years my wife was of the same way of thinking
as myself. Her parents were a branch of the
de Choiseuls, and their prejudices were even stronger
than those of my father. Little did they think
what was passing in the minds of their children.
Many a time when they were mourning a French victory
in the parlour we were both capering with joy in the
garden. There was a little window, all choked
round with laurel bushes, in the corner of the bare
brick house, and there we used to meet at night, the
dearer to each other from our difference with all
who surrounded us. I would tell her my ambitions;
she would strengthen them by her enthusiasm.
And so all was ready when the time came.
But there was another reason besides
the death of my father and the receipt of this letter
from my uncle. Ashford was becoming too hot to
hold me. I will say this for the English, that
they were very generous hosts to the French emigrants.
There was not one of us who did not carry away a
kindly remembrance of the land and its people.
But in every country there are overbearing, swaggering
folk, and even in quiet, sleepy Ashford we were plagued
by them. There was one young Kentish squire,
Farley was his name, who had earned a reputation in
the town as a bully and a roisterer. He could
not meet one of us without uttering insults not merely
against the present French Government, which might
have been excusable in an English patriot, but against
France itself and all Frenchmen. Often we were
forced to be deaf in his presence, but at last his
conduct became so intolerable that I determined to
teach him a lesson. There were several of us
in the coffee-room at the Green Man one evening, and
he, full of wine and malice, was heaping insults upon
the French, his eyes creeping round to me every moment
to see how I was taking it. ‘Now, Monsieur
de Laval,’ he cried, putting his rude hand upon
my shoulder, ’here is a toast for you to drink.
This is to the arm of Nelson which strikes down the
French.’ He stood leering at me to see
if I would drink it. ‘Well, sir,’
said I, ’I will drink your toast if you will
drink mine in return.’ ‘Come on, then!’
said he. So we drank. ‘Now, monsieur,
let us have your toast,’ said he. ’Fill
your glass, then,’ said I. ‘It is
full now.’ ’Well, then, here’s
to the cannon-ball which carried off that arm!’
In an instant I had a glass of port wine running
down my face, and within an hour a meeting had been
arranged. I shot him through the shoulder, and
that night, when I came to the little window, Eugenie
plucked off some of the laurel leaves and stuck them
in my hair.
There were no legal proceedings about
the duel, but it made my position a little difficult
in the town, and it will explain, with other things,
why I had no hesitation in accepting my unknown uncle’s
invitation, in spite of the singular addition which
I found upon the cover. If he had indeed sufficient
influence with the Emperor to remove the proscription
which was attached to our name, then the only barrier
which shut me off from my country would be demolished.
You must picture me all this time
as sitting upon the side of the lugger and turning
my prospects and my position over in my head.
My reverie was interrupted by the heavy hand of the
English skipper dropping abruptly upon my arm.
‘Now then, master,’ said
he, it’s time you were stepping into the dingey.’
I do not inherit the politics of the
aristocrats, but I have never lost their sense of
personal dignity. I gently pushed away his polluting
hand, and I remarked that we were still a long way
from the shore.
‘Well, you can do as you please,’
said he roughly; ’I’m going no nearer,
so you can take your choice of getting into the dingey
or of swimming for it.’
It was in vain that I pleaded that
he had been paid his price. I did not add that
that price meant that the watch which had belonged
to three generations of de Lavals was now lying in
the shop of a Dover goldsmith.
‘Little enough, too!’
he cried harshly. ’Down sail, Jim, and
bring her to! Now, master, you can step over
the side, or you can come back to Dover, but I don’t
take the Vixen a cable’s length nearer to Ambleteuse
Beef with this gale coming up from the sou’-west.’
‘In that case I shall go,’ said I.
‘You can lay your life on that!’
he answered, and laughed in so irritating a fashion
that I half turned upon him with the intention of
chastising him. One is very helpless with these
fellows, however, for a serious affair is of course
out of the question, while if one uses a cane upon
them they have a vile habit of striking with their
hands, which gives them an advantage. The Marquis
de Chamfort told me that, when he first settled in
Sutton at the time of the emigration, he lost a tooth
when reproving an unruly peasant. I made the
best of a necessity, therefore, and, shrugging my
shoulders, I passed over the side of the lugger into
the little boat. My bundle was dropped in after
me conceive to yourself the heir of all
the de Lavals travelling with a single bundle for
his baggage! and two seamen pushed her off,
pulling with long slow strokes towards the low-lying
shore.
There was certainly every promise
of a wild night, for the dark cloud which had rolled
up over the setting sun was now frayed and ragged at
the edges, extending a good third of the way across
the heavens. It had split low down near the
horizon, and the crimson glare of the sunset beat
through the gap, so that there was the appearance of
fire with a monstrous reek of smoke. A red dancing
belt of light lay across the broad slate-coloured
ocean, and in the centre of it the little black craft
was wallowing and tumbling. The two seamen kept
looking up at the heavens, and then over their shoulders
at the land, and I feared every moment that they would
put back before the gale burst. I was filled
with apprehension every time when the end of their
pull turned their faces skyward, and it was to draw
their attention away from the storm-drift that I asked
them what the lights were which had begun to twinkle
through the dusk both to the right and to the left
of us.
‘That’s Boulogne to the
north, and Etaples upon the south,’ said one
of the seamen civilly.
Boulogne! Etaples! How
the words came back to me! It was to Boulogne
that in my boyhood we had gone down for the summer
bathing. Could I not remember as a little lad
trotting along by my father’s side as he paced
the beach, and wondering why every fisherman’s
cap flew off at our approach? And as to Etaples,
it was thence that we had fled for England, when the
folks came raving to the pier-head as we passed, and
I joined my thin voice to my father’s as he
shrieked back at them, for a stone had broken my mother’s
knee, and we were all frenzied with our fear and our
hatred. And here they were, these places of my
childhood, twinkling to the north and south of me,
while there, in the darkness between them, and only
ten miles off at the furthest, lay my own castle,
my own land of Grosbois, where the men of my blood
had lived and died long before some of us had gone
across with Duke William to conquer the proud island
over the water. How I strained my eager eyes
through the darkness as I thought that the distant
black keep of our fortalice might even now be visible!
‘Yes, sir,’ said the seaman,
’’tis a fine stretch of lonesome coast,
and many is the cock of your hackle that I have helped
ashore there.’
‘What do you take me for, then?’ I asked.
’Well, ‘tis no business
of mine, sir,’ he answered. ’There
are some trades that had best not even be spoken about.’
‘You think that I am a conspirator?’
‘Well, master, since you have
put a name to it. Lor’ love you, sir,
we’re used to it.’
‘I give you my word that I am none.’
‘An escaped prisoner, then?’
‘No, nor that either.’
The man leaned upon his oar, and I
could see in the gloom that his face was thrust forward,
and that it was wrinkled with suspicion.
‘If you’re one of Boney’s spies ’
he cried.
‘I! A spy!’ The tone of my voice
was enough to convince him.
‘Well,’ said he,’
I’m darned if I know what you are. But
if you’d been a spy I’d ha’ had
no hand in landing you, whatever the skipper might
say.’
‘Mind you, I’ve no word
to say against Boney,’ said the other seaman,
speaking in a very thick rumbling voice. ’He’s
been a rare good friend to the poor mariner.’
It surprised me to hear him speak
so, for the virulence of feeling against the new French
Emperor in England exceeded all belief, and high and
low were united in their hatred of him; but the sailor
soon gave me a clue to his politics.
’If the poor mariner can run
in his little bit of coffee and sugar, and run out
his silk and his brandy, he has Boney to thank for
it,’ said he. ’The merchants have
had their spell, and now it’s the turn of the
poor mariner.’
I remembered then that Buonaparte
was personally very popular amongst the smugglers,
as well he might be, seeing that he had made over into
their hands all the trade of the Channel. The
seaman continued to pull with his left hand, but he
pointed with his right over the slate-coloured dancing
waters.
‘There’s Boney himself,’ said he.
You who live in a quieter age cannot
conceive the thrill which these simple words sent
through me. It was but ten years since we had
first heard of this man with the curious Italian name think
of it, ten years, the time that it takes for a private
to become a non-commissioned officer, or a clerk to
win a fifty-pound advance in his salary. He had
sprung in an instant out of nothing into everything.
One month people were asking who he was, the next
he had broken out in the north of Italy like the plague;
Venice and Genoa withered at the touch of this swarthy
ill-nourished boy. He cowed the soldiers in the
field, and he outwitted the statesmen in the council
chamber. With a frenzy of energy he rushed to
the east, and then, while men were still marvelling
at the way in which he had converted Egypt into a
French department, he was back again in Italy and
had beaten Austria for the second time to the earth.
He travelled as quickly as the rumour of his coming;
and where he came there were new victories, new combinations,
the crackling of old systems and the blurring of ancient
lines of frontier. Holland, Savoy, Switzerland they
were become mere names upon the map. France was
eating into Europe in every direction. They had
made him Emperor, this beardless artillery officer,
and without an effort he had crushed down those Republicans
before whom the oldest king and the proudest nobility
of Europe had been helpless. So it came about
that we, who watched him dart from place to place
like the shuttle of destiny, and who heard his name
always in connection with some new achievement and
some new success, had come at last to look upon him
as something more than human, something monstrous,
overshadowing France and menacing Europe. His
giant presence loomed over the continent, and so deep
was the impression which his fame had made in my mind
that, when the English sailor pointed confidently
over the darkening waters, and cried ‘There’s
Boney!’ I looked up for the instant with a foolish
expectation of seeing some gigantic figure, some elemental
creature, dark, inchoate, and threatening, brooding
over the waters of the Channel. Even now, after
the long gap of years and the knowledge of his downfall,
that great man casts his spell upon you, but all that
you read and all that you hear cannot give you an
idea of what his name meant in the days when he was
at the summit of his career.
What actually met my eye was very
different from this childish expectation of mine.
To the north there was a long low cape, the name
of which has now escaped me. In the evening light
it had been of the same greyish green tint as the
other headlands; but now, as the darkness fell, it
gradually broke into a dull glow, like a cooling iron.
On that wild night, seen and lost with the heave and
sweep of the boat, this lurid streak carried with
it a vague but sinister suggestion. The red line
splitting the darkness might have been a giant half-forged
sword-blade with its point towards England.
‘What is it, then?’ I asked.
‘Just what I say, master,’
said he. ’It’s one of Boney’s
armies, with Boney himself in the middle of it as
like as not. Them is their camp fires, and you’ll
see a dozen such between this and Ostend. He’s
audacious enough to come across, is little Boney, if
he could dowse Lord Nelson’s other eye; but
there’s no chance for him until then, and well
he knows it.’
‘How can Lord Nelson know what he is doing?’
I asked.
The man pointed out over my shoulder
into the darkness, and far on the horizon I perceived
three little twinkling lights.
‘Watch dog,’ said he, in his husky voice.
‘Andromeda. Forty-four,’ added his
companion.
I have often thought of them since,
the long glow upon the land, and the three little
lights upon the sea, standing for so much, for the
two great rivals face to face, for the power of the
land and the power of the water, for the centuries-old
battle, which may last for centuries to come.
And yet, Frenchman as I am, do I not know that the
struggle is already decided? for it lies
between the childless nation and that which has a
lusty young brood springing up around her. If
France falls she dies, but if England falls how many
nations are there who will carry her speech, her traditions
and her blood on into the history of the future?
The land had been looming darker,
and the thudding of waves upon the sand sounded louder
every instant upon my ears. I could already see
the quick dancing gleam of the surf in front of me.
Suddenly, as I peered through the deepening shadow,
a long dark boat shot out from it, like a trout from
under a stone, making straight in our direction.
‘A guard boat!’ cried one of the seamen.
‘Bill, boy, we’re done!’
said the other, and began to stuff something into
his sea boot.
But the boat swerved at the sight
of us, like a shying horse, and was off in another
direction as fast as eight frantic oars could drive
her. The seamen stared after her and wiped their
brows. ’Her conscience don’t seem
much easier than our own,’ said one of them.
’I made sure it was the preventives.’
’Looks to me as if you weren’t
the only queer cargo on the coast to-night, mister,’
remarked his comrade. ‘What could she be?’
’Cursed if I know what she was.
I rammed a cake of good Trinidad tobacco into my
boot when I saw her. I’ve seen the inside
of a French prison before now. Give way, Bill,
and have it over.’
A minute later, with a low grating
sound, we ran aground upon a gravelly leach.
My bundle was thrown ashore, I stepped after it, and
a seaman pushed the prow off again, springing in as
his comrade backed her into deep water. Already
the glow in the west had vanished, the storm-cloud
was half up the heavens, and a thick blackness had
gathered over the ocean. As I turned to watch
the vanishing boat a keen wet blast flapped in my
face, and the air was filled with the high piping of
the wind and with the deep thunder of the sea.
And thus it was that, on a wild evening
in the early spring of the year 1805, I, Louis de
Laval, being in the twenty-first year of my age, returned,
after an exile of thirteen years, to the country of
which my family had for many centuries been the ornament
and support. She had treated us badly, this
country; she had repaid our services by insult, exile,
and confiscation. But all that was forgotten
as I, the only de Laval of the new generation, dropped
upon my knees upon her sacred soil, and, with the
strong smell of the seaweed in my nostrils, pressed
my lips upon the wet and pringling gravel.