For who is he, whose chin is but enriched
With one appearing hair, that will not follow
These culled and choice-drawn cavaliers ’gainst
France?
Work, work your thoughts, and therein see a siege.
King
Henry V.
The next forenoon, Mary met James
in the park, wandering in search of his pupil, whom
he had not seen since they had finished their morning’s
work in the study. Some wild freak with Clara
was apprehended, but while they were conferring, Mary
exclaimed, ‘What’s that?’ as a clatter
and clank met her ear.
‘Only the men going out to join
old Brewster’s ridiculous yeomanry,’ said
Jem.
‘Oh, I should like to see them,’
cried Mary, running to the top of a bank, whence she
could see into the hollow road leading from the stables
to the lodge. Four horsemen, the sun glancing
on their helmets, were descending the road, and a
fifth, at some distance ahead, was nearly out of sight.
‘Ah,’ she said, ’Louis must have
been seeing them off. How disappointed he must
be not to go!’
‘I wish I was sure ’
said James, with a start. ’I declare his
folly is capable of anything! Why did I not
think of it sooner?’
Clara here rushed upon them with her
cameleopard gallop, sending her voice before her,
‘Can you see them?’
‘Scarcely,’ said Mary, making room for
her.
‘Where’s Louis’!’ hastily
demanded her brother.
‘Gone to the yeomanry meeting,’
said Clara, looking in their faces in the exultation
of producing a sensation.
James was setting off with a run to
intercept him, but it was too late; and Clara loudly
laughed as she said, ‘You can’t catch him.’
‘I’ve done with him!’
cried James. ‘Can madness go further?’
‘James! I am ashamed of
you,’ cried the Giraffe, with great stateliness.
’Here are the enemy threatening our coasts,
and our towns full of disaffection and sedition; and
when our yeomanry are lukewarm enough to go off grouse-shooting
instead of attending to their duty, what is to become
of the whole country if somebody does not make an
exertion? The tranquillity of all England may
depend on the face our yeomanry show.’
’On Lieutenant Fitzjocelyn’s
yellow moustache! Pray how long have you been
in the secret of these heroic intentions?’
‘Ever since I came home.’
‘We all knew that he meant to
go out if he could,’ said Mary, in a tone calculated
to soothe Jem, and diminish Clara’s glory in
being sole confidante, ’but we did not think
him well enough. I hope it will do him no harm.’
‘Exertions in a good cause can
do no harm!’ boldly declared Clara; then, with
sudden loss of confidence, ‘do you really think
it will?’
‘Just cripple him for life,’ said James.
‘Mr. Walby wished him not to
attempt riding,’ said Mary. ’He thinks
any strain on the ankle just now might hurt him very
much; but it may be over caution.’
‘Mr. Walby is an old woman,’
said Clara. ’Now, Jem, you said so yourself.
Besides, it is all for his duty! Of course,
he would risk anything for the good of his country.’
‘Don’t say another word,
Clara,’ exclaimed James, ’or you will drive
me distracted with your folly. One grain of
sense, and even you would have stopped it; but neither
you nor he could miss a chance of his figuring in
that masquerade dress! Look at the sun, exactly
like a red-hot oven! We shall have him come
home as ill as ever!’
Clara had another milder and more
sorrowful version of the scolding from her grandmother,
but Lord Ormersfield escaped the day’s anxiety
by being so busy with Richardson, that he never emerged
from the study, and did not miss his son.
It was an exceedingly sultry day,
and the hopeful trusted that Louis would be forced
to give in, before much harm could be done; but it
was not till five o’clock that the hoofs were
heard on the gravel; and Jem went out to revenge himself
with irony for his uneasiness.
‘I hope you are satisfied,’
he said, ‘dulce est pro patria
mori.’
Louis was slowly dismounting, and
as he touched the ground gave a slight cry of pain,
and caught at the servant’s arm for support.
‘No more than I expected,’
said James, coming to help him; and at the same moment
Lord Ormersfield was heard exclaiming
‘Fitzjocelyn ! what imprudence!’
‘Take care,’ hastily interrupted
James, finding Louis leaning helplessly against him,
unable to speak or stand, and his flushed cheek rapidly
changing to deadly white.
They lifted him up the steps into
the hall, where he signed to be laid down on the seat
of the cool north window, and trying to smile, said
’it was only the hot sun, and his foot aching
rather; it would soon go off.’
And when, with much pain and difficulty, Frampton had
released his swollen foot from the regulation-boot,
into which he had foolishly thrust it, he went on
more fluently. ’He had thought it his
duty, especially when Mr. Shaw, the captain of his
troop, had chosen to go away he had believed
it could do no harm he was sure it was only
a little present discomfort, and in the present crisis ’
He addressed his aunt, but his eyes
were on his father; and when he heard not a single
word from him, he suddenly ceased, and presently,
laying his head down on the window-sill, he begged
that no one would stand and watch him, he should come
into the library in a few minutes.
The few minutes lasted, however, till
near dinnertime, when he called to Mary, as she was
coming downstairs, and asked her to help him into
the library; he could remain no longer exposed to Frampton’s
pity, as dinner went in.
He dragged himself along with more
difficulty than he had found for weeks, and sank down
on the sofa with a sigh of exhaustion; while Clara,
who was alone in the room, reared herself up from an
easy-chair, where she had been sitting in an attitude
that would have been despair to her mistress.
‘Ha, Clara!’ said Louis,
presently; ’you look as if you had been the
object of invective?’
‘I don’t care,’
exclaimed Clara, ’I know you were in the good
old cause.’
‘Conde at Jarnac, Charles XII.
at Pultowa which?’ said Louis.
’I thought of both myself only,
unluckily, I made such frightful blunders. I
was thankful to my men for bringing me off, like other
great commanders.’
‘Oh, Louis! but at least you
were in your place you set the example.’
’Unluckily, these things descend
from the sublime to the other thing, when one is done
up, and beginning to doubt whether self-will cannot
sometimes wear a mask.’
’I’m sure they are all
quite cross enough to you already, without your being
cross to yourself.’
‘An ingenious and elegant impersonal,’
said Louis.
Clara rushed out into the garden to
tell the stiff old rose-trees that if Lord Ormersfield
were savage now, he would be more horrid than ever.
Meanwhile, Louis drew a long sigh,
murmuring, ’Have I gone and vexed him again?
Mary, have I been very silly?’
The half-piteous doubt and compunction
had something childish, which made her smile as she
answered: ’You had better have done as you
were told.’
‘The surest road to silliness,’
said Louis, whose tendency was to moralize the more,
the more tired he was, ’is to think one is going
to do something fine! It is dismal work to come
out at the other end of an illusion.’
‘With a foot aching as, I am afraid, yours does.’
‘I should not mind that, but that I made such
horrid mistakes!’
These weighed upon his mind so much,
that he went on, half aloud, rehearsing the manoeuvres
and orders in which he had failed, from the difficulty
of taking the command of his troop for the first time,
when bewildered with pain and discomfort. The
others came in, and James looked rabid; Louis stole
a glance now and then at his father, who preserved
a grave silence, while Clara stood aloof, comparing
the prostrate figure in blue and silver to all the
wounded knights in history or fiction.
He was past going in to dinner, and
the party were ’civil and melancholy,’
Mrs. Frost casting beseeching looks at her grandson,
who sat visibly chafing at the gloom that rested on
the Earl’s brow, and which increased at each
message of refusal of everything but iced water.
At last Mrs. Frost carried off some grapes from the
dessert to tempt him, and as she passed through the
open window her readiest way to the library the
Earl’s thanks concluded with a disconsolate murmur
‘quite ill,’ and ‘abominable folly;’
a mere soliloquy and nearly inaudible, but sufficient
spark to produce the explosion.
‘Fitzjocelyn’s motives
deserve no such name as folly,’ James cried,
with stammering eagerness.
‘I know you did not encourage
him,’ said Lord Ormersfield.
‘I did,’ said a young,
clear voice, raised in alarm at her own boldness;
‘Jem knew nothing of it, but I thought it right.’
Lord Ormersfield made a little courteous
inclination with his head, which annihilated Clara
upon the spot.
‘I doubt whether I should have
done right in striving to prevent him,’ said
James. ‘Who can appreciate the moral effect
of heroism?’
‘Heroism in the cause of a silver jacket!’
‘Now, that is the most unfair
thing in the world!’ cried James, always most
violent when he launched out with his majestic cousin.
’There is not a man living more careless of
his appearance. You do him justice, Mrs. Ponsonby?’
’Yes, I do not believe that
vanity had anything to do with it. A man who
would bear what he has done to-day would do far more.’
‘If it had been for any reasonable cause,’
said the Earl.
‘You may not understand it,
Lord Ormersfield,’ exclaimed James, ’but
I do. In these times of disaffection, a sound
heart, and whole spirit, in our volunteer corps may
be the saving of the country; and who can tell what
may be the benefit of such an exhibition of self-sacrificing
zeal. The time demands every man’s utmost,
and neither risk nor suffering can make him flinch
from his duty.’
‘My dear Jem,’ said a
voice behind him at the window, ’I never see
my follies so plainly as when you are defending them.
Come and help me up stairs; Granny is ordering me
up; a night’s rest will set all smooth.’
It was not a night’s rest, neither
did it set things smooth. In vain did Louis
assume a sprightly countenance, and hold his head and
shoulders erect and stately; there was no concealing
that he was very pale, and winced at every step.
His ankle had been much hurt by the pressure of the
stirrup, and he was not strong enough to bear with
impunity severe pain, exertion, and fatigue on a burning
summer day. It was evident that his recovery
had been thrown back for weeks.
His father made no reproaches, but
was grievously disappointed. His exaggerated
estimate of his son’s discretion had given place
to a no less misplaced despondency, quite inaccessible
to Mrs. Ponsonby’s consolations as to the spirit
that had prompted the performance. He could
have better understood a youth being unable to forego
the exhibition of a handsome person and dress, than
imagine that any one of moderate sense could either
expect the invasion, or use these means of averting
it. If imagination was to be allowed for, so
much the worse. A certain resemblance to the
childish wilfulness with which his wife had trifled
with her health, occurred to him, increasing his vexation
by gloomy shadows of the past.
His silent mortification and kind
anxiety went to his son’s heart. Louis
was no less disappointed in himself, in finding his
own judgment as untrustworthy as ever, since the exploit
that had been a perpetual feast to his chivalrous
fancy had turned out a mere piece of self-willed imprudence,
destroying all the newly-bestowed and highly-valued
good opinion of his father; and even in itself, incompetently
executed. ‘He had made a fool of himself
every way.’ That had been James’s
first dictum, and he adopted it from conviction.
In the course of the day, goodnatured,
fat Sir Gilbert Brewster, the colonel of the yeomanry,
who had been seriously uneasy at his looks, and had
tried to send him home, rode over to inquire for him,
complimenting him on being ‘thorough game to
the last.’ Louis relieved his mind by
apologies for his blunders, whereupon he learnt that
his good colonel had never discovered them, and now
only laughed at them, and declared that they were
mere trifles to what the whole corps, officers and
men, committed whenever they met, and no one cared
except one old sergeant who had been in the Light
Dragoons. Louis’s very repentance for them
was another piece of absurdity. He smiled, indeed,
but seemed to give himself up as a hopeless subject.
His spirits flagged as they had not done throughout
his illness, and, unwell, languid, and depressed,
he spent his days without an attempt to rally.
He was only too conscious of his own inconsistency,
but he had not energy enough to resume any of the
habits that Mary had so diligently nursed, neglected
even his cottage-building, would not trouble himself
to consider the carpenter’s questions, forgot
messages, put off engagements, and seemed to have
only just vigour enough to be desultory, tease James,
and spoil Clara.
Lord Ormersfield became alarmed, and
called in doctors, who recommended sea air, and James
suggested a secluded village on the Yorkshire coast,
where some friends had been reading in the last long
vacation. This was to be the break-up of the
party; Mrs. Frost and the two Marys would resort to
Dynevor Terrace, Clara would return to school, and
James undertook the charge of Louis, who took such
exceedingly little heed to the arrangements, that
Jem indignantly told him that he cared neither for
himself nor anybody else.