There was no helping it! People
must have their letters whether Paul Blackthorn were
lost or not, and Harold was a servant of the public,
and must do his duty, so after some exhortations from
his mother, he ruefully rose up, hoping that he should
not have to go to Ragglesford.
‘Yes, you will,’ said
his mother, ’and maybe to wait. Here’s
a registered letter, and I think there are two more
with money in them.’
‘To think,’ sighed Harold,
as he mounted his pony, ’of them little chaps
getting more money for nothing, than Paul did in a
month by working the skin off his bones!’
’Don’t be discontented,
Harold, on that score. Them little chaps will
work hard enough by-and-by: and the money they
have now is to train them in making a fit use of it
then.’
Harold looked anxiously up and down
the road for Paul, and asked Mr. Cope’s housekeeper
whether he had been there to take leave. No;
and indeed Harold would have been a little vexed if
he had wished good-bye anywhere if not at home.
There was a fine white frost, and
the rime hung thickly on every spray of the heavy
branches of the dark firs and larches that overhung
the long solitary lane between the Grange and Ragglesford,
and fringed the park palings with crystals.
Harold thought how cold poor Paul must be going on
his way in his ragged clothes. The ice crackled
under the pony’s feet as she trotted down Ragglesford
Lane, and the water of the ford looked so cold, that
Peggy, a very wise animal, turned her head towards
the foot-bridge, a narrow and not very sound affair,
over which Harold had sometimes taken her when the
stream was high, and threatened to be over his feet.
Harold made no objection; but no sooner
were all the pony’s four hoofs well upon the
bridge, than at the other end appeared Dick Royston.
‘Hollo, Har’ld!’
was his greeting, ‘I’ve got somewhat to
say to ye.’
‘D’ye know where Paul Blackthorn is?’
asked Harold.
‘Not I - I’m a traveller myself,
you must know.’
‘You, going to cut?’ cried Harold.
‘Ay,’ said Dick, laying
hold of the pony’s rein. ’The police
have been down at Rolt’s - stupid fellow
left old gander’s feet about - Mrs.
Barker swore to ’em ’cause he’d
had so many kicks and bites on common - Jesse’s
took up and peached - I’ve been hiding
about all night - precious cold it was, and
just waiting, you see, to wish you good-bye.’
Harold, very much shocked, could have
dispensed with his farewells, nor did he like the
look of his eyes.
’Thank you, Dick; I’m
sorry - I didn’t think - but
I’m after time - I wish you’d
let go of Peggy.’
‘So that’s all you have
to say to an old comrade!’ said Dick; ’but,
I say, Har’ld, I’m not going so.
I must have some tin to take me to Portsmouth.
I want to know what you’ve got in that there
bag!’
‘You won’t have that;
it’s the post. Let go, Dick;’ and
he pushed the pony forward, but Dick had got her fast
by the head. Harold looked round for help, but
Ragglesford Lane was one of the loneliest places in
the country. There was not a house for half
a mile, and Lady Jane’s plantations shut in
the road on either side.
‘I mean to have it,’ said
Dick, looking coolly up into his face; ’I mean
to see if there’s any of the letters with a half-sovereign
in ’em, that you tell us about.’
’Dick, Dick, it would be robbing!
For shame, Dick! What would become of Mother
and me?’
‘That’s your look-out,’
said Dick; and he stretched out his hand for the bag.
He was four years older than Harold, and much stouter.
Harold, with a ready move, chucked
the bag round to his back, and shouted lustily in
hopes that there might be a keeper in the woods, ’Help!
Thieves! He’s robbing the post!’
Dick’s hoarse laugh was all
the answer. ‘That’ll do, my dear,’
he said; ‘now you’d best be quiet; I’d
be loath to hurt you.’
For all answer, Harold, shouting all
the time, dealt him a stroke right over the eyes and
nose with his riding-switch, and made a great effort
to force the pony on in hopes the blow might have
made him slacken his hold. But though one moment
Dick’s arm was thrown over his watering eyes,
the other hand held the bridle as firmly as ever,
and the next instant his fist dealt Harold such a
blow, as nearly knocked out all his breath. Setting
his teeth, and swearing an oath, Dick was pouncing
on the boy’s arm, when from the road before
them came bursting a meagre thing darting like a wild
cat, which fell upon him, hallooing as loud as Harold.
Dick turned in fury, and let go the
bridle. The pony backed in alarm. The new-comer
was grappling with the thief, and trying to drag him
aside. ‘On, on; go on, Har’ld!’
he shouted, but his strength was far from equal to
Dick’s, who threw him aside on the hand-rail.
Old rotten rail that it was, it crashed under the
weight, and fell with both the boys into the water.
Peggy dashed forward to the other side, where Harold
pulled her up with much difficulty, and turned round
to look at the robber and the champion. The
fall was not far, nor the water deep, and they had
both risen, and were ready to seize one another again
in their rage. And now Harold saw that he who
had come to his help was no other than Paul Blackthorn,
who shouted loudly, ‘On, go on! I’ll
keep him.’
‘He’ll kill you!’
screamed Harold, in despair, ready to push in between
them with his horse; but at that moment cart-wheels
were heard in the road, and Dick, shaking his fist,
and swearing at them both, shook off Paul as if he
had been a feather, and splashing out of the ford on
the other side, leapt over the hedge, and was off
through the plantations.
Paul more slowly crept up towards
Harold, dripping from head to foot.
‘Paul! Paul! I’m
glad I’ve found you!’ cried Harold.
’You’ve saved the letters, man, and one
was registered! Come along with me, up to the
school.’
‘Nay, I’ll not do that,’ said Paul.
‘Then you’ll stay till
I come back,’ said Harold earnestly; ’I’ve
got so much to tell you! My Lady sent for you.
Our Ellen told her all about you, and you’re
to go to her. Ellen was in such a way when she
found you were off.’
‘Then she didn’t think I’d taken
the eggs?’ said Paul.
‘She’d as soon think that
I had,’ said Harold. ’Why, don’t
we all know that you’re one of the parson’s
own sort? But what made you go off without a
word to nobody?’
‘I don’t know. Every
one was against me,’ said Paul; ’and I
thought I’d just go out of the way, and you’d
forget all about me. But I never touched those
eggs, and you may tell Mr. Cope so, and thank him for
all his kindness to me.’
‘You’ll tell him yourself.
You’re going home along with me,’ cried
Harold. ’There! I’ll not stir
a step till you’ve promised! Why, if you
make off now, ’twill be the way to make them
think you have something to run away for, like that
rascal.’
‘Very well,’ said Paul, rather dreamily.
‘Then you won’t?’ said Harold.
‘Upon your word and honour?’
Paul said the words after him, not
much as if he knew what he was about; and Harold,
rather alarmed at the sound of the Grange clock striking,
gave a cut to the pony, and bounded on, only looking
back to see that Paul was seating himself by the side
of the lane. Harold said to himself that his
mother would not have liked to see him do so after
such a ducking, but he knew that he was more tenderly
treated than other lads, and with reason for precaution
too; and he promised himself soon to be bringing Paul
home to be dried and warmed.
But he was less speedy than he intended.
When he arrived at the school, he had first to account
to the servants for his being so late, and then he
was obliged to wait while the owner of the registered
letter was to sign the green paper, acknowledging
its safe delivery.
Instead of having the receipt brought
back to him, there came a message that he was to go
up to tell the master and the young gentlemen all about
the robbery.
So the servant led the way, and Harold
followed a little shy, but more curious. The
boys were in school, a great bare white-washed room,
looking very cold, with a large arched window at one
end, and forms ranged in squares round the hacked
and hewed deal tables. Harold thought he should
tell Alfred that the young gentlemen had not much the
advantage of themselves in their schoolroom.
The boys were mostly smaller than
he was, only those of the uppermost form being of
the same size. There might be about forty of
them, looking rather red and purple with the chilly
morning, and all their eighty eyes, black or brown,
blue or grey, fixed at once upon the young postman
as he walked into the room, straight and upright,
in his high stout gaiters over his cord trousers,
his thick rough blue coat and red comforter, with
his cap in his hand, his fair hair uncovered, and his
blue eyes and rosy cheeks all the more bright for
that strange morning’s work. He was a
well-mannered boy, and made his bow very properly to
Mr. Carter, the master, who sat at his high desk.
‘So, my little man,’ said
the master, ’I hear you’ve had a fight
for our property this morning. You’ve
saved this young gentleman’s birthday present
of a watch, and he wants to thank you.’
‘Thank you, Sir,’ said
Harold; ’but he’d have been too much for
me if Paul hadn’t come to help. He’s
a deal bigger than me.’
The boys all made a thumping and scuffling
with their feet, as if to applaud Harold; and their
master said, ‘Tell us how it was.’
Harold gave the account in a very
good simple manner, only he did not say who the robber
was - he did not like to do so - indeed,
he would not quite believe it could be his old friend
Dick. The boys clapped and thumped doubly when
he came to the switching, and still more at the tumble
into the water.
‘Do you know who the fellow was?’ asked
Mr. Carter.
‘Yes, I knowed him,’ said Harold, and
stopped there.
‘But you had rather not tell. Is that
it?’
‘Please, Sir, he’s gone, and I wouldn’t
get him into trouble.’
At this the school-boys perfectly stamped, and made
signs of cheering.
‘And who is the boy that came to help you?’
’Paul Blackthorn, Sir; he’s
a boy from the Union who worked at Farmer Shepherd’s.
He’s a right good boy, Sir; but he’s got
no friends, nor no - nothing,’ said
Harold, pausing ere he finished.
‘Why didn’t you bring him up with you?’
asked the master.
‘Please, Sir, he wouldn’t come.’
‘Well,’ said Mr. Carter,
’you’ve behaved like a brave fellow, and
so has your friend; and here’s something in
token of gratitude for the rescue of our property.’
It was a crown piece.
‘And here,’ said the boy
whose watch had been saved, ’here’s half-a-crown.
Shake hands, you’re a jolly fellow; and I’ll
tell my uncle about you.’
Harold was a true Englishman, and
of course his only answer could be, ‘Thank you,
Sir, I only did my duty;’ and as the other boys,
whose money had been rescued, brought forward more
silver pledges of gratitude, he added, ‘I’ll
take it to Paul - thank you, Sir - thank
you, Sir.’
‘That’s right; you must
share, my lad,’ said the school-master.
’It is a reward for both of you.’
‘Thank you, Sir, it was my
duty,’ repeated Harold, making his bow.
‘Sir, Sir, pray let us give
him three cheers,’ burst out the head boy in
an imploring voice.
Mr. Carter smiled and nodded; and
there was such a hearty roaring and stamping, such
‘hip, hip, hurrah!’ bursting out again
and again, that the windows clattered, and the room
seemed fuller of noise than it could possibly hold.
It is not quite certain that Mr. Carter did not halloo
as loud as any of the boys.
Harold turned very red, and did not
know which way to look while it was going on, nor
what to do when it was over, except to say a very odd
sort of ‘Thank you, Sir;’ but his heart
leapt up with a kind of warm grateful feeling of liking
towards those boys for going along with him so heartily;
and the cheers gave a pleasure and glow that the coins
never would have done, even had he thought them his
own by right.
He was not particularly good in this;
he had never felt the pinch of want, and was too young
to care; and he did not happen to wish to buy anything
in particular just then. A selfish or a covetous
boy would not have felt as he did; but these were
not his temptations. Knowing, as he did, that
the assault had been the consequence of his foolish
boasts about the money-letters, and that he, being
in charge, ought to defend them to the last gasp,
he was sure he deserved the very contrary from a reward,
and never thought of the money belonging to any one
but Paul, who had by his own free will come to the
rescue, and saved the bag from robbery, himself from
injury and disgrace.
How happy he was in thinking what
a windfall it was for his friend, and how far it would
go in fitting him up respectably!
Peggy was ready to trot nearly as
fast as he wished her down the lane to the place where
he had left Paul; and no sooner did Harold come in
sight of the olive-coloured rags, than he bawled out
a loud ’Hurrah! Come on, Paul; you don’t
know what I’ve got for you! ’Twas
a young gentleman’s watch as you saved; and
they’ve come down right handsome! and here’s
twelve-and-sixpence for you - enough to rig
you out like a regular swell! Why, what’s
the matter?’ he added in quite another voice,
as he had now come up to Paul, and found him sitting
nearly doubled up, with his head bent over his knees.
He raised his face up as Harold came,
and it was so ghastly pale, that the boy, quite startled,
jumped off his pony.
’Why, old chap, what is it?
Have you got knit up with cold, sitting here?’
‘Yes, I suppose so,’ said
Paul; but his very voice shivered, his teeth chattered,
and his knees knocked together with the chill.
’The pains run about me,’ he added; but
he spoke as if he hardly knew what he was doing or
saying.
‘You must come home with me,
and Mother will give you something hot,’ said
Harold. ’Come, you’ll catch your
death if you don’t. You shall ride home.’
He pulled Paul from his seat with
some difficulty, and was further alarmed when he found
that the poor fellow reeled and could hardly stand;
but he was somewhat roused, and knew better what he
was about. Harold tried to put him on the pony,
but this could not be managed: he could not help
himself enough, Peggy always swerved aside, nor was
Harold strong enough to lift him up.
The only thing to be done was for
Harold to mount, and Paul to lean against the saddle,
while the pony walked. When they had to separate
at the ford, poor Paul’s walk across the bridge
was so feeble and staggering, that Harold feared every
moment that he would fall where the rail was broken
away, but was right glad to put his arm on his shoulder
again to help to hold him up. The moving brought
a little more life back to the poor boy’s limbs,
and he walked a little better, and managed to tell
Harold how he had felt too miserable to speak to any
one after the rating the farmer had given him, and
how he had set out on the tramp for more work, though
with hope so nearly dead in his heart, that he only
wished he could sit down and die. He had walked
out of the village before people were about, so as
not to be noticed, and then had found himself so weak
and weary that he could not get on without food, and
had sat down by the hedge to eat the bit of bread
he had with him. Then he had taken the first
lonely-looking way he saw, without knowing that it
was one of Harold’s daily rides, and was slowly
dragging himself up the hill from the ford when the
well-known voice, shouting for help, had suddenly
called him back, and filled him with spirit and speed
that were far enough off now, poor fellow!
That was a terrible mile and a half - Harold
sometimes thought it would never be over, or that
Paul would drop down, and he would have to gallop
off for help; but Paul was not one to give in, and
somehow they got back at last, and Harold, with his
arm round his friend, dragged him through the garden,
and across the shop, and pushed him into the arm-chair
by the fire, Mrs. King following, and Ellen rushing
down from up-stairs.
‘There!’ cried Harold,
all in a breath, ’there he is! That rascal
tried to rob me on Ragglesford Bridge, and was nigh
too much for me; but he there came and pulled
him off me, and got spilt into the river, and he’s
got a chill, and if you don’t give him something
jolly hot, Mother, he’ll catch his death!’
Mrs. King thought so too: Paul’s
state looked to her more alarming than it did even
to Harold. He did not seem able to think or speak,
but kept rocking himself towards the fire, and that
terrible shivering shaking him all over.
‘Poor lad!’ she said kindly.
’I’ll tell you what, Harold, all you can
do is put him into your bed at once. - Here,
Ellen, you run up first, and bring me a shirt to warm
for him. Then we’ll get his own clothes
dried.’
‘No, no,’ cried Harold,
with a caper, ’we’ll make a scare-crow
of ’em. You don’t know what I know,
Mother. I’ve got twelve shillings and
sixpence here all his own; and you’ll see what
I won’t do with it at old Levi’s, the
second-hand clothes man, to-night.’
Harold grew less noisy as he saw how
little good the fire was doing to his patient, and
how ill his mother seemed to think him. He quietly
obeyed her, by getting him up-stairs, and putting him
into his own bed, the first in which Paul had lain
down for more than four months. Then Mrs. King
sent Harold out for some gin; she thought hot spirits
and water the only chance of bringing back any life
after such a dreadful chill; and she and Ellen kept
on warming flannels and shawls to restore some heat,
and to stop the trembling that shook the bed, so that
Alfred felt it, even in the next room, where he lay
with the door open, longing to be able to help, and
wishing to understand what could have happened.
At last, the cordial and the warm
applications effected some good. Paul was able
to say, ‘I don’t know why you are so good
to me,’ and seemed ready to burst into a great
fit of crying; but Mrs. King managed to stop him by
saying something about one good turn deserving another,
and that she hoped he was coming round now.
Harold was now at leisure to tell
the story in his brother’s room. Alfred
did not grieve now at his brother’s being able
to do spirited things; he laughed out loud, and said,
‘Well done, Harold!’ at the switching,
and rubbed his hands, and lighted up with glee, as
he heard of the Ragglesford boys and their cheers;
and then, Harold went eagerly on with his scheme for
fitting up Paul at the second-hand shop, both Mrs.
King and Alfred taking great interest in his plans,
till Mrs. King hearing something like a moan, went
back to Paul.
She found his cheeks and hands as
burning hot as they had been cold; they were like
live coals; and what was worse, such severe pains were
running all over his limbs, that he was squeezing
the clothes into his mouth that he might not scream
aloud.
Happily it was Mr. Blunt’s day
for calling; and before the morning was over he came,
and after a few words of explanation, he stood at Paul’s
bedside.
Not much given to tenderness towards
the feelings of patients of his degree, Mr. Blunt’s
advice was soon given. ’Yes, he is in for
rheumatic fever - won’t be about again
for a long time to come. I say, Mistress, all
you’ve got to do is to send in your boy to the
Union at Elbury, tell ’em to send out a cart
for him, and take him in as a casual pauper.
Then they may pass him on to his parish.’
Therewith Mr. Blunt went on to attend to Alfred.
‘Then you think this poor lad
will be ill a long time, Sir?’ said Mrs. King,
when Mr. Blunt was preparing to depart.
’Of course he will; I never
saw a clearer case! You’d better send him
off as fast as you can, while he can be moved.
He’ll have a pretty bout of it, I dare say.
‘It is nothing infectious, of
course, Sir?’ said the mother, a little startled
by this hastiness.
’Infectious - nonsense!
why, you know better than that, Mrs. King; I only
meant that you’d better get rid of him as quick
as you can, unless you wish to set up a hospital at
once - and a capital nurse you’d be!
I would leave word with the relieving officer for
you, but that I’ve got to go on to Stoke, and
shan’t be at home till too late.’
Mrs. King’s heart ached for
the poor forlorn orphan, when she remembered what
she had heard of the nursing in Elbury Union.
She did not know how to turn him from her door the
day he had saved her son from danger such as she could
not think of without shuddering; and yet, what could
she do? Her rent and the winter before her, a
heavy doctor’s bill, and the loss of Alfred’s
work!
Slowly she went up the stairs again
to the narrow landing that held the bed where Paul
Blackthorn lay. He was quite still, but there
were large tears coursing one after the other from
his eyes, his hollow cheeks quite glazed with them.
‘Is the pain so very bad?’
she said in her soft voice, putting her hand over
his hot forehead, in the way that Alfred liked.
‘I don’t - know,’
he answered; and his black eyes, after looking up once
in her face with the piteous earnest glance that some
loving dogs have, shut themselves as if on purpose
to keep in the tears, but she saw the dew squeezing
out through the eye-lashes.
‘My poor boy, I’m sure
it’s very bad for you,’ she said again.
‘Please, don’t speak so
kind,’ said Paul; and this time he could not
prevent a-sob. ‘Nobody ever did so before,
and - ’ he paused, and went on, ‘I
suppose they do it up in Heaven, so I hope I shall
die.’
‘You are vexing about the Union,’
said Mrs. King, without answering this last speech,
or she knew that she should begin to cry herself.
‘I did think I’d
done with them,’ said Paul, with another sob.
’I said I’d never set foot in those four
walls again! I was proud, maybe; but please
don’t stop with me! If you wouldn’t
look and speak like that, the place wouldn’t
seem so hard, seeing I’m bred to it, as they
say;’ and he made an odd sort of attempt to
laugh, which ended in his choking himself with worse
tears.
‘Harold is not gone yet,’
said Mrs. King soothingly; ’we’ll wait
till he comes in from his work, and see how you are,
when you’ve had a little sleep. Don’t
cry; you aren’t going just yet.’
That same earnest questioning glance,
but with more hope in it, was turned on her again;
but she did not dare to bind herself, much as she
longed to take the wanderer to her home. She
went on to her son’s room.
‘Mother, Mother,’ Alfred
cried in a whisper, so eager that it made him cough,
‘you can’t never send him to the workhouse?’
‘I can’t bear the thought,
Alfy,’ she said, the tears in her eyes; ’but
I don’t know what to do. It’s not
the trouble. That I’d take with all my
heart, but it is hard enough to live, and -
‘I’m sure,’ said
Ellen, coming close, that her undertone might be heard,
‘Harold and I would never mind how much we were
pinched.’
‘And I could go without - some things,’
began Alfred.
‘And then,’ went on the
mother, ’you see, if we got straitened, and
Matilda found it out, she’d want to help, and
I can’t have her savings touched; and yet I
can’t bear to let that poor lad be sent off,
so ill as he is, and after all he’s done for
Harold - such a good boy, too, and one that’s
so thankful for a common kind word.’
‘O Mother, keep him!’
said Alfred; ’don’t you know how the Psalm
says, “God careth for the stranger, and provideth
for the fatherless and the widow"?’
Mrs. King almost smiled. ’Yes,
Alf, I think it would be trusting God’s word;
but then there’s my duty to you.’
‘You’ve not sent Harold off for the cart?’
said Alfred.
’No; I thought somehow, we have
enough for to-day; and it goes against me to send
him away at once. I thought we’d wait to
see how it is to-morrow; and Harold won’t mind
having a bed made up in the kitchen.’
Tap, tap, on the counter. Some
one had come in while they were talking. It was
Mr. Cope, very anxious to hear the truth of the strange
stories that were going about the place. Ellen
and Alfred thought it very tiresome that he was so
long in coming up-stairs; but the fact was, that their
mother was very glad to talk the matter over without
them. She knew indeed that Mr. Cope was a very
young man, and not likely to be so well able as herself,
with all her experience, to decide what she could
afford, or whether she ought to follow her feelings
at the risk of debt or of privations for her delicate
children; but she also knew that though he had not
experience, education had given him a wider and clearer
range of thought; and that, as her pastor, he ought
to be consulted; so though she did not exactly mean
to make it a matter for his decision (unless, indeed,
he should have some view which had not occurred to
her), she knew that he was by far the best person
to help her to see her way, and form her own judgment.
Mr. Cope heard all the story with
as much eagerness as the Ragglesford boys themselves,
and laughed quite out loud at Harold’s spirited
defence.
‘That’s a good lad!’
said he. ’Well, Mrs. King, I don’t
think you need be very uneasy about your boy.
When a fellow can stand up like that in defence of
his duty, there must be the right stuff in him to be
got at in time! And now, as to his ally - this
other poor fellow - very kind of you to have
taken him in.’
‘I couldn’t do no other,
Sir,’ said Mrs. King; ’he came in so drenched,
and so terribly bad, I could do nothing but let him
lie down on Harold’s bed; and now Dr. Blunt
thinks he’s going to have a rheumatic fever,
and wanted me to send in to the relieving officer,
to have him removed, but I don’t know how to
do that; the poor lad doesn’t say one word against
it, but I can see it cuts him to the heart; and they
do tell such stories of the nurses at the Union, that
it does seem hard to send him there, such an innocent
boy, too, and one that doesn’t seem to know how
to believe it if one says a kind word to him.’
The tears were in Mrs. King’s eyes as she went
on: ’I do wish to let him stay here and
do what I can for him, with all my heart, and so does
all the children, but I don’t hardly know what’s
right by them, poor things. If the parish would
but allow him just one shilling and sixpence a week
out of the house, I think I could do it.’
’What, with your own boy in
such a state, you could undertake to nurse a stranger
through a rheumatic fever!’
‘It wouldn’t make much
difference, Sir,’ said Mrs. King. ’You
see I am up a good deal most nights with Alfred, and
we have fire and candle almost always alight.
I should only be glad to do it for a poor motherless
lad like that, except for the cost; and I thought perhaps
if you could speak to the Guardians, they might allow
him ever so little, because there will be expenses.’
Mr. Cope had not much hope from the
parish, so he said, ’Mr. Shepherd ought to do
something for him after he has worked for him so long.
He has been looking wretchedly ill for some time
past; and I dare say half this illness is brought
on by such lodging and living as he got there.
But what did you say about some eggs?’
Mrs. King told him; and he stood a
moment thoughtful, then said, ’Well, I’ll
go and see about it,’ and strode across to the
farm.
When Mr. Cope came back, Ellen was
serving a customer. He stood looking redder
than they had ever seen him, and tapping the toe of
his boot impatiently with his stick; and the moment
the buyer had turned away, he said, ‘Ellen,
ask your mother to be kind enough to come down.’
Mrs. King came, and found the young
Curate in such a state of indignation, as he could
not keep to himself. He had learnt more than
he had ever known, or she had ever known, of the oppression
that the farmer and his wife and Tom Boldre had practised
on the friendless stranger, and he was burning with
all the keen generous displeasure of one new to such
base ways. At the gate he had met, going home
to dinner, John Farden with Mrs. Hayward, who had
been charing at the farm. Both had spoken out,
and he had learned how far below the value of his labour
the boy had been paid, how he had been struck, abused,
and hunted about, as would never have been done to
one who had a father to take his part. And he
had further heard Farden’s statement of having
himself thrown away the eggs, and Mrs. Hayward’s
declaration that she verily believed that the farmer
only made the accusation an excuse for hurrying the
lad off because he thought him faltering for a fever,
and wouldn’t have him sick there.
This was shocking enough; Mr. Cope
had thought it merely the kind-hearted woman’s
angry construction, but it was still worse when he
came to the farmer and his wife.
So used were they to think it their
business to wring the utmost they could out of whatever
came in their way, that they had not the slightest
shame about it. They thought they had done a
thing to be proud of in making such a good bargain
of the lad, and getting so much work out of him for
so little pay; in fact, that they had been rather weakly
kind in granting him the freedom of the hay-loft;
the notion of his dishonesty was firmly fixed in their
heads, though there was not a charge to bring against
him. This was chiefly because they had begun
by setting him down as a convict, and because they
could not imagine any one living honestly on what
they gave him. And lastly, the farmer thought
the cleverest stroke of all, was the having got rid
of him just as winter was coming on and work was scarce,
and when there seemed to be a chance of his being
laid up to encumber the rates. Mr. Cope was quite
breathless after the answer he had made to them.
He had never spoken so strongly in his life before,
and he could hardly believe his own ears, that people
could be found, not only to do such things, but to
be proud of having done them.
It is to be hoped there are not many
such thoroughgoing tyrants; but selfishness is always
ready to make any one into a tyrant, and Mammon is
a false god, who manages to make his servants satisfied
that they are doing their duty.
It was plain enough that no help was
to be expected from the farm, and neither Mrs. King
nor the clergyman thought there was much hope in the
Guardians; however, they were to be applied to, and
this would be at least a reprieve for Paul.
Mr. Cope went up to see him, and found Harold sitting
on the top step of the stairs.
‘Well, boys,’ he said,
in his hearty voice, ’so you’ve had a battle,
I hear. I’m glad it turned out better
than your namesake’s at Hastings.’
Paul was not too ill to smile at this;
and Harold modestly said, ’It was all along
of he, Sir.’
‘And he seems to be the chief
sufferer. - Are you in much pain, Paul?’
‘Sometimes, Sir, when I try
to move,’ said Paul; ’but it is better
when I’m still.’
‘You’ve had a harder time
of it than I supposed, my boy,’ said Mr. Cope.
‘Why did you never let me know how you were treated?’
Paul’s face shewed more wonder
than anything else. ‘Thank you, Sir,’
he said, ‘I didn’t think it was any one’s
business.’
‘No one’s business!’
exclaimed the young clergyman. ’It is every
one’s business to see justice done, and it should
never have gone on so if you had spoken. Why
didn’t you?’
‘I didn’t think it would
be any use,’ again said Paul. ’There
was old Joe Joiner, he always said ’twas a hard
world to live in, and that there was nothing for it
but to grin and bear it.’
‘There’s something better
to be done than to grin,’ said Mr. Cope.
‘Yes, I know, Sir,’ said
Paul, with a brighter gleam on his face; ’and
I seem to understand that better since I came here.
I was thinking,’ he added, ’if they pass
me back to Upperscote, I’ll tell old Joe that
folks are much kinder than he told me, by far.’
‘Kinder - I should
not have thought that your experience!’ exclaimed
Mr. Cope, his head still running on the Shepherds.
But Paul did not seem to think of
them at all, or else to take their treatment as a
matter-of-course, as he did his Union hardships.
There was a glistening in his eyes; and he moved
his head so as to sign down-stairs, as he said, ’I
didn’t think there was ne’er a one in the
world like her.’
‘What, Mrs. King? I don’t
think there are many,’ said Mr. Cope warmly.
‘And yet I hope there are.’
‘Ay, Sir,’ said Paul fervently.
’And there’s Harold, and John Farden,
and all the chaps. Please, Sir, when I’m
gone away, will you tell them all that I’ll
never forget ’em? and I’ll be happier as
long as I live for knowing that there are such good-hearted
folks.’
Mr. Cope felt trebly moved towards
one who thought harshness so much more natural than
kindness, and who received the one so submissively,
the other so gratefully; but the conversation was
interrupted by Harold’s exclaiming that my Lady
in her carriage was stopping at the gate, and Mother
was running out to her.
Rumours of the post-office robbery,
as little Miss Selby called it, had travelled up to
the Grange, and she was wild to know what had happened
to Harold; but her grandmamma, not knowing what highway
robbers might be roaming about Friarswood, would not
hear of her walking to the post-office, and drove
thither with her herself, in full state, close carriage,
coachman and footman; and there was Mrs. King, with
her head in at the carriage window, telling all the
story.
‘So you have this youth here?’ said Lady
Jane.
‘Yes, my Lady; he was so poorly that I couldn’t
but let him lie down.’
‘And you have not sent him to the workhouse
yet?’
’Why, no, not yet, my Lady;
I thought I would wait to see how he is to-morrow.’
‘You had better take care, Mary,’
said Lady Jane. ’You’ll have him
too ill to be moved; and then what will you do? a
great lad of that age, and with illness enough in
the house already!’ She sighed, and it was not
said unkindly; but Mrs. King answered with something
about his being so good a lad, and so friendless.
And Miss Jane exclaimed, ’O Grandmamma, it
does seem so hard to send him to the workhouse!’
‘Do not talk like a silly child,
my dear,’ said Lady Jane. ’Mary is
much too sensible to think of saddling herself with
such a charge - not fit for her, nor the
children either - even if the parish made
it worth her while, which it never will. The
Union is intended to provide for such cases of destitution;
and depend on it, the youth looks to nothing else.’
‘No, my Lady,’ said Mrs.
King; ’he is so patient and meek about it, that
it goes to one’s very heart.’
‘Ay, ay,’ said the old
lady; ’but don’t be soft-hearted and weak,
Mary. It is not what I expect of you, as a sensible
woman, to be harbouring a mere vagrant whom you know
nothing about, and injuring your own children.’
‘Indeed, my Lady,’ began
Mrs. King, ’I’ve known the poor boy these
four months, and so has Mr. Cope; and he is as steady
and serious a boy as ever lived.’
‘Very likely,’ said Lady
Jane; ’and I am sure I would do anything for
him - give him work when he is out again,
or send him with a paper to the county hospital.
Eh?’
But the county hospital was thirty
miles off; and the receiving day was not till Saturday.
That would not do.
‘Well,’ added Lady Jane,
’I’ll drive home directly, and send Price
with the spring covered cart to take him in to Elbury.
That will be better for him than jolting in the open
cart they would send for him.’
’Why, thank you, my Lady, but
I - I had passed my word that he should not
go to-day.’
Lady Jane made a gesture as if Mary
King were a hopelessly weak good-natured woman; and
shaking her head at her with a sort of lady-like vexation,
ordered the coachman to drive on.
My Lady was put out. No wonder.
She was a very sensible, managing woman herself,
and justly and up-rightly kind to all her dependants;
and she expected every one else to be sternly and
wisely kind in the same pattern. Mrs. King was
one whom she highly esteemed for her sense and good
judgment, and she was the more provoked with her for
any failure in these respects. If she had known
Paul as the Kings did, it is probable she might have
felt like them. Not knowing him, nor knowing
the secrets of Elbury Union, she thought it Mrs. King’s
clear duty to sacrifice him for her children’s
sake. Moreover, Lady Jane had strict laws against
lodgers - the greatest kindness she could
do her tenants, though often against their will.
So to have her model woman receiving a strange boy
into her house, even under the circumstances, was beyond
bearing.
So Mrs. King stood on her threshold,
knowing that to keep Paul Blackthorn would be an offence
to her best friend and patroness. Moreover, Mr.
Cope was gone, without having left her a word of advice
to decide her one way or the other.