After Midnight I know not
how long, for I lost count of the hours by the Abbey
chimes, and our light had gone out after
midnight I heard by my father’s breathing that
he was asleep. I was thankful to see it for
his sake, and also for another reason.
I could not sleep all my
faculties were preternaturally alive; my weak body
and timid mind became strong and active, able to compass
anything. For that one night, at least, I felt
myself a man.
My father was a very sound sleeper.
I knew nothing would disturb him till daylight; therefore
my divided duty was at an end. I left him, and
crept down-stairs into Sally Watkins’ kitchen.
It was silent, only the faithful warder, Jem, dozed
over the dull fire. I touched him on the shoulder at
which he collared me and nearly knocked me down.
“Beg pardon, Mr. Phineas hope
I didn’t hurt ’ee, sir?” cried he,
all but whimpering; for Jem, a big lad of fifteen,
was the most tender-hearted fellow imaginable.
“I thought it were some of them folk that Mr.
Halifax ha’ gone among.”
“Where is Mr. Halifax?”
“Doan’t know, sir wish
I did! wouldn’t be long a finding out, though on’y
he says: ’Jem, you stop ‘ere wi’
they’” (pointing his thumb up the staircase).
“So, Master Phineas, I stop.”
And Jem settled himself with a doggedly
obedient, but most dissatisfied air down by the fire-place.
It was evident nothing would move him thence:
so he was as safe a guard over my poor old father’s
slumber as the mastiff in the tan-yard, who was as
brave as a lion and as docile as a child. My
last lingering hesitation ended.
“Jem, lend me your coat and
hat I’m going out into the town.”
Jem was so astonished, that he stood
with open mouth while I took the said garments from
him, and unbolted the door. At last it seemed
to occur to him that he ought to intercept me.
“But, sir, Mr. Halifax said ”
“I am going to look for Mr. Halifax.”
And I escaped outside. Anything
beyond his literal duty did not strike the faithful
Jem. He stood on the door-sill, and gazed after
me with a hopeless expression.
“I s’pose you mun have
your way, sir; but Mr. Halifax said, ’Jem, you
stop y’ere,’ and y’ere
I stop.”
He went in, and I heard him bolting
the door, with a sullen determination, as if he would
have kept guard against it waiting for
John until doomsday.
I stole along the dark alley into
the street. It was very silent I
need not have borrowed Jem’s exterior, in order
to creep through a throng of maddened rioters.
There was no sign of any such, except that under
one of the three oil-lamps that lit the night-darkness
at Norton Bury lay a few smouldering hanks of hemp,
well resined. They, then, had thought of that
dreadful engine of destruction fire.
Had my terrors been true? Our house and
perhaps John within it!
On I ran, speeded by a dull murmur,
which I fancied I heard; but still there was no one
in the street no one except the Abbey-watchman
lounging in his box. I roused him, and asked
if all was safe? where were the rioters?
“What rioters?”
“At Abel Fletcher’s mill; they may be
at his house now ”
“Ay, I think they be.”
“And will not one man in the town help him;
no constables no law?”
“Oh! he’s a Quaker; the law don’t
help Quakers.”
That was the truth the
hard, grinding truth in those days.
Liberty, justice, were idle names to Nonconformists
of every kind; and all they knew of the glorious constitution
of English law was when its iron hand was turned against
them.
I had forgotten this; bitterly I remembered
it now. So wasting no more words, I flew along
the church-yard, until I saw, shining against the
boles of the chestnut-trees, a red light. It
was one of the hempen torches. Now, at last,
I had got in the midst of that small body of men,
“the rioters.”
They were a mere handful not
above two score apparently the relics of
the band which had attacked the mill, joined with a
few plough-lads from the country around. But
they were desperate; they had come up the Coltham
road so quietly, that, except this faint murmur, neither
I nor any one in the town could have told they were
near. Wherever they had been ransacking, as yet
they had not attacked my father’s house; it
stood up on the other side the road barred,
black, silent.
I heard a muttering “Th’
old man bean’t there.” “Nobody
knows where he be.” No, thank God!
“Be us all y’ere?”
said the man with the torch, holding it up so as to
see round him. It was well then that I appeared
as Jem Watkins. But no one noticed me, except
one man, who skulked behind a tree, and of whom I
was rather afraid, as he was apparently intent on watching.
“Ready, lads? Now for the rosin!
Blaze ’un out.”
But, in the eager scuffle, the torch,
the only one alight, was knocked down and trodden
out. A volley of oaths arose, though whose fault
it was no one seemed to know; but I missed my man
from behind the tree nor found him till
after the angry throng had rushed on to the nearest
lamp. One of them was left behind, standing close
to our own railings. He looked round to see
if none were by, and then sprang over the gate.
Dark as it was I thought I recognized him.
“John?”
“Phineas?” He was beside me in a bound.
“How could you do ”
“I could do anything to-night.
But you are safe; no one has harmed you. Oh,
thank God, you are not hurt!”
And I clung to his arm my friend, whom
I had missed so long, so sorely.
He held me tight his heart felt as mine,
only more silently.
“Now, Phineas, we have a minute’s
time. I must have you safe we must
get into the house.”
“Who is there?”
“Jael; she is as good as a host
of constables; she has braved the fellows once to-night,
but they’re back again, or will be directly.”
“And the mill?”
“Safe, as yet; I have had three
of the tan-yard men there since yesterday morning,
though your father did not know. I have been
going to and fro all night, between there and here,
waiting till the rioters should come back from the
Severn mills. Hist! here they are I
say, Jael?”
He tapped at the window. In
a few seconds Jael had unbarred the door, let us in,
and closed it again securely, mounting guard behind
it with something that looked very like my father’s
pistols, though I would not discredit her among our
peaceful society by positively stating the fact.
“Bravo!” said John, when
we stood all together in the barricaded house, and
heard the threatening murmur of voices and feet outside.
“Bravo, Jael! The wife of Heber the Kenite
was no braver woman than you.”
She looked gratified, and followed
John obediently from room to room.
“I have done all as thee bade
me thee art a sensible lad, John Halifax.
We are secure, I think.”
Secure? bolts and bars secure against
fire? For that was threatening us now.
“They can’t mean it surely
they can’t mean it,” repeated John, as
the cry of “Burn ’un out!” rose
louder and louder.
But they did mean it. From the
attic window we watched them light torch after torch,
sometimes throwing one at the house, but
it fell harmless against the staunch oaken door, and
blazed itself out on our stone steps. All it
did was to show more plainly than even daylight had
shown, the gaunt, ragged forms and pinched faces, furious
with famine.
John, as well as I, recoiled at that miserable sight.
“I’ll speak to them,”
he said. “Unbar the window, Jael;”
and before I could hinder, he was leaning right out.
“Holloa, there!”
At his loud and commanding voice a
wave of up-turned faces surged forward, expectant.
“My men, do you know what you
are about? To burn down a gentleman’s
house is hanging.”
There was a hush, and then a shout of derision.
“Not a Quaker’s! nobody’ll get hanged
for burning out a Quaker!”
“That be true enough,”
muttered Jael between her teeth. “We must
e’en fight, as Mordecai’s people fought,
hand to hand, until they slew their enemies.”
“Fight!” repeated John,
half to himself, as he stood at the now-closed window,
against which more than one blazing torch began to
rattle. “Fight with these? What
are you doing, Jael?”
For she had taken down a large Book the
last Book in the house she would have taken under
less critical circumstances, and with it was trying
to stop up a broken pane.
“No, my good Jael, not this;”
and he carefully replaced the volume; that volume,
in which he might have read, as day after day, and
year after year, we Christians generally do read,
such plain words as these “Love your
enemies;” “bless them that curse you;”
“pray for them that despitefully use you and
persecute you.”
A minute or two John stood with his
hand on the Book, thinking. Then he touched
me on the shoulder.
“Phineas, I’m going to
try a new plan at least, one so old, that
it’s almost new. Whether it succeeds or
no, you’ll bear me witness to your father that
I did it for the best, and did it because I thought
it right. Now for it.”
To my horror, he threw up the window wide, and leant
out.
“My men, I want to speak to you.”
He might as well have spoken to the
roaring sea. The only answer was a shower of
missiles, which missed their aim. The rioters
were too far off our spiked iron railings,
eight feet high or more, being a barrier which none
had yet ventured to climb. But at length one
random stone hit John on the chest.
I pulled him in, but he declared he
was not hurt. Terrified, I implored him not
to risk his life.
“Life is not always the first
thing to be thought of,” said he, gently.
“Don’t be afraid I shall come
to no harm. But I must do what I think
right, if it is to be done.”
While he spoke, I could hardly hear
him for the bellowings outside. More savage still
grew the cry
“Burn ’em out! burn ’em out!
They be only Quakers!”
“There’s not a minute
to lose stop let me think Jael,
is that a pistol?”
“Loaded,” she said, handing
it over to him with a kind of stern delight.
Certainly, Jael was not meant to be a Friend.
John ran down-stairs, and before I
guessed his purpose, had unbolted the hall-door, and
stood on the flight of steps, in full view of the
mob.
There was no bringing him back, so
of course I followed. A pillar sheltered me I
do not think he saw me, though I stood close behind
him.
So sudden had been his act, that even
the rioters did not seem to have noticed, or clearly
understood it, till the next lighted torch showed
them the young man standing there, with his back to
the door outside the door.
The sight fairly confounded them.
Even I felt that for the moment he was safe.
They were awed nay, paralyzed, by his daring.
But the storm raged too fiercely to
be lulled, except for one brief minute. A confusion
of voices burst out afresh
“Who be thee?” “It’s
one o’ the Quakers.” “No,
he bean’t.” “Burn ’un,
anyhow.” “Touch ’un, if
ye dare.”
There was evidently a division arising.
One big man, who had made himself very prominent
all along, seemed trying to calm the tumult.
John stood his ground. Once
a torch was flung at him he stooped and
picked it up. I thought he was going to hurl
it back again, but he did not; he only threw it down,
and stamped it out safely with his foot. This
simple action had a wonderful effect on the crowd.
The big fellow advanced to the gate
and called John by his name.
“Is that you, Jacob Baines? I am sorry
to see you here.”
“Be ye, sir.”
“What do you want?”
“Nought wi’ thee. We wants Abel
Fletcher. Where is ’um?”
“I shall certainly not tell you.”
As John said this again the noise
arose, and again Jacob Baines seemed to have power
to quiet the rest.
John Halifax never stirred.
Evidently he was pretty well known. I caught
many a stray sentence, such as “Don’t hurt
the lad.” “He were kind to
my lad, he were.” “No, he be
a real gentleman.” “No, he comed
here as poor as us,” and the like. At length
one voice, sharp and shrill, was heard above the rest.
“I zay, young man, didst ever
know what it was to be pretty nigh vamished?”
“Ay, many a time.”
The answer, so brief, so unexpected,
struck a great hush into the throng. Then the
same voice cried
“Speak up, man! we won’t hurt ‘ee!
You be one o’ we!”
“No, I am not one of you.
I’d be ashamed to come in the night and burn
my master’s house down.”
I expected an outbreak, but none came.
They listened, as it were by compulsion, to the clear,
manly voice that had not in it one shade of fear.
“What do you do it for?”
John continued. “All because he would not
sell you, or give you, his wheat. Even so it
was his wheat, not yours. May not a man
do what he likes with his own?”
The argument seemed to strike home.
There is always a lurking sense of rude justice in
a mob at least a British mob.
“Don’t you see how foolish
you were? You tried threats, too.
Now you all know Mr. Fletcher; you are his men some
of you. He is not a man to be threatened.”
This seemed to be taken rather angrily;
but John went on speaking, as if he did not observe
the fact.
“Nor am I one to be threatened,
neither. Look here the first one of
you who attempted to break into Mr. Fletcher’s
house I should most certainly have shot. But
I’d rather not shoot you, poor, starving fellows!
I know what it is to be hungry. I’m sorry
for you sorry from the bottom of my heart.”
There was no mistaking that compassionate
accent, nor the murmur which followed it.
“But what must us do, Mr. Halifax?”
cried Jacob Baines: “us be starved a’most.
What’s the good o’ talking to we?”
John’s countenance relaxed.
I saw him lift his head and shake his hair back,
with that pleased gesture I remember so well of old.
He went down to the locked gate.
“Suppose I gave you something
to eat, would you listen to me afterwards?”
There arose up a frenzied shout of
assent. Poor wretches! they were fighting for
no principle, true or false, only for bare life.
They would have bartered their very souls for a mouthful
of bread.
“You must promise to be peaceable,”
said John again, very resolutely, as soon as he could
obtain a hearing. “You are Norton Bury
folk, I know you. I could get every one of you
hanged, even though Abel Fletcher is a Quaker.
Mind, you’ll be peaceable?”
“Ay ay! Some’at to eat;
give us some’at to eat.”
John Halifax called out to Jael; bade
her bring all the food of every kind that there was
in the house, and give it to him out of the parlour-window.
She obeyed I marvel now to think of it but
she implicitly obeyed. Only I heard her fix
the bar to the closed front door, and go back, with
a strange, sharp sob, to her station at the hall-window.
“Now, my lads, come in!” and he unlocked
the gate.
They came thronging up the steps,
not more than two score, I imagined, in spite of the
noise they had made. But two score of such famished,
desperate men, God grant I may never again see!
John divided the food as well as he
could among them; they fell to it like wild beasts.
Meat, cooked or raw, loaves, vegetables, meal; all
came alike, and were clutched, gnawed, and scrambled
for, in the fierce selfishness of hunger. Afterwards
there was a call for drink.
“Water, Jael; bring them water.”
“Beer!” shouted some.
“Water,” repeated John.
“Nothing but water. I’ll have no
drunkards rioting at my master’s door.”
And, either by chance or design, he
let them hear the click of his pistol. But it
was hardly needed. They were all cowed by a mightier
weapon still the best weapon a man can use his
own firm indomitable will.
At length all the food we had in the
house was consumed. John told them so; and they
believed him. Little enough, indeed, was sufficient
for some of them; wasted with long famine, they turned
sick and faint, and dropped down even with bread in
their mouths, unable to swallow it. Others gorged
themselves to the full, and then lay along the steps,
supine as satisfied brutes. Only a few sat and
ate like rational human beings; and there was but
one, the little, shrill-voiced man, who asked me if
he might “tak a bit o’ bread to the old
wench at home?”
John, hearing, turned, and for the first time noticed
me.
“Phineas, it was very wrong of you; but there
is no danger now.”
No, there was none not
even for Abel Fletcher’s son. I stood safe
by John’s side, very happy, very proud.
“Well, my men,” he said,
looking round with a smile, “have you had enough
to eat?”
“Oh, ay!” they all cried.
And one man added “Thank the Lord!”
“That’s right, Jacob Baines:
and, another time, trust the Lord. You wouldn’t
then have been abroad this summer morning” and
he pointed to the dawn just reddening in the sky “this
quiet, blessed summer morning, burning and rioting,
bringing yourselves to the gallows, and your children
to starvation.”
“They be nigh that a’ready,”
said Jacob, sullenly. “Us men ha’
gotten a meal, thankee for it; but what’ll become
o’ the little ’uns at home?
I say, Mr. Halifax,” and he seemed waxing desperate
again, “we must get some food somehow.”
John turned away, his countenance
very sad. Another of the men plucked at him
from behind.
“Sir, when thee was a poor lad
I lent thee a rug to sleep on; I doan’t grudge
’ee getting on; you was born for a gentleman,
sure-ly. But Master Fletcher be a hard man.”
“And a just one,” persisted
John. “You that work for him, did he ever
stint you of a halfpenny? If you had come to
him and said, ’Master, times are hard, we can’t
live upon our wages,’ he might I don’t
say that he would but he might even
have given you the food you tried to steal.”
“D’ye think he’d
give it us now?” And Jacob Baines, the big,
gaunt, savage fellow, who had been the ringleader the
same, too, who had spoken of his “little ’uns” came
and looked steadily in John’s face.
“I knew thee as a lad; thee’rt
a young man now, as will be a father some o’
these days. Oh! Mr. Halifax, may ‘ee
ne’er want a meal o’ good meat for the
missus and the babbies at home, if ee’ll get
a bit o’ bread for our’n this day.”
“My man, I’ll try.”
He called me aside, explained to me,
and asked my advice and consent, as Abel Fletcher’s
son, to a plan that had come into his mind. It
was to write orders, which each man presenting at
our mill, should receive a certain amount of flour.
“Do you think your father would agree?”
“I think he would.”
“Yes,” John added, pondering “I
am sure he would. And besides, if he does not
give some, he may lose all. But he would not
do it for fear of that. No, he is a just man I
am not afraid. Give me some paper, Jael.”
He sat down as composedly as if he
had been alone in the counting-house, and wrote.
I looked over his shoulder, admiring his clear, firm
hand-writing; the precision, concentrativeness, and
quickness, with which he first seemed to arrange and
then execute his ideas. He possessed to the
full that “business” faculty, so frequently
despised, but which, out of very ordinary material,
often makes a clever man; and without which the cleverest
man alive can never be altogether a great man.
When about to sign the orders, John
suddenly stopped. “No; I had better not.”
“Why so?”
“I have no right; your father might think it
presumption.”
“Presumption? after to-night!”
“Oh, that’s nothing!
Take the pen. It is your part to sign them,
Phineas.”
I obeyed.
“Isn’t this better than
hanging?” said John to the men, when he had
distributed the little bits of paper precious
as pound-notes and made them all fully
understand the same. “Why, there isn’t
another gentleman in Norton Bury, who, if you had
come to burn his house down, would not have had
the constables or the soldiers, have shot down one-half
of you like mad dogs, and sent the other half to the
county gaol. Now, for all your misdoings, we
let you go quietly home, well fed, and with food for
children, too. Why, think you?”
“I don’t know,” said Jacob Baines,
humbly.
“I’ll tell you. Because Abel Fletcher
is a Quaker and a Christian.”
“Hurrah for Abel Fletcher! hurrah
for the Quakers!” shouted they, waking up the
echoes down Norton Bury streets; which, of a surety,
had never echoed to that shout before.
And so the riot was over.
John Halifax closed the hall-door
and came in unsteadily staggering.
Jael placed a chair for him worthy soul!
she was wiping her old eyes. He sat down, shivering,
speechless. I put my hand on his shoulder; he
took it and pressed it hard.
“Oh! Phineas, lad, I’m glad; glad
it’s safe over.”
“Yes, thank God!”
“Ay, indeed; thank God!”
He covered his eyes for a minute or
two, then rose up pale, but quite himself again.
“Now let us go and fetch your father home.”
We found him on John’s bed,
still asleep. But as we entered he woke.
The daylight shone on his face it looked
ten years older since yesterday he stared,
bewildered and angry, at John Halifax.
“Eh, young man oh! I remember.
Where is my son where’s my Phineas?”
I fell on his neck as if I had been
a child. And almost as if it had been a child’s
feeble head, mechanically he smoothed and patted mine.
“Thee art not hurt? Nor any one?”
“No,” John answered; “nor is either
the house or the tan-yard injured.”
He looked amazed. “How has that been?”
“Phineas will tell you. Or, stay better
wait till you are at home.”
But my father insisted on hearing.
I told the whole, without any comments on John’s
behaviour; he would not have liked it; and, besides,
the facts spoke for themselves. I told the simple,
plain story nothing more.
Abel Fletcher listened at first in
silence. As I proceeded he felt about for his
hat, put it on, and drew its broad brim close down
over his eyes. Not even when I told him of the
flour we had promised in his name, the giving of which
would, as we had calculated, cost him considerable
loss, did he utter a word or move a muscle.
John at length asked him if he were satisfied.
“Quite satisfied.”
But, having said this, he sat so long,
his hands locked together on his knees, and his hat
drawn down, hiding all the face except the rigid mouth
and chin sat so long, so motionless, that
we became uneasy.
John spoke to him gently, almost as a son would have
spoken.
“Are you very lame still? Could I help
you to walk home?”
My father looked up, and slowly held out his hand.
“Thee hast been a good lad, and a kind lad to
us; I thank thee.”
There was no answer, none. But
all the words in the world could not match that happy
silence.
By degrees we got my father home.
It was just such another summer morning as the one,
two years back, when we two had stood, exhausted and
trembling, before that sternly-bolted door. We
both thought of that day: I knew not if my father
did also.
He entered, leaning heavily on John.
He sat down in the very seat, in the very room, where
he had so harshly judged us judged him.
Something, perhaps, of that bitterness
rankled in the young man’s spirit now, for he
stopped on the threshold.
“Come in,” said my father, looking up.
“If I am welcome; not otherwise.”
“Thee art welcome.”
He came in I drew him in and
sat down with us. But his manner was irresolute,
his fingers closed and unclosed nervously. My
father, too, sat leaning his head on his two hands,
not unmoved. I stole up to him, and thanked
him softly for the welcome he had given.
“There is nothing to thank me
for,” said he, with something of his old hardness.
“What I once did, was only justice or
I then believed so. What I have done, and am
about to do, is still mere justice. John, how
old art thee now?”
“Twenty.”
“Then, for one year from this
time I will take thee as my ’prentice, though
thee knowest already nearly as much of the business
as I do. At twenty-one thee wilt be able to set
up for thyself, or I may take thee into partnership we’ll
see. But” and he looked at me,
then sternly, nay, fiercely, into John’s steadfast
eyes “remember, thee hast in some
measure taken that lad’s place. May God
deal with thee as thou dealest with my son Phineas my
only son!”
“Amen!” was the solemn answer.
And God, who sees us both now ay,
now! and, perhaps, not so far apart as some may
deem He knows whether or no John Halifax
kept that vow.