“Relate at large, my godlike
guest,” she said,
“The Grecian stratagems, the
town betrayed!”
Dryden: Virgil,
AEneid, book ii.
Descending thence, they ’scaped! Ibid.
A great improvement had taken place
in the character of Augustus Tomlinson since Paul
had last encountered that illustrious man. Then
Augustus had affected the man of pleasure, the learned
lounger about town, the all-accomplished Pericles
of the papers, gayly quoting Horace, gravely flanking
a fly from the leader of Lord Dunshunner. Now
a more serious yet not a less supercilious air had
settled upon his features; the pretence of fashion
had given way to the pretence of wisdom; and from
the man of pleasure Augustus Tomlinson had grown to
the philosopher. With this elevation alone, too,
he was not content: he united the philosopher
with the politician; and the ingenious rascal was
pleased especially to pique himself upon being “a
moderate Whig”!
“Paul,” he was wont to
observe, “believe me, moderate Whiggism is a
most excellent creed. It adapts itself to every
possible change, to every conceivable variety of circumstance.
It is the only politics for us who are the aristocrats
of that free body who rebel against tyrannical laws;
for, hang it, I am none of your democrats. Let
there be dungeons and turnkeys for the low rascals
who whip clothes from the hedge where they hang to
dry, or steal down an area in quest of a silver spoon;
but houses of correction are not made for men who have
received an enlightened education, who
abhor your petty thefts as much as a justice of peace.
can do, who ought never to be termed dishonest
in their dealings, but, if they are found out, ‘unlucky
in their speculations’! A pretty thing,
indeed, that there should be distinctions of rank among
other members of the community, and none among us!
Where’s your boasted British Constitution, I
should like to know, where are your privileges of
aristocracy, if I, who am a gentleman born, know Latin,
and have lived in the best society, should be thrust
into this abominable place with a dirty fellow who
was born in a cellar, and could never earn more at
a time than would purchase a sausage? No, no!
none of your levelling principles for me! I am
liberal, Paul, and love liberty; but, thank Heaven,
I despise your democracies!”
Thus, half in earnest, half veiling
a natural turn to sarcasm, would this moderate Whig
run on for the hour together during those long nights,
commencing at half-past four, in which he and Paul
bore each other company.
One evening, when Tomlinson was so
bitterly disposed to be prolix that Paul felt himself
somewhat wearied by his eloquence, our hero, desirous
of a change in the conversation, reminded Augustus
of his promise to communicate his history; and the
philosophical Whig, nothing loath to speak of himself,
cleared his throat, and began.
“Never mind who was my father,
nor what was my native place! My first ancestor
was Tommy Linn (his heir became Tom Linn’s son), you
have heard the ballad made in his praise,
“’Tommy Linn
is a Scotchman born,
His head is bald and his beard is shorn;
He had a cap made of a hare skin,
An elder man is Tommy Limn!’
“There was a sort of prophecy
respecting my ancestor’s descendants darkly
insinuated in the concluding stanza of this ballad:
“’Tommy Linn,
and his wife, and his wife’s mother,
They all fell into the fire together;
They that lay undermost got a hot skin,
“We are not enough!”
said Tommy Linn.’”
“You see the prophecy:
it is applicable both to gentlemen rogues and to moderate
Whigs; for both are undermost in the world, and both
are perpetually bawling out, ‘We are not enough!’
“I shall begin my own history
by saying, I went to a North Country school, where
I was noted for my aptness in learning; and my skill
at ’prisoner’s base,’ upon
my word I purposed no pun! I was intended for
the Church. Wishing, betimes, to instruct myself
in its ceremonies, I persuaded my schoolmaster’s
maidservant to assist me towards promoting a christening.
My father did not like this premature love for the
sacred rites. He took me home; and wishing to
give my clerical ardour a different turn, prepared
me for writing sermons by reading me a dozen a day.
I grew tired of this, strange as it may seem to you.
‘Father,’ said I, one morning, ’it
is no use talking; I will not go into the Church, that’s
positive. Give me your blessing and a hundred
pounds, and I’ll go up to London and get a living
instead of a curacy.’ My father stormed;
but I got the better at last. I talked of becoming
a private tutor; swore I had heard nothing was so
easy, the only things wanted were pupils;
and the only way to get them was to go to London and
let my learning be known. My poor father, well,
he’s gone, and I am glad of it now!” The
speaker’s voice faltered. “I got the
better, I say, and I came to town, where I had a relation
a bookseller. Through his interest, I wrote a
book of Travels in Ethiopia for an earl’s son,
who wanted to become a lion; and a Treatise on the
Greek Particle, dedicated to the prime minister, for
a dean, who wanted to become a bishop, Greek
being, next to interest, the best road to the mitre.
These two achievements were liberally paid; so I took
a lodging in a first floor, and resolved to make a
bold stroke for a wife. What do you think I did? nay,
never guess; it would be hopeless. First, I went
to the best tailor, and had my clothes sewn on my
back; secondly, I got the peerage and its genealogies
by heart; thirdly, I marched one night, with the coolest
deliberation possible, into the house of a duchess,
who was giving an immense rout! The newspapers
had inspired me with this idea. I had read of
the vast crowds which a lady ‘at home’
sought to win to her house. I had read of staircases
impassable, and ladies carried out in a fit; and common-sense
told me how impossible it was that the fair receiver
should be acquainted with the legality of every importation.
I therefore resolved to try my chance, and entered
the body of Augustus Tomlinson, as a piece of stolen
goods. Faith! the first night I was shy, I
stuck to the staircase, and ogled an old maid of quality,
whom I had heard announced as Lady Margaret Sinclair.
Doubtless she had never been ogled before; and she
was evidently enraptured with my glances. The
next night I read of a ball at the Countess of -------’s.
My heart beat as if I were going to be whipped; but
I plucked up courage, and repaired to her ladyship’s.
There I again beheld the divine Lady Margaret; and
observing that she turned yellow, by way of a blush,
when she saw me, I profited by the port I had drunk
as an encouragement to my entree, and lounging up
in the most modish way possible, I reminded her ladyship
of an introduction with which I said I had once been
honoured at the Duke of Dashwell’s, and requested
her hand for the next cotillion. Oh, Paul, fancy
my triumph! The old damsel said, with a sigh,
she remembered me very well, ha, ha, ha! and
I carried her off to the cotillion like another Theseus
bearing away a second Ariadne. Not to be prolix
on this part of my life, I went night after night
to balls and routs, for admission to which half the
fine gentlemen in London would have given their ears.
And I improved my time so well with Lady Margaret,
who was her own mistress and had L5,000, a
devilish bad portion for some, but not to be laughed
at by me, that I began to think when the
happy day should be fixed. Meanwhile, as Lady
Margaret introduced me to some of her friends, and
my lodgings were in a good situation, I had been honoured
with some real invitations. The only two questions
I ever was asked were (carelessly), ‘Was I the
only son?’ and on my veritable answer ‘Yes!’
‘What’ (this was more warmly put), ’what
was my county?’ Luckily my county was a wide
one, Yorkshire; and any of its inhabitants
whom the fair interrogators might have questioned about
me could only have answered, I was not in their part
of it.
“Well, Paul, I grew so bold
by success that the devil one day put it into my head
to go to a great dinner-party at the Duke of Dashwell’s.
I went, dined, nothing happened; I came
away, and the next morning I read in the papers,
“’Mysterious affair person
lately going about first houses most
fashionable parties nobody knows Duke
of Dashwell’s yesterday. Duke not like
to make disturbance as royalty present.”
“The journal dropped from my
hands. At that moment the girl of the house gave
me a note from Lady Margaret, alluded to
the paragraph; wondered who was ‘The Stranger;’
hoped to see me that night at Lord A-----’s,
to whose party I said I had been asked; speak then
more fully on those matters I had touched on! in
short, dear Paul, a tender epistle! All great
men are fatalists, I am one now; fate made
me a madman. In the very face of this ominous
paragraph I mustered up courage, and went that night
to Lord A-----’s. The fact is, my affairs
were in confusion,--I was greatly in debt. I
knew it was necessary to finish my conquest over Lady
Margaret as soon as possible; and Lord A-----’s
seemed the best place for the purpose. Nay, I
thought delay so dangerous, after the cursed paragraph,
that a day might unmask me, and it would be better
therefore not to lose an hour in finishing the play
of ‘The Stranger’ with the farce of ‘The
Honey Moon.’ Behold me then at Lord A-----’s,
leading off Lady Margaret to the dance. Behold
me whispering the sweetest of things in her ear.
Imagine her approving my suit, and gently chiding
me for talking of Gretna Green. Conceive all this,
my dear fellow, and just at the height of my triumph,
dilate the eyes of your imagination, and behold the
stately form of Lord A-----, my noble host, marching
up to me, while a voice that, though low and quiet
as an evening breeze, made my heart sink into my shoes,
said, ’I believe, sir, you have received no
invitation from Lady A-----?’
“Not a word could I utter, Paul, not
a word. Had it been the highroad instead of a
ballroom, I could have talked loudly enough; but I
was under a spell. ‘Ehem!’ I
faltered at last, ’e-h-e-m! Some
mis-take, I I ’ There
I stopped.
“‘Sir,’ said the
earl, regarding me with a grave sternness, ’you
had better withdraw.’
“‘Bless me! what’s
all this?’ cried Lady Margaret, dropping my palsied
arm, and gazing on me as if she expected me to talk
like a hero.
“‘Oh,’ said I, ’eh-e-m,
eh-e-m, I will exp lain
to-morrow, ehem, e-h-e-m.’
I made to the door; all the eyes in the room seemed
turned into burning-glasses, and blistered the very
skin on my face. I heard a gentle shriek, as
I left the apartment, Lady Margaret fainting,
I suppose! There ended my courtship and my adventures
in ’the best society.’
“I felt melancholy at the ill-success
of my scheme. You must allow it was a magnificent
project. What moral courage! I admire myself
when I think of it. Without an introduction,
without knowing a soul, to become, all by my own resolution,
free of the finest houses in London, dancing with
earls’ daughters, and all but carrying off an
earl’s daughter myself as my wife. If I
had, the friends must have done something for me;
and Lady Margaret Tomlinson might perhaps have introduced
the youthful genius of her Augustus to parliament
or the ministry. Oh, what a fall was there!
Yet, faith, ha, ha, ha! I could not help laughing,
despite of my chagrin, when I remembered that for three
months I had imposed on these ‘delicate exclusives,’
and been literally invited by many of them, who would
not have asked the younger sons of their own cousins,
merely because I lived in a good street, avowed myself
an only child, and talked of my property in Yorkshire!
Ha, ha! how bitter the mercenary dupes must have felt
when the discovery was made! What a pill for
the good matrons who had coupled my image with that
of some filial Mary or Jane, ha, ha, ha!
The triumph was almost worth the mortification.
However, as I said before, I fell melancholy on it,
especially as my duns became menacing. So I went
to consult with my cousin the bookseller. He
recommended me to compose for the journals, and obtained
me an offer. I went to work very patiently for
a short time, and contracted some agreeable friendships
with gentlemen whom I met at an ordinary in St. James’s.
Still, my duns, though I paid them by driblets, were
the plague of my life. I confessed as much to
one of my new friends. ‘Come to Bath with
me,’ quoth he, ’for a week, and you shall
return as rich as a Jew.’ I accepted the
offer, and went to Bath in my friend’s chariot.
He took the name of Lord Dunshunner, an Irish peer
who had never been out of Tipperary, and was not therefore
likely to be known at Bath. He took also a house
for a year; filled it with wines, books, and a sideboard
of plate. As he talked vaguely of setting up
his younger brother to stand for the town at the next
parliament, he bought these goods of the townspeople,
in order to encourage their trade. I managed
secretly to transport them to London and sell them;
and as we disposed of them fifty per cent under cost
price, our customers, the pawnbrokers, were not very
inquisitive. We lived a jolly life at Bath for
a couple of months, and departed one night, leaving
our housekeeper to answer all interrogatories.
We had taken the precaution to wear disguises, stuffed
ourselves out, and changed the hues of our hair.
My noble friend was an adept in these transformations;
and though the police did not sleep on the business,
they never stumbled on us. I am especially glad
we were not discovered, for I liked Bath excessively;
and I intend to return there some of these days, and
retire from the world on an heiress!
“Well, Paul, shortly after this
adventure I made your acquaintance. I continued
ostensibly my literary profession, but only as a mask
for the labours I did not profess. A circumstance
obliged me to leave London rather precipitately.
Lord Dunshunner joined me in Edinburgh. D –it,
instead of doing anything there, we were done!
The veriest urchin that ever crept through the High
Street is more than a match for the most scientific
of Englishmen. With us it is art; with the Scotch
it is nature. They pick your pockets without
using their fingers for it; and they prevent reprisal
by having nothing for you to pick.
“We left Edinburgh with very
long faces, and at Carlisle we found it necessary
to separate. For my part, I went as a valet to
a nobleman who had just lost his last servant at Carlisle
by a fever; my friend gave me the best of characters!
My new master was a very clever man. He astonished
people at dinner by the impromptus he prepared
at breakfast; in a word, he was a wit. He soon
saw, for he was learned himself, that I had received
a classical education, and he employed me in the confidential
capacity of finding quotations for him. I classed
these alphabetically and under three heads, ’Parliamentary,
Literary, Dining-out.’ These were again
subdivided into ‘Fine,’ ‘Learned,’
and ‘Jocular;’ so that my master knew
at once where to refer for genius, wisdom, and wit.
He was delighted with my management of his intellects.
In compliment to him, I paid more attention to politics
than I had done before; for he was a ‘great
Whig,’ and uncommonly liberal in everything but
money! Hence, Paul, the origin of my political
principles; and I thank Heaven there is not now a rogue
in England who is a better that is to say,
more of a moderate-Whig than your humble servant!
I continued with him nearly a year. He discharged
me for a fault worthy of my genius: other servants
may lose the watch or the coat of their master; I
went at nobler game, and lost him his private
character!”
“How do you mean?”
“Why, I was enamoured of a lady
who would not have looked at me as Mr. Tomlinson;
so I took my master’s clothes and occasionally
his carriage, and made love to my nymph as Lord.
Her vanity made her indiscreet. The Tory papers
got hold of it; and my master, in a change of ministers,
was declared by George the Third to be ’too gay
for a Chancellor of the Exchequer.’ An
old gentleman who had had fifteen children by a wife
like a Gorgon, was chosen instead of my master; and
although the new minister was a fool in his public
capacity, the moral public were perfectly content
with him, because of his private virtues!
“My master was furious, made
the strictest inquiry, found me out, and turned me
out too!
“A Whig not in place has an
excuse for disliking the Constitution. My distress
almost made me a republican; but, true to my creed,
I must confess that I would only have levelled upwards.
I especially disaffected the inequality of riches;
I looked moodily on every carriage that passed; I
even frowned like a second Catiline at the steam of
a gentle man’s kitchen! My last situation
had not been lucrative; I had neglected my perquisites,
in my ardour for politics. My master, too, refused
to give me a character: who would take me without
one?
“I was asking myself this melancholy
question one morning, when I suddenly encountered
one of the fine friends I had picked up at my old
haunt, the ordinary, in St. James’s. His
name was Pepper.”
“Pepper!” cried Paul.
Without heeding the exclamation, Tomlinson
continued: “We went to a tavern and
drank a bottle together. Wine made me communicative;
it also opened my comrade’s heart. He asked
me to take a ride with him that night towards Hounslow.
I did so, and found a purse.”
“How fortunate! Where?”
“In a gentleman’s pocket.
I was so pleased with my luck that I went the same
road twice a week, in order to see if I could pick
up any more purses. Fate favoured me, and I lived
for a long time the life of the blessed. Oh,
Paul, you know not you know not what a glorious
life is that of a highwayman; but you shall taste
it one of these days, you shall, on my
honour.
“I now lived with a club of
honest fellows. We called ourselves ’The
Exclusives,’ for we were mighty
reserved in our associates, and only those who did
business on a grand scale were admitted into our set.
For my part, with all my love for my profession, I
liked ingenuity still better than force, and preferred
what the vulgar call swindling, even to the highroad.
On an expedition of this sort, I rode once into a country
town, and saw a crowd assembled in one corner; I joined
it, and my feelings! beheld my poor friend
Viscount Dunshunner just about to be hanged!
I rode off as fast as I could, I thought
I saw Jack Ketch at my heels. My horse threw
me at a hedge, and I broke my collar-bone. In
the confinement that ensued gloomy ideas floated before
me. I did not like to be hanged; so I reasoned
against my errors, and repented. I recovered
slowly, returned to town, and repaired to my cousin
the bookseller. To say truth, I had played him
a little trick: collected some debts of his by
a mistake, very natural in the confusion
incident on my distresses. However, he was extremely
unkind about it; and the mistake, natural as it was,
had cost me his acquaintance.
“I went now to him with the
penitential aspect of the prodigal son; and, faith,
he would have not made a bad representation of the
fatted calf about to be killed on my return, so
corpulent looked he, and so dejected! ‘Graceless
reprobate!’ he began, ‘your poor father
is dead!’ I was exceedingly shocked; but never
fear, Paul, I am not about to be pathetic. My
father had divided his fortune among all his children;
my share was L500. The possession of this soon
made my penitence seem much more sincere in the eyes
of my good cousin; and after a very pathetic scene,
he took me once more into favour. I now consulted
with him as to the best method of laying out my capital
and recovering my character. We could not devise
any scheme at the first conference; but the second
time I saw him, my cousin said with a cheerful countenance:
’Cheer up, Augustus, I have got thee a situation.
Mr. Asgrave the banker will take thee as a clerk.
He is a most worthy man; and having a vast deal of
learning, he will respect thee for thy acquirements.’
The same day I was introduced to Mr. Asgrave, who
was a little man with a fine, bald, benevolent head;
and after a long conversation which he was pleased
to hold with me, I became one of his quill-drivers.
I don’t know how it was, but by little and little
I rose in my master’s good graces. I propitiated
him, I fancy, by disposing of my L500 according to
his advice; he laid it out for me, on what he said
was famous security, on a landed estate. Mr.
Asgrave was of social habits, he had a capital
house and excellent wines. As he was not very
particular in his company, nor ambitious of visiting
the great, he often suffered me to make one of his
table, and was pleased to hold long arguments with
me about the ancients. I soon found out that
my master was a great moral philosopher; and being
myself in weak health, sated with the ordinary pursuits
of the world, in which my experience had forestalled
my years, and naturally of a contemplative temperament,
I turned my attention to the moral studies which so
fascinated my employer. I read through nine shelves
full of metaphysicians, and knew exactly the points
in which those illustrious thinkers quarrelled with
each other, to the great advance of the science.
My master and I used to hold many a long discussion
about the nature of good and evil; as, by help of
his benevolent forehead and a clear dogged voice,
he always seemed to our audience to be the wiser and
better man of the two, he was very well pleased with
our disputes. This gentleman had an only daughter, an
awful shrew, with a face like a hatchet but philosophers
overcome personal defects; and thinking only of the
good her wealth might enable me to do to my fellow-creatures,
I secretly made love to her. You will say that
was playing my master but a scurvy trick for his kindness.
Not at all; my master himself had convinced me that
there was no such virtue as gratitude. It was
an error of vulgar moralists. I yielded to his
arguments, and at length privately espoused his daughter.
The day after this took place, he summoned me to his
study. ‘So, Augustus,’ said he, very
mildly, ’you have married my daughter:
nay, never look confused; I saw a long time ago that
you were resolved to do so, and I was very glad of
it.’
“I attempted to falter out something
like thanks. ‘Never interrupt me!’
said he. ’I had two reasons for being glad, first,
because my daughter was the plague of my life, and
I wanted some one to take her off my hands; secondly,
because I required your assistance on a particular
point, and I could not venture to ask it of any one
but my son-in-law. In fine, I wish to take you
into partnership!’
“‘Partnership!’
cried I, falling on my knees. ‘Noble, generous
man!’
“‘Stay a bit,’ continued
my father-in-law. ’What funds do you think
requisite for carrying on a bank? You look puzzled!
Not a shilling! You will put in just as much
as I do. You will put in rather more; for you
once put in L500, which has been spent long ago.
I don’t put in a shilling of my own. I
live on my clients, and I very willingly offer you
half of them!’
“Imagine, dear Paul, my astonishment,
my dismay! I saw myself married to a hideous
shrew, son-in-law to a penniless scoundrel,
and cheated out of my whole fortune! Compare
this view of the question with that which had blazed
on me when I contemplated being son-in-law to the rich
Mr. Asgrave. I stormed at first. Mr. Asgrave
took up Bacon ’On the Advancement of Learning,’
and made no reply till I was cooled by explosion.
You will perceive that when passion subsided, I necessarily
saw that nothing was left for me but adopting my father-in-law’s
proposal. Thus, by the fatality which attended
me at the very time I meant to reform, I was forced
into scoundrelism, and I was driven into defrauding
a vast number of persons by the accident of being son-in-law
to a great moralist. As Mr. Asgrave was an indolent
man, who passed his mornings in speculations on virtue,
I was made the active partner. I spent the day
at the counting-house; and when I came home for recreation,
my wife scratched my eyes out.”
“But were you never recognized
as ‘the stranger’ or ‘the adventurer’
in your new capacity?”
“No; for of course I assumed,
in all my changes, both aliases and disguises.
And, to tell you the truth, my marriage so altered
me that, what with a snuff-coloured coat and a brown
scratch wig, with a pen in my right ear, I looked
the very picture of staid respectability. My face
grew an inch longer every day. Nothing is so respectable
as a long face; and a subdued expression of countenance
is the surest sign of commercial prosperity.
Well, we went on splendidly enough for about a year.
Meanwhile I was wonderfully improved in philosophy.
You have no idea how a scolding wife sublimes
and rarefies one’s intellect. Thunder clears
the air, you know! At length, unhappily for my
fame (for I contemplated a magnificent moral history
of man, which, had she lived a year longer, I should
have completed), my wife died in child-bed. My
father-in-law and I were talking over the event, and
finding fault with civilization for the enervating
habits by which women die of their children instead
of bringing them forth without being even conscious
of the circumstance, when a bit of paper, sealed awry,
was given to my partner. He looked over it, finished
the discussion, and then told me our bank had stopped
payment. ‘Now, Augustus,’ said he,
lighting his pipe with the bit of paper, ‘you
see the good of having nothing to lose.’
“We did not pay quite sixpence
in the pound; but my partner was thought so unfortunate
that the British public raised a subscription for
him, and he retired on an annuity, greatly respected
and very much compassionated. As I had not been
so well known as a moralist, and had not the prepossessing
advantage of a bald, benevolent head, nothing was
done for me, and I was turned once more on the wide
world, to moralize on the vicissitudes of fortune.
My cousin the bookseller was no more, and his son
cut me. I took a garret in Warwick Court, and
with a few books, my only consolation, I endeavoured
to nerve my mind to the future. It was at this
time, Paul, that my studies really availed me.
I meditated much, and I became a true philosopher,
namely, a practical one. My actions were henceforth
regulated by principle; and at some time or other,
I will convince you that the road of true morals never
avoids the pockets of your neighbour. So soon
as my mind had made the grand discovery which Mr.
Asgrave had made before me, that one should live according
to a system, for if you do wrong, it is
then your system that errs, not you, I
took to the road, without any of those stings of conscience
which had hitherto annoyed me in such adventures.
I formed one of a capital knot of ‘Free Agents,’
whom I will introduce to you some day or other, and
I soon rose to distinction among them. But about
six weeks ago, not less than formerly preferring byways
to highways, I attempted to possess myself of a carriage,
and sell it at discount. I was acquitted on the
felony, but sent hither by Justice Burnflat on the
misdemeanour. Thus far, my young friend, hath
as yet proceeded the life of Augustus Tomlinson.”
The history of this gentleman made a deep impression
on Paul. The impression was strengthened by the
conversations subsequently holden with Augustus.
That worthy was a dangerous and subtle persuader.
He had really read a good deal of history, and something
of morals; and he had an ingenious way of defending
his rascally practices by syllogisms from the latter,
and examples from the former. These theories
he clenched, as it were, by a reference to the existing
politics of the day. Cheaters of the public, on
false pretences, he was pleased to term “moderate
Whigs;” bullying demanders of your purse were
“high Tories;” and thieving in gangs was
“the effect of the spirit of party.”
There was this difference between Augustus Tomlinson
and Long Ned, Ned was the acting knave,
Augustus the reasoning one; and we may see therefore,
by a little reflection, that Tomlinson was a far more
perilous companion than Pepper, for showy
theories are always more seductive to the young and
clever than suasive examples, and the vanity of the
youthful makes them better pleased by being convinced
of a thing than by being enticed to it.
A day or two after the narrative of
Mr. Tomlinson, Paul was again visited by Mrs. Lobkins, for
the regulations against frequent visitors were not
then so strictly enforced as we understand them to
be now; and the good dame came to deplore the ill-success
of her interview with Justice Burnflat.
We spare the tender-hearted reader
a detail of the affecting interview that ensued.
Indeed, it was but a repetition of the one we have
before narrated. We shall only say, as a proof
of Paul’s tenderness of heart, that when he
took leave of the good matron, and bade “God
bless her,” his voice faltered, and the tears
stood in his eyes, just as they were wont
to do in the eyes of George the Third, when that excellent
monarch was pleased graciously to encore “God
save the King!”
“I’ll be hanged,”
soliloquized our hero, as he slowly bent his course
towards the subtle Augustus, “I’ll
be hanged (humph! the denunciation is prophetic),
if I don’t feel as grateful to the old lady for
her care of me as if she had never ill-used me.
As for my parents, I believe I have little to be grateful
for or proud of in that quarter. My poor mother,
by all accounts, seems scarcely to have had even the
brute virtue of maternal tenderness; and in all human
likelihood I shall never know whether I had one father
or fifty. But what matters it? I rather
like the better to be independent; and, after all,
what do nine tenths of us ever get from our parents
but an ugly name, and advice which, if we follow,
we are wretched, and if we neglect, we are disinherited?”
Comforting himself with these thoughts,
which perhaps took their philosophical complexion
from the conversations he had lately held with Augustus,
and which broke off into the muttered air of
“Why should we quarrel for riches?”
Paul repaired to his customary avocations.
In the third week of our hero’s
captivity Tomlinson communicated to him a plan of
escape that had occurred to his sagacious brain.
In the yard appropriated to the amusements of the
gentlemen “misdemeaning,” there was a
water-pipe that, skirting the wall, passed over the
door through which every morning the pious captives
passed in their way to the chapel. By this Tomlinson
proposed to escape; for to the pipe which reached
from the door to the wall, in a slanting and easy direction,
there was a sort of skirting-board; and a dexterous
and nimble man might readily, by the help of this
board, convey himself along the pipe, until the progress
of that useful conductor (which was happily very brief)
was stopped by the summit of the wall, where it found
a sequel in another pipe, that descended to the ground
on the opposite side of the wall. Now, on this
opposite side was the garden of the prison; in this
garden was a watchman, and this watchman was the hobgoblin
of Tomlinson’s scheme, “For
suppose us safe in the garden,” said he, “what
shall we do with this confounded fellow?”
“But that is not all,”
added Paul; “for even were there no watchman,
there is a terrible wall, which I noted especially
last week, when we were set to work in the garden,
and which has no pipe, save a perpendicular one, that
a man must have the legs of a fly to be able to climb!”
“Nonsense!” returned Tomlinson;
“I will show you how to climb the stubbornest
wall in Christendom, if one has but the coast clear.
It is the watchman, the watchman, we must ”
“What?” asked Paul, observing
his comrade did not conclude the sentence.
It was some time before the sage Augustus
replied; he then said in a musing tone,
“I have been thinking, Paul,
whether it would be consistent with virtue, and that
strict code of morals by which all my actions are regulated,
to slay the watchman!”
“Good heavens!” cried Paul, horror-stricken.
“And I have decided,”
continued Augustus, solemnly, without regard to the
exclamation, “that the action would be perfectly
justifiable!”
“Villain!” exclaimed Paul,
recoiling to the other end of the stone box for
it was night in which they were cooped.
“But,” pursued Augustus,
who seemed soliloquizing, and whose voice, sounding
calm and thoughtful, like Young’s in the famous
monologue in “Hamlet,” denoted that he
heeded not the uncourteous interruption, “but
opinion does not always influence conduct; and although
it may be virtuous to murder the watchman, I have
not the heart to do it. I trust in my future
history I shall not by discerning moralists be too
severely censured for a weakness for which my physical
temperament is alone to blame!”
Despite the turn of the soliloquy,
it was a long time before Paul could be reconciled
to further conversation with Augustus; and it was only
from the belief that the moralist had leaned to the
jesting vein that he at length resumed the consultation.
The conspirators did not, however,
bring their scheme that night to any ultimate decision.
The next day Augustus, Paul, and some others of the
company were set to work in the garden; and Paul then
observed that his friend, wheeling a barrow close
by the spot where the watchman stood, overturned its
contents. The watchman was good-natured enough
to assist him in refilling the barrow; and Tomlinson
profited so well by the occasion that that night he
informed Paul that they would have nothing to dread
from the watchman’s vigilance. “He
has promised,” said Augustus, “for certain
consi-de-ra-tions, to allow me to knock him
down; he has also promised to be so much hurt as not
to be able to move until we are over the wall.
Our main difficulty now, then, is the first step, namely,
to climb the pipe unperceived!”
“As to that,” said Paul,
who developed, through the whole of the scheme, organs
of sagacity, boldness, and invention which charmed
his friend, and certainly promised well for his future
career, “as to that, I think we may
manage the first ascent with less danger than you imagine.
The mornings of late have been very foggy; they are
almost dark at the hour we go to chapel. Let
you and I close the file: the pipe passes just
above the door; our hands, as we have tried, can reach
it; and a spring of no great agility will enable us
to raise ourselves up to a footing on the pipe and
the skirting-board.
“The climbing then is easy;
and what with the dense fog and our own quickness,
I think we shall have little difficulty in gaining
the garden. The only precautions we need use
are, to wait for a very dark morning, and to be sure
that we are the last of the file, so that no one behind
may give the alarm ”
“Or attempt to follow our example,
and spoil the pie by a superfluous plum!” added
Augustus. “You counsel admirably; and one
of these days, if you are not hung in the mean while,
will, I venture to auger, be a great logician.”
The next morning was clear and frosty;
but the day after was, to use Tomlinson’s simile,
“as dark as if all the negroes of Africa had
been stewed down into air.” “You
might have cut the fog with a knife,” as the
proverb says. Paul and Augustus could not even
see how significantly each looked at the other.
It was a remarkable trait of the daring
temperament of the former, that, young as he was,
it was fixed that he should lead the attempt.
At the hour, then, for chapel the prisoners passed
as usual through the door. When it came to Paul’s
turn he drew himself by his hands to the pipe, and
then creeping along its sinuous course, gained the
wall before he had even fetched his breath. Rather
more clumsily, Augustus followed his friend’s
example. Once his foot slipped, and he was all
but over. He extended his hands involuntarily,
and caught Paul by the leg. Happily our hero
had then gained the wall, to which he was clinging;
and for once in a way, one rogue raised himself without
throwing over another. Behold Tomlinson and Paul
now seated for an instant on the wall to recover breath;
the latter then, the descent to the ground
was not very great, letting his body down
by his hands, dropped into the garden.
“Hurt?” asked the prudent
Augustus, in a hoarse whisper, before he descended
from his “bad eminence,” being even willing
“To
bear those ills he had,
Than
fly to others that he knew not of”
“No!” without taking every
previous precaution in his power, was the answer in
the same voice, and Augustus dropped.
So soon as this latter worthy had
recovered the shock of his fall, he lost not a moment
in running to the other end of the garden. Paul
followed. By the way Tomlinson stopped at a heap
of rubbish, and picked up an immense stone. When
they came to the part of the wall they had agreed
to scale, they found the watchman, about
whom they needed not, by the by, to have concerned
themselves; for had it not been arranged that he was
to have met them, the deep fog would have effectually
prevented him from seeing them. This faithful
guardian Augustus knocked down, not with a stone,
but with ten guineas; he then drew forth from his
dress a thickish cord, which he procured some days
before from the turnkey, and fastening the stone firmly
to one end, threw that end over the wall. Now
the wall had (as walls of great strength mostly have)
an overhanging sort of battlement on either side;
and the stone, when flung over and drawn to the tether
of the cord to which it was attached, necessarily
hitched against this projection; and thus the cord
was as it were fastened to the wall, and Tomlinson
was enabled by it to draw himself up to the top of
the barrier. He performed this feat with gymnastic
address, like one who had often practised it; albeit
the discreet adventurer had not mentioned in his narrative
to Paul any previous occasion for the practice.
As soon as he had gained the top of the wall, he threw
down the cord to his companion, and, in consideration
of Paul’s inexperience in that manner of climbing,
gave the fastening of the rope an additional security
by holding it himself. With slowness and labour
Paul hoisted himself up; and then, by transferring
the stone to the other side of the wall, where it
made of course a similar hitch, our two adventurers
were enabled successively to slide down, and consummate
their escape from the House of Correction.
“Follow me now!” said
Augustus, as he took to his heels; and Paul pursued
him through a labyrinth of alleys and lanes, through
which he shot and dodged with a variable and shifting
celerity that, had not Paul kept close upon him, would
very soon, combined with the fog, have snatched him
from the eyes of his young ally. Happily the immaturity
of the morning, the obscurity of the streets passed
through, and above all, the extreme darkness of the
atmosphere, prevented that detection and arrest which
their prisoner’s garb would otherwise have insured
them. At length they found themselves in the
fields; and skulking along hedges, and diligently
avoiding the highroad, they continued to fly onward,
until they had advanced several miles into “the
bowels of the land.” At that time “the
bowels” of Augustus Tomlinson began to remind
him of their demands; and he accordingly suggested
the desirability of their seizing the first peasant
they encountered, and causing him to exchange clothes
with one of the fugitives, who would thus be enabled
to enter a public-house and provide for their mutual
necessities. Paul agreed to this proposition,
and accordingly they watched their opportunity and
caught a ploughman. Augustus stripped him of his
frock, hat, and worsted stockings; and Paul, hardened
by necessity and companionship, helped to tie the
poor ploughman to a tree. They then continued
their progress for about an hour, and, as the shades
of evening fell around them, they discovered a public-house.
Augustus entered, and returned in a few minutes laden
with bread and cheese, and a bottle of beer. Prison
fare cures a man of daintiness, and the two fugitives
dined on these homely viands with considerable complacency.
They then resumed their journey, and at length, wearied
with exertion, they arrived at a lonely haystack,
where they resolved to repose for an hour or two.