I
boast no song in magic wonders rife;
But
yet, O Nature! is there nought to prize,
Familiar
in thy bosom scenes of life?
And
dwells in daylight truth’s salubrious skies
No
form with which the soul may sympathize?
Young,
innocent, on whose sweet forehead mild
The
parted ringlet shone in simplest guise,
An
inmate in the home of Albert smiled,
Or
blessed his noonday walk, she was his only
child.
Gertrude
of Wyoming.
O time, thou hast played strange tricks
with us; and we bless the stars that made us a novelist,
and permit us now to retaliate. Leaving Paul to
the instructions of Augustus Tomlinson and the festivities
of the Jolly Angler, and suffering him, by slow but
sure degrees, to acquire the graces and the reputation
of the accomplished and perfect appropriator of other
men’s possessions, we shall pass over the lapse
of years with the same heedless rapidity with which
they have glided over us, and summon our reader to
a very different scene from those which would be likely
to greet his eyes, were he following the adventures
of our new Telemachus. Nor wilt thou, dear reader,
whom we make the umpire between ourself and those
who never read, the critics; thou who hast,
in the true spirit of gentle breeding, gone with us
among places where the novelty of the scene has, we
fear, scarcely atoned for the coarseness, not giving
thyself the airs of a dainty abigail, not
prating, lacquey-like, on the low company thou has
met, nor wilt thou, dear and friendly reader,
have cause to dread that we shall weary thy patience
by a “damnable iteration” of the same
localities. Pausing for a moment to glance over
the divisions of our story, which lies before us like
a map, we feel that we may promise in future to conduct
thee among aspects of society more familiar to thy
habits; where events flow to their allotted gulf through
landscapes of more pleasing variety and among tribes
of a more luxurious civilization.
Upon the banks of one of fair England’s
fairest rivers, and about fifty miles distant from
London, still stands an old-fashioned abode, which
we shall here term Warlock Manorhouse. It is
a building of brick, varied by stone copings, and
covered in great part with ivy and jasmine. Around
it lie the ruins of the elder part of the fabric; and
these are sufficiently numerous in extent and important
in appearance to testify that the mansion was once
not without pretensions to the magnificent. These
remains of power, some of which bear date as far back
as the reign of Henry the Third, are sanctioned by
the character of the country immediately in the vicinity
of the old manor-house. A vast tract of waste
land, interspersed with groves of antique pollards,
and here and there irregular and sinuous ridges of
green mound, betoken to the experienced eye the evidence
of a dismantled chase or park, which must originally
have been of no common dimensions. On one side
of the house the lawn slopes towards the river, divided
from a terrace, which forms the most important embellishment
of the pleasure-grounds, by that fence to which has
been given the ingenious and significant name of “ha-ha!”
A few scattered trees of giant growth are the sole
obstacles that break the view of the river, which
has often seemed to us, at that particular passage
of its course, to glide with unusual calmness and serenity.
On the opposite side of the stream there is a range
of steep hills, celebrated for nothing more romantic
than their property of imparting to the flocks that
browse upon that short and seemingly stinted herbage
a flavour peculiarly grateful to the lovers of that
pastoral animal which changes its name into mutton
after its decease. Upon these hills the vestige
of human habitation is not visible; and at times, when
no boat defaces the lonely smoothness of the river,
and the evening has stilled the sounds of labour and
of life, we know few scenes so utterly tranquil, so
steeped in quiet, as that which is presented by the
old, quaint-fashioned house and its antique grounds, the
smooth lawn, the silent, and (to speak truly, though
disparagingly) the somewhat sluggish river, together
with the large hills (to which we know, from simple
though metaphysical causes, how entire an idea of quiet
and immovability peculiarly attaches itself), and
the white flocks, those most peaceful of
God’s creatures, that in fleecy clusters
stud the ascent.
In Warlock House, at the time we refer
to, lived a gentleman of the name of Brandon.
He was a widower, and had attained his fiftieth year
without casting much regret on the past or feeling
much anxiety for the future. In a word, Joseph
Brandon was one of those careless, quiescent, indifferent
men, by whom a thought upon any subject is never recurred
to without a very urgent necessity. He was good-natured,
inoffensive, and weak; and if he was not an incomparable
citizen, he was at least an excellent vegetable.
He was of a family of high antiquity, and formerly
of considerable note. For the last four or five
generations, however, the proprietors of Warlock House,
gradually losing something alike from their acres
and their consequence, had left to their descendants
no higher rank than that of a small country squire.
One had been a Jacobite, and had drunk out half-a-dozen
farms in honour of Charley over the water; Charley
over the water was no very dangerous person, but Charley
over the wine was rather more ruinous. The next
Brandon had been a fox-hunter, and fox-hunters live
as largely as patriotic politicians. Pausanias
tells us that the same people; who were the most notorious
for their love of wine were also the most notorious
for their negligence of affairs. Times are not
much altered since Pausanias wrote, and the remark
holds as good with the English as it did with the Phigalei.
After this Brandon came one who, though he did not
scorn the sportsman, rather assumed the fine gentleman.
He married an heiress, who of course assisted to ruin
him; wishing no assistance in so pleasing an occupation,
he overturned her (perhaps not on purpose), in a new
sort of carriage which he was learning to drive, and
the good lady was killed on the spot. She left
the fine gentleman two sons, Joseph Brandon,
the present thane, and a brother some years
younger. The elder, being of a fitting age, was
sent to school, and somewhat escaped the contagion
of the paternal mansion. But the younger Brandon,
having only reached his fifth year at the time of
his mother’s decease, was retained at home.
Whether he was handsome or clever or impertinent, or
like his father about the eyes (that greatest of all
merits), we know not; but the widower became so fond
of him that it was at a late period and with great
reluctance that he finally intrusted him to the providence
of a school.
Among harlots and gamblers and lords
and sharpers, and gentlemen of the guards, together
with their frequent accompaniments, guards
of the gentlemen, namely, bailiffs, William
Brandon passed the first stage of his boyhood.
He was about thirteen when he was sent to school; and
being a boy of remarkable talents, he recovered lost
time so well that when at the age of nineteen he adjourned
to the University, he had scarcely resided there a
single term before he had borne off two of the highest
prizes awarded to academical merit. From the University
he departed on the “grand tour,” at that
time thought so necessary to complete the gentleman;
he went in company with a young nobleman, whose friendship
he had won at the University, stayed abroad more than
two years, and on his return he settled down to the
profession of the law.
Meanwhile his father died, and his
fortune, as a younger brother, being literally next
to nothing, and the family estate (for his brother
was not unwilling to assist him) being terribly involved,
it was believed that he struggled for some years with
very embarrassed and penurious circumstances.
During this interval of his life, however, he was
absent from London, and by his brother supposed to
have returned to the Continent; at length, it seems,
he profited by a renewal of his friendship with the
young nobleman who had accompanied him abroad, reappeared
in town, and obtained through his noble friend one
or two legal appointments of reputable emolument.
Soon afterwards he got a brief on some cause where
a major had been raising a corps to his brother officer,
with the better consent of the brother-officer’s
wife than of the brother officer himself. Brandon’s
abilities here, for the first time in his profession,
found an adequate vent; his reputation seemed made
at once, he rose rapidly in his profession, and, at
the time we now speak of, he was sailing down the
full tide of fame and wealth, the envy and the oracle
of all young Templars and barristers, who, having
been starved themselves for ten years, began now to
calculate on the possibility of starving their clients.
At an early period in his career he had, through the
good offices of the nobleman we have mentioned, obtained
a seat in the House of Commons; and though his eloquence
was of an order much better suited to the bar than
the senate, he had nevertheless acquired a very considerable
reputation in the latter, and was looked upon by many
as likely to win to the same brilliant fortunes as
the courtly Mansfield, a great man, whose
political principles and urbane address Brandon was
supposed especially to affect as his own model.
Of unblemished integrity in public life, for,
as he supported all things that exist with the most
unbending rigidity, he could not be accused of inconsistency, William
Brandon was (as we have said in a former place of unhappy
memory to our hero) esteemed in private life the most
honourable, the most moral, even the most austere
of men; and his grave and stern repute on this score,
joined to the dazzle of his eloquence and forensic
powers, had baffled in great measure the rancour of
party hostility, and obtained for him a character
for virtues almost as high and as enviable as that
which he had acquired for abilities.
While William was thus treading a
noted and an honourable career, his elder brother,
who had married into a clergyman’s family, and
soon lost his consort, had with his only child, a
daughter named Lucy, resided in his paternal mansion
in undisturbed obscurity. The discreditable character
and habits of the preceding lords of Warlock, which
had sunk their respectability in the county as well
as curtailed their property, had rendered the surrounding
gentry little anxious to cultivate the intimacy of
the present proprietor; and the heavy mind and retired
manners of Joseph Brandon were not calculated to counterbalance
the faults of his forefathers, nor to reinstate the
name of Brandon in its ancient popularity and esteem.
Though dull and little cultivated, the squire was
not without his “proper pride;” he attempted
not to intrude himself where he was unwelcome, avoided
county meetings and county balls, smoked his pipe
with the parson, and not unoften with the surgeon
and the solicitor, and suffered his daughter Lucy to
educate herself with the help of the parson’s
wife, and to ripen (for Nature was more favourable
to her than Art) into the very prettiest girl that
the whole county we long to say the whole
country at that time could boast of.
Never did glass give back a more lovely image than
that of Lucy Brandon at the age of nineteen.
Her auburn hair fell in the richest luxuriance over
a brow never ruffled, and a cheek where the blood never
slept; with every instant the colour varied, and at
every variation that smooth, pure; virgin cheek seemed
still more lovely than before. She had the most
beautiful laugh that one who loved music could imagine, silvery,
low, and yet so full of joy! All her movements,
as the old parson said, seemed to keep time to that
laugh, for mirth made a great part of her innocent
and childish temper; and yet the mirth was feminine,
never loud, nor like that of young ladies who had
received the last finish at Highgate seminaries.
Everything joyous affected her, and at once, air,
flowers, sunshine, butterflies. Unlike heroines
in general, she very seldom cried, and she saw nothing
charming in having the vapours. But she never
looked so beautiful as in sleep; and as the light breath
came from her parted lips, and the ivory lids closed
over those eyes which only in sleep were silent, and
her attitude in her sleep took that ineffable grace
belonging solely to childhood, or the fresh youth into
which childhood merges, she was just what
you might imagine a sleeping Margaret, before that
most simple and gentle of all a poet’s visions
of womanhood had met with Faust, or her slumbers been
ruffled with a dream of love.
We cannot say much for Lucy’s
intellectual acquirements; she could, thanks to the
parson’s wife, spell indifferently well, and
write a tolerable hand; she made preserves, and sometimes
riddles, it was more difficult to question
the excellence of the former than to answer the queries
of the latter. She worked to the admiration of
all who knew her, and we beg leave to say that we
deem that “an excellent thing in woman.”
She made caps for herself and gowns for the poor, and
now and then she accomplished the more literary labour
of a stray novel that had wandered down to the Manorhouse,
or an abridgment of ancient history, in which was
omitted everything but the proper names. To these
attainments she added a certain modicum of skill upon
the spinet, and the power of singing old songs with
the richest and sweetest voice that ever made one’s
eyes moisten or one’s heart beat.
Her moral qualities were more fully
developed than her mental. She was the kindest
of human beings; the very dog that had never seen her
before knew that truth at the first glance, and lost
no time in making her acquaintance. The goodness
of her heart reposed upon her face like sunshine,
and the old wife at the lodge said poetically and truly
of the effect it produced, that “one felt warm
when one looked on her.” If we could abstract
from the description a certain chilling transparency,
the following exquisite verses of a forgotten poet
might express the purity and lustre of her countenance:
“Her
face was like the milky way i’ the sky,
A
meeting of gentle lights without a name.”
She was surrounded by pets of all
kinds, ugly and handsome, from Ralph the
raven to Beauty the pheasant, and from Bob, the sheep-dog
without a tail, to Beau, the Blenheim with blue ribbons
round his neck; all things loved her, and she loved
all things. It seemed doubtful at that time whether
she would ever have sufficient steadiness and strength
of character. Her beauty and her character appeared
so essentially womanlike soft yet lively,
buoyant yet caressing that you could scarcely
place in her that moral dependence that you might in
a character less amiable but less yieldingly feminine.
Time, however, and circumstance, which alter and harden,
were to decide whether the inward nature did not possess
some latent and yet undiscovered properties.
Such was Lucy Brandon in the year ;
and in that year, on a beautiful autumnal evening,
we first introduce her personally to our readers.
She was sitting on a garden-seat by
the river side, with her father, who was deliberately
conning the evening paper of a former week, and gravely
seasoning the ancient news with the inspirations of
that weed which so bitterly excited the royal indignation
of our British Solomon. It happens, unfortunately
for us, for outward peculiarities are scarcely
worthy the dignity to which comedy, whether in the
drama or the narrative, aspires, that Squire
Brandon possessed so few distinguishing traits of
mind that he leaves his delineator little whereby to
designate him, save a confused and parenthetical habit
of speech, by which he very often appeared to those
who did not profit by long experience or close observation,
to say exactly, and somewhat ludicrously, that which
he did not mean to convey.
“I say, Lucy,” observed
Mr. Brandon, but without lifting his eyes from the
paper, “I say, corn has fallen; think
of that, girl, think of that! These times, in
my opinion (ay, and in the opinion of wiser heads than
mine, though I do not mean to say that I have not some
experience in these matters, which is more than can
be said of all our neighbours), are very curious and
even dangerous.”
“Indeed, Papa!” answered Lucy.
“And I say, Lucy, dear,”
resumed the squire, after a short pause, “there
has been (and very strange it is, too, when one considers
the crowded neighbourhood Bless me! what
times these are!) a shocking murder committed upon
(the tobacco stopper, there it is) think,
you know, girl, just by Epping! an
old gentleman!”
“Dear, how shocking! By whom?”
“Ay, that’s the question!
The coroner’s inquest has (what a blessing it
is to live in a civilized country, where a man does
not die without knowing the why and the wherefore!)
sat on the body, and declared (it is very strange,
but they don’t seem to have made much discovery;
for why? we knew as much before) that the body was
found (it was found on the floor, Lucy) murdered;
murderer or murderers (in the bureau, which was broken
open, they found the money left quite untouched) unknown!”
Here there was again a slight pause;
and passing to another side of the paper, Mr. Brandon
resumed, in a quicker tone, “Ha! well,
now this is odd! But he’s a deuced clever
fellow, Lucy! That brother of mine has (and in
a very honourable manner, too, which I am sure is highly
creditable to the family, though he has not taken too
much notice of me lately, a circumstance
which, considering I am his elder brother, I am a
little angry at) distinguished himself in a speech,
remarkable, the paper says, for its great legal (I
wonder, by the by, whether William could get me that
agistment-money! ’t is a heavy thing to lose;
but going to law, as my poor father used to say, is
like fishing for gudgeons [not a bad little fish;
we can have some for supper] with, guineas) knowledge,
as well as its splendid and overpowering (I do love
Will for keeping up the family honour; I am sure it
is more than I have done, heigh-ho!), eloquence!”
“And on what subject has he been speaking, Papa?”
“Oh, a very fine subject; what
you call a (it is astonishing that in this country
there should be such a wish for taking away people’s
characters, which, for my part, I don’t see is
a bit more entertaining than what you are always doing, playing
with those stupid birds) libel!”
“But is not my uncle William
coming down to see us? He promised to do so,
and it made you quite happy , Papa, for
two days. I hope he will not disappoint you;
and I am sure that it is not his fault if he ever
seems to neglect you. He spoke of you to me, when
I saw him, in the kindest and most affectionate manner.
I do think, my dear father, that he loves you very
much.”
“Ahem!” said the squire,
evidently flattered, and yet not convinced. “My
brother Will is a very acute fellow, and I make no my
dear little girl question, but that (when
you have seen as much of the world as I have, you
will grow suspicious) he thought that any good word
said of me to my daughter would (you see, Lucy, I
am as clear-sighted as my neighbours, though I don’t
give myself all their airs; which I very well might
do, considering my great-great-great-grandfather, Hugo
Brandon, had a hand in detecting the gunpowder plot)
he told to me again!”
“Nay, but I am quite sure my
uncle never spoke of you to me with that intention.”
“Possibly, my dear child; but
when (the evenings are much shorter than they were!)
did you talk with your uncle about me?
“Oh, when staying with Mrs.
Warner, in London; to be sure, it is six years ago,
but I remember it perfectly. I recollect, in particular,
that he spoke of you very handsomely to Lord Mauleverer,
who dined with him one evening when I was there, and
when my uncle was so kind as to take me to the play.
I was afterwards quite sorry that he was so good-natured,
as he lost (you remember I told you the story) a very
valuable watch.”
“Ay, ay, I remember all about
that, and so (how long friendship lasts with some
people!) Lord Mauleverer dined with William! What
a fine thing it is for a man (it is what I never did,
indeed; I like being what they call ’Cock of
the Walk’ let me see, now I think
of it, Pillum comes to-night to play a hit at backgammon)
to make friends with a great man early in (yet Will
did not do it very early, poor fellow! He struggled
first with a great deal of sorrow hardship,
that is) life! It is many years now since Will
has been hand-and-glove with my (’t is a bit
of a puppy) Lord Mauleverer. What did you think
of his lordship?”
“Of Lord Mauleverer? Indeed
I scarcely observed him; but he seemed a handsome
man, and was very polite. Mrs. Warner said he
had been a very wicked person when he was young, but
he seems good-natured enough now, Papa.”
“By the by,” said the
squire, “his lordship has just been made (this
new ministry seems very unlike the old, which rather
puzzles me; for I think it my duty, d’ye see,
Lucy, always to vote for his Majesty’s government,
especially seeing that old Hugo Brandon had a hand
in detecting the gun powder plot; and it is a little
odd-at least, at first-to think that good now which
one has always before been thinking abominable) Lord
Lieutenant of the county.”
“Lord Mauleverer our Lord Lieutenant?”
“Yes, child; and since his lordship
is such a friend of my brother, I should think, considering
especially what an old family in the county we are, not
that I wish to intrude myself where I am not thought
as fine as the rest,--that he would be more attentive
to us than Lord -------- was; but that, my dear Lucy,
puts me in mind of Pillum; and so, perhaps, you would
like to walk to the parson’s, as it is a fine
evening. John shall come for you at nine o’clock
with (the moon is not up then) the lantern.”
Leaning on his daughter’s willing
arm, the good old man then rose and walked homeward;
and so soon as she had wheeled round his easy-chair,
placed the backgammon board on the table, and wished
the old gentleman an easy victory over his expected
antagonist, the apothecary, Lucy tied down her bonnet,
and took her way to the rectory.
When she arrived at the clerical mansion
and entered the drawing-room, she was surprised to
find the parson’s wife, a good, homely, lethargic
old lady, run up to her, seemingly in a state of great
nervous agitation and crying,
“Oh, my dear Miss Brandon! which
way did you come? Did you meet nobody by the
road? Oh, I am so frightened! Such an accident
to poor dear Dr. Slopperton! Stopped in the king’s
highway, robbed of some tithe-money he had just received
from Farmer Slowforth! If it had not been for
that dear angel, good young man, God only knows whether
I might not have been a disconsolate widow by this
time!”
While the affectionate matron was
thus running on, Lucy’s eye glancing round the
room discovered in an armchair the round and oily little
person of Dr. Slopperton, with a countenance from which
all the carnation hues, save in one circular excrescence
on the nasal member, that was left, like the last
rose of summer, blooming alone, were faded into an
aspect of miserable pallor. The little man tried
to conjure up a smile while his wife was narrating
his misfortune, and to mutter forth some syllable
of unconcern; but he looked, for all his bravado,
so exceedingly scared that Lucy would, despite herself,
have laughed outright, had not her eye rested upon
the figure of a young man who had been seated beside
the reverend gentleman, but who had risen at Lucy’s
entrance, and who now stood gazing upon her intently,
but with an air of great respect. Blushing deeply
and involuntarily, she turned her eyes hastily away,
and approaching the good doctor, made her inquiries
into the present state of his nerves, in a graver
tone than she had a minute before imagined it possible
that she should have been enabled to command.
“Ah! my good young lady,”
said the doctor, squeezing her hand, “I may,
I may say the church for am I not its minister?
was in imminent danger but this excellent
gentleman prevented the sacrilege, at least in great
measure. I only lost some of my dues, my
rightful dues, for which I console myself
with thinking that the infamous and abandoned villain
will suffer hereafter.”
“There cannot be the least doubt
of that,” said the young man. “Had
he only robbed the mail-coach, or broken into a gentleman’s
house, the offence might have been expiable; but to
rob a clergyman, and a rector too! Oh,
the sacrilegious dog!”
“Your warmth does you honour,
sir,” said the doctor, beginning now to recover;
“and I am very proud to have made the acquaintance
of a gentleman of such truly religious opinions.”
“Ah!” cried the stranger,
“my foible, sir, if I may so speak, is
a sort of enthusiastic fervour for the Protestant
Establishment. Nay, sir, I never come across
the very nave of the church without feeling an indescribable
emotion a kind of sympathy, as it were with with you
understand me, sir I fear I express myself
ill.”
“Not at all, not at all!”
exclaimed the doctor: “such sentiments are
uncommon in one so young.”
“Sir, I learned them early in
life from a friend and preceptor of mine, Mr. MacGrawler,
and I trust they may continue with me to my dying day.”
“I will tell you, my dear, I
will tell you, Miss Lucy, all about it. I was
walking home from Mr. Slowforth’s, with his money
in my pocket, thinking, my love, of buying you that
topaz cross you wished to have.”
“Dear, good man!” cried
Mrs. Slopperton; “what a fiend it must have been
to rob so excellent a creature!”
“And,” resumed the doctor,
“it also occurred to me that the Madeira was
nearly out, the Madeira, I mean, with the
red seal; and I was thinking it might not be amiss
to devote part of the money to buy six dozen more;
and the remainder, my love, which would be about one
pound eighteen, I thought I would divide ’for
he that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord!’ among
the thirty poor families on the common; that is, if
they behaved well, and the apples in the back garden
were not feloniously abstracted!”
“Excellent, charitable man!”
ejaculated Mrs. Slopperton. “While I was
thus meditating, I lifted my eyes, and saw before me
two men, one of prodigious height, and
with a great profusion of hair about his shoulders;
the other was smaller, and wore his hat slouched over
his face: it was a very large hat. My attention
was arrested by the singularity of the tall person’s
hair, and while I was smiling at its luxuriance, I
heard him say to his companion, ’Well, Augustus,
as you are such a moral dog, he is in your line, not
mine; so I leave him to you.’ Little did
I think those words related to me. No sooner were
they uttered than the tall rascal leaped over a gate
and disappeared; the other fellow, then marching up
to me, very smoothly asked me the way to the church,
and while I was explaining to him to turn first to
the right and then to the left, and so on, for
the best way is, you know, exceedingly crooked, the
hypocritical scoundrel seized me by the collar, and
cried out, ‘Your money or your life!’ I
do assure you that I never trembled so much, not,
my dear Miss Lucy, so much for my own sake, as for
the sake of the thirty poor families on the common,
whose wants it had been my intention to relieve.
I gave up the money, finding my prayers and expostulations
were in vain; and the dog then, brandishing over my
head an enormous bludgeon, said what abominable
language! ’I think, doctor, I shall
put an end to an existence derogatory to your self
and useless to others.’ At that moment the
young gentleman beside me sprang over the very gate
by which the tall ruffian had disappeared, and cried,
‘Hold, villain!’ On seeing my deliverer,
the coward started back, and plunged into a neighbouring
wood. The good young gentleman pursued him for
a few minutes, but then returning to my aid, conducted
me home; and as we used to say at school,
“’ Te
rediisse incolumem gaudeo,’
which, being interpreted, means (sir,
excuse a pun, I am sure so great a friend to the Church
understands Latin) that I am very glad to get back
safe to my tea. He! he! And now, Miss Lucy,
you must thank that young gentleman for having saved
the life of your pastoral teacher, which act will
no doubt be remembered at the Great Day!”
As Lucy, looking towards the stranger,
said something in compliment, she observed a vague,
and as it were covert smile upon his countenance,
which immediately and as if by sympathy conjured one
to her own. The hero of the adventure, however,
in a very grave tone replied to her compliment, at
the same time bowing profoundly,
“Mention it not, madam!
I were unworthy of the name of a Briton and a man,
could I pass the highway without relieving the distress
or lightening the burden of a fellow-creature.
And,” continued the stranger, after a momentary
pause, colouring while he spoke, and concluding in
the high-flown gallantry of the day, “methinks
it were sufficient reward, had I saved the whole church
instead of one of its most valuable members, to receive
the thanks of a lady whom I might reasonably take
for one of those celestial beings to whom we have been
piously taught that the Church is especially the care!”
Though there might have been something
really ridiculous in this overstrained compliment,
coupled as it was with the preservation of Dr. Slopperton,
yet, coming from the mouth of one whom Lucy thought
the very handsomest person she had ever seen, it appeared
to her anything but absurd; and for a very long time
afterwards her heart thrilled with pleasure when she
remembered that the cheek of the speaker had glowed,
and his voice had trembled as he spoke it.
The conversation now, turning from
robbers in particular, dwelt upon robberies in general.
It was edifying to hear the honest indignation with
which the stranger spoke of the lawless depredators
with whom the country, in that day of Macheaths, was
infested.
“A pack of infamous rascals!”
said he, in a glow, “who attempt to justify
their misdeeds by the example of honest men, and who
say that they do no more than is done by lawyers and
doctors, soldiers, clergymen, and ministers of State.
Pitiful delusion, or rather shameless hypocrisy!”
“It all comes of educating the
poor,” said the doctor. “The moment
they pretend to judge the conduct of their betters,
there’s an end of all order! They see nothing
sacred in the laws, though we hang the dogs ever so
fast; and the very peers of the land, spiritual and
temporal, cease to be venerable in their eyes.”
“Talking of peers,” said
Mrs. Slopperton, “I hear that Lord Mauleverer
is to pass by this road to-night on his way to Mauleverer
Park. Do you know his lordship, Miss Lucy:
He is very intimate with your uncle.”
“I have only seen him once,” answered
Lucy.
“Are you sure that his lordship
will come this road?” asked the stranger, carelessly.
“I heard something of it this morning, but did
not know it was settled.”
“Oh, quite so!” rejoined
Mrs. Slopperton. “His lordship’s gentleman
wrote for post-horses to meet his lordship at Wyburn,
about three miles on the other side of the village,
at ten o’clock to-night. His lordship is
very impatient of delay.”
“Pray,” said the doctor,
who had not much heeded this turn in the conversation,
and was now “on hospitable cares intent,” “pray,
sir, if not impertinent, are you visiting or lodging
in the neighbourhood; or will you take a bed with
us?”
“You are extremely kind, my
dear sir, but I fear I must soon wish you good-evening.
I have to look after a little property I have some
miles hence, which, indeed, brought me down into this
part of the world.”
“Property! in what
direction, sir, if I may ask?” quoth the doctor;
“I know the country for miles.”
“Do you, indeed? Where’s
my property, you say? Why, it is rather difficult
to describe it, and it is, after all, a mere trifle;
it is only some common-land near the highroad, and
I came down to try the experiment of hedging and draining.”
“’T is a good plan, if
one has capital, and does not require a speedy return.”
“Yes; but one likes a good interest
for the loss of principal, and a speedy return is
always desirable, although, alas! it is
often attended with risk!”
“I hope, sir,” said the
doctor, “if you must leave us so soon, that your
property will often bring you into our neighbourhood.”
“You overpower me with so much
unexpected goodness,” answered the stranger.
“To tell you the truth, nothing can give me greater
pleasure than to meet those again who have once obliged
me.”
“Whom you have obliged, rather!”
cried Mrs. Slopperton; and then added, in a loud whisper
to Lucy, “How modest! but it is always so with
true courage!”
“I assure you, madam,”
returned the benevolent stranger, “that I never
think twice of the little favours I render my fellow-men;
my only hope is that they may be as forgetful as myself.”
Charmed with so much unaffected goodness
of disposition, the doctor and Mrs. Slopperton now
set up a sort of duet in praise of their guest:
after enduring their commendations and compliments
for some minutes with much grimace of disavowal and
diffidence, the stranger’s modesty seemed at
last to take pain at the excess of their gratitude;
and accordingly, pointing to the clock, which was
within a few minutes to nine, he said,
“I fear, my respected host and
my admired hostess, that I must now leave you; I have
far to go.”
“But are you yourself not afraid
of the highwaymen?” cried Mrs. Slopperton, interrupting
him.
“The highwaymen!” said
the stranger, smiling; “no; I do not fear them;
besides, I have little about me worth robbing.”
“Do you superintend your property
yourself?” said the doctor, who farmed his own
glebe and who, unwilling to part with so charming a
guest, seized him now by the button.
“Superintend it myself! why,
not exactly. There is a bailiff, whose views
of things don’t agree with mine, and who now
and then gives me a good deal of trouble.”
“Then why don’t you discharge him altogether?”
“Ah! I wish I could; but
’t is a necessary evil. We landed proprietors,
my dear sir, must always be plagued with some thing
of the sort. For my part, I have found those
cursed bailiffs would take away, if they could, all
the little property one has been trying to accumulate.
But,” abruptly changing his manner into one
of great softness, “could I not proffer my services
and my companionship to this young lady? Would
she allow me to conduct her home, and indeed stamp
this day upon my memory as one of the few delightful
ones I have ever known?”
“Thank you, dear sir,”
said Mrs. Slopperton, answering at once for Lucy;
“it is very considerate of you. And
I am sure, my love, I could not think of letting you
go home alone with old John, after such an adventure
to the poor dear doctor.”
Lucy began an excuse which the good
lady would not hear. But as the servant whom
Mr. Brandon was to send with a lantern to attend his
daughter home had not arrived, and as Mrs. Slopperton,
despite her prepossessions in favour of her husband’s
deliverer, did not for a moment contemplate his accompanying,
without any other attendance, her young friend across
the fields at that unseasonable hour, the stranger
was forced, for the present, to re-assume his seat.
An open harpsichord at one end of the room gave him
an opportunity to make some remark upon music; and
this introducing an eulogium on Lucy’s voice
from Mrs. Slopperton, necessarily ended in a request
to Miss Brandon to indulge the stranger with a song.
Never had Lucy, who was not a shy girl, she
was too innocent to be bashful, felt nervous
hitherto in singing before a stranger; but now she
hesitated and faltered, and went through a whole series
of little natural affectations before she complied
with the request. She chose a song composed somewhat
after the old English school, which at that time was
reviving into fashion. The song, though conveying
a sort of conceit, was not, perhaps, altogether without
tenderness; it was a favourite with Lucy, she scarcely
knew why, and ran thus:
Lucy’ssong.
Why
sleep, ye gentle flowers, ah, why,
When
tender eve is falling,
And
starlight drinks the happy sigh
Of
winds to fairies calling?
Calling
with low and plaining note,
Most
like a ringdove chiding,
Or
flute faint-heard from distant boat
O’er
smoothest waters gliding.
Lo,
round you steals the wooing breeze;
Lo,
on you falls the dew!
O
sweets, awake, for scarcely these
Can
charm while wanting you!
Wake
ye not yet, while fast below
The
silver time is fleeing?
O
heart of mine, those flowers but show
Thine
own contented being.
The
twilight but preserves the bloom,
The
sun can but decay
The
warmth that brings the rich perfume
But
steals the life away.
O
heart, enjoy thy present calm,
Rest
peaceful in the shade,
And
dread the sun that gives the balm
To
bid the blossom fade.
When Lucy ended, the stranger’s
praise was less loud than either the doctor’s
or his lady’s; but how far more sweet it was!
And for the first time in her life Lucy made the discovery
that eyes can praise as well as lips. For our
part, we have often thought that that discovery is
an epoch in life.
It was now that Mrs. Slopperton declared
her thorough conviction that the stranger himself
could sing. He had that about him, she said, which
made her sure of it.
“Indeed, dear madam,”
said he, with his usual undefinable, half-frank, half-latent
smile, “my voice is but so-so, and any memory
so indifferent that even in the easiest passages I
soon come to a stand. My best notes are in the
falsetto; and as for my execution But we
won’t talk of that.”
“Nay, nay; you are so modest,”
said Mrs. Slopperton. “I am sure you could
oblige us if you would.”
“Your command,” said the
stranger, moving to the harpsichord, “is all-sufficient;
and since you, madam,” turning to Lucy, “have
chosen a song after the old school, may I find pardon
if I do the same? My selection is, to be sure,
from a lawless song-book, and is supposed to be a
ballad by Robin Hood, or at least one of his merry
men, a very different sort of outlaws from
the knaves who attacked you, sir!”
With this preface the stranger sung
to a wild yet jovial air, with a tolerable voice,
the following effusion:
The love of
our profession; or the robber’s
life.
On
the stream of the world, the robber’s life
Is
borne on the blithest wave;
Now
it bounds into light in a gladsome strife,
Now
it laughs in its hiding cave.
At
his maiden’s lattice he stays the rein;
How
still is his courser proud
(But
still as a wind when it hangs o’er the main
In
the breast of the boding cloud),
With
the champed bit and the archd crest,
And
the eye of a listening deer,
Like
valour, fretful most in rest,
Least
chafed when in career.
Fit
slave to a lord whom all else refuse
To
save at his desperate need;
By
my troth! I think one whom the world pursues
Hath
a right to a gallant steed.
“Away,
my beloved, I hear their feet!
I
blow thee a kiss, my fair,
And
I promise to bring thee, when next we meet,
A
braid for thy bonny hair.
Hurrah!
for the booty! my steed, hurrah!
Thorough
bush, thorough brake, go we;
And
the coy moon smiles on our merry way,
Like
my own love, timidly.”
The
parson he rides with a jingling pouch,
How
it blabs of the rifled poor!
The
courtier he lolls in his gilded coach,
How
it smacks of a sinecure!
The
lawyer revolves in his whirling chaise
Sweet
thoughts of a mischief done;
And
the lady that knoweth the card she plays
Is
counting her guineas won!
“He,
lady! What, holla, ye sinless men!
My
claim ye can scarce refuse;
For
when honest folk live on their neighbours, then
They
encroach on the robber’s dues!”
The
lady changed cheek like a bashful maid,
The
lawyer talked wondrous fair,
The
parson blasphemed, and the courtier prayed,
And
the robber bore off his share.
“Hurrah!
for the revel! my steed, hurrah!
Thorough
bush, thorough brake, go we!
It
is ever a virtue, when others pay,
To ruffle it merrily!”
Oh, there never was life
like the robber’s, so
Jolly and bold and free! And its
end-why, a cheer from the crowd below, And
a leap from a leafless tree!
This very moral lay being ended, Mrs.
Slopperton declared it was excellent; though she confessed
she thought the sentiments rather loose. Perhaps
the gentleman might be induced to favour them with
a song of a more refined and modern turn, something
sentimental, in short. Glancing towards Lucy,
the stranger answered that he only knew one song of
the kind Mrs. Slopperton specified, and it was so short
that he could scarcely weary her patience by granting
her request.
At this moment the river, which was
easily descried from the windows of the room, glimmered
in the starlight; and directing his looks towards
the water, as if the scene had suggested to him the
verses he sung, he gave the following stanzas in a
very low, sweet tone, and with a far purer taste,
than, perhaps, would have suited the preceding and
ruder song.
Thewish.
As
sleeps the dreaming Eve below,
Its
holiest star keeps ward above,
And
yonder wave begins to glow,
Like
friendship bright’ning into Love!
Ah,
would thy bosom were that stream,
Ne’er
wooed save by the virgin air!
Ah,
would that I were that star, whose beam
Looks
down and finds its image there!
Scarcely was the song ended, before
the arrival of Miss Brandon’s servant was announced;
and her destined escort, starting up, gallantly assisted
her with her cloak and her hood, happy,
no doubt, to escape in some measure the overwhelming
compliments of his entertainers.
“But,” said the doctor,
as he shook hands with his deliverer, “by what
name shall I remember and” (lifting his reverend
eyes) “pray for the gentleman to whom I am so
much indebted?”
“You are very kind,” said
the stranger; “my name is Clifford. Madam,”
turning to Lucy, “may I offer my hand down the
stairs?”
Lucy accepted the courtesy; and the
stranger was half-way down the staircase, when the
doctor, stretching out his little neck, exclaimed,
“Good-evening, sir! I do hope we shall
meet again.”
“Fear not!” said Mr. Clifford,
laughing gayly; “I am too great a traveller
to make that hope a matter of impossibility. Take
care, madam, one step more.”
The night was calm and tolerably clear,
though the moon had not yet risen, as Lucy and her
companion passed through the fields, with the servant
preceding them at a little distance with the lantern.
After a pause of some length, Clifford
said, with a little hesitation, “Is Miss Brandon
related to the celebrated barrister of her name?”
“He is my uncle,” said Lucy; “do
you know him?”
“Only your uncle?” said
Clifford, with vivacity, and evading Lucy’s
question. “I feared hem! hem! that
is, I thought he might have been a nearer relation.”
There was another, but a shorter pause, when Clifford
resumed, in a low voice: “Will Miss Brandon
think me very presumptuous if I say that a countenance
like hers, once seen, can never be forgotten; and
I believe, some years since, I had the honour to see
her in London, at the theatre? It was but a momentary
and distant glance that I was then enabled to gain;
and yet,” he added significantly, “it
sufficed!”
“I was only once at the theatre
while in London, some years ago,” said Lucy,
a little embarrassed; “and indeed an unpleasant
occurrence which happened to my uncle, with whom I
was, is sufficient to make me remember it.”
“Ha! and what was it?”
“Why, in going out of the play-house
his watch was stolen by some dexterous pickpocket.”
“Was the rogue caught?” asked the stranger.
“Yes; and was sent the next
day to Bridewell. My uncle said he was extremely
young, and yet quite hardened. I remember that
I was foolish enough, when I heard of his sentence,
to beg very hard that my uncle would intercede for
him; but in vain.”
“Did you, indeed, intercede
for him?” said the stranger, in so earnest a
tone that Lucy coloured for the twentieth time that
night, without seeing any necessity for the blush.
Clifford continued, in a gayer tone: “Well,
it is surprising how rogues hang together. I should
not be greatly surprised if the person who despoiled
your uncle were one of the same gang as the rascal
who so terrified your worthy friend the doctor.
But is this handsome old place your home?”
“This is my home,” answered
Lucy; “but it is an old-fashioned, strange place;
and few people, to whom it was not endeared by associations,
would think it handsome.”
“Pardon me!” said Lucy’s
companion, stopping, and surveying with a look of
great interest the quaint pile, which now stood close
before them; its dark bricks, gable-ends, and ivied
walls, tinged by the starry light of the skies, and
contrasted by the river, which rolled in silence below.
The shutters to the large oriel window of the room
in which the squire usually sat were still unclosed,
and the steady and warm light of the apartment shone
forth, casting a glow even to the smooth waters of
the river; at the same moment, too, the friendly bark
of the house-dog was heard, as in welcome; and was
followed by the note of the great bell, announcing
the hour for the last meal of the old-fashioned and
hospitable family.
“There is a pleasure in this,”
said the stranger, unconsciously, and with a half-sigh;
“I wish I had a home!”
“And have you not a home?”
said Lucy, with naivety. “As much as a
bachelor can have, perhaps,” answered Clifford,
recovering without an effort his gayety and self-possession.
“But you know we wanderers are not allowed the
same boast as the more fortunate Benedicts; we send
our hearts in search of a home, and we lose the one
without gaining the other. But I keep you in
the cold, and we are now at your door.”
“You will come in, of course!”
said Miss Brandon, “and partake of our evening
cheer.”
The stranger hesitated for an instant,
and then said in a quick tone,
“No! many, many thanks; it is
already late. Will Miss Brandon accept my gratitude
for her condescension in permitting the attendance
of one unknown to her?” As he thus spoke, Clifford
bowed profoundly over the hand of his beautiful charge;
and Lucy, wishing him good-night, hastened with a
light step to her father’s side.
Meanwhile Clifford, after lingering
a minute, when the door was closed on him, turned
abruptly away; and muttering to himself, repaired with
rapid steps to whatever object he had then in view.