Many things fall between
the cup and the lip!
Your man does please
me
With his conceit.
...............
Comes Chanon Hugh accoutred as you
see
Disguised!
And thus am I to gull the constable?
Now have among you for a man at arms.
...............
High-constable was more, though
He laid Dick Tator by the heels.
Ben Jonson Tale
of a Tub.
Meanwhile Clifford strode rapidly
through the streets which surrounded the judge’s
house, and turning to an obscurer quartier of
the town, entered a gloomy lane or alley. Here
he was abruptly accosted by a man wrapped in a shaggy
great-coat, of somewhat a suspicious appearance.
“Aha, Captain!” said he,
“you are beyond your time, but all ’s well!”
Attempting, with indifferent success,
the easy self-possession which generally marked his
address to his companions, Clifford, repeating the
stranger’s words, replied,
“All’s well! What! are the prisoners
released?”
“No, faith!” answered
the man, with a rough laugh, “not yet; but all
in good time. It is a little too much to expect
the justices to do our work, though, by the Lord Harry,
we often do theirs!”
“What then?” asked Clifford, impatiently.
“And this is what you call well!”
said Clifford, angrily. “No, Captain, don’t
be glimflashy! You have not heard all yet!
It seems that the only thing buffed hard against them
was by a stout grazier, who was cried ‘Stand!’
to, some fifty miles off the town; so the queer coffin
thinks of sending the poor fellows to the jail of
the county where they did the business!”
“Ah! that may leave some hopes
for them! We must look sharp to their journey;
if they once get to prison, their only chances are
the file and the bribe. Unhappily, neither of
them is so lucky as myself at that trade!”
“No, indeed, there is not a
stone-wall in England that the great Captain Lovett
could not creep through, I’ll swear!” said
the admiring satellite.
“Saddle the horses and load
the pistols! I will join you in ten minutes.
Have my farmer’s dress ready, the false hair,
etc. Choose your own trim. Make haste;
the Three Feathers is the house of meeting.”
“And in ten minutes only, Captain?”
“Punctually!”
The stranger turned a corner and was
out of sight. Clifford, muttering, “Yes,
I was the cause of their apprehension; it was I who
was sought; it is but fair that I should strike a
blow for their escape before I attempt my own,”
continued his course till he came to the door of a
public-house. The sign of a seaman swung aloft,
portraying the jolly tar with a fine pewter pot in
his hand, considerably huger than his own circumference.
An immense pug sat at the door, lolling its tongue
out, as if, having stuffed itself to the tongue, it
was forced to turn that useful member out of its proper
place. The shutters were half closed, but the
sounds of coarse merriment issued jovially forth.
Clifford disconcerted the pug; and
crossing the threshold, cried in aloud tone, “Janseen!”
“Here!” answered a gruff
voice; and Clifford, passing on, came to a small parlour
adjoining the tap. There, seated by a round oak
table, he found mine host, a red, fierce,
weather-beaten, but bloated-looking personage, like
Dick Hatteraick in a dropsy.
“How now, Captain!” cried
he, in a gutteral accent, and interlarding his discourse
with certain Dutch graces, which with our reader’s
leave we will omit, as being unable to spell them;
“how now! not gone yet!”
“No! I start for the coast
to-morrow; business keeps me to-day. I came to
ask if Mellon may be fully depended on?”
“Ay, honest to the back-bone.”
“And you are sure that in spite
of my late delays he will not have left the village?”
“Sure! What else can I
be? Don’t I know Jack Mellon these twenty
years! He would lie like a log in a calm for
ten months together, without moving a hair’s-breadth,
if he was under orders.”
“And his vessel is swift and
well manned, in case of an officer’s chase?”
“The ‘Black Molly’
swift? Ask your grandmother. The ‘Black
Molly’ would outstrip a shark.”
“Then good-by, Janseen; there
is something to keep your pipe alight. We shall
not meet within the three seas again, I think.
England is as much too hot for me as Holland for you!”
“You are a capital fellow!”
cried mine host, shaking Clifford by the hand; “and
when the lads come to know their loss, they will know
they have lost the bravest and truest gill that ever
took to the toby; so good-by, and be d –d
to you!”
With this valedictory benediction
mine host released Clifford; and the robber hastened
to his appointment at the Three Feathers.
He found all prepared. He hastily
put on his disguise; and his follower led out his
horse, a noble animal of the grand Irish
breed, of remarkable strength and bone, and save only
that it was somewhat sharp in the quarters (a fault
which they who look for speed as well as grace will
easily forgive), of most unequalled beauty in its symmetry
and proportions.
Well did the courser know, and proudly
did it render obeisance to, its master; snorting impatiently
and rearing from the hand of the attendant robber,
the sagacious animal freed itself of the rein, and
as it tossed its long mane in the breeze of the fresh
air, came trotting to the place where Clifford stood.
“So ho, Robin! so ho! What,
thou chafest that I have left thy fellow behind at
the Red Cave! Him we may never see more.
But while I have life, I will not leave thee, Robin!”
With these words the robber fondly stroked the shining
neck of his favourite steed; and as the animal returned
the caress by rubbing its head against the hands and
the athletic breast of its master, Clifford felt at
his heart somewhat of that old racy stir of the blood
which had been once to him the chief charm of his
criminal profession, and which in the late change of
his feelings he had almost forgotten.
“Well, Robin, well,” he
renewed, as he kissed the face of his steed, “well,
we will have some days like our old ones yet; thou
shalt say, Ha! ha! to the trumpet, and bear thy master
along on more glorious enterprises than he has yet
thanked thee for sharing. Thou wilt now be my
only familiar, my only friend, Robin; we two shall
be strangers in a foreign land. But thou wilt
make thyself welcome easier than thy lord, Robin;
and thou wilt forget the old days and thine old comrades
and thine old loves, when Ha!” and
Clifford turned abruptly to his attendant, who addressed
him; “It is late, you say. True! Look
you, it will be unwise for us both to quit London
together. You know the sixth milestone; join
me there, and we can proceed in company!”
Not unwilling to linger for a parting
cup, the comrade assented to the prudence of the plan
proposed; and after one or two additional words of
caution and advice, Clifford mounted and rode from
the yard of the inn. As he passed through the
tall wooden gates into the street, the imperfect gleam
of the wintry sun falling over himself and his steed,
it was scarcely possible, even in spite of his disguise
and rude garb, to conceive a more gallant and striking
specimen of the lawless and daring tribe to which
he belonged; the height, strength, beauty, and exquisite
grooming visible in the steed; the sparkling eye, the
bold profile, the sinewy chest, the graceful limbs,
and the careless and practised horsemanship of the
rider.
Looking after his chief with a long
and an admiring gaze, the robber said to the hostler
of the inn, an aged and withered man, who had seen
nine generations of highwaymen rise and vanish,
“There, Joe, when did you ever
look on a hero like that? The bravest heart,
the frankest hand, the best judge of a horse, and the
handsomest man that ever did honour to Hounslow!”
“For all that,” returned
the hostler, shaking his palsied head, and turning
back to the tap-room, “for all that,
master, his time be up. Mark my whids, Captain
Lovett will not be over the year, no, nor
mayhap the month!”
“Why, you old rascal, what makes
you so wise? You will not peach, I suppose!”
“I peach! Devil a bit!
But there never was the gemman of the road, great
or small, knowing or stupid, as outlived his seventh
year. And this will be the captain’s seventh,
come the 21st of next month; but he be a fine chap,
and I’ll go to his hanging!”
“Fish!” said the robber,
peevishly, he himself was verging towards
the end of his sixth year, “pish!”
“Mind, I tells it you, master;
and somehow or other I thinks and I has
experience in these things by the fey, of
his eye and the drop of his lip, that the captain’s
time will be up to-day!”
[Fey A word
difficult to translate; but the closest interpretation
of which is, perhaps,
“the ill omen.”]
Here the robber lost all patience,
and pushing the hoary boder of evil against the wall,
he turned on his heel, and sought some more agreeable
companion to share his stirrup-cup.
It was in the morning of the day following
that in which the above conversations occurred, that
the sagacious Augustus Tomlinson and the valorous
Edward Pepper, handcuffed and fettered, were jogging
along the road in a postchaise, with Mr. Nabbem squeezed
in by the side of the former, and two other gentlemen
in Mr. Nabbem’s confidence mounted on the box
of the chaise, and interfering sadly, as Long Ned growlingly
remarked, with “the beauty of the prospect.”
“Ah, well!” quoth Nabbem,
unavoidably thrusting his elbow into Tomlinson’s
side, while he drew out his snuffbox, and helped himself
largely to the intoxicating dust; “you had best
prepare yourself, Mr. Pepper, for a change of prospects.
I believes as how there is little to please you in
guod [prison].”
“Nothing makes men so facetious
as misfortune to others!” said Augustus, moralizing,
and turning himself, as well as he was able, in order
to deliver his body from the pointed elbow of Mr.
Nabbem. “When a man is down in the world,
all the bystanders, very dull fellows before, suddenly
become wits!”
“You reflects on I,” said
Mr. Nabbem. “Well, it does not sinnify a
pin; for directly we does our duty, you chaps become
howdaciously ungrateful!”
“Ungrateful!” said Pepper;
“what a plague have we got to be grateful for?
I suppose you think we ought to tell you you are the
best friend we have, because you have scrouged us,
neck and crop, into this horrible hole, like turkeys
fatted for Christmas. ’Sdeath! one’s
hair is flatted down like a pancake; and as for one’s
legs, you had better cut them off at once than tuck
them up in a place a foot square, to say
nothing of these blackguardly irons!”
“The only irons pardonable in
your eyes, Ned,” said Tomlinson, “are the
curling-irons, eh?”
“Now, if this is not too much!”
cried Nabbem, crossly; “you objects to go in
a cart like the rest of your profession; and when I
puts myself out of the way to obleedgie you with a
shay, you slangs I for it!”
“Peace, good Nabbem!”
said Augustus, with a sage’s dignity; “you
must allow a little bad humour in men so unhappily
situated as we are.”
The soft answer turneth away wrath.
Tomlinson’s answer softened Nabbem; and by way
of conciliation, he held his snuff-box to the nose
of his unfortunate prisoner. Shutting his eyes,
Tomlinson long and earnestly sniffed up the luxury,
and as soon as, with his own kerchief of spotted yellow,
the officer had wiped from the proboscis some lingering
grains, Tomlinson thus spoke:
“You see us now, Mr. Nabbem,
in a state of broken-down opposition; but our spirits
are not broken too. In our time we have had something
to do with the administration; and our comfort at
present is the comfort of fallen ministers!”
“Oho! you were in the Methodist
line before you took to the road?” said Nabbem.
“Not so!” answered Augustus,
gravely. “We were the Methodists of politics,
not of the church; namely, we lived upon our flock
without a legal authority to do so, and that which
the law withheld from us our wits gave. But tell
me, Mr. Nabbem, are you addicted to politics?”
“Why, they says I be,”
said Mr. Nabbem, with a grin; “and for my part,
I thinks all who sarves the king should stand up for
him, and take care of their little families!”
“You speak what others think!”
answered Tomlinson, smiling also. “And I
will now, since you like politics, point out to you
what I dare say you have not observed before.”
“What be that?” said Nabbem.
“A wonderful likeness between
the life of the gentlemen adorning his Majesty’s
senate and the life of the gentlemen whom you are conducting
to his Majesty’s jail.”
The libellous
parallel of Augustus Tomlinson.
“We enter our career, Mr. Nabbem,
as your embryo ministers enter parliament, by
bribery and corruption. There is this difference,
indeed, between the two cases: we are enticed
to enter by the bribery and corruptions
of others; they enter spontaneously by dint of
their own. At first, deluded by romantic visions,
we like the glory of our career better than the
profit, and in our youthful generosity we profess
to attack the rich solely from consideration for
the poor! By and by, as we grow more hardened,
we laugh at these boyish dreams, peasant
or prince fares equally at our impartial hands;
we grasp at the bucket, but we scorn not the thimbleful;
we use the word ‘glory’ only as a trap
for prosélytes and apprentices; our fingers,
like an office-door, are open for all that can
possibly come into them; we consider the wealthy as
our salary, the poor as our perquisites.
What is this, but a picture of your member of
parliament ripening into a minister, your patriot
mellowing into your placeman? And mark me,
Mr. Nabbem! is not the very language of both
as similar as the deeds? What is the phrase
either of us loves to employ? ‘To
deliver.’ What? ‘The Public.’
And do not both invariably deliver it of the same
thing, namely, its purse? Do
we want an excuse for sharing the gold of our neighbours,
or abusing them if they resist? Is not our mutual,
our pithiest plea, ‘Distress’?
True, your patriot calls it ’distress of the
country;’ but does he ever, a whit more than
we do, mean any distress but his own? When
we are brought low, and our coats are shabby,
do we not both shake our heads and talk of ‘reform’?
And when, oh! when we are up in the world, do
we not both kick ‘reform’ to the
devil? How often your parliament man ‘vacates
his seat,’ only for the purpose of resuming
it with a weightier purse! How often, dear
Ned, have our seats been vacated for the same end!
Sometimes, indeed, he really finishes his career
by accepting the Hundreds, it is by
‘accepting the hundreds’ that ours may
be finished too! [Ned drew a long sigh.] Note
us now, Mr. Nabbem, in the zenith of our prosperity, we
have filled our pockets, we have become great
in the mouths of our party. Our pals admire us,
and our blowens adore. What do we in this
short-lived summer? Save and be thrifty?
Ah, no! we must give our dinners, and make light of
our lush. We sport horses on the race-course,
and look big at the multitude we have bubbled.
Is not this your minister come into office?
Does not this remind you of his equipage, his palace,
his plate? In both cases lightly won, lavishly
wasted; and the public, whose cash we have fingered,
may at least have the pleasure of gaping at the
figure we make with it! This, then, is our harvest
of happiness; our foes, our friends, are ready
to eat us with envy, yet what is
so little enviable as our station? Have we not
both our common vexations and our mutual
disquietudes? Do we not both bribe [Nabbem
shook his head and buttoned his waistcoat] our enemies,
cajole our partisans, bully our dependants, and
quarrel with our only friends, namely,
ourselves? Is not the secret question with each,
‘It is all confoundedly fine; but how long will
it last?’ Now, Mr. Nabbem, note me, reverse
the portrait: we are fallen, our career
is over, the road is shut to us, and new
plunderers are robbing the carriages that once
we robbed. Is not this the lot of
No, no! I deceive myself! Your ministers,
your jobmen, for the most part milk the popular
cow while there’s a drop in the udder.
Your chancellor declines on a pension; your minister
attenuates on a grant; the feet of your great
rogues may be gone from the treasury benches,
but they have their little fingers in the treasury.
Their past services are remembered by his Majesty;
ours only noted by the Recorder. They save
themselves, for they hang by one another; we go to
the devil, for we hang by ourselves. We have
our little day of the public, and all is over;
but it is never over with them. We both
hunt the same fox; but we are your fair riders, they
are your knowing ones, we take the
leap, and our necks are broken; they sneak through
the gates, and keep it up to the last!”
As he concluded, Tomlinson’s
head dropped on his bosom, and it was easy to see
that painful comparisons, mingled perhaps with secret
murmurs at the injustice of fortune, were rankling
in his breast. Long Ned sat in gloomy silence;
and even the hard heart of the severe Mr. Nabbem was
softened by the affecting parallel to which he had
listened. They had proceeded without speaking
for two or three miles, when Long Ned, fixing his
eyes on Tomlinson, exclaimed,
“Do you know, Tomlinson, I think
it was a burning shame in Lovett to suffer us to be
carried off like muttons, without attempting to rescue
us by the way! It is all his fault that we are
here; for it was he whom Nabbem wanted, not us.”
“Very true,” said the
cunning policeman; “and if I were you, Mr. Pepper,
hang me if I would not behave like a man of spirit,
and show as little consarn for him as he shows for
you! Why, Lord now, I doesn’t want to ’tice
you; but this I does know, the justices are very anxious
to catch Lovett; and one who gives him up, and says
a word or two about his c’racter, so as to make
conviction sartain, may himself be sartain of a free
pardon for all little sprees and so forth!”
“Ah!” said Long Ned, with
a sigh, “that is all very well, Mr. Nabbem,
but I’ll go to the crap like a gentleman, and
not peach of my comrades; and now I think of it, Lovett
could scarcely have assisted us. One man alone,
even Lovett, clever as he is, could not have forced
us out of the clutches of you and your myrmidons,
Mr. Nabbem! And when we were once at-----, they
took excellent care of us. But tell me now, my
dear Nabbem,” and Long Ned’s voice wheedled
itself into something like softness, “tell
me, do you think the grazier will buff it home?”
“No doubt of that,” said
the unmoved Nabbem. Long Ned’s face fell.
“And what if he does?” said he; “they
can but transport us!”
“Don’t desave yourself,
Master Pepper!” said Nabbem: “you’re
too old a hand for the herring-pond. They’re
resolved to make gallows apples of all such numprels
[Nonpareils] as you!”
Ned cast a sullen look at the officer.
“A pretty comforter you are!”
said he. “I have been in a post chaise
with a pleasanter fellow, I’ll swear! You
may call me an apple if you will, but, I take it,
I am not an apple you’d like to see peeled.”
With this pugilistic and menacing
pun, the lengthy hero relapsed into meditative silence.
Our travellers were now entering a
road skirted on one side by a common of some extent,
and on the other by a thick hedgerow, which through
its breaks gave occasional glimpses of woodland and
fallow, interspersed with cross-roads and tiny brooklets.
“There goes a jolly fellow!”
said Nabbem, pointing to an athletic-looking man,
riding before the carriage, dressed in a farmer’s
garb, and mounted on a large and powerful horse of
the Irish breed. “I dare say he is well
acquainted with your grazier, Mr. Tomlinson; he looks
mortal like one of the same kidney; and here comes
another chap” (as the stranger, was joined by
a short, stout, ruddy man in a carter’s frock,
riding on a horse less showy than his comrade’s,
but of the lengthy, reedy, lank, yet muscular race,
which a knowing jockey would like to bet on).
“Now that’s what I calls a comely lad!”
continued Nabbem, pointing to the latter horseman;
“none of your thin-faced, dark, strapping fellows
like that Captain Lovett, as the blowens raves about,
but a nice, tight little body, with a face like a carrot!
That’s a beauty for my money! Honesty’s
stamped on his face, Mr. Tomlinson! I dare says”
(and the officer grinned, for he had been a lad of
the cross in his own day), “I dare
says, poor innocent booby, he knows none of the ways
of Lunnun town; and if he has not as merry a life as
some folks, mayhap he may have a longer. But
a merry one forever for such lads as us, Mr. Pepper!
I say, has you heard as how Bill Fang went to Scratchland
[Scotland] and was stretched for smashing queer screens
[that is, hung for uttering forged notes]? He
died ’nation game; for when his father, who
was a gray-headed parson, came to see him after the
sentence, he says to the governor, say he, ’Give
us a tip, old ’un, to pay the expenses, and
die dacently.’ The parson forks him out
ten shiners, preaching all the while like winkey.
Bob drops one of the guineas between his fingers,
and says, ’Holla, dad, you have only tipped
us nine of the yellow boys! Just now you said
as how it was ten!’ On this the parish-bull,
who was as poor as if he had been a mouse of the church
instead of the curate, lugs out another; and Bob, turning
round to the jailer, cries, ’Flung the governor
out of a guinea, by God! [Fact] Now,
that’s what I calls keeping it up to the last!”
Mr. Nabbem had scarcely finished this
anecdote, when the farmer-like stranger, who had kept
up by the side of the chaise, suddenly rode to the
window, and touching his hat, said in a Norfolk accent,
“Were the gentlemen we met on
the road belonging to your party? They were asking
after a chaise and pair.”
“No!” said Nabbem, “there
be no gentlemen as belongs to our party!” So
saying, he tipped a knowing wink at the farmer, and
glanced over his shoulder at the prisoners.
“What! you are going all alone?” said
the farmer.
“Ay, to be sure,” answered
Nabbem; “not much danger, I think, in the daytime,
with the sun out as big as a sixpence, which is as
big as ever I see’d him in this country!”
At that moment the shorter stranger,
whose appearance had attracted the praise of Mr. Nabbem
(that personage was himself very short and ruddy),
and who had hitherto been riding close to the post-horses,
and talking to the officers on the box, suddenly threw
himself from his steed, and in the same instant that
he arrested the horses of the chaise, struck the postilion
to the ground with a short heavy bludgeon which he
drew from his frock. A whistle was heard and
answered, as if by a signal: three fellows, armed
with bludgeons, leaped from the hedge; and in the
interim the pretended farmer, dismounting, flung open
the door of the chaise, and seizing Mr. Nabbem by
the collar, swung him to the ground with a celerity
that became the circular rotundity of the policeman’s
figure rather than the deliberate gravity of his dignified
office.
Rapid and instantaneous as had been
this work, it was not without a check. Although
the policemen had not dreamed of a rescue in the very
face of the day and on the high-road, their profession
was not that which suffered them easily to be surprised.
The two guardians of the dicky leaped nimbly to the
ground; but before they had time to use their firearms,
two of the new aggressors, who had appeared from the
hedge, closed upon them, and bore them to the ground.
While this scuffle took place, the farmer had disarmed
the prostrate Nabbem, and giving him in charge to
the remaining confederate, extricated Tomlinson and
his comrade from the chaise.
“Hist!” said he in a whisper,
“beware my name; my disguise hides me at present.
Lean on me, only through the hedge; a cart
waits there, and you are safe!”
With these broken words he assisted
the robbers as well as he could, in spite of their
manacles, through the same part of the hedge from
which the three allies had sprung. They were already
through the barrier, only the long legs
of Ned Pepper lingered behind, when at
the far end of the road, which was perfectly straight,
a gentleman’s carriage became visible.
A strong hand from the interior of the hedge, seizing
Pepper, dragged him through; and Clifford, for
the reader need not be told who was the farmer, perceiving
the approaching reinforcement, shouted at once for
flight. The robber who had guarded Nabbem, and
who indeed was no other than Old Bags, slow as he habitually
was, lost not an instant in providing for himself;
before you could say “Laudamus,” he was
on the other side of the hedge. The two men engaged
with the police-officers were not capable of an equal
celerity; but Clifford, throwing himself into the
contest and engaging the policemen, gave the robbers
the opportunity of escape. They scrambled through
the fence; the officers, tough fellows and keen, clinging
lustily to them, till one was felled by Clifford,
and the other, catching against a stump, was forced
to relinquish his hold; he then sprang back into the
road and prepared for Clifford, who now, however, occupied
himself rather in fugitive than warlike measures.
Meanwhile, the moment the other rescuers had passed
the Rubicon of the hedge, their flight, and that of
the gentlemen who had passed before them, commenced.
On this mystic side of the hedge was a cross-road,
striking at once through an intricate and wooded part
of the country, which allowed speedy and ample opportunities
of dispersion. Here a light cart, drawn by two
swift horses in a tandem fashion, awaited the fugitives.
Long Ned and Augustus were stowed down at the bottom
of this vehicle; three fellows filed away at their
irons, and a fourth, who had hitherto remained inglorious
with the cart, gave the lash and he gave
it handsomely to the coursers. Away
rattled the equipage; and thus was achieved a flight
still memorable in the annals of the elect, and long
quoted as one of the boldest and most daring exploits
that illicit enterprise ever accomplished.
Clifford and his equestrian comrade
only remained in the field, or rather the road.
The former sprang at once on his horse; the latter
was not long in following the example. But the
policeman, who, it has been said, baffled in detaining
the fugitives of the hedge, had leaped back into the
road, was not idle in the meanwhile. When he saw
Clifford about to mount, instead of attempting to
seize the enemy, he recurred to his pistol, which
in the late struggle hand to hand he had been unable
to use, and taking sure aim at Clifford, whom he judged
at once to be the leader of the rescue, he lodged
a ball in the right side of the robber at the very
moment he had set spurs in his horse and turned to
fly. Clifford’s head drooped to the saddle-bow.
Fiercely the horse sprang on. The robber endeavoured,
despite his reeling senses, to retain his seat; once
he raised his head, once he nerved his slackened and
listless limbs, and then, with a faint groan, he fell
to the earth. The horse bounded but one step
more, and, true to the tutorship it had received,
stopped abruptly. Clifford raised himself with
great difficulty on one arm; with the other hand he
drew forth a pistol. He pointed it deliberately
towards the officer that wounded him. The man
stood motionless, cowering and spellbound, beneath
the dilating eye of the robber. It was but for
a moment that the man had cause for dread; for muttering
between his ground teeth, “Why waste it on an
enemy?” Clifford turned the muzzle towards the
head of the unconscious steed, which seemed sorrowfully
and wistfully to incline towards him. “Thou,”
he said, “whom I have fed and loved, shalt never
know hardship from another!” and with a merciful
cruelty he dragged himself one pace nearer to his
beloved steed, uttered a well-known word, which brought
the docile creature to his side, and placing the muzzle
of the pistol close to his ear, he fired, and fell
back senseless at the exertion. The animal staggered,
and dropped down dead.
Meanwhile Clifford’s comrade,
profiting by the surprise and sudden panic of the
officer, was already out of reach, and darting across
the common, he and his ragged courser speedily vanished.