The news of the failure of the Welsh
insurrection and the Scotch invasion, while the risings
in Kent and Essex were crushed out, showed Harry Furness
that, for the time at least, there was no further fighting
to be done. Cromwell, after the defeat of the
Scotch, marched with his army to Edinburgh, where
he was received with enthusiasm by Argyll and the
fanatic section, who were now again restored to power,
and recommenced a cruel persecution of all suspected
of Royalist opinions. Now that the Scotch had
been beaten, and the Royalist rising everywhere crushed
out, the Parliament were seized with fear as to the
course which Cromwell and his victorious army might
pursue. If they had been so arrogant and haughty
before, what might not be expected now. Negotiations
were at once opened with the king. He was removed
from Carisbrook to a good house at Newport. Commissioners
came down there, and forty days were spent in prolonged
argument, and the commissioners returned to London
on the 28th of November with a treaty signed.
It was too late. The army stationed at St. Albans
sent in a remonstrance to Parliament, calling upon
them to bring the king to trial, and stating that
if Parliament neglected its duty the army would take
the matter into its own hands. This remonstrance
caused great excitement in the Commons. No steps
were taken upon it however, and the Commons proceeded
to discuss the treaty, and voted that the king’s
concessions were sufficient. On the 29th a body
of soldiers went across to the Isle of Wight, surrounded
the king’s house, seized him and carried him
to Hurst Castle. The next day Parliament voted
that they would not debate the remonstrance of the
army, and in reply the army at Windsor marched on
the 2d of December into London. On the 5th the
Commons debated all day upon the treaty.
Prynne, formerly one of the stanchest
opposers of King Charles, spoke with others strongly
in his favor, and it was carried by a hundred and
twenty-nine to thirty-eight. The same day some
of the leaders of the army met, and determined to
expel from the house all those opposed to their interests.
On the 7th the Trained Bands of the city were withdrawn
from around the House, and Colonel Pride with his regiment
of foot surrounded it. As the members arrived
forty-one of them were turned back. The same
process was repeated on the two following days, until
over a hundred members had been arrested. Thus
the army performed a revolution such as no English
sovereign has dared to carry out. After this
it is idle to talk of the Parliament as in any way
representing the English people. The representatives
who supported the king had long since left it.
The whole of the moderate portion of those who had
opposed him, that is to say, those who had fought to
support the liberties of Englishmen against encroachments
by the king, and who formed the majority after the
Royalists had retired, were now expelled; there remained
only a small body of fanatics devoted to the interests
of the army, and determined to crush out all liberties
of England under its armed heel. This was the
body before whom the king was ere long to undergo
the mockery of a trial.
King Charles was taken to Hurst Castle
on the 17th of December, and three days later carried
to Windsor. On the 2d of January, 1649, the Commons
voted that in making war against the Parliament the
king had been guilty of treason, and should be tried
by a court of a hundred and fifty commissioners.
The Peers rejected the bill, and the Commons then
voted that neither the assent of the Peers nor the
king was necessary for a law passed by themselves.
All the encroachments of King Charles
together were as nothing to this usurpation of despotic
power.
In consequence of the conduct of the
Peers, the number of commissioners was reduced to
a hundred and thirty-five; but of these only sixty-nine
assembled at the trial. Thus the court which was
to try the king consisted only of those who were already
pledged to destroy him. Before such a court as
this there could be but one end to the trial.
When, after deciding upon their sentence, the king
was brought in to hear it, the chief commissioner
told him that the charges were brought against him
in the name of the people of England, when Lady Fairfax
from the gallery cried out, “It’s a lie!
Not one-half of them.” Had she said not
one hundredth of them, she would have been within the
mark.
On the 27th sentence was pronounced.
On the 29th the court signed the sentence, which was
to be carried out on the following day.
From the time when Harry Furness left
Brentwood at the end of August until the king was
brought to London, he had lived quietly at Southampton.
He feared to return home, and chose this port as his
residence, in order that he might, if necessary, cross
into France at short notice. When the news came
that the king had been brought up from Windsor, Harry
and his friends at once rode to London, Every one was
so absorbed in the great trial about to take place
that Harry had little fear of attracting attention
or of being molested should any one recognize in the
young gentleman in sober attire the rustic who had
led the rising in the spring. To London, too,
came many other Cavaliers from all parts of the country,
eager to see if something might not be attempted to
rescue the king. Throughout London the consternation
was great at the usurpation by the remnant of the
Commons of all the rights of the Three Estates, and
still more, at the trial of the king. The army,
however, lay in and about London, and, with Cromwell
at its head, it would, the people felt, easily crush
out any attempt at a rising in the city. Within
a few hours of his arrival in London, Harry saw that
there was no hope from any effort in this direction,
and that the only possible chance of saving the king
was by his arranging for his escape. His majesty,
on his arrival from Windsor, had been lodged in St.
James’ Palace, and as this was completely surrounded
by the Roundhead troops, there was no chance of effecting
an invasion thence. The only possible plan appeared
to be a sudden attack upon his guards on his way to
execution.
Harry gathered round him a party of
thirty Cavaliers, all men ready like himself to sacrifice
their lives for the king. Their plan was to gather
near Whitehall, where the execution was to take place,
to burst through the soldiers lining the way, to cut
down the guards, and carry the king to a boat in readiness
behind Whitehall, This was to convey him across to
Lambeth, where fleet horses were to be stationed, which
would take him down to the Essex coast.
The plan was a desperate one, but
it might possibly have succeeded, could the Cavaliers
have gained the position which they wished. The
whole of the army was, however, placed in the streets
and passages leading to Whitehall, and between that
place and the city the cavalry were drawn up, preventing
any from coming in or going out. When they found
that this was the case, the Cavaliers in despair mounted
their horses, and rode into the country, with their
hearts filled with grief and rage.
On the 30th, an hour after the king’s
execution, proclamation was made that whoever should
proclaim a new king would be deemed a traitor, and
a week later, the Commons, now reduced to a hundred
members, formally abolished the House of Peers.
A little later Lord Capel, Lord Holland, and the Duke
of Hamilton were executed.
Had the king effected his escape,
Harry Furness had determined to return to Abingdon
and live quietly at home, believing that now the army
had grasped all power, and crushed all opposition,
it was probable that they would abstain from exciting
further popular animosity by the persecution of those
who had fought against them. The fury, however,
excited in his mind by the murder of the king after
the mockery of a trial, determined him to fight to
the last, wherever a rising might be offered, however
hopeless a success that rising might appear. He
would not, however, suffer Jacob and William Long
any longer to follow his fortunes, although they earnestly
pleaded to do so. “I have no hope of success,”
he said. “I am ready to die, but I will
not bring you to that strait. I have written
to my father begging him, Jacob, to receive you as
his friend and companion, and to do what he can, William,
to assist you in whatever mode of life your wishes
may hereafter lead you to adopt. But come with
me you shall not.”
Not without tears did Harry’s
faithful companions yield themselves to his will,
and set out for Abingdon, while he, with eight or ten
comrades as determined as himself, kept on west until
they arrived at Bristol, where they took ship and
crossed to Ireland. They landed at Waterford,
and journeyed north until they reached the army, with
which the Marquis of Ormonde was besieging Dublin.
Nothing that Harry had seen of war in England prepared
him in any way for the horrors which he beheld in
Ireland. The great mass of the people there were
at that time but a few degrees advanced above savages,
and they carried on their war with a brutal cruelty
and bloodshed which could now only be rivaled in the
center of Africa. Between the Protestants and
the English and Scotch settlers on the one hand, and
the wild peasantry on the other, a war of something
like extermination went on. Wholesale massacres
took place, at which men, women, and children were
indiscriminately butchered, the ferocity shown being
as great upon one side as the other. In fact,
beyond the possession of a few large towns, Ireland
had no claim whatever to be considered a civilized
country. As Harry and his comrades rode from
Waterford they beheld everywhere ruined fields and
burned houses; and on joining the army of the Marquis
of Ormonde, Harry felt even more strongly than before
the hopelessness of the struggle on which he was engaged.
These bands of wild, half-clad kernes, armed with pike
and billhook, might be brave indeed, but could do nothing
against the disciplined soldiers of the Parliament.
There were with Ormonde, indeed, better troops than
these. Some of the companies were formed of English
and Welsh Royalists. Others had been raised by
the Catholic gentry of the west, and into these some
sort of order and discipline had been introduced.
The army, moreover, was deficient in artillery, and
not more than one-third of the footmen carried firearms.
Harry was, a day or two after reaching the camp of
Lord Ormonde, sent off to the West to drill some of
the newly-raised levies there. It was now six
years since he had begun to take an active part in
the war, and he was between twenty-one and twenty-two.
His life of active exertion had strengthened his muscles,
broadened his frame, and given a strength and vigor
to his tall and powerful figure.
Foreseeing that the siege of Dublin
was not likely to be successful, Harry accepted his
commission to the West with pleasure. He felt
already that with all his devotion to the Royalist
cause he could not wish that the siege of Dublin should
be successful; for he saw that the vast proportion
of the besieging army were animated by no sense of
loyalty, by no interest in the constitutional question
at stake, but simply with a blind hatred of the Protestant
population of Dublin, and that the capture of the
city would probably be followed by the indiscriminate
slaughter of its inhabitants.
He set out on his journey, furnished
with letters from Ormonde to several influential gentlemen
in Galway. The roads at first were fairly good,
but accustomed to the comfortable inns in England,
Harry found the resting-places along the road execrable.
He was amused of an evening by the eagerness with
which the people came round and asked for news from
Dublin. In all parts of England the little sheets
which then did service as newspapers carried news
of the events which were taking place. It is
true that none of the country population could read
or write; but the alehouses served as centers of news.
The village clerk, or, perhaps, the squire’s
bailiff, could read, as could probably the landlord,
and thus the news spread quickly round the country.
In Ireland news traveled only from mouth to mouth,
often becoming strangely distorted on the way.
Harry was greatly struck by the bareness
of the fields and the poverty of the country; and
as he journeyed further west the country became still
wilder and more lonely. It was seldom now that
he met any one who could speak English, and as the
road was often little more than a track, he had great
difficulty in keeping his way, and regretted that he
had not hired a servant knowing the country before
leaving the army. He generally, however, was
able to obtain a guide from village to village.
The loneliness of the way, the wretchedness of the
people, the absence of the brightness and comfort
so characteristic of English life, made the journey
an oppressive one, and Harry was glad when, five days
after leaving Dublin, he approached the end of his
ride. Upon this day he had taken no guide, being
told that the road was clear and unmistakable as far
as Galway.
He had not traveled many hours when
a heavy mist set in, accompanied by a keen and driving
rain, in his face. With his head bent down, Harry
rode along, paying less attention than usual to his
way. The mist grew thicker and thicker.
The horse no longer proceeded at a brisk pace, and
presently came to a stop. Harry dismounted, and
discovered that he had left the road, Turning his
horse’s head, and taking the reins over his
arm, he tried to retrace his steps.
For an hour he walked along, the conviction
growing every moment that he was hopelessly lost.
The ground was now soft and miry and was covered with
tussocks of coarse grass, between which the soil was
black and oozy. The horse floundered on for some
distance, but with such increasing difficulty that,
upon reaching a space of comparatively solid ground,
Harry decided to take him no further.
The cold rain chilled him to the bone,
and after awhile he determined to try and make his
way forward on foot, in hopes of finding, if not a
human habitation, some walls or bushes where he could
obtain shelter until the weather cleared. He
fastened the reins to a small shrub, took off the
saddle and laid it on the grass, spread the horse rug
over the animal to protect it as far as possible,
and then started on his way. He had heard of
Irish bogs extending for many miles, and deep enough
to engulf men and animals who might stray among them,
and he felt that his position was a serious one.
He blamed himself now for not having
halted immediately he perceived that he had missed
the road. The only guide that he had as to the
direction he should take was the wind. On his
way it had been in his face, and he determined now
to keep it at his back, not because that was probably
the way to safety, but because he could see more easily
where he was going, and he thought by continuing steadily
in one direction he might at last gain firm ground.
His view extended but a few yards round him, and he
soon found that his plan of proceeding in a straight
line was impracticable. Often quagmires of black
ooze, or spaces covered with light grass, which were,
he found, still more treacherous, barred his way,
and he was compelled to make considerable detours to
the right or left in order to pass them. Sometimes
widths of sluggish water were met with. For a
long time Harry continued his way, leaping lightly
from tuft to tuft, where the grass grew thickest,
sometimes wading knee-deep in the slush and feeling
carefully every foot lest he should get to a depth
whence he should be unable to extricate himself.
Every now and then he shouted at the top of his voice,
in hopes that he might be heard by some human being.
For hours he struggled on. He was now exhausted
with his efforts, and the thickening darkness told
him that day was fading. From the time he had
left his horse he had met with no bush of sufficient
height to afford him the slightest shelter.
Just as he was thinking whether he
had not better stop where he was, and sit down on
the firmest tuft he could find and wait for morning,
when perhaps the rainstorm might cease and enable him
to see where he was, he heard, and at no very great
distance, the sudden bray of a donkey. He turned
at once in the direction of the sound, with renewed
hopes, giving a loud shout as he did so. Again
and again he raised his voice, and presently heard
an answering shout. He called again, and in reply
heard some shouts in Irish, probably questions, but
to these he could give no answer. Shouting occasionally,
he made his way toward the voice, but the bog seemed
more difficult and treacherous than ever, and at last
he reached a spot where further advance seemed absolutely
impossible. It was now nearly dark, and Harry
was about to sit down in despair, when suddenly a
voice sounded close to him. He answered again,
and immediately a barefooted boy sprang to his side
from behind. The boy stood astonished at Harry’s
appearance. The latter was splashed and smeared
from head to foot with black mire, for he had several
times fallen. His broad hat drooped a sodden
mass over his shoulders, the dripping feather adding
to its forlorn appearance. His high riding boots
were gone, having long since been abandoned in the
tenacious ooze in which they had stuck; his ringlets
fell in wisps on his shoulder.
After staring at him for a minute,
the boy said something in Irish. Harry shook
his head.
His guide then motioned him to follow
him. For some time it seemed to Harry that he
was retracing his steps. Then they turned, and
by what seemed a long detour, at last reached firmer
ground. A minute or two later they were walking
along a path, and presently stopped before the door
of a cabin, by which two men were standing. They
exchanged a word or two with the boy, and then motioned
to Harry to enter. A peat fire Was burning on
the hearth, and a woman, whose age Harry from her aspect
thought must be enormous, was crouched on a low stool
beside it. He threw off his riding cloak and
knelt by her, and held his hands over the fire to
restore the circulation. One of the men lighted
a candle formed of rushes dipped in tallow. Harry
paid no heed to them until he felt the warmth returning
to his limbs. Then he rose to his feet and addressed
them in English. They shook their heads.
Perceiving how wet he was one of them drew a bottle
from under the thatch, and pouring some of its contents
into a wooden cup offered it to him. Harry put
it to his lips. At first it seemed that he was
drinking a mixture of liquid fire and smoke, and the
first swallow nearly choked him. However he persevered,
and soon felt the blood coursing more rapidly in his
veins. Finding the impossibilty of conversing,
he again sat down by the fire and waited the course
of events. He had observed that as he entered
his young guide had, in obedience probably to the
orders of one of the men, darted away into the mist.
The minutes passed slowly, and not
a word was spoken in the cottage. An hour went
by, and then a tramp of feet was heard, and, accompanied
by the boy, eight or ten men entered. All carried
pikes. Between them and the men already in the
hut an eager conversation took place. Harry felt
far from easy. The aspect of the men was wild
in the extreme. Their hair was long and unkempt,
and fell in straggling masses over their shoulders.
Presently one, who appeared to be the leader, approached
Harry, who had now risen to his feet, and crossed himself
on the forehead and breast. Harry understood
by the action that he inquired if he was a Catholic,
and in reply shook his head.
An angry murmur ran through the men.
Harry repressed his inclination to place his hand
on his pistols, which he had on alighting from his
horse taken from the holsters and placed in his belt.
He felt that even with these and his sword, he should
be no match for the men around him. Then he bethought
of the letters of which he was a bearer. Taking
them from his pocket he held them out. “Ormonde,”
he said, looking at the men.
No gleam of intelligence brightened
their faces at the word.
Then he said “Butler,”
the Irish family name of the earl. Two or three
of the men spoke together, and Harry thought that there
was some comprehension of his meaning. Then he
read aloud the addresses of the letters, and the exclamations
which followed each named showed that these were familiar
to the men. A lively conversation took place between
them, and the leader presently approached and held
out his hand.
“Thomas Blake, Killicuddery,”
he said. This was the address of one of the letters,
and Harry at once gave it him. It was handed to
the boy, with a few words of instruction. The
lad at once left the hut. The men seemed to think
that for the time there was nothing more to be done,
laid their pikes against the wall, and assumed, Harry
thought, a more friendly aspect. He reciprocated
their action, by unbuckling his belt and laying aside
his sword and pistols. Fresh peats were piled
on the fire, another candle was lit, and the party
prepared to make themselves comfortable. The
bottle and wooden cup were again produced, and the
owner of the hut offered some black bread to his visitor.