The following brief narrative contains
a faithful account of one of the many strange incidents
which chequered the life of Hardress Fitzgerald — one
of the now-forgotten heroes who flourished during the
most stirring and, though the most disastrous, by no
means the least glorious period of our eventful history.
He was a captain of horse in the army
of James, and shared the fortunes of his master, enduring
privations, encountering dangers, and submitting to
vicissitudes the most galling and ruinous, with a fortitude
and a heroism which would, if coupled with his other
virtues have rendered the unhappy monarch whom he
served, the most illustrious among unfortunate princes.
I have always preferred, where I could
do so with any approach to accuracy, to give such
relations as the one which I am about to submit to
you, in the first person, and in the words of the original
narrator, believing that such a form of recitation
not only gives freshness to the tale, but in this
particular instance, by bringing before me and steadily
fixing in my mind’s eye the veteran royalist
who himself related the occurrence which I am about
to record, furnishes an additional stimulant to my
memory, and a proportionate check upon my imagination.
As nearly as I can recollect then,
his statement was as follows:
After the fatal battle of the Boyne,
I came up in disguise to Dublin, as did many in a
like situation, regarding the capital as furnishing
at once a good central position of observation, and
as secure a lurking-place as I cared to find.
I would not suffer myself to believe
that the cause of my royal master was so desperate
as it really was; and while I lay in my lodgings, which
consisted of the garret of a small dark house, standing
in the lane which runs close by Audoen’s Arch,
I busied myself with continual projects for the raising
of the country, and the re-collecting of the fragments
of the defeated army — plans, you will allow,
sufficiently magnificent for a poor devil who dared
scarce show his face abroad in the daylight.
I believe, however, that I had not
much reason to fear for my personal safety, for men’s
minds in the city were greatly occupied with public
events, and private amusements and debaucheries, which
were, about that time, carried to an excess which
our country never knew before, by reason of the raking
together from all quarters of the empire, and indeed
from most parts of Holland, the most dissolute and
desperate adventurers who cared to play at hazard
for their lives; and thus there seemed to be but little
scrutiny into the characters of those who sought concealment.
I heard much at different times of
the intentions of King James and his party, but nothing
with certainty.
Some said that the king still lay
in Ireland; others, that he had crossed over to Scotland,
to encourage the Highlanders, who, with Dundee at
their head, had been stirring in his behoof; others,
again, said that he had taken ship for France, leaving
his followers to shift for themselves, and regarding
his kingdom as wholly lost, which last was the true
version, as I afterwards learned.
Although I had been very active in
the wars in Ireland, and had done many deeds of necessary
but dire severity, which have often since troubled
me much to think upon, yet I doubted not but that I
might easily obtain protection for my person and property
from the Prince of Orange, if I sought it by the ordinary
submissions; but besides that my conscience and my
affections resisted such time-serving concessions,
I was resolved in my own mind that the cause of the
royalist party was by no means desperate, and I looked
to keep myself unimpeded by any pledge or promise
given to the usurping Dutchman, that I might freely
and honourably take a share in any struggle which
might yet remain to be made for the right.
I therefore lay quiet, going forth
from my lodgings but little, and that chiefly under
cover of the dusk, and conversing hardly at all, except
with those whom I well knew.
I had like once to have paid dearly
for relaxing this caution; for going into a tavern
one evening near the Tholsel, I had the confidence
to throw off my hat, and sit there with my face quite
exposed, when a fellow coming in with some troopers,
they fell a-boozing, and being somewhat warmed, they
began to drink ‘Confusion to popery,’ and
the like, and to compel the peaceable persons who
happened to sit there, to join them in so doing.
Though I was rather hot-blooded, I
was resolved to say nothing to attract notice; but,
at the same time, if urged to pledge the toasts which
they were compelling others to drink, to resist doing
so.
With the intent to withdraw myself
quietly from the place, I paid my reckoning, and putting
on my hat, was going into the street, when the countryman
who had come in with the soldiers called out:
‘Stop that popish tom-cat!’
And running across the room, he got
to the door before me, and, shutting it, placed his
back against it, to prevent my going out.
Though with much difficulty, I kept
an appearance of quietness, and turning to the fellow,
who, from his accent, I judged to be northern, and
whose face I knew — though, to this day, I
cannot say where I had seen him before — I
observed very calmly:
’Sir, I came in here with no
other design than to refresh myself, without offending
any man. I have paid my reckoning, and now desire
to go forth. If there is anything within reason
that I can do to satisfy you, and to prevent trouble
and delay to myself, name your terms, and if they
be but fair, I will frankly comply with them.’
He quickly replied:
’You are Hardress Fitzgerald,
the bloody popish captain, that hanged the twelve
men at Derry.’
I felt that I was in some danger,
but being a strong man, and used to perils of all
kinds, it was not easy to disconcert me.
I looked then steadily at the fellow,
and, in a voice of much confidence, I said:
’I am neither a Papist, a Royalist,
nor a Fitzgerald, but an honester Protestant, mayhap,
than many who make louder professions.’
‘Then drink the honest man’s
toast,’ said he. ’Damnation to the
pope, and confusion to skulking Jimmy and his runaway
crew.’
‘Yourself shall hear me,’
said I, taking the largest pewter pot that lay within
my reach. ’Tapster, fill this with ale;
I grieve to say I can afford nothing better.’
I took the vessel of liquor in my
hand, and walking up to him, I first made a bow to
the troopers who sat laughing at the sprightliness
of their facetious friend, and then another to himself,
when saying, ’G — damn yourself
and your cause!’ I flung the ale straight into
his face; and before he had time to recover himself,
I struck him with my whole force and weight with the
pewter pot upon the head, so strong a blow, that he
fell, for aught I know, dead upon the floor, and nothing
but the handle of the vessel remained in my hand.
I opened the door, but one of the
dragoons drew his sabre, and ran at me to avenge his
companion. With my hand I put aside the blade
of the sword, narrowly escaping what he had intended
for me, the point actually tearing open my vest.
Without allowing him time to repeat his thrust, I
struck him in the face with my clenched fist so sound
a blow that he rolled back into the room with the
force of a tennis ball.
It was well for me that the rest were
half drunk, and the evening dark; for otherwise my
folly would infallibly have cost me my life. As
it was, I reached my garret in safety, with a resolution
to frequent taverns no more until better times.
My little patience and money were
wellnigh exhausted, when, after much doubt and uncertainty,
and many conflicting reports, I was assured that the
flower of the Royalist army, under the Duke of Berwick
and General Boisleau, occupied the city of Limerick,
with a determination to hold that fortress against
the prince’s forces; and that a French fleet
of great power, and well freighted with arms, ammunition,
and men, was riding in the Shannon, under the walls
of the town. But this last report was, like many
others then circulated, untrue; there being, indeed,
a promise and expectation of such assistance, but
no arrival of it till too late.
The army of the Prince of Orange was
said to be rapidly approaching the town, in order
to commence the siege.
On hearing this, and being made as
certain as the vagueness and unsatisfactory nature
of my information, which came not from any authentic
source, would permit; at least, being sure of the main
point, which all allowed — namely, that Limerick
was held for the king — and being also naturally
fond of enterprise, and impatient of idleness, I took
the resolution to travel thither, and, if possible,
to throw myself into the city, in order to lend what
assistance I might to my former companions in arms,
well knowing that any man of strong constitution and
of some experience might easily make himself useful
to a garrison in their straitened situation.
When I had taken this resolution,
I was not long in putting it into execution; and,
as the first step in the matter, I turned half of the
money which remained with me, in all about seventeen
pounds, into small wares and merchandise such as travelling
traders used to deal in; and the rest, excepting some
shillings which I carried home for my immediate expenses,
I sewed carefully in the lining of my breeches waistband,
hoping that the sale of my commodities might easily
supply me with subsistence upon the road.
I left Dublin upon a Friday morning
in the month of September, with a tolerably heavy
pack upon my back.
I was a strong man and a good walker,
and one day with another travelled easily at the rate
of twenty miles in each day, much time being lost
in the towns of any note on the way, where, to avoid
suspicion, I was obliged to make some stay, as if
to sell my wares.
I did not travel directly to Limerick,
but turned far into Tipperary, going near to the borders
of Cork.
Upon the sixth day after my departure
from Dublin I learned, certainly, from some fellows
who were returning from trafficking with the soldiers,
that the army of the prince was actually encamped before
Limerick, upon the south side of the Shannon.
In order, then, to enter the city
without interruption, I must needs cross the river,
and I was much in doubt whether to do so by boat from
Kerry, which I might have easily done, into the Earl
of Clare’s land, and thus into the beleaguered
city, or to take what seemed the easier way, one,
however, about which I had certain misgivings — which,
by the way, afterwards turned out to be just enough.
This way was to cross the Shannon at O’Brien’s
Bridge, or at Killaloe, into the county of Clare.
I feared, however, that both these
passes were guarded by the prince’s forces,
and resolved, if such were the case, not to essay to
cross, for I was not fitted to sustain a scrutiny,
having about me, though pretty safely secured, my
commission from King James — which, though
a dangerous companion, I would not have parted from
but with my life.
I settled, then, in my own mind, that
if the bridges were guarded I would walk as far as
Portumna, where I might cross, though at a considerable
sacrifice of time; and, having determined upon this
course, I turned directly towards Killaloe.
I reached the foot of the mountain,
or rather high hill, called Keeper — which
had been pointed out to me as a landmark — lying
directly between me and Killaloe, in the evening,
and, having ascended some way, the darkness and fog
overtook me.
The evening was very chilly, and myself
weary, hungry, and much in need of sleep, so that
I preferred seeking to cross the hill, though at some
risk, to remaining upon it throughout the night.
Stumbling over rocks and sinking into bog-mire, as
the nature of the ground varied, I slowly and laboriously
plodded on, making very little way in proportion to
the toil it cost me.
After half an hour’s slow walking,
or rather rambling, for, owing to the dark, I very
soon lost my direction, I at last heard the sound of
running water, and with some little trouble reached
the edge of a brook, which ran in the bottom of a
deep gully. This I knew would furnish a sure
guide to the low grounds, where I might promise myself
that I should speedily meet with some house or cabin
where I might find shelter for the night.
The stream which I followed flowed
at the bottom of a rough and swampy glen, very steep
and making many abrupt turns, and so dark, owing more
to the fog than to the want of the moon (for, though
not high, I believe it had risen at the time), that
I continually fell over fragments of rock and stumbled
up to my middle into the rivulet, which I sought to
follow.
In this way, drenched, weary, and
with my patience almost exhausted, I was toiling onward,
when, turning a sharp angle in the winding glen, I
found myself within some twenty yards of a group of
wild-looking men, gathered in various attitudes round
a glowing turf fire.
I was so surprised at this rencontre
that I stopped short, and for a time was in doubt
whether to turn back or to accost them.
A minute’s thought satisfied
me that I ought to make up to the fellows, and trust
to their good faith for whatever assistance they could
give me.
I determined, then, to do this, having
great faith in the impulses of my mind, which, whenever
I have been in jeopardy, as in my life I often have,
always prompted me aright.
The strong red light of the fire showed
me plainly enough that the group consisted, not of
soldiers, but of Irish kernes, or countrymen, most
of them wrapped in heavy mantles, and with no other
covering for their heads than that afforded by their
long, rough hair.
There was nothing about them which
I could see to intimate whether their object were
peaceful or warlike; but I afterwards found that they
had weapons enough, though of their own rude fashion.
There were in all about twenty persons
assembled around the fire, some sitting upon such
blocks of stone as happened to lie in the way; others
stretched at their length upon the ground.
‘God save you, boys!’
said I, advancing towards the party.
The men who had been talking and laughing
together instantly paused, and two of them — tall
and powerful fellows — snatched up each a
weapon, something like a short halberd with a massive
iron head, an instrument which they called among themselves
a rapp, and with two or three long strides they came
up with me, and laying hold upon my arms, drew me,
not, you may easily believe, making much resistance,
towards the fire.
When I reached the place where the
figures were seated, the two men still held me firmly,
and some others threw some handfuls of dry fuel upon
the red embers, which, blazing up, cast a strong light
upon me.
When they had satisfied themselves
as to my appearance, they began to question me very
closely as to my purpose in being upon the hill at
such an unseasonable hour, asking me what was my occupation,
where I had been, and whither I was going.
These questions were put to me in
English by an old half-military looking man, who translated
into that language the suggestions which his companions
for the most part threw out in Irish.
I did not choose to commit myself
to these fellows by telling them my real character
and purpose, and therefore I represented myself as
a poor travelling chapman who had been at Cork, and
was seeking his way to Killaloe, in order to cross
over into Clare and thence to the city of Galway.
My account did not seem fully to satisfy the men.
I heard one fellow say in Irish, which
language I understood, ’Maybe he is a spy.’
They then whispered together for a
time, and the little man who was their spokesman came
over to me and said:
’Do you know what we do with
spies? we knock their brains out, my friend.’
He then turned back to them with whom
he had been whispering, and talked in a low tone again
with them for a considerable time.
I now felt very uncomfortable, not
knowing what these savages — for they appeared
nothing better — might design against me.
Twice or thrice I had serious thoughts
of breaking from them, but the two guards who were
placed upon me held me fast by the arms; and even
had I succeeded in shaking them off, I should soon
have been overtaken, encumbered as I was with a heavy
pack, and wholly ignorant of the lie of the ground;
or else, if I were so exceedingly lucky as to escape
out of their hands, I still had the chance of falling
into those of some other party of the same kind.
I therefore patiently awaited the
issue of their deliberations, which I made no doubt
affected me nearly.
I turned to the men who held me, and
one after the other asked them, in their own language,
‘Why they held me?’ adding, ’I am
but a poor pedlar, as you see. I have neither
money nor money’s worth, for the sake of which
you should do me hurt. You may have my pack and
all that it contains, if you desire it — but
do not injure me.’
To all this they gave no answer, but
savagely desired me to hold my tongue.
I accordingly remained silent, determined,
if the worst came, to declare to the whole party,
who, I doubted not, were friendly, as were all the
Irish peasantry in the south, to the Royal cause, my
real character and design; and if this avowal failed
me, I was resolved to make a desperate effort to escape,
or at least to give my life at the dearest price I
could.
I was not kept long in suspense, for
the little veteran who had spoken to me at first came
over, and desiring the two men to bring me after him,
led the way along a broken path, which wound by the
side of the steep glen.
I was obliged willy nilly to go with
them, and, half-dragging and half-carrying me, they
brought me by the path, which now became very steep,
for some hundred yards without stopping, when suddenly
coming to a stand, I found myself close before the
door of some house or hut, I could not see which,
through the planks of which a strong light was streaming.
At this door my conductor stopped,
and tapping gently at it, it was opened by a stout
fellow, with buff-coat and jack-boots, and pistols
stuck in his belt, as also a long cavalry sword by
his side.
He spoke with my guide, and to my
no small satisfaction, in French, which convinced
me that he was one of the soldiers whom Louis had sent
to support our king, and who were said to have arrived
in Limerick, though, as I observed above, not with
truth.
I was much assured by this circumstance,
and made no doubt but that I had fallen in with one
of those marauding parties of native Irish, who, placing
themselves under the guidance of men of courage and
experience, had done much brave and essential service
to the cause of the king.
The soldier entered an inner door
in the apartment, which opening disclosed a rude,
dreary, and dilapidated room, with a low plank ceiling,
much discoloured by the smoke which hung suspended
in heavy masses, descending within a few feet of the
ground, and completely obscuring the upper regions
of the chamber.
A large fire of turf and heath was
burning under a kind of rude chimney, shaped like
a large funnel, but by no means discharging the functions
for which it was intended. Into this inauspicious
apartment was I conducted by my strange companions.
In the next room I heard voices employed, as it seemed,
in brief questioning and answer; and in a minute the
soldier reentered the room, and having said, ’Votre
prisonnier — lé general veut lé
voir,’ he led the way into the inner room,
which in point of comfort and cleanliness was not
a whit better than the first.
Seated at a clumsy plank table, placed
about the middle of the floor, was a powerfully built
man, of almost colossal stature — his military
accoutrements, cuirass and rich regimental clothes,
soiled, deranged, and spattered with recent hard travel;
the flowing wig, surmounted by the cocked hat and
plume, still rested upon his head. On the table
lay his sword-belt with its appendage, and a pair
of long holster pistols, some papers, and pen and
ink; also a stone jug, and the fragments of a hasty
meal. His attitude betokened the languor of fatigue.
His left hand was buried beyond the lace ruffle in
the breast of his cassock, and the elbow of his right
rested upon the table, so as to support his head.
From his mouth protruded a tobacco-pipe, which as I
entered he slowly withdrew.
A single glance at the honest, good-humoured,
comely face of the soldier satisfied me of his identity,
and removing my hat from my head I said, ‘God
save General Sarsfield!’
The general nodded
‘I am a prisoner here under
strange circumstances,’ I continued ’I
appear before you in a strange disguise. You do
not recognise Captain Hardress Fitzgerald!’
‘Eh, how’s this?’ said he, approaching
me with the light.
‘I am that Hardress Fitzgerald,’
I repeated, ’who served under you at the Boyne,
and upon the day of the action had the honour to protect
your person at the expense of his own.’
At the same time I turned aside the hair which covered
the scar which you well know upon my forehead, and
which was then much more remarkable than it is now.
The general on seeing this at once
recognised me, and embracing me cordially, made me
sit down, and while I unstrapped my pack, a tedious
job, my fingers being nearly numbed with cold, sent
the men forth to procure me some provision.
The general’s horse was stabled
in a corner of the chamber where we sat, and his war-saddle
lay upon the floor. At the far end of the room
was a second door, which stood half open; a bogwood
fire burned on a hearth somewhat less rude than the
one which I had first seen, but still very little
better appointed with a chimney, for thick wreaths
of smoke were eddying, with every fitful gust, about
the room. Close by the fire was strewed a bed
of heath, intended, I supposed, for the stalwart limbs
of the general.
‘Hardress Fitzgerald,’
said he, fixing his eyes gravely upon me, while he
slowly removed the tobacco-pipe from his mouth, ’I
remember you, strong, bold and cunning in your warlike
trade; the more desperate an enterprise, the more
ready for it, you. I would gladly engage you,
for I know you trustworthy, to perform a piece of
duty requiring, it may be, no extraordinary quality
to fulfil; and yet perhaps, as accidents may happen,
demanding every attribute of daring and dexterity which
belongs to you.’
Here he paused for some moments.
I own I felt somewhat flattered by
the terms in which he spoke of me, knowing him to
be but little given to compliments; and not having
any plan in my head, farther than the rendering what
service I might to the cause of the king, caring very
little as to the road in which my duty might lie,
I frankly replied:
’Sir, I hope, if opportunity
offers, I shall prove to deserve the honourable terms
in which you are pleased to speak of me. In a
righteous cause I fear not wounds or death; and in
discharging my duty to my God and my king, I am ready
for any hazard or any fate. Name the service you
require, and if it lies within the compass of my wit
or power, I will fully and faithfully perform it.
Have I said enough?’
‘That is well, very well, my
friend; you speak well, and manfully,’ replied
the general. ’I want you to convey to the
hands of General Boisleau, now in the city of Limerick,
a small written packet; there is some danger, mark
me, of your falling in with some outpost or straggling
party of the prince’s army. If you are taken
unawares by any of the enemy you must dispose of the
packet inside your person, rather than let it fall
into their hands — that is, you must eat it.
And if they go to question you with thumbscrews, or
the like, answer nothing; let them knock your brains
out first.’ In illustration, I suppose,
of the latter alternative, he knocked the ashes out
of his pipe upon the table as he uttered it.
‘The packet,’ he continued,
’you shall have to-morrow morning. Meantime
comfort yourself with food, and afterwards with sleep;
you will want, mayhap, all your strength and wits
on the morrow.’
I applied myself forthwith to the
homely fare which they had provided, and I confess
that I never made a meal so heartily to my satisfaction.
It was a beautiful, clear, autumn
morning, and the bright beams of the early sun were
slanting over the brown heath which clothed the sides
of the mountain, and glittering in the thousand bright
drops which the melting hoar-frost had left behind
it, and the white mists were lying like broad lakes
in the valleys, when, with my pedlar’s pack upon
my back, and General Sarsfield’s precious despatch
in my bosom, I set forth, refreshed and courageous.
As I descended the hill, my heart
expanded and my spirits rose under the influences
which surrounded me. The keen, clear, bracing
air of the morning, the bright, slanting sunshine,
the merry songs of the small birds, and the distant
sounds of awakening labour that floated up from the
plains, all conspired to stir my heart within me, and
more like a mad-cap boy, broken loose from school,
than a man of sober years upon a mission of doubt
and danger, I trod lightly on, whistling and singing
alternately for very joy.
As I approached the object of my early
march, I fell in with a countryman, eager, as are
most of his kind, for news.
I gave him what little I had collected,
and professing great zeal for the king, which, indeed,
I always cherished, I won upon his confidence so far,
that he became much more communicative than the peasantry
in those quarters are generally wont to be to strangers.
From him I learned that there was
a company of dragoons in William’s service,
quartered at Willaloe; but he could not tell whether
the passage of the bridge was stopped by them or not.
With a resolution, at all events, to make the attempt
to cross, I approached the town. When I came
within sight of the river, I quickly perceived that
it was so swollen with the recent rains, as, indeed,
the countryman had told me, that the fords were wholly
impassable.
I stopped then, upon a slight eminence
overlooking the village, with a view to reconnoitre
and to arrange my plans in case of interruption.
While thus engaged, the wind blowing gently from the
west, in which quarter Limerick lay, I distinctly
heard the explosion of the cannon, which played from
and against the city, though at a distance of eleven
miles at the least.
I never yet heard the music that had
for me half the attractions of that sullen sound,
and as I noted again and again the distant thunder
that proclaimed the perils, and the valour, and the
faithfulness of my brethren, my heart swelled with
pride, and the tears rose to my eyes; and lifting
up my hands to heaven, I prayed to God that I might
be spared to take a part in the righteous quarrel
that was there so bravely maintained.
I felt, indeed, at this moment a longing,
more intense than I have the power to describe, to
be at once with my brave companions in arms, and so
inwardly excited and stirred up as if I had been actually
within five minutes’ march of the field of battle.
It was now almost noon, and I had
walked hard since morning across a difficult and broken
country, so that I was a little fatigued, and in no
small degree hungry. As I approached the hamlet,
I was glad to see in the window of a poor hovel several
large cakes of meal displayed, as if to induce purchasers
to enter.
I was right in regarding this exhibition
as an intimation that entertainment might be procured
within, for upon entering and inquiring, I was speedily
invited by the poor woman, who, it appeared, kept this
humble house of refreshment, to lay down my pack and
seat myself by a ponderous table, upon which she promised
to serve me with a dinner fit for a king; and indeed,
to my mind, she amply fulfilled her engagement, supplying
me abundantly with eggs, bacon, and wheaten cakes,
which I discussed with a zeal which almost surprised
myself.
Having disposed of the solid part
of my entertainment, I was proceeding to regale myself
with a brimming measure of strong waters, when my
attention was arrested by the sound of horses’
hoofs in brisk motion upon the broken road, and evidently
approaching the hovel in which I was at that moment
seated.
The ominous clank of sword scabbards
and the jingle of brass accoutrements announced, unequivocally,
that the horsemen were of the military profession.
‘The red-coats will stop here
undoubtedly,’ said the old woman, observing,
I suppose, the anxiety of my countenance; ’they
never pass us without coming in for half an hour to
drink or smoke. If you desire to avoid them,
I can hide you safely; but don’t lose a moment.
They will be here before you can count a hundred.’
I thanked the good woman for her hospitable
zeal; but I felt a repugnance to concealing myself
as she suggested, which was enhanced by the consciousness
that if by any accident I were detected while lurking
in the room, my situation would of itself inevitably
lead to suspicions, and probably to discovery.
I therefore declined her offer, and
awaited in suspense the entrance of the soldiers.
I had time before they made their
appearance to move my seat hurriedly from the table
to the hearth, where, under the shade of the large
chimney, I might observe the coming visitors with less
chance of being myself remarked upon.
As my hostess had anticipated, the
horsemen drew up at the door of the hut, and five
dragoons entered the dark chamber where I awaited them.
Leaving their horses at the entrance,
with much noise and clatter they proceeded to seat
themselves and call for liquor.
Three of these fellows were Dutchmen,
and, indeed, all belonged, as I afterwards found,
to a Dutch regiment, which had been recruited with
Irish and English, as also partly officered from the
same nations.
Being supplied with pipes and drink
they soon became merry; and not suffering their smoking
to interfere with their conversation, they talked
loud and quickly, for the most part in a sort of barbarous
language, neither Dutch nor English, but compounded
of both.
They were so occupied with their own
jocularity that I had very great hopes of escaping
observation altogether, and remained quietly seated
in a corner of the chimney, leaning back upon my seat
as if asleep.
My taciturnity and quiescence, however,
did not avail me, for one of these fellows coming
over to the hearth to light his pipe, perceived me,
and looking me very hard in the face, he said:
’What countryman are you, brother,
that you sit with a covered head in the room with
the prince’s soldiers?’
At the same time he tossed my hat
off my head into the fire. I was not fool enough,
though somewhat hot-blooded, to suffer the insolence
of this fellow to involve me in a broil so dangerous
to my person and ruinous to my schemes as a riot with
these soldiers must prove. I therefore, quietly
taking up my hat and shaking the ashes out of it,
observed:
’Sir, I crave your pardon if
I have offended you. I am a stranger in these
quarters, and a poor, ignorant, humble man, desiring
only to drive my little trade in peace, so far as
that may be done in these troublous times.’
‘And what may your trade be?’ said the
same fellow.
‘I am a travelling merchant,’
I replied; ’and sell my wares as cheap as any
trader in the country.’
‘Let us see them forthwith,’
said he; ’mayhap I or my comrades may want something
which you can supply. Where is thy chest, friend?
Thou shalt have ready money’ (winking at his
companions), ’ready money, and good weight,
and sound metal; none of your rascally pinchbeck.
Eh, my lads? Bring forth the goods, and let us
see.’
Thus urged, I should have betrayed
myself had I hesitated to do as required; and anxious,
upon any terms, to quiet these turbulent men of war,
I unbuckled my pack and exhibited its contents upon
the table before them.
‘A pair of lace ruffles, by
the Lord!’ said one, unceremoniously seizing
upon the articles he named.
‘A phial of perfume,’
continued another, tumbling over the farrago which
I had submitted to them, ’wash-balls, combs,
stationery, slippers, small knives, tobacco; by — ,
this merchant is a prize! Mark me, honest fellow,
the man who wrongs thee shall suffer — ’fore
Gad he shall; thou shalt be fairly dealt with’
(this he said while in the act of pocketing a small
silver tobacco-box, the most valuable article in the
lot). ’You shall come with me to head-quarters;
the captain will deal with you, and never haggle about
the price. I promise thee his good will, and thou
wilt consider me accordingly. You’ll find
him a profitable customer — he has money
without end, and throws it about like a gentleman.
If so be as I tell thee, I shall expect, and my comrades
here, a piece or two in the way of a compliment — but
of this anon. Come, then, with us; buckle on
thy pack quickly, friend.’
There was no use in my declaring my
willingness to deal with themselves in preference
to their master; it was clear that they had resolved
that I should, in the most expeditious and advantageous
way, turn my goods into money, that they might excise
upon me to the amount of their wishes.
The worthy who had taken a lead in
these arrangements, and who by his stripes I perceived
to be a corporal, having insisted on my taking a dram
with him to cement our newly-formed friendship, for
which, however, he requested me to pay, made me mount
behind one of his comrades; and the party, of which
I thus formed an unwilling member, moved at a slow
trot towards the quarters of the troop.
They reined up their horses at the
head of the long bridge, which at this village spans
the broad waters of the Shannon connecting the opposite
counties of Tipperary and Clare.
A small tower, built originally, no
doubt, to protect and to defend this pass, occupied
the near extremity of the bridge, and in its rear,
but connected with it, stood several straggling buildings
rather dilapidated.
A dismounted trooper kept guard at
the door, and my conductor having, dismounted, as
also the corporal, the latter inquired:
‘Is the captain in his quarters?’
‘He is,’ replied the sentinel.
And without more ado my companion
shoved me into the entrance of the small dark tower,
and opening a door at the extremity of the narrow
chamber into which we had passed from the street, we
entered a second room in which were seated some half-dozen
officers of various ranks and ages, engaged in drinking,
and smoking, and play.
I glanced rapidly from man to man,
and was nearly satisfied by my inspection, when one
of the gentlemen whose back had been turned towards
the place where I stood, suddenly changed his position
and looked towards me.
As soon as I saw his face my heart
sank within me, and I knew that my life or death was
balanced, as it were, upon a razor’s edge.
The name of this man whose unexpected
appearance thus affected me was Hugh Oliver, and good
and strong reason had I to dread him, for so bitterly
did he hate me, that to this moment I do verily believe
he would have compassed my death if it lay in his
power to do so, even at the hazard of his own life
and soul, for I had been — though God knows
with many sore strugglings and at the stern call of
public duty — the judge and condemner of
his brother; and though the military law, which I
was called upon to administer, would permit no other
course or sentence than the bloody one which I was
compelled to pursue, yet even to this hour the recollection
of that deed is heavy at my breast.
As soon as I saw this man I felt that
my safety depended upon the accident of his not recognising
me through the disguise which I had assumed, an accident
against which were many chances, for he well knew
my person and appearance.
It was too late now to destroy General
Sarsfield’s instructions; any attempt to do
so would ensure detection. All then depended upon
a cast of the die.
When the first moment of dismay and
heart-sickening agitation had passed, it seemed to
me as if my mind acquired a collectedness and clearness
more complete and intense than I had ever experienced
before.
I instantly perceived that he did
not know me, for turning from me to the soldier with
all air of indifference, he said,
’Is this a prisoner or a deserter?
What have you brought him here for, sirra?’
‘Your wisdom will regard him
as you see fit, may it please you,’ said the
corporal. ’The man is a travelling merchant,
and, overtaking him upon the road, close by old Dame
MacDonagh’s cot, I thought I might as well make
a sort of prisoner of him that your honour might use
him as it might appear most convenient; he has many
commododies which are not unworthy of price in this
wilderness, and some which you may condescend to make
use of yourself. May he exhibit the goods he has
for sale, an’t please you?’
‘Ay, let us see them,’ said he.
‘Unbuckle your pack,’
exclaimed the corporal, with the same tone of command
with which, at the head of his guard, he would have
said ‘Recover your arms.’ ’Unbuckle
your pack, fellow, and show your goods to the captain — here,
where you are.’
The conclusion of his directions was
suggested by my endeavouring to move round in order
to get my back towards the windows, hoping, by keeping
my face in the shade, to escape detection.
In this manoeuvre, however, I was
foiled by the imperiousness of the soldier; and inwardly
cursing his ill-timed interference, I proceeded to
present my merchandise to the loving contemplation
of the officers who thronged around me, with a strong
light from an opposite window full upon my face.
As I continued to traffic with these
gentlemen, I observed with no small anxiety the eyes
of Captain Oliver frequently fixed upon me with a kind
of dubious inquiring gaze.
‘I think, my honest fellow,’
he said at last, ’that I have seen you somewhere
before this. Have you often dealt with the military?’
‘I have traded, sir,’
said I, ’with the soldiery many a time, and always
been honourably treated. Will your worship please
to buy a pair of lace ruffles? — very cheap,
your worship.’
‘Why do you wear your hair so
much over your face, sir?’ said Oliver, without
noticing my suggestion. ’I promise you,
I think no good of thee; throw back your hair, and
let me see thee plainly. Hold up your face, and
look straight at me; throw back your hair, sir.’
I felt that all chance of escape was
at an end; and stepping forward as near as the table
would allow me to him, I raised my head, threw back
my hair, and fixed my eyes sternly and boldly upon
his face.
I saw that he knew me instantly, for
his countenance turned as pale as ashes with surprise
and hatred. He started up, placing his hand instinctively
upon his sword-hilt, and glaring at me with a look
so deadly, that I thought every moment he would strike
his sword into my heart. He said in a kind of
whisper: ‘Hardress Fitzgerald?’
‘Yes;’ said I, boldly,
for the excitement of the scene had effectually stirred
my blood, ’Hardress Fitzgerald is before you.
I know you well, Captain Oliver. I know how you
hate me. I know how you thirst for my blood;
but in a good cause, and in the hands of God, I defy
you.’
‘You are a desperate villain,
sir,’ said Captain Oliver; ’a rebel and
a murderer! Holloa, there! guard, seize him!’
As the soldiers entered, I threw my
eyes hastily round the room, and observing a glowing
fire upon the hearth, I suddenly drew General Sarsfield’s
packet from my bosom, and casting it upon the embers,
planted my foot upon it.
‘Secure the papers!’ shouted
the captain; and almost instantly I was laid prostrate
and senseless upon the floor, by a blow from the butt
of a carbine.
I cannot say how long I continued
in a state of torpor; but at length, having slowly
recovered my senses, I found myself lying firmly handcuffed
upon the floor of a small chamber, through a narrow
loophole in one of whose walls the evening sun was
shining. I was chilled with cold and damp, and
drenched in blood, which had flowed in large quantities
from the wound on my head. By a strong effort
I shook off the sick drowsiness which still hung upon
me, and, weak and giddy, I rose with pain and difficulty
to my feet.
The chamber, or rather cell, in which
I stood was about eight feet square, and of a height
very disproportioned to its other dimensions; its
altitude from the floor to the ceiling being not less
than twelve or fourteen feet. A narrow slit placed
high in the wall admitted a scanty light, but sufficient
to assure me that my prison contained nothing to render
the sojourn of its tenant a whit less comfortless than
my worst enemy could have wished.
My first impulse was naturally to
examine the security of the door, the loop-hole which
I have mentioned being too high and too narrow to afford
a chance of escape. I listened attentively to
ascertain if possible whether or not a guard had been
placed upon the outside.
Not a sound was to be heard.
I now placed my shoulder to the door, and sought with
all my combined strength and weight to force it open.
It, however, resisted all my efforts, and thus baffled
in my appeal to mere animal power, exhausted and disheartened,
I threw myself on the ground.
It was not in my nature, however,
long to submit to the apathy of despair, and in a
few minutes I was on my feet again.
With patient scrutiny I endeavoured
to ascertain the nature of the fastenings which secured
the door.
The planks, fortunately, having been
nailed together fresh, had shrunk considerably, so
as to leave wide chinks between each and its neighbour.
By means of these apertures I saw
that my dungeon was secured, not by a lock, as I had
feared, but by a strong wooden bar, running horizontally
across the door, about midway upon the outside.
‘Now,’ thought I, ’if
I can but slip my fingers through the opening of the
planks, I can easily remove the bar, and then — ’
My attempts, however, were all frustrated
by the manner in which my hands were fastened together,
each embarrassing the other, and rendering my efforts
so hopelessly clumsy, that I was obliged to give them
over in despair.
I turned with a sigh from my last
hope, and began to pace my narrow prison floor, when
my eye suddenly encountered an old rusty nail or holdfast
sticking in the wall.
All the gold of Plutus would not have
been so welcome as that rusty piece of iron.
I instantly wrung it from the wall,
and inserting the point between the planks of the
door into the bolt, and working it backwards and forwards,
I had at length the unspeakable satisfaction to perceive
that the beam was actually yielding to my efforts,
and gradually sliding into its berth in the wall.
I have often been engaged in struggles
where great bodily strength was required, and every
thew and sinew in the system taxed to the uttermost;
but, strange as it may appear, I never was so completely
exhausted and overcome by any labour as by this comparatively
trifling task.
Again and again was I obliged to desist,
until my cramped finger-joints recovered their power;
but at length my perseverance was rewarded, for, little
by little, I succeeded in removing the bolt so far
as to allow the door to open sufficiently to permit
me to pass.
With some squeezing I succeeded in
forcing my way into a small passage, upon which my
prison-door opened.
This led into a chamber somewhat more
spacious than my cell, but still containing no furniture,
and affording no means of escape to one so crippled
with bonds as I was.
At the far extremity of this room
was a door which stood ajar, and, stealthily passing
through it, I found myself in a room containing nothing
but a few raw hides, which rendered the atmosphere
nearly intolerable.
Here I checked myself, for I heard
voices in busy conversation in the next room.
I stole softly to the door which separated
the chamber in which I stood from that from which
the voices proceeded.
A moment served to convince me that
any attempt upon it would be worse than fruitless,
for it was secured upon the outside by a strong lock,
besides two bars, all which I was enabled to ascertain
by means of the same defect in the joining of the
planks which I have mentioned as belonging to the
inner door.
I had approached this door very softly,
so that, my proximity being wholly unsuspected by
the speakers within, the conversation continued without
interruption.
Planting myself close to the door,
I applied my eye to one of the chinks which separated
the boards, and thus obtained a full view of the chamber
and its occupants.
It was the very apartment into which
I had been first conducted. The outer door, which
faced the one at which I stood, was closed, and at
a small table were seated the only tenants of the
room — two officers, one of whom was Captain
Oliver. The latter was reading a paper, which
I made no doubt was the document with which I had
been entrusted.
‘The fellow deserves it, no
doubt’ said the junior officer. ’But,
methinks, considering our orders from head-quarters,
you deal somewhat too hastily.’
‘Nephew, nephew,’ said
Captain Oliver, ’you mistake the tenor of our
orders. We were directed to conciliate the peasantry
by fair and gentle treatment, but not to suffer spies
and traitors to escape. This packet is of some
value, though not, in all its parts, intelligible to
me. The bearer has made his way hither under
a disguise, which, along with the other circumstances
of his appearance here, is sufficient to convict him
as a spy.’
There was a pause here, and after
a few minutes the younger officer said:
’Spy is a hard term, no doubt,
uncle; but it is possible — nay, likely,
that this poor devil sought merely to carry the parcel
with which he was charged in safety to its destination.
Pshaw! he is sufficiently punished if you duck him,
for ten minutes or so, between the bridge and the
mill-dam.’
‘Young man,’ said Oliver,
somewhat sternly, ’do not obtrude your advice
where it is not called for; this man, for whom you
plead, murdered your own father!’
I could not see how this announcement
affected the person to whom it was addressed, for
his back was towards me; but I conjectured, easily,
that my last poor chance was gone, for a long silence
ensued. Captain Oliver at length resumed:
’I know the villain well.
I know him capable of any crime; but, by — ,
his last card is played, and the game is up. He
shall not see the moon rise to-night.’
There was here another pause.
Oliver rose, and going to the outer door, called:
‘Hewson! Hewson!’
A grim-looking corporal entered.
’Hewson, have your guard ready
at eight o’clock, with their carbines clean,
and a round of ball-cartridge each. Keep them
sober; and, further, plant two upright posts at the
near end of the bridge, with a cross one at top, in
the manner of a gibbet. See to these matters,
Hewson: I shall be with you speedily.’
The corporal made his salutations, and retired.
Oliver deliberately folded up the
papers with which I had been commissioned, and placing
them in the pocket of his vest, he said:
’Cunning, cunning Master Hardress
Fitzgerald hath made a false step; the old fox is
in the toils. Hardress Fitzgerald, Hardress Fitzgerald,
I will blot you out.’
He repeated these words several times,
at the same time rubbing his finger strongly upon
the table, as if he sought to erase a stain:
‘I will blot you out!’
There was a kind of glee in his manner
and expression which chilled my very heart.
’You shall be first shot like
a dog, and then hanged like a dog: shot to-night,
and hung to-morrow; hung at the bridgehead — hung,
until your bones drop asunder!’
It is impossible to describe the exultation
with which he seemed to dwell upon, and to particularise
the fate which he intended for me.
I observed, however, that his face
was deadly pale, and felt assured that his conscience
and inward convictions were struggling against his
cruel resolve. Without further comment the two
officers left the room, I suppose to oversee the preparations
which were being made for the deed of which I was
to be the victim.
A chill, sick horror crept over me
as they retired, and I felt, for the moment, upon
the brink of swooning. This feeling, however,
speedily gave place to a sensation still more terrible.
A state of excitement so intense and tremendous as
to border upon literal madness, supervened; my brain
reeled and throbbed as if it would burst; thoughts
the wildest and the most hideous flashed through my
mind with a spontaneous rapidity that scared my very
soul; while, all the time, I felt a strange and frightful
impulse to burst into uncontrolled laughter.
Gradually this fearful paroxysm passed
away. I kneeled and prayed fervently, and felt
comforted and assured; but still I could not view
the slow approaches of certain death without an agitation
little short of agony.
I have stood in battle many a time
when the chances of escape were fearfully small.
I have confronted foemen in the deadly breach.
I have marched, with a constant heart, against the
cannon’s mouth. Again and again has the
beast which I bestrode been shot under me; again and
again have I seen the comrades who walked beside me
in an instant laid for ever in the dust; again and
again have I been in the thick of battle, and of its
mortal dangers, and never felt my heart shake, or a
single nerve tremble: but now, helpless, manacled,
imprisoned, doomed, forced to watch the approaches
of an inevitable fate — to wait, silent and
moveless, while death as it were crept towards me,
human nature was taxed to the uttermost to bear the
horrible situation.
I returned again to the closet in
which I had found myself upon recovering from the
swoon.
The evening sunshine and twilight
was fast melting into darkness, when I heard the outer
door, that which communicated with the guard-room in
which the officers had been amusing themselves, opened
and locked again upon the inside.
A measured step then approached, and
the door of the wretched cell in which I lay being
rudely pushed open, a soldier entered, who carried
something in his hand; but, owing to the obscurity
of the place, I could not see what.
‘Art thou awake, fellow?’
said he, in a gruff voice. ’Stir thyself;
get upon thy legs.’
His orders were enforced by no very
gentle application of his military boot.
‘Friend,’ said I, rising
with difficulty, ’you need not insult a dying
man. You have been sent hither to conduct me to
death. Lead on! My trust is in God, that
He will forgive me my sins, and receive my soul, redeemed
by the blood of His Son.’
There here intervened a pause of some
length, at the end of which the soldier said, in the
same gruff voice, but in a lower key:
’Look ye, comrade, it will be
your own fault if you die this night. On one
condition I promise to get you out of this hobble with
a whole skin; but if you go to any of your d — d
gammon, by G — , before two hours are passed,
you will have as many holes in your carcase as a target.’
‘Name your conditions,’
said I, ’and if they consist with honour, I will
never balk at the offer.’
’Here they are: you are
to be shot to-night, by Captain Oliver’s orders.
The carbines are cleaned for the job, and the cartridges
served out to the men. By G — , I tell
you the truth!’
Of this I needed not much persuasion,
and intimated to the man my conviction that he spoke
the truth.
‘Well, then,’ he continued,
’now for the means of avoiding this ugly business.
Captain Oliver rides this night to head-quarters, with
the papers which you carried. Before he starts
he will pay you a visit, to fish what he can out of
you with all the fine promises he can make. Humour
him a little, and when you find an opportunity, stab
him in the throat above the cuirass.’
‘A feasible plan, surely,’
said I, raising my shackled hands, ’for a man
thus completely crippled and without a weapon.’
‘I will manage all that presently
for you,’ said the soldier. ’When
you have thus dealt with him, take his cloak and hat,
and so forth, and put them on; the papers you will
find in the pocket of his vest, in a red leather case.
Walk boldly out. I am appointed to ride with Captain
Oliver, and you will find me holding his horse and
my own by the door. Mount quickly, and I will
do the same, and then we will ride for our lives across
the bridge. You will find the holster-pistols
loaded in case of pursuit; and, with the devil’s
help, we shall reach Limerick without a hair hurt.
My only condition is, that when you strike Oliver,
you strike home, and again and again, until he is finished;
and I trust to your honour to remember me when we
reach the town.’
I cannot say whether I resolved right
or wrong, but I thought my situation, and the conduct
of Captain Oliver, warranted me in acceding to the
conditions propounded by my visitant, and with alacrity
I told him so, and desired him to give me the power,
as he had promised to do, of executing them.
With speed and promptitude he drew
a small key from his pocket, and in an instant the
manacles were removed from my hands.
How my heart bounded within me as
my wrists were released from the iron gripe of the
shackles! The first step toward freedom was made — my
self-reliance returned, and I felt assured of success.
‘Now for the weapon,’ said I.
‘I fear me, you will find it
rather clumsy,’ said he; ’but if well
handled, it will do as well as the best Toledo.
It is the only thing I could get, but I sharpened
it myself; it has an edge like a skean.’
He placed in my hand the steel head
of a halberd. Grasping it firmly, I found that
it made by no means a bad weapon in point of convenience;
for it felt in the hand like a heavy dagger, the portion
which formed the blade or point being crossed nearly
at the lower extremity by a small bar of metal, at
one side shaped into the form of an axe, and at the
other into that of a hook. These two transverse
appendages being muffled by the folds of my cravat,
which I removed for the purpose, formed a perfect
guard or hilt, and the lower extremity formed like
a tube, in which the pike-handle had been inserted,
afforded ample space for the grasp of my hand; the
point had been made as sharp as a needle, and the
metal he assured me was good.
Thus equipped he left me, having observed,
’The captain sent me to bring you to your senses,
and give you some water that he might find you proper
for his visit. Here is the pitcher; I think I
have revived you sufficiently for the captain’s
purpose.’
With a low savage laugh he left me to my reflections.
Having examined and adjusted the weapon,
I carefully bound the ends of the cravat, with which
I had secured the cross part of the spear-head, firmly
round my wrist, so that in case of a struggle it might
not easily be forced from my hand; and having made
these precautionary dispositions, I sat down upon
the ground with my back against the wall, and my hands
together under my coat, awaiting my visitor.
The time wore slowly on; the dusk
became dimmer and dimmer, until it nearly bordered
on total darkness.
‘How’s this?’ said
I, inwardly; ’Captain Oliver, you said I should
not see the moon rise to-night. Methinks you are
somewhat tardy in fulfilling your prophecy.’
As I made this reflection, a noise
at the outer door announced the entrance of a visitant.
I knew that the decisive moment was come, and letting
my head sink upon my breast, and assuring myself that
my hands were concealed, I waited, in the attitude
of deep dejection, the approach of my foe and betrayer.
As I had expected, Captain Oliver
entered the room where I lay. He was equipped
for instant duty, as far as the imperfect twilight
would allow me to see; the long sword clanked upon
the floor as he made his way through the lobbies which
led to my place of confinement; his ample military
cloak hung upon his arm; his cocked hat was upon his
head, and in all points he was prepared for the road.
This tallied exactly with what my
strange informant had told me.
I felt my heart swell and my breath
come thick as the awful moment which was to witness
the death-struggle of one or other of us approached.
Captain Oliver stood within a yard
or two of the place where I sat, or rather lay; and
folding his arms, he remained silent for a minute or
two, as if arranging in his mind how he should address
me.
‘Hardress Fitzgerald,’
he began at length, ’are you awake? Stand
up, if you desire to hear of matters nearly touching
your life or death. Get up, I say.’
I arose doggedly, and affecting the
awkward movements of one whose hands were bound,
‘Well,’ said I, ’what
would you of me? Is it not enough that I am thus
imprisoned without a cause, and about, as I suspect,
to suffer a most unjust and violent sentence, but
must I also be disturbed during the few moments left
me for reflection and repentance by the presence of
my persecutor? What do you want of me?’
‘As to your punishment, sir,’
said he, ’your own deserts have no doubt suggested
the likelihood of it to your mind; but I now am with
you to let you know that whatever mitigation of your
sentence you may look for, must be earned by your
compliance with my orders. You must frankly and
fully explain the contents of the packet which you
endeavoured this day to destroy; and further, you
must tell all that you know of the designs of the
popish rebels.’
’And if I do this I am to expect
a mitigation of my punishment — is it not
so?’
Oliver bowed.
’And what is this mitigation
to be? On the honour of a soldier, what is it
to be?’ inquired I.
‘When you have made the disclosure
required,’ he replied, ’you shall hear.
‘Tis then time to talk of indulgences.’
‘Methinks it would then be too
late,’ answered I. ’But a chance is
a chance, and a drowning man will catch at a straw.
You are an honourable man, Captain Oliver. I
must depend, I suppose, on your good faith. Well,
sir, before I make the desired communication I have
one question more to put. What is to befall me
in case that I, remembering the honour of a soldier
and a gentleman, reject your infamous terms, scorn
your mitigations, and defy your utmost power?’
‘In that case,’ replied
he, coolly, ’before half an hour you shall be
a corpse.’
‘Then God have mercy on your
soul!’ said I; and springing forward, I dashed
the weapon which I held at his throat.
I missed my aim, but struck him full
in the mouth with such force that most of his front
teeth were dislodged, and the point of the spear-head
passed out under his jaw, at the ear.
My onset was so sudden and unexpected
that he reeled back to the wall, and did not recover
his equilibrium in time to prevent my dealing a second
blow, which I did with my whole force. The point
unfortunately struck the cuirass, near the neck, and
glancing aside it inflicted but a flesh wound, tearing
the skin and tendons along the throat.
He now grappled with me, strange to
say, without uttering any cry of alarm; being a very
powerful man, and if anything rather heavier and more
strongly built than I, he succeeded in drawing me with
him to the ground. We fell together with a heavy
crash, tugging and straining in what we were both
conscious was a mortal struggle. At length I succeeded
in getting over him, and struck him twice more in the
face; still he struggled with an energy which nothing
but the tremendous stake at issue could have sustained.
I succeeded again in inflicting several
more wounds upon him, any one of which might have
been mortal. While thus contending he clutched
his hands about my throat, so firmly that I felt the
blood swelling the veins of my temples and face almost
to bursting. Again and again I struck the weapon
deep into his face and throat, but life seemed to
adhere in him with an almost insect tenacity.
My sight now nearly failed, my senses
almost forsook me; I felt upon the point of suffocation
when, with one desperate effort, I struck him another
and a last blow in the face. The weapon which
I wielded had lighted upon the eye, and the point
penetrated the brain; the body quivered under me,
the deadly grasp relaxed, and Oliver lay upon the
ground a corpse!
As I arose and shook the weapon and
the bloody cloth from my hand, the moon which he had
foretold I should never see rise, shone bright and
broad into the room, and disclosed, with ghastly distinctness,
the mangled features of the dead soldier; the mouth,
full of clotting blood and broken teeth, lay open;
the eye, close by whose lid the fatal wound had been
inflicted, was not, as might have been expected, bathed
in blood, but had started forth nearly from the socket,
and gave to the face, by its fearful unlikeness to
the other glazing orb, a leer more hideous and unearthly
than fancy ever saw. The wig, with all its rich
curls, had fallen with the hat to the floor, leaving
the shorn head exposed, and in many places marked
by the recent struggle; the rich lace cravat was drenched
in blood, and the gay uniform in many places soiled
with the same.
It is hard to say, with what feelings
I looked upon the unsightly and revolting mass which
had so lately been a living and a comely man.
I had not any time, however, to spare for reflection;
the deed was done — the responsibility was
upon me, and all was registered in the book of that
God who judges rightly.
With eager haste I removed from the
body such of the military accoutrements as were necessary
for the purpose of my disguise. I buckled on
the sword, drew off the military boots, and donned
them myself, placed the brigadier wig and cocked hat
upon my head, threw on the cloak, drew it up about
my face, and proceeded, with the papers which I found
as the soldier had foretold me, and the key of the
outer lobby, to the door of the guard-room; this I
opened, and with a firm and rapid tread walked through
the officers, who rose as I entered, and passed without
question or interruption to the street-door. Here
I was met by the grimlooking corporal, Hewson, who,
saluting me, said:
’How soon, captain, shall the
file be drawn out and the prisoner despatched?’
‘In half an hour,’ I replied, without
raising my voice.
The man again saluted, and in two
steps I reached the soldier who held the two horses,
as he had intimated.
‘Is all right?’ said he, eagerly.
‘Ay,’ said I, ‘which horse am I
to mount?’
He satisfied me upon this point, and
I threw myself into the saddle; the soldier mounted
his horse, and dashing the spurs into the flanks of
the animal which I bestrode, we thundered along the
narrow bridge. At the far extremity a sentinel,
as we approached, called out, ’Who goes there?
stand, and give the word!’ Heedless of the interruption,
with my heart bounding with excitement, I dashed on,
as did also the soldier who accompanied me.
‘Stand, or I fire! give the word!’ cried
the sentry.
‘God save the king, and to hell
with the prince!’ shouted I, flinging the cocked
hat in his face as I galloped by.
The response was the sharp report
of a carbine, accompanied by the whiz of a bullet,
which passed directly between me and my comrade, now
riding beside me.
‘Hurrah!’ I shouted; ‘try it again,
my boy.’
And away we went at a gallop, which
bid fair to distance anything like pursuit.
Never was spur more needed, however,
for soon the clatter of horses’ hoofs, in full
speed, crossing the bridge, came sharp and clear through
the stillness of the night.
Away we went, with our pursuers close
behind; one mile was passed, another nearly completed.
The moon now shone forth, and, turning in the saddle,
I looked back upon the road we had passed.
One trooper had headed the rest, and
was within a hundred yards of us.
I saw the fellow throw himself from
his horse upon the ground.
I knew his object, and said to my comrade:
’Lower your body — lie
flat over the saddle; the fellow is going to fire.’
I had hardly spoken when the report
of a carbine startled the echoes, and the ball, striking
the hind leg of my companion’s horse, the poor
animal fell headlong upon the road, throwing his rider
head-foremost over the saddle.
My first impulse was to stop and share
whatever fate might await my comrade; but my second
and wiser one was to spur on, and save myself and
my despatch.
I rode on at a gallop, turning to
observe my comrade’s fate. I saw his pursuer,
having remounted, ride rapidly up to him, and, on reaching
the spot where the man and horse lay, rein in and
dismount.
He was hardly upon the ground, when
my companion shot him dead with one of the holster-pistols
which he had drawn from the pipe; and, leaping nimbly
over a ditch at the side of the road, he was soon lost
among the ditches and thornbushes which covered that
part of the country.
Another mile being passed, I had the
satisfaction to perceive that the pursuit was given
over, and in an hour more I crossed Thomond Bridge,
and slept that night in the fortress of Limerick, having
delivered the packet, the result of whose safe arrival
was the destruction of William’s great train
of artillery, then upon its way to the besiegers.
Years after this adventure, I met
in France a young officer, who I found had served
in Captain Oliver’s regiment; and he explained
what I had never before understood — the
motives of the man who had wrought my deliverance.
Strange to say, he was the foster-brother of Oliver,
whom he thus devoted to death, but in revenge for
the most grievous wrong which one man can inflict
upon another!