After the kings of Great Britain had
assumed the right of appointing the colonial governors,
the measures of the latter seldom met with the ready
and generous approbation which had been paid to those
of their predecessors, under the original charters.
The people looked with most jealous scrutiny to the
exercise of power which did not emanate from themselves,
and they usually rewarded their rulers with slender
gratitude for the compliances by which, in softening
their instructions from beyond the sea, they had incurred
the reprehension of those who gave them. The
annals of Massachusetts Bay will inform us, that of
six governors in the space of about forty years from
the surrender of the old charter, under James II,
two were imprisoned by a popular insurrection; a third,
as Hutchinson inclines to believe, was driven from
the province by the whizzing of a musket-ball; a fourth,
in the opinion of the same historian, was hastened
to his grave by continual bickerings with the House
of Representatives; and the remaining two, as well
as their successors, till the Revolution, were favored
with few and brief intervals of peaceful sway.
The inferior members of the court party, in times
of high political excitement, led scarcely a more
desirable life. These remarks may serve as a preface
to the following adventures, which chanced upon a
summer night, not far from a hundred years ago.
The reader, in order to avoid a long and dry detail
of colonial affairs, is requested to dispense with
an account of the train of circumstances that had
caused much temporary inflammation of the popular
mind.
It was near nine o’clock of
a moonlight evening, when a boat crossed the ferry
with a single passenger, who had obtained his conveyance
at that unusual hour by the promise of an extra fare.
While he stood on the landing-place, searching in
either pocket for the means of fulfilling his agreement,
the ferryman lifted a lantern, by the aid of which,
and the newly risen moon, he took a very accurate survey
of the stranger’s figure. He was a youth
of barely eighteen years, evidently country-bred,
and now, as it should seem, upon his first visit to
town. He was clad in a coarse gray coat, well
worn, but in excellent repair; his under garments
were durably constructed of leather, and fitted tight
to a pair of serviceable and well-shaped limbs; his
stockings of blue yarn were the incontrovertible work
of a mother or a sister; and on his head was a three-cornered
hat, which in its better days had perhaps sheltered
the graver brow of the lad’s father. Under
his left arm was a heavy cudgel formed of an oak sapling,
and retaining a part of the hardened root; and his
equipment was completed by a wallet, not so abundantly
stocked as to incommode the vigorous shoulders on which
it hung. Brown, curly hair, well-shaped features,
and bright, cheerful eyes were nature’s gifts,
and worth all that art could have done for his adornment.
The youth, one of whose names was
Robin, finally drew from his pocket the half of a
little province bill of five shillings, which, in the
depreciation in that sort of currency, did but satisfy
the ferryman’s demand, with the surplus of a
sexangular piece of parchment, valued at three pence.
He then walked forward into the town, with as light
a step as if his day’s journey had not already
exceeded thirty miles, and with as eager an eye as
if he were entering London city, instead of the little
metropolis of a New England colony. Before Robin
had proceeded far, however, it occurred to him that
he knew not whither to direct his steps; so he paused,
and looked up and down the narrow street, scrutinizing
the small and mean wooden buildings that were scattered
on either side.
“This low hovel cannot be my
kinsman’s dwelling,” thought he, “nor
yonder old house, where the moonlight enters at the
broken casement; and truly I see none hereabouts that
might be worthy of him. It would have been wise
to inquire my way of the ferryman, and doubtless he
would have gone with me, and earned a shilling from
the Major for his pains. But the next man I meet
will do as well.”
He resumed his walk, and was glad
to perceive that the street now became wider, and
the houses more respectable in their appearance.
He soon discerned a figure moving on moderately in
advance, and hastened his steps to overtake it.
As Robin drew nigh, he saw that the passenger was
a man in years, with a full periwig of gray hair, a
wide-skirted coat of dark cloth, and silk stockings
rolled above his knees. He carried a long and
polished cane, which he struck down perpendicularly
before him at every step; and at regular intervals
he uttered two successive hems, of a peculiarly solemn
and sepulchral intonation. Having made these
observations, Robin laid hold of the skirt of the old
man’s coat just when the light from the open
door and windows of a barber’s shop fell upon
both their figures.
“Good evening to you, honored
sir,” said he, making a low bow, and still retaining
his hold of the skirt. “I pray you tell
me whereabouts is the dwelling of my kinsman, Major
Molineux.”
The youth’s question was uttered
very loudly; and one of the barbers, whose razor was
descending on a well-soaped chin, and another who was
dressing a Ramillies wig, left their occupations, and
came to the door. The citizen, in the mean time,
turned a long-favored countenance upon Robin, and
answered him in a tone of excessive anger and annoyance.
His two sepulchral hems, however, broke into the very
centre of his rebuke, with most singular effect, like
a thought of the cold grave obtruding among wrathful
passions.
“Let go my garment, fellow!
I tell you, I know not the man you speak of.
What! I have authority, I have hem,
hem authority; and if this be the respect
you show for your betters, your feet shall be brought
acquainted with the stocks by daylight, tomorrow morning!”
Robin released the old man’s
skirt, and hastened away, pursued by an ill-mannered
roar of laughter from the barber’s shop.
He was at first considerably surprised by the result
of his question, but, being a shrewd youth, soon thought
himself able to account for the mystery.
“This is some country representative,”
was his conclusion, “who has never seen the
inside of my kinsman’s door, and lacks the breeding
to answer a stranger civilly. The man is old,
or verily I might be tempted to turn back
and smite him on the nose. Ah, Robin, Robin! even
the barber’s boys laugh at you for choosing such
a guide! You will be wiser in time, friend Robin.”
He now became entangled in a succession
of crooked and narrow streets, which crossed each
other, and meandered at no great distance from the
water-side. The smell of tar was obvious to his
nostrils, the masts of vessels pierced the moonlight
above the tops of the buildings, and the numerous
signs, which Robin paused to read, informed him that
he was near the centre of business. But the streets
were empty, the shops were closed, and lights were
visible only in the second stories of a few dwelling-houses.
At length, on the corner of a narrow lane, through
which he was passing, he beheld the broad countenance
of a British hero swinging before the door of an inn,
whence proceeded the voices of many guests. The
casement of one of the lower windows was thrown back,
and a very thin curtain permitted Robin to distinguish
a party at supper, round a well-furnished table.
The fragrance of the good cheer steamed forth into
the outer air, and the youth could not fail to recollect
that the last remnant of his travelling stock of provision
had yielded to his morning appetite, and that noon
had found and left him dinnerless.
“Oh, that a parchment three-penny
might give me a right to sit down at yonder table!”
said Robin, with a sigh. “But the Major
will make me welcome to the best of his victuals;
so I will even step boldly in, and inquire my way
to his dwelling.”
He entered the tavern, and was guided
by the murmur of voices and the fumes of tobacco to
the public-room. It was a long and low apartment,
with oaken walls, grown dark in the continual smoke,
and a floor which was thickly sanded, but of no immaculate
purity. A number of persons the larger
part of whom appeared to be mariners, or in some way
connected with the sea occupied the wooden
benches, or leatherbottomed chairs, conversing on
various matters, and occasionally lending their attention
to some topic of general interest. Three or four
little groups were draining as many bowls of punch,
which the West India trade had long since made a familiar
drink in the colony. Others, who had the appearance
of men who lived by regular and laborious handicraft,
preferred the insulated bliss of an unshared potation,
and became more taciturn under its influence.
Nearly all, in short, evinced a predilection for the
Good Creature in some of its various shapes, for this
is a vice to which, as Fast Day sermons of a hundred
years ago will testify, we have a long hereditary
claim. The only guests to whom Robin’s
sympathies inclined him were two or three sheepish
countrymen, who were using the inn somewhat after
the fashion of a Turkish caravansary; they had gotten
themselves into the darkest corner of the room, and
heedless of the Nicotian atmosphere, were supping on
the bread of their own ovens, and the bacon cured
in their own chimney-smoke. But though Robin
felt a sort of brotherhood with these strangers, his
eyes were attracted from them to a person who stood
near the door, holding whispered conversation with
a group of ill-dressed associates. His features
were separately striking almost to grotesqueness,
and the whole face left a deep impression on the memory.
The forehead bulged out into a double prominence, with
a vale between; the nose came boldly forth in an irregular
curve, and its bridge was of more than a finger’s
breadth; the eyebrows were deep and shaggy, and the
eyes glowed beneath them like fire in a cave.
While Robin deliberated of whom to
inquire respecting his kinsman’s dwelling, he
was accosted by the innkeeper, a little man in a stained
white apron, who had come to pay his professional welcome
to the stranger. Being in the second generation
from a French Protestant, he seemed to have inherited
the courtesy of his parent nation; but no variety
of circumstances was ever known to change his voice
from the one shrill note in which he now addressed
Robin.
“From the country, I presume,
sir?” said he, with a profound bow. “Beg
leave to congratulate you on your arrival, and trust
you intend a long stay with us. Fine town here,
sir, beautiful buildings, and much that may interest
a stranger. May I hope for the honor of your commands
in respect to supper?”
“The man sees a family likeness!
the rogue has guessed that I am related to the Major!”
thought Robin, who had hitherto experienced little
superfluous civility.
All eyes were now turned on the country
lad, standing at the door, in his worn three-cornered
hat, gray coat, leather breeches, and blue yarn stockings,
leaning on an oaken cudgel, and bearing a wallet on
his back.
Robin replied to the courteous innkeeper,
with such an assumption of confidence as befitted
the Major’s relative. “My honest friend,”
he said, “I shall make it a point to patronize
your house on some occasion, when” here
he could not help lowering his voice “when
I may have more than a parchment three-pence in my
pocket. My present business,” continued
he, speaking with lofty confidence, “is merely
to inquire my way to the dwelling of my kinsman, Major
Molineux.”
There was a sudden and general movement
in the room, which Robin interpreted as expressing
the eagerness of each individual to become his guide.
But the innkeeper turned his eyes to a written paper
on the wall, which he read, or seemed to read, with
occasional recurrences to the young man’s figure.
“What have we here?” said
he, breaking his speech into little dry fragments.
“’Left the house of the subscriber, bounden
servant, Hezekiah Mudge, had on, when he
went away, gray coat, leather breeches, master’s
third-best hat. One pound currency reward to
whosoever shall lodge him in any jail of the providence.’
Better trudge, boy; better trudge!”
Robin had begun to draw his hand towards
the lighter end of the oak cudgel, but a strange hostility
in every countenance induced him to relinquish his
purpose of breaking the courteous innkeeper’s
head. As he turned to leave the room, he encountered
a sneering glance from the bold-featured personage
whom he had before noticed; and no sooner was he beyond
the door, than he heard a general laugh, in which the
innkeeper’s voice might be distinguished, like
the dropping of small stones into a kettle.
“Now, is it not strange,”
thought Robin, with his usual shrewdness, “is
it not strange that the confession of an empty pocket
should outweigh the name of my kinsman, Major Molineux?
Oh, if I had one of those grinning rascals in the
woods, where I and my oak sapling grew up together,
I would teach him that my arm is heavy though my purse
be light!”
On turning the corner of the narrow
lane, Robin found himself in a spacious street, with
an unbroken line of lofty houses on each side, and
a steepled building at the upper end, whence the ringing
of a bell announced the hour of nine. The light
of the moon, and the lamps from the numerous shop-windows,
discovered people promenading on the pavement, and
amongst them Robin had hoped to recognize his hitherto
inscrutable relative. The result of his former
inquiries made him unwilling to hazard another, in
a scene of such publicity, and he determined to walk
slowly and silently up the street, thrusting his face
close to that of every elderly gentleman, in search
of the Major’s linéaments. In his
progress, Robin encountered many gay and gallant figures.
Embroidered garments of showy colors, enormous periwigs,
gold-laced hats, and silver-hilted swords glided past
him and dazzled his optics. Travelled youths,
imitators of the European fine gentlemen of the period,
trod jauntily along, half dancing to the fashionable
tunes which they hummed, and making poor Robin ashamed
of his quiet and natural gait. At length, after
many pauses to examine the gorgeous display of goods
in the shop-windows, and after suffering some rebukes
for the impertinence of his scrutiny into people’s
faces, the Major’s kinsman found himself near
the steepled building, still unsuccessful in his search.
As yet, however, he had seen only one side of the thronged
street; so Robin crossed, and continued the same sort
of inquisition down the opposite pavement, with stronger
hopes than the philosopher seeking an honest man,
but with no better fortune. He had arrived about
midway towards the lower end, from which his course
began, when he overheard the approach of some one
who struck down a cane on the flag-stones at every
step, uttering at regular intervals, two sepulchral
hems.
“Mercy on us!” quoth Robin, recognizing
the sound.
Turning a corner, which chanced to
be close at his right hand, he hastened to pursue
his researches in some other part of the town.
His patience now was wearing low, and he seemed to
feel more fatigue from his rambles since he crossed
the ferry, than from his journey of several days on
the other side. Hunger also pleaded loudly within
him, and Robin began to balance the propriety of demanding,
violently, and with lifted cudgel, the necessary guidance
from the first solitary passenger whom he should meet.
While a resolution to this effect was gaining strength,
he entered a street of mean appearance, on either
side of which a row of ill-built houses was straggling
towards the harbor. The moonlight fell upon no
passenger along the whole extent, but in the third
domicile which Robin passed there was a half-opened
door, and his keen glance detected a woman’s
garment within.
“My luck may be better here,” said he
to himself.
Accordingly, he approached the doors
and beheld it shut closer as he did so; yet an open
space remained, sufficing for the fair occupant to
observe the stranger, without a corresponding display
on her part. All that Robin could discern was
a strip of scarlet petticoat, and the occasional sparkle
of an eye, as if the moonbeams were trembling on some
bright thing.
“Pretty mistress,” for
I may call her so with a good conscience thought the
shrewd youth, since I know nothing to the contrary, “my
sweet pretty mistress, will you be kind enough to
tell me whereabouts I must seek the dwelling of my
kinsman, Major Molineux?”
Robin’s voice was plaintive
and winning, and the female, seeing nothing to be
shunned in the handsome country youth, thrust open
the door, and came forth into the moonlight.
She was a dainty little figure with a white neck,
round arms, and a slender waist, at the extremity of
which her scarlet petticoat jutted out over a hoop,
as if she were standing in a balloon. Moreover,
her face was oval and pretty, her hair dark beneath
the little cap, and her bright eyes possessed a sly
freedom, which triumphed over those of Robin.
“Major Molineux dwells here,” said this
fair woman.
Now, her voice was the sweetest Robin
had heard that night, yet he could not help doubting
whether that sweet voice spoke Gospel truth. He
looked up and down the mean street, and then surveyed
the house before which they stood. It was a small,
dark edifice of two stories, the second of which projected
over the lower floor, and the front apartment had
the aspect of a shop for petty commodities.
“Now, truly, I am in luck,”
replied Robin, cunningly, “and so indeed is
my kinsman, the Major, in having so pretty a housekeeper.
But I prithee trouble him to step to the door; I will
deliver him a message from his friends in the country,
and then go back to my lodgings at the inn.”
“Nay, the Major has been abed
this hour or more,” said the lady of the scarlet
petticoat; “and it would be to little purpose
to disturb him to-night, seeing his evening draught
was of the strongest. But he is a kind-hearted
man, and it would be as much as my life’s worth
to let a kinsman of his turn away from the door.
You are the good old gentleman’s very picture,
and I could swear that was his rainy-weather hat.
Also he has garments very much resembling those leather
small-clothes. But come in, I pray, for I bid
you hearty welcome in his name.”
So saying, the fair and hospitable
dame took our hero by the hand; and the touch was
light, and the force was gentleness, and though Robin
read in her eyes what he did not hear in her words,
yet the slender-waisted woman in the scarlet petticoat
proved stronger than the athletic country youth.
She had drawn his half-willing footsteps nearly to
the threshold, when the opening of a door in the neighborhood
startled the Major’s housekeeper, and, leaving
the Major’s kinsman, she vanished speedily into
her own domicile. A heavy yawn preceded the appearance
of a man, who, like the Moonshine of Pyramus and Thisbe,
carried a lantern, needlessly aiding his sister luminary
in the heavens. As he walked sleepily up the
street, he turned his broad, dull face on Robin, and
displayed a long staff, spiked at the end.
“Home, vagabond, home!”
said the watchman, in accents that seemed to fall
asleep as soon as they were uttered. “Home,
or we’ll set you in the stocks by peep of day!”
“This is the second hint of
the kind,” thought Robin. “I wish
they would end my difficulties, by setting me there
to-night.”
Nevertheless, the youth felt an instinctive
antipathy towards the guardian of midnight order,
which at first prevented him from asking his usual
question. But just when the man was about to vanish
behind the corner, Robin resolved not to lose the
opportunity, and shouted lustily after him, “I
say, friend! will you guide me to the house of my
kinsman, Major Molineux?”
The watchman made no reply, but turned
the corner and was gone; yet Robin seemed to hear
the sound of drowsy laughter stealing along the solitary
street. At that moment, also, a pleasant titter
saluted him from the open window above his head; he
looked up, and caught the sparkle of a saucy eye;
a round arm beckoned to him, and next he heard light
footsteps descending the staircase within. But
Robin, being of the household of a New England clergyman,
was a good youth, as well as a shrewd one; so he resisted
temptation, and fled away.
He now roamed desperately, and at
random, through the town, almost ready to believe
that a spell was on him, like that by which a wizard
of his country had once kept three pursuers wandering,
a whole winter night, within twenty paces of the cottage
which they sought. The streets lay before him,
strange and desolate, and the lights were extinguished
in almost every house. Twice, however, little
parties of men, among whom Robin distinguished individuals
in outlandish attire, came hurrying along; but, though
on both occasions, they paused to address him such
intercourse did not at all enlighten his perplexity.
They did but utter a few words in some language of
which Robin knew nothing, and perceiving his inability
to answer, bestowed a curse upon him in plain English
and hastened away. Finally, the lad determined
to knock at the door of every mansion that might appear
worthy to be occupied by his kinsman, trusting that
perseverance would overcome the fatality that had
hitherto thwarted him. Firm in this resolve, he
was passing beneath the walls of a church, which formed
the corner of two streets, when, as he turned into
the shade of its steeple, he encountered a bulky stranger
muffled in a cloak. The man was proceeding with
the speed of earnest business, but Robin planted himself
full before him, holding the oak cudgel with both
hands across his body as a bar to further passage.
“Halt, honest man, and answer
me a question,” said he, very resolutely.
“Tell me, this instant, whereabouts is the dwelling
of my kinsman, Major Molineux!”
“Keep your tongue between your
teeth, fool, and let me pass!” said a deep,
gruff voice, which Robin partly remembered. “Let
me pass, or I’ll strike you to the earth!”
“No, no, neighbor!” cried
Robin, flourishing his cudgel, and then thrusting
its larger end close to the man’s muffled face.
“No, no, I’m not the fool you take me
for, nor do you pass till I have an answer to my question.
Whereabouts is the dwelling of my kinsman, Major Molineux?”
The stranger, instead of attempting to force his passage,
stepped back into the moonlight, unmuffled his face,
and stared full into that of Robin.
“Watch here an hour, and Major
Molineux will pass by,” said he.
Robin gazed with dismay and astonishment
on the unprecedented physiognomy of the speaker.
The forehead with its double prominence the broad
hooked nose, the shaggy eyebrows, and fiery eyes were
those which he had noticed at the inn, but the man’s
complexion had undergone a singular, or, more properly,
a twofold change. One side of the face blazed
an intense red, while the other was black as midnight,
the division line being in the broad bridge of the
nose; and a mouth which seemed to extend from ear
to ear was black or red, in contrast to the color
of the cheek. The effect was as if two individual
devils, a fiend of fire and a fiend of darkness, had
united themselves to form this infernal visage.
The stranger grinned in Robin’s face, muffled
his party-colored features, and was out of sight in
a moment.
“Strange things we travellers see!” ejaculated
Robin.
He seated himself, however, upon the
steps of the church-door, resolving to wait the appointed
time for his kinsman. A few moments were consumed
in philosophical speculations upon the species of man
who had just left him; but having settled this point
shrewdly, rationally, and satisfactorily, he was compelled
to look elsewhere for his amusement. And first
he threw his eyes along the street. It was of
more respectable appearance than most of those into
which he had wandered, and the moon, creating, like
the imaginative power, a beautiful strangeness in
familiar objects, gave something of romance to a scene
that might not have possessed it in the light of day.
The irregular and often quaint architecture of the
houses, some of whose roofs were broken into numerous
little peaks, while others ascended, steep and narrow,
into a single point, and others again were square;
the pure snow-white of some of their complexions,
the aged darkness of others, and the thousand sparklings,
reflected from bright substances in the walls of many;
these matters engaged Robin’s attention for a
while, and then began to grow wearisome. Next
he endeavored to define the forms of distant objects,
starting away, with almost ghostly indistinctness,
just as his eye appeared to grasp them, and finally
he took a minute survey of an edifice which stood
on the opposite side of the street, directly in front
of the church-door, where he was stationed. It
was a large, square mansion, distinguished from its
neighbors by a balcony, which rested on tall pillars,
and by an elaborate Gothic window, communicating therewith.
“Perhaps this is the very house
I have been seeking,” thought Robin.
Then he strove to speed away the time,
by listening to a murmur which swept continually along
the street, yet was scarcely audible, except to an
unaccustomed ear like his; it was a low, dull, dreamy
sound, compounded of many noises, each of which was
at too great a distance to be separately heard.
Robin marvelled at this snore of a sleeping town,
and marvelled more whenever its continuity was broken
by now and then a distant shout, apparently loud where
it originated. But altogether it was a sleep-inspiring
sound, and, to shake off its drowsy influence, Robin
arose, and climbed a window-frame, that he might view
the interior of the church. There the moonbeams
came trembling in, and fell down upon the deserted
pews, and extended along the quiet aisles. A
fainter yet more awful radiance was hovering around
the pulpit, and one solitary ray had dared to rest
upon the open page of the great Bible. Had nature,
in that deep hour, become a worshipper in the house
which man had builded? Or was that heavenly light
the visible sanctity of the place, visible
because no earthly and impure feet were within the
walls? The scene made Robin’s heart shiver
with a sensation of loneliness stronger than he had
ever felt in the remotest depths of his native woods;
so he turned away and sat down again before the door.
There were graves around the church, and now an uneasy
thought obtruded into Robin’s breast. What
if the object of his search, which had been so often
and so strangely thwarted, were all the time mouldering
in his shroud? What if his kinsman should glide
through yonder gate, and nod and smile to him in dimly
passing by?
“Oh that any breathing thing
were here with me!” said Robin.
Recalling his thoughts from this uncomfortable
track, he sent them over forest, hill, and stream,
and attempted to imagine how that evening of ambiguity
and weariness had been spent by his father’s
household. He pictured them assembled at the
door, beneath the tree, the great old tree, which
had been spared for its huge twisted trunk and venerable
shade, when a thousand leafy brethren fell. There,
at the going down of the summer sun, it was his father’s
custom to perform domestic worship that the neighbors
might come and join with him like brothers of the
family, and that the wayfaring man might pause to drink
at that fountain, and keep his heart pure by freshening
the memory of home. Robin distinguished the seat
of every individual of the little audience; he saw
the good man in the midst, holding the Scriptures in
the golden light that fell from the western clouds;
he beheld him close the book and all rise up to pray.
He heard the old thanksgivings for daily mercies,
the old supplications for their continuance to
which he had so often listened in weariness, but which
were now among his dear remembrances. He perceived
the slight inequality of his father’s voice
when he came to speak of the absent one; he noted how
his mother turned her face to the broad and knotted
trunk; how his elder brother scorned, because the
beard was rough upon his upper lip, to permit his features
to be moved; how the younger sister drew down a low
hanging branch before her eyes; and how the little
one of all, whose sports had hitherto broken the decorum
of the scene, understood the prayer for her playmate,
and burst into clamorous grief. Then he saw them
go in at the door; and when Robin would have entered
also, the latch tinkled into its place, and he was
excluded from his home.
“Am I here, or there?”
cried Robin, starting; for all at once, when his thoughts
had become visible and audible in a dream, the long,
wide, solitary street shone out before him.
He aroused himself, and endeavored
to fix his attention steadily upon the large edifice
which he had surveyed before. But still his mind
kept vibrating between fancy and reality; by turns,
the pillars of the balcony lengthened into the tall,
bare stems of pines, dwindled down to human figures,
settled again into their true shape and size, and then
commenced a new succession of changes. For a single
moment, when he deemed himself awake, he could have
sworn that a visage one which he seemed
to remember, yet could not absolutely name as his kinsman’s was
looking towards him from the Gothic window. A
deeper sleep wrestled with and nearly overcame him,
but fled at the sound of footsteps along the opposite
pavement. Robin rubbed his eyes, discerned a man
passing at the foot of the balcony, and addressed
him in a loud, peevish, and lamentable cry.
“Hallo, friend! must I wait
here all night for my kinsman, Major Molineux?”
The sleeping echoes awoke, and answered
the voice; and the passenger, barely able to discern
a figure sitting in the oblique shade of the steeple,
traversed the street to obtain a nearer view.
He was himself a gentleman in his prime, of open,
intelligent, cheerful, and altogether prepossessing
countenance. Perceiving a country youth, apparently
homeless and without friends, he accosted him in a
tone of real kindness, which had become strange to
Robin’s ears.
“Well, my good lad, why are
you sitting here?” inquired he. “Can
I be of service to you in any way?”
“I am afraid not, sir,”
replied Robin, despondingly; “yet I shall take
it kindly, if you’ll answer me a single question.
I’ve been searching, half the night, for one
Major Molineux, now, sir, is there really such a person
in these parts, or am I dreaming?”
“Major Molineux! The name
is not altogether strange to me,” said the gentleman,
smiling. “Have you any objection to telling
me the nature of your business with him?”
Then Robin briefly related that his
father was a clergyman, settled on a small salary,
at a long distance back in the country, and that he
and Major Molineux were brothers’ children.
The Major, having inherited riches, and acquired civil
and military rank, had visited his cousin, in great
pomp, a year or two before; had manifested much interest
in Robin and an elder brother, and, being childless
himself, had thrown out hints respecting the future
establishment of one of them in life. The elder
brother was destined to succeed to the farm which his
father cultivated in the interval of sacred duties;
it was therefore determined that Robin should profit
by his kinsman’s generous intentions, especially
as he seemed to be rather the favorite, and was thought
to possess other necessary endowments.
“For I have the name of being
a shrewd youth,” observed Robin, in this part
of his story.
“I doubt not you deserve it,”
replied his new friend, good-naturedly; “but
pray proceed.”
“Well, sir, being nearly eighteen
years old, and well grown, as you see,” continued
Robin, drawing himself up to his full height, “I
thought it high time to begin in the world. So
my mother and sister put me in handsome trim, and
my father gave me half the remnant of his last year’s
salary, and five days ago I started for this place,
to pay the Major a visit. But, would you believe
it, sir! I crossed the ferry a little after dark,
and have yet found nobody that would show me the way
to his dwelling; only, an hour or two since, I was
told to wait here, and Major Molineux would pass by.”
“Can you describe the man who
told you this?” inquired the gentleman.
“Oh, he was a very ill-favored
fellow, sir,” replied Robin, “with two
great bumps on his forehead, a hook nose, fiery eyes;
and, what struck me as the strangest, his face was
of two different colors. Do you happen to know
such a man, sir?”
“Not intimately,” answered
the stranger, “but I chanced to meet him a little
time previous to your stopping me. I believe you
may trust his word, and that the Major will very shortly
pass through this street. In the mean time, as
I have a singular curiosity to witness your meeting,
I will sit down here upon the steps and bear you company.”
He seated himself accordingly, and
soon engaged his companion in animated discourse.
It was but of brief continuance, however, for a noise
of shouting, which had long been remotely audible,
drew so much nearer that Robin inquired its cause.
“What may be the meaning of
this uproar?” asked he. “Truly, if
your town be always as noisy, I shall find little
sleep while I am an inhabitant.”
“Why, indeed, friend Robin,
there do appear to be three or four riotous fellows
abroad to-night,” replied the gentleman.
“You must not expect all the stillness of your
native woods here in our streets. But the watch
will shortly be at the heels of these lads and ”
“Ay, and set them in the stocks
by peep of day,” interrupted Robin recollecting
his own encounter with the drowsy lantern-bearer.
“But, dear sir, if I may trust my ears, an army
of watchmen would never make head against such a multitude
of rioters. There were at least a thousand voices
went up to make that one shout.”
“May not a man have several
voices, Robin, as well as two complexions?”
said his friend.
“Perhaps a man may; but Heaven
forbid that a woman should!” responded the shrewd
youth, thinking of the seductive tones of the Major’s
housekeeper.
The sounds of a trumpet in some neighboring
street now became so evident and continual, that Robin’s
curiosity was strongly excited. In addition to
the shouts, he heard frequent bursts from many instruments
of discord, and a wild and confused laughter filled
up the intervals. Robin rose from the steps,
and looked wistfully towards a point whither people
seemed to be hastening.
“Surely some prodigious merry-making
is going on,” exclaimed he “I have laughed
very little since I left home, sir, and should be sorry
to lose an opportunity. Shall we step round the
corner by that darkish house and take our share of
the fun?”
“Sit down again, sit down, good
Robin,” replied the gentleman, laying his hand
on the skirt of the gray coat. “You forget
that we must wait here for your kinsman; and there
is reason to believe that he will pass by, in the
course of a very few moments.”
The near approach of the uproar had
now disturbed the neighborhood; windows flew open
on all sides; and many heads, in the attire of the
pillow, and confused by sleep suddenly broken, were
protruded to the gaze of whoever had leisure to observe
them. Eager voices hailed each other from house
to house, all demanding the explanation, which not
a soul could give. Half-dressed men hurried towards
the unknown commotion stumbling as they went over
the stone steps that thrust themselves into the narrow
foot-walk. The shouts, the laughter, and the tuneless
bray the antipodes of music, came onwards with increasing
din, till scattered individuals, and then denser bodies,
began to appear round a corner at the distance of
a hundred yards.
“Will you recognize your kinsman,
if he passes in this crowd?” inquired the gentleman.
“Indeed, I can’t warrant
it, sir; but I’ll take my stand here, and keep
a bright lookout,” answered Robin, descending
to the outer edge of the pavement.
A mighty stream of people now emptied
into the street, and came rolling slowly towards the
church. A single horseman wheeled the corner in
the midst of them, and close behind him came a band
of fearful wind instruments, sending forth a fresher
discord now that no intervening buildings kept it
from the ear. Then a redder light disturbed the
moonbeams, and a dense multitude of torches shone along
the street, concealing, by their glare, whatever object
they illuminated. The single horseman, clad in
a military dress, and bearing a drawn sword, rode
onward as the leader, and, by his fierce and variegated
countenance, appeared like war personified; the red
of one cheek was an emblem of fire and sword; the
blackness of the other betokened the mourning that
attends them. In his train were wild figures in
the Indian dress, and many fantastic shapes without
a model, giving the whole march a visionary air, as
if a dream had broken forth from some feverish brain,
and were sweeping visibly through the midnight streets.
A mass of people, inactive, except as applauding spectators,
hemmed the procession in; and several women ran along
the sidewalk, piercing the confusion of heavier sounds
with their shrill voices of mirth or terror.
“The double-faced fellow has
his eye upon me,” muttered Robin, with an indefinite
but an uncomfortable idea that he was himself to bear
a part in the pageantry.
The leader turned himself in the saddle,
and fixed his glance full upon the country youth,
as the steed went slowly by. When Robin had freed
his eyes from those fiery ones, the musicians were
passing before him, and the torches were close at
hand; but the unsteady brightness of the latter formed
a veil which he could not penetrate. The rattling
of wheels over the stones sometimes found its way
to his ear, and confused traces of a human form appeared
at intervals, and then melted into the vivid light.
A moment more, and the leader thundered a command to
halt: the trumpets vomited a horrid breath, and
then held their peace; the shouts and laughter of
the people died away, and there remained only a universal
hum, allied to silence. Right before Robin’s
eyes was an uncovered cart. There the torches
blazed the brightest, there the moon shone out like
day, and there, in tar-and-feathery dignity, sat his
kinsman, Major Molineux!
He was an elderly man, of large and
majestic person, and strong, square features, betokening
a steady soul; but steady as it was, his enemies had
found means to shake it. His face was pale as
death, and far more ghastly; the broad forehead was
contracted in his agony, so that his eyebrows formed
one grizzled line; his eyes were red and wild, and
the foam hung white upon his quivering lip. His
whole frame was agitated by a quick and continual
tremor, which his pride strove to quell, even in those
circumstances of overwhelming humiliation. But
perhaps the bitterest pang of all was when his eyes
met those of Robin; for he evidently knew him on the
instant, as the youth stood witnessing the foul disgrace
of a head grown gray in honor. They stared at
each other in silence, and Robin’s knees shook,
and his hair bristled, with a mixture of pity and
terror. Soon, however, a bewildering excitement
began to seize upon his mind; the preceding adventures
of the night, the unexpected appearance of the crowd,
the torches, the confused din and the hush that followed,
the spectre of his kinsman reviled by that great multitude, all
this, and, more than all, a perception of tremendous
ridicule in the whole scene, affected him with a sort
of mental inebriety. At that moment a voice of
sluggish merriment saluted Robin’s ears; he
turned instinctively, and just behind the corner of
the church stood the lantern-bearer, rubbing his eyes,
and drowsily enjoying the lad’s amazement.
Then he heard a peal of laughter like the ringing
of silvery bells; a woman twitched his arm, a saucy
eye met his, and he saw the lady of the scarlet petticoat.
A sharp, dry cachinnation appealed to his memory,
and, standing on tiptoe in the crowd, with his white
apron over his head, he beheld the courteous little
innkeeper. And lastly, there sailed over the heads
of the multitude a great, broad laugh, broken in the
midst by two sepulchral hems; thus, “Haw, haw,
haw, hem, hem, haw, haw, haw,
haw!”
The sound proceeded from the balcony
of the opposite edifice, and thither Robin turned
his eyes. In front of the Gothic window stood
the old citizen, wrapped in a wide gown, his gray
periwig exchanged for a nightcap, which was thrust
back from his forehead, and his silk stockings hanging
about his legs. He supported himself on his polished
cane in a fit of convulsive merriment, which manifested
itself on his solemn old features like a funny inscription
on a tombstone. Then Robin seemed to hear the
voices of the barbers, of the guests of the inn, and
of all who had made sport of him that night. The
contagion was spreading among the multitude, when
all at once, it seized upon Robin, and he sent forth
a shout of laughter that echoed through the street, every
man shook his sides, every man emptied his lungs, but
Robin’s shout was the loudest there. The
cloud-spirits peeped from their silvery islands, as
the congregated mirth went roaring up the sky!
The Man in the Moon heard the far bellow. “Oho,”
quoth he, “the old earth is frolicsome to-night!”
When there was a momentary calm in
that tempestuous sea of sound, the leader gave the
sign, the procession resumed its march. On they
went, like fiends that throng in mockery around some
dead potentate, mighty no more, but majestic still
in his agony. On they went, in counterfeited
pomp, in senseless uproar, in frenzied merriment,
trampling all on an old man’s heart. On
swept the tumult, and left a silent street behind.
“Well, Robin, are you dreaming?”
inquired the gentleman, laying his hand on the youth’s
shoulder.
Robin started, and withdrew his arm
from the stone post to which he had instinctively
clung, as the living stream rolled by him. His
cheek was somewhat pale, and his eye not quite as
lively as in the earlier part of the evening.
“Will you be kind enough to
show me the way to the ferry?” said he, after
a moment’s pause.
“You have, then, adopted a new
subject of inquiry?” observed his companion,
with a smile.
“Why, yes, sir,” replied
Robin, rather dryly. “Thanks to you, and
to my other friends, I have at last met my kinsman,
and he will scarce desire to see my face again.
I begin to grow weary of a town life, sir. Will
you show me the way to the ferry?”
“No, my good friend Robin, not
to-night, at least,” said the gentleman.
“Some few days hence, if you wish it, I will
speed you on your journey. Or, if you prefer
to remain with us, perhaps, as you are a shrewd youth,
you may rise in the world without the help of your
kinsman, Major Molineux.”