Living as we did all by ourselves,
and five or six miles away from the Robbers’
Valley, we had felt little fear of the Doones hitherto,
because we had nothing for them to steal except a
few books, the sight of which would only make them
swear and ride away. But now that I was full-grown,
and beginning to be accounted comely, my father was
sometimes uneasy in his mind, as he told Deborah,
and she told me; for the outlaws showed interest in
such matters, even to the extent of carrying off young
women who had won reputation thus. Therefore
he left Thomas Pring at home, with the doors well-barred,
and two duck guns loaded, and ordered me not to quit
the house until he should return with a creel of trout
for supper. Only our little boy Dick Hutchings
was to go with him, to help when his fly caught in
the bushes.
My father set off in the highest spirits,
as anglers always seem to do, to balance the state
in which they shall return; and I knew not, neither
did anyone else, what a bold stroke he was resolved
upon. When it was too late, we found out that,
hearing so much of that strange race, he desired to
know more about them, scorning the idea that men of
birth could ever behave like savages, and forgetting
that they had received no chance of being tamed, as
rough spirits are by the lessons of the battlefield.
No gentleman would ever dream of attacking an unarmed
man, he thought; least of all one whose hair was white.
And so he resolved to fish the brook which ran away
from their stronghold, believing that he might see
some of them, and hoping for a peaceful interview.
We waited and waited for his pleasant
face, and long, deliberate step upon the steep, and
cheerful shout for his Sylvia, to come and ease down
his basket, and say — “Well done, father!”
But the shadows of the trees grew darker, and the
song of the gray-bird died out among them, and the
silent wings of the owl swept by, and all the mysterious
sounds of night in the depth of forest loneliness,
and the glimmer of a star through the leaves here
and there, to tell us that there still was light in
heaven — but of an earthly father not a sign;
only pain, and long sighs, and deep sinking of the
heart.
But why should I dwell upon this?
All women, being of a gentle and loving kind, — unless
they forego their nature, — know better than
I at this first trial knew, the misery often sent
to us. I could not believe it, and went about
in a dreary haze of wonder, getting into dark places,
when all was dark, and expecting to be called out again
and asked what had made such a fool of me. And
so the long night went at last, and no comfort came
in the morning. But I heard a great crying, sometime
the next day, and ran back from the wood to learn
what it meant, for there I had been searching up and
down, not knowing whither I went or why. And
lo, it was little Dick Hutchings at our door, and Deborah
Pring held him by the coat-flap, and was beating him
with one of my father’s sticks.
“I tell ’ee, they Doo-uns
has done for ’un,” the boy was roaring
betwixt his sobs; “dree on ’em, dree on
’em, and he’ve a killed one. The squire
be layin’ as dead as a sto-un.”
Mrs. Pring smacked him on the mouth,
for she saw that I had heard it. What followed
I know not, for down I fell, and the sense of life
went from me.
There was little chance of finding
Thomas Pring, or any other man to help us, for neighbours
were none, and Thomas was gone everywhere he could
think of to look for them. Was I likely to wait
for night again, and then talk for hours about it?
I recovered my strength when the sun went low; and
who was Deborah Pring, to stop me? She would have
come, but I would not have it; and the strength of
my grief took command of her.
Little Dick Hutchings whistled now,
I remember that he whistled, as he went through the
wood in front of me. Who had given him the breeches
on his legs and the hat upon his shallow pate?
And the poor little coward had skiddered away, and
slept in a furze rick, till famine drove him home.
But now he was set up again by gorging for an hour,
and chattered as if he had done a great thing.
There must have been miles of rough
walking through woods, and tangles, and craggy and
black boggy hollows, until we arrived at a wide open
space where two streams ran into one another.
“Thic be Oare watter,”
said the boy, “and t’other over yonner
be Badgefry. Squire be dead up there; plaise,
Miss Sillie, ’ee can goo vorrard and vaind ’un.”
He would go no further; but I crossed
the brook, and followed the Badgery stream, without
knowing, or caring to know, where I was. The
banks, and the bushes, and the rushing water went by
me until I came upon — but though the Lord
hath made us to endure such things, he hath not compelled
us to enlarge upon them.
In the course of the night kind people
came, under the guidance of Thomas Pring, and they
made a pair of wattles such as farmers use for sheep,
and carried home father and daughter, one sobbing and
groaning with a broken heart, and the other that should
never so much as sigh again. Troubles have fallen
upon me since, as the will of the Lord is always;
but none that I ever felt like that, and for months
everything was the same to me.
But inasmuch as it has been said by
those who should know better, that my father in some
way provoked his merciless end by those vile barbarians,
I will put into plainest form, without any other change,
except from outlandish words, the tale received from
Dick Hutchings, the boy, who had seen and heard almost
everything while crouching in the water and huddled
up inside a bush.
“Squire had catched a tidy few,
and he seemed well pleased with himself, and then
we came to a sort of a hollow place where one brook
floweth into the other. Here he was a-casting
of his fly, most careful, for if there was ever a
trout on the feed, it was like to be a big one, and
lucky for me I was keeping round the corner when a
kingfisher bird flew along like a string-bolt, and
there were three great men coming round a fuzz-bush,
and looking at squire, and he back to them. Down
goes I, you may say sure enough, with all of me in
the water but my face, and that stuck into a wutts-clump,
and my teeth making holes in my naked knees, because
of the way they were shaking.
“‘Ho, fellow!’ one
of them called out to squire, as if he was no better
than father is, ‘who give thee leave to fish
in our river?’
“‘Open moor,’ says
squire, ’and belongeth to the king, if it belongeth
to anybody. Any of you gentlemen hold his majesty’s
warrant to forbid an old officer of his?’
“That seemed to put them in
a dreadful rage, for to talk of a warrant was unpleasant
to them.
“’Good fellow, thou mayest
spin spider’s webs, or jib up and down like
a gnat,’ said one, ’but such tricks are
not lawful upon land of ours. Therefore render
up thy spoil.’
“Squire walked up from the pebbles
at that, and he stood before the three of them, as
tall as any of them. And he said, ’You be
young men, but I am old. Nevertheless, I will
not be robbed by three, or by thirty of you.
If you be cowards enough, come on.’
“Two of them held off, and I
heard them say, ’Let him alone, he is a brave
old cock.’ For you never seed anyone look
more braver, and his heart was up with righteousness.
But the other, who seemed to be the oldest of the
three, shouted out something, and put his leg across,
and made at the squire with a long blue thing that
shone in the sun, like a looking-glass. And the
squire, instead of turning round to run away as he
should have, led at him with the thick end of the fishing
rod, to which he had bound an old knife of Mother
Pring’s for to stick it in the grass, while
he put his flies on. And I heard the old knife
strike the man in his breast, and down he goes dead
as a door-nail. And before I could look again
almost, another man ran a long blade into squire, and
there he was lying as straight as a lath, with the
end of his white beard as red as a rose. At that
I was so scared that I couldn’t look no more,
and the water came bubbling into my mouth, and I thought
I was at home along of mother.
“By and by, I came back to myself
with my face full of scratches in a bush, and the
sun was going low, and the place all as quiet as Cheriton
church. But the noise of the water told me where
I was; and I got up, and ran for the life of me, till
I came to the goyal. And then I got into a fuzz-rick,
and slept all night, for I durstn’t go home to
tell Mother Pring. But I just took a look before
I began to run, and the Doone that was killed was
gone away, but the squire lay along with his arms
stretched out, as quiet as a sheep before they hang
him up to drain.”