Captain Purvis, now brought to the
Warren in this very sad condition, had not been shot
by his own men, as the dashing Marwood de Wichehalse
said; neither was it quite true to say that he had
been shot by anyone. What happened to him was
simply this: While behaving with the utmost gallantry
and encouraging the militia of Somerset, whose uniforms
were faced with yellow, he received in his chest a
terrific blow from the bottom of a bottle. This
had been discharged from a culveria on the opposite
side of the valley by the brave but impetuous sons
of Devon, who-wore the red facings, and had taken
umbrage at a pure mistake on the part of their excellent
friends and neighbours, the loyal band of Somerset.
Either brigade had three culverins; and never having
seen such things before, as was natural with good
farmers’ sons, they felt it a compliment to
themselves to be intrusted with such danger, and resolved
to make the most of it. However, when they tried
to make them go, with the help of a good many horses,
upon places that had no roads for war, and even no
sort of road at all, the difficulty was beyond them.
But a very clever blacksmith near Malmesford, who
had better, as it proved, have stuck to the plough,
persuaded them that he knew all about it, and would
bring their guns to bear, if they let him have his
way. So they took the long tubes from their carriages,
and lashed rollers of barked oak under them, and with
very stout ropes, and great power of swearing, dragged
them into the proper place to overwhelm the Doones.
Here they mounted their guns upon
cider barrels, with allowance of roll for recoil,
and charged them to the very best of their knowledge,
and pointed them as nearly as they could guess at
the dwellings of the outlaws in the glen; three cannons
on the north were of Somerset and the three on the
south were of Devonshire; but these latter had no balls
of metal, only anything round they could pick up.
Colonel Stickles-was in command, by virtue of his
royal warrant, and his plan was to make his chief
assault in company with some chosen men, including
his host, young farmer Ridd, at the head of the valley
where the chief entrance was, while the trainbands
pounded away on either side. And perhaps this
would have succeeded well, except for a little mistake
in firing, for which the enemy alone could be blamed
with justice. For while Captain Purvis was-behind
the line rallying a few men who-showed fear, and not
expecting any combat yet, because Devonshire was not
ready, an elderly gentleman of great authority-appeared
among the bombardiers. On his breast he wore
a badge of office, and in his hat a noble plume of
the sea eagle, and he handed his horse to a man in
red clothes.
“Just in time,” he shouted;
“and the Lord be thanked for that! By order
of His Majesty, I take supreme command. Ha, and
high time, too, for it! You idiots, where are
you pointing your guns? What allowance have you
made for windage? Why, at that elevation, you’ll
shoot yourselves. Up with your muzzles, you yellow
jackanapes! Down on your bellies! Hand me
the linstock! By the Lord, you don’t even
know how to touch them off!”
The soldiers were abashed at his rebukes,
and glad to lie down on their breasts for fear of
the powder on their yellow facings. And thus they
were shaken by three great roars, and wrapped in a
cloud of streaky smoke. When this had cleared
off, and they stood up, lo! the houses of the Doones
were the same as before, but a great shriek arose on
the opposite bank, and two good horses lay on the
ground; and the red men were stamping about, and some
crossing their arms, and some running for their lives,
and the bravest of them stooping over one another.
Then as Captain Purvis rushed up in great wrath, shouting:
“What the devil do you mean by this?”
another great roar arose from across the valley, and
he was lying flat, and two other fine fellows were
rolling in a furze bush without knowledge of it.
But of the general and his horse there was no longer
any-token.
This was the matter that lay so heavily
on the breast of Captain Purvis, sadly-crushed as
it was already by the spiteful stroke bitterly intended
for him. His own men had meant no harm whatever,
unless to the proper enemy; although they appear to
have been deluded by a subtle device of the Councillor,
for which on the other hand none may blame him.
But those redfaced men, without any inquiry, turned
the muzz’l’s of their guns upon Somerset,
and the injustice rankled for a generation between
two equally honest counties. Happily they did
not fight it out through scarcity of ammunition, as
well as their mutual desire to go home and attend
to their harvest business.
But Anthony Purvis, now our guest
and patient, became very difficult to manage; not
only because: of his three broken ribs, but the
lowness of the heart inside them. Dr. Cutcliffe
Lane, a most cheerful man from that cheerful town
Southmolton, was able (with the help of Providence)
to make the bones grow again without much anger into
their own embraces. It is useless, however, for
the body to pretend that it is doing wonders on its
own account, and rejoicing and holiday making, when
the thing that sits inside it and holds the whip,
keeps down upon the slouch and is out of sorts.
And truly this was the case just now with the soul
of Captain Purvis. Deborah Pring did her very
best, and was in and out of his room every minute,
and very often seemed to me to run him down when he
deserved it, not; on purpose that I might be started
to run him up. But nothing of that sort told
at all according to her intention. I kept myself
very much to myself; feeling that my nature was too
kind, and asking at some little questions of behaviour,
what sort of returns my dear father had obtained for
supposing other people as good as himself.
Moreover, it seemed an impossible
thing that such a brave warrior, and a rich man too — for
his father, Sir Geoffrey, was in full possession now
of all the great property that belonged by right to
us — that an officer who should have been
in command of this fine expedition, if he had his
dues, could be either the worse or the better of his
wound, according to his glimpses of a simple maid
like me. It was useless for Deborah Pring, or
even Dr. Cutcliffe Lane himself, to go on as they did
about love at first sight, and the rising of the heart
when, the ribs were broken, and a quantity of other
stuff too foolish to repeat. “I am neither
a plaster nor a poultice,” I replied to myself,
for I would not be too cross to them — and
beyond a little peep at him, every afternoon, I kept
out of the sight of Captain Purvis.
But these things made it very hard
for me to be quite sure how to conduct myself, without
father and mother to help me, and with Mistress Pring,
who had always been such a landmark, becoming no more
than a vane for the wind to blow upon as it listed;
or, perhaps, as she listed to go with it. And
remembering how she used to speak of the people who
had ousted us, I told her that I could not make it
out. Things were in this condition, and Captain
Purvis, as it seemed to me, quite fit to go and make
war again upon some of His Majesty’s subjects,
when a thing, altogether out of reason, or even of
civilisation, happened; and people who live in lawful
parts will accuse me of caring too little for the
truth. But even before that came about, something
less unreasonable — but still unexpected — befell
me. To wit, I received through Mistress Pring
an offer of marriage, immediate and pressing, from
Captain Anthony Purvis! He must have been sadly
confused by that blow on his heart to think mine so
tender, or that this was the way to deal with it, though
later explanations proved that Deborah, if she had
been just, would have taken the whole reproach upon
herself. The captain could scarcely have seen
me, I believe more than half a dozen times to speak
of; and generally he had shut his eyes, gentle as
they were and beautiful; not only to make me feel
less afraid, but to fill me with pity for his weakness.
Having no knowledge of mankind as yet, I was touched
to the brink of tears at first; until when the tray
came out of his room soon after one of these pitiful
moments, it was plain to the youngest comprehension
that the sick man had left very little upon a shoulder
of Exmoor mutton, and nothing in a bowl of thick onion
sauce.
For that I would be the last to blame
him, and being his hostess, I was glad to find it
so. But Deborah played a most double-minded part;
leading him to believe that now she was father and
mother in one to me; while to me she went on, as if
I was most headstrong, and certain to go against anything
she said, though for her part she never said anything.
Nevertheless he made a great mistake, as men always
do, about our ways; and having some sense of what
is right, I said, “Let me hear no more of Captain
Purvis.”
This forced him to leave us; which
he might have done, for aught I could see to the contrary,
a full week before he departed. He behaved very
well when he said goodbye, — for I could not
deny him that occasion, — and, perhaps, if
he had not assured me so much of his everlasting gratitude,
I should have felt surer of deserving it. Perhaps
I was a little disappointed also, that he expressed
no anxiety at leaving our cottage so much at the mercy
of turbulent and triumphant outlaws. But it was
not for me to speak of that; and when I knew the reason
of his silence, it redounded tenfold to his credit.
Nothing, however, vexed me so much as what Deborah
Pring said afterward: that he could not help
feeling in the sadness of his heart that I had behaved
in that manner to him just because his father was in
possession of our rightful home and property.
I was not so small as that; and if he truly did suppose
it, there must have been some fault on my part, for
his nature was good to everybody, and perhaps al!
the better for not descending through too many high
generations.
There is nothing more strange than
the way things work in the mind of a woman, when left
alone, to doubt about her own behaviour. With
men it can scarcely be so cruel; because they can
always convince themselves that they did their best;
and if it fail, they can throw the fault upon Providence,
or bad luck, or something outside their own power.
But we seem always to be denied this happy style of
thinking, and cannot put aside what comes into our
heart more quickly, and has less stir of outward things,
to lead it away and to brighten it. So that I
fell into sad, low spirits; and the glory of the year
began to wane, and the forest grew more and more lonesome.