The scene which presented itself on
the morning after the storm is not easily described,
and the change to the trio who had up to that time
lived so peacefully on Refuge Islands’ Reef was
so great that they found it difficult at first to
believe it was other than a dream.
On awaking, indeed, Otto saluted his
brother with the exclamation-
“O Dom, I’ve had such a comical dream!”
“Indeed, my boy,” said
Dominick, “I fear it was no dream, but a reality.”
At this Otto suddenly sprang up, and
ran out to relieve his mind on the point. A
few seconds sufficed. On clearing the bushes
he beheld the new wreck lying not far from the old
one, and saw from the crowds of people who were being
put into the boats that the emigrant ship had been
no mere creature of his imagination. It was evident
that the boat which had just quitted the vessel’s
side contained the first band of emigrants, for the
only people yet landed were a few men, who busied
themselves in putting up a rude shelter for the women
and children, and in kindling fires for the preparation
of breakfast on a little mound between two and three
hundred yards from the golden cave.
By that time the storm had blown itself
out, and the rising sun was mounting into a cloudless
blue sky, and covering the sea with dazzling ripples,
which looked as if the very water were laughing with
joy at the sudden change from darkness and fury to
light and peace.
Conspicuous among those who worked
on shore was the gigantic form of Joe Binney.
Considering him an old acquaintance. Otto ran
up to him and shook hands.
“How many emigrants are there of you?”
he asked.
“Three hundred, more or less,
master, but I ain’t rightly sure; there’s
such a many that it’s difficult to count ’em
when they are all a-movin’ to and fro.”
“Here, Joe, catch hold o’
this post, an’ keep it steady till I make it
fast,” said Hugh Morris, the seaman who has been
described as one of the most turbulent among the men.
While Joe assisted in the erection
of the canvas booth or shelter, he gave Otto a good
deal of information regarding the vessel, the emigrants,
the crew, and the misunderstandings which had occurred
previous to the captain’s death.
“It’s well for one man
that we’ve bin wrecked, anyhow,” remarked
Morris, stepping back with an artistic air to survey
his handiwork.
“You mean the young doctor,” said Joe.
“That’s who I mean,”
returned Morris. “Doctor John Marsh.
He’s the only man in the ship that’s
worth his salt, but I fear he’s a doomed man.”
“I hope not, Hugh, though there
are one or two men on board worth more than
their salt,” said Joe, with a peculiar smile,
as he returned to the care of a large kettle of beans,
from which the sailor had called him.
On Otto inquiring what was the matter
with the doctor, Joe Binney explained-
“He’s been ill a’most
since we left England, owin’ to a fall he had
in tryin’ to save one o’ the child’n
as was tumblin’ down the after-hatch. He
saved the child, but broke one or two of his own ribs,
an’ the broken ends must have damaged his lungs,
for, ever since, he’s bin spittin’ blood
an’ wearin’ away, till we can hardly believe
he’s the same stout, hearty, active young feller
that came aboord at Gravesend. Spite of his
hurt he’s bin goin’ among us quite cheerful-like,
doin’ the best he could for the sick; but as
Morris says, he looks like a doomed man. P’r’aps
gittin’ ashore may do him good. You see,
bein’ the only doctor in the ship, he couldn’t
attend to hisself as well as might be, mayhap.”
While Joe and Otto were conversing,
the first boat load of emigrants landed, consisting
chiefly of women and children. Dr Marsh was also
among them, in order that, as he said with quiet pleasantry,
he might attend to the sanitary arrangements of the
camp in the new land, though all who saw him quit
the wreck were under the sorrowful impression that
the new land would prove to be in his case a last resting-place.
There was something peculiarly attractive
in the manly, handsome face of this young disciple
of Aesculapius, worn as it was by long sickness and
suffering, and Otto fell in love with him at first
sight.
There can be no doubt that some human
beings are so constituted as to powerfully attract
others by their mere physical conformation and expression,
without reference to character or conduct,-indeed,
before character or conduct can possibly be known.
And when this peculiar conformation and expression
is coupled with delicacy of health, and obvious suffering,
the attractive influence becomes irresistible.
Let us thank God that such is the case. Blind,
unreasoning affection is a grand foundation on which
to build a mighty superstructure of good offices,
kindly acts, and tender feelings, mingled, it may be,
with loving forbearance, and occasional suffering,
which shall be good to the souls of the lover, as
well as the loved one.
Anyhow, when Otto saw Dr Marsh helped,
almost lifted, out of the boat; observed him give
a pitiful little smile, and heard him utter some mild
pleasantry to those who assisted him, he experienced
a gush of feeling such as had never before inflated
his reckless little bosom, and something like water-to
his great astonishment-caused interference
with his vision.
Running forward just as the widow
Lynch was officiously thrusting her warm-hearted attentions
on the invalid, he accosted the doctor, and offered
to escort him to the golden cave.
And we may here inform the reader
that the involuntary affection of our little hero
met with a suitable return, for Dr Marsh also fell
in love with Otto at first sight. His feelings,
however, were strongly mingled with surprise.
“My boy,” he said, with
painfully wide-open eyes, “from what part of
the sky have you dropt?”
“Well, not being a falling star
or a rocket-stick, I cannot claim such high descent,-but
hasn’t the mate told you about us?” returned
Otto.
Here widow Lynch broke in with:
“Towld him about you?
Av course he hasn’t. He don’t
throuble his hid to tell much to any wan; an’,
sure, wasn’t the doctor slaapin’ whin he
returned aboord i’ the night, an’ wasn’t
I nursin’ of ’im, and d’ee think
any wan could git at ’im widout my lave?”
Otto thought that certainly no one
could easily accomplish that feat, and was about to
say so, when Dr Marsh said remonstratively-
“Now, my dear widow Lynch, do
leave me to the care of this new friend, who, I am
sure, is quite able to assist me, and do you go and
look after these poor women and children. They
are quite helpless without your aid. Look! your
favourite Brown-eyes will be in the water if you don’t
run.”
The child of a poor widow, which had
been styled Brown-eyes by the doctor because of its
gorgeous optics, was indeed on the point of taking
an involuntary bath as he spoke. Mrs Lynch, seeing
the danger, rushed tumultuously to the rescue, leaving
the doctor to Otto’s care.
“Don’t let me lean too
heavily on you,” he said, looking down; “I’m
big-boned, you see, and long-legged, though rather
thin.”
“Pooh!” said Otto, looking
up, “you’re as light as a feather, and
I’m as strong as a horse,-a little
horse, at least. You’d better not go to
the camp yet, they are not ready for you, and that
sweet little delicate creature you call widow Lynch
is quite able to manage them all. Come up with
me to the cave. But has nobody said a word about
us?”
“Not a soul. As the widow
told you, I was asleep when the mate returned to the
wreck. Indeed, it is not very long since I awoke.
I did hear some mention in passing of a few people
being on the island, but I thought they referred to
savages.”
“Perhaps they were not far wrong,”
said Otto, with a laugh. “I do feel pretty
savage sometimes, and Dominick is awful when he is
roused; but we can’t count Pauline among the
savages.”
“Dominick! Pauline!”
exclaimed the doctor. “My good fellow,
explain yourself, and let us sit down on this bank
while you do so. I’m so stupidly weak
that walking only a few yards knocks me up.”
“Well, only two or three yards
further will bring you to our cave, which is just
beyond that cluster of bushes, but it may be as well
to enlighten you a little before introducing you.”
In a few rapid sentences Otto explained
their circumstances, and how they came to be there.
He told his brief tale in sympathetic ears.
“And your own name,” asked the doctor,
“is ?”
“Otto Rigonda.”
“Well, Otto, my boy, you and I shall be friends;
I know it-I feel it.”
“And I’m sure of
it,” responded the enthusiastic boy, grasping
the hand of the invalid, and shaking it almost too
warmly. “But come, I want to present you
to my sister. Dominick is already among the
emigrants, for I saw him leave the cave and go down
to the camp when you were disputing with that female
grampus.”
“Come, don’t begin our
friendship by speaking disrespectfully of one of my
best friends,” said the doctor, rising; “but
for widow Lynch’s tender nursing I don’t
think I should be here now.”
“I’ll respect and reverence
her henceforth and for ever,” said Otto.
“But here we are-this is the golden
cave. Now you’ll have to stoop, because
our door was made for short men like me-and
for humble long ones like my brother.”
“I’ll try to be a humble
long one,” said the doctor as he stooped and
followed Otto into the cave.
Pauline was on her knees in front
of the fire, with her back to the door, as they entered.
She was stooping low and blowing at the flames vigorously.
“O Otto!” she exclaimed,
without looking round, “this fire will break
my heart. It won’t light!”
“More company, Pina,” said her brother.
Pauline sprang up and turned round
with flushed countenance and disordered hair; and
again Otto had the ineffable delight of seeing human
beings suddenly reduced to that condition which is
variously described as being “stunned,”
“thunderstruck,” “petrified,”
and “struck all of a heap” with surprise.
Pauline was the first to recover self-possession.
“Really, Otto, it is too bad
of you to take one by surprise so. Excuse me,
sir,-no doubt you are one of the unfortunates
who have been wrecked. I have much pleasure
in offering you the hospitality of our humble home!”
Pauline spoke at first half jestingly,
but when she looked full at the thin, worn countenance
of the youth who stood speechless before her, she
forgot surprise and everything else in a feeling of
pity.
“But you have been ill,”
she continued, sympathetically; “this wreck
must have-pray sit down.”
She placed a little stool for her
visitor beside the fire.
If Dr John Marsh had spoken the words
that sprang to his lips he would have begun with “Angelic
creature,” but he suppressed his feelings and
only stammered-
“Your b-brother, Miss Rigonda,
must have a taste for taking people by surprise, for
he did not tell me that-that-I-I
mean he did not prepare me for-for-you
are right. I think I had better sit down, for
I have, as you perceive, been very ill, and am rather
weak, and-and in the circumstances such
an unexpected-a-”
At this critical moment Dominick fortunately
entered the cave, and rescued the doctor from the
quicksand, in which he was floundering.
“Oh! you must be the very man
I want,” he said, grasping his visitor by the
hand.
“That is strange,” returned
the doctor, with a languid smile, “seeing that
you have never met me before.”
“True, my good sir; nevertheless
I may venture to say that I know you well, for there’s
a termagant of an Irish woman down at the camp going
about wringing her hands, shouting out your good qualities
in the most pathetic tones, and giving nobody a moment’s
peace because she does not know what has become of
you. Having a suspicion that my brother must
have found you and brought you here, I came to see.
But pray, may I ask your name, for the Irish woman
only describes you as `Doctor, dear!’”
“Allow me to introduce him,”
cried Otto, “as an old friend of mine-Dr
Marsh.”
Dominick looked at his brother in surprise.
“Otto is right,” said
the doctor, with a laugh, “at least if feeling
may be permitted to do duty for time in gauging the
friendship.”
“Well, Dr Marsh, we are happy
to make your acquaintance, despite the sadness of
the circumstances,” said Dominick, “and
will do all we can for you and your friends; meanwhile,
may I ask you to come to the camp and relieve the
mind of your worshipper, for I can scarcely call her
less.”
Poor Dr Marsh, feeling greatly exhausted
by excitement as much as by exertion, was on the point
of excusing himself and begging his host to fetch
the widow up to the cave, when he was saved the trouble
by the widow herself, whose voice was just then heard
outside.
“What’s that yer sayin’,
Joe?” she exclaimed in a remonstrative tone,
“ye seed ’im go into that rabbit-hole?
Never! Don’t tell me! Arrah it’s
on his hands an knees he’d have to do it.”
The voice which replied was pitched
in a much deeper and softer key, but it was heard
distinctly to say, “Ay, widdy Lynch, that’s
the door I seed him an’ a boy go through; so
ye’d better rap at it an’ inquire.”
“Faix, an’ that’s
jist what I’ll do, though I don’t half
belave ye.”
She was about to apply her large red
knuckles to the door in question when her intention
was frustrated and her doubts were scattered by the
door opening and Dominick presenting himself.
“Come in, Mrs Lynch, come in.
Your doctor is here, alive and well.”
“Well, is it-ah!
I wish he was! Are ye there, darlin’?”
“Yes, yes,” came from
within, in a laughing voice. “Here I am,
Mrs Lynch, all right and comfortable. Come in.”
Being excessively tall, the widow
was obliged, like others, to stoop to enter; but being
also excessively broad, she only got her head and
shoulders through the doorway, and then, unlike others,
she stuck fast. By dint, however, of a good pull
from Dominick and a gentle push from Joe, she was
got inside without quite carrying away the structure
which the gale of the preceding night had spared.
“Och! ’tis a quare place
intirely, and there is some disadvantage in bein’
big-thank ye kindly, sir-but
on the whole-”
She got no further, for at that moment
her sharp little grey eyes fell on Pauline, and once
again Otto’s heart was stirred to its profoundest
depths by the expressive glare that ensued. Indeed,
Dominick and Marsh were equally affected, and could
not help laughing.
“Ha! ye may laugh,” said
the widow, with profound solemnity, “but if
it’s not dramin’ I am, what Father Macgrath
says about ghosts is true, and-”
“I hope you don’t take
me for a ghost, Mrs Lynch,” said Pauline,
stepping forward with a kindly smile and holding out
her hand.
“No, cushla! I don’t,”
returned the widow, accepting the hand tenderly.
“Sure it’s more like a ghost the doctor
is, in spite of his larfin’. But wonders
’ll niver cease. I’ll lave ’im
wid an aisy mind, for he’s in good hands.
Now, Joe, clear out o’ the door, like a good
man, an’ let me through. They’ll
be wantin’ me at the camp. A good haul,
Joe, I’m tough; no fear o’ me comin’
to pieces. Och! but it’s a poor cabin.
An Irish pig wouldn’t thank ye for it.”
Murmuring similar uncomplimentary
remarks, mingled with expressions of surprise, the
voice of the woman gradually died away, and the people
in the golden cave were left to discuss their situation
and form hasty plans for the present emergency.
At first, of course, they could do
little else than make each other partially acquainted
with the circumstances which had so strangely thrown
them together, but Dominick soon put an end to this
desultory talk.
“You see, it will take all our
time,” he said, “between this and sunset
to get the emigrants comfortably under canvas, or some
sort of shelter.”
“True,” assented Dr Marsh,
“and it would never do with so many women and
children, some of whom are on the sick list, to leave
them to the risk of exposure to another storm like
that which has just passed. Is your island subject
to such?”
“By no means,” answered
Dominick. “It has a splendid climate.
This gale is quite exceptional. Nevertheless,
we cannot tell when the next may burst on us.
Come, Otto, you and I will go down to the camp.
Now, Dr Marsh, you must remain here. I can
see, without being told, that you are quite unfit
to help us. I know that it is hard to be condemned
to inaction when all around are busy, but reflect how
many patients you have solemnly warned that their
recovery would depend on implicit obedience to the
doctor’s orders! Divide yourself in two,
now, and, as a doctor, give yourself strict orders
to remain quiet.”
“H’m! Gladly would
I divide myself,” was the doctor’s reply,
“if while I left the patient half to act the
invalid, I could take the impatient half down to the
camp to aid you. But I submit. The days
of my once boasted strength are gone. I feel
more helpless than a mouse.”
There was something quite pitiful
in the half-humorous look, and the weary sigh, with
which the poor youth concluded his remarks, and Otto
was so touched that he suddenly suggested the propriety
of his staying behind and taking care of him.
“Why, you conceited creature,”
cried Dominick, “of what use could you
be? Besides, don’t you think that Pina
is a sufficiently good nurse?”
Otto humbly admitted that she was.
Dr Marsh, glancing at her pretty face,
on which at the moment there beamed an expression
of deep sympathy, also admitted that she was; but,
being a man of comparatively few words, he said nothing.
It was a busy day for Dominick and
his brother. Not only had they to counsel and
advise with the unfortunate emigrants as to the best
position for the temporary encampment, with reference
to wood and water, as well as to assist with their
own hands in the erection of tents made of torn sails
and huts and booths composed of broken planks and reeds,
but they had to answer innumerable questions from the
inquisitive as to their own history, from the anxious
as to the probabilities of deliverance, from the practical
as to the resources of the islands, and from the idiotic
as to everything in general and nothing in particular.
In addition to which they had to encourage the timid,
to correct the mistaken, and to remonstrate with or
resist the obstinate; also to romp a little with the
children as they recovered their spirits, quiet the
babies as they recovered their powers of lung, and
do a little amateur doctoring for the sick in the
absence of the medical man.
In all these varied occupations they
were much aided by the widow Lynch, who, instead of
proving to be, as they had expected, a troublesome
termagant, turned out to be a soft-hearted, kindly,
enthusiastic, sympathetic woman, with a highly uneducated,
unbalanced mind, a powerfully constituted and masculine
frame, and “a will of her own.” In
this last particular she did not differ much from the
rest of the human species, but she was afflicted with
an unusually strong desire to assert it.
Very like Mrs Lynch in the matters
of kindly soft-heartedness and sympathy was Mrs Welsh-a
poor, gentle, delicate Englishwoman, the wife of a
great hulking cross-grained fellow named Abel, who
was a carpenter by trade and an idler by preference.
Mrs Welsh was particularly good as a sick-nurse and
a cook, in which capacities she made herself extremely
useful.
About midday, Mrs Welsh having prepared
a glorious though simple meal for her section of the
emigrant band, and the other sections having been
ministered to more or less successfully by their more
or less capable cooks, Dominick and Otto went up to
the golden cave to dinner, which they well knew the
faithful Pauline would have ready waiting for them.
“What a day we have had, to
be sure!” said Dominick as they walked along;
“and I’m as hungry as a kangaroo.”
Without noticing the unreasonableness
of supposing that long-legged creature to be the hungriest
of animals, Otto declared that he was in the same
condition, “if not more so.”
On opening the door they were checked
by the expression of Pauline’s face, the speaking
eyes of which, and the silent mouth, were concentrated
into an unmistakable “hush!”-which
was emphasised by a significant forefinger.
“What’s wrong?” whispered Dominick,
anxiously.
“Sleeping,” murmured Pauline-she
was too good a nurse to whisper- pointing
to the invalid, who, overcome with the night’s
exposure and the morning’s excitement, had fallen
into a profound slumber on Otto’s humble couch.
This was a rather severe and unexpected
trial to Otto, who had come up to the cave brimming
over with camp news for Pauline’s benefit.
He felt that it was next to impossible to relate
in a whisper all the doings and sayings, comical and
otherwise, that he had seen and heard that day.
To eat his dinner and say nothing seemed equally
impossible. To awaken the wearied sleeper was
out of the question. However, there was nothing
for it but to address himself to the suppression of
his feelings. Probably it was good for him to
be thus self-disciplined; certainly it was painful.
He suffered chiefly at the top of
the nose-inside behind his eyes-that
being the part of the safety-valve where bursts of
laughter were checked; and more than once, while engaged
in a whispering commentary on the amiable widow Lynch,
the convulsions within bade fair to blow the nasal
organ off his face altogether. Laughter is catching.
Pauline and Dominick, ere long, began to wish that
Otto would hold his tongue. At last, some eccentricity
of Joe Binney, or his brother, or Mrs Lynch, we forget
which, raised the pressure to such a pitch that the
safety-valves of all three became ineffective.
They all exploded in unison, and poor Marsh was brought
to consciousness, surprise, and a sitting posture at
the same instant.
“I’m afraid,” he
said, rather sheepishly, “that I’ve been
sleeping.”
“You have, doctor, and a right
good sleep you’ve had,” said Dominick,
rising and placing a stool for the invalid. “We
ought to apologise for disturbing you; but come, sit
down and dine. You must be hungry by this time.”
“Indeed I am. The land
air seems to have had a powerful effect on me already.”
“Truly it must,” remarked
Pauline, “else you could not have fallen asleep
in the very middle of my glowing description of our
island home.”
“Did I really do that?”
said the doctor, with an air of self-reproach.
“Indeed you did; but in the
circumstances you are to be excused.”
“And I hope,” added Dominick,
“that you’ll have many a good sleep in
our golden cave.”
“Golden cave, indeed,”
echoed the invalid, in thought, for his mind was too
much taken up just then with Pauline to find vent in
speech. “A golden cave it will be to me
for evermore!”
It is of no use mincing the matter;
Dr John Marsh, after being regarded by his friends
at home as hopelessly unimpressible-in short,
an absolute woman-hater-had found his fate
on a desolate isle of the Southern seas, he had fallen-nay,
let us be just-had jumped over head and
ears in love with Pauline Rigonda! Dr Marsh was
no sentimental die-away noodle who, half-ashamed,
half-proud of his condition, displays it to the semi-contemptuous
world. No; after disbelieving for many years
in the power of woman to subdue him, he suddenly and
manfully gave in-sprang up high into the
air, spiritually, and so to speak, turning a sharp
somersault, went headlong down deep into the flood,
without the slightest intention of ever again returning
to the surface.
But of this mighty upheaval and overturning
of his sentiments he betrayed no symptom whatever,
excepting two bright spots-one on either
cheek-which might easily have been mistaken
for the effects of weakness, or recent excitement,
or bad health, or returning hunger. Calmly he
set to work on the viands before him with unusual appetite,
conversing earnestly, meanwhile, with Dominick and
Otto on the gravity of their situation, and bestowing
no more attention upon Pauline than was barely consistent
with good breeding, insomuch that that pretty young
creature began to feel somewhat aggrieved. Considering
all the care she had so recently bestowed on him,
she came to the conclusion, in short, that he was
by no means as polite as at first she had supposed
him to be.
By degrees the conversation about
the present began to give place to discussions as
to the future, and when Dominick and Otto returned
for their evening meal at sunset, bringing with them
Mr Malines, the mate, and Joe Binney and his brother
David and Hugh Morris as being representative men
of the emigrants and ship’s crew, the meeting
resolved itself into a regular debating society.
At this point Pauline deserted them and went down
to the camp to cultivate the acquaintance of the widow
Lynch, Mrs Welsh, and the other female and infantine
members of the wrecked party.
“For my part,” said Malines,
“I shall take one o’ the boats, launch
it in the lagoon, and go over to the big island, follow
me who may, for it is clear that there’s not
room for us all on this strip of sand.”
“I don’t see that,”
objected Hugh Morris. “Seems to me as there’s
space enough for all of us, if we’re not too
greedy.”
“That shows ye knows nothin’
about land, Hugh,” said Joe Binney. “What’s
of it here is not only too little, but too sandy.
I votes for the big island.”
“So does I,” said David Binney.
“Big Island for me.”
Thus, incidentally, was the large island named.
“But,” said Hugh, still
objecting, “it won’t be half so convenient
to git things out o’ the wreck, as where we
are.”
“Pooh! that’s nothing,”
said Malines. “It won’t cost us much
trouble to carry all we want across a spit of sand.”
Seeing that the two men were getting
angry with each other, Dominick interposed by blandly
stating that he knew well the capabilities of the
spot on which they were encamped, and he was sure that
such a party would require more ground if they meant
to settle on it.
“Well now, master,” observed
Joe, with a half-laugh, “we don’t ’zactly
mean for to settle on it, but here we be, an’
here we must be, till a ship takes us off, an’
we can’t afford to starve, ’ee know, so
we’ll just plough the land an’ plant our
seed, an’ hope for good weather an’ heavy
crops; so I says Big Island!”
“An’ so says I-Big
Island for ever!” repeated his brother David.
After a good deal more talk and altercation
this was finally agreed to, and the meeting dissolved
itself.
That night, at the darkest hour, another
meeting was held in the darkest spot that could be
found near the camp. It chanced, unknown to the
meeting, to be the burial-ground at first discovered
by the Rigondas.
Unwittingly, for it was very dark,
Hugh Morris seated himself on one of the old graves,
and about thirty like-minded men gathered round him.
Little did they know that Otto was one of the party!
Our little hero, being sharp eyed and eared, had
seen and overheard enough in the camp that day to
induce him to watch Morris after he left the cave,
and follow him to the rendezvous.
“My lads,” said Morris,
“I’ve done my best to keep them to the
reef, but that blackguard Malines won’t hear
of it. He’s bent on takin’ ’em
all to the big island, so they’re sure to go,
and we won’t get the help o’ the other
men: but no matter; wi’ blocks an’
tackle we’ll do it ourselves, so we can afford
to remain quiet till our opportunity comes. I’m
quite sure the ship lays in such a position that we
can get her over the ledge into deep water, and so
be able to draw round into the open sea, and then-”
“Hurrah for the black flag and
the southern seas,” cried one of the party.
“No, no, Jabez Jenkins,”
said Morris, “we don’t mean to be pirates;
only free rovers.”
“Hallo! what’s this?”
exclaimed another of the party. “A cross,
I do believe! and this mound-why, it’s
a grave!”
“And here’s another one!”
said Jabez, in a hoarse whisper. “Seems
to me we’ve got into a cannibal churchyard,
or-”
“Bo-o-o-o-oo!” groaned
Otto at that moment, in the most horribly sepulchral
tone he could command.
Nothing more was wanted. With
one consent the conspirators leapt up and fled from
the dreadful spot in a frenzy of unutterable consternation.