The next morning Bevis’s papa
looking at the almanac found there was going to be
an eclipse of the sun, so Bevis took a piece of glass
(part of one of the many window panes he had broken)
and smoked it over a candle, so as to be able to watch
the phenomenon without injury to his eyes. When
the obscuration began too, the dairy-maid brought him
a bucket of clear water in which the sun was reflected
and could be distinctly seen. But before the
eclipse had proceeded beyond the mere edge of the
sun, Bevis heard the champing of a bit, and the impatient
pawing of hoofs, and running up to the stable to see
who it was, found that his papa was just on the point
of driving over in the dog-cart to see another farmer
(the very old gentleman in whose orchard Kapchack’s
palace was situated) about a load of straw.
Bevis of course insisted upon going
too, the smoked glass was thrown aside, he clambered
up and held the reins, and away they went, the eclipse
now counting for nothing. After a while, however,
as they went swiftly along the road, they came to
a hill, and from the summit saw a long way off a vast
shadow like that cast by some immense cloud which
came towards them over the earth, and in a second or
two arrived, and as it were put out the light.
They looked up and the sun was almost gone. In
its place was a dark body, with a rim of light round
it, and flames shooting forth.
As they came slowly down the hill
a pheasant crowed as he flew up to roost, the little
birds retired to the thickets, and at the farmyards
they passed the fowls went up to their perches.
Presently they left the highway and drove along a
lane across the fields, which had once been divided
from each other by gates. Of these there was nothing
now standing but the posts, some of which could hardly
be said to stand, but declining from the perpendicular,
were only kept from falling by the bushes. The
lane was so rough and so bad from want of mending that
they could only walk the impatient horse, and at times
the jolting was extremely unpleasant.
Sometimes they had to stoop down in
the trap to pass under the drooping boughs of elms
and other trees, which not having been cut for years,
hung over and almost blocked the track. From the
hedges the brambles and briars extended out into the
road, so that the wheels of the dog-cart brushed them,
and they would evidently have entirely shut up the
way had not waggons occasionally gone through and
crushed their runners. The meadows on either
hand were brown with grass that had not been mown,
though the time for mowing had long since gone by,
while the pastures were thick with rushes and thistles.
Though so extensive there were only two or three cows
in them, and these old and poor, and as it were broken-down.
No horses were visible, nor any men at work.
There were other fields which had
once grown wheat, but were now so choked with weeds
as to be nothing but a wilderness. As they approached
the farmhouse where the old gentleman dwelt, the signs
of desolation became more numerous. There were
walls that had fallen, and never been repaired, around
whose ruins the nettles flourished. There were
holes in the roofs of the sheds exposing the rafters.
Trees had fallen and lay as they fell,
rotting away, and not even cut up for firewood.
Railings had decayed till there was nothing left but
a few stumps; gates had dropped from their hinges,
and nothing of them remained but small bits of rotten
board attached to rusty irons. In the garden
all was confusion, the thistles rose higher than the
gooseberry bushes, and burdocks looked in at the windows.
From the wall of the house a pear that had been trained
there had fallen away, and hung suspended, swinging
with every puff; the boughs, driven against the windows,
had broken the panes in the adjacent casement; other
panes which had been broken were stuffed up with wisps
of hay.
Tiles had slipped from the roof, and
the birds went in and out as they listed. The
remnants of the tiles lay cracked upon the ground beneath
the eaves just as they had fallen. No hand had
touched them; the hand of man indeed had touched nothing.
Bevis, whose eyes were everywhere, saw all these things
in a minute. “Why,” said he, “there’s
the knocker; it has tumbled down.” It had
dropped from the door as the screws rusted; the door
itself was propped up with a log of wood. But
one thing only appeared to have been attended to,
and that was the wall about the orchard, which showed
traces of recent mortar, and the road leading towards
it, which had not long since been mended with flints.
Now Bevis, as I say, noting all these
things as they came near with his eyes, which, like
gimlets, went through everything, was continually
asking his papa questions about them, and why everything
was in such a state, till at last his papa, overwhelmed
with his inquiries, promised to tell him the whole
story when they got home. This he did, but while
they are now fastening up the horse (for there was
no one to help them or mind it), and while Bevis is
picking up the rusty knocker, the story may come in
here very well: —
Once upon a time, many, many years
ago, when the old gentleman was young, and lived with
his mother at the farmhouse, it happened that he fell
in love. The lady he loved was very young, very
beautiful, very proud, very capricious, and very poor.
She lived in a house in the village little better
than a cottage, with an old woman who was said to
be her aunt. As the young farmer was well off,
for the land was his own, and he had no one to keep
but his old mother, and as the young lady dearly loved
him, there seemed no possible obstacle in their way.
But it is well known that a brook can never run straight,
and thus, though all looked so smooth, there were,
in reality, two difficulties.
The first of these was the farmer’s
old mother, who having been mistress in the farmhouse
for very nearly fifty years, did not like, after half-a-century,
to give place to a mere girl. She could not refrain
from uttering disparaging remarks about her, to which
her son, being fond of his mother, could not reply,
though it angered him to the heart, and at such times
he used to take down his long single-barrelled gun
with brass fittings, and go out shooting. More
than once the jealous mother had insulted the young
lady openly in the village street, which conduct, of
course, as things fly from roof to roof with the sparrows,
was known all over the place, and caused the lady
to toss her head like a filly in spring to show that
she did not care for such an old harridan, though in
secret it hurt her pride beyond expression.
So great was the difficulty this caused,
that the young lady, notwithstanding she was so fond
of the handsome young farmer, who rode so well and
shot so straight, and could carry her in his arms as
if she were no more than a lamb, would never put her
dainty foot, which looked so little and pretty even
in the rude shoes made for her by the village cobbler,
over the threshold of his house. She would never
come in, she said, except as a wife, while he on his
part, anxious as he was to marry her, could not, from
affection for his mother, summon up courage to bring
her in, as it were, rough-shod over his mother’s
feelings.
Their meetings, therefore, as she
would not come indoors, were always held in the farmer’s
orchard, where was a seat in an arbour, a few yards
in front of which stood the ancient apple-tree in which
Kapchack, who was also very young in those days, had
built his nest. At this arbour they met every
day, and often twice a day, and even once again in
the evening, and could there chat and make love as
sweetly as they pleased, because the orchard was enclosed
by a high wall which quite shut out all spying eyes,
and had a gate with lock and key. The young lady
had a duplicate key, and came straight to the orchard
from the cottage where she lived by a footpath which
crossed the lane along which Bevis had been driven.
It happened that the footpath just
by the lane, on coming near the orchard, passed a
moist place, which in rainy weather was liable to be
flooded, and as this was inconvenient for her, her
lover had a waggon-load of flints brought down from
the hills where the hares held their revels, and placed
in the hollow so as to fill it up, and over these
he placed faggots of nut-tree wood, so that she could
step across perfectly clean and dry. In this
orchard, then, they had their constant rendezvous;
they were there every day when the nightingale first
began to sing in the spring, and when the apple-trees
were hidden with their pink blossom, when the haymakers
were at work in the meadow, when the reapers cut the
corn, and when the call of the first fieldfare sounded
overhead. The golden and rosy apples dropped at
their feet, they laughed and ate them, and taking
out the brown pips she pressed them between her thumb
and finger to see how far they would shoot.
Though they had begun to talk about
their affairs in the spring, and had kept on all the
summer and autumn, and though they kept on as often
as the weather was dry (when they walked up and down
the long orchard for warmth, sheltered by the wall),
yet when the spring came again they had not half finished.
Thus they were very happy, and the lady used particularly
to laugh at the antics of the magpie, who became so
accustomed to their presence as to go on with the repairs
to his nest without the least shyness. Kapchack,
being then very young and full of spirits, and only
just married, and in the honeymoon of prosperity,
played such freaks and behaved in so amusing a manner
that the lady became quite attached to him, and in
order to protect her favourite, her lover drove away
all the other large birds that came near the orchard,
and would not permit any one whatever to get up into
Kapchack’s apple-tree, nor even to gather the
fruit, which hung on the boughs till the wind pushed
it off.
Thus, having a fortress to retreat
to, and being so highly honoured of men, Kapchack
gave the reins to his natural audacity, and succeeded
in obtaining the sovereignty. When the spring
came again they had still a great deal of talking
to do; but whether the young lady was weary of waiting
for the marriage-ring, or whether she was jealous of
the farmer’s mother, or whether she thought
they might continue like this for the next ten years
if she did not make some effort, or whether it was
the worldly counsels of her aunt, or what it was — perhaps
her own capricious nature, it is certain that they
now began to quarrel a little about another gentleman.
This gentleman was very rich, and
the owner of a large estate in the neighbourhood;
he did not often reside there, for he did not care
for sport or country life, but once when he came down
he happened to see the young lady, and was much attracted
towards her. Doubtless she did not mean any harm,
but she could not help liking people to admire her,
and, not to go into every little particular, in the
course of time (and not very long either) she and
the gentleman became acquainted. Now, when her
own true lover was aware of this, he was so jealous
that he swore if ever he saw them together he would
shoot his rival with his long-barrelled gun, though
he were hung for it the next day.
The lady was not a little pleased
at this frantic passion, and secretly liked him ten
times better for it, though she immediately resorted
to every artifice to calm his anger, for she knew
his violent nature, and that he was quite capable
of doing as he had said. But the delight of two
strings to her bow was not easily to be foregone, and
thus, though she really loved the farmer, she did
not discourage the gentleman. He, on his part,
finding after a while that although she allowed him
to talk to her, and even to visit her at the cottage,
and sometimes (when she knew the young farmer was
at market) go for a walk with him, and once even came
and went over his grand mansion, still finding that
it was all talk, and that his suit got no further,
he presently bethought him of diamonds.
He gave her a most beautiful diamond
locket, which he had had down all fresh and brilliant
from London. Now this was the beginning of the
mischief. She accepted it in a moment of folly,
and wished afterwards ten times that she had refused,
but having once put it on, it looked so lovely she
could not send it back. She could not openly wear
it, lest her lover should see it, but every morning
she put it on indoors, and frequently glanced in the
glass.
Nor is it any use to find fault with
her; for in the first place she has been dead many
years, and in the second she was then very young, very
beautiful, and living quite alone in the world with
an old woman. Now her lover, notwithstanding
the sweet assurances she gave him of her faithfulness,
and despite the soft kisses he had in abundance every
day in the orchard, soft as the bloom of the apple-trees,
could not quite recover his peace of mind. He
did not laugh as he used to do. He was restless,
and the oneness of his mind was gone. Oneness
of mind does not often last long into life, but while
it lasts everything is bright. He had now always
a second thought, a doubt behind, which clouded his
face and brought a line into his forehead.
After a time his mother, observing
his depression, began to accuse herself of unkindness,
and at last resolved to stand no longer in the way
of the marriage. She determined to quit the house
in which she had lived ever since she came to it a
happy bride half-a-century before. Having made
up her mind, that very morning she walked along the
footpath to the young lady’s cottage, intending
to atone for her former unkindness, and to bring the
girl back to lunch, and thus surprise her son when
he came in from the field.
She had even made up her mind to put
up with the cold reception she would probably meet
with, nor to reply if any hard words were used towards
her. Thus thinking, she lifted the latch, as country
people do not use much ceremony, and stepped into
the cottage, when what was her surprise to find the
girl she had come to see with a beautiful diamond
locket about her neck, gleaming in the sunshine from
the open door! She instantly understood what
it meant, and upbraiding the girl with her falseness,
quitted the place, and lost no time in telling her
son, but first she took the precaution of hiding his
gun. As he could not find that weapon, after
the first storm of his jealous anger had gone over
he shut himself up in his room.
The lady came the same evening to
the rendezvous in the orchard, but her lover did not
meet her. She came again next day, and in the
evening; and again the third day, and so all through
the week, and for nearly a month doing all she could
without actually entering the house to get access to
him. But he sullenly avoided her; once seeing
her in the road, he leaped his horse over the hedge
rather than pass her. For the diamond locket
looked so like a price — as if she valued
a glittering bauble far above true love.
At last one day she surprised him
at the corner of the village street, and notwithstanding
that the people (who knew all the story) were looking
on, she would speak to him. She walked by his
side, and said: “George, I have put the
locket in the arbour, with a letter for you. If
you will not speak to me, read the letter, and throw
the locket in the brook.”
More she could not say, for he walked
as fast as he could, and soon left her behind.
He would not go near the orchard all
day, but at last in the evening something prompted
him to go. He went and looked, but the locket
and the letter were not there.
Either she had not left them as she
had said, or else some one had taken them. No
one could enter the orchard without a key, unless they
went to the trouble of bringing a ladder from the
rickyard, and as it was spring, there were no apples
to tempt them to do that. He thought, perhaps,
his mother might have taken his key and gone to the
arbour, and there was a terrible scene and bitter
words between them — the first time he had
ever replied to her. The consequence was that
she packed a chest that very day, took a bag of money,
which in old-fashioned style she kept under her bed,
and left her home for ever; but not before she had
been to the cottage, and reviled the girl with her
duplicity and her falseness, declaring that if she
had not got the locket, she had not put it in the
orchard, but had sold it, like the hussy she was!
Fortunately, however, she added, George could now
see through her.
The farmer himself, much agitated
at his mother’s departure, made another search
for the locket, and mowed the grass in the orchard
himself, thinking that perhaps the lady had dropped
it, or that it had caught in her dress and dragged
along, and he also took the rake, and turned over
every heap of dead leaves which the wind had blown
into the corners. But there was no locket and
no letter. At last he thought that perhaps the
magpie, Kapchack — as magpies were always
famous for their fondness for glittering things, such
as silver spoons — might have picked up the
locket, attracted by the gleaming diamonds. He
got a ladder and searched the nest, even pulling part
of it to pieces, despite Kapchack’s angry remonstrances,
but the locket was not there.
As he came down the ladder there was
the young lady, who had stolen into the orchard and
watched his operations. They stood and faced each
other for a minute: at least, she looked at him,
his sullen gaze was bent upon the ground.
As for her, the colour came and went in her cheek,
and her breast heaved so that, for a while, she could
not speak. At last she said very low: “So
you do not believe me, but some day you will know
that you have judged me wrongly”. Then she
turned, and without another word went swiftly from
the orchard.
He did not follow her, and he never
saw her again. The same evening she left the
village, she and the old woman, her aunt, quietly and
without any stir, and where they went (beyond the
market town) no one knew or even heard. And the
very same evening, too, the rich gentleman who had
given her the locket, and who made an unwonted stay
in his country home because of her, also left the
place, and went, as was said, to London. Of course
people easily put two and two together, and said no
doubt the girl had arranged to meet her wealthy admirer,
but no one ever saw them together. Not even the
coachman, when the gentleman once more returned home
years afterwards, though the great authority in those
days, could say what had become of her; if she had
met his master it was indeed in some secret and mysterious
manner. But the folk, when he had done speaking,
and had denied these things, after he had quaffed his
ale and departed, nudged each other, and said that
no doubt his master, foreseeing the inquiries that
would be made, had bribed him with a pocketful of
guineas to hold his tongue.
So the farmer, in one day, found himself
alone; his dear lady, his mother, and his rival were
gone. He alone remained, and alone he remained
for the rest of his days. His rival, indeed, came
back once now and then for short periods to his mansion;
but his mother never returned, and died in a few years’
time. Then indeed deserted, the farmer had nothing
left but to cultivate, and dwell on, the memory of
the past. He neglected his business, and his farm;
he left his house to take care of itself; the cows
wandered away, the horses leaped the hedges, other
people’s cattle entered his corn, trampled his
wheat, and fattened on his clover. He did nothing.
The hand of man was removed, and the fields, and the
house, and the owner himself, fell to decay.
Years passed, and still it was the
same, and thus it was, that when Bevis and his papa
drove up, Bevis was so interested and so inquisitive
about the knocker, which had fallen from the front
door. One thing, and one place only, received
the owner’s care, and that was the orchard, the
arbour, the magpie’s nest, and the footpath that
led to the orchard gate. Everything else fell
to ruin, but these were very nearly in the same state
as when the young lady used to come to the orchard
daily. For the old gentleman, as he grew old,
and continued to dwell yet more and more upon the
happy days so long gone by, could not believe that
she could be dead, though he himself had outlived
the usual span of life.
He was quite certain that she would
some day come back, for she had said so herself; she
had said that some day he would know that he had judged
her wrongly, and unless she came back it was not possible
for him to understand. He was, therefore, positively
certain that some day she would come along the old
footpath to the gate in the orchard wall, open it
with her duplicate key, walk to the arbour and sit
down, and smile at the magpie’s ways. The
woodwork of the arbour had of course decayed long
since, but it had been carefully replaced, so that
it appeared exactly the same as when she last sat
within it. The coping fell from the orchard wall,
but it was put back; the gate came to pieces, but a
new one was hung in its place.
Kapchack, thus protected, still came
to his palace, which had reached an enormous size
from successive additions and annual repairs.
As the time went on people began to talk about Kapchack,
and the extraordinary age to which he had now attained,
till, by-and-by, he became the wonder of the place,
and in order to see how long he would live, the gentlemen
who had gamekeepers in the neighbourhood instructed
them to be careful not to shoot him. His reputation
extended with his years, and those curious in such
things came to see him from a distance, but could never
obtain entrance to the orchard, nor approach near
his tree, for neither money nor persuasion could induce
the owner to admit them.
In and about the village itself Kapchack
was viewed by the superstitious with something like
awe. His great age, his singular fortune, his
peculiar appearance — having but one eye — gave
him a wonderful prestige, and his chattering was firmly
believed to portend a change of the weather or the
wind, or even the dissolution of village personages.
The knowledge that he was looked upon in this light
rendered the other birds and animals still more obedient
than they would have been. Kapchack was a marvel,
and it gradually became a belief with them that he
would never die.
Outside the orchard-gate, the footpath
which crossed the lane, and along which the lady used
to come, was also carefully kept in its former condition.
By degrees the nut-tree faggots rotted away — they
were supplanted by others; in the process of time
the flints sunk into the earth, and then another waggon-load
was sent for. But the waggons had all dropped
to pieces except one which chanced to be under cover;
this, too, was much decayed, still it held together
enough for the purpose. It was while this very
waggon was jolting down from the hills with a load
of flints to fill this hollow that the one particular
flint, out of five thousand, worked its way through
a hole in the bottom and fell on the road. And
the rich old gentleman, whose horse stepped on it the
same evening, who was thrown from the dog-cart, and
whose discharged groom shot him in his house in London,
was the very same man who, years and years before,
had given the diamond locket to the young lady.
In the orchard the old farmer pottered
about every day, now picking up the dead wood which
fell from the trees, now raking up the leaves, and
gathering the fruit (except that on Kapchack’s
tree), now mowing the grass, according to the season,
now weeding the long gravel path at the side under
the sheltering wall, up and down which the happy pair
had walked in the winters so long ago. The butterflies
flew over, the swallows alighted on the topmost twigs
of the tall pear-tree and twittered sweetly, the spiders
spun their webs, or came floating down on gossamer
year after year, but he did not notice that they were
not the same butterflies or the same swallows which
had been there in his youth. Everything was the
same to him within the orchard, however much the world
might change without its walls.
Why, the very houses in the village
close by had many of them fallen and been rebuilt;
there was scarcely a resident left who dwelt there
then; even the ancient and unchangeable church was
not the same — it had been renovated; why,
even the everlasting hills were different, for the
slopes were now in many places ploughed, and grew oats
where nothing but sheep had fed. But all within
the orchard was the same; his lady, too, was the same
without doubt, and her light step would sooner or later
come down the footpath to her lover. This was
the story Bevis’s papa told him afterwards.
They had some difficulty in fastening
up the horse, until they pulled some hay from a hayrick,
and spread it before him, for like Bevis he had to
be bribed with cake, as it were, before he would be
good. They then knocked at the front door, which
was propped up with a beam of timber, but no one answered,
nor did even a dog bark at the noise; indeed, the
dog’s kennel had entirely disappeared, and only
a piece of the staple to which his chain had been
fastened remained, a mere rusty stump in the wall.
It was not possible to look into this room, because
the broken windows were blocked with old sacks to
keep out the draught and rain; but the window of the
parlour was open, the panes all broken, and the casement
loose, so that it must have swung and banged with the
wind.
Within, the ceiling had fallen upon
the table, and the chairs had mouldered away; the
looking-glass on the mantelpiece was hidden with cobwebs,
the cobwebs themselves disused; for as they collected
the dust, the spiders at last left them to spin new
ones elsewhere. The carpet, if it remained, was
concealed by the dead leaves which had been carried
in by the gales. On these lay one or two picture
frames, the back part upwards, the cords had rotted
from the nails, and as they dropped so they stayed.
In a punch-bowl of ancient ware, which stood upon the
old piano untouched all these years, a robin had had
his nest. After Bevis had been lifted up to the
window-ledge to look in at this desolation, they went
on down towards the orchard, as if the old gentleman
was not within he was certain to be there.
They found the gate of the orchard
open — rather an unusual thing, as he generally
kept it locked, even when at work inside — and
as they stepped in, they saw a modern double-barrel
gun leant against a tree. A little farther, and
Bevis caught sight of Kapchack’s nest, like a
wooden castle in the boughs, and clapped his hands
with delight. But there was a ladder against
Kapchack’s tree, a thing which had not been seen
there these years and years, and underneath the tree
was the old farmer himself, pale as his own white
beard, and only kept from falling to the ground by
the strong arms of a young gentleman who upheld him.
They immediately ran forward to see what was the matter.
Now it had happened in this way.
It will be recollected that when the keeper fell from
the dead oak-tree, he not only disabled himself, but
his gun going off shot the dogs. Thus when the
heir to the estate came down the same evening, he
found that there was neither dog nor keeper to go
round with him the next day. But when the morning
came, not to be deprived of his sport, he took his
gun and went forth alone into the fields. He
did not find much game, but he shot two or three partridges
and a rabbit, and he was so tempted by the crowds of
wood-pigeons that were about (parties from Choo Hoo’s
army out foraging), that he fired away the remaining
cartridges in his pocket at them.
So he found himself early in the day
without a cartridge, and was just thinking of walking
back to the house for some more, when the shadow of
the eclipse came over. He stayed leaning against
a gate to watch the sun, and presently as he was looking
up at it a hare ran between his legs — so
near, that had he seen her coming he could have caught
her with his hands.
She only went a short way down the
hedge, and he ran there, when she jumped out of the
ditch, slipped by him, and went out fifty or sixty
yards into the field, and sat up. How he now wished
that he had not shot away all his ammunition at the
wood-pigeons! While he looked at the hare she
went on, crossed the field, and entered the hedge on
the other side; he marked the spot, and hastened to
get over the gate, with the intention of running home
for cartridges. Hardly had he got over, than
the hare came back again on that side of the hedge,
passed close to him, and again leaped into the ditch.
He turned to go after her, when out she came again,
and crouched in a furrow only some twenty yards distant.
Puzzled at this singular behaviour
(for he had never seen a hare act like it before),
he ran after her; and the curious part of it was, that
although she did indeed run away, she did not go far — she
kept only a few yards in front, just evading him.
If she went into a hedge for shelter, she quickly
came out again, and thus this singular chase continued
for some time. He got quite hot running, for though
he had not much hope of catching the creature, still
he wanted to understand the cause of this conduct.
By-and-by the zig-zag and uncertain
line they took led them close to the wall of the old
gentleman’s orchard, when suddenly a fox started
out from the hedge, and rushed after the hare.
The hare, alarmed to the last degree, darted into
a large drain which went under the orchard, and the
fox went in after her. The young gentleman ran
to the spot, but could not of course see far up the
drain. Much excited, he ran round the orchard
wall till he came to the gate, which chanced to be
open, because the farmer that day, having discovered
that the great bough of Kapchack’s tree had
been almost torn from the trunk by the gale, had just
carried a fresh piece of timber in for a new prop,
and having his hands full, what with the prop and
the ladder to fix it, he could not shut the gate behind
him. So the sportsman entered the orchard, left
his gun leaning against a tree, and running down to
see if he could find which way the drain went, came
upon the old gentleman, and caught sight of the extraordinary
nest of old King Kapchack.
Now the reason Ulu (for it was the
very hare Bevis was so fond of) played these fantastic
freaks, and ran almost into the very hands of the
sportsman, was because the cunning fox had driven her
to do so for his own purposes.
After he learnt the mysterious underground
saying from the toad imprisoned in the elm, he kept
on thinking, and thinking, what it could mean; but
he could not make it out. He was the only fox
who had a grandfather living, and he applied to his
grandfather, who after pondering on the matter all
day, advised him to keep his eyes open. The fox
turned up his nostrils at this advice, which seemed
to him quite superfluous. However, next day,
instead of going to sleep as usual, he did keep his
eyes open, and by-and-by saw a notch on the edge of
the sun, which notch grew bigger, until the shadow
of the eclipse came over the ground.
At this he leaped up, recognising
in a moment the dead day of the underground saying.
He knew where Bevis’s hare had her form, and
immediately he raced across to her, though not clearly
knowing what he was going to do; but as he crossed
the fields he saw the sportsman, without any dogs
and with an empty gun, leaning over the gate and gazing
at the eclipse. With a snarl the fox drove Ulu
from her form, and so worried her that she was obliged
to run (to escape his teeth) right under the sportsman’s
legs, and thus to fulfil the saying: “The
hare hunted the hunter”.
Even yet the fox did not know what
was going to happen, or why he was doing this, for
such is commonly the case during the progress of great
events. The actors do not recognise the importance
of the part they are playing. The age does not
know what it is doing; posterity alone can appreciate
it. But after a while, as the fox drove the hare
out of the hedges, and met and faced her, and bewildered
the poor creature, he observed that her zig-zag course,
entirely unpremeditated, was leading them closer and
closer to the orchard where Kapchack (whom he wished
to overthrow) had his palace.
Then beginning to see whither fate
was carrying them, suddenly he darted out and drove
the hare into the drain, and for safety followed her
himself. He knew the drain very well, and that
there was an outlet on the other side, having frequently
visited the spot in secret in order to listen to what
Kapchack was talking about. Ulu, quite beside
herself with terror, rushed through the drain, leaving
pieces of her fur against the projections of the stones,
and escaped into the lane on the other side, and so
into the fields there. The fox remained in the
drain to hear what would happen.
The sportsman ran round, entered the
gate, and saw the old farmer trimming the prop, the
ladder just placed against the tree, and caught sight
of the palace of King Kapchack. As he approached
a missel-thrush flew off — it was Eric; the
farmer looked up at this, and saw the stranger, and
was at first inclined to be very angry, for he had
never been intruded upon before, but as the young
gentleman at once began to apologise for the liberty,
he overlooked it, and listened with interest to the
story the sportsman told him of the vagaries of the
hare. While they were talking the sportsman looked
up several times at the nest above him, and felt an
increasing curiosity to examine it. At last he
expressed his wish; the farmer demurred, but the young
gentleman pressed him so hard, and promised so faithfully
not to touch anything, that at last the farmer let
him go up the ladder, which he had only just put there,
and which he had not himself as yet ascended.
The young gentleman accordingly went
up the ladder, being the first who had been in that
tree for years, and having examined and admired the
nest, he was just going to descend, when he stayed
a moment to look at the fractured bough. The
great bough had not broken right off, but as the prop
gave way beneath it had split at the part where it
joined the trunk, leaving an open space, and revealing
a hollow in the tree. In this hollow something
caught his eye; he put in his hand and drew forth
a locket, to which an old and faded letter was attached
by a mouldy ribbon twisted round it. He cast
this down to the aged farmer, who caught it in his
hand, and instantly knew the locket which had disappeared
so long ago.
The gold was tarnished, but the diamonds
were as bright as ever, and glittered in the light
as the sun just then began to emerge from the eclipse.
He opened the letter, scarce knowing what he did; the
ink was faded and pale, but perfectly legible, for
it had been in a dry place. The letter said that
having tried in vain to get speech with him, and having
faced all the vile slander and bitter remarks of the
village for his sake, she had at last resolved to
write and tell him that she was really and truly his
own. In a moment of folly she had, indeed, accepted
the locket, but that was all, and since the discovery
she had twice sent it back, and it had twice been
put on her dressing-table, so that she found it there
in the morning (doubtless by the old woman, her aunt,
bribed for the purpose).
Then she thought that perhaps it would
be better to give it to him (the farmer), else he
might doubt that she had returned it; so she said,
as he would not speak to her, she should leave it
in the arbour, twisting the ribbon round her letter,
and she begged him to throw the locket in the brook,
and to believe her once again, or she should be miserable
for life. But, if after this he still refused
to speak to her, she would still stay a while and
endeavour to obtain access to him; and if even then
he remained so cruel, there was nothing left for her
but to quit the village, and go to some distant relations
in France. She would wait, she added, till the
new moon shone in the sky, and then she must go, for
she could no longer endure the insinuations which were
circulated about her. Lest there should be any
mistake she enclosed a copy of a note she had sent
to the other gentleman, telling him that she should
never speak to him again. Finally, she put the
address of the village in France to which she was
going, and begged and prayed him to write to her.
When the poor old man had read these
words, and saw that after all the playful magpie must
have taken the glittering locket and placed it, not
in his nest, but a chink of the tree; when he learned
that all these years and years the girl he had so
dearly loved must have been waiting with aching heart
for a letter of forgiveness from him, the orchard swam
round, as it were, before his eyes, he heard a rushing
sound like a waterfall in his ears, the returning
light of the sun went out again, and he fainted.
Had it not been for the young gentleman, who caught
him, he would have fallen to the ground, and it was
just at this moment that Bevis and his papa arrived
at the spot.