Woodstock; or, the Cavalier by Walter Scott (ready player one ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Walter Scott
Book online «Woodstock; or, the Cavalier by Walter Scott (ready player one ebook .TXT) đ». Author Walter Scott
âIt is well thou dost not, Alice,â answered Sir Henry Lee, in a tone of suppressed anger; âfor, by the blessed Rood, thou hast well nigh led me into the heresy of thinking thee no daughter of mine.âAh! my beloved companion, who art now far from the sorrows and cares of this weary world, couldst thou have thought that the daughter thou didst clasp to thy bosom, would, like the wicked wife of Job, become a temptress to her father in the hour of affliction, and recommend to him to make his conscience truckle to his interest, and to beg back at the bloody hands of his masterâs and perhaps his sonâs murderers, a wretched remnant of the royal property he has been robbed of!âWhy, wench, if I must beg, thinkâst thou I will sue to those who have made me a mendicant? No. I will never show my grey beard, worn in sorrow for my sovereignâs death, to move the compassion of some proud sequestrator, who perhaps was one of the parricides. No. If Henry Lee must sue for food, it shall be of some sound loyalist like himself, who, having but half a loaf remaining, will not nevertheless refuse to share it with him. For his daughter, she may wander her own way, which leads her to a refuge with her wealthy roundhead kinsfolk; but let her no more call him father, whose honest indigence she has refused to share!â
âYou do me injustice, sir,â answered the young lady, with a voice animated yet faltering, âcruel injustice. God knows, your way is my way, though it lead to ruin and beggary; and while you tread it, my arm shall support you while you will accept an aid so feeble.â
âThou wordâst me, girl,â answered the old cavalier, âthou wordâst me, as Will Shakspeare saysâthou speakest of lending me thy arm; but thy secret thought is thyself to hang upon Markham Everardâs.â
âMy father, my father,â answered Alice, in a tone of deep grief, âwhat can thus have altered your clear judgment and kindly heart!âAccursed be these civil commotions; not only do they destroy menâs bodies, but they pervert their souls; and the brave, the noble, the generous, become suspicious, harsh, and mean! Why upbraid me with Markham Everard? Have I seen or spoke to him since you forbid him my company, with terms less kindâI will speak it trulyâthan was due even to the relationship betwixt you? Why think I would sacrifice to that young man my duty to you? Know, that were I capable of such criminal weakness, Markham Everard were the first to despise me for it.â
She put her handkerchief to her eyes, but she could not hide her sobs, nor conceal the distress they intimated. The old man was moved.
âI cannot tell,â he said, âwhat to think of it. Thou seemâst sincere, and wert ever a good and kindly daughterâhow thou hast let that rebel youth creep into thy heart I wot not; perhaps it is a punishment on me, who thought the loyalty of my house was like undefiled ermine. Yet here is a damned spot, and on the fairest gem of allâmy own dear Alice. But do not weepâwe have enough to vex us. Where is it that Shakspeare hath it:â
âGentle daughter,
Give even way unto my rough affairs:
Put you not on the temper of the times,
Nor be, like them, to Percy troublesome.ââ
âI am glad,â answered the young lady, âto hear you quote your favourite again, sir. Our little jars are ever wellnigh ended when Shakspeare comes in play.â
âHis book was the closet-companion of my blessed master,â said Sir Henry Lee; âafter the Bible, (with reverence for naming them together,) he felt more comfort in it than in any other; and as I have shared his disease, why, it is natural I should take his medicine. Albeit, I pretend not to my masterâs art in explaining the dark passages; for I am but a rude man, and rustically brought up to arms and hunting.â
âYou have seen Shakspeare yourself, sir?â said the young lady.
âSilly wench,â replied the knight, âhe died when I was a mere childâthou hast heard me say so twenty times; but thou wouldst lead the old man away from the tender subject. Well, though I am not blind, I can shut my eyes and follow. Ben Jonson I knew, and could tell thee many a tale of our meetings at the Mermaid, where, if there was much wine, there was much wit also. We did not sit blowing tobacco in each otherâs faces, and turning up the whites of our eyes as we turned up the bottom of the wine-pot. Old Ben adopted me as one of his sons in the muses. I have shown you, have I not, the verses, âTo my much beloved son, the worshipful Sir Henry Lee of Ditchley, Knight and Baronet?ââ
âI do not remember them at present, sir,â replied Alice.
âI fear ye lie, wench,â said her father; âbut no matterâthou canst not get any more fooling out of me just now. The Evil Spirit hath left Saul for the present. We are now to think what is to be done about leaving Woodstockâor defending it?â
âMy dearest father,â said Alice, âcan you still nourish a momentâs hope of making good the place?â
âI know not, wench,â replied Sir Henry; âI would fain have a parting blow with them, âtis certainâand who knows where a blessing may alight? But then, my poor knaves that must take part with me in so hopeless a quarrelâthat thought hampers me I confess.â
âOh, let it do so, sir,â replied Alice; âthere are soldiers in the town, and there are three regiments at Oxford!â
âAh, poor Oxford!â exclaimed Sir Henry, whose vacillating state of mind was turned by a word to any new subject that was suggested,ââSeat of learning and loyalty! these rude soldiers are unfit inmates for thy learned halls and poetical bowers; but thy pure and brilliant lamp shall defy the foul breath of a thousand churls, were they to blow at it like Boreas. The burning bush shall not be consumed, even by the heat of this persecution.â
âTrue, sir,â said Alice, âand it may not be useless to recollect, that any stirring of the royalists at this unpropitious moment will make them deal yet more harshly with the University, which they consider as being at the bottom of every thing which moves for the King in these parts.â
âIt is true, wench,â replied the knight; âand small cause would make the villains sequestrate the poor remains which the civil wars have left to the colleges. That, and the risk of my poor fellowsâWell! thou hast disarmed me, girl. I will be as patient and calm as a martyr.â
âPray God you keep your word, sir!â replied his daughter; âbut you are ever so much moved at the sight of any of these men, thatââ
âWould you make a child of me, Alice?â said Sir Henry. âWhy, know you not that I can look upon a viper, or a toad, or a bunch of engendering adders, without any worse feeling than a little disgust? and though a roundhead, and especially a red-coat, are in my opinion more poisonous than vipers, more loathsome than toads, more hateful than knotted adders, yet can I overcome my nature so far, that should one of them appear at this moment, thyself should see how civilly I would entreat him.â
As he spoke, the military preacher abandoned his leafy screen, and stalking forward, stood unexpectedly before the old cavalier, who stared at him, as if he had thought his expressions had actually raised a devil.
âWho art thou?â at length said Sir Henry, in a raised and angry voice, while his daughter clung to his arm in terror, little confident that her fatherâs pacific resolutions would abide the shock of this unwelcome apparition.
âI am, one,â replied the soldier, âwho neither fear nor shame to call myself a poor day-labourer in the great work of Englandâumph!âAy, a simple and sincere upholder of the good old cause.â
âAnd what the devil do you seek here?â said the old knight, fiercely.
âThe welcome due to the steward of the Lords Commissioners,â answered the soldier.
âWelcome art thou as salt would be to sore eyes,â said the cavalier; âbut who be your Commissioners, man?â
The soldier with little courtesy held out a scroll, which Sir Henry took from him betwixt his finger and thumb, as if it were a letter from a pest-house; and held it at as much distance from his eyes, as his purpose of reading it would permit. He then read aloud, and as he named the parties one by one, he added a short commentary on each name, addressed, indeed, to Alice, but in such a tone that showed he cared not for its being heard by the soldier.
âDesboroughâthe ploughman Desboroughâas grovelling a clown as is in Englandâa fellow that would be best at home like an ancient Scythian, under the tilt of a waggonâdân him. Harrisonâa bloody-minded, ranting enthusiast, who read the Bible to such purpose, that he never lacked a text to justify a murderâdân him too. Bletsonâa true-blue Commonwealthâs man, one of Harrisonâs Rota Club, with his noddle full of new fangled notions about government, the clearest object of which is to establish the tail upon the head; a fellow who leaves you the statutes and law of old England, to prate of Rome and Greeceâsees the Areopagus in Westminster-Hall, and takes old Noll for a Roman consulâAdad, he is like to prove a dictator amongst them instead. Never mindâdân Bletson too.â
âFriend,â said the soldier, âI would willingly be civil, but it consists not with my duty to hear these godly men, in whose service I am, spoken of after this irreverent and unbecoming fashion. And albeit I know that you malignants think you have a right to make free with that damnation, which you seem to use as your own portion, yet it is superfluous to invoke it against others, who have better hopes in their thoughts, and better words in their mouths.â
âThou art but a canting varlet,â replied the knight; âand yet thou art right in some senseâfor it is superfluous to curse men who already are damned as black as the smoke of hell itself.â
âI prithee forbear,â continued the soldier, âfor mannersâ sake, if not for conscienceâgrisly oaths suit ill with grey beards.â
âNay, that is truth, if the devil spoke it,â said the knight; âand I thank Heaven I can follow good counsel, though old Nick gives it. And so, friend, touching these same Commissioners, bear them this message; that Sir Henry Lee is keeper of Woodstock Park, with right of waif and stray, vert and venison, as complete as any of them have to their estateâthat is, if they possess any estate but what they have gained by plundering honest men. Nevertheless, he will give place to those who have made their might their right, and will not expose the lives of good and true men, where the odds are so much against them. And he protests that he makes this surrender, neither as acknowledging of these so termed Commissioners, nor as for his own individual part fearing their force, but purely to avoid the loss of English blood, of which so much hath been spilt in these late times.â
âIt is well spoken,â said the steward of the Commissioners; âand therefore, I pray you, let us walk together into the house, that thou mayâst deliver up unto me the vessels, and gold and silver ornaments, belonging unto the Egyptian Pharaoh, who committed them to thy keeping.â
âWhat vessels?â exclaimed the fiery old knight; âand belonging to whom? Unbaptized dog, speak civil of the Martyr in my presence, or I will do a deed misbecoming of me on that caitiff corpse of thine!ââAnd shaking his daughter from his right arm, the old man laid his hand on his rapier.
His antagonist, on the contrary, kept his temper completely, and waving his hand to add impression to his speech, he said, with a calmness which aggravated Sir Henryâs wrath, âNay, good friend, I prithee be still, and brawl notâit becomes not grey hairs and feeble arms to rail and rant like drunkards. Put me not to use the carnal weapon in mine own defence, but listen to the voice of reason. Seeâst thou not that the Lord hath decided this great controversy in
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