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
Of black-mailâd warriors many a rank;
âRevenge!â he cried, âand gae.ââ
HENRY MACKENZIE.
The little party at the Lodge were assembled at supper, at the early hour of eight oâclock. Sir Henry Lee, neglecting the food that was placed on the table, stood by a lamp on the chimney-piece, and read a letter with mournful attention.
âDoes my son write to you more particularly than to me, Doctor Rochecliffe?â said the knight. âHe only says here, that he will return probably this night; and that Master Kerneguy must be ready to set off with him instantly. What can this haste mean? Have you heard of any new search after our suffering party? I wish they would permit me to enjoy my sonâs company in quiet but for a day.â
âThe quiet which depends on the wicked ceasing from troubling,â said Dr. Rochecliffe, âis connected, not by days and hours, but by minutes. Their glut of blood at Worcester had satiated them for a moment, but their appetite, I fancy, has revived.â
âYou have news, then, to that purpose?â said Sir Henry.
âYour son,â replied the Doctor, âwrote to me by the same messenger: he seldom fails to do so, being aware of what importance it is that I should know every thing that passes. Means of escape are provided on the coast, and Master Kerneguy must be ready to start with your son the instant he appears.â
âIt is strange,â said the knight; âfor forty years I have dwelt in this house, man and boy, and the point only was how to make the day pass over our heads; for if I did not scheme out some hunting match or hawking, or the like, I might have sat here on my arm-chair, as undisturbed as a sleeping dormouse, from one end of the year to the other; and now I am more like a hare on her form, that dare not sleep unless with her eyes open, and scuds off when the wind rustles among the fern.â
âIt is strange,â said Alice, looking at Dr. Rochecliffe, âthat the roundhead steward has told you nothing of this. He is usually communicative enough of the motions of his party; and I saw you close together this morning.â
âI must be closer with him this evening,â said the Doctor gloomily; âbut he will not blab.â
âI wish you may not trust him too much,â said Alice in reply.ââTo me, that manâs face, with all its shrewdness, evinces such a dark expression, that methinks I read treason in his very eye.â
âBe assured, that matter is looked to,â answered the Doctor, in the same ominous tone as before. No one replied, and there was a chilling and anxious feeling of apprehension which seemed to sink down on the company at once, like those sensations which make such constitutions as are particularly subject to the electrical influence, conscious of an approaching thunder-storm.
The disguised Monarch, apprised that day to be prepared on short notice to quit his temporary asylum, felt his own share of the gloom which involved the little society. But he was the first also to shake it off, as what neither suited his character nor his situation. Gaiety was the leading distinction of the former, and presence of mind, not depression of spirits, was required by the latter.
âWe make the hour heavier,â he said, âby being melancholy about it. Had you not better join me, Mistress Alice, in Patrick Careyâs jovial farewell?âAh, you do not know Pat Careyâa younger brother of Lord Falklandâs?â
âA brother of the immortal Lord Falklandâs, and write songs!â said the Doctor.
âOh, Doctor, the Muses take tithe as well as the Church,â said Charles, âand have their share in every family of distinction. You do not know the words, Mistress Alice, but you can aid me, notwithstanding, in the burden at leastâ
âCome, now that weâre parting, and âtis one to ten
If the towers of sweet Woodstock I eâer see agen,
Let us eâen have a frolic, and drink like tall men,
While the goblet goes merrily round.ââ
The song arose, but not with spirit. It was one of those efforts at forced mirth, by which, above all other modes of expressing it, the absence of real cheerfulness is most distinctly animated. Charles stopt the song, and upbraided the choristers.
âYou sing, my dear Mistress Alice, as if you were chanting one of the seven penitential psalms; and you, good Doctor, as if you recited the funeral service.â
The Doctor rose hastily from the table, and turned to the window; for the expression connected singularly with the task which he was that evening to discharge. Charles looked at him with some surprise; for the peril in which he lived, made him watchful of the slightest motions of those around himâthen turned to Sir Henry, and said, âMy honoured host, can you tell any reason for this moody fit, which has so strangely crept upon us all?â
âNot I, my dear Louis,â replied the knight; âI have no skill in these nice quillets of philosophy. I could as soon undertake to tell you the reason why Bevis turns round three times before he lies down. I can only say for myself, that if age and sorrow and uncertainty be enough to break a jovial spirit, or at least to bend it now and then, I have my share of them all; so that I, for one, cannot say that I am sad merely because I am not merry. I have but too good cause for sadness. I would I saw my son, were it but for a minute.â
Fortune seemed for once disposed to gratify the old man; for Albert Lee entered at that moment. He was dressed in a riding suit, and appeared to have travelled hard. He cast his eye hastily around as he entered. It rested for a second on that of the disguised Prince, and, satisfied with the glance which he received in lieu, he hastened, after the fashion of the olden day, to kneel down to his father, and request his blessing.
âIt is thine, my boy,â said the old man; a tear springing to his eyes as he laid his hand on the long locks, which distinguished the young cavalierâs rank and principles, and which, usually combed and curled with some care, now hung wild and dishevelled about his shoulders. They remained an instant in this posture, when the old man suddenly started from it, as if ashamed of the emotion which he had expressed before so many witnesses, and passing the back of his hand hastily across his eyes, bid Albert get up and mind his supper, âsince I dare say you have ridden fast and far since you last baitedâand weâll send round a cup to his health, if Doctor Rochecliffe and the company pleasesâJoceline, thou knave, skink aboutâthou lookâst as if thou hadst seen a ghost.â
âJoceline,â said Alice, âis sick for sympathyâone of the stags ran at PhĆbe Mayflower to-day, and she was fain to have Jocelineâs assistance to drive the creature offâthe girl has been in fits since she came home.â
âSilly slut,â said the old knightââShe a woodmanâs daughter!âBut, Joceline, if the deer gets dangerous, you must send a broad arrow through him.â
âIt will not need, Sir Henry,â said Joceline, speaking with great difficulty of utteranceââhe is quiet enough nowâhe will not offend in that sort again.â
âSee it be so,â replied the knight; âremember Mistress Alice often walks in the Chase. And now, fill round, and fill too, a cup to thyself to overred thy fear, as mad Will has it. Tush, man, PhĆbe will do well enoughâshe only screamed and ran, that thou mightâst have the pleasure to help her. Mind what thou dost, and do not go spilling the wine after that fashion.âCome, here is a health to our wanderer, who has come to us again.â
âNone will pledge it more willingly than I,â said the disguised Prince, unconsciously assuming an importance which the character he personated scarce warranted; but Sir Henry, who had become fond of the supposed page, with all his peculiarities, imposed only a moderate rebuke upon his petulance. âThou art a merry, good-humoured youth, Louis,â he said, âbut it is a world to see how the forwardness of the present generation hath gone beyond the gravity and reverence which in my youth was so regularly observed towards those of higher rank and stationâI dared no more have given my own tongue the rein, when there was a doctor of divinity in company, than I would have dared to have spoken in church in service time.â
âTrue, sir,â said Albert, hastily interfering; âbut Master Kerneguy had the better right to speak at present, that I have been absent on his business as well as my own, have seen several of his friends, and bring him important intelligence.â
Charles was about to rise and beckon Albert aside, naturally impatient to know what news he had procured, or what scheme of safe escape was now decreed for him. But Dr. Rochecliffe twitched his cloak, as a hint to him to sit still, and not show any extraordinary motive for anxiety, since, in case of a sudden discovery of his real quality, the violence of Sir Henry Leeâs feelings might have been likely to attract too much attention.
Charles, therefore, only replied, as to the knightâs stricture, that he had a particular title to be sudden and unceremonious in expressing his thanks to Colonel Leeâthat gratitude was apt to be unmannerlyâfinally, that he was much obliged to Sir Henry for his admonition; and that quit Woodstock when he would, âhe was sure to leave it a better man than he came there.â
His speech was of course ostensibly directed towards the father; but a glance at Alice assured her that she had her full share in the compliment.
âI fear,â he concluded, addressing Albert, âthat you come to tell us our stay here must be very short.â
âA few hours only,â said Albertââjust enough for needful rest for ourselves and our horses. I have procured two which are good and tried. But Doctor Rochecliffe broke faith with me. I expected to have met some one down at Jocelineâs hut, where I left the horses; and finding no person, I was delayed an hour in littering them down myself, that they might be ready for to-morrowâs workâfor we must be off before day.â
âIâIâintended to have sent Tomkinsâbutâbutââhesitated the Doctor, âIââ
âThe roundheaded rascal was drunk, or out of the way, I presume,â said Albert. âI am glad of itâyou may easily trust him too far.â
âHitherto he has been faithful,â said the Doctor, âand I scarce think he will fail me now. But Joceline will go down and have the horses in readiness in the morning.â
Jocelineâs countenance was usually that of alacrity itself on a case extraordinary. Now, however, he seemed to hesitate.
âYou will go with me a little way, Doctor?â he said, as he edged himself closely to Rochecliffe.
âHow? puppy, fool, and blockhead,â said the knight, âwouldst thou ask Doctor Rochecliffe to bear thee company at this hour?âOut, hound!âget down to the kennel yonder instantly, or I will break the knaveâs pate of thee.â
Joceline looked with an eye of agony at the divine, as if entreating him to interfere in his behalf; but just as he was about to speak, a most melancholy howling arose at the hall-door, and a dog was heard scratching for admittance.
âWhat ails Bevis next?â said the old knight. âI think this must be All-Fools-day, and that every thing around me is going mad!â
The same sound startled Albert and Charles from a private conference in which they had engaged, and Albert ran to the hall-door to examine personally into the cause of the noise.
âIt is no alarm,â said the old knight to Kerneguy, âfor in such cases the dogâs bark is short, sharp, and furious. These long howls are said to be ominous. It was even so that Bevisâs grandsire bayed the whole livelong night on which my poor father died. If it comes now as a presage, God send it regard the old and useless, not the young, and those who may yet serve King and country!â
The dog had pushed past Colonel Lee, who stood a little while at the hall-door to listen if there were any thing stirring without, while Bevis advanced into the room where the company were assembled, bearing something in his mouth, and exhibiting, in an unusual degree, that sense of duty and interest which a dog seems to show when he thinks he has the charge of something important. He entered therefore, drooping his long tail, slouching his head and ears, and walking with the stately yet melancholy dignity of a war-horse at his masterâs funeral. In this manner he paced through the room, went straight up to Joceline, who had been regarding him with astonishment, and uttering a short and melancholy howl, laid at his feet the object which he bore in his mouth. Joceline
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