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 done at last,â said one; âthe worst and hardest labour I ever did in my life. I believe there is no luck about me left. My very arms feel as if they did not belong to me; and, strange to tell, toil as hard as I would, I could not gather warmth in my limbs.â
âI have warmed me enough,â said Rochecliffe, breathing short with fatigue.
âBut the cold lies at my heart,â said Joceline; âI scarce hope ever to be warm again. It is strange, and a charm seems to be on us. Here have we been nigh two hours in doing what Diggon the sexton would have done to better purpose in half a one.â
âWe are wretched spadesmen enough,â answered Dr. Rochecliffe. âEvery man to his toolsâthou to thy bugle-horn, and I to my papers in cipher.âBut do not be discouraged; it is the frost on the ground, and the number of roots, which rendered our task difficult. And now, all due rites done to this unhappy man, and having read over him the service of the Church, valeat quantum, let us lay him decently in this place of last repose; there will be small lack of him above ground. So cheer up thy heart, man, like a soldier as thou art; we have read the service over his body; and should times permit it, we will have him removed to consecrated ground, though he is all unworthy of such favour. Here, help me to lay him in the earth; we will drag briers and thorns over the spot, when we have shovelled dust upon dust; and do thou think of this chance more manfully; and remember, thy secret is in thine own keeping.â
âI cannot answer for that,â said Joceline. âMethinks the very night winds among the leaves will tell of what we have been doingâmethinks the trees themselves will say, âthere is a dead corpse lies among our roots.â Witnesses are soon found when blood hath been spilled.â
âThey are so, and that right early,â exclaimed Cromwell, starting from the thicket, laying hold on Joceline, and putting a pistol to his head. At any other period of his life, the forester would, even against the odds of numbers, have made a desperate resistance; but the horror he had felt at the slaughter of an old companion, although in defence of his own life, together with fatigue and surprise, had altogether unmanned him, and he was seized as easily as a sheep is secured by the butcher. Dr. Rochecliffe offered some resistance, but was presently secured by the soldiers who pressed around him.
âLook, some of you,â said Cromwell, âwhat corpse this is upon whom these lewd sons of Belial have done a murderâCorporal Grace-be-here Humgudgeon, see if thou knowest the face.â
âI profess I do, even as I should do mine own in a mirror,â snuffled the corporal, after looking on the countenance of the dead man by the help of the lantern. âOf a verity it is our trusty brother in the faith, Joseph Tomkins.â
âTomkins!â exclaimed Cromwell, springing forward and satisfying himself with a glance at the features of the corpseââTomkins!âand murdered, as the fracture of the temple intimates!âdogs that ye are, confess the truthâYou have murdered him because you have discovered his treacheryâ I should say his true spirit towards the Commonwealth of England, and his hatred of those complots in which you would have engaged his honest simplicity.â
âAy,â said Grace-be-here Humgudgeon, âand then to misuse his dead body with your papistical doctrines, as if you had crammed cold porridge into its cold mouth. I pray thee, General, let these menâs bonds be made strong.â
âForbear, corporal,â said Cromwell; âour time presses.âFriend, to you,âwhom I believe to be Doctor Anthony Rochecliffe by name and surname, I have to give the choice of being hanged at daybreak to-morrow, or making atonement for the murder of one of the Lordâs people, by telling what thou knowest of the secrets which are in yonder house.â
âTruly, sir,â replied Rochecliffe, âyou found me but in my duty as a clergyman, interring the dead; and respecting answering your questions, I am determined myself, and do advise my fellow-sufferer on this occasionââ
âRemove him,â said Cromwell; âI know his stiffneckedness of old, though I have made him plough in my furrow, when he thought he was turning up his own swatheâRemove him to the rear, and bring hither the other fellow.âCome thou hereâthis wayâcloserâcloser.âCorporal Grace-be-here, do thou keep thy hand upon the belt with which he is bound. We must take care of our life for the sake of this distracted country, though, lack-a-day, for its own proper worth we could peril it for a pinâs point.âNow, mark me, fellow, choose betwixt buying thy life by a full confession, or being tucked presently up to one of these old oaksâHow likest thou that?â
âTruly, master,â answered the under-keeper, affecting more rusticity than was natural to him, (for his frequent intercourse with Sir Henry Lee had partly softened and polished his manners,) âI think the oak is like to bear a lusty acornâthat is all.â
âDally not with me, friend,â continued Oliver; âI profess to thee in sincerity I am no trifler. What guests have you seen at yonder house called the Lodge?â
âMany a brave guest in my day, Iâse warrant ye, master,â said Joceline. âAh, to see how the chimneys used to smoke some twelve years back! Ah, sir, a sniff of it would have dined a poor man.â
âOut, rascal!â said the General, âdost thou jeer me? Tell me at once what guests have been of late in the Lodgeâand look thee, friend, be assured, that in rendering me this satisfaction, thou shalt not only rescue thy neck from the halter, but render also an acceptable service to the State, and one which I will see fittingly rewarded. For, truly, I am not of those who would have the rain fall only on the proud and stately plants, but rather would, so far as my poor wishes and prayers are concerned, that it should also fall upon the lowly and humble grass and corn, that the heart of the husbandman may be rejoiced, and that as the cedar of Lebanon waxes in its height, in its boughs, and in its roots, so may the humble and lowly hyssop that groweth upon the walls flourish, andâand, trulyâUnderstandâst thou me, knave?â
âNot entirely, if it please your honour,â said Joceline; âbut it sounds as if you were preaching a sermon, and has a marvellous twang of doctrine with it.â
âThen, in one wordâthou knowest there is one Louis Kerneguy, or Carnego, or some such name, in hiding at the Lodge yonder?â
âNay, sir,â replied the under-keeper, âthere have been many coming and going since Worcester-field; and how should I know who they are?âmy service is out of doors, I trow.â
âA thousand pounds,â said Cromwell, âdo I tell down to thee, if thou canst place that boy in my power.â
âA thousand pounds is a marvellous matter, sir,â said Joceline; âbut I have more blood on my hand than I like already. I know not how the price of life may thriveâand, âscape or hang, I have no mind to try.â
âAway with him to the rear,â said the General; âand let him not speak with his yoke-fellow yonderâFool that I am, to waste time in expecting to get milk from mules.âMove on towards the Lodge.â
They moved with the same silence as formerly, notwithstanding the difficulties which they encountered from being unacquainted with the road and its various intricacies. At length they were challenged, in a low voice, by one of their own sentinels, two concentric circles of whom had been placed around the Lodge, so close to each other, as to preclude the possibility of an individual escaping from within. The outer guard was maintained partly by horse upon the roads and open lawn, and where the ground was broken and bushy, by infantry. The inner circle was guarded by foot soldiers only. The whole were in the highest degree alert, expecting some interesting and important consequences from the unusual expedition on which they were engaged.
âAny news, Pearson?â said the General to his aide-de-camp, who came instantly to report to his superior.
He received for answer, âNone.â
Cromwell led his officer forward just opposite to the door of the Lodge, and there paused betwixt the circles of guards, so that their conversation could not be overheard.
He then pursued his enquiry, demanding, âWere there any lightsâany appearances of stirringâany attempt at sallyâany preparation for defence?â
âAll as silent as the valley of the shadow of deathâEven as the vale of Jehosaphat.â
âPshaw! tell me not of Jehosaphat, Pearson,â said Cromwell. âThese words are good for others, but not for thee. Speak plainly, and like a blunt soldier as thou art. Each man hath his own mode of speech; and bluntness, not sanctity, is thine.â
âWell then, nothing has been stirring,â said Pearson.ââYet peradventureââ
âPeradventure not me,â said Cromwell, âor thou wilt tempt me to knock thy teeth out. I ever distrust a man when he speaks after another fashion from his own.â
âZounds! let me speak to an end,â answered Pearson, âand I will speak in what language your Excellency will.â
âThy zounds, friend,â said Oliver, âshoweth little of grace, but much of sincerity. Go to thenâthou knowest I love and trust thee. Hast thou kept close watch? It behoves us to know that, before giving the alarm.â
âOn my soul,â said Pearson, âI have watched as closely as a cat at a mouse-hole. It is beyond possibility that any thing could have eluded our vigilance, or even stirred within the house, without our being aware of it.â
ââTis well,â said Cromwell; âthy services shall not be forgotten, Pearson. Thou canst not preach and pray, but thou canst obey thine orders, Gilbert Pearson, and that may make amends.â
âI thank your Excellency,â replied Pearson; âbut I beg leave to chime in with the humours of the times. A poor fellow hath no right to hold himself singular.â
He paused, expecting Cromwellâs orders what next was to be done, and, indeed, not a little surprised that the Generalâs active and prompt spirit had suffered him during a moment so critical to cast away a thought upon a circumstance so trivial as his officerâs peculiar mode of expressing himself. He wondered still more, when, by a brighter gleam of moonshine than he had yet enjoyed, he observed that Cromwell was standing motionless, his hands supported upon his sword, which he had taken out of the belt, and his stern brows bent on the ground. He waited for some time impatiently, yet afraid to interfere, lest he should awaken this unwonted fit of ill-timed melancholy into anger and impatience. He listened to the muttering sounds which escaped from the half-opening lips of his principal, in which the words, âhard necessity,â which occurred more than once, were all of which the sense could be distinguished. âMy Lord-General,â at length he said, âtime flies.â
âPeace, busy fiend, and urge me not!â said Cromwell. âThinkâst thou, like other fools, that I have made a paction with the devil for success, and am bound to do my work within an appointed hour, lest the spell should lose its force?â
âI only think, my Lord-General,â said Pearson, âthat Fortune has put into your coffer what you have long desired to make prize of, and that you hesitate.â
Cromwell sighed deeply as he answered, âAh, Pearson, in this troubled world, a man, who is called like me to work great things in Israel, had need to be, as the poets feign, a thing made of hardened metal, immovable to feelings of human charities, impassible, resistless. Pearson, the world will hereafter, perchance, think of me as being such a one as I have described, âan iron man, and made of iron mould.ââYet they will wrong my memoryâmy heart is flesh, and my blood is mild as that of others. When I was a sportsman, I have wept for the gallant heron that was struck down, by my hawk, and sorrowed for the hare which lay screaming under the jaws of my greyhound; and canst thou think it a light thing to me, that, the blood of this ladâs father lying in some measure upon my head, I should now put in peril that of the son? They are of the kindly race of English sovereigns, and, doubtless, are adored like
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