[Illustration: “‘There he is,’ said Bride softly to Eustace. ‘I think
you had better go to him alone.’... Without pausing to rehearse any
speech, Eustace walked up to the lonely figure on the rocks, holding
out his hand in greeting.”--P. 234.]




  EUSTACE MARCHMONT

  A FRIEND OF THE PEOPLE

  BY
  EVELYN EVERETT-GREEN

  [Illustration]

  BOSTON:
  A. I. BRADLEY & CO.
  PUBLISHERS.




[Illustration]




CONTENTS


  CHAP.                                 PAGE

      I. ON CHRISTMAS EVE                  1

     II. THE DUCHESS OF PENARVON          17

    III. THE HOUSE OF MOURNING            32

     IV. THE DUKE’S HEIR                  48

      V. MAN OF THE WORLD AND MYSTIC      63

     VI. THE GOSPEL OF DISCONTENT         78

    VII. THE KINDLED SPARK                94

   VIII. BRIDE’S PERPLEXITIES            111

     IX. THE WAVE OF REVOLT              129

      X. A STRANGE NIGHT                 145

     XI. DUKE AND DEFAULTER              160

    XII. AUTUMN DAYS                     176

   XIII. TWO ENCOUNTERS                  193

    XIV. EUSTACE’S DILEMMA               209

     XV. STIRRING DAYS                   225

    XVI. THE POLLING AT PENTREATH        242

   XVII. THE DUKE’S CARRIAGE             258

  XVIII. ABNER’S PATIENT                 274

    XIX. THE BULL’S HORNS                289

     XX. BRIDE’S VIGIL                   307

    XXI. FROM THE DEAD                   322

   XXII. SAUL TRESITHNY                  337

  XXIII. BRIDE’S PROPOSAL                353

   XXIV. CONCLUSION                      368

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

EUSTACE MARCHMONT




CHAPTER I

_ON CHRISTMAS EVE_

  “Yer’s tu thee, old apple-tree,
  Be zure yu bud, be zure yu blaw,
  And bring voth apples gude enough
      Hats vul! caps vul!
  Dree bushel bags vul!
  Pockets vul and awl!
      Urrah! Urrah!
  Aw ’ess, hats vul, caps vul!
  And dree bushel bags vul!
      Urrah! Urrah! Urrah!”


This strange uncouth song was being chanted by moonlight by two score
or more of rough West-Country voices. For half-a-mile the sound was
carried by the sea-breeze, and all the cottagers within hearing of the
chant had run forth to join, both in the song and in the ceremony which
it marked.

For it was Christmas Eve, and Farmer Teazel was “christening his
apple-trees,” according to the time-honoured custom of the place. And
when the trees were being thus christened, there was cider to be had
for the asking; and the farmer’s cider was famed as being the best in
all St. Bride’s, or indeed in any of the adjacent parishes.

The moon shone frostily bright in a clear dark sky. A thin white
carpet of sparkling frost coated the ground; but the wind blew from
the west over the rippling sea, and was neither cruel nor fierce, so
that even little children were caught up by their mothers to assist at
this yearly ceremony; and Farmer Teazel’s orchard had, by ten o’clock,
become the centre of local attraction, fully a hundred voices swelling
the rude chant as the largest and best trees in the plantation were
singled out as the recipients of the peculiar attentions incident to
the ceremony.

First, copious libations of cider were poured round the roots of these
trees, whilst large toast sops were placed amid the bare branches; all
this time the chant was sung again and again, and the young girls and
little children danced round in a ring, joining their shriller voices
with the rougher tones of the men. The cider can that supplied the
trees with their libations passed freely amongst the singers, whose
voices grew hoarse with something beyond exercise.

When the serenading and watering had been sufficiently accomplished,
guns were fired through the branches of the chosen trees, and the
company broke up, feeling that now they had done what was necessary to
ensure a good crop of cider-apples for the ensuing year.

But whilst the singing and drinking was at its height, and the moon
gazed calmly down upon the curious assembly beneath the hoary old trees
in the farmer’s orchard, a keen observer might have noted a pair of
figures slightly withdrawn from the noisy throng around the gnarled
trees that were receiving the attentions of the crowd--a pair that
gravitated together as if by mutual consent, and stood in a sheltered
nook of the orchard; the man leaning against the rude stone wall which
divided it from the farm buildings of one side, the girl standing a few
paces away from him beside a sappling, her face a little bent, but a
look of smiling satisfaction upon her red lips. She was clasping and
unclasping her hands in a fashion that bespoke something of nervous
tremor, but that it was the tremor of happiness was abundantly evident
from the expression of her face.

The moon shone clearly down upon the pair, and perhaps gave a touch of
additional softness and refinement to them, for at that moment both
appeared to the best advantage, and looked handsome enough to draw
admiring regards from even fastidious critics.

The man was very tall, and although he was habited in the homely garb
of a farm labourer of the better sort, there was a something in his
air and carriage which often struck the onlooker as being different
from the average man of his class. If he had been a gentleman, his mien
would have been pronounced “distinguished;” but there was something
incongruous in applying such a term as that to a working man in the
days immediately prior to the Reform agitation of 1830. If the artisan
population of the Midlands had begun to recognise and assert their
rights as members of the community, entitled at least to be regarded
as having a voice in the State (though how that was to be accomplished
they had hardly formulated an opinion), the country labourer was
still plunged in his ancient apathy and indifference, regarding
himself, and being regarded, as little more than a serf of the soil.
The years of agricultural prosperity during the Great War had been
gradually followed by a reaction. Whilst trade revived, agriculture
was depressed; and the state of the labourers in many places was very
terrible. Distress and bitter poverty prevailed to an extent that was
little known, because the sufferers had no mouthpiece, and suffered in
silence, like the beasts of the field. But a growing sense of sullen
discontent was slowly permeating the land, and in the restless North
and the busy Midlands there was a stirring and a sense of coming strife
which had not yet reached the quiet far West. And here was this young
son of Anak, with the bearing of a prince and the garb of a labourer,
standing beside the farmer’s daughter, Genefer, and telling her of his
love.

Although he was but one of the many men who worked by day for her
father, and slept at night in a great loft above the kitchen, in common
with half-a-dozen more men so employed, yet Genefer was listening to
his words of love with a sense of happy triumph in her heart, and
without the smallest feeling of condescension on her part. Possibly her
father might have thought it presumptuous of the young man thus boldly
to woo his only daughter; and yet the girl did not feel much afraid
of any stern parental opposition; for Saul Tresithny, in spite of a
history that to many men would have been a fatal bar towards raising
himself, had acquired in the parish of St. Bride’s a standing somewhat
remarkable, and was known upon the farm as the handiest and most
capable, as well as the strongest man there, and one whom the farmer
especially favoured.

Genefer was the farmer’s only daughter, and had to work as hard as
either father or brothers, for since her mother’s death, a year or two
ago, the whole management of the dairy and of the house had passed
into her hands, and she had as much to do in the day as she could get
through. Perhaps it was from the fact that Saul was always ready to
lend a helping hand when her work was unwontedly pressing, and that
he would work like a fury at his own tasks by day in order to have a
leisure hour to lighten her labours towards supper-time, that she had
grown gradually to lean on him and feel that life without him would
be but a barren and desolate sort of existence. Her brothers, ’Siah
and ’Lias, as they were invariably called, were kind to her in their
own fashion, and so was her father, who was proud of her slim active
figure, her pretty face, and crimpy dark hair. West-Country women are
proverbially good to look at, and Genefer was a favourable specimen of
a favoured race. Her eyes were large and bright, and of a deep blue
tint; her skin was clear, and her colour fresh and healthy, and the
winter winds and summer suns had failed to coarsen it. She was rather
tall, and her figure was full of unconscious grace and activity. If
her hands were somewhat large, they were well shaped and capable, and
her butter, and cream, and bread were known far and wide for their
excellence. She had a woman and a girl to help her in the house, but
hers was the head that kept all going in due order, and her father had
good cause to be proud of her.

And now young Saul stood beside the old grey wall in the light of the
full moon, and boldly told her of his love.

“I’ll be a gude husband to yu if yu’ll have me, Genefer,” he said in
the soft broad speech of his native place, though Saul could speak if
he chose without any trace of dialect, albeit always with a subtle
intonation, which gave something of piquancy to his words. “I du lovee
rarely, my girl. Doee try to love me back. I’ll serve day and night for
yu if thee’ll but say the word.”

“What word am I to zay, Zaul?” asked the girl softly, with a shy upward
look that set all his pulses tingling. “Yu du talk so much, I am vair
mazedheaded with it all. What is it yu would have me zay to thee?”

“Only that yu love me, Genefer,” answered Saul, taking a step forward,
and possessing himself of one of the restless hands that fluttered in
his grasp, and then lay still, as if content to be there. “It’s such a
little word for yu to zay, yet it means such a deal to me.”

She let herself be drawn nearer and nearer to him as he spoke; but
there was still a look of saucy mischief in her eyes, despite their
underlying softness.

“Yu be such a masterful chap, Zaul, I du feel half afeared on ye. It’s
all zoft talk now, but the clapper-claw come afterwards.”

“Nay, lassie, I’ll never clapper-claw yu. Yu needen be afeared of that.
I’ll work for yu, and toil for yu, and yu shall be as happy as I can
make yu. Only say yu can love me, Genefer. That is all I care to hear
yu say to-night.”

He had drawn her close to his side by this time, and she was pressed to
his heart. He bent his head and kissed her on the lips, and only when a
few minutes had passed by, of which they kept no count, did the sudden
salvo of the guns cause them to start suddenly apart, and Genefer
exclaimed, almost nervously--

“Whatever will vaither zay?”

“Du yu think he will make a bobbery about it, Genefer?”

“Nay, I dwon’t know. He is fond of yu, Zaul, but I du not think he will
part easy with me; and then----”

“I du not ask that of him, Genefer,” broke in Saul quickly; “yu du know
that I have no home tu take yu tu yet. It’s the love I want to make
sure of now, lassie. If I know I have your heart, I can wait patiently
for the rest. Can yu be patient tu?”

“Oh, yes, Zaul, so as I know yu love me,” answered the girl with a
quick blush; “dwon’t yu think that is enow for the present? Why need we
speak to vaither about it at all? May be it mid anger un. Why shouldn’t
we keep it a secret betwixt us twain?”

“With all my heart, if yu will have it so,” answered Saul, who was
fully prepared to wait many years before he should be in a position to
marry. That he would one day be a man of some small substance as things
went in those parts, he was aware. But his grandfather, from whom he
looked to receive this modest heritage, was yet a hale man, and it
might not be his for some years to come. Meantime he had at present no
ideas beyond working on with Farmer Teazel, as he had done since his
boyhood, and it quite satisfied him to feel that he had won Genefer’s
heart. He was ready to let this mutual avowal of love remain a secret
between them for the present. He had of late been consumed with
jealousy of a certain smart young farmer, who paid frequent visits to
the Cliff Farm, and appeared to pay a great amount of attention to the
pretty daughter who ruled there. It did not take two eyes to see what a
treasure Genefer would be as a farmer’s wife, and Saul was afraid the
girl’s father had begun to look with favour upon the visits of young
Mr. Hewett. It was this fear which made him resolve to put his fate to
the touch on this particular Christmas Eve. He half believed that his
love was returned by Genefer, but he could no longer be satisfied with
mere hope. He must be certain how things were to be between them in the
future; but having been so satisfied, he was quite content to leave
matters where they were, and not provoke any sort of tempest by openly
letting it be known that he had aspired to the hand of his master’s
daughter. He knew that his present position did not warrant the step he
had taken, yet it was his nature to hazard all upon one throw, and this
time he had won. He feared no tempest himself, but he would have been
loth to provoke one that might have clouded Genefer’s life, and Farmer
Teazel could be very irascible when angered, and by no means good to
live with then.

Whilst the lovers were thus standing in the corner of the orchard,
exchanging vows of constancy which meant more than their quiet homely
phrases seemed to imply, an elderly man with a slight stoop in his tall
figure and a singularly thoughtful and attractive face, was coming
slowly up the long steep slope of down which led to the farm, guided
alike by the brilliance of the moonbeams and by the voices singing the
rude chant round the apple-trees. That he was a man occupying a humble
walk in life was evident from the make and texture of his garments, the
knotted hardness of his hands, and other more subtle and less definable
indications; but the moonlight shone down upon a face that riveted
attention from any but the most unobservant reader of physiognomy,
and betrayed at once a man of unusual thoughtfulness for his walk in
life, as well as of unwonted depth of soul and purity of character.
The face was quite clean shaven, as was common in those times, when
beards were regarded as indicative of barbarism in the upper classes,
and were by no means common in any rank of life save that of seafaring
men. The features were, however, very finely cut, and of a type noble
in themselves, and farther refined by individual loftiness of soul.
The brow was broad, and projected over the deep-set eyes in a massive
pent-house; the nose was long and straight, and showed a sensitive
curve at the open nostril; the mouth was rather wide, but well formed,
and indicative of generosity and firm sweetness; the eyes were calm and
tranquil in expression. The colour it was impossible to define: no two
people ever agreed upon the matter. They looked out upon the world from
their deep caverns with a look that was always gentle, always full of
reflection and questioning intelligence, but was expressive above all
of an inward peace so deep and settled that no trouble from without
could ruffle it. Children always came to his side in response to a
look or a smile; women would tell their troubles to Abner Tresithny,
whose lips were sealed to all the world beside. There was something
in the man, quiet though he was, that made him a power in his own
little world, and yet he had never dreamed of seeking power. He was
at once the humblest and the most resolute of men. He would do the
most menial office for any person, and see no degradation in it; he
was gentle as a woman and mild as a little child: yet once try to move
him beyond the bounds he had set himself in life, and it would be as
easy to strive to move that jagged reef of rocks guarding St. Bride’s
Bay on the south side--the terror of hapless vessels driven in upon
the coast--the safeguard and joy of the hardy smugglers who fearlessly
drove their boats across it with the falling tide, and laughed to scorn
the customs-house officers, who durst not approach that line of boiling
foam in their larger craft.

Abner Tresithny had grown up at St. Bride’s Bay, and was known to
every soul there and in the neighbouring parish of St. Erme, where
Farmer Teazel’s farm lay. Perhaps no man was more widely beloved and
respected than he, and yet he was often regarded with a small spice of
contempt--especially amongst the men-folk; and those who were fullest
of the superstitions of the time and locality were the readiest to gibe
at the old gardener as being a “man of dreams and fancies”--a mystic,
they might have called it, had the word been familiar to them--a man
who seemed to live in a world of his own, who knew his Bible through
from end to end a sight better than the parson did--leastways the
parson of St. Bride’s--and found there a vast deal more than anybody
else in the place believed it to contain.

To-night an unwonted gravity rested upon Abner’s thoughtful face--a
shadow half of sorrow, half of triumphant joy, difficult to analyse;
and sometimes, as he paused in the long ascent and wiped the moisture
from his brow, his eyes would wander towards the sea lying far below,
over which the moon was shining in misty radiance, marking a shimmering
silver track across it from shore to horizon, and he would say softly
to himself--

“And she will soon know it all--all the mysteries we have longed to
penetrate. All will be known so soon to her. God be with her! The Lord
Jesus be near her in His mercy and His love in that struggle! O my God,
do Thou be near her in that last hour, when flesh and heart do fail!
Let not her faith be darkened! Let not the enemy prevail against her!
Do Thou be very very near, dear Lord. Do Thou receive her soul into Thy
hands.”

And after some such softly breathed prayer, during which his eyes would
grow dim and his voice husky, he would turn his face once more towards
the upland farm and resume his walk thither.

The firing of the guns, which told him the ceremony was over, met his
ears just as he reached the brow of the hill, and he began to meet the
cottagers and fisher-folk streaming away. They all greeted him by name,
and he returned their greetings gently: but he could not refrain from
a gentle word of reproof to some whose potations had been visibly too
deep, and who were still roaring their foolish chant as they staggered
together down the slippery slope.

Abner was known all round as an extraordinary man, who, whilst
believing in an unseen world lying about us as no one else in the
community did, yet always set his face quietly and resolutely against
these time-honoured customs of propitiating the unseen agencies,
which formed such a favourite pastime in the whole country. It was a
combination altogether beyond the ken of the rustic mind, and encircled
Abner with a halo of additional mystery.

“Yu should be to home with your sick wife, Nat,” he said to one man who
was sober, but had plainly been enjoying the revel as much as the rest.
“What good du yu think can come of wasting good zyder over the trees,
and singing yon vulish song to them? Go home to your sick wife and
remember the true Christmas joy when the morrow comes. All this is but
idle volly.”

“Nay, nay, maister,” answered the man, with sheepish submission in his
tone, albeit he could not admit any folly in the time-honoured custom.
“Yu knaw farmer he wants a ’bundant craap of awples next year, an we
awl of us knaw tha’ the trees widden gi’ us a bit ef we didden holler a
bit tu ’m the night.”

“Nay, nay, Nat, it’s not your hollering that makes the trees give of
their abundance,” answered Abner, with gentle sadness in his tone.
“It’s the abiding promise of the Lord that seed-time and harvest shall
not vail. Go home, go home, and mind thy wife.”

“Ay, ay, maister, I’m gwoan,” answered the man, and beat a hasty
retreat, secretly wondering whether one of these days the black witches
wouldn’t “overlook” Abner’s house and affairs generally, since he
was known for a man of such peculiar views. The Duke’s head-gardener
was looked upon with considerable respect by the mere labourers, and
always addressed as “maister” by them. He came of a good stock himself;
and from having been so much with the “quality,” he could speak pure
English as easily as the Saxon vernacular of the peasantry. It was
constant conversation with him which had given to Saul his command
of language. From the time of his birth till he began to earn his
own bread, Saul had lived with his grandfather; and it had been a
disappointment to the old man that his grandson had refused the place
of garden boy offered him by the Duchess when he was old enough to
be of use on the place. Before that he had scared birds for Farmer
Teazel, and had done odd jobs about the farm; and to the surprise of
all who knew the prestige and advantages attached to the service of the
Duke, the lad had elected to continue a servant of the farmer rather
than work in the ducal gardens. The grandfather had not attempted to
coerce his grandson, but had let him follow his own bent, although he
thought he was making a mistake, and was perplexed and pained by his
independent attitude.

“He wants to get away from the old ’un--he can’t stand all that
preachin’ and prayin’,” had been the opinion in some quarters;
but Abner knew this was not the case. His grandson had always been
attached to him, and the old man had never obtruded his own opinions
upon him. Saul’s reason for his decision lay beyond any natural desire
for an independent home of his own. He had independence of a kind up
at the farm, but only of a kind. He was a member of Farmer Teazel’s
household. He had to keep the hours observed there. He had not nearly
such comfortable quarters there as in his grandfather’s cottage. He had
to work hard early and late, and had none of the privileges accorded
from time to time on high days and holidays to the servants at Penarvon
Castle. Yet he never appeared to regret the decision he had made,
or spoke of desiring to change his condition. This was in one way a
satisfaction to Abner; but he missed the youth from his own home, and
was always glad of an excuse to get him down there for a few days.

This was, in fact, the reason of his errand to the farm on this winter
evening. To-morrow (Christmas Day) no work would be done, and the day
following was Sunday; so that if Saul would come home with him to-night
they would have quite a little spell together before he had to return
to his work on the Monday morning.

The farmer saw his approach, and hailed him with friendly greeting,
offering him a tankard of cider, of which the old man partook
sparingly, as was his way.

“How gwoes the world down to St. Bride’s?” asked the master, as he
received back the tankard and put it to his own lips. “They du say as
the Duchess be mortal bad. Is it trew that the doctors ’a given her
oop, poor zoul?”

Abner shook his head mournfully.

“So they du zay,” he answered; “I asked at the castle my own self this
even, and they said she could scarce live over the night. St. Bride
will lose a kind friend when it loses her. God be with her and with us
all this night!”

Faces were grave and serious as the sense of Abner’s words penetrated
beyond the immediate circle round him. The Duchess of Penarvon had been
long ill: for several years she had been more or less of an invalid;
but it had not been known until quite recently that the nature of her
malady was so serious as it had now proved to be, and the confirmation
of the tidings of her extremity was received with a considerable amount
of feeling. The Duke was a stern grave man, just and not unkindly, but
self-restrained and hard in his looks and words, whatever his acts
might be. But the Duchess was gentle and kindly towards rich and poor
alike, and had a personal acquaintance with most of the fisher-folk
and cottagers in the parishes of St. Bride and St. Erme. If those who
were in trouble could obtain speech with the Duchess, they nearly
always went rejoicing home again. If any casualty occurred amongst the
fisher-folk in the bay during a winter storm, the Duchess was almost
sure to send substantial aid to make up the loss. It was no wonder then
that the news Abner brought with him was regarded as a public calamity,
and that even those who had drunk most deeply of the farmer’s cider
were sobered into gravity and propriety of demeanour by the thought of
what was passing at the castle down by the Bay of St. Bride.

“I came to fetch Saul to bide with me till Monday,” explained Abner.
“It makes a bit of company, and my heart is heavy with sorrow for them
all. They say that Lady Bride looks as if her heart was breaking. She
and her mother have been together almost by night and day, ever since
the Duchess’s health first failed her so sadly. It’ll be a sad day for
her, poor young thing, when her mother is taken from her.”

“Ay, that it will be,” answered one and another, and heads were
gravely shaken. For the position of Lady Bride in stately solitude at
Penarvon Castle, without the sheltering protection of her mother’s
love, was felt even by these unimaginative rustics to be a trying
one. It was whispered around that her father had never quite forgiven
her for not being a boy. It was hard upon him that their only child
should be a girl, incapable of inheriting title or estates. He was not
a violent or irascible man, but the disappointment of having no son
had eaten deeply into his nature, and there had always been a sense of
injured disapproval in his dealings with his daughter, of which that
sensitive young thing had been keenly conscious. It had thrown her more
and more upon the one parent of whose love she felt secure, and even
the unlettered village hinds (who knew a good deal of the tittle-tattle
of the servants’ hall) could stand mute and struck for a few minutes in
contemplating the thought of the terrible blank that would be left in
the girl’s life when her invalid mother was taken away.

But Abner would not stay to discuss the situation with the farmer and
his family. He was anxious to get home, and Saul was quickly found,
and appeared ready and willing to go with him. Saul indeed was not
sorry just at this juncture for a good excuse to leave the farm for a
few days till he and Genefer had had time to get used to the secret
that now existed between them. Genefer was quite as much relieved as
her lover at this temporary parting. She felt that she should in his
presence be in imminent danger of betraying herself a dozen times a
day; and as her father would be at home enjoying his brief holiday, he
might have leisure to note little symptoms which would pass him by on
a working day. Moreover, Mr. Hewett might very likely drive over and
bring her some sort of a fairing in honour of the season, and if he did
so, and she was forced to be civil and friendly to him, she would just
as soon have Saul fairly out of the way.

Grandfather and grandson walked down the hill together, the old man’s
mind full of the mystery of death, the young man’s flooded by that
kindred mystery of love--the two most wonderful mysteries of the world.
He had been sorry to hear of the extremity of the Duchess; but it
seemed a thing altogether apart from himself, and his own new happiness
soon banished it from his mind. Not that he had not some feeling that
was not happiness mingling with his own bright dreams, as the growingly
stern expression of his face testified; and all of a sudden he turned
upon his grandfather and asked--

“Do you know who my father was?”

“I cannot say that I _know_. I have my suspicions. But your mother
would not tell even me, and she died so soon. Had she lived a little
longer I should perhaps have learned more.”

“And so I must always be called Saul Tresithny, though that is not my
name by right?”

“It is your name by right, because you were so christened. You may have
another name as well, my lad, or you may not.”

The last words were spoken very slowly and sorrowfully, but Saul
started as though they stung him.

“I will never believe that my mother,” he began, and then stopped
short, his face contracted with passion and pain.

“I trust not also, Saul,” said the grandfather, his face expressing a
far keener depth of pain than that of his young companion. “But she
may have been deceived--that has been the fate of too many loving and
ignorant women; and she came without papers upon her and would speak
no word. Illness and sorrow sealed her lips, and there was no time for
urging speech upon her of herself. There was but time to point the way
heavenwards for the departing spirit. I have left that question with my
Maker all these years, and you will have to do the same, my boy, for I
fear the truth will never be known on this side of the grave.”

Saul compressed his lips and walked on in silence. His face in the
moonlight looked as if carved out of solid marble.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER II

_THE DUCHESS OF PENARVON_


Penarvon Castle was a great pile of grey building situated on the
commanding promontory of land that jutted out into the sea and formed
the division between the two bays of St. Bride and St. Erme.

St. Bride’s Bay lay to the south of the castle, and was a small and
insignificant inlet, not deep enough to afford anchorage for vessels of
any size, and avoided on account of the dangers of the jagged reef on
its southern boundary, which went by the name of “Smuggler’s Reef.” The
little bay, however, was a favourite spot for boats and small craft,
as its waters were generally smooth, save when a direct west wind was
blowing, and the smooth sand of its beach made landing safe and easy.
A little hamlet of fisher-folk (and smugglers) nestled beneath the
overhanging cliffs, which broke up just at this point and became merged
in the green slopes of the downs behind. Smuggled goods landed in the
bay could be transported thence without any great difficulty, and not
a fisherman in the place but did not have his own private smuggling
venture whenever fortune favoured, and his own clientèle amongst the
neighbouring farmers and gentlemen, who were glad to purchase what he
brought and ask no questions.

The castle faced due west, and on its north side lay the wider and
larger bay of St. Erme; but the character of the coast along this
bay was not such as to tempt either boats or larger vessels, for the
cliffs ran sheer down into the sea and presented a frowning iron-bound
aspect, and the shelter of the bay was sometimes too dearly purchased
by vessels running before the gale; for if they once struck upon one of
the many sunken rocks with which its bottom was diversified, they were
almost bound to go to pieces without hope of rescue.

The castle was a turreted building of quadrangular construction, and
in one lofty turret on all stormy nights a brilliant light was always
burning, which had at last become as a beacon to passing vessels,
showing them where they were, and warning them especially of those
twin and much dreaded rocks called the “Bull’s Horns,” which lay just
beneath the castle walls, forming the northern boundary to St. Bride’s
Bay, and between which lay a shifting expanse of quicksand, out of
which no vessel ever emerged if once she had run upon it.

Upon this eve of the festival of Christmas, late though the hour was,
there were lights shining from many windows of the great pile of grey
stone--lights that the stranger would believe to portend some festivity
going on within those walls, but which in reality indicated something
altogether different.

The two doctors summoned in haste earlier in the day had at last
taken their leave with hushed steps and grave faces. All that human
skill could avail had been done, and done in vain. Throughout the
castle it was known that the fiat had gone forth that the gentle
mistress whom all loved lay dying--that she would hardly see the dawn
of the Christmas morning; and there was hardly a dry eye amongst the
assembled household, gathered together to talk in whispers of the sad
intelligence, and to listen breathlessly for any sound proceeding from
the part of the house where the dying woman lay.

The pealing of the bell of the outer door caused a commotion in their
midst, till the butler, who rose to answer the summons, remarked that
it was most likely one of the two parsons come to see the Duchess. The
Duke had sent a message to both when the death sentence had gone forth,
and this was probably the response.

He went to the door, and sure enough there walked in, with hushed
step and awed face, the Rev. Job Tremodart, resident clergyman of St.
Bride’s, whose parsonage stood not half-a-mile away.

He was a tall, loose-limbed, lantern-jawed man, with a plain but
benevolent countenance, an awkward manner, and a very decided
inclination to slip into the native dialect in conversation. He entered
with a nervous air, and seemed reluctant to follow the servant up the
great staircase to the floor above.

“May be I shan’t be wanted,” he whispered, trying to detain the man.
“Du yu know if her Grace has asked for me?”

“It was his Grace that sent word for you to be told, sir, you and Mr.
St. Aubyn, of her Grace’s condition,” answered the man respectfully.
“His Grace is in the little parlour here when he is not in the room. I
will let him know you are here.”

“Has Mr. St. Aubyn come too?” asked Mr. Tremodart, a look of relief
crossing his face; “he will du her Grace more gude than I.”

“He is not here yet, sir,” answered the butler, and then stood aside
and motioned to the clergyman to go on, for at the top of the staircase
stood a tall rigid figure, and Mr. Tremodart found himself shaking
hands with the Duke almost before he had had time to realise the
situation.

“The Duchess will be glad to see you,” was the only word spoken by the
stricken husband; and whether he would or no, the hapless pastor was
compelled to follow his noble host.

The Duke was tall and very spare in figure, and seemed to have grown
more so during the past week of anxiety and watching. His hair, which
had hitherto been dark streaked with silver, seemed all at once to
have silvered over almost entirely. His face was finely cut, and the
features gave the impression of having been carved out of a piece of
ivory. The eyebrows were very bushy and were still dark, and the eyes
beneath were a steely blue and of a peculiarly penetrating quality.
The thin-lipped mouth was indicative of an iron will, and the whole
countenance was one to inspire something of awe and dread. At the
present moment it was difficult to imagine that a smile could ever
soften it--difficult, at least, until the Duke approached the side of
his wife’s bed, and then the change which imperceptibly stole over it
showed that beneath a hard and even harsh exterior--too deep perhaps
for outward expression--lay a power of love and tenderness such as only
a strong nature can truly know.

“My love,” said the Duke very quietly, “Mr. Tremodart is here.”

“I shall be glad to see Mr. Tremodart,” spoke a soft voice from the
bed; and in response to a sign from the Duke, the clergyman (visibly
quaking) passed round the great screen which shut off the bed from the
rest of the room, and found himself face to face with the dying woman.

It was a scene not to be forgotten by any who looked upon it. The
Duchess lay back upon a pile of snowy pillows, the peculiar pallor of
approaching death lying like a shadow across her beautiful face. And
yet, save for this never-to-be-mistaken shadow, there was nothing of
death in her aspect. Few and far between as Mr. Tremodart’s pastoral
visits had been (for he was always fearful of intruding upon the great
folks at the castle), he had many times seen the Duchess look more worn
and ill than she did now. The lines of pain, which had deepened so
much of late in her face, had all been smoothed away. Something of the
undefinable aspect of youth had come back to the expression, and the
soft dark eyes were full of a liquid brightness which it was somehow
difficult for him to meet. It was as though the brightness had been
absorbed from an unseen source. There was a great awe in his eyes as he
approached and touched the feeble hand for a moment extended to him.

On her knees beside the bed, grasping the other hand of the dying
woman, was a young girl whose face could not at this moment be seen,
for it was pillowed in the bed-clothes, whilst the slight figure was
shivering and heaving with suppressed emotion. All that could be seen
besides the slim graceful form was a mass of rippling loosened hair
that looked dark in shadow, but lighted up with gleams of ruddy gold
where the light touched it. Mr. Tremodart gave a compassionate glance
at the weeping girl. It needed no word to explain the terrible loss
which was coming upon her.

“My journey is just done, sir,” said the Duchess, with a swift glance
from the face of her husband to that of the clergyman. “The call home
has come at last. Will you speak some word of peace to me before I go?
Let me hear the message that my Lord sends to me. Give me some promise
of His to lead me on my way.”

The voice was very low, but clearly audible in the deep stillness. Poor
Mr. Tremodart twisted his great hands together and felt as though an
angel from heaven had asked counsel of him.

“O my dear lady!” he burst out at last, “you know those promises far
better than I do. You have no need of any poor words of mine. Your
life has ever been a blameless one. It is you who should teach me. God
knows I need it. But you, if you are going before His judgment throne,
can scarcely have a sin upon your soul. I stand mute in presence of a
holiness greater than any I ever have known.”

The eyes of the dying woman were fixed upon Mr. Tremodart’s face with
an expression he scarce understood.

“Am I to go into the presence of my God clad in the robe of my own
righteousness?” she asked with a faint smile.

“O my dear lady, how better could you go?” questioned the confused and
embarrassed clergyman. “Surely if ever there were a saint upon earth
it is yourself. Everybody in the place knows it. What can I say to you
that you do not already know?”

Still the same searching inexplicable gaze fixed upon his face--tender,
pitying, regretful. Never had the Rev. Job Tremodart felt so utterly
unworthy of his office and calling as at that moment. He had always
recognised the fact that he had “never been cut out for a parson,” as
he had phrased it. He had allowed himself to be ordained and presented
with a living in deference to his father’s wishes and the pressure of
circumstances, and he had striven after his own light to do his duty
amongst his illiterate and semi-savage flock. On the whole he had
succeeded fairly well to his satisfaction, and was as good a clergyman
as many of his brethren around. But somehow, beside the dying bed of
the Duchess of Penarvon, he stood shamed and silent, having no word to
speak to her save to remind her of her own saint-like life and her own
righteousness. Even he felt a faint qualm as he spoke those words, yet
their incongruity hardly struck him in its full force. But it was an
immense relief when a slight stir without was followed by the entrance
of another figure into the room, and he could step back and motion the
new-comer to take his place beside the bed. Even the girl raised her
head now and looked round with eyes dark-rimmed and dim with weeping.
She did not otherwise move, but she no longer kept her face hidden;
she turned it towards her mother with a hungry intensity of gaze that
was infinitely pathetic.

“You are welcome, my friend,” said the Duchess in the same soft even
tone. “I am glad to look upon your face once more. I am going down into
the valley at last. The shadow is closing round me. You have brought me
some word to take with me there?”

Mr. St. Aubyn came one step nearer and laid his hand upon the nerveless
one of the dying woman. He was an older man than his brother clergyman,
and one of very different aspect. His face was worn and hollow, as if
with thought and toil; his eyes were deep and tranquil, often full of
a dreamy brilliance, which bespoke a mind far away. His features, if
not beautiful in themselves, were redeemed by a wonderful sweetness
and depth of expression. He looked like one whose “conversation is in
heaven,” and the dying woman’s eyes sought his with quiet confidence
and joy.

“The shadow truly is there--but the rod and the staff are with all the
servants of the Lord who can trust in Him--and the brightness of the
eternal city is beyond. Truly the enemy’s power is but brief. He can
but cast a shadow betwixt us and our Saviour, and we who have the staff
of His consolation in our grasp need not fear. To depart and be with
Christ is a blessed thing. It is through the grave and gate of death
that we pass to our joyful resurrection. There is no fear, no darkness,
no shadow that can come between us and that glorious promise, ‘I am the
Resurrection and the Life.’”

The eyes of the dying woman kindled--filled suddenly with a beautiful
triumphant joy. Her lips moved, and she softly repeated the words--

“‘I am the Resurrection and the Life’--ah! that is enough--that is all
we need to think of when our peace is made.”

“Yea, verily--the Lamb of God suffered death for us to reconcile us
again to God: and He rose triumphant from the grave--the first-fruits
of them that sleep--for us to know that in the appointed day we too
may rise again and be glorified together with Him. And meantime we
rest in His peace, awaiting the day of our common perfecting. Ah! and
when the trump of the Archangel is heard, it is the blessed dead who
rise first, whilst in a moment of time the faithful living are caught
away with them to meet the Lord in the air. O blessed, blessed hope
for living and dead alike--to meet the Lord and be ever with Him!
Surely that is the promise that takes the sting from death and robs
the grave of victory. We know not the day nor the hour--that is hid in
the foreknowledge of the Divine Father; but we have the everlasting
promise--the promise which robs death of its sting, even for those who
are left behind--who are parted from our loved ones. For at any moment
the wondrous shout of the Lord may be heard as He descends from heaven
to awaken the dead and call ‘those that are His at His coming,’ and
we may be one with them in the blessed and holy first resurrection.
‘Wherefore comfort one another with these words.’”

The gaze of the clergyman as he spoke these latter words was rather
bent on the daughter than the mother, and the dying woman read the
thought in his heart and laid her own feeble hand upon her child’s
head. The girl’s tears were dry now. Her lips had parted in a smile of
wondrous vividness and hope. She clasped her hands together, and her
glance sought her mother’s face.

“O mother, my mother--if it might only be soon! O pray for me that I
lose not heart--that I may learn to live in the hope in that promise!”

“The Lord will give you help and grace so to live, my child, if you
will but trust in Him. Heaven and earth may pass away, but His word
will not pass away, and that hope is His most blessed promise. ‘We
shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed.’ O my child, never
think to put off the making of your peace with God till the hour of
death, as some do. Remember that ‘we shall not all die.’ It is the life
eternal, not the grave and gate of death, upon which our hearts must
be fixed. Although I am called to pass through that gate, ask not, my
child, for power to die. Ask rather the gift of the everlasting life
which will be given without dying at the coming of the Lord. Ask for
that coming and kingdom to be hastened, that He will come down speedily
upon this rent and riven earth, and cause His reign of peace to begin.
Yea, pray for the outpouring of His Spirit in this time of darkness and
perplexity. Pray for that great and glorious day when mortality shall
be swallowed up of life!”

The Duchess had half risen upon her pillows as she spoke. A strange
light was in her eyes. In spite of her physical weakness, she spoke
with a power and strength that had seemed impossible a few moments
before. Was it the last expiring spark, flashing out with momentary
vividness; or was it some spiritual power within her that gave to her
this access of strength?

Those about her knew not, yet they hung upon her words with a sense of
strange wonder and awe.

To the Duke and the other clergyman this talk was absolutely
inexplicable--like words spoken in a strange language. Deeply as the
reserved and stern husband had loved his wife, there were subjects
that were never spoken of between them, owing to his resolute reserve
and reticence. Dry orthodoxy and an upright walk before men had been
characteristic of the Duke through life. The fruits of the Spirit,
showing forth in love, joy, and peace, and the yearning for light upon
the dealings of God with His children, were absolutely unknown to him;
and though he knelt with the rest when Mr. St. Aubyn offered a prayer
beside the bed of his dying wife, the words spoken fell meaningless on
his ears. He had far more sympathy with the clergyman who had called
his wife a saint, and shrunk from striving to speak any words of
promise, than with him who was speaking of things so far beyond his ken
as to appear to him idle mysticism and folly.

But the peace and joy beaming from those dying eyes told him more
eloquently than any words what it meant to her, and he bowed his head
and stifled the groan which rose to his lips as he realised that,
despite their tender love, they had yet lived so far asunder in spirit
that a great gulf already seemed to divide them.

Yet the wife would not suffer herself to be long sundered in spirit
from her husband; and when the two clergymen had silently departed,
having done all that they could, each in his own way, she summoned him
to her bedside by a glance, and brought her mind back to earth again
with something of an effort.

“My dear, dear husband,” she fondly whispered; and then the groan would
have its way, as he took her hand in his and dropped down into the seat
beside the bed which had been his for so many long hours during the
past days.

The Duchess bent her head softly towards the other side where her
daughter knelt, and said in a low voice--

“My child, I would be alone with your father a brief while. Leave me
for one short half-hour, then you shall return, and I will send you
away no more, my patient darling.”

The words of tender endearment brought a rush of tears to the girl’s
eyes, but she rose without a word, and slipped noiselessly from the
room. The mother looked after her with wistful eyes.

“Husband,” she said softly, “you will be tender with the child? You
will let her take my place with you so far as such a thing is possible.
She will try to do her duty by you and by all. You will let that duty
be a labour of love?”

“I will do what I can; but I am old to change my ways, and I do not
understand young girls. No one can take your place; you talk of
impossibilities. O Geraldine! Geraldine! it is too hard to be thus
left, old and stricken, and alone. Why must it be?--you so many, many
years younger than I. I never thought to be the one left behind. I
cannot be resigned. I cannot be willing to let you go. The Almighty is
dealing very bitterly with me!”

“Dear husband, the parting will be the shorter that you are well
stricken in years,” she answered gently, answering him according to the
measure of his understanding and feeling. “It will be but a few short
years before we meet again in the place where there is no parting.
And now, my husband, before I am taken away from you--before this new
strength, which, I believe, God has given me for a purpose, be spent--I
have a few things to say to you--a few charges to give to you. Will you
let me speak from my very heart, and forgive me if in any sort I pain
and grieve you?”

“_You_ pain or grieve me by any precious words you may speak! That
thing is impossible. Let me know all that is in your tender, noble
heart. It shall be the aim and object of the miserable residue of my
days to carry out whatever you may speak.”

The Duchess pressed his hand affectionately, and lay still for a
moment, gathering strength. Her husband gave her some of the cordial
which stood at hand, and presently she spoke again--

“My husband, we are living in troubled and anxious days. The world
around us is full of striving and upheaval. You and I remember those
awful struggles in France now dying out of men’s minds, and we have
indications, only too plainly written on the face of the earth, that
the spirit of lawlessness and anarchy thus let loose is seething and
fermenting throughout the world.”

The Duke bent his head in assent. He well knew such to be the case, but
hardly expected that to be the subject of his dying wife’s meditations.
She continued speaking with pauses in between.

“My husband, perhaps you know that ever since those terrible days, when
men began to see in that awful Revolution the first outpouring of God’s
last judgments upon the earth, godly men and women of every shade of
opinion have been earnestly and constantly praying for God’s guidance
and Spirit, that they may read the signs of the times aright, and learn
what are His purposes towards mankind, as revealed in His written Word.
I will not speak too particularly of all that has been given in answer
to this generation of prayer; but it is enough for me to tell you that
Light has come, that the long-neglected prophetic writings have been
illumined by the light of God’s Spirit to many holy men and women,
who have made them their study day by day and year by year, and that
rays of light from above have come to us, illumining the darkness, and
showing us faintly, yet clearly, God’s guiding hand in these days of
darkness and trouble. Do you follow me so far?”

“I understand your words, and am ready to believe that in these things
you have a knowledge that I cannot attain unto; but what then?”

“What I would ask of you, my husband, is patience and trust--patience
with many things that will seem strange to you, that will seem like a
subversion of all your ideas of wisdom and prudence--and trust in God’s
power to make all things work together for good, and to bring good out
of evil. We know that the latter days are coming fast upon us--that
the armies of good and evil are gathering for that last tremendous
struggle which precedes the reign of the Lord. We know that the strange
upheavals we see in the world about us are the beginnings of these
things, and that those who would be found faithful must learn to
discern between the evil and the good; for Satan can transform himself
into an angel of light, and deceive, if it were possible, the very
elect, whilst God has again and again chosen the weak and despised
things of this world to confound the strong; and it is human nature to
turn away in scorn from all such weak things, and look for strength and
salvation from the mighty and approved.”

The Duke listened with a sigh. He understood but little of all this.
Yet every word from his dying wife was precious, and engraved itself
upon his memory in indelible characters.

“There are difficult days coming upon the earth: great wrongs will be
righted, much that is pure and good will spring up; and side by side
with that much that is evil, lawless, and terrible. Dear husband, what
I would ask of you is a patient mind, patience to look at changes
without prejudice, and strive prayerfully to discern whether or not
they be of God;--also patience to hear what is said by their advocates,
and to weigh well what you hear. Let mercy ever temper justice in your
dealings with your dependents; and condemn not those who are not at
one with you without pausing to understand the nature of all they are
striving to accomplish. The evil and the good will and must grow up
together till the day of the harvest. The wheat and the tares cannot
be sorted out till the reapers are sent forth from God. But let us
strive with eyes anointed from above to distinguish in our own path
that which is good, and not cast it scornfully aside, nor rush after
what is evil because it approves itself to the great ones of the earth.
I am sure that God will lead and guide all those who truly turn to Him
in these times of darkness and perplexity. My dear, dear husband, if I
could feel sure that you would be amongst those who would thus turn to
Him now, I should pass away with a sweeter sense of trust and hope--a
brighter confidence in that most blessed meeting on the other shore.”

The white head of the husband was bowed upon the pillow. He did not
weep--the fountain of his tears lay too deep for him to find relief
thus--but a few deep breaths, like gasps, bespoke the intensity of his
emotion, and when he could articulate, he answered briefly--

“My life, I will try--I will try--so help me God!”

“He will help you, my precious husband,” she answered, with quivering
tenderness of intonation, “and you know the promise that cannot fail,
‘All things are possible to him that believeth.’”

And then from that bowed head there came the earnest cry--

“‘Lord, I believe; help Thou mine unbelief.’”

After that followed a pause of deep silence. The Duchess, exhausted
but content, lay back on her pillow with closed eyes. The Duke held
her hand between his, and fought out his battle in silence and alone.
He was passing through deeper waters than the dying woman; for her
peace was made, and she was going confidently forth to meet Him who had
bidden her to come; whilst he was fighting in doubt and helplessness
the tempestuous winds and waves, feeling every moment that they must
engulf him. And yet never had the two loving hearts beat more in
sympathy and unison. Those moments were unspeakably precious to both,
although no word passed between them.

The silence was scarcely broken as the door opened softly, and Bride
stole back to her mother’s side. She had been caught by her old nurse
meantime, and had been dosed with soup and wine, while some of the
dishevelment of her dress and hair had been removed. Her aching eyes
had been bathed, and she looked altogether strengthened and refreshed.
The dying eyes turned upon her took in this, and the Duchess smiled
with a sense of relief to think that there was one faithful woman
beneath the castle roof who would make Bride her first care.

The girl’s eyes sought her mother’s face with wistful intensity of
gaze, and at once noted a change that even that brief half-hour had
brought with it. The shadow had deepened; there was a dimness coming
over the bright eyes, the hand she touched was icy cold.

“Mother!--mother!--mother!” she cried, and sank down on her knees
beside the bed.

“My child, my little Bride. You have been a dear, dear child to me.
In days to come, if you live to have children of your own, may you be
rewarded for all the tenderness you have shown to me.”

“Mother, mother, let me die too! I cannot bear it! I cannot live
without you!”

“Dearest, you must live for your father; you must comfort each other,”
and with a last effort of strength, the dying woman brought the hands
of father and daughter together across her emaciated form, and held
them locked together so in her stiffening fingers.

When the end came they neither knew exactly. Bride was on her knees,
her face hidden, the shadow seeming to weigh her down till all was
blackness round her, and she felt sinking, sinking, sinking down into
some unknown abyss, clinging frantically to something which she took
to be her mother’s hand. The Duke, with his eyes upon his wife’s face,
saw the fluttering of the eyelids, heard a soft sigh, and then watched
the settling down upon that wan face of a look of unspeakable rest and
sweetness.

If that was death, why need death be dreaded? It was like nothing that
he had seen or imagined before. The only words which came into his mind
were those of a familiar formula never understood before--

“The peace of God that passeth all understanding.”




[Illustration]

CHAPTER III

_THE HOUSE OF MOURNING_


Eustace Marchmont came in sight of Penarvon Castle just as the last
rays of the winter sunset were striking upon its closed windows and
turning them into squares of flashing red light dazzling to the eye.
The castle stood commandingly upon its lofty promontory of jagged
cliff, and from its garden walls, as the young man remembered well, the
spectator could look sheer down a deep precipice into the tossing waves
of the sea beneath. He remembered the long side terrace of the castle,
against which the thunder of the surf in winter months made a perpetual
roar and battle; whilst even on summer evenings, when the sea lay like
a sheet of molten gold beneath them, the ceaseless murmur was always to
be heard, suggestive of the restless life of the ocean. It was natural
perhaps that Eustace should draw rein and look at the majestic pile
with something of pride in his gaze, for he was the Duke’s next of kin,
and in the course of nature would one day be master here. Yet there was
no exultation in the steady gaze he fixed upon his future home: it was
speculative and thoughtful rather than triumphant. There was a shade of
perplexity in the wide-open grey eyes intently fixed upon the place,
which looked at the moment as though lit up for illumination, and the
firm lips set themselves in lines that were almost grim.

Eustace Marchmont was clad in a suit of black, which was evidently
quite new, although slightly stained and disordered by the evidences of
a long and hasty journey. He had, in fact, ridden hard from town ever
since the news of the Duchess’s death reached him, now three days ago.
He knew that propriety demanded he should be present at her funeral,
even without the invitation from the Duke. He had come as fast as
post-horses could bring him, with his two servants in attendance, and
had travelled without mischance.

It was many years now since Eustace had visited Penarvon. His father
(dead two years since) and the Duke were cousins, and the Duke had no
brother. As young men there had been some attachment between them,
but they had grown apart with the advance of years. The Duke was by
many years the elder of the two; and perhaps on account of seniority,
perhaps from his position as head of the family, had striven with
possibly unwise persistence to mould his cousin after his own wishes.
Disagreement had ended in coolness, and the intercourse had become
slacker. Although Eustace had visited his “uncle’s” house (he had been
taught so to speak of the Duke), he did not remember ever having seen
his father there, and since his own boyhood he had not seen the place
himself.

He had not understood at the time why his visits ceased, but he knew it
well enough now. Although the Duke long cherished hopes of a son of his
own to succeed him, he had always regarded Eustace as a possible heir,
and had desired to have a voice in his education. The boy had been sent
to Eton at his suggestion; but when his school-days were ended, and his
uncle naturally supposed that the University would be the next step
in his training, Mr. Marchmont had suddenly decided to travel abroad
with the boy and see the world--the close of the long war having just
rendered travelling possible with safety. When he himself returned
to England at the end of two years, it was with the news that Eustace
had been left behind in Germany to finish his education there; and the
indignant remonstrances of the Duke had resulted in a coolness which
had never been altogether conquered. He considered that the young man
would be rendered entirely unfit by such training, for the position
every year seemed to make it more probable he would one day hold,
whilst Mr. Marchmont argued that, the youth’s heart being set upon it,
it was far better to give him his own way than try to force him into
paths uncongenial and distasteful.

Eustace was now seven-and-twenty, and in command of an ample fortune.
Both his parents were dead--his mother he did not even remember, and
he had neither brother nor sister. His second cousin, Lady Bride
Marchmont, whom he dimly remembered as a shrinking little girl, for
ever clinging to her mother’s hand, was the only relative of his own
generation that he possessed; and it had naturally occurred to him
before now that to marry the Duke’s daughter, if he could learn to
love her and teach her to love him, would be the best reparation he
could make to her for the lack of brothers of her own. It seemed to
him a hard and unjust thing that her sex should disqualify her from
succeeding to her father’s wealth and title. Eustace was no lover of
the time-honoured laws of primogeniture, entail, or the privileges of
the upper classes. The leaven of the day was working strongly in him,
and he was ready to break a lance in the cause of freedom and brotherly
equality with whatever foe came in his way.

His face bespoke something of this temperament. He had the broad lofty
brow of the thinker, the keen steady eye of the man of battle, the open
sensitive nostril of the enthusiast, and the firm tender mouth of the
philanthropist. Without being handsome he was attractive, and his face
was worthy of study. There was something of quiet scorn lying latent in
his expression, which argument easily called into active existence.
The face could darken sternly, or soften into ardent tenderness and
enthusiasm, as the case might be. He had the air of a leader of men.
His voice was deep, penetrating, and persuasive, and he had a fine
command of language when his pulses were stirred. In person he was tall
and commanding, and had that air of breeding which goes far to win
respect with men of all classes. He moved with the quiet dignity and
ease of one perfectly trained in all physical exercises, and in whom
no thought of self-consciousness lurks. He looked well on horseback,
riding with the grace of long practice. As he followed the windings of
the zigzag road which led up to the castle, looking about him with keen
eyes to observe what changes time had made in the old place, he looked
like one whom the Duke might welcome with pride as his heir, since it
had not pleased Providence to bestow upon him a son of his own.

He rode quietly up to the great sweep before the gateway and passed
beneath it, answering the respectful salute of the porter with a
friendly nod, and found himself in the quadrangle upon which the great
hall door opened. His approach had been observed, and the servants in
their sombre dress were waiting to receive him; but the drawn blinds
over all the windows, and the deep hush which pervaded the house,
struck a chill upon the spirit of the young man as he passed beneath
the portal, and a quick glance round the hall assured him that none but
servants were there.

A great hound lying beside the roaring fire of logs rose with a
suspicious bay and advanced towards him, but seeming to recognise
kinship in the stranger, permitted him to stroke his head, as Eustace,
standing beside the hearth, addressed the butler in low tones:--

“How is it with his Grace?”

The man slowly shook his head.

“Sadly, sir, but sadly. He keeps himself shut up in his own room--the
room next to that in which her Grace lies--and unless it be needful
nobody disturbs him. He looks ten years older than he did a month back:
it has made an old man of him in a few weeks.”

“And the Lady Bride?”

“She is bearing up wonderfully, but we think she has scarce realised
her loss yet. She seems taken out of herself by it all--uplifted
like--almost more than is natural in so young a lady. But she was
always half a saint, like her Grace herself. She will be just such
another as her mother.”

“And the funeral is to-morrow?”

“Yes, sir--on the first day of the new year. Her Grace died very early
upon the morning of Christmas Day--just a week from now.”

Eustace was silent for a few minutes, and then turning to the servant,
said--

“Does his Grace know I am here? Shall I see him to-day? Does he see
anybody?”

“If you will let me show you your rooms, sir, I will let him know you
have arrived. He will probably see you at dinner-time. He and Lady
Bride dine together at five--their other meals they have hitherto taken
in their own rooms, but that may be changed now. You will join them at
dinner, of course, sir.”

“If they wish it, certainly,” answered Eustace; “but I have no wish to
intrude if they would prefer to be alone. Is anybody else here?”

“There is nobody else to come, sir. Her Grace’s few relatives are in
Ireland, and there has not been time to send for them, and they were
not nearly related to her either. I am glad you are here, sir. It is a
long time since Penarvon has seen you.”

“Yes, I have been much abroad, but the place looks exactly the same. I
could believe I had been here only yesterday.”

And then Eustace followed the man up the grand marble staircase and
down a long corridor, so richly carpeted that their foot-falls made no
sound, till they reached a small suite of apartments, three in number,
which had been prepared for the use of the guest, and which were
already bright with glowing fires, and numbers of wax candles in silver
sconces arranged along the walls.

The costliness and richness of his surroundings was strange to Eustace,
for although wealth was his, his habits were very simple, and he
neither desired nor appreciated personal indulgences of whatever kind
they might be. He looked round him now with a smile not entirely free
from contempt, although he recognised in the welcome thus accorded him
a spirit of friendly regard, which was pleasant.

“Unless, indeed, it is all the work of hired servants,” he said, after
a moment’s cogitation. “Probably it is so--who else would have thought
to spare for a guest at such a time as this? This is the regular thing
at the castle for every visitor. There is nothing personal to me in all
this warmth and brightness.”

His baggage had arrived, and his servant had laid out his evening
dress: but Eustace never required personal attention, and the man had
already taken his departure. The young man donned his new suit of
decorous black with rapidity and precision. He was no dandy, but he
was no sloven either, and always looked well in his clothes. After
his rapid toilet was completed, he sat down beside the fire to muse,
and was only interrupted by the message to the effect that his Grace
desired the pleasure of his company at the dinner-table that evening.

This being the case, and the hands of the clock on the mantelpiece
pointing ten minutes only to the hour of five, Eustace at once rose and
descended to the drawing-room, the door of which was thrown open for
him by one of the footmen carrying in some logs to feed the huge fire.
One glance round the once familiar apartment showed him that it was
empty. It was the smallest of the three drawing-rooms, opening one into
the other in a long suite, and formed indeed the ante-chamber to the
larger ones beyond; but it was the one chiefly used when there were no
guests at the castle; and Eustace remembered well the pictures on the
white and gold walls, the amber draperies, and the cabinets with their
treasures of silver, china, and glass.

Nothing seemed changed about the place, and the sense of stationary
immutability and repose struck strangely upon the alert faculties of
the young man, whose life had always been full of variety--not only of
place and scene, but of thought and principle. A dreamlike feeling came
over him as he stood looking about him, and he did not know whether the
predominant sensation in his mind were of satisfaction or impatience.

The door slowly opened, and in came a slim black-robed figure. For a
moment Eustace, standing near to an interesting picture, and shadowed
by a curtain, passed unnoticed, so that he took in the details of
this living picture before he himself was seen. He knew in a moment
who it was--his cousin Bride--the little timid girl of his boyish
recollections; but if all else were unchanged at Penarvon, there was
change at least here, for had he seen her in any other surroundings he
would never have known or recognised her.

Bride’s face was very pale, and there were dark violet shadows beneath
the eyes which told of vigil and of weeping; yet the face was now not
only calm, but full of a deep spiritual tranquillity and exaltation,
which gave to it an aspect almost unearthly in its beauty. Bride had
inherited all her mother’s exceptional loveliness of feature, but she
owed more to that expression--caught from, rather than transmitted
by, that saintly mother--which struck the beholder far more than mere
delicacy of feature or purity of colouring. Eustace was no mean
student of art, and had studied at the shrine of the old masters
with an enthusiasm born of true appreciation for genius; yet never
had he beheld, even in the greatest masterpieces, such a wonderfully
spiritualised and glorified face as he now beheld in the person of his
cousin Bride. A wave of unwonted devotional fervour came suddenly upon
him. He felt that he could have bent the knee before her and kissed the
hem of her garment; but instead of that he was constrained by custom to
walk forward with outstretched hand, meeting the startled glance of her
liquid dark eyes as she found herself not alone.

“You are my cousin Eustace,” she said, in a low melodious voice that
thrilled him strangely as it fell upon his ear; “my father will be glad
you are come.”

For once Eustace’s readiness failed him. He held Bride’s hand, and knew
not how to address her. His heart was beating with quick strong throbs.
He felt as though he were addressing some being from another sphere.
What could he say to her at such a moment?

Perhaps his silence surprised her, for she raised her soft eyes again
to his, and the glance went home to his soul like a sword-thrust, so
that he quivered all over. But he found his voice at last.

“Forgive me,” he said, and his voice was soft and even tremulous. “If
I am silent, it is because I have no words in which to express what I
wish. There are moments in life when we feel that words are no true
medium of thought. I remember your mother, Bride--that is all I can
find to say. I remember her--and before the thought of your great loss
I am dumb. Silence is sometimes more eloquent that any speech can be.”

He still held her hand. She raised her eyes to his, and he saw that he
had touched her heart, for they were swimming now in bright tears, but
her sweet mouth did not quiver.

“Thank you,” she said, in tones that were little raised above a
whisper. “I am glad you have said that. I am glad you remember her. I
think she was fond of you, Eustace.”

Then the door opened and the Duke appeared.

Eustace was shocked at his aspect. He remembered him as a very upright,
dignified, majestic man, whose words were few and to the point, whose
personality inspired awe and reverence in all about him, whose wishes
were law, and whose will none ventured to dispute. He beheld before him
now a bowed, white-headed man, out of whose eyes the light and keenness
had passed, whose voice was low and enfeebled, and whose whole aspect
betokened a mind and heart broken by grief, and a physique shattered by
the blow which had desolated his home.

Nevertheless this form of grief did not appear to the young man so
pathetic as Bride’s, and he was not tongue-tied before the Duke. His
well-chosen words of sympathy and condolence were received kindly by
the old man, and before the first dinner was over Eustace felt that the
ice was broken, and that he began to have some slight knowledge of the
relatives with whom he felt he should in the future have considerable
dealings if he succeeded in winning their favour. Their loneliness,
isolation, and weakness appealed to the manly instincts of his nature,
and he resolved that any service he could perform to lighten their
burden should not be lacking.

When left alone with the Duke after Bride had vanished, little passed
between them. The host apologised for his silence, but said he could
not yet begin to talk of common things, and contented himself by
obtaining a promise from Eustace to remain some weeks at the castle as
his guest. In those days visits were always of considerable length, and
Eustace had made his preparations for a lengthened absence from London,
in case he should be required here. He accepted the invitation readily,
and the Duke, rising and saying good night, with an intimation that
he should retire at once to his room, Eustace strolled across the vast
hall to the drawing-room, half expecting to find it empty; but his
heart gave a quick bound as he saw it tenanted by the slim black-robed
figure, and met the earnest gaze of Bride’s soft eyes.

She rose as he appeared, and advanced to met him. Upon her face was an
expression which he did not understand till her next words explained it.

“Would you like to come and see her for the last time? To-morrow it
will be too late.”

Eustace bent his head in voiceless assent. He could not say nay to such
an invitation, albeit he thought that there was something morbid in the
feeling which prompted it. Habituated to foreign ways and customs, this
keeping of the dead unburied for so many days was in his eyes slightly
repulsive; but he followed the noiseless steps of his guide, and was
at last ushered into a large dim room, lighted by many wax tapers, the
light of which seemed, however, absorbed into the heavy black draperies
with which the walls were hung.

In this sombre apartment the Duchess had lain in state (if such a
phrase might be used) for many days. The whole population of St. Bride
and St. Erme had combined to plead for a last look upon her who in life
had been so greatly beloved; and both the Duke and his daughter had
been touched by the request, which was promptly gratified.

And so Eustace now found himself before a prostrate figure that bore
the likeness of a marble effigy, but was clad in soft white robes
of sheeny texture, the fine dark hair being dressed as in life, and
crowned by the film of priceless lace which the Duchess was wont to
wear. Tall lilies in pots made a background for the recumbent figure,
and the wax tapers cast their light most fully upon the tranquil
face of the dead. And when once the eye rested on that face, the
accessories were all forgotten. Eustace looked, and a great awe and
wonder fell upon him. Bride looked, and her face kindled with that
expression which he marked upon it when first he had seen her, and
which afterwards, when he heard the words, seemed to him best described
in this phrase, “Death is swallowed up of victory.”

She knelt down beside the couch on which all that was mortal of her
mother lay, and when Eustace turned his eyes away from the peaceful
face of the dead, it was to let them rest for a moment upon the
ecstatic countenance of the living.

But after one glance he softly retired, unnoticed by Bride, and shut
the door behind him noiselessly.

In the shelter of his own room the sense of mystic awe and wonder that
possessed him fell away by degrees. He paced up and down, lost in
thought, and presently a frown clouded the eyes that had been till now
full of pity and sympathy.

“She looks as though she had been living with the dead till she is more
spirit than flesh. How can they let her? It is enough to kill her or
send her mad! Well, thank heaven, the funeral is to-morrow. After that
this sort of thing must cease. Poor child, poor girl! A father who
seems to have no knowledge of her existence, her mother snatched away
in middle life. And she does not look made of the stuff that forgets
either. She will have a hard time of it in the days to come. I wonder
if she will let me help her, if I can in any wise comfort her. That
must be a heart worth winning, if one had but the key.”

Upon the forenoon of the next day the funeral of the Duchess was
celebrated with all the pomp and sombre show incident to such occasions
in the days of which we write. Bride did not accompany the sable
procession as it left the castle and wound down the hill. Women did not
appear in public on such occasions then; and she only watched from a
turret window the mournful cortège as it set forth, the servants of the
household forming in rank behind the coaches, and walking in procession
in the rear, and as the gates were reached, being followed in turn by
almost every man, woman, and child within a radius of five miles, the
whole making such a procession as had never been seen in the place
before.

Hitherto the girl had been supported by the feeling that her mother,
although dead, was still with her; that she could gaze on that dear
face at will, feel the shadowing presence of her great love, and know
something of the hallowing brooding peace which rested upon the quiet
face of the dead. Moreover, she was upheld all these days by a wild
visionary hope that perhaps even yet her mother would be restored
to her. Her intense faith in the power of God made it easy to her
to imagine that in answer to her fervent prayer the soul might be
restored to its tenement--the dead raised up to life. If the prayer
of faith could move mountains--if _all_ things were possible to him
that believeth, why might not she believe that her own faith, her own
prayer, might be answered after this manner? Had not men been given
back from the dead before now? Why not this precious life, so bound up
in her own and in the hearts of so many?

Thus the girl had argued, and thus she had spent her days and her
nights in fasting and prayer, raised up above the level of earth by her
absorbing hope and faith, till she had almost grown to believe that
the desired miracle would become a reality. And now that the dream
was ended, now that she stood watching the disappearance of that long
procession, and knew that God had not answered her prayers, had not
rewarded her faith as she felt it deserved to be rewarded, a strange
leaden heaviness fell upon her spirit. The reaction from the ecstatic
fervour of spirit set in with somewhat merciless force. She felt that
the earth was iron and the heavens brass, that there was none below
to love her, none above to hear her. A sense akin to terror suddenly
possessed her. She turned from her post of observation and fled
downwards. She felt choking, and craved the fresh salt air, which had
not kissed her cheek for more than this eternity of a week. At the foot
of the turret was a door opening into the garden. She fled down, and
found herself in the open air, and with hasty steps she passed through
the deserted gardens till she came to the great glass conservatory,
which had been erected at no small cost for the winter resort of the
Duchess since she became so much the invalid; and flinging herself
down upon the couch which still stood in its accustomed place in the
recess made for it, the girl burst into wild weeping, and beat her head
against the cushions in a frenzy akin to despair.

How long she thus remained she knew not. Darkness seemed to fall upon
her, and a great horror of she knew not what. The next sensation of
which she was really conscious was the touch of a hand on her shoulder,
and the sound of a kindly and familiar voice in her ear--

“Lady Bride, ladybird, don’tee take on so bitterly, my lamb. It is not
_her_ they have put underground. May be _she_ is near yu now whilst
you weep. May be it was she who put it into my heart to come here just
at this time. If they can grieve whom the peace of God Almighty has
wrapped round, I think ’twould grieve her to see yu breaking your heart
to-day.”

“O Abner!” cried the girl, sitting up and pushing the heavy hair out of
her eyes, “I am glad you have come! I felt as though there was no one
left in the wide world but me--that I was all alone, and all the world
was dead. But I have not been like this before. Till they took her
away I felt I had her with me. I knew that she was near--that she was
watching over me. There was always the hope that she was not dead--that
her spirit might come back once more. O Abner, Abner! why does God
always take those who can least be spared? There are so many who would
scarce be missed, and she----”

Bride could not complete her sentence, and the old gardener looked
tenderly at her. He had known her from her birth. He had guided her
tottering steps round the garden before she could fairly walk alone.
He had watched her growth and development with an almost fatherly
tenderness and pride. She was as dear to him as though she had been his
own flesh and blood; and the mother who was now taken away had never
interfered with the friendship between the child and the old servant;
nay, she had many and many a time held long talks herself with Abner,
and knew how strong a sympathy there was between his views and her own,
despite their widely different walk in life. And so in the old gardener
Bride had a friend to whom at such a moment as this she could talk more
freely than to any other living creature.

“May be the Lord wants the most beautiful flowers for His own garden,
my Ladybird,” answered the old man, using the familiar pet name which
had grown up between them in childhood. “When I used to gather flowers
for her Grace’s room, I chose the sweetest and most perfect blossoms I
could find. We mustn’t wonder if the Lord sometimes does the same--nor
grudge Him the fairest and purest flowers, even though the loss is
ours.”

Slightly soothed by the thought, Bride tried to smile.

“Only it seems as though we wanted them so much more,” said she.

“I don’t know. The dear Lord must have loved her full as much as we do.
He lent her to us for many years; may be He knew she would be better
placed in His garden now, where no pruning-knife need ever touch her,
and no suns can scorch her, and where her leaves will never wither.
Sure, my Ladybird, yu du not grudge her her place in God’s garden of
Paradise?”

“O Abner! I will try not. I know what you mean; she did have much
suffering to bear here, and I am thankful she will have no more. But
there are some things so hard to understand, even when we believe
them. I cannot bear to think of her body lying in the cold ground, and
becoming--oh! it does not bear thinking of.”

“Then, why think of it, Ladybird?--why not look beyond this poor
corruptible body, and think of the glorious resurrection body with
which we shall all arise?”

“Oh, it is so hard to understand!” cried Bride, pressing her hands
together--“it is so hard to understand!”

“I think it is not possible to understand,” said the old man quietly,
“but surely it is easy to believe, for we see it every day and every
year.”

“How do we see it?” asked Bride, almost listlessly.

Abner put his hand in his pocket and drew forth a little packet of
seed, some of which he poured into his palm.

“Lady Bride,” he said in his grave meditative way, “it does not seem
wonderful to yu that each of these tiny seeds will, after it has rotted
in the ground, germinate and bear leaves and flowers and fruit. But if
yu did not know it from constant seeing it year by year, if it was a
strange thing that yu have been told, and yu would not believe it, and
yu said to me, ‘No, Abner, that cannot be. It is not sense. It cannot
be understood. I must prove it first before I believe it.’ And suppose
yu took that seed and put it under that glass which clever men use for
discoveries, and suppose beneath that powerful glass yu pulled it bit
by bit to pieces to see if it contained the germ of the mystery, du yu
think yu would find it there? Du yu think your seed would grow after
being treated so?”

“No, of course not,” answered Bride.

“Well, isn’t it just so with the mysteries of God? He gives them to
us, and says, ‘Here is your body. It is corruptible and mortal; but
it has within it the germ of immortality, and though it will die and
perish in the ground, yet it will rise again glorified when the day of
resurrection comes.’ But men in these days take that mystery and say,
‘We will not take God’s word for it; we will put it beneath the glass
of our great intellects, and examine and see if it be true, and if we
may not prove it by examination, then we will not believe it!’ And so
they set to work, and when they have done, they tell men not to believe
God any longer, because they have proved Him a liar by the gauge of
their own intellects. Du yu think these men would believe that this
seed would sprout into a flower if they did not see it do so with their
own eyes? No; they would laugh yu to scorn for telling them so. And so
they laugh us to scorn who tell them that there will be a resurrection
of the dead. But, Ladybird, never let your heart fail you. Never let
doubt steal over your mind. What God has promised we know He will
surely accomplish--and His words cannot fail.”

She rose with a faint smile and held out her hand, which the old
gardener took reverently and tenderly between both of his own.

“I will try to think of that if ever I doubt again,” she said softly.
“I do know--I do believe--but sometimes it is very hard to keep fast
hold on the faith.”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER IV

_THE DUKE’S HEIR_


“Your name is Tresithny, is it not?--and you are the gardener here, by
what I understand, and have lived at Penarvon all your life. Is that
so?”

“Yes, sir. My father was gardener to the old Duke, and he brought me
up to take his place; and I’ve been working on the place here, man and
boy, these fifty years. I was only a lad of eight when first I used to
help my father with some of the lighter tasks, and now I have all the
men on the place working under my orders. It is a long while since you
paid us a visit, sir; but I remember you well as a little fellow when
you came to Penarvon.”

“I’m afraid I don’t remember you. Boys are selfish little brats, and go
about thinking of nothing but their own amusement. But, Tresithny, I
have come to you now for information. They tell me you are a thoughtful
man, and have educated yourself soundly in your leisure hours. One can
almost see as much by looking at you and hearing you speak. I feel as
though you are the man I want to get hold of. I have been here nearly
a month now, and I have not been idle meantime: I have come here with
an object, and I have been collecting information as far as I have been
able to do so alone; but I believe you will be able to help me better
than I can help myself.”

The gardener raised his head, and looked at the young gentleman before
him with thoughtful mien. Although this was the first time he had been
addressed by Eustace, he had seen him often pacing the garden paths in
meditative abstraction, and had heard of him from others as walking or
riding over the country roads, and asking strange questions of those he
encountered in his rambles. He had been down amongst the fisher-folk
of the bay. He had been up amongst the downlands, talking with the
shepherd-folk who dwelt in the scattered stone huts that were met with
from time to time there. He had been seen at various farmsteads, making
friends with their inhabitants, and people were beginning to ask in a
puzzled way what he meant by it all, and to wonder at the nature of his
questions, albeit the stolid rustic mind was not wont to disturb itself
much by inquiry or speculation. When asked a question of the bearing
of which he was doubtful, the peasant would generally scratch his head
and look vacantly out before him; and again and again, when pressed by
Eustace for an answer, would drawl out something like the following
reply--

“Zure, thee’d better ask Maister Tresithny. He mid knaw. He du knaw a
sight o’ things more’n we. ’E be a’most as gude as Passon tu talk tu.
Thee’d best ask he.”

And after some time Eustace had followed this counsel, and was now face
to face with his uncle’s servant, although in the first instance he had
told himself that he would speak of these things to nobody at Penarvon
itself.

“I’ll be pleased and proud to help any one of your name and race, sir,”
answered Abner quietly, “so far as I may rightly do so. What can I do
for you, sir? You have been main busy since you came here, by all I see
and hear.”

“You have heard of me, then?” questioned Eustace, with a smile. “People
have talked of my comings and goings, have they?”

“Folks here mostly take notice of what goes on up to the castle,”
answered Abner, “and they say that the young master is wonderful little
there, but out all day on his own business, which is what they cannot
make out.”

Eustace laughed pleasantly, and then his face grew grave again.

“I should be more at the castle if I could be of service to his Grace
or Lady Bride; but there is a sorrow upon which a stranger may not
intrude, and at present I can call myself little else. In time I trust
I may win my way there; but during these first days I believe the
truest kindness is to keep away from them for the greater part of my
time. And I have my own object to pursue, which is one that may not be
ignored; for it is a duty, and I am resolved to do it to the utmost of
my power.”

Abner nodded his head in grave approval.

“That is the way our duties should be tackled, sir. It is no good
giving half our energies to them. We have our orders plain and
simple--‘What thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might.’”

“Yes--just so,” answered Eustace, with a quick glance at the man, whose
hands were still at work amongst his pots, even whilst he talked. He
was in the potting-shed, pricking out a quantity of young seedlings;
and although he gave intelligent heed to the words of the young
gentleman before him, he continued his employment with scrupulous care
and exactness. “By-the-bye, Tresithny,” Eustace suddenly interpolated,
“aren’t you something of a preacher, by what they say? Don’t you hold
meetings in St. Bride’s amongst the fisher-folk? I have heard something
of it down amongst the people there.”

“Well, sir,” answered Abner, “it isn’t so to say a service; but we’ve
got men-folk down there as will not enter the doors of a church, do
what you will; and though they be good enough friends with the Rev.
Tremodart when he comes down on the bit of a quay to chat with them,
they won’t go to church, and he’s too wise, may be, to try and force
them. But they’ll sometimes come of a Sunday evening to Dan Denver’s
cottage, and listen whilst I read them a chapter and talk it over
afterwards. Some days they don’t seem to have much to say, and leaves
it most to me, and then it du seem to them almost like a bit of a
sermon. But that’s not what I mean it to be. I want to get them to
think and talk as well.”

The young man’s eyes suddenly flashed, and he took up the word with
suppressed eagerness.

“Ah! Tresithny, that’s just it! That’s the very pith of the whole
matter. You and I ought to be friends. We both want to rouse the people
to think. If we could do that--how much could be achieved!”

“Ay, indeed it could, sir. There be times when it seems as though it
would be as easy to get the brute beast of the field to think, as it is
to rouse them up to do it. And yet they have all immortal souls, though
they care no more what becomes of them than the beasts that perish.
Think of it!--think of it!”

Eustace gave Abner a quick keen look of mingled sympathy and criticism.
He saw that their minds were working on absolutely different lines, but
was by no means sure that these lines might not be made to coincide
by a little gentle diplomacy. He recognised at once in this upright
and stalwart old gardener a man of considerable power and influence,
who might be a valuable ally if won over to the cause. But he knew,
too, that the limitations imposed upon his intellect by the manner of
his life, and his opportunities of self-culture, might form a serious
barrier between them, so he resolved to feel his way cautiously before
advocating openly any of those opinions of which he was apparently the
pioneer in these parts.

“Ah!” he said, with a long-drawn breath, “that hopeless apathy towards
everything ennobling and elevating comes from centuries of oppression
and injustice. Whilst men are forced to live like beasts, they will
grovel in the mire like beasts, and not even know that they are treated
like beasts. But let them be raised out of their helpless misery and
grinding poverty, and their minds will grow healthy with their bodies.
The state into which the people of this land have fallen is a disgrace
to humanity; and all men of principle must stand shoulder to shoulder
together to strive to raise and elevate them. It is a duty which in
these days is crying aloud to Heaven, and to which thinking men in all
countries are responding with more or less of zeal and energy. Things
cannot go on as they have been doing. France has taught us a grim
lesson of what will happen at last if we continue to tread down and
oppress our humble brethren, as we have been doing all these long years
and centuries!”

Eustace threw back his head, and the fire flashed from his eyes. His
nature was always stirred to its depths by the thought of the wrongs of
humanity. He had not found round and about Penarvon quite that amount
of physical misery that he had heard described in other places; yet he
had seen enough of the bovine apathy and stolid indifference of the
rustics to rouse within him feelings of indignation and keen anger. He
argued fiercely within himself that men were made into patient beasts
of burden just to suit the selfish desires of the classes above them,
who dreaded the day of reckoning which would follow any awakening on
their part to a sense of their wrongs. The artisans of the Midlands and
the North had partially awakened, and from all sides was the cry going
up--the cry for justice, for a hearing, for some one to expound their
grievances and make a way out of them. Their helpless rage had hitherto
been expended in the breaking of machinery, which they took to be their
worst enemy, and in riots which had brought condign punishment upon
them. Now they were being taken in hand by men of wealth and power,
and were raising the cry of reform--crying aloud for representation
in Parliament--agitating for a thing the nature of which they hardly
understood, but which they were told would bring help and well-being
in its wake. And men like Eustace Marchmont, with generous ardour all
aflame in the cause which they held to be sacred and righteous, longed
to see the spread of this feeling through the length and breadth of the
land. The agricultural labourers were far more difficult to arouse than
the artisan classes had been; but if the whole nation with one accord
raised its voice aloud in a cry for justice, would not that cry prevail
in spite of the whole weight and pressure brought to bear against it,
and carry all before it in a triumphant series of long-needed reforms?

So Eustace argued in his hot and generous enthusiasm, and gently and
cautiously did he strive to explain his views to Abner and win his
sympathy for them. Here was a man who loved his fellows with a great
and tender love--in that at least the two men were in accord--but
whilst Abner thought almost exclusively of their immortal souls,
Eustace’s mind was entirely bent upon the improvement of their physical
condition. He was by no means certain in his heart of hearts whether
they possessed souls at all. As to everything connected with the
spiritual world his mind was altogether a blank. There might or might
not be a life to come; he could not profess any opinion of his own on
such a point as that, but at least of this present life he was sure,
and his religion, in as far as he could be said to have one, was
directed with perfect singleness of purpose towards the attainment
of what he held to be the loftiest aim and object a man could have,
namely, raising his fellow-men to a sense of their own responsibilities
and rights, to ameliorate their condition, teach them self-restraint,
self-culture, rational and intelligent happiness, to give them sunshine
in their lives here, and a high code of moral ethics to live up to when
they were able to receive it.

Something of all this did he strive to make plain to Abner as he sat
beside him at his work. That he succeeded in winning the interest of
his hearer was abundantly evident from the expression of the thoughtful
intelligent face, and that the gardener understood a good deal of the
questions of the day appeared from the nature of the questions and
comments he made from time to time.

When Eustace had said his say there was silence for a while, and he
waited with some eagerness to hear the effect produced upon the old
man. He felt that Abner was a power in the place, and that a good
deal of his own success might depend on how far he could get him to
be a partisan in the good cause. Abner was slow to speak when his
mind was not made up, and he was not one to reach a conclusion in a
hurry. It was some time before he spoke, and then he said slowly and
meditatively, “There’s a deal of good in what you say, sir, and a deal
more good in what you mean; but yet for all that I can’t quite see as
you do. There’s something in it all that’s like putting the cart before
the horse, to use a homely phrase, and that’s not a thing as is found
to answer when folks come to try it on.”

“I don’t think I quite take your meaning, Tresithny.”

“No, sir? Well, I’ll try to make it plainer like--that is, if you care
to hear what an old man like me thinks, who has picked up his knowledge
a bit here and a bit there, and less from books than from men.”

“I do care,” answered Eustace, “and yours are the best methods of
gaining instruction. You are a man of the people and a thinking man. I
do value your opinion, and should like to have it.”

“Well, sir, you shall. I am, as you truly say, a man of the people, and
I think I may lay claim to understand my people as well as gentlefolks
can do; and I’m very sure of one thing, that I’d be very sorry to live
in a country where they were the rulers; for they haven’t either the
patience, or the knowledge, or the faculty of government; and things
will go badly for England if the day comes when the voice of the people
shall prevail as the voice of God.”

“Ah! but the people have to be elevated and educated to be fit to
rule,” said Eustace. “They are not fit now, I admit, but we are to seek
to raise them, body, soul, and spirit, and then a vastly different
state of affairs will be brought about.”

But Abner’s face was very grave, and anything but acquiescent.

“Sir,” he said, “I can’t see that as you do. I’ve read a bit of history
here and there, and I’ve seen too in my own lifetime something of what
comes when the voice of the people prevails.”

“It is not fair to charge upon the people the horrors of the French
Revolution,” interposed Eustace quickly. “The tyrants who provoked it
were the people really to blame. They had made brutes and devils of the
people, and they only reaped what they had sown.”

“Very well, sir, I know in part at least you are right. We will say no
more about history that may be open to such arguments as yours. But we
always have our Bibles to go to when in doubt and perplexity, and we
have it there in black and white that the powers that be are ordained
of God, that riders and men of estate are to be reverenced, obeyed, and
feared, that we are to submit ourselves to them as the ordinance of
God.”

“Yes, yes, Tresithny, in moderation; and if they do their duty on their
side, that would be all right enough,” answered Eustace, who began to
feel that Abner was taking an unconsciously unfair advantage of him in
adducing arguments drawn from Holy Writ, which had no value for him
whatsoever. “But when kings and men of estate abuse their powers and
become tyrannical and oppressive, then the compact on both sides is
broken, and the people must stand up for themselves and their rights,
or they will only fall into absolute slavery.”

“Well, sir, I can’t quite see that,” answered Abner thoughtfully. “When
St. Paul wrote by the power of the Holy Ghost about the reverence due
to the great men and rulers of the earth, he was speaking in the main
of heathen tyrants, of whom he stood in peril of his own life; but he
still recognised them as the ordinance of God, as our Lord Himself did
when He stood at the judgment-seat of Pilate. It isn’t that I deny the
wrongdoing of kings and nobles, but that I don’t think you’ve got hold
of the right way of making things better. I said it was like putting
the cart before the horse, and that’s just how it appears to me.”

“But you have not explained how.”

“Well, sir, that’s soon done. My way of thinking is this. God meant
first of all, in the early dispensations, to rule the world directly
Himself, through His prophets and faithful servants; but the hardness
and perverseness of man stood in His way, and so He gave them rulers
and governors of their own to be their natural heads; and before the
Christian dispensation had come, this was the ordered method, and He
Himself gave it His sanction and blessing in many ways when He lived
on earth: ‘Render unto Cæsar the things that are Cæsar’s,’ and so
forth. Now, knowing that God has ordained kings and rulers, it seems
plain to me that we should continue to give them reverence and honour;
and if the world is going wrong through those evils which you speak
of as abuses, that instead of the wise, and earnest, and good men
(such as yourself, sir) coming to the people and trying to stir up in
their hearts hatred and ill-will towards those above them--which your
doctrine will and does do, sir, whether you mean it or not--you should
go to the kings and the nobles. Why not strive to stir _them_ up to
do their duty by the people, to be just and merciful and liberal, to
cease from oppression where it exists, and give them such things as are
good for them to have by free and willing pleasure, instead of teaching
the people to wring them from them little by little grudgingly and
unwillingly? If men like you, sir, and those you have told me of, born
to wealth and all that is great in the world, can feel for the wrongs
and distresses of the poor of the land, surely others can be brought
to do the same, the more so when they learn that mercy and liberality
and justice are enjoined by God Himself. Then the people would learn
to love and trust those above them, and would rejoice in their rulers
as the Lord means them to; but teach them discontent and hatred and
rebellion, and indeed, sir, I know not where it will end.”

Eustace smiled with something of covert triumph.

“No; we do not know where it will end, save that it will end in the
emancipation of the people from tyranny and oppression, which is what
we aim for. That is the fear which holds men back from the good cause;
but we are careless of that. Do what is right and leave the rest: that
is our maxim. You who are such a theologian should know, Tresithny,
that all things work together for good.”

“To those who love the Lord, sir,” answered Abner quietly, and then
there was silence for a moment between the men.

“Your plan is not bad in theory, Tresithny,” broke out Eustace, after
a pause, “but practically it is unworkable in these days. It would not
accomplish our ends. We should not be listened to. We are not listened
to. We are scouted and held in abhorrence of rulers.”

“You might not be listened to all at once,” said Abner, as the young
man paused; “but neither will the people listen all at once. You say
yourself it will take a generation, perhaps two or three, to accomplish
what should be done. Suppose those generations were given to the other
attempt--the striving to work upon the hearts of those in high places
to study the needs of the land, and do justly by its humbler sons,
might not there be hopes of a better result? I am but an unlettered
man; I am scarce fit to dispute with you; but I think I know the nature
of the classes you wish to see holding power, and I should not desire
to be ruled by them.”

“Well, well, we must agree to differ in some things, I see,” said
Eustace, rising with a smile, and holding out his hand in token
of good-fellowship; “all this sounds strange and sudden to you.
Men’s minds have to grow into new ideas. But at least you love your
people--in that we are agreed; and you would fain see them raised, and
their condition improved, if it could be achieved. In that at least we
agree. So we will part friends, and not oppose each other, even though
we each see the shield on a different side.”

Abner’s smile was pleasant to see, and Eustace sauntered away, a little
disappointed perhaps--for Abner’s look of intellect had made him hope
to win a disciple here--but pleased and interested in the man, and by
no means despairing of winning him at last.

A few days later the Duke spoke to him upon a subject of keen interest
to him. Both the Duke and his daughter had kept themselves very much
secluded since the funeral, as was rather the custom of the day,
although in their case it was real broken-hearted sorrow which held
them aloof from all the world at this juncture. But February came with
sunshine and soft south winds, and the old nobleman began to resume his
ordinary habits, and was pleased in his silent way to have a companion
in Eustace. The young kinsman was sincerely attached to the head of his
house, and his quick sympathies were aroused to real tenderness for him
in his great sorrow. He had hitherto avoided any sort of speech that
could possibly raise any irritation in the Duke’s mind. Their talk had
been of a subdued and quiet kind, so that nothing had arisen to disturb
the harmony that existed between them.

Yet Eustace knew that he and his kinsman differed widely in thought
and opinion, and that some day this divergence must appear in their
talk. He meant to be very moderate and reasonable in all he might be
forced to say, but to hide his views either from cowardice or motives
of policy was a thing abhorrent to his nature, and could not be
contemplated for a moment.

The first note of warning was struck one day when the pair were riding
together across a stretch of bleak down. The Duke suddenly looked at
his companion and asked--

“Do you ever think of standing for Parliament, Eustace?”

The young man flushed quickly.

“I have had some thoughts of it,” he answered with subdued eagerness,
“but I do not know of any constituency that would accept me. I am
almost a stranger to my country.”

“Ah! yes--that German education of yours was a great mistake--a great
mistake,” said the Duke, with drawn brow; but after a few moments his
face cleared and he drew rein, his companion following his example.
“But after all, you might manage it--it might be done. Do you see
yonder heap of stones away there to the left? Well, that marks the
site of an old manor belonging to us. That heap of stones returns a
member to Parliament. _I_ return the member, in point of fact, as you
doubtless know. The old member now sitting is growing infirm and deaf:
he feels the journeys backwards and forwards too much for him. I think
it will not be long before he resigns. When he does so, the borough
will fall vacant, and I can give it as I please. Then would come your
chance, boy.”

Eustace had flushed quickly; now he grew pale. The whole iniquity of
this system of rotten boroughs was one of the flagrant abuses of the
day, which he stood pledged to sweep away. Whilst growing and opulent
cities like Manchester, Birmingham, and Sheffield had no representation
of any kind, a heap of stones, a lonely field, a tiny group of hovels
frequently returned a member to Parliament. Practically the House of
Lords returned half the House of Commons, and the middle and lower
classes were scarcely represented in any way.

Eager as Eustace was for a voice in the legislation of the future, he
hesitated to think of gaining it in such a fashion.

“You are very good, uncle, he said”--he found it pleased the Duke to be
so addressed. “But I am afraid I should hardly be a candidate to your
mind. Times advance, and men’s views change, and I suspect that mine
and yours are scarcely in accord.”

He had expected a sharp and almost scornful answer, and certainly
a close and sifting examination; but nothing of the kind came, and
looking into his kinsman’s face, Eustace was surprised to see a
strangely far-away and softened expression stealing over it.

“Times change!--ay, verily, they do--and men with them,” he said, in a
very gentle tone, “and we must learn to be patient with new ways and
not condemn them unheard. Boy, I am not fond of change. I have lived my
life from day to day and year to year in quiet and peace, and I have
not seen that good follows on the steps of those things that men call
reform. But I am an old man now, and shall not be here much longer.
What I think matters little, so that the right be done. Do not be
afraid to speak to me freely. I will, at least, hear you patiently. I
have learned that God’s purposes may be fulfilling themselves when we
can least see it. I may not agree, nor yet approve, but at least I can
strive after patience.”

Greatly surprised at a development altogether unexpected in the
irascible old Duke, as he remembered him in the past, with his
intolerance of anything but the strongest Tory statesmanship and the
most conservative fashion of regarding everything, Eustace spoke with
an answering moderation and sympathy, ignoring nothing that was wise
and good in the old régime, but pointing out that the day for advance
had come, and that the good of the country was at stake. He spoke well,
for he had education and enthusiasm, and had thought for himself as
well as having learned from others.

The Duke rode on very silently, only putting in a word here and there,
but listening with close attention; and as they entered the courtyard,
at last, still in earnest talk, he said--

“I do not agree with you, Eustace. I cannot see things as you do; but
I will not go so far as to say you are altogether wrong. There may be
two sides to the question, and we will talk more of it another time.
I am sorry you take such pronounced views upon a side I hold to be in
error, but you do so with pure motives and honest conviction. Youth is
always ardent, and you are young. Perhaps in days to come you will
see that we are not altogether to blame for a state of things such as
exists in the country to-day. I have lived longer than you have done in
the world, boy; and I do not think you are going to rid the world of
sin, misery, oppression, and degradation by your methods. If you have
strength to carry them, you will work a silent and I trust a bloodless
revolution; but you have an enemy to fight stronger than you think for.
You may reduce the power of the Crown to a mere cipher. You may abolish
privilege, prerogative, and a hundred other bugbears against which your
ardent spirits are chafing. But when you have hurled them down from
their places, do you think you will have contented the seething masses
you are stirring up to ask for their ‘rights?’ Do you think crime,
misery, vice, and degradation will be lessened? _I_ think they will
steadily increase, and that you will find yourselves, you reformers,
fifty years hence, face to face with problems in comparison with which
these before you now are but molehills to mountains. But go your way,
go your way. Only experience can teach you your lesson; and that is the
dearest master you can have--and generally teaches his lessons just a
generation too late!”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER V

_MAN OF THE WORLD AND MYSTIC_


“There be no zarvice in the church to-day, my lady--not to St.
Bride’s,” said a garden lad to Bride one bright Sunday morning in
February as she was returning from a walk along the cliff in time for
the eight-o’clock breakfast. Eustace had met her strolling homewards
and had joined her. This had happened once or twice lately, and the
strangeness of the feeling of having a companion was beginning to wear
off.

“No service?” questioned the girl, pausing in her walk. “Is Mr.
Tremodart ill? I had not heard of it.”

The lad scratched his head as he replied in the slow drawl of his
native place--

“’Tisn’t ezactly that, my lady. Passon isn’t zick; but he du have
one of his hens a settin’ in the pulpit, and zo he du not wish her
distarbed.”

Eustace broke into a peal of laughter. It seemed a delicious notion to
him that the service of the parish church was to be suspended because
an erratic hen had chosen to sit herself in the sacred building. It
chimed in with many notions he already held of the effeteness and
deadness of the Church. He glanced into his companion’s face for an
answering smile, but Bride was looking straight before her with an
expression in her liquid dark eyes which he was quite unable to fathom.

“You can go to hear Mr. St. Aubyn at St. Erme, George,” she said kindly
to the lad, after a moment’s pause, but he only scratched his head
again, and said--

“Mappen I’ll go tu Dan’s and year Maister Tresithny. They du zay as
he’ll read a bit out o’ the book and tell folks what it all means.”

“That will be better than getting into mischief,” said the lady, with a
grave though kindly look at the lad; and then she passed onwards to the
house, Eustace walking beside her, smiling still.

“Are the services of the Church often suspended here for such weighty
reasons?” he asked.

“Not often,” answered Bride, still in the same gravely quiet way; “but
Mr. Tremodart is hardly alive to the sacredness of his calling nor the
sanctity of his office. He is a kind man, but he does not win souls by
his teaching. The church is very badly attended: no doubt he thinks
one service more or less of small importance. The people, I believe,
like him all the better for giving them an occasional holiday from
attendance, even though they may be very irregular in coming.”

“I should think that highly probable,” answered Eustace, still
examining Bride’s face with some curiosity, as if anxious to gauge her
thoughts on this subject and to seek to find in them some accord with
his own. “My experiences of the services at St. Bride’s Church are not
very stirring. The smell of dry-rot suggests the idea that it has been
caught from the calibre of the discourses heard there. Our friend Mr.
Tremodart may have many virtues, but he has not the gift of eloquence.”

Bride made no response. In her eyes there was a look akin to pain, as
though she felt the truth of the stricture, and yet it went against her
to admit its truth.

Eustace waited for a moment and then continued in the same light way--

“And will the service of the parish church be suspended for three
Sundays?--for, if my boyish recollections serve me, that is the time
required by a hen for bringing off her brood.”

“Oh, no,” answered Bride, with a quick earnestness and energy, “that
will certainly not be. Poor Mr. Tremodart, he knows no better perhaps;
but it is very, very sad. I suppose it was only found out last night
or this morning. There was no sermon last Sunday, so I suppose the
eggs collecting in the pulpit were not noticed. Of course they should
have been taken away at once. But Mr. Tremodart is very fond of his
animals, and he does not think of sacred things quite as--as--others
do. Of course it will be done before next Sunday. Oh, I am sorry it has
happened. I am sorry for the poor people.”

Eustace could not understand her mood. He saw only the humorous side
of the incident, but he would not say so to her. He was very anxious
to approach nearer in thought and feeling to his beautiful cousin, who
was as yet almost as much of a stranger to him as she had been upon
the day of his arrival. Although he saw her daily, sat at table with
her, and sometimes spent an hour over the piano with her in the evening
(for both were good musicians, as things went in those days), he still
felt as though she were a thing apart from him, wrapped in a world
of her own of which he knew nothing. The barrier which divided them
was at once impenetrable and invisible, yet he had never succeeded in
discovering wherein its power lay, and what might be done to break it
down and bring them together.

“You will go to St. Erme’s Church to-day, I suppose?” he said next,
without trying to solve the problem suggested by her speech. “I have
never attended St. Erme for a service, although I have met Mr. St.
Aubyn. Will you let me be your escort there? I suppose your father
will hardly walk as far.”

“No, I think not. He seldom goes out when there is no service at St.
Bride. He does not care for Mr. St. Aubyn’s preaching as I do: he
prefers that of Mr. Tremodart.”

Eustace secretly thought it must be a queer sort of preaching that
could be inferior to that of the parson of St. Bride’s; but he made no
remark, and merely asked--

“Then you will let me be your escort?”

“Thank you,” answered Bride quietly; “if you wish to go, I think you
will be rewarded.”

Eustace felt that his reward would be in the pleasure of the walk to
and fro with his cousin; but he did not say so, even though rather
exaggerated and high-flown compliments were then the fashion of the
day more than they have since become. Something in Bride’s aspect and
manner always withheld him from uttering words of that kind, and his
own honesty and common-sense kept him at all times within bounds, so
that he had never acquired the foolish foppery that was fashionable
amongst the gilded youth of the aristocracy. In one thing at least he
and Bride were agreed--that life was given for something more than mere
idle amusement and pleasure-seeking. And when they started off together
for their two miles’ walk across cliff and down for the little church
of St. Erme, Eustace began to ask questions of her as to the condition
of the people, their ignorance, their poverty, their state of apathy
and neglect, which all at once aroused her interest and sympathy, and
caused her to open out towards him as she had never done before.

Bride loved the people--that was the first fact he gathered from the
answers she made him. She loved them--and he loved them too. He was
conscious that they loved them with a difference--that when they
spoke of raising them and making them better and happier, she was
thinking of one thing and he of another. He was conscious of this, but
he did not think she was; and he was very careful to say no word to
check the impulse of confidence which had arisen between them. Bride
was grieved for the state of things about her: she mourned over the
degradation, the apathy, the almost bestial indifference to higher
things that reigned amongst the humble folks about her home. She spoke
with a glimmer as of tears in her eyes of their absolute indifference
to all that was high and noble and true; of the deep superstitions,
which stultified their spiritual aspirations, and the blind error and
folly of those who, turning away from God, sought wisdom and help from
those calling themselves witches--many of whom did possess, or appear
to possess, occult powers that it was impossible altogether to explain
away or disbelieve.

“Yes, Bride, it is very sad to hear of,” said Eustace gravely, “and it
all points to the same thing. We must teach the people. We must raise
them. We must feed them with wholesome food, and then they will turn
away in disgust from these effete superstitions, which are only the
outcome of ignorance and degraded minds.”

“I fear me there is something worse in them than that, Eustace,” said
Bride, looking out before her with that luminous gaze he often noticed
in her, which suggested a mind moving in a sphere above that of the
common earth. “It is the work of something more than blind ignorance.
It is the work of the devil himself. The powers many of these witches
exert is something beyond what any mere trickery can account for. There
is an agency beyond anything of that sort--it is the devil who endows
these miserable beings with powers above those of their fellows. God
have mercy on the souls of such! For in an evil hour, and for the hope
of worldly gain, they have placed their neck beneath an awful yoke, and
God alone knows whether for such there can be pardon and restoration!”

Eustace listened in silent amazement. He knew that gross superstition
reigned amongst the degraded and ignorant; but he had always believed
that it was confined to them, and that those who had enjoyed the
advantages of education were far above anything so credulous as a
belief in a personal devil working through the medium of men. It
was an age when materialism and rationalism in one form or another
stalked triumphantly over the earth. Spirituality was at a low ebb;
the Catholic revival was in its infancy. The wave of earnestness and
spiritual light which had been awakened by Wesley had dwindled and
spent itself, leaving many traces behind of piety and zeal, but without
accomplishing that work of awakening its founders had hoped to do. The
Court set a bad example; the people followed it more or less. It was
an age of laxity both in morals and in thought; but the prevailing
tone of ordinary men was one of condescending scepticism--tolerating
religion, but believing that a new era was coming upon the world in
which Christianity should be superseded by “natural religion”--a thing
far purer and higher in the estimation of its devotees.

That the world was evil, and in the greatest need of reform, Eustace
would be the last man to deny; but to refer the gross superstitions
of a benighted peasantry to the direct agency of a personal devil
savoured to his mind of utter childishness, although possibly it was
not more logically untenable than a belief in a personal Saviour, from
whom proceeded all holy impulses, all elevating and pardoning love,
all earnest searchings after the higher life. But if he was equally
sceptical on both of these points, he would fain have gauged the soul
of his companion, being keenly interested, not only in herself, but in
every aspect of thought as it presented itself to minds of different
calibre.

“You mean that you still believe in a certain devil-possession?” he
asked tentatively; and Bride turned upon him one long inscrutable
glance as she answered, after a long pause--

“Has the world ever been without devil-possession of one kind or
another, varying infinitely in its forms, to blind and deceive those
who dwell on the earth? What is sin at all but the work in men’s hearts
of the devil and his angels, ever prompting, deceiving, suggesting? But
where ignorance is grossest, and the light of God shines least, there
he finds the readiest victims to listen to his seducing whispers.” She
paused a moment, looked first at Eustace, with the earnestness that
always perplexed and stimulated his curiosity, and then added, in a
much lower tone, “And are we not to look for more and more indications
of his powers, more manifestations of them in forms of every kind, in
the days that are coming?”

“Why?” asked Eustace, in a tone as low as hers.

She clasped her hands lightly together as she made reply--

“Ah! because the days of the end are approaching--because the great
day of Armageddon is coming upon us, and the armies of heaven and hell
are mustering in battle-array for that awful final struggle which
shall mark the end of this dispensation, in which the Antichrist
shall be revealed--the man of sin, in whom the great apostasy shall
be consummated, and whom the Lord shall finally destroy when He rides
triumphant to do the final will of God, with the armies of heaven
following Him on white horses. And will the devil be idle when he knows
that his time is but short? Will he fail to send the strong delusion to
blind men’s eyes, and make them ready to hail the Man of Sin when he
shall arise? Men have thought that they saw him in the great conqueror
whose power was broken but a few short years ago; but there is another
and a greater to arise than he, and the devil is working now in the
hearts of men to prepare them for his coming.”

Eustace regarded her with keen interest and curiosity as she spoke.
Her face had kindled in a wonderful way. In the liquid depths of her
eyes there were strange lights shining. That she saw before her as in
a picture all that she spoke of he could not doubt, nor yet that she
hoped herself to be numbered in the armies of the Lord of Hosts when He
went forth conquering and to conquer. He had never before met mysticism
carried to such a point, and it stirred his pulses with quick thrills
of wonderment and curiosity.

“But, Bride, I would understand more of this,” he said very gently, so
as not to rouse her from her trance of feeling. “How do you know that
the days of the end are approaching so near? Why should not the world
be, as many believe her to be, still in her infancy?”

“Because the voice of God has been awakened in the Church,” answered
Bride, in a low tense tone. “Because God has at last answered the
prayers of those who, ever since those awful days of the uprising in
France, have been sending up supplications to His throne to send us
light and help from above. He has answered. He has shown us through
holy men, who have been, with fasting and prayer, making study of the
prophetic books of Scripture, so long sealed to man, what all this
stirring and uprising of the nations portends; and He has told us that
this is the beginning of those judgments of God, which in the last
days He will pour out upon the earth, when the apostasy of the world
and of the Church shall be avenged, and the Lord will purify the earth
before He comes to reign there. We know, because the voice of the
Lord has spoken it. But the world will not hear His voice. The world
will not listen; and the devil, for fear lest it should, sends false
voices--messages from the dead--teaches men to inquire of spirits that
peep and mutter, instead of inquiring to the living God; and so we see
an awakening of the spirits of evil as well as of those of good; and so
it will go on, each party growing stronger and stronger; though that
of the evil one will have the seeming mastery, till the final struggle
shall be consummated, and the enemies of God overthrown for ever.”

Eustace was saved the perplexity of trying to find an answer by the
sudden approach of Mr. St. Aubyn (whose old-fashioned rectory house
they were now passing) just as he turned out of his gate in the
direction of the church. He greeted Bride and her companion cordially,
made them promise to come to his house at the conclusion of the service
and refresh themselves before their walk home, and then had them
ushered into the rectory pew, which was always empty at this time of
year, for his wife was a great invalid, and could only get out of doors
in the most genial season of the year.

The little church of St. Erme was very antiquated, and interesting
to archæologists; but under Mr. St. Aubyn’s care it had lost the air
of neglect and desolation which was so common in rural churches. The
congregation was good for the size of the place, and the service was
reverently and intelligently conducted. The sermon was very simple,
in accordance with the needs of the flock; but there was a vein of
spirituality and piety running through it that struck Eustace as being
unusual and original, and kept alive his interest in the views of
“pietists,” as he classified them in his mind. He had been taught to
regard every form of belief or unbelief as a portion of a classified
system of speculation or philosophy; and he was glad to think he might
have an opportunity of some conversation with Mr. St. Aubyn after the
service, as he had struck him on other occasions when they had met as
being a man of intellect and wide reading.

The Rector himself escorted the guests to his house, and Bride
went upstairs to see the invalid, who reminded her a little of her
own mother, and whose presence always acted on her soothingly and
gratefully.

She felt refreshed by the hour spent in that quiet room, refreshed in
body and mind. She had had food given her to eat; and communion of
thought with one who sympathised with her, even where their opinions
might not be altogether in accord, was more to her in those days than
any bodily sustenance could be. Since her mother’s death Bride had been
shut up entirely within herself, and it is not good for such an ardent
soul as hers to be deprived of the natural outlet of speech with her
fellow-man.

When the girl went downstairs again, she found the two men deep in
talk, and sat quietly down in a shadowy corner to wait till they had
finished. Mr. St. Aubyn observed her entrance, though Eustace, whose
back was towards her, did not. The two were keenly interested in their
discourse, and continued it with animation. Bride soon began to pick
up the drift of it, and listened with wonder and amaze, a sense of
indignation and sadness inextricably mixed together falling upon her as
she realised what it all meant.

The two scholars were discussing the various phases of German
rationalism which had arisen close on the heels of French and
English deism; and from the tone taken by Eustace it was abundantly
evident that he was deeply bitten by the philosophy of Wolff, by the
destructive rationalism of Semler and Bretschneider, and the subjective
philosophy of Kant and his followers, who evolve all things in heaven
and earth from their own consciousness of them, on the principle that
“cogito, ergo sum.”

He had been educated at Jena and Weimar, where this school of
philosophy had its headquarters; and he was deeply impregnated with
the teaching of those who had followed upon the first bold propounders
of its doctrines. The names of Descartes and Locke, Spinoza and Fichte,
fell glibly from his tongue, as he ran through in a masterly way
the methods of these great thinkers of the different centuries, and
strove to show how, one after another, each in a different way had
struggled to show a blinded world that there could be no religion that
did not appeal to the reason; that the allegorical and the dogmatic
methods of interpreting Scripture had been tried in the balances
and found wanting, and that only the historic--the true rational
interpretation--could be found lasting with thinking men.

It was with a smile, and with great courtesy and patience, that Mr. St.
Aubyn listened to the clear and terse arguments of his intellectual
guest; and then he asked him what he thought of the Berlin school of
thought, which had trodden quickly upon the heels of the one he had
been ardently advocating--asked him what had been the teaching of
Schleiermacher and Neander and De Wette, and whether they had been able
(whilst giving all due weight to the value of reason) to remain where
the destructive rationalist thinkers had left them. Already they had
begun to strive to reconstruct a living and personal Christ out of the
ruins of the historic method, which would have robbed Him of all but a
shadowy existence as a misguided though well-meaning fanatic, deceiving
and deceived. How was it men could never rest without some theory of
a Divine personality, call it by what name they would? Was it not the
most rational deduction to admit that the reason for this inherent
longing (which none of the world’s greatest thinkers had ever attempted
to deny) was that the subjective philosophy never can content the
heart of man; that man _must_ have an object of worship, an external
standard, a living Head, and not an abstraction, simply because there
_is_ a living God, who created him in His own image; because he _has_
been redeemed by a living and incarnate Saviour, and because the Spirit
of the Eternal God the Father and the Son is for ever working in his
heart, and seeking to bring it back to uniformity with the heart of
Christ, overflowing with love towards God and towards man?

That, in brief, was the argument on both sides, only argued out at
length with skill and knowledge and versatility of thought by each
combatant. Bride, in her dim corner, sat and listened, and sometimes
shivered in horror, sometimes glowed with an ecstatic rapture, but
always listened with undivided attention, for these matters were not
to her the dry arguments of philosophers merely, but indications of
the spirit of perversity and blindness at work in the world in the
latter days--the spirit of the lawless one, coming in every insidious
form; first under the guise of liberality of thought and intellect,
then teaching men to throw off from them all the fetters imposed by the
precepts of Christ, all the external authority of the Church; paving
the way for that other rising against kings and rulers and external
authority of any kind whatsoever which she had been warned was one
of the signs of the latter days, when the voice of the people should
prevail once again, and they should give the power to him who should
come “in his own name.”

But the discussion ended at last as all such do, each man thinking as
he did before, though glad of the opportunity of exchanging ideas with
a scholar and person of intellectual acumen.

“We can at least agree to differ,” said Mr. St. Aubyn, as he shook
hands warmly. “We can be friends, even though we have our private
thoughts about each other’s folly. You are young yet. You have
your tilt with the world before you. It is natural to your age and
temperament to take nothing on trust, to examine all for yourself.
Perhaps in the days to come you may learn the lesson which other
philosophers of your own school have done--that there is no living on
systems and philosophies--that the hungry human heart of man must have
more to feed on than husks. Well, there is the Bread of Life waiting
for you when you are willing to receive it. I think the day will come
when you will take it at the hands of the all-forgiving and all-loving
Father.”

Eustace smiled, and pressed the hand he held. He was no bigot, and he
had a vein of poetical imagination within him to which these words
appealed. Besides, Bride was standing by, and he would not willingly
have pained her. He did not know how much she had heard of the previous
discussion, nor how much she would have understood if she had heard. He
said his adieus cordially, hoped he and Mr. St. Aubyn would often meet,
and gave his arm to his cousin to escort her home again.

He was sufficiently thoughtful himself that his silence did not strike
him till they had walked some way; but when he did strive to speak
on subjects which generally commanded her interest, he found her
absolutely unresponsive.

He looked at her, and saw that her face was cold and tranquil in its
statuesque beauty. The light which so often beamed in her eyes was
extinguished now. She was very pale, and moved mechanically, and as
though with something of an effort. He asked her if she were tired, but
received a monosyllabic negative; and then he made one more effort to
interest her by a theme which had never failed heretofore.

The ignorance of the peasantry was with her, as with him, a source
of pain and dissatisfaction. She and her mother had been planning,
before the death of the latter, how some small beginning might be
made to get the children taught just such rudiments of knowledge as
should raise them above the level of the beasts they tended. Hardly a
single labourer or respectable working man in country districts could
either read or write. Sometimes a substantial farmer could do no more
than set his name to a bill; and clever lads, who might have raised
themselves in the world, were kept down and hampered all their lives by
the inability to master the rudiments of education. Bride’s grief was
that none of the villagers and fisher-folks could read the Bible--that
it must remain to them a sealed book, save when others expounded it to
them. Eustace’s objection to ignorance was very differently grounded;
but hitherto the subject had been one of common interest, and when
together they had taken pleasure in discussing Bride’s favourite plan
of erecting a small school in memory of her mother, where such men,
women, and children as could find time and had the desire to learn
might be taught by a qualified person, and gradually win for the
place a higher standard of life and faith than was to be found in the
surrounding villages.

But even this subject to-day did not rouse in the girl any spark of her
wonted interest. She looked at him with steadfast sadness, as he spoke
of what he meant to try to do in this matter in other places (he did
not, from motives of delicacy, identify himself too much with St. Bride
in talking to his cousin), and said very gently, but with a severity
which was not altogether without intention--

“I am not sure that the people will not be better as they are, Eustace,
than taught as you will be likely to teach them.”

The young man flushed quickly. Philosopher though he was, he was human,
and this was a taunt he hardly cared to let pass.

“Do you mean to say that you think I should do them harm and not good
by helping them out of their mists of darkness?” he asked, with slight
incisiveness of manner.

“Do you think you _would_ be helping them out of the mists of
darkness?” asked the girl, suddenly turning her eyes upon him, with a
look he could not fathom.

“Certainly,” he answered quickly, and without hesitation.

Her face was turned away then. He only saw the pale pure profile
outlined against the sky.

“I am afraid not,” she answered, in a quiet serious way, that indicated
sadness if not depression; “there are worse forms of darkness than
intellectual darkness.”

“Do you think so?” he answered, in a tone that implied absolute
disagreement.

“I know it,” she answered, without the smallest hesitation.
“Intellectual darkness is sad, carried to the extent we see it here.
But spiritual darkness is a thousand times sadder, and, oh! how much
more difficult to enlighten!”

He said nothing. “Why try to argue with a fanatic?” he thought, and
they took their homeward way in silence.

Bride left him at the castle door and went quietly up to her room.
Eustace stood looking after her.

“You are very beautiful, my cousin,” he said to himself, “and you
fascinate me as no woman has fascinated me yet; but you are a mystic
and a fanatic both--and both these are beings inexplicable to me--and
yet I shall try to find you out, and teach you that there are nobler
things a woman can be than you have dreamed of as yet.”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VI

_THE GOSPEL OF DISCONTENT_


Saul Tresithny was in a restless and disturbed frame of mind just now.
He did not himself know what was creeping over him, but he had been for
some time now experiencing a change of feeling,--a sense of weariness
and disgust with his daily toil, with the people about him, with the
world in general, that he had never felt before, and which perplexed
him not a little.

A few weeks earlier, when this state had first assailed him, he
believed it to be the outcome of his growing affection for Genefer, the
farmer’s daughter, and thought, if he could but assure himself that his
affection was returned, he should be himself once more; but in this
conjecture he had not proved right. Genefer had admitted her preference
for him; they held stolen interviews at all manner of times in and
about the farm; she took care that his material comforts were greater
than they had ever been before, and he could (if he chose) look forward
to settling in life at no very distant date with a wife and home of his
own. And yet he was not happy--he was more restless and discontented
than ever in his life before.

Was it the monotony of farm labour that was the cause of this? Of
course Saul and those about him had long known that he could do much
better for himself if he wished. His grandfather had always told him
that there was a home open to him in his comfortable cottage if he
ever chose to avail himself of it, and that a wife of his would be
warmly welcomed to make the home bright and cheerful for them both.
He knew that the Duke would at any time give him employment in his
stables, for Saul had a knack with horses that was well known all
through the neighbourhood, and often caused him to be summoned to look
at some refractory animal, and assist in the task of breaking him.
Mr. St. Aubyn had more than once offered him the post of “odd man” at
the rectory, where his one servant kept the flower garden and looked
after the one stout cob which the Rector rode on his parish rounds,
and had a comfortable little cottage at the gates for his home. But
for some unexplained reason Saul had always declined these chances of
bettering himself, and remained obstinately at his ill-paid farm work,
greatly to the satisfaction of the farmer, who had never had so good an
all-round man before, and who always treated Saul with consideration
and affability, recognising qualities in him that he would have been
loth to part with.

But perhaps no man of latent talent and energy is really content long
together in a life that gives no scope for the exercise of his higher
powers. Possibly it was merely this sense of constraint and uselessness
which was at the bottom of Saul’s inexplicable and little understood
depression. However that maybe, he had certainly taken to a mood
of sullen brooding, which could hardly be dignified by the name of
thought. He avoided his grandfather’s cottage on Sunday, preferring to
work off his oppression by taking long walks across the cliffs; often
finding himself in the little town of Pentreath before he was ready for
a halt; and it was in this place that he first began to know and hear
something of the questions of the day that were stirring in the great
world around his humble home.

Newspapers never found their way to St. Bride’s, save to the castle;
but Saul had formed the acquaintance of a cobbler in Pentreath, who
was an ardent politician in his own way, and, with the natural and
unexplained bias of his class, was a red-hot Radical to boot, and loved
nothing so well as to inveigh with untrained and perfervid eloquence
against the evils of the day--the oppression and misery of the poor,
the tyranny and licentiousness, the cruelty and selfishness, of the
rich. He prognosticated a day when there should be a general upheaval
and turning of the tables, when every man should have his “rights,” and
the tyrants of the earth should quake and tremble before their outraged
slaves, as had been the case in France but a generation ago--the
fearful story of which was well known to him, and over which he gloated
with eager delight, even in its most ghastly details.

With this man we have no concern in these pages. He was one of that
class of demagogues and agitators which was arising in England, and has
flourished there to a greater or less extent ever since. Hundreds and
thousands of these men were too obscure and too ignorant ever to make a
name in the world, but they acted on the ignorant people about them as
the leaven in the pan, and did much to bring about the state of general
discontent and revolt which preceded the era of reform.

All through the month of January, when Saul would not spend his Sundays
at the farm, on account of the visits of young Farmer Hewett, who was
his especial aversion, he walked over to Pentreath and passed several
hours with the cobbler, whose acquaintance he had made some time
previously. At first the man’s talk had small interest for him, but he
had a natural thirst for information; and great enthusiasm is like to
kindle sparks in the minds of others, even when at first there seems
small sympathy between them. Almost in spite of himself, Saul began
to feel interested in the monologues and diatribes of the bright-eyed
little artisan, and whether or no he agreed in his conclusions, he did
come to have some notion of the state of the country at this time, the
abuses which reigned there in many quarters, and the general sense
amongst the people that something had got to be done to remedy this
state of affairs--or they would know the reason why!

Thus it came about that when Saul first came into contact with Eustace
Marchmont, he was not in that state of blank ignorance which was the
usual attribute of the rustic of those parts, but had been instructed,
although in a one-sided and imperfect way, upon the grievances of his
class, and had, at least, been aroused to a sense that the world was
all wrong, whether or not he was to have a hand in the setting of it to
rights.

Eustace had seen Saul once or twice before he attempted to speak with
him. His fine presence always attracted attention, and in his case the
strong likeness to Abner gave him another mark of interest for those
who knew the elder man. Eustace would have tried to get speech with him
before, being impressed by the intelligence and character of the face,
but had been somewhat deterred from the fact that he heard Abner had
had the bringing up of the boy, and if so, he felt he might not find
there the sort of soil he wanted. He liked a talk with the gardener
at any time he could get him to engage in conversation, but the two
never agreed in their conclusions. Both fully admitted the evils of
the day and the need for reformation, but how that reformation was to
be effected they never could agree; and although they parted friends,
and had a warm esteem one for the other, Eustace secretly wished that
Tresithny either knew a little more or a little less, and that his
uncle did not possess a servant of such strong and peculiar views, and
with so much influence in the place.

If Saul should prove to be a disciple of his grandfather’s, Eustace
felt that it would be time wasted to seek to win him to his own view of
the situation; whilst, on the other hand, if he could gain the young
man as a convert to the new gospel, such a recruit would be a great
power in his hand; for no one could look into Saul’s dark handsome
face, and note the development of brow and head, without being certain
that he possessed intelligence beyond the wont of his fellows, and
force of character, which went farther in such a cause than keenness of
wits.

But though Eustace often tried to get speech with the young man in a
casual and incidental way, he never succeeded in doing so. He went to
the farm from time to time and made himself pleasant to the farmer and
his family. He walked about the place, and chatted as occasion served
with the broad-faced, soft-spoken labourers, who grinned at any small
sally he might make, and looked bland, though deferential, if he spoke
of matters beyond their ken, as he had a way of doing tentatively,
although with an object in view. He began to be talked of as a man with
something in his head that was quite unfathomable. All agreed that he
was an affable young gentleman, and well-spoken and friendly; but the
rustics were shy of him nevertheless, and his chief friends were made
amongst the bold and lawless fisher and smuggling folks down in the
cluster of hovels beneath the shelter of the cliff. They were more or
less at war with the law as it was--at least with the excise laws,
which were the only ones about which they knew or cared a halfpenny;
and it was easy to convince them that there was something rotten in
the present system of administering the law generally, and that the
people must combine to insist on a reformation. But even whilst
winning grunts and snorts of approval from these rough fellows, Eustace
felt that his mind and theirs were really poles asunder, and that the
lawlessness they looked upon as the embodiment of welfare and happiness
was an altogether different thing from that beautiful justice, law,
and order which he strove to believe was to come into the world when
his doctrines had leavened and fermented and taken shape. Sometimes he
was almost disheartened with his want of success, wondering whether
this doctrine of discontent were a wise one to instil into the minds of
these wild, fierce fisher-folk. Some of the conclusions they drew from
his teaching startled him not a little, as when one of them remarked
that, since the great folks were so tyrannical and wicked and selfish,
it would be no more that right and a just judgment to lure them to
their death by false lights some stormy night, that their goods might
fall a prey to the suffering poor; and this savage suggestion was
hailed with such enthusiasm that Eustace was sternly horrified, and
spoke with terse eloquence against any such wickedness, only to find,
as other teachers and orators have found before him, that though it
was easy to convince men of the truth of a doctrine towards which they
were predisposed, it was altogether another matter to hinder them from
deductions altogether false, and foreign to the matter in hand, when
these also were to their liking; and that they were far less patient in
listening to words that opposed these deductions than they had been to
those which suggested them.

It was after some such experiences as these that Eustace had left the
fishermen and striven to win the friendship of the rustics, but had
been met by the placid stolidity and uncomprehending ignorance which
seemed to form almost as absolute a barrier between them as the lack
of reason and speech in brute beasts. Indeed, they and their sheep and
oxen seemed to understand each other better than he and the labouring
men upon the land. It was discouraging and uphill work from first to
last; and the one man whom he really desired to gain, and felt certain
possessed the stamp of mind and the intelligence he longed to meet,
avoided him with a persistence which led him to the conclusion at last
that Tresithny had warned his grandson to have no dealings with the
gentleman from the castle.

But accident led at last to a meeting, and from that meeting dated the
train of circumstances which led to a strange but lasting friendship
between the two men whose walks in life lay so widely apart.

Eustace was out upon the downs riding a mettlesome young horse from the
Duke’s stable. He was a fearless horseman, but not an experienced one.
During the years he had spent in travel and in Germany, horse exercise
had not come much in his way, save as a means of locomotion, and then
the animals ridden had not been of a fiery kind. He had a firm seat and
a steady hand, but he was by no means familiar with the tricks of a
flighty young mare, when the spring of the year sets the hot blood of
all young things stirring joyously in their veins, and incites them to
all sorts of vagaries and extravagant gambols. Eustace was possessed
with the master-mind that must always gain the upper hand of any
creature under his control; and perhaps he was a thought too stern in
his desire after discipline; for in lieu of indulging the wild spirits
of his steed with a healthy gallop over the short elastic turf, which
might soon have reduced her to quietness and submission, he held her
with a strong firm hand, resolved that he and he alone would decide
the time when her limbs should be allowed to stretch themselves as
they longed to do;--with the effect that the beautiful, high-spirited
creature, fretted beyond the limits of endurance, commenced to
buck-jump with such alarming persistence and velocity, that Eustace
was at last unseated, and measured his length ignominiously upon the
short turf, whilst his horse, tossing her dainty head with a gesture
of visible triumph, set off at a mad gallop straight across the green
down, which she hardly seemed to touch with her feet.

Eustace was not hurt. He had kicked his feet free of the stirrups
before he slipped off, and the ground was soft. The mare had avoided
touching him with her feet as she sped off, and, save for the
humiliation of the fall, and the fear lest the horse should be hurt,
Eustace cared little for the accident. He could no longer see the
flying steed. The ridge of swelling down hid her from him; but he
picked himself up and wondered what he should do next, and whether the
creature would find her way home or should be pursued, for she had not
headed for her stable, but had gone tearing away over the green turf
in a diagonal direction. Brushing the traces of his accident from his
clothes, Eustace slowly mounted the low ridge, and then to his relief
saw a horseman cantering towards him up the opposite side. A second
glance told him that the horseman was none other than Saul Tresithny,
and that he was mounted upon the runaway mare, whom he had evidently
captured before she had had time to do herself a mischief.

Two minutes later Saul had come to a standstill beside him, and was on
his own feet in a twinkling.

“I hope you are not hurt, sir,” he said shortly.

“Not at all, thank you--only humiliated. I did not mean to let her have
her own way, but she took it in spite of me. How did you manage to
catch her? And how come you to be so good a rider? You manage her far
better than I do.”

“I broke her in, you see, sir,” answered Saul, who was stroking the
glossy foam-flecked neck of the beautiful creature, whilst she dropped
her nose into his palm, and was evincing every sign of satisfaction in
the meeting. “His Grace bought her from Farmer Teazel. She was bred
on these downs, and I had the breaking of her. She’ll make a capital
hunter one of these days; but it’s not every rider she’ll let mount
her, nor yet keep mounted when once they’ve been on her back. She’ll
give you some trouble, I expect, sir, the next time you try to ride
her. But Lady Bride can guide her with a silken thread. She took to her
ladyship from the first moment she mounted her.”

“And she seems to take to you too. I think your name is Tresithny,
isn’t it? You are grandson to the gardener at the castle?”

“Yes, sir,” answered Saul, and said no more, holding the stirrup for
Eustace to mount, but without anything the least servile or obsequious
in his attitude. The young man noted also in his speech the absence
of the vernacular peculiarities that characterised all the ordinary
rustics of the place. Saul’s voice was soft, and his speech had an
intonation that bespoke him a native of these parts, but that was all.
Just as it was with the grandfather, so it was with the grandson: they
could put off the dialect when they chose, and use it when they chose.
Abner had early taught his young charge the same purity of diction as
he had acquired himself, and in speaking to his superiors Saul adopted
it naturally.

“I don’t think I’ll ride again just yet, thanks,” said Eustace, with
his frank and pleasant smile. “If you don’t object, I’ll walk your way,
Tresithny. I’ve often wanted to talk with you, but I’ve never had the
opportunity before.”

Saul’s face was not responsive; but he was too well trained to refuse
to lead the horse for the gentleman when asked, and after all it was
not so very far back to his work, where he must of necessity shake off
this undesirable companion.

“I want to speak to you, Tresithny, about the cause which (in addition
to the death of the Duchess) brought me just now into these parts. You
know of course that, in the natural order of things, I shall one day be
master here. It is not a position I covet. I hold that there is great
injustice in making one man ruler and owner of half a county perhaps,
and of huge revenues, holding vast powers in his hand whether he be
capable or not of ruling wisely and well--simply from an accident of
birth, whilst hundreds and thousands of his fellow-men are plunged in
untold misery, and vice that is the outcome of that undeserved misery.
I believe myself that the whole system of the country is rotten and
corrupt, and that the day has come when a new and better era will dawn
upon the world. But meantime, in the present, I have to look forward to
succeeding his Grace, and I am naturally very greatly interested in the
people of this place, and intensely anxious to see them elevated and
ennobled.”

Saul suddenly looked at the young man as he had never looked at him
before, and said between his teeth--

“That’s a strange thing for _you_ to say, sir.”

“Why strange?” asked Eustace, half guessing the answer,

“Because, sir, if once the people begin to think for themselves, to see
for themselves, and to understand the meaning of things around them,
they soon won’t stand what they see--won’t stand that one set of men in
the country should have everything, and roll in wealth and wallow in
luxury, whilst they can’t get bread to put in their children’s mouths.
They’ll think it’s time their turn came--as they did in France, I’ve
heard, not so very long ago, and that’ll be a bad day for you and for
all those like you.”

“Yes,” answered Eustace, with emphasis, “such a bad day for us, and (if
_that_ form of revolution were repeated) such a bad day for England
too--ay, and for you, Tresithny, and your class--that we men who
recognise and deplore the injustice and tyranny of the present system
are resolved to try and prevent it by making the people’s cause ours,
and ridding them of their grievous wrongs before they shall have been
goaded to madness and rise in ignorant savagery, and become butchers
and not reformers. The French Revolution turned France into a veritable
hell upon earth. What we are striving to accomplish is to bring a day
of peace and plenty, and justice and happiness upon England, without
the shedding of one drop of blood, without any but gentle measures, and
the increase of confidence and goodwill between class and class.”

“And do you think you are going to do it?” asked Saul, with a grim look
about his mouth, which Eustace did not altogether understand.

“I think so--I trust so. Earnest and devoted men of every class are
banded together with that object. But, Tresithny, we want the help of
the people. We want the help of such as you. What is the use of our
striving to give their rights to the people if they remain in stolid
apathy and do not ask for them? We must awaken and arouse them; we must
teach them discontent with their present state of misery and ignorance,
and then open the way for them to escape from it. Do you understand
at all what I mean? We must awaken and arouse them. They are--in this
part of the world, at least--like men sleeping an unnatural drugged
sleep. The poison of ignorance and apathy is like opium in its effects
upon their spirits. We must awaken and arouse them before there is hope
for cure. Tresithny, we want men of intelligence like you to help in
this work. You know their ways and their thoughts. You can appeal to
their slumbering senses far better than we can do. We want to interest
those who live with them and amongst them, and whose language they
understand as they cannot understand ours. There is a great work to be
accomplished by such as you, Tresithny, if you will but join the good
cause.”

Saul was roused by a style of talk for which much of his recent
brooding had prepared the way, and made a reply which showed Eustace
that here at least there was no impassable barrier of ignorance or
apathy to be overcome. In ten minutes’ time the men were in earnest
talk, Eustace giving his companion a masterly summary of the state of
parties and the feeling of the day (vastly different from anything he
had heard before, and before which his mental horizon seemed to widen
momentarily), and he joining in with question and retort so apt and
pointed, that Eustace was more and more delighted with his recruit, and
felt that to gain such a man as Saul Tresithny to his side would be
half the battle in St. Bride’s.

But even here he could not achieve quite the success he coveted. He
could implant the gospel of discontent easily enough--the soil was just
of the kind in which the plant would take ready root; but with that
other side of the doctrine--that endeavour to make men distinguish
between the abuses, and the men who had hitherto appeared to profit by
them--ay, there was the rub!

“You speak, sir, sometimes of doing all this without making the people
hate their tyrants and their oppressors; but that isn’t human nature.
If they’ve a battle to fight against those that hold the power now, and
if they are stirred up to fight it, they will hate them with a deadly
hatred; and even when the victory is ours, as you say it will and must
be one day, the hatred will go on and on. It’s in our blood, and it’ll
be there till the world’s end. We may forget it whilst we’re sleeping;
but once you and the like of you wake us up, it won’t sleep again in a
hurry; no, and it shall not either!” And the young man raised his arm
and shook his fist in the air with a wild gesture, as though hurling
defiance at the whole world.

“Ah! Tresithny, that is a natural feeling at the outset; and although
we regret it, we cannot wonder at it, nor try to put it down with too
strong a hand. But it is not the right feeling--and the right one will
prevail at last, as I fully hope and trust. When we are boys at school
and under restraint, against which we kick and fret, we look upon our
masters as natural enemies; yet as we grow to manhood and meet them
again, they become valued friends, and we laugh together over former
animosities. And so it will be when the great work of reform is carried
out in the generous spirit that we strive to instil; and you amongst
others will be the first to hold out the hand of fellowship to all men,
when wrongs have been righted, and society has come forth purified and
ennobled by the struggle.”

“Never!” cried Saul, with a look of such concentrated hatred that
Eustace was startled. “You may talk till you are black in the face,
sir, but you’ll never talk out the hatred that is inborn between class
and class. I know what that is. I am a man of the people, and for the
rights of the people I am ready to live and to die. But I HATE THE RACE
OF TYRANTS AND OPPRESSORS. I hate, and shall always hate and loathe
them. Do not talk to me of goodwill and friendship. I will have none
of it. I would set up a gallows over yonder, if I had my way, and hang
every noble of the land upon it--as the French set up their guillotine,
and set the heads of the king and queen and nobles of the land rolling
from it!”

This was not by any means the spirit Eustace had desired to kindle in
his disciple; but, after all, might not such sentiments be but the
natural ebullition of enthusiasm in one who was young, untrained, and
ardent? Certainly it was preferable in his eyes to apathy, and he was
not disposed to strain the relations newly set up between them by
opposing such sanguinary statements.

“The wrongs of humanity do indeed set up a strong sense of righteous
indignation,” he said quietly; “but, believe me, the fierce and
sanguinary revolutions of history have not had half the lasting effects
of the bloodless ones accomplished by nations within themselves, by
the accord of all classes concerned. That is what we are now bent upon
striving to accomplish. We want your help, Tresithny, but not all the
bloodthirsty eagerness you are disposed to give us. You must temper
your zeal with discretion. Have you any personal cause to hate the
so-called upper classes as you do?”

The young man’s face was so dark and stern that Eustace almost repented
of his question.

“Have I?--have I? Have I not, indeed! The upper classes! Ay, indeed,
they are well called! Oh, can I but help to hurl them down to the dust,
my life will not have been lived for nothing!”

Eustace looked earnestly at him.

“Can you not tell me what you mean, Tresithny? Believe me, I would be
your friend, if you would permit it. I have seen no one since I came
here in whom I take so warm an interest.”

There was this about Eustace that always made him popular wherever he
went, and that was his perfect sincerity. When he spoke words like
these, it was obvious that he meant them, and those whom he addressed
felt this by instinct. Saul did so, and the fierce darkness died out
of his face. He turned and looked into Eustace’s eyes, and Eustace
returned the glance steadily, holding out his hand as he did so.

“I mean what I say, Tresithny,” he said, with a smile. “If you will
have me for a friend, I will be worthy of your confidence.”

And then Saul, by a sudden impulse, put his hand into that of the Duke
of Penarvon’s heir, and the compact was sealed.

“I will tell you my story, or rather my mother’s story,” he said,
after a few moments of silence, “and then perhaps you will understand
what I have said. It is common enough--too common, perhaps, to
interest you; but to me it can never become common. My grandfather was
gardener to the Duke. He had a loving wife, and one daughter, whom
they both loved as the apple of their eye. When she was old enough to
do something for herself, she was taken into the castle and rose to be
second maid to her Grace, who was always very kind to her attendants,
and took pains that the girl should be taught many things that would
be of value to her as she grew up in life. There was plenty of fine
company at the castle then: it was before Lady Bride was born, and her
Grace’s health gave way. Of course I cannot tell what went on; but a
day came when my mother disappeared from St. Bride, and none knew where
she had gone. It killed her mother, for there was no manner of doubt
but that she had been persuaded to go with or after one of the fine
gentlemen who had been visiting there.”

“Or one of their servants,” suggested Eustace, very quietly.

For a moment Saul paused, as though such an idea had never entered his
head before, as indeed it never had done. He had heard very little of
his young mother’s mournful tale, but he had always believed that she
left her parents for the protection of one of the Duke’s fine popinjay
friends.

“I don’t know,” he answered sullenly, “but they all said it was a
certain gentleman. She broke her father’s heart, and killed her mother,
and came back at the end of a year to die herself. She could never tell
her story--or would not--whether or not she had been betrayed. That
we shall never know; but she left me behind her to my grandfather’s
care, and I have grown up knowing all. I never would enter the castle
as servant. I never would, and I never will. I will carry my enmity to
your class, sir, to my life’s end, and I will fight against it with
might and main, and with all the powers that I have. I have taken your
hand in friendship, because I see you mean well by us, and because I
cannot help it; but I will never do so a second time. I will not make a
second friend of one above me in rank. I will keep the right to fight
against them and to hate--_hate_--HATE them--and not all your honeyed
pleadings can change that. Now I have told you all, and you can choose
whether you will have me or not; for it will be war to the death when I
fight, and you may as well know it first as last!”

Eustace smiled at the vehemence of his disciple as he said quietly--

“We will have you, Saul, hatred and all. You are too useful a tool to
be spared because your edge is over sharp.”

And thus the compact was sealed between them.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VII

_THE KINDLED SPARK_


“I don’t approve of it,” said the Duke, bringing his hand down upon
the table with an emphasis that made all the glasses on it ring. “You
may talk as you will, Eustace; you may mix argument with sophistry as
much as you like, but you’ll never make black white by all the rhetoric
of the world. I don’t like it. I don’t like the whole movement, and I
don’t believe that good will ever come of it; but leaving alone that
point, on which we shall never agree, I hold that your methods are
vile and hateful. You are setting class against class; you are rousing
ill-will and stirring up hatred and enmity; you are teaching men to be
discontented with their position in life----”

“Yes, sir, I know I am, because they _ought_ to be discontented with
degradation, ignorance, and hopeless misery. There is no reason why it
should continue and increase as it does. We want them to be disgusted
and discontented with it. Would there ever have been any civilisation
and culture in the world had men always been contented to remain
exactly in the position in which they were born?”

“Don’t talk your stump-orator nonsense to me,” said the old Duke
sternly. “Confusion of terms does all very well to blind and deceive
an ignorant mob; but keep it for them, and don’t try to advance
your flimsy arguments by using it to men who can think and reason.
The gradual growth of science and art and learning--the building on
and on from an original foundation as the mental horizon extends--is
generically different from the aimless discontent and selfish desire
to rob and plunder, which is the outcome of the vaunted discontent you
wish to inspire in the breasts of the people; and you know it as well
as I do. You may keep _that_ sort of talk for those who cannot see
through it, and answer the fool according to his folly. But when you
have men to deal with, and not ignorant children, you must think of
sounder arguments if you desire to be listened to patiently.”

Eustace flushed rather hotly at the taunt, which was hardly deserved
in his case, although he was aware that his cause--like too many
others--was promoted by means of arguments which could be torn to
shreds by any shrewd thinker. But for all that, he had a profound
belief in the gospel of discontent as the most powerful factor in the
world’s history, and he used it with a genuine belief in it, not with
the desire to promote confusion in the minds of his hearers. But he did
not reply to his kinsman’s sharp retort, and after a brief pause the
Duke recommenced his former diatribe.

“I have been patient with you, Eustace. I recognise fully your position
here, and that you have a certain latitude with regard to the people
which would be accorded to no one else; but----”

“Indeed, uncle, I hope you do not think I have presumed upon that,”
cried Eustace, with almost boyish eagerness, and a sidelong look
at Bride, who was leaning back in her chair, a silent but watchful
spectator of the little drama, and a keenly interested listener to the
frequent arguments and dialogues which passed after dinner between her
father and her cousin. It had become a regular custom with them to
discuss the questions of the day during the hour they passed at the
exit of the servants and the advent of dessert. Neither of them were
drinkers of wine, but both were accomplished talkers; and Bride, though
seldom speaking, had come to take a keen interest in these discussions,
which were adding to her store of facts, and admitting her to regions
of debate which had hitherto been sealed to her. She was not ignorant
of the events passing in the world. She had read the newspapers to her
mother too regularly for that; but naturally she had not seen those
organs of the press which advocated the new and more liberal ideas
coming then into vogue; and many of her cousin’s harrowing pictures of
the fearful miseries of certain classes of the community haunted her
with terrible persistency, and awakened within her an impotent longing
to be able to do something to rescue them from such degradation and
misery.

Her father, too, listened to Eustace with a moderation and patience
which surprised her not a little, since up till the present time the
very name of Radical filled him with disgust, and provoked him to an
outbreak of scornful anger. If Eustace did not openly proclaim himself
one of this party, he was advocating every principle of reform with
all the ardour of one; and yet, until the present moment, the Duke
had heard him expound his views, and had answered his arguments with
considerable patience, and often with a certain amount of sympathy.
To-day, however, the atmosphere was more stormy. Something had occurred
to raise the displeasure of the old man, and soon it became apparent
what the grievance was.

“I do not accuse you of presuming upon that,” he said, still speaking
sternly--“not intentionally, at any rate; but you do wrong in being led
blindfold by your youthful and headstrong passions, and by teaching
others to follow in your wake, without your substratum of sense and
moderation. That young Tresithny has been openly teaching the people
in St. Erme’s and St. Bride’s to set law and order at defiance, and
if necessary to avenge their so-called ‘wrongs’ at the sword’s point.
He is collecting a regular following in the place, and there will be
mischief here before long if things go on at this rate. On inquiry I
found, of course, that he has been seen frequently in conversation with
you, Eustace. Of course the inference is plain. You are teaching him
your views, and trying to make a demagogue and stump-orator of him,
with apparently only too much success. And he is just the type of man
to be most dangerous if he is once aroused, as you may find to your
cost one of these days, Eustace.”

“Most dangerous--or most useful--which is it?” questioned Eustace
thoughtfully; yet, remembering some of the words and looks that had
escaped Saul during their conversations, he could hardly have answered
that question himself.

“From whom have you heard this?” he asked. Eustace had himself been
absent from the castle for a few days, spending his time in the
neighbourhood, but not returning to his kinsman’s house to sleep. He
had returned this day only, to find the Duke’s mood somewhat changed,
and he began now to suspect the cause of this.

“Mr. Tremodart is my informant,” answered the Duke briefly. “He will
give you any information on the subject that you desire. I shall say
no more. The subject is very distasteful and painful to me. I am well
aware that I am growing old, and that the world is changing around
me. I know perfectly that no power of mine will suffice to stem the
current, and I shall therefore refrain from futile efforts. But none
the less does it pain me that one bearing my name, and coming after me
when I am gone, should be one of the foremost to stir up strife and set
class against class, as you are doing, Eustace. And let me add just
one more word of warning. It is an easy thing to set a stone rolling
down a hill-side; but no man can foresee where it will stop when once
in motion, and no human power can stop it when once the impetus is upon
it. It will go hurtling down, carrying death and destruction with it;
and those who have set it in motion can simply stand helplessly by,
looking with dismay at the ruin they have provoked. Beware how you set
in motion the forces of anarchy, Eustace, for Heaven alone knows what
the end will be when that is done!” and the old man rose from his seat
and walked from the room with a quiet and sorrowful dignity of aspect
which struck and touched both his hearers. It was so unusual for him to
break through the trifling ceremonial rules of life, that the very fact
of his leaving the table before his daughter had risen showed that he
must be greatly disturbed in mind. Bride looked after him with wistful
eyes, and then suddenly turned upon Eustace with an imploring air,
which was harder still to resist.

“You will not go on grieving him, Eustace!” she pleaded; “you will give
it up?”

“Give what up, Bride?” he asked quietly.

“The actions which grieve him, which stir up strife in our peaceful
community, which rouse hatred and foment discontent. Ah! Eustace, if
you would only give yourself to a nobler task, how much you might do
for the cause of right!--whilst now you are, in the hope of doing good,
fomenting the worst passions of the human heart, and leading men to
break not only the laws of man, but those of God.”

Perhaps never before had Eustace been so strongly tempted as at that
moment to abandon the cause to which he was pledged. Through all the
weeks he had spent beneath the roof of Castle Penarvon, he had been
conscious of two strong influences working upon him--one the desire to
enkindle in the minds of the ignorant rustics the spark of discontent
and revolt against needless wrongs, which should result in reformed
legislation, and the raising of the whole country; the other, the keen
desire to win for his wife the beautiful and unapproachable girl he
called cousin, and who every day exercised over him a stronger and
stronger power. With him it had been a case of love almost at first
sight. Eustace was one of those men who are always striving to attain
and obtain the best and highest good which the world has to offer, not
as a matter of preference only, but as a matter of principle. Hitherto
he had never seen a woman who stirred his heart, for he had never
seen one who in any way corresponded to the lofty ideals of womanhood
which he had kept pure within him from boyhood. His whole mind and
soul had been given to study, to learning, and to the attainment of
those objects upon which, as his mind matured, his whole being became
set. Woman as an individual had neither part nor lot in his life until
he met his cousin Bride, and knew before he had been many days at
Penarvon that in her he had found his ideal. That she was a mystic,
that she held extraordinary and altogether impracticable views of
life, and lived in a world of her own which could never be his, he was
perfectly aware; but then he was also aware that the ideal woman of
his dreams must likewise live a life apart, wrapped in her own pure
imaginings and Divine ideals, until the power of love should awake
within her another and a deeper life, and bring her to a knowledge of
joys hitherto unknown. A sceptic himself, he was in nowise daunted to
find that the woman of his choice was as devout, and almost as full of
mystic fervour, as a mediæval nun. Somehow it all pieced in with his
preconceived ideas of perfect womanhood, and he said within himself
that this single-minded devotion and power to lead the higher life,
when directed into other channels by the kindling touch of a great
love, was exactly the force and power most needed for the work which
must be that of his own life and of hers who became bone of his bone
and flesh of his flesh.

The cause was first with him, the woman second, when Bride was not
present; but when confronted by her soft deep eyes, when beneath
the spell of her thrilling voice and the magnetic attraction which,
with absolute unconsciousness, she exercised upon him, he was often
conscious that the cause was relegated to the second place, and that
the desire to win this woman for his wife took the foremost position
there. It was so just at this moment. The words spoken by the Duke
had struck somewhat coldly upon him. They were the echo of a thought
which sometimes obtruded itself unsuggested when he was in conversation
with those very men of whom he hoped most in the forwarding of the
cause--the thought that after all he and such as he were playing with
edged tools, and were rather in the position of boys experimenting with
explosives of unknown force. They might safely reckon that what they
desired might be accomplished by their means, but were they equally
certain that, whereas they only meant to break down and overthrow
certain obstructions which were standing in the way of progress and
a better order, the forces they had set in motion might not sweep
over all appointed bounds and land them in a state of confusion and
anarchy they never contemplated for a moment at the outset? This was,
he knew, the cry of all supporters of the old order, the time-honoured
cry against any sort of progress or reform. But might there not be
perhaps some sound substratum of truth at the bottom?--and were he and
his comrades wise to listen always with a smile of pity, and even of
contempt, when that plea was brought forward?

Just for a moment, under Bride’s pleading glances, under the impression
produced by the Duke’s warning, Eustace was tempted to fling to the
winds everything save his overmastering desire to call Bride his own,
to win her love even at the sacrifice of his own career; but before
the burning thoughts had been translated into words or had passed his
lips, other and cooler considerations pushed themselves to the front,
and he checked himself before attempting a reply. After that his words
were chosen with care, and fell quietly and resolutely from his lips.

“I would do much, very much, for you and for your father, Bride; but
I cannot, even for you, be untrue to myself, and to the cause of
suffering humanity. The woes of our brethren are crying aloud for
redress. Christianity and humanity are alike disgraced by the scenes
which are daily enacted in this Christian land. Believe me, Bride,
you and I are nearer in heart than you are able yet to see. You have
lived your life in this peaceful spot, and know little or nothing of
the fearful abuses which stalk rampant through the land. Did you know
what I know, had you seen what I have seen, you would know that I am
embarked upon a righteous cause, and that the power you call God--which
is in very truth the spirit of justice, mercy, and true and lasting
peace--is with us. I do not deny that, in stirring up men’s hearts,
even in a righteous cause, evil and selfish passions are too often
inevitably stirred also. Human nature finds it all but impossible
to hate the abuse without hating those who in their eyes at least
are the living embodiment of that abuse. We have a twofold mission
to execute--to rouse in men a hatred of evil and oppression, whilst
at the same time striving to inculcate patience towards those who
appear to them to be the incarnation of that evil. The one task is of
course easier at the outset than the other; but we do not despair of
accomplishing both. No reformation of abuses was ever yet made without
the stirring up of evil passions--without many and great dangers and
mistakes; yet the world has been better, and purer, and wiser for these
same reforms, and so it will be again. Ah! Bride, my beautiful cousin,
we want noble-hearted women to aid us in the task. If we men can rouse
the slumbering to claim the rights of humanity for themselves, you
women can pour oil on troubled waters, and instil gentle and tender
feelings into rude hearts that we find it hard to subdue. If you would
walk hand in hand with me in this thing, Bride, how much might not be
accomplished for Penarvon and those poor benighted people in whom your
own interest is so keen! Bride, will you not let it be so? Will you not
help me? Will you not help a cause which is pledged to raise the people
of this land from misery and degradation, and teach them that even for
them there is a higher and a better life, if they will but strive and
attain to it?”

The girl’s eyes were fixed upon his face in one of her inscrutable
gazes, in which she seemed to be looking him through and through, and
reading his very soul, whilst hers was to him as a sealed book.

“Ah! Eustace,” she said very softly, “would that you _were_ striving to
teach to them the true meaning of the higher life. Then, indeed, would
I most gladly, most willingly, follow where you lead; but, alas, alas!
I fear me it is not so. Oh, my cousin, can you truly tell me that you
yourself are striving after the higher life--the highest life--the life
of the Kingdom--so that you can teach it to another?”

He did not answer--for, indeed, he did not fully understand her;
he only knew that in speaking of the higher life he and she meant
something altogether different, although he still trusted that the
difference was but superficial, and that deeper down lay an accord
which would some day become patent to both. Meantime, with her eyes
upon him, he knew not what to say; and Bride, with a look of sorrow and
gentle compassion that went to his heart, rose and glided away, leaving
him alone in the great dining-hall, with the flicker of many wax
candles mingling with the fading light of the March evening.

It was half-past six, and the light without, although fast dying, was
not yet gone. Eustace felt it impossible after what had passed to join
either the Duke in his study or Bride in the drawing-room; and taking
his hat and putting on a thin overcoat, he sallied out from the castle,
and after descending the road by the wide zigzag drive, he paused a
moment at the lodge gate, and then turned off in the direction of the
parsonage, where Mr. Tremodart lived alone in the solitude of childless
widowhood.

Eustace had been to that house before. He knew its disorderly and
comfortless aspect, the long low rooms littered about with pipes and
books and papers, fishing-tackle and riding-whips. He knew well the
aspect of the tall gaunt parson, seated at some table with a pipe
between his lips, and his long fingers busy over the manufacture of
artificial flies. For Mr. Tremodart was a mighty fisherman, and there
was excellent trout-fishing in the many streams that watered the plains
above, and pike-fishing in the land-locked lakes high up in the moors.
The season dear to the heart of anglers was coming on apace, and
Eustace found the master of the ramshackle abode deep in the mysteries
of his craft.

Eustace had not pulled the cracked and broken bell. He knew that the
deaf old crone who lived at the parsonage, and did as much or as little
of the needful work there as her goodwill or rheumatism permitted,
deeply resented a needless journey to the door, which always stood wide
open from morning to night, save in the very bitterest weather. He
walked straight in, and after glancing in at one or two open doors, was
at length guided by a small stream of light beneath the one farthest
down the passage, to that place where the parson was found at work. Mr.
Tremodart had long since ceased to have a regular room in which either
to sit or to eat. He would use one of the many apartments upon the
ground-floor of his rambling parsonage for both purposes, until it grew
too terribly dirty and untidy to be borne, and then he would move into
another, gradually making the whole round. At the end of some three or
four months he would turn in a couple of stout young women, with pails
and brooms and dusters, and have the whole house swept and garnished,
whilst he spent the day on the moors with rod and gun; and then the
rotatory fashion of living would begin over again, the old woman
confining her labours to her kitchen, preparing the needful meals in
such fashion as she chose, and making her master’s bed and setting his
sleeping chamber to rights in the morning. Mr. Tremodart appeared quite
content with his _ménage_ as it existed; and if he were satisfied,
there was no need for any one to waste pity on him.

He welcomed Eustace with a smile, his plain broad face lighting up
genially, in a fashion that redeemed it from ugliness, despite the
blunt features and tanned skin. He did not rise, or even hold out his
hand, having both well occupied in some delicate operation of tying;
but he indicated with a nod a chair for his guest, and asked if he
would smoke.

Eustace had acquired in Germany a habit which was still in his own
country designated as “filthy” by a large section of the upper classes;
and though he never smoked at the castle, was not averse to indulging
himself in the recesses of the parsonage. He took a pipe from his
pocket and filled it leisurely, coming out at last with the matter next
his heart.

“What is this I hear about young Tresithny? He seems to have been
setting the place by the ears in my absence.”

The parson gave him one keen quick glance out of his deep-set eyes,
and remarked in the soft drawling tone that had a strong touch of the
prevailing vernacular about it--

“I think yu should know more about it than I du, sir. I take it he is
your disciple. It is yu who are going about teaching our country-folk
that they are being ground down and oppressed, is it not? Well, may be
it will please yu tu know that young Tresithny is following in your
steps and making all St. Bride writhe under a sense of a deep and
terrible oppression she never found out for herself before.”

Eustace flushed very slightly. He was keen to note a touch of irony
when directed against the cause he had at heart. He looked to meet it
in many quarters, but he had hardly expected to find it here, nor was
he absolutely certain of the drift of Mr. Tremodart’s remark.

“What has he been doing?” he asked briefly.

“Why, I think yu would call it turning stump-orator,” was the reply,
as Mr. Tremodart bent over his work again. “He hasn’t any time by the
week to help enlighten the ignorance of his fellow-men, but he was
good enough to invite them to a preaching or a speaking on the shore
on Sunday morning in church hours, so we had an empty church save for
the Duke and Lady Bride, and some of the castle servants.” The parson
raised his head and gently scratched his nose with his forefinger as
he concluded reflectively, “If yu come tu think of it, ’tis a curious
thing how much more attractive it is to mankind to know how they may
rob their neighbours than how they may save their souls.”

Eustace could not for the life of him refrain from the retort which
sprang to his lips--

“And you hold that they do learn that important lesson by coming to the
weekly service at St. Bride’s church?”

Mr. Tremodart continued gently to rub his nose with his forefinger.
His rugged face expressed no annoyance, rather some compunction and
humility, and yet he answered with the quiet composure which in most
cases appeared natural to him.

“I know what yu are thinking, young man. I can tell yu that without
either feeling or meaning offence. Yu are thinking that my poor
discourses in yon pulpit are but sorry food for the souls of men--and
I am with yu there. Yu are thinking that if I shut up the church on a
Sunday from time to time on some paltry excuse, I cannot greatly value
its services for the poor. Yu could say some very harsh things of me,
and I in shame and sorrow would be forced to say ‘Amen’ to them. I am
a sorry minister, and I know it; but for all that, I would have yu
distinguish between the unworthy servant and the Master he serves. My
incapacity, idleness, and mistakes must not be set down to Him. A most
unworthy and disobedient servant may yet serve in some sort the best of
masters.”

“Forgive me,” said Eustace frankly; “I should not have spoken as I did;
although I confess I was thinking of the service suspended on account
of the sitting hen.”

“Yes, I made an error there,” answered Mr. Tremodart, pushing his
hands through his hair; “but she was the best hen in my yard. I had
set my heart on having a brood of her chickens to bring up, and she
was so wild and shy that I feared we’d never find her, and that the
foxes would get at the eggs of the chicks before ever we could make
sure of them. I had a bad cold too, and was in bed when the old sexton
came hurrying in to tell me of the find. I knew once we rudely and
hastily disturbed her she would never sit again, and I had no other
broody hen to take her place; so I just said we’d have no service that
day, thinking David would go and say it was my cold that kept me to
home. But instead, he told the story of the hen, and shamed me before
my flock. And yet I cannot complain--it was my own sinfulness. But
mark my word, my young friend: however sinful the minister may be, the
church is the house of God, and a blessing rests on those who come
thither to worship Him, talk as you hot-headed young reformers may of
your newer and more rational religions which are to take the place of
that ordained by God.”

With Mr. St. Aubyn Eustace would have argued, but this man had not the
learning to enable him to support his beliefs, and Eustace declined
controversy by saying, with a smile--

“I am, at least, quite ready to admit that if we have souls in your
sense of the word, they may easily be saved through regular attendance
at St. Bride’s or any other church.”

The Cornishman threw back his head with a gesture that was at once
emphatic and picturesque.

“Young man, do not mock,” he said in his deep-toned, resonant voice.
“The soul of man is a mystery which your philosophy will never fathom;
and mark me again--when I speak of saving souls and attendance at
church in one breath, I mean something far different than what yu imply
in your light phrase. What I should say is this--let the preacher
be never so ignorant and unworthy, in our churches we have forms of
prayer which embrace the whole circle of Christian doctrine. On our
knees we confess our sins to God; on our knees we hold up before Him
the one Atonement of the Cross as our only hope of salvation, and pray
for the guidance of the Holy Spirit to rule and direct our hearts.
We read the word of God in our midst. We offer psalms, and hymns,
and spiritual songs. And I say again that Christ has taught us that
penitent confession, coupled with faith in Him, is sufficient for
salvation--that every erring sinner coming to Him is never cast out,
and that He has given His Spirit to be our guide and comforter through
life. Wherefore I say and maintain that all those who truly follow
the services offered in our churches week by week may find in them
salvation, whether he who offers them be as weak and unworthy as the
man before you now.”

Eustace rose and held out his hand.

“Believe me, sir, I had no such stricture in my mind when I spoke. I
respect solid conviction and true faith wherever I meet it, even when
I hold that the faith is misplaced, and that the day is coming when a
sounder and truer form of worship will be seen in this earth. At least
we are in accord in wishing the best for the people we both love; only
at present we disagree as to what is the best. In days to come I trust
and believe that we shall be in accord even here. Meantime I will see
this hot-headed young Tresithny, and warn him not to hold his addresses
at times when men should be in church. The young and ardent have more
zeal than discretion, but if I can help it you shall not be annoyed
again.”

“Nay, I am not annoyed,” said the parson, with a broad smile; “his
Grace was more annoyed than I. But yu will have a tougher job in
holding back yon mettlesome lad, I take it, than in starting him off
along the road. But there is good in the Tresithnys, though there is a
tough grain in them which makes it no light task to try and carve them
into shape. Must yu go? Then fare yu well, and give you a good issue to
your mission.”

Eustace strode away, and without any pause set off in the direction
of Farmer Teazel’s farm in the next parish. He walked rapidly, as a
man does when burning words are welling up in his heart, and he seeks
to prepare himself for an interview in which strong arguments may be
needed. But when he returned along the same road, it was with slower
step and bent head. He had found his disciple, and had spoken long
and earnestly with him, but had come away with the conviction that
he had spoken in vain. He had kindled a spark in Saul’s passionate
heart which had lighted a long-smouldering flame. Now this had burst
into active conflagration, and what the result would be no man could
yet say. At present a violent class hatred was raging within him, and
he was bent upon setting class against class in the spirit of the
true demagogue. The wiser and more moderate teachings of Eustace fell
upon deaf ears. The young man began to see that Saul was growing far
less keenly interested in the wrongs of his fellow-men, which it was
right and needful to alleviate and remove, than in the opportunity
afforded by a general movement after reform for a rising against the
privileged classes, for whom he had long cherished an undying hatred.
The very intelligence and quickness of the young man made him the
more dangerous. He could turn upon Eustace with some argument of
his own, used perhaps for another purpose, and by no means intended
to be universally applied, and deduce from it conclusions only too
mercilessly logical, tending to the subversion of the empire and
the awakening of a spirit of lawless violence, which of all things
Eustace desired to prevent. He had hoped, when first he took to giving
instruction and counsel to so apt and attentive a pupil, that he should
retain over Saul the influence he gained in the first place; and even
now he recognised that the young man was deeply attached to him, and
believed that so long as his eye was upon him he would keep within
bounds. But the limits of Eustace’s visit to Penarvon were drawing
near, and he did not think, in face of what was occurring, that the
Duke would press him to remain. He would leave, and then what would
happen to that wild spirit? Already the farmer had threatened him with
dismissal if he persisted in his obstinate courses, and tried to instil
and introduce lawless opinions amongst his servants. Saul had not been
daunted by that threat. It appeared that already he had made friends
amongst kindred spirits in the town, and would find support and
employment there if he chose to break away from his old associates.

Eustace walked back to the castle in a state of mind that was by no
means happy or satisfied. He had made a great step in Penarvon since
his arrival; but was it altogether such a step as was wise or right?

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER VIII

_BRIDE’S PERPLEXITIES_


But if Eustace suffered from doubts and fears, even when embarked
upon a cause which he fully believed to be that of right and justice,
other people were not exempt from their share of perplexity and mental
distress, and certainly the youthful Lady Bride was no exception
to this rule. For her, things seemed to have come hardly. Just as
she was deprived of the loving counsels and tender training of a
mother whom she literally adored, was she confronted by problems and
questions which had never entered into her inner life before, and which
threatened at times to upheave many of her most cherished notions, or
to land her in a perfect sea of doubt and bewilderment.

True, she had not grown up in actual ignorance of the questions
beginning to agitate the world, but hitherto she had regarded them, as
it were, from an infinite distance: they had not penetrated to her own
sphere. She could regard them in perspective, and moralise upon them in
an abstract fashion totally distinct from that which confronted her,
now that they had in a sense intruded into her very home, and risen
up in altogether unexpected proportion before her eyes. Calm as she
appeared to the eyes of those about her, remote and aloof as Eustace
felt her to be, dwelling in a world of her own, and hardly awake to
the throbbing life of that other world of which he was a member,
she was in reality far more aware of its pulsating life than he ever
dreamed, and far more perplexed by the problems of the times than
he as yet suspected. Pity and love for the humble and poor had been
instilled into Bride’s heart by her mother from her earliest years,
and it was a lesson not likely to be ignored now that she was left so
lonely and desolate in her palatial home. Towards her father she felt
a deep and reverential affection and compassion, and they had drawn
a very little nearer together during this time of common sorrow; but
the habits of a lifetime are seldom broken through, even when there
is willingness to break them, and the Duke found himself unable to
open his heart to his young daughter, as he had learned to do to his
gentle wife, even when he was conscious that if the effort could be
made it would be abundantly rewarded. He was gentle towards her, and
more tender than he had ever been in his life before, but there was no
impulse of confidence between them. It was just as hard for Bride to
try to speak to him out of her heart (as she had been wont to do to her
mother) as for him to cast off his reserve before her; so that when
perplexities arose within her, the girl had to fight them out alone,
and increasingly hard did she find the battle as day by day fresh
thoughts and problems presented themselves before her mental vision.

Mr. St. Aubyn might have helped her, but she was timid of seeking him
out. She felt towards him a deep and reverential affection. She had
always hung upon his words when he visited her mother, and the two
talked together long and earnestly of the coming crisis in the world’s
history of which both were keenly conscious, and for which both were
preparing themselves in different measure. But the girl had never
opened her own heart to the clergyman, or indeed to any person except
her mother, and she did not know how to make the first advance now,
although feeling often in sore need of guidance and help.

But there was still one person to whom she sometimes spoke when the
sense of the burden became greater than she could bear, and that was
to the old gardener, Abner Tresithny. She had a great respect, and
indeed affection, for the faithful old servant, who from childhood
had always been ranked as one of her friends, so that the habit of
reserve had not extended to her intercourse with him. Bride had her
own outdoor pursuits in the garden, which Abner superintended with his
advice and assistance, and as the pair worked together in greenhouse or
potting-shed, they often talked of many other matters than the plants
they tended. Bride had gained much of her insight into human nature
and the state of the village from Abner; and now when Saul’s fervid
discourses had stirred up so much excitement there, it was natural that
the matter should be mentioned, and that other things of a kindred
nature should be discussed.

Abner had been pained and grieved by his grandson’s (apparently sudden)
development, and Bride saw that the subject was a sore one with him.
With her ready tact she avoided the point which most pained the old
man, and opened her heart to him on the subject which had been with her
night and day for many a long week now, and which will raise itself
before each one of us with a ceaseless iteration so long as this state
of sin and misery lasts in the world.

“O Abner, can we wonder?--can we blame them so very much if they do
rise in rebellion and revolt? Why is it--ah! why is it that some--not
just a few here and there, but hundreds and thousands--even millions
of human beings are born into the world to a life of hopeless misery,
degradation, and poverty, from which not one man in a thousand has
power to raise himself? My cousin has been telling me things--I have
heard him and my father talking--and it goes to my very heart to think
what it all means. I know--oh! I can never doubt it--that in every
human soul there is the power to live the higher life by the grace
of the Spirit of God; but oh! Abner, how is it, humanly speaking,
possible that this germ of heavenly fire should be developed in such
surroundings? How can those encompassed by every physical misery and
degradation ever lift their hearts and their hopes heavenward? How
can it be looked for? And why does God permit such awful inequalities
in the destinies of His children? If He loves us all--as we know He
does--why, oh! why are these things allowed?”

The pain in her face and in her voice plainly showed how deeply she had
taken to heart what she had gleaned of late respecting the condition
of a large section of the population at that time. Abner looked at his
young mistress with a world of sympathy in his steady, deep-set eyes,
and slowly shook his head.

“There be many of us ask that same question, my Ladybird, as we go
on in life, and none of us can rightly answer it. And yet may be the
answer is under our hand all the while. It is the sin of man that
brought the curse into the world; and ever since the hardness of man’s
heart has been making him choose the evil and the curse instead of the
way of the Lord and the blessing, and every generation sinks the world
deeper and deeper into the slough.”

“I know, I know that. Sin is at the root of all,” answered Bride, with
quick eagerness, “but that does not seem to answer everything. It is
the awful inequalities of the world that frighten me, and the sense of
the terrible gulf that seems to divide such lives as mine from those
of the miserable women and children born in the midst of a squalor and
misery of which my cousin tells me I can have no conception. We are all
born in sin, but we are not all born to utter want and wretchedness.
God loves all His children alike: why should such things be? Oh, why
should they be?”

She clasped her hands together in a passion of perplexity and pain.
The eyes which were so deep and inscrutable to Eustace were full of
a pleading intensity of gaze, as though she would wring an answer to
her appeal from the heavens themselves. Abner looked at her with a
softening of the lines of his rugged face; and as he steadily pursued
his task of cleansing from blight a great camellia tree that stood in
the centre of the conservatory, he made an answer that was eminently
characteristic of him, and which roused the instant interest of the
girl.

“My Ladybird, I think we can none of us rightly answer such a question,
because the ways of the Almighty are past finding out, and we can by no
stretch of our poor finite minds hope to understand the eternal wisdom
of the Infinite. And yet, inasmuch as we have God’s own word that we
are made in His image, we can just get here and there a glimpse into
the workings of His mind; and I often think that a gardener at his toil
gets a clearer bit of insight into His dealings than some others can
do.”

“Oh, tell me how,” cried Bride, who dearly loved to listen to Abner’s
deductions from the world of nature to the realm of human experience.
She had been used to listening to his allegories from childhood, and
always found in them food for thought and farther research.

Quietly pursuing his task, as was his way when thinking most deeply,
Abner took up his parable again.

“It sometimes comes to me like this, my lady, when I am amongst my
flowers and plants and seeds, and folks come to me and say, ‘Abner, why
do you do this?’ and ‘Abner, why do you do that?’ Look at the little
seeds as they lie on your hand--seeming so like to one another that
even the best of us would be puzzled to know some kinds apart; but
when they grow up, how different they appear, and how different they
have to be treated! Some are hardy things, and are put out to face
the biting winds and cruel snows of winter, and nothing given them
for protection, whilst others are tenderly protected from the least
hardship, and grow up in the soft warm air of the hot-house, watered
and tended and watched over like petted children. Is it because the
gardener loves one sort of seed more than another that he treats them
so differently? What sort of a garden would he have when the summer
came had he put the tender hot-house seeds out in the cold ground, and
tried to grow the hardy seedlings in a hot-house? And then again, see
how the different plants are treated as they grow up under the same
gardener’s eye. Look at these great specimen heliotropes and fuchsias
and petunias. How were they treated when they were young?--pinched
in, trained, clipped, kept back, as it seemed, in every possible way,
everything against them, everything, as one would say, taken from them,
till the right stature and height and growth had been attained, and
then encouraged to bud and break where it had been decided they should;
and now see the beautiful graceful trees--a joy to the eye and to the
heart--covered with blossom, rejoicing as it seems in their beauty, the
pride of the gardener who seemed at first so cruel to them, so resolved
to keep them barren and unlovely.”

Bride drew a long breath and clasped her hands together. She had asked
sometimes deep down in her heart why her own life had been left so
desolate by the death of her mother. Was she in some sort finding an
answer now? Was it perhaps for her ultimate good and for the glory of
God that she was thus heavily chastened in her youth?

Abner had made a slight pause, but now he continued, speaking in the
same slow way, with the same rather remarkable choice of words for a
man of his class.

“And again, look at another class of plants--look at our bulbs. Does
not the gardener find a quiet nook for them in the garden where they
will never be disturbed, and put them in, and let them come up year
after year undisturbed and unmolested? Is it because he loves them
more that he leaves them to bloom at their own time and in their own
fashion, and does not even cut down their leaves when the blooming
season is over? Why is he so cruel (as the ignorant folk might put it)
to some of his plants, and so tender to others? Why does he treat them
so differently? Why do some grow up and flourish for a season only,
and are rooted up and cast away at its close, whilst others remain
year by year in the ground, or are tended in warmth and luxury in the
glass homes provided for them? Why such inequalities when originally
all start alike from a tiny seed germ, one of which scarce differs from
another? Is it because the gardener is partial or cruel? or because he
knows as no untrained person can, what is best for each, and how in the
end, after patient waiting and watching, the most perfect garden will
arise up under his hand? And if this is so in our little world, can we
not understand that it must be something the same in the great garden
of God--that kingdom of Christ for which we are waiting and watching,
and for which He is working in His own all-powerful and mysterious way?
Ah! how often I think of that as I go about my daily toil--that reign
of the Lord’s upon earth, when the wilderness shall blossom as the
rose, where sorrow and pain and sin shall be done away, and we shall
see the meaning of all those things which perplex and bewilder us now,
and understand the love in the Father’s heart, although the discipline
seemed hard to understand at the first.”

Bride raised her eyes with the light shining in them which the thought
of the coming kingdom of the Lord always brought there.

“Ah! yes,” she said softly, “we shall know then--we shall understand
then--we shall see face to face. O Abner, would that that day might
come quickly! Ah! why does not God hear the cry of His people in their
trouble and perplexities, and send forth the Great Deliverer? Are we
not praying for His appearing hour by hour and day by day? Why does He
tarry so long?”

Abner slowly shook his head. He understood perfectly those utterances
of the girl, which from time to time filled Eustace with absolute
bewilderment. One result of the awakening of spiritual perception,
and of the unceasing prayer which had been offered up by all sorts
and conditions of men for many years, had been a deep and earnest
conviction that the Second Advent was at hand, that the French
Revolution was but the commencement of the Great Apostasy of the latter
days, and that the times of the end were approaching. Amongst all the
confusion of prophetic interpretation stirring the minds of men and
raising up countless differences of opinion and beliefs as to what
was coming upon the earth, there stood out one paramount conviction
which attracted multitudes to adhere to it, which was that before the
final judgments were to be poured upon the earth, as foretold in the
Revelation according to St. John, there would be a gathering together
of the first-fruits to Christ--the dead and living saints called alike
to meet Him in the air, and thus escape the horrors that were coming
upon the world--the company typified in Scripture as the hundred and
forty-four thousand sealed ones standing with the Lamb upon Mount
Zion before the last vials of wrath are poured out, and before the
resurrection of the multitude whom no man can number, who have come
scathlessly through the great tribulation of the days of Antichrist.

This had been the unshaken conviction of the Duchess, and Bride had
received it from her mother with an absolute trust. Abner, like many
men of his class and race, was equally filled with a devout hope
and expectation of living to see the Lord appear without sin unto
salvation. The wave of revived spirituality and personal faith which
had swept over the West-Country with the advance of Methodism a
generation before, had, as it were, prepared the minds of men for a
fresh development of faith in the fulfilment of God’s prophetic word.
Methodism itself had already begun to fossilise to a certain extent
into a system, and had been rent by faction and split into hostile
camps; but this new wave of awakened spirituality was sweeping over the
land with all its first strength, and destined in one form or another
to do a great work in the Church. The thought and the hope of the
Kingdom was one so familiar and so congenial to those who had accepted
it, that already they were striving after the life of the Kingdom in
the present world of sorrow and sin. To Bride it was the very source
and centre of all her happiness in life, and anything that turned her
thoughts back to it again brought solace and comfort with it; so that
even the hope that the darkness and perplexity around her would be
explained and made clear in the Kingdom, and that what she now saw with
pain and shrinking would at last prove to be God’s way of bringing good
out of the mass of evil engendered by the sin and disobedience of man,
brought a measure of comfort with it, and Bride walked through the
sunny gardens in a deep reverie, looking around her at the awakening of
nature with a strange but intensely real hope that it was but the type
and foretaste of another and more wondrous resurrection, in which she
might be counted worthy to have a share, perhaps even before this same
young year had run its appointed course.

Her meditations were interrupted by the sudden appearance at her side
of her cousin Eustace. How he came she knew not. She had not observed
his approach, but here he was walking beside her; and as she raised
her eyes for a moment to his face, she was aware that it wore an
expression of strange concentration, whilst at the same time in his
voice there was a tone which she did not remember ever to have heard
there before.

“Bride,” he said, speaking more abruptly than usual, “you know that I
am going away soon?”

“I had heard something of it. I did not know the day was fixed. I think
you must feel glad. There is so little to do at Penarvon--for one like
you.”

“I fear your father thinks I have done too much, as it is,” answered
Eustace hastily. “Bride, have I made him hate me? Has he spoken with
disapproval of me to you?”

“Oh, no!” answered Bride. “My father seldom speaks disparagingly of any
one who is not there to defend himself. He would say nothing to me that
he did not say to you; and if he did. I could not repeat it, of course.”

“No,” answered Eustace quickly; “I was wrong in asking; but I was
nervously afraid, I think, lest he should have said something to do
hurt to my cause. Bride, are you sorry I am going away? Will you miss
me when I am gone?”

He spoke with covert eagerness, almost with excitement, and Bride was
puzzled at the note of emotion in his voice, and paused to consider her
answer. She was always transparently truthful and sincere, and although
brought up to show courtesy to all with whom she came in contact, she
had never taught herself to utter the platitudes and shallow untruths
of society, and chose her words with care when appealed to in such a
fashion.

“I think I shall miss you,” she answered, looking reflectively before
her. “It will seem strange not to see your face at table, or to have
some one to talk to in the evenings. I think father will miss you too.
He likes to converse with one who knows the world and can understand
him. Perhaps you will come again some day, Eustace?”

“Do you ask it, Bride?” he questioned, his voice quivering.

“I have no power to invite guests to Penarvon,” she answered gently.
“My father has never given me leave to do so; but I think he will be
glad to think you will come again: he has so few belonging in any way
to him now.”

“Would you be glad, Bride?” he asked, in the same tense and almost
impassioned way; “that is what I wish to know. Would you be glad to
think that I should come again soon?”

Something in his tone aroused in Bride a vague sense of shrinking and
distaste. She could not understand exactly what produced this feeling;
but at that moment her impulse was to leave her cousin hastily and fly
to the shelter of her own room. That being impossible, she could only
retire into the shell of her own impenetrable reserve, and Eustace was
at once aware that some of the light had gone out of her eyes, and that
she very slightly drew away from him.

“I do not know,” she said very quietly; “that depends upon so many
things. You have been very kind, Eustace, and yet you have done things
which have brought great trouble to us. If you could learn to be a
comfort to my father, I would welcome you gladly again; but you can
hardly expect it when you trouble and distress him.”

“Bride, Bride, do not speak so! do not drive me to despair!” cried
Eustace suddenly, losing his long-preserved self-control. “Do you not
know that I love you, that I have loved you almost ever since I saw you
first three months ago? Oh, my love, my life, only love me in return,
and do what you will with me! I am yours, body and soul, and together
we will walk through life, and yours shall be the guiding and directing
will, for you are the guiding star of my life! Bride, Bride! hear me!
Be my wife, and I will be in the future what you will. You shall rule
my life for me. Only let me know that your love is mine, and I care for
nothing else!”

She understood then, and the surprise of it all held her mute and
spellbound. Perhaps no maiden in the length and breadth of the land
had grown up more oblivious of the thought of love and marriage than
Lady Bride Marchmont. No young companions had she ever known to suggest
such ideas. Her mother had preserved the guarded silence on the subject
that mothers are wont to do whilst their daughters are yet young, and
her father had followed his wife’s example. She had seen the best and
happiest side of married life in the tender love and dependence of her
parents; but as a thing applied to herself she had never given it a
thought, and now she recoiled from this passionate appeal with a sense
of shrinking and distaste which she found it difficult to refrain from
expressing in words that would inflict pain on the man before her. She
did not wish to pain him. She was woman enough to know that he meant to
do her honour by this proffer of love and service; but he had utterly
failed to awaken any answering chord in her heart, and she felt that he
ought not to have spoken as he had done, or to use such arguments to
her.

“No, Eustace,” she said, not ungently, as he tried to take her hand.
“You must not speak to me so. It is not right. It is not even manly.
I think you can know very little of me when you speak of offering
yourself to me body and soul, or tell me that you care for nothing
else if you can have my love. Do you think I can love any one, save
with the love of a deep pity, who can place a mere earthly love before
everything else, and talk as though his soul were his own to give
into the keeping of another? Do you think I like to hear you say that
you would even abandon a cause which seemed to you holy and just and
right, simply because you think I may not approve it? Do you wish to
make of me your conscience-keeper? O Eustace! think what such words
mean!--think what treachery they imply, not only to God but to man, and
I am sure you yourself will be ashamed of them.”

“I can think of nothing but that I love you, Bride,” broke in Eustace,
hotly and passionately, his heart moved by the wonderful beauty of the
woman before him; her utter unconsciousness of the wild passions of
love and tenderness stirring within him only rousing him to a sense of
wilder resolve to win her at all cost. “I love you! I love you! I love
you! All my religion, all my faith, all my happiness here or hereafter
are comprised within the limits of those three little words. I love
you! Surely you will not tell me in return that you hate me, and would
spurn me from your presence. O Bride, my life, my love! do not say that
you have no love to give me in return.”

There was something so appealing in his voice that her heart was
touched with compassion, though with no answering response. She let him
possess himself of her hand, but it lay cool and passive in his hot
clasp.

“I do not hate you, Eustace--why should I? I do not hate any living
thing. I do not spurn you. I do not spurn your love.”

“My darling, ten thousand thanks for that sweet word. If my love is not
spurned, surely it will some day be returned! Bride, you will at least
let me hope that?”

“I cannot help what you hope,” she answered, with childlike frankness.
“But, Eustace, I do not think I can ever love you as you wish, and
I can never, never, never be your wife unless I do. I like you as a
cousin; but indeed that is all. I do not understand what it is that
makes you wish to marry me. We should be very unhappy together--I am
quite sure of that.”

“Ah! no, Bride! Do not speak so. Unhappy, and with you!”

“I should be very unhappy,” answered the girl steadily, “and you
_ought_ to be, Eustace, if you really knew what love meant.”

He looked at her in amaze; that _she_ should be speaking to _him_ of
the nature of love with that look of divine compassion in her eyes was
a thing altogether too strange and perplexing. Her very attitude and
quiet composure told of a heart unruffled as yet by any touch of human
passion, and yet she was turning upon him and rebuking him for his
ignorance. It was she who broke the momentary pause, seeming almost to
read his thoughts.

“You wonder how I know perhaps, but, ah! if you had seen my father and
mother together you would have understood. If you had known what love
there was between my mother and me, you would understand. Do not I know
what love is? Ah! do I not? It is the power to lay bare the innermost
sanctuary of your soul, and to know that you will be understood,
helped, strengthened, comforted. It is the knowledge that thoughts
too deep, and hopes too wonderful and mysterious for words are shared
together, and can be whispered of together without being tarnished by
the poor attempt to reduce them to speech; the consciousness that in
everything we are in accord, that we are often thinking the same things
at the same moment; the knowledge that the deeper and deeper we go
the more and more sympathy and sweet accord there is between us; that
not only are we one in opinion about temporal and changing things,
but knit close, close together in soul and spirit as well, sharing
the same faith, the same hope, the same love! Ah! Eustace! if you had
known such a love as that, you could never think that there would be
happiness for you and me in linking our lives together!”

He stood silent, almost abashed, before her, marvelling alike at
her eloquence and at the insight displayed of a union of spirit, of
which Eustace was forced to admit that he had not thought. To win
Bride as his wife, to set her up as his object of adoring love, had
seemed all-sufficient to him hitherto. Now it suddenly dawned upon
him that with such a woman as this, that would be but the travesty
and mockery of happiness. She was right and he was wrong: without a
deeper sympathy and love than any which had come into his philosophy
as yet, marriage would be a doleful blunder. He would be no nearer to
her than before--perhaps farther away. He must learn to share with her
that inner and mystic life of which he saw glimpses from time to time
when she opened out for a moment and showed him what lay below the calm
surface of her nature. Either he must share that with her, or wean
her away from it; replacing mysticism with philanthropy, fanaticism
with practical benevolence, objective with subjective religion. One of
those two ends must be accomplished before he could hope to win the
desire of his heart. As he stood in the bright spring sunshine facing
her, he became suddenly aware of that, and a new light leaped into his
eyes--the light of battle and of resolve. He would win her yet, but
it must be by slower steps than any he had contemplated hitherto. She
was worthy of better things than becoming a mere dreamer and nunlike
recluse. It should be his to lead her steps to surer ground, to show
her that there was a higher Christianity than any of which she had
hitherto dreamed. Not now--not all at once, but he would come again
and begin upon a surer foundation. He looked into her eyes, and gently
taking her hand before she had time to draw it away, he said quietly--

“Do not be afraid, Bride; I see that you judged more wisely than I.
You are right and I am wrong, and I will go away and trouble you no
more in the present; but the time will come when I shall return, and I
trust that by slow and sure degrees we shall draw so closely together
that you will no longer shrink from me in fear and trembling. You are
very young, sweet cousin, and there are many things you have yet to
learn. It is a beautiful thing, I doubt not, to hold commune in the
spirit with the higher world; but we are set in our place here below
for something I hold to be more truly noble than that. We are set in
a world of sin and misery that we may gird our armour upon us and
fight the battle with this sin and misery--fight it for our poor and
afflicted brethren, as they cannot fight it for themselves. That is the
true Christianity; that is the highest form of religious devotion. You
can read it for yourself in your Bible--‘True religion and undefiled
before God and the Father is this, to visit the widows and orphans in
their affliction’--to be ministers, in fact, of mercy and blessing in
any sphere, of which one is given as the type.”

“Yes,” answered Bride very softly, “and to keep himself unspotted from
the world.”

She looked straight at Eustace as she spoke, and he looked back at her,
marvelling at the extraordinary depth and beauty of those dark eyes. He
longed, as he had never longed before, to take her in his arms and hold
her to his heart; but he knew that he must not, so with a great effort
he restrained himself, and kept back the words of passionate love which
rose to his lips.

“Yes,” he answered steadily; “and for your sweet sake, Bride, I will
strive to do even that--evil and full of temptation as my world is.”

“Not for my sake, Eustace, not for my sake,” she replied, with an
earnestness he scarcely understood; “that would be indeed a vain
resolve. If you cannot yet strive in the power and might of the Risen
and Ascended Lord, whom you deny, strive at least in the power of the
right you own and believe in, though you know not from whence it comes.”

He looked at her in some amaze.

“Why do you say I deny your Risen Saviour, Bride?”

“Because I heard you with your own lips do so, in effect if not in
actual words. You spoke of His miracles as being ordinary gifts
of healing exaggerated by the devotion of His followers; of the
Transfiguration being a like delusion--men awakened from sleep seeing
their Master standing in the glory of the sunrise, and mistaking the
morning mists for other luminous figures beside Him. You said that the
Resurrection had been accounted for by the theory that the Saviour did
not die, but was taken from the Cross in a state of trance, from which
He recovered in the tomb.”

A flush mounted quickly into Eustace’s face.

“You mistake me, Bride,” he answered hastily. “We were discussing--Mr.
St. Aubyn and I--some of the teachings of various philosophers and
thinkers, and I was explaining to him how Paulus had extended to the
New Testement the method which Eichhorn had applied to the Old. I
was not defending the theory, but merely stating it as a matter of
speculation amongst men of a certain school.”

Bride looked at him intently.

“If that is so, I am thankful and glad; but I heard too much not to
know very well where your sympathies and convictions lie. If you do not
follow the impious teachings of this Paulus, you are very far along
the road which does not lead to the Father’s house. No, Eustace; let
us talk no more of this--it is only painful to both. I shall never
convince you; but I shall pray for you. And now farewell. I trust when
next we meet it will be without this sense of unutterable distance
between us; but it must be you to change--for I never shall.”

She turned and left him standing there in the sunshine. That same day
Eustace took leave of Penarvon, and commenced his backward journey to
London.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER IX

_THE WAVE OF REVOLT_


“Fegs! if theer’s tu be a bobbery up tu Pentreath, us lads o’ St.
Bride’s wunt be left owt on’t!”

“Dashed if us wull! Wheer theer’s fightin’ and a fillyboo, theer’s
more’n hard knocks to be gotten. Us’ll soon see what us can get by un!”

“Aw dally-buttons, that us wull! They du say as our Saul’s theer in t’
thick of un. But what’s it awl about? Dost any o’ yu knaw?”

The swarthy fishermen looked each other in the face with a grin, but
nobody seemed ready with an answer.

“May’ap ’tis because the king’s dead,” suggested one.

“Naw, ’tidden that ezakally,” objected another. “’Tis becos they
Frenchers ’ave abin an’ gone for tu ’ave a new bobbery ower theer--what
the great folks calls a reverlooshon. They’ve a druv theer king over tu
England: that’s what ’as set all the lads ower heer in a takin’ after
theer roights.”

“’Tidden theer roights theer a’ter,” remarked a woman who was sitting
hunched up in the chimney-corner of the hut where this confabulation
was going on, “’tis other folks’ goods they want. They thinks wheerever
a bobbery be theer’ll be gutterin’ and guzzlin’, and that’s all they
care for. You’d a best ’ave nowt tu du with un.”

But this piece of advice was received with ridicule and disfavour.

“Ef theer be zo much as gutterin’ and guzzlin’ why shetten us be left
behind? ’Tidden much of either us gets nowadays with those dashed
customs-men always a’ter we. Crimminy! but us’ll take our share ef
zo be as theer’s awght to be gotten. I’ve heerd tell theer be a real
hollerballoo up tu Pentreath. I be agwaine to see un.”

“Zo be I! Zo be I!” echoed in turn a dozen or more voices, and from the
dim chimney-corner there only came a rough snort of disapproval.

“Go ’long wi’ ye then. When the dowl’s abroad ’twidden be in yer to
bide tu home. Go ’long and help make the bobbery wusser. ’Tidden hurt
I. But it’ll be a poor-come-along-on’t for some o’ yu, I take it.
Theer’ll be trouble at St. Bride along on’t.”

The men hesitated for a moment, for the old woman who thus spoke had
won the not too enviable reputation of being next door to a witch, and
of reading or moulding future events--which, it was not altogether
certain in the minds of the people. She was a lonely widow woman, but
lived in one of the best cottages in the place, where she kept a sort
of private bar, selling spirits and tobacco to the fishermen, and
allowing them to make use of her sanded kitchen, where at all seasons
of the year a fire was burning, as a place of resort where all the
gossip of the place could be discussed. They never put two and two
together in seeking to account for the occult knowledge possessed by
the old woman respecting the private concerns of the whole community.
She affected to be rather deaf, and therefore low-toned conversations
were carried on freely in her presence. Old Mother Clat was quite a
character in her way, and a distinct power in the fishing community of
St. Bride.

But her advice was not sufficient to deter the bolder spirits from
taking part in the exciting scenes known to be passing in the country
round them. At that moment England was passing through a crisis more
perilous than was fully realised at the time. The sudden revolution in
France, which had culminated in the abdication and flight of the king,
the death of the English king, George the Fourth, at almost the same
moment, and the whispers in the air that Belgium and other countries
were about to imitate France, and rise in revolt against the oppression
and tyranny of princes, acted in an extraordinary fashion upon the
minds of the discontented population of this land. The long period of
depression and distress, whilst it had ground down one section of the
community to a state of passive despair, had aroused in others the
spirit of insubordination and revolt. Like leaven in the loaf was this
fermentation going on, greatly helped by the knowledge that the cause
of the people was exercising the minds of many of the great ones of the
land, and that in them they would find a mouthpiece if only they could
succeed in making their voice heard.

Now when there is any great uprising in any one district, there is
generally a local as well as a general cause of complaint; and in this
remote West-Country district it was far less the question of reformed
representation and the abolishment of certain grave abuses which was
exercising the minds of the community than the fact that new machinery
had recently been set up in some of the mills at Pentreath, and in
some of the farmsteads scattered about the district; and the panic
of the Midlands had spread down to the South and West, the people
fully believing that this would be the last straw--the last drop of
bitterness in their cup, and that nothing but absolute starvation lay
before them unless they took prompt measures to defend themselves from
the dreaded innovations.

The Midlands and North had set the example. Ever since the rising
of the Luddites there had been more or less of disturbance in the
manufacturing districts, where, of course, in the first instance the
introduction of machinery did throw certain classes of operatives out
of employment; and they were unable to realise that this would soon
be more than made up to them by the increase of trade resulting from
the improvement in the many complicated processes of manufacture. In
the North the riots were on the wane. It was just beginning to dawn
upon the minds of the more enlightened artisans, that if they would
leave matters to take a peaceful course they would soon see themselves
reinstated in the mills, where trade was growing more brisk and active
than ever before. But away down in the remote West, any innovation
was received with the greatest horror and aversion, and the people
had heard just enough about their wrongs to be in that restless state
when any sort of activity becomes attractive, and any uprising against
authority appears in the light of an act of noble resistance to tyranny.

Pentreath was an ancient town, though a small one. It sent a member to
Parliament, although the huge and fast-increasing towns of the North
did not. Of late years it had become a small centre of manufacturing
industry, the water-power there being considerable. There were two
cloth-mills and one silk-mill, a paper manufactory, and another
where soap and essences were made. One reason why the district round
Pentreath was not feeling the general poverty and distress very keenly
was that from the rural districts men who could not get employment
upon the land could generally find it in the mills. But when almost at
one and the same time improved machinery became introduced both into
agriculture and manufacture, the sense of revolt was deeply stirred. A
certain number of turbulent spirits had been simultaneously dismissed
both from the farms and from the mills, and these two contingents
at once banded together in somewhat dangerous mood to talk over the
situation and their own private grievances, and to set about to find a
remedy.

It was the Duke who first introduced the machinery into the
neighbourhood, although he had dismissed no servant of his until three
of his men were found tampering with and injuring the new machine,
when he promptly sent them about their business. Their bad example was
followed by others, and four more were summarily dismissed; whereupon
the Duke let it be thoroughly understood that any servant of his taking
that line would be promptly discharged, but that he had no intention of
dismissing any of those on his estate who were orderly and obedient,
and used the improved implements in a right and workmanlike way. This
declaration had the effect at Penarvon of stopping depredations for
the moment, and no more labourers were sent away; but those who had
already received notice were not taken on again: for the Duke, though
a just and liberal master, was a stern upholder of law and order, and
had no intention of having his will or his authority set at naught by a
handful of ill-conditioned fellows, who refused to listen to any other
guides than their own blind passions.

These men gravitated naturally into Pentreath, in the hope of finding
employment there, only to be met by the news that the mills were
turning off hands, owing to the saving of labour by the introduction
of improved machinery. The band of what in these days would be termed
“unemployed” gathered together by common accord, and roved the streets
by day, begging and picking up odd jobs of work as they could get them,
and meeting at night in a low tavern on the outskirts of the town to
spend their pittance generally on raw spirit, and to talk sedition and
treason.

Possibly, had no other power been at work just at that juncture,
the whole thing might have begun and ended in talk; but there were
other forces in operation, all favourable to the spirit of revolt and
vengeful hatred which actuated this small band; and as discontented men
of every class draw together by common consent, however various their
grievances may be, so did the newly aroused politicians of the place,
eager and anxious to awaken the country to a sense of its political
grievances, and the urgent need of parliamentary reform, gravitate
towards the little band of discontented labourers and operatives, sure
of finding in them allies in the general feeling of revolt against the
prevailing system, which they had set themselves to amend, and hoping
quickly to arouse in them the patriotic enthusiasm which kindled their
own hearts.

Saul’s friend the cobbler was the first to address these men on the
subject of the hoped-for reform. He went to them upon several evenings,
strove to arouse in them a sense of indignation against prevailing
abuses and evils, and found his task an easy one. Wherever he made out
that the country was suffering from the oppression of tyrants and the
greed of the rich, he was received with howls of approval and delight.
The answer of his audience was invariably a cry of “Down with it! Down
with them!” They would have rushed with the greatest pleasure through
the streets, and attacked the houses of the mill-owners, or have broken
into the mills and gutted them, had there been any to lead them. But
the cobbler was a man of words rather than of action. He was one to
foster fierce passions, but his talents did not lie in directing the
action which follows upon such an arousing. One Sunday afternoon, it
is true, he headed a procession which marched through the streets,
shouting and threatening, so that the people shut their shutters in
haste, and begged that the watchmen or the military might go out and
disperse the mob. No harm, however, came of the demonstration, save
that an uneasy feeling was aroused in the minds of the townfolk, who
looked askance upon the haggard men seeking alms or employment about
their doors, and were less disposed to help them than they had been at
first.

Thus the ill-feeling between class and class grew and increased, and it
was to a band of men rendered well-nigh desperate by misery and a sense
of burning wrong that Saul came down one Sunday, his own heart inflamed
by passion and hatred, to supplement the efforts of the cobbler by one
of his own harangues, which had already won for their author a certain
measure of celebrity.

Saul had greatly changed during the past six months, changed and
developed in a remarkable manner. When he stood by the orchard wall
making love to Genefer Teazel, he had looked a very fine specimen of
his race, and superior in many points to the labourers with whom he
consorted, and whose toil he shared; but since the rapid development
of his mental faculties had set in, he had altered wonderfully in his
outward man, and no one to look at him would believe, save from his
dress and the hardness of his hands, that he had spent his life in mere
manual toil on a farm. His face, always well-featured, had now taken
an expression of concentration and purpose, seldom seen in a labouring
man; the eyes were very intense in their expression, and, as the
fisher-folk were wont to say, went through you like a knife. His tall
figure had grown rather thin and gaunt, as though the activity of the
mind had reacted on the body, or else that he had been denying himself
the needful support for his strong frame. He looked like a man whom it
would not be well to incite to anger. There was a sufficient indication
in his face of suppressed passion and fury held under firm control,
yet ready to blaze up into a fierce life under provocation. He looked
like a man born to be an Ishmaelite in his life’s pilgrimage--his hand
against every man, and every man’s hand against him--a man in revolt
against the world, against society, against himself. A keen and yet
sympathetic physiognomist could hardly study that face without a sigh
of compassion. Saul Tresithny, with his nature, his temperament, his
antecedents, could scarcely have any but an unhappy life--unless he had
been able to yield himself in childlike submission to the teachings of
his grandfather, and look for peace and happiness beyond the troublous
waves of this world, to the far haven of everlasting peace.

Saul had spent the past six months in close reading and study, whenever
time and opportunity were his. First from his friend the cobbler, then
from his friend the Duke’s heir, he had received books and papers; and
out in the fields in his dinner-hour, or trudging to and fro with the
plough, or up in his attic at night, with his companions snoring around
him, he had studied and read and thought--thought till it seemed often
as though thought would madden him, read until he looked haggard and
wan from his long vigils, and he found the best part of his pittance of
wage go in the purchase of the rushlights by which he studied his books
at night. Eustace had lent him histories of other nations--down-trodden
peoples who had revolted at last from their oppressors, and had won
for themselves freedom--sometimes of body, sometimes of mind, at the
sword’s point. Eustace had tried to choose writers of impartiality;
but his own bias had been too strong to make him a very good director
of such a mind as Saul’s; and when a man of that temperament reaches
passages which are not to his liking, he simply skips over them till
he reaches what is more to his taste; and Saul had invariably missed
out those explanatory and exculpatory pages, wherein the historian
shows the other side of the question, and explains how some of the
grievances most declaimed against by an oppressed people are the result
rather of circumstance, and the changing order of the day, than the
direct outcome of a real injustice and tyranny.

So his mind rapidly developed in a fashion by no means desired by
his mentor; and so soon as the restraining influence of Eustace was
removed, the wild and ardent imagination of the young man had full
sway, and he had none to give him better counsel or strive to check
the hot intemperance of his great zeal. He avoided his grandfather,
and Abner was too wise to force his company where it was not wanted.
He would not speak to Mr. St. Aubyn when the latter found him out, and
sought, in his gentle and genial way, to get the hot-headed youth,
of whom much talk was going about, to make a friend of him, and open
out upon the subjects of such moment to all the country. No; Saul
maintained a rigid and obstinate silence; and the Rector went away
disappointed, for he feared there were evil days in store for Saul.
Farmer Teazel, who was a staunch old Tory, and an ardent believer
in the existing state of things, even though he admitted times to
be bad in the immediate present, had no manner of patience with his
new-fangled notions, that were, as he said, “driving honest folks
crazy.” He had winked at Saul’s conduct as long as he could, valuing
the many sterling qualities possessed by the young man, and hoping
every day that he would turn over a new leaf. But his patience had long
been sorely tried. Saul, not content with haranguing the fisher-folk
down in the hamlet, who were always ready to imbibe any sort of lawless
doctrine--their one idea being that the law and the customs were one
and the same, and that to revolt against any existing order was a step
towards that freedom of traffic which was their idea of prosperity and
happiness. Not that they wished the excise duties withdrawn--for that
would render abortive their illicit traffic; but they always fancied
that there was advantage to be gained from stirring up strife and
revolting against established order, and were eager listeners to Saul’s
speeches. But not content with that, Saul was working might and main
amongst the more placid and bovine rustics, his fellow-labourers on the
farm, to emulate the fisher-folk in their restless discontent, and with
this amount of success, that when Farmer Teazel, in imitation of his
noble landlord, introduced with pride and delight a new and wonderful
machine into his own yard, his own men rose in the night and did it
some fatal injury, which cost him pounds to repair, as well as delaying
for a whole month the operations which it had especially been bought to
effect.

This was too much. The farmer was in the main a placid man and a
good-tempered one; but he could not stand this, and he well knew whom
he had to thank for the outrage. Whether or no Saul had prompted the
men to do the mischief mattered little. It was he who had fostered in
them the spirit of disobedience and self-will which had been at the
bottom of the outrage; and so long as he remained on the place there
was no prospect of things being better. Before his anger had had time
to cool, he summoned Saul, and a battle of words ensued, which led to
the summary dismissal of the young man, whilst the farmer strode out of
the kitchen, in which the interview had taken place, in a white heat of
rage and disappointment.

Saul stood looking after him with a strange gleam in his eyes, and then
his eyes caught sight of Genefer crouching in a corner with her hands
over her face.

Saul had not thought much of Genefer all this while, as presumably she
had been well aware; but the sight of her distress touched him, and
he would have approached her to offer some rude sympathy, had she not
suddenly sprung up and faced him with blazing eyes and a fury only
second to that which her father had displayed.

In the emphatic and most idiomatic vernacular, which is always used by
natives in moments of excitement, she told Saul _her_ opinion of him
and of his conduct; she let loose in a flood all the mingled pique,
anger, disappointment, and jealousy which his conduct of the past
months had inspired. That he should presume to ask her love, and then
care for nothing but wild notions that savoured to her of the devil
himself, and which all right-minded people reprobated to the last
extent, was an insult she could not put up with. Woman-like, she had
looked to stand first and to stand paramount with handsome Saul, when
once she had permitted him to woo her; and instead of this, he had
heeded her less and less with every week that passed, and had even
refused to remain on Sunday at the farm when she had asked it as a
favour; and at last had done this mischief to her father through his
mischievous, ill-conditioned tongue. She would have none of him, no,
not she! He might go to his friends the fisher-folk, or to the slums of
Pentreath for a wife, if he wanted one!--she would have none of him!
He had been false to her, he had treated her shamefully, and now he
might go. She never wished to see him again! And bursting into tears
(the almost invariable climax to an outburst of anger with women of her
class) Genefer rushed from the room, and Saul, looking white about the
lips, but with a blaze in his eyes which made all who met him shrink
away from him, put together the few things he had at the farm besides
his books, and stalked away into Pentreath, where he found an audience
as ready to listen to him as he was to address them.

And this is how it came about that St. Bride was set in a ferment of
excitement by the news that there were exciting scenes going on at
Pentreath--mysterious outbreaks of popular fury--machines broken in the
mills--a statue of the old king standing in the market-place, found
in the river-bed one morning greatly shattered by the fall--a baker’s
shop looted in broad daylight another day; and over all a sense that
there was more to come, and that this was but the beginning of what
might grow to rival one of the great risings of the Midlands and the
North, when private houses had been broken into, and an untold amount
of damage inflicted upon rich men, who had drawn upon themselves the
popular hatred.

Now St. Bride, as represented by the fishermen, had no wish to be left
out of any enterprise which promised either excitement or reward. It
was whispered in all quarters that Saul was at the head of the rioters,
and that his was the master-mind there. If so, they would be certain of
a welcome from him if they joined his little band; and so it came about
that, whilst the boats still lay high and dry upon the beach, the men
of the place were almost all mysteriously missing, and their womenfolk
professed absolute ignorance as to what had taken them off.

“Oh, Mr. St. Aubyn,” said Bride, with tears in her eyes, as she
encountered the clergyman of St. Erme on the downs, bent in the same
direction as herself, to the cottage where a sick woman was lying, “do
you think it is true what they are all saying, that Abner’s grandson
is gathering together a band of desperate men, and intends to try
and provoke a general rising, and to march all through the district,
breaking machines and robbing and plundering? It seems too dreadful to
think of; but wherever I go I hear the same tale. Do you believe that
it is true?”

“I trust that you have heard an exaggerated account of what is passing,
Lady Bride,” he said; “though I fear that there are troublous days
before us; but I think we are prepared for that, and can look without
over-much dismay around. Remember, my child, that when we see the
beginning of these things coming to pass, we are to lift up our heads,
because our redemption draweth nigh. In that is our safeguard and our
hope.”

The light flashed into Bride’s eyes.

“Ah! thank you for reminding me. It is so hard to keep it always in
mind; but indeed it is like the beginning--men’s heart’s failing them
for fear, and for looking after those things that are coming on the
earth. Mr. St. Aubyn, tell me, _are_ the people altogether wrong in
demanding redress of those grievances which lie so heavy upon them? Is
it right that they should have so little, so very little voice in the
government of the nation, when we call this a free and a constitutional
form of government? Need we condemn them altogether for doing what
their ignorance and misery drive them to do? Are we not also to blame
in that they are so miserable and ignorant?”

“In very truth we are, Lady Bride----”

“Ah! no; not _Lady_ Bride to you, when we are alone like this,” she
pleaded. “It never used to be so. Let it be Bride again, as though I
were a child. Ah! would that I were, and that _she_ were with me! Oh,
it is all so dark and perplexing now!”

“It is, my child, it is, even for the best and wisest on the earth. Let
us take comfort in the thought that it is light with God, and that He
sees the working out of His eternal purposes, even where most let and
hindered by the sin and opposition of man. A time of darkness is upon
us--that none can deny--not in this land alone, but in all the lands
of Christendom; and you are right in your feeling that it is not the
ignorant masses who are alone in fault. We--the Church--the nobility,
the great ones of the earth, have failed again and again in our duties
towards those below them, and now they have to suffer. Two wrongs do
not make one right, and the method in which the ignorant seem like to
set to work is not only foolish, but sinful also; and in our sense of
sympathy for the people and our self-reprobation, we must not palliate,
even though we may partially understand the cause of the sin. It is
right that the people should be thought of and rightly done by. God has
taught us that again and again; but it is not the ordinance of God that
the people should govern--and yet, if I read my Bible and interpret
aright, that is what we shall come to in the days of the end; it will
no longer be the voice of God, nor yet the voice of the king which will
prevail, but the voice of the people; and we shall again hear in newer
and more subtle forms that word of blasphemy which tells us that the
voice of the people is the voice of God.”

“Ah! do you think so? That is what I have heard said; but surely it
will take long, very long, to accomplish?”

“Perhaps; I know not. In France it was accomplished in a few terrible
years. Methinks in this land, where God has been so gracious times
and again, it may be differently done and with less of terror and
bloodshed; but the end will assuredly be the same. One can see, even
from a worldly aspect, how it will be accomplished. Men say, and with
justice and truth, that there should be in the community, for the good
of all, a fair class representation--that is, that each class should
have such a voice in the discussion of the affairs of the nation as
will secure for that class the meed of justice and consideration to
which its position entitles it. At present this is not so. The rising
and important middle class have almost no representation, and the
labouring and artisan class none. Yet they have a stake in the country,
and are entitled to a voice.”

“That is what Eustace says, and it sounds right.”

“It is right, according to my ideas of justice, and will be gradually
accomplished, as you know, by extension of franchise and so forth. We
need not discuss that theme now. What I mean to point out to you is
the danger that threatens us in the future. From claiming a fair class
representation as the basis of sound government, the next step will be
the theory that every man--or at least every householder--should have
a vote, and most plausible reasons will be given for this. Probably in
time it will be carried into law, and then you will see at once an end
of class representation as well as of fair constitutional government.
The power will no longer be balanced. It will all be thrown into the
hands of one class, and that the most numerous but the least educated,
the least thoughtful, the least capable of clear and sound judgment,
because their very conditions of life preclude them from study and the
acquisition of the needful knowledge requisite for sound government.
The power will be vested in the class the most easily led or driven by
unprincipled men, by the class with the least stake in the country,
and the least power of seeing the true bearing of a measure which may
be very plausible, but absolutely unsound. It may take the people very
long to find their power, and perhaps longer still to dare to use it;
but in time both these things will be achieved, and then the greatness
of England will be at an end; and, as I think, the state of misery and
confusion which will ensue will be far, far greater than what she has
endured beneath the sway of her so-called tyrants and oppressors.”

Bride heaved a long sigh.

“Eustace would not think that,” she remarked softly.

“No, nor many great men of the day; and time has yet to show whether
they are right, or an old parish priest who has been buried alive
all his days and knows nothing, as they would argue, of the signs of
the times;” and here Mr. St. Aubyn smiled slightly. “Well, well, God
knows, and in His good time we shall know. For the present that must
content us. Let us not be in haste to condemn. Let us be patient, and
full of faith and hope. He has always pointed out a way of escape for
His faithful servants and followers before things become too terrible
for endurance. Our hope no man can take from us. Let us live in its
heavenly light, and then shall we not be confounded at the swelling
of the waters and the raging of the flood--those great waters of the
latter days--supporting the beast and his scarlet rider, which are
peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues, the power of a great
and lawless democracy.”

Bride looked awed and grave, yet full of confidence and hope; but the
conversation was brought to a close by their arrival at the cottage
whither both were bound.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER X

_A STRANGE NIGHT_


It was a sultry August night, and Bride felt no disposition for
sleep. She had acquired during her mother’s long illness the habit
of wakefulness during the earlier hours of the night, when she was
frequently beside the sick-bed, ministering to the wants of the
patient. Since death had robbed her of that office, she had fallen into
the habit of spending the earlier hours of the night in meditation and
prayer, together with a study of the Scriptures; and to-night, after
her old nurse had brushed out her abundant hair, and arranged it for
the night, and after she had exchanged her dress for a long straight
wrapper which was both cooler and more comfortable, she dismissed the
old servant with a few sweet words of thanks, and setting her windows
wide open to the summer night, knelt down beside the one which looked
out over the moonlit bay, and was soon lost to all outward impression
by her absorption in her own prayerful meditations.

The hour of midnight had boomed from the clock-tower before she
moved, and then she was aroused less by that sound than by a gradual
consciousness that there was in the sky, to which her eyes were
frequently raised, a glow that was not of the moon, but was more
ruddy in tone, and seemed to absorb into itself the softer and whiter
light. As she remarked this, her thoughts came back to earth again,
and rising from her knees, she leaned out of the window, and then
crossed the room hastily towards that other window looking away in the
direction of Pentreath, and then at once she understood.

A tall column of fire arose from behind the belt of woodland which hid
the distant town, a beautiful but awful pillar of fire, reaching up as
it seemed to the very heavens, and swaying gently to and fro in the
light summer breeze. For a few moments Bride stood gazing at it with
eyes in which pain and wonderment were gathering, and then a stifled
exclamation broke from her lips.

“God forgive them!--that is the work of incendiaries!”

She stood rigid and motionless a few moments longer, and then with
rapid fingers she began unfastening her wrapper, and clothing herself
in one of her dark walking dresses. Her heart was beating fast and
furiously. Her face was very pale, for she was taking a resolution that
cost her a great effort; but she seemed to see her duty clearly mapped
out before her, and she came of a race that was not wont to shrink from
the path of duty because the road was rough.

Few knew better than did Lady Bride Marchmont the temper of the rude
fisher-folk of St. Bride’s Bay. From her childhood she had been wont to
accompany her mother down to that cluster of cottages and hovels which
formed the little community, and she had grown up with an intuitive
understanding of the people, and their ways and methods of thought,
which had been matured and deepened by her many talks with Abner. She
knew full well that, although in the main kindly men individually,
there was a vein of ferocity running through the fibre of their nature,
which a certain class of events always awoke to active life. Thirty
years back these men, or their fathers, were professionally wreckers,
and it had needed long patience, and all the gentle influence of
the Duchess and her helpers, to break them of this terrible sin. Of
late years deliberate wrecking had to a very great extent died out,
but there was still in the hearts of the fishermen an irradicable
conviction that when “Providence” did send a vessel to pieces on their
iron-bound coast, the cargo of that vessel became their lawful prey;
and they were careless enough, in striving to outwit the authorities
and secure the booty, of any loss of human life which might have
been averted by prompt measures on their part. They made it rather
a principle than otherwise to let the crew drown before their eyes
without any attempt at rescue. When the crew were saved, they had a way
of claiming the contents of the ship if any came ashore, and that was a
notion altogether foreign to the ideas of the fishermen of St. Bride.

The same instinct of plunder awoke within them when any misfortune
occurred in the neighbourhood; and wherever there was booty to be had
for the taking, there were the hardy fisher-folk of the place likely to
be found. Bride realised in a moment that if they saw the glow of this
fire, and understood its meaning as she did, they would set off at once
to join the band of marauders and incendiaries; and as every addition
to such a band brings a fresh access of lawlessness and a growing sense
of power, the very fact of the arrival of this reinforcement was likely
enough to result in fresh outrage, and fresh scenes of destruction and
horror.

Whilst standing rigid and silent, watching that terrible pillar of
flame, Bride had turned the matter over in her mind, and resolved upon
her own course of action. She knew the fishermen well, and knew their
nature--at once soft and passionate, gentle and ferocious. Were she
to alarm the household and get her father to send down a number of the
servants to try and stop them by force from marching to join the riot,
she knew that nothing but fighting and disaster would ensue. There
was a long-standing and instinctive feud between the servants of the
castle, many of whom were not natives of the place, and the rugged
fisher-folk of the bay. The servants despised the fishermen, and the
fishermen hated the servants. No good could possibly result from such a
course of action. But Bride knew every man amongst them. She had gone
fearlessly in and out of their houses since childhood. She had sailed
in their boats on the bay, she had visited their wives in sickness, and
had clothed their children with the work of her own hands. They loved
her in their own rough way. She knew that well, and she was a power in
their midst, as her mother had been before her. They might be stayed by
her pleading words, when no attempt at force would do more than whet
their desire after battle and plunder. If she went alone, she had a
chance with them; if she stayed to get help, all would be lost.

Her resolution was taken in less time than it has taken to read these
lines. Donning her plainest dress and cloak, and softly summoning
from the anteroom a great hound, who was the invariable companion of
her lonely walks, she opened another door into one of the turreted
chambers of the castle, and found her way down a spiral staircase,
lighted by broad squares of moonlight from unclosed windows, to a door
at the base, the bolts of which she drew back easily--for this was her
own ordinary mode of access to the gardens--and found herself out in
the soft night-air with the moon overhead, and that glow in the sky
behind her which told such a terrible tale of its own. There were two
ways from the castle to the fishing-village lying out of sight beneath
the shelter of the cliff. One was the long and roundabout way of the
zigzag carriage-drive, leading through the grounds and out by the
lodge upon the road, from which a bye-lane led down to the shore. The
other was a far shorter, but a rough and in some seasons a perilous
track--a narrow pathway formed by a jutting ledge of rock, extending
by one of nature’s freaks from a little below the great terrace in
front of the castle right round the angle of the bluff, and so to St.
Bride’s Bay itself. A long, long flight of steps led down from the
sea-terrace of Penarvon to the beach below, where the castle boats lay
at anchor, or were housed within their commodious boat-house, according
to weather and season; and from one spot as you descended these steps
a sure-footed person could step upon the ledge of rock which formed
the pathway round the headland. Bride was familiar from childhood with
this path, and had traversed it too often and too freely to feel the
smallest fear now. The moonlight was clear and intense. She knew every
foot of the way, and even the hound who followed closely in her wake
was too well used to the precarious ledge to express any uneasiness
when his mistress led the way down to it.

With rapid and fearless precision Bride made the transit round the
rocky headland, and saw the waters of the bay lying still and calm at
her feet. The ledge of rock sloped rapidly down on this side of the
bluff, and very quickly Bride found herself quite close to the hamlet,
which lay like a sleeping thing beneath the sheltering crags. Her heart
gave a bound of relief. All was still as yet. Perhaps the men had not
realised what was passing, and were all at home and asleep. She paused
a moment, reconnoitring, wondering whether she would do better to go
forward or back. But the sight of a light shining steadily in one
window, and a shadow passing to and fro within the room it lighted,
convinced her that something was astir, and decided her to go on.
She knew the cottage well. It was that of the old woman who went by
the name of Mother Clat. Bride knew that if any mischief were afoot,
she would be the first to know it; nay, it was like enough it would
be hatched and discussed beneath her very roof. Even now the worst
characters of the place, the boldest of the men, and those most bent on
riot and plunder, might be gathered together there; but the knowledge
of this probability did no deter Bride, who had all the resolute
fearlessness of her race and temperament; and she went composedly
forward and knocked at the outer door.

“Coom in wi’ ye,” answered a familiar voice, and Bride lifted the latch
and entered.

A fire of peat turves glowed on the open hearth, over which a pot was
hanging; but the room was empty, save for the old woman herself, who
gazed in unaffected amaze at the apparition of the slim black-robed
girl with her white face and shining eyes.

“Loramassy! ef it ban’t t’ Laady Bride hersen! Mercy on us! What’s
brought she doon heer at such a time! My pretty laady, you ’a no beznez
out o’ your bed sech a time as this. You shudden ’ave abin an’ gone vor
tu leave t’ castle to-night!”

“Why not?” asked Bride, coming forward towards the fire, and looking
full at the woman, who shrank slightly under the penetrating gaze.
“What is going on abroad to-night, Mother Clat? I know that something
is?”

“Fegs! I’m thinking the dowl himsel’s abroad these days,” answered the
woman uneasily. “The bwoys are that chuck vull o’ mischief. Theer’s no
holdin’ un when ’e gets un into ’is maw. It du no manner o’ gude to
clapper-claw un. ’T on’y maakes un zo itemy’s a bear wi’ a zore yed.”

“Where are the men?” asked Bride quietly. The woman eyed the girl
uneasily and not without suspicion, but the expression of her face
seemed to reassure her.

“Ye dwawnt mean no harm to the bwoys ef so be as I tellee?” she
answered tentatively.

“No, indeed,” answered Bride earnestly. “I want to keep them from harm
all I can. I am so terribly afraid they are running into it themselves.
I hoped I should be in time to stop it. Oh, I fear I am too late!”

“Crimminy!” ejaculated the old woman, with admiration in her voice and
eyes, “ef yu came to try an’ stop they bwoys from mischief, yu are a
righy bold un!--that yu be! But ’tidden no use tu argufy widden. I did
go for tu try mysen: but twarn’t no use. Et gwoeth agin the grain o’
men-folk tu listen tu a woman--let alone a bit of a gurl like yu, my
laady.”

“I think they would have listened to me if I could have found them in
time,” said Bride softly, with a great regret in her eyes. “You mean
they have all gone off to join the rioters over at Pentreath?”

“They’ve abin tu Pentreath ever sin’ yestereen. Yu’ve coom tu late, my
pretty laady. Du ee go back now. ’Tidden no place for yu heer. What
ud his Graace say ef he heard you was tu St. Bride’s at this time o’
night?”

The woman was so manifestly uneasy that the girl suspected something,
though she knew not what. As she stood looking into the fire, Mother
Clat still urging her to be gone, it suddenly occurred to her that
possibly the rioters had other plans than those whispered designs
against the mills of Pentreath. Had not her own father angered one
section of the community by the introduction of machinery upon the
land? And when the spirit of revolt was aroused and well whetted by
scenes of outrage, might not one lead to others?

Looking straight at the old woman with the grave direct glance which
made this girl a power sometimes with those about her, she asked
clearly and steadily--

“Do you mean that you are expecting the men back? that they are bent on
doing mischief here? Do not try and deceive me. It is always best to
speak the truth.”

The old woman cowered before the girl, as she never cowered in the
midst of the rude rough men, even when they were in their cups, and
threatened her with rough ferocity.

“Yu nidden be glumpy wi’ I,” she half whimpered, “I an’t adued nawt but
try to keep un back. I twold un it ud coom tu no gude. They’d better
letten bide. But I be terrabul aveared they means mischief. It’s awl
along o’ that Zaul. He’ve abin arufyin’, and aggin’ un on, and now they
du zay as ’e’s leadin’ un the dowl on’y knaws wheer; and they’re fair
’tosticated wi’t all!”

Bride started a little, as though something had stung her, and a look
of keen pain came into her face.

“Saul,” she said softly, “Abner’s boy! Ah! what a sorrow it will be for
him! And that is Eustace’s doing! It was he who is responsible, not the
poor hot-headed youth himself. O Eustace! Eustace! will you ever see
the danger of the path you are treading, and the peril into which you
are leading others?”

The woman was loth to speak at first, but the charm of Bride’s
gentleness, and her absolute sense of security in the goodwill of the
young lady, overcame her reticence at last, and she told the girl all
she knew. It was not much; but she had gathered from some news that
reached her at dusk that she might expect a party some time in the
small hours of the morning, who would stand in need of refreshment,
but would pay her well for her trouble. Reading between the lines of
the message, she had got a shrewd notion that the marauders under Saul
Tresithny would pay a visit to the neighbourhood of St. Bride’s that
night, and it might be presumed that the Duke’s new machinery might
suffer in consequence. This was by no means certain, however. The
Duke was known to take precautions not possible for smaller farmers
with fewer servants and less issue at stake, and it might be that the
attack would be made upon the smaller men, who would less easily recoup
themselves for the loss. Of that the woman knew nothing; as a matter
of fact, she did not know, but only guessed, that an attack might be
made at all. She had soon come to an end of such information as she
possessed, and Bride was left to consider what she ought to do under
the circumstances.

Should she go home and rouse her father’s men? or would that only
bring about the very collision she so much wished to avoid? Was
the information received sufficient for her to act upon, or had it
originated with the woman herself, who was evidently not in the
confidence of the men? Musing for a few moments over this question,
Bride made a quick resolve, and after saying a brief but kindly
farewell to Mother Clat, who was anxiously studying her face all the
while, she slipped out of the cottage, and along the silent little
street of the village beneath the cliff, till she found herself upon
the bit of rough road which led upwards from the shore, through a
narrow gully, towards the church and the rectory.

Bride knew the habits of Mr. Tremodart. He was seldom in bed before
one or two o’clock in the morning. He was a man of eccentric ways,
and almost invariably after his supper at half-past eight, sat down
to smoke in one of his untidy rooms, and at ten o’clock started out
on a long walk over the moors or along the cliffs, coming home about
midnight, and sitting up with a book for an hour or two later. It was
not much after one o’clock now, and she had good hopes of catching him
before he retired. With all his peculiarities, and his lack of the
spirituality that was to Bride as the breath of life, the Cornishman
was a shrewd, hard-headed man, with a large fund of common-sense, and
a wide experience of St. Bride’s folks and their ways. He would be by
far the best person to acquaint with the danger of the hour. He was
(as was usual in those days) magistrate as well as clergyman, had a
secular as well as sacred charge over his people. To her great relief,
as she unlatched the garden-gate, she saw him standing out in his
untidy plot of ground and looking at the red light in the sky. As her
light footfall fell upon his ear, he turned with a start, and his face
expressed a great amazement when he saw who had come to disturb his
solitude at such an hour.

“Lady Bride! Will wonders never cease! And what are yu doing out here
alone at this time of night, my child? It is hardly fit yu should be
abroad with no protector but your dog. Is anything amiss at home? And
why did yu not send rather than come?”

In a few words Bride told the story of her evening’s vigil and
its result, the clergyman standing and looking down at her in the
moonlight, and making patterns on the gravel with the point of his
stick.

“The foolish lads! the foolish, wrong-headed lads! they will bring
mischief on their heads one of these days, I take it. Well, well, well,
it is perhaps less their fault than those who egg them on, and puzzle
their heads by half-truths. Dear, dear, we must stop the mischief if we
can. I wonder now where they are like to go first. To the Duke’s, think
you, Lady Bride? ’Twas he who first brought in this new machinery, and
there would be most glory in destroying his property, as they would
think it, poor misguided souls!”

“Yes, but they know my father’s men have firearms, and that the dogs
are left loose in the great yard where the machines are kept, and that
there is always one man sleeping in the room by the great alarm-bell
that was put up, who would rouse the whole castle if he heard any sound
of attack.”

“If they know that, they are hardly likely to be daring enough to try
to injure his Grace’s property,” remarked Mr. Tremodart thoughtfully.
“But there are several more in their black books--Farmer Teazel, for
instance--and that misguided young Tresithny, whom yu say is at the
head of all this, knows the place well, and would be able to lead them
to it.”

“Oh, I cannot believe it of Saul!” cried Bride, with a note of pain in
her voice, “to turn into a leader of cowardly mobs, after the teaching
and the training he has had! It doesn’t seem possible; yet I fear it
is too true. And it is, I fear, the doing of my cousin Eustace. Oh, it
seems too sad that we should first lead them on to riot, and then sit
in judgment upon them for what we have taught them to do.”

“I must see if I cannot stop this before it has come to a matter
for the magistrates,” said Mr. Tremodart, with a firm look upon his
face; “if things go too far, it becomes a hanging matter for the
ringleaders--examples are made, and the people intimidated by the
hanging of those who lead them. We must not let Abner’s grandson finish
his life upon the gallows if we can help it. So come with me, Lady
Bride; I will see you to the gate of your home, and then go and meet
these lads if they do pay us a visit. They will most likely take the
direct road for some distance, and the night is very still. I think I
shall find them out by the tramp of their feet. I have good ears for
sound.”

Bride knew that, and walked rapidly by his side up the steep road
trending upwards towards the castle; but when the lodge gate was
reached, and he would have opened it for her, she paused and placed her
hand upon his arm.

“I cannot,” she said; “I must go on. I must see the end of this.
Indeed, I shall get no harm. Nobody will lay a finger on me. No, do
not refuse me; do not think me self-willed, but I must go with you.
Something within me tells me I must. Mr. Tremodart, it has been the
doing of a Marchmont that Saul Tresithny and these poor ignorant
fishermen are abroad with evil intent to-night. You must not hinder me
from striving to do my share to avert the threatened danger, and I know
I shall not be hurt. You will be with me, and no one will lay a finger
on either of us. They may not listen to us; but they will not hurt us.
Our West-Country men are not savages.”

Mr. Tremodart rubbed his chin and shook his head in some perplexity.
He did not think the delicate girl was suited to the task in hand,
and he rather feared what the Duke might say when this night’s work
came to his ears; but then it was very difficult for him to overcome
the resistance of Lady Bride, whose rank and standing gave her an
importance of her own quite independent of that exercised by her strong
personality.

“I will tell my father that it was my own doing,” said Bride quietly,
observing his hesitation, and taking his arm, she led him onwards, he
yielding the point, because he did not exactly know what else to do,
having no authority over her to insist on her return.

The walk was a swift but silent one. The road lay white beneath their
feet, and the moon, which was now sinking in the sky, threw long
strange shadows over the world. The track grew rougher as it rose upon
the down-land, but both were good walkers, and did not heed. The great
hound paced silently behind them as they moved, till all at once it
lifted up its huge head, and after sniffing the air suspiciously for a
while, broke into a low deep bay.

At that sound both pedestrians stopped and listened intently, and in
a few brief moments they heard a noise. It was not the sound of the
measured tramping they had expected first to hear, but rather that of
voices--voices in confabulation or dispute, sometimes low and confused,
sometimes rising higher and higher, as if in angry debate--the voices
of a multitude, as was testified by the continual hum, in addition to
the more distinct sounds of argument or strife. The moon just now had
passed behind a cloud, and the moor was very dark, but Mr. Tremodart
and Bride walked swiftly and silently forward, leaving the road for the
soft grass, as they deflected their course, so as to come near to the
spot where the colloquy was being held. Their footsteps made no sound,
and Bride held the hound by the collar and hushed him into silence.
Very soon they had approached near enough to hear what was passing, and
to catch every word of a harangue being delivered in a voice which both
of them knew only too well.

“I tell yu yu are cowards to think only of duing what is safest and
easiest for yourselves. Are we fighting for ourselves, or for our
miserable and oppressed brothers? Men, we are bound together in a great
undertaking; and if we stand shoulder to shoulder in the fight, and
are true tu ourselves and tu each other all over the land, no power
can stand against us. We are bound together tu overthrow tyrants and
oppressors--the great ones of the earth, who fatten upon our misery and
grind us to the very dust. Those are our enemies, and all of yu know it
as well as I. And now to-night, when the power is in our hands, are we
to disgrace our cause by falling upon men only a little better off than
ourselves, and wrecking their goods and bringing them to misery? No--I
say no. I say that would be a coward act. And those who want to go to
yon upland farm, and ruin a man who was once as one of us, till by his
industry he raised himself to comfort, or his father before him, must
go alone. I will not be with him. There is one man only in these parts
upon whose goods I will lay a hand, and that is the Duke of Penarvon.
He is the type tu us of that wealth and power we are banded together
tu overthrow, and I will lead yu on tu his place and lay down my life
in the struggle with all joy. But I will knock down the first man who
tries to go to the farm, and yu men in the crowd who owe the farmer a
grudge and hound the rest on to attack him, yu best know whether or not
I can keep my word!”

There was dead silence after this speech, which was evidently the
culminating oration of a hot debate, and a voice from the crowd called
out--

“Us ban’t agwain’ vur tu be a-killed by the Duke’s men an’ theer
guns--we’m had enough o’ guns. We’ll de dalled ef we du! Ef we can’t
have a slap at t’old varmer’s ’chines, us’ll gwo home tu our beds. Be
yu agwaine to take we theer or ban’t yu?”

“I’ll not take yu tu the varm, nor yet stand by and zee yu gwo!”
answered Saul hotly, lapsing from the dignity of speaker into that of a
common disputer, and for a minute the battle raged again; but perhaps
the crowd from Pentreath had about tired itself out, for there was no
very determined resistance to Saul’s resolute opposition, and evidently
no disposition in the mob to run the gauntlet of the Duke’s well-known
and organised opposition to such attacks.

In the darkness of the night--darkest before the dawn--the crowd slowly
melted away, slowly at first, but with considerable rapidity, as the
men realised that they were hungry, and tired, and cold, and that
many of them had plunder from the burning mill to secrete before the
authorities came in search of them. Before the moon shone out again
the mob had melted like snow before the sun, and Mr. Tremodart and
Bride, whose figures seemed to rise up out of the very ground before
the astonished gaze of one man left standing alone upon the moor, found
themselves face to face with Saul Tresithny, who looked in the white
low moonlight as though confronted by veritable wraiths.

“Saul,” said Bride, coming one step forward, “why do you hate my father
so much? What ill has he ever done to you, or to any in St. Bride?”

The man made no attempt to reply, till the glance fixed full upon him
seemed to draw the answer, but without his own volition.

“It is not he himself I hate,” he said, speaking with difficulty, “it
is the whole system he supports. He is one of the enemies of the cause
of the people. He and all his class are barriers and bulwarks against
our freedom. You do not understand; you could not. But we do, and Mr.
Marchmont will tell you all, if you ask him. He knows. It is not the
men themselves we hate, but the power they hold over us. We will not
have it longer. We will break the yoke off our neck.”

At this moment the sound of galloping horse-hoofs was heard along the
soft turf, and the three standing in the moonlight saw a young officer
of dragoons, followed by three mounted troopers, heading straight for
them.

“That’s the fellow!” cried the officer; “seize him, men, and make him
fast. I thought we’d run him to earth here. That’s your man. See he
does not escape you!”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XI

_DUKE AND DEFAULTER_


Bride made three steps forward and stood beside the horse ridden by the
young officer, the moonlight shining clear upon her, and adding to the
pure pale character of her beauty.

“Captain O’Shaughnessy,” she said gently, “I think you are making a
mistake about this man.”

In a second the young officer was off his horse and on his feet. He
recognised the speaker now, although his astonishment at such an
encounter at such an hour of the night--or rather morning, for the dawn
would soon begin to break--was past all power of expression.

“Lady Bride!--Can it be you? or do I see a ghost?”

“No, it is I,” answered the girl quietly; “I came out with our good
clergyman, Mr. Tremodart, to see if we could persuade our foolish
and misguided fishermen from St. Bride to come quietly home. We were
afraid they were bent on mischief. But we only came up as the crowd was
dispersing. Your prisoner there was refusing to permit an attack on the
machinery at Farmer Teazel’s, which the men were eager to make. That is
why I say that I think you are making a mistake in arresting him.”

The young officer, who had received hospitality from the Duke on
occasion, as all the officers of the regiment quartered near to
Pentreath did from time to time, looked from his prisoner to the lady
and from the lady to the prisoner in some perplexity, and then said
doubtfully--

“Do you not think you are mistaken, Lady Bride? Was not the man urging
them to make the attack?”

“No,” answered Bride at once. “He would have been willing to do so had
they marched upon my father’s place, where there would have been a
warm welcome for them, and hard fighting; but his followers were not
prepared for that. They wished to go where there would be little or no
resistance, and where they could effect their purpose with impunity.
But your prisoner there threatened to knock down the first man who
attempted such a thing, and his words had the effect of dispersing the
crowd. As you yourself saw, he was alone when you came up. But for him,
that dispersed crowd would have been in full march upon one of the
nearest farms here. Are you arresting him for that?”

“Faith no!” answered the young man, evidently rather nonplussed by the
lady’s story, and uncertain how to proceed. “Nevertheless this is the
man, as I take it, whom I was sent out to capture. Is not your name
Saul Tresithny?” he asked, turning towards the prisoner, who stood
perfectly still and quiet between his guards, making no attempt at
escape.

“Yes.”

“And you were leading the mob in Pentreath this night--helping to set
fire to the mills?”

“I was with them part of the time,” answered Saul fearlessly.

“And you are the man who makes speeches that sends them all stark
raving mad? I’ve heard of you, Saul Tresithny. I think it is high time
you had a taste of prison discipline.”

“I do what I can for the cause of freedom,” answered Saul, throwing
back his head with a gesture that was rather fine. “I cry death to
tyranny and tyrants wherever they be, but I’ll have no hand in harming
poor men’s goods. If my men would have marched on the castle to-night,
I’d have led them with all my best ability; but they had not the
stomach for it--poor, ill-fed wretches--one can’t wonder. Courage and
starvation are not wont to walk hand in hand, so they melted away like
a mist just before you came. But I am here, ready to lay down my life
for the cause, if that will be any good to it.”

The young officer shrugged his shoulders and turned back to the lady
with a gesture that spoke volumes.

“There, Lady Bride, you see what kind of a temper that fellow has got;
your pleadings are quite thrown away on such as he.”

“He is only repeating what he has been taught, and that by those who
should know better,” pleaded Bride gently, yet earnestly. “Captain
O’Shaughnessy, I have known that young man all my life, and until he
was led away by the voice of this cruel agitation he bore the best of
characters; and to-night he has dispersed a lawless mob by the strength
of his own determination. Men are not punished for their intentions but
for their deeds. He says he would have injured my father’s property;
but he did not do it. What he did do was all in the cause of law and
order. Mr. Tremodart, tell Captain O’Shaughnessy what we saw and heard;
then he will understand better that he is making a mistake about Saul.”

“I can only testify that what you’ve said is the truth, Lady Bride. I
can’t say, of course, what the young man has been doing earlier on; but
we came out to try and stop the boys of St. Bride from getting intu
mischief, which is a way they have when mischief is afloat; and we came
upon the young fellow making a speech which had the effect of sending
them tu the right-about and dispersing them. That’s all true as gospel;
but whether yu are justified in letting your prisoner escape yu, I
don’t profess to judge. Yu should know your duty better than we can
teach it yu.”

“And I’m afraid my duty is to arrest him and take him back to
Pentreath,” said the young man regretfully. “Lady Bride, I don’t like
doing anything against your wishes, but my orders were to ride after
the mob and disperse it, and capture Saul Tresithny if possible. I
don’t think I should be justified in letting him escape me after
that--once having my hands upon him. You wouldn’t wish me, I am sure,
to fail in my own duty and obedience?”

The young fellow spoke almost pleadingly, and Bride’s face changed.
The soft eager light went out of her eyes, and was replaced by one of
sadness and resignation.

“I must persuade no one to fail in duty and obedience,” she said, with
a sigh, “least of all one of his Majesty’s soldiers. But will you
remember all that I have spoken in his favour, and let it be known what
he did to-night?”

“Faith and I will. I’ll say everything I can in his favour--how he
didn’t resist us, but behaved as quietly and as well as possible, and
had sent all the people to the right-about before ever we had got up to
them. I’ll say everything I know for him, poor fellow. For he’ll need
it--with the charges they’ll bring against him.”

The soldiers, at a sign from their superior, had walked the prisoner
a little farther away, and Bride, looking anxiously into Captain
O’Shaughnessy’s face, asked, in a low voice--

“What charges will they bring?”

“Arson, for one thing,” answered the young man significantly. “You
see, there’s been a lot of damage done in Pentreath to-night, and it’s
pretty well known that Tresithny and another little cobbler fellow have
been the stirrers-up of all this turbulence. They’ve got the cobbler
fast enough; and now I’ve got Tresithny too. They’ll be examined
to-morrow before the magistrates, and most likely committed for trial.
It’s been a bad bit of business, and the country is getting exasperated
with all this senseless rioting and destruction of property. They make
signal examples now and again of ringleaders--just to try and deter
others.”

Bride turned very white in the dying moonlight.

“What do you think they will do to him?” she asked, in a low voice.

“Well, I can’t say. I’ll tell all you’ve told me, Lady Bride. I’ll
say what there is to say in his favour, for he’s a plucky fellow, and
deserves a better fate. He’d make an uncommon fine soldier, if he were
only in the ranks now. But many men have been hanged for less than
has been astir in Pentreath these past few days, and there’s a strong
feeling in the place against this fellow Tresithny.”

Bride caught her breath a little sharply, but her voice was quite calm
as she bowed her adieus to the young officer.

“Well, I must not detain you any longer, Captain O’Shaughnessy. I am
grateful to you for telling me the truth, and for promising to befriend
Saul Tresithny as far as you are able. You say he will be brought
before the magistrates to-morrow--does that mean to-day? It is their
day for sitting, I know.”

“To-day! why, to be sure it is to-day,” answered the young man, with
a short laugh. “Good morning, Lady Bride. I must be off after my men.
They have been out the best part of the night. I’ll say all I can for
that fellow Tresithny; but----”

He sprang on his horse, and the rest of the sentence, if it was ever
finished, was lost on Bride. She took Mr. Tremodart’s arm, and he felt
that she was trembling all over.

“This has been too much for you, Lady Bride,” he said, with his awkward
gentleness. “I ought not to have let you come.”

“It is not that,” answered Bride, in a very low voice. “I am not tired;
it is the thought of _that_. Oh, Mr. Tremodart, is it true?--can they
hang him for it?”

“The magistrates cannot hang him,” answered Mr. Tremodart; “and if he
is committed for trial, several weeks will elapse before the assize
comes on, and things may have happened to divert public attention; so
perhaps the feeling against him will not be running so high. All those
things make a great difference.”

“But have they hanged men before for this sort of thing?”

“Yes--they have certainly done so.”

Bride shuddered again. She spoke some words, as if to herself, in so
low a voice that he could not catch them; but he thought he heard the
name of Eustace pass her lips.

He shook his own head sorrowfully.

“I was afraid Mr. Marchmont was wrong in trying to stir up the people
to be discontented and rebellious. He meant well--all those reformers
mean well, and have a great deal on their side; but they go to work so
often in the wrong way, and their followers make the blunder ten times
worse. It’s not easy to say out of hand how the thing should be done;
but I take it they’ve not got hold of the right end of the stick yet.”

The two walked with rapid steps, their thoughts keeping them silent for
the most part. Bride’s mind was hard at work; her feelings were keenly
stirred within her. The burden of the song which kept ringing in her
ears was, “This is Eustace’s doing, this is Eustace’s work. Oh, how
can we let another die, and die perhaps unfit and impenitent through
his act, through his teaching? It must not be. Oh, it shall not be!
Saul must not die through Eustace’s fault!”

Bride had come to think of Eustace in a way she scarcely understood
herself. She had not greatly liked him on his visit. For many weeks she
had thought little of him, and later on, when she knew him better, she
saw too much in him to disapprove to grow in any way dependent upon
him. And yet since his departure she was conscious that he filled a
good deal of her thoughts, that she felt a certain responsibility in
his career, and that she was unable to help identifying herself with
him in a fashion she could neither understand nor explain.

True he had made her an offer of marriage, and had professed an undying
love for her. He had gone away half pledged to return and seek her
again; and no woman can be utterly indifferent towards a man who loves
her, especially when she is young, and has never known what it is to be
wooed before. Bride had shrunk back in justifiable reproof when Eustace
spoke of her as being the sun and star of his life, the elevating power
which could raise him to what heights she would; but none the less
did his words leave an impress on her sensitive mind, and gave her
much food for reflection. She was too well taught, as well as too full
of spiritual insight, to be confused by such an outburst, or to come
to look upon herself as responsible for the soul of the man who had
almost offered it to her to make what she would of; but she had begun
to wonder what she might be able to do for him by prayer and unceasing
intercession, and the thought was helping her to take a keener and more
personal interest in any matter in which Eustace was concerned than
would otherwise have been the case.

The dawn was breaking as Bride reached home, but she slipped up to her
room unobserved. She was too worn out and weary to think any more just
then; and slipping off her clothes and getting into bed, she fell into
a deep sleep, which lasted till the attendant came to rouse her in the
morning.

Refreshed by those few hours of dreamless sleep, but with her mind as
full as before of the events of the past night, she rose and dressed,
and found her way to the breakfast-room just as her father was entering.

The Duke’s face was very stern. He had just heard of the riots in
Pentreath. Mr. St. Aubyn had come half-an-hour earlier to speak to
him on the matter. He was on his way to Pentreath, for both he and
Mr. Tremodart, according to the prevailing custom of the day, were on
the magisterial bench, and he often came in on his way to a sitting
to consult the Duke on some point of law, or ask leave to look in
his many and valuable books for some information on a knotty point.
He was in the library at this moment, and the Duke was ordering some
refreshment to be taken to him there, as he had no time to come to the
breakfast-room.

When he saw his daughter, he greeted her with an air of abstraction;
and as the two sat at table together, he told her in a few words
the news which had reached him, and spoke of his own intention of
accompanying Mr. St. Aubyn to Pentreath, in order to make personal
inquiries and inspection as to the magnitude of the riot.

Bride listened in silence whilst he spoke; and then suddenly summoning
up all her own courage (for she had all her life stood in considerable
awe of her father), she told him in unconsciously graphic words the
whole story of her night’s adventure, and of the terrible peril now
menacing Saul Tresithny.

The Duke listened in silence, but evidently the story produced a
profound impression on him. His eyes never moved from his daughter’s
face as she proceeded, and at the end he sat perfectly silent for a
full three minutes before he put a sudden question--

“And why are you so keenly interested in the fate of this Saul
Tresithny, Bride? What is he more to you than the cobbler, for
instance, of whom Captain O’Shaughnessy spoke? Is it because he is a
St. Bride man--Abner’s grandson? Poor old Abner!--it will be a terrible
blow to him!”

“I think it will kill him if Saul is condemned to death,” said the
girl, with shining eyes. “Yes, papa, it is all that--I have known Saul
ever since I can remember anything--ever since I was a tiny child,
and he used to collect shells and seaweed for me, and make me boats
to sail. But it is not that quite--it is not only that he belongs to
our village, and that he is Abner’s grandson. That would always make
me interested in him, and dreadfully sorry if he got into trouble. But
there is another and a much greater reason than that. Oh, papa! surely
you know what it is!”

He was still looking at her earnestly. Little as Bride knew it, there
was at this moment in her face a look of her mother which the Duke
had never observed there before; her face was pale from her night’s
vigil, and from the stress of her emotion. Her dark eyes were full of
a liquid light, reminding him painfully of the dying brightness of his
wife’s eyes as she gave him her last solemn charge. Even the note of
appeal in the girl’s voice had something of the mother’s sweetness and
softness. Bride _had_ been growing increasingly like her mother during
the past months--many people had observed it; but her father had never
noticed it till now. Now the likeness struck him with a curious force,
and Bride noted that he seemed arrested by her words as had seldom been
the case before. But he made no verbal response, and she suddenly rose
and came over to him and knelt down at his feet, clasping her hands
upon the arm of his chair, and turning her sweet, quivering, earnest
face up towards him. Probably she would never have ventured upon this
demonstration before her unapproachable father, had it not been that
her sensitive spirit had received some instinctive consciousness of
sympathy new between him and herself. He laid his hand now upon her
clasped fingers, and the touch sent a quick thrill through her.

“Papa, Saul must not die!” she said, with intense earnestness of
resolve. “He must not die a traitor’s death, for the things he has done
are not prompted by his own imaginings. The words he has spoken are not
his own. It is Eustace who has done it all--Eustace who is the author
of all. Oh, papa, the punishment must not fall on Saul’s head. I think
it would break Eustace’s heart if he were to know that Saul had come to
his death like that.”

The Duke’s face was very dark and stern, but his sternness was not for
his child, as Bride knew by the pressure of the fingers upon her hand.

“Eustace should think of this before he sets about playing with
explosives. Could he not see that young Tresithny was not a man to be
stirred up with impunity? What a man sows, that shall he also reap.”

“Ah! truly he does! Oh, papa, I fear me the harvest Eustace will have
to reap will be a very bitter one; but, indeed, indeed Saul must not
die for Eustace’s fault. Eustace is our kinsman. He was here as our
guest. We cannot altogether shirk the responsibility of his deeds.
Papa, you will not let Saul die for what is the folly and sin of
Eustace. Ah! no. You will save him, I know. You will save him, for the
honour of the name of Marchmont!”

“What can I do. Bride? I have no power. I am not one of the
magistrates.”

“You are not a magistrate, but you have more power than any one in the
county,” answered Bride, with a smile so like her mother’s, that the
heart of the old man contracted first with pain, and then swelled with
a sense of new happiness. “Eustace would perhaps call it an abuse, that
one man should have so much power in his hands just because he had
wealth and lands; but I do not think that. I hold that if he uses his
power on behalf of true justice and true mercy, and in the cause of
Christ, it can be a power of great good to be used for the glory of God
and the blessing of man. _You_ will use your power so, dearest father,
will you not? Saul would have striven to do you hurt last night, not
from any personal enmity, but because he has been wrongly taught by our
own kinsman. You will go to-day and plead for him before his accusers,
and show him that the rich do not hate and oppress the poor, that the
great ones of the world can feel compassion and tenderness for those
who are deceived and led away, and that in them, and not in those who
raise the cry of hatred and bitterness, their friends are to be found.”

The Duke was silent for several minutes, and Bride did not disturb
him by so much as a word. He had laid his hand upon her head, and
was looking into her eyes with a glance she could not understand. In
very truth he was recalling the parting scene with his wife, the last
charge she had given him before the hand of death had been laid upon
those lips. It seemed to him as if now, all these months later, he was
listening to the echo of those words; and a strange wave of tenderness
swept over him, softening the hard lines of his face, and bringing into
it something which Bride had scarcely seen there before.

“You would have me stand before our ministers of the law as the
advocate of one who has been lawless, criminal, and the stirrer-up of
sedition? Am I to appear before our townsfolks as the supporter of
anarchy and arson?”

“No, but of mercy and goodwill towards the erring and deceived,”
answered Bride, “as the one man perhaps in the whole place who can so
stand fearlessly forward on the side of mercy, when he is known to be
held the greatest enemy to the public good, the bitterest enemy these
poor misguided creatures have. They hold you to be the embodiment of
all that is cruel and crushing--you will show them that you are their
best friend. You will plead for them, their ignorance, their inability
to see the falsity and folly of their teachers. You will show that Saul
has hitherto led an honest and industrious life; that till he was led
away by the teachings of Eustace, he was one of the steadiest men in
St. Bride. You will tell how he averted the attack on the farm last
night, and strive to gain mercy for one who has been only blinded and
maddened by others, and has within him the germs of so much that is
good. It is a first offence. Surely you can gain mercy for him! Oh, I
do not know how to bear the thought that Saul may have to die for what
is the fault of Eustace!”

The Duke sat very still, thinking deeply.

“You hold the fault to be Eustace’s?”

“Yes,” answered Bride, slowly and mournfully. “Other causes may have
helped, but Eustace set the ball rolling. He taught Saul discontent, as
he has tried to teach it to others. He thinks that that is the first
step towards trying to make men raise themselves. As Abner truly says,
it is beginning at the wrong end; but he cannot see that. If they would
but be discontented with themselves first--with their sinfulness, with
their vices--if they would rise higher by that repentance and cleansing
which would purify their hearts, then there would be hope for them
to rise in other ways. But to begin by stirring up all that is most
selfish and wicked, all the anger, hatred, and malice, which Christ
came down to destroy and overcome--ah! how can they look for good to
come? It never will and it never can.”

The Duke suddenly rose to his feet, for the clock had chimed the hour
of ten.

“I must be going if I am to go,” he said. “My child, you are your
mother’s daughter. Her voice speaks to me in yours. I will do what I
can for that miserable man, for her sake and yours.”

Her face quivered as she heard these words, and she turned away to hide
her emotion. He could not have spoken words which would more cheer her
than these which spoke of a likeness to her mother. Would she ever be
able in some small degree to take that vacant place with him?

The day seemed to pass wearily for Bride. Abner was not in the garden.
The Duke himself had sent him to the town to try and get speech of
his turbulent grandson, and to persuade him, if it were possible, to
comport himself with due humility, and without a needless show of
defiance before the magistrates that day. None knew better than the
Duke how much harm Saul might do to his own cause by an assumption
of defiance and impenitence before the arbiters of his fate; and
none knew better than he how little chance the young man stood if
he were once committed for trial at the County Assizes. Although
the spirit of reform was stirring all classes of the community, the
feeling against revolution was growing stronger in England with each
small outbreak--stronger, that is, in the eyes of the governing
powers--and signal examples were made of many obscure persons who
had been concerned in turbulent risings and riots. Once before the
criminal judges of the land, accused of arson, riot, and such-like
misdemeanours, a short shrift and a long halter were almost sure to be
his fate. All lay in the Duke’s power to avert a committal, and Abner
had been despatched with all speed to seek and use his influence with
the impracticable young man, that he might not tie a rope round his own
neck by some such speeches as he had made before Captain O’Shaughnessy.

The day seemed interminably long to Bride. She went down to the
fishing-village, and spoke earnestly with many of the men (now returned
home in that state of sheepish shame and satisfaction that betrayed
the fact of their having been engaged in some lawless but by no means
profitless undertaking) of the wickedness of such attacks on other
people’s property, and this spoiling of other people’s goods.

They listened to her grave gentle remonstrances in silence, half
ashamed of their conduct so long as her eye was upon them, never daring
in her presence to attempt the style of argument freely indulged in
alone. There was not one of those wild rough men who would have laid
a finger on this slight gentle girl, not though she was clad in gold
and jewels, or would have spoken a rough word or used an oath in her
presence. She and her mother had been and still were an embodiment
to them of something transcendently pure and holy: it was the one
elevating and sanctifying element in their lives; and many a man or
woman, when the hand of death seemed about to clutch them, had sent in
haste to know whether one of the ladies from the castle would come,
feeling that in such a presence as that even the king of terrors would
be robbed of half his power to hurt.

The day drew at last to its close, and Bride stationed herself at a
window to watch for the return of her father. She saw him at last
riding slowly up the ascent, with the servants behind him; and giving
him time to alight and reach the hall, she met him there with an eager
question on her lips.

“Oh, papa, what have you to tell me?”

“He is not committed for trial,” answered the Duke, as he moved slowly
across to his study, and sat down wearily in his own chair. “I could
not save him altogether, and perhaps it will be well for him to taste
prison discipline after what he has been doing these past weeks.”

“Prison! Oh, is Saul in prison?”

“He has been sent to jail for six months. It was the least sentence
that could well be passed upon him. There were two on the bench almost
resolved to make a criminal case of it; but as you say, my love, my
word goes a long way yet, and Mr. Tremodart and Mr. St. Aubyn and
another clergyman were on the side of mercy. Your story was told, and
it was corroborated by Captain O’Shaughnessy, and Saul’s previous
good character and steadiness up to the time he had been led away by
demagogues” (and a little spasm crossed the Duke’s face) “was all in
his favour. It was the first time he had been had up--a first offence
in the eyes of the law, though there were stories of months of conduct
the reverse of satisfactory to the authorities. Still he had dispersed
the crowd last night--no one could dispute that; and he was not proved
to have been present at the firing of the mills. The evidence on that
point was too confused and contradictory to go for anything. He denied
himself having been there, and we all believed he spoke the truth,
for he seemed almost reluctant to admit that he had not been in the
forefront of the riot. He had been attracted to the spot by the sight
of the flames, and had consented to head a march upon my yard. How
that ended you know. There was another ringleader who had headed the
arson mob, a cobbler, a well-known and most dangerous man. He was
committed for trial; there is no chance for him. His life will pay the
forfeit of his crime; but Saul Tresithny has escaped with six months’
imprisonment. Let us hope that he will have time and leisure in prison
to meditate on the error of his ways and come out a better and a wiser
man.”

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[Illustration]

CHAPTER XII

_AUTUMN DAYS_


During the latter half of the year 1830, England was passing through
some searching experiences, and through a crisis of her political
history. The events of these momentous years of the Reform struggle
have become by this time a matter of history, but a very brief outline
of passing events may not be out of place for younger readers.

When George IV. mounted the throne, the hopes of the Whig party rose
high. He was held to be the champion of liberty and reform, and it was
a bitter disappointment to those who had regarded him as the friend
and pupil of Fox, to find him cast himself into the arms of the Tory
party and turn his back on former associates. The leaven of reformed
representation had taken such hold of the nation, however, that already
a strong party existed, not in the country alone, but in Parliament;
yet the prospects of that party were at a very low ebb, till the
sudden turn brought about in the first place by the death of the king,
and secondly by the “Three days of July” in Paris, when an arbitrary
ministry, striving to override the Chamber of Deputies and subvert the
constitution, brought about the momentous rising in Paris which cost
Charles X. his throne, and raised Louis Philippe to be “King of the
Barricades.”

With the accession of William IV., the hopes of the Reform party rose
high. The Sailor Prince, as the people liked to call him, although he
had been something of a Tory in early life, did not stand pledged to
any side in politics, and might have the shrewdness to take warning
by the fate of his brother of France, and deem it wise and politic to
support all that was right and reasonable in the projected scheme of
reform. The champions of the movement were Lord Grey, Lord Durham,
his son-in-law, Lord John Russell, and Lord Brougham; but the Duke of
Wellington and his cabinet were strenuously opposed to any alteration
in the existing method of Parliamentary representation; and when
Parliament met for the first time in the new king’s reign, in October,
the premier plainly stated this opinion in his opening speech, and with
his customary boldness asserted that not only would he introduce no
measure of reform, but he would strenuously oppose any that should be
brought before the House.

It is well for a minister to have the courage of his opinions; but
from the moment of the delivery of that speech the existing ministry
became highly unpopular throughout the country. All far-seeing men,
of whatever shade of opinion, recognised that, whether for good or
ill, the time had come when something must be done to give the large
cities and the opulent middle classes a voice in the representation of
their country. The rotten boroughs, however desirable from a partisan
point of view, were obviously an abuse, and were doomed; the country
was in a state of ferment which threatened to become dangerous, and
the spirit shown by the Wellington Ministry was one which was at
that juncture impossible to carry out in practical legislation. They
recognised this themselves, and resigned in November, upon a very small
and insignificant defeat, knowing that if they did not do so then, they
would only be forced later on upon a more crucial question.

Lord Grey was intrusted by the king with the formation of the next
ministry, and the winter months were spent in private discussions
amongst the leaders of the Reform party as to the nature of the bill
to be introduced. Its terms were kept a profound secret till the
following March, when Lord John Russell announced them in a densely
packed and intensely excited House of Commons. After a spirited debate
the House agreed to accept the introduction of the bill for amending
the representation without a division; but the second reading was
carried only by a majority of one, and the Government, foreseeing that
so strong a measure could never be carried through committee with
such an uncertain majority, determined to appeal to the country, and
on sustaining a small defeat on a resolution of General Gascoigne’s,
resolved on a dissolution. The king was greatly opposed to this, but
was persuaded at last to consent to it; and to the great joy of the
reforming party all over the country, Parliament was dissolved, and
writs for a fresh election issued.

This is anticipating matters in the course of the narrative, but it is
better to give the brief abstract of the work of Lord Grey’s ministry
consecutively. As for the terms of the new Reform Bill, they will be
found in any history of the day, and are hardly in place in the pages
of a story.

These autumn days, spent by Saul Tresithny eating out his heart in
prison, but by the country at large in a state of seething excitement
and unrest, and by such men as Eustace Marchmont in an eager canvassing
amongst men of all shades of opinion and all sorts of positions for
adherents to the new gospel of reform and emancipation, were passed
by Bride very quietly in her sea-girt home, and by the Duke in much
serious thought, and study of the vexed questions of the day.

He and his daughter, since that day when she made her appeal to him
on behalf of Saul, had drawn slowly yet surely nearer together. The
change was hardly noticeable at first, though Bride was sensible of
an increased gentleness in her father’s manner. But by degrees he
came to talk more to her of the things working in his mind, and she
began to ask questions of him, which hitherto she had kept locked up
in her own heart. Both were the better for the outlet, and began to
look forward to the evening hour after dinner, when they sat together
in the big drawing-room and spoke of whatever was uppermost in their
minds. It was in this way that they came to speak often about the
questions of the day, which subject led naturally to that of Eustace
and his doings and sayings. Eustace was often a great deal in the minds
both of father and daughter just then. He wrote to the Duke regularly,
though not frequently, and his letters were always full of interesting
information, though this information was not always palatable to the
recipient, who was too old to change his attitude of mind, and whilst
striving after tolerance and a spirit of justice and impartiality,
regarded with something very much like dread the coming strife.

“Shall we invite Eustace to spend his Christmas with us this winter?”
asked the Duke of his daughter one day towards the latter end of
October.

Bride glanced at her father, and her cheek crimsoned suddenly.

“If--if--you wish it, papa,” she said, with visible hesitancy.

The old man glanced at her with a quick searching look.

“Does that mean you would not wish it yourself?”

“I--I--hardly know. I had not thought of it. Eustace was very kind to
me when he was here; but----”

Again she faltered in a way that was not much like her, and her father,
watching her with a newly awakened interest, said gently--

“I do not wish to distress you, my dear. Perhaps there is something in
this that I do not understand. I have no wish to force your confidence.
We will say no more about it.”

But Bride rose quickly, and came and knelt down beside her father,
turning her sweet trustful face up to his.

“Papa, do not speak so, please--as though I would not tell you
everything in my heart. I think I should like you to know. I did not
say anything at first--I did not know whether Eustace might have done
so or not, for he went the very same day, and I think just when it
happened I could not have talked about it. But before he went he told
me that he loved me, and he asked me to be his wife; but I could not,
and so he went away; and I do not know whether he will ever come back
any more. That is why I do not know what to say about asking him for
Christmas.”

The Duke was silent for many minutes, stroking Bride’s soft hair with
gentle fingers, and looking very thoughtfully into her face. She knelt
beside him, only thankful for the caressing touch, which was still
sufficiently infrequent to stir her pulses and awaken a sense of
indescribable happiness.

“So he asked you to be his wife, and you refused him. What does that
mean, Bride? Does it mean that you do not like him?”

“No, papa; it means that I do not love him.”

The Duke paused and looked into the fire. The expression on his face
made the girl ask quickly--

“You are not vexed with me for answering as I did?”

“No, my child, I am not vexed. You were right to answer according to
the dictates of your own heart. And yet, had things been a little
different with Eustace, I would gladly have seen you his wife.”

A faint glow of colour stole into Bride’s face.

“If things were different with Eustace,” she said very softly, “I think
perhaps I could have answered differently. I think about him a great
deal. I am grateful for his love, and it hurts me to have none to give
in return; but as things now are, I cannot give it to him. He grieves
me so often. I know that he would make me miserable if I had let his
earnestness carry me away. He might be so great, so noble, so good, but
he just fails in everything; and I think he would break my heart if I
were his wife.”

The Duke looked earnestly into her earnest eyes.

“It is his views that stagger you? Yes, my child, that is what I feel
about him--and them. I will not deny that when first he came to us I
had hopes that you and he might learn to love one another. You will
never be anything but a rich woman, Bride, even though Penarvon and
its revenues must go to Eustace. You will have your mother’s ample
fortune, and everything I have to leave independently of the estate.
You will have wealth and position; but you are very lonely. You have no
near relations, and your mother’s health made it impossible for you to
be taken to London and presented and introduced to society. Your life
has been a very solitary one, and I have regretted it. I confess I had
hopes with regard to Eustace; but when I learnt what manner of man he
was, and how he stands pledged to a policy which I can never approve in
the abstract, though I will not deny that some of its concrete measures
are just and fair, I began to feel differently on the subject. And you
have the same feelings, it seems, as I.”

Bride slipped to a footstool at her father’s feet, and leaned upon his
knee with his hand still held in hers, and her face turned towards the
fire.

“Papa,” she said, “I do not think it is Eustace’s Radical views which
repel me, except in so far as they are bound up in those which to me
are both sinful and sad. I know that he has the welfare of this land
and its people as much at heart as you; that he loves his country and
the poor in it as we love them; that he wishes to raise and teach and
make them better and happier. I know he would spend his life and his
fortune in the cause and grudge it nothing if good could be done. There
is a great deal that I admire and love in Eustace; but, ah! I cannot
divide into two distinct parts his political views and those other
views of his which are so integral a part of his character. To me they
seem interlocked at every point, and therefore at every point I see
something which repels me--something which I shrink from--something
which seems to me untrue and evil in essence, even though on the
surface so much may be said for it. I do not know if you understand
me. Sometimes I scarcely understand myself--hardly know how to put my
thoughts into words; but they are there, always with me; and the more I
think, the less I can feel that the two things can ever be altogether
divided.”

“What two things?” asked the Duke. “I do not think I follow you.”

“I mean, papa, the spiritual and the intellectual side of our nature.
You know we have a threefold nature--body, soul, and spirit; but yet it
is all one, and I think people make a great mistake when they seek to
try and divide the physical and the intellectual from the spiritual.
Eustace does--in practice, if not in theory. He wishes to gain for the
poor an improved condition of bodily comfort, and I am sure this is
a kindly and a right wish. He has told me things that make my blood
curdle about the awful misery and want reigning in many places. He
wants to raise men intellectually, to think for themselves, to learn
many things which will help in their advancement, to strive after a
better standard, and to be disgusted at their present ignorance and
degradation. But having done that, he stops short. He has no wish to
quicken in their spirits the love of God, which would purify these
other desires and hold in check the baser passions they so often
arouse without that curb. Of their spirits he takes no heed--how should
he, when he does not even admit that there is an inner and spiritual
life--when he is content to remain in ignorance of everything beyond
the limits of his own understanding, and to assert that nothing can
be positively taught as truth which cannot be proved by the finite
intellect of man? I may not put his case quite justly, because he does
not speak of these things openly to me. He tries to pass them over in
vague words, and keep the talk to ‘practical matters.’ But I have heard
enough to know what he does think--to know that he has no faith in the
Crucified Saviour--in an Incarnate God--in a Sanctifying Spirit; and
without that faith, how can he hope to lead men aright? Ah! he will
never do it!”

The Duke looked down at the girl’s face seen in profile as she half
raised it towards him, and he marvelled at her, yet traced in her words
the outcome of her mother’s teaching, and felt as though his wife
were speaking to him through the lips of her daughter. He had always
regarded his wife as something of a saint or angel--recognising in
her deep spirituality a calibre of mind altogether different from his
own, and in her faith, intense and vivid, a something vastly different
from his own dry orthodoxy. He had often listened to her in wonder and
amaze, half lifted up by her earnestness, half shrinking from following
her into regions so strangely unfamiliar; but there was in Bride’s line
of argument a thread of practical common-sense which aroused in him a
curiosity to know more of her mind, and he said tentatively--

“You mean that you do not believe even in political reform unless it is
based on the highest spiritual motives?”

“I think I mean,” answered Bride thoughtfully, “that I do not believe
there _can_ be any true reform at all that does not come from a
spiritual impulse. How can I say it best? Eustace is fond of quoting
the Bible to me. He bids me remember that we are called upon by Christ
to love our neighbours as ourself, and goes on to point out that he is
trying to work upon that principle. But he forgets that we are _first_
bidden to love God with all our soul and mind and strength, and that
the brotherly love is the outcome, the corollary of the love to God
which should be the leading thought of our whole life.”

“Yes!--and what do you deduce from that?”

“Oh, papa, can you not see? Look what those men are doing who think
that they can love their brothers and do them good without loving
God first and best! Look what Eustace has done!--stirred up strife
and discontent all round the country, landed poor Saul in a prison,
provoked deeds of violence, lawlessness, and reckless wickedness--deeds
that he himself would be the first to deplore and condemn, yet which
are the direct outcome of his teaching. These men love their brothers,
yet they stir up class hatred wherever they go--and why? It is because
they forget that love of God _must_ come first if any good is to come;
it is because, though they themselves love their fellows, they cannot
teach love of mankind to these more ignorant men whom they would lead.
When men do not understand the sweetness of obedience to the perfect
law of God, how can they ever be taught the duty of obedience to the
imperfect law of man?--and yet we know that obedience to law--even when
that law is sadly imperfect--is God’s will and ordinance, and that
it brings its blessing with it. Oh, if men would go about teaching
the people to love God with all their heart and soul and strength,
to love each other in the bond of unity and peace, and to _pray_ for
their rulers and governors, that God would turn their hearts from
all thought of oppression and tyranny, and make them to be just and
merciful rulers of the people, then indeed might our land become a
country blessed by God and relieved from the burden of her woes! If
great and small would look to God for His guidance in all things,
and cease warring with each other in anger and jealous hate, then
would true reform begin. But when the cleverest, and often the most
earnest men of the day leave God out of their thoughts and plans, and
smile at the thought of working through the power of His name, then
what can we expect but confusion and anarchy, and a slowly growing
discontent amongst the people, which will lead at last to some terrible
end? Eustace says that this movement is but the beginning of a huge
wave that will sweep right over the country, and end by making the
people--the masses--the rulers of the world. He looks upon that as
an era of universal good to all--a Utopia, as he calls it--which is
to supersede everything that has gone before--including Christianity
itself--in its perfection of all human systems and the development of
his gospel, ‘the greatest good to the greatest number.’ But though I
think it will come--I think we can see that in the prophetic words of
Scripture about the latter days--I fear it will come with more fearful
misery and terror and tyranny than anything that has gone before. It is
the men who practically refuse Christ--the Incarnate Son of God--though
they may use the name of Christ still for an abstraction of their own,
who will welcome the Antichrist coming in his own name. I think men
_do_ welcome any leader now who comes in his own name, and almost makes
himself a god. Was it not so with Napoleon Buonaparte, whom some almost
believed to be the Antichrist himself? It is those who come to them in
the name of God whom they will not hear; for if they look to God as the
Head, they must keep His laws; and men who are striving after bringing
about this new era of happiness on the earth, do not want to do that.
They like their own ways best.”

There was a long silence after this. Bride had paused many times for
her father to speak, and had then gone on with her train of musing,
almost forgetting she had an auditor. After a prolonged pause, the Duke
said slowly--

“So this is why you could not bring yourself to marry Eustace?”

“Yes,” she answered softly; “I do not think there could be happiness
for us, thinking so differently. He thinks now that he could give up
everything for my sake--but I know him better than he knows himself.
Besides, I would not wish him to give up anything for _my_ sake; if he
gives it up, it must be because he knows and feels it to be contrary
to the law of God--and I do not think such an idea as that has ever
entered into his head.”

“Yet if you could get him to give up some of his wild notions for love
of you, it would be a step in the right direction,” said the Duke
thoughtfully; but Bride shook her head.

“No, not in the right direction--it would be doing evil that good
might come--teaching Eustace to act against his conscience and better
judgment, just to please me. It would be like what he is doing himself
when he stirs up the evil passions of men to try and overthrow a great
abuse. He admits the present evil, but says the end will justify the
means, and that the evil is an incidental detail, whilst the good
will remain permanent. That is where we cannot agree. And we are not
likely to agree when Eustace really admits no outward standard of right
and wrong, but abides by his own judgment and the prompting of his
individual conscience. And even what he cannot defend he excuses--his
conscience condemns, but his judgment palliates the wrong--and there
is nothing stronger and more perfect and holy to which to appeal. That
is the most terrible thing of all to me, and, oh! how terrible it must
be in the sight of God.”

Bride had Eustace very much on her mind and heart just now. She had
promised to pray for him, and she did this with increasing earnestness
as the days went by. She prayed too for the unhappy Saul, wearing
out his weary term of imprisonment, visited from time to time by
Abner, who looked years older ever since the trouble of that August
night. He brought back disquieting accounts of the prisoner to his
young mistress, who never failed to ask after him. Saul was utterly
impenitent and hardened. He had thrown off all semblance of outward
faith, and was an open advocate of the very darkest and baldest forms
of atheism. He had learnt this fearful creed from the cobbler, by
this time lying under sentence of death; but Bride recognised with a
shudder now and again, as she talked with Abner and heard his sorrowful
accounts of Saul’s words, the influence upon him of Eustace’s more
subtle scepticism. Here and there a word or phrase came in where she
recognised her cousin’s mind. Doubtless Saul had opened his heart on
this point too with his master, and Eustace had probably only confirmed
him in his unbelief by his assertions of the impossibility of knowing
the truth where all thinking men were at variance.

The thought of these two men haunted her with a persistence that was
wearying. She was haunted too by thoughts of that condemned criminal
in his lonely cell, dying perhaps in utter blackness and infidelity,
and passing out into the presence of his Maker without one thought
of repentance or submission. Suppose Saul had been called upon to
die, would he too have gone forth in that frame of mind? If illness
or accident were to smite down Eustace, what would be his method of
meeting death? Would they all reject the love of the Saviour? Would
they all remain impenitent to the last? And what, ah! what was the
fate of those who passed away without one cry for mercy, without one
glance towards that Cross whereon the sins of the whole world had been
expiated?

This thought became such a terror to her, that she took it at last to
her one friend and confidante, Mrs. St. Aubyn, and she had hardly got
out her trouble before the Rector himself, unknowing of her visit,
entered his wife’s room; and Bride hardly knew whether she were glad or
sorry that the question should be referred to him.

It was Mrs. St. Aubyn who told her husband the nature of their talk,
and added, as she did so--

“I was going to say that I myself almost doubted whether any human soul
could die absolutely and entirely impenitent. We know that the outward
aspect of some remains unchanged to the last; but how can any man dare
to deny that some strange and mysterious intercourse may not go on
in spirit between man and his Maker, unknown and unseen by any human
eye? Thought cannot be measured by our time. A few brief seconds may
be enough to establish some sort of spiritual communication. Where we
are told so little, perhaps it is not wise to speculate too curiously;
but I cannot help thinking that where blind ignorance and the doctrine
of false teachers has kept a soul away from God, He may yet in His
infinite mercy deal with that erring soul at the last in such a way as
to break in upon the darkness, and kindle one ray of the Divine love,
even with the dying breath. For we know that it is not the will of the
Father that one should perish, and that He gave His Son to die for
all--only they must approach Him through the living Saviour.”

She looked at her husband as she spoke, and he smiled in response as he
said--

“There are mysteries in God’s dealings with man into which we may not
too closely look, and especially is this the case in reference to those
departed or departing this life; but there is so much that we _do_ know
to cheer and encourage us to hope all things and believe all things,
that we may well let our minds dwell upon these things, and argue from
them that God’s ways are wider and more merciful than the heart of man
can fathom.”

“Bride is unhappy about several persons who seem to be wandering so far
away from the fold,” said Mrs. St. Aubyn, in her gentle tones. “She is
suffering, as we all suffer at some time or another, when those we love
seem rather against than with us. Can you say something to comfort her?
I think she has come here for a little bit of comfort. Have you not, my
child?”

Bride’s soft eyes swam in tears. She was rather unhinged by her own
intensity of thought. The motherly words almost broke her down. Mrs.
St. Aubyn took her hand and caressed it gently. The clergyman, after a
moment of silence, spoke, in his thoughtful tender fashion--

“Yes, we have so much cause for hope, even for those who have gone far,
far astray. We must not think of them as sundered from the love of the
Father, for we know that He does not so regard them, even though His
heart may be full of pain at the thought of their transgressions and
neglect. We have such beautiful lessons set before us by our Lord, who
knew the heart of the Father as none of us can know it. Let us think,
just for one minute, of that wonderful story of the prodigal son.”

Bride raised her face quickly.

“He repented,” she said softly.

“Yes,” said Mr. St. Aubyn, “he had been full of self-will and folly.
He had gone very far from the father’s house, and the place which
was his there by the father’s wish. He was in a far country. He had
squandered the gifts of a loving father--the talents, the faculties,
the opportunities--upon unworthy and sinful objects. He had followed
the dictates of his own heart, and had not heeded his father’s loving
counsel and admonitions; and at the last he was reduced to husks, those
unsubstantial and empty husks which are in the end all that is left to
us of a life of worldly pleasure, take what form it will at the outset.
Only the husks remained, and the hunger of the soul set in, which is
the worst hunger of all to bear. When that stage has been reached, the
backward glance to the father’s house becomes inevitable. The young man
in the far country felt it; and I think there was much more than the
mere craving for physical comforts in the resolve which was embodied in
the words, ‘I will arise and go to my father.’ There is much more than
that in those words of penitence, followed up by the resolve to ask,
‘Make me as one of thy hired servants.’ That was what the son set out
to say--‘make me as one of thy hired servants;’ but when he reached his
father he could not say it. Why not?”

Bride was silent. The tears were still in her eyes. Mr. St. Aubyn
looked at her, looked at his wife, and then went on softly--

“He could not say it because he was ashamed to say it--because the love
of his father, the love which was watching for him after all these
years of absence, which went out to meet him whilst he was yet a great
way off, which wrapped him round in its embrace in that mysterious
fulness of fatherhood, shamed him into silence. He could confess his
sins and his unworthiness; perhaps at no moment had he ever felt so
utterly humiliated, yet he could not say ‘make me as one of thy hired
servants’--the father’s love had taught him his place as a son; the
father’s love had broken down the last barrier of reserve. Unworthy,
humbled to the dust, broken down by his emotion, he yet knew that it
was as a son he was received back; and the deep unchanging love of the
father _shamed_ him, I say, from trying to seek the lower place. When
God gives us the right to call ourselves sons, is it for us to say,
‘Nay, Lord, but let me be as a hired servant?’ Is that the humility
that the Lord asks of us? Is that the truest faith?”

Still Bride was silent, and as if in answer to her unspoken thought,
Mr. St. Aubyn continued--

“Thank God it is given to some of us to remain ever in the Father’s
house. We have not been tempted to stray from it. We live in His love,
and seek every day to do Him service. But there is always the peril to
us of looking abroad at our brothers who have wandered away, and of
asking ourselves, sometimes in tender anxiety, sometimes with a sense
of compassionate disfavour, sometimes perhaps in something too nearly
approaching scorn, whether for them there can ever be a return to the
Father’s house, whether they will ever be worthy to be received there
once more, even if they do return; and there are not lacking those
amongst us, I fear, who would sometimes, consciously or unconsciously,
deny them their place in the home, judging them to have lost it for
ever through disobedience and rebellion.”

Bride clasped her hands together, her soft eyes shining.

“Oh, go on,” she said softly; “tell me the rest.”

“It has been told already, my child, told in the reception of the
erring son, not as a stranger or a servant, but as a son. The love of
the Father transcends our love for our brethren, as much as did the
father’s love transcend that of the jealous elder son. It is not for us
to despair for the wanderers, for the Father does not despair of them.
He watches for them, and when their faint and lagging footsteps are
homeward turned, irresolutely perhaps, fearfully perhaps, despondently
perhaps, while they are a great way off he goes Himself to meet them.
He sends no servant; He sends no brother even; He goes Himself. And
then, when the lost son feels the Father’s arms about his neck, hears
the Father’s voice speaking in his ear, the faint and fearful love of
his heart is turned to a deep stream of true filial devotion, and he
knows himself in all his abasement and humility for a son, and the
first word he speaks, amidst his tears, is the word ‘Father.’ And after
that word is spoken there can be no talk of being a hired servant.
Father!--our Father--that is the essence of Christ’s redeeming work on
earth.”

“Thank you,” said Bride, drawing a long breath; “I think you have given
me comfort. I was too much like the elder brother, too much inclined to
despair of those who had strayed away. I will think of them differently
now. Surely they will one day turn back to the home again.”

“I trust so; we can at least pray that it may be so. Prayer is the
strongest power there is for leading men back to God; and I often think
and note that, when He would draw to Himself an erring son who will not
pray for himself, He puts it into the heart of a brother or a sister to
pray for him, and so the erring one is drawn back towards the Father’s
house.”

Bride’s face quivered as she held out her hand in farewell, but she
went home greatly comforted.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIII

_TWO ENCOUNTERS_


Bride was riding slowly down the hill from St. Erme’s on her little
Exmoor pony, with a grave and sorrowful face. Around her the green
billowy downs stretched away in all their bright spring greenness,
overhead the larks were carolling as though their hearts were filled
with rapture, whilst far below the sea tossed and sparkled in the
brilliant sunshine in a fashion that was exhilarating and gladsome.

It was a day late on in March--one of those days not unfrequent at that
season, especially in the south and west--a day that seems filled with
a promise of coming summer--a day in which all nature rejoices, which
stirs the pulses and sets the blood coursing joyously, and fills the
air with subtle promises of life and hope.

Bride’s face had been tranquil and happy as she rode up the heights
towards Farmer Teazel’s farm, but it was sorrowful and troubled now as
she returned, for she had failed in the mission on which she had been
bound, and was experiencing one of those revulsions of feeling which
often follow upon a period of solitary meditation and resolve, when the
dreamer is brought face to face with the stern realities of human life
and human nature.

Bride’s mission to the farm had been to plead with the farmer to offer
a place in his service to Saul Tresithny, now just out of prison. His
sentence had been up a few weeks earlier, but he had been ill of fever
in the prison hospital when the period of release came, and had only
that week been set at liberty.

All through the term of his imprisonment Bride’s thoughts and her
prayers had been much exercised with him. The compassion she felt
towards him partook of the nature of a great yearning tenderness,
curious in a girl of her age and station, and she could not help
believing that her feelings must be in some sort reflected in the minds
of others. Her father she knew felt compassion for Saul, though he
seldom spoke his name. Abner, as was natural, yearned over his grandson
with a great love and tenderness, and both Mr. Tremodart and Mr. St.
Aubyn were interested in him, and were willing to give him occupation
in their service on his release, if he would accept it. But Saul’s
known aversion to service in any of its branches was too well known in
the place for any one to have much hope of his falling in with either
of these offers. Abner shook his head whenever he was questioned on the
subject, and said he feared Saul had not changed or softened with his
incarceration. But the thought came to Bride that if his old master the
farmer, with whom he had always got on so well, would offer him his old
place at the farm, that offer would be accepted, and she had gone up to
talk poor Saul’s case over with the kind-hearted yeoman, and get him to
see the matter in the light that she herself viewed it.

But only disappointment and sorrowful surprise awaited her here. Farmer
Teazel _was_ a thoroughly kind-hearted man, and very fond indeed of the
little Lady Bride, whom he had known ever since her infancy. He loved
to see her riding up to his farm on the pony of his own breeding and
choosing. He was all smiles and kindness till her subject was broached,
and then she found that there was a limit to his benevolence, and to
the influence she had over him--a barrier like a ledge of hard rock
against which her arguments rebounded helplessly.

Saul Tresithny had sinned in a fashion the farmer could not forgive,
and he had no pity upon misfortune deliberately run into by a man who
has had every opportunity of knowing better. The fact that Saul had
averted the attack upon his own homestead did not weigh with him here.
He argued that Saul had had his revenge on his (the farmer’s) machines
before this. The sturdy yeoman had his own grievance against Saul
and his teaching, and was not disposed to be grateful for the other
deliverance. No, Saul was a reprobate and a jail-bird, and he would
have none of him. He had had enough of the mischief his tongue did
before. It wasn’t in reason he should put up with it again. No, no; he
was sorry to refuse Lady Bride anything; but ladies did not understand
these things--did not understand the nature of great, ill-conditioned
demi-gods (as he called it in his haste) such as Saul had become. It
was no use talking to him of forgiveness and mercy. It would be time
enough for that when the man had repented. He hadn’t ever learned that
there was any call to forgive before the sinner was sorry. From all he
heard, Saul wasn’t a bit humbled or penitent. It would only be the old
trouble over again if he came back; the farmer would take care he had
nothing more to do with such a fellow.

When Bride had exhausted her eloquence upon the farmer, and he had
gone out to his work again, she tried what she could do with the
daughter; but Genefer was even more impracticable than her father. Half
ashamed of ever having given encouragement to Saul, who had behaved so
cavalierly to her afterwards, she was bitterly set against him, and did
not pick her words when launching forth about him. Moreover, Genefer
was now openly betrothed in marriage to young Farmer Hewett, and was
mortally afraid lest he should ever hear that she had permitted Saul
to make love to her. She would not for anything in the world have had
him again at the farm, and Bride was forced to ride away downcast and
sorrowful, wondering in her heart how it was that people of the same
class were so hard upon one another, and musing by degrees on the
result to the community of a gradual change which should practically
throw the governing power into the hands of the masses. Would that
power be exercised on the side of mercy and love, or would it become
only a new form of tyranny and hardness, far more difficult to modify
and soften than any monarchical harshness of rule? It was a question
she could not answer, but it helped to keep her face grave and her brow
sad as she rode slowly down the hill, rode right down by the rough
lane to the cottages upon the shore, where she had an errand of mercy
to perform; and leaving her pony to nibble at the salt herbage at the
base of the rocks, as he loved to do, she walked forward alone towards
the margin of the sea, and came suddenly and quite unexpectedly face
to face with Saul Tresithny, who was sitting in the hot sunshine on a
rock, and gazing out over the sea, with those strange dark eyes of his
that gleamed with sombre fire.

She knew that he was free, but thought him still at Pentreath, he
having refused to come to his grandfather’s cottage on his release. The
recognition was mutual, and the man instinctively, though sullenly,
rose to his feet. Bride glanced up at the tall towering figure, which
looked taller than before in the gauntness of recent illness. There was
something rather terrible in the gloom of the cadaverous face. Saul
had been stricken down with that terrible fever which was so common in
prisons during the previous century, and went by the significant name
of jail-fever, and which still lingered about those prisons which were
overcrowded or unsanitary, and generally claimed for its victims those
who were unused to confinement and a close atmosphere, and had led an
open-air life hitherto.

The terrible sufferings Saul had endured during six months of
imprisonment were too clearly written on his face to evade observation.
What such incarceration meant to one of his nature and training can
only be realised by those who have lived the life he had hitherto led,
and have been out in the open air from dawn till dark every day of
their lives, summer and winter, from boyhood. Bride shrank back as she
saw his face, with a sense akin almost to terror; but then her sense of
Divine compassion and tenderness for the wild impenitent prisoner came
back with a bound, and she put out her little gloved hand and laid it
on his arm.

“Saul, I have been so sorry for you, so very sorry,” she said, softly
and gently. “But it is over now, and you have life still before you.
You will learn to----”

“To forget? never!” interrupted he, with a strange flash in his eyes.
“I will never forget, ay! and never forgive, to the end of my days.
Stacked like pigs in a stye, crowded together in hunger and dirt,
and wretchedness unspeakable, the best man amongst them hanged by
the neck till he died, and all for preaching the gospel of truth to
a down-trodden people, that is what England has to look for from her
rulers! That is what we have to look forward to who strive to raise
our brothers from abject misery and degradation. Forget! No, I will
never forget. I will avenge those months of misery, and the death of my
best and truest friend; ay! I _will_ avenge it on the proud heads of
the tyrants of this land. Don’t come near me, don’t speak to me, Lady
Bride. I would not hurt you willingly; but there is that within me that
may prompt me to do you a mischief if you stand there much longer. Go,
I say, go! You are a woman; I believe you are a good and a merciful
woman; but you come of a race that is doomed. Go, let me never see you
here again! Look to yourself, and let your father look to himself, for
they have made a Cain and an Ishmaelite of me; and I will be in very
truth what they have made me. I will give them cause to tremble!”

But Bride looked at him with quiet fearlessness, sorrowful, yet not
afraid. That the fever and weakness, combined with long months of
brooding and suffering, had partially clouded his brain, she could well
understand. His threats did not alarm her. She knew he would never lay
a finger upon her.

“I am very grieved for you, Saul,” she said again. “It has been very
hard to bear, and the more so because all the while you believed
you were doing right. That is what is so hard to understand in this
world--how to do right without doing wrong too; and there is only one
Power that can help us to know that. I hope some day you will learn to
know that Power, and see with unclouded eyes. Meantime, if you will let
me, I should like to help you and to be your friend. I think you know
that you may trust me, even though you may not be able to help hating
me.”

He looked at her with a strange expression in his hollow eyes that
sometimes burned so brightly, and sometimes were clouded over with a
mist of bewilderment and semi-delirious imaginings. He looked at her as
though about to speak, but then suddenly closing his lips, he turned
hastily away and walked rapidly, though a little unsteadily, in the
opposite direction; whilst a woman from a neighbouring cottage came
hurrying out, and Bride saw that Mother Clat was approaching.

“’Tidden wise o’ yu tu talk wi’ yon lad out heer alone, Laady Bride.
He be maazed wi’ t’ prison vever, he be,” she said anxiously, with a
backward glance over her shoulder at the retiring figure of Saul. “Duee
go tu home now, and letten ’lone tu coom tu hisself. Yu’ll on’y be
aggin’ he on to du wusser ef zo be as yu try to talk un zoft.”

“I am very sorry for him. He looks very ill,” said Bride
compassionately. “Do you know where he is living now?”

“He du be bidin’ wi’ me these past tu daays,” answered the woman; “I
wunt zay how long he’ll bide. He’s gotten zome money, an’ he’s a rare
hand wi’ th’ bwoats. I reckon he can maake a shift to live down along
wi’ we, ef zo be as he’s got a mind tu.”

“Take care of him, then,” said Bride pleadingly. “I think he wants care
and good food whilst he looks so thin and gaunt. Give him all you think
he needs, and I will take care you are no loser. Don’t say a word to
him, but just let me know. See, I will leave this crown with you now.
Get him everything he ought to have. I never saw anybody so dreadfully
changed before.”

The woman took the coin and nodded. She was perfectly to be trusted,
despite the peculiarity of her position in St. Bride as the known ally
of smugglers, and the cleverest hider and concealer of contraband
goods in the place. Bride perfectly recognised the distinction between
general dishonesty and this particular sin, so common in those days
amongst men otherwise upright and trustworthy. She left the bay a
little comforted by learning that Saul had at least a roof over his
head, and was amongst men who liked and trusted him. Mother Clat was,
with all her witch-like aspect and rough speech, a kind-hearted woman,
and would do her best for her lodger. Saul was better here by the salt
sea waves than in some poor lodging in Pentreath. Evidently the death
of the cobbler and the scattering of the little band of malcontents
had for the time shattered his dream of becoming a semi-professional
agitator. The fascination of the blue sea, the boundless sky, and the
tossing salt waves had drawn him back to St. Bride’s. If only some
gentler influence could be brought to bear upon him, he might yet
become a changed character with patience and time.

“If Eustace could see his pupil now, what would he think?” questioned
the girl to herself, as she rode up the rough beach path; and she
wondered to herself whether his influence, could it be brought to bear,
would be for good or for ill--though this seemed but idle speculation,
as Eustace was far away in London, and she did not think he would
visit Penarvon for long enough to come. Musing thus, she turned in at
the lodge gate and rode quietly up the zigzag track through the pine
wood, till, arriving at the point where the road divided, she took the
right-hand fork and rode direct to the stable-yard, and three minutes
later reined in her pony in the big enclosure, a groom coming forward
to assist her to dismount.

Three strange horses stood tied up in the yard, looking as though they
had been ridden somewhat hard that day. Stablemen were grooming them
down with assiduity, the head-coachman looking on and making remarks
from time to time to his subordinates. As he saw his young mistress he
came respectfully forward.

“Has some visitor arrived?” she asked, with a glance at the strange
horses; but there was no need for the man to answer. At that moment
a tall figure entered the yard through the door of the covered way
leading from stable-yard to house--entered hurriedly, as though to give
some forgotten order, and Bride found herself face to face with her
cousin Eustace.

They both started slightly, but Bride recovered herself immediately,
and quietly offered her hand.

“This is an unlooked-for pleasure,” she said gently; and his face
flushed from brow to chin beneath the bronze of the sunny journey in
March shine and blow.

“Thank you,” he answered, pressing her hand gratefully; and then,
turning for a moment to the coachman, he gave the instruction in
reference to his horse which he had come to deliver. That done, he
turned once more to Bride and said--

“Your father is not within--he has ridden out too. I thought I should
have to wait for any welcome. I trust that I have not taken an
unwarrantable liberty in coming thus unannounced, but I have news that
I thought would interest the Duke, and it is necessary that I should
have personal speech with him.”

“I am sure my father will bid you welcome to Penarvon,” answered Bride,
with gentle dignity. “I trust the news that you bring is good and not
bad.”

“I trust so myself. It is news that cannot fail to stir all hearts more
or less at such a time. Parliament is dissolved. There is to be a new
appeal to the electors of the country!”

Bride paused to look at her cousin’s face, which was full of an
enthusiasm and glad hopefulness that was almost infectious. Instead
of taking the covered way back to the castle, the cousins were slowly
following the longer road by which horses and carriages travelled.
Bride caught her long skirt up with one hand, the other held her whip.
Her face was flushed with the surprise of this second unlooked-for
encounter. Eustace thought he had never seen her look more lovely than
at this moment, in the close-fitting habit and picturesque hat with its
waving plume.

“A dissolution!” she exclaimed; “I thought the king was altogether
averse to that. I thought your bill had just achieved its second
triumph.”

“It has, and it has not. The papers have kept you conversant with the
bald facts of the case. But what it comes to is this, that without a
more powerful majority than we have now, such a measure as ours cannot
be successfully passed through the House. It would be so mauled and
mutilated in committee that it would utterly fall to pieces. We must
know now what the country feels on this great question. We must feel
the pulse of the nation. It is the only thing to do. The king was
against the measure; but the voice of wisdom prevailed. As soon as his
consent was gained, I took horse and started off. I wished to be the
first to bring the news to Penarvon. Tell me, Bride, what have these
six months done for my uncle in modifying or changing his views on this
question? He now knows the just and moderate terms of the bill. Does he
feel against it all the same prejudice he did at the outset, when we
none of us knew exactly on what lines it had been framed?”

“I do not think he feels any very great hostility to the present bill,”
answered Bride quietly. “He has fully recognised that there are abuses
with regard to the representation of the country that may well be
mended, and on the whole I think he admits the present measure to be
moderate and wise. But he knows as well as you know that this is only
the beginning, and whilst you approve heart and soul the movement of
which it is the pioneer, he distrusts and dreads it. That is why the
success of even a wise measure fills him with no enthusiasm. He still
believes that the abuses which will grow up under your new régime,
when it is established, will far transcend those which flourish under
the old, and that sin and want and misery will increase rather than
diminish. That is as much as I can tell you of his opinions, for he
does not talk of this thing often. The subject is rather a painful one
to him. It brings with it a sense of helplessness, a sense of drifting
away from the old moorings into a troubled sea for which he has no
chart or compass. I think he knows that the thing must be; but he does
not look forward with joy to the future it will bring in its wake.”

“At his age that is perhaps natural,” answered Eustace. “He is a more
liberal-minded man than many of his generation and position. I am
thankful he is not bitter in opposition, for I shall want something
from him that he might be very loth to give did he feel as some do.”

Bride turned to look at him. Eustace was flushed and excited. His face
had grown more intent and earnest during the past months. Bride thought
that his expression was improved; but just at this moment he was more
excited than she had ever seen him before. She wondered at the reason.

“I have come to ask a favour of your father, Bride,” he said, as they
reached the castle, and instead of passing through the gateway and
entering the hall, skirted round the building till they stood upon the
magnificent stone terrace that overhung the sea on the west side. “Do
you think he will grant it me?”

“A favour!--what favour?” asked Bride, looking wonderingly at him,
with steady fearlessness in her eyes. She was no longer shy with him,
for her instinct told her that it was not on an errand of love-making
that he had come. The last time they talked together alone he had been
seeking for her love; now he had other matters foremost in his mind.
The individual was sunk in the cause. Almost before the words of his
answer were spoken, she guessed what they would be; yet she heard them
almost with surprise.

“Bride, this next Parliament will be one that will mark an epoch in the
world’s history; I feel that I must take my share in it. I am a man
young and untried, but I feel that I can serve my country in its need.
I long to be one of its legislators in the coming struggle, which will,
I know, be a triumphant one. I have come to ask your father for the
seat which he has in his own hands. He almost offered it to me once.
Will he give it to me now, do you think, when I come to solicit it at
his hands?”

Bride’s eyes expressed a grave surprise.

“A pocket borough, as you have called them, Eustace? I thought the
system of pocket boroughs was utterly abhorrent to you--one of the
abuses which most cried for redress!”

“Yes--and I long to be one of the legislators who shall abolish the
abuse!” cried Eustace eagerly. “I would sweep all such anomalies from
the face of the earth; but to assist in the battle with all my powers,
I must be entitled for once to sit in the next Parliament.”

Bride said nothing. She looked away from Eustace over the sea, and he
saw that a shadow had fallen on her face.

“What is it, Bride?” he questioned quickly, feeling the sense of her
beauty and purity again stealing over him like a charm. He had fancied
after all these months that he could meet her without emotion, but
already he felt the old fascination creeping over him.

“I am sorry,” answered Bride gently, “I am sorry--that is all.”

“Sorry about what?” he asked quickly.

“Sorry that you feel like that--that you can stoop to such a thing.”

He started as though something had stung him.

“I do not understand you,” he said, with a certain hauteur in his tone
and a look of pain in his eyes.

She raised hers to his and looked him full in the face.

“It is not difficult to understand. You look on these pocket boroughs
as a flagrant abuse, and yet you are willing to profit by that abuse.
It is just the old story over again. You are willing to do evil that
good may come, Eustace. I do not think that good ever does come when
men have stooped to employ unworthy means. Take care you do not ruin
your own cause by making that mistake all through.”

Yes, it was the same girl he had left--the same Bride--the mystic, the
impracticable woman of dreams and theories. Beautiful ideals are so
plausible till you come to try and apply them to the sordid realities
of life--and then how untenable they become! But how was she to know
that, living in this old-world spot and in a dreamland of her own? So
he stifled his irritation and answered very patiently--

“You hardly understand, Bride. Your father will have to nominate a
member at this election, though probably for the last time. The abuse
is yet unredressed, and cannot be redressed till honest men who love
their country combine to blot it out. I wish to have the honour and
privilege of being among that number; and I am your father’s next of
kin, and the man it would be most natural for him to appoint. It lies
here; he must either give it to a man who would fight against the good
cause, though he would accept the seat without a qualm, or it must go
to one like myself, who, recognising the thing as a manifest outrage
upon constitutional representation, yet for this last time would take
advantage of a pernicious system in order to hurl it down for ever
more. I hold that mine is the right position to hold. If I were to
stand aside for a man who would take the seat and strive to hold back
the cause of reform, I should be a traitor to the cause and to my
country. I ought not to stand idly by without striving to win it for
myself.”

She made no reply; but her silence was not the silence of assent, and
he knew it. He took one or two turns upon the terrace and then said--

“Why do you always try to take the heart out of me, Bride? I never
speak with you, but it is always the same old story. You look like
one of God’s angels from heaven; you talk like a veritable saint upon
earth; and yet you stand there as it were opposed to every effort to
raise and bless and benefit humanity--a champion for what is tyrannous
and oppressive and hateful!”

It was not often that Eustace was carried away by his ardour in this
fashion; but the excitement through which he had recently been passing
had somewhat shaken and unnerved him. Bride looked away from him and
out over the sea with one of those intense gazes of hers which calmed
him better than any words could have done. He came up and took her
hand, which she did not withdraw from his clasp.

“Forgive me,” he said; “I spoke like a brute. I did not know what I was
saying. But, O Bride! why will not you and such as you help us? Why
will you stand aloof with pitying scorn when the world and humanity are
crying aloud for your sympathy and help?”

“Not scorn,” answered Bride gently, “not scorn; but pity--yes. I often
do feel pity for you, Eustace, because I know that you will be so
bitterly disappointed. You want to make men better and happier and
more prosperous; and more prosperous you may make them by improved
legislation. Many will be content when that is done, but you will
not. Your aim goes higher. You want to see them raised out of their
degradation--to see them ennobled and made truly better. And you will
be so bitterly disappointed! I know you will; and I pity you often
from the bottom of my heart; but indeed I do not scorn you. I know
you--and--love you far too much for that.”

She spoke with quiet fearlessness, and used the word in an impersonal
sense that Eustace could not misunderstand. He bent forward and lifted
the hand he held to his lips, and she did not shrink away, for it was
not the action of a lover, and she felt it and was not afraid. Nor was
the salute in itself altogether obsolete in those days, though growing
rarer and rarer.

“You shall teach me the knowledge in which I am lacking,” he said
ardently; but she slightly shook her head.

“I am afraid not, Eustace; I am afraid the task would be too hard.
You cannot see with my eyes, nor I with yours. You think all the way
through that the end justifies the means. I hold that no lasting good
can be, or ever has been done when unworthy and time-serving means have
been employed. A man must be pure in heart before he can successfully
fight the good fight against evil.”

“You mean that I must give up hoping to sit in Parliament?” said
Eustace hotly, unable to help applying the doctrine to the matter most
near his heart.

“No, I do not mean that. I should like to see you there; but I would
rather you fought your seat like other men, and did not profit by the
very abuse you seek to overthrow.”

“Seats are only won by wading through a sink of iniquity!” said Eustace
bitterly; and Bride was silent, her face growing sternly sorrowful.
Her heart often grew heavy within her as she realised the terrible
wickedness of the great world without.

“No seat is worth that,” she said softly; but Eustace could not agree
with her.

“We must purify legislation; we must so work that a new and perfect
system rises from the ashes of the old!” he cried, his quick enthusiasm
firing at the thought. “Men can and shall be raised. We shall one day
see the dawn of a brighter and purer day. This is but the hour of
darkness which precedes the dawn. The brightness of the day will atone
for all. You will live to see a new world yet, Bride!”

A sudden light sprang into her eyes. For a moment her face was
transfigured; but as she looked at him that light died out. She
realised how widely apart were their ideas of a new world.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIV

_EUSTACE’S DILEMMA_


“She is right in theory--she is perfectly right. She holds the stronger
position. But yet I cannot give it up. One cannot live in the world,
and breathe an atmosphere so far above it as she does. The thing is
not possible. What!--go back to London--go back to my friends there,
and say that I cannot accept my kinsman’s seat, because in right and
justice he should not have it to give! What a howl of derision I
should provoke! And to have to confess that my adviser in this was a
girl years younger than myself, who had hardly left her sea-girt home
all her life--who knows no more of the world than the babe in the
nursery! Why, I should become a laughing-stock to the whole of the
town! I should never be able to face the world again. No, no, no--such
scruples are untenable. A great work has to be done, and men are wanted
of birth, energy, determination, and probity; I think I may, without
undue self-appreciation, assert that I possess all these needful
qualifications. Better men than myself have told me so. First let us
get the upper hand, and then we will see what may be done for purifying
the country and raising a higher and a better standard. If the world
_would_ listen to such teachings as Bride’s, I will not say the world
might not be a better place; but if it will not--why, we must needs
employ tools more fitted for the work. To be deterred by such a
scruple!--no--it would be unworthy of the Cause!”

Eustace was alone in his room, dressing for dinner. His welcome from
his kinsman had been kind and cordial, and he was now bracing himself
for the discussion which must follow upon the request he had to make.
The subject had not yet been broached between them, though he fancied
that the Duke half suspected his errand, or rather the motive which had
prompted it; but hitherto the talk had been all on public matters, and
he had been relieved to find the old man by no means so hostile in mind
towards the bill as he had feared to find him. Bride’s estimate of her
father’s attitude of mind was pretty correct. He knew that some sort
of change was needed, and that improved legislation was required for
the peace and prosperity of the country; but he felt that the proposed
measure would but be the beginning of an upheaval from which he shrank
with natural distaste, and he feared that evils would follow of
magnitude greater than those to be done away. Therefore he watched the
advance of the wave with no little dread, feeling almost sad that he
should have lived to see so many old landmarks washed away or submerged.

So much Eustace had gathered, but he was not daunted. Things might have
been much worse. He had been received more cordially at the castle than
he expected, and there was exhilaration in the thought of his close
proximity to Bride, even though he resolved not to make any attempt
this visit to approach her as a lover.

But he was still quite resolved to win her for his wife if possible.
The few hours spent in her company had riveted his chains afresh. He
had never met a woman who exercised one-tenth part of the charm upon
him that Bride did. Her very unapproachableness made her dearer and
more fascinating. The bright sunshine of the March afternoon beguiled
him from his room some while before the dinner-hour. He strolled out
into the gardens, and began wandering there, thinking of his love.
Turning a corner, he came suddenly upon Abner, and was grieved to
see such a change in the old man. His hair had grown many degrees
more white, and there was a bowed look about the shoulders which had
not been noticeable before. His fine old face was seamed with lines
that told of pain, either mental or physical, whilst the eyes, though
retaining their old steadfastness and brightness, had taken something
of wistfulness withal, as though some haunting regret or unanswered
longing were always present in his mind.

“Why, Tresithny, I fear you have been ill,” said Eustace, with his
kindly smile, as he greeted the old man, and expressed his pleasure
at seeing him again. “You have not worn as well as my uncle. Has the
winter been too much for you?”

“Nay, it’s not the weather, sir--I’m too well seasoned to mind that. I
hadn’t heard as we were tu see yu down to the castle again, sir. I wish
you well, and hope I see yu in good health.”

“The best, thank you, Tresithny, and this beautiful air of yours is
like the elixir of life, if you’ve ever heard of that. But I want to
know what ails you; you are not looking the same man as when I left.
Have you had some illness?”

“No, sir, thank yu,” answered Abner quietly, with a quick glance into
Eustace’s face that seemed to tell him all he wished to know. “Belike
yu haven’t heard of the trouble. Such things don’t get into the
newspapers yu’ll be likely to see, I take it.”

“Trouble!--what trouble?” asked Eustace kindly, his quick sympathies
stirred at once by the thought of any sort of suffering. “I have not
heard much news from Penarvon and St. Bride since I left. My uncle has
written occasionally, but he does not give me much local news.”

“No, sir, there’s other things more important to be spoke of; but his
Grace was the best friend we had in the trouble, and there’s no manner
of doubt that he saved his life--poor misguided lad. ’Twould have abin
a hanging matter with him, as ’twas with t’other, but for his Grace
coming himself to speak up for him. I’ll never forget that. He’s been
our best friend throughout, him and our own Lady Bride--bless her!”

“Ay, you may well say that,” answered Eustace fervently; “a sweeter
creature never drew breath on this earth. But I want to know more of
this, Tresithny. What in the world has been going on? I did not know
you could have such serious troubles in this little paradise of a
place. It seems as though it should be exempt from the strife and crime
of the great world.”

“No, sir,” answered Abner gravely, “there’s no place where human life
abides that is free from the curse of sin. We live in no paradise here.
One place is very much like another, as far as that goes, all the world
over, I take it. But I won’t weary yu with my talk. There’s not much
to tell, and it’s soon told. My grandson, Saul, got into bad company
and bad hands last year. They deceived and misled the poor lad, and he,
being hot and fiery by nature, was all the more ready to their hand. He
took to preaching rebellion, and I don’t know what, to the folks who
would listen, and so lost his place on the farm.”

“He was always too good for a mere labourer,” spoke Eustace, in a quick
low tone. “He was just eating his heart out in the solitude and the
lack of human interest and sympathy.”

“Well, sir, I don’t know that he mended matters much by leaving. He
went to Pentreath and got some sort of work there--I’m not very clear
what--and got more and more with bad companions. Then came those riots
you’ve heard tell of all over the country--sometimes against the new
machines, sometimes against the masters, or any rich men whom the
people think worth robbing when they get the chance. Saul was mixed
up in these riots. I shan’t never know, I s’pose, exactly how much
he was to blame; but he’d got a bad name, and folks were after him;
and at last he and the cobbler, whose house he lived at, were took
up and brought before the magistrates. Saul got off with six months’
imprisonment; but the cobbler went before the judges at assizes and was
hanged. They all say Saul would have been served the same if his Grace
hadn’t gone down on purpose to speak up for him to their reverences: it
was that that did it. But six months of prison has been enough for the
boy. I doubt me he’ll ever be the same again.”

Eustace was not a little shocked by this story. He remembered Saul
as he had last seen him--a fine, manly, fearless fellow, strong as
a giant, and with mental and intellectual possibilities that raised
him far above his fellows. He knew something of the state of country
prisons; that was one of the abuses he and his friends meant to inquire
into when the time came. Something had been done towards amending their
condition, even in the previous century; but very much yet remained
that needed to be done. How had Saul borne that life for six long weary
months? It was bad enough for a town-bred man, used to confinement and
foul air, but what must it have been for this son of the sea and the
downs?

“Tresithny, I am grieved--I am deeply grieved,” he said. “Tell me more
of the poor fellow. I always thought highly of Saul. Tell me how he has
borne it. He is out again now, I trust?”

“Yes, shattered in body and soul and spirit,” answered the old man very
sadly, though without bitterness. “The iron has entered into his soul,
and for him there is yet no healing touch that can salve the soreness
of that wound.”

“He has been ill?”

“Ay, of the jail-fever. It’s rarer now than ’twas years ago; but it got
fast hold of Saul. May be the fresh winds will make a strong man of him
again before long; but I’m feared he’s gotten a hurt that is worse than
weakness of body.”

“Poor fellow!” said Eustace with sincere concern. “I must go and see
him as soon as I can.”

There was a momentary silence, and then Abner said quietly--

“Yu must do as yu will about that, sir.”

There was something in these words so foreign to the old gardener’s
customary respectful cordiality that Eustace, who in his own fashion
was sensitive enough, gave a keen quick look at his interlocutor, and
spoke with subdued vehemence.

“Tresithny, I trust you do not believe that it has been my doing that
poor Saul has fallen into this trouble.”

Abner finished tying up the young shoot of the tree he was training
before making answer, and then he spoke very slowly and with an air of
sorrowful resignation, which seemed sadder to the young man than open
expressions of anger or grief.

“Sir,” he said, “I am not one lightly to lay any man’s sin at another
man’s door. Only the Lord in heaven can know what blame may attach
to each--the one for his act, the other for words which it were
better he should not have spoken. No, sir; Saul has sinned, and he
has suffered for his sin. I have tried to think no bitter thoughts of
any of those who helped to lead him astray. Some of them are poor,
ignorant, miserable creatures, who doubtless knew no better. Some,
I doubt not, have many and just causes of complaint, and have been
goaded to violence and lawlessness by the fear of starvation, which
works like poison in the blood. It is hard to think hard thoughts of
such, especially when they are left in their ignorance and misery, and
those who should be their pastors and shepherds seek not after the
scattered flock to gather and feed them. My boy had doubtless seen and
heard enough to fire his blood, and God Almighty alone may judge of the
measure of his guilt. But for my part, I would that he had been saved
from that teaching, and those thoughts which have worked like madness
in his brain; and you know better than I can do, sir, how much of the
wild words he uses have been learned from you.”

“Not much wildness, I think,” answered Eustace gravely. “He has
certainly learned a good many facts from me, but I have said very much
to him to try and curb the wild spirit of hatred and lawless revolt
which I saw in him. He would tell you that himself if you asked him.”

“Yes, sir; I don’t doubt it; but when you bring gunpowder close to the
fire to dry it, as you may think, and take every care that it doesn’t
explode, you run a great risk, even with the most cautious intentions.
A puff of wind down the chimney will send a spark into it, and then
comes an explosion. It’s something like that when you educated and
clever gentlemen begin to bring your fire near the hot inflammable
minds of our ignorant lads. You don’t mean there to be any spark; you
mean to get your material well dried and in good working order, so
that it can be used for right and legitimate ends; but though you’re
clever enough to make it dry and hot and fit for service, you can’t
stop the fall of the spark that brings about the explosion, and then
you call it a sad accident and deplore it as much as any but you don’t
always consider the fearful risks you run of bringing about this very
accident, which may perhaps recoil one day on your own head, and which
has injured for life many and many a brave lad who might have lived out
his days in innocence and a fair amount of happiness but for that.”

Eustace stood looking down at the path with a thoughtful face. He could
have brought many arguments to bear upon the old man, explaining how
every good cause as yet undertaken against every existing form of evil
had been marred and hindered at the outset, and indeed all through its
career, by the rashness, the impetuosity, the ill-advised action of
individuals; but he held his peace, and said nothing that might sound
like an excuse for his own conduct. He _did_ take blame to himself in
the case of Saul. He had felt again and again, whilst talking with
that fiery youth, with his strong character and individuality, and his
burning hatred against the ruling classes, that he was playing with
edged tools. The pleasure of finding so much intelligence and sympathy
in a man of the people had led him on often to speak out things which
on calmer consideration he would hardly have put into words so freely.
From time to time his own conscience had warned him that Saul might one
day turn out an unmanageable disciple; but he had hoped his own strong
influence upon him would suffice to hold in check his fiery partisan
zeal, and had forgotten how quickly that influence would be removed,
whilst the memory of his words, and the feelings they excited, would
live on and ferment and eat into his very soul.

“I am sorry,” he said at last, looking up at Abner with frank, open
regret in his eyes; “I think I was wrong. I think I had better have let
Saul alone. He has too much gunpowder, as you rightly call it, in his
composition. I should have been warned by that and have let him alone.”

This frank apology evoked a smile from Abner.

“Sir,” he said, “don’t think I don’t appreciate your care for the
people, or that I don’t know you wish to do good. I’m very sure of
that; and Saul had heard a good deal more than was good for him before
he ever met you. But knowing that a gentleman such as you felt with
him went a long way with him--seemed to turn the scale altogether, if
you know what I mean. But I’m not saying he might not have gone as far
without, if he’d taken up with the lads of Pentreath as he’s lately
done. However, he seems to have took altogether against Pentreath now,
and spends his time down on the shore with the fisher-folk. He’ll be
glad enough to see you, sir, I doubt not. It isn’t many as he’s got a
welcome for, but I think he’ll have it for you.”

“And I’ll try and see that he is none the worse for my visit,” said
Eustace, with a grave smile; and then he walked back to the castle, for
the dinner-hour had all but arrived.

His face was grave and absorbed as he took his seat. The conversation
with Abner had left a painful impression on his mind. He felt like a
man on the horns of a dilemma. His whole heart was in the cause of
reform. He felt that he was pledged to it, and that he must give his
whole life and energies to it, come what might; and yet at every turn
he was confronted by problems past his power to solve. He had worked
amongst the people--and behold, his most promising pupil had been
spending the winter in jail, and had but just come forth shattered
in body and mind. He might do more good by sitting in Parliament and
fighting the battle there--that indeed was his great desire; but to do
so he must take a step which seemed in a sense to be a sacrifice of
principle and self-respect. He seemed hedged in by difficulties all
ways; but his resolution did not waver.

“Once let me get this seat, and the knot will be cut,” he kept saying
to himself, as the meal proceeded in its quiet stately course; and
feeling that the sooner the plunge was taken the better it would he, he
only waited until the servants had withdrawn at the conclusion of the
meal before he spoke out freely and frankly.

“Uncle,” he said, with an abruptness that was the result of repressed
excitement, “last year, before you knew much of my views on politics,
you offered to give me a seat in Parliament upon the first opportunity.
That opportunity has now come, and I have come to remind you of your
offer, and to ask you whether--knowing my views--you still feel
disposed to give it me. Your old friend has retired, as you told me he
would. He will not sit again. I want, above all things, to be a member
of that House which will--if I mistake not greatly--have the honour
of passing that measure which will be the keystone to the prosperity
of England. I believe that there is no doubt as to the composition of
the next House of Commons. The voice of the nation cannot longer be
misunderstood or ignored. It will be a great and a glorious time for
England, and I want to have the great honour and privilege of serving
her at this crisis. Will you give me that seat of which you spoke, that
I may realise this ambition and happiness?”

“And pass a measure about which I feel the very gravest doubts, and
which, I fear, may prove anything but the keystone to greatness and
prosperity?” said the Duke.

“I know, sir, we do not think alike on this subject. It is scarcely
likely we should. But you have had enough experience of the ways of
the world to be aware that the advancing wave cannot be turned back.
If these most crucial and important measures are to be passed, is it
not better that they should be drawn up and passed by men of birth
and station, men of education and sound principle? Without claiming
for myself qualifications which I do not possess, or any very great
amount of experience in legislating, I think I have the qualities I
have named; and I am a Marchmont, and the Marchmonts have not shown
themselves deficient either in ability or in governing power in days of
yore. I cannot but feel that you would prefer your kinsman in the House
to a mere stranger; and I would remember and respect your scruples and
injunctions, and would place them before my colleagues, giving them all
due weight and respect.”

The Duke smiled slightly.

“The boy talks as though he would be a cabinet minister at once!” he
remarked to the room at large. “Do you suppose anybody will pay any
attention to what a tyro like you will think or speak? and, for my own
part, if I have anything to say to the bill which I hold to be worth
saying, I can go to Westminster and say it for myself.”

“Yes, in the Upper House,” said Eustace; “but it is in the Commons that
the battle will be fought.”

“And you think you can be my mouthpiece there?” asked the Duke, a
little grimly. “Boy, do you not think I could find a better mouthpiece
for my views than you will ever make?”

But the question was put with a smile which made Eustace believe that
there would not be much of a battle to fight. His kinsman was not
without the strong family feeling which was so strong a characteristic
of his race; and the very fact that Eustace desired the seat was a
strong reason why he should have it. With all his advanced views, he
was a Marchmont, and a man of rectitude and high principle. That the
Reform Bill would assuredly pass the next House of Commons the whole
country fully believed, and the Duke also. There was a good deal in
Eustace’s argument about getting it drawn up and debated by the best
stamp of men possible.

“But you--what has so changed your view?” asked the old man, suddenly
turning upon Eustace, and looking keenly at him. “When first I made my
offer, it only evoked a tirade against the abuse of rotten or pocket
boroughs, as I think you called them. I was led to imagine that you
would recoil in horror from profiting by such an abuse; and behold,
here are you in a year’s time craving to advance yourself by that very
means! How comes that, my fine young redresser of evils? How can you
reconcile it to your conscience to accept the seat which you dispute my
right to hold?”

A flush mounted to Eustace’s face.

“I accept it, and even crave it, that I may be one of those to abolish
it in the future. Till the laws are amended, the abuse must last, and
to amend those laws is the aim and object of my life. I admit that
my position is one which appears inconsistent. You can easily put me
in a dilemma by well-planted questions; but my mind is clear and my
conscience too. You have to find a candidate for this seat, and I,
as your next of kin, desire it. I openly proclaim to you the fact
that once I am seated in Parliament, I shall strain every nerve to
accomplish the abolition of the abuse by which I have gained my seat
so readily; but I am neither afraid nor ashamed to seek it now. I will
profit by the iniquity to expunge that iniquity from our country for
ever!”

“To do a great right, do a little wrong,” quoted the Duke thoughtfully.
“Well, Eustace, you shall have the seat if you desire it, but I cannot
help feeling that I wish you had not asked me for it, or been willing
to take it.”

The flush deepened in Eustace’s face as the Duke spoke, and he caught
the answering glance in Bride’s eyes. He had purposely made his request
before her, although it cost him something to do it. He wished to
prove to himself that he had the courage of his opinions, and was not
ashamed of the trifling inconsistency, which he explained away again
and again to what he called his own satisfaction. He was not prepared
to make himself the laughing-stock of his friends in town for a
scruple of this sort; but he wished he could have avoided the apparent
inconsistency with these kinsfolk of his, who appeared to look on at
the strife of parties and the battle of life from an altitude which was
rather perplexing and discomfiting.

“I am greatly obliged, sir,” said Eustace, hardly believing the battle
was already won. He had looked for much more argument and resistance.
“I will try to be worthy of the trust reposed in me. I hope you do
not distrust me for my willingness to take advantage for once of this
custom so soon to be made obsolete?”

“I do not distrust your loyalty to your cause; I think you deserve to
sit in the next House, and may in time make yourself of value to your
party. At the same time, since you do hold so strongly your advanced
views, I had rather you obtained your seat in another fashion, speaking
simply from a moral and theoretic standpoint.”

“I agree with you there, in theory,” answered Eustace eagerly. “I wish
the world could be governed according to theory; but, alas! in practice
too many of our brightest and best theories break down. If I had any
chance of winning a seat by an ordinary contest, I would gladly do so;
but I know that I have not. I am an untried man, and unknown in any
constituency. I should not stand the ghost of a chance; and the bribery
and corruption of an election under such conditions is too revolting to
think of.”

A faint smile played round the lips of the old Duke.

“Yes, bribery and corruption are the lawful methods by which our House
of Commons is returned by the country, save where there are rotten
or pocket boroughs to be given by favour, or openly bought and sold;
and when these last are done away with, and more contests set on foot,
there will be more bribery and corruption, rioting and drunkenness,
than ever, and this will be the first step of the great reform.”

“Yes, but only the first step,” answered Eustace eagerly. “After that
step will follow others for the purifying of these contests, and the
rectifying of these flagrant abuses. Some great men say it can and will
be done by establishing a system of ballot-voting, by which no man may
know how his neighbour votes, so that a deathblow will be dealt to
bribery.”

“_Will_ it?” questioned the Duke significantly.

“Yes,” was the fearless answer, “because men will learn to see the
worse than folly of bribing a man who can pocket the bribe, take one
from his opponent, and then go perfectly free and unfettered to vote as
he pleases! The thing will die a natural death as a matter of course.
It may die hard, but die it must.”

“Yes, it will die in its open form. Votes will no longer be bought
at so much a head; but mark my word, Eustace, a more corrupt and
iniquitous form of bribery will creep slowly and surely upon the
country. Governments will outbid each other with promises of measures
which will appeal to the selfish and self-seeking passions of the
people, just to get into power, quite apart from true statesmanship
or the true good of the nation. There will be one long struggle after
popularity with the unthinking masses--one long bribing of them by a
wholesale system of promises, more or less faithfully carried out,
which will corrupt the nation to the core as the old bribery has
never corrupted it. Don’t tell me, boy! I have lived longer than you.
I know human nature. An inducement--a bribe--men will have; and the
bribe will now be of increased power, increased franchise, increased
ability to levy taxes which those who levy them will not pay--a system
of legalised robbery, which will sooner or later bring the country to
ruin. Ah! yes, you smile. You think I am a croaker and a pessimist.
Well, well, well--thank God, I shall not live to see the day; but that
day will come for England before many generations have passed, when she
will be groaning beneath the burden laid upon her by her reformers,
but absolutely unable to break that increasing yoke from off her neck.
Men may rise up in arms against their tyrants when their tyrant is a
monarch; but when they are their own tyrants, their own legislators,
their own oppressors, where are they to find redress?”

Eustace made no attempt to reply. The Duke was talking a language
incomprehensible to him and absurd. Even argument seemed thrown away
here; yet all the while he respected the sincerity and the character of
the man before him, and he answered with a smile--

“Well, uncle, if we cannot agree as to the outcome of these measures,
at least we can agree to differ, and we can each pocket our little
bit of inconsistency with a quiet conscience. You will give me the
seat, whilst holding that eventual ill will come from the cause I
advocate; and I will profit by an abuse to do away with that abuse. I
think it comes pretty much to this: we both know that this first step
is inevitable, therefore you cease to fight against it, whilst I seek
to help to forward it by every wise and right method. There are many
men in the country more ‘advanced’ than I, and I have a dread of rash
precipitation. I think I shall do good and not harm even to your cause
by my voice. I shall certainly take warning by your words, and be
always on the side of moderation.”

“You shall have the seat,” said the Duke, “because you are my next of
kin, and because I respect you as a man, if I do not agree with you as
a politician. In the course of nature you will not long be able to sit
in the House of Commons; and since your heart is set upon it, I will
give you the chance this time. You can choose which you will do--accept
the seat I have at my disposal--getting in by an abuse; or I will
give my seat to the Tory member for Pentreath, and put you up in his
place and give you my influence there. Pentreath has hitherto always
returned a Tory candidate, and Sir Roland Menteith is a very popular
man locally--you would have no chance against him; but if I gave him
my seat, and you stepped forward as the Reform candidate--a moderate
reformer supported by the Penarvon interest, you might stand an
excellent chance. There would certainly be another Tory adversary put
up against you, but I know of no man likely to be popular. The people
of the place have become strongly leavened by the spirit of the day,
and my influence would go far to turn the scale with a great many. You
can think it over and do as you will. Personally you have no influence,
or little here; but as a Marchmont and the future Duke, you would have
a good deal. There would be expenses of course--we could talk about
that later. I do not seek to persuade you to anything; I only tell you
what I will do for you if you prefer to contest a seat rather than get
one by an abuse. You can think it quietly over, and decide at your
leisure. Sir Roland is dining here in a week’s time. He always comes to
see me after his return from Westminster to give me all the news. We
can talk the matter over with him then.”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XV

_STIRRING DAYS_


Sir Roland Menteith was slightly known to Eustace, who had spent much
time in the lobbies of the House of Commons, and was personally known
to the majority of its members, by sight if not by name. He was a
fine-looking man of some five-and-thirty summers, and although a Tory
by descent and tradition, was by no means an enemy of such moderate
measures of parliamentary reform as were at present under discussion.
He had voted for the reading of the recent bill, and was by no means
prepared to pledge himself to his constituency as its enemy. There
were many amongst his enemies who said he had no right, with the views
he held, to call himself a Tory; but he would defend himself by the
argument that Tories would soon cease to exist if they never moved one
step forward with the times they lived in. A system originally sound
and good could well become corrupt and bad under a changed condition
of affairs, and if Tories were pledged to resist any sort of change,
bad or good--well, they at once placed themselves in a false position,
and made their own extinction only a matter of time. He maintained
that the true Tory aimed always for the best and soundest policy, the
policy that would make England respected abroad and prosperous at
home. Tearing down and splitting up were actions bad and degrading
to a government, but gradual change, especially of a constructive
character, was essential to the development of the national life. So
he argued, and Eustace cordially agreed, whilst the old Duke listened
with his slight peculiar smile, and said little, but kept true to the
point in the little he did say. Sir Roland had come over to the castle
in great excitement only one day following the arrival of Eustace
there, and he had easily been persuaded to remain on as a guest whilst
these important and stirring themes were under discussion. He was very
well pleased to find in young Marchmont so moderate and temperate a
reformer. Eustace had certainly learnt more moderation of thought
during the past year, and was more cautious both in what he advocated
and what he approved. He had had several experiences of a kind likely
to awaken in him some distrust of the methods which once had seemed
entirely right and praiseworthy; and he began to have an inkling that
there was something wanting in his system before it could be called in
any way perfect. The passions of the people could easily be stirred;
but there was no power he knew of as yet strong enough to hold them
in a just and proper repression. It was a hateful thing to him to be
accused (as he knew he was in many quarters) of being one of those
demagogues bent on rousing all that was worst and most cruel and wild
in the natures over which he acquired influence. Sir Roland, after one
of his many morning rides into Pentreath, told him flatly that he had
the credit of being at the bottom of those riots which had caused such
loss and destruction of property there in the autumn, and it was soon
ascertained that the feeling there was so strongly against him that it
would be hopeless for him to stand as a candidate on either one side or
the other.

This piece of intelligence came as rather a severe shock to him. After
the interview with the Duke on the day of his arrival, he had thought
more and more of the suggestion that he should contest the seat at
Pentreath, sparing Sir Roland the cost and the worry. His own income
was large, and could well stand the strain, and the Duke was a man of
known wealth and liberality. Eustace, too, was indulging in halcyon
dreams of contesting the seat with rigid purity of method, hoping even
to shame his adversary into better ways by his own absolute probity.
Sir Roland, although fond of his constituents, and rather fond of the
excitement and bustle of an election and the sound of his own clever
speeches on the hustings, was by no means averse to be spared the
trouble and expense for once, stepping quietly into the Duke’s pocket
borough, and throwing in his influence for young Marchmont, with whom
upon the essential matter of the coming strife he agreed. Eustace was
feeling something of the keen exhilaration of the coming strife, and
was enjoying the release from the anomalous position he would have
occupied (at least in the eyes of Bride) as his kinsman’s nominee, when
this fresh blow was dealt to his pride and his hopes. Sir Roland had
heard enough to be very certain that the very name of Eustace Marchmont
would arouse an uproar of fury amongst the class who had the voting
power; also, there could be no manner of doubt that his appearance
as a candidate would provoke fresh riots of a very serious nature.
Investigation of these rumours only confirmed them. Eustace Marchmont’s
name had been on the lips of all the rioters who made havoc of the town
during the recent outbreak. Their young leader, Saul Tresithny, had
quoted him as his authority for almost every wild argument by which
he had stirred the people to madness, and roused them to any act of
violence, in order to overthrow, or at least be revenged upon, their
tyrants and foes. If he were to appear on the hustings, he would be
at once the idol of the lawless (and voteless) mob; but the object of
reprobation, if not of execration, to all the sober-minded citizens,
whatever might be their political views. Had Eustace come amongst them
as a stranger with the Penarvon and Menteith interest at his back, he
might have carried all before him, for there was no popular man in
the place likely to oppose him under those conditions; but branded as
he now was by the names of Radical and revolutionary, all men looked
askance at him, and it was with a keen sense of disappointment, not
to say humiliation, that he had to abandon the idea of contesting
the seat, and revert to his original plan of accepting his kinsman’s
nomination.

“I suppose you think that my sin has found me out,” he said rather
bitterly to Bride, when this unpalatable news had become verified as
actual fact. “I suppose you believe that I went about the country last
year inciting men to arson and pillage and every sort of brutality. You
know that is what is said of me by the respectable people of Pentreath,
that I provoked and incited riot, and took very good care to be out of
the way when it took place, that others might bear the punishment.”

“It is cruel to say such things of you,” answered Bride, with a quiet
indignation which was very grateful to him. “I know they are not true,
and I almost think the people who say them know that there is only a
very small substratum of truth in them. But, Eustace,” and she looked
up at him with one of her rare smiles, “do you not think you sometimes
say things almost as untrue on the other side? Do you not sometimes
make out men in high places to be little else than monsters, when all
the time they are almost as helpless, and perhaps even less to blame
for the effects of a system, than you for those riots at Pentreath,
which above all things you disapprove and deprecate?”

“I know what you mean,” he said; “I think we all go too far in our
attack and defence. But those men _do_ uphold a system of tyranny and
iniquity, even if they are not responsible for it, whilst I never
uphold violence and lawlessness. I hate and abominate it with my whole
heart.”

“I know you do; but you will not get ignorant men to believe it, when
you teach them how bad the laws are. Their idea of mending the existing
state of things is to rebel against it by force.”

“Yes; and great present mischief is the result; but, Bride, if all
men held your doctrine of patience and submission, no reformation or
reform, no redress of abuses, no respite from tyranny and oppression,
would ever have been effected in the world’s history. When you have
such imperfect material to deal with, imperfections are everywhere.
Good is always mixed with evil, and will be to the end of the chapter.”

“Yes; until the Kingdom,” answered Bride sadly, yet with a sudden
lighting of the eyes. “Yes, Eustace, I know that so long as human
nature is what it is, nothing can be done without evil creeping in.
But I still think that if men would be content to leave results, and
simply strive themselves after the best and highest good, and try
and teach the ignorant and the degraded the one true and only way of
raising themselves--if men would look to God for His teaching--from the
highest to the lowest--trying in all things to do not their will but
His--then I think the world would gradually raise itself without these
cruel scenes of strife and bloodshed, without these heart-burnings and
miserable factions. ‘Thy kingdom come!’ It is a prayer always on our
lips; but do men try to apply the laws of God’s kingdom to this earth
which He has made and they have marred?”

“I think that is about the last thing men of the present day think
of,” answered Eustace, with a curious sidelong look at the earnest
face beside him. “They want something more practical to go by. When it
comes to be a question what God wills, every divine and every school of
theology and philosophy has a different answer to give. Such an appeal
as that would only make confusion worse confounded.”

A very wistful, sorrowful look crept into the fair young face.

“I was not thinking of schools of theology or philosophy,” she answered
very quietly, “I was thinking of God Himself as revealed in His
Incarnate Son; but I do not think we understand each other when we
speak of that, Eustace.”

In very truth he did not understand her. Did she seriously believe that
the affairs of the world could be directed by a Divine voice straight
from heaven? It almost appeared sometimes as though she did, and yet
in most matters Lady Bride, mystic and dreamer though she was, was not
lacking in quiet common-sense and a fair amount of experience of such
life as she had seen.

For a moment he stood silent beside her--they were on the terrace,
looking down at the sparkling sea below. Then he roused himself, and
changed the subject suddenly.

“Shall we go down to the shore and see Saul Tresithny? I have not
succeeded in catching him yet. I do not think he tries to avoid me.
Your gardener says he is much attached to me; but he has always been
out with the boats. There seems plenty of fishing just now. I hope the
poor fellow is not suffering from lack of employment.”

“I think not. There is always plenty of work with the boats in the
summer months. It is the winter that is so hard for our people, except
when they take to smuggling, as too many do. I am afraid that is what
Saul will do when fishing gets slack. He always had a leaning towards
any sort of adventure and danger. Abner managed to keep him away from
the fishing-village as a lad, and when he went to the farm he had
other work, and was too far off; but I am afraid how it will be with
him now. I had hoped he would go to Mr. St. Aubyn and take care of
his garden and horse, but he will not. Nobody can do anything with
him--poor Saul!”

“I will see what I can do,” said Eustace, with hopeful confidence.
“He is too good to turn into a mere fisherman and smuggler. There are
traits of great promise in him. I suppose birth and blood _does_ tell,
and there is reason to believe that his father was a man of birth, I
hear, although he may have been a villain. Certainly the man is very
different from his fellows. I wonder whether he would come to London as
my servant. I could do very well with another groom, and I know he has
a great knack with horses. He might be very useful.”

“I wish he would,” said Bride earnestly. “It might be a turning-point
in his life to get away from old associates and old ideas.”

They were by this time walking down towards the shore by the little
ridge-like path before described. Eustace was behind, and Bride in
front, so that she could not see the sudden light which leaped into his
eyes; but she heard something new in the tone of his voice as he said--

“Then you do not hold that I have been the ruin of Saul--body and soul,
as so many do? You do not think that to take him away with me would be
but to consummate that ruin?”

“No, indeed I do not,” answered Bride gently. “I think that the people
who say such things do not understand you, Eustace. I think you might
perhaps do poor Saul more good than anybody just now, because I think
he will listen to you, and he will listen to no one else. I should like
to think of him going away with you. If you cannot teach him all he
will have to learn before he can be a truly happy man, you can teach
him a great deal that he will be better for the knowing; and perhaps
some day, when the right time has come, he will be ready to be taught
the rest.”

“Then you do not call me a demagogue, an infidel--a man dangerous to
the whole community, and to the world at large?” questioned Eustace,
with the insistance of one whose heart has been deeply wounded
by accusations hurled against him--all the more deeply from the
consciousness that the censure has not been wholly undeserved.

“No,” answered Bride softly, “I do not call you any of those names--not
even in my thoughts. I know you have not been very wise; I think you
know that yourself, and will learn wisdom for the future. But I know
that you believed yourself right in what you said and did, and were
generous and disinterested in your teaching. About your faith I know
very little. I think you know very little yourself; but we can leave
that in God’s hands. It does not come by man, or through man, but
by the will of God. I think it is His will, Eustace, to draw you to
Himself one day; but that day must come in His good time. I think we
sometimes make a great mistake in striving to urge and drive those whom
we love. Waiting _is_ hard, and sometimes it seems very, very long. But
things are so different with God--His patience as well as His love are
so much greater than ours. And we can always pray--that helps the time
of waiting best.”

Eustace was intensely thrilled by these low-spoken words, which
he only just caught through the plash of the waves beneath. That
magnetic influence which Bride always exercised upon him was almost
overpoweringly strong at that moment. He could almost have fallen at
her feet in adoration. After the good-natured strictures of Sir Roland,
the slight grim reproofs of the Duke, and his knowledge of the cutting
criticisms and violent abuse levelled at him by the world of Pentreath,
these words of Bride’s fell like balm upon his spirit. He felt lifted
into a different atmosphere, and the question could not but present
itself to him--

“If faith and those unseen things in which that pure girl believes,
which are to her the greatest realities of life, are nothing but a
myth, a figment of the imagination, what gives them such power over
a nature like mine? Why do I thrill at the thought of them? Why do I
see glimpses, as through a rifted cloud, of a glory, a beauty, a peace
beyond anything I have ever conceived? Why, even by the teachings of my
own philosophy, the fact of this stirring of spirit indicates a reality
of some sort. And is there, after all, nothing higher than philosophy?
Is there no object of objective worship? Is there, after all, a God?”

Little did Bride suspect the quick stirrings of spirit her words had
evoked. She walked on, with her sweet face set in earnest lines,
thinking of Saul and his grandfather’s ceaseless prayers on his behalf,
praying herself for him in a half-unconscious fashion, as was her habit
when thoughts of the erring one presented themselves. Her mind was more
with him just at that moment than with the kinsman behind her, with
whom, however, thoughts of Saul were always more or less mixed up;
therefore the question, when it came, did not in any wise startle her.

“Bride, do you mean that you ever pray for me?”

“Yes, Eustace. I always pray for those whom I love, and for those who
seem to need my prayers.”

He was silent for several minutes, and then his thoughts surging back
to a question that had been on the tip of his tongue before, he asked,
“Bride, you said I could not teach Saul to be a truly happy man. Do you
think that I am not a happy man myself?”

“Not a truly happy one,” she answered, with quiet certainty. “I believe
you are happy in one way--in the world’s way. But that is not what
I mean by true happiness. There is another happiness I hope you will
learn some day--I think you will; and then you will understand. I do
not think you can understand yet.”

He was not sure that he could not. He remembered the Duchess in
former years; he had Bride before his eyes now. Even old Abner, in
the midst of all his trouble, showed a substratum of unchanging
serenity which nothing seemed able to shake. He believed he apprehended
without understanding what manner of thing this happiness was--a
thing altogether different from and independent of the fluctuations
of enjoyment and pleasure which went by the name of happiness in his
world. Eustace was receiving impressions just now with a force and a
rapidity that was startling to him. Every day something seemed added
to his list of experiences, and not the least was the peculiar wave of
emotion that swept over him now.

Yet Bride noticed nothing different in his manner as they reached the
beach, and were able to walk on side by side. He was a little absent
and thoughtful perhaps, as was natural with the interview just hanging
over him; and it soon appeared that their journey was not in vain, for
the tall form of Saul was seen seated upon a rock not far away, and
Bride said softly to Eustace, “There he is. I think you had better go
to him alone. I will go and see some of the poor people and join you
later on.”

Eustace was grateful to her for this suggestion. Now that he was almost
face to face with his quondam pupil, he felt that he would rather
be alone. He did not know in what mood Saul would meet him, and it
was better perhaps that they should be without the fetter which the
presence of Bride must necessarily impose.

Without pausing to rehearse any speech, Eustace walked straight up to
the lonely figure on the rock, and holding out his hand in greeting (a
demonstration very rare in those days between men of such different
stations), said, with warm feeling, “Tresithny, you have suffered in
what you took to be the cause of the people. That must make a fresh
bond between us, whatever else we may have to say upon the subject.”

Saul started at the sound of the familiar, unexpected voice (the plash
of the waves had drowned approaching footsteps); he started again
at sight of the outstretched hand; but after a moment of visible
hesitation, he took it in his grasp and wrung it till Eustace could
have winced. The sombre face was working strangely. The mask of stolid
indifference and contempt had fallen from it. There was a new light in
the hollow eyes as they met the searching gaze of Eustace’s, and the
first words came out with something of a gasp.

“Then you have come at last, sir, and you have not changed!”

“Why should I change?” asked Eustace, with a smile, wonderfully
relieved to find that this unapproachable man, who was puzzling all
the world besides, did not turn a deaf ear upon him. Shocked as he was
at the change he saw in the outward aspect of Saul, he saw that it was
the same Saul as of old, a man full of strength and fight--a tool that
might be dangerous to work with, or of inestimable value, according
as it could be guided and tempered. A sense of true admiration and
fellowship sprang up within him towards this stern-faced son of toil,
with his sorrowful story and suffering face.

“Why should I change?” he asked; and then Saul’s pent-up feeling burst
out.

Every one had changed--the whole world--the very cause itself. All had
left him in his hour of need--all had turned upon him and betrayed
and deserted him. Months of solitary brooding, the delirium of fever,
the overwrought nervous condition into which imprisonment had driven
him, had all combined to produce in Saul a distorted image of life, of
the world, and of every single being in it. Hitherto he had locked
these feelings in his own heart; but now, before Eustace, the one man
who had proffered him friendship in the midst of his trouble, the
friendship of comrade to comrade, man to man, it all came pouring out
in one great flood of impassioned eloquence and imprecation, terrible
sometimes to listen to. It was not easy at times even to follow his
rapid speech, which alternated between the roughest vernacular and the
purest English he had ever spoken, rehearsed a hundred times in his
prison-house, as he had prepared the speeches which were to raise all
Devon and Cornwall to arms, if need be, against the monstrous class
tyranny under which the country lay groaning. Eustace let him have his
fling, never stopping him by argument or opposition, leading him on by
a sympathetic word now and again to outpour everything that was in his
heart without fear. He knew by instinct what the relief would be, how
much good it would do for the outlet to be found at length; and though
unable to repress a sense of shuddering loathing at some of the words
of his companion, he could well excuse them in the thought of his great
sufferings and state of mental distraction, and was very hopeful by
slow degrees of winning him back to a better and more reasonable frame
of mind.

It was much to have gained his confidence--much that Saul was able to
depend on the sympathy of his former master, and was not afraid of
baring his inmost soul before him. Eustace was seized sometimes with
a sense of something like dismay to find how absolutely Saul believed
he would echo even the most blasphemous of his thoughts, how securely
he reckoned upon finding in his leader the same absolute denial of
all revealed religion--religion which he himself fiercely decried and
ridiculed, as part and parcel of a corrupt system soon to be exploded.
Much that the young man thus hotly declaimed against--much of his wild
and random vituperation must have been learned from others. Eustace
could honestly affirm he had never allowed such expressions to pass
his lips; but here and there a phrase of his own would mingle with the
wilder words of Saul, and half startle Eustace by the method of its
application. Also he could not help recognising, as this man poured
out his soul before him by the shore that day, that his own standpoint
had very slightly and insensibly changed from those days, more than a
year back now, when he had first sought to awaken in Saul a response
to his own ardent imaginings. What the change was he could scarcely
define, but he was aware that arguments and assertions which would then
have passed by as only slight exaggerations of a legitimate truth, now
came to him with something of a shock, bringing a realisation of some
unheeded change or development in himself which had silently leavened
during the past months, till it had attained a proportion he never
suspected.

Rousing himself with a start from the train of thought thus suggested,
he tried to bring his companion back to the world of real things,
and to leave these idle denunciations and invectives alone for the
present. When Saul had about tired himself with his own impetuosity,
and had kept silence for a few moments, Eustace spoke a few well-chosen
words of sympathy, and gradually bringing round the subject of the
forthcoming election, he explained to the ex-prisoner what had been
going on in the world during his incarceration, and what bright hopes
were now entertained in this country of better days in store for it,
when a strong Government, pledged to redress the gravest of political
abuses, should be in power.

Saul was not entirely ignorant of what had passed, but had very
distorted ideas as to the amount and character of the opposition
offered to the bill and the prospects of its speedy success. He
listened eagerly to what Eustace told him, and his remarks and
questions again struck his master as showing a quickness of insight
and a power of appreciation most remarkable in one of his class. He
was a more excitable, a more sombre, a more embittered man than he had
been a year before. His class hatred had sunk deeper into his soul,
and become a more integral part of his nature. Eustace recognised how
the humiliation, if not the destruction, of the moneyed classes was to
him almost more of an object than the redress of the grievances of the
poor. The two were linked together in his mind, it was true; but it was
easy to see which of them held the foremost place. Eustace realised,
as perhaps he had never done so well before, the temper of the French
revolutionaries of forty years back. He could well picture Saul in
their midst, and think with a shudder of the deeds he would commit at
the head of a furious mob, wrought up to a pitch of ungovernable fury
by the rude eloquence of such a leader. Perhaps he realised, too, what
might come to England if her sons were stirred up to a like madness,
instead of being worked upon by gentler methods. He well knew that
there had been moments when his own country had been on the brink of
revolution, and that such moments might even come again. Surely it was
needful for the men who stood in the forefront of the van of reform
to walk warily. They had an immense power behind them; but it was, as
Abner had said, the power of an explosive whose properties and whose
energies were but imperfectly understood. Reform may be the best
hindrance to revolution, but it may also incite the very danger it
strives to avert. Eustace had been told this a hundred times before,
but he had never been so convinced of the truth of the warning as he
was whilst walking on the shore that day in the company of Saul.

He suggested taking him away from St. Bride, and showing him the other
side of life in the great centres of the world; but Saul, though
visibly attracted by the thought of continuing near to Eustace, for
whom his love and admiration were most loyal, gave no decided answer.
He shrank from the confinement even of freedom in a great city, shrank
from even such slight bondage as service under such a master as this
would entail. Moreover, there was no need for a speedy decision.
Eustace would be some weeks at the castle; he would probably remain
there till the result of the election was known. It would be time
enough to settle then what should be done. For the present, Saul would
remain unfettered and untrammelled.

“For I must be in Pentreath if there is to be an election,” he said,
the light of battle leaping into his eyes. He remembered elections in
past times, and the attendant excitement and fighting and fun, as in
those days it seemed to him. He was no politician then, and had only
the vaguest notion as to what it was all about; but he was always
foremost in the crowd about the hustings, cheering, howling, flinging
missiles, according to the spirit of the moment and the wave of public
opinion, which would ebb and rise and change a dozen different times in
as many hours. He had always been instinctively the enemy of the Tory
and the supporter of the Whig candidate, because he had always taken
on every matter the contrary opinion of the Castle--almost as a matter
of religion. Otherwise he could not be said to have had an opinion
heretofore in such things. But the excitement, the indiscriminate
treating, the rowdyism of the whole place, and the fights and
scrimmages that were constantly arising, were like the elixir of life
to the ardent temperament of one who was forced by circumstances into a
life of monotonous toil. He always obtained a few days’ holiday on such
occasions, and spent them in a fashion dear to his heart. Now he looked
forward to a longer spell of excitement, and to struggles of a very
different kind. Then it had all been fun, now it would be stern earnest
with him. There was a fierce light of battle in his eyes. The hope
sprang up again in his heart of striking a blow for the cause. Eustace
saw the look, heard the half hissed words of joy and anticipation, and
smilingly laid a hand on the young fisherman’s arm.

“Yes, I think you will do well to be there. You are one of those who
may do us good, and help on the cause of right and liberty; but not
by violence, Saul--always remember that. Violence is not our friend,
but our most deadly foe. It puts a sword in the hands of our enemies
to slay us withal. There must be no unseemly violence at the Pentreath
election--remember that. We must give our opponents no reason to say
that the cause of reform is advocated by cowardly and unworthy means.
Leave all that sort of thing to our foes. Let them get up as many
riots as they please. Our part is to be just and wise and patient,
secure in the righteousness and justice of our object. You will find
we shall come out in a far stronger position by remembering this than
if we organise disturbances and lead angry mobs to deeds of reckless
lawlessness.”

Saul made no response; Eustace was not even sure that he heard. His
eyes were flashing, his nostrils working; he clenched and unclenched
his hand in a fashion indicative of strong excitement.

Eustace judged it wiser to say no more for the present. There would
be plenty of time before the elections came off to gain an increasing
ascendency over this wild spirit. His first beginning had been by no
means bad.

Yet Eustace, as he walked homewards silently with Bride, could hardly
help smiling at the thought of the part he should be forced to play
with Saul. That there were stirring days coming upon the country he
could not doubt, and he meant to take his part in them with a will; but
he realised that, with Saul watching his every movement, and pledged
to follow him to the utmost limit to which his own arguments could be
pushed, he should be forced to weigh his words, and direct his actions
with a greater prudence end moderation than he had originally purposed.
Perhaps it might be well for him to have this reminder well before his
eyes, but he could not but smile at the peculiar result which had been
brought about by his own endeavour to work some sort of small agitation
amongst the people at St. Bride’s, St. Erme, and Penarvon.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVI

_THE POLLING AT PENTREATH_


Even Bride caught something of the prevailing excitement as the days
and weeks flew by, and nothing was spoken of, or thought of in the
world about her, but the coming election and the prospects of the
Reform party. The far West-Country might be a little long in growing
into the burning questions of the day, but once aroused, it could show
an amount of eagerness and enthusiasm not to be despised by busier
centres. Moreover, party and local feeling always runs very high in
out-of-the-world places, and many in and around Pentreath who cared but
little, and understood less, of the real point at issue, were keenly
excited over the coming contest on account of the exceptional nature it
presented.

Hitherto their member, Sir Roland Menteith, had been returned almost
without opposition. He was popular with all sections of the community,
and such opposition as he met with was of a kind sufficient to be
the excuse for unlimited treating and unlimited rowdyism on polling
day, without being enough to awaken the smallest amount of anxiety or
uncertainty as to the result of the struggle. But now all this was to
be changed, and as days and weeks rolled on, it became very evident
that there would be a decided and sharp contest; and although the
supporters of Sir Roland were fairly sanguine as to the result, the
election was not the foregone conclusion it had been in days of yore.

In the first place, there was already division in the camp; for so
soon as it became known that Sir Roland, whilst still professing Tory
principles, intended to give his adhesion to the bill which was before
the country for the reform of the franchise, a strong party, including
large numbers of wealthy men, at once seceded from him, and in a short
time it was announced that young Viscount Lanherne was coming forward
in the Tory interest to dispute the seat with Sir Roland; whilst in the
extreme Whig or Radical interest a candidate was forthcoming in the
person of Mr. Morval, a wealthy and influential middle-class man, whose
power and importance in the place had been steadily growing during the
past years, and who promised to bring a strong army of voters to the
poll when the day should come.

The defection of these old-fashioned and “rabid” Tories from the ranks
of Sir Roland was a serious blow, for hitherto he had always counted
securely upon every vote this section of the community had to give. It
was a distinct split in the ranks, and a very serious one. The young
Viscount, though personally popular in society, was only a lad fresh
from Oxford, and knew nothing of the bulk of his constituents. He had
practically no chance of success, yet greatly endangered Sir Roland’s
seat, and was in great danger of making it a present to the Radical
candidate. From a common-sense standpoint it was a grave error of
judgment, but when party feeling runs high, common-sense too often goes
to the wall. There was a large section in the county who absolutely
refused to give any vote to a man not pledged to fight the Reform
Bill tooth and nail. By this section Sir Roland was looked upon as a
turncoat and renegade; nor could the old-fashioned soundness of his
Conservative principles on other questions condone the fact that he
stood pledged to the support of this measure, which was looked upon as
the first step towards the overthrow of the existing constitution.

Neither did the Whig and Radical section trust the policy of Sir
Roland. They had too long been accustomed to regard him as the Tory
candidate to look upon him with favouring eyes now. In plain English,
the appearance of another Tory candidate in the field, pledged to the
old-fashioned Tory policy, had taken the wind out of his sails, and
made his position an anomalous one. He found himself in the quandary so
many do who try to adopt a moderate and liberal policy without giving
up altogether the older traditions in which they have been reared:
he was suspected and distrusted by a large section on both sides,
and regarded as one who was neither “fish, flesh, fowl, nor good red
herring,” a position not a little galling and irritating to a man who
had hitherto carried all before him with easy assurance.

The Penarvon interest was his, and that went a long way; and Eustace,
who worked most energetically on his committee, did all that one man
can do to ensure a victory. Eustace, however, was not always the best
of advocates, for though he had a wide popularity in certain classes,
he was very greatly suspected and distrusted in others, and those who
would most willingly have followed his lead were not of the class that
had votes to give.

Still Sir Roland was by no means out of heart as to the result. He had
a very large following of men of moderate opinions, and the support
of the Duke, who was greatly respected by the upper classes in the
neighbourhood, was the best guarantee he could possess that he was
not going to pursue a destructive and outrageous policy. Men who had
wavered at first and had heard with enthusiasm the news that Viscount
Lanherne was coming forward, began to think better of the matter after
reading some of Sir Roland’s manifestoes and hearing some of his
speeches. The young Viscount, though eager for the excitement of the
coming contest, and all on fire for the cause on which he had embarked,
was neither a man of experience nor knowledge, and he betrayed his
lack of many of the needful requirements of a politician whenever he
addressed a meeting or harangued a crowd. People began to take up the
name of “painted popinjay,” which had been freely flung at him by the
Radicals. It seemed somehow to fit the young spark, who was always
dressed in the tiptop of fashion, and whose face was as brightly tinted
as that of a girl.

Sir Roland had won for himself the name of “trimmer,” and found it
difficult to know what to call himself, since the name Tory was now
absorbed by the Viscount’s party, whilst the other opponent had taken
upon himself the name and office of the Whig representative. At last,
following the example of the great trimmer, Lord Halifax, he, with
a mixture of tact and good-humour which did him credit and proved a
strategic success, himself adopted the name thrust upon him, and in
his speeches and printed addresses openly advocated the policy of
“trimming,” when it had become a certainty that neither of the two
advocated extremes could any longer govern the country. Of course there
was an immense power in the style of argument adopted from the great
peer of two centuries back, who had often found himself in a parallel
dilemma; and his arguments, dressed up in a fresh garb, were freely
used by Sir Roland, and that with no small effect. Eustace read up the
subject of compromise for him, and furnished him with most telling
precedents to quote to his audiences. The Duke spoke to those friends
who came to remonstrate with, or consult him, in a fashion that was
not without effect. Men began to say to one another that if the Duke
of Penarvon had reached the conclusion that it was hopeless to try and
stem the tide, and that the wisest and best course now was to seek to
place in authority men of known experience, probity, and moderation to
guide the bark of the country through the troubled waters of reform,
why then they had better follow the same tactics. He would certainly
have advocated a fighting policy if there was any reasonable hope of
maintaining the struggle with success; but if he despaired of this, it
showed, indeed, that the time for compromise had come, and every one
who knew anything of human nature or the history of nations, must be
aware that to insist on fighting a hopeless battle was only to stir up
an infinity of bitterness and party feeling, and render the winning
side tenfold more violent and destructive.

And so the days fled swiftly by; Eustace, though secure of his own
seat, working as hard in the cause of Sir Roland as though it had been
his own, striving to live down the distrust and ill-feeling he found
prevailing against him in Pentreath and its neighbourhood, and gaining
an experience and insight into human nature which he had never obtained
before. He found himself sometimes in a rather awkward corner, it is
true; for his own views were far more in accordance with those of the
Radical candidate, Mr. Morval, than with those of Sir Roland, and it
was by no means always easy to avoid being landed again and again on
the horns of a dilemma. But since Sir Roland and he were of one mind
upon the great question upon which the appeal to the country was made,
Eustace felt that side issues and other matters of policy could be left
to take care of themselves. It would have been impossible to remain
a guest at Penarvon and to have flung himself into the arms of the
Radical or even the Whig party (it was all one, called at the castle
Radical, and in the town Whig, for the name Radical was still unpopular
amongst those who were voters, though beginning to be caught up by
the people). Eustace had no strong temptation to do this, having from
the first taken a liking for Sir Roland, and feeling grateful towards
his kinsman the Duke, who had been liberal enough to promise him the
coveted seat, even whilst regretting the nature of the great measure
his kinsman was pledged to support. Eustace would have sacrificed more
to win his goodwill and approval, or to keep in touch and in sympathy
with Bride. She was awaking to a keener interest in the coming struggle
than he had ever looked to see in her. He could not tell exactly
what she thought about it all, or what view she took of the question
of Reform; but there was something in her method of receiving his
accounts of their doings that inspired him with a keen wish to retain
her sympathies; and those he had found he could never have unless his
own doings were perfectly upright and honourable. Many and many a time
he was restrained from employing some common trick or some unworthy
inducement by the remembrance of the look in Bride’s eyes when Sir
Roland had laughingly boasted of a like bit of sharp practice. In
point of fact, he was growing to rule his life by a new standard since
knowing more of Bride and her ideals. He hardly recognised this himself
as yet; but, had he paused to look back, he would have known that there
were innumerable little ways in which he had changed. Things which in
old days would have appeared absolutely legitimate, if not actually
advisable, were now avoided by him with a scrupulousness which often
exposed him to a laugh. He began to ask himself instinctively how Bride
would regard any course of action about which he was uncertain, and
again and again that question had arrested him from taking a slightly
doubtful course, and kept him upon the road of strict probity and
honesty.

Nor could Bade be altogether unconscious of this herself, and it
began to form a silent bond between them, which was, perhaps, almost
dangerously sweet. Eustace was the most conscious of this, and it
often made his heart thrill with pleasure; neither was it without its
effect upon her--one of these being an increased interest in everything
concerning this contest, and the keenest sympathy with Eustace’s
strenuous endeavours that it should be conducted on lines of the
strictest equity, and that nothing should be said or done to disgrace
the cause or give a handle for calumny or reproach. Bride was scarcely
more sorrowful than he when it was found that the agent was conniving
at time-honoured abuses, and setting on foot the ordinary methods for
vote-catching. Things that were looked upon as a matter of course by
Sir Roland, and received with a laugh and a shrug, Eustace heard with
a sense of repulsion which he certainly would not have experienced a
year before; and he worked might and main to impose purer and more
equitable methods upon his subordinates, till it really began to be
said in Pentreath that Sir Roland deserved the seat if it was only for
his probity and upright dealing.

Eustace had hoped to have Saul working with and for him in these
stirring days; but, to his disappointment, and rather to his surprise,
he utterly failed in bringing his disciple into the arena of his own
efforts. Saul was working in his own fashion with a fierce resolution
and single-heartedness; but no argument or persuasion on Eustace’s part
would induce him to cast in his lot with the candidate of the Castle
party. It was in vain to say that he was on the side of the great
reform, that he was fighting the battle of the bill; Saul would reply
that Mr. Morval was also doing that, and that _he_ was a man pledged
to the cause of the people through thick and thin, whilst everybody
knew that Sir Roland was only advocating the bill because he knew it
was hopeless to oppose it, and that at heart he was a Tory and an
aristocrat. It was quite enough for Saul that the Castle was supporting
him. No gentle words from Lady Bride, no good offices from the Duke,
had had the smallest effect in overcoming the bitter hostility of this
man towards the house of Penarvon. Eustace sometimes doubted whether
he should ever retain Saul’s confidence if he were to succeed to the
dukedom one day, as was probable. As it was, Saul seemed able to
dissever the man from his name and race; but how long this might be the
case was an open question.

At any rate, Saul would not work with Eustace, and he worked on lines
absolutely independent, if not openly hostile. There was a section in
the town which was quite disposed to make an idol of the young fellow,
who had undergone a term of imprisonment and suffered so much in the
cause of justice and liberty.

This section was not one which commanded many votes; but the voice of
numbers always makes itself felt, and Saul was possessed of a rude
eloquence which commanded attention; and publicans began to find that,
if Saul was going to address a meeting in the evening, it was sure
to be largely attended by a class of customers who brought grist to
the mill. The operatives from the mills--now finding that the hated
machinery was a friend rather than a foe to them, and almost all of
them working again there--rallied round Saul to a man. They liked to
have as their spokesman and champion a man of his grand physique and of
a power of expression so much in advance of their own. They always came
to hear him speak, and he was gradually becoming something of a power
in the place. It is true that his addresses were of so inflammatory
a character that they were often followed by a demonstration or a
small riot which was alarming to the more orderly inhabitants; but, at
election times, people made up their mind to disturbances, and tried to
regard them philosophically as the natural concomitants of the crisis.

The scenes presented by the hustings as the election day drew on were
increasingly lively and animated. Eustace came home one day with his
coat half torn off his back, having adventured himself rather unwisely
down a side alley where some considerable body of rabid socialists
had gathered to listen to one of their own number denouncing anything
and everything in the past systems of government with a beautiful
impartiality. He often returned soiled and draggled, sometimes with
a cut on the face or hands. Sir Roland did not escape some of these
amenities either, and declared with good-humoured amusement that it
promised to be the most lively election he could remember.

The excitement became so acute as the day drew on, that even Bride
caught the infection of it, and was more aroused from her dreamy life
of silent meditation and prayer than she had ever been before. Not that
she ceased to pray constantly and earnestly for the victory of the
righteous cause--whichever that should be; but she spent less time in
silent musing and meditation, and more in the study of those papers and
journals which told her of the questions of the day, and the aim and
ultimate object of this hot party strife.

When the polling day really came, and her father settled to drive in
in the coach, taking Eustace with him--Sir Roland had his rooms at
the hotel in Pentreath, and had ceased to make headquarters at the
castle--Bride suddenly asked to accompany the party, a request so
foreign to her ordinary habits that both the men looked at her in
surprise.

“It will be very noisy and rowdy in the town,” said Eustace, “and we
may get into some street-fights, and have a warm reception ourselves.
Would you not be better and safer at home?”

“I should like to see the town at election time,” answered Bride, “and
I should like to be with my father.”

The Duke was surprised, and said a few words to dissuade her, but
finding her really bent upon it, gave way. He did not anticipate
anything very different to-day from what he had experienced at other
elections, and his daughter would go straight to the hotel where Sir
Roland’s committee-room was situated, and would remain there till he
drove out again. He himself would go early to the poll and register his
vote, and then come back and await the news which from time to time
would be brought in. He did not intend to remain late, to remain till
the result was announced; but he would spend a few hours in the place,
and gain a general idea how the fortunes of the day were going.

The town presented an extraordinary appearance to Bride, as the great
coach rumbled through its streets, ordinarily so quiet and silent
and sleepy. The whole place was alive. It seemed as though every
inhabitant of the town and neighbourhood was abroad in the streets, and
shouts and yells, hootings and cheers, greeted the appearance of the
ducal equipage as it turned every corner. On the whole, however, the
crowd seemed jovial and good-tempered, and although Bride shrank back
sometimes in vague distress and alarm at the sound of certain hoarse
cries which assailed her ears, she was aroused and interested by all
she saw. The carriage passed through the streets without molestation,
though with many needful halts on account of the congested state of
the traffic, till it stopped at the hotel, and the Duke handed out
his daughter amid the cheering of a large crowd, which had gathered
there in the expectation of hearing some speeches from Sir Roland.
Bride was glad to hide herself in the building; but was soon provided
with a chair near the window, from which she could look out into the
market-place below. Sheltered by a curtain, she could see without
being seen. The room opened by one of its long windows upon the great
square balcony formed by the roof of the projecting porch; and from
time to time Sir Roland, or one of his coadjutors, stepped out upon
this balcony and made a short speech, always received with vociferous
applause. When it was known that the Duke had arrived, there were many
shouts for him; and at last he gratified the people by going forward,
and making a brief but able little speech, in which encouragement and
warning were blended in a way that produced an obvious effect, and set
the people thinking.

Eustace made a speech to which Bride listened with undivided attention;
and never for a moment did he forget that she was listening, and seldom
perhaps had he spoken better, or so eloquently advocated his entire
belief in the use of the best and noblest weapons only, in the noble
cause to which they were pledged. When he came in again, after being
warmly applauded from without, she gave him a glance which set his
heart bounding and his pulses throbbing; but he had no time for speech
then, as the Duke wished to go to the poll at once, and he accompanied
him to try and ward off anything like personal attack or insult; for he
was by no means sure what Saul and his band of malcontents were up to;
and his own presence at the side of his kinsman would be the greatest
protection from any disagreeable interlude.

Bride remained in the hotel, sometimes watching the animated scene
without, sometimes exchanging courtesies with the gentlemen of the
county who came in and out, some accompanied by their wives, who, like
Bride, had come to see what was going on, and who were pleased to see
the girl again after her long period of seclusion following on her
mother’s last illness and death.

Luncheon was spread in a room below, and partaken of as the appetite or
convenience of the guests suggested. The Duke returned from the poll
with tidings so far favourable to their candidate. But it was too
early to feel any security; and the supporters of the Viscount were
rallying bravely round him, and talking grandly of carrying the seat in
the Tory interest in face of all Radical and time-serving opposition.

At two o’clock, however, things were still looking well for Sir
Roland, and better still at three. The Viscount’s poll remained almost
stationary now, and the Radical candidate was left far behind. True,
his supporters were mainly those likely to register their votes later
in the day, but on the whole there was a feeling in the minds of Sir
Roland and his committee that the day was going very well for them, and
the cheering and enthusiasm outside, whenever news from the poll was
received, was loud and increasing.

But the Duke, though keenly interested in the contest, was not desirous
of remaining much longer. He wished to get home before the mills ceased
work, and the operatives came pouring out. At any rate, he wished to
be clear of the town by that time; and when he was told that to-day
many of the mills were to close at four o’clock, he quickly ordered his
carriage to be got ready, for there was not too much time to spare.

It took time, with the yard so full of vehicles and the stables so
overcrowded, to get the great coach out and equipped; and Eustace
suddenly resolved that he would at least make one of the party in
it on its way through the streets. The hands of the clock were
drawing rapidly on to the hour of four, and still the coach could
not be got free of the yard. Then a messenger from the poll came
tearing up with news of farther advances for Sir Roland, and some
more congratulations and cheering had to be gone through, whilst the
crowd, surging up closer and closer round the hotel, made egress for
the moment practically impossible. Before the horses were in and
the start accomplished, the clocks had boomed out the hour of four
some ten minutes since; and as Eustace looked out through the window
at the crowded state of the streets, and the threatening aspect of
the operatives swarming round them, he wished they had cleared the
precincts of the town some half-hour ago, but was very glad he was in
the carriage.

They had turned out of the main thoroughfare, where progress was almost
impossible, on account of its proximity to the polling booth, and were
making their way down a narrow alley, when a sudden sound of hooting
and yelling broke upon their ears, and Eustace, trained to such things,
detected a note of menace in it which he feared was directed against
the well-known carriage of the Duke. This suspicion was heightened by
the conduct of the coachman on the box, who suddenly lashed his horses
into a mad gallop, as though the man felt that this was the only chance
of getting through some barrier suddenly raised before them.

This manœuvre was received with a howl and a yell. The next moment,
the carriage lurched violently, the horses plunged and kicked in wild
terror. Cries, groans, and curses arose in deafening tumult around the
carriage, and Bride half started up, exclaiming--

“They are trampling down the people. Eustace, stop the horses! Tell the
coachman to pull up! They must not hurt the people! See that they do
not! See if any one is hurt!”

There was no fear in her face, only a great compassion and anxiety.
But before Eustace could make any move or answer, the horses had
been brought to a standstill by the hands of the mob, and the wild
and enraged people were yelling and surging round the carriage in a
fashion which could not but remind all its occupants of scenes they had
heard described as having taken place in France during the days of the
uprising of the populace there.

Bride sank back in her seat, pale, but with a look of quiet
resolution, which bespoke the high courage of her race. The Duke
put out his hand and took his daughter’s in its clasp, but remained
otherwise perfectly quiet and unmoved. His fine old face regarded the
tumult without a change or a quiver; his eyes looked quietly, though
rather sternly, out from beneath the pent-house of his bushy brows, and
his lips looked a little thin and grim. The men on the box were making
a gallant fight, laying about them right and left with the great whip
and with the reins, whose buckled end made no bad weapon when whirled
round the head of some approaching ruffian. But these demonstrations
only provoked the crowd to wilder fury, and Eustace knew not whether
to open the door and remonstrate with both parties, or reserve his
words for any attack likely to be made upon the party inside. It was a
terribly anxious moment for him, knowing as he did the temper of the
people, and the terrible lengths to which angry passions will drive
furious and disappointed men. It was very plain that these turbulent
malcontents had heard that Sir Roland seemed carrying the day; and
their native bitterness towards all persons of rank and station was
intensified fourfold by the discouraging news just made known.

A large stone came crashing in through the window, shivering the glass
to fragments, and sending the sharp morsels flying round the occupants
in a most dangerous fashion.

“Come out of that!--give up your coach to proper uses!” cried rough
voices in every key. “Down with the tyrants and oppressors! Down with
all dukes and baronets and fine gentlemen!”

Eustace looked out of the window with flaming eyes.

“Men!” he cried in a loud voice--and for a moment his well-known face
and voice arrested attention and respect, “be men!--not brutes! There
is a lady with us. Respect her womanhood, if you cannot respect her
station; and let us pass in peace. You do not make war on women. Be
men, and let us through. I will go with you if you will; but not till
you have promised not to molest this carriage.”

A mocking roar was the answer; those behind set it going, and the whole
crowd took it up.

“You!--and what are you, pray?--a turncoat--a deserter--a
trimmer!”--and at that word a yell went up transcending anything that
had gone before.

“Trimmer!--trimmer!--traitor!” was bawled and yelled on all sides, and
then there arose such a hubbub as cannot be described, a hubbub in
which no articulate words could be detected, save oaths of blasphemous
import, which made Bride whiten and shiver as no sense of personal
peril could do. Eustace better analysed the meaning of those shouts
and yells and cries, and turning to the Duke, he said, “I think we
must leave the carriage. If we were alone we might sit it out and
brave them; but we have a lady with us, and it will not do to provoke
them too far. They will stop short, I fully believe, at personal
violence, and there is a house just opposite where they are making
friendly signals to us, and will give us shelter if we can reach the
door. Bride, will you be afraid to face the mob for one minute? They
will howl and yell; but they will not molest you--they shall not!
Come!--there is no time to lose.”

Indeed there was not. A new sound arose, a sound of more hooting and
yelling, as though a new crowd was upon them; and as this fresh noise
smote upon the ears of the mob round the carriage, it became mingled
with a new war-cry, and Eustace distinguished the shout of “Saul
Tresithny!--Saul Tresithny!” mingling with other sounds.

If indeed it were Saul coming upon them, he would be most likely
heading the wildest crew in the town. Eustace looked suddenly pale
but intensely resolute as he flung open the door of the carriage and
sprang out, before the people were prepared for the action.

“You shall have the carriage, men,” he said, “but make way for this
lady to pass;” and he gave his hand to Bride, who came out with her
simple air of quiet fearless dignity, and stood for a second regarding
the surging crowd with such a great compassion in her eyes, that those
nearest involuntarily fell back, and not a sound arose from any but
the hinder ranks, as the Duke and his daughter passed through the mob
and gained the friendly shelter of the humble house which Eustace had
recognised as a place where they would find shelter.

Was it the fearless dignified bearing of the old nobleman, or the
gentle self-possession of the girl? Eustace wondered, and could not
say. All he knew was that for the brief moment of the transit there was
comparative silence and tranquillity; and the Duke showed no sign of
nervous haste as he paused to direct the coachman and footman to cease
ineffectual resistance and to come also within doors.

Then he followed Eustace and Bride with firm and quiet bearing, whilst
just as the door closed behind the whole party, the hootings and yells
redoubled in fury, mingling freely with the name which seemed to infuse
fresh life into the howling mob--the name of Saul Tresithny.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVII

_THE DUKE’S CARRIAGE_


Two hours later Bride looked up with an eager air, for she had heard
the sound of a familiar footstep on the stair, and knew that she should
have tidings at last.

She was comfortably established in a small parlour over a shop, and
was making friends with a pair of solemn-looking little children,
who were strangely fascinated by, though half afraid of, the pretty
stranger lady. The house which had opened its door to the Duke’s
party--and had had several windows broken in consequence--belonged to
some humble tradespeople, and they had put everything in their house at
the disposal of the Duke and his daughter, and had done all in their
power to make them comfortable during the brief time which they had
been forced to remain prisoners, owing to the presence of the howling
mob without. Then when the crowd was diverted to some other spot, and
had left this little street empty, Bride had still been left in the
security of this humble abode, whilst the Duke and Eustace made their
way back to the hotel, promising to return for her when the kidnapped
carriage should have been recovered, and they could make another
attempt to quit the town.

Bride had passed these two hours somewhat anxiously--her anxiety being
for her father and Eustace, not for herself. The grocer’s two big
lads, who acted the part of scouts, and ran in and out with items
of news, reported that there was much excitement and rioting going
on in the town now that all the mill hands were at liberty, and the
supporters of the Radical candidate going to the poll. Sometimes sounds
of distant yelling and hooting broke upon the ears of the listening
girl, and sent a thrill through her frame. Sometimes there was a rush
of growling operatives down the narrow street where she had found
shelter, and for a moment her heart would stand still in expectation of
an attack upon this very house; but the worthy people who had sheltered
her took it all very quietly, and were not at all seriously disturbed.
They said it was always so at election times, and smiled at the notion
of there being any danger to dread.

So Bride had sipped the tea brought to her, and begged for the company
of the two little children when their mother was obliged to go to her
duties below. The time passed somewhat wearily and anxiously, but at
last the sound of a familiar footstep without warned her that her time
of waiting was at an end.

The door opened and Eustace entered, his face pale, his left arm in a
sling, his clothes, though not exactly torn, and evidently carefully
brushed, showing traces that their owner had been in some sort of
skirmish or riot. The girl sprang up anxiously at sight of him, her
face blanching a little.

“My father----?” she began, her lips forming the words, though her
voice was barely a whisper. Eustace’s smile reassured her.

“He is quite safe. He will be here soon with a coach to take you safely
home. He has not been in any of the troubles; he has been in the hotel
ever since he left you. We got there by the back way without any
difficulty; but the town was too disturbed for it to be advisable to
attempt to drive out till some sort of order had been restored.”

“But you are hurt,” said Bride, with a look at the slung arm; “what
have you been doing?”

“Oh, it is nothing,” answered Eustace, as he sat down to tell his
tale, for he had been on his feet the best part of the day and was
very fatigued; “only a little crushed and mangled--no bone broken. I
could not keep within doors when so much that was exciting was going
on without, and I was in the thick of the _mêlée_ once. Poor Saul
Tresithny fared worse than I. I am afraid he will never walk again.
They are taking him to his grandfather’s house to be cared for: we
thought it was the best thing to do. Poor fellow! poor fellow!--such a
fine character run to waste! He might have done much for the cause of
liberty and advancement; but he would not listen to aught save his own
wild passions.”

Bride clasped her hands and looked earnestly at Eustace.

“Tell me what has happened,” she said breathlessly.

“I will tell you as much as I know myself. You are aware, of course,
that to get possession of your father’s carriage and drag all the
Radical voters to the poll in it was considered the most wonderful
triumph over us and our man. As soon as you were safely out of the
way, the mob turned its attention to the spoil they had confiscated. A
young blacksmith who could drive was put on the box; the colours were
torn from the horses and replaced by others; and the equipage was sent
dashing all over the town, returning each time crammed inside and out
with the shabbiest and least reputable voters that could be found, the
snorting, terrified, foaming horses being goaded almost to madness by
the shouting and the blows they received, and threatening again and
again to become altogether unmanageable.”

“Poor creatures!” said Bride softly; “I hope they have not been hurt.
My father would be grieved.”

“I think they will not be the worse in the end. They are on their
homeward way now with their own coachman driving them, and poor Saul
lies groaning in the torn and ruined carriage, being taken to his
grandfather’s cottage by the wish of the Duke. It is doubtful whether
he will live through the effects of this day’s work; and your father
wished him to be taken to Abner, as the only person likely to exercise
the smallest influence over him.”

“Ah! poor Abner!” said Bride, with compassion; and looking again at
Eustace, she said, “Go on, please; tell me the rest.”

“Well, as far as I understand the matter, it was like this. Saul and
his satellites were in possession of the Duke’s carriage, and acted
as a sort of bodyguard whilst it made its journeys through the town.
But as soon as it was recognised by the other side as being the Duke’s
coach, and rumour spread abroad the report of how it had been taken
from his Grace and put to these vile purposes, a counter-demonstration
was at once organised. A mob of men wearing the colours not only of Sir
Roland but of the Viscount, combined together to effect the rescue of
the carriage, and very soon this ill-fated vehicle became the centre of
a continuous and never-ceasing furious riot. It still remained in the
possession of Saul’s men, but it was hemmed in by a crowd of enemies;
and though by sheer weight and dogged power of resistance it was driven
to and fro between the polling place and the town streets, its progress
became with each succeeding journey more difficult, and the fighting
around it hotter and hotter.”

“How extraordinary people are!” said Bride, with a light shiver, “as
though it did any good to make these fearful disturbances and riots. Do
they really think any cause will be benefited by such things? It seems
all so strange and sad.”

“At least it seems the outcome of ordinary human nature at such times,”
answered Eustace. “I did not know much about what was going on for
some time, but by-and-bye word was brought that the fighting over the
carriage was getting really rather serious. Once it had been taken
possession of by the rival rabble, and was being borne back in triumph
to the hotel to be put once more at the service of its owner; but
then Saul led a tremendous charge with his roughs, and the fortunes
of the day turned once more in his favour. Things in the town were
getting so serious that some soldiers had been brought in under Captain
O’Shaughnessy, and were drawn up in readiness not far off. But we all
hoped there would be no need for their interference, and I thought I
would go down and see what it was all about, and, if it was possible,
draw off our own adherents from the unseemly riot.”

“And that was how you got hurt?” said Bride.

“Yes; perhaps I was foolish to suppose that one man, and that myself,
could do any good at such a moment; but I think one has a natural
desire to be in the thick of everything, and I knew that I should not
come to harm, if Saul Tresithny could help it. I went down and out into
the street. The noise told me that the carriage could not be far away,
and very soon I had forced myself into the thick of the fight, hoping,
when I got between the combatants, to induce Saul on the one side to
draw off his men, whilst I urged those of our own supporters who had
joined in the scrimmage to retire from the unseemly disturbance. But
things had gone much too far for any pacific endeavours on my part.
I do not know exactly in whose possession the carriage was at the
moment when I reached it; and the press round it and the fighting was
so fierce and indiscriminate that I could hardly move or breathe,
let alone trying to make my voice heard. And soon I was recognised by
one great fellow as an enemy, and a new element of fury was added to
the struggle; but what really made the danger, and caused the damage
at last, was a sudden shout raised at the back of the crowd that the
soldiers were coming.”

“Ah!” breathed Bride softly.

“I suppose the man on the box of the carriage saw over our heads that
it was true, for he suddenly deserted his post, and flung himself down
to the ground; whilst the horses, feeling the sudden jerk of the reins,
and then the slackness which followed, set to plunging and kicking
wildly, scattering the mob right and left, and knocking down at least
half-a-dozen of the crowd, as they swerved and tried to turn, before
bolting off in their terror. Saul saw the peril to every one, rushed
forward and made a gallant spring at their heads; but he was knocked
down and trampled upon in a fearful way, before I and a few others
could come to his assistance and get to the heads of the horses. When
we brought them to a standstill at last, I had got my arm crushed, I
shall never know exactly how; and the other fellows had all got bruises
or cuts of one sort or another. As for poor Tresithny, he lay on the
ground like one dead, his head bleeding, one foot so crushed that I
fear he will never walk again, and with other injuries of quite as
grave a character. But the mob had scattered helter-skelter by that
time, and the soldiers, with their bayonets fixed, were quietly bearing
down through the street, clearing a path before them, as a gale of wind
clears away the fog wreaths through a valley.”

“They did not hurt the people--they did not fire?”

“Oh, no; they behaved very well and good-temperedly, for they were
a good bit pelted and hooting at starting. I heard. They just fixed
their bayonets, and marched quietly on in rank, and the mob dispersed
more quickly than one would suppose possible. I think the fall of poor
Tresithny, and the rumour that he was dead, frightened and discouraged
the crowd, and perhaps they had had enough of it by that time. At any
rate, by the time the soldiers reached us the street was almost clear;
and after we had soothed and quieted the poor horses, who were in a
lather from head to foot and quaking in every limb, they had picked
up Tresithny tenderly enough, and laid him in the carriage, making a
sort of bed for him there with all the cushions. It did not matter then
that the poor fellow was bleeding, and that his clothes were covered
with dust and mud: the carriage was in such a state inside and out
that nothing could harm it more. When we had placed him there, we led
the horses to the hotel yard, and your father was told everything, and
came down to look for himself at the state of the equipage, and at the
prostrate leader of the mob.”

“And he sent him home to Abner?” said Bride, with a soft light in her
eyes.

“Yes. We got a surgeon to look at him without moving him, and he bound
up the wound on his head, and cut away the boot from the crushed foot.
He would not have him taken out of the carriage or moved in any way
till he could be put straight to bed; and after the horses had been
groomed and fed, the coachman was called for, and directed to drive
young Tresithny to his grandfather’s cottage, the surgeon going in the
carriage with him.”

“Poor Abner!” said Bride once more; “but it will be the happiest thing
for him to have Saul under his own roof.”

“That is what your father said. So two soldiers were told off to see
the carriage safe out of the town, and there is a sharp patrol of the
streets being kept up to prevent any more organised rioting. I think
the disturbers of the peace have had enough of it by this time. There
is the ordinary scrimmaging and hustling about the poll, but that is
quite a different thing from the desperate fighting and blackguardism
that was going on round the Duke’s carriage. And now I have come to
tell you that you will soon be called for and taken home. The hotel has
furnished us with a coach to drive back in, and Captain O’Shaughnessy
himself will accompany us out of the town to make sure there is no more
rioting about us.”

“And how is the poll going?”

“Well for us. Mr. Morval has polled a large number of votes these
past two hours, but Sir Roland still holds his own. So far as one may
guess till the end has come, I should say he was quite safe for the
seat; though I think his majority will be considerably reduced, as is
natural, seeing how the party split. Things might have been much worse
under such circumstances.”

The rattle of wheels below announced the arrival of the promised coach,
and Bride took her departure, after having made acknowledgment of all
kinds to the friendly people who had given her shelter. She found her
father looking fagged and worn, but quiet and tranquil, and the journey
home was accomplished without any farther disturbance.

Early next morning news reached the castle that Sir Roland had won the
seat by a reduced though still substantial majority. The other piece of
news was that Saul Tresithny had lived through the night, and, though
very much injured, might still survive, only that he must lose his
foot. It was so crushed and mangled and dislocated that nothing could
be done for it. If his life were to be saved, the foot must go.

Bride went down herself to see Abner and make personal inquiries. The
old man looked very pale and grave, but was quiet and composed.

“It may be, my Ladybird, that the Lord has sent this in mercy and not
in wrath,” he said. “There’s many a one as has found the door of the
fold in the time of weakness and sorrow and pain, that never could see
it when things were otherwise with him. It is better to enter into life
maimed than to lose the hope of salvation for this life and the next.
Pray God he will turn to Him at last in this dark hour, when he could
not make shift to see the way before.”

“Ah! I hope so!--I trust so,” said Bride softly. “That is why I am so
glad for him to be with you and not amongst strangers. You can point
the way; you can tell him of the hope. When his life here looks so dark
before him, perhaps he will turn at last to the hope of the glory and
blessedness that will be revealed in the kingdom. I do not see how men
can live without that hope, when the things of earth fail them, and
show how hollow and empty they always are.”

Abner smiled with a look on his face in which hope and sorrow were
strangely blended. He knew better than this girl could do the hardness
of the human heart and the stubborn toughness of a nature like Saul’s,
and yet he would not despond.

“The Great Gardener never takes the pruning-knife but for the good of
the plant He is about to prune,” he said. “It’s hard sometimes to watch
the living tree cut away from the stem, but in days to come one sees
and knows why it was needful. We can but live in faith that it will be
so with these poor frail bodies of ours.”

“Does he know?” asked Bride, with a little shiver.

“No, he has never come to his senses yet, and I am hoping he won’t
until it is all over. The doctor will come this afternoon with another
gentleman, and then ’twill be done quick and sharp. I’m hoping and
praying it will all be over before the poor lad comes rightly to
himself.”

Bride spent that day mostly alone, and much of it in prayer. Her
father, wearied out by the fatigues and excitements of yesterday, kept
to his room, and Eustace had gone into Pentreath to see Sir Roland.

It was evening when a message from Abner was brought to the girl to
tell her that the operation was over successfully, and that the patient
was sleeping quietly under the influence of an opiate.

That evening she and Eustace dined alone together, the Duke preferring
to keep still to his room. It was a soft clear evening in May, and the
sunlight lay broad and bright upon the sparkling water as they passed
out, at Eustace’s suggestion, upon the terrace, and sat there watching
the beautiful pageantry of the evening sky. Eustace looked pale and
tired, and there was a touch of gentle solicitude in Bride’s manner
towards him that sent quick thrills through all his pulses. Those weeks
just passed had not been too full of other interests and excitements
to blind Eustace to the fact that Bride was still the one woman of all
others for him. He had not spoken a single word of love to her all this
while, and she gave no sign of remembering what had once passed between
them; but the thought of it was strong in his mind to-night, and he
was wondering with an intensity of feeling whether he might venture
upon expressing some of those many thoughts and hopes which always came
crowding upon him in the presence of his cousin when they were alone
together.

She had told him all she knew of Saul--they could talk of him, at any
rate; and both were keenly interested in the young man, and deeply
grieved at the terrible injury he had received.

“If it had been in a good cause, it would have been easier to bear,
I think,” she said. “But a street-fight--in the display of brute
violence and unmeaning hostility--ah! it makes me so sad even to think
of it!”

“I think it was better than that, Bride,” said Eustace. “I think, when
Saul sprang at that great pair of plunging horses, he was trying to
hinder mischief and hurt for others. I think he was trying to save me,
for one, for I was very near. He had been fighting and leading rioters;
but I think he fell in the cause of humanity and charity; I think he
deliberately sacrificed himself for others.”

Bride’s eyes lightened and glistened.

“Oh, I am glad of that--I am very glad. I must tell Abner.”

There was silence for a few minutes between them, and then Eustace said
in a low voice--

“Bride, you will let me know how it goes with him, and what sort of a
recovery he makes. Your father is not very likely to mention it in his
letters; but will you write now and then yourself, and tell me how it
fares with Saul?”

She looked up quickly.

“Then are you going, Eustace?”

“I must go soon, quite soon, Bride. I do not know exactly when this
new Parliament will first meet. The polling in the country is not over
yet, but it soon will be now; and there is much to learn and to discuss
before the House meets. I cannot delay much longer, now that I have a
seat of my own.”

“No, I had forgotten for a moment. Of course, you are a member of
Parliament now.”

He looked at her rather searchingly.

“Bride--tell me that you do not despise me for it?”

“Oh, no, Eustace, I do not despise you. I hope I do not despise
anybody. I think it is very sad that men and women should ever hate or
despise each other. We have all our faults and our imperfections. We
ought to be very gentle and loving and patient.”

He wished she would be just a little less impersonal in her replies;
and yet he could not wish her other than she was. He put out his hand
and laid it softly on hers.

“Bride,” he said, “you have not given me the promise I asked for.”

She did not take her hand away, but let his lie upon it as they sat
together in the soft evening light. She turned her sweet face towards
him. It was not flushed, and was very calm and tranquil; yet, deep
down in those liquid dark eyes there was a look which sent the blood
coursing through his veins in a fashion that made him giddy for a
moment. Yet he showed nothing outwardly, and she saw nothing to alarm
her or drive her into herself.

“What promise?” she asked softly.

“To write to me sometimes when I am far away.”

“To tell you about Saul?” she added quietly. “Yes, Eustace, I will do
that very willingly.”

“Thank you, Bride; but do not let your letters be restricted to news of
Saul only. You will tell me of other things. You will tell me of St.
Bride, St. Erme, of the St. Aubyns, Mr. Tremodart, of yourself.”

“I will tell you any news that I think will interest you,” she
answered. “But you know there is little to happen at Penarvon. Nothing
ever happens to me that would interest you.”

“Indeed, you are wrong there,” he answered with suppressed eagerness;
“everything that happens to you is of the greatest possible interest to
me.”

“I hardly think so,” she said musingly; “for you see one day here is
outwardly just like another. Except at such times as these, there are
no external events; and I do not think you take account of any but
outward things--no one can speak of what is inward and spiritual to one
who does, not understand.”

“And you think that I do not understand such things, Bride?”

Her glance into his face was very steady and searching.

“I do not _think_ you do--yet,” she answered; “I may be wrong, but we
generally feel those things. You have an intellectual life--a much
deeper and fuller one than mine; but I think you have starved your
spiritual life for a great many years. I think you have tried to judge
all things spiritual by your intellectual standard, and all the things
that cannot be made to agree with your philosophy are set aside as
superstitions. I often think that the pride many men take in being
above superstition is one of the subtlest and most destructive weapons
the devil has ever forged. What is superstition? I have been told
that long, long ago, it was almost the same in meaning as religion.
It certainly means a belief in the unseen--in the powers of good and
evil, in the mysterious actions of God--and of the devil--with regard
to the children of men. But everything too deep or mysterious for human
comprehension may be called superstition by those whose spiritual
insight is blunted, and who have no experience of God’s dealing in the
hearts of individual men. I know that hundreds and thousands of clever
men call it superstition when they hear of men and women believing
in special providences of God--believing that prayer is answered for
such things as rainfall or drought or epidemic sickness. Others call
it superstition when they are told of the coming kingdom of Christ and
His Second Coming in glory, of which the Apostles constantly wrote and
spoke, and which long ago the Early Church hoped to see. It is all so
very, very sad to me when I think of it. Ah! Eustace, if you could but
see the beautiful truth of God with eyes unclouded by the mists of your
worldly philosophy! I sometimes think and believe that you will do so
yet; but I do not think men can ever shake off the scales from their
eyes until they begin to know that scales are there. Whilst they think
it is their eyes that see, and their souls that embrace true wisdom,
how can the Spirit of God find a home in their hearts? It is those who
pray, ‘Lord, that I might receive my sight!’ who feel the Saviour’s
hand laid upon them, and go away seeing.”

Eustace sat perfectly still, with his eyes fixed upon Bride’s face.
A quick strange thrill went through him at her words, as it had done
many times before when she was speaking with him. But during these past
busy weeks there had been no talk of this sort between the cousins; and
Eustace felt with a sensation of surprise, and almost of exultation,
how far more responsive was his heart now when such words fell on his
ear, than it had been months ago--a year ago, when she had sometimes
spoken in this strain, and he had smiled to himself at her mystic
fanaticism.

She had certainly come gradually to a clearer appreciation of what was
going on in the world, and to a juster estimate of the good and the
evil of the movements of the day. He often felt her increased power
of sympathy and comprehension, and rejoiced in it; but had he too
changed on his side, and were they really growing nearer together in
all things? He no longer felt disposed to smile when she spoke words
like these; rather he longed for her purity of faith and singleness of
heart, and felt that she possessed a reserve of power and strength that
was in many respects greater than his own. Where he would be led away
by self-interest, she would see with perfect clearness of vision. Where
he would be influenced by a partisan spirit to fail in discrimination,
and adopt the evil with the good without analysis or reflection, she
would detect at once all that was impure and unworthy, and refuse
contact with it, even at the price of personal loss. It was, perhaps,
impossible for a man in the vortex of political life and a keen party
struggle to keep his heart perfectly pure, and always be found on the
side of right, and the opponent of wrong in every phase; but at least
she had inspired him with this desire as he had never known it before;
and he began to understand--what once he would not have believed--that
she gained this insight and this purity of heart and motive through the
workings of that spiritual nature which had been such a perplexity to
him before.

“Bride,” he said at last, in a strange voice, which he hardly knew
for his own, “you almost persuade me to ask for that power of vision
myself.”

Her eyes lighted with a strange radiance, though they were not turned
to him, but out over the sea.

“I think it is never asked in vain,” she said softly, “if it is asked
in humble repentant faith.”

“You will have to teach me, Bride, for I am very ignorant in all these
things.”

“I cannot teach you,” she answered softly, “though, perhaps, I can
help you with my prayers. Only the Spirit of God can guide you into
all truth. He will lead you to the cross of the Crucified One first,
and then by gradual steps to the knowledge of the Risen, the Ascended,
the Glorified Lord, for whose bright and glorious coming we and all
creation are waiting in patient confidence and joyful hope.”

He was silent. He could not follow her yet into these regions, but
faint stirrings of the desire to do so were working in him. Once he
had thought, “I must draw her down to earth and my level;” now, the
unconscious aspiration of his mind was, “Would that I might follow her
there!” But all he said was--

“Do you pray for me, then, Bride?”

“Always,” she answered softly; and although Eustace went in having
spoken no word of love (as he had almost intended at the outset), he
felt that he and Bride had never been so near together as at that
moment.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XVIII

_ABNER’S PATIENT_


Eustace went back to London about ten days after the election at
Pentreath. Parliament was to meet in June, and there was much of
importance to be discussed beforehand. He and Sir Roland travelled in
company, and the Duke’s farewell was warmer and more cordial by many
degrees than it had been on the occasion of his last departure. As for
Bride, there had been something so sweet and subtly tender in their
relations during the past few days, that the parting with her was
wonderfully hard. Eustace lay awake the whole of his last night at the
castle, thinking of her, and wondering how he could bear to say adieu;
and when they met in the morning, her eyes were heavy and her face was
sorrowful, as though she too had kept vigil and dreaded the coming day.
In point of fact, Bride had kept vigil in a very literal fashion, for
she had been kneeling in prayer for Eustace very many hours of that
summer’s night--praying that he might be delivered from any and all of
those perils which might happen to the body whilst travelling through
an excited country; but above all, praying that he might be kept safe
in those assaults of evil that might assail and hurt the soul--that he
might be strong to resist temptation, that he might be the champion
always for good, yet discriminate and discern the moment when evil
crept in, and where party spirit took the place of the true desire
after the best welfare of the nation. She understood far better than
she had done a year ago the difficulties of that strife, and where once
she would have stood aloof with a sense of pained disappointment and
disapproval, she would now, as it were, stretch forward a helping hand,
and strive to show the firm path amid all the quagmires of strife and
emulation. As she clasped hands with Eustace for the last time, and
their eyes met, some strange electric current seemed to pass between
them, and, as though in answer to spoken words, he said, in a low moved
tone--

“I will be true--I will be faithful--I will strive to fight the good
fight, and you will be my best helper.”

She did not answer with her lips, but her eyes made amends for that.
Suddenly Eustace came one step nearer, put both his hands upon her
shoulders, and bent his head and kissed her on the lips. For a single
second she started, as though the touch of his hands had alarmed her,
but the next moment she looked straight into his eyes, and yielded her
lips to his for that last salute.

“God be with you, Eustace,” she whispered; and as the young man rode
away he felt he understood for the first time in his life the true
meaning and application of the simple and oft-used phrase, “Good-bye.”

Bride stood where he had left her, in the middle of that anteroom where
their parting had been exchanged. Her face was slightly flushed; there
was a strange gleam of vivid light in her eyes; the sweet mouth was
tremulous with emotions strongly stirred. The Duke, who had witnessed
the parting between them, looked at her with a veiled inquiry in his
eyes. Bride, coming back to everyday life, saw that look and answered
it.

“It is not what you think, papa,” she said very softly, “yet I think
Eustace and I belong to one another now. I do not know how else to
say it. It seems as though there was something linking us together
stronger than ourselves.”

A slight smile lighted the old man’s face.

“I am glad to hear that, my child,” he said gently. “I am far better
pleased with Eustace this time than I was before. He has greatly grown
in wisdom and moderation--greatly improved. I believe he will turn out
one of those men whom the world needs. He is after all a Marchmont,
and the Marchmonts have generally the gift of government in some
form or another. A young and ardent temperament may be led astray at
the outset; but the experience of life gives ballast; and there seem
to have been many influences at work upon Eustace, moderating his
impetuosity, and showing him the reverse side of the shield.”

“I think he is learning a great deal,” answered Bride softly; “I am
glad you feel the same about him.”

She could not settle to her ordinary avocations that day. There was a
subtle sense of exhilaration and happiness in her pulses which made
active exercise needful to her. She had her pony saddled, and started
to ride along the cliffs to St. Erme. She wanted to be alone for
awhile to think and muse upon the sudden sense of new happiness that
had come into her life. She had visits to pay at St. Erme’s which had
been waiting for a day of leisure. Eustace had filled much of her time
of late, but now she must learn to do without him. She rode quietly
onward, with the sunshine about her, and the soft breeze fanning her
cheek and lighting her eyes. There came over her, almost for the first
time in her life, a sense of the beauty and joyousness of it, even in
this fallen world of sorrow and sin. Before she had thought, almost
exclusively at such times as these, when alone with nature and at peace
with herself and all the world, of the brightness and glory of the
Kingdom. Her heart had had little here to feed itself upon, and she had
dwelt in the thought of the glory which shall be revealed. But to-day
she felt as though she was experiencing a strange foretaste of that
glory and happiness in this inexpressible sense of sweetness and love.
An atmosphere of joy seemed to enwrap and envelop her. She scarcely
understood herself or her heart; but she was happy with a happiness
that was almost startling, and in her head some words seemed to set
themselves to the joyous hymn that nature was singing all the while.

“I will be faithful--I will be true!” ... “God be with you!”

Her absorption of mind did not hinder her from paying her visits and
entering with full sympathy and tenderness into the trials and troubles
of those she had come to see. The sight of her was always very welcome
to the simple people who had known her from childhood, and who regarded
her something as an angel visitor, as they had regarded her mother
before her.

Her visits paid, she was about to turn homewards, when, as she was
passing the gate of the rectory, she encountered Mr. St. Aubyn riding
forth on his sturdy cob. They exchanged greetings gladly.

“I am on my way to St. Bride,” he said, smiling. “Shall we go in
company? or are you coming to pay a visit to my wife?”

“I think I will ride back with you,” said Bride, “and see Mrs. St.
Aubyn another day. It will be too hot to be out with comfort if I
linger longer. Are you coming to the castle?”

“My errand is to your gardener’s cottage. My good friend Mr. Tremodart
has asked me to visit young Tresithny in his terrible affliction. He
seems to close his heart and his lips against all the world. My kind
friend at the parsonage thought I might have more success in dealing
with him; but I fear me the time has not yet come when the words of man
will avail aught.”

Bride’s face was very sorrowful.

“It seems so sad,” she said softly, “so very, very sad. Oh, I am
grieved for Abner. He looks aged and bowed like an old man, yet his
faith never fails. He is a lesson to us all. ‘The child of many
prayers,’ he calls Saul, and he will not give up hope. But it must be
terrible for him to have to sit by and hear the poor young man shouting
out all sorts of horrible imprecations and blasphemies in his delirium
and pain. No one can tell whether he quite knows what he is saying; but
his words are terrible to hear. Widow Curnow has come to help to nurse
him, and I hear almost more from her than from Abner. I hoped he would
have been able to see my cousin Eustace before he went to London; but
he has never been enough himself, and all excitement has to be avoided.
I believe Eustace has the most influence upon him of any person in the
world. He has won his affection, and I fear poor Saul knows more of
hatred than of love towards the world at large.”

“He has had a very sad life,” said the clergyman sorrowfully, “a life
of spiritual revolt against the very conditions of his existence, as
well as a mental and physical revolt against the wrongs of a world
which can never be set truly right, save by the advent of One to whom
in their blindness these would-be reformers never look for guidance,
still less join in the cry for Him to appear and take the reins of
government Himself. It is sorrowful to think of--that the very men most
forward in the struggle to do justice to their fellow-men, are often
the most careless about giving God His dues. They will render to Cæsar
the things that are Cæsar’s, but will they render to God the things
that are God’s? How often, as one hears them speak or reads the words
they are speaking to the nation, does one say in one’s heart, ‘Lord,
open their eyes so that they may see!’ for philanthropy alone will
never raise or purify the world; it must be joined with a living faith
in a living God, and the first love and service of our hearts must
belong to God; the second, given to our neighbours.”

Bride looked with a sudden questioning wistfulness into the clergyman’s
face.

“Mr. St. Aubyn, do you not think that a man who loves mankind with a
true and unselfish love must somewhere in the depths of his heart have
a love for God also, even though he may not know it? Is not love in its
essence Divine? and can there be a true and pure love that does not in
some sort own allegiance to God?”

Mr. St. Aubyn’s face was serious and thoughtful.

“Pure and true love is indeed Divine in its essence; but there is a
carnal and earthly love too, which is but a travesty of God-given love,
and burns to its own destruction. I think man often confuses these two
loves, and sometimes calls the lower one the higher. Perhaps no eye but
God’s can really distinguish altogether the gold and the dross, but we
can sometimes judge the tree by its fruit. How often do we see evil
fruit springing from a tree which we have thought to be good! We are
deceived sometimes, but our Heavenly Father never!”

“Yes! I think I know what you mean. I have seen something of that, as
in poor Saul’s case. The fruit is a sorrowful crop, and yet he means
nobly and well, I am sure. But there is no love of God in his heart;
and yet I sometimes wonder whether perhaps the love for man does not
come first with some: ‘If he loves not his brother whom he hath seen,
how shall he love God whom he hath not seen?’ There are words very like
that somewhere.”

“True, God’s love is so beautiful and infinite, and His patience with
His erring children so inexhaustible, that He will do everything in
His power to lead their hearts to Him. We are taught and entreated
throughout the Bible to seek _first_ the kingdom of heaven; to give the
whole of our strength, and mind, and heart, and soul to God in loving
submission; to be living members of His Body first, and then members
one of another; but as though He would make provision for the weakness
and frailty of the flesh, and the infirmity and lack of faith in
human nature, we find here and there just such loving touches as show
us that our Father will lead us to Himself by every possible means;
that love for our brethren shall be a stepping-stone, if used aright,
towards that higher and holier love; though perhaps the truer meaning
of the words is to teach us that no love for God can be really pure and
sincere if it does not carry with it love for our brethren too. The
greater must embrace the less; and a man cannot truly love God who is
in bitterness with the brethren.”

They rode along in silence for a time then, each thinking deeply. Mr.
St. Aubyn was the first to speak.

“Mr. Marchmont has left you then?”

“Yes, he started for London this morning.”

“I knew it was to be soon. He came to say good-bye a few days ago. I
was greatly pleased by the talk we had on that occasion.”

Bride looked up quickly.

“I did not know Eustace had been to see you.”

“Yes, he came and sat above two hours with me. We had a most
interesting conversation. I almost wish you had been there to hear.”

Bride was silent. She would not ask the nature of the conversation. She
knew that Mr. St. Aubyn would tell her all that he felt at liberty to
reveal.

Presently he spoke again, a slight smile playing on his lips.

“Long ago, as you know, we had a talk, part of which you overheard,
in which Mr. Marchmont betrayed how deeply the philosophy of the
destructive rationalists had eaten into his soul. I told him then
that he would never be able to rest where he was; that even the
philosophers and students who had been so glad to destroy were already
finding rest impossible, and were beginning a constructive form of
rationalism, in which scope was allowed for an objective as well as a
subjective Divinity, and a semblance of Christian faith creeping back,
because men invariably find at last that they cannot do without it,
although they too often content themselves with half-truths, or very
small fragments of the whole truth. Well, he did not agree with me
then; but it is wonderful what this year has done for his spiritual
life. It is like talking to another man. It was wonderfully inspiring
to mark the work of the Spirit in that heart. But I dare say you have
found that out for yourself.”

There were tears of joy in Bride’s eyes. She did not turn her head as
she answered--

“I have hoped so--I have thought so; but I have been afraid to ask or
to hope too much.”

“Ah! you need never fear that. Are we not bidden to ‘hope and believe
all things’? Is anything too hard for the Lord?”

“Indeed, I think not,” answered Bride softly.

“It made me think of our talk once about forgiveness and the Father’s
love,” continued Mr. St. Aubyn musingly. “It is such a beautiful
mystery--that yearning love over all these myriads of disobedient
children. And yet never an individual instance of spiritual grace comes
before us, but we realise how true it is that the Father has gone forth
to meet the erring son whilst he is still a great way off, and is
leading him so tenderly home, sometimes almost before the wanderer has
realised it himself.”

Bride made no reply: her heart was too full; and so in happy communion
of spirit the pair rode down the hill, and through the gate of the
castle grounds.

“You will come and see my father when you have been to see Saul?” said
Bride. “He would be sorry for you to go without paying him a visit.”

Mr. St. Aubyn promised, and Bride rode on to the castle, and had
changed her riding gear for a cool white dress before the clergyman
appeared. His face was grave, and he looked troubled and compassionate.

“I have seen him,” he said, in reply to Bride’s look of inquiry, “I
have seen him, and I found him stronger in body than I anticipated
after all I have heard of the injuries he received. The doctor was
leaving as I rode to the door, and said he was making a wonderful
recovery. But I fear that the recovery is only one of the body. The
soul and spirit are terribly darkened. It seems almost as though the
powers of evil had so taken possession there that there was no room for
the entry of God’s light. I could not even speak the words I would have
done. I saw that to do so would be only to provoke more blasphemies.
May God in His mercy do something to soften that hard heart, for only
He can do it!”

It was the same tale all the way through where poor Saul was
concerned. Impenitent, rebellious, cursing his own fate and crippled
condition, and cursing yet more bitterly those he held responsible
for the accident--the tyrants who set soldiers upon poor and harmless
people, to trample them to death beneath their iron heel for no other
offence than claiming the rights of human beings and citizens of the
commonwealth. He refused all visits save those from such men of his own
fashion of thinking as came to condole with him, and to fan the flame
of his bitterness and wrath. Abner soon ceased to try and reason with
him. He wrestled ceaselessly in prayer for him, as indeed did many of
his neighbours, who were wont to meet together at intervals for the
reading the Scripture, and that prayer for the speedy coming of the
Lord, which had become one of the leading features of the faith of the
little community of St. Bride. It was indeed all that could be done
for the unhappy young man; and so soon as he was able to get about on
crutches, he announced his intention of going back to Mother Clat’s,
and resuming his old life with the fishermen.

There was indeed one very good reason why he should do this. In a boat
his lameness would matter comparatively little. He could manage sheet
and tiller whilst he sat quietly in the stern; and although there would
be moments when he would feel somewhat keenly the loss of his foot and
his crippled condition, yet this would be not nearly the same hindrance
to him on the water as it would be on land.

A collection had been made for him in the town by a number of those
who regarded him as a victim and a martyr. This amounted to a sum
sufficient to enable him to purchase a little cutter of his own, that
happened to be going cheap at a neighbouring seaport town. Saul’s
mates having heard of it, went to look at it, and finally negotiated
the purchase, which made him the proud possessor of this fast-sailing
cutter, which was significantly said to be far faster and more
responsive to wind and tide than any of the Customs boats in these
parts.

And now a new life began for Saul. He had always done some smuggling
along the coast with his friends the fishermen; but now it became a
regular trade with him. Fishing was the merest excuse for the more
serious occupation of his life; and as his health and strength returned
with this free life on the sea, so did his ferocious hatred to all
restraints of law and order grow and increase in him. He delighted in
his illicit traffic far more because he was a breaker of the law than
because it brought him large gains. He began to be a notable man along
the coast; appearing now at this place, now at the other; landing his
goods with a skill and daring that made him the idol of the fisher-folk
all around, and the terror of the custom-house officers, who tried in
vain to catch him, and began to think he must bear a charmed life, so
absolutely impossible did they find it to get sight of him.

As for the gentry round, there was a very mixed feeling in their minds
with regard to the defaulter and his occupation. They had nearly all of
them cellars of excellent brandy and wine that had never paid duty, and
were by no means desirous of seeing the illicit traffic too rigidly put
down. They winked at it, if they did not actually encourage it; and it
was well known that half of them would always buy smuggled goods and
ask no question, in spite of all that the indignant officers could urge
to the contrary.

The country was soon in a state of pleasurable excitement with the
news that the Reform Bill had successfully passed the Commons, and
had only to go through the Upper House to become law. The ignorant
people considered the triumph already assured, and began to wonder why
something wonderful did not immediately happen to change the current
of their lives and issue in a new prosperity and affluence. But others
shook their heads, and said the Lords would be certain to throw it
out, whilst some argued that they would not dare, when the mind of the
country had been so emphatically declared.

The Duke was very doubtful as to the result.

“The Duke of Wellington will fight it tooth and nail,” he said to those
who asked his opinion, “and I think he will carry the House with him.
My kinsman, young Marchmont, tells me that if the Lords refuse to pass
it, they will urge the King to make such a number of new Whig peers as
shall suffice to carry it in the teeth of all opposition. His Majesty
is very averse to such a step, though anxious for the passage of the
bill. It remains to be seen what will happen. But I do not think the
Iron Duke will give way.”

All this talk sufficed to keep the country alive and excited through
the early autumn months. Eustace wrote regularly, sometimes to the
Duke, sometimes to Bride; and she wrote to him according to promise,
telling him the news of the place, her own particular history, and the
doings of Saul. Eustace himself wrote to Saul from time to time, and
received answers from the wild young man always breathing a spirit of
personal loyalty and devotion; but nothing which passed induced him
for one moment to give up his wild life. His boat was always speeding
between the shores of England and France. He was seldom at home, and
when in the cottage on the beach, seldom to be spoken with by any of
those who would gladly have tried to approach him for his own good.
Bride once or twice encountered him, and spoke gently to him; but
though he stood before her silently and with an outward aspect of
respect, he would scarcely give her back a word, and only appeared to
listen to her with any willingness when she told him of Eustace.

He sometimes went into Pentreath, and addressed meetings there, in
response to invitations from old associates; but his personal interest
in the place and in politics seemed to have flagged just now. The
passing of the measure upon which his heart had been set took away from
him his sense of grievance, and robbed that side of his character of
its main element. He shared the half-ignorant expectations of the lower
classes, that as soon as the Reform Bill became law some great change
in the condition of the people would result immediately from it; and he
supposed this change was already going on in other places, and would
soon reach the West-Country. If that was so, his task was over for the
present, until some new agitation was set on foot. Meantime the free
and lawless life he was leading was all-sufficient for him. He was the
hero of St. Bride’s Bay, the most successful man all along the coast,
and was not only making money fast, but was enjoying his life as he had
perhaps never enjoyed it before.

But the old class hatred which had long burned within him was still
smouldering as fiercely as before, and only wanted a breath of wind to
fan it to a raging flame.

Nor was this breath long wanting; for in November came the news that
the Lords had thrown out the bill, that for the moment it was dead,
could not pass into law, that the battle would have to be fought all
over again (as most people thought), and that the Lords had shown
themselves once and for all the fierce and inveterate enemies of the
rights and liberties of the people.

A great wave of anger and revolt swept all through England when this
thing became known. Perhaps never had she been so near to revolution
as that dark November, when the people, eagerly awaiting the advent of
some wonderful and semi-miraculous change in their condition, received
the news that the measure which was to ensure this had been trampled
under foot, and cast ignominiously to the four winds of heaven by
the peers of the realm. A cry of execration and hatred ran through
the country. Riots and incendiary fires broke out wherever the news
penetrated. At Pentreath there was a hot demonstration of popular
fury; and Saul had never so raged against his physical infirmity as
when he found himself forced to remain at home, eating his heart out
in silence, whilst the other men of his persuasion marched with the
rioters, and committed acts of lawlessness which gratified their bitter
hatred, without, as it happened, doing very much permanent harm in the
place.

But the passion that can vent itself is less dangerous than that
which is locked up without an outlet, and seethes and smoulders till
something suddenly causes a violent explosion. Could Saul have gone
with his comrades, perhaps more immediate mischief might have been
done, since his was always the most daring spirit; but possibly the
blackest chapter of his life might not have been written, and he might
have been saved from the depth of iniquity into which he speedily fell.

There is an anger so terrible in its intensity that it works like
madness in the brain; and this anger is generally the fiercest when
it exists between class and class, and results in reality less from
inherent ill-will between the two parties concerned, than from a
constitutional and insurmountable difficulty in mutual understanding.

This hatred (which has been at the bottom of many of the world’s
tragedies) was now burning with such a white heat of silent fury in
Saul’s breast that there began to creep into his sombre eyes a light
like that of madness. He would sit up late into the night brooding over
the dying embers of the fire, and thinking thoughts that hardly bore
putting into words. The wild weather had for the present put a stop to
his cruises. He felt the change from the mild autumn days, and often
had pain in the maimed member which had suffered from the surgeon’s
knife. He was not able to get out much in the cold and wet, and this
constant brooding and fierce silent thought were almost enough to turn
any man’s brain.

“Revenge! revenge! revenge!” such was the burden of his thoughts; and
as he sat pondering over his wild yearnings after vengeance, there
would steal into his mind, like whispers from the evil one, memories
of what desperate men in past days had done to bring about ruin
and disaster. Great ships, containing the wealth of the proud and
prosperous, had been shattered on these cruel rocks, and high-born men
and women had found a grave in the dark cruel waters, a grave less
cruel and dark than the one which engulfed hundreds and thousands
of their helpless brothers and sisters through their own greed and
selfishness. Would it not be a righteous retribution to lure some such
vessel with its living freight upon those cruel “Bull’s Horns”? He
knew his comrades would aid and abet such a notion, if he propounded
it, for the sake of the plunder and the gain it would bring. But for
him the plunder was nothing; he would not touch the gold. But he should
feel he had struck a vengeful blow against the rich and the mighty of
the land, and then perchance the fever-thirst of his soul would be
quenched, and he could rest again.

And thus, brooding and planning and meditating, the dark days slipped
by one by one, and the light of madness and unquenchable hatred burned
ever brighter and brighter in Saul’s eyes.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XIX

_THE BULL’S HORNS_


It was so fatally easy.

St. Bride’s Bay lay between two very dangerous points along the coast.
Its south extremity was bounded by the long jagged reef known as the
Smuggler’s Reef, whilst its northern limit was formed by the jutting
cliff upon which Penarvon Castle had been built, and by those two huge
crescent-like projecting rocks, significantly termed the Bull’s Horns,
just below the castle walls, with the treacherous silting, shifting bed
of quicksand between.

For many years now in one turret of the castle there had burned from
dusk till dawn a strong, steady light, warning vessels along the coast
of this dangerous spot. The lantern-tower, as it was commonly called,
had a separate entrance and staircase of its own, and the light was
watched and tended by a disabled fisherman, who had been appointed
by the late Duchess to the office when unfit for more active work.
Although growing old and feeble now, he still clung to his task, and
had never been found unfaithful to his post, or unable to fulfil the
light duties it imposed upon him.

The light in this lantern-tower warned vessels of their exact position,
and was a most valuable beacon to them; for as soon as ever they had
passed it, it became necessary (if they were passing down Channel) to
set the ship’s head almost due east, so as to avoid a dangerous cross
current round some sunken rocks out at sea, and to keep for some short
distance very near in-shore, the water being at this point very deep,
and free from any rock or reef.

The plan fermenting in the darkened mind of Saul Tresithny became thus
fatally easy. A small body of determined men had only to go to the
lantern-tower after the household at the castle had retired to rest,
overpower the old custodian, extinguish the light, and light a false
beacon farther along the coast--a little to the south of the Smuggler’s
Reef--and the thing was done. Any vessel beating down Channel would
see the light, would clear it, and then turn sharp towards the land,
and upon a dark and moonless night would strike hopelessly, and
without a moment’s warning, upon those cruel Bull’s Horns, from whose
deadly embrace there would be no escape. The vessel would shatter,
the crew and passengers would be sucked into a living tomb. The men
bent on plunder would have time to secure for themselves a certain
amount of the cargo, but before morning dawned the vessel would in
all probability have disappeared utterly and entirely. Saul’s act of
purposeless vengeance would be accomplished, and he told himself that
he should then have some peace.

Of the hapless crew--men drawn from his own class--he would not allow
himself to think. They always went, more or less, with their lives in
their hands, and sooner or later a large proportion met a watery death.
They must take their chance. It was not with them he was concerned.
What he longed to do was to strike a blow at wealth, prosperity, and
rank. He was unable to take any part in the turbulent scenes enacting
in the country round; but if he could lure to its fate some great
vessel with its freight of passengers--one of those new vessels which
worked by steam-power, that were just beginning to make headway and to
appear along the coasts, to the astonishment and superstitious terror
of the fishermen--if he could lure one of these vessels, which always
carried wealthy passengers, who could afford to pay for the extra
advantages of speed and independence of contrary wind, he felt he
should be striking a blow at the hated world of wealth and opulence;
and little recked he of any personal peril he might run were the thing
found out.

As to his own fate, he was perfectly indifferent. A fierce despair
mingled with his reckless hatred of his kind. He would willingly lay
down his own life if he could by those means compass the ruin of his
enemies. He would sometimes sit and ponder, with a fierce brooding
envy, over the story of the death of Samson, with which Abner’s reading
of the Scriptures to him in his childhood had made him familiar. If
only he could achieve an act of vengeance like that! What a glorious
death it would be! But there was no such way open to him of avenging
his nameless wrongs against the world. He could only accomplish an
isolated act of malevolent cruelty and destruction. But he brooded
over that, and thought out its details, till he seemed in his feverish
dreams to see the thing enacted over and over, till every detail was
familiar. He used to dream that the vessel had struck, that she was
going to pieces fast, that he and his comrades were out in their boats,
listening to the cries and shrieks of the drowning wretches, always
avoiding giving the help so agonisingly demanded, pushing savagely from
the gunnel of their boat any frantic hand that might cling to it, and
laughing with fiendish joy as the wretched victims sank with a gurgling
cry, or were washed within the region of the treacherous quicksand.

Such dreams might well work a sort of madness in a brain inflamed with
hatred, and a mind all but unhinged by illness, and perpetual revolt
against the conditions of life. Saul had every detail planned by this
time with almost diabolical precision. All that was wanted now was the
right moment and the right vessel. He had his scouts out along the
coast. He knew they would receive warning of the approach of such a
vessel as would afford a rich prey for plunderers and a rich vengeance
for him.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Papa,” said Bride one morning, seeking her father with an open letter
in her hand, and a soft flush upon her cheek, “I have a letter here
from Eustace. He thinks of coming to the castle to tell us all about
the bill, and what has been happening in London, and what is likely to
happen.”

The Duke looked up with something approaching eagerness in his face.
He had missed his young kinsman during these past months, and was
beginning to feel it pleasant to have Eustace about the place, even
though they were by no means of entire accord in their views or in
their outlook on life. Although he seldom spoke on the subject, the
old peer had begun to feel his hold upon life rather uncertain. He had
never recovered the shock of his wife’s death, and he experienced from
time to time an uneasy sensation in the region of the heart, which
made him suspect that that organ was in some sort affected. His father
had died suddenly of syncope at seventy years of age, and the Duke
remembered hearing him describe sensations exceedingly like those from
which he began at times to suffer himself.

He could not therefore but feel a wish to see something settled as to
Bride’s future. She was very much alone in the world, and would be
in sore need of a protector were her father taken away. He had long
felt that a husband’s loving and protecting care was what she truly
needed, and rather blamed himself for having kept her so entirely from
meeting with men of her own age and station. But if his own heir, this
young enthusiast Eustace, of whom he was really beginning to think
well and to regard with affection, had really succeeded in making an
impression upon the girl’s sensitive heart, nothing could be more
entirely satisfactory from a worldly standpoint. No one knew better
than the Duke how well fitted his daughter was to be the future Duchess
of Penarvon, and how greatly she would be beloved by all, as indeed
she was already. He had entertained this hope when first Eustace came
amongst them, and had then allowed it to fall into abeyance, fearing
how the young man’s character would turn out, and that he and Bride
would never agree. But hope had revived upon the second visit, when
Eustace had shown a different calibre of mind and a greater moderation
and thoughtfulness. The hearts of both father and daughter had changed
towards him, and again a hope had awakened within the Duke’s heart that
he should still live to see his daughter the wife of the man who must
succeed him at Penarvon.

Thus this announcement of Bride’s came upon him with a note of
gladness, and he looked at her with unwonted animation.

“A visit from Eustace? That is good hearing. I had written to ask if he
could not spend his Christmas with us. Is this his answer?”

“I think he can hardly have got your letter. It does not sound like an
answer. But he speaks of a wish to see Penarvon again, and to consult
with you about the political outlook. He knows he will be welcome, from
other things you have said. He will get your invitation, I dare say,
before he starts. I hope he will be with us then. It is hard to be
happy at Christmas--hard not to feel it a sorrowful instead of a joyful
day; but it will help us to have Eustace. I am glad he will be with us.”

“Does he say when he will come?”

“Not exactly; he does not know when he can get away. He seems very
busy; but he says he thinks he shall come by water. The roads are so
very heavy after the long autumn rains.”

“It may be easier and more comfortable,” said the Duke, “but I have
always preferred land travelling myself. Contrary winds make water
journeys too tedious at times, and I am not a lover of the sea.”

“I think Eustace is. And he says he will not come if he has to take a
sailing-vessel; but he thinks he can travel by one of those wonderful
new boats which go by steam-power. He has been in one before. He went
to Scotland so once, he told me. Last time he was here he was very full
of it. He thinks there will soon be nothing else used for long voyages.
It is wonderful to think how they can move through the water without
sails or oars. He says in his letter he thinks he may soon have a
chance of coming along the coast in one of these strange and wonderful
vessels, and will be put ashore either at Plymouth or Falmouth, and
come on to us from there.”

“That would not be a bad plan. I myself have sometimes wished to travel
by these new boats; but I hardly think I shall do so in my time. In
yours they may become more common. Eustace was telling me of them
himself. If I knew where he would land, I would travel down to meet him
and see the ship myself.”

“Ah! I wish we did know,” answered Bride, with brightening eyes; “I
would go with you, papa, and see the wonderful new ship too.”

The Duke was studying her face attentively.

“You are pleased to think of having your cousin here again, Bride?” he
asked tentatively.

Her face was very sweet in its soft increase of colour, but her eyes
were steady, and truthfully fearless.

“I think I am very glad,” she said softly. There was a pause after
this which neither seemed exactly to know how to break; but at last
Bride said in a different tone, “And I am glad for another reason
too. Eustace is the only person who has any influence over poor Saul
Tresithny. It seems as though he were the only person in the world that
Saul has ever loved. He does love him. His name is just the one thing
that will rouse him to listen to Abner, or which wins him a look from
me if I try to speak to him. Whatever harm Eustace may have done Saul
in the beginning--and I fear he did help to rouse in him those fierce
and evil passions which have worked such havoc of his life--at least
he has won the only love of a heart that seems closed to all the world
besides; and Abner thinks as I do, and Mr. St. Aubyn also, that no soul
is quite dead, no spirit altogether beyond hope of reclaim in which the
spirit of love yet burns, however feebly and fitfully. Eustace always
believes that it was to save him from being trampled down by the sudden
turning and plunging of the horses that day in the crowd, which made
Saul spring at them, and almost cost him his life. If so, there must be
a vein of gold in his nature somewhere; and I always think that Eustace
will find it some day, somehow. Poor Saul! He looks most terribly
haggard and wild and miserable. Everybody else has failed to touch
him; but I do think Eustace may succeed when he comes. He had to leave
last time, before Saul had recovered consciousness enough to bear the
excitement of a visit.”

“I trust it may be so, for the sake of the unhappy young man himself,
and of his patient and heroic old grandfather. Abner’s faith is a
lesson to us all. May God send him at last his heart’s desire!”

It was so seldom that her father spoke thus, that sudden tears sprang
to the girl’s eyes; and instead of answering, she laid her hand softly
on his shoulder, the mute caress speaking more eloquently than words.
For a moment there was silence between them, and then the Duke asked--

“Shall you let Saul know that Eustace is coming?”

“I shall tell Abner. I never see Saul now. He can do as he thinks best;
but I believe he will decide to say nothing, but let Eustace come upon
him quite unexpectedly, before Saul knows anything about his being
here, or has had time to harden his heart, as he might try to do, even
against Eustace, if he were prepared beforehand. I think with such
natures as his it is better to give no time for that. But Abner will
know best.”

       *       *       *       *       *

“Now’s our chance. Her be beatin’ down Channel. The lads ’a sighted she
round t’ corner. Her’ll be passin’, in an hour. ’Tis zo dark’s a hadge
out o’ doors, and ’twill be cruel cold bimbye. The bwoys are all out
ready with the false light. We’m goin’ to put out t’other light, then
we’ll be all ready.”

The light leaped into Saul’s sombre eyes as this news was brought by a
pair of breathless and excited fishermen, after more than ten days of
anxious watching. So soon as the last moon had begun to wane, a close
watch was established all along the coast, and had been continued on
every dark night since; and as all the nights had been wild and dark,
the watch had never been relaxed. The watchers kept their look-out
from a little cove not more than four miles off as the crow flies, but
situated just where the coast made a great bend, so that the coasting
vessels had to make a great détour, and took a considerable time
getting round the point, especially with a raging north-westerly gale
driving up Channel as on to-night.

“Be she a zailin’ ship?” asked Saul.

“Naw, her be one o’ they new-fangled ones wi’ smoke querkin’ out of her
middle. Yu’ll be gwoin’ to the bwoat, Zaul, mappen, and get she out.
Us’ll be a’ter yu quick’s us can. ’Twidden tak’ us long to put out ol’
Joey’s light.”

“I’ll go tu the boat,” answered Saul, seizing his crutch “She’s all
ready at her moorin’s. Yu’ll find me there when yu’ve changed the
lights. I’ll watch for yu tu come. I s’pose it’s pretty quiet in the
bay?”

“Ess zure. Win’s tu northerly tu hurt she. Us wunt keep yu long
waitin’. Coome on, lad. Us is bound vur tu be sharp.”

The men hurried off through the driving rain and bitter wind of
midnight upon their diabolic errand; and Saul, with a look upon his
face which spoke of a purpose equally diabolic, limped down to the
shore, seeming to see in the dark like a cat, and took up his place in
his own stout and seaworthy little boat.

It was what sailors call a “dirty night,” a stiff half-gale blowing,
and scuds of rain driving over, making the darkness more pitchy whilst
they lasted. There was no moon, and the sky was obscured by a thick
pall of low-lying cloud. It was the kind of night just suited to a deed
of darkness and wickedness, such as the one about to be perpetrated.

Saul, with a face that matched in gloom and wildness the night itself,
sat in his boat with his eyes fixed steadfastly upon the gleaming light
in the lantern-tower of the castle, that strong and steady light which
shone out over the waste of waters like a blessing as well as a beacon.
All at once, even whilst he watched, the light suddenly flickered and
went out, whilst at the very same instant up sprang another light,
equally steady and strong, on the other side of the bay, which, after
flickering for a few moments, settled down as it were, and burned on
with a fixed and calm radiance.

Saul’s face, turned towards it, seemed to catch a momentary gleam.
His dark eyes glowed and flashed in their hollow caverns. His hands
clenched themselves convulsively upon the tiller by which he sat. There
was in his fierce heart a throb of triumphant satisfaction which made
life almost a joy to him at that moment. He felt a spring of life well
up within him, such as he had not experienced for months. After all, so
long as vengeance remained to him, life was not altogether devoid of
joy.

The sound of voices approaching from the shore warned him that his
confederates were approaching. Some came from the castle, others from
the neighbourhood of the false light they had kindled. In all there
were a dozen of them, stout fierce men, bent on plunder, and caring
nothing for the loss of human life, like too many of their race all
along the coast in those days.

Some of these men pushed off in a second boat, others joined Saul in
his small cutter. They carried no lights with them, nor did they do
more than row out into the bay. Once safely off from shore, they lay
still on their oars, and listened and watched intently, talking in low
tones to one another from time to time, but mostly absorbed in the
excitement of expectation.

All at once out of the darkness hove a light, out beyond the Smuggler’s
Reef, where the false light was burning, and a stilled exclamation of
triumph burst from all--

“That be she!”

Then deep silence fell again, and the men held their breath to watch
her course. She went slowly by the reef; they could hear the throb
of her engines in pauses of the gale; and then suddenly they saw her
lights shift--she had fallen into the trap--she was turning inwards. In
a few short minutes more she would strike upon those cruel horns, and
be dashed to pieces before them, without the chance of escape. If they
struck outside the rock, there would be more spoil and prey; but it
might be safer for the wreckers if she went within the extended horns
and grounded there. Then the quicksands would suck down all traces in
a very short time, and none would know the fate of the missing vessel,
which would be supposed to have met her death through the failure of
the new-fangled machinery.

Onward, ever onward, came the doomed ship, riding fearlessly through
the angry sea, secure of the course she was going. She had slowed down
a little in turning, but the engines were at work now at full power.
Her light was very near. The men in the boats almost felt as though
their close proximity would be observed....

CRASH!

It was an awful sound. No man of those who heard it that night ever
forgot it, and it rang in Saul’s ears for many a long weary day,
driving him well-nigh to madness.

One terrific splintering crash, and then an awful sound of grinding and
tearing and battering. The ship’s lights heaved up and fell again in a
terrible fashion, and amid the shrill whistling of the gale there rang
out a wail of human anguish and despair, and then hoarse loud voices,
as if in command; though there was no distinguishing words in the
strife of the elements.

Motionless, awed, triumphant, yet withal almost terrified, the wreckers
sat in their boats and listened and waited. It needed no great exercise
of knowledge to tell them that the great vessel had heeled over and was
settling--settling slowly to her end; that there could be no launching
of boats--no hope for any on board unless they were stout and sturdy
swimmers and well acquainted with the coast. The vessel had actually
impaled itself, as it were, upon the cruel sharp point of one of the
horns. The water had rushed in through the ruptured side, and almost at
once the great floating monster had heeled over, and, though partially
upheld by the rocks, was being battered and dashed in the most fearful
way, so that no living being could long escape either being drawn down
to a watery death, or battered out of all human form upon the cruel
jagged rocks.

At first a shriek and a cry of human anguish would rend the silence
for a moment, and then sink again. But now many moments had passed and
no such sound had been heard. Moments grew into minutes, and perhaps
a quarter of an hour passed thus in watching the one light rising
and falling as the vessel rose on the crests of the waves only to be
dashed down again with renewed fury, whilst the rending of timbers
and snapping of spars told a tale that was intelligible enough to the
fierce men only a stone’s throw from the doomed vessel.

At last they deemed they had waited long enough. From the very nature
of the catastrophe, it was unlikely there would be many survivors.
All who were below must have perished like rats in a trap, and the
few on deck would quickly have been swept overboard. It was time the
plundering began, else there might be little left to plunder. As it
was, there would be peril in trying to rifle the hull; but these men
knew what they were about, and producing their dark lanterns, they
cautiously approached the floating mass, and after due precautions,
scrambled one after another upon her, and commenced a rapid but
cautious search.

With this sort of thing Saul had no concern. He knew that his comrades
must be gratified in their thirst for plunder, but his work had been
accomplished when the great vessel struck without hope of succour. As
the larger boat could not approach too nearly to the wreck, all the men
had gone off in the smaller one, and were to bring to him from time
to time such valuables as they could find and secure. Twice already
had this been done, and the men reported that there was more still to
come, and that they might make a second journey to the wreck perhaps,
if she would only hold together whilst both the laden boats put ashore
and came out again empty. His comrades were daring and skilful, and ran
less risk than they appeared to do in thus treading the decks of the
vessel. She had lodged now, and though still swept by heavy seas, was
not tossed about as she had been at first. The tide was falling and had
landed her fast upon a serrated ledge of rock. Unless she broke up, she
would lie there till the next tide dashed her off again and sucked her
into the quicksand. But as the water fell, more and more booty became
accessible. The greed in the men’s hearts rose with what they found.
They told themselves that this night’s work would make them rich for
life.

But Saul would not leave the spot. A curious fascination held him
rooted to it. When the boats were filled and the men insisted on going,
he said he would get upon the wreck and await their return there.
The wind was abating. The sea was running less high. It was clear to
experienced eyes that for some hours at least the vessel would lie
where she was, and that there would be no great peril in remaining on
her. Saul was not a man easy to thwart or contradict. His comrades
raised no objection to what he proposed. It was his affair, not theirs,
and they helped him to a station on the deck and left him. They left a
light with him--it would serve them as a beacon in returning.

Saul sat where he had been placed and watched them row away, their
light growing fainter and fainter over the great crested waves. He sat
alone upon the shivering, heaving wreck, pondering on the night’s work,
and on all he had seen and done. He pictured the scene that these decks
must have witnessed but one short hour ago, and thought of all the dead
men--and fair women, perhaps--lying drowned and dead in the cabins
beneath his feet. A savage light came into his eyes. A wild triumphant
laugh rang out in the silence and the darkness. He thought for a moment
of trying to get below and looking upon the dead faces of his foes--men
and women he had hated for no other cause than that they lived in a
world that was for him a place of evil and oppression, and deserved to
die for the tyranny and oppression of the race they represented to his
disordered imagination.

But he did not go. For one thing, his lameness hindered him; for
another, there was something almost too ghastly even for him in the
thought. But as he sat brooding and thinking of it all out in the cold
and the darkness of the night, well might he have been taken for the
very spirit of the storm, sitting wild-eyed and sullenly triumphant
in the midst of all this destruction, gloating over the death of his
fellow-men, and picturing the ghastly details with the fascination of a
mind on the verge of madness.

Suddenly an object floating in the water, quite near to the vessel,
took his eyes, and roused him from his lethargy. In another moment his
experienced and cat-like eyes had grasped its outline, and he knew what
it was.

A human creature--a man, in all probability--supported in the water by
a life-belt, for he could see the outlines of head and shoulders above
the crests of the waves. Well could Saul guess what had happened. This
man--sailor or passenger, whichever he might be--had been on deck when
the ship struck. He had had the good fortune and presence of mind to
secure a life-belt about him during the few minutes that the ship kept
above water, and probably struck out for shore when washed from the
deck. In all probability he had quickly been dashed against the rocks
and deprived of consciousness, and the ebb of the tide had dragged
and sucked him back from the shore and in the direction of the wreck.
A little more and he would be washed upon the shoals of treacherous
quicksand--and then!

A sudden fierce desire came upon Saul to see the face of this man. He
was floating almost close to the wreck now, rising and falling upon the
heaving waves without any motion save what they endowed him with. Saul
turned and possessed himself of his lantern, and moving cautiously to
the very edge of the wreck, turned the light full upon the floating
object in the water.

Then the silence of the night was rent by a wild and exceeding bitter
cry; and in the midst of the darkness and terror of that winter’s
night, the soul of Saul Tresithny suddenly awoke, amid throbs of
untold anguish, from its long lethargy and death. In one moment of
intense illumination, in which for a moment he seemed wrapped in
flame--scorched by a remorse and despair that was in essence different
from anything he had experienced hitherto, he saw his past life and
the crime of the night in a totally new aspect. It was a moment not
to be analysed, not to be described; but the impression was such that
its memory was graven on his mind ever after in characters of fire.
It was as if in that awful moment something within him had died and
something been born. Heart and soul, for those few brief seconds in
which he stood mute and paralysed with horror, were crowded with all
the bitterness of death and the pangs of birth. Yet it was scarce five
seconds that the spell held him in its thrall.

What was it that he saw in that heaving waste of waters?

The face of the one man that he loved. The face of the only human
creature whom he had thought on as a friend. The face of Eustace
Marchmont!

And he--Saul Tresithny--had lured his only friend, and the one being he
loved and trusted--to a terrible and hideous death.

It was as he realised this that the awful cry broke from him, and after
that the five seconds of paralysed waiting and watching that seemed
like an eternity to him.

Then in the midst of that unspeakable agony there came one whisper as
of hope--the voice of an angel--penetrating the terrible despairing
anguish of his soul.

“Perhaps he is not yet dead. Perchance it may be given you to save him
yet. But lose not a moment, else your chance may come too late.”

When Saul heard that voice, he hesitated not one second. Flinging off
his heavy pilot-coat, and casting a rope round him, which he fastened
to a broken mast, he plunged without a moment’s hesitation into the
sea, striking out for the floating object now just being carried beyond
the circle of light cast by the lamp.

Saul had always been a strong and bold swimmer, but since he became
maimed and lame and enfeebled, he had seldom been in the water save for
the purpose of launching his boat or getting it in, and he had done no
swimming for many months. Still there was no difficulty in reaching
Eustace and getting a firm grip round his neck. The life-buoy supported
the double weight well; but when Saul strove to strike out in the
direction of the ship, he found that the ebb of the tide was carrying
them both farther and farther away. Struggle as he would, he could get
no nearer, but saw the light as it were receding from him, and knew
that the ebb was sucking them little by little towards those terrible
quicksands close at hand, which if they touched, their doom was sealed.

When would the rope be payed out and stop them? He had not guessed how
long it was when he had tied one end about his waist and fastened the
other about the broken mast. Would it never become taut, that he could
try hauling himself and his comrade in? And even where they now were
they might touch the sand any moment with the fall of the tide. It was
constantly changing and shifting. No one knew exactly where it would
lie from day to day and week to week.

A sense of cold numb horror fell upon Saul. He was growing faint and
giddy. A whisper in another voice now assailed his ears.

“Save yourself at least--and leave him to perish. Likely enough he is
dead already; why risk your life for a corpse? Without his weight you
could easily make the ship. Save yourself, and leave him to his fate.
What is he to you?”

Saul’s senses were leaving him fast, ebbing away in a deadly faintness
that made even the terror of his position more like a dream than a
reality. But even so the words of the tempter fell powerless upon his
ears. His answer was to set his teeth and close his embrace more fast
around his friend.

“If he dies, I will die with him!” was the unspoken thought of his
heart.

A sudden jerk told him that the rope was all payed out. Had he strength
to pull it in again? Rallying his failing powers with an almost
superhuman effort, and still keeping his arms clasped about Eustace, he
got hold of the rope behind his back, and bit by bit he pulled upon it,
drawing the double burden slowly--oh! how slowly and painfully!--inch
by inch towards the wreck.

The whole of his past life seemed to rise up in review before him
without any volition on his own part--his happy childhood with his
grandfather in the gardener’s cottage--Abner’s words of loving
admonition and instruction--the teaching he had imbibed almost without
knowing it, and had deliberately thrust from him later on. Then he
seemed to see himself at the farm, working early and late with Farmer
Teazel’s men; his brief but ardent courting of Genefer seemed like
nothing but a dream; whilst the sudden appearance of Eustace Marchmont
into his life was stamped upon his soul as in characters of fire. This
man had called him friend--had taught him, cared for him, put himself
on an equality with him--had taken his hand as brother might the hand
of brother. And he--Saul--had brought him to _this_--had perhaps done
him to death! It must not--it should not be!

A noise of rushing was in his ears. His breath came in laboured gasps.
His heart seemed bursting; his eyes were blinded, and could see nothing
but a floating, blood-red haze. In laboured gasps of agony the words
came from him--words of the first prayer which had ever passed his lips
since the days of his childhood--

“Lord, have mercy upon us! God, give me strength to save him!”

And even with those words on his lips his consciousness failed him;
black darkness swallowed him up.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XX

_BRIDE’S VIGIL_


Bride was awakened from sleep by the sound of a voice.

“Bride! Bride! Oh, my love, farewell! God grant we meet again in the
eternal haven of rest! Farewell, my love, farewell!”

The voice sounded so loud in her ears that the girl started wide awake
in bed, and found herself sitting up, gazing across the dimly-lighted
room, in the expectation of seeing some one beside her.

But there was nothing. The room was empty, save for her own presence.
The fire was not yet out, and the night-lamp on the table in the corner
burned with a steady ray. Outside, the voice of the storm wailed round
the corners of the house; but Bride was too well used to the voice
of wind and water to think she had been deceived by that. There was
nothing in the voice of the gale to-night different from what she was
used to hear wherever the winter days had come. Often and often the
tempest raged with double and treble power about the exposed castle,
and yet she was not disturbed. What, then, had happened to-night?

She passed her hands across her eyes, as if to clear away the mists of
sleep.

“It was Eustace’s voice!” she said in her heart, and a light shiver ran
through her.

Perhaps she had been thinking of Eustace at sea before she slept, for
her dreams had been of a ship ploughing through the waves. She could
not recall all that she had dreamed; but she was vaguely conscious that
her visions had been uneasy ones of terror and peril. She could not
be sure whether she had dreamed of Eustace: everything was confused
in her mind. But that voice calling her name through the darkness had
been utterly different from anything that had gone before, and had
effectually aroused her from sleep.

“Is he in peril? Is he thinking of me?” she asked herself; and even as
she put the question she rose from her bed and began mechanically to
dress herself; for there was only one thing now possible for Bride, and
that was to pour out her soul in prayer for the man she loved--the man
she believed to be in danger at this very moment. Why that conviction
of his peril came so strongly upon her she could hardly have explained.
She had had no vivid dream; she had gone to rest with no presentiment
of evil. That dream-cry was the only cause of her uneasiness; but the
conviction was so strong that there could be no more sleep for her that
night. She was absolutely certain of that, and she quickly dressed
herself, as though to be ready for a call when it came; and when she
had stirred the fire into a glow, and had trimmed and lighted her
larger lamp, she knelt down beside the little table whereon lay her
books of devotion, and the Bible which had been her mother’s, and laid
bare her soul in supplication and prayer for the man she now knew that
she loved, and whom she fully believed to be in peril to-night, though
whether this peril were physical or spiritual she could not tell.

And yet it mattered not, for God knew, and He would hear her
supplication, and answer it in His own way. Bride did not know whether
Eustace had yet learned to pray for himself; but she had been praying
so long that there was nothing strange in this long and impassioned
prayer for him to-night. How the time passed the girl did not know; nor
did she know what it was that prompted her at last to go to the window
and draw aside the curtain to look out into the night.

When she did this, however, she became aware that the darkness without
was something unwonted, and for a moment she could not understand the
cause of this. There was no moon, and the sky was obscured by a wrack
of drifting cloud; why should there be anything but black darkness?
and yet it was not always so, even on the pitchiest nights. And then a
sudden cry broke from her pale lips--

“The lantern-tower is not lighted to-night!”

That was it. That was what she missed--the faint refulgence she was
accustomed to see shining from the turret where the great lamp always
burned. What had happened? Had the old fisherman neglected to come? or
had he been negligent of his charge and suffered the lamp to go out?
She felt sure the light must have been burning as usual earlier in the
night. It was lighted at five now, and numbers of persons would have
noticed had it not been lighted, and news would certainly have quickly
reached the castle. No, it must be that the old fisherman had gone
to sleep, and had omitted to fill up the lamp, which had burned down
and gone out. And ah! suppose some vessel even now was beating down
Channel, and anxiously looking out for the beacon! Oh, suppose some
vessel was already in peril for want of the guiding light! Suppose that
vessel were the one in which Eustace was journeying to them! Ah!--was
that the meaning of that cry? Had it indeed been sent as a sign--as a
warning?

With a sense of sudden comprehension Bride turned back into the room
and hastily took up her lamp. Without waiting to summon any other
person--without a moment of needless delay--she made her way along the
dark still corridors, where the heavy shadows lay sleeping, but woke
and fled away like spectres at her approach; through the blank silence
of the great house she stepped, followed silently by the faithful
hound, who always slept at her door, till she reached a heavy oaken
door, studded with brass nails, and fastened on the inside with heavy
bolts and clamps, that led from the castle into that corner turret
which had for so many years been given up to the beacon light and its
custodian.

Bride used as a child to go frequently into the tower with her mother.
Latterly she had been much less often, but she was familiar with the
fastenings of the door, and knew her way to the upper chamber where the
great lamp burned.

The place was perfectly dark as she entered, and as silent as the
grave; but as she ascended the spiral staircase which led to the
chamber where the great lamp burned, she was aware of a peculiar
moaning sound, she hardly knew whether human or not, and a thrill of
horror ran through her, though she did not pause in her rapid ascent.

The hound heard it too, and sped past her with a low whimper of
curiosity, bounding upwards and into the room overhead, where he broke
into a loud bay.

Bride was keenly excited, too much excited to feel any personal fear;
moreover, she knew that if the dog had found any unknown occupant in
that upper chamber, he would have flown at him at once and pinned him,
and she should be warned by the sounds as to what was going on. Hastily
mounting the last flight, she entered the room, which, as she fully
expected, was in utter darkness. The sound of inarticulate moaning
grew louder as she approached, and the moment her lamp threw its beams
within the chamber, she saw the old custodian lying on the floor,
gagged, and bound with cruel cords, his head bleeding a little from
some cuts upon it, and his face drawn and white.

In a moment she had sprung to his aid. The hound was sniffing round the
room with lashing tail and a red light in his eyes, uttering from time
to time a deep bay, as though asking to be let out to follow on the
track of the evil-doers who had forced a way into the tower to do this
deed of darkness.

But Bride could not attend to him then. She got a strong knife out
of the old fisherman’s pocket, and in another minute he was free. He
rose, looking dazed and shaken; but his first thought was for the
extinguished light.

“They put her out zo zoon’s they’d gotten me down,” he explained in
trembling tones, as he set about to kindle the beacon, not able even to
drink the contents of the cup Bride had mixed for him (there was always
refreshment kept in the room for the watcher on these cold nights) till
he had set the lamp burning again. “They bwoys ban’t a’ter no gude.
Lord help any ship that’s passed to-night. A take it they will ’ave
abin an’ gone vur tu light a valse light zumwheeres ’long t’ coast. Yu
can’t remember they days, my laady, when ’t wuz common ’nuff for the
bwoys tu du that. But his Grace and your mawther, they zet theerselves
agin it: and a’ter vour or vive o’ the worst o’ the lot ’ad abin
clapped intu clink, and t’ light zet burnin’ heer, theer wuzzn’t near
zo much, and a thought it wuz pretty night stopped vur good. A reckon
Zaul Tresithny’s abin at the bottom o’ this night’s work, that a du. A
zeed he t’other daay. ’E wuz just zo zavage’s a bear, he wuz. With the
faace aw’m like a death’s ’ead ’pon a mop-stick. A zed then theer’d be
mischief wi’ ’e, afore we heerd t’ last o’t.”

“Oh, I trust not!” breathed Bride, with clasped hands, as she stood
watching the old man kindling the lamp, slowly drawling out his words
as he did so. “It would be too terrible. Saul of all people! Oh, I
trust it is not so! It is awful for any of them to do such things; but
some are too ignorant to understand the full meaning of such a fiendish
act. But Saul is not ignorant; he would know. I pray he has had no hand
in this thing!”

“A dawn’t knaw, but a zuzpecs ’e’s abin at the bottom o’t,” was the
deliberate reply. “Ef yu wuz tu luke out o’ yon winder, my laady,
mappen yu may zee a false light a burning zomewheeres ’long the shore.
They’ll a’ve tu putten out now we got this ’un alight: but I reckon
they will ’ave abin burnin’ one all this time. God help any poor ships
as may ’ave bin goin’ by tu-night!”

Bride, shivering with a nameless horror, went to the window indicated,
and there, sure enough, about a mile away, she saw the twinkling of
a false light, the dread purpose of which she but too well divined.
Heaven send that no vessel had been lured by its false shining to a
terrible fate!

“David,” she said to the old man, “I must go and rouse the men, and
send down to the shore to see what has been passing there. It is too
fearful. Are you afraid to be left? Do you think there is any chance of
those wicked men coming back? I will send somebody to you very quickly,
and the dog shall stay to protect you meantime: he will not let anybody
touch you or the light so long as he is here.”

“Lorblessee! Dawntee by afeared to leev me. A dawn’t think as they’ll
dare come agin. They’d be vules ef they were tu. A’ll be zafe’s a want
in ’is burrow. Duee go and tell his Grace what they bwoys ’ave abin at.
A reckon they’d not ’a dued it unless they’d ’a knawed as zome ship
were like tu pass by. They bwoys mostly knaws what tu be at. Yu let me
be, and go tu his Grace. Mappen theer’s help wanted tu the shore by
now.”

Bride hastened away with a beating heart, leaving the angry hound,
who had never ceased sniffing round the doorway which led downwards
to the outer door of the tower, to act as protector to the old man,
in case the miscreants should again invade him with intent to put out
the light. She rapidly retraced her steps to the inhabited part of the
castle, and knocking at her father’s door, told him enough to cause
him to ring the bell in his room which communicated with the men’s
quarters, and quickly brought quite a number of them hurrying up to the
master’s room, ready dressed against some emergency.

The Duke had hastily attired himself, and was in earnest confabulation
with his daughter by the time the household assembled. A few words to
them sent them flying after lanterns and ropes, and Bride asked her
father--

“What are you going to do?”

“I am going down to the shore, with all the men I can muster, to try
and seize the wreckers if possible at their fiendish work, or to render
help if it be possible to any hapless vessel they may have lured to
destruction. I pray Heaven we may defeat their villainous intentions;
but I fear old David is right, and that they know very well what they
are about, and do not light false fires without warrant that they light
them not in vain. Bride, remain you here; call up the women, and let
one or two rooms be prepared. It may be we shall have some half-drowned
guest with us when we return. It can do no harm to be prepared. That is
your office. See that all is in readiness if wanted.”

The excitement and alarm had by this time spread to the stables, and
the men from there came hurrying round, eager to take a share in the
night’s expedition. Two stout young fellows were sent to the foot of
the lantern-tower to keep guard there, and see that no hurt came to the
old man; and the rest were formed into a regular marching squad by the
Duke, who always had his servants drilled into some sort of military
precision, ready for an emergency of this kind, and led by him straight
down to the beach, carrying such things as were thought needful, both
in the event of a struggle with the wreckers, or the necessity of
organising a rescue party to some vessel in distress.

Bride was left in the castle, surrounded by the women of the household,
who had by this time been aroused, and had come out of their rooms,
some in terror, some in excitement, and were all eager to know both
what had happened and what was to be done.

Bride took a little on one side the housekeeper and her old nurse, two
old servants in whom she had the utmost confidence, and quietly gave
her orders. One or two of the spare bed-chambers were to be quickly
prepared for the accommodation of possible guests. The fire in the hall
was to be lighted, and some refreshment spread there. Visitors at the
castle had been rare of late, and some of the chambers were likely to
be damp, and the fires might very likely smoke on being lighted.

“You had better make use of the rooms Mr. Marchmont uses when he is
here,” said Bride. “They have been used a good deal this year. I think
there has never been any trouble with them.”

“They are all ready, my lady,” answered the housekeeper. “His Grace
gave orders that they were to be put in readiness to receive him at any
time. They only want the fires lighting.”

“Ah! true--I remember,” answered Bride. “Then let fires be lighted
there instantly. Set the girls to work at something. They are only
growing frightened and upset by talking and wondering. Let everything
be ready in case there are persons brought in drowned, or almost
drowned. Let everything be at hand that can be wanted. Nurse, you
understand that sort of thing. You know what is needed in every kind
of emergency. See that all is ready. We do not know what may be coming
to-night.”

Bride spoke calmly, but her heart was throbbing wildly the whole
time. In her head was beating the ceaseless repetition of the one
name--“Eustace! Eustace! Eustace!”

She seemed all at once to understand the meaning of her troubled dream,
and the cry which had awakened her. Eustace was truly in some deadly
peril, and her name had been upon his lips, as it was in his heart, at
the supreme moment when he believed himself passing from life to death.
Bride had too full a belief in the independent life of the spirit to
feel any great surprise at such a thing as this. The power and the deep
mystery of love were a part of her creed. She held that a true and
God-given love was as immortal as the soul--was the very essence of the
soul; and now that she fully recognised the depth of her own love for
Eustace, she could well believe (knowing his love for her) that his
spirit would seek to meet hers in the supreme moment when he thought
death was coming upon him. But, surely--ah! surely, her prayer for him,
which had immediately followed upon that cry, would have been heard
in heaven, and God would give him back to her! Ah! how she had prayed
for this man--body, soul, and spirit! How she had poured out herself
in supplication for him again and yet again, that his heart might be
changed and softened, that the Spirit of grace might work therein,
that he might learn to know his Saviour, and that his body might be
preserved from all perils.

Bride had that faith which believes all things; and even through the
anxious terrors of that night she believed that Eustace would be given
back to her. She believed absolutely that he had been in deadly peril,
that the cry she had heard in her dreams was no dream, but that it
portended some crisis in the life of her lover. She knew that he was
likely to be at sea to-night, and coming down Channel along these very
coasts. It might indeed have been his vessel that these desperate men
had striven to wreck. She never tried to fight against the conviction
that something terrible had befallen Eustace that night; but so
convinced was she that God had heard her prayers, and had made of her
an instrument for the deliverance and saving of her lover, that she
was able to retain her calmness and tranquillity, even through that
terrible hour of suspense, saying always to herself--

“Perhaps it is the Father’s way of leading home the erring son. Perhaps
it was in the darkness and the storm that He went out to meet him.
I think he will be given back to me; but even if not, and he is in
the safe-keeping of the Father, I can bear it. But I believe I shall
receive him back as from the dead.”

She went to and fro through the house, seeing that her own and her
father’s orders were carried out, her face wearing a strange expression
of intense expectancy, but her bearing and manner retaining their
customary calmness. When everything that could be done in advance had
been done, she went down into the hall again. The fire was blazing
there and the lights were burning. Upon a table stood refreshments, and
all was as she desired to see it. The old butler, who had not gone with
the rest of the men, stood in a dim recess, looking out of the window,
and half concealed by the curtain. Suddenly he moved quickly towards
the door.

“Do you see anything?” asked Bride breathlessly.

“I hear steps,” he answered, and went to the door. The next minute he
opened it wide and the Duke entered.

Bride made a quick step forward. Her father’s face was pale and stern.
His clothes were wet as from contact with salt water, but his manner
was composed, though indicative of mental disturbance. His first words
were to the servant.

“Go or send instantly to Abner Tresithny’s cottage, and tell him to
come here at once.”

The butler disappeared without waiting to hear more. Abner’s cottage
was on the premises, a little distance from the stable-yard. He could
be there in a very short time after the summons reached him; but why
was he summoned?

Bride’s eyes asked the question her lips could not frame. Her father
came forward, and put his hands upon her shoulders.

“Can you be brave to bear bad news, Bride?” he asked; and she saw
that his face looked very grave, and that his lips quivered a little
involuntarily.

“I think so,” she answered steadily. “Is it Eustace?”

She felt him give a slight start.

“How did you know? Who has told you?”

“I hardly know--Eustace himself, I think. I have felt sure the whole
time that he has been in peril to-night. Do not be afraid to tell me
the worst. Is he dead?”

“I fear so! I fear so! God grant I may be mistaken, but I have no
hope--it is the face of the dead!”

There was something in the tone of the voice that bespoke a keener
distress than Bride would have looked for her father to show in any
matter connected with Eustace. She gave him a quick glance of grateful
sympathy, and, moving from his side, went to the table and poured him
out a glass of wine. He drank it, and then she said softly--

“Tell me about it.”

“I will tell you all I know; it is a hideous tale, but the details will
only be known when the wretched miscreants whom we have apprehended
are brought before the proper authorities. We know that our light was
extinguished and a false one kindled, in order that some vessel might
be deluded to dash itself upon the Bull’s Horns, where nothing can save
it. This diabolic deed has been done only too well. The men, taken
red-handed bringing their boat back full of spoil, could deny nothing.
Evidence was too clear against them. We apprehended every man of them,
and they are lying bound under a strong guard of our fellows to await
the arrival of the officers of the law. But one man said that Saul
Tresithny was still upon the wreck, that it was he who had planned all
this, and that he was waiting there till they went for another load and
fetched him off.”

“And you sent a boat for him?” questioned Bride breathlessly.

“The men were for leaving him to his fate, but of course that could
not be allowed, and I wished to see for myself the position of the
wreck, and to learn all that was possible about her; for we all know
that before another tide has risen and fallen she may be dashed off the
ledge on which she rests now, and sucked into the treacherous shoals of
quicksand.”

“Papa,” said Bride quickly, interrupting the tale for a moment; “tell
me one thing--are any lives saved?”

“None--unless Eustace be living, and I fear he is not and as Bride for
a moment pressed her hand to her eyes, the Duke took up the thread
of his narrative, though always with his face towards the open door,
listening and watching intently.

“The sea was falling, and we in the bay were sheltered from its power.
We soon reached the wreck, and there found a light burning, but for a
moment there was no sign of Tresithny. Then one of our men called out
that he saw something in the water--that it was attached to the wreck
by a rope. We got hold of the rope and pulled upon it, and drew the
floating mass towards us.”

“And found--Eustace.”

The words were scarcely a whisper. Bride’s pale lips moved, but scarce
a breath came through them.

“Found Eustace and Saul Tresithny, locked in an embrace so tenacious
that it has been impossible to unloose it. How they came to be so
locked together no man yet knows. The wreckers declare that there was
no living soul on board when they left Saul alone on the wreck. What
passed whilst he was there alone none can say. Eustace had a great
life-belt passed under his arms, holding him well out of the water.
Saul Tresithny’s arms were locked in a bear-like embrace around his
neck, and his hands were so clenched upon the rope which was attached
to the broken mast of the vessel that it was impossible to loosen
it. We had to cut the rope when the two men were lifted into the
boat. Had Saul been alone, one would have said that he was hauling
himself in towards the vessel, from which he had been washed off when
unconsciousness had come over him. But how those two came to be locked
thus together none can say. I can form no guess. That will be one of
the riddles we shall never solve.”

“Is Saul dead too?” asked Bride, in an awed voice.

“So far as we can tell, both are dead,” answered the Duke; “but until
they can be separated it is not possible to be absolutely certain on
the point. Saul cannot have been so very long in the water, and the
belt supported both well; but there appears no sign of life about
either. I think they have both passed away together in the darkness and
the storm--master and pupil together--master and pupil! Ah! Eustace,
Eustace! what do you think of your teaching now?”

The last words were only just breathed in a tone of gentle sorrow.
Bride said nothing, for the sound of measured tramping was borne to her
ears, and she looked quickly at her father.

“They are bringing them here, of course?”

“Of course,” he answered, with a slight motion of his head. “Whether
living or dead, Eustace must lie here; and till Tresithny’s grasp can
be unloosened we cannot separate them.”

“Let Saul lie here too, papa,” said Bride suddenly. “Whether living or
dead, let us shelter him. If he has greatly sinned, he has suffered
terribly. We do not carry enmity beyond the grave, nor punishment after
a man has been so struck down.”

“I have sent for his grandfather. I will settle with him about that
unhappy young man. Bride, my dear, I think you had better go. This will
be no sight for you.”

But Bride slipped her hand within her father’s arm, and looked
beseechingly into his face.

“Do not send me away till I have seen him. You know that I love
Eustace, papa, and he loves me. I believe that this is God’s way of
giving him back to me. I can bear it whichever way it turns.”

The Duke said no more. He recognised in Bride that inherent strength of
character, born of a perfect faith, which had characterised her mother.
He let her stay beside him as the heavy steps drew nearer and nearer,
and the hand upon his arm did not quiver as the bearers appeared with
their strange load at the great door.

In they came, panting with the effort, for the ascent to the castle was
steep, and the load a heavy one. And when once within the shelter of
the hall, they were forced, without waiting for leave, to lay it down
and gasp for breath.

Bride stepped forward and looked. There was nothing ghastly in the
sight to her--only something unspeakably solemn and mysterious.

The faces of both men were white and rigid, but in nowise distorted.
There was a calm nobility of aspect about Eustace, which suggested the
hope that the soul was at peace in the midst of the terrors of that
fearful night. Saul’s brow was knitted, and his lips were set in lines
of vehement resolution, as though not even death could obliterate from
his face the intensity of his great resolve.

As Bride looked, she said within herself, “He died trying to save
Eustace;” and though she could not tell how such a thing could be, she
felt the sense of certainty rise up glad and strong within her. If his
life had been a wild and wicked one, might not his death have witnessed
to the dawn of the eternal love in his darkened heart? Might not this
sudden act of self-sacrifice have been the Divine spark kindling in his
soul, and lighting his way to God?

And then from two different doors entered on the one hand Abner, and
the other the doctor, who had been summoned in hot haste by a mounted
messenger some time before; and Bride, with one last lingering look
upon her lover’s face, silently withdrew, to return to her vigil and
her prayers, till she could learn what was the verdict about these two
men so strangely locked together.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXI

_FROM THE DEAD_


“My lady, I cannot stay, but I must be the one to bring the news. He is
living after all.”

Bride had risen from her knees at the sound of hurrying steps along
the corridor, and now stood face to face with the faithful old nurse,
who with the doctor had been fighting the two hours’ battle, in the
teeth of almost hopeless despair, over the rigid and motionless form of
Eustace Marchmont, and now she stood white and panting before her young
mistress, but with tears of gladness standing in her eyes.

Bride raised her face for a moment, her eyes alight with the intensity
of her thanksgiving. The dawn was just stealing in through the
uncurtained window. She looked for a moment at the crimson blush in the
east, and then suddenly bent her head and kissed the faithful woman
beside her.

“Thank God!” she said very softly; “and thank you, dear nurse, for I
know how you have been toiling for him--and for me.”

“Oh, my Ladybird, it would have broken my heart if he had slipped away
out of life just when--but there, there! I mustn’t stop to talk. And we
mustn’t build too much on keeping him here. He’s been a terrible time
in the water, and been fearfully dashed about. He’ll have a fight to
pull through; but then he’s young and strong, and he’ll have the best
sort of hope to help him. There, deary, there, there! I can’t linger
longer. There’s a deal to be done, and the doctor has to go when he can
spare a moment to look to that other poor fellow. I don’t know which is
the worst of the two, but they are both of them alive at least.”

“Saul too? Ah! I am glad!” cried Bride; and then the nurse hurried
away, and she sat down after the long strain of those strange hours,
and tried to collect her scattered thoughts.

Eustace living--though by no means out of danger! Ah! but was it not
enough just now to be assured that the life was still in him? Surely
since God had given him back in answer to her prayers, He had spared
him for some great purpose. He had brought him to the very gates
of death, but had brought him back therefrom already. Was not that
evidence that he was spared for some good purpose? Might she not look
forward in faith and confidence to Him, Who had saved him from these
terrible bodily perils, that He would also be with him in any other
trial that might lie before him, bodily or spiritual? Need she be
fearful or troubled any more after the wonderful experiences of the
past night? Eustace had been given back to her prayers. What need she
fear when that proof of Fatherly love was hers?

Bride mechanically put the finishing touches to her toilet, and washed
from her face the traces of her long vigil; then, unable to remain
inactive any longer, she left her room and descended the staircase, the
light broadening and strengthening in the sky as she did so, as the sun
rose from behind banks of low-lying cloud, and looked forth upon the
new day now begun.

The great door at the far end of the hall stood wide open to the breezy
morning, and even as Bride reached the foot of the staircase a tall
figure darkened it for a moment, and Mr. Tremodart came in with an
uncertain air, glancing about him here and there, as if in search of
something or some one.

Bride stepped forward and held out her hand.

“You have heard?” she asked briefly.

“Ah yes! it is a terrible thing, a terrible thing! Lady Bride, it
makes me feel that I must send in my resignation to the Bishop, and
ask him to appoint another pastor to this flock. Surely had I done my
duty, they would not now be such savages and fiends! I have been down
with them, poor miserable men! I have been hearing their confession.
They have been led away by a spirit stronger than their own. The Lord
forgive me! Perhaps had I been more to them and more with them, they
would not have hearkened to such evil counsel!”

The clergyman’s remorse was painful to see. Bride had grown to feel
a great liking and respect for Mr. Tremodart during the past year.
That he was somewhat out of his element as a parish priest, she never
attempted to deny. That he had been placed in his present position
without any real aptitude for his vocation, he never himself denied;
but he had tried to do his duty according to his own lights; and though
often too much engrossed in his favourite pursuits to give all the time
he should have done to his flock, he had never neglected to respond to
a summons from any one of them, however personally inconvenient, and
had always striven to relieve distress, both of body and mind, as far
as in him lay, though his methods were sometimes clumsy, and his words
halting and lame.

Still on the whole he had won the respect and liking of his flock,
and the confidence of the black sheep better, perhaps, than a more
truly earnest and devoted man might have done. The fishermen were not
afraid of him. They knew he understood their ways of thinking, and had
a sympathy with them even in their peccadillos. He did not receive or
purchase smuggled goods, as too many of his profession did in those
days; but he did not look with any very great displeasure on a traffic
that he had been used to all his life, and which seemed almost a part
of the economy of life. But with all his faults and his easy-going
ways, he had never for a moment encouraged indifference to human
life or suffering; and the knowledge that the men of Bride’s Bay had
deliberately lured to her doom a great vessel, from which only one man
had been rescued alive, was a terrible thought. The moment the news had
been brought to him, Mr. Tremodart had hastened down to the shore to
learn the truth of the matter, and had now come to the castle with a
grave face and heavy heart, to seek news of the survivor, and the man
who had been found with him.

“Perhaps we might all have done more for them than we did,” said Bride
gently; “but men will listen so much more readily to the voice of the
tempter than to those who would hold them back from their sinful deeds.
And Saul Tresithny had such power over them! I fear it was he who led
them on.”

“Ay! ay! there can be no doubting that. One and all, they all say it.
’Twas his doing--his planning from first to last. They, poor fellows,
thought of the spoil to be had, and listened with greedy ears; but he
was thinking darker thoughts, I fear. They say he wanted nothing for
himself. All his mind was fixed upon some evil hope of vengeance. His
hatred for mankind had driven him well-nigh mad. Ah! Lady Bride, I
think that we may well say that if God is Love--as we have His blessed
assurance--then the devil is--hatred. For sure only the devil himself
could so have inspired that spirit of hatred which could vent itself in
such an act as that of last night.”

“Indeed, I think so,” answered Bride, in a low tone of great feeling.
“It is too terrible to think of. What will happen to those poor men?
Where are they now?”

“The officers have taken them. I fear they will be committed for trial.
I scarce know the penalty--transportation, I should think. Perhaps a
few may be released--a few of the younger men; but example will be made
of some. It would scarce be right to wish it otherwise. That noble
vessel! and all hands lost, and every soul on board save one! Ah me! ah
me! And the men of St. Bride the culprits! I could sink to the ground
for shame!”

“Do you know who the survivor is?” asked Bride.

“Nay; I did but hear he had been carried here--he and Tresithny, locked
in one embrace, none knowing whether either were alive or dead. I came
for news of them.”

“They are both living--now,” answered Bride, with a strange light in
her eyes, “though we must not build too much on that. The survivor from
the wreck is our kinsman, Eustace Marchmont.”

“God bless my soul! you don’t say so?” cried the clergyman, starting
back in great astonishment.

“Yes,” answered Bride; “we were expecting him shortly, and he spoke of
coming by sea in one of the new steam-ships. That was the one which was
wrecked last night. Eustace was there. He had on a great life-belt, and
Saul was clinging round him when they were carried in. Saul had been
left behind on the wreck whilst the other men took their first load of
spoil to shore. What happened then nobody yet knows; but when my father
and his men reached the wreck, they found those two in the water,
floating near to it at the end of a rope--whether alive or dead, it was
hours before anybody knew.”

“You don’t say so? What an extraordinary thing! Do you think they were
struggling together in the water? Could Saul have been striving to do
some injury to Mr. Marchmont----?”

“Oh no, no,” cried Bride quickly; “I am sure that was not so. What
it all means I cannot tell yet; but I know that Saul loved Eustace. I
think he was the only being in the world he has ever truly loved. I
cannot help thinking he was trying to save him--trying to draw him out
of the water. But we may never know the truth of it. Yet I shall never
believe that Saul would lift up a hand against Eustace.”

“I trust not--I trust not. Ah! poor fellow, it will be a mercy for him
if he die a natural death from exposure. He has nothing to live for
now, I fear, save transportation or the gallows.”

Bride turned pale and took a backward step. That aspect of the case had
not struck her before.

“Ah!” she exclaimed, with a little gasp, and was silent, trying to take
it all in. Oh, that blind, misguided nature, warped and deformed by
unreasoning and unreasonable hatred! How had the springs of nobility
lying latent there been poisoned at their very source! How had the
man’s whole career been blasted and shattered through the entering in
of that demon of jealousy and hatred, which had gradually struggled
with and overpowered every other emotion, and become absolute master of
the man! And there had been a time when Saul had been spoken of as a
youth of such promise. Alas! how had that promise been fulfilled?

Bride and the clergyman stood facing each other in silence, the morning
sunshine lying in broad bands across the paved floor of the hall,
and the sounds of life from without speaking cheerful things of the
awakening day. The butler came forward and broke the spell of silent
musing by informing his young mistress that breakfast had been carried
in, but that His Grace was still resting after the fatigues of the
night, and did not wish to be disturbed.

“Then you will breakfast with me, Mr. Tremodart,” said Bride, “and then
we will ask for fresh news of the patients.”

The meal was a silent one, but both stood in need of refreshment and
felt strengthened by it. At the conclusion Bride rose up, and looking
at her companion said--

“Will you come with me? I am going to ask news of him at his door.
Perhaps, if he is conscious, he will like to see you. I fear his life
will be in danger for some time. He may feel the need of your presence.”

“I--I--hardly know whether I could help him if such were the case,”
answered Mr. Tremodart, always rather nervous at the prospect of being
called upon for spiritual ministrations, especially by those of the
educated and superior classes. He was not a man of ready speech, and
felt his deficiency greatly. “Perhaps Mr. St. Aubyn would come,” he
suggested. “I think he knows Mr. Marchmont better than I.”

“I think it is likely he will come when he hears,” answered Bride; “but
we belong to you too, Mr. Tremodart, and at least you will come and
hear the news from the sick-room?”

He was very anxious to do so, and followed the girl up the staircase
and along the corridors. Bride paused at length at a half-open door. It
led into a pleasant room furnished as a study, and beyond it was the
bedroom, from which proceeded a quiet murmur of voices.

Bride held her breath to listen. Was it Eustace speaking? No, she
thought it was the doctor; but was there not a still lower voice, a
mere whisper? or was it only the beating of her heart?

The door of communication opened suddenly, and the nurse came out. Her
face lighted at the sight of Bride.

“Oh, my lady, I think he is asking for you. We can’t quite make out his
words. He has no voice, and scarce any breath; but I saw his lips move,
and I’m almost sure he’s saying your name. We can’t tell whether he
knows us yet--whether his mind is there. But I think if you would go in
to him we might be able to tell.”

Bride looked at her companion.

“Let us go in together,” she said, feeling a strange desire for the
support of another presence. She hardly knew what it was that she
would be called upon to witness in that room; but at least Eustace was
there--Eustace was still living; and if he wanted her, was not that
enough?

Her face was very pale, but her manner was quite composed as she walked
forward, passed the screen, and stood beside the bed.

Upon the bed, perfectly flat, with only one thin pillow beneath his
head, lay Eustace, as motionless and almost as rigid as though life
were extinct. His arms lay passively outside the bed-clothing just
as they had been placed. The left arm was bound up in a splint, but
the right lay almost as helpless and powerless beside him. There was
a white bandage about his head, and his face was almost as white as
the linen. The lips were ashen grey, and a shadow seemed to rest upon
the face, robbing it of almost all semblance of life. Only the eyes
retained any of their colour. They were sunken and dim, but there was
life in their glance yet; and as Bride stood beside him, and softly
spoke his name, a sudden gleam of joyous recognition flashed from them,
and the white lips curved to the faint semblance of a smile.

“Bride,” he said, in the lowest whisper.

She took the powerless hand in his, and then bent down and kissed him.

“I am here, Eustace, I am with you. You will live for my sake,” she
said, in soft clear tones, which seemed to penetrate the mists of
weakness closing him in. The dim eyes brightened more and more, and
fixed themselves upon her fair, sweet face. She felt a very slight
answering pressure of the fingers she held, and again she heard the
whisper of her name.

The doctor was standing a little distance off. He had known Bride from
her infancy, and was watching the little scene with extreme interest,
both professional and personal. Now he came forward and stood on the
other side of the bed; his kind old face was beaming with satisfaction.

“That is good, very good, Lady Bride,” he said; “I can see what is the
medicine our patient wants. You have done more for him in a minute than
I have been able to do all these hours. We want him to get a grip on
life again--just to help him to hold on to it till Nature can make up
for the terrible exhaustion of those hours in the water. Now look here,
it’s most important he should take the hot soup and the cordial nurse
has over there. We can’t get more than a few drops down at a time, but
perhaps you will be more successful. We are keeping up the animal heat
by outward applications, but we must keep the furnace inside going
still. Try what you can do for him, my dear. I think you have made him
understand as we have not succeeded in doing yet.”

The nurse came to the bedside with cup and spoon, and Bride took them
from her hand. With a gentle tenderness almost like that of a mother
she bent over Eustace, raised his head as she had been wont to do for
her mother in her long last illness, and gave him what the doctor bade
her.

He swallowed it without a murmur, perfectly understanding her voice
and touch. Three or four spoonsful were taken in this way, the doctor
looking on and slightly rubbing his hands.

“If you can stay with him two hours, and feed him like that every ten
minutes, Lady Bride,” he said, “I think we shall see a change for the
better by that time. Everything depends on keeping up the vital power.
It was down to the very lowest ebb when he was brought in. If he had
not the most magnificent constitution, he could never have survived all
that exposure. It will be everything if he can be kept up. Will you be
his nurse for to-day, and keep guard over him? You can do more than all
the rest of us put together. Are you willing?”

Bride desired nothing better. She had hardly dared to let herself hope
to see Eustace for many days, and here she was established beside him
as head-nurse, and the person most needful to his recovery. Her heart
bounded within her as the doctor and Mr. Tremodart stole away together
to visit the other patient, and she found herself left in charge of her
lover.

Yes, she called him so now without hesitation or fear. She had long
known that love was stealing more and more into her heart, and latterly
she had not been afraid to face the thought and to follow it to its
conclusion.

She loved Eustace, and he loved her. She had heard that from his own
lips before she had had any love to give to him. But since she had
begun to pray for him, to intercede for him, to bring his name into the
presence of God day by day and night by night, not in despondency, but
in perfect faith, faith that her prayers for him would be heard and
answered, and that the Father would turn his heart homewards, and go
forth to meet him when once his steps were homeward set--since she had
begun to think of him and pray for him thus, love had gradually stolen
into her heart; whilst since the strange events of the past night, when
their spirits had met in the darkness and the storm, and God had used
her as an instrument for the saving of her lover’s life, she had not
feared to recognise that love, and to call Eustace her own.

His eyes were turned now upon her with a restful look of infinite
content. He did not try to speak; he had not strength to return the
soft pressure of her hand from time to time, but he lay and looked
at her; and when she bent over him, and spoke his name in words that
sounded like a caress, and touched his brow with her lips, or smoothed
away the dank tumbled hair, he smiled a slight smile of restful peace,
and he never resisted her pleading voice when she put food to his lips,
and bade him make the effort to swallow it “for her sake.”

Two hours had gone by thus, and Bride began to see a slight, indefinite
change in her patient. The grey shadow was lighter than it had been.
There was more brightness in the eyes; once or twice she had heard a
whispered “thank you” spoken, and when the sound of the opening door
fell upon their ears, he as well as she looked to see who was coming--a
plain proof of a distinct advance in his condition.

It was the Duke. He looked weary and worn and pale. He had not escaped
without some exhaustion and suffering from the effects of the night’s
adventure, and was feeling old and shaken, as indeed he looked. But
sleep had restored him to some extent, and now his anxiety had brought
him to Eustace’s side. His face lighted with pleasure as he saw the
look of recognition on the white face, and noted that Bride had taken
up her station beside the bed.

He came forward and stood beside them, looking down at his young
kinsman.

“You are better, Eustace?” he said kindly; and to Bride’s surprise the
answer came quite audibly, though only in a very faint whisper--

“Bride is giving me new life.”

“That is well, very well. Do not talk. Keep quiet, and Bride will take
care of you;” and at that moment the doctor came back, and looked at
his patient with an emphatic nod of approval.

“Very good, very good, couldn’t be better. Lady Bride, if you will only
go on as successfully as you have begun, we shall have him round the
corner by the time the day is over. A magnificent constitution--truly
a magnificent one! Could not have believed it! Gave very little signs
of life four hours ago--just a flicker; but I was afraid to hope too
much, and now--why, there’s quite a pulse, and no fever. Wonderful!
wonderful!”

Eustace was growing drowsy by this time--a very favourable symptom in
the doctor’s sight. The murmur of voices about him induced a state of
dreamy torpor. His eyes closed, and he dropped off into a light dose,
as people do who are very weak, but have no fever or pain. Bride looked
up with a smile at her father.

“He will be better if he sleeps,” she said. “Will you not sit down,
papa? you look so tired.”

The doctor gave a shrewd glance at the Duke’s face, and seconded his
daughter’s recommendation. They drew a little away from the bed, and
Bride asked softly--

“What about Saul?”

The doctor shook his head.

“He is in a raging fever. Whether it is an affection of the brain,
or the effects of the exposure and wetting on a constitution already
much enfeebled, I hardly know yet, but he is in raving delirium at
present, and I doubt if we pull him through. Poor fellow! poor fellow!
It is a fine character blasted and ruined, a fine career flung away
for the gratification of senseless passion! Ah me!--we live in a world
of perplexities. The history of that young man has been a source of
wonderment and sorrow to the whole place. I fear it is drawing to its
close now.”

“Perhaps that is the happiest thing for him,” said Bride softly, “if
only----”

She did not finish her sentence--there was no need. All who knew the
young man’s story could finish it themselves. As the girl sat beside
Eustace whilst the hours sped by, each one renewing her hope and sense
of thankful relief in seeing the flame of life within him burn more
steadily and brightly, her thoughts were much with that other patient
lying not so far away, wondering what was going on in his soul, and
whether this chastening had indeed been for the salvation of his soul.
Towards evening Eustace was so wonderfully recovered that he had
spoken a few short sentences, and would have told her something of the
wreck of the vessel, only that consecutive speech was forbidden him.
The grey shadow had vanished, a faint colour had come into his lips.
He was able to take such nourishment as his condition required, and to
dispense with much of the outward application of heat. At last he fell
into a sound, refreshing, and perfectly natural sleep, and Bride, at
the suggestion of the nurse, stole away to get a mouthful of air on the
terrace before dark, after which she went herself to that other part of
the house where Saul lay, to try to get speech of Abner, who was with
his grandson, as he had been ever since he was brought in the previous
night.

The old man came out to her, looking bent and aged, but with a light in
his eyes which Bride saw at once.

“Is he better?” she asked eagerly; and the answer was curious.

“I trust and hope that he is, my lady. I think that he has prayed.”

“Prayed?” repeated Bride, her eyes lighting in quick response. “Ah,
Abner!--then he must indeed be better!”

“I think he will die,” said Abner, with quiet calmness; “but what
matters the death of the corruptible body, if the spark of immortal
life and love be quickened in the soul? My lady, in his ravings of
fever my boy has laid bare his soul to me--all the terrible darkness,
all the wild hatred, all the fearful thoughts which went to prompt
that last dread act of his life. But he has told other things as well.
He has told how, whilst he sat alone upon the wreck, gloating over
the crime he had committed, he saw an object in the water, and knew
that one of his victims was near him. I cannot paint that scene as he
has painted it in his ravings, but I think I see it all. He turned
his light upon the victim, and he saw the face of Mr. Marchmont, his
friend. Then I think he saw his handiwork as it appears in the sight
of God. He saw himself the blackest of sinners, and with a prayer on
his lips that he might be permitted to make this atonement, he sprang
into the water to strive and save Mr. Marchmont, who else must surely
have been sucked back into the cruel quicksands lying so close at hand.”

“Ah!” cried Bride softly, “I said so--I thought so!”

“So he tied himself to the vessel--ah! he has been acting it all so
fearfully, that I can see it as though I had been there!--he flung
himself into the sea and grappled with the floating figure, trying
to pull it to the wreck and place it in safety. Ah! how he must have
struggled with the wind and tide that were fighting against him! but
in his mortal agony he turned in prayer to the God he had despised and
defied, and prayed to Him that this life--this one life--might be given
to him. Ah! how many times has that prayer passed his lips to-day--‘God
help me! God give me strength! God be merciful to me, a sinner!’ He
knows not what he says now, but he knew it when he lifted his heart
in prayer in the hour of his extremest need. It was not for his own
life he prayed, but for the life of the one he sought to save. I truly
believe that in those terrible moments he lived through a lifetime
of agony and repentance. God does not measure time as we do. I think
He will accept those moments of agonised penitence as He accepted
the repentance of the thief upon the cross. I think he looked to his
Saviour in that hour of mortal weakness and despair, when life and all
seemed slipping away. Last night was the witness of the crowning sin of
his reckless life, yet I believe, by the grace of God, it was witness,
too, of a penitent malefactor turning towards Him at the last. This
gives me more hope and joy than I have ever known before for him.”

Bride went away with a great awe upon her--a deep respect and sympathy
for the faith of this patient man, and a sense of the intense reality
of the power of prayer such as she had scarcely experienced in her
life before. She knew that Abner had been praying for the conversion
of Saul, even as she had been praying that Eustace might turn in faith
towards the God of Salvation. Once it had seemed as though nothing
could conquer the invincible wildness of the one or the intellectual
scepticism of the other. But God had put forth His hand in power, and
had caused that even the powers of evil should aid in bringing about
the answer. She wanted to think it out. She wanted to be alone in her
awe and her thankfulness. She went swiftly up to her own room, and sank
upon her knees, burying her face in her hands.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXII

_SAUL TRESITHNY_


His eyes opened slowly upon the unfamiliar room. The shaft of sunlight
slanting in from the west shone upon a comfortable apartment, far
larger and loftier than anything to which he had been accustomed. The
window was larger, the fireplace was wider, and there was a clear
fire of coal burning in the grate, very different from the peat and
driftwood fires to which he had been long accustomed. The only familiar
object in the room was the figure of his grandfather, bending over
the big Bible on the table, as he had been so used to see it from
childhood, when he awakened from sleep in the early hours of the night,
and looked about him to know where he was.

For a moment a dreamy wonderment came over him. He asked himself
whether he had not been dreaming a long, long troubled dream of manhood
and strife, and whether, after all, he were not a little child again,
living in his grandfather’s cottage, happy in his games upon the shore,
and looking eagerly forward to the time when he should be a man and
could follow the fortunes of fishermen and smugglers, or have a big
garden to care for like Abner.

But this dreamy condition did not last long. There was a bowed look
about Abner, and his hair was altogether too white for him to be
identified with the Abner of twenty years back. Saul raised his own
hand and looked at it curiously. It was shrunken to skin and bone, but
a great hand still, with indications of vanished power and strength.
The dark sombre eyes roved round and round the room. Memory was
awakening, the mists of fever and delirium were passing away. Suddenly
Saul seemed to see as in a panorama the whole map of his past life
rolled out before him. It was written in characters of fire upon the
bare walls of the room. Everywhere he looked he saw his wild and evil
deeds depicted. Why was it that they looked black and hideous to him
now, when hitherto he had gloried in them--gloated over them? He saw,
last of all, the doomed vessel bearing straight down upon the cruel
rocks. And now he seemed to see a face on board that vessel--the face
of one he loved--the face of the man who had held out his hand in
friendship, when (as he believed) all the world beside had turned its
back upon him. He saw the face of this friend looking at him with a
deep reproach in the eyes, and a sudden groan of anguish broke from
Saul’s lips as he stretched out his hands to stay the course of the
doomed vessel.

At the sound of that groan Abner rose quickly and came forward to the
bedside. The ray of dying daylight was fading already, and the shadow
of the winter’s evening closing in; and yet in the dimness about the
bed, Abner thought he saw something new in Saul’s face.

“Saul, my lad,” he said gently, “do you know me?”

“Tu be sure I du,” answered Saul, and wondered why his voice sounded so
distant and hollow. “What’s the matter, grandfather?”

“You have been in a fever for many days, my lad, and didn’t know
anybody about yu. What is it, boy? Don’t excite yourself. Yu must be
kept quite quiet.”

Saul’s face was changing every moment, turning from red to pale
and pale to red. He was struggling with emotion and a rush of
recollection. For a moment Abner’s voice and presence had arrested the
course of his memories; but now they came surging back.

“Grandfather, tell me,” he cried, struggling to sit up and then sinking
back in his weakness, “what happened?--how did I get out of the water?
Where is Mr. Marchmont?”

“Here in the castle. You were brought in together. They could not loose
your clasp upon him for a long time.”

“And where is he? Is he alive?”

“Yes--alive, and like to live.”

Saul suddenly pressed his hands together and broke into wild weeping.

“Thank God! thank God!” he cried, his whole frame shaken with sobs.
“Grandfather, pray for me--you know I never learned to pray for
myself--at least I have well-nigh forgotten now. But down on your
knees and thank God for that for me! May be He will hear yu. It must
have been He that saved him; for the devil was at my ear all the while
prompting me to let him die.”

Abner was already on his knees, with a thanksgiving of his own to
offer. He had prayed too much and too earnestly, both in secret and
before his fellow-men, to lack words now in this hour of intense
gratitude and thanksgiving. In rugged yet not ill-chosen words
he lifted up his voice and gave thanks to God for His great and
unspeakable mercies in giving back this one life from the destruction
that had come upon all besides; and in permitting the very man whose
sin had brought about this fearful thing to be His instrument for the
salvation of the life of his friend. He pleaded for mercy for the
sinner with an impassioned eloquence which bespoke a spirit deeply
moved. He brought before the Lord the sins and shortcomings of this
erring man, now stretched on a bed of sickness, and besought that the
cleansing blood of Christ might wash them all away. He pleaded for
Saul as he never could have pleaded for himself. He brought together
all those eternal promises of mercy which are to the sinner as the
anchor and stay of the soul in the deep and bitter waters of remorse.
He pleaded with his Redeemer for the soul of his grandson with a
fervour only inspired by a love and a faith too deep to be daunted by
any considerations as to the weight of iniquity to be pardoned, or the
lack of faith in the one thus prayed for. And Saul, lying helpless
and tempest-tossed, listened to this pleading, and found his tears
bursting forth again. He had seen before all the black and crushing
iniquity of his own past record, but now was brought before his eyes
a picture of the infinite and ineffable love of a dying Saviour--the
Lord of Glory crucified for _him_--bearing _his_ sins upon the Cross
of shame--stretching out His wounded hands and bidding _him_ come to
that Cross and lay down his burden there. It was too much for Saul,
softened as he was by the sense that God had already answered his
prayer even in the midst of his sin and wickedness, and had given him
the one petition, the only one he ever remembered to have offered. The
whole conception of such divine mercy was too much--it broke down all
his pride and reserve and sullen defiance--it broke his heart and made
it as the heart of a little child. His tears gushed forth. He clasped
his hands, and lifted them in supplication to his Saviour. He could not
have found words for his own guilt, but he could follow the earnest
words of the grandfather, whose simple piety he had hitherto held in
a species of lofty contempt. And in that still evening hour, with the
dying day about them, and the shadow of death hovering as it were in
the very air above them (for Saul was dying, although he knew it not
yet; and Abner knew that his hours were numbered, though he might
linger for a day or two yet), the erring soul turned in penitence and
love to the Saviour in Whose death lay the only hope of pardon, and in
Whose resurrection-life the only hope of that life immortal beyond the
grave, beyond the power of the second death, and found at last peace
and rest, in spite of all the blackness of past sin.

For when the Saviour’s Blood has washed away the sin, the blackness
can no longer remain. Humble penitence and contrite love remain, but
the misery and despair are taken away. He bears the grief and carries
the sorrow; He takes the shame, the curse, the wrath of a holy and a
just God. It was a thought almost too overwhelming for Saul to bear.
It broke his heart and humbled him to the very dust. But he no longer
fought against the infinite love--no longer hardened his heart against
the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of comfort and sanctification. He had felt
the blessedness of the pardoning love, and he yearned for the guiding
light that should show him how he might direct his steps for the time
that remained to him.

Of that time he had not yet thought. Those hours had been too crowded
with extreme emotion. He had passed through a crisis of spiritual
existence which made all earthly things dwarf into insignificance. It
was only when the hour of midnight tolled forth, and he recollected
that a new day had begun for him, that he first folded his hands in
prayer, lifting up his heart to God in thanksgiving for the light which
was now in his soul, and then turning his gaze upon Abner, who had
never moved from his side all this while, asked softly--

“What day is it?”

“Sunday, my lad. A new day and a new week. I little thought upon the
last Sunday what the Lord had in store for me for this. The Lord’s Day,
my lad--the Lord’s Day. That’s what I love to call it. May we have
grace to keep it to His glory. Saul, my lad, you have no fears now?”

“Fears of what, grandfather?”

“Fears about the Lord’s love--about the forgiveness He has granted yu?”

A singular radiance came over Saul’s face.

“No--I can’t doubt it. It’s too wonderful to be understood. But I can
feel it right through me. I’ve no fear.”

“And would you fear, my boy, if you had to see Him face to face--if you
should be called upon to meet Him--if He should come this very night to
gather to Himself those that wait for His coming?”

Saul looked earnestly into the old man’s face. He knew something of
Abner’s belief and hope, though it was now several years since he had
spoken of it in his hearing. As a youth his grandfather, who was slowly
gathering up fragments from the prophetic Scriptures, and, in common
with many others who met for prayer and meditation, beginning to awaken
to a belief in the sudden and instantaneous appearing of the Lord on
earth, had striven to convince the boy of the truth of this belief,
and awaken within his soul that burning love and longing after the
coming and kingdom of the Lord which was stealing upon his own. Saul,
however, had not been responsive. To him it was all old wives’ fables,
and he had sometimes mocked and sometimes sneered, so that Abner
had soon ceased to urge him, trusting that faith would come at last
through the mercy of God, though not by the will of man. Nevertheless
the foundations had been laid, inasmuch as Saul now understood what
his grandfather meant, and could even recall the words of Scriptural
promise in which Christ had spoken of His return, and the Apostles had
exhorted the early churches to remain steadfast in the hope of it. And
as these memories crowded in upon his mind and brain now--now that
the love of the Lord had awakened within him, and he was only longing
for some means of showing that love and abasing himself at His feet
in penitence and adoration--the memory of these words and promises
came back to him charged with a wonderful beauty and significance, and
clasping his hands together he replied in a choked voice--

“It is too wonderful and beautiful to be believed, but He has said it.
If He were to come to-night, grandfather, I dare scarcely to hope that
such an one as I should be counted worthy to be caught away to meet Him
in the air; but if I might but look upon His glorified face it would be
enough. He would know how much I love Him, and how I hate myself and
my vile life. I should see Him--I should be able to look up to Him and
say--‘My Lord and my God!’ I do not even ask more!”

Abner was silent for a moment, and then said in a voice that quivered
with the intensity of his emotion--

“And, my lad, if the Lord delays His own coming, but calls to you to
meet Him in another way, would you be afraid?”

Saul looked at him quickly, and read in a moment all that was in
Abner’s soul.

“Do you mean that I shall die?” he asked.

There was silence for a moment, and then Abner spoke--

“It may not be to-night, but it must be soon. The doctor says you
strained your heart so terrible hard that night, and there was
something amiss with you before. I don’t rightly understand his
words, but you’ve never been the same since that fever, and when you
were knocked down by the horses they did you a mischief you’ve never
got over. That night on the wreck was the last straw, as folks say.
There’s something broke and hurt past mending. You won’t have no pain,
but things can’t go on long. You’ll not be long before you see your
Saviour, my lad; for I’m very sure we go to be with Him, even though we
may not share His glory till the blessed day of the Resurrection.”

A strange awe fell upon Saul. His eyes looked straight at Abner with an
expression the latter could hardly fathom. Was it fear? Was it joy? Was
it triumph? He did not know, but Saul’s next words gave him the clue.

“It is goodness past belief--I can’t understand it!”

“What, my boy?”

“Why, that the Lord should take me to Himself, when He might have left
me to a life of misery and degradation in a far-off land with criminals
and evil-doers, or sent me to the scaffold, as I was nearly sent
before. After such a life as I’ve led, to take me away to His beautiful
land of rest. It’s too much--it’s too much! I don’t know how to thank
Him aright. Grandfather, get down upon your knees again and tell
Him--though He knows it, to be sure--that for love of Him I’m willing
to live that life of misery, or die the shameful death I’ve deserved,
and led others to, I fear. Let it be only as He wills, but to be taken
away from it all to be with Him seems more blessedness and goodness
than I can rightly understand.”

Tears were running down Abner’s face. His voice was broken by sobs.

“Oh, my boy! my boy! if that’s how you feel, I’ve no fears for you.
That’s the feeling we should all strive after. Whether we live, we
live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord: so
that, living or dying, we are the Lord’s. If it’s so with thee, my
boy, there’s nought else to wish for thee. The peace that passes all
understanding will be with thee to the end. Oh, bless the Lord! thank
the Lord! Hallelujah! Hallelujah!”

For many minutes there was in that chamber of death such a sense of joy
and peace as was indeed a foretaste of the everlasting peace of God.
Saul lay and looked out before him through the casement, through which
a very young moon was just glinting. It was a strange thought that
before that moon waned his body would be lying stiff and cold beneath
the churchyard sod. But there was no fear in Saul’s mind. Fear had
never been a friend to him, and now the perfect love of his crucified
and ascended Lord had driven out all fear. Yet even with the prospect
of that wondrous change to pass upon him, Saul’s thoughts were not all
of himself. He listened to all there was to know of the men he had
lured and tempted to this great crime, and heaved a sigh of relief to
hear that the magistrates had themselves dealt with the cases of the
younger men--men some of them little more than lads, who had plainly
been led away by their associates, and had had a lesson they would not
be likely to forget. Only six had been committed for trial, and these
were all men of bad character and reckless lives. Their fate might
likely be a hard one, but they were to have counsel to defend them,
and stress was to be laid upon the action of Saul in the matter, and
the part he had taken in urging the crime upon them. Saul made a full
confession of all his share to Abner that night, and made him promise
to attend the trial and repeat this before the judges if possible. It
might militate in their favour perhaps, and Saul directed that his boat
and all that he had should be sold and given to the wives of the two
men out of the six who were married; and having settled all this with
his grandfather, he felt his mind relieved of a part of its burden, and
lay quiet and exhausted for some time.

He had fallen into a doze when Abner aroused him to take food, and
looking up quickly he asked--

“Where are we now? I don’t know this place.”

“It’s a room in the castle--in the servants’ block,” answered Abner.
“I told yu they could not get your clasp loosened from Mr. Marchmont’s
neck. They had tu bring yu both here, and then the doctor would not let
yu be taken away--not even so far as my cottage. Yu were brought here,
and yu’ve had the same care and attention as Mr. Marchmont himself. The
doctor went to and fro betwixt yu all that night, and has been three
and four times a day tu see yu ever since.”

A little flicker passed over Saul’s face. He remembered, as a thing
long since past, his old hatred of the class above him. Now he could
only feel love for all men--a natural outcome of the intense and
burning love for his Lord which was filling all his heart.

“If I could only see him once more!” he said softly.

“See what?”

“Mr. Marchmont.”

But Abner shook his head, and such an expression of gravity came over
his face that Saul cried out quickly--

“What is it? Yu said he was doin’ well!”

“Yes--that is what we heard at first. It is true tu--so far as it goes.
When we feared he would die, it seemed everything to know that his
life was spared; but after that came terrible bad news tu. His life is
safe--the doctor says he will live years and years--to be an old man
like enough; but it’s doubtful whether he will ever walk again. He’s
been hurt in the back, and is what folks call half paralysed. He’s got
the feelin’s in his limbs, but no power. He lies on his back, and there
he’ll lie for years. He may get better very slowly, they say. A great
doctor from London has been down, and says with his strength and youth
he may bit by bit get back his strength and power; but anyhow it’ll be
a question of years; and meantime there he’ll lie like a log, and have
to be tended and cared for like a baby.”

Saul put his hand before his eyes and Abner stopped short, realising
that perhaps he had said too much, and that what had grown familiar to
him during these past days had come on Saul as a shock.

And indeed it might well do so; for if any one in so different a
position in life could estimate the terrible death-in-life of such a
fate for one with all Eustace’s enthusiasm and ardent thirst for active
work, Saul Tresithny could; for Eustace had talked with him as man to
man, and had told him of his personal aims and ambitions and purposes
as a man of his class seldom does to one in a sphere so entirely
different.

“Crippled for life--perhaps! Crippled through my crime! O my God, can
there be forgiveness for this? Ah! yes--His Blood washes away _all_
sin. But my punishment seems greater than I can bear!”

He lay still for a few moments and then half rose up in bed.

“I must see him--I must! I must ask his pardon on my knees. If my
Saviour has pardoned my guilt, I must yet ask pardon of him whom I
have so grievously wronged. Grandfather, help me!--I must go to him. I
cannot die till I have seen him once again!”

In great perplexity and distress, Abner strove to reason with the
excited patient, and great was his relief when the doctor appeared
suddenly upon the scene.

Inquiring what all the commotion was about, and learning that Saul had
recovered his senses, but had grown excited in his desire to see Mr.
Marchmont once more, he thrust out his under lip and regarded the young
man intently, his finger upon his patient’s wrist all the while. Then
he spoke to him quietly and soothingly.

“I will let you see him to-morrow, if possible,” he said kindly. “I
understand your feeling; but to-night you must be content to wait and
gather a little strength. Mr. Marchmont is sleeping, and had better
not be disturbed; but if you sleep too, the hours will soon pass.
To-morrow I will do what I can to gratify you,” and having quieted Saul
and administered a soothing draught, he drew Abner with him outside the
door.

“Can he really do it?” asked the old man wonderingly. “I thought he was
like to die at any sudden movement or exertion.”

“Yes, that is true; but there are cases where repose of mind does
more than rest of body. Saul is so near to the gates of death that it
matters little what he does or does not do. How the heart’s action
keeps up at all in the present condition of the organ I do not know;
but the end cannot be far off. If he is bent on this I shall not thwart
him beyond a certain point. He may have forgotten by the morning; but
if not, we must see what we can do to get him there. The distance is
very short--only a few steps along this corridor, and through the swing
door, and you are close to Mr. Marchmont’s room. I think the exertion
of movement will try him less than the tossing and restlessness of
unfulfilled expectation and desire. Let him have his night in peace,
if possible. But if the desire should grow too strong upon him, let
him have his way. It cannot do more than hasten the inevitable end by
a brief span. I am not sure whether his strength will not desert him
at the first attempt to move, and he may give it up of his own free
will; but do not thwart him beyond a certain point. We doctors always
try to give dying men their way. It is cruelty to thwart them save to
gain some real advantage. In your grandson’s case there is nothing to
be gained. He is past human skill; but if we can ease his passage by
relieving his mind of any part of its burden, I should not stand in the
way because it might hasten the end by a brief hour or more.”

Saul, lying with closed eyes, his senses preternaturally acute and
sharpened by illness, heard every word the doctor spoke, and a quick
thrill of gratitude and thankfulness ran through him. He lay quite
still when his grandfather returned. He gave no sign of having heard.
He was exhausted to an extent which made any sort of speech or movement
impossible at the moment, and told him even more clearly than the
doctor’s words had done of his close approach to the dark valley. But
his mind was at rest, concentrated upon the one purpose of making his
peace with man, as he had already made it with God. He felt a perfect
confidence that this thing also would be permitted him, and he lay calm
and tranquil, resting and thinking.

He saw his grandfather moving softly about the room, saw him put out
beside the fire a suit of his own (Saul’s) clothes, evidently ready
against a possible emergency. He saw a servant come in with food for
them both, and watched through half-closed eyes while Abner ate his
supper. Then he felt himself made comfortable in bed and fed with
something strong and warm, which gave him an access of strength. He
fell into a light sleep after that, and when he opened his eyes again,
Abner was sleeping soundly in his chair--sleeping that deep sleep of
utter exhaustion which always follows at last on a prolonged vigil.

Saul lay still and watched him, and then a sudden and intense desire
took possession of him. He sat up in bed, and found himself strong
beyond all expectation. A glass of some cordial was standing at the
bedside. He took it and swallowed the potion, and rose to his feet. He
crossed the room softly, still marvelling at the power which had come
to him, and clad himself in the warm garments put out in readiness.
Abner meantime slept on, utterly unconscious of what was passing. To
Saul it all seemed like part of the same wonderful miracle which had
been wrought upon his spirit by the power of the Eternal Spirit of
God. His eyes had been opened at the eleventh hour to see the light;
and now the goodness of God was giving to him just that measure of
physical strength which was needed to accomplish the last desire of his
heart before he should be called away from this earth.

Once dressed, there was no difficulty in finding his way to the room
where Eustace lay. Saul knew something of the castle, and had once
been taken by Eustace himself up the staircase in the servants’ wing,
past the door of this very room, and into the rooms he occupied to
look at some plant under the microscope. He opened the door softly,
and found that the passage was lighted by a lamp. He was able to walk
by supporting one shoulder against the wall and crawling slowly along.
His breath was very short; every few steps he had to pause to pant, and
there were strange sensations as of pressure upon his windpipe; but he
felt that he had strength for what he purposed, and he persevered.

Through the swing door he passed, and into the carpeted corridor of the
main block of building, and here a light was also burning, whilst the
door he remembered to have opened before stood ajar. He paused there a
moment and looked in. The room was empty, and beyond lay the sleeping
chamber, its door half-open also. Pausing again to gather breath, Saul
passed slowly through that door, and found himself in a dim and quiet
chamber, where a man-servant kept a quiet watch in a chair beside the
fire; and upon the bed, his eyes closed and his face quite peaceful,
lay Eustace Marchmont.

But the entrance of this tall, gaunt, spectre-like figure produced an
effect Saul had not calculated upon. The man-servant well knew Saul
Tresithny by sight, and knew that he lay at the point of death in an
adjoining chamber of the castle. Seeing this figure glide noiselessly
through the door and up to the bed, he fully believed he saw the young
fisherman’s ghost, and springing to his feet with a cry of terror, he
fled precipitately from the room, overcome by invincible fear. The cry
awoke Eustace, and the next moment he and Saul Tresithny were looking
into each other’s eyes--almost as men might look who had passed beyond
the realms of this world and had met in the land of spirits.

“Is that you, Saul--in the flesh?” asked Eustace faintly. “I have asked
for you, but never thought to see you again.”

“I have come to ask forgiveness of you,” cried Saul in a choked voice,
sinking to his knees beside the bed, partly through physical weakness,
partly through the abasement of his self-humiliation. “I am dying,
sir; I am glad to die, for I know my sins are forgiven by a merciful
Saviour. But oh! I feel I cannot go without your forgiveness too! I
have done you so terrible an injury. Ah! let me hear you say you can
forgive me even that before I go!”

The voice was choked and strained. Saul’s head sank heavily upon the
bed. Eustace heard the gasping breath, and a hoarse rattle in the
throat, which told its own tale. With a great effort he just lifted his
hand and laid it on the bowed head.

“My poor fellow,” he said, “you have as much to forgive as I. May God
forgive you all your sins, as I forgive all you have done amiss towards
me, and as I pray I may be myself forgiven for such part and lot as I
have had in much of sin that has stained your past life.”

With one last effort Saul raised his head, and saw standing beside him
a shining figure which he took to be one of the angels from heaven.
A wonderful, radiant smile lit up his haggard face, his eyes seemed
to look through and beyond those about him, and with the faint but
rapturous cry--

“My Lord and my God!” he fell prone upon the bed.

Bride, aroused by the cry of the servant, had come in hastily, clad in
her white flowing wrapper, with her hair about her shoulders, and laid
a soft hand upon his head as she said in a very low voice--

“Lord, into Thine Almighty Hands we commend the spirit of this our
brother!” and even as she spoke the words, both she and Eustace knew
that the soul of Saul Tresithny had returned to the God who gave it.

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXIII

_BRIDE’S PROPOSAL_


“Papa,” said Bride softly, coming into the Duke’s study and standing
behind his chair with her arms loosely clasped about his neck, “will
you let me marry Eustace now?”

The Duke gave a very slight start, and then sat perfectly still. He
could not see Bride’s face, and he was glad for a moment that his own
could not be seen.

“My dear child,” he said, after an appreciable pause, “do you mean that
you do not know?”

“I think I know everything,” answered Bride softly. “I know that
Eustace will be as he is now for two or three years--perhaps all his
life; but I do not think it will be that--I mean not all his life. I
had a long talk before he went with the doctor from London, and he said
he was almost confident that power would return, only the patient must
have good nursing, care, and freedom from worry of mind, or anxious
fears for himself, which might react unfavourably upon him. It is only
for a few years he will be helpless; and I want to be his wife during
those years, to help him through with them, to keep him from the worry
and the care which I believe he will feel if he thinks he may perhaps
never be a strong man again, never be able to ask me to marry him.
I know that he loves me, papa, and that I can do more for him than
anybody else. I know that even now he is beginning to lose heart,
not because his work is stopped--he is most wonderfully brave over
that--but because he thinks he may lose me. Does it sound vain to say
that? But indeed it is true. I can read Eustace through and through,
because I love him so. Why should I not be his wife? Then I could nurse
him back to health and strength, and he could stay here with us all the
time, and we should be so happy together!”

The Duke had been silent at first from sheer amaze. He had never
yet entered into all the still depths of Bride’s nature; and though
personally conscious of his disappointment that his daughter and heir
could not now think of marriage till the health of the latter was
reestablished, he had never thought of a different solution of the
difficulty with regard to Eustace in his helpless and lonely condition.
He had been grieving over the situation in silence many long days, but
the thing that Bride suggested so quietly and persuasively had never
entered his head.

Yet even as she spoke there came upon him a conviction of the truth
of her words. None knew better than he the comfort and support that
a man can receive from a loving and tender wife. He was beginning to
recognise in his daughter those very traits of character which had been
so strongly developed in her mother. Well could he understand what it
would be to Eustace to be nursed and tended, consoled and strengthened,
by such a wife. Doubtless it would be an enormously powerful factor in
his recovery, and the father had long wished with a great desire to see
the future of his child settled before many more months should pass. It
had been a sad blow to him to hear that Eustace’s recovery must be so
slow, for he felt very sure he should not live to see him on his feet
again; and what would become of Bride, left so utterly alone in the
world?

Now he drew her gently towards him, and she knelt beside him at his
feet, looking up into his face with a soft and lovely colour in her
cheeks.

“Has Eustace spoken of this to you, my dear?” he said.

“Ah no!” she answered quickly. “Is it likely he would? He calls himself
a helpless log; and I know that the worst trouble of all is, that he
thinks his helplessness divides him from me. Papa, I want you to go to
him. I want you to tell him that we will be married very soon--as soon
as it can be arranged--and that I will nurse him back to health. Tell
him that we will stay happily together here, and have only one home,
here at Penarvon. I know you do not want to lose me, yet I know (for
you have told me) that you would like to see me Eustace’s wife. Well,
it is all so easy. Do you not see it so yourself? Dearest father, I
love him, and he loves me. What can anything else matter? Does not his
weakness and his helplessness make me love him all the more? I want to
have the right to be with him always, to lighten the load which will
weigh on him, however brave and patient he is, heavily sometimes. I
shall never love anybody else; and I think he will not either. Why
should we wait? Why should we not have the happiness of belonging to
one another before he is strong again as well as after? Why should
those years be wasted for us both?”

The Duke looked into her soft, unfathomable eyes, and he ceased to
oppose her.

“It shall be as you wish, my dear,” he said. “I believe had it been
with me as it is with Eustace, your mother would have done just what
you propose to do. God has His angels here below amongst us still. I
will go and speak of this to Eustace, if you wish it. You are right, my
child, in saying that I would fain see you married to Eustace, since
you love each other. I had not thought of this way, but perhaps it is
the best.”

“You will come and tell me what he says,” answered Bride, with a lovely
blush upon her face; and the Duke went slowly upstairs to the sick-room.

Eustace was gaining vital power rapidly and most satisfactorily, and
was not paralysed in the ordinary acceptation of the term; but he had
received such violent blows in the spine, either from the force of
the waves whilst he was tossed to and fro at their mercy, or by being
dashed upon rocks--though there were few outward bruises or cuts--that
the whole nervous power had been most seriously impaired, and he could
neither raise himself in bed nor move any of his limbs, although
sensation was not materially affected. It was a case likely to be
tedious and trying rather than dangerous or hopeless. There was every
prospect of an ultimate recovery; but great patience would be needed,
and any premature attempts at exertion might lead to bad results.
Eustace had heard his fate with resolute courage, and had breathed no
word of repining since; but a gravity had settled down upon him which
deepened rather than lessened day by day; and Bride had been quick to
note this, and trace it to its source.

With the Duke, the relations of the young man were now of a most
cordial character. His kinsman had played a father’s part to him during
these past days, and his visits were always welcome in the monotony of
sick-room life.

“I have been talking to Bride,” said the elder man, as he took his
accustomed seat; “we have been talking about your marriage, Eustace,
and neither she nor I see why it should be indefinitely postponed.
Indeed, there seems good reason for hastening it on, since she can then
be your companion and nurse, as is not possible now, greatly as she
wishes it. We cannot think of parting with you till you are well and
strong once more, and that will not be for some time even at best. Have
I your authority to arrange with Mr. St. Aubyn for a marriage here
as quickly as it can be arranged? Since your minds are both made up,
there appears no reason why Bride should not have the comfort of caring
for you and making you her charge. Perhaps you hardly estimate the joy
which such a charge is to a woman of her loving nature. But you know
her well enough to believe that she never speaks a word that is not
literal truth; and as she wishes to have that privilege, I confess I
see no legitimate objection.”

Eustace had been silent, much as the Duke had been silent when the
girl laid her proposal before him. Sheer astonishment and an unbounded
sense of his own unworthiness and her almost divine devotion and
love held him spellbound for a moment; and when his words came they
were tempestuous and contradictory, declaring one moment the thing
impossible--Bride’s youth must not be so sacrificed--the next declaring
that it was too much happiness, that he dared not accept it, because it
was altogether too much joy to contemplate. The Duke let him have his
fling, and then took up his word again, imposing silence by a gentle
motion of the hand.

“I respect your doubts and your scruples, Eustace; but I think you
need not let them weigh too heavily in the balance against your own
wishes and ours. I will take you into my confidence, and I think you
will then see that even for Bride’s sake this thing is a good one. She
does not know it, but I have a mortal illness upon me, which may carry
me off at any moment, though I may perhaps be spared some few years
longer. I myself consulted the physician whom we summoned for you, and
he admitted that my life was a bad one, and that with my family history
I must not look to be spared much longer. You know how lonely Bride
would be were I taken from her. You can imagine how greatly I desire
to see her settled in life with a husband to love and cherish her.
Were I to die whilst you were thus laid aside, you must of necessity
be separated, and where would Bride go? What would she do? Money is
not everything. A home--a husband’s care--that is what a woman wants.
Eustace, if you are made man and wife now, all this anxiety will be
done away, and the happiness of all will be secured. Will you not
consent? It all rests with you, for I desire it, and Bride desires
it--I think you desire it----”

“Only too much!” cried Eustace, with such a light in his eyes as had
not been seen there for weeks, “only too much. I am afraid of my own
intensity of desire.”

“If that is all, we may dismiss the objection as frivolous,” said
the Duke with a slight smile. “Then I have your consent to make the
arrangements? I will go and tell Bride, and send her to you.”

She came within half-an-hour, calm, tranquil, serene as ever, a
lovely colour in her face, but no other outward sign of excitement or
confusion. Her eyes sought his with one of those glances he had learned
to look for and treasure; and when she came to his side she bent and
kissed him, which hitherto she had not made a habit of doing.

“Bride,” he said softly, getting possession of her hand, “is this true?”

“Yes, Eustace,” she answered softly; “I do not think we can love each
other more than we do; but we can belong to each other more when we
have been joined together by God. That is what I want, to be one with
you in His sight, so that nothing can part us more.”

He looked earnestly at her, the love in his eyes as eloquent as it was
in hers, and scarcely as much under control.

“You are not afraid, my darling? You were afraid of trusting yourself
to me once?”

“Yes,” she answered gently; “I had not learned to love you then, and
you had not learned love either. You have only learned that slowly, as
I have learned it slowly myself.”

“How do you know I have learned it--the love which you mean?”

She looked at him with a smile that brought an answering smile to his
face.

“Do you think I have been with you all these weeks, in and out, by day
and night, and have not known that? Do you forget how you showed it in
those days when you seemed to be slipping away from life, and only the
eternal promises of everlasting love and help could reach you to help
and strengthen you? You did not talk, but you made us talk to you, and
your eyes gave their answer. You found then that it was not a beautiful
philosophy, but a living Saviour you wanted; not an abstraction
representing an ideal purity, but a Man, the one Incarnate Son of God,
to whom you must cling in the darkness of the night. Ah! Eustace, it
was then that you truly turned back to the Father’s house; and I know
that the Father came out to meet you, and to bring you into His safe
shelter. I knew He would--oh! I think I have known that for a long time
now; but the joy of the certainty is so wonderful and beautiful----”

Her voice broke, and she turned her head away for a moment, but he said
softly--

“The angels of God rejoicing over one sinner that repenteth? Is that
it, Bride? For you are a veritable angel upon earth!”

“Ah no!” she answered quickly, “do not say that--do not think it. Holy
and blessed as the angels of God are, we have yet a higher vocation--a
higher calling to live up to. It is a human body, not an angelic body,
that our Lord took and sanctified to all eternity. It is for fallen
human creatures, not for the angels, that He came down to die. And it
is glorified human beings, changed into His glorious likeness, who are
called to live and reign with Him in glory unspeakable. I never want
to be an angel. Ours is a more truly blessed and glorious calling. To
be His at His coming. To hear His voice, and be caught up to meet Him
in the air. To be ever with the Lord--kings and priests for ever and
ever! O Eustace! we cannot conceive of such a thing yet; but the day
_will_ come when the kingdoms of this world shall become the Kingdoms
of our God and of His Christ, and He shall reign for ever and ever!”

The face she turned upon him was as it were transfigured already, and
it seemed to Eustace as though for a moment a curtain lifted before
his eyes and showed him a glimpse of some unspeakable glory which lay
beyond the ken of mortal man. For the first time since he had known
her he began to understand that what had seemed to him as the outcome
of a mystic fanaticism might be in reality the development of some
purer spiritual understanding than he had been able to attain to.
Lying for days at the gate of the unseen world as he had done, he had
learned that many things formerly slighted and almost despised were the
very things which brought a man peace at the last, and which glowed
and strengthened beneath the mysterious fire of peril that turned to
dross and nothingness the wisdom in which he had trusted, and the
staff upon which he had tried to lean. Having learned this much, he
could believe there was more to learn; that even when fear was cast
out and faith reigned in its stead, there was still progress to be
made in the heavenly life. He did indeed believe that the Saviour
had died for the sins of the whole world, and that He lived to make
intercession eternally for those who claimed the Atonement of His
blood. But now he began to understand that for those who truly love Him
and walk every step of their lives in the light from above, there is
a vision of unspeakable and unimagined glory always open before them;
and that, leaving those things that are behind, there is a continual
pressing forward to the prize of our high calling in Christ--the one
overmastering desire so to live as to be His at His coming, and be used
for His eternal purpose of establishing His Kingdom on the earth.

“Bride,” he said softly, after a long pause, “you must teach me more of
this Kingdom. I had hoped to do a great work for our fellow-men in this
land, and even now I may live to do something; but I can at least seek
to understand God’s ways of working, which are not always man’s ways;
that if it please Him to raise me up, I may consecrate my life, _first_
to His service, and secondly to the service of man. Abner truly told me
I was beginning at the wrong end when I first spoke to him long ago. I
did not understand him then, but I begin to do so now. I may never see
things clearly, as you do, in the heavenly light; but at least I do see
that our first aim and object must be to do God’s work on earth in His
way; not blinded by our own wishes and ambitions. The fate of poor Saul
Tresithny will always be a warning and a landmark to me. He _might_
have grown as wild and reckless without my teaching--with that I have
nothing to do--but I did teach him dangerous doctrines of all sorts,
and his life and death are a standing memorial to me of what such
teaching may lead to. I trust the lesson has not been learned in vain.”

“And I think his death was a very happy one,” said Bride softly. “I
think I am glad he died with us alone. He loved you, Eustace. And I am
sure if any of us had our choice, we should always choose to be with
the being we love best at the moment of our death. It was so with him.
I think it was rather beautiful and wonderful how he rose and came
to you when the hand of death was upon him. Poor Saul!--but we need
not grieve for him. Abner has ceased to grieve, and is more peaceful
and happy than I have seen him for many years. ‘To depart and be with
Christ’ was so much better for him than anything he had to expect upon
earth. He learned his lesson at the last--I am sure his end was peace.”

After that there was no reserve on any subject between Eustace and his
betrothed wife. Bride was able to speak to him from the very depths
of her heart, and as she elevated and strengthened his spiritual
perceptions, so did he in another fashion impart to her such knowledge
of the things of this world as were beneficial to her in forming her
mind and character, and helping her to obtain a just and accurate
outlook upon the affairs of the nation and the events moving the
hearts of men. They acted as a check one upon the other; helping,
strengthening, teaching, and encouraging--growing every day nearer in
love and in spirit, finding fresh happiness and closer unity of soul
each day as it passed, and always upheld by the thought that a few days
more would see their union hallowed and blessed in the sight of God--a
thought so unspeakably sweet and precious to both that they seldom
spoke of it, though it was never altogether out of their thoughts.

Mr. St. Aubyn was to perform the ceremony, with the cordial consent of
Mr. Tremodart, who was glad to be spared the task himself. The Rector
of St. Erme had been much at the castle when Eustace lay in so critical
a state, and the young man had profited much from his instruction and
counsel. Now he came frequently to see both Bride and her betrothed
husband, for he was one of those who rejoice to see true spirituality
in all its forms, and to be certain before hearing pronounced any
solemn and binding vows that they are spoken from the very heart.

The Duke went about looking very happy in those days, and his manner
to his daughter was more gentle and fatherly than it had ever been
before. The whole castle was in a subdued state of excitement, whilst
a lawyer from London arrived, who was to remain till the completion
of the ceremony and see to all the needful papers. But with these
things Bride felt little concern, and went about with a tranquil face,
thankful to be spared the bustle of preparation which would have been
needful under ordinary circumstances, but which was quite superfluous
now.

A bridal dress and veil were, however, quickly provided, and Bride was
content that it should be so, knowing that her white would be pleasing
to the eye of the sick man. She herself was calmly and tranquilly
happy, spending much time beside the patient, and the rest in earnest
musings and meditation, or in visits to the poor, amongst whom so much
of her life had been passed.

It was a clear, sunny morning toward the end of January when Bride
awoke with the consciousness that it was her wedding-day--though so
quiet and uneventful a wedding as was to be hers perhaps no Duke’s
daughter had yet known. Even her name would not be changed, as
Eustace had playfully told her, nor would she leave the shelter of
her father’s roof. All the change that would take place would be that
she and her husband would take up their quarters in a suite of rooms
specially prepared for them, with Bride’s nurse and Eustace’s man for
their especial attendants. But the young wife would continue to take
her place at her father’s table when he took his meals, waiting upon
her husband and sharing his at different hours, such hours as were
prescribed by his medical man. Although all this sounded strange to
outsiders, who heard with amaze that Lady Bride was going to marry her
father’s heir while he was still crippled and helpless, it did not seem
strange to her. Others said it was an obvious marriage of convenience
and diplomacy, but never had been a marriage of purer and truer
affection. Bride robed herself with a happy heart and a serene face,
and was not surprised to receive a message at the last that Abner would
much like a few words with his young mistress, if she could spare them
for him.

He was in the great conservatory when she went down--the place where
so many talks had taken place between them, and where Bride pictured
Eustace lying in comfort and pleasure before very long, surrounded by
sweet scents and beautiful blossoms. Abner held in his hand a beautiful
bouquet of white flowers, and Bride thanked him with one of her
sweetest smiles as she took it from his hands.

“I did want to see yu my own self, my Ladybird,” he said in a voice
that shook a little, “to wish yu every joy and a blessing on your new
life. I know there will be a blessing on it, for there’s One above as
has yu very near His heart; but yu’ll let an old man as has loved yu
ever since yu were a babe in the nurse’s arms give yu his blessing
to-day.”

Bride held out her slim white hand, which the old man took and carried
very tenderly to his lips; and her voice shook a little as she said,
“Thank you for that blessing, Abner. I feel my heart the warmer for
it. We know that this world’s happiness is but a small thing compared
to the glory that is to be revealed; but yet we must be thankful when
it does come to us, and take it as God’s best gift. I think that your
heart is at peace now, and that your worst trouble is laid at rest.”

“Bless the Lord--it is so indeed. My boy died with His name on his
lips. I couldn’t ask more for myself.”

Bride could not linger. Mr. St. Aubyn had already arrived and wished
to speak with her alone. She found him pacing the room with slow and
thoughtful mien, but his eyes were very bright and glad.

“My child,” he said softly, “I wished to speak with you a few moments
before we go upstairs. I have just been seeing him you are to wed. My
dear, I think I need not say all that I feel about the change I find
in him since first I knew him. I can pronounce the benediction of holy
matrimony over you two with a glad and thankful heart. In the sight of
man and of God such a union as yours must be holy indeed.”

Bride’s eyes were softly bright.

“I know we love one another,” she said softly, “but I think that the
love of God comes first--indeed, I trust it is so.”

“I believe so truly,” he answered; “and, my child, I have been talking
to-day to Eustace. He has long been hindered by sickness from the
ordinances of the Church--the most blessed ordinance instituted by our
Lord for His faithful people to follow until His coming again. Before
that, as you know, he was something slack and doubtful, and did not
avail himself of the Christian privileges in their fullest measure;
and it is long since he has partaken of the bread and wine blessed in
the name of the Lord. And he wishes now that he may receive this Holy
Communion with you--his newly wedded wife--so soon as you are made one.
I indeed have thankfully and joyfully assented to this, and even now
the room is being prepared for the simple ceremony which shall make you
his, and then you can together partake of that Body and Blood--the sign
and symbol of the Ineffable Love. I am sure, my child, that your heart
will rejoice, as mine does, over this return of the lost sheep to the
fold. We have known for long that that son has been turning homewards,
and that the Father has gone forth to meet him. Now we shall see him
at the Father’s table, partaking of the mystical feast which it is our
Christian privilege to enjoy. ‘Do this in remembrance of Me.’ It will,
I know, be a joyous thing for you that the following of this gracious
and simple command shall be the first act of your married life.”

Tears were standing in Bride’s soft eyes. She put out her hand and laid
it on Mr. St. Aubyn’s arm.

“I am too happy to talk about it,” she said; “it is the one thing to
make the day complete; but oh! Mr. St. Aubyn, I have so often wanted
to thank you for what you said to me that day long ago about the lost
son and the returning home. It was such a help. It was that which made
me begin to pray in hope for Eustace, instead of naming him only in a
sort of faithless despondency. I was in danger of being like the elder
brother, and looking upon him and many others as altogether beyond the
pale of the Father’s love. After that I could always pray in hope; and
I think--I believe, that my prayers did help him. You know what you
said about that being God’s way of leading to Him some one who would
not yet pray for himself.”

The clergyman smiled tenderly upon the girl.

“God bless you, my child,” he said softly. “I think you will be your
mother over again as the years go by. Such faith as hers I have never
seen in any one else, but I think I shall live to see it in you.”

“I have received so much,” answered Bride softly, “I should not be able
to doubt even if I wished.”

Only a few minutes later, and Bride entered the room where Eustace
lay, leaning on her father’s arm, her face shaded by her veil, but not
so concealed that its serene beauty and composure could not be seen.
Some dozen of the old servants of the castle, and two or three old
friends, were present to witness the simple ceremony; but Bride only
saw Eustace; and none who caught the glance that flashed from one to
the other ever forgot it. The room was decked with flowers, everything
was perfectly simple, yet perfectly appropriate, and Mr. St. Aubyn’s
rendering of the holy words was doubly impressive from the peculiar
circumstances of the case. Bride’s vows were spoken with a steady
sweetness which brought tears to many eyes; all the faltering was on
Eustace’s part, and was made through the depth of his emotion. It was
a strangely simple yet strangely impressive wedding, never forgotten
by those who saw it. When all was spoken that was needed to make them
man and wife, Bride stooped and kissed her husband, without a thought
of any who stood by, and they heard the passionate intensity of love in
the voice that responded--

“My Bride--my wife!”

[Illustration]




[Illustration]

CHAPTER XXIV

_CONCLUSION_


Bride was riding homewards from Pentreath to the castle on a sunny day
early in June. The sound of joy-bells was in the air, the faces of men
were glad and triumphant, all nature seemed in tune with the general
rejoicing which some recent event had plainly set on foot; and the
young wife’s face was glad, too, though thoughtfully and temperately.
For she knew that the news of which she was the bearer would gladden
the heart of her husband, though it would not be to him now that source
of triumphant exhilaration which it would have been a year before.

Behind her rode the servant with a bag full of papers at his
saddle-bow. It was these letters and newspapers which had been the
object of Bride’s ride that day. Her husband had persuaded her to go
herself on the chance of news; he was always glad to make an excuse to
induce her to take the amount of needful air and exercise which was
good for her health, and she always found it so hard to leave him.

But to-day she had been persuaded, and was now riding rapidly homewards
with her budget of news, knowing how impatiently her husband and father
at home would be awaiting her return.

Dismounting at the castle door, and taking the bag from the hands of
the servant, she passed hastily through hall and corridor into the
great conservatory, where Eustace was now daily wheeled upon his couch.
Since the beginning of May he had been taken down to a ground-floor
room in the wing which he and his wife occupied, in order that, when
possible, he might be taken out of doors, or into this pleasant place
of flowers. He had made as much progress as the most sanguine could
hope for during the past months, and recovery was considered now only
a matter of time and patience. Time and patience were the only doctors
for such a case as his, and Eustace surprised all who came in contact
with him by the extreme patience and cheerfulness he showed under a
condition of helplessness so trying to youthful manhood; but he would
say, with a smile, that Bride made life too sweet for him for any
repining to be possible. Each day he found filled with happiness--the
happiness of her presence, and of that full community of soul which
made their union what it was. Every day brought its own measure of
temporal happiness and spiritual growth; and though the young man
looked forward with ardent expectation to the hope of being able to
fight the battle of life once more, and work in the service of his
fellow-men, he recognised fully and freely that this period of enforced
idleness had been sent him by the Father in mercy and love, and was
resolved that the lesson it was sent to teach him should not be learnt
in vain.

The way in which his face kindled at the sight of his wife was a sight
good to see. She came quickly forward, bent over and kissed him, and
said softly--

“It is good news, Eustace. The Lords have passed the bill!”

“Ah!” he said, and drew a long breath. “I felt it would be so when the
King was obliged to recall Lord Grey. All parties must have known then
that the mind of the country was made up, and that the thing was right,
and must be made law. Have you read the news?”

“No; I only heard what they were all saying in Pentreath. I met many
friends, and they all told me something. The Duke of Wellington, when
he found the King would create enough new peers to pass the bill,
if that was the only resource left, retired from his place in the
House, and, some say, will retire from public life altogether. Lord
Wharncliffe and his party of waverers came over at once to the side
of Lord Grey, and so the bill was passed at once. The people are wild
with delight, the bells are being rung, and bonfires are being built
up. I sometimes wonder whether they really understand what it is that
they rejoice at. They seem to think that some wonderfully good time
is coming for them. Poor creatures! I fear they will be disappointed.
An act of constitutional justice has been done; but the troubles of
England lie far, far deeper than an imperfect system of constitutional
representation.”

Eustace was eagerly skimming the contents of newspapers and private
letters, and from time to time giving bits of information to his wife;
but the sense of her words came home to his mind for all that, and
by-and-bye, laying down the papers, he said--

“That is only too true, Bride. That is the very point upon which my
eyes have been opened latterly. I used to think that good government
and pure government was the backbone of a nation’s prosperity and
well-being--as in one sense of the word it is. I mean, that if all men
were doing their utmost to walk in the ways appointed by God, we should
have a pure and good government, and the nation would prosper. But I
see only too clearly now that I was quite deceived in my old belief
that this country and the world can ever be renovated and made good by
any scheme of political reform instituted by man. We may do our best
to be just and temperate, to act uprightly, and think impartially of
the interests of all classes; but that alone will never raise them,
never give them true happiness, never lift them out of the degradation
into which they, as well as too many of us so-called ‘superiors,’ have
fallen. There is only one Power which can do that, only one Power
mighty enough for that task, and that is the Power of which I fear that
we, as a nation of politicians and upright rulers, think singularly
little. The time may come when we shall awake to the remembrance that
God must be Ruler in the earth if right and justice and equity are to
be done; but at present, though we listen to such words with approval
from the pulpit, we are absolutely ignorant how to put them into daily
practice, and our profession and practice are utterly at variance. That
is where our failure comes in, and where I, for one, foresee failure
all along the line. This bill may be the inauguration of an enlightened
and liberal policy for the next generation; but my old hope of seeing
the world raised out of its misery, its degradation, its wickedness by
any such means, is fading fast within me.”

Bride was silent for a while, looking out before her with a sweet sad
smile upon her fair face.

“It will not be achieved by such means,” she said quietly at last;
“and yet, if men would but look to the Lord for help and deliverance,
I truly believe He would show us the perfect way, and restore to us
those things which are lacking in the order of our daily lives, of
our worship, of our government. We know that the powers that be are
ordained of God; but we have lost so much of His guidance. Yet I
verily believe that if men would with one voice and one heart cry to
Him for light and guidance, He would send it to them, even as in days
of old. Is He not the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever? Though we
have forsaken Him, yet He has not forsaken us. As He spoke by holy
men of old, moved by His Spirit, so I truly believe He would speak
again had men but faith to listen. But it is that which is always the
stumbling-block--the hindrance. Men have lost their faith; they will
not believe that God is still amongst them, even as of old--nay, far
more truly and nearly than of old; for Christ is the living Head of His
Church, and all who believe and are baptized are very members of His
mystical Body. And yet we say He is far away, He has passed into the
heavens, He is no more working with and amongst us, save through the
workings of the Spirit in our hearts. But I feel so very, very sure
that, would we let Him, He would fain be much more to us than that, as
indeed He will be one day--in the day when the Kingdom shall be set up
on earth.”

Eustace drew a long breath. He, too, lying there in helplessness, and
seeing much of the brightness of his early visions fade into dimness as
he watched the course of events and learned to see more of the workings
of this world, had come to think with a great longing of the coming
Kingdom, when all that is vile and evil shall be done away, and when
Christ Himself shall be revealed and rule in righteousness. Once that
thought had seemed to him as the veriest vision of the mystic; now he
had come to long for it himself with a great and increasing longing.
Loving his fellow-men as he did, he yet loved the Lord more; and to see
Him reigning over the world, and the misery and the sin all done away,
was a prospect too bright and happy not to excite his ardent longings.
Even in his satisfaction at the news just brought, he could yet think
with calm hopefulness of the time when the crooked things should be
made straight, and the rough places plain, and men should live together
in peace and love, and strivings and hatred should be done away.

“And until that day comes,” he said softly at last, “we shall do more
to help our brethren by teaching them to look for the Kingdom of God
and of His Christ, than by stirring up in their hearts desires after
earthly good which perhaps may never be theirs.”

Bride looked up with a sweet smile.

“Ah! that is just what I feel about it, Eustace; let us do all that is
right for them, but teach them to strive after contentment and love of
God themselves. That is the only thing that will really raise them or
make them truly happy.”

“Seek ye first----” said Eustace musingly, not finishing the quotation,
for there was no need. “After all, that is the best and highest wisdom,
though for eighteen hundred years men have had the answer to their
strivings and heart-burnings under their hand, and have not known how
to use it. You must help me, sweet wife, in the future, when I go
forth, as I trust by God’s mercy I may, to take my place in the battle
of life, and stand up for the right and the truth, as I may be called
upon to do, to bear in mind that great precept, for without it we can
accomplish nothing.”

Bride gave him an eloquent glance, but made no reply, for her father
was coming in, anxious to know the news.

She told her tale once more, and the papers were read and discussed
between the two men with eager interest. It was strange how, by almost
imperceptible degrees, those two had drawn together--not entirely in
opinion, but in mutual understanding and sympathy, so that differences
of opinion seemed trifles. Now it was real pleasure to both to be
together; and though they still argued and disputed, it was in a spirit
of toleration and mutual respect and liking which made such argument
pleasant and stimulating rather than irritating. The Duke took a more
despondent view of the future of the country than Eustace, and had
far less confidence in the success of the coming era of more liberal
principles of government for redressing wrongs and bringing about a
lasting state of prosperity and peace; but then Eustace was far less
sanguine about the coming Utopia, far more patient and reasonable when
existing wrongs were discussed, far less confident in the powers of
legislation for the elevation of mankind than he once had been. Like
many other ardent young dreamers in the forefront of the battle of
reform, he had practically left out of his calculations the mystery
of original sin--the inherent corruption of men’s hearts, and their
perversity of vision, their determination to do evil until their eyes
are opened to see God’s dealings in all things, and their hearts are
purified by the Holy Spirit. No system, however perfect, will ever
make men righteous that does not first lead them to God. It was this
that Eustace had never realised before when he sought to raise men
by increased prosperity, and wiser and more just legislation. Now he
had begun to see the futility of his former dreams, and insensibly he
grew to sympathise with the feelings of his kinsman, who had lived
through so many crises of the world’s history, but had found at the
end that human nature was never changed, and that no era of bliss and
joy followed upon the violent efforts made to secure a better order of
things.

Leaving them to talk thus together and to discuss the situation to
their hearts’ content, Bride stole away into the garden, and wandered
along some of the shady paths, thinking her own thoughts, and filled
with a sense of profound thankfulness and joy in the unity of spirit
now existing between herself and her husband. It was the same daily joy
to her that it was to him, and her heart was charged with a peace and
restful content that sometimes seemed to her to be a foretaste of the
Kingdom itself, towards which her heart was always turning.

In one of the alleys of the rose-garden she came upon Abner, who was
tying up the young shoots upon the arch, and picking off the dead
blossoms. He welcomed her with the smile that the sight of her always
called up in his eyes, and stood still with a face full of interest
whilst she told him the news.

“Well, well, well,” he said when she had done, “may be it’ll be a
good thing. It sounds just, and right, and reasonable; but I don’t
understand these big matters, and there’s a deal to be said on both
sides, so far as I can see. My poor boy would have been pleased. He
was terrible set on it; but I used to think that when he got it, he
would find himself as discontented as ever, and set off after some new
teacher who would tell him this was only the beginning of what men must
demand. May be he sees things clearer now. I sometimes think we’ll know
a deal better what to think of such matters once we are free of the
burden of the sinful flesh. But there’s always comfort in the thought
that the Lord’s working in one way or another in all these things. He
sees the fulfilment of His purpose all through, though we can’t. That’s
what I comfort myself with when things seem blackest. The frost and the
snow, the biting winds and the storms, all seem against the gardener;
but by-and-bye he sees they all have their use, and his plants would
not have done as well without them. I always go back to that when I’m
perplexed and worried. The great Gardener will bring out His perfected
garden on the earth in time; and it should be enough for us to be
trying to help Him on in our little corner, without thinking He can’t
rule the world without us.”

Bride smiled as she answered softly--

“Yes; though perhaps He wants to use some of us for great tasks, as He
uses us all for little ones. But I know what you mean, Abner, and I
feel with you. We can never fully understand God’s purposes till they
are revealed to us in His perfect Kingdom; but we can all strive to
live the life of the Kingdom here below, as far as our sinful natures
will let us, and try to make just the little corner about us bear
flowers and fruit, as a garden should. I do not think we shall be
called upon for any great work. I think our lot will lie here, away in
the west, in this little place. But, for my part, I shall be content if
we can bring the hope and the life of the Kingdom into just this little
corner of the vineyard--to our sisters and brothers of St. Bride’s Bay.”


THE END



TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


  Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

  Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

  Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.

  The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber using
    the original cover as the background and is entered into the
    public domain.