Tales of Northumbria

By Howard Pease

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Title: Tales of Northumbria

Author: Howard Pease

Release Date: January 6, 2013 [EBook #41795]

Language: English


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    TALES OF NORTHUMBRIA




    BY THE SAME AUTHOR

    BORDERLAND STUDIES
    THE MARK O' THE DEIL
    THE WHITE-FACED PRIEST




    TALES OF
    NORTHUMBRIA

    BY
    HOWARD PEASE

    METHUEN & CO.
    36 ESSEX STREET, W.C.
    LONDON

    1899




    TO
    EARL GREY

    EVER KEENLY INTERESTED IN WHATEVER
    CONCERNS HIS NATIVE COUNTY
    THESE SKETCHES OF NORTHUMBRIAN CHARACTER
    ARE DEDICATED BY THE AUTHOR




CONTENTS


                                         PAGE

    NORTHUMBERLAND                          1

    'A LONG MAIN'                           7

    THE SQUIRE'S LAST RIDE                 29

    À L'OUTRANCE                           41

    'T'OWD SQUIRE'                         59

    AN 'AMMYTOOR' DETECTIVE                79

    'IN MEMORIOV'M'                       109

    'THE HECKLER' UPON WOMENFOLK          121

    THE 'CALEB JAY'                       133

    GEORDIE ARMSTRONG 'THE JESU-YTE'      147

    'GEORDIE RIDE-THE-STANG'              165

    YANKEE BILL AND QUAKER JOHN           187

    THE PROTÉGÉ                           209

    THE SPANISH DOUBLOON                  243




The tales that go to make up this small volume have already appeared
in print: the first part of the Introduction, 'A Long Main,' 'In
Memoriov'm,' in the _National Observer_; 'The Protégé,' in the
_Queen_; 'Quaker John and Yankee Bill,' 'T'Owd Squire,' 'An Ammytoor
Detective,' in the _Newcastle Courant_; 'À l'Outrance,' in the
_Newcastle Weekly Chronicle_; and the remaining six in the _Newcastle
Daily Leader_. I desire to tender my thanks herewith to the various
editors concerned.




TALES OF NORTHUMBRIA




NORTHUMBERLAND


It is generally admitted that your Northumbrian pre-eminently
possesses the quality which the pious but worldly Scotchman was used
to pray for, namely, 'a guid conceit o' hissel'.'

It is the more unfortunate, therefore, that of late years a
considerable landslip should have taken place in the ground whereon
his reputation rested.

The local poet no longer hymns the 'Champions o' Tyneside,' for
Chambers and Renforth and other heroes have long since departed,
leaving 'no issue.'

Advancing civilization, again, has, it is to be feared, made havoc of
the proud insularity of the Northumbrian squirearchy. No longer are
they content, like the Osbaldistones of yore, to devote themselves to
cellar and stable, to stay at home, contemptuous of London and its
politics, of travel and of new ideas. 'Markham's Farriery' and the
'Guide to Heraldry' have lost their pristine charm, and the
Northumbrian is, as a consequence, foregoing his ancient
characteristics merely to become provincial.

'Geordie Pitman' alone makes a stand against all modern innovation.
Firm in his pele tower of ancient superiority, he is still convinced
of the superiority of all things Northumbrian.

'Champions' may have died out elsewhere, and patriotism be decayed in
the higher social ranks, but in the pit-village there still lingers an
admirable quantity of the old self-love.

In each separate village you may find some half-dozen self-styled
'champions' who will match themselves against 'any man in the world'
for £10 or £15 a side at their own particular hobby or pastime.

Defeat has little effect upon a 'champion': like Antæus, he picks
himself up the stronger for a fall, and having advertised himself in
the papers as 'not being satisfied' with his beating, challenges
another attempt forthwith.

       *       *       *       *       *

Now this self-satisfaction--though somewhat decayed of late--is
probably one of the oldest strains in the Northumbrian character,
having been developed, doubtless, in the first instance, under stress
of constant raid and foray, and but little affected thereafter--owing
to the remoteness of the county both from the universities and from
London--by the higher standards of softer and more civilized centres.

After this, the next most predominant trait is a love of sport, for
which the climate, together with the physical conformation of the
county, may be held responsible; for the open aspect of the plain, the
crown of bare western hills, the wind-swept moorland and the sea,
suggest a life of hard endurance and fatigue, the strenuous toil of
the hunter, the keen excitements of the chase.

Still, as of old, the wide and spreading grasslands try horse and
rider with a tempting challenge, as of one who cries, 'Come, who will
tire first?' The music of the hounds sweeps down the brae:
'Yoi--yoi--yoi!' quivers the cry from the streaming pack. Onward the
rider gallops, the plover perchance rising at his horse's heels, the
long note of the curlew sounding in his ears, the breath of the west
wind racing in his nostrils; he may see on this side the purple bar of
Cheviot, on the other the blue, flat line of the sea, and
therewith--if ever in his life--may taste of the primeval joy of
living--of the joy of the early hunter who lived with his horse as
with a comrade, drew from the sea the 'sacred fish,' from the moorland
the 'winged fowl,' and knew not discontent.

The beauty of the southern counties is not to be met with here.

The south is the well-dowered matron, the north a bare-headed
gipsy-lass, freckled with sun and wind, who 'fends' for her living
with strategies of hand and head.

Still, in the northern blood, the heritage of the 'raid' and the
'foray' abides, and still, as of old, are the children of the
Borderland nursed by the keen wind of the moorland and the sea. 'Hard
and heather-bred' ran the ancient North-Tyne slogan; 'hard and
heather-bred--yet--yet--yet.'




'A LONG MAIN'


'So you're a county family?' I echoed, and, though it may have been
impolite, I could not forbear a smile, for never had I seen County
Family so well disguised before.

'Ay,' replied Geordie Crozier, 'I is,' and forthwith proceeded to
search in the pocket of his pit-knickerbockers for his 'cutty.' He had
just come up to 'bank' from the 'fore-shift,' and was leaning on a
waggon on the pit-heap, about to have a smoke before going home for a
'wesh,' dinner, and bed. 'The last ov us,' he continued, having lit
his pipe, 'that had Crozier Hall was grandfeythor--Jake Crozier, of
Crozier Hall, was his name an' address, an'--an'--I's his relics.'

I glanced at the 'relics' afresh--six foot two if he was an inch, and
broad in proportion, a magnificent pair of arms--he was champion hewer
at the colliery--with legs to match, though slightly bowed through the
constant stooping underground. Under the mask of coal-dust his eyes
gleamed like pearls, and a thrusting lower lip, backed by a square
jaw, gave evidence of determination and the faculty of enjoyment. A
short, well-trimmed beard put the finishing touch to 'the Squire,' for
so his friends styled him, half in jest.

'Well, and how was it lost?' said I. 'Was "cellar and stable," the
good old Northumbrian motto, his epitaph? Or did your grandfather take
an even quicker road to the bailiffs?'

'Grandfeythor was like us, I b'lieve; he was a fine spender but an ill
saver, an' he had a h---- ov a time till the mortgages gave oot, for
he was a tarr'ble tasteful man--lasses, greyhounds, an' horses,
racin', drinkin', cockin', an' card-playin' were aal hobbies ov his at
one time or another, but what was warse than aal this put togither was
that he never wud be beat. Everything he had must be the best, an' the
fact that anythin' belonged to him was quite enough to prove to him it
was the best o' the sort i' the county. Well, for a while as a young
man things went well wi' him. He win the Plate[1] two years runnin',
an' many was the cock-fight an' coursin' match he pulled off wiv his
cocks an' his hounds; but there was a chap came oot o' Aadcastle who
was one too many for him at the finish. This chap had made a vast o'
brass i' the toon at ship-buildin' or such like, an' bein' wishful to
set hisself up as a big pot, had hired a big place next grandfeythor's
i' the country. Well, grandfeythor couldn't abide him, for, bein' a
red-hot Tory, he didn't believe i' one man bein' as good as another at
aal, an' when, as happened shortlies, his neighbour's son came
sweetheartin' his daughter, he says, "No Crozier lass ever yet married
a shopkeeper's son, an' they never shall as long as I'm above
ground--orffice boys mun marry wi' orffice gals," says he.

'Well, the lad's feythor was tarr'ble vext at this, an' he swears
he'll have his revenge on the Squire--an' it wasn't long before he got
his opportunity.

'He'd set hissel' up as a sportin' man, ye ken, when he come to the
country, an' wes tarr'ble keen o' shootin' wiv a gun, an' occasionally
he meets grandfeythor at a shootin' party, an' always takes the
opportunity to differ from him i' a polite sort o' way on every topic
under the sun.

'Well, after their dinners one day, grandfeythor, bein' fairly full up
wi' beer, ye ken, begins sneering at all toon's folk settin' up as
sportsmen. "It stan's to reason," says he, "if a man's forbears have
never handled a gun, nor shot nowt mevvies[2] but a hoody crow or a
seagull on a holiday, that the bairns canna shoot either, for it's
bred an' born in a man--it's part o' his birthright, like a fam'ly
jool," says he; "a heditary gift, the same as a proper knowledge o'
horseflesh, fightin' cocks, greyhounds an' aal; money won't buy it,
an' it's no use argifyin' aboot it, for it's a fact, and the will o'
Providence," says he.

'Noo, when grandfeythor got on aboot Providence, most folks, I
b'lieve, used to say nowt, but Smithson--that was the chap's name--he
gies a sort o' tee-hee at this oot loud, which would be the same as if
you or me were to say, "It's just d----d nonsense."

'Well, there was a tarr'ble tow-row at this, grandfeythor as red as a
bubbly-jock an' swearin' like a drunken fishwife, and Smithson as
polite as a counter-jumper wiv his "pardon me's" and "pray be seated,
sirs"--aal to no effect.

'At the finish, when matters were quieted doon a bit, Smithson offers
to back hissel' at a shootin' match wi' grandfeythor for £1,000 a
side, an' also at a cockin' match--"a long main" it was to be--twenty
battles at £100 the "battle" and £1,000 the "main."

'Well, aal the comp'ny thought it was just a bit swagger on the part
o' Smithson, an' that when the time came he'd just cry off an' pay
forfeit, for the match was to take place in three weeks' time, and
never a cock had Smithson in his place ava, whereas grandfeythor, he
had a rare breed, the best i' the county--mixed Rothbury an'
Felton--an' the old Felton breed was the one the King o' England win
his brass ower formerly.

'The time comes, an' the comp'ny is aal assembled i' the cock-pit at
Bridgeton, grandfeythor, full o' beans an' bounce, backin' hissel'
like a prize-fighter, takin' snuff an' handin' roon' the box to his
friends, an' sayin' noo an' again, "Where's that dam' fellow
Smithson?"

'Well, the clock on the old tower was just on the stroke of ten, when
in saunters Smithson, cool as a ha'penny ice, an' behind him, in green
and gold liv'ries, come ten flunkies each wi' two big bags behind his
shoulder, an' in each bag a tarr'ble fine fightin' cock.

'Where he'd gathered them nobody knew save old Ned Stevison--an
ancient old cock-fighter o' Bridgeton, who loved cocks more than many
a man his missus. "The Moonlight Breed" he called them, but they had a
strain of the famous old Lord Derby's breed i' them, and were blood
uns to the bone.

'Some half dozen were Stevison's own, but the remainder 'twas said he
had stolen from awa doon Sooth for Smithson, an' anyways "Captain
Moonlight" was his nickname ever afterwards.

'Well, they weighs aal the cocks; from six to six and a half pounds
their weight was to be, an' the fight commences.

'Bob Stevison fought Smithson's cocks for him, an' grandfeythor fought
his own, kneelin' doon on the cock-pit floor wiv his coat off so as to
handle them the better.

'The first two or three battles grandfeythor wins easy, Stevison using
his warst cocks at the first, d'ye see, oot o' craft mevvies to get
longer odds i' the bettin', so that at one time grandfeythor was five
battles to two to the good; a bit later it was eight all, an' the
excitement was immense, bets flyin' aboot like snowflakes at
Christmas.

'Then Stevison oots wiv a beauty--a perfect picture it was ov a
fighter; eyes like a furnace at night, liftin' his legs like a Derby
winner, wings an' tail clipped short--aal glossy wi' health an'
shinin' like mahogany.

'Stevison runs him up an' doon the floor to heat his blood, an' tweaks
a feather doon from his rump--that was a clever trick he had, to
madden his cock just before the start--an' holds him ready for the
battle.

'Then grandfeythor, he oots wiv his champion cock--"Stingo," he called
him--an old favouryte ov his, a gran' bird too, six years old, an' a
little past his prime mevvies, though he'd never lost a battle in his
life.

'As soon as they sees each other "Stingo" gies a bit triumphant crow,
an' leans forward from his master's hand to try an' nip hold o' the
other wiv his beak. The other says nowt, just looks at him wi' fiery
eyes red hot wi' murder, an' as soon as ever his feet touch the
sawdust bends low, then springs straight for Stingo, drivin' wiv his
spur o' shinin' steel right for his heart.

'Just i' the nick o' time Stingo leaps i' the air to meet him; there's
a "click, click," "click, click," as o' daggers crossin', an' pantin'
from the shock, doon sinks either bird to the ground.

'Stevison's mouth was tremblin' like a bairn's as he took his
favouryte up, for there was blood on his lower breast feathers, but
Stingo wasn't touched ava, an' grandfeythor, puffed oot wi' pride,
claps a bit mair o' the fam'ly property on to his champion.

'It was a bit lesson for the other cock; he was just as determined as
ever, but a bit quieter like; round an' round Stingo he goes like a
prize-fighter, clickin' in noo an' again as he thought he saw his
openin', an' when they grappled tegither wi' their beaks, though his
comb was almost torn in two, he hammered for Stingo's eye as a
blacksmith hammers on his anvil.

'After about fifteen minutes neither cock could stand straight; at a
distance you'd have said they was both as drunk as my lord; both were
drippin' blood; Stingo had lost an' eye, an' neither o' t'other's were
much use to him, bein' bunged up wi' bruised flesh. They staggered
aboot here an' there; knocked up against each other in a blind-man's
"beg-pardin" sort o' way. Every noo and again the Moonlight cock would
pull himself together, hop feebly into the air, an' strike wiv his
spurs, but as often as not the air was all he hit, for, his eyesight
bein' aal askew, he couldn't aim straight, an' doon he would flop on
his tail end, coughin' an' choakin' wi' blood--powerless, yet mad to
gan on fightin'.

'At the finish he gets Stingo pinned up against the cockpit bars, an',
thinkin' he has him noo, gies a feeble craw, lifts hissel' into the
air, an' claps for his heart wiv his spurs.

'There was a bit clash in the held-breath stillness of the place, then
a tiny moan, an', by Gox! there was Moonlight lyin' flat on his back
on the sawdust wiv one leg broke in two an' danglin' wiv its spur like
a watch-chain on his breast.

'Such a hullaballoo as there was, grandfeythor yellin' like an Injun!
"Pick up yo'r bird," he cries, "he's a dead un!" for there was Stingo
a-top o' Moonlight peckin' at what was left ov his head-piece like a
blackbird at a snail.

'Stevison never moved, but his gills went flutterin' like those ov a
dyin' fish; he couldn't speak, but I b'lieve he was prayin' for his
favouryte.

'A minute passed, then Moonlight comes to; he beats wiv his wings,
struggles, crawls an inch or two, manages to shake off Stingo, then
hoistin' hissel' up once again wiv his one leg an' wings slashes wiv
his spur, and by the damn'dest luck lands it in Stingo's eye.

'Doon in a motionless heap they falls, an' when they're separated
Stingo's dead as a leg o' mutton.

'The rest o' the comp'ny yells and shouts; some says Moonlight's a
dead un, too, an' it's a drawn battle, an' grandfeythor, he swears his
bird can still fight, while Stevison, unable to find his voice, picks
up Moonlight, an' finally claps a great kiss on to the middle ov his
back, an' when he sets him doon again wiv a drop brandy in his mouth
he sets up a feeble craw of defiance, plainly axin', "Who the deevil
says I's a dead un?"

'After that it was all up wi' grandfeythor; the stuffin' seemed
knocked oot o' him an' his cocks by the loss ov his favouryte, an' in
the next battle another of his best birds had his heart squashed oot,
like a ripe gooseberry, at the vary first encounter.

'It was a black day that for grandfeythor, but, as I was sayin' at the
start, he never gies in, an' he comforts hissel' wi' thinkin' he'd
make matters square up an' a bit to spare by the shootin' match which
was to follow in a fortnight's time.

'Smithson had agreed to shoot off the match at Crozier Hall, for
grandfeythor had aboot the best shootin' in the county at the time,
an' there was one place famous for the grand shots ye got overhead
between two woods planted on either side of a dene, ye ken.

'There was stubbles an' beanfields usuallies beyond, an' the
pheasants, when driven off, used to fly right across the haugh below
over into the woods beyond--mevvies aboot two hundred yards awa'.

'Well, the great day comes. A fine, sunshiny October day it was, wiv a
bit o' wind from the west--the way the birds was to fly, ye ken, an' a
tarr'ble big comp'ny was assembled to see grandfeythor gie "the
furrinor" his gruel.

'Grandfeythor was i' tremendous spirits that mornin', an' as full o'
gob as a torkey-cock; nothin' could hold him; the world was a toy to
him--like the geography chap[3] i' the bairns' books, ye ken--he felt
sae tarr'ble strong an' healthy. "Eyeball clear as a bairn's," says
he, "hand steady as a rock, digestion a marvel," an' he pats hissel'
on the stomach as pleased as Punch.

'They tosses as to who shoots first, an' the coin comes doon for
grandfeythor, an' mighty delighted he was to be the first to shoot.
There wasn't much chance o' grandfeythor's bettin' as much as he
wished for, for naebody thought Smithson had a chanst, but what he
could get he gobbled up like a hungry trout--fearfu' odds they
was--six to one on himself he had to lay, an' often a bit more.

'The match was for £1,000 a side, a hundred shots each at the first
hundred pheasants within shot, an' the referee to decide any disputed
points.

'Grandfeythor takes up his stand aboot thirty yards awa' from the
wood's edge; then the referee fires a pistol, the head-beater i' the
wood above waves a white flag, an' there's a dead stillness as though
we were aal i' church prayin'.

'There was a big clump o' fir-trees standin' right oot from the thick
o' the wood's edge about fifty yards off mevvies, an' two o' the firs
stood oot high above their fellows, an' that was where the pheasants
always broke oot, whizzin' up like rockets as they came ower the top
o' them, an' it was just at that point that grandfeythor had always
nicked them clever--just as they cleared the rise of the topmost tree,
ye ken, an' started on their level flight for the opposite side. If ye
missed them i' front ye hadn't much chanst behind, for they swept awa'
like lightnin' doon the wind before ye could get turned round. Well,
aal was stillness as I said, when sudden there comes a far-away cry
through the clear air--"Cock forrard, cock forrard!" an' in another
two seconds there comes a clap o' wings from above. Bang! gans
grandfeythor's gun, as a fine cock sweeps overhead. "D----!" says he,
wiv a flush on his cheek; for aal there was to show was some
half-dozen tail feathers left twirlin', as if in mock'ry, forty yards
in the air above him.

'"Cock forrard, cock forrard!" comes the cry again, an' grandfeythor
grips a firmer stand wiv his feet, an' grasps his weapon a bit tighter
than before. Bang, bang! this time, an' the cock gies a frightful
lurch as though about to fall headlong, but steadies hissel', rises a
bit, an' wins over to the other side.

'"H----!" yells grandfeythor, trembling wi' rage, an' stamps upon the
ground. "Cock forrard, cock forrard!" again comes the beater's cry,
an' half a dozen come flightin' overhead at once.

'Bang! once again, an' grandfeythor wiv a groan flings his gun to the
ground, for he had missed altogether that time.

'"I'm fair bewitched," he cries, and aal the while the pheasants were
streamin' overhead.

'He trembled aal over, an' we thought he was gannin' to have a fit,
for his brow was damp wi' drops o' sweat, an' his eye wild an' glassy.
"Thoo damned fellow," he cries, glancing round at Smithson, an' takes
a step towards him, "thoo's cozened me somehow, thoo must have
poisoned my beer!" he yells.

'"Steady, sir, for God's sake, steady!" says the keeper in his ear,
an' offers him his gun again ready loaded for another shot, for aal
the while the pheasants came liftin' above their heads.

'Well, he takes it up again, looks at it an' feels as though he didn't
recognise it, as though it had injured him somehow, an', tremblin' aal
over, takes up a stand again. After a shot or two he kills one in
beautiful style, an' gradually getting back a bit o' confidence he
gets warmed up, an' at the finish he has seventy-five oot o' the
hundred--oot o' the last twenty never missin' one.

'And noo it was Smithson's turn.

'He makes a splendid start, wipin' up the first fifteen birds wivvoot
an error; after that again the pheasants come wilder, an' gettin'
flurried belike, he tailors them. Then he gets steadied once more, an'
at the finish has ten cartridges left an' seventy birds doon.

'A wunnerfu' chap for nerve he was, was Smithson; the mair excitement
the cooler he gets.

'A hen pheasant comes sailin' awa' to the right some sixty yards off.

'"In shot?" asked he, as though he were passin' the time o' day.

'"Shoot," cries the referee, an' ping, ping! gans two cartridges, but
he cannot stop her, she was ower far off, though she left a trail o'
feathers ahint her.

'He gets another fearfu' hard one to the left this time, an' it takes
two cartridges to settle number seventy-one--six cartridges left an'
five birds to bag.

'Wow! but the excitement was painfu', an' folks fell to bettin' i'
quick whispers, "Two to one against Smithson," an' he takes it wiv a
nod, smilin' if you please.

'The next three he gets, then he misses a longish shot, two cartridges
left an' two birds to knock doon.

'Here they come--two cocks high together overhead--be-eauties; suthin'
seems wrang wi' trigger or cartridge, an' Smithson misses first
barrel.

'"I've won!" yells grandfeythor, an' tosses his cap i' the air. Bang!
says Smithson's second barrel, an' doon comes the two cock pheasants
togither. The first had swerved, d'ye see, an' jostled up against the
second, an' Smithson cops 'em both wiv his last cartridge an' wins on
the post, seventy-six to seventy-five. Gox! but it was the nearest
touch an' go thing ever seen i' the North Country, I's warn'd, an' wi'
that last cartridge bang gans Crozier Hall.'

'Was there any trickery?' I inquired; 'had Smithson tampered with your
grandfather's cartridges, for instance?'

'No, he'd not done that; he couldn't ha' done that, but he had tricked
grandfeythor a bit, though it wasn't found out till afterwards.

'The way of it was this: Smithson was a d----d clever feller, ye ken,
an' knowin' as he did that grandfeythor had a wunnerfu' way o' pickin'
off the pheasants just as they came over the topmost trees, he had
sent two or three o' his men i' the night-time, an' had fixed up a
young fir right on to the top o' the highest tree, so that Mr.
Pheasant had to rise another six feet afore he cam' ower.

'Well, this was just enough to put grandfeythor oot ov his reckonin's,
an' when he misses the first one, as he'd never done before, he cannot
make it oot, he went clean flustered, thought he must have had a
stroke, an' swore he was bewitched, or poisoned, or such like.

'It was a crool thing to do, but it wasn't exactly what ye could call
a Jew's swindle--but, damn Smithson aal the same, I says; for here's
me, Geordie Crozier, left a po'r orphin i' the warld wi' none o' his
fam'ly property to belang to him, 'cept two gifts--the yen for
drinkin' an' t'other for gamblin', an' it's damn Smithson, says I.'


FOOTNOTES:

[1] Northumberland Plate, or Pitmen's Derby.

[2] 'Mevvies' = maybe, perhaps. The true Northumbrian is in a
threefold danger of betraying his origin: phonetically, by the 'burr';
dialectically, by constant use of 'mevvies,' 'wor' (our), and 'I's
warned' (I warrant you); psychologically, by a perpetual readiness to
back himself, his dog, or any of his belongings, against any other
man's in the world, and for any amount, at a moment's notice.

[3] Atlas, presumably.




THE SQUIRE'S LAST RIDE


'Ay, that's the priest, the Catholic Priest,' said Eph Milburn, after
a white-haired, cassock-clad old gentleman, who had nodded slightly in
reply to my companion's greeting, had passed over the bridge and
departed out of hearing.

'He looks as if butter wouldn't melt in his mouth now,' continued
Milburn, a long-legged, ruddy-bearded, hawk-eyed son of the moorlands,
'and aal his time nowadays he spends in his garden over his bees or
his flowers, or thumbing his Mass-book in his library; but it wasn't
so once-a-day, not he, not when the old Squire was above ground, and
he came up by to stop wiv him.

'Ye'll have heard tell o' the old Squire an' aal his goin's on, I'll
be bound? Ay, o' course, but there's one thing nobody kens o', not
even Father Blenkinsop, and that's where the Squire's bones are lyin',
for they never found his body, ye ken.

'Squire Dally was the last o' the fam'ly that had lived in the old
Pele Tower o' Dally from generation to generation, and he was the
wildest o' a wild lot--riders an' reivers in the old times, canny hard
fox-hunters, drinkers, an' gam'lers this century. They were bound to
get through their property soon or late, an' the last Squire, Tom
Dally o' Dally, he says, "I leave my property tiv a South-countryman?
Not I, by Gad!" says he; "why, damme, but I'll cheat him yet," an' sae
he spends hissel' right an' left on any mortal thing he took a fancy
for.

'The Hall--which was an old Pele wi' two wings added, ye ken--an' a
good bit o' the property, had gone before that. The last Squire's
grandfeythor had got shot o' that, the mortgages on it bein' far ower
heavy to keep up; but there was still a fair property left, an' a nice
canny house that had once been a dower-house, an' was now a farm, an'
that was where Squire Tom lived with his fighting-cocks, an' his
hounds, an' his hawks an' aal.

'His missus had died early, ye ken, an' that had been the ruin ov him,
for she was a clivvor woman, wiv a turn o' management--just what ye
would call good hands i' the matter ov a horse; that was her faculty,
an' she was a bonny-featured woman for-bye.

'Ay, she could manage him fine.

'There was a grand scene, 'twas always said, when he brings her home
after their furrin' tower, an' one night, bein' merry wiv his bottle,
he forgets hissel', an' swears at her before company. Up she gets
swiftly, pale, but determined, an' leanin' a wee bit ower the table
she speaks straight at him. "Tom," she says, "you forget yourself; and
until you apologize to me for your rudeness I'll sit no more at table
wi' ye," an' oot she gans frae the dining-room, haughty as the Queen
in Scripture, leavin' the Squire gapin' an' speechless, never havin'
been treated that fashion before.

'There was two or three other men wiv him dinin' that night, an' on
they sat drinkin' steadily, the Squire in a towerin' temper aal the
while, noo damnin' hissel', next cursin' his neighbour, an' backin'
his horses, an' hawks, an' hissel', wi' gun an' rod, against anyone,
or the lot o' them together.

'They tried to soothe him a bit, but the mair they tried the hotter he
got, an' had the Pope hissel' been his visitor that night, Squire Tom
would have d----d him too, an' been glad o' the opportunity. After a
bit mair snarling an' sneerin', an' snappin' he sits quiet for a
while, then he glares round at his guest friends, an' he cries:

'"Ye're nowt better than a lot o' 'momenty morries,'"--meanin'
skeletons, ye ken--"the wife's worth the whole boilin' o' ye, an' I'm
d----d if I don't apologize," an' he glared round to see if anyone
would dare laugh at him for't; but no one spoke save a little fam'ly
lawyer chap, up for the night frae the toon, an' he chirrups up an' he
says, "Qui' right, qui' right," he hiccoughs, an' the Squire glares
right through him as he growls, "When I ask ye for an opinion I pay ye
for't, but if ye advise me unasked again, I'll fling ye oot at
window," he says.

'Sae oot he strides into the hall, an' cries up the stairs: "Nell, my
lass, Nell, ho-way doon, an' I'll apologize to ye, ay, d----, I will,"
an' doon she comes, an' on tiv his knees he gans, an' she holds oot
her hand, an' the Squire he kisses it like a lover.

'Well, she manages him clivvor, but in her first child-bed she was
taken ill, poor lady, an' dies vary shortly, leavin' him wiv a baby
girl.

'After that the Squire was never the same man again. He turned
reckless, for what was the use ov "a filly" to him, he says; an'
havin' no son an' heir to live an' save for, he sets hissel' to spend
aal he can an' spite his next o' kin--a barrister chap in London toon,
whom he hated for bein' no sportsman--"a priest-faced, pauper chap iv
a black gown an' wig," he called him, an' no love was lost between the
pair o' them. He was a good bit older than the Squire, an' had a
largish fam'ly, the second son bein' none other than Father
Blenkinsop--the priest that's just passed us by.

'He was the only one the Squire could take up wi' at aal, an' as a boy
he was often there for shootin', an' huntin', an' fishin', though his
father liked ill his bein' there, for fear o' his gettin' into bad
ways under the Squire's guidance, who was gettin' wilder an' wilder
wiv every year that passed. He was just a boy then, was Father
Blenkinsop, havin' left his schoolin', an' bein' aboot to gan tiv a
college to be turned into a Jesu-yte, an' nowt pleased the Squire
mair, after a long day's huntin' or hawkin', than to fill the lad up
wi' liquor an' sneer at religion, an' Mass, an' priests, an' aal.

'"Chuck it, my boy, chuck it," he would say, clappin' him on the
shoulder, as he passed the bottle about. "Divv'nt put on the black
petticoat; ye're ower much ov a man for that. Ye can ride, an' ye can
shoot, an' ye can look a gal i' the face, an' ye can crack a bottle,
but if ye turn priest, ye'll neither be man nor woman, but a ---- bad
mixture o' both."

'So he would talk o' nights, pourin' oot his ribaldries an' drinkin'
doon his wine, yet never gettin' fair drunk; for he had a marvellous
stomach for liquor, had the Squire--no butt o' Malmsey wine could ever
have drooned him, I's warn'd--an' the only way he betrayed himself was
by gettin' a bit hotter i' the face an' fiercer i' his talk.

'Well, one night he vexed his young cousin beyond bearin'--what wi'
blackguardin' his father an' his mother, an' wi' one thing an'
another--an' sudden the boy leaps up--mevvies he was a little above
hissel' wi' liquor that evenin'--an' he bangs wiv his fist on the
table, an' he cries, "Look here, Cousin Tom, I'll stand it no longer,
an' to prove I'm no coward, I'll challenge ye to ride to the big Black
Stone on Glowrorum Fell an' back across the Moor this very night."

'"Done wi' ye, lad, done wi' ye!" shouts the Squire, bangin' wiv his
fist in his turn, "an' I'll tell ye what the stakes shall be. If I
win, you chuck the Jesu-yte business an' come an' live wi' me, an' if
you win, you can take your pick o' the horses i' my stable. Agreed?"

'"Ay!" shouted the boy recklessly; "done wi' ye."

'Fifteen minutes after this the two o' them starts off with a wild
hallo up the brae side, an' so across the Moor, the Squire "yoickin'"
an' "tally-hooin'" as he went.

'The Moor was mevvies aboot two miles across--an' a tarr'ble bad place
for hard gallopin', for there was a stone wall or two i' the middle
o't, bogs to the left hand, an' some old workin's--pit-shafts or the
like--to the right.

'So right across Towlerhirst Moor they galloped--hell-to-leather--the
Squire to the right an' the boy to the left.

'Tom Brewis, the old herd up at Windyneuk, happened to be passin'
along the sheep-track that leads by the Moor edge that night, an'
hearin' the sound ov a horse gallopin', an' a lively hollerin' as tho'
to a pack o' hounds, he comes across a bit to find oot what it might
be.

'It was a dampish, daggyish sort o' night, but at times there was a
drift o' moonlight, an' in one o' thae glimpses he caught a sight ov a
dark figure on horseback, aboot two hundred yards from him, tryin' to
jump a big black horse across one o' thae open shafts. "You won't,
won't you? Then d---- ye, ye ---- black de'il, ye shall!" an' clappin'
his spurs deep into his sides, an' layin' his huntin' crop aboot his
ears, he forced him some paces backward an' sent him at it again.

'It was a big black stallion he was ridin'--a fiery-tempered brute, a
proper match for the Squire--an' up he reared on end, fightin' him,
shriekin' wi' pain an' rage; but he couldn't get shot ov his rider, so
wiv a sudden bound he starts forward an' tries to clear the shaft wiv
one great leap.

'Just at that moment the moonlight faded, an' Tom Brewis couldn't tell
exactly what happened, but he saw a dark mass leapin', he heard a
rattle o' stones, then a heavy thud deep down somewhere, a sort o'
splash, an' aal was still.

'Tom stands there aal a-gliff wi' terror, half dazed, not kennin'
whether he can have seen or heard aright; then, pullin' hissel'
together, walks slowly thither to see if any trace can be seen of
horse or rider.

'But there wasn't a one--neither o' horse nor Squire--nowt but a
tramplin' o' horse's hoofs an' a white gash as o' a half horse-shoe on
a big boulder o' rock two feet below the surface t'other side. Sae Tom
gans slowly back, an' doon to the Squire's house to find if he can
hear anything ov him doon there; for he half hoped it might be a sort
o' dream after aal.

'Just as he gets to the door a figure comes up the drive leadin' to
the house, draggin' a lame horse after him, an' "Ha ye seen anything
o' the Squire?" it shouts at him. "No-o," says Tom, startled-like,
"that was just what I was comin' to ask for myself;" an' he peers
through the shadows to see who his questioner could be, an' recognises
Master Fred, the Squire's cousin, bleedin' frae a wound i' the head,
an' leadin' a horse wi' two fearfu' broken knees.

'He win his wager,' concluded my companion slowly, 'but after that
ride he was never the lad he had been before, an' perhaps it's
scarcely likely that he should be, I'm thinkin'.'




À L'OUTRANCE


We were standing on the fencing-room floor--Jake Carruthers and
I--leaning our backs against the armoury, our foils still in our
hands, slowly recovering our breath, after a rapier and dagger contest
which had lasted a good half-hour.

He was much less 'winded' than myself, for all his sixty-five years;
and as I had positively worn myself out against his iron wrist I was
delighted to gain a breathing space, and occupied the time in drawing
out from my companion some old-time memories of the fencing floor.

'Have you ever seen a duel?' I inquired. 'I don't mean a semi-drunken,
nose-chopping bout, or a garden-party affair, with coffee and
liqueurs, as in France, but a genuine "throat-cutting, blood-letting"
matter, such as Porthos or D'Artagnan would have loved?'

'No,' replied Jake reflectively, drawing the length of his foil
lovingly along the soft sleeve of his jacket; 'the time's past, I
doubt, for that sort of performance. The Divorce Court is what "my
lord" appeals to nowadays for "satisfaction," and Trimmer Joe or
Bricklayer Tom, they just "bash" the trespasser upon their family
preserves on the head, and there's an end on't.

'The cleverest, best-fought fight I ever saw--and I believe there was
a bit something of what you're meanin' in it--was, strange to say,
twixt a man and a woman--leastways, a gentleman an' a lady. It was a
fair battle, proper fightin' on her side; for she was sworn to win,
and sair wishful to punish him, I's warn'd; and he, though he was
tarr'ble keen to win too, found it took him all his time to keep her
from letting daylight into him--an', by the way, this is the varra
tale ye used always to be askin' for, an' I'll tell it ye noo, for
ye've improved i' your fencin', I'm thinkin', since ye began. You'll
have heard tell of Squire Dennington of Dennington Hall? A great rider
he was once, and a sportsman generally--"Jockey Jack" his own private
friends called him, and his horse, "Pit Laddie"--ye'll heard of
him?--won the "Plate" some thirty years back.

'Well, his lady, Mrs. Dennington, was just the proudest woman in the
whole county of Northumberland--scarcely what ye would call "bonny,"
but just tarr'ble handsome, and the Squire, he fair worships her. He
had married her in Berlin, and there was some queer odds an' ends o'
stories about her, but he'd never have hearkened to them any more than
he would listen to anyone shoutin' to him the way to go out hunting.

'He was in the army at that time, ye ken--the Northumberland
Fusiliers, "The Old and Bold," with "Where the Fates calls ye" in
Latin for their motto--and I was his man-servant, joining the army
along of him, as my forbears had often done with his forbears
beforetime.

'The Squire had to go out to Berlin with his mother, and he gets leave
for me to accompany him, and there it was that he met with his lady
that was to be--Miss Maxwell as she was then.

'She was the handsomest woman in Berlin, 'twas said, but quite poor,
living as a companion with the wife of one of the Ambassador's party,
being a kind of cousin, and many were the stories about her.

'Gossip said that one of them grand dukes with a name a yard long had
wanted her for his mistress, but when he made his proposition he got
such an answer that he never dared speak to her again. Then it was
reported that she was engaged to the Ambassador's chief secretary,
Oxencourt his name was--Sir Henry Oxencourt as he is now--and that she
had even run away with him, but that at the last moment he turned
round and said that he couldn't afford to marry her till his father
died, so there and then she leaves him, walks the night through till
she can get a conveyance, and arrives just in time to stay the mouth
of scandal from ruining her reputation.

'Well, the Squire meets her, falls desperately into love--for he cares
nothing for gossips--and in three weeks' time she accepts him for good
and all.

'They marries at once, and travel for a year or more, and finally
settle down at Dennington Hall.

'The Squire after a bit sends for me, buys my discharge, makes me his
body-servant, and sets up the old banqueting-room as a fencing
hall--for he was always tarr'ble keen at fencing, boxing,
single-stick, and all manly sports--and it was part of my duty to give
them both a turn of fencing most mornings of the week.

'Well, one winter, after about three years of marriage, the Squire
goes off to Algeria to shoot gazelle, leaving Mrs. Dennington and his
sister behind at the Hall, and he hadn't been gone more than a week
before Sir Henry Oxencourt turns up at the Hall.

'Well, when I see him there, I was fair dismayed, for I kenned nicely
there was but one thing he could be wantin', for his repute in the
matter of women was notorious. Forbye that ancient gossip at Berlin
had always reported that he had been mad at missing his chance with
her, and had sworn he would win her back again--get her a divorce and
marry her himself at the finish.

'His father had died since then, and he was now a rich man, and as
handsome and masterful a man as ever I saw in my life.

'Well, he comes and he courts her the live-long day, quiet-like and
respectful, but never missing an opportunity, and she seems to enjoy
his company. They go out hunting together; she dares him to jump this
and he dares her to jump that, and so the play goes on, and all the
while I was fearing he was getting a fast hold upon her, for she liked
power and was tarr'ble ambitious, and Sir Henry, they said, might have
been one of the cleverest diplomatists in the world if he could but
have kept clear of women.

'It was easy to see that he was just mad keen for her, but I was not
so sure after a bit that she was so keen for him. It seemed to me she
was leading him on, and leading him on, but with what purpose I
couldn't guess.

'Well, one afternoon she comes to me and she says, off-hand like, "Sir
Henry Oxencourt would like to show me some new tricks of fence he has
learnt abroad; kindly see that the fencing-room is in order to-night,
and, by the way, I want to show him the pair of duelling rapiers, with
the silver foxes on the hilts, that Mr. Dennington is so fond of."

'Well, all afternoon I wondered what it meant; for though her manner
was cool enough, there was something curious about my mistress's
expression as she gave her orders.

'"If possible," I thinks to myself, "I'll have a peep also at Sir
Henry's tricks to-night," and as I polished up the rapiers that
afternoon I thought of the story the Squire used to tell of them. One
of them had a stain on the "foible" which would not come out for any
quantity of rubbing--it was the blood, the Squire said, of a certain
"Black Rutherford," who had made love to the then Lady Dennington when
her Knight was away fighting for King Charlie. Sir John comes back,
having heard about it, but says nothing, and asks him to dinner; they
have a game of cards after; Sir John accuses him of cheating, and
there and then in the banqueting-hall they have a set-to with their
rapiers before my lady's eyes; in five minutes Sir John disarms him,
and before the rapier touches the floor, runs him clean through the
right lung and out below the shoulder-blade.

'Well, after taking in coffee that evening, I went to the
fencing-room, and on the pretence of looking after the fire, mending
jackets, straightening masks, and so forth, stayed on there till about
ten o'clock, when in comes Mrs. Dennington, followed by Sir Henry.

'She gives a sort of start when she sees me, then she says curtly,
"You needn't stay, Carruthers," and walks past me into the middle of
the room.

'Well, I felt bound to see that fencing, whatever it might be, and the
only way I could manage it was to go round and up to the old
musicians' gallery at the southern end. If I could open the door
without attracting notice, I might then lie down at full length and
see pretty well what was going on below.

'It took me the best part of five minutes to open the door and squeeze
through, and when I had crawled to the ledge and looked over, the two
combatants were just about to begin.

'"Put the letters on the mantelpiece," I could hear her say with a
curiously strung tone to her voice, and Sir Henry bowed in a mocking
sort of way. Then he says slowly, after having walked to the
chimney-piece and placed a packet on the shelf: "But it is not quite
fair, of course, for you cannot see your stakes, whereas I--I have
mine before my eyes at the end of my blade--the most beautiful stakes
in Europe," and he bowed again to Madame with an air of gallantry and
passion and arrogance all in one.

'For reply the mistress only gave a quick nod with her head, nervous,
impatient, like a racehorse that must be away.

'I daren't do more than peep over now and again, for the lights were
bright below, and I was afraid of being caught; but I could see that
she was in a state of great excitement, while he was cool in
comparison with her, and wore a proud, triumphing sort of air, as of
one who knows full well he has the victory in his grasp.

'They walk to the centre of the hall and take their stands. They "take
length," and then salute--she, swiftly, nervously, he in a foreign,
bravado sort of fashion.

'"First blood," says Sir Henry, "and the stakes are won," saluting
once again in a vainglorious way he had.

'"Yes, but not for a scratch," replies my lady swiftly. Then they
cross rapiers, and the play begins.

'My sangs! but it wasn't a play at all, it was a reg'ler battle, a
fair duello, and it was all Sir Henry could do to hold his own. They
had engaged in "quatre," and no sooner had blades touched than she
disengages and feints in "tierce"; then, with an amazing swiftness,
she disengages again, and lunges full at him in "sixte"; carelessly he
parries with "sixte," and in a flash she disengages again, "beats" his
blade downwards, and, for all but a biscuit, has him disarmed. He
loses hold of his weapon, his fingers slipping from the quillons, but
catches it in mid-air before it drops, leaps back a yard, parrying
another lunge clever with his left hand as he does so.

'"'Tis a dirty Italian trick ye have learnt! they haven't improved ye
abroad!" my lady sneers at him.

'Now, had she been but one flash of an eye quicker with her lunge
after the "beat," she'd have had him in "quatre" nicely, but she
hadn't thought she could disarm him so easy, and she just missed her
chance. Sir Henry, though, had had his lesson; he drops his careless,
tempting manner, such as a professor tries a beginner with, and fights
cooler and more careful, chucking his bravado airs, for it's dead in
earnest she is, and no mere stage-play for the gallery.

'On she comes again like a tigress, evidently trying to "rush" him,
and back and back she presses him till the pair o' them's right under
the gallery where I was lying. I had my head right through the bars by
that time, I was so keen to see the fight, and it was only by stuffing
my handkerchief into my mouth that I could stop myself from shouting
advice and encouragement to her, she fought so desperate keen and with
such a wild-cat pluck.

'It wasn't exactly scientific, her fencing, it was too rash and
all-for-victory straight away, but it was grand to see her flashing
her rapier in and out, flickering like a serpent's tongue, and all the
while her graceful limbs moved softly, swiftly, like a panther's,
beneath her silken evening dress.

'Once Sir Henry's foot slipped, and in she comes like a knife, and he
only escapes by adopting another Italian trick--that of dropping with
the left hand to the floor. She still presses him harder than ever,
and I could hear her breathing hotly, "heck, heck," like an angered
hawk. Then swift he "binds" with her, but he does it over-viciously
and pays for it, for she's agile as a cat, and freeing herself with a
leap backward, suddenly with a lightning-like "cut-over" touches him
on the sword arm, and though he wouldn't acknowledge it, I knew she'd
pricked him, and I could tell that it had roused him to anger in his
turn. "You she-devil!" I heard him hiss between his teeth, and now he
turned to the offensive himself.

'He was at a disadvantage, though, for he didn't want to hurt her
badly, being a woman, so he tries to disarm her, and give her some
slight wound on the sword arm, or high in "quatre" or "tierce."

'That was no good, as I could have told him nicely, for she had the
strongest and supplest wrist of any woman ever I saw, and forbye that,
disarming can only be done by taking your opponent unawares, and she
kenned nicely what he was after.

'Then sudden he gies it up, seeing the uselessness o't, and tries a
brute strength game, waits his chance till he can lift up her blade,
and then thrusts sideways so as to pink her high in the shoulder, but
she twists aside and it only just touches her through the sleeve.
"First blood!" he shouts triumphantly, "the stakes are mine," with a
low bow and a sweep o' the sword arm. "Phit!" she cries passionately;
"it's only a scratch," and she comes again at him with a bound.

'Then he loses his temper a bit, I think, for his own sword arm was
bleeding, as I knew well, for I saw a drop or two of blood on the
floor and his hand was crimson forbye. So he comes to meet her,
quickly driving her back in turn, plying his rapier this way and that
fiercely, just missing her by a hair's breadth to frighten her, till
he could have her at his mercy, and then he tries a "cut-over" in
"tierce," swift as a meteor, pressing his "fort" strongly against her
"foible," and would have been home sure as fate had not his foot
slipped on a drop of blood on the floor. Up flies his rapier idly--she
with a sudden flip tosses it higher still, and with a leap, by Gox!
she ran him through in "seconde"--just above his right hip.

'"Hurroo!" shouts I, through my handkerchief and all. "Clever,
clever!" for it was splendidly done--scientific, exact, just
perfection.

'There Sir Henry lay in a swoon upon the floor, for no doubt the pain
and the shock together would be immense, while my mistress, she just
takes one look at him, then wipes her rapier swift upon her
handkerchief, takes up Sir Henry's also, and places them against the
rack in the armoury, takes down two foils, throws one on the floor,
breaks the other in two and flings the pieces down beside its fellow.
Then swift as ever she goes to the mantelpiece, takes up the bundle of
letters and chucks them into the fire.

'She watches them burn for a moment, then presses the electric bell
close by, and just as John the footman walks in at the door Sir Henry
comes to himself, and lifts himself up on to his elbow off the floor.

'"Help Sir Henry Oxencourt up to his room," says she, cool as a
cucumber, "and tell Carruthers to attend to him, and to send for the
doctor, if necessary. A foil broke as we fenced, and Sir Henry, I
fear, has suffered through the accident."

'John stares with an open mouth, but a peremptory "Don't you
understand?" from his mistress wakes him up, and he goes and helps Sir
Henry up, who therewith slowly rises, and, resting one hand on John's
shoulder, without one word limps away.

'The door shuts, and Mistress Dennington turns slowly to the fire, her
eyes glued to them letters burning blackly amongst the coals. As she
watches she takes a cigarette from a box on the mantelshelf, lights
it, and I heard her say to herself, "You fool!" then she smokes a puff
or two and again she says, "You fool!" and therewith taps her foot
smartly on the floor.'

'But what do you think she meant by "fool"?' I here interrupted.

'Well,' replied Jake slowly, 'I've often asked myself that very
question, and what I believe she meant was something o' this sort:
"Fool not to take your chance--and such a chance!--when you had it,
and Fool again, for not knowing me better than to think that of me
when 'twas too late."'

'And now one more question,' I said, for Jake was preluding with his
weapon once again, evidently anxious to commence another bout. 'Did
you ever tell the Squire?'

'No, not exactly,' replied he, 'but I gave him a hint, and bank-notes
wouldn't have bought that rapier after that, and there it still hangs
in Dennington Hall in the armoury, I believe, though I haven't been
there since the Squire died and I set up as a Maître d'Armes in
Oldcastle here. The mistress, though, she's still alive, but she never
cared for Northumberland--"so dull," says she, and goes and diverts
herself in London town. And now no more talk. Gardez-vous, M'sieur--en
garde, s'il vous plaît,' and with a smile he struck my foil upon the
floor.




'T'OWD SQUIRE'


'No, I never saw him, not the old Squire--"t'owd Squire," as they
called him; but grandfather, he was thick with him, bein' the oldest
farmer in the dale an' pretty nigh a gentleman hisself in those days;
he was master of the 'ounds, d'ye see, when they was a trencher-fed
pack--that was before Squire Heron took them over to t' new kennels at
The Ford.

'Well, I done some pretty fair jumps myself at one time an' another in
t' ring or steeple-chasin', but 'twas nowt to what he done, not even
when a mare I was ridin' jumped over a wall an' fifteen feet into t'
quarry t' other side.

'There's a pretty tidy place at t' bottom o' that field'--pointing to
a low-lying, marshy expanse on the left that rose at the end to a high
bank--'that he jumped one afternoon in cold blood which five out of
six wouldn't have touched in warm, but at t' end of his time he was
reckless--almost to touch on madness, so grandfather always said. But
if ye'll bide here three minutes till I've seen the mare looked to
properly I'll tell ye a tale of t' Squire--same as grandfather told it
me.'

So saying Jack Skelton cantered round to the farm, where he was now
employed as horse-breaker and showyard rider, while I strolled down to
view the leap at the end of the field till he was free to join me. I
could see The Ford opposite to me as I walked along--a square keep
flanked with castellated wings rising proudly amongst its trees beyond
the winding river in a circle of fir-clad hills.

'The old Squire's' daughter lived there now with her husband, who had
taken her name on his marriage, but they were childless, and the
ancient race of Herons seemed destined to become extinct.

Arrived at the bank I saw a formidable gulf open below me, with a soft
and rotten landing on the further side, some fourteen feet across, the
space between oozy with marsh mud and choked drains. '"All hope
abandon ye who enter here,"' I quoted aloud, just as Jack Skelton came
up to me.

'Ay,' he chuckled, 'it would be a job for a contractor to get a horse
an' man out o' that, an' after that I'll lay odds but the laundry-maid
would give her notice.

'It was a great big, seventeen hands horse he had that he jumped it
with--an ugly devil to look at, light roan in colour, but up to any
weight an' absolutely fearless. All ye had to do, as grandfather used
to say, was to lay t' reins on his neck, and straight across country
he'd go like a bird.

'He hadn't always been such a fierce one to go, hadn't t' Squire, and
what changed his temper was what I was goin' to tell ye.

'There was a woman in it, d'ye see, an' that woman his wife. When
first they was married no couple in broad Yorkshire was happier, as
folk thought. She was a handsome lass and clever at book-larnin' an'
suchlike, ambitious, too, like the clever ones usually are; but at
first she was all for sport an' huntin', same as t'owd Squire, and
where he went she mostly followed him, bein' as well mounted as
himself. As for t'owd Squire, he was t' happiest man alive in those
days--used to slap grandfather on t' back an' cry, after a steaming
run, t' fox's mask in his hand ready to tie on to his missus's saddle,
"By ----, Skelton, but she's the straightest woman rider in England,
whether in or out o' t' shires."

'Yet for all that his happiness was short-lived, for after a son was
born to him Mistress Heron seemed to lose heart for huntin'--her
narves, she said, had gone wrong with her; but grandfather always
upheld that she'd grown tired of her husband. She was a clever woman,
as I said, an' ambitious; an' 'twas reported that she'd been forced to
marry wi' t'owd Squire by her mother in Lunnon town--he bein' as rich
as "Creases"--whilst the man she really favoured hadn't a penny beyond
what his wits might bring him in. For a bit the excitement of huntin'
had been enough for her, an' spendin' t' Squire's brass, t' big house,
an' t' novelty; but after t' son was born she grew dissatisfied an'
took a dislike to her life. Consequence was that she took up with a
young man called Cunliffe, that lived over at The Tower--right away on
that hillside over there, about two miles west of us--ye can see it
against trees from Heronsford easy.

'The place had been bought by his father, who made money in trade at
Ironopolis, an' he'd just got himself elected into Parliament, an' was
like to get on at it, 'twas said, bein' one of them ready-witted,
oily-tongued chaps that never go quite straight, but gallop along t'
roads an' sneak through gates, an' then swagger on at t' kill. Ay,
there's none "who-oops" an' "tally-hos" louder than them.

'T'owd Squire, on t'other hand, was one of t' owd-fashioned sort, and
said what he meant always, an' clapped an oath on t' back of it; hated
Lunnon, an' Lunnon ways, lived for huntin' an' shootin' an' country
pursuits, an' drank a bottle of port wine reg'lar every evenin' to his
own cheek. He wasn't over well educated neither, havin' all his life
lived almost entirely at home; no scholar savin' a vast knowledge of
the stud-book, farriery, an' horse-breedin', which was a sort o'
larnin' that Mistress Heron didn't care a button about. Well, things
went gradually askew between the two, she always wantin' fresh company
in t' house, an' him hatin' society ways like poison.

'Amongst others she took up with was this young Member o' Parliament,
Cunliffe, an' often he would be over an' dinin' with them; he could
sing a bit, an' she was fond of t' piano, an' they would play on
together in t' drawing-room while t' Squire sat over his mahog'ny
passin' t' bottle round, talkin' over t' 'untin', layin' wagers with
his own particular cronies of the red-faced, good-hearted,
rough-tongued, fox-'untin' Yorkshire style.

'Well, t'owd Squire couldn't stomach young Cunliffe at all; for in the
first place he was a poor rider to 'ounds, never jumped owt if he
could help it, was a mean chap with his brass, an' had a supercilious
way o' talk about him that angered t' Squire fearful. Add to this that
he was always comin' over to sweetheart his missus, an' you can
imagine how ill the two men would agree.

'Well, one night they was sitting playin' cards after dinner, an'
Mistress Heron was lookin' on at them. T' Squire was nowt of a
scholar, as I said before, but he had a good head for cards, an' loved
to take t' shekels off young Cunliffe, who hated losin', but was
generally the one who had to pay up.

'It was a game they call Pickit they were playin'; grandfather told
me--for in after days t' Squire let out a good bit of his troubles to
my grandfather, havin' been playmates together, an' grandfather bein'
a god-child o' t'owd Squire's father beside that--an' Cunliffe bein'
flustered had forgot when it came to t' last two cards--there bein' a
ticklish bit at stake--what had been played previously.

'He looked this way and that, then all of a sudden he catches Mistress
Heron's eye, sees something in it that tells him somewhat, claps doon
t' right card an' wins.

'T'owd Squire, he keeps extraordinary quiet, just gives one swift look
round under his eyelids at his wife standin' there above him, an' says
softly, "Ye've a wonderful memory, Mr. Cunliffe," says he, at which
the other gets very red, an' begins to talk of getting home.

'"Mistress Heron and I," says t' Squire, "were talking on this
afternoon about t' private steeplechase we're going to hold shortly in
t' Park here, an' she was all for layin' out t' course for first two
miles straight west till it almost touches Towers gates. 'It will just
take inside of ten minutes from t' Ford,' says she, 'to Towers turn,
and beautiful going all the way over grass with t' big jump an' t'
black beck in t' middle of it.' 'Ay,' says I, 'and that will stop one
or two that I know of--I'll lay a monkey.' 'Not a bit of it,' says
she, 'not a bit; an' I'll take evens with ye that everybody tries it.'

'"Now, as Mistress Heron is going to ask ye to ride one of her
nominations for her at the race, it might be helpful to ye to have a
preliminary trial, an' as t' night is bright as day wi' moonlight,
perhaps ye'd like a ride home to-night across country, an' I'll lay ye
double of what ye've won to-night that ye don't get to your own
gate-ends in, say, twelve minutes from t' Ford's paddock. An' ye can
have your pick o' what's in my stable," adds t' Squire, as he looks
from one to t' other of them, "while Mistress Heron an' I will watch
ye from t' battlements an' take time for ye; or, of course, if ye're
afraid," he adds, as Cunliffe, hemming an' hawing, says something
about "not likin' to take a horse out at that time o' night," an'
dwells heavy on the words, "we can send ye home in the landau, like a
lady," says t' Squire.

'"If Mr. Cunliffe accepts your proposal to ride a horse for me in the
steeplechase," interrupts Mistress Heron scornfully, "that is of
itself sufficient to falsify your insinuation."

'"I shall be only too proud," cries Cunliffe at once, with a bow, "to
ride for Mistress Heron."

'"Ay," says t' Squire, "an' t' night before a message will doubtless
come to say that Mr. Cunliffe has suddenly been called away on
important political business, an' he's much grieved to forego a
pleasure he had been so much looking forward to."

'"You've said quite enough, sir," cries Cunliffe, red an' passionate;
"kindly have your horse saddled--t' light-roan one for choice; for I
take your wager an' will ride your horse home this night."

'T' Squire goes out to t' stable himself, gives his orders, an' in
fifteen minutes' time t' horse is round at t' door.

'"Ye'll be wantin' a switch likely," says t' Squire, as he shows him
downstairs, "an' if ye'll come into t' gun-room here, ye can take your
pick o' crops, or cuttin' whips, or what ye will."

'T' room was dark, an' Cunliffe, he bumps up against a small pail o'
something an' upsets it on his trousers and all over t' floor before
t' Squire gets a candle lighted.

'"Never mind, never mind that," says t' Squire cheerily, "it's just
nowt to matter; it's just for to try my hounds with to-morrow, an'
shouldn't have been there. See, there's t' whip-stand; take your
choice," says he.

'Cunliffe, he takes a cuttin' whip, an' jumps on t' horse without more
ado, an' goes out into t' paddock with t' stud groom, who is to show
him where to start from when t' Squire shouts "off" from the roof of
the house.

'A minute or two later t' Squire shows himself on t' battlements, and
Mistress Heron's there too, to see the sport.

'"Are ye ready?" rings out t' Squire's voice.

'"Yes," comes back t' answer.

'"Then off!" he shouts down and drops t' handkerchief.

'Away he goes at a full gallop straight across t' wide-spreading west
park-land, then draws rein a moment as he approaches t' haha with a
drop of five feet or so, perhaps. Just as he pulls up there comes a
faint "you-yowin'," as of hounds upon a scent, from around t' corner
of t' house.

'"Whatever's that?" cries Mistress Heron quickly, as she catches the
sound of it.

'"Why, it's t' hounds," cries t' Squire, with a stabbing laugh. "I
thowt it might help him t' jump t' black beck an' win his wager to
have t' hounds after him, an' so it will, for there's a bit aniseed
sprinkled on Gamecock's fetlock bandages, an' Cunliffe's stepped into
some himself."

'"'Tis the deed of a savage!" says my lady, and with a proud contempt
of him she steps away from his side as far as t' battlements will
permit.

'Away go t' hounds wi' riotous music hot upon t' scent; on, forrard on
they go, right over t' haha and up and across t' pasture beyond, at t'
end of which, and beside t' beck, Cunliffe was galloping up an' down
trying to find an easier place. It appears he hadn't, in his
excitement, taken notice of t' hounds giving tongue, or looked behind
him, but all of a sudden he perceives it, and halting his horse
stockstill, looks behind him. Then it seemed to flash upon him what's
up, and he forces back t' horse some twenty yards or so--first hounds
racing towards him about hundred yards behind--rams in t' spurs, cuts
him with t' whip, and claps him at it. Gamecock tries it bravely, and
leaping high into the air just lands on t' further bank, but short a
bit, and on t' soft edge, and pecks forward badly on his head, sending
Cunliffe somersaulting over like a shot rabbit.

'"T' bet's won!" shouts the Squire, marking t' horse pick himself up
before his rider and gallop away by himself over t' far field; "t'
damned cockney cannot ride at all."

'"Yes, you've won your bet," replies my lady, gathering her skirts
together and holding them close as she passes him by, "but possibly
you may have lost remembrance that you were born a gentleman," and
with that she proudly turns her back and sweeps away down t' stairs.

'Well, t' hounds couldn't get across t' beck, and t' Squire's first
whip was ready wi' t' horn to fetch them back again; so Cunliffe was
safe enough, but sorely damaged an' bruised, an' 'twas a full week
before he left his house, when straight he goes abroad on foreign
travel.

'Things gradually went on from bad to worse twixt t' Squire and
Mistress Heron after that night's play; she used to lament for Lunnon
an' its fashions, an' on t' last night of all she set t'owd Squire's
blood blazin' by sneerin' at "country yokels" and their drunken ways.

'"Why, damn t' ----!" cries he, quite forgetting himself, and using a
word more suitable to t' kennels than t' drawing-room, "ain't we been
here since King Alfred? An' what can ye want more than that?"

'Swift as fire she answers him, "One might wish that they were
gentlemen," says she, an' cold an' contemptuous she walks past him out
of the drawing-room and up into her own room, where she orders her
maid to pack up for her at once, an' 'tis but an hour later when she
drives away in t' carriage an' never sees t'owd place again.

'Well, they separate by law, an' shortly after, when t' bairn comes to
live with his father, Mistress Heron gets much taken up with one of
those father parsons, famous as a preacher in Lunnon at that time.

'Finally, she goes into a sort of retirement and becomes head of a
sisterhood shortly, which gets to be very famous for its Good
Samaritan sort of deeds.

'Grandfather used to say that whatever she took up she would be sworn
to do better than anybody else. "Fox-'untin' she learnt clever in six
months' time, an' if ye can larn that ye can larn owt," says he.

'As for t'owd Squire, he hunts harder than ever he had done before;
an' nowt, positively nowt, can stop him across country, nor liquor
stagger him, so that many thought he was heartier an' happier than
ever he had been before.

'His son, as he grew up, was a bit trouble to him, certainly, as he
was a wild lad--just like himself, but with a touch of his mother's
pride, so that it was just as well when he went into t' army an' was
sent to t' Indies.

'Well, time sped on, and t'owd Squire's hair was turnin' gray, when
news came that his wife--Sister Eva, as they called her--had died
suddenly in her retreat or convent.

'Up goes t' Squire to Lunnon without a word, an' when the chief
mourners--all of them ladies of t' sisterhood, in their white
dresses--were liftin' up t' coffin ropes to carry it to t' graveside,
an' ancient gentleman, clad in a queer, long, bottle-green tail-coat,
with a high stock and beaver hat on t' back of his head, comes forward
an' quietly takes hold of t' head ropes.

'T' sisters remonstrate with him, and ask him who he is. "Mesdames,"
says he, "I was her unworthy husband," and he doffs his hat as he
speaks, and without another word spoken helps to carry her to her
grave.

''Twas said that they were t' same clothes he had worn on his
wedding-day.

'It would be some months after this that my grandfather was dinin'
with t'owd Squire, after t' opening meet of t' season.

'"Here's to fox-huntin'!" cries he, after t' cloth was removed; an' a
bit later he rises solemnly in his chair, an' he says, "And here's to
a saint in heaven!" an' as he drinks it down grandfather sees a tear
tricklin' on his cheek.

'Little by little he tells him all about t' quarrel and what had
completed it: "And she was right, by G----!" cries t' Squire at the
end of it, "as she always was, though I was too proud to say so then;
and now it's too late, for she's a saint in heaven."

'That was the only time he spoke of her; but for all that, grandfather
said it was clear that he was just broken-hearted, was t' poor owd
Squire, even though five minutes after he was challenging him to ride
for a fiver when 'ounds should find on t' morrow's mornin'.

'T'owd Squire never went better in his life, they said, than he did
that day; but just at t' close of it his horse made a mistake over
some timber, and he came a cropper in a ploughed field, with his horse
on top of him, and had three of his ribs broken.

'It was a baddish fall; but though the doctors pulled him through he
never got the better of it, and was taken away before t' season was
out; and he was glad to go, was poor owd Squire, for he said he
believed she had forgiven him, but he couldn't rest till he knew for
certain.'




AN 'AMMYTOOR' DETECTIVE


'Tell me about that mysterious affair of "Tom the Scholar," and Jack
Jefferson's sudden death, and how you ran him to ground when suspicion
had given up the chase. If all I have heard is true, you ought to have
been at Bow Street, high up in the Criminal Investigation Department.
Tell me,' I said again, 'how you came to play the part of amateur
detective.'

'There was nowt o' the ammytoor aboot it,' retorted 'the Heckler' with
aggressive dignity, 'it was a proper perfessional bit o' wark, an' the
pollis was fine put oot that they hadn't had a hand in it. Wey, there
was Scott, wor pollis; he came to us an' he says, "If ye had only
tell't me about it I could hev made a job on 't," says he, "'stead o'
lettin' him gan an' commit a fellor, d' y' see?"

'"No," says I, "I divvn't see; it was him that done it, an' it was us
as copped him, an' if I hadn't taken it intiv hand, wey, thoo would
have still been usin' long words an' followin' up yor clue like an aad
blind man followin' efter his dog," says I, "for I've no sort o'
notion o' the pollis; they nivvor finds out nowt for themselves, ye
hev elwis ti tell them what it is ye want done, an' then at the finish
gan an' do it yorsel'."

'No, no; the pollis is just what the lawyer chaps call "accessories
efter the fac'"--meanin' they comes up ti ye when aal's ower an' done
wi', like the bairns at the school-sports, each one expectin' a prize.

'Well, as I was sayin', I copped "Tom the Scholar" aal maa lane, an' I
doot whether anyone else could hev done it but me. I had suspected him
a while back, for he was a mistetched[4] chap, ye ken, one o' the sort
that has a bit grudge against everythin', an' vicious same as horses
is sometimes, unforgettin', unforgivin'--just a nasty disagreeable
beggor, ye ken.

'He was a scholar, though--"Tom the Scholar" they called him--an' was
aye busy wi' books, nivvor had his head oot o' them, whether at the
Institute or at aad Mistress Swan's, where he lodged.

'Efter a bit he takes up wi' courtin' Mary Straughan, her who got
married on Jack Jefferson, an' I b'lieve she had a mind for him once,
but not for long, for he frightened her biv his strange ways, an' a
passionate way o' talk he had, an' she gave up walkin' wiv him an'
took up wi' Jack instead--a south-country chap that had come frae
Yorkshire--a big, burly, thick-headed sort o' chap, but tarr'ble
good-natured.

'Well, Tom, he takes it varry badly, an' just before they gets
"called" i' church he tarrifies Mary wi' vague threats as ti what'll
happen if she dares ti wed wi' Jack. Noo, Tom was a "spirritualist,"
ye ken, as weel as a scholar, an' he swears that the spirits forbade
the match, an' would be properly savage if they was disobliged.

'She was a narvious sort, was Mary, an' she tell't Jack ov't, an'
Jack, he says, iv his queer clipp't Yorkshire way o' talk, "T'
spirrits be d----d!" says he; "an' if that softy Tom comes interferin'
'twixt thoo an' me, I'll make him softier than ever," he says, shakin'
a great big hairy fist that looked like a bullock's head.

'Well, they gets theirsel's married wivoot askin' leave either o' the
"spirrits" or o' Tom, an' as nowt happened, an' Jack forbye was
tarr'ble lucky iv his cavils[5] just efter his marriage, even Mary
began ti laugh at the idea o' Tom an' his "spirrits" an' aal.

'They was tarr'ble happy those two, an' I mind well hoo proud and
triumphant-like Jack looked as he slapped us on the back one early
summer mornin' as we went ti the pit on the fore-shift, for I was only
a hewer then, same as himsel', an' not what I is now--checkweighman,
an' half ov a magistrate as well, bein' vice-chairman o' wor lokil
District Council[6]--an' he cries, "Geordie," he says, "Geordie, man,
I's that happy I can scarcely haud myself in. There's nowt I couldn't
do. I could hew as much in one shift as any five men together in two;
I could lepp ower a hoos, I's that cobby. I could challenge wee Bob
Aitchison, t' sprinter, to a quarter-mile, an' lay t' fortnight's
wages that I'd best him too. I could sing, I b'lieve," he says, an'
wiv a solemn voice on him he adds: "Ay, an' I could even put up a bit
prayer--though I's not much ov a Churchman--almost as weel as t'
priest himself. An' I'll tell thoo why. It's because Mary tells me
that there's likely gawin' to be an addition to the fam'ly party
sometime shortly. She's a rare well-bred un, too, is Mary, an' I'll
lay it's twins." "I'll gie ye the best o' luck," says I, "but twins is
tarr'ble expensive, for I've tried 'em," says I. "Man alive!" cries
he, holdin' up his arm--a proper colossyum ov a limb--"look at that.
If that cannot win bread for a dozen o' twins, then a lighted candle
cannot fire gas," says he.

'He was a fine brave man,' continued 'the Heckler' slowly, 'an' I can
see him still standin' on the heapstead, an' I mind hoo pleased he was
that he could hear a lark singin' high i' the air ower heid just as
the sun peeped up before we went doon i' the cage that mornin' for the
last time together--just as full o' life an' vigour he was as thoo is
noo--but for all that it was the last time I saw him alive i' this
world.

'It was the vary next mornin' that he was killed, but I wasn't doon
the pit that day, for I had happened a bit accident the day before
through a shot that went wrang on us, an' I was laid up i' bed for a
week wiv a bandage ower my eyes. I bear the marks yet,' and he pointed
to some small blue punctures, not unlike shot marks, that the
gunpowder had left round about his left eyelid and cheekbone.

'Aal I could hear was that he had been knocked doon biv a runaway
galloway pony that a lad called Harry Nicholson used to drive. Harry,
ye must ken, was a bit weak iv his intellectuals, hevin' been born iv
an ower great hurry like before his bit intellect had had time ti
ripen, through his mother's gettin' a gliff at an accident that had
happened her man doon the pit.

'Well, Harry was a driver, as I said, an' he an' the galloway was
comin' doon an incline wiv a full tub, an' the galloway, hevin'
bolted, dragged the tub off the lines, an' came blindly tearin' along
this side an' that smash up inti Jack as he rounded an awkward corner.
He was fearfu' knocked aboot when he was picked up, they said, his
head bashed in bi the tub's wheels, an' there he lay, dead as mutton.

'The crowner comes doon an' sits on the body, an' the jury bring it in
"Death by mis'dventure" slap off, bein' iv a hurry likelies ti get oot
for their dinners, an' there the whole thing would have ended wiv a
buryin' an' a gettin' up mevvies ov a bit subscription fer his missus
an' the bairn; ay, that's hoo it would have ended up had it not been
for "the Heckler."

'I wasn't allowed oot by the doctor, sae I was just forced to think it
oot aal maa lane--mevvies havin' my eyes blindfolded helped us a bit;
anyways, I lay there quiet i' bed an' found I could think it aal oot
like Gladstone; ay, an' I tell thoo that Gladstone an' Horbert Spencor
together cudn't have thought harder than I did at that period o' time,
nor have pieced the puzzle together bettor than us. It sounds like a
bit brag, mevvies, but it isn't, by Gox! it's just the naked truth.

'Well, there I lay between the sheets wi' my "linin's" on, detarmined
that if there had been any foul play nowt but death should stop us
frae findin' it oot. First thing I does is ti get the wife ti ask
Harry Nicholson in ti tea wiv us, so as ti hear aal aboot hoo it
happened.

'Well, efter he has been well filled oot wi' tea, an' spice loaf, an'
jam an' aal, I gets him ti tell the whole story, an' then I axes him a
few supernumerary questions.

'"Thoo'll ken 'Tom the scholar?'" I axes him--"him that's a stoneman
doon the pit, an' gans in for spiritualism an' sich like for his hobby
an' pastime?" "Ay," he says, "I ken him nicely. Wey, I been at some ov
his 'seeantics,' or whativvor it is he calls them, an' I have the
makin' ov a fine 'meejum,'" he says, "for I can parsonate folks ov aal
kinds, males an' females, wivoot any distinction o' sexes."

'"Ay!" says I, interruptin' him wiv a sort ov admirin' surprise i' my
tone o' voice, "can thoo, noo? Wey, thoo's a clivvor one, that's what
thoo is."

'"Ay," says he, quite enlarged at the thought, "an' there's some folk
says that I isn't quite right i' the head, but they couldn't parsonate
Alexander the Great--him that the sword-dancers sing aboot--like as I
can. Could they, noo?"

'"No," says I, "not they. They're not scholars enough for that, an'
mevvies they would be gliffed at it as weel. Dis thoo nivvor get a
gliff at the spirits?" I axes, careless like.

'"Not while I's parsonating, I divvn't, but whiles when I's doon the
pit I gets a gliff," says he; "it's sae dark an' lonesome i' places."

'"Dis Tom ivvor try to make thoo parsonate doon i' the pit?" I axes
him, "for Tom, bein' stoneman, 'll come across thoo at times drivin'
yor galloway."

'"Ay, I've seen him doon below," he says, "though he nivvor talked on
aboot parsonating, but usuallies passes us by wivoot sayin' nowt, for
Tom's a vary distant sort o' chap, thoo knaas."

'"But sometimes mevvies he would speak wi' thoo when he passed thoo,
an' other folks wasn't aboot? Did he ivvor talk on aboot the spirits
ti thoo at all? That day the galloway ran away, did he speak wi' thoo
that mornin'? Mevvies he did, laddie, an' mevvies he told thoo not ti
speak aboot it lest the spirits wouldn't like it, or some such kind ov
argument," says I, insinuatin' it tiv him like one o' thae lawyer
chaps iv a wig.

'"Ay, he spoke tiv us that mornin', sure enough, sayin' as hoo he
thought the spirits was vexed, for he had heard them callin' i' the
pit itself through the darkness, an' he wanted ti knaa whether I had
heard the voices same as himself or not. Well, I hadn't heard nowt,
nor had nivvor thought aboot spirits bein' doon the pit, but I gets a
bit gliffed myself at that, an' a bit later I ackshally heard them
speakin' aloud--sure an' certain," says he.

'"Did they gliff thoo just before the galloway ran away an' ran ower
poor Jack Jefferson?" says I.

'"Ay," says he, "I got a gliff then, for I heard the spirits' voices
shootin'[7] oot against us."

'"Gox!" says I, "to think o' that, noo! Wey, thoo gies us a gliff an'
aal; an' what dis thoo hear them sayin'?" axes I.

'"'Here's the parsonator,' they shoots out aloud, 'that calls us frae
wor rest. Lepp oot upon him, an' torment him! At him, Annexo!' or some
such ootlandish name,--'at him, spirits aal!'"

'"Sae thoo starts awa' likelies wi' the galloway at a gallop, an'
couldn't get him stopped on the incline?" I axes him.

'"No, no, I was ower flay'd mysel' ti do owt; but the galloway must
have gotten a gliff at something. I mind I thought I saw a flash o'
light just at the moment, an' the galloway he couldn't abide a sudden
light across his eyes, he was that narvious; or mevvies it was the
voice that gliffed him same as it did us; anyways, awa' aff he goes
wivvoot me, an' dashes aff doon the incline wiv us chasin' him an'
shootin', 'Woa, woo-h, Paddie; woo-ah, thoo daftie!'"

'"An' hoo far behind him dis thoo think thoo was when he come to the
corner where he ran inti poor Jack? Did thoo see Jack theesel', or
hear him shoot out as the galloway butted him?"

'"No," says he, "I nivvor seen him, an' I wasn't far behind the
galloway nowther, for as soon as the tub got awa' frae the lines he
couldn't travel vary fast, for it was loaded. Aal I could hear was the
bumpity-bump o' the tub, then smash inti the wall--smash--smash--an' a
crash as the tub swung ower an' dragged the galloway wiv it. I can
mind nae mair nor that, mistor," says he, at the end ov his tale, "for
I fell slap ower Jack Jefferson's body i' the darkness, an' pitchin'
full upon my head was knocked senseless, till they come along an'
picked us up. An' that's the whole story, Mister Carnaby," says he,
"an' I've done wi' the spirits, an' parsonatin', an' aal noo, for
they're treacherous things, there's nae doot aboot it," says he.

'Weel, that was aal I could get oot ov him, sae I gives him some
sweeties an' lets him gan, biddin' him not let on that I'd axed him
any questions, ye ken, an' efter that I lay i' bed thinkin' it aal
ower an' makin' up a plan o' campaign for when "the Heckler" should be
up an' aboot again.

'Efter aboot another three days I was allowed oot by the doctor wiv a
sort o' lampshade ower my eyelids, an' the next day bein' "pay
Saturday," an' the pit idle, I detarmines within my ain mind ti gan
doon maa lane an' hev a look round by myself; for it's no use trustin'
anyone else when ye've got a job o' that calibry iv hand, ye ken.

'I kenned where the trajiddy had taken place, o' course, sae I
detarmines ti gan ti the spot an' make a sarious of obsarvations.
"First place," I says ti myself, "there winnot be much change i' the
surroundin's, for it's a new drift in by there that they are drivin',
wi' 'Tom the Scholar' an' his marrow, an' not many workin'; an',
secondly, it's damp there wi' the salt water oozin' in through the
rock, sae that footmarks will have a good chance ti stand a bit."

'Noo, "Scholar Tom" had a tarr'ble large footprint, ye ken, an' it was
that I was i' search o', for I had my suspicions o' what might have
happened, an' I was convinced that that d----d, mistetched beggor was
at the bottom o' poor Jack Jefferson's sudden endin'--ay, an'
whenivvor I thought o' that fine, brave chap an' his bright face an'
his happiness, I says ti myself, "There'll be no rest nor pleasure nor
nowt for 'the Heckler' till the mystery's discovered; an' it's yor job
ti discover it," I says ti myself.

'He was bound ti have been there, for, o' course, it was him as
shooted out that nonsense at Harry that had gliffed him, an' dootless
it was him that had flashed his davy i' the galloway's eyes.

'Jack, d'ye see, would have been lousin' off frae his wark an' walkin'
doon the drift at that time when the galloway started off; but what
beat me was that Jack couldn't hev got oot o' the way i' time, bein'
fine an' active, grand at hearin' and seein', an' ne fool forbye that.

'Noo, just when I had detarmined upon this i' maa mind a sort ov an
inspiration takes us aal ov a sudden. "Wey divvn't thoo take that
driver lad alang wi' thoo ti show thoo exactly where the trajiddy
happened?" it says tiv us just as thoo it was a real, genu-ine voice
i' my inside. "Sink me!" thinks I, "it's a tarr'ble clivvor idea, an'
sae I will."

'"Has thoo anything else ti add ti that, Inspiration?" I axes it, an'
shortlies efter it says, "Divvn't thoo trust ower much ti what
Nicholson says, nor tell him o' yor plan beforehand, for he's i' Tom's
power, an' tarrified ov him," it says again.

'"Gox!" thinks I, "but this is the champion; wey, I's as good a
spiritualist as Tom himself."

'"There's one last question I must ax thoo," says I, for I hadn't
properly thought beforehand o' the difficulty o' gannin' doon the pit
on "pay-Saturday," an' that is: "Hoo i' the warld can us gan in-bye?
for thoo kens that naebody but the furnace-man, engine-man, an'
horse-keeper gans doon that day, an' if anyone else wanted ti, wey, he
would have ti get leave frae the manager, an' even then he would have
ti have a deputy alang wiv him. Answer us this, Inspiration," says I,
"an' it's a clagger for thoo, I's warned."

'But, mevvies efter two minutes, it whispers back two words, "drift,"
an' "beer."

'"Drift?" I repeats, an' "beer?" An' then aal at onst I sees the
implication, for I kenned the lodge-keeper at the head o' the drift
nicelies, an', what's mair, I kenned what Sammy Cuthbertson, the local
preacher, calls "the joint iv his harness" still better.

'Sae I gans up tiv him quietly, an' I says tiv him, "Geordy," says I,
"hoo much o' the best beer will five bob procure iv an emergency?"

'"Five bob," says he, vary serious, "will buy aal but two gallons o'
the best bitter, an' d---- the emergency," says he.

'"Dis thoo prefer it i' bottles, or iv a greyhen, or iv a pail--an'
aal at onst?" says I.

'"Bottles is no use," says he, "wey, the corks alone will mevvies take
a pint ti theirselves. Na, na, gie it ti me iv a pail for aal-roond
drinkin'."

'"Well," says I, "thoo shall have it iv a pail if thoo'll just let us
an' the lad here gan in doon by the drift for an hour ti investigate a
private matter o' wor ain--just a visit ov inspection. No harm done,
nobody need ken, an' up again within the hour, I'll promise thoo
that," says I.

'Well, his face prolonged itself at that a bit. "But if it was
kenned," says he, "I'd get my notice."

'"Nobody will ken but us three," says I; "an', look thoo, thoo shall
have the pail at yor dinner to-morrow forenoon," says I.

'That did the business for him, I's warn'd, an' he promises ti oot wiv
his key an' let us gan in by. Poor chap, though, he got his notice aal
the same, though it wasn't my blame: it was because he was ower-greedy
an' thought he could get another pailful oot o' somebody else later.

'Well, I says nowt ti Nicholson aboot gannin' doon the pit till the
vary mornin', and then I gans along an' catches ahaud on him, an'
says, "Ho-way,[8] thoo mun come along wiv us doon the pit, for I wants
ti see the place o' the accident myself, an' I hev arranged aboot
gannin' doon," I says. Well, he turns quite white at this, an' whines
an' cries not ti gan; but I was res'lute wiv him, an' tarr'fies him
wiv a hint ov a gaol if he winnot come doon and show us aal I axes
him.

'Well, we went by the drift and straight doon ti the "Number 3,
North," or "Joan" district, as we call it worsels, an' there we gropes
aboot the trolley-way, just at the corner where the accident must have
taken place, an' searched for footmarks.

'The lad, ye ken, must just have started frae the putter's flat wiv a
full tub, an' aboot thirty yards doon he must have been gliffed.
Hereaboots, iv a fenced place, Tom must have waited on Jack's "loosin'
off" frae his wark, an' another ten yards further on is where the
galloway must have run awa' off frae the rails. I had it aal mapped
oot ready i' my mind, an' it was just the details I had ti fit in wiv
it.

'There was mair tramplin' aboot than I had expected, what wi' the
galloway's stumblin', the tub ploughin' alang through the dirt, an'
the footprints o' the search-party that had come up ti the scene o'
the casualty; but for aal that, I could see here an' there the marks
o' Tom's big shoes, wi' the extry broad plates at heel an' toes he
used ti wear.

'Mevvies it wasn't ower much ti see, but it heartened us up, for it
conformed us i' wor opinions, especially the fact that wherever they
was visible they was close in by the wall-side, as if he had been
wishful ti hide himself as far as might be--a sort o' presumptuous
evidence against him, as the lawyers call it.

'"I will have ti gan back ti bed again," I says ti myself, "ti think
it aal oot properly, for though I haven't a doot about it myself, I'll
have ti convince aal thae thick-heads o' judges at my lord's 'Size[9]
before I gets him properly convicted, sae I must have it aal pieced
oot an' put together like a bairn's puzzle-map."

'Well, we was slowly makin' wor way oot o' the passage when I hears
something comin' up-by, creak, creakin' as it came. Weel, I's no
coward, I's warn'd, an' I'll face any man livin' that ye like ti
mention, but I got a fair gliff at that, for I couldn't make oot what
it might mean--Nicholson an' us bein' the only folk aboot doon there.
"Gox, it's Jack's ghost!" think I ti mysel iv a sudden sweat o' fear.
Sae oot at once I turns my davy (lamp), an' the lad's, fearin' lest he
might notice us, an' shrinks back inti the corner o' the wall as small
as could be, with the lad tremblin' aal ower next us. Efter a bit I
sees a wee glimmer o' light shakin' i' the darkness, then a shadow ov
a man behind it, an' slowly, vary slowly, as if seekin' something, it
mounts up the passage towards us.

'"Hist!" says I ti the lad iv a thick whisper, "just smear your face
an' hands ower wi' clarts, or the ghaist will cop us," I says, an'
grabbin' a handful I clarts his face an' hands iv an instant o' time;
then I scrapes up a handful for mysel' an' aal, but i' reachin' oot
for a good fill o' clarts my hands struck up against a sort ov a heavy
bar o' some specie or other.

'I gied a bit haul at it, an' awa it comes up inti my hands--a small,
heavy, but handy bit ov iron it was, mevvies about sixteen inches
long, wiv a sort o' knob at the end o't.

'"I'll have a look at thoo later," says I, an' claps it inti my pocket
wi' the one hand, whiles I clarts my face wi' the other. Meantime the
creakin' thing was drawin' nigher an' nigher tiv us, but the light wiv
it was tarr'ble dim, an' I couldn't have given it a name.

'On came the light an' the shadow, but the creakin' noise had stopped;
'stead o' that there was a squelch, squelch, as ov a man steppin' in
an' oot' o' mud.

'It passed us biv a finger's breadth, an' I almost shouted aloud by
way o' relief, for it was a real live flesh-an'-blood man, wiv a
fouled davy, an' no ghost--for ghosts canna spit, I's warn'd.

'"D---- thoo!" I was just aboot ti shoot at him, comin' flayin' folk
i' that fashion. "Who is thoo, thoo ----" when he stops short on a
sudden, just round the corner above us, an' talks tiv himself oot
loud. "Ay, it'll be just aboot here," he muttered, "that it fell," and
I could have let flee a yell o' delight that would have brought a fall
o' stone doon, for it was no other voice than "Tom the Scholar's"
himsel'.

'"Thoo b----!" I says ti mysel', an' clenches my fist tight; "thoo
b----! but I's copped thoo noo."

'"Tell ti me noo, Annexo," continues Tom, usin' the same furrin' sort
o' talk as he had ti the lad; "tell ti me noo where it lies--the
weapon that freed my destined bride frae unlawful arms. I mun hev it
back, for there's a d----d chap i' wor village that they call 'the
Heckler,'" he gans on, the impittent scoondrel that he was, "a daft
feller that's mad aboot dogs an' sic' like nonsense, but he has his
suspicions, an' mevvies might be dangerous, for he has been
questionin' my meejum, Nicholson, the driver lad. Speak then, Annexo,
speak, my beauty. Where lies my trusty weapon? Speak louder," says he
again, impatient like, "for I canna hear i' the darkness."

'Just on that instant I gets another inspiration i' my insides, an'
wivvoot mair ado I whispers oot loud iv a fine, feminine, and
superfluous voice: "Search ti the right hand a bit lower doon, canny
man," says I, "an' thoo'll find what thoo is wantin'," an' I held oot
my hand ready ti grasp his wi' when he stretched it oot.

'"Aha!" says he, quite gratified like, "sae thoo has found a voice,
has thoo?"

'It was nigh pitch darkness about us, for his davy had almost gane
clean oot wi' the clogged wick, but I could feel his hands gropin'
towards us, an' I says ti mysel', "Another foot, an' a murderer's
copped!"

'His hands came hoverin' ower mine, for I could feel the wind o' them;
in another second he touches us, an', grabbin' ahaud ov him by way o'
reply, I shouts oot, "Ay, here's Annex-us, thoo b----!"

'The yell he let oot was fearfu', an', startin' back, he dragged his
arm oot o' my grasp, an' then leaped forward iv a flash, ducked past
us, an' awa off round the corner he fled, us efter him like the aad
bitch[10] efter a started hare.

'He had dropped his lamp, an' it was darker nor Hell itself, but I
could hear him dashin' along i' front ov us at wondrous speed. Mad
keen I was, as I tore efter him ower bits o' balk an' stone lyin'
aboot doon the rolley-way, bended double sae as ti avoid the
roof-beams. Bang up against a door I comes, shakin' mysel' intiv a
jelly by the shock, but when I had it opened an' was through I could
still catch the sound ov his footfalls not far in front ov us. "He'll
have come a big bat hissel' against the door," I thinks ti mysel' as I
started off again, "ay, an' bein' before us he'll have aal the
obstacles ti contend wi' first ov aal. Huzza, ho-way!" an' I tore
efter him, a fair deevil for recklessness--makin' no doot he was for
the main rolleyway, an' sae oot by the main drift by which we had
entered the pit.

'There came the thud ov another door, an' I gans a bit mair cautious
like, fendin' wi' my hands i' front ov us. Shortlies efter I notices
that the footfalls sounded fainter-like; they seemed ti be comin' frae
the left-hand side noo an' not i' front ov us.

'Aal ov a sudden I minds mysel' ov a return air-way that would lead
oot by the main drift. "Gox!" I thinks, "thoo's hit the mark, but
where the openin' is I cannot mind, for it isn't travelled biv any one
barrin' the deputies. He passed the door i' front ov us, but bi the
sound he's ti the left hand ov us noo;" sae I felt along the wall till
I comes tiv an open way. "Ho-way," says I, mad ti think he might
escape us efter aal, "ho-way, thoo'll get him yet!"

'On, on I went at a reckless speed, ti make up for my bad turn, an' iv
another minute I gied tongue like a foxhound, for I heard him pat,
pattin' on i' front ov us. "I's copped thoo!" I yelled through the
darkness tiv him, ti tarr'fy him, for I heard him stumblin' amangst
some loose props or gear o' some sort quite plainly, "I's copped the
murderer!"

'Foot upon foot I gains on him; I hears him pantin' just a yard or two
i' front ov us. I grasps oot wi' my hands an' touches his shoulder,
an' he yells wi' terror, givin' a leap like a hare, an' slips frae
under my hands.

'Doon, full length, doon I fell wiv a smash like a fall o' stone, half
stunned, my head like a night o' stars.

'Suddenly there comes a yell o' horror--then a thud, a clump, clump,
an' a c-clush, an' then stark silence, an' doon, right doon at the
bottom ov a staple fifteen fathoms deep ten yards i' front ov us lay
aal that was left o' the murderer copped, clean copped, by "the
Heckler."'


FOOTNOTES:

[4] 'Mistetched' = spoiled; of ill habits. _Cf._ Chaucer's 'tetch,' a
spot.

[5] 'Cavil' = the quarterly ballot amongst coal-hewers for their
places down the pit. Seams differ greatly in quality and depth of
coal, and in ease of working. This is the miners' own rough-and-ready
method of adjusting the inequalities.

[6] The chairman of a local District Council is _ex-officio_ a
magistrate.

[7] 'Shootin'' (shouting). 'Shuttin',' on the other hand, would mean
shooting, whereby quaint confusions have occasionally arisen.

[8] Come along.

[9] The Assizes.

[10] Viz., Bonnie Bella, a famous greyhound of 'the Heckler's.'




'IN MEMORIOV'M'


'Ay, that's what 'tis,' replied 'the Heckler' to my query, 'it's an
"in memoriov'm"--Latin, ye ken, meanin' in memory ov him. The words is
alike, mevvies, but it's Latin language, I's warn'd, an' I howked it
oot upon that headstone myself wiv a clasp-knife.'

I knelt down upon the sandy dune and brushed aside the bents that
nearly covered the squat gray stone with their long lashes, and
eventually deciphered a straggling array of figures which for their
illegibility would have enraptured an antiquary.

'It was just below us,' continued 'the Heckler,' 'that I found his
cap, an' thinkin' him drooned, an' him bein' a favour-yte wi' me, I
just put up that bit stone for him an' carved his initials on it, an'
the Latin, an' G. C., that's for us, "the Heckler," ye ken, his mark.
But it was a false alarm efter aal, an' noo that Jim Hedley's a Right
Hon. Lord Mayor oot iv Australie, I's warn'd but when he's put under
the sod he'll hev a hearse an' four horses an' a proper musulyum'
(mausoleum) 'tiv hisself.'

'What made you think he was drowned?' I inquired. 'Did you think it a
case of suicide?'

'Ay, o' course I did; we aal did that, an' not wivvoot reasons,'
responded 'the Heckler,' 'for he was full o' misery at that time, an'
wanted ti get shot o' the whole lot ov it. Jim was a fine, tall,
proper lad--"bonny Jim" the lasses called him--wunnerfu' handy, too,
iv aal sorts of ways, an' as for behaviour, wey, he could talk ti my
lord as canny as tiv a pot-boy.

'Well, wiv aal these gifts o' fortune it wasn't surprisin' he got
hisself sweetheartin' wiv a young, bonny, quiet-faced lassie, daughter
ov aad Sheepshanks, the farmer, close in by the village.

'It was a bit lift for Jim, for she had some brass, but aad
Sheepshanks, he tries to forbid the "callins"' (banns) 'i' church;
"for what's a pitman," says he, "that a farmer's daughter should marry
on?--a dirty-faced, drunken, dog-lovin', gamblin' chep," says he; an'
a lot o' gob o' that kind, ye ken, bein' a red-hot Tory wiv a lot o'
Noah's-ark kind ov ideas iv his head.

'The lassie didn't think that, though; she just warshipped Jim,
followin' him aboot wiv her eyes everywhere, just like the aad bitch'
(here he nodded towards the greyhound beside him) 'does "the Heckler."

'Well, they marries an' has a bit fam'ly, an' Jim gans ahead quick; he
was marrow' (mate) 'wi' me as a hewer yence, an' then he becomes a
deputy, an' bein' a great reader an' a gran' speaker, there was some
talk o' makin' him wor Member o' Parlyment when he got a bit older.
Well, it had aal been plain sailin' for Jim so far, an' everybody
thought his success was sartin, but he soon came tarr'ble nigh makin'
a tragedy ov hisself, poor chap.

'There was a young widow woman came ti live doon here at the Prospect
House ower there. She'd been married on a fat old chap that had made a
lot o' brass i' the toon i' publics, an' they used to come here for a
bit i' the summer, an' when he died she comes doon ti the "Prospect"
ti bide for good an' aal.

'I sometimes think,' continued my companion after a slight pause,
'that it's a sair pity folks isn't sometimes drooned like kittens or
"put under" same as dogs that turn oot no use. It wud save a lot o'
misfortunes an' misery, I's warn'd, an' unless ye drooned a Gladstone,
or a John Wesley, or mevvies even a "Heckler," the world would be aal
the better o't.

'Anyways, she should have been drooned slap off as a babby, for she
was a rank bad un--just rank bad ti the bone--an' when a woman is bad,
she's just the devil's own viewer[11] or deputy, by Gox!

'She had been on the stage, 'twas said, at one time, an' there was
queer stories aboot her, so that the gentry-folk aboot here would have
nowt ti do wiv her, sae she had aal the better opportunity ti play her
tricks wi' Jim.

'She was free wi' the brass, ye ken, an' give subscriptions awa for
the askin', providin' she had her name an' address clagged up large on
the play-bills, an' was a champion at gettin' up concerts for wor
Mechanic Institute an' such-like entertainments.

'That was hoo she first got a hand upon Jim, for he had a gran'
voice--a perfect champion at harmony he was, an' she just buttered him
up properly. It was "Oh, Mr. Hedley, an' what a fortin ye would have
made in the Opera!" "Sing it again, Mr. Hedley, it's fair ravishin',"
an' so she carried on till she had him awa to practise duetties wiv
her at her hoos, an' made him stay ti supper wi' glasses o' wine tiv
it--yellow shampain wine that'll set your brain iv a froth, I b'lieve,
an' at the finish she has him just drugged wiv her enchantments.

'There was one night I mind I was oot walkin' an' chanst ti pass by
alang that road there that leads past the hoos--the trees wasn't grown
up then, ye ken, an' I could spy a bit in through the windie, which
was open on the night--it bein' summer then, d'ye see.

'She was settin' beside the pianner playin' pretence wiv it, an'
castin' up white eye-glances at Jim soft-like, noo an' again, with a
sort ov insolence, too, as though she kenned her power ower
him--drawin' oot the very marrow an' soul ov him wiv her perfections.

'She was aal clad i' silks an' satins, like a play-actress--her bosom
gleamin' wi' jools, an' Jim was leanin' against the pianner gazin' at
her, fair drunk wiv her blandishments.

'I cuddn't stand by an' just do nowt ava, sae I let fly a yell upon
the night, "Ho-way home ti thy own lawfu' missus, an' leave that
d----d hussy alone."

'He gave a sudden start at that, an' leaps round ti the windie, claps
it ti wiv a smash, an' pulls the curtains ower it.

'Well, I kenned then by that token that it was aal ower wi' Jim. She
had him fast, an' nowt could be done, for interferin' i' them cases is
warse than useless; but I was sair, sair grieved for him an' his wee
quiet bonny-faced wife, an' I walked awa home callin' that woman aal
things I could lay my tongue ti under heaven.

'Things went gradually from warse ti warse; he neglected his work an'
avoided his wife, an' he became tarr'ble violent iv his temper, an'
nigh offered ti fight me yence when I tried ti argy wiv him upon his
foolishness. Well, the crissis comes one night when his wife follows
him ti the Prospect Hoos an' walks straight inti the drorin'-room
where him an' the other woman was. He'd just been threatened by the
viewer, d'ye see, wi' gettin' his notice if he didn't pull hisself
tegither, an' knawin' things were aaltegither wrang wiv him, he just
gans slap off ti the woman oot o' pure recklessness, for he was none
o' yo'r half an' half gentlemen, an' as he was gannin' ti the deevil,
wey, he wud gan wiv a brass band, ye ken.

'His wife comes in upon them like a ghost, an' never heedin' the other
woman, cries tiv him, haudin' oot her arms for him, "Oh, come back,
Jim, come back; divvn't break my heart!"

'Jim says nowt, but glares moodily on the ground, an' there's silence
for a bit. Then the woman begins ti laugh saftly tiv herself, eyein'
Jim's missus scornfu' like frae top ti toe standin' there, small an'
shabby-dressed an' tearfu', an', "Wey doesn't thoo gan?" says she,
"here's yo'r hooskeeper come ti fetch thoo home!" she says.

'Jim gies a start at this an' looks up wi' blazing eyes at his
temptress, then he says tiv his wife, "Gan home, Mary, gan home; this
is no a fit place for thoo," an' sae she gans awa softly, weepin' like
a desolate bairn.

'Soon as the door shuts he turns upon the other woman, an' he says
sternly, "This is the end o't, Susan; I'm gannin' awa' an' ye'll never
see me mair. You've plenty brass, an' can fend for yo'rself. I've
given thoo my life, an' I can do nae mair; sae good-bye, my lass, for
ever an' aye."

'But she rushes tiv him, an' clasps her arms roond aboot his neck an'
sweethearts him an' swears they must get married; but Jim, he puts her
quietly awa', an' wiv a stone-set face gans oot o' the hoos an'
straight for the shore.

'Tossin' his cap on ti the ground, he walks right inti the waters an'
begins swimmin' oot, right oot inti the sea, there ti droon hissel'
an' his troubles straight awa.

'Well, mevvies he was ower strong ti be easy ti droon; mevvies the
cold water cleared his mind a bit, an' he thought shame on hissel' ti
leave wife an' bairns ti shift for theirsels; anyhoo, as he said
efter, when he saw the red light of a little schooner ridin' waitin'
for the tide off the harbour, a thought cam intiv his brain, "Wey not
gan right awa an' make a fresh start iv a fresh place?"

'The thought grows on him, an' he swims oot ti the schooner just as
she was standin' awa for London town, an' he hails her an' is taken on
board i' the nick o' time. Another minute an' she would have been oot
o' sight an' hearin', an' Jim would have been a corpse in another ten
minutes, I's warn'd.

'Well, nowt is heard ov him for months an' months. "The Heckler"
carves an "In memoriov'm" on that headstone; his missus gans inti
"blacks," an' the other woman leaves the Prospect Hoos an' gans right
awa from these parts.

'One day though, Jim's missus comes alang tiv us cryin' an' laughin'
aal at yence, haudin' up a letter and kissin' it between whiles. "It's
from Jim! Jim!" she cries, "an' Jim, sweet Jim, he kept hissel' alive
for me an' Jackie an' Sal! Oh, he loves me yet, my Jim!"

'Well, it seems as hoo he had gan oot tiv Australia, an' efter a bit
wanderin' had gettened hisself a very canny sitivation at a gold mine,
an' he sends aff at yence for his missus an' bairns, an' a week later
awa they starts.

'They finds Jim doin' first-class when they gets there, an' he went
ahead like a hoos-o'-fire as soon as he gets his missus an' bairns
back tiv hissel', an' the past wiv its clartiness was just clean wiped
out between them.

'An' noo he's the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor o' Ballarat, or some
such place, an' cannot mak' enough ov his missus and bairns, they say.

'There's some women mevvies,' added 'the Heckler' in conclusion, 'who
wouldn't have pardoned their man, but she was one o' the sort that are
just faithfu' ti death--nowt can tarr'fy them aff, an' it's fair
providential that it should be so, for there's many men noo livin' who
wud just have been iv hell lang syne else.'


FOOTNOTE:

[11] Manager.




'THE HECKLER' UPON WOMENFOLK


'Men are kittle cattle enough,' replied 'the Heckler' oracularly, from
his position of vantage on the top of a gate, to some question of mine
concerning an indignation meeting held recently to protest against
some matter about which no two people could give a like account; 'but
they're nowt ti what womenfolk is. Ye can get roond most men easy
enough if ye've a bit tax.'

'Tax?' I queried aloud, somewhat mystified. 'What tax? not rates an'
tax----'

'Gan on wi' thoo--rates an' taxes be d----!' retorted the oracle
swiftly. 'No, nowt ti do wi' them things; just tax, or tacts, mevvies
it is, meanin' a pleasant way wi' ye, a bit touch o' the cap when the
manager's vext wi' ye, a turn o' management when a drunken man wants
ti fight ye for nowt at aal, ye ken, an' sae forth. Wow, but ye can
fettle most things amangst men wiv a little o' that social lubricant,
but wi' women it's different aaltigether; tax is nae use wi' them;
it's just throwin' pearls before swine.'

'Holloa!' I interrupted again. 'What would the missus say to that?'

'Not hevin' heard it, she'll say nowt,' retorted 'the Heckler'
severely.

'Well, as I was aboot to say when thoo forgot theeself, and disturbed
the meetin' wi' yor interruptions, most men has foibles--some's
dog-men like myself, some's book-men, some's gard'ners, some's
beer-barrils, an' sae forth, an' if ye mind this ye can get what ye
want usuallies oot o' them. But women's a different breed aaltigether.
They divvn't care for the same things as men, an' ye cannet get roond
them, I's warn'd, for they elwis gets roond ye instead. A man has no
ambitions till he's married, Maistor John. Mevvies he's keen aboot
this, an' that, an' 'tother thing, but that's nowt. Noo, woman's just
chockfull ov ambitions aal her life long, an's nivvor, no, nivvor,
satisfied from her cradle tiv her grave, an' even then she's wantin'
fower horses tiv her hearse. Tak' a wee girlie for an instance: she's
elwis wantin' new claes; then she's wantin' a man, then bairns, then a
hoos ov her own, then a better cloak than Mariarann nex' door; an'
when she gets them aal she's not satisfied, not one little bit, but's
warse than ivvor.

'Noo I'll gie ye an instance o't.

'Ye'll dootless mind havin' seen or heard tell ov Tom Archbold, yence
fore overman here i' the aad pit, a great, big, buirdly man, champion
hewer o' the colliery at one time, who aye took the lead i' the
village at every bit sport, an' carry-on, an' jollification that might
be gannin' on at any time.

'Well, there was a little wee bit lassie ov aboot twenty-five years ov
age, who had been married yence, but had lost her man iv an accident
doon the pit--a fall o' stone, ye ken--an' nae sooner has she buried
him than she's on the look-oot for anither mate.

'Well, bein' the littlest woman i' the village, she natorally--such
bein' woman's human nature--tak's a fancy for the biggest man iv it,
meanin' Tom Archbold, an' she gans for him straight awa.

'Ye'll hev seen a setter dog workin' for a partridge or a rabbit iv a
rough grass field, mevvies. Weel, it was just the same method o'
procedure wiv her. She gets a scent o' what she was wantin'; she draws
upon him up wind; then she gets a tip-toe, steals tiv him till her
breath's fair upon him, an' the man's done--fair done--clean copped,
and it's "for better an' warse till death do us part."

'So it was wi' Lizzie an' Tom.

'Tom was a weeda (widower), an' on the look-out for anither missus,
an' havin' had a great big woman for his first--a proper marrow ov
himself i' size an' shape--an' not havin' been ower well satisfied wiv
his venture, he thinks he'll try a smaller article for his second
lott'ry.

'Well, Tom was elwis very free an' open wiv his conversation, an'
mevvies Lizzie, she gets ti hear ov it; but she pretends ti tak' no
notice o' Tom when she passes along the Raa,[12] or meets Tom i' the
street. She just sails past him, noo wiv head i' the air, again wiv
her eyes upon the ground, mournfu' like for the loss of her man, an'
Tom becomes quite bewitched by her manners, for she was a fair
contrast wiv Bella, who had ti tarrify him wiv a summons from the
pollis at the finish before she could get him ti marry her i' chorch.

'Well, she bags him clivvor at the finish, an' they gets theyselves
married wivoot more ado.

'A week efter comes "pay-Friday,"[13] an', natorally, quite apart from
the "celebration of his nuptials," as the newspaper cheps say, he gets
hissel' as boosy as can be, what wi' standin' treat, an' bein' treat
an' aal, an' efter closin' time it was wi' some difficulty that me an'
my marrer gets him along home.

'We knocks on the door, an' we assists him in, an' he staggers up tiv
his missus, who was sittin' iv her armchair knittin', an' tries ti gie
her a bit chuck under the chin. "Ho--way----," he stutters, "Lizzie,
maa lass, an' put us ti bed!" an' stoopin' down iv a staggerin' way ti
kiss her loses his balance, an' flops doon unexpected on the floor.
"Ye needn't wait," Lizzie says tiv us, haughty-like, takin' no notice
o' Tom, an' sae oot we gans, an' leaves them. But we just stops a
minute ootside ti hear Lizzie gie him his gruel; an', wow! but she let
him have it, an' no mistake! "Thoo great flamin' drunken lubbert!"
says she, "comin' home ti my hoos at this time o' night, drunk as a
lord, an' only been married a week!" she cries. "Thoo mun just get
used wiv it, maa lass," says he solemnly from the floor; "for aa elwis
gets drunk reg'lor on a pay-Friday; an' it'sh maa hoos thoo ----, for
aa's maistor," he says, thinkin', mevvies, he mun assert hissel' even
if he has had his gills.

'"Put thoo ti bed?" cries she. "Wey, I'll not touch thoo, nor let thoo
touch me nowther till thoo's sober again, an's begged maa pardon."

'"Pardon-sh?" says Tom, an' laughs, fair amused by her impittence.
"Wey, if maa legs wesn't sae wambly the night, I'd larn thoo a lesson,
thoo ----"

'"Get up, an' try, thoo sponge o' beer," she says, an' snaps her
fingers iv his face. "Get up, an' try," cries she again. "I daur thoo
ti;" an' she actually has the impittence ti stir him wiv her foot.
Just fancy that! A yard an' a half o' petticoat, fair insultin' upon a
proper mountain ov a man like Tom! The door was a bit open, d'ye see,
an' my marrer an' me could see them two comics quite plain.

'Well, Tom, he thinks things is comin' tiv a pretty pass if his missis
is gannin' ti clean her boots on him efter a week's marryin'; so, much
against his will, he pulls hissel' tegither, an' by the help o' the
bedpost gets on his feet.

'"Wey," cries Lizzie again, lookin' him ower mair scornfu' than ever,
"thoo's as unsteady on thy feet as a horse wi' the staggers!" she
says. "I could knock thoo doon wi' one finger!"

'"I bet-sh a sovereign thoo cannet; ay, an' anither that I'll drive
yo'r lugs reet intiv yo'r heid wi' one bat o' my fist," says he; an'
he puffs hissel' oot as he searches for the coin, an' spits on his
hands iv a preliminary sort o' way.

'Then, sudden, she comes up tiv him, gies him a tap wiv her
forefinger, unexpected like, straight on the breast, an' Tom, taken
unawares, lurches backward, catches his foot iv a bracket, crashes
intiv a chair, an' falls wiv a tarr'ble thump an' a racket of
furniture straight on ti the flaggin'. He gies a little lift ov his
head as he looks up in a dazed way for a moment from the floor. Then
he says, sinkin' back again, "There's been a fall o' stone; gan an'
fetch the depity," he says, then sort o' dwams (swoons) awa.

'Lizzie, she looks him ower for awhile, cool as a policeman wiv a
lantern, then lifts a pillow off the bed, an' puts it under his head
as he lies stretched upon the floor. Next, she takes the boots off her
man, an' sae leaves him ti bide where he lies, whilst she gans ti bed
her lane.

'Next mornin' Tom feels hissel' as sick as a bad bat o' the head an' a
wambly stomach can make a man, an' "lies in" while his missus gies him
warm things ti drink, an' tends him like a bairn.

'Well, she has him properly caught, for he has ti lie there idle the
best part ov a week, an' cannet work for another week efter that, the
skelp he'd got frae the fall bein' a serious affair, as it seemed.

'When he gets up again he was sae savage at the chaff he gets aboot
bein' knocked doon biv his missus that he gans back tiv his hoos iv a
hurry, tak's off his belt, an' is gannin' ti strap her within an inch
ov her life, when she says, "Tom, an' who was it that's been nursin'
thoo this last fortnight?" An' she axes it quietly, facin' him wivoot
a tremor, her eyes fixed upon his.

'Tom stands there wiv his arm uplifted; but though he was hot ti
strike her, somehoo or ither, as he said efter, he was fair bested if
he could manage it.

'Well, that was aboot the beginnin' an' the end o't, for she'd
conquered him properly, an' Mister Six-Foot-Two soon found oot he'd
got a proper taskmaster for his missus, even though she was but a yard
an' a half high, an' looked as though ye could have snapt her across
yor arm. She didn't knock him doon again, but she was elwis surprisin'
him inti startin' things, an' when he tired ov it she would scorn him a
bit, an' ask, "An' what's the good o' bein' a strong man if ye cannet
show yor strength? Any fool can get drunk," says she, "an' lose his
brass bettin'; but thoo's a strong man, Tom, I's warn'd, an' I've bet
Ned Lee's wife a dollar that thoo can walk past the Pitman's Arms on
pay-Friday night wivvoot ever lookin' inside!"

'Well, that was the way o't i' Lizzie's case. She soon had her
Samson's locks clipped short, an' iv a few years' time he becomes a
depity, a back overman, an' finally fore overman, has a hoos ov his
own, an' a whole raa (row) o' cottages.

'Some has different ways from others,' reflected my companion,
further, 'but aal womenfolk's ambitious.'

'Noo, tak' my own case--"the Heckler's"--when I got married on the aad
lady there was no nonsense aboot the business. "Ho-way," I says, "will
ye tak' us, Betty?" for I kenned nicely beforehand she was the right
sort for us, havin' obsarved her previous, an' walked oot wiv her a
Sunday night or two. "Ay, an' I will, Geordie," she says thankfully,
an' as meek as skim milk; but for aal that I've been got the best o'
lots o' time biv her ambition, an' noo, here I is, wiv a fam'ly o'
seven, an' the missus insistin' upon Harry's--that's the eldest boy,
ye ken--gannin' ti the Grammar School ti parfect hissel' as a scholar.
Ay, wor Harry's a proper scholar, I's warn'd, but schoolin's tarr'ble
expensive.

'An' noo, I'll just gie ye this bit advice, Maistor John. Divvn't thoo
get married unless thoo marries a heiress, for, I tell thoo, aal
women's ambitious, an' ambition's a tarr'ble expensive hobby.

'Gox! yes, just fearful, Maistor John.'


FOOTNOTES:

[12] Row.

[13] Pitmen are paid fortnightly on the Friday: the following day is
'pay-Saturday.' Non-pay-Saturday is known as 'baff-Saturday,' the
derivation of which no man knows to this day.




THE 'CALEB JAY'

(THE 'QUEL OBJÊT')


I.

The 'Caleb Jay'[14] was not, as his nickname of itself might testify,
popular in our pit village of Black Winning. His appearance was
against him in the first instance, and he continued to be shy and
reserved even after you might be said to have made his acquaintance.
Reserve is unpopular in any society, but in the lower social grades,
where life is of a freer and more hearty character than in the
propriety-loving circles of the well-to-do, it may be said to be one
of the 'seven deadly sins.'

There was no reserve about Tom, his elder brother, who was a
good-looking, idle, somewhat dissolute youth of twenty-three years of
age.

Tom was always ready to 'stand in' for a 'ha'penny loo,' never
flinched from a 'bout at the beer,' could throw a quoit well, when his
eye was clear and his hand steady, and was never at a loss with the
lasses.

Tom, therefore, was a general favourite, being 'well ta'en up wi'' by
all save a few of the more serious-minded people; and 'Caleb Jay'
suffered, I think, partly through contrast with his brother.

'Caleb Jay' had been injured when working as a putter down the pit,
and consequently was 'game of one leg.' He wore the cast-off finery of
his brother, the coloured scarves and embroidered waistcoats of his
festive occasions--out of economy, no doubt, but some said 'oot o'
foolishness.'

Certainly they did not suit well with his sallow complexion and thin,
peaked countenance, and with the big and weary eyes.

He worked now at any odd job he could find. He had the care of the
viewer's strip of kitchen garden, and went round with papers, etc.;
but it was not much that he earned, apparently, for his mother, who
doted on her handsome son Tom, was often heard to complain that he
wasn't worth his keep.

He had a strange way of mysteriously disappearing for some days on
occasion, sometimes even for a week at a stretch, and sundry persons,
annoyed perhaps by his reticence, hinted at secret dissipation.

If closely questioned, he would admit having had a 'job i' the toon,'
or 'ower away yonder,' pointing vaguely this way or that; and gossip
had at least this confirmation for its uncharitable suspicion, that he
always returned pale, tired and haggard-looking.

Some of the boys had tried to 'nab' him either coming or going on one
of these expeditions of his, but he was 'cuter nor a cushat'[15] as I
overheard a sporting youth lament who had followed him in early
morning all the way to Oldcastle, and there in the suburbs had
suddenly lost him just on the brink of discovering the secret.

Gradually we became accustomed to his flittings, and he was spied upon
no more; but for my own part I thought I had, by a comparison of the
times and seasons of his absences, at least discovered this much--that
he was usually away at the incidence of fairs and festivals.

I think I knew him more intimately than any other person in the
village, except, perhaps, our Methodist minister, who never rested
till he had succoured any who might be in 'sickness, sorrow, or
distress'; but to neither of us, I found, on comparing notes, had he
ever vouchsafed any confidences.

The only way in which I eventually discovered I could be of any use to
him was by lending him books. He was extremely fond of reading, and
had a special taste for dramatic poetry, which he occasionally
gratified by coming to my lodgings, and there devouring the historical
plays and tragedies of Shakespeare.

I had once or twice on these occasions endeavoured to extort from him
the secret of his absences, but the only result had been an increased
reserve on his part, followed by an almost immediate departure from my
presence, so that I had soon desisted from further questioning him on
the point.

At the same time, I confess I entertained a lingering hope that I
might one day be able to penetrate the mystery; for mystery of some
sort I was convinced it was, though not of a vulgar kind.


II.

It so chanced that I was detained in Bridgeton on the day of the
annual fair and hiring, and having two hours to wait for my train, I
determined to pass the time away by noting the humours of the
festival. Farmers' wives, laden with 'remnants' and cheap bargains in
the hardware line, were slowly surging through the throng, towards the
various publics, in search of their 'men' and the 'trap.' Hinds, male
and female, having now 'bound their bargains' with their masters, were
coasting round the booths and stalls, 'putting in' at all the
ale-houses they passed in their uncertain voyaging.

The men were somewhat sheepish still, not having taken sufficient beer
on board as yet to lose the shyness of the countryman in town. They
confined themselves to chaffing one another, to casting stray glances
at their sweethearts, who tittered in their wake, and to offering,
when moved to gallantry, 'anuther glass o' yel.'

A squad of pitmen here and there, their customary rivalries heated
with liquor, were challenging each other noisily at the various
'try-your-strengths' and 'prove-your-powers' that were anchored in the
corners of the market-place.

My attention was next attracted by the clash of cymbals and flamboyant
drum-drubbings. ''Ere y'are, ladies and gents, 'ere y'are! Yo'r friend
an' acquaintance Bob Stevens, wiv his high-class dancin', trapezin',
Shakespearian an' variety entertainment!'

The great flaring gas-brackets, with their smoky tongues stabbing the
darkness fitfully, lit up a most delectable advertisement. I produced
'tuppence,' 'walked up,' as invited, to the tent, and found myself in
the 'hall of amusement and instruction combined.' It was already
crowded, but I eventually discovered a seat in the far corner.

Cries of 'Back! back!'[16] were still ringing in the air, and after a
moment or two a most cadaverous-looking clown reappeared and advanced
to the footlights.

His haggard, melancholy mien was in admirable artistic contrast to his
garb and the burlesque humour of his song. '_And oh_,' sang he, at the
end of each verse relating some contretemps of the bashful lover, '_it
makes me very, very lively! Very, very lively!_' he repeated, as he
step-danced up and down the tiny stage amidst the guffaws of his
audience.

It was no great thing to do, perhaps; but it was admirably done. There
was no extravagance in his accompanying actions, nor exaggeration of
emphasis anywhere. In short, there was something of the genuine artist
in him, and it was evident that he held his quaintly assorted
'tuppeny' audience in his grasp.

I grew strangely interested in the queer little figure before me.
Something about him appealed strongly to the imagination.

He was encored again, and as I watched him more narrowly his aspect
became more and more pathetic. I grew convinced that he was suffering
physical pain; the blot of vermilion on his nose glowed brighter;
beneath his mask of white I could see ashen-coloured lines streaking a
colourless face.

'Poor little chap,' thought I; 'he's starving!'

Just at that moment he concluded at the 'wings,' bowing to the
audience. His linen blouse blew open as he turned, and below a ragged
shirt thus momentarily visible I saw that which made me suddenly feel
sick. Before I recovered myself he had passed out on a step, humming
his refrain, '_Oh, it makes me very, very lively!_'

Now, what I saw was a tumour which could only mean one thing, and that
was death--an early and painful death probably. 'He's not starving,' I
muttered to myself; 'poor little chap, he's dying!'

I thought I would go out into the fresh air, but as I prepared to rise
my eye caught sight of a chink in the canvas through which the 'green
room' was visible.

The trapeze gentleman was now performing, and the clown was removing
his 'make up.' Now that he was off the stage I could see that he had a
limp. A gust of wind came suddenly, enlarging the opening. He turned,
apparently to close the orifice; his eyes met mine, and in that
startled second I knew him to be the 'Caleb Jay.'

Repressing a cry of surprise, I came out, and went round to the back
to wait for him.


III.

'Now, tell me,' said I, as I led him up to the station, 'why do you do
it? You know you oughtn't to, for it will kill you if you exert
yourself like that.'

'Ay, an' that's why,' replied he, 'for I ken I'm dyin'; I went an'
axed a doctor a while back, iv Oldcastle, an' he says, "I'll gie ye a
year ti live at the ootside," says he.'

'Then, why do it?' I urged. 'Do you love it so, or is it for the sake
of the money?'

'Ay,' he replied, gasping a little, as we mounted the slope to the
station, 'that's it. It's for the brass. Ye ken Tom, my brother? Well,
it's for him i' pairt, an' i' pairt for my mother, who wants a bit
frae me for my keep, ye ken. Noo, Tom's a bonny fellow, ain't
he?--just a joy ti the eye ti look upon; an' he's aye wantin' a bit
mair brass for this, an' that, an' t'ither, an', man, it's a pleasure
ti me ti slave a bit for him. There's nae use o' brass for me--me
that' just the puir "Caleb Jay"--but Tom's like a live lord when he's
plenty of brass; an', man, but he spends it weel!'

I was silent for a while, thinking of the tragedy of it all. Then I
inquired again: 'Well, but how did you know you had this gift of
acting and singing and impersonation? and why did you hide your talent
so carefully from us all?'

'It came ower us first, I think,' he answered, 'when reading
Shakespeare an' tragedies an' sic like. I seemed ti see the vary
actors theirselves before my eyes, an' I fair felt like them, ye ken.
Ye'll think it strange, mevvies, but grandfeythor, he had a bit talent
that way, an' ran awa frae his home, an' made his livin' play-acting
an' piano-playin', an' singin', an' aal. He took ill somewhere aboot
here, an' died, an' feythor, he took ti warkin' at the pits, an'
that's the story of it,' concluded my little companion shyly.

'But with a gift like yours, why didn't you tell _me_ of it, for
example, or the minister, and perhaps we could have got you a proper
start somewhere?'

'Ay, I kenned that,' said he, 'an' thank ye kindlies; but I found, on
tryin' it, that I wesn't strang enow for't iv a reg'lor way; an'
forbye that, I didn't want the laddies ti ken aboot it, lest they
might call us "Hamlet," mevvies, or "clownie," or sic like, an' my
mother divvent like play-actin'; it was she as made my feythor give it
up, sayin' it wes nae bettor than a mugger's[17] life, elwis wanderin'
frae one place tiv anuther, an' nae brass iv it at aal.'

There was no time for further talk, for the train was waiting, and,
arriving at our destination, I found my companion so tired that it was
all he could do to walk home.

The minister and I put our heads together after this, and collected
enough money to send our little friend down to a seaside home for a
few weeks.

On Saturday night, however, a message came from the doctor that he was
rapidly sinking. His mother and brother were both out, as it happened,
but the minister and I arrived just in time to bid farewell to the
poor little 'Caleb Jay.'

As we proceeded silently homeward, an idea came into my head.

'In an age of public testimonials and memorials,' I said, 'humble
self-sacrifice goes unrewarded. Our little friend ought to have a
statue at the least; but, of course, it is no good doing anything.
You, therefore, should bring him into your sermon to-morrow evening,
and give a few people a hint of it beforehand.'

The idea seemed to strike my companion, and he said he would gladly do
so.

I had not seen Tom, but as I walked to my lodgings I passed him
standing at the street corner amidst a knot of companions.

I heard one of them mention the 'Caleb Jay,' and I stayed my steps a
moment to hear the reply.

'Ay,' said Tom, 'he was a plucky little beggor iv his way, an' useful
tae, an' I was often sorry for him, _he wes sae tarr'ble ugly_! But,
ho-way, I's plenty brass on me, and I'll treat ye aal tiv anuthor
beor!'


FOOTNOTES:

[14] It is said that at the time of the Napoleonic wars some French
prisoners were detained in custody in the pit country not far from
Durham City. It would appear that some intercourse between the
inhabitants of the place and the foreigners sprang up, which resulted
in the addition of one expressive phrase, at least, to the local
dialect, that, namely, of 'Caleb Jay' for 'Quel objêt!' due to their
strange garb, probably, or tattered appearance. The phrase is now
wholly obsolete, the writer believes, but it is said it was once
actually in use.

[15] Wood-pigeon.

[16] The Northumbrian for 'encore.'

[17] 'Mugger' = beggar; literally, one who sells mugs.




GEORDIE ARMSTRONG, 'THE JESU-YTE'


I.

Geordie Armstrong, after a somewhat stormy past, had become a steady
hewer, and a local preacher of some repute. Never a Sunday but he was
'planned' to speak at this or that village, and frequently, as he
found opportunity, would 'pit in a bit overtime' at a 'class-meeting'
or 'knife-an'-fork tea,' when the 'asking a blessing' or a returning
of thanks might furnish occasion for a 'bit extemporizin'.' He was in
receipt of excellent wages down the pit; his worldly goods comprised,
as he often proclaimed, a 'bonny, an' what's o' far mair importance, a
godly missus, three canny bairns, a cosy hoos, a fine little
librairee, an' a tarr'ble fertile garden.'

As he thought upon the sum of his blessings one Saturday night when,
after having 'weshed hissel' an' had his tea,' he proceeded to light
his pipe, he felt he could only properly describe himself as a
'varitable corn-u-cop-ye-ar ov happiness.'

Yet even then, even in that depth of felicity, an uneasy feeling would
intrude: the memory of Scotty would float to the surface of his mind,
and the thought of the 'parlous state' in which his old 'marrow'
(mate) stood would ruffle its calm placidity.

This was 'the little rift within the lute'; here was the caterpillar
in the 'corn-u-cop-ye-ar,' and, like the Apostle Paul of old, he was
fain to accept his trial, in the spirit of true humility, as a
judgment upon him for the failings of his past life.

It was not for lack of trying that Scotty refused to come to chapel;
indeed, Geordie had so vexed him with his importunity that Scotty had
refused to work with him any longer, and was now employed further
'in-by' with another mate. But for all that, Geordie felt certain that
the cause of failure lay with himself, due probably to his weakness in
faith, to lack of some essential or other, and that the blame of
Scotty's not being 'brought to the Lord' lay at his door.

It had been evident to him for some time that he must try other means,
and, being a great reader, he had latterly come across, and been much
attracted by, a remarkable account of some ancient methods of the
'Jesu-ytes' in cases of this sort.

Sometimes the sinner in question had been unwittingly tempted into the
'narrow path' by the gratification of his ambitions on some point or
other, conversion resulting, as in the case of Tom Appleby--once a
fire-hot Socialist, now a sleek Conservative--from unexpected
prosperity.

At other times the same end had been attained by a crafty flattery.
Suppose a man ambitious of eminence and State distinction: he might be
diverted from politics to the Church, and many were the instances
given of bold and ambitious men who had done great work and attained
high place as the servants of St. Peter.

Could Scotty not be caught hold of in some such fashion? queried
Geordie to himself, as he sat by his fireside that night, deeply
pondering the records he had just been studying. 'I divvn't think he's
ambitious, for he cares nowt aboot politics, an' he never even thought
o' stannin' for election on wor Parish Cooncil. Aal he cares for is
his beer, an' his quoits, an' bettin', an'--an'--his pansies; an' I
doot I cannot catch haud ov him in any one of those partic'lors, for
it wouldn't be fittin' for us that's a local preacher to gan an' send
him a barril o' beer, or back him at a quoitin' match. But
stay--there's the pansies; he's pansy champion, dootless; but then I's
leek champion, an' if I can grow leeks, I's warn'd but I can grow
pansies, for flooers is easier grown nor vegetables.'

Geordie puffed at his pipe vigorously for a minute or two in silence
as he turned the matter over in his mind.

A light kindled slowly in the back of his deep-set eye, a smile showed
upon his lips, then he cuffed himself vigorously upon the knee.

'Ho-way, gan on, Geordie!' he encouraged himself aloud; 'thoo's
turnin' a fair Jesu-yte, I's warn'd!'

       *       *       *       *       *

As the day appointed for the annual meeting of the Flower Show drew
near, Geordie had been heard to drop hints of the 'wonnerfu' new
specie' of pansies he had become possessed of--'seedlin's' he had
obtained 'doon the south-country way,' and it was not long before the
rumour reached the ears of Scotty.

Nothing could exceed the contempt of the latter when he heard of
Geordie's trying to grow pansies--'him that's just a vegetable man, a
tormut (turnip) grower, a sort o' ha'penny farmer,' and as for
anything good in the way of seedlings coming out of the south-country,
it was just 'bang ridi'klous, for a' folk kenned that a' the best
growers lived in auld Scotland.'

By-and-by some mischievous individual told Scotty that Geordie was
'full' set upon being pansy champion, and was so cock-sure about it
that he was willing to back himself to win.

Scotty was so annoyed at this that the next time he came across
Geordie he could not refrain from jeering at his attempt at pansy
growing. 'Wey, it'll be as muckle as ye can do to tell a pansy frae a
vi'let!' he cried.

Geordie looked at him seriously from under his bushy eyebrows as he
replied, 'I's gannin' to show--an' I's gannin' to win--_wi' pansies,
not vi'lets_.'

'Will ye back yorsel', then?' retorted his opponent sneeringly.

'Well, ye knaa,' replied the other slowly, with evident embarrassment,
'I's not a bettin' man, but if thoo thinks I's not in earnest, I's
willin' to gie a proof that I is. What d'ye say to yor takin'--if ye
beat us, that is--anythin' oot o' my hoos thoo has a fancy for;
an'--an'--if I beat thoo, wey, aal I axes is that thoo should come to
chapel--noo an' again, ye knaa--ov an evenin',' he hastily added, as
his companion's face assumed a look of infinite scorn.

'Ha' ye got that auld double-barrelled shot-gun yet?' queried Scotty,
after a pause in which he had arrived at the conclusion that the odds
were 'aboot a thoosand to one' in his favour.

'Yes,' replied Geordie. 'I still have her; she's there hangin' up
above the mantelshelf.'

'Well, I'll tak' up wi' yor proposal,' was Scotty's reply.

'Shake hands on't, then,' said Geordie slowly, unsuccessfully
endeavouring to instil an apprehensive tremor into his voice.

His companion shook hands carelessly, and swung away whistling
barefacedly, 'And it's up wi' the bonnets o' Bonnie Dundee.'

Geordie, on his part, walked away swiftly homewards, fearing lest his
exultation might betray itself too openly. 'Wow!' he thought to
himself, 'but I's fair a-feard o' mysel'. I's growin' intiv a proper
Jesu-yte!'

The morning of the show-day came, and Geordie, having finished packing
his exhibits with extraordinary care, had just returned with the small
cart the grocer had lent him to convey his treasures to the
show-field, about a mile and a half distant, when up came Maggie,
Scotty's wife, who, notwithstanding the little difference between
their respective men, had always kept up her friendship with Geordie's
wife. Her arms bore a large green case, tied round with a many-knotted
cord. This she hastily set down beside the cart, then turned
breathlessly to Geordie, who, with his son, was just about to drive
off.

'Eh noo, canny man,' she cried, as she wiped her hot face with the
tail of her gown, 'do us a favour. Will thoo carry my man's pansy-case
up to the show wi' yors? Wor Jimmy was to have taken it up first thing
this mornin', but he went aff for his school treat an' left it--an' my
man's awa playin' hissel' at quoits--an' he'll aboot kill Jimmy when
he gans up to the show an' finds his pansies isn't there.'

Geordie willingly acceded, and the green case was carefully deposited
alongside of his own at the bottom of the cart.

His nine-year-old son squatted on the seat opposite, his legs up to
his chin, so as to be out of the way as much as possible in the
crowded cart. The pony started off gallantly enough, and all went well
till within about two or three hundred yards of the field. At that
point, however, the pony suddenly shied at some stray paper on the
road, and Tommy fell with a crash upon the green case below.

'Eh, Tommy, lad!' cried his father in dismay; 'what hast thoo done?
Wow! but thoo's gan an' smashed Scotty's case right thro' an' thro'!'

His succeeding feeling was one of joy; for, the accident having
irreparably damaged a third at least of his rival's pansies, it was
evident that Scotty was now 'catched,' and Geordie, with an inward
acknowledgment to Providence, saw, as in a vision, Scotty sitting
devoutly 'under' himself in chapel.

A few moments later, however, doubt and dismay entered his soul. What
if Scotty should say Tommy had done it 'o' purpose'--at his
instigation? Further reflection convinced him that this was exactly
what Scotty would say, and doubtless there would be some folk unkind
enough to back him up in it.

Scotty would likelies claim the gun. Well, he'd not mind parting with
that, but he could not give up the prospect of saving Scotty's soul
alive without a groan.

'Eh, Tommy, lad! Eh, Tommy! But thoo divvn't knaa what thoo's done;
thoo's put us in a fine quandary,' he murmured, gazing sadly now at
Tommy, who was rubbing his knee ruefully, and again at the splintered
case. The problem was a 'puzzlor;' even a Jesu-yte might have found
solution difficult; for Scotty, he knew, would not believe him if he
told the simple story of the accident, and winning the prize would be
useless in the face of Scotty's insinuations of foul play.

The only way out of the difficulty, he determined sadly, was to
exhibit his own pansies under Scotty's name, and withdraw from the
contest himself. The contents of the two cases were sufficiently alike
for his purpose, though his own were superior in size and depth of
colour. It was a 'sair trial,' for his pansies were bound to win; but
his character as an honest, religious man was at stake, and Scotty's
triumph would be easier to endure than his sneers, if defeated, at a
'chap who caa's hissel' releegious, an' swindles ye like a Jew
pedlar.'

With a groan he undid the label, and tied it on to his own beloved
specimens, casting aside, as a temptation of the evil one, a
disturbing suggestion that he was guilty of deception in passing off
his own as Scotty's pansies.

       *       *       *       *       *

The judges had been round, and Scotty's pansies easily gained the
place of pride; pansies so perfectly developed, so dark and deep in
colour, had never been shown before.

A crowd of admirers stood round. Scotty came lurching up, having
evidently held a preliminary carouse in certain expectation of the
championship, and, with a careless glance at his exhibits and the red
card attached, cried triumphantly:

'Ay! an' whaur's that Geordie body noo, wi' his brags an' a'? Wey, I'm
tauld he daurna even exhibit his ain puir specimens by the side o'
mine! Look at thae pansies, an' think o' him wi' his yaller sheep's
tormuts tryin' to vie wi' me that's the auld established pansy
champion! Ay, I'm that ower an' ower again; an' what's mair, I've win
his gun. Wey, I'll gang an' fetch her awa at aince!'

So boasting, the proud champion reeled off in triumph, inadvertently
knocking up against a silent looker-on, who was standing in melancholy
guise against a tent-pole some little distance away.

One morning, a day or so after the flower-show, it chanced that Tommy
was late for school, and, rounding a corner hurriedly, ran up against
a big boy, who was sporting a pansy in his buttonhole. The big boy,
who was Scotty's son, immediately proceeded to cuff him for his
carelessness, and Tommy retorted by "calling"[18] his opponent and his
family connections with a ready profuseness.

'Wey, even that pansy thoo's sportin' divvn't belong thoo, nor thy
feythor nowther, it's my dad's growin'; he showed his ain pansies as
Scotty's, 'cos Scotty's happened an accident i' the cart. Feythor took
them up for yor mither, 'cos thoo had forgottened them, an' to save
thoo a strappin'; an' feythor's pansy champion, and Scotty's nowt but
a beer-barril!'

'Liar!' responded the other boy, with a punch of his fist.

'Ax yor mither, then,' shouted Tommy, as he ducked and broke away from
his captor's clutch.

A night or two after this encounter Geordie was surprised by a visit
from Scotty.

'Whatten a tale's this ye're spreadin' aboot o' yor showin' yoor
pansies as mine, I'd like to ken?' demanded the intruder wrathfully.

Geordie looked up quietly from his book, and: 'I've spread no tales
aboot thoo or thy pansies,' he replied.

'Weel, it's either thoo or that wee, impittent son o' yoors, Tommy.
Noo, I've been axin' my missus aboot it, an' she says she did gie ye
my pansies to tak' up to the show wi' yoors; an' what I want to be at
is what i' the deil's name ye did to them.'

Geordie, in reply, exactly related what had occurred.

'Then, wey didn't ye tell us aboot it?' demanded Scotty, still
dissatisfied.

'Because thoo has a tarr'ble sharp tongue i' thy mouth, an' I divvn't
want to be scandalized aboot the village as one who would sharp
another for the sake o' winnin' a floo'er prize.'

'Hum!' ejaculated Scotty, 'it's an extraordinar' thing this! But hoo
can ye explain aboot the pansies, then? I'm pansy champion, an'
therefore thae pansies that win the prize mun ha' been mine, yet here
ye are sayin' that they were yoors.'

Geordie got up from his seat, and, without immediately replying, went
into the room at the back, and came forth again bearing in his arms a
shattered green case.

'Dis thoo recognise this?' he asked quietly, as he set it down on the
table in front of his visitor.

'Ay,' replied Scotty, after a minute inspection; 'it's mine dootless.
But what then?'

'Wey, then, thoo has my case, an' my pansies inside ov it; an' here's
yors still left i' their holes, just as they were on show-day.'

Scotty bent over the broken lid incredulously, lifted a faded specimen
out, and regarded it contemptuously.

'Na, na,' he asserted shortly, 'that's no my pansies; mine were
champions, an' these is weeny things. Na, na, there's been a bit queer
play about this. Maybe Tommy changed them frae the one case to the
ither.'

'Tommy did nowt o' the sort,' retaliated Geordie quickly. 'Aal that
was done was to untie the label an' clagg (stick) it on to my case
instead o' yors.'

'Weel, it's a dommed queer thing aaltegither,' replied Scotty, pushing
his cap from his brow, 'and beyont me; for I'm champion, nobody can
deny that, an' a proper professor at floo'er growin', an' ye're but an
ammytoor, d'ye see? An' it's just surprising to me that ye could e'er
imagine ye could compete wi' me. But I divvn't wish to be ower hard on
ye, an' I'll e'en gie ye the benefit o' the doot, as the saying is;
sae I'll just send ye back yoor gun--that is,' he continued slowly,
eyeing Geordie wistfully, 'if ye're wishfu' to ha' her back.'

'Thoo can keep her,' replied Geordie, 'for it's nae use to me
nowadays; but I would like--I would be tarr'ble pleased if thoo would
come----' Here he halted abruptly, on a sudden fear lest Scotty's
suspicions of some underhand play in regard to the pansies might be
again roused if he too openly requested him to come to chapel.

The other hesitated a little. 'Weel,' he said finally, 'it's a canny
wee gun, an' I would gey like to keep her. An' as for chapel
gangin'--for I suppose that's what ye're after--if ye divvn't blab
aboot us, wey, I'll just tak' a look in noo an' again.'

'That's right, noo,' responded Geordie gratefully, and his deep-set
eyes glowed with a warmer light. 'Shake hands on't.'

Scotty shook hands without demur and swiftly departed, fearful lest
Geordie might regret the arrangement.

Geordie leant back in his chair and heaved a sigh of relief as he
offered up a silent thanksgiving to Providence for having softened
Scotty's heart.

'It's aal right noo,' he murmured. 'Wi' the help I've had from above
I've catched him at the finish, an' chapel will do the rest.'

Thus for some time he reflected devoutly. Then of a sudden a smile
broke upon his lips and he clapped his hand vigorously upon his thigh.
'By!' he exclaimed aloud, 'but I's a proper Jesu-yte efter aal!'


FOOTNOTE:

[18] Abusing.




'GEORDIE RIDE-THE-STANG'


     The custom of 'riding the stang' is now obsolete, so that the date
     of this story must be put back a number of years, though Mr.
     Brockett,[19] writing in his glossary of Northumbrian words, in the
     early part of this century, says, 'I have myself been witness to
     processions of this kind. Offenders of this description are mounted
     a-straddle on a long pole, or stang, supported upon the shoulders
     of their companions. On this painful and fickle seat they are borne
     about the neighbourhood backwards, attended by a swarm of children
     huzzaing and throwing all manner of filth. It is considered a mark
     of the highest reproach, and the person who has been thus treated
     seldom recovers his character in the opinion of his neighbours.'
     The method of divination by the puddings has been practised within
     living memory, and even yet may be resorted to by way of a jest
     upon occasion.

     Since writing the above the author has come across in Mr. R.
     Blakeborough's interesting book, 'Yorkshire Wit, Character and
     Customs,' a different version of 'riding the stang,' to which he
     is indebted for the first four lines of the 'furrinor's' song. In
     a footnote Mr. Blakeborough adds that the 'stang' was ridden at
     Thoralby, Wensleydale, as recently as October, 1896.

There was French blood in Geordie Robertson's wife, Mary, and it may
perhaps have been owing to her origin that she was so eager for
revenge when she found herself deceived by her husband.

She had begun to suspect him of infidelity even before a neighbour had
given her a hint that he had a 'fancy' wife away in Bridgeton, for her
husband brought home less and less with his 'pack' after his weekly
tramp was over, and when she asked for explanations he 'called' her
with most abusive virulence.

For her further satisfaction she determined to make trial, now that
the pig was to be killed, of the ancient method of divination
practised by the pit-wives, of which the following is the ritual:

When the animal has been slaughtered and the blood duly made into
puddings, these puddings are 'set away' to boil by the inquirer of the
oracle. Then, just before they are taken out of the 'pot,' the
officiating priestess must say aloud that she 'gives them' to him who
is suspected of infidelity. Should the puddings emerge whole, gossip
is dumfoundered; should they come forth broken, the man is proved to
have a 'fancy' wife.

Mary, indeed, found she could scarcely control her impatience when the
fatal day came, and, the pig duly slaughtered, she 'gave' the puddings
to her husband, Geordie.

She waited another minute to give the spell the lawful grace, then
with a trembling hand plucked forth the puddings.

'Ah--ah!' she gasped, tremulous but triumphant, 'then it is so; he has
a fancy wife,' and her quick brain fell to pondering a plan for
discovery and revenge.

The first thing to be done was to lure her 'man' into a false security
by subtle commiseration with him on the 'slackness' of trade, as also
by a wonderful submissiveness, even to the extent of going without
bacon for breakfast in order that she might save enough to buy him
tobacco. Now this form of procedure with a selfish man usually
produces excellent results. If he is sufficiently selfish, he does not
stay to inquire why or wherefore, but takes all he can, as a cat her
cream, without delay, without a thank you--nay, unlike tabby, without
even an inward purr.

It was so with Geordie, who began incontinently to brag about his
'missus's trainin',' and how he was 'champion' at 'fettlin' a wife's
nonsense,' and, swollen with self-satisfaction, began now to treat her
with a sort of contemptuous toleration.

A fortnight or so after Mary had made trial of her puddings, Geordie
carelessly mentioned the fact that he would be away over the
'week-end' in and about Bridgeton, and demanded some 'brass' from her
for the replenishing of his 'pack.'

Outwardly submissive, she gave him five shillings from her small
savings, but inwardly determined that it was the last sum of money he
should have from her.

On Friday night Geordie departed gaily for Bridgeton, and on the
Saturday afternoon Mary followed suit, clad in a thick cloak which
might serve her for a disguise upon occasion.

When she arrived there, the main street and market were thickly
crowded with a swarm of holiday-making pitmen, country folk, farmers
and their wives, hinds, male and female, for it was the date of the
annual fair and hiring, of 'the general assembly' of tramps, pedlars,
'tinklers' (tinkers), show-men, and the like, whose business it is to
attend such gatherings.

In such a crowd Mary felt safe from recognition, but it might be a
difficult task to discover her 'man' in all that company.

An hour or two passed, and she had been up and down the long street
twice without success; but just as she was turning into a cheap
refreshment-room, with 'Tea and coffy always redy' written in a
slovenly hand upon a dirty placard in the window, she caught the sound
of a voice raised in semi-drunken irritation close behind her which
caused her to turn her head hurriedly in that direction.

Yes, there he was without doubt, her Geordie, heavy with liquor
already--not 'mortal' yet, but quarrelsome. Aha! and that was the
'fancy' wife, of course, who had him fast by the arm--a blousy,
red-faced, fat-armed, big chested woman, who was evidently trying to
persuade her charge to come home much against his inclination. At
sight of her rival--immodest, gross, overpowering--Mary shrank back
aghast, and it was only after a struggle with herself and a forcible
iteration of her wrongs, that she could persuade herself slowly and
reluctantly to follow the couple in front of her.

'Ho-way!' shouted Geordie; 'there's Tom Turnbull ower by there tryin'
ti lift weights an' show 's strength. Wey, but Tom cannet lift
weights, he's nowt but a wee bit beggor. Tom, thoo beggor!' he
challenged across the intervening throng of heads, 'thoo cannet lift
weights; wey, Aa'l lift weights wi' thoo for a bottle o' whisky!'

'Ho-way, then, thoo aad fightin'-cock! but Aa give thoo fair warnin'
Aa can beat thoo, for Aa's champion.'

At this, the 'fancy' wife seized her 'man' firmly by the sleeve,
fearing doubtless lest, in his then 'muzzy' condition, Geordie would
waste the scanty remainder of his brass upon a vain endeavour, and, by
way of effectually dissuading him, indiscreetly praised his rival's
prowess.

'No, no, Geordie, my man, come this way, an' give us my fairin'; wey,
there's a mort o' things ti see yet; there's the shuttin'-gall'ry, an'
the twa-headed cat, an' the giant, an' the fat woman, an' aal--ho-way.
Ay, an' Geordie, hinny, Tom Turnbull's tarr'ble clivvor at liftin'
they handles things an' drivin' the bolt up the stick wi' the hammer,
an' Aa's warn'd but he'll bang thoo at that game.'

'Tom Turnbull!--that haalf-grown, bandy-legged beggor ov a bit tailor
ov a man bang me? Gox! but Aa'll larn him a lesson. Aa'll cut his
comb, Aa's warn'd!' and Geordie forthwith, murmuring maledictions,
thrust blindly through the crowd till he reached the spot where his
rival stood, the centre of an admiring circle of friends.

'Noo,' cried Geordie, turning up his wrist-cuffs, 'Aa'll show thoo hoo
the thing's done when it's done proper. Wey, this bolt 'll hit the
beam at the top when Aa gie the stump a bat!' and without more
ado--amidst the jeers of some, and the encouragement of a few false
friends--he seized the hammer, swung it round his head, and brought it
down some feet wide of the mark--smash upon the cobble-stones of the
market-place. 'That's done the business!' cried Geordie triumphantly,
conscious from the stinging of his hands that he had 'gi'en it a
champion bat,' and certain that he had driven up the bolt some feet
above his rival's mark.

Through the roar of laughter, which Geordie complacently accepted as
the proper accompaniment of Tom's defeat, a voice pierced suddenly
with a shrill note as of a fife.

'Thoo great clumsy lubbert, see what thoo's done! Thoo's broke the
hammer's head off! That's half a crown, my man, for the hammer, an' a
penny for the shot; an' if thoo disn't hand it ower, I'll call the
pollis, for it's fair takin' the livin' oot ov a poor weeda woman's
mouth to break her hammer thet fashion!' and a thin-faced female, with
a red-lined nose, sharp cheekbones, and watery eyes, held up two
skinny fists in anger against him.

'Gan on, woman, gan on!' retorted Geordie indignantly; 'wey, it's thoo
sh'd pay us, or gie us a cigyar, or a cokienut; for that bat o' mine
hit the bull's-eye, Aa's warned.'

The shrill-voiced female renewed her protestations, and some of the
bystanders joined in with additional explanations; but Geordie would
have none of them. 'Gan on,' he retorted; 'gan awa home, an' wesh yor
feyce! Wey, the hammer's as rotten as pash, for Aa brought her fair
doon like a pick reet on top o' the stump. What else should maa hands
be tinglin' for?'

The proprietress of the hammer, however, continued to assail Geordie
with abuse, while at the same time the 'fancy' wife upon his other
side endeavoured to drag him away, so that it need not surprise us if
Geordie suddenly lost his temper, and turned heavily upon his
tormentors.

He shook off the one, and flung down a shilling in payment of the
supposed damage to the hammer; the other--the 'fancy' wife--he pushed
roughly from him, with the result that she lost her balance, and fell
whimpering in the mud, while Geordie lurched off to the nearest
hostelry, muttering indignantly as he went, 'Aa's been fair mucked
ower wi' women the day--just fair mucked ower.'

A swift inspiration gleamed in Mary's mind. For the punishment of
Geordie she had already made due preparation, and now, if she could
only persuade the 'fancy' wife, her triumph would be complete.

She noticed the woman angrily brushing the muck off her 'feast gown,'
and at once made her way up to her and touched her gently on the arm.
'Ay,' she said quietly, as the other looked up with red and testy
face, 'an' it's the same way he treats me;' holding her left hand
loosely so that her marriage-ring was plainly conspicuous.

'So he has a lawful wife, an' yore her?' And the speaker gave a
suspicious, all-embracing stare. 'Well,' she continued slowly,
jealousy slipping, like some slow portcullis, from her eyes, 'he's had
a change, has my lord! Forst, it was a thin lass like yorsel', an' noo
it's a plump one like me. Ay, he's greedy, is Geordie; he winna be
content wi' the one, like Jack Spratt, but wants both.'

'Ay, lass,' replied the other woman quietly, 'yore right: he's greedy
an' selfish. That's the sort--a selfish good-like nowt, that lives on
women, makes them keep him through life just as one does a babby; an'
he's treated the pair ov us shameful--just shameful; but, hinny, I've
a plan for a bit payment for him, an' if ye come aside a bit wi' me,
I'll tell ye o't.' And she laid an appealing hand upon the other's,
and affected with the disengaged one to brush the remaining dirt from
the 'fancy' wife's skirt.

'Well, what is't?' said the latter, suffering herself to be led
through the crowd to a quiet corner.

Mary at once proceeded, but with a cautious self-effacement, to detail
her schemes for Geordie's discomfiture. 'It will not hurt him,' she
protested, as her rival still sat silent, 'but it will pay him a bit
for the way he's treated us'--here Mary's hand again occupied itself
with the soiled dress--'and it will give ye the laugh over him. I've
done wiv him mysel; I'm awa to France to-night or morning--that's
where Grandfeyther was bred; he came to these parts selling onions at
first, an' finally settled doon here to 'scape the soldierin'. An'
I've money enough to pay the expenses,' she continued; 'an' for
suthin' to eat an' drink an' the ticket.'

The 'fancy' wife looked at her somewhat hardly, suspicion rising to
the surface of her eye. 'An' sae yore off to France, are ye?' she
queried; 'ay, an' yore tired ov him? Well, mevvies he would say as he
was tired o' thoo; but I've a grudge again' him for the way he's treat
us to-day, spendin' aal my brass ower himsel' an' clartin' my gown an'
all, an' I'll pay him for't, I's warn'd.' And her face darkened
vindictively.

'That's right,' replied Mary swiftly. 'And now for the plan. Here's
money for you to treat him with. Get him awa oot o' the public before
he's had too much, an' bring him along wi' you by the last train from
Bridgeton, an' I'll meet you wi' the "stang" ready for him, an' the
lads, an' the music, an' all. Oh, but it'll all gan fine, ye-es,
ye-es!'

So Mary, having handed over all that she could spare to her rival,
departed for the railway-station with a view to catching an earlier
train, and revising her preparations at the other end.

Her elation was complete. The only possible flaw in her subtly-devised
plan lay in the moods of the 'fancy' wife. If Geordie continued to
treat her roughly--and as he had now evidently settled down to the
drink, he was almost certain to do so--she would be true to the
arrangement; if not, she might relent, and keep Geordie from his house
that night.

       *       *       *       *       *

The train was overdue, and Mary waited with a feverish expectation at
the station's descent amidst a small crowd of young men and boys to
whom the idea of making anyone 'ride the stang' had appealed with an
irresistible sense of novelty.

The custom, indeed, was obsolete, but all had heard of it, and the
older men had often witnessed it in their youth, and some of them had
collected near the station to criticise and superintend the
performance.

The 'stang' itself was in readiness--having been lent to Mary on this
occasion by the schoolmaster and antiquary of the village, whose
father had been, as constable, its custodian in the old days.

And now at last the rumble of an approaching train was audible, and
the group at once assumed an alert and eager air.

A crowd of tired excursionists slowly descended the narrow path from
the station, men and women together, but there was no sign of Geordie
or the 'fancy' wife. Mary's heart grew heavy within her; after all,
then, she would have to depart without that sweet morsel--her revenge.
The 'fancy' wife must have relented and informed Geordie of her plans.

'Ho-way,' cried a man in her ear, 'he's not comin' back the night;
thoo's gi'en him a gliff mevvies.'

'Stay!' cried she swiftly, detaining him by the arm. 'What's that,
then?' she whispered triumphantly, as at the tail of the procession of
pleasure-seekers a couple became visible descending fitfully with
wayward lurches.

'See there!' continued Mary eagerly, 'it's Geordie an' his "fancy"
wife with him. Catch tight haud of him, an' mount him, an' carry him
through the length o' the village on the "stang"--right to his very
door; he canna get in though, for I've the key i' my pocket,' and Mary
laughed with an inward glee.

Down came the couple slowly, Geordie abusing his companion, as he
lurched against her heavily, for not progressing with more even
footsteps, the woman saying nothing, but tightly gripping him by the
arm, in order, doubtless, to keep him upright and also to prevent any
attempt at escape.

The wicket-gate swung open, Geordie lurched through, and in a moment
he was seized, hoisted into the air, a rough pole thrust through his
legs, and the triumphal march began to the tune of a penny whistle,
played by the local champion, a carter to trade, and a number of Jews'
harps and toy trumpets with which a herd of small boys poured forth
discordant revel.

'Gox! Aa's fallen intiv a sorcus (circus),' cried Geordie, in the
first moment of astonishment, then, 'Leave haud ov us, ye great
flamin' Irish---- What the devil's this Aa's astride o'?' adding with
solemn dignity, 'Yore makin' a tarr'ble mistake. Aa's not Blondin, ti
walk on a tight rope for ye; Aa's Geordie Campbell o' the Raa (Row),
whe lives i' the hoos wi' the brass handle tiv't.'

'Ay, ay, we knaa thoo!' cried the chorus of urchins; 'thoo's Geordie,
drunken Geordie, Geordie wi' the "fancy" wife. Geordie, Geordie
ride-the-stang! Eh, what a clivvor rider is Geordie! Thoo's a proper
jockey, Geordie, an' thoo'll mevvies ride the winner i' "the
Plate"[20] before thoo's finished wiv it.'

This idea tickled the carriers of the 'stang,' and Geordie's bearers
were forthwith transformed into thorough-breds with a tendency to
buck-jump. Hither and thither he rolled, dazed and bewildered,
helplessly clutching at the heads of those near him for support, but
his arms were seized, his legs tightly crossed below the 'stang,' and
he swung from side to side, while the rougher boys, chanting rude
doggerel over him, gathered and threw mud upon him. A trombone and a
'sarpint' here joined the noisy crowd, and to the varied strains of
'The Campbells are coming,' 'Weel may the keel row,' and 'Canny Dog
Cappie,' Geordie was borne in triumph up the Row.

A 'furrinor' (foreigner, stranger) here joined the medley, a 'South
countryman' from Yorkshire, who, chancing to have lately come to the
village after some private experience of his own in stang-riding in
one of the remoter Yorkshire vales, at once placed his services at the
crowd's disposal.

Marching at the head of the procession, like the drum-major of a band,
and beating together two saucepan-lids, he led the anthem.

Between the 'cling, cling, cling' of the lids his voice rose lustily:

    'Ah tinkle, ah tinkle, ah tinkle tang,
    It's not foor your part nor mah part
    'At ah ride the stang,
    But foor you, Geordie Robertson, who his wife did bang.'

Scarcely had he ended when the shrill trebles of the boys took up the
wondrous tale, and in antiphony chanted their response:

    'Up wiv a bump and down wiv a bang
    Gans Geordie, Geordie ride-the-stang;
    A bump an' a bang for his deed sae wrang,
    An' we'll larn him a lesson for ever sae lang.'

Then, to the full chorus, with complete orchestra of flute and fife,
trombone and triangle, tin whistle and 'sarpint,' brass pot, pan, and
saucepan-lids, the entire procession moved slowly onward.

Mary's eyes burned bright with exultation as she marched along in the
crowd, not letting a single incident of the spectacle escape her
notice, and as she watched she too joined in the chorus of 'Geordie,
Geordie ride-the-stang' without restraint.

The sound of the familiar voice roused the victim from the stupor into
which the hustling, peltings, and shoutings had reduced him.

'Thoo ----,' he yelled, as he caught sight of her; 'then it's thoo
that's at the bottom o' this? By, but if Aa wes free Aa'd----' But a
stalk of cabbage thrown at a venture by a small boy on the skirts of
the crowd here impeded his utterance, and Mary's voice rang out
perhaps more triumphantly than before.

The 'fancy' wife, meanwhile, who had at first discreetly retired from
public view and looked on at the procession from a distance, had
shortly after joined the noisy throng, moved thereto by a sense of
isolation, and also by a certain smouldering compunction. She looked
around her irresolutely; she felt she had acted precipitately;
certainly she was not deriving any advantage from the proceedings,
whereas her rival was the leader of the revelry, dancing, clapping her
hands, and carrying on like a 'Maypole lass.'

At this moment Mary inadvertently brushed against her, and in a moment
the 'fancy' wife turned upon her like a spitfire. Clenching her fists
and shouting vituperations, she tried to seize her by the hair. Foiled
in this by an adroit swerve of Mary's under the 'stang,' she turned
her fury upon Geordie's bearers, and with such success that to defend
themselves they were forced to lower the pole to the ground. 'Noo,
Geordie,' cried she, promptly thrusting the wooden weapon into his
hands, 'mak' play wiv it, my man, ho-way,' and Geordie, realizing he
was now free, lunged furiously in all directions, and scattered the
crowd like chaff before him.

Steered by his 'fancy' wife, a way grew clear about them, and Geordie
marched slowly, unsteadily forward, bearing the 'stang' like a
battering-ram straight in front of him, down the remaining length of
the Row, accompanied at a respectful distance by a rabble of the
smaller urchins.

Right on past his house he went, out into the darkness beyond, and
over the bridge at the end of the village, still tightly grasping the
'stang' himself, and tightly grasped in his turn by his 'fancy' wife.

The last train to Oldcastle happened to pass above the bridge at that
moment, and a head leant far out through a carriage window.

'Ay!' a clear voice sounded, with a touch of derision on the night
air--'Ay! that's right, haud him tight, for he wants it badlies.'


FOOTNOTES:

[19] Mr. Brockett died in 1842.

[20] The Northumberland Plate.




YANKEE BILL AND QUAKER JOHN


Quaker John was one of the best known figures in the small seaport
town of Old Quay. Short of stature, heavy of tread, always quietly
attired in a black suit, which varied not in cut from year to year;
indeed, the same suit had once been known to do duty for three years
together, till his wife one day, so 'twas said, handed them over to
the chimney-sweep in mistaken identity. You might have told that he
was of Puritan descent some yards away, but the 'letter of the law' in
him had been softened down by the kindly genius of the old-fashioned
Quaker. A genial twinkle lay in hiding at the back of his steadfast
eye, and a smile was always 'at heel' beside his big and honest mouth.

A broad and spectacled nose completed the portrait of one in whom the
harmlessness as of a dove did not of necessity efface the wisdom of
the serpent. At least, so said Yankee Bill, who read character 'at
sight'; but then, Bill was a disciple of that cynical logic which
proclaims not only all priests to be humbugs, but all men immersed in
business who make pretensions to piety to be hypocrites or fools.

He had happened to pass along the street one 'fourth-day' morning as
John came out of the meeting-house, and overheard him address a remark
about business to a Quaker friend at his side, and thereafter was
merciless in ridicule. 'John's patent incubator,' he styled the
meeting-house, 'for plot-hatching,' and pretended to be afraid of
doing business with him on Wednesday afternoons for fear of being
'skinned.'

Bill was a waif from the seas who had somehow been thrown up at Old
Quay a few years back, and having 'prospected around' and 'pegged out
a claim' for himself in the indiscriminate region of commission
business, life insurance, advertising agencies, secretaryships, and
other nebulous formative processes, was now almost as well-known a
figure in the town as Quaker John himself.

The chief foundation in any abiding friendship is a certain diversity
of temperament which those who wondered at the mutual liking that had
sprung up between the retiring stockbroker's clerk and the worldly
Yankee had evidently overlooked. To John the American's audacity was a
perpetual delight, tempered by occasional Puritan scruples as to
whether he was justified in associating with so hardened an
unbeliever. To Bill Coody the Quaker's reposefulness and quiet
self-sufficiency were both a sleeping-draught and irritant.

Nothing delighted him more than to get a rise out of John; but John
was hard to catch, and even when craftily inveigled into a theological
argument, was extremely chary of entering into definite statements.
Even when his position was most hotly assailed by the other, who made
unsparing use of the _argumentum ad hominem_, reinforced by a store of
malicious anecdotes of religious 'professors' all the world over, John
never lost his temper, but mildly suggested that his antagonist was an
Anarchist in disguise.

John himself, though immersed in business which some of the 'plain
people' have been used to look askance at, lived after the simple
fashion of the straiter sect.

After his day's work at the office, where as head clerk much
responsibility lay on his shoulders, he would go straight home and
employ his leisure on fine days in his garden, and on wet days in his
library, for John was not only a book-collector, but also a reader.

One pipe of tobacco he allowed himself before going to bed on week
days and two on 'first-days,' and flavoured his tobacco with a chapter
of 'George,' as he styled in affectionate intimacy his favourite
author (Mr. Meredith) on week-days, but a portion of Barclay's
'Apology' on 'first-day' evenings.

One evening John was sitting reading as usual, when the maid-servant
came in to say that Mr. Coody wished to have a few words with him.
'Very well,' replied her master, laying aside 'George' with a sigh,
and wondering what business Bill might have on hand to come at such an
untimely hour.

In came his friend as unceremoniously as ever, and, sitting himself
down on the sofa, drew vigorously at his cheroot for a minute or two
before entering upon the topic that had brought him thither.

'Look here, John,' he exclaimed all at once, 'you're a confidential
cuss, I guess, and I've got a scheme on hand that will "scoop the
boodle" if properly carried out; and what I want to know is, whether
your people will take a hand in it or no. It's a certain thing, and
will go ahead like a runaway buggy anyway; but the less friction the
better, so that if your people will grease the wheels a bit, so much
the better for them and all consarned.'

'Tell me precisely what it is,' replied John cautiously, 'then I may
be able to offer an opinion; but, of course, I can't say off-hand
whether the firm will entertain the idea or not.'

'Waal,' replied Bill, 'I guess you're the firm pretty often, for your
bosses are generally away huntin' or shootin' or foolin' around
somewhere; anyway, your advice is generally listened to, I guess.
Waal, to come to business. I'm fixin' up a new store on the most
modern principles. I sell everything cheaper than anybody else
anywhere in this little country of yours; any bloomin' thing that's
asked for, why, it's there, delivered free to any part of the United
Kingdom. Everybody comes along--Noah's Ark on a wet day ain't in it
for the pushin' there'll be at our doors once we get opened out--and,
another thing, everybody gets made into an automatic shareholder; for
profits have to lie till they reach £5, when each man, woman, and
child gets a share given them, will they, nill they--and you bet,
John, they will. I tell you, the thing's fixed up, and is goin' to
give Old Quay shocks. Why, I'm buyin' up here and there bankrupt
stocks enough to bust the place with--pianners, hardware, bicycles,
rose-trees, fam'ly Bibles, rat-traps--every taste will be suited, for
I tell you cosmopolitanism ain't in it with Bill Coody. I tell you
I'll be in a position to bust every single bicycle dealer in this
little one-hoss place; every pianner dealer can shut up shop when I
get started. Why, there won't be a pitman in Northumberland who hasn't
got a demi-grand Eureka B. C. piano in his house in another three
weeks' time, and every colliery village will have its Bayreuth
Festival with "Canny Dog Cappie" and "Weel may the keel row" tinklin'
away down each row.'

'But think of the poor shopkeeper!' John interrupted, aghast at this
slaughter of the innocents.

'Now, John,' expostulated Bill, as one who reproves a child for
foolishness, 'it's not "first-day," and you ain't "in meeting," so
stick to business, if _you_ please. Waal, the thing's got to go, as
I'm sayin', and the only question is, are your people goin' to join in
or no? If not, I bust their little donkey go-cart of Supply Stores
which they set up a few years back in South Street "for the mutual
encouragement of thrift and the supply of the best articles at
first-hand cost" as the prospectus says, combinin' philanthropy and
five per cent, plus their commission on floatin' the shop. Now, I know
how much they have in it, your bosses. J. B. has 10,000 shares, and
young T. he has 5,000 out of a total of 30,000, so they're the largest
shareholders in the concern, but Bill Coody has shares in it, too,
John, he or his nominees. Likely you've noticed the shares have been
jumpin' up a bit lately and been wonderin' what the jooce was up, eh?'

'Yes,' responded John quietly, endeavouring to conceal any disquietude
he might feel; 'yes, I've noticed that.'

'Waal, we've got enough to bust their shop up pretty well, and if your
people don't come into my showyard I'll give their shares away with a
pound of tea,' and here he pulled out a handful of certificates from
his trousers' pocket and flourished them in John's face, which was
gradually growing longer as the other unrolled his arguments.

'But how did you get the necessary capital?' John inquired after a
pause, professional curiosity piqued at this unexpected revelation of
means.

'Waal,' replied the American, as he carelessly lit another cheroot,
expectorating with relish into John's carefully-trimmed fire, 'I'll
tell you straight out, for I'm one of them that goes straight to the
point--fibbin' ain't in it with truthfulness, and bluffin's no good
when the cards are on the table. Waal, I bank with the Old Bank here,
and decent enough people they are, too, but a trifle slow, so no
sooner did the Joint Stock Bank open out a new branch in Old Quay than
in I go, and I says, "Look here, boss, I want £5,000 of the ready, and
I'll bring you business," I says. Well, the boss rubs his hands in
butter, and he says, "Sartinly, sartinly, Mr. Coody, we know your name
well, sir; most happy to oblige, I'm sure, and much obliged if you
could introduce us to a few of your friends," so after a bit more
palaver and a deposit of some shares the deal's done. Waal, down the
street goes Bill Coody, and into the parlour of the Old Bank, and says
to the partners straight out: "Now, look here, gentlemen, there's no
beatin' about the bush with me, and no frivolity in matters of
business, and what I want is £5,000 straight down, which is the figure
I've just been offered by the new Joint Stock Bank over the way. Now I
like your style," I says, "and I should be sorry to leave you; but
sentiment's not my style of doin' business, so there you have it."
Waal, the old gentleman looked at me over his spectacles, same way as
you do, John, and under his spectacles also, and offers me a pinch of
snuff, while he and his partner waggle their heads together in a
far-off corner of the room. Waal, after a bit more palaver and a
little "pi" jaw thrown in gratis about the evils of speculatin', and a
hope that a strange bank will not interfere with mutual friendly
business relations, that deal's done, and Bill Coody has £10,000 to
draw upon by feedin'-time that morning.

'Waal, John, I think you'll have the hang of it now, and will be able
to advise your bosses as to what's best for them and the community,
too, at large, and I want an answer--a regular business-like
document--signed, sealed, and delivered, by this time to-morrow night,
for there's a shipload of my goods in already and lyin' at the quay,
and I can't let the thing dry-rot while two thickheads worry the
situation out and try to tinker up a mind between them. So fix it up
for them, John, yourself. Ta-ta; I must be off. There's a chap waitin'
for me at the club on business.' And rising as he spoke, he went as
unceremoniously as he came, leaving a trail of rank tobacco that was
as penetrating to John's nostrils as his communications had been to
his intellect.

John lit his pipe again, which had gone out as he listened to Bill's
scheme, and thought for a while how 'George' would have dealt with the
situation; how his penetrating intellect would have pierced through
Bill's armour-plating, and revealed the naked artificer within.

Ah! if 'George' had only been there for five minutes, several of the
questions that were troubling him might have received instant
solution. He could not feel certain how far Bill meant business with
his store. It was not all bluff, of course; but how much of it was
bluff, how much business, he could not of himself determine.

It might be that he wanted to be bought off at a price, or be offered
a post upon the directorate, or was merely a 'bull' of the shares.
However, one thing was certain: there must be no shilly-shallying.
Either Bill must be squared or he must be defied.

That was the question for him to determine. No doubt, from a strictly
business point of view, the chief matter to be considered was which of
the two courses was likely to prove most beneficial to his principals;
but the thought of the poor shopkeepers was present in John's mind,
and operated largely in influencing his mind in the direction of
defiance. There was poor old Mrs. S----, for example, who kept herself
and two grandchildren on the proceeds of a small florist's business,
once her son-in-law's. What would happen to her if Bill were to flood
the town with rose-trees at a shilling the dozen?

To-morrow was Saturday, and Bill demanded an answer by the evening.
The next day being 'first-day,' he would have to satisfy his
conscience--that 'still small voice' which, even in the silence of the
meeting, interrogated him severely on his dealings during the past
week, and permitted no subterfuge or evasive answer--and it was
useless to think he could do so by pleading that he was only a
subordinate, not an official, in this affair of the store. Well, so be
it. It must be defiance, then--war to the knife--if Bill was in
earnest; for to offer to put him on the directorate of the supply
stores would merely mean setting up Bill's store under the old title.

John sat late as he pondered over the situation. Suddenly one of the
Articles of Association of the stores flamed within the chamber of his
brain, and a twinkle shone in his eye, as he reflected that it should
enable him to mate Bill's cleverness at the very outset.

Bill had quoted from the prospectus, but he had evidently overlooked
the Articles of Association, and John chuckled to himself delightedly
as he recalled Article 5.

Shortly after seven next morning John might have been observed taking
the air upon the quay, casting shrewd glances as he passed along. He
had some suspicions concerning the amount of value of Bill's
consignment of pianos, family Bibles, etc., and he thought he might
possibly discover something for himself if he saw what vessels were
lying at the quay.

There was a green-hulled brigantine from Norway lying alongside, but
she was full of battens and pit-props; a steam-collier lay next, but
she must simply be waiting there for stores or sailing orders. A tramp
came next, apparently from America, by the labels on some of her
packages that the cranes were already swinging overhead.

This, then, must be Bill's consignment, for there was nothing else in
the river or at the quay that John could see that could possibly have
anything on board for Bill or his stores.

As he stood there immersed in thought, a figure appeared on the deck
above him, and, leaning his arms on the taffrail, regarded the scene
below him with a gloomy air. 'The skipper,' thought John, as he noted
his blue broadcloth and peaked cap, and on the spur of a sudden
inspiration immediately accosted him.

'Fine morning, captain. I happen to have heard a rumour to the effect
that you were wanting an offer for your cargo. If so, I might possibly
get you an offer from a friend of mine--at a reasonable figure, of
course.'

'Waal,' replied the other slowly, 'I guess I'm ready for a deal, as
the consignees are bust up, and only 25 per cent. of the freight paid
for; but it's not a knock-out, I tell ye, for I've had a bid already
for the lot.'

'Was it from a man they call Bill Coody, by any chance?' asked John,
with a fine carelessness.

'Waal,' replied the skipper, as he turned his quid, 'his name's
nothin' to me, so long as he has the ready. Mr. Cash is the gent I do
business with; but if my memory sarves me right, I think Bill Coody
was the name on his pasteboard.'

'What precisely is the cargo?' queried John. 'Is it dry-store
goods--organs, pianos, and such like commodities?'

'Ay, that's about what it is--all the sort o' fixin's that make a
harmonious home for the retired commercial gent--organs, melodeons,
brick-a-bacs, articles of virtoo and amusement combined; and a fine
variety of wood goods besides. Waal, if you're for a deal you must be
sharp about it, for I've to fix up with Mr. Coody by ten o'clock this
mornin', and I leave again this afternoon, havin' just signed a fresh
charter party for a cargo of fireclay bricks. So name your figure,
plank down the cash, and I'm ready to deal.'

'Well, what did Mr. Coody offer you?' asked John pertinently.

'Three hundred pounds in bank notes,' replied the skipper; 'but I'll
take £400 to clear; and dirt cheap, too, when you think o' what a nest
o' nightingales your fam'ly and friends will be at ten dollars a
head.'

'Thank you,' said John, as he moved away; 'I'll just go round and have
a talk with my friend, and will let you know the result before ten
o'clock.'

'Right,' replied the captain, cutting himself a fresh plug of tobacco;
'£400 down, coin o' the realm, before ten, mind ye, and your friend's
set up for life with a "house beautiful" that Solomon in all his glory
and Mrs. Sheba couldn't have fixed up better between them.'

'What a curious, profane, hard-featured set of men these Americans
are!' thought John, as he stepped briskly away in the direction of his
senior partner's house. 'Why, the mind of that skipper is exactly of
the same temper as Bill's; his features are as irregular, even his
voice has the same twanging, nasal habit. However, he means business
evidently, and I think I can persuade Mr. William to buy up his cargo,
which will put, I imagine, a pretty stiff spoke in Bill's wheel.'

Within a quarter of an hour John was on Mr. William's doorstep, and
ten minutes afterwards was explaining the strategical position to the
senior partner in his dressing-gown. 'Certainly, John,' said Mr.
William slowly, after listening attentively to John's recital; 'we
couldn't possibly have Coody on our Board; it wouldn't do at all. Why,
he's a mere adventurer, and his method of under-cutting, "busting"
people up, etc., would bring discredit upon our firm and have a bad
effect upon our business. No, it's quite evident, John, as you say,
that we can't square him--as to how far he means business, I don't
know. I incline to think he is bluffing us; but there isn't time to
find out how much he has up his sleeve; and if we buy up this cargo we
trump his ace, you think, and can make a profit out of it ourselves at
the stores after? Well, I daresay you're right, John; and, after all,
£400 won't ruin us. We buy his cargo, and as he can't "bear" the
shares, he'll be like a chained dog showing his teeth, but doing no
damage. Yes, I think it is an excellent idea, John,' Mr. William said
in conclusion, 'and if you'll wait one minute I'll give you the cheque
for £400.'

By ten o'clock that morning John had completed his defences; the cargo
was bought; he held an indemnity against any claims from the skipper
and owners of the goods in question; he had made an inquiry at the Old
Bank, and now was sitting down at the office to write a short note
marked 'private' to Bill, to tell him it was to be 'war to the knife.'

'And I may tell thee, Bill, that thee had better give in with a good
grace; for, in the first place, thee cannot sell the shares below
par--_vide_ the Articles of Association, paragraph 10--and, in the
second, we have bought up thy cargo; and, finally, I feel assured that
stores managed on thy suggested lines would never bring a blessing
with them. Thou saidst it was to be "war to the knife," but we hope
thee will think better of it, for thy sake more than for our own,' and
with a friendly warning John finished his letter, and despatched it by
hand to 'William Coody, Esq.'

Late that afternoon, just as John was leaving the office, a letter was
brought to him in Bill's handwriting. It ran as follows:

     'Ta-ta, John, I'm off, you quaint, cocked-hat old Puritan
     Precisian; but I couldn't leave without having tried a fall with
     you first, and, on totting it up, I think Bill Coody's just had a
     trifle the best of the mêlée. If I'd got on to the stores, I'd
     have stayed in this derned little one-hoss place, but those
     all-fired articles[21] upset that cart. I'll allow you that,
     John; but I have you, my boy, over that little cargo of mine.
     Why, the whole show was a got-up job, the cargo saw-dust, salvage
     stocks worth £20 at an outside figure. The skipper, being a pal
     of mine, lent me his duds, this morning, for I knew you'd be down
     there sniffing and spectacling about with the morning's sunrise,
     and I had the show ready for you, John, to walk into, and in you
     walked like blue blazes. The £400 will about pay for my trouble,
     and for the premiums on the store shares. Your principals will
     have to buy the shares back from the banks--they mustn't buy
     below par, though, John--you remind them of that.

     'I've sold my biz., and am off with my pal, the skipper, this
     moment. No time to handshake. Ta-ta, John, and bear no malice.
     Stick to piety and 5 per cent., and don't buy up bankrupt
     cargoes, and you'll be Lord Mayor of Old Quay before you're
     finished. So long, your pardner,

                                                'BILL COODY.'


FOOTNOTE:

[21] '_Article 5._--No shares shall be dealt in below their face value
except with the consent of the Board of Directors.'




THE PROTÉGÉ


The Vale of the Frolic in the far west of Northumberland had always
been a favourite retreat of mine. As I trudged the London pavements in
the dog-days before the Law Courts rose, my heart panted for the green
hills and the sweet silences of remotest Frolicdale.

The chiefest charm of the vale perhaps for me lay in the fact that it
was a track untrodden by the tourist, resembling the maid of the
waters of Dove in this--that it was one which, as yet, there were 'few
to know, and very few to love.'

It was a pastoral, sheep-raising countryside, inhabited by shepherds
almost entirely, who were at the same time farmers also, for their
tenure was something after the métayer order.

There was nothing to mar the quaint and antique flavour of existence.
The post, like our lifeboat institution, was here supported by
voluntary contributions. If anyone were 'gannin' up the wattor,' well
and good; he would take the letters with him. If not, then they were
left at the schoolmaster's till called for. Newspapers, again, with
the exception of a weekly _Courant_ or a _Scots Mail_, were, like the
woodcock, but 'occasional visitors' in that region; and when it is
added that the house I usually stayed at was situated eighteen miles
from a terminus of a slow branch line of the North British Railway
Company, it will be evident that the ordinary tourist had a very poor
chance of putting in an appearance in that favoured region.

I was recalling all these little details with infinite gusto as I sat
down at my desk to write to my friend the Presbyterian minister and
schoolmaster of Fair-Green Haugh, suggesting a visit from myself a
week ahead.

The answer came just in time for me to pack up and start within the
week.

'I am sorry to say,' wrote my friend in conclusion, 'that my
accommodation is somewhat limited this summer, as I have had to give
up my small sanctum to a protégé of mine, who, though he has just been
discharged from gaol, will yet, I feel assured, become a highly useful
and respectable member of society.

'I know your kind heart, my friend,' he continued, 'and feel sure you
will not regret a temporary lack of comfort in so good a cause. You
can always use the schoolroom, as it is holiday time, for reading,
writing and smoking.'

'Heavens!' I murmured to myself, as I took in the monstrous situation;
'fancy having to spend my vacation trying to improve an infernal
burglar! He knows my kind heart, he says. Well, it only proves the
truth of the poet's lines:

    '"Not e'en the dearest heart, and next our own,
    Knows half the reasons why we smile or cry."

I wonder,' I soliloquized, 'whether he is of the heavy, hang-dog,
dropped-jaw type--the knifing variety, in brief--or the other
species--the shifty-eyed, chinless, quick but evil brained sort. On
the whole, I prefer the first, for if he cannot control his temper, at
any rate you know where you are with him, whereas with the latter you
never can tell what he may be up to.'

Anyway, it was exasperating, for here had I been congratulating myself
upon the sweet security of my proposed retreat, only to discover at
the last moment that I was destined to become co-warder of a criminal.

However, it was no use making myself miserable before the time, and as
I was at any rate now free from the choking London atmosphere I could
revel in the thought of fresh country air, liberty and leisure.

I stayed the night at Heathtown (famous for the church wherein Bernard
Gilpin, 'the apostle of the north,' stayed the hot Borderers from
feud), and, drawing the heather-honeyed air deep into my lungs, felt
my strength so renewed that the thoughts of shifting the
ticket-of-leave gentleman if he didn't, in North-country phrase, 'keep
a civil tongue in his heid and behave hissel' respectable,' positively
inspired me with pleasure.

The postman in his cart was, as it chanced, going up to the little
village, styled a 'toon,' where the last post and telegraph-office
this side of Scotland is situated, and insisted upon giving me a
'cast' so far upon my road.

'No, nowse is changed ava,' he replied, in answer to my query, 'syne
ye were last here, save belikely that we are aal a year older, an'
that Farmer Newton's missus was brought tae bed wi' anither bairn a
month ago last Saterday. Ye'll mind she had her fourth bairn the last
time ye were here, an' Farmer Newton, he says he'll just hae tae turn
priest, an' get the Sixstanes livin',[22] an' there, ye ken, the Queen
sends ye a ten-pound note for every addition tae yor fam'ly; an'
though there might not be ower muckle profit in it, it wud help tae
keep the pot a-boiling, says he. But I'm thinkin' mysel',' continued
my informant reflectively, 'that if Farmer Newton were tae give up
shootin' an' huntin' sae muckle, an' took a turn at farmin', he'd have
a less reason for complaining.'

And so we passed the time away, he regaling me with all the domestic
gossip of the countryside, I interrupting him now and again to point
out the historical objects of interest on either hand of us; for, like
all true countrymen, though he knew every stick and stone by the
wayside, he was entirely ignorant of the past history of his vale.

We were now close on the village where my driver ended his stage, and
it suddenly occurred to me to inquire, as I thanked him for his
kindness to myself, if he knew anything of my friend's protégé at the
Fair Green Haugh.

'Well,' he replied slowly, 'I have heard as hoo he has ta'en up wi' a
convick or gaol-bord o' that description. Wey, I canna tell. He'd
muckle better hae getten'd hissel' marrit; an' sartinly we divvn't
want that sort o' specie up this wattor-side. We hevn't muckle gear
belike, but we prefer tae keep wor ain. He'll be ain o' the lifting
kind likelies, the same as thae moss-troopin' fellers ye were crackin'
on aboot enoo whae divvn't seem ivvor tae hae heard on the fifth
commandment. Ye'll be weel employed this holiday-time o' yors wi'
lookin' efter him, I's warn'd. But yo're a lawyer chap,' he continued,
'an' dootless ye'll find an excuse tae shift him wi'. Put on yor wig,
an' nae doot but it will tarrify him.'

I thanked the speaker for his advice somewhat ruefully, for his words
exactly fitted my own presentiment.

Having bade adieu to my postman friend, and arranged for my heavier
luggage to be sent forward in the next carrier's cart that might be
going 'up the wattor,' I set out across the hills to The Nook on Fair
Green Haugh with my knapsack on my back.

Two hours' walking brought me within view of The Nook, and as I paused
at the top of the brae to drink in the well-beloved aspect of the
small 'bigging' that sheltered in the green coign between Windy Law
and Blind Burn side, I noticed the figure of a man carrying a small
child in his arms.

I knew most of the inhabitants of the vale by sight, but the aspect of
the individual in question was unknown to me. It was scarcely likely
he could be a shepherd's extra hand, for the washing and shearing time
was over, and a tramp in the ordinary sense of the term would have
been, to quote from the ornithologists, a 'rare and occasional
visitor.' Besides, he had not the appearance of a tramp; he walked
with an easy boldness, apparently playing with the child as he
strolled, for as I drew nearer I could hear the child's voice
gleefully crying, 'Again, again; do it again, funny man.'

As I drew nearer I looked at the stranger with interest, and noted
that he was a well-made, active fellow, of good proportions. His face
was slightly scarred, as though from small-pox, but not unpleasantly;
it was as if the disease, suddenly repenting of spoiling a bright and
healthful countenance, had incontinently left him for another victim.

His eyes blue, his teeth, splendidly regular, were clean and white as
a hound's. Glancing at the child, I discovered her to be Maggie, the
six-year-old child of Tom Hedley, the herd at Fulhope Law, so I went
straight up to her and asked for a kiss as usual. 'No,' said the
diminutive flirt archly, holding her head backwards; 'no kiss for zoo.
I's got a new man noo,' and forthwith she buried her curls in his
neck. 'He's a nice funny man,' she continued in another moment,
peeping forth from her hiding-place, 'an' he's got nae mair hair on
his heid than oor little puppy-dog at home.'

I glanced at her captor, and noting his cropped crown, jumped to a
sure conclusion as to his identity. 'Why, 'tis none other,' thought I,
'than the protégé.' Possibly he read my thoughts; at any rate,
releasing one arm, he lifted his hand to a salute, smiling, meanwhile,
in the most affable way in the world. I nodded 'Good afternoon,' and
learning that the minister was within and waiting my arrival, turned
my steps to the house.

After our first greetings were over he commenced to apologize again
for the limited space at my disposal, but he was certain that when
once I had got to know his 'protégé,' I should think no more about it.
'He is a beautiful character,' he concluded enthusiastically, 'one
could tell that at a glance by the way in which children take to him.'

'I met him outside just a moment ago,' I replied, 'and he certainly
seems to have won little Maggie's heart, but from my recollection of
her half a dozen "sweeties" would explain that feat. And after all,' I
continued judicially, 'some of the greatest ruffians that ever lived
were extremely fond of children. There was Herod, of course, but he
was the exception that proves the rule.'

'Ah,' sighed my friend, 'that terrible London atmosphere! How it
cankers the human affections! The theory of the law, I believe, is
that every man should be considered innocent till he has been proved
guilty; but you lawyers, reversing this in practice, hold every man
guilty till he prove his innocence.'

'How about his hair?' I inquired rather unkindly.

'His hair?' my friend queried, with a puzzled expression. 'Oh, I see
what you mean,' he continued almost immediately, endeavouring to shed
a _soupçon_ of a smile over his seriously earnest countenance. 'But
don't notice that, please, or you may make him reckless. For now is
the critical time,' he added solemnly, with the professional manner of
a physician making his diagnosis; 'if he gets safely over this his
cure may be regarded as practically assured.

'The great thing is to believe in a man, to cultivate little by little
his sense of self-respect; by "believing men to be better than they
are," one may even, as has been so well said, "make them better than
they are." In England we have always gone on a wrong principle; we
worship success, worldly success, far too much, and have scant
sympathy with the unfortunate. My friend outside says that he stole a
leg of mutton for his starving daughter. The result is he cannot now
get a situation, and his daughter has been taken from him, and is now
in a home. Well, if the man be treated with contumely, he may very
likely despair and give up all hope of improvement. Treat him well, on
the other hand, and you may yet turn him into a useful citizen.'

'You put a premium on wrong-doing,' said I, as I shook my head at his
argument, smiling, however, at the impassioned face before me.

His high, narrow forehead with the ruffled upstanding hair betrayed
the enthusiast; the broad, refined, and eager lips marked a perennial
emotion within; his eyes, notwithstanding their wonderful clarity, had
a far-away look in the depths of them; a spare form, thin wrists, and
shrunken hands completed the presentation of the idealistic, mystical,
Don Quixote type of human nature.

While I thus reflected, my friend continued to pour out fresh
instances proving satisfactorily to any non-prejudiced mind the
correctness of his theory.

'But what are you going to do with him?' I asked eventually, 'for
after all that is the important thing. I mean, his being here with you
may be very nice for him, but it doesn't teach him a trade, and you
can't afford to keep him, I know, for long.'

'First of all,' eagerly began my friend, 'I propose to keep him long
enough to re-instate him in his self-respect; secondly, to study his
temperament and character thoroughly in order to discover what line of
life he is best suited for, and then to get him some appropriate
situation. That is the programme, and, I think, a quite practical and
satisfactory one. There is no "pauperizing" here, you see; it is
simply giving a man a fair chance. And now,' he continued briskly,
'come out and inspect the garden.'

The protégé, it appeared, had been making himself useful therein,
which my friend thought was a highly encouraging sign, 'for,' said he,
'no bad man ever cared for gardening.'

The next few days I spent contentedly in absolute idleness, now
strolling up the waterside, now smoking and reading peacefully in the
little arbour behind the herbaceous border. I had almost forgotten the
existence of my _bête-noir_; he showed, indeed, a most commendable
readiness to efface himself as much as possible from observation, and
when I chanced to pass him he seemed rather to avoid me than to seek
my company. 'Good-morning,' I would say, if I happened to come out of
the house before breakfast for a stroll, and find him chopping
firewood, 'lovely weather, and looks like lasting, I think.'

'Ay,' he would usually reply, with a hurried touch to his cap, 'it's
canny weather,' then muttering something about being busy, would
incontinently hurry into the house. I took this as a sign of grace,
and was quite favourable to the mode of intercourse thus established.
But my host, I could see, was pained at my apparent lack of interest
in his protégé; so the next day, finding Blythe engaged in tying up
the suckers of the honeysuckle to the trellis of the arbour, I went
boldly up to him, determined to try and draw him out.

'Well, and how do you like the country?' I inquired. 'A pleasant
change after town life, eh?'

He gave me a quick, suspicious glance in return, then muttering, 'Ay,
dootless,' again devoted himself to his occupation.

I tried again, but, meeting with no encouragement, became, I am bound
to confess, a little nettled, as though with an insubordinate witness.
The happy insouciance I thought to have marked in him at our first
encounter had vanished, and ''Tis the knifing variety, after all,' I
murmured to myself, and fell to scrutinizing him somewhat severely.
There was something about him that somehow seemed familiar to me. I
determined to probe, and see if he would wince.

'Possibly you don't care about the country?' I suggested smoothly;
'towns, perhaps, attract you more. York, for example, is a nice town,
and, by chance, say September 30 for a little business in the
vicinity, eh?'

He looked me full in the face at this, a very ugly smile curving his
lips, as he replied abruptly, 'What is it you're wanting?'

'I don't know that I want anything for myself,' said I, somewhat
elated at the success of my conjecture, 'but I should like fair play
for my friend inside. Pheasants are scarce hereabouts, but possibly
other things might come in useful. I needn't specify,' I continued
airily, 'to a gentleman of your intelligence; 'twould be superfluous.'

For reply he made a bound at me, head down, and both fists
outstretched. It was as the rush of the bull for the matador's flag,
and my bound aside just saved me from his charge, though his right
fist touched me on the chest and sent me staggering backward.

He turned, and came again; this time I had more space for manoeuvre,
and the memory of an old fencing trick, learned in Angelo's school of
arms, swift as a flashlight, lit within my brain. I leant forward as
though to meet him like a boxer, then, as he rushed upon me, turned
quickly sideways, fencing fashion, and slipped half a foot backward.
He missed me by a hand's breadth; a reek of tobacco touched me hotly
on the cheek; another moment and I had leapt forward on a late 'time
thrust,' and caught my antagonist neatly just behind the ear. I had
been unable to put any strength into the blow, but it proved to be
enough to upset his poise. He staggered, stooped, and then fell
headlong on the path, scarce having time to break his fall with hand
or arm.

He lay there for a moment or two, apparently half-dazed; then, slowly
picking himself up, leant back with folded arms against an apple-tree,
and surveyed me with a sort of sulky resignation.

'Well, you've got the better o' me again,' said he; 'you've the luck
on your side, nae doot. "Bing lay your shero,"' I overheard him mutter
to himself under his breath, which, taken in conjunction with his
name, amply sufficed to confirm my conjecture of his gipsy origin.
'What is 't ye want wi' me?' he continued, in a louder voice.

'As I said before,' I replied slowly, seating myself upon a wooden
bench in front of the arbour, 'I only require fair play for my friend
within. A man of the world like yourself can easily deceive him, even
to the half of his kingdom; and if he has a fancy to cure the leopard
of his spots or whitewash the Ethiopian--or perhaps I might say the
"Egyptian" rather--I would like the process to be as inexpensive as
possible to him--you understand?' I queried of my opposite, smiling as
I spoke; for I had the whip-hand of him undoubtedly, and to be
unpleasant politely is part of the lawyer's art.

'To put the matter more clearly still,' I continued, for he had made
no response to my suggestion, 'I think a week of fresh air and quiet
seclusion in the country should be enough for any man of active habits
after a period of enforced leisure; the hair, moreover, grows quickly
in a country retreat, as Joshua's messengers found of old, and,
briefly, what I would advise is a moonlight flitting.'

Pleased with the brevity of my peroration, I took my cigarette-case
from my pocket, and, having selected a cigarette, carefully proceeded
to light it with the utmost deliberation.

I had taken my eyes off him for the moment, partly in order to
ascertain if the cigarette were properly alight, partly to perfect the
illusion of _sang froid_; and dearly I paid for my rashness, for with
a bound he was upon me.

I ducked; but it was too late, and over I went backward, my enemy
a-top of me, crash through the arbour on to the stone flagging within.

I was stunned, I suppose, for a minute or so, for I lay there
wondering what had happened, and annoyed that a wasp, as I thought,
should have stung me in the neck. In another moment I had discovered
that the smart was due to a bit of live cigarette-ash that had chanced
to drop inside my collar in my fall, and I tried to put up a hand to
remove it. To my disgust, I found my hands were knotted tightly
together; my legs, too, were bound, and, as I turned my head, my eyes
met those of my enemy, sitting beside me on a low stool.

'The gadgi' (viz., 'gorgio,' or man of non-gipsy race) 'is but a fool
in his pride and self-conceit,' said he; 'he is but a tortoise, for
all his pushkin's (hare) gallop at the start.'

This was what I heard him saying as I recovered consciousness, and as
I knew that gipsies always hide their origin, and refrain from their
language in the presence of the 'gorgios,' I felt certain he must be
labouring under great excitement, and momentarily expected to see him
out with his knife and finish me there and then. Here he stooped, and
I thought my hour had come, but apparently it was only to pick up my
fallen cigarette. Pinching off the blackened end, he put it between
his lips, and, lighting it at the other end, drew in deep breaths of
tobacco-smoke.

'I don't wonder you enjoy it,' said I, as I watched his proceedings
with an intense annoyance; 'successful theft is pleasant to a tchor
(thief), I presume?'

'And who's the tchor in the end,' retorted he--'you or me? Speak,
little gutterwhelp from the toon, that art paid to lie at so many bars
(sovereigns) the lie. Your kind take a man's money, plead so ill that
at the finish the "stande" (gaol) has him, while the big thief's left
behind in court wi' a white wig on, an' a smile on his ugly moi
(mouth). Who's the tchor, then?' he repeated with a leer, as he blew a
cloud of smoke in the air. 'I 'low ye got me nabbed at York 'Sizes,
but it wesn't yor doin', 'twas that dirty Jack Spraggon, who turned
informer an' legged me that time. Why, ye pink-eyed toon's-spawn, if
I'd my rights, an' things were as they aince was, I'd hang ye tae the
nearest tree. Look there,' he cried, as, stirring me with his foot, he
drew up his coat-sleeve and thrust a tattoed wrist over my eyes--'look
there, d'ye ken what that is?'

I gazed with interest, for it was evidently an heraldic coat,
excellently well punctured in his flesh.

'A lion rampant within a tressure fleury counter fleury, by Jove!
debruised by a bar sinister,' I murmured aloud.

My thoughts went back at a bound to memories of the 'Gaberlunzie Man'
of the ballad, the errant James V., and 'ane louit Johnnie Faa, Lord
and Earl of Little Egypt,' but all I said was, 'Still, people don't
boast of an illegitimate origin nowadays.'

'Illegitimate!' he cried angrily; 'I'll teach ye manners, ye ----' but
here a step sounded on the path outside, and in another moment my host
peered in at the doorway.

'Tut--tut--tut,' said my friend, removing his glasses from his nose in
his agitation, 'dear, dear! what can have happened? Speak, Ned;
explain, Will.'

My adversary rose to his feet, saluted our interrogator somewhat
shamefacedly, and, pointing to myself, replied, 'He wes sae impiddent
wi' me I'd just tae teach him a lesson, but nae harm's done.'

'Oh,' cried my little friend, and he positively wrung his hands in his
distress, 'but you shouldn't,' and here he looked at us reproachfully
in turn. Then a happy thought seemed to rise in his brain. 'We must
forget all about this unhappy occurrence,' cried he; 'we will not
inquire into it, but will shake hands all round, and begin afresh.'

So saying he immediately knelt down, undid my bandages, and helped me
to rise from the floor. 'Now,' he cried, and seized hold of our
respective hands.

'Well,' said my antagonist, 'I bear no malice, but keep yor tongue a
bit civiler i' future.'

'And refrain from pheasants and legs of mutton,' I nearly retorted,
but stayed my tongue in time, and the three of us shook hands promptly
all round, as desired. I was willing enough to shake hands because I
felt I had been in error in taunting my antagonist, but I was not
prepared for the reproof my host had in store for me, as he put his
arm through mine, and led me away for a stroll up the brae.

'Oh, how could you do it?' he said. 'You must have stung him beyond
endurance, and you promised, you remember, to respect him.'

'I only told him the truth,' I replied sulkily. 'As a matter of fact,
I recognised in him the first individual I ever had the pleasure of
getting convicted--at York Assizes--pheasant-poaching, stoning a
keeper, etc. One's first conviction is like one's first love--one
can't forget it.'

'Ah, but if it is so, that is just an incident in that past career of
his which is quite dead and buried now; you see yourself how annoyed
he was at your bringing it up against him. Of course, his conduct was
inexcusable,' he hastily added, suddenly remembering doubtless that he
was my host, 'but this vigour of resentment proves to my mind the
genuineness of his repentance.'

It was hopeless to argue, so I turned the subject, inwardly resolving
that I would leave on the morrow.

After supper that evening I went outside to smoke, and there lingered
long, enjoying the soft, luminous northern twilight.

The murmur of the stream in the valley trembled amidst the silence of
the night, as of some old monk telling his beads in the solitude of a
vast cathedral. Suddenly a discordant singing sounded down the vale.
'Some roysterer,' thought I with disgust. 'I suppose there must have
been a wedding or some festivity of that sort.'

The sounds rose and fell fitfully, but grew gradually louder. It was
evident someone was coming 'up the wattor,' and I waited to see who
the disturber of our quiet could be.

The last corner had apparently been turned, for now I could hear the
voice distinctly. 'The protégé again, by Jove!' I groaned.

I meditated instant flight, but a fit of laughter caught me, and I
stayed. Out of the gray twilight a toper lurched up to the gate on
which I leant, and, steadying himself, momentarily peered into my
face.

'No malish, little Wool-shack, eh?' quoth he with a grin. Then,
becoming confidential, he leant forward and whispered, 'Drink ye for a
"bar," turn an' turn about,' producing as he spoke a most
suspicious-looking black bottle.

'Look here,' said I, 'why did you come to this place?'

'It's a free-sh country,' replied my opposite solemnly, 'an'
wanderin's my trade, an' the wee big bairn upstairs, he's ta'en a sort
o' woman's fancy for us. Noo, Wull Blythe's like his ancient forbears,
royal Wull Faa, an' the lave, an' he cannot say nae to a woman, though
he'll ne'er tak' a look frae a man.'

'Well, good-night,' I said, 'and don't wake the big bairn upstairs.'

It was some time before I finished packing, and after that was done I
sat down and had another pipe by the window. I was just dozing off
when a smell of burning seemed to creep in upon my nostrils, and the
atmosphere grew thicker to my sub-consciousness.

'It can't be anything,' I murmured inwardly, and tried to recede still
further into the dark grove of sleep, but a step outside my door
effectually roused me.

A light gleamed upon me. 'Come, my friend, come quick; I fear the
house is on fire,' cried my host at the doorway; 'throw on a coat, wet
your blankets, and follow me upstairs at once with them.'

I rushed upstairs headlong some few seconds after, and stumbled over a
prostrate form on the small garret landing, a reek of whisky giving me
assurance of its identity. I rose hastily, and passed into the room
beyond, where, amidst heavy smoke-wreaths, I perceived my host, now
beating burning bedding with his hands, and again stamping with his
feet upon smouldering coverings on the floor.

I did my best to help him, and we succeeded shortly in getting the
better of the conflagration. After emptying buckets of water over bed
and bedding, we waited for some minutes to ascertain if any hidden
fire lingered anywhere.

'I think it will be all right now,' said my host; 'but come, we must
look after my poor friend outside--I fear he is badly burned. Poor
fellow, he was lying in bed stupefied with the smoke. I suppose he
must have fallen asleep reading, and the candle must have set fire
somehow to the bed-clothes or curtain.'

He had scarcely finished speaking when he swayed suddenly, and before
I could reach out an arm, had fallen to the ground in a dead faint. I
lifted him up and carried him downstairs at once, and found that he
was rather severely burnt about the hands.

After I had restored him to consciousness as best I could and dressed
his hurts, I proceeded, at my friend's earnest entreaty, to look after
the protégé, who was still lying prostrate on the garret landing;
absolutely unconscious and hopelessly intoxicated.

He was badly burnt on one arm, and scorched down one side of his body.
Appearances seemed to show that he must have thrown off the
counterpane and blankets on to the floor, that there they must have
become ignited either from his fallen pipe or candle, and eventually
have set fire to one side of the bed.

The doctor had to be sent for, and for a week the protégé was kept in
bed; when he did come down again he was as contrite as possible, and I
carefully avoided all mention of the disaster, for I had a dim feeling
of guilt in the matter, suspecting that he went down the valley that
evening to the alehouse in consequence of his excitement at his
triumph over myself.

Now that he was about again, and my friend too was quite restored, I
determined to depart, and the next morning went down early to the
Frolic to enjoy a last bathe.

I was sitting on a shelf of rock above a deep pool, drying myself
slowly after my swim, when I heard sounds below me. Looking out from
my shelter, I saw Blythe, who appeared to be about to follow my
example. His procedure, however, was curious; for first he cast his
cap upon the waters, then carefully deposited what looked to me like a
Bible on his coat on the bank, and, finally, having looked about him
stealthily, took off his shoes and proceeded to ford the burn.

'He's off,' I thought to myself, then cried to him, 'Holloa! what's
up?'

He stood stock-still in mid-stream like one petrified, then,
perceiving me, waded slowly to shore.

'Noo, don't ye blab tae Mistor Rutherford,' he said, as he came close
up underneath where I was standing. 'I's awa aff. I cannot stay, but I
doot the little man will be sair troubled aboot it, sae let him think
on as that I'm drooned, wi' the Bible there tae show I's a convarted
character, for he's been one tae many for Blythe, an' I wud'na like
him tae grieve ower my disappointing him. I cam' for a bit fun, but
it's turning tae seriousness noo, an' I can't bide any mair, that's a
sartinty.'

I don't know whether I acted wrongly or not, but I fell in with his
view of the situation, and when I had finished my dressing he had
already stolen out of sight.

I stayed on another week after this, and during that time successfully
concealed my connivance at the protégé's flight.

The discovery of his cap and coat was considered proof of his having
been drowned, and the Bible, borrowed from himself for the occasion,
provided at once a consolation for my friend and a rebuke to my
scepticism.

I spent a night in Oldcastle on my way back to town, and chance took
me through one of the most thickly populated, though not most
aristocratic, quarters of the city. It was a fine night, and I had
prolonged my stroll unconsciously. Suddenly the swing-door of a
public-house was thrown back violently, and a man came hurtling
through, and fell with a thud on the pavement beside me; a face peered
through the aperture of the doors for a moment, and in a flash I
recognised it.

The gentleman who had been thus ignominiously 'chucked out' slowly
pulled himself together, collected his faculties and his hat with
difficulty, uttered some violent and abusive epithets, then slowly
staggered off down the street with drunken dignity.

I went inside the aforesaid doors. My eyes had not deceived me, for
there was the protégé behind the counter in his new capacity of barman
and 'chucker out.' He signed to me to follow him into the 'snug,' and
there confided to me that he had got a permanent job for the first
time in his life.

'Here,' said he, 'is a bar' (sovereign); 'send it along tae Mister
Rutherford, an' tell him I's alive an' hearty, an' that I canna rest
till I's paid for the blankets an' beddin' I burnt the other week.
Mind,' says he, 'ye're not tae say where I am, but tell him I've a
situation, an's givin' satisfaction.'

'Well,' thought I to myself, as I returned to my hotel, 'if my friend
hasn't reformed the protégé, he has come at all events as near to
success as is good for the ordinary mortal.'


FOOTNOTE:

[22] The author understands that this is the case in regard to some of
the livings in the gift of Greenwich Hospital.




THE SPANISH DOUBLOON


Ransacking Jake's treasury one afternoon, I made an unexpected
find--no less than a Spanish doubloon hidden away in an old sporran of
a great-uncle of his.

The history of the fox-marked rapier, of the blood-stained tress of
hair found at Cawnpore, and of the yellow robe of the Brahmin, I knew
already; but the heavy Spanish coin suggested something of a different
order.

'Come,' said I, holding it up so as to attract his attention, 'tell me
the tale connected with this--something to do with a pirate, or the
Spanish Main, I dare swear.'

Jake smiled quaintly as he fingered the coin with deliberation. 'Weel,
it's a queer tale, sartinly, that's connected wi' yon coin, but all I
can tell ye is what my aunt telled me langsyne, when she presented it
to me on my joining the sarvice, just before I left for India.

'Noo, my aunt, ye mun ken, was a widow woman who lived on a bit
property she had left her doon at the small, ootlandish-named seaport,
as it was then, o' Bocca Chica, on the Northumberland coast.

'There was a man there she kenned nicely--in fact, she aye said
afterwards, wi' a shudder at the thocht o't, that at one time he
wanted to marry wi' her--who cut a big figure i' the place, by name
Isaac Stephenson--"Black Isaac," as he was mair usually styled. It
seems he had been bred and born i' the place, but had run awa to sea
i' his youth, an' after many voyagings here an' there turns up again
wi' pockets fu' o' siller, and a wee, misbegotten heathen dwarf o' a
Malay as his attendant.

'The dwarf called hissel' Chilpo, or some such uncanny name, an' was a
kind o' body-servant an' clerk an' dirty-job man to Isaac. But Isaac
never let on where he picked him up, an' Chilpo was a sour-tempered
little deil, whom maist folks were terrified o'; sae naebody e'er
kenned muckle o' his antecedents or ancestry.

'Weel, Isaac, on his settling doon again at home, set up i' business
as a shipowner an' broker, an' carried on a large business as an
exporter o' coals, an' did a bit, as maist everybody did i' those
days, i' the smuggling line--salt, an' lace, an' brandy, ye ken. He
had siller, as I said, when he started his new trade, though naebody
kenned hoo he had come by it; but it was no lang before he was the
richest man i' the toon, an' folk began to talk weel o' him, an'
praise him up as a good citizen as was a credit to the toon, an' ask
him to open bazaars for them, an' suchlike.

'There was just one strange thing aboot him, an' that was that the
womenfolk couldn't abide him. E'en after he had made hisself the
richest man i' the toon, he could ne'er get hissel' married, though
'twas said my aunt, when he took up wi' religion, had aince had a
thocht o' him, but no for lang, for there was suthin' aboot him that
tarrified her when it came near the point.

'He was no ill-favoured neither, for I mind seein' him mysel' as a lad
aince I was stayin' wi' my aunt--a tall, poo'erfu', black-haired man,
wi' heavy eyebrows, an' a lustfu' sort o' eye--half hectorin', half
cowardly. But he had a cruel sort o' look aboot him--thick-lipped, an'
greedy, sweaty sort o' hands.

'Weel, after a good few years o' prosperity he turned sort o'
sickly-like, an' for the first time i' his life began to think upon
his latter end, an' at the finish takes up wi' a sect o' Bible
Christians, or Christadelphians, or some such body, who were glad to
get hold o' such a rich, influential sort o' person withoot askin'
ower mony questions.

'Weel, he gans to his chapel, an' he prays, an' he gies his testimony,
an' calls hissel' all sorts o' names, but was ay cautious no to gie
ower mony details o' his sins, an' the good folk were highly edified
by it, my aunt amangst them, an' asked him for subscriptions for every
sort o' charity.

'But Chilpo, he couldna stand this sudden right-about-face, for there
was nae releegion at aal i' his wee, misshapen anatomy, naething but
love o' siller, and beastly, secretive pleasures o' opium drams an'
such like. An' he mutinies against it, an' cusses an' swears to
hissel' i' his pigeon-English talk, for Isaac by degrees began to hae
his doots aboot the lawfu'ness o' smugglin' an' saeforth, an' Chilpo's
wages an' profits dootless wud suffer by his maister's scruples.

'Consequence was, there grew to be bad blood betwixt maister an' man,
an' folk could hear them quarrelling inside the office o' nights, till
at the finish there's a grand flare-up, Isaac seemingly strikin'
Chilpo, an' Chilpo clickin' his maister wi' his knife.

'Chilpo gets the bag for that, Isaac no daurin' to prosecute him, for
he kenned ower muckle. But he disna leave the toon; just hangs aboot,
doggin' Isaac's footsteps, an' cussin' to hissel' i' his queer,
ootlandish way o' talk. "Him coward," he would mutter, "but Chilpo
brave man. He no take no blowee. Chilpo hang Isaac--hang himselfee--no
matter--Chilpo fear nozzin'," an' he would gnash wi' his white teeth
savagely like a mad dog as he saw Isaac pass along the street.

'His heart was just as black as his sweaty, black phiznommy, an' he
properly haunted Isaac till he fair plagued him to death.

'One Sabbath, when there was a great function on at Isaac's chapel, he
actually follows him in, an' sat sneerin' an' mimickin' an' makin'
game o' Isaac as he prayed an' groaned, an' confessed to bein' a
muckle great sinner i' the past, till Isaac was near mad wi' rage an'
terror. He tried to pray, but the words wouldn't come richt, an' the
sweat poured aff his brow, they said, till folk thought he was about
to hae a fit or seizure o' some sort.

'At the finish he gies it up, an', staggerin' on to his feet, points
i' a frenzied sort o' way to Chilpo sittin' there below him, an' cries
oot loud: "It's the deil, it's the deil! Drive him awa; drive him oot
o' the holy place! I tell ye he's sin hissel'. See the sooty face on
him!"

'"Ugh! Black Isaac, him coward!" shouts Chilpo, standin' up on his
seat. "Him sky-pilot nowee, no goodee any more. Once a timee
diffelent; good pilate once, grand pilate with Chilpo; men's pilate,
women's pilates, temple's pilates, all sorts pilates. Oh yez; huzza!
Dam good timee then; ping-pang, click-click, plenty moneys, plenty
grogs, plenty funee. O yez; Chilpo, he knowee." The little heathen
chuckled to himself, makin' uncanny motions wi' his hands o'
throat-cuttin' an' liquor-drinkin' an' fillin' his pockets wi' siller.

'"Him hipple-clite nowee," continued Chilpo, shoutin' aloud to all the
chapel-folks who hadn't recovered theirsels from their amazement; "dam
hipple-clite! Why, him worship the debbil like Chilpo former timee.
Him no use for prayee; him dam-ee, curs-ee; him Church's pilate,
women's pilate, then burnee together. Oh yes, him lemember allight;
askee him," an' wi' that he points his finger at Isaac, whose face was
workin' in a frightful fashion, his eyes starin' this way an' that,
wi' no meanin' i' them, his lips black, an' his mouth slobberin'; then
sudden he starts to run, but catches his foot an' falls full length
doon on the floor an' drums wi' his hands amangst the cushions.

'There was a panic at that; half o' the women faints dead awa, the
bairns scream, and some o' the men drives Chilpo, still chucklin' to
himself, oot at the door wi' blows, whilst others attend to Isaac
lyin' wi' his head covered i' the dusty cushions an' his hands hard
a-grip o' the seat-stanchions.

'They loosens his grasp wi' difficulty, but lifts him up at the finish
wi' a shockin' face on him, an' a senseless tongue that babbled aboot
a parrot. Some said it mun ha' been i' reference someway to some
wicked episode i' his past life which Chilpo kenned o' an' alluded to
i' the chapel. Maybe a parrot had been left the sole survivor after a
sack, ye ken, an' Isaac couldna forget the scene. Anyways, Chilpo, the
dam cunnin' little de'il, kenned o' the hidden sore i' Isaac's mind,
an' laid a cruel finger on 't wi' the blackest malice. An' there was
nae doot aboot the outcome o't, for Isaac was gone clean daft, an'
died not long afterwards i' the asylum.

'Weel, they gied him a big buryin', for his brethren i' the chapel
said they believed he was a true repentant sinner, an' forbye that he
had left a good bit siller amangst them, which would dootless assist
them to that conclusion; an' as there had been some body-snatchin'
lately, they determined to form a small watch committee to keep guard
at the graveside for a night or two.

'Weel, the watch was composed o' some decent elderly folk, who didn't
trash theirselves ower the job; an' mevvies the funeral festivities
had delayed them a bit, for they didn't arrive at the graveyard till
aboot half-past ten o' the clock.

'It was ane o' thae tempestuous October nights, wi' half a gale
blowin', an' clouds gallopin', wi' flittin's o' moonlight like jockeys
ridin' 'em; an' when they came nigh to the graveside, an' saw a dark,
misshapen sort o' a figure plyin' an axe vigorously, an' heard a thud,
thud, same as ye may when passin' by a butcher's shop any day, why,
they turned tail and fled, the most o' them stumblin' this way an'
that amangst the headstones.

'Two o' them, though, was a bit bolder, an' pressed on up to the
graveside, whereupon the little black demon figure thuds doon his axe
wi' a sickenin' sound, then dives awa into the darkness, screechin'
oot: "Chilpo, Chilpo! he makee sicker, he makee sicker!" and therewith
vanished frae Bocca Chica.

'As for the doubloon,' concluded Jake, spinning it into the air as he
spoke, 'it was found amangst some leavin's o' Chilpo's at his
lodgin's, an' sold wi' some other trinkets to pay some small debts he
had left behind him.

'My aunt bought it up as a memento o' the marcifu' preservation she
had had frae marryin' wi' a buccaneer; an' when I said good-bye to her
on startin' for India, she presented it to me, wi' an admonition ne'er
to have any traffic wi' dwarfs or pirates.'


THE END




PRINTED BY

BILLING AND SONS, GUILDFORD


       *       *       *       *       *

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE

Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.

Obvious punctuation and spelling errors repaired. Punctuation and
spelling standardized when a predominant preference was found in this
book. Other possible errors retained.

Page 43, "the many" changed to "them any" (he'd never have hearkened
to them any more).

Page 164, "Georgie" changed to "Geordie" (responded Geordie
gratefully).

Inconsistent hyphenation was retained. When uncertain of the author's
spelling of words split across lines, hyphen was retained in such
words as "chimney-piece", "god-child", "cock-sure", "well-made". Words
"lampshade", "mantelpiece", "grandchildren", also split across lines
in the original, are not hyphenated in this text.

"GEORDIE ARMSTRONG, 'THE JESU-YTE'" tale starts with subheading I,
which suggests that the tale has several parts. However, there are no
other numbered subheadings in this chapter.





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