<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN> CHAPTER X</h2>
<p>To have determined upon an act something akin to heroism in its way, and to
have fulfilled it by lying heartily, and so subverting the whole structure
built by good resolution, seems a sad downfall if we forget what human nature,
in its green weedy spring, is composed of. Young Richard had quitted his cousin
Austin fully resolved to do his penance and drink the bitter cup; and he had
drunk it; drained many cups to the dregs; and it was to no purpose. Still they
floated before him, brimmed, trebly bitter. Away from Austin’s influence,
he was almost the same boy who had slipped the guinea into Tom Bakewell’s
hand, and the lucifers into Farmer Blaize’s rick. For good seed is long
ripening; a good boy is not made in a minute. Enough that the seed was in him.
He chafed on his road to Raynham at the scene he had just endured, and the
figure of Belthorpe’s fat tenant burnt like hot copper on the tablet of
his brain, insufferably condescending, and, what was worse, in the right.
Richard, obscured as his mind’s eye was by wounded pride, saw that
clearly, and hated his enemy for it the more.</p>
<p>Heavy Benson’s tongue was knelling dinner as Richard arrived at the
Abbey. He hurried up to his room to dress. Accident, or design, had laid the
book of Sir Austin’s aphorisms open on the dressing-table. Hastily
combing his hair, Richard glanced down and read—</p>
<p>“The Dog returneth to his vomit: the Liar must eat his Lie.”</p>
<p>Underneath was interjected in pencil: “The Devil’s mouthful!”</p>
<p>Young Richard ran downstairs feeling that his father had struck him in the
face.</p>
<p>Sir Austin marked the scarlet stain on his son’s cheekbones. He sought
the youth’s eye, but Richard would not look, and sat conning his plate,
an abject copy of Adrian’s succulent air at that employment. How could he
pretend to the relish of an epicure when he was painfully endeavouring to
masticate The Devil’s mouthful?</p>
<p>Heavy Benson sat upon the wretched dinner. Hippias usually the silent member,
as if awakened by the unnatural stillness, became sprightly, like the
goatsucker owl at night and spoke much of his book, his digestion, and his
dreams, and was spared both by Algernon and Adrian. One inconsequent dream he
related, about fancying himself quite young and rich, and finding himself
suddenly in a field cropping razors around him, when, just as he had, by steps
dainty as those of a French dancing-master, reached the middle, he to his
dismay beheld a path clear of the bloodthirsty steel-crop, which he might have
taken at first had he looked narrowly; and there he was.</p>
<p>Hippias’s brethren regarded him with eyes that plainly said they wished
he had remained there. Sir Austin, however, drew forth his note-book, and
jotted down a reflection. A composer of aphorisms can pluck blossoms even from
a razor-crop. Was not Hippias’s dream the very counterpart of
Richard’s position? He, had he looked narrowly, might have taken the
clear path: he, too, had been making dainty steps till he was surrounded by the
grinning blades. And from that text Sir Austin preached to his son when they
were alone. Little Clare was still too unwell to be permitted to attend the
dessert, and father and son were soon closeted together.</p>
<p>It was a strange meeting. They seemed to have been separated so long. The
father took his son’s hand; they sat without a word passing between them.
Silence said most. The boy did not understand his father: his father frequently
thwarted him: at times he thought his father foolish: but that paternal
pressure of his hand was eloquent to him of how warmly he was beloved. He tried
once or twice to steal his hand away, conscious it was melting him. The spirit
of his pride, and old rebellion, whispered him to be hard, unbending, resolute.
Hard he had entered his father’s study: hard he had met his
father’s eyes. He could not meet them now. His father sat beside him
gently; with a manner that was almost meekness, so he loved this boy. The poor
gentleman’s lips moved. He was praying internally to God for him.</p>
<p>By degrees an emotion awoke in the boy’s bosom. Love is that blessed wand
which wins the waters from the hardness of the heart. Richard fought against
it, for the dignity of old rebellion. The tears would come; hot and struggling
over the dams of pride. Shamefully fast they began to fall. He could no longer
conceal them, or check the sobs. Sir Austin drew him nearer and nearer, till
the beloved head was on his breast.</p>
<p>An hour afterwards, Adrian Harley, Austin Wentworth, and Algernon Feverel were
summoned to the baronet’s study.</p>
<p>Adrian came last. There was a style of affable omnipotence about the wise youth
as he slung himself into a chair, and made an arch of the points of his
fingers, through which to gaze on his blundering kinsmen. Careless as one may
be whose sagacity has foreseen, and whose benevolent efforts have forestalled,
the point of danger at the threshold, Adrian crossed his legs, and only
intruded on their introductory remarks so far as to hum half audibly at
intervals,</p>
<p class="poem">
“Ripton and Richard were two pretty men,”</p>
<p>in parody of the old ballad. Young Richard’s red eyes, and the
baronet’s ruffled demeanour, told him that an explanation had taken
place, and a reconciliation. That was well. The baronet would now pay
cheerfully. Adrian summed and considered these matters, and barely listened
when the baronet called attention to what he had to say: which was elaborately
to inform all present, what all present very well knew, that a rick had been
fired, that his son was implicated as an accessory to the fact, that the
perpetrator was now imprisoned, and that Richard’s family were, as it
seemed to him, bound in honour to do their utmost to effect the man’s
release.</p>
<p>Then the baronet stated that he had himself been down to Belthorpe, his son
likewise: and that he had found every disposition in Blaize to meet his wishes.</p>
<p>The lamp which ultimately was sure to be lifted up to illumine the acts of this
secretive race began slowly to dispread its rays; and, as statement followed
statement, they saw that all had known of the business: that all had been down
to Belthorpe: all save the wise youth Adrian, who, with due deference and a
sarcastic shrug, objected to the proceeding, as putting them in the hands of
the man Blaize. His wisdom shone forth in an oration so persuasive and
aphoristic that had it not been based on a plea against honour, it would have
made Sir Austin waver. But its basis was expediency, and the baronet had a
better aphorism of his own to confute him with.</p>
<p>“Expediency is man’s wisdom, Adrian Harley. Doing right is
God’s.”</p>
<p>Adrian curbed his desire to ask Sir Austin whether an attempt to counteract the
just working of the law was doing right. The direct application of an aphorism
was unpopular at Raynham.</p>
<p>“I am to understand then,” said he, “that Blaize consents not
to press the prosecution.”</p>
<p>“Of course he won’t,” Algernon remarked. “Confound him!
he’ll have his money, and what does he want besides?”</p>
<p>“These agricultural gentlemen are delicate customers to deal with.
However, if he really consents”—</p>
<p>“I have his promise,” said the baronet, fondling his son.</p>
<p>Young Richard looked up to his father, as if he wished to speak. He said
nothing, and Sir Austin took it as a mute reply to his caresses; and caressed
him the more. Adrian perceived a reserve in the boy’s manner, and as he
was not quite satisfied that his chief should suppose him to have been the only
idle, and not the most acute and vigilant member of the family, he commenced a
cross-examination of him by asking who had last spoken with the tenant of
Belthorpe?</p>
<p>“I think I saw him last,” murmured Richard, and relinquished his
father’s hand.</p>
<p>Adrian fastened on his prey. “And left him with a distinct and
satisfactory assurance of his amicable intentions?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Richard.</p>
<p>“Not?” the Feverels joined in astounded chorus.</p>
<p>Richard sidled away from his father, and repeated a shamefaced
“No.”</p>
<p>“Was he hostile?” inquired Adrian, smoothing his palms, and
smiling.</p>
<p>“Yes,” the boy confessed.</p>
<p>Here was quite another view of their position. Adrian, generally patient of
results, triumphed strongly at having evoked it, and turned upon Austin
Wentworth, reproving him for inducing the boy to go down to Belthorpe. Austin
looked grieved. He feared that Richard had faded in his good resolve.</p>
<p>“I thought it his duty to go,” he observed.</p>
<p>“It was!” said the baronet, emphatically.</p>
<p>“And you see what comes of it, sir,” Adrian struck in. “These
agricultural gentlemen, I repeat, are delicate customers to deal with. For my
part I would prefer being in the hands of a policeman. We are decidedly
collared by Blaize. What were his words, Ricky? Give it in his own
Doric.”</p>
<p>“He said he would transport Tom Bakewell.”</p>
<p>Adrian smoothed his palms, and smiled again. Then they could afford to defy Mr.
Blaize, he informed them significantly, and made once more a mysterious
allusion to the Punic elephant, bidding his relatives be at peace. They were
attaching, in his opinion, too much importance to Richard’s complicity.
The man was a fool, and a very extraordinary arsonite, to have an accomplice at
all. It was a thing unknown in the annals of rick-burning. But one would be
severer than law itself to say that a boy of fourteen had instigated to crime a
full-grown man. At that rate the boy was ‘father of the man’ with a
vengeance, and one might hear next that ‘the baby was father of the
boy.’ They would find common sense a more benevolent ruler than poetical
metaphysics.</p>
<p>When he had done, Austin, with his customary directness, asked him what he
meant.</p>
<p>“I confess, Adrian,” said the baronet, hearing him expostulate with
Austin’s stupidity, “I for one am at a loss. I have heard that this
man, Bakewell, chooses voluntarily not to inculpate my son. Seldom have I heard
anything that so gratified me. It is a view of innate nobleness in the
rustic’s character which many a gentleman might take example from. We are
bound to do our utmost for the man.” And, saying that he should pay a
second visit to Belthorpe, to inquire into the reasons for the farmer’s
sudden exposition of vindictiveness, Sir Austin rose.</p>
<p>Before he left the room, Algernon asked Richard if the farmer had vouchsafed
any reasons, and the boy then spoke of the tampering with the witnesses, and
the Bantam’s “Not upon oath!” which caused Adrian to choke
with laughter. Even the baronet smiled at so cunning a distinction as that
involved in swearing a thing, and not swearing it upon oath.</p>
<p>“How little,” he exclaimed, “does one yeoman know another! To
elevate a distinction into a difference is the natural action of their minds. I
will point that out to Blaize. He shall see that the idea is native
born.”</p>
<p>Richard saw his father go forth. Adrian, too, was ill at ease.</p>
<p>“This trotting down to Belthorpe spoils all,” said he. “The
affair would pass over to-morrow—Blaize has no witnesses. The old rascal
is only standing out for more money.”</p>
<p>“No, he isn’t,” Richard corrected him. “It’s not
that. I’m sure he believes his witnesses have been tampered with, as he
calls it.”</p>
<p>“What if they have, boy?” Adrian put it boldly. “The ground
is cut from under his feet.”</p>
<p>“Blaize told me that if my father would give his word there had been
nothing of the sort, he would take it. My father will give his word.”</p>
<p>“Then,” said Adrian, “you had better stop him from going
down.”</p>
<p>Austin looked at Adrian keenly, and questioned him whether he thought the
farmer was justified in his suspicions. The wise youth was not to be entrapped.
He had only been given to understand that the witnesses were tolerably
unstable, and, like the Bantam, ready to swear lustily, but not upon the Book.
How given to understand, he chose not to explain, but he reiterated that the
chief should not be allowed to go down to Belthorpe.</p>
<p>Sir Austin was in the lane leading to the farm when he heard steps of some one
running behind him. It was dark, and he shook off the hand that laid hold of
his cloak, roughly, not recognizing his son.</p>
<p>“It’s I, sir,” said Richard panting. “Pardon me. You
mustn’t go in there.”</p>
<p>“Why not?” said the baronet, putting his arm about him.</p>
<p>“Not now,” continued the boy. “I will tell you all to-night.
I must see the farmer myself. It was my fault, sir. I-I lied to him—the
Liar must eat his Lie. Oh, forgive me for disgracing you, sir. I did it—I
hope I did it to save Tom Bakewell. Let me go in alone, and speak the
truth.”</p>
<p>“Go, and I will wait for you here,” said his father.</p>
<p>The wind that bowed the old elms, and shivered the dead leaves in the air, had
a voice and a meaning for the baronet during that half-hour’s lonely
pacing up and down under the darkness, awaiting his boy’s return. The
solemn gladness of his heart gave nature a tongue. Through the desolation
flying overhead—the wailing of the Mother of Plenty across the bare-swept
land—he caught intelligible signs of the beneficent order of the
universe, from a heart newly confirmed in its grasp of the principle of human
goodness, as manifested in the dear child who had just left him; confirmed in
its belief in the ultimate victory of good within us, without which nature has
neither music nor meaning, and is rock, stone, tree, and nothing more.</p>
<p>In the dark, the dead leaves beating on his face, he had a word for his
note-book: “There is for the mind but one grasp of happiness: from that
uppermost pinnacle of wisdom, whence we see that this world is well
designed.”</p>
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