<h2>CHAPTER L.</h2>
<h4>TREATING OF SOME CONFUSION, IN CONSEQUENCE, IN THE CLUB-ROOM OF THE
PHŒNIX AND ELSEWHERE, AND OF A HAT THAT WAS PICKED UP.</h4>
<div class="figleft"><ANTIMG src="images/img002.jpg" alt="ORNAMENTAL CAPITAL 'W'" title="ORNAMENTAL CAPITAL 'W'" /></div>
<p>hen Cluffe sprang out of the boat, he was very near capsizing it and
finishing Puddock off-hand, but she righted and shot away swiftly
towards the very centre of the weir, over which, in a sheet of white
foam, she swept, and continued her route toward Dublin—bottom upward,
leaving little Puddock, however, safe and sound, clinging to a post, at
top, and standing upon a rough sort of plank, which afforded a very
unpleasant footing, by which the nets were visited from time to time.</p>
<p>'Hallo! are you safe, Cluffe?' cried the little lieutenant, quite firm,
though a little dizzy, on his narrow stand, with the sheets of foam
whizzing under his feet; what had become of his musical companion he had
not the faintest notion, and when he saw the boat hurled over near the
sluice, and drive along the stream upside down, he nearly despaired.</p>
<p>But when the captain's military cloak, which he took for Cluffe himself,
followed in the track of the boat, whisking, sprawling, and tumbling, in
what Puddock supposed to be the agonies of drowning, and went over the
weir and disappeared from view, returning no answer to his screams of
'Strike out, Cluffe! to your right, Cluffe. Hollo! to your right,' he
quite gave the captain over.</p>
<p>'Surrendhur, you thievin' villain, or I'll put the contints iv this gun
into yir carcass,' shouted an awful voice from the right bank,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span> and
Puddock saw the outline of a gigantic marksman, preparing to fire into
his corresponding flank.</p>
<p>'What do you mean, Sir?' shouted Puddock, in extreme wrath and
discomfort.</p>
<p>'Robbin' the nets, you spalpeen; if you throw them salmon you're hidin'
undher your coat into the wather, be the tare-o-war—'</p>
<p>'What salmon, Sir?' interrupted the lieutenant. 'Why, salmon's not in
season, Sir.'</p>
<p>'None iv yer flummery, you schamin' scoundrel; but jest come here and
give yourself up, for so sure as you don't, or dar to stir an inch from
that spot, I'll blow you to smithereens!'</p>
<p>'Captain Cluffe is drowned, Sir; and I'm Lieutenant Puddock,' rejoined
the officer.</p>
<p>'Tare-an-ouns, an' is it yerself, Captain Puddock, that's in it?' cried
the man. 'I ax yer pardon; but I tuk you for one of thim vagabonds
that's always plundherin' the fish. And who in the wide world, captain
jewel, id expeck to see you there, meditatin' in the middle of the
river, this time o' night; an' I dunna how in the world you got there,
at all, at all, for the planking is carried away behind you since
yistherday.'</p>
<p>'Give an alarm, if you please, Sir, this moment,' urged Puddock.
'Captain Cluffe has gone over this horrid weir, not a minute since, and
is I fear drowned.'</p>
<p>'Dhrownded! och! bloody wars.'</p>
<p>'Yes, Sir, send some one this moment down the stream with a rope—'</p>
<p>'Hollo, Jemmy?' cried the man, and whistled through his crooked finger.</p>
<p>'Jemmy,' said he to the boy who presented himself, 'run down to Tom
Garret, at the Millbridge, and tell him Captain Cluffe's dhrownded over
the weir, and to take the boat-hook and rope—he's past the bridge by
this time—ay is he at the King's House—an' if he brings home the
corpse alive or dead, before an hour, Captain Puddock here will give him
twenty guineas reward.' So away went the boy.</p>
<p>''Tis an unaisy way you're situated yourself, I'm afeard,' observed the
man.</p>
<p>'Have the goodness to say, Sir, by what meanth, if any, I can reach
either bank of the river,' lisped Puddock, with dignity.</p>
<p>''Tis thrue for you, captain, <i>that's</i> the chat—how the divil to get
you alive out o' the position you're in. Can you swim?'</p>
<p>'No, Thir.'</p>
<p>'An' how the dickens did you get there?'</p>
<p>'I'd rather hear, Sir, how I'm to get away, if you please,' replied
Puddock, loftily.</p>
<p>'Are you bare-legged?' shouted the man.</p>
<p>'No, Sir,' answered the little officer, rather shocked.</p>
<p>'An' you're there wid shoes on your feet.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Of course, Sir,' answered Puddock.</p>
<p>'Chuck them into the water this instant minute,' roared the man.</p>
<p>'Why, there are valuable buckles, Sir,' remonstrated Puddock.</p>
<p>'Do you mane to say you'd rather be dhrownded in yer buckles than alive
in yer stockin' feet?' he replied.</p>
<p>There were some cross expostulations, but eventually the fellow came out
to Puddock. Perhaps the feat was not quite so perilous as he
represented; but it certainly was not a pleasant one. Puddock had a rude
and crazy sort of banister to cling to, and a rugged and slippery
footing; but slowly and painfully, from one post to another, he made his
way, and at last jumped on the solid, though not dry land, his life and
his buckles safe.</p>
<p>'I'll give you a guinea in the morning, if you come to my quarterth, Mr.
---- Thir,' and, without waiting a second, away he ran by the footpath,
and across the bridge, right into the Phœnix, and burst into the
club-room. There were assembled old Arthur Slowe, Tom Trimmer, from
Lucan, old Trumble, Jack Collop, Colonel Stafford, and half-a-dozen more
members, including some of the officers—O'Flaherty among the number, a
little 'flashy with liquor' as the phrase then was.</p>
<p>Puddock stood in the wide opened door, with the handle in his hand. He
was dishevelled, soused with water, bespattered with mud, his round face
very pale, and he fixed a wild stare on the company. The clatter of old
Trimmer's backgammon, Slowe's disputations over the draftboard with
Colonel Stafford, Collop's dissertation on the points of that screw of a
horse he wanted to sell, and the general buzz of talk, were all almost
instantaneously suspended on the appearance of this phantom, and Puddock
exclaimed—</p>
<p>'Gentlemen, I'm thorry to tell you, Captain Cluffe ith, I fear,
drowned!'</p>
<p>'Cluffe?' 'Drowned?' 'By Jupiter!' 'You don't say so? and a round of
such ejaculations followed this announcement.</p>
<p>Allow me here to mention that I permit my people to swear by all the
persons of the Roman mythology. There was a horrible profanity in the
matter of oaths in those days, and I found that without changing the
form of sentences, and sacrificing idioms, at times, I could not manage
the matter satisfactorily otherwise.</p>
<p>'He went over the salmon weir—I saw him—Coyle's—weir—headlong, poor
fellow! I shouted after him, but he could not anthwer, so pray let's be
off, and—'</p>
<p>Here he recognised the colonel with a low bow and paused. The commanding
officer instantaneously despatched Lieutenant Brady, who was there, to
order out Sergeant Blakeney and his guard, and any six good swimmers in
the regiment who might volunteer, with a reward of twenty guineas for
whoever should bring in Cluffe alive, or ten guineas for his body; and
the fat fellow all the time in his bed sipping sack posset!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So away ran Brady and a couple more of the young fellows at their best
pace—no one spared himself on this errand—and little Puddock and
another down to the bridge. It was preposterous.</p>
<p>By this time Lillyman was running like mad from Cluffe's lodgings along
Martin's Row to the rescue of Puddock, who, at that moment with his
friends and the aid of a long pole, was poking into a little floating
tanglement of withered leaves, turf, and rubbish, under the near arch of
the bridge, in the belief that he was dealing with the mortal remains of
Cluffe.</p>
<p>Lillyman overtook Toole at the corner of the street just in time to hear
the scamper of the men, at double-quick, running down the sweep of the
road to the bridge, and to hear the shouting that arose from the
parade-ground by the river bank, from the men within the barrack
precincts.</p>
<p>Toole joined Lillyman running.</p>
<p>'What the plague's this hubbub and hullo?' he cried.</p>
<p>'Puddock's drowned,' panted Lillyman.</p>
<p>'Puddock! bless us! where?' puffed Toole.</p>
<p>'Hollo! you, Sir—have they heard it—is he <i>drowned?</i>' cried Lillyman
to the sentry outside the gate.</p>
<p>'Dhrownded? yes, Sir,' replied the man saluting.</p>
<p>'Is help gone?'</p>
<p>'Yes, Sir, Lieutenant Brady, and Sergeant Blakeney, and nine men.'</p>
<p>'Come along,' cried Lillyman to Toole, and they started afresh. They
heard the shouting by the river bank, and followed it by the path round
the King's House, passing the Phœnix; and old Colonel Stafford, who
was gouty, and no runner, standing with a stern and anxious visage at
the door, along with old Trumble, Slowe, and Trimmer, and some of the
maids and drawers in the rear, all in consternation.</p>
<p>'Bring me the news,' screamed the colonel, as they passed.</p>
<p>Lillyman was the better runner. Toole a good deal blown, but full of
pluck, was labouring in the rear; Lillyman jumped over the stile, at the
river path; and Toole saw an officer who resembled 'poor Puddock,' he
thought, a good deal, cross the road, and follow in Lillyman's wake. The
doctor crossed the stile next, and made his best gallop in rear of the
plump officer, excited by the distant shouting, and full of horrible
curiosity and good-nature.</p>
<p>Nearly opposite Inchicore they fished up an immense dead pig; and Toole
said, to his amazement, he found Puddock crying over it, and calling it
'my brother!' And this little scene added another very popular novelty
to the doctor's stock of convivial monologues.</p>
<p>Toole, who loved Puddock, hugged him heartily, and when he could get
breath, shouted triumphantly after the more advanced party, 'He's found,
he's found!'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Oh, thank Heaven!' cried little Puddock, with upturned eyes; 'but is he
really found?'</p>
<p>The doctor almost thought that his perils had affected his intellect.</p>
<p>'Is he found—are <i>you</i> found?' cried the doctor, resuming that great
shake by both hands, which in his momentary puzzle he had suspended.</p>
<p>'I—a—oh, dear!—I don't quite understand—is he lost? for mercy's sake
is Cluffe lost?' implored Puddock.</p>
<p>'Lost in his bed clothes, maybe,' cried Lillyman, who had joined them.</p>
<p>'But he's not—he's <i>not</i> drowned?'</p>
<p>'Pish! drowned, indeed! unless he's drowned in the crock of hot water
he's clapt his legs into.'</p>
<p>'Where is he—where's Cluffe?'</p>
<p>'Hang it!—he's in bed, in his lodging, drinking hot punch this
half-hour.'</p>
<p>'But are you certain?'</p>
<p>'Why, I saw him there myself,' answered Lillyman, with an oath.</p>
<p>Poor little Puddock actually clasped his hands, looked up, and poured
forth a hearty, almost hysterical, thanksgiving; for he had charged
Cluffe's death altogether upon his own soul, and his relief was beyond
expression.</p>
<p>In the meantime, the old gentlemen of the club were in a thrilling
suspense, and that not altogether disagreeable state of horror in which
men chew the cud of bitter fancy over other men's catastrophes. After
about ten minutes in came young Spaight.</p>
<p>'Well,' said the colonel, 'is Cluffe safe or—eh?'</p>
<p>'Cluffe's safe—only half drowned; but poor Puddock's lost.'</p>
<p>'What!'</p>
<p>'Drowned, I'm afraid.'</p>
<p>'Drowned! who says so?' repeated the colonel.</p>
<p>'Cluffe—everybody.'</p>
<p>'Why, there it is!' replied the colonel, with a great oath, breaking
through all his customary reserve and stiffness, and flinging his
cocked-hat on the middle of the table, piteously, 'A fellow that can't
swim a yard <i>will</i> go by way of saving a great—a large gentleman, like
Captain Cluffe, from drowning, and he's pulled in himself; and so—bless
my soul! what's to be done?'</p>
<p>So the colonel broke into a lamentation, and a fury, and a wonder.
'Cluffe and Puddock, the two steadiest officers in the corps! He had a
devilish good mind to put Cluffe under arrest—the idiots—Puddock—he
was devilish sorry. There wasn't a more honourable'—<i>et cetera</i>. In
fact, a very angry and pathetic funeral oration, during which,
accompanied by Doctor Toole, Lieutenant Puddock, in person, entered; and
the colonel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span> stopped short with his eyes and mouth very wide open, and
said the colonel very sternly.</p>
<p>'I—I'm glad to see, Sir, you're safe: and—and—I suppose, I shall hear
now that <i>Cluffe's</i> drowned?' and he stamped the emphasis on the floor.</p>
<p>While all this was going on, some of the soldiers had actually got into
Dublin. The tide was in, and the water very high at 'Bloody Bridge.' A
hat, near the corner, was whisking round and round, always trying to get
under the arch, and always, when on the point, twirled round again into
the corner—an image of the 'Flying Dutchman' and hope deferred. A
watchman's crozier hooked the giddy thing. It was not a military hat;
but they brought it back, and the captive was laid in the
guard-room—mentioned by me because we've seen that identical hat
before.</p>
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