<h3>CHAPTER I.</h3>
<blockquote><p>Trouble is a thing that will come without our
call: but true joy will not spring up without ourselves.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">—<span class="smcap">Bishop
Patrick</span>’s “<i>Heart’s
Ease</i>.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>One fine day last spring—(and fine days are not so
common in Manchester, at that season of the year, as to make them
easily forgotten)—one fine day I was crossing the new
Victoria bridge, from the Manchester to the Salford side of the
river, when my attention was arrested by a middle-aged person, (I
had nearly written gentleman, but that word would not have
conveyed quite an accurate idea to the reader,) who was gazing
very steadily over the battlements, at the <span class="smcap">Old Church Clock</span>. He was a person whom
I had often remarked strolling about the streets of the town, and
whom I felt myself to be perfectly acquainted with, by sight,
though I had no idea whatever of his name or occupation.
Occupation, indeed, I felt almost assured he had none, or at
least not one which demanded any considerable portion of his
time; for, besides his age, which was evidently too advanced to
permit him to discharge any very laborious duties, he was more abroad in the
open air, than was consistent with any constant or indispensable
calling. His dress was of a description which implied
something above want, though not much; for, like its wearer, it
had seen better days; moreover, it showed its owner to be a man
not given to change; for it was of a fashion more in vogue thirty
years ago, than at the present time. Over a coat that had
once been of a blacker dye than now, he wore a <i>spencer</i>, or
short great-coat, buttoned up to the chin. His
small-clothes were strictly what their name implies, closely
buttoned at the knees. His legs were comfortably encased in
thick woollen stockings, which received additional warmth from a
pair of short black gaiters, which clothed his ancles.
Altogether he had rather the air of a country schoolmaster, with
more scholars than fees, taking the air on a half-holiday.
This respectable personage was (as I said) gazing steadfastly at
the <span class="smcap">Old Church Clock</span>, over the
battlements of the bridge: he had his own watch in his hand, of
ample size and antique appearance; and I saw that he was going to
regulate its time by that of the venerable old time-teller in the
tower of the Collegiate Church. Knowing that at that moment
the Old Church clock was not, as they say “quite
right,” (for friend <span class="smcap">Peter Clare</span>
is sometimes much more attentive to the accuracy of his own
external appearance, than to the correctness of those measurers
of time, which her majesty’s subjects have committed to his
regulation,) I could not resist the inclination to caution one,
whom I almost considered an old acquaintance, against being led
into error, by setting his own watch to a clock which was at
least five minutes behind the hour.</p>
<p>“My friend,” said I, (taking out my own watch at
the same time, to give some force to my words,) “that clock
is six minutes too slow.” “It may be so,
sir,” said he, looking at me quite in the way that I had
looked at him, viz. as an old acquaintance, “it may be so,
but I always set my watch by that clock, every week, whether it
be right or wrong!” “Indeed!” exclaimed
I, “that seems a strange fancy.” “It may
be so,” said he, “and perhaps it is. But, sir,
I know that clock of old; five and forty years I have gone by it, and it
has never led me far wrong yet. It has saved me some good
thrashings, and more hard money; to say nothing of better things
it has done for me. It is now the oldest friend I have in
Manchester, and I keep up my acquaintance with it, by setting my
watch by it every Saturday; and, with <span class="smcap">God</span>’s blessing, so long as I live in
Manchester, (and it is very likely, now, that I may live here
till I die,) I will set my watch by that clock, be it right or
wrong!” There was a mixture of joke and earnest in
the old man’s manner, as he said this, like one who feels
that what he says seriously may yet be open to ridicule; and I
could not help replying, in a tone somewhat similar to his
own—“Well, I never heard so much said in favour of
the Old Church clock before! As we are walking in the same
direction, perhaps you will give me some particulars as to your
acquaintance with that old clock, and of the good which you have
had out of it.”</p>
<p>“It will be rather a long story, sir: but I am getting
to an age when it is a pleasure to me to tell long stories,
especially about myself—I have little else to
do.”</p>
<p>Here there was a pause of some duration; and I saw an anxious
expression on the old man’s features, either as if he was
somewhat startled with the task which he had undertaken, or did
not quite know where to begin: probably both feelings were in his
mind, for in about half a minute, he raised his eyes a little,
which had been, till then, fixed on the ground, and said, as if
half to me and half to himself, “I think it will be best to
begin at the beginning. He will like to hear of my young
days, and it is a pleasure to me to go over them again. I
was not, sir, born in Manchester; indeed, I hardly ever knew any
body that was! Many come from Ireland, like pigs, and they
live like pigs; and many from the north, like woodcocks and
fieldfares,—some grow fat like fieldfares, and some grow
lean like woodcocks!”</p>
<p>I now found that my new friend had some humour in his
conversation; and I confess, I did not like him the worse for
it. He continued:—“I am from the north.
I was born
in one of the wildest parts of the country you ever saw, in the
midst of lakes and mountains. It has been fashionable
lately to visit the lake country, but most persons go in their
carriages or on horseback, and they miss the very finest parts
and the grandest scenes. I did not think much of the
beauties of the country then; but since I left it, and came to
live in this smoky dungeon, my heart has often gone back to the
place of my birth; and it now looks much more beautiful in my
mind than it did then to my eyes, or than it probably would if I
were ever to see it again.—I wonder if that will ever
be!”—he here half whispered to
himself—“Sir, the house in which I was born stood in
one of the most retired parts of the lake country—a spot, I
dare say, never visited at all by strangers. They call it
<i>Yewdale</i>. The house (I see it now!) was low, and
built of cobbles, but firm as a rock; one end, indeed, had fallen
in, and was used as a hen-roost and cart-house, but the main part
of the house was well slated with good brown flat stones, out of
Coniston Old Man, and had two chimneys at the top as tall and
round as a churn. The house stood on the side of the hill,
just where the road makes a turn to run right down upon Coniston
Water Head. There was a great broad plane tree at the end
of it,”—“and a large thorn before the
door,” interrupted I, “with the top of it cut into
the shape of a cock.”</p>
<p>“Exactly so!” exclaimed he, looking up into my
face with much surprise, “why you have seen the very
place!”</p>
<p>“To be sure I have, and that the very last summer, when
I was strolling about Yewdale and Tilberthwaite, the finest part
of all the lake country.”</p>
<p>“Eh, sir!” said he, his native dialect
unconsciously returning with his early
recollections,—“Eh, sir, and is it not a <i>bonny
bit</i>?—and so the old cock is still crowing on the top of
the old thorn!”</p>
<p>“Indeed it <i>was</i>,” said I; “but as I
passed by, I saw a ladder reared up to its side, and a decent
looking man, apparently the owner, diligently employed, with a
pair of shears, in cutting off the cock’s tail!”</p>
<p>“Confound Tom Hebblethwaite,” said my companion,
more seriously <SPAN name="page5"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
5</span>vexed than I thought it possible for him to
be,—“I wish—but I am a fool for being angry
with him—what better could be expected from him? At
school he was always a stupid fellow; he never could catch a
trout out of the lake in his life, and whenever he tried to rob a
hen-roost, he was sure to tumble down the ladder, and waken all
the cocks and hens in the parish!”</p>
<p>I was much amused at the reasons which the old man assigned
why nothing good could be expected from Tom Hebblethwaite, but
said nothing more to provoke his indignation, which I saw he soon
became rather ashamed of. After a pause he regained his
wonted composure, and proceeded:—“In that house I was
born. My earliest recollection is the death of my
grandmother. I do not know how old she was, but she must
have been near a hundred years old. I yet remember her
calling me to her bed side, just before her death, giving me a
shilling, which she seemed to have concealed somewhere about the
bed-clothes, and saying, in a deep and earnest tone, ‘God
bless you.’ She died that night. I have never
forgotten her blessing, and I have never parted with her
shilling—I never will!” There was a tear in his
eye as he said this, and he paused for a few moments in his
narrative.</p>
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