<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>Here’s neither want of appetite nor mouths;<br/>
Pray Heaven we be not scant of meat or mirth!<br/>
—OLD PLAY.<br/></p>
<p>Even upon ordinary occasions, and where means were ample, a great
entertainment in those days was not such a sinecure as in modern times,
when the lady who presides has but to intimate to her menials the day and
hour when she wills it to take place. At that simple period, the lady was
expected to enter deeply into the arrangement and provision of the whole
affair; and from a little gallery, which communicated with her own private
apartment, and looked down upon the kitchen, her shrill voice was to be
heard, from time to time, like that of the warning spirit in a tempest,
rising above the clash of pots and stewpans—the creaking spits—the
clattering of marrowbones and cleavers—the scolding of cooks—and
all the other various kinds of din which form an accompaniment to dressing
a large dinner.</p>
<p>But all this toil and anxiety was more than doubled in the case of the
approaching feast at Martindale Castle, where the presiding Genius of the
festivity was scarce provided with adequate means to carry her hospitable
purpose into effect. The tyrannical conduct of husbands, in such cases, is
universal; and I scarce know one householder of my acquaintance who has
not, on some ill-omened and most inconvenient season, announced suddenly
to his innocent helpmate, that he had invited</p>
<p>“Some odious Major Rock,<br/>
To drop in at six o’clock.”<br/></p>
<p>to the great discomposure of the lady, and the discredit, perhaps, of her
domestic arrangements.</p>
<p>Peveril of the Peak was still more thoughtless; for he had directed his
lady to invite the whole honest men of the neighbourhood to make good
cheer at Martindale Castle, in honour of the blessed Restoration of his
most sacred Majesty, without precisely explaining where the provisions
were to come from. The deer-park had lain waste ever since the siege; the
dovecot could do little to furnish forth such an entertainment; the
fishponds, it is true, were well provided (which the neighbouring
Presbyterians noted as a suspicious circumstance); and game was to be had
for the shooting, upon the extensive heaths and hills of Derbyshire. But
these were but the secondary parts of a banquet; and the house-steward and
bailiff, Lady Peveril’s only coadjutors and counsellors, could not agree
how the butcher-meat—the most substantial part, or, as it were, the
main body of the entertainment—was to be supplied. The house-steward
threatened the sacrifice of a fine yoke of young bullocks, which the
bailiff, who pleaded the necessity of their agricultural services,
tenaciously resisted; and Lady Peveril’s good and dutiful nature did not
prevent her from making some impatient reflections on the want of
consideration of her absent Knight, who had thus thoughtlessly placed her
in so embarrassing a situation.</p>
<p>These reflections were scarcely just, if a man is only responsible for
such resolutions as he adopts when he is fully master of himself. Sir
Geoffrey’s loyalty, like that of many persons in his situation, had, by
dint of hopes and fears, victories and defeats, struggles and sufferings,
all arising out of the same moving cause, and turning, as it were, on the
same pivot, acquired the character of an intense and enthusiastic passion;
and the singular and surprising change of fortune, by which his highest
wishes were not only gratified, but far exceeded, occasioned for some time
a kind of intoxication of loyal rapture which seemed to pervade the whole
kingdom. Sir Geoffrey had seen Charles and his brothers, and had been
received by the merry monarch with that graceful, and at the same time
frank urbanity, by which he conciliated all who approached him; the
Knight’s services and merits had been fully acknowledged, and recompense
had been hinted at, if not expressly promised. Was it for Peveril of the
Peak, in the jubilee of his spirits, to consider how his wife was to find
beef and mutton to feast his neighbours?</p>
<p>Luckily, however, for the embarrassed lady, there existed some one who had
composure of mind sufficient to foresee this difficulty. Just as she had
made up her mind, very reluctantly, to become debtor to Major Bridgenorth
for the sum necessary to carry her husband’s commands into effect, and
whilst she was bitterly regretting this departure from the strictness of
her usual economy, the steward, who, by-the-bye, had not been absolutely
sober since the news of the King’s landing at Dover, burst into the
apartment, snapping his fingers, and showing more marks of delight than
was quite consistent with the dignity of my lady’s large parlour.</p>
<p>“What means this, Whitaker?” said the lady, somewhat peevishly; for she
was interrupted in the commencement of a letter to her neighbour on the
unpleasant business of the proposed loan,—“Is it to be always thus
with you?—Are you dreaming?”</p>
<p>“A vision of good omen, I trust,” said the steward, with a triumphant
flourish of the hand; “far better than Pharaoh’s, though, like his, it be
of fat kine.”</p>
<p>“I prithee be plain, man,” said the lady, “or fetch some one who can speak
to purpose.”</p>
<p>“Why, odds-my-life, madam,” said the steward, “mine errand can speak for
itself. Do you not hear them low? Do you not hear them bleat? A yoke of
fat oxen, and half a score prime wethers. The Castle is victualled for
this bout, let them storm when they will; and Gatherill may have his d—d
mains ploughed to the boot.”</p>
<p>The lady, without farther questioning her elated domestic, rose and went
to the window, where she certainly beheld the oxen and sheep which had
given rise to Whitaker’s exultation. “Whence come they?” said she, in some
surprise.</p>
<p>“Let them construe that who can,” answered Whitaker; “the fellow who drove
them was a west-country man, and only said they came from a friend to help
to furnish out your ladyship’s entertainment; the man would not stay to
drink—I am sorry he would not stay to drink—I crave your
ladyship’s pardon for not keeping him by the ears to drink—it was
not my fault.”</p>
<p>“That I’ll be sworn it was not,” said the lady.</p>
<p>“Nay, madam, by G—, I assure you it was not,” said the zealous
steward; “for, rather than the Castle should lose credit, I drank his
health myself in double ale, though I had had my morning draught already.
I tell you the naked truth, my lady, by G—!”</p>
<p>“It was no great compulsion, I suppose,” said the lady; “but, Whitaker,
suppose you should show your joy on such occasions, by drinking and
swearing a little less, rather than a little more, would it not be as
well, think you?”</p>
<p>“I crave your ladyship’s pardon,” said Whitaker, with much reverence; “I
hope I know my place. I am your ladyship’s poor servant; and I know it
does not become me to drink and swear like your ladyship—that is,
like his honour, Sir Geoffrey, I would say. But I pray you, if I am not to
drink and swear after my degree, how are men to know Peveril of the Peak’s
steward,—and I may say butler too, since I have had the keys of the
cellar ever since old Spigots was shot dead on the northwest turret, with
a black jack in his hand,—I say, how is an old Cavalier like me to
be known from those cuckoldly Roundheads that do nothing but fast and
pray, if we are not to drink and swear according to our degree?”</p>
<p>The lady was silent, for she well knew speech availed nothing; and, after
a moment’s pause, proceeded to intimate to the steward that she would have
the persons, whose names were marked in a written paper, which she
delivered to him, invited to the approaching banquet.</p>
<p>Whitaker, instead of receiving the list with the mute acquiescence of a
modern Major Domo, carried it into the recess of one of the windows, and,
adjusting his spectacles, began to read it to himself. The first names,
being those of distinguished Cavalier families in the neighbourhood, he
muttered over in a tone of approbation—paused and pshawed at that of
Bridgenorth—yet acquiesced, with the observation, “But he is a good
neighbour, so it may pass for once.” But when he read the name and surname
of Nehemiah Solsgrace, the Presbyterian parson, Whitaker’s patience
altogether forsook him; and he declared he would as soon throw himself
into Eldon-hole,[*] as consent that the intrusive old puritan howlet, who
had usurped the pulpit of a sound orthodox divine, should ever darken the
gates of Martindale Castle by any message or mediation of his.</p>
<p>[*] A chasm in the earth supposed to be unfathomable, one of the<br/>
wonders of the Peak.<br/></p>
<p>“The false crop-eared hypocrites,” cried he, with a hearty oath, “have had
their turn of the good weather. The sun is on our side of the hedge now,
and we will pay off old scores, as sure as my name is Richard Whitaker.”</p>
<p>“You presume on your long services, Whitaker, and on your master’s
absence, or you had not dared to use me thus,” said the lady.</p>
<p>The unwonted agitation of her voice attracted the attention of the
refractory steward, notwithstanding his present state of elevation; but he
no sooner saw that her eye glistened, and her cheek reddened, than his
obstinacy was at once subdued.</p>
<p>“A murrain on me,” he said, “but I have made my lady angry in good
earnest! and that is an unwonted sight for to see.—I crave your
pardon, my lady! It was not poor Dick Whitaker disputed your honourable
commands, but only that second draught of double ale. We have put a double
stroke of malt to it, as your ladyship well knows, ever since the happy
Restoration. To be sure I hate a fanatic as I do the cloven foot of Satan;
but then your honourable ladyship hath a right to invite Satan himself,
cloven foot and all, to Martindale Castle; and to send me to hell’s gate
with a billet of invitation—and so your will shall be done.”</p>
<p>The invitations were sent round accordingly, in all due form; and one of
the bullocks was sent down to be roasted whole at the market-place of a
little village called Martindale-Moultrassie, which stood considerably to
the eastward both of the Castle and Hall, from which it took its double
name, at about an equal distance from both; so that, suppose a line drawn
from the one manor-house to the other, to be the base of a triangle, the
village would have occupied the salient angle. As the said village, since
the late transference of a part of Peveril’s property, belonged to Sir
Geoffrey and to Bridgenorth in nearly equal portions, the lady judged it
not proper to dispute the right of the latter to add some hogsheads of
beer to the popular festivity.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, she could not but suspect the Major of being the unknown
friend who had relieved her from the dilemma arising from the want of
provisions; and she esteemed herself happy when a visit from him, on the
day preceding the proposed entertainment, gave her, as she thought, an
opportunity of expressing her gratitude.</p>
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