<h2> CHAPTER XXXIV </h2>
<p>Degenerate youth, and not of Tydeus’ kind,<br/>
Whose little body lodged a mighty mind.<br/>
—ILIAD.<br/></p>
<p>Left quiet at least, if not alone, for the first time after the events of
this troubled and varied day, Julian threw himself on an old oaken seat,
beside the embers of a sea-coal fire, and began to muse on the miserable
situation of anxiety and danger in which he was placed; where, whether he
contemplated the interests of his love, his family affections, or his
friendships, all seemed such a prospect as that of a sailor who looks upon
breakers on every hand, from the deck of a vessel which no longer obeys
the helm.</p>
<p>As Peveril sat sunk in despondency, his companion in misfortune drew a
chair to the opposite side of the chimney-corner, and began to gaze at him
with a sort of solemn earnestness, which at length compelled him, though
almost in spite of himself, to pay some attention to the singular figure
who seemed so much engrossed with contemplating him.</p>
<p>Geoffrey Hudson (we drop occasionally the title of knighthood, which the
King had bestowed on him in a frolic, but which might introduce some
confusion into our history), although a dwarf of the least possible size,
had nothing positively ugly in his countenance, or actually distorted in
his limbs. His head, hands, and feet were indeed large, and
disproportioned to the height of his body, and his body itself much
thicker than was consistent with symmetry, but in a degree which was
rather ludicrous than disagreeable to look upon. His countenance, in
particular, had he been a little taller, would have been accounted, in
youth, handsome, and now, in age, striking and expressive; it was but the
uncommon disproportion betwixt the head and the trunk which made the
features seem whimsical and bizarre—an effect which was considerably
increased by the dwarf’s moustaches, which it was his pleasure to wear so
large, that they almost twisted back amongst, and mingled with, his
grizzled hair.</p>
<p>The dress of this singular wight announced that he was not entirely free
from the unhappy taste which frequently induces those whom nature has
marked by personal deformity, to distinguish, and at the same time to
render themselves ridiculous, by the use of showy colours, and garments
fantastically and extraordinarily fashioned. But poor Geoffrey Hudson’s
laces, embroideries, and the rest of his finery, were sorely worn and
tarnished by the time which he had spent in jail, under the vague and
malicious accusation that he was somehow or other an accomplice in this
all-involving, all-devouring whirlpool of a Popish conspiracy—an
impeachment which, if pronounced by a mouth the foulest and most
malicious, was at that time sufficiently predominant to sully the fairest
reputation. It will presently appear, that in the poor man’s manner of
thinking, and tone of conversation, there was something analogous to his
absurd fashion of apparel; for, as in the latter, good stuff and valuable
decorations were rendered ludicrous by the fantastic fashion in which they
were made up; so, such glimmerings of good sense and honourable feeling as
the little man often evinced, were made ridiculous by a restless desire to
assume certain airs of importance, and a great jealousy of being despised,
on account of the peculiarity of his outward form.</p>
<p>After the fellow-prisoners had looked at each other for some time in
silence, the dwarf, conscious of his dignity as first owner of their joint
apartment, thought it necessary to do the honours of it to the new-comer.
“Sir,” he said, modifying the alternate harsh and squeaking tones of his
voice into accents as harmonious as they could attain, “I understand you
to be the son of my worthy namesake, and ancient acquaintance, the stout
Sir Geoffrey Peveril of the Peak. I promise you, I have seen your father
where blows have been going more plenty than gold pieces; and for a tall
heavy man, who lacked, as we martialists thought, some of the lightness
and activity of our more slightly made Cavaliers, he performed his duty as
a man might desire. I am happy to see you, his son; and, though by a
mistake, I am glad we are to share this comfortless cabin together.”</p>
<p>Julian bowed, and thanked his courtesy; and Geoffrey Hudson, having broken
the ice, preceded to question him without further ceremony. “You are no
courtier, I presume, young gentleman?”</p>
<p>Julian replied in the negative.</p>
<p>“I thought so,” continued the dwarf; “for although I have now no official
duty at Court, the region in which my early years were spent, and where I
once held a considerable office, yet I still, when I had my liberty,
visited the Presence from time to time, as in duty bound for former
service; and am wont, from old habit, to take some note of the courtly
gallants, those choice spirits of the age, among whom I was once enrolled.
You are, not to compliment you, a marked figure, Master Peveril—though
something of the tallest, as was your father’s case; I think, I could
scarce have seen you anywhere without remembering you.”</p>
<p>Peveril thought he might, with great justice, have returned the
compliment, but contented himself with saying, “he had scarce seen the
British Court.”</p>
<p>“Tis pity,” said Hudson; “a gallant can hardly be formed without
frequenting it. But you have been perhaps in a rougher school; you have
served, doubtless?”</p>
<p>“My Maker, I hope,” said Julian.</p>
<p>“Fie on it, you mistake. I meant,” said Hudson, “<i>á la François</i>,—you
have served in the army?”</p>
<p>“No. I have not yet had that honour,” said Julian.</p>
<p>“What! neither courtier nor soldier, Master Peveril?” said the important
little man: “your father is to blame. By cock and pie he is, Master
Peveril! How shall a man be known, or distinguished, unless by his bearing
in peace and war? I tell you, sir, that at Newberry, where I charged with
my troop abreast with Prince Rupert, and when, as you may have heard, we
were both beaten off by those cuckoldly hinds the Trained Bands of London,—we
did what men could; and I think it was a matter of three or four minutes
after most of our gentlemen had been driven off, that his Highness and I
continued to cut at their long pikes with our swords; and I think might
have broken in, but that I had a tall, long-legged brute of a horse, and
my sword was somewhat short,—in fine, at last we were obliged to
make volte-face, and then, as I was going to say, the fellows were so glad
to get rid of us, that they set up a great jubilee cry of ‘There goes
Prince Robin and Cock Robin!’—Ay, ay, every scoundrel among them
knew me well. But those days are over.—And where were you educated,
young gentleman?”</p>
<p>Peveril named the household of the Countess of Derby.</p>
<p>“A most honourable lady, upon my word as a gentleman,” said Hudson.—“I
knew the noble Countess well when I was about the person of my royal
mistress, Henrietta Maria. She was then the very muster of all that was
noble, loyal, and lovely. She was, indeed, one of the fifteen fair ones of
the Court, whom I permitted to call me Piccoluomini—a foolish jest
on my somewhat diminutive figure, which always distinguished me from
ordinary beings, even when I was young—I have now lost much stature
by stooping; but, always the ladies had their jest at me.—Perhaps,
young man, I had my own amends of some of them somewhere, and somehow or
other—I <i>say</i> nothing if I had or no; far less do I insinuate
disrespect to the noble Countess. She was daughter of the Duc de la
Tremouille, or, more correctly, des Thouars. But certainly to serve the
ladies, and condescend to their humours, even when somewhat too free, or
too fantastic, is the true decorum of gentle blood.”</p>
<p>Depressed as his spirits were, Peveril could scarce forbear smiling when
he looked at the pigmy creature, who told these stories with infinite
complacency, and appeared disposed to proclaim, as his own herald, that he
had been a very model of valour and gallantry, though love and arms seemed
to be pursuits totally irreconcilable to his shrivelled, weather-beaten
countenance, and wasted limbs. Julian was, however, so careful to avoid
giving his companion pain, that he endeavoured to humour him, by saying,
that, “unquestionably, one bred up like Sir Geoffrey Hudson, in court and
camps, knew exactly when to suffer personal freedoms, and when to control
them.”</p>
<p>The little Knight, with great vivacity, though with some difficulty, began
to drag his seat from the side of the fire opposite to that where Julian
was seated, and at length succeeded in bringing it near him, in token of
increasing cordiality.</p>
<p>“You say well, Master Peveril,” said the dwarf; “and I have given proofs
both of bearing and forbearing. Yes, sir, there was not that thing which
my most royal mistress, Henrietta Maria, could have required of me, that I
would not have complied with, sir; I was her sworn servant, both in war
and in festival, in battle and pageant, sir. At her Majesty’s particular
request, I once condescended to become—ladies, you know, have
strange fancies—to become the tenant, for a time, of the interior of
a pie.”</p>
<p>“Of a pie?” said Julian, somewhat amazed.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, of a pie. I hope you find nothing risible in my complaisance?”
replied his companion, something jealously.</p>
<p>“Not I, sir,” said Peveril; “I have other matters than laughter in my head
at present.”</p>
<p>“So had I,” said the dwarfish champion, “when I found myself imprisoned in
a huge platter, of no ordinary dimensions you may be assured, since I
could lie at length in it, and when I was entombed, as it were, in walls
of standing crust, and a huge cover of pastry, the whole constituting a
sort of sarcophagus, of size enough to have recorded the epitaph of a
general officer or an archbishop on the lid. Sir, notwithstanding the
conveniences which were made to give me air, it was more like being buried
alive than aught else which I could think of.”</p>
<p>“I conceive it, sir,” said Julian.</p>
<p>“Moreover, sir,” continued the dwarf, “there were few in the secret, which
was contrived for the Queen’s divertisement; for advancing of which I
would have crept into a filbert nut, had it been possible; and few, as I
said, being private in the scheme, there was a risk of accidents. I
doubted, while in my darksome abode, whether some awkward attendant might
not have let me fall, as I have seen happen to a venison pasty; or whether
some hungry guest might not anticipate the moment of my resurrection, by
sticking his knife into my upper crust. And though I had my weapons about
me, young man, as has been my custom in every case of peril, yet, if such
a rash person had plunged deep into the bowels of the supposed pasty, my
sword and dagger could barely have served me to avenge, assuredly not to
prevent, either of these catastrophes.”</p>
<p>“Certainly I do so understand it,” said Julian, who began, however, to
feel that the company of little Hudson, talkative as he showed himself,
was likely rather to aggravate than to alleviate the inconveniences of a
prison.</p>
<p>“Nay,” continued the little man, enlarging on his former topic, “I had
other subjects of apprehension; for it pleased my Lord of Buckingham, his
Grace’s father who now bears the title, in his plenitude of Court favour,
to command the pasty to be carried down to the office, and committed anew
to the oven, alleging preposterously that it was better to be eaten warm
than cold.”</p>
<p>“And did this, sir, not disturb your equanimity?” said Julian.</p>
<p>“My young friend,” said Geoffrey Hudson, “I cannot deny it.—Nature
will claim her rights from the best and boldest of us.—I thought of
Nebuchadnezzar and his fiery furnace; and I waxed warm with apprehension.—But,
I thank Heaven, I also thought of my sworn duty to my royal mistress; and
was thereby obliged and enabled to resist all temptations to make myself
prematurely known. Nevertheless, the Duke—if of malice, may Heaven
forgive him—followed down into the office himself, and urged the
master-cook very hard that the pasty should be heated, were it but for
five minutes. But the master-cook, being privy to the very different
intentions of my royal mistress, did most manfully resist the order; and I
was again reconveyed in safety to the royal table.”</p>
<p>“And in due time liberated from your confinement, I doubt not?” said
Peveril.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; that happy, and I may say, glorious moment, at length arrived,”
continued the dwarf. “The upper crust was removed—I started up to
the sound of trumpet and clarion, like the soul of a warrior when the last
summons shall sound—or rather (if that simile be over audacious),
like a spell-bound champion relieved from his enchanted state. It was then
that, with my buckler on my arm, and my trusty Bilboa in my hand, I
executed a sort of warlike dance, in which my skill and agility then
rendered me pre-eminent, displaying, at the same time my postures, both of
defence and offence, in a manner so totally inimitable, that I was almost
deafened with the applause of all around me, and half-drowned by the
scented waters with which the ladies of the Court deluged me from their
casting bottles. I had amends of his Grace of Buckingham also; for as I
tripped a hasty morris hither and thither upon the dining-table, now
offering my blade, now recovering it, I made a blow at his nose—a
sort of estramaçon—the dexterity of which consists in coming mighty
near to the object you seem to aim at, yet not attaining it. You may have
seen a barber make such a flourish with his razor. I promise you his Grace
sprung back a half-yard at least. He was pleased to threaten to brain me
with a chicken-bone, as he disdainfully expressed it; but the King said,
‘George, you have but a Rowland for an Oliver.’ And so I tripped on,
showing a bold heedlessness of his displeasure, which few dared to have
done at that time, albeit countenanced to the utmost like me by the smiles
of the brave and the fair. But, well-a-day! sir, youth, its fashions, its
follies, its frolics, and all its pomp and pride, are as idle and
transitory as the crackling of thorns under a pot.”</p>
<p>“The flower that is cast into the oven were a better simile,” thought
Peveril. “Good God, that a man should live to regret not being young
enough to be still treated as baked meat, and served up in a pie!”</p>
<p>His companion, whose tongue had for many days been as closely imprisoned
as his person, seemed resolved to indemnify his loquacity, by continuing
to indulge it on the present occasion at his companion’s expense. He
proceeded, therefore, in a solemn tone, to moralise on the adventure which
he had narrated.</p>
<p>“Young men will no doubt think one to be envied,” he said, “who was thus
enabled to be the darling and admiration of the Court”—(Julian
internally stood self-exculpated from the suspicion)—“and yet it is
better to possess fewer means of distinction, and remain free from the
backbiting, the slander, and the odium, which are always the share of
Court favour. Men who had no other cause, cast reflections upon me because
my size varied somewhat from the common proportion; and jests were
sometimes unthinkingly passed upon me by those I was bound to, who did not
in that case, peradventure, sufficiently consider that the wren is made by
the same hand which formed the bustard, and that the diamond, though small
in size, out-values ten thousand-fold the rude granite. Nevertheless, they
proceeded in the vein of humour; and as I could not in duty or gratitude
retort upon nobles and princes, I was compelled to cast about in my mind
how to vindicate my honour towards those, who, being in the same rank with
myself, as servants and courtiers, nevertheless bore themselves towards me
as if they were of a superior class in the rank of honour, as well as in
the accidental circumstance of stature. And as a lesson to my own pride,
and that of others, it so happened, that the pageant which I have but just
narrated—which I justly reckon the most honourable moment of my
life, excepting perhaps my distinguished share in the battle of
Round-way-down—became the cause of a most tragic event, in which I
acknowledge the greatest misfortune of my existence.”</p>
<p>The dwarf here paused, fetched a sigh, big at once with regret, and with
the importance becoming the subject of a tragic history; then proceeded as
follows:—</p>
<p>“You would have thought in your simplicity, young gentleman, that the
pretty pageant I have mentioned could only have been quoted to my
advantage, as a rare masking frolic, prettily devised, and not less deftly
executed; and yet the malice of the courtiers, who maligned and envied me,
made them strain their wit, and exhaust their ingenuity, in putting false
and ridiculous constructions upon it. In short, my ears were so much
offended with allusions to pies, puff-paste, ovens, and the like, that I
was compelled to prohibit such subject of mirth, under penalty of my
instant and severe displeasure. But it happ’d there was then a gallant
about the Court, a man of good quality, son to a knight baronet, and in
high esteem with the best in that sphere, also a familiar friend of mine
own, from whom, therefore, I had no reason to expect any of that species
of gibing which I had intimated my purpose to treat as offensive. Howbeit,
it pleased the Honourable Mr. Crofts, so was this youth called and
designed, one night, at the Groom Porter’s being full of wine and waggery,
to introduce this threadbare subject, and to say something concerning a
goose-pie, which I could not but consider as levelled at me. Nevertheless,
I did but calmly and solidly pray him to choose a different subject;
failing which, I let him know I should be sudden in my resentment.
Notwithstanding, he continued in the same tone, and even aggravated the
offence, by speaking of a tomtit, and other unnecessary and obnoxious
comparisons; whereupon I was compelled to send him a cartel, and we met
accordingly. Now, as I really loved the youth, it was my intention only to
correct him by a flesh wound or two; and I would willingly that he had
named the sword for his weapon. Nevertheless, he made pistols his
election; and being on horseback, he produced by way of his own weapon, a
foolish engine, which children are wont, in their roguery, to use for
spouting water; a—a—in short, I forget the name.”</p>
<p>“A squirt, doubtless,” said Peveril, who began to recollect having heard
something of this adventure.</p>
<p>“You are right,” said the dwarf; “you have indeed the name of the little
engine, of which I have had experience in passing the yards at
Westminster.—Well, sir, this token of slight regard compelled me to
give the gentleman such language, as soon rendered it necessary for him to
make more serious arms. We fought on horseback—breaking ground, and
advancing by signal; and, as I never miss aim, I had the misadventure to
kill the Honourable Master Crofts at the first shot. I would not wish my
worst foe the pain which I felt, when I saw him reel on his saddle, and so
fall down to the earth!—and, when I perceived that the life-blood
was pouring fast, I could not but wish to Heaven that it had been my own
instead of his. Thus fell youth, hopes, and bravery, a sacrifice to a
silly and thoughtless jest; yet, alas! wherein had I choice, seeing that
honour is, as it were, the very breath in our nostrils; and that in no
sense can we be said to live, if we permit ourselves to be deprived of
it?”</p>
<p>The tone of feeling in which the dwarfish hero concluded his story, gave
Julian a better opinion of his heart, and even of his understanding, than
he had been able to form of one who gloried in having, upon a grand
occasion, formed the contents of a pasty. He was indeed enabled to
conjecture that the little champion was seduced into such exhibitions, by
the necessity attached to his condition, by his own vanity, and by the
flattery bestowed on him by those who sought pleasure in practical jokes.
The fate of the unlucky Master Crofts, however, as well as various
exploits of this diminutive person during the Civil Wars, in which he
actually, and with great gallantry, commanded a troop of horse, rendered
most men cautious of openly rallying him; which was indeed the less
necessary, as, when left alone, he seldom failed voluntarily to show
himself on the ludicrous side.</p>
<p>At one hour after noon, the turnkey, true to his word, supplied the
prisoners with a very tolerable dinner and a flask of well-flavoured
though light claret; which the old man, who was something of a bon-vivant,
regretted to observe, was nearly as diminutive as himself. The evening
also passed away, but not without continued symptoms of garrulity on the
part of Geoffrey Hudson.</p>
<p>It is true these were of a graver character than he had hitherto
exhibited, for when the flask was empty, he repeated a long Latin prayer.
But the religious act in which he had been engaged, only gave his
discourse a more serious turn than belonged to his former themes, of war,
lady’s love, and courtly splendour.</p>
<p>The little Knight harangued, at first on polemical points of divinity, and
diverged from this thorny path, into the neighbouring and twilight walk of
mysticism. He talked of secret warnings—of the predictions of
sad-eyed prophets—of the visits of monitory spirits, and the
Rosicrucian secrets of the Cabala; all which topics he treated of with
such apparent conviction, nay, with so many appeals to personal
experience, that one would have supposed him a member of the fraternity of
gnomes, or fairies, whom he resembled so much in point of size.</p>
<p>In short, he persevered for a stricken hour in such a torrent of
unnecessary tattle, as determined Peveril, at all events, to endeavour to
procure a separate lodging. Having repeated his evening prayers in Latin,
as formerly (for the old gentleman was a Catholic, which was the sole
cause of his falling under suspicion), he set off on a new score, as they
were undressing, and continued to prattle until he had fairly talked both
himself and his companion to sleep.</p>
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