<h2> CHAPTER XXXVI </h2>
<p>A short hough’d man, but full of pride.<br/>
—ALLAN RAMSAY.<br/></p>
<p>The blood of Julian Peveril was so much fevered by the state in which his
invisible visitor left him, that he was unable, for a length of time, to
find repose. He swore to himself, that he would discover and expose the
nocturnal demon which stole on his hours of rest, only to add gall to
bitterness, and to pour poison into those wounds which already smarted so
severely. There was nothing which his power extended to, that, in his
rage, he did not threaten. He proposed a closer and a more rigorous survey
of his cell, so that he might discover the mode by which his tormentor
entered, were it as unnoticeable as an auger-hole. If his diligence should
prove unavailing, he determined to inform the jailers, to whom it could
not be indifferent to know, that their prison was open to such intrusions.
He proposed to himself, to discover from their looks whether they were
already privy to these visits; and if so, to denounce them to the
magistrates, to the judges, to the House of Commons, was the least that
his resentment proposed. Sleep surprised his worn-out frame in the midst
of his projects of discovery and vengeance, and, as frequently happens,
the light of the ensuing day proved favourable to calmer resolutions.</p>
<p>He now reflected that he had no ground to consider the motives of his
visitor as positively malevolent, although he had afforded him little
encouragement to hope for assistance on the points he had most at heart.
Towards himself, there had been expressed a decided feeling, both of
sympathy and interest; if through means of these he could acquire his
liberty, he might, when possessed of freedom, turn it to the benefit of
those for whom he was more interested than for his own welfare. “I have
behaved like a fool,” he said; “I ought to have temporised with this
singular being, learned the motives of its interference, and availed
myself of its succour, provided I could do so without any dishonourable
conditions. It would have been always time enough to reject such when they
should have been proposed to me.”</p>
<p>So saying, he was forming projects for regulating his intercourse with the
stranger more prudently, in case their communication should be renewed,
when his meditations were interrupted by the peremptory summons of Sir
Geoffrey Hudson, that he would, in his turn, be pleased to perform those
domestic duties of their common habitation, which the dwarf had yesterday
taken upon himself.</p>
<p>There was no resisting a request so reasonable, and Peveril accordingly
rose and betook himself to the arrangement of their prison, while Sir
Hudson, perched upon a stool from which his legs did not by half-way reach
the ground, sat in a posture of elegant languor, twangling upon an old
broken-winded guitar, and singing songs in Spanish, Moorish, and Lingua
Franca, most detestably out of tune. He failed not, at the conclusion of
each ditty, to favour Julian with some account of what he had sung, either
in the way of translation, or historical anecdote, or as the lay was
connected with some peculiar part of his own eventful history, in the
course of which the poor little man had chanced to have been taken by a
Sallee rover, and carried captive into Morocco.</p>
<p>This part of his life Hudson used to make the era of many strange
adventures; and, if he could himself be believed, he had made wild work
among the affections of the Emperor’s seraglio. But, although few were in
a situation to cross-examine him on gallantries and intrigues of which the
scene was so remote, the officers of the garrison of Tangier had a report
current amongst them, that the only use to which the tyrannical Moors
could convert a slave of such slender corporeal strength, was to employ
him to lie a-bed all day and hatch turkey’s eggs. The least allusion to
this rumour used to drive him well-nigh frantic, and the fatal termination
of his duel with young Crofts, which began in wanton mirth, and ended in
bloodshed, made men more coy than they had formerly been, of making the
fiery little hero the subject of their raillery.</p>
<p>While Peveril did the drudgery of the apartment, the dwarf remained much
at his ease, carolling in the manner we have described; but when he beheld
Julian attempting the task of the cook, Sir Geoffrey Hudson sprang from
the stool on which he sat <i>en Signor</i>, at the risk of breaking both
his guitar and his neck, exclaiming, “That he would rather prepare
breakfast every morning betwixt this and the day of judgment, than commit
a task of such consequence to an inexperienced bungler like his
companion.”</p>
<p>The young man gladly resigned his task to the splenetic little Knight, and
only smiled at his resentment when he added, that, to be but a mortal of
middle stature, Julian was as stupid as a giant. Leaving the dwarf to
prepare the meal after his own pleasure, Peveril employed himself in
measuring the room with his eyes on every side, and in endeavouring to
discover some private entrance, such as might admit his midnight visitant,
and perhaps could be employed in case of need for effecting his own
escape. The floor next engaged a scrutiny equally minute, but more
successful.</p>
<p>Close by his own pallet, and dropped in such a manner that he must have
seen it sooner but for the hurry with which he obeyed the summons of the
impatient dwarf, lay a slip of paper, sealed, and directed with the
initial letters, J.P., which seemed to ascertain that it was addressed to
himself. He took the opportunity of opening it while the soup was in the
very moment of projection, and the full attention of his companion was
occupied by what he, in common with wiser and taller men, considered as
one of the principal occupations of life; so that, without incurring his
observation or awaking his curiosity, Julian had the opportunity to read
as follows:—</p>
<p>“Rash and infatuated as you are, there is one who would forfeit<br/>
much to stand betwixt you and your fate. You are to-morrow to be<br/>
removed to the Tower, where your life cannot be assured for a<br/>
single day; for, during the few hours you have been in London, you<br/>
have provoked a resentment which is not easily slaked. There is<br/>
but one chance for you,—renounce A.B.—think no more of her. If<br/>
that be impossible, think of her but as one whom you can never see<br/>
again. If your heart can resolve to give up an attachment which it<br/>
should never have entertained, and which it would be madness to<br/>
cherish longer, make your acquiescence in this condition known by<br/>
putting on your hat a white band, or white feather, or knot of<br/>
ribbon of the same colour, whichever you may most easily come by.<br/>
A boat will, in that case, run, as if by accident, on board of<br/>
that which is to convey you to the Tower. Do you in the confusion<br/>
jump overboard, and swim to the Southwark side of the Thames.<br/>
Friends will attend there to secure your escape, and you will find<br/>
yourself with one who will rather lose character and life, than<br/>
that a hair of your head should fall to the ground; but who, if<br/>
you reject the warning, can only think of you as of the fool who<br/>
perishes in his folly. May Heaven guide you to a sound judgment of<br/>
your condition! So prays one who would be your friend, if you<br/>
pleased,<br/>
“UNKNOWN.”<br/></p>
<p>The Tower!—it was a word of terror, even more so than a civil
prison; for how many passages to death did that dark structure present!
The severe executions which it had witnessed in preceding reigns, were not
perhaps more numerous than the secret murders which had taken place within
its walls; yet Peveril did not a moment hesitate on the part which he had
to perform. “I will share my father’s fate,” he said; “I thought but of
him when they brought me hither; I will think of nothing else when they
convey me to yonder still more dreadful place of confinement; it is his,
and it is but meet that it should be his son’s.—And thou, Alice
Bridgenorth, the day that I renounce thee, may I be held alike a traitor
and a dastard!—Go, false adviser, and share the fate of seducers and
heretical teachers!”</p>
<p>He could not help uttering this last expression aloud, as he threw the
billet into the fire, with a vehemence which made the dwarf start with
surprise. “What say you of burning heretics, young man?” he exclaimed; “by
my faith, your zeal must be warmer than mine, if you talk on such a
subject when the heretics are the prevailing number. May I measure six
feet without my shoes, but the heretics would have the best of it if we
came to that work. Beware of such words.”</p>
<p>“Too late to beware of words spoken and heard,” said the turnkey, who,
opening the door with unusual precautions to avoid noise, had stolen
unperceived into the room; “However, Master Peveril has behaved like a
gentlemen, and I am no tale-bearer, on condition he will consider I have
had trouble in his matters.”</p>
<p>Julian had no alternative but to take the fellow’s hint and administer a
bribe, with which Master Clink was so well satisfied, that he exclaimed,
“It went to his heart to take leave of such a kind-natured gentleman, and
that he could have turned the key on him for twenty years with pleasure.
But the best friends must part.”</p>
<p>“I am to be removed, then?” said Julian.</p>
<p>“Ay, truly, master, the warrant is come from the Council.”</p>
<p>“To convey me to the Tower.”</p>
<p>“Whew!” exclaimed the officer of the law—“who the devil told you
that? But since you do know it, there is no harm to say ay. So make
yourself ready to move immediately; and first, hold out your dew-beaters
till I take off the darbies.”</p>
<p>“Is that usual?” said Peveril, stretching out his feet as the fellow
directed, while his fetters were unlocked.</p>
<p>“Why, ay, master, these fetters belong to the keeper; they are not a-going
to send them to the Lieutenant, I trow. No, no, the warders must bring
their own gear with them; they get none here, I promise them.
Nevertheless, if your honour hath a fancy to go in fetters, as thinking it
may move compassion of your case——”</p>
<p>“I have no intention to make my case seem worse than it is,” said Julian;
whilst at the same time it crossed his mind that his anonymous
correspondent must be well acquainted both with his own personal habits,
since the letter proposed a plan of escape which could only be executed by
a bold swimmer, and with the fashions of prison, since it was foreseen
that he would not be ironed on his passage to the Tower. The turnkey’s
next speech made him carry conjecture still farther.</p>
<p>“There is nothing in life I would not do for so brave a guest,” said
Clink; “I would nab one of my wife’s ribbons for you, if your honour had
the fancy to mount the white flag in your beaver.”</p>
<p>“To what good purpose?” said Julian, shortly connecting, as was natural,
the man’s proposed civility with the advice given and the signal
prescribed in the letter.</p>
<p>“Nay, to no good purpose I know of,” said the turnkey; “only it is the
fashion to seem white and harmless—a sort of token of
not-guiltiness, as I may say, which folks desire to show the world,
whether they be truly guilty or not; but I cannot say that guiltiness or
not-guiltiness argufies much, saving they be words in the verdict.”</p>
<p>“Strange,” thought Peveril, although the man seemed to speak quite
naturally, and without any double meaning, “strange that all should
apparently combine to realise the plan of escape, could I but give my
consent to it! And had I not better consent? Whoever does so much for me
must wish me well, and a well-wisher would never enforce the unjust
conditions on which I am required to consent to my liberation.”</p>
<p>But this misgiving of his resolution was but for a moment. He speedily
recollected, that whoever aided him in escaping, must be necessarily
exposed to great risk, and had a right to name the stipulation on which he
was willing to incur it. He also recollected that falsehood is equally
base, whether expressed in words or in dumb show; and that he should lie
as flatly by using the signal agreed upon in evidence of his renouncing
Alice Bridgenorth, as he would in direct terms if he made such
renunciation without the purpose of abiding by it.</p>
<p>“If you would oblige me,” he said to the turnkey, “let me have a piece of
black silk or crape for the purpose you mention.”</p>
<p>“Of crape!” said the fellow; “what should that signify? Why, the bien
morts, who bing out to tour at you,[*] will think you a chimney-sweeper on
Mayday.”</p>
<p>[*] The smart girls, who turn out to look at you.<br/></p>
<p>“It will show my settled sorrow,” said Julian, “as well as my determined
resolution.”</p>
<p>“As you will, sir,” answered the fellow; “I’ll provide you with a black
rag of some kind or other. So, now; let us be moving.”</p>
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<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0455.jpg" style="width:100%;" ><i>Original</i></SPAN>
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<p>Julian intimated his readiness to attend him, and proceeded to bid
farewell to his late companion, the stout Geoffrey Hudson. The parting was
not without emotion on both sides, more particularly on that of the poor
little man, who had taken a particular liking to the companion of whom he
was now about to be deprived. “Fare ye well,” he said, “my young friend,”
taking Julian’s hand in both his own uplifted palms, in which action he
somewhat resembled the attitude of a sailor pulling a rope overhead,—“Many
in my situation would think himself wronged, as a soldier and servant of
the king’s chamber, in seeing you removed to a more honourable prison than
that which I am limited unto. But, I thank God, I grudge you not the
Tower, nor the rocks of Scilly, nor even Carisbrooke Castle, though the
latter was graced with the captivity of my blessed and martyred master. Go
where you will, I wish you all the distinction of an honourable
prison-house, and a safe and speedy deliverance in God’s own time. For
myself, my race is near a close, and that because I fall martyr to the
over-tenderness of my own heart. There is a circumstance, good Master
Julian Peveril, which should have been yours, had Providence permitted our
farther intimacy, but it fits not the present hour. Go, then, my friend,
and bear witness in life and death, that Geoffrey Hudson scorns the
insults and persecutions of fortune, as he would despise, and has often
despised, the mischievous pranks of an overgrown schoolboy.”</p>
<p>So saying, he turned away, and hid his face with his little handkerchief,
while Julian felt towards him that tragi-comic sensation which makes us
pity the object which excites it, not the less that we are somewhat
inclined to laugh amid our sympathy. The jailer made him a signal, which
Peveril obeyed, leaving the dwarf to disconsolate solitude.</p>
<p>As Julian followed the keeper through the various windings of his penal
labyrinth, the man observed, that “he was a rum fellow, that little Sir
Geoffrey, and, for gallantry, a perfect Cock of Bantam, for as old as he
was. There was a certain gay wench,” he said, “that had hooked him; but
what she could make of him, save she carried him to Smithfield, and took
money for him, as for a motion of puppets, it was,” he said, “hard to
gather.”</p>
<p>Encouraged by this opening, Julian asked if his attendant knew why his
prison was changed. “To teach you to become a King’s post without
commission,” answered the fellow.</p>
<p>He stopped in his tattle as they approached that formidable central point,
in which lay couched on his leathern elbow-chair the fat commander of the
fortress, stationed apparently for ever in the midst of his citadel, as
the huge Boa is sometimes said to lie stretched as a guard upon the
subterranean treasures of Eastern Rajas. This overgrown man of authority
eyed Julian wistfully and sullenly, as the miser the guinea which he must
part with, or the hungry mastiff the food which is carried to another
kennel. He growled to himself as he turned the leaves of his ominous
register, in order to make the necessary entry respecting the removal of
his prisoner. “To the Tower—to the Tower—ay, ay, all must to
the Tower—that’s the fashion of it—free Britons to a military
prison, as if we had neither bolts nor chains here!—I hope
Parliament will have it up, this Towering work, that’s all.—Well,
the youngster will take no good by the change, and that is one comfort.”</p>
<p>Having finished at once his official act of registration, and his
soliloquy, he made a signal to his assistants to remove Julian, who was
led along the same stern passages which he had traversed upon his
entrance, to the gate of the prison, whence a coach, escorted by two
officers of justice, conveyed him to the water-side.</p>
<p>A boat here waited him, with four warders of the Tower, to whose custody
he was formally resigned by his late attendants. Clink, however, the
turnkey, with whom he was more especially acquainted, did not take leave
of him without furnishing him with the piece of black crape which he
requested. Peveril fixed it on his hat amid the whispers of his new
guardians. “The gentleman is in a hurry to go into mourning,” said one;
“mayhap he had better wait till he has cause.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps others may wear mourning for him, ere he can mourn for any one,”
answered another of these functionaries.</p>
<p>Yet notwithstanding the tenor of these whispers, their behaviour to their
prisoner was more respectful than he had experienced from his former
keepers, and might be termed a sullen civility. The ordinary officers of
the law were in general rude, as having to do with felons of every
description; whereas these men were only employed with persons accused of
state crimes—men who were from birth and circumstances usually
entitled to expect, and able to reward, decent usage.</p>
<p>The change of keepers passed unnoticed by Julian, as did the gay and busy
scene presented by the broad and beautiful river on which he was now
launched. A hundred boats shot past them, bearing parties intent on
business, or on pleasure. Julian only viewed them with the stern hope,
that whoever had endeavoured to bribe him from his fidelity by the hope of
freedom, might see, from the colour of the badge which he had assumed, how
determined he was to resist the temptation presented to him.</p>
<p>It was about high-water, and a stout wherry came up the river, with sail
and oar, so directly upon that in which Julian was embarked, that it
seemed as if likely to run her aboard. “Get your carabines ready,” cried
the principal warder to his assistants. “What the devil can these
scoundrels mean?”</p>
<p>But the crew in the other boat seemed to have perceived their error, for
they suddenly altered their course, and struck off into the middle stream,
while a torrent of mutual abuse was exchanged betwixt them and the boat
whose course they had threatened to impede.</p>
<p>“The Unknown has kept his faith,” said Julian to himself; “I too have kept
mine.”</p>
<p>It even seemed to him, as the boats neared each other, that he heard, from
the other wherry, something like a stifled scream or groan; and when the
momentary bustle was over, he asked the warder who sat next him, what boat
that was.</p>
<p>“Men-of-war’s-men, on a frolic, I suppose,” answered the warder. “I know
no one else would be so impudent as run foul of the King’s boat; for I am
sure the fellow put the helm up on purpose. But mayhap you, sir, know more
of the matter than I do.”</p>
<p>This insinuation effectually prevented Julian from putting farther
questions, and he remained silent until the boat came under the dusky
bastions of the Tower. The tide carried them up under a dark and lowering
arch, closed at the upper end by the well-known Traitor’s gate,[*] formed
like a wicket of huge intersecting bars of wood, through which might be
seen a dim and imperfect view of soldiers and warders upon duty, and of
the steep ascending causeway which leads up from the river into the
interior of the fortress. By this gate,—and it is the well-known
circumstance which assigned its name,—those accused of state crimes
were usually committed to the Tower. The Thames afforded a secret and
silent mode of conveyance for transporting thither such whose fallen
fortunes might move the commiseration, or whose popular qualities might
excite the sympathy, of the public; and even where no cause for especial
secrecy existed, the peace of the city was undisturbed by the tumult
attending the passage of the prisoner and his guards through the most
frequented streets.</p>
<p>[*] See note, “Fortunes of Nigel.”<br/></p>
<p>Yet this custom, however recommended by state policy, must have often
struck chill upon the heart of the criminal, who thus, stolen, as it were,
out of society, reached the place of his confinement, without encountering
even one glance of compassion on the road; and as, from under the dusky
arch, he landed on those flinty steps, worn by many a footstep anxious as
his own, against which the tide lapped fitfully with small successive
waves, and hence looked forward to the steep ascent into a Gothic state
prison, and backward to such part of the river as the low-brow’d vault
suffered to become visible, he must often have felt that he was leaving
daylight, hope, and life itself, behind him.</p>
<p>While the warder’s challenge was made and answered, Peveril endeavoured to
obtain information from his conductors where he was likely to be confined;
but the answer was brief and general—“Where the Lieutenant should
direct.”</p>
<p>“Could he not be permitted to share the imprisonment of his father, Sir
Geoffrey Peveril?” He forgot not, on this occasion, to add the surname of
his house.</p>
<p>The warder, an old man of respectable appearance, stared, as if at the
extravagance of the demand, and said bluntly, “It is impossible.”</p>
<p>“At least,” said Peveril, “show me where my father is confined, that I may
look upon the walls which separate us.”</p>
<p>“Young gentleman,” said the senior warder, shaking his grey head, “I am
sorry for you; but asking questions will do you no service. In this place
we know nothing of fathers and sons.”</p>
<p>Yet chance seemed, in a few minutes afterwards, to offer Peveril that
satisfaction which the rigour of his keepers was disposed to deny to him.
As he was conveyed up the steep passage which leads under what is called
the Wakefield Tower, a female voice, in a tone wherein grief and joy were
indescribably mixed, exclaimed, “My son!—My dear son!”</p>
<p>Even those who guarded Julian seemed softened by a tone of such acute
feeling. They slackened their pace. They almost paused to permit him to
look up towards the casement from which the sounds of maternal agony
proceeded; but the aperture was so narrow, and so closely grated, that
nothing was visible save a white female hand, which grasped one of those
rusty barricadoes, as if for supporting the person within, while another
streamed a white handkerchief, and then let it fall. The casement was
instantly deserted.</p>
<p>“Give it me,” said Julian to the officer who lifted the handkerchief; “it
is perhaps a mother’s last gift.”</p>
<p>The old warder lifted the napkin, and looked at it with the jealous
minuteness of one who is accustomed to detect secret correspondence in the
most trifling acts of intercourse.</p>
<p>“There may be writing on it with invisible ink,” said one of his comrades.</p>
<p>“It is wetted, but I think it is only with tears,” answered the senior. “I
cannot keep it from the poor young gentleman.”</p>
<p>“Ah, Master Coleby,” said his comrade, in a gentle tone of reproach, “you
would have been wearing a better coat than a yeoman’s to-day, had it not
been for your tender heart.”</p>
<p>“It signifies little,” said old Coleby, “while my heart is true to my
King, what I feel in discharging my duty, or what coat keeps my old bosom
from the cold weather.”</p>
<p>Peveril, meanwhile, folded in his breast the token of his mother’s
affection which chance had favoured him with; and when placed in the small
and solitary chamber which he was told to consider as his own during his
residence in the Tower, he was soothed even to weeping by this trifling
circumstance, which he could not help considering as an omen, that his
unfortunate house was not entirely deserted by Providence.</p>
<p>But the thoughts and occurrences of a prison are too uniform for a
narrative, and we must now convey our readers into a more bustling scene.</p>
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