<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 1 </h2>
<p>In the year 1775, there stood upon the borders of Epping Forest, at a
distance of about twelve miles from London—measuring from the
Standard in Cornhill,' or rather from the spot on or near to which the
Standard used to be in days of yore—a house of public entertainment
called the Maypole; which fact was demonstrated to all such travellers as
could neither read nor write (and at that time a vast number both of
travellers and stay-at-homes were in this condition) by the emblem reared
on the roadside over against the house, which, if not of those goodly
proportions that Maypoles were wont to present in olden times, was a fair
young ash, thirty feet in height, and straight as any arrow that ever
English yeoman drew.</p>
<p>The Maypole—by which term from henceforth is meant the house, and
not its sign—the Maypole was an old building, with more gable ends
than a lazy man would care to count on a sunny day; huge zig-zag chimneys,
out of which it seemed as though even smoke could not choose but come in
more than naturally fantastic shapes, imparted to it in its tortuous
progress; and vast stables, gloomy, ruinous, and empty. The place was said
to have been built in the days of King Henry the Eighth; and there was a
legend, not only that Queen Elizabeth had slept there one night while upon
a hunting excursion, to wit, in a certain oak-panelled room with a deep
bay window, but that next morning, while standing on a mounting block
before the door with one foot in the stirrup, the virgin monarch had then
and there boxed and cuffed an unlucky page for some neglect of duty. The
matter-of-fact and doubtful folks, of whom there were a few among the
Maypole customers, as unluckily there always are in every little
community, were inclined to look upon this tradition as rather apocryphal;
but, whenever the landlord of that ancient hostelry appealed to the
mounting block itself as evidence, and triumphantly pointed out that there
it stood in the same place to that very day, the doubters never failed to
be put down by a large majority, and all true believers exulted as in a
victory.</p>
<p>Whether these, and many other stories of the like nature, were true or
untrue, the Maypole was really an old house, a very old house, perhaps as
old as it claimed to be, and perhaps older, which will sometimes happen
with houses of an uncertain, as with ladies of a certain, age. Its windows
were old diamond-pane lattices, its floors were sunken and uneven, its
ceilings blackened by the hand of time, and heavy with massive beams. Over
the doorway was an ancient porch, quaintly and grotesquely carved; and
here on summer evenings the more favoured customers smoked and drank—ay,
and sang many a good song too, sometimes—reposing on two
grim-looking high-backed settles, which, like the twin dragons of some
fairy tale, guarded the entrance to the mansion.</p>
<p>In the chimneys of the disused rooms, swallows had built their nests for
many a long year, and from earliest spring to latest autumn whole colonies
of sparrows chirped and twittered in the eaves. There were more pigeons
about the dreary stable-yard and out-buildings than anybody but the
landlord could reckon up. The wheeling and circling flights of runts,
fantails, tumblers, and pouters, were perhaps not quite consistent with
the grave and sober character of the building, but the monotonous cooing,
which never ceased to be raised by some among them all day long, suited it
exactly, and seemed to lull it to rest. With its overhanging stories,
drowsy little panes of glass, and front bulging out and projecting over
the pathway, the old house looked as if it were nodding in its sleep.
Indeed, it needed no very great stretch of fancy to detect in it other
resemblances to humanity. The bricks of which it was built had originally
been a deep dark red, but had grown yellow and discoloured like an old
man's skin; the sturdy timbers had decayed like teeth; and here and there
the ivy, like a warm garment to comfort it in its age, wrapt its green
leaves closely round the time-worn walls.</p>
<p>It was a hale and hearty age though, still: and in the summer or autumn
evenings, when the glow of the setting sun fell upon the oak and chestnut
trees of the adjacent forest, the old house, partaking of its lustre,
seemed their fit companion, and to have many good years of life in him
yet.</p>
<p>The evening with which we have to do, was neither a summer nor an autumn
one, but the twilight of a day in March, when the wind howled dismally
among the bare branches of the trees, and rumbling in the wide chimneys
and driving the rain against the windows of the Maypole Inn, gave such of
its frequenters as chanced to be there at the moment an undeniable reason
for prolonging their stay, and caused the landlord to prophesy that the
night would certainly clear at eleven o'clock precisely,—which by a
remarkable coincidence was the hour at which he always closed his house.</p>
<p>The name of him upon whom the spirit of prophecy thus descended was John
Willet, a burly, large-headed man with a fat face, which betokened
profound obstinacy and slowness of apprehension, combined with a very
strong reliance upon his own merits. It was John Willet's ordinary boast
in his more placid moods that if he were slow he was sure; which assertion
could, in one sense at least, be by no means gainsaid, seeing that he was
in everything unquestionably the reverse of fast, and withal one of the
most dogged and positive fellows in existence—always sure that what
he thought or said or did was right, and holding it as a thing quite
settled and ordained by the laws of nature and Providence, that anybody
who said or did or thought otherwise must be inevitably and of necessity
wrong.</p>
<p>Mr Willet walked slowly up to the window, flattened his fat nose against
the cold glass, and shading his eyes that his sight might not be affected
by the ruddy glow of the fire, looked abroad. Then he walked slowly back
to his old seat in the chimney-corner, and, composing himself in it with a
slight shiver, such as a man might give way to and so acquire an
additional relish for the warm blaze, said, looking round upon his guests:</p>
<p>'It'll clear at eleven o'clock. No sooner and no later. Not before and not
arterwards.'</p>
<p>'How do you make out that?' said a little man in the opposite corner. 'The
moon is past the full, and she rises at nine.'</p>
<p>John looked sedately and solemnly at his questioner until he had brought
his mind to bear upon the whole of his observation, and then made answer,
in a tone which seemed to imply that the moon was peculiarly his business
and nobody else's:</p>
<p>'Never you mind about the moon. Don't you trouble yourself about her. You
let the moon alone, and I'll let you alone.'</p>
<p>'No offence I hope?' said the little man.</p>
<p>Again John waited leisurely until the observation had thoroughly
penetrated to his brain, and then replying, 'No offence as YET,' applied a
light to his pipe and smoked in placid silence; now and then casting a
sidelong look at a man wrapped in a loose riding-coat with huge cuffs
ornamented with tarnished silver lace and large metal buttons, who sat
apart from the regular frequenters of the house, and wearing a hat flapped
over his face, which was still further shaded by the hand on which his
forehead rested, looked unsociable enough.</p>
<p>There was another guest, who sat, booted and spurred, at some distance
from the fire also, and whose thoughts—to judge from his folded arms
and knitted brows, and from the untasted liquor before him—were
occupied with other matters than the topics under discussion or the
persons who discussed them. This was a young man of about
eight-and-twenty, rather above the middle height, and though of somewhat
slight figure, gracefully and strongly made. He wore his own dark hair,
and was accoutred in a riding dress, which together with his large boots
(resembling in shape and fashion those worn by our Life Guardsmen at the
present day), showed indisputable traces of the bad condition of the
roads. But travel-stained though he was, he was well and even richly
attired, and without being overdressed looked a gallant gentleman.</p>
<p>Lying upon the table beside him, as he had carelessly thrown them down,
were a heavy riding-whip and a slouched hat, the latter worn no doubt as
being best suited to the inclemency of the weather. There, too, were a
pair of pistols in a holster-case, and a short riding-cloak. Little of his
face was visible, except the long dark lashes which concealed his downcast
eyes, but an air of careless ease and natural gracefulness of demeanour
pervaded the figure, and seemed to comprehend even those slight
accessories, which were all handsome, and in good keeping.</p>
<p>Towards this young gentleman the eyes of Mr Willet wandered but once, and
then as if in mute inquiry whether he had observed his silent neighbour.
It was plain that John and the young gentleman had often met before.
Finding that his look was not returned, or indeed observed by the person
to whom it was addressed, John gradually concentrated the whole power of
his eyes into one focus, and brought it to bear upon the man in the
flapped hat, at whom he came to stare in course of time with an intensity
so remarkable, that it affected his fireside cronies, who all, as with one
accord, took their pipes from their lips, and stared with open mouths at
the stranger likewise.</p>
<p>The sturdy landlord had a large pair of dull fish-like eyes, and the
little man who had hazarded the remark about the moon (and who was the
parish-clerk and bell-ringer of Chigwell, a village hard by) had little
round black shiny eyes like beads; moreover this little man wore at the
knees of his rusty black breeches, and on his rusty black coat, and all
down his long flapped waistcoat, little queer buttons like nothing except
his eyes; but so like them, that as they twinkled and glistened in the
light of the fire, which shone too in his bright shoe-buckles, he seemed
all eyes from head to foot, and to be gazing with every one of them at the
unknown customer. No wonder that a man should grow restless under such an
inspection as this, to say nothing of the eyes belonging to short Tom Cobb
the general chandler and post-office keeper, and long Phil Parkes the
ranger, both of whom, infected by the example of their companions,
regarded him of the flapped hat no less attentively.</p>
<p>The stranger became restless; perhaps from being exposed to this raking
fire of eyes, perhaps from the nature of his previous meditations—most
probably from the latter cause, for as he changed his position and looked
hastily round, he started to find himself the object of such keen regard,
and darted an angry and suspicious glance at the fireside group. It had
the effect of immediately diverting all eyes to the chimney, except those
of John Willet, who finding himself as it were, caught in the fact, and
not being (as has been already observed) of a very ready nature, remained
staring at his guest in a particularly awkward and disconcerted manner.</p>
<p>'Well?' said the stranger.</p>
<p>Well. There was not much in well. It was not a long speech. 'I thought you
gave an order,' said the landlord, after a pause of two or three minutes
for consideration.</p>
<p>The stranger took off his hat, and disclosed the hard features of a man of
sixty or thereabouts, much weatherbeaten and worn by time, and the
naturally harsh expression of which was not improved by a dark
handkerchief which was bound tightly round his head, and, while it served
the purpose of a wig, shaded his forehead, and almost hid his eyebrows. If
it were intended to conceal or divert attention from a deep gash, now
healed into an ugly seam, which when it was first inflicted must have laid
bare his cheekbone, the object was but indifferently attained, for it
could scarcely fail to be noted at a glance. His complexion was of a
cadaverous hue, and he had a grizzly jagged beard of some three weeks'
date. Such was the figure (very meanly and poorly clad) that now rose from
the seat, and stalking across the room sat down in a corner of the
chimney, which the politeness or fears of the little clerk very readily
assigned to him.</p>
<p>'A highwayman!' whispered Tom Cobb to Parkes the ranger.</p>
<p>'Do you suppose highwaymen don't dress handsomer than that?' replied
Parkes. 'It's a better business than you think for, Tom, and highwaymen
don't need or use to be shabby, take my word for it.'</p>
<p>Meanwhile the subject of their speculations had done due honour to the
house by calling for some drink, which was promptly supplied by the
landlord's son Joe, a broad-shouldered strapping young fellow of twenty,
whom it pleased his father still to consider a little boy, and to treat
accordingly. Stretching out his hands to warm them by the blazing fire,
the man turned his head towards the company, and after running his eye
sharply over them, said in a voice well suited to his appearance:</p>
<p>'What house is that which stands a mile or so from here?'</p>
<p>'Public-house?' said the landlord, with his usual deliberation.</p>
<p>'Public-house, father!' exclaimed Joe, 'where's the public-house within a
mile or so of the Maypole? He means the great house—the Warren—naturally
and of course. The old red brick house, sir, that stands in its own
grounds—?'</p>
<p>'Aye,' said the stranger.</p>
<p>'And that fifteen or twenty years ago stood in a park five times as broad,
which with other and richer property has bit by bit changed hands and
dwindled away—more's the pity!' pursued the young man.</p>
<p>'Maybe,' was the reply. 'But my question related to the owner. What it has
been I don't care to know, and what it is I can see for myself.'</p>
<p>The heir-apparent to the Maypole pressed his finger on his lips, and
glancing at the young gentleman already noticed, who had changed his
attitude when the house was first mentioned, replied in a lower tone:</p>
<p>'The owner's name is Haredale, Mr Geoffrey Haredale, and'—again he
glanced in the same direction as before—'and a worthy gentleman too—hem!'</p>
<p>Paying as little regard to this admonitory cough, as to the significant
gesture that had preceded it, the stranger pursued his questioning.</p>
<p>'I turned out of my way coming here, and took the footpath that crosses
the grounds. Who was the young lady that I saw entering a carriage? His
daughter?'</p>
<p>'Why, how should I know, honest man?' replied Joe, contriving in the
course of some arrangements about the hearth, to advance close to his
questioner and pluck him by the sleeve, 'I didn't see the young lady, you
know. Whew! There's the wind again—AND rain—well it IS a
night!'</p>
<p>Rough weather indeed!' observed the strange man.</p>
<p>'You're used to it?' said Joe, catching at anything which seemed to
promise a diversion of the subject.</p>
<p>'Pretty well,' returned the other. 'About the young lady—has Mr
Haredale a daughter?'</p>
<p>'No, no,' said the young fellow fretfully, 'he's a single gentleman—he's—be
quiet, can't you, man? Don't you see this talk is not relished yonder?'</p>
<p>Regardless of this whispered remonstrance, and affecting not to hear it,
his tormentor provokingly continued:</p>
<p>'Single men have had daughters before now. Perhaps she may be his
daughter, though he is not married.'</p>
<p>'What do you mean?' said Joe, adding in an undertone as he approached him
again, 'You'll come in for it presently, I know you will!'</p>
<p>'I mean no harm'—returned the traveller boldly, 'and have said none
that I know of. I ask a few questions—as any stranger may, and not
unnaturally—about the inmates of a remarkable house in a
neighbourhood which is new to me, and you are as aghast and disturbed as
if I were talking treason against King George. Perhaps you can tell me
why, sir, for (as I say) I am a stranger, and this is Greek to me?'</p>
<p>The latter observation was addressed to the obvious cause of Joe Willet's
discomposure, who had risen and was adjusting his riding-cloak preparatory
to sallying abroad. Briefly replying that he could give him no
information, the young man beckoned to Joe, and handing him a piece of
money in payment of his reckoning, hurried out attended by young Willet
himself, who taking up a candle followed to light him to the house-door.</p>
<p>While Joe was absent on this errand, the elder Willet and his three
companions continued to smoke with profound gravity, and in a deep
silence, each having his eyes fixed on a huge copper boiler that was
suspended over the fire. After some time John Willet slowly shook his
head, and thereupon his friends slowly shook theirs; but no man withdrew
his eyes from the boiler, or altered the solemn expression of his
countenance in the slightest degree.</p>
<p>At length Joe returned—very talkative and conciliatory, as though
with a strong presentiment that he was going to be found fault with.</p>
<p>'Such a thing as love is!' he said, drawing a chair near the fire, and
looking round for sympathy. 'He has set off to walk to London,—all
the way to London. His nag gone lame in riding out here this blessed
afternoon, and comfortably littered down in our stable at this minute; and
he giving up a good hot supper and our best bed, because Miss Haredale has
gone to a masquerade up in town, and he has set his heart upon seeing her!
I don't think I could persuade myself to do that, beautiful as she is,—but
then I'm not in love (at least I don't think I am) and that's the whole
difference.'</p>
<p>'He is in love then?' said the stranger.</p>
<p>'Rather,' replied Joe. 'He'll never be more in love, and may very easily
be less.'</p>
<p>'Silence, sir!' cried his father.</p>
<p>'What a chap you are, Joe!' said Long Parkes.</p>
<p>'Such a inconsiderate lad!' murmured Tom Cobb.</p>
<p>'Putting himself forward and wringing the very nose off his own father's
face!' exclaimed the parish-clerk, metaphorically.</p>
<p>'What HAVE I done?' reasoned poor Joe.</p>
<p>'Silence, sir!' returned his father, 'what do you mean by talking, when
you see people that are more than two or three times your age, sitting
still and silent and not dreaming of saying a word?'</p>
<p>'Why that's the proper time for me to talk, isn't it?' said Joe
rebelliously.</p>
<p>'The proper time, sir!' retorted his father, 'the proper time's no time.'</p>
<p>'Ah to be sure!' muttered Parkes, nodding gravely to the other two who
nodded likewise, observing under their breaths that that was the point.</p>
<p>'The proper time's no time, sir,' repeated John Willet; 'when I was your
age I never talked, I never wanted to talk. I listened and improved myself
that's what I did.'</p>
<p>'And you'd find your father rather a tough customer in argeyment, Joe, if
anybody was to try and tackle him,' said Parkes.</p>
<p>'For the matter o' that, Phil!' observed Mr Willet, blowing a long, thin,
spiral cloud of smoke out of the corner of his mouth, and staring at it
abstractedly as it floated away; 'For the matter o' that, Phil, argeyment
is a gift of Natur. If Natur has gifted a man with powers of argeyment, a
man has a right to make the best of 'em, and has not a right to stand on
false delicacy, and deny that he is so gifted; for that is a turning of
his back on Natur, a flouting of her, a slighting of her precious caskets,
and a proving of one's self to be a swine that isn't worth her scattering
pearls before.'</p>
<p>The landlord pausing here for a very long time, Mr Parkes naturally
concluded that he had brought his discourse to an end; and therefore,
turning to the young man with some austerity, exclaimed:</p>
<p>'You hear what your father says, Joe? You wouldn't much like to tackle him
in argeyment, I'm thinking, sir.'</p>
<p>'IF,' said John Willet, turning his eyes from the ceiling to the face of
his interrupter, and uttering the monosyllable in capitals, to apprise him
that he had put in his oar, as the vulgar say, with unbecoming and
irreverent haste; 'IF, sir, Natur has fixed upon me the gift of argeyment,
why should I not own to it, and rather glory in the same? Yes, sir, I AM a
tough customer that way. You are right, sir. My toughness has been proved,
sir, in this room many and many a time, as I think you know; and if you
don't know,' added John, putting his pipe in his mouth again, 'so much the
better, for I an't proud and am not going to tell you.'</p>
<p>A general murmur from his three cronies, and a general shaking of heads at
the copper boiler, assured John Willet that they had had good experience
of his powers and needed no further evidence to assure them of his
superiority. John smoked with a little more dignity and surveyed them in
silence.</p>
<p>'It's all very fine talking,' muttered Joe, who had been fidgeting in his
chair with divers uneasy gestures. 'But if you mean to tell me that I'm
never to open my lips—'</p>
<p>'Silence, sir!' roared his father. 'No, you never are. When your opinion's
wanted, you give it. When you're spoke to, you speak. When your opinion's
not wanted and you're not spoke to, don't you give an opinion and don't
you speak. The world's undergone a nice alteration since my time,
certainly. My belief is that there an't any boys left—that there
isn't such a thing as a boy—that there's nothing now between a male
baby and a man—and that all the boys went out with his blessed
Majesty King George the Second.'</p>
<p>'That's a very true observation, always excepting the young princes,' said
the parish-clerk, who, as the representative of church and state in that
company, held himself bound to the nicest loyalty. 'If it's godly and
righteous for boys, being of the ages of boys, to behave themselves like
boys, then the young princes must be boys and cannot be otherwise.'</p>
<p>'Did you ever hear tell of mermaids, sir?' said Mr Willet.</p>
<p>'Certainly I have,' replied the clerk.</p>
<p>'Very good,' said Mr Willet. 'According to the constitution of mermaids,
so much of a mermaid as is not a woman must be a fish. According to the
constitution of young princes, so much of a young prince (if anything) as
is not actually an angel, must be godly and righteous. Therefore if it's
becoming and godly and righteous in the young princes (as it is at their
ages) that they should be boys, they are and must be boys, and cannot by
possibility be anything else.'</p>
<p>This elucidation of a knotty point being received with such marks of
approval as to put John Willet into a good humour, he contented himself
with repeating to his son his command of silence, and addressing the
stranger, said:</p>
<p>'If you had asked your questions of a grown-up person—of me or any
of these gentlemen—you'd have had some satisfaction, and wouldn't
have wasted breath. Miss Haredale is Mr Geoffrey Haredale's niece.'</p>
<p>'Is her father alive?' said the man, carelessly.</p>
<p>'No,' rejoined the landlord, 'he is not alive, and he is not dead—'</p>
<p>'Not dead!' cried the other.</p>
<p>'Not dead in a common sort of way,' said the landlord.</p>
<p>The cronies nodded to each other, and Mr Parkes remarked in an undertone,
shaking his head meanwhile as who should say, 'let no man contradict me,
for I won't believe him,' that John Willet was in amazing force to-night,
and fit to tackle a Chief Justice.</p>
<p>The stranger suffered a short pause to elapse, and then asked abruptly,
'What do you mean?'</p>
<p>'More than you think for, friend,' returned John Willet. 'Perhaps there's
more meaning in them words than you suspect.'</p>
<p>'Perhaps there is,' said the strange man, gruffly; 'but what the devil do
you speak in such mysteries for? You tell me, first, that a man is not
alive, nor yet dead—then, that he's not dead in a common sort of way—then,
that you mean a great deal more than I think for. To tell you the truth,
you may do that easily; for so far as I can make out, you mean nothing.
What DO you mean, I ask again?'</p>
<p>'That,' returned the landlord, a little brought down from his dignity by
the stranger's surliness, 'is a Maypole story, and has been any time these
four-and-twenty years. That story is Solomon Daisy's story. It belongs to
the house; and nobody but Solomon Daisy has ever told it under this roof,
or ever shall—that's more.'</p>
<p>The man glanced at the parish-clerk, whose air of consciousness and
importance plainly betokened him to be the person referred to, and,
observing that he had taken his pipe from his lips, after a very long
whiff to keep it alight, and was evidently about to tell his story without
further solicitation, gathered his large coat about him, and shrinking
further back was almost lost in the gloom of the spacious chimney-corner,
except when the flame, struggling from under a great faggot, whose weight
almost crushed it for the time, shot upward with a strong and sudden
glare, and illumining his figure for a moment, seemed afterwards to cast
it into deeper obscurity than before.</p>
<p>By this flickering light, which made the old room, with its heavy timbers
and panelled walls, look as if it were built of polished ebony—the
wind roaring and howling without, now rattling the latch and creaking the
hinges of the stout oaken door, and now driving at the casement as though
it would beat it in—by this light, and under circumstances so
auspicious, Solomon Daisy began his tale:</p>
<p>'It was Mr Reuben Haredale, Mr Geoffrey's elder brother—'</p>
<p>Here he came to a dead stop, and made so long a pause that even John
Willet grew impatient and asked why he did not proceed.</p>
<p>'Cobb,' said Solomon Daisy, dropping his voice and appealing to the
post-office keeper; 'what day of the month is this?'</p>
<p>'The nineteenth.'</p>
<p>'Of March,' said the clerk, bending forward, 'the nineteenth of March;
that's very strange.'</p>
<p>In a low voice they all acquiesced, and Solomon went on:</p>
<p>'It was Mr Reuben Haredale, Mr Geoffrey's elder brother, that twenty-two
years ago was the owner of the Warren, which, as Joe has said—not
that you remember it, Joe, for a boy like you can't do that, but because
you have often heard me say so—was then a much larger and better
place, and a much more valuable property than it is now. His lady was
lately dead, and he was left with one child—the Miss Haredale you
have been inquiring about—who was then scarcely a year old.'</p>
<p>Although the speaker addressed himself to the man who had shown so much
curiosity about this same family, and made a pause here as if expecting
some exclamation of surprise or encouragement, the latter made no remark,
nor gave any indication that he heard or was interested in what was said.
Solomon therefore turned to his old companions, whose noses were brightly
illuminated by the deep red glow from the bowls of their pipes; assured,
by long experience, of their attention, and resolved to show his sense of
such indecent behaviour.</p>
<p>'Mr Haredale,' said Solomon, turning his back upon the strange man, 'left
this place when his lady died, feeling it lonely like, and went up to
London, where he stopped some months; but finding that place as lonely as
this—as I suppose and have always heard say—he suddenly came
back again with his little girl to the Warren, bringing with him besides,
that day, only two women servants, and his steward, and a gardener.'</p>
<p>Mr Daisy stopped to take a whiff at his pipe, which was going out, and
then proceeded—at first in a snuffling tone, occasioned by keen
enjoyment of the tobacco and strong pulling at the pipe, and afterwards
with increasing distinctness:</p>
<p>'—Bringing with him two women servants, and his steward, and a
gardener. The rest stopped behind up in London, and were to follow next
day. It happened that that night, an old gentleman who lived at Chigwell
Row, and had long been poorly, deceased, and an order came to me at half
after twelve o'clock at night to go and toll the passing-bell.'</p>
<p>There was a movement in the little group of listeners, sufficiently
indicative of the strong repugnance any one of them would have felt to
have turned out at such a time upon such an errand. The clerk felt and
understood it, and pursued his theme accordingly.</p>
<p>'It WAS a dreary thing, especially as the grave-digger was laid up in his
bed, from long working in a damp soil and sitting down to take his dinner
on cold tombstones, and I was consequently under obligation to go alone,
for it was too late to hope to get any other companion. However, I wasn't
unprepared for it; as the old gentleman had often made it a request that
the bell should be tolled as soon as possible after the breath was out of
his body, and he had been expected to go for some days. I put as good a
face upon it as I could, and muffling myself up (for it was mortal cold),
started out with a lighted lantern in one hand and the key of the church
in the other.'</p>
<p>At this point of the narrative, the dress of the strange man rustled as if
he had turned himself to hear more distinctly. Slightly pointing over his
shoulder, Solomon elevated his eyebrows and nodded a silent inquiry to Joe
whether this was the case. Joe shaded his eyes with his hand and peered
into the corner, but could make out nothing, and so shook his head.</p>
<p>'It was just such a night as this; blowing a hurricane, raining heavily,
and very dark—I often think now, darker than I ever saw it before or
since; that may be my fancy, but the houses were all close shut and the
folks in doors, and perhaps there is only one other man who knows how dark
it really was. I got into the church, chained the door back so that it
should keep ajar—for, to tell the truth, I didn't like to be shut in
there alone—and putting my lantern on the stone seat in the little
corner where the bell-rope is, sat down beside it to trim the candle.</p>
<p>'I sat down to trim the candle, and when I had done so I could not
persuade myself to get up again, and go about my work. I don't know how it
was, but I thought of all the ghost stories I had ever heard, even those
that I had heard when I was a boy at school, and had forgotten long ago;
and they didn't come into my mind one after another, but all crowding at
once, like. I recollected one story there was in the village, how that on
a certain night in the year (it might be that very night for anything I
knew), all the dead people came out of the ground and sat at the heads of
their own graves till morning. This made me think how many people I had
known, were buried between the church-door and the churchyard gate, and
what a dreadful thing it would be to have to pass among them and know them
again, so earthy and unlike themselves. I had known all the niches and
arches in the church from a child; still, I couldn't persuade myself that
those were their natural shadows which I saw on the pavement, but felt
sure there were some ugly figures hiding among 'em and peeping out.
Thinking on in this way, I began to think of the old gentleman who was
just dead, and I could have sworn, as I looked up the dark chancel, that I
saw him in his usual place, wrapping his shroud about him and shivering as
if he felt it cold. All this time I sat listening and listening, and
hardly dared to breathe. At length I started up and took the bell-rope in
my hands. At that minute there rang—not that bell, for I had hardly
touched the rope—but another!</p>
<p>'I heard the ringing of another bell, and a deep bell too, plainly. It was
only for an instant, and even then the wind carried the sound away, but I
heard it. I listened for a long time, but it rang no more. I had heard of
corpse candles, and at last I persuaded myself that this must be a corpse
bell tolling of itself at midnight for the dead. I tolled my bell—how,
or how long, I don't know—and ran home to bed as fast as I could
touch the ground.</p>
<p>'I was up early next morning after a restless night, and told the story to
my neighbours. Some were serious and some made light of it; I don't think
anybody believed it real. But, that morning, Mr Reuben Haredale was found
murdered in his bedchamber; and in his hand was a piece of the cord
attached to an alarm-bell outside the roof, which hung in his room and had
been cut asunder, no doubt by the murderer, when he seized it.</p>
<p>'That was the bell I heard.</p>
<p>'A bureau was found opened, and a cash-box, which Mr Haredale had brought
down that day, and was supposed to contain a large sum of money, was gone.
The steward and gardener were both missing and both suspected for a long
time, but they were never found, though hunted far and wide. And far
enough they might have looked for poor Mr Rudge the steward, whose body—scarcely
to be recognised by his clothes and the watch and ring he wore—was
found, months afterwards, at the bottom of a piece of water in the
grounds, with a deep gash in the breast where he had been stabbed with a
knife. He was only partly dressed; and people all agreed that he had been
sitting up reading in his own room, where there were many traces of blood,
and was suddenly fallen upon and killed before his master.</p>
<p>Everybody now knew that the gardener must be the murderer, and though he
has never been heard of from that day to this, he will be, mark my words.
The crime was committed this day two-and-twenty years—on the
nineteenth of March, one thousand seven hundred and fifty-three. On the
nineteenth of March in some year—no matter when—I know it, I
am sure of it, for we have always, in some strange way or other, been
brought back to the subject on that day ever since—on the nineteenth
of March in some year, sooner or later, that man will be discovered.'</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />