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<h2> Chapter 55 </h2>
<p>John Willet, left alone in his dismantled bar, continued to sit staring
about him; awake as to his eyes, certainly, but with all his powers of
reason and reflection in a sound and dreamless sleep. He looked round upon
the room which had been for years, and was within an hour ago, the pride
of his heart; and not a muscle of his face was moved. The night, without,
looked black and cold through the dreary gaps in the casement; the
precious liquids, now nearly leaked away, dripped with a hollow sound upon
the floor; the Maypole peered ruefully in through the broken window, like
the bowsprit of a wrecked ship; the ground might have been the bottom of
the sea, it was so strewn with precious fragments. Currents of air rushed
in, as the old doors jarred and creaked upon their hinges; the candles
flickered and guttered down, and made long winding-sheets; the cheery
deep-red curtains flapped and fluttered idly in the wind; even the stout
Dutch kegs, overthrown and lying empty in dark corners, seemed the mere
husks of good fellows whose jollity had departed, and who could kindle
with a friendly glow no more. John saw this desolation, and yet saw it
not. He was perfectly contented to sit there, staring at it, and felt no
more indignation or discomfort in his bonds than if they had been robes of
honour. So far as he was personally concerned, old Time lay snoring, and
the world stood still.</p>
<p>Save for the dripping from the barrels, the rustling of such light
fragments of destruction as the wind affected, and the dull creaking of
the open doors, all was profoundly quiet: indeed, these sounds, like the
ticking of the death-watch in the night, only made the silence they
invaded deeper and more apparent. But quiet or noisy, it was all one to
John. If a train of heavy artillery could have come up and commenced ball
practice outside the window, it would have been all the same to him. He
was a long way beyond surprise. A ghost couldn't have overtaken him.</p>
<p>By and by he heard a footstep—a hurried, and yet cautious footstep—coming
on towards the house. It stopped, advanced again, then seemed to go quite
round it. Having done that, it came beneath the window, and a head looked
in.</p>
<p>It was strongly relieved against the darkness outside by the glare of the
guttering candles. A pale, worn, withered face; the eyes—but that
was owing to its gaunt condition—unnaturally large and bright; the
hair, a grizzled black. It gave a searching glance all round the room, and
a deep voice said:</p>
<p>'Are you alone in this house?'</p>
<p>John made no sign, though the question was repeated twice, and he heard it
distinctly. After a moment's pause, the man got in at the window. John was
not at all surprised at this, either. There had been so much getting in
and out of window in the course of the last hour or so, that he had quite
forgotten the door, and seemed to have lived among such exercises from
infancy.</p>
<p>The man wore a large, dark, faded cloak, and a slouched hat; he walked up
close to John, and looked at him. John returned the compliment with
interest.</p>
<p>'How long have you been sitting thus?' said the man.</p>
<p>John considered, but nothing came of it.</p>
<p>'Which way have the party gone?'</p>
<p>Some wandering speculations relative to the fashion of the stranger's
boots, got into Mr Willet's mind by some accident or other, but they got
out again in a hurry, and left him in his former state.</p>
<p>'You would do well to speak,' said the man; 'you may keep a whole skin,
though you have nothing else left that can be hurt. Which way have the
party gone?'</p>
<p>'That!' said John, finding his voice all at once, and nodding with perfect
good faith—he couldn't point; he was so tightly bound—in
exactly the opposite direction to the right one.</p>
<p>'You lie!' said the man angrily, and with a threatening gesture. 'I came
that way. You would betray me.'</p>
<p>It was so evident that John's imperturbability was not assumed, but was
the result of the late proceedings under his roof, that the man stayed his
hand in the very act of striking him, and turned away.</p>
<p>John looked after him without so much as a twitch in a single nerve of his
face. He seized a glass, and holding it under one of the little casks
until a few drops were collected, drank them greedily off; then throwing
it down upon the floor impatiently, he took the vessel in his hands and
drained it into his throat. Some scraps of bread and meat were scattered
about, and on these he fell next; eating them with voracity, and pausing
every now and then to listen for some fancied noise outside. When he had
refreshed himself in this manner with violent haste, and raised another
barrel to his lips, he pulled his hat upon his brow as though he were
about to leave the house, and turned to John.</p>
<p>'Where are your servants?'</p>
<p>Mr Willet indistinctly remembered to have heard the rioters calling to
them to throw the key of the room in which they were, out of window, for
their keeping. He therefore replied, 'Locked up.'</p>
<p>'Well for them if they remain quiet, and well for you if you do the like,'
said the man. 'Now show me the way the party went.'</p>
<p>This time Mr Willet indicated it correctly. The man was hurrying to the
door, when suddenly there came towards them on the wind, the loud and
rapid tolling of an alarm-bell, and then a bright and vivid glare streamed
up, which illumined, not only the whole chamber, but all the country.</p>
<p>It was not the sudden change from darkness to this dreadful light, it was
not the sound of distant shrieks and shouts of triumph, it was not this
dread invasion of the serenity and peace of night, that drove the man back
as though a thunderbolt had struck him. It was the Bell. If the ghastliest
shape the human mind has ever pictured in its wildest dreams had risen up
before him, he could not have staggered backward from its touch, as he did
from the first sound of that loud iron voice. With eyes that started from
his head, his limbs convulsed, his face most horrible to see, he raised
one arm high up into the air, and holding something visionary back and
down, with his other hand, drove at it as though he held a knife and
stabbed it to the heart. He clutched his hair, and stopped his ears, and
travelled madly round and round; then gave a frightful cry, and with it
rushed away: still, still, the Bell tolled on and seemed to follow him—louder
and louder, hotter and hotter yet. The glare grew brighter, the roar of
voices deeper; the crash of heavy bodies falling, shook the air; bright
streams of sparks rose up into the sky; but louder than them all—rising
faster far, to Heaven—a million times more fierce and furious—pouring
forth dreadful secrets after its long silence—speaking the language
of the dead—the Bell—the Bell!</p>
<p>What hunt of spectres could surpass that dread pursuit and flight! Had
there been a legion of them on his track, he could have better borne it.
They would have had a beginning and an end, but here all space was full.
The one pursuing voice was everywhere: it sounded in the earth, the air;
shook the long grass, and howled among the trembling trees. The echoes
caught it up, the owls hooted as it flew upon the breeze, the nightingale
was silent and hid herself among the thickest boughs: it seemed to goad
and urge the angry fire, and lash it into madness; everything was steeped
in one prevailing red; the glow was everywhere; nature was drenched in
blood: still the remorseless crying of that awful voice—the Bell,
the Bell!</p>
<p>It ceased; but not in his ears. The knell was at his heart. No work of man
had ever voice like that which sounded there, and warned him that it cried
unceasingly to Heaven. Who could hear that bell, and not know what it
said! There was murder in its every note—cruel, relentless, savage
murder—the murder of a confiding man, by one who held his every
trust. Its ringing summoned phantoms from their graves. What face was
that, in which a friendly smile changed to a look of half incredulous
horror, which stiffened for a moment into one of pain, then changed again
into an imploring glance at Heaven, and so fell idly down with upturned
eyes, like the dead stags' he had often peeped at when a little child:
shrinking and shuddering—there was a dreadful thing to think of now!—and
clinging to an apron as he looked! He sank upon the ground, and grovelling
down as if he would dig himself a place to hide in, covered his face and
ears: but no, no, no,—a hundred walls and roofs of brass would not
shut out that bell, for in it spoke the wrathful voice of God, and from
that voice, the whole wide universe could not afford a refuge!</p>
<p>While he rushed up and down, not knowing where to turn, and while he lay
crouching there, the work went briskly on indeed. When they left the
Maypole, the rioters formed into a solid body, and advanced at a quick
pace towards the Warren. Rumour of their approach having gone before, they
found the garden-doors fast closed, the windows made secure, and the house
profoundly dark: not a light being visible in any portion of the building.
After some fruitless ringing at the bells, and beating at the iron gates,
they drew off a few paces to reconnoitre, and confer upon the course it
would be best to take.</p>
<p>Very little conference was needed, when all were bent upon one desperate
purpose, infuriated with liquor, and flushed with successful riot. The
word being given to surround the house, some climbed the gates, or dropped
into the shallow trench and scaled the garden wall, while others pulled
down the solid iron fence, and while they made a breach to enter by, made
deadly weapons of the bars. The house being completely encircled, a small
number of men were despatched to break open a tool-shed in the garden; and
during their absence on this errand, the remainder contented themselves
with knocking violently at the doors, and calling to those within, to come
down and open them on peril of their lives.</p>
<p>No answer being returned to this repeated summons, and the detachment who
had been sent away, coming back with an accession of pickaxes, spades, and
hoes, they,—together with those who had such arms already, or
carried (as many did) axes, poles, and crowbars,—struggled into the
foremost rank, ready to beset the doors and windows. They had not at this
time more than a dozen lighted torches among them; but when these
preparations were completed, flaming links were distributed and passed
from hand to hand with such rapidity, that, in a minute's time, at least
two-thirds of the whole roaring mass bore, each man in his hand, a blazing
brand. Whirling these about their heads they raised a loud shout, and fell
to work upon the doors and windows.</p>
<p>Amidst the clattering of heavy blows, the rattling of broken glass, the
cries and execrations of the mob, and all the din and turmoil of the
scene, Hugh and his friends kept together at the turret-door where Mr
Haredale had last admitted him and old John Willet; and spent their united
force on that. It was a strong old oaken door, guarded by good bolts and a
heavy bar, but it soon went crashing in upon the narrow stairs behind, and
made, as it were, a platform to facilitate their tearing up into the rooms
above. Almost at the same moment, a dozen other points were forced, and at
every one the crowd poured in like water.</p>
<p>A few armed servant-men were posted in the hall, and when the rioters
forced an entrance there, they fired some half-a-dozen shots. But these
taking no effect, and the concourse coming on like an army of devils, they
only thought of consulting their own safety, and retreated, echoing their
assailants' cries, and hoping in the confusion to be taken for rioters
themselves; in which stratagem they succeeded, with the exception of one
old man who was never heard of again, and was said to have had his brains
beaten out with an iron bar (one of his fellows reported that he had seen
the old man fall), and to have been afterwards burnt in the flames.</p>
<p>The besiegers being now in complete possession of the house, spread
themselves over it from garret to cellar, and plied their demon labours
fiercely. While some small parties kindled bonfires underneath the
windows, others broke up the furniture and cast the fragments down to feed
the flames below; where the apertures in the wall (windows no longer) were
large enough, they threw out tables, chests of drawers, beds, mirrors,
pictures, and flung them whole into the fire; while every fresh addition
to the blazing masses was received with shouts, and howls, and yells,
which added new and dismal terrors to the conflagration. Those who had
axes and had spent their fury on the movables, chopped and tore down the
doors and window frames, broke up the flooring, hewed away the rafters,
and buried men who lingered in the upper rooms, in heaps of ruins. Some
searched the drawers, the chests, the boxes, writing-desks, and closets,
for jewels, plate, and money; while others, less mindful of gain and more
mad for destruction, cast their whole contents into the courtyard without
examination, and called to those below, to heap them on the blaze. Men who
had been into the cellars, and had staved the casks, rushed to and fro
stark mad, setting fire to all they saw—often to the dresses of
their own friends—and kindling the building in so many parts that
some had no time for escape, and were seen, with drooping hands and
blackened faces, hanging senseless on the window-sills to which they had
crawled, until they were sucked and drawn into the burning gulf. The more
the fire crackled and raged, the wilder and more cruel the men grew; as
though moving in that element they became fiends, and changed their
earthly nature for the qualities that give delight in hell.</p>
<p>The burning pile, revealing rooms and passages red hot, through gaps made
in the crumbling walls; the tributary fires that licked the outer bricks
and stones, with their long forked tongues, and ran up to meet the glowing
mass within; the shining of the flames upon the villains who looked on and
fed them; the roaring of the angry blaze, so bright and high that it
seemed in its rapacity to have swallowed up the very smoke; the living
flakes the wind bore rapidly away and hurried on with, like a storm of
fiery snow; the noiseless breaking of great beams of wood, which fell like
feathers on the heap of ashes, and crumbled in the very act to sparks and
powder; the lurid tinge that overspread the sky, and the darkness, very
deep by contrast, which prevailed around; the exposure to the coarse,
common gaze, of every little nook which usages of home had made a sacred
place, and the destruction by rude hands of every little household
favourite which old associations made a dear and precious thing: all this
taking place—not among pitying looks and friendly murmurs of
compassion, but brutal shouts and exultations, which seemed to make the
very rats who stood by the old house too long, creatures with some claim
upon the pity and regard of those its roof had sheltered:—combined
to form a scene never to be forgotten by those who saw it and were not
actors in the work, so long as life endured.</p>
<p>And who were they? The alarm-bell rang—and it was pulled by no faint
or hesitating hands—for a long time; but not a soul was seen. Some
of the insurgents said that when it ceased, they heard the shrieks of
women, and saw some garments fluttering in the air, as a party of men bore
away no unresisting burdens. No one could say that this was true or false,
in such an uproar; but where was Hugh? Who among them had seen him, since
the forcing of the doors? The cry spread through the body. Where was Hugh!</p>
<p>'Here!' he hoarsely cried, appearing from the darkness; out of breath, and
blackened with the smoke. 'We have done all we can; the fire is burning
itself out; and even the corners where it hasn't spread, are nothing but
heaps of ruins. Disperse, my lads, while the coast's clear; get back by
different ways; and meet as usual!' With that, he disappeared again,—contrary
to his wont, for he was always first to advance, and last to go away,—leaving
them to follow homewards as they would.</p>
<p>It was not an easy task to draw off such a throng. If Bedlam gates had
been flung wide open, there would not have issued forth such maniacs as
the frenzy of that night had made. There were men there, who danced and
trampled on the beds of flowers as though they trod down human enemies,
and wrenched them from the stalks, like savages who twisted human necks.
There were men who cast their lighted torches in the air, and suffered
them to fall upon their heads and faces, blistering the skin with deep
unseemly burns. There were men who rushed up to the fire, and paddled in
it with their hands as if in water; and others who were restrained by
force from plunging in, to gratify their deadly longing. On the skull of
one drunken lad—not twenty, by his looks—who lay upon the
ground with a bottle to his mouth, the lead from the roof came streaming
down in a shower of liquid fire, white hot; melting his head like wax.
When the scattered parties were collected, men—living yet, but
singed as with hot irons—were plucked out of the cellars, and
carried off upon the shoulders of others, who strove to wake them as they
went along, with ribald jokes, and left them, dead, in the passages of
hospitals. But of all the howling throng not one learnt mercy from, or
sickened at, these sights; nor was the fierce, besotted, senseless rage of
one man glutted.</p>
<p>Slowly, and in small clusters, with hoarse hurrahs and repetitions of
their usual cry, the assembly dropped away. The last few red-eyed
stragglers reeled after those who had gone before; the distant noise of
men calling to each other, and whistling for others whom they missed, grew
fainter and fainter; at length even these sounds died away, and silence
reigned alone.</p>
<p>Silence indeed! The glare of the flames had sunk into a fitful, flashing
light; and the gentle stars, invisible till now, looked down upon the
blackening heap. A dull smoke hung upon the ruin, as though to hide it
from those eyes of Heaven; and the wind forbore to move it. Bare walls,
roof open to the sky—chambers, where the beloved dead had, many and
many a fair day, risen to new life and energy; where so many dear ones had
been sad and merry; which were connected with so many thoughts and hopes,
regrets and changes—all gone. Nothing left but a dull and dreary
blank—a smouldering heap of dust and ashes—the silence and
solitude of utter desolation.</p>
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