<SPAN name="V2_CV" id="V2_CV"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<p>It was in one of the lucid intervals, as I may term them, that occurred
during this period, that a peasant was brought before him, in his character
of a justice of peace, upon an accusation of having murdered his fellow. As
Mr. Falkland had by this time acquired the repute of a melancholy
valetudinarian, it is probable he would not have been called upon to act in
his official character upon the present occasion, had it not been that two
or three of the neighbouring justices were all of them from home at once, so
that he was the only one to be found in a circuit of many miles. The reader
however must not imagine, though I have employed the word insanity in
describing Mr. Falkland's symptoms, that he was by any means reckoned for a
madman by the generality of those who had occasion to observe him. It is
true that his behaviour, at certain times, was singular and unaccountable;
but then, at other times, there was in it so much dignity, regularity, and
economy; he knew so well how to command and make himself respected; his
actions and carriage were so condescending, considerate, and benevolent,
that, far from having forfeited the esteem of the unfortunate or the many,
they were loud and earnest in his praises.</p>
<p>I was present at the examination of this peasant. The moment I heard of
the errand which had brought this rabble of visitors, a sudden thought
struck me. I conceived the possibility of rendering the incident subordinate
to the great enquiry which drank up all the currents of my soul. I said,
this man is arraigned of murder, and murder is the master-key that wakes
distemper in the mind of Mr. Falkland. I will watch him without remission. I
will trace all the mazes of his thought. Surely at such a time his secret
anguish must betray itself. Surely, if it be not my own fault, I shall now
be able to discover the state of his plea before the tribunal of unerring
justice.</p>
<p>I took my station in a manner most favourable to the object upon which my
mind was intent. I could perceive in Mr. Falkland's features, as he entered,
a strong reluctance to the business in which he was engaged; but there was
no possibility of retreating. His countenance was embarrassed and anxious;
he scarcely saw any body. The examination had not proceeded far, before he
chanced to turn his eye to the part of the room where I was. It happened in
this as in some preceding instances—we exchanged a silent look, by
which we told volumes to each other. Mr. Falkland's complexion turned from
red to pale, and from pale to red. I perfectly understood his feelings, and
would willingly have withdrawn myself. But it was impossible; my passions
were too deeply engaged; I was rooted to the spot; though my own life, that
of my master, or almost of a whole nation had been at stake, I had no power
to change my position.</p>
<p>The first surprise however having subsided, Mr. Falkland assumed a look
of determined constancy, and even seemed to increase in self-possession much
beyond what could have been expected from his first entrance. This he could
probably have maintained, had it not been that the scene, instead of being
permanent, was in some sort perpetually changing. The man who was brought
before him was vehemently accused by the brother of the deceased as having
acted from the most rooted malice. He swore that there had been an old
grudge between the parties, and related several instances of it. He affirmed
that the murderer had sought the earliest opportunity of wreaking his
revenge; had struck the first blow; and, though the contest was in
appearance only a common boxing match, had watched the occasion of giving a
fatal stroke, which was followed by the instant death of his antagonist.</p>
<p>While the accuser was giving in his evidence, the accused discovered
every token of the most poignant sensibility. At one time his features were
convulsed with anguish; tears unbidden trickled down his manly cheeks; and
at another he started with apparent astonishment at the unfavourable turn
that was given to the narrative, though without betraying any impatience to
interrupt. I never saw a man less ferocious in his appearance. He was tall,
well made, and comely. His countenance was ingenuous and benevolent, without
folly. By his side stood a young woman, his sweetheart, extremely agreeable
in her person, and her looks testifying how deeply she interested herself in
the fate of her lover. The accidental spectators were divided, between
indignation against the enormity of the supposed criminal, and compassion
for the poor girl that accompanied him. They seemed to take little notice of
the favourable appearances visible in the person of the accused, till, in
the sequel, those appearances were more forcibly suggested to their
attention. For Mr. Falkland, he was at one moment engrossed by curiosity and
earnestness to investigate the tale, while at another he betrayed a sort of
revulsion of sentiment, which made the investigation too painful for him to
support.</p>
<p>When the accused was called upon for his defence, he readily owned the
misunderstanding that had existed, and that the deceased was the worst enemy
he had in the world. Indeed he was his only enemy, and he could not tell the
reason that had made him so. He had employed every effort to overcome his
animosity, but in vain. The deceased had upon all occasions sought to
mortify him, and do him an ill turn; but he had resolved never to be engaged
in a broil with him, and till this day he had succeeded. If he had met with
a misfortune with any other man, people at least might have thought it
accident; but now it would always be believed that he had acted from secret
malice and a bad heart.</p>
<p>The fact was, that he and his sweetheart had gone to a neighbouring fair,
where this man had met them. The man had often tried to affront him; and his
passiveness, interpreted into cowardice, had perhaps encouraged the other to
additional rudeness. Finding that he had endured trivial insults to himself
with an even temper, the deceased now thought proper to turn his brutality
upon the young woman that accompanied him. He pursued them; he endeavoured
in various manners to harass and vex them; they had sought in vain to shake
him off. The young woman was considerably terrified. The accused
expostulated with their persecutor, and asked him how he could be so
barbarous as to persist in frightening a woman? He replied with an insulting
tone, "Then the woman should find some one able to protect her; people that
encouraged and trusted to such a thief as that, deserved no better!" The
accused tried every expedient he could invent; at length he could endure it
no longer; he became exasperated, and challenged the assailant. The
challenge was accepted; a ring was formed; he confided the care of his
sweetheart to a bystander; and unfortunately the first blow he struck proved
fatal.</p>
<p>The accused added, that he did not care what became of him. He had been
anxious to go through the world in an inoffensive manner, and now he had the
guilt of blood upon him. He did not know but it would be kindness in them to
hang him out of the way; for his conscience would reproach him as long as he
lived, and the figure of the deceased, as he had lain senseless and without
motion at his feet, would perpetually haunt him. The thought of this man, at
one moment full of life and vigour, and the next lifted a helpless corpse
from the ground, and all owing to him, was a thought too dreadful to be
endured. He had loved the poor maiden, who had been the innocent occasion of
this, with all his heart; but from this time he should never support the
sight of her. The sight would bring a tribe of fiends in its rear. One
unlucky minute had poisoned all his hopes, and made life a burden to him.
Saying this, his countenance fell, the muscles of his face trembled with
agony, and he looked the statue of despair.</p>
<p>This was the story of which Mr. Falkland was called upon to be the
auditor. Though the incidents were, for the most part, wide of those which
belonged to the adventures of the preceding volume, and there had been much
less policy and skill displayed on either part in this rustic encounter, yet
there were many points which, to a man who bore the former strongly in his
recollection, suggested a sufficient resemblance. In each case it was a
human brute persisting in a course of hostility to a man of benevolent
character, and suddenly and terribly cut off in the midst of his career.
These points perpetually smote upon the heart of Mr. Falkland. He at one
time started with astonishment, and at another shifted his posture, like a
man who is unable longer to endure the sensations that press upon him. Then
he new strung his nerves to stubborn patience. I could see, while his
muscles preserved an inflexible steadiness, tears of anguish roll down his
cheeks. He dared not trust his eyes to glance towards the side of the room
where I stood; and this gave an air of embarrassment to his whole figure.
But when the accused came to speak of his feelings, to describe the depth of
his compunction for an involuntary fault, he could endure it no longer. He
suddenly rose, and with every mark of horror and despair rushed out of the
room.</p>
<p>This circumstance made no material difference in the affair of the
accused. The parties were detained about half an hour. Mr. Falkland had
already heard the material parts of the evidence in person. At the
expiration of that interval, he sent for Mr. Collins out of the room. The
story of the culprit was confirmed by many witnesses who had seen the
transaction. Word was brought that my master was indisposed; and, at the
same time, the accused was ordered to be discharged. The vengeance of the
brother however, as I afterwards found, did not rest here, and he met with a
magistrate, more scrupulous or more despotic, by whom the culprit was
committed for trial.</p>
<p>This affair was no sooner concluded, than I hastened into the garden, and
plunged into the deepest of its thickets. My mind was full, almost to
bursting. I no sooner conceived myself sufficiently removed from all
observation, than my thoughts forced their way spontaneously to my tongue,
and I exclaimed, in a fit of uncontrollable enthusiasm, "This is the
murderer; the Hawkinses were innocent! I am sure of it! I will pledge my
life for it! It is out! It is discovered! Guilty, upon my soul!"</p>
<p>While I thus proceeded with hasty steps along the most secret paths of
the garden, and from time to time gave vent to the tumult of my thoughts in
involuntary exclamations, I felt as if my animal system had undergone a
total revolution. My blood boiled within me. I was conscious to a kind of
rapture for which I could not account. I was solemn, yet full of rapid
emotion, burning with indignation and energy. In the very tempest and
hurricane of the passions, I seemed to enjoy the most soul-ravishing calm. I
cannot better express the then state of my mind than by saying, I was never
so perfectly alive as at that moment.</p>
<p>This state of mental elevation continued for several hours, but at length
subsided, and gave place to more deliberate reflection. One of the first
questions that then occurred was, what shall I do with the knowledge I have
been so eager to acquire? I had no inclination to turn informer. I felt what
I had had no previous conception of, that it was possible to love a
murderer, and, as I then understood it, the worst of murderers. I conceived
it to be in the highest degree absurd and iniquitous, to cut off a man
qualified for the most essential and extensive utility, merely out of
retrospect to an act which, whatever were its merits, could not be
retrieved.</p>
<p>This thought led me to another, which had at first passed unnoticed. If I
had been disposed to turn informer, what had occurred amounted to no
evidence that was admissible in a court of justice. Well then, added I, if
it be such as would not be admitted at a criminal tribunal, am I sure it is
such as I ought to admit? There were twenty persons besides myself present
at the scene from which I pretend to derive such entire conviction. Not one
of them saw it in the light that I did. It either appeared to them a casual
and unimportant circumstance, or they thought it sufficiently accounted for
by Mr. Falkland's infirmity and misfortunes. Did it really contain such an
extent of arguments and application, that nobody but I was discerning enough
to see?</p>
<p>But all this reasoning produced no alteration in my way of thinking. For
this time I could not get it out of my mind for a moment: "Mr. Falkland is
the murderer! He is guilty! I see it! I feel it! I am sure of it!" Thus was
I hurried along by an uncontrollable destiny. The state of my passions in
their progressive career, the inquisitiveness and impatience of my thoughts,
appeared to make this determination unavoidable.</p>
<p>An incident occurred while I was in the garden, that seemed to make no
impression upon me at the time, but which I recollected when my thoughts
were got into somewhat of a slower motion. In the midst of one of my
paroxysms of exclamation, and when I thought myself most alone, the shadow
of a man as avoiding me passed transiently by me at a small distance. Though
I had scarcely caught a faint glimpse of his person, there was something in
the occurrence that persuaded me it was Mr. Falkland. I shuddered at the
possibility of his having overheard the words of my soliloquy. But this
idea, alarming as it was, had not power immediately to suspend the career of
my reflections. Subsequent circumstances however brought back the
apprehension to my mind. I had scarcely a doubt of its reality, when
dinner-time came, and Mr. Falkland was not to be found. Supper and bed-time
passed in the same manner. The only conclusion made by his servants upon
this circumstance was, that he was gone upon one of his accustomed
melancholy rambles.</p>
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