<SPAN name="V3_CXI" id="V3_CXI"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<p>Having given vent to my resentment, I left Mr. Spurrel motionless, and
unable to utter a word. Gines and his companion attended me. It is
unnecessary to repeat all the insolence of this man. He alternately
triumphed in the completion of his revenge, and regretted the loss of the
reward to the shrivelled old curmudgeon we had just quitted, whom however he
swore he would cheat of it by one means or another. He claimed to himself
the ingenuity of having devised the halfpenny legend, the thought of which
was all his own, and was an expedient that was impossible to fail. There was
neither law nor justice, he said, to be had, if Hunks who had done nothing
were permitted to pocket the cash, and his merit were left undistinguished
and pennyless.</p>
<p>I paid but little attention to his story. It struck upon my sense, and I
was able to recollect it at my nearest leisure, though I thought not of it
at the time. For the present I was busily employed, reflecting on my new
situation, and the conduct to be observed in it. The thought of suicide had
twice, in moments of uncommon despair, suggested itself to my mind; but it
was far from my habitual meditations. At present, and in all cases where
death was immediately threatened me from the injustice of others, I felt
myself disposed to contend to the last.</p>
<p>My prospects were indeed sufficiently gloomy and discouraging. How much
labour had I exerted, first to extricate myself from prison, and next to
evade the diligence of my pursuers; and the result of all, to be brought
back to the point from which I began! I had gained fame indeed, the
miserable fame to have my story bawled forth by hawkers and ballad-mongers,
to have my praises as an active and enterprising villain celebrated among
footmen and chambermaids; but I was neither an Erostratus nor an Alexander,
to die contented with that species of eulogium. With respect to all that was
solid, what chance could I find in new exertions of a similar nature? Never
was a human creature pursued by enemies more inventive or envenomed. I could
have small hope that they would ever cease their persecution, or that my
future attempts would be crowned with a more desirable issue.</p>
<p>They were considerations like these that dictated my resolution. My mind
had been gradually weaning from Mr. Falkland, till its feeling rose to
something like abhorrence. I had long cherished a reverence for him, which
not even animosity and subornation on his part could utterly destroy. But I
now ascribed a character so inhumanly sanguinary to his mind; I saw
something so fiend-like in the thus hunting me round the world, and
determining to be satisfied with nothing less than my blood, while at the
same time he knew my innocence, my indisposition to mischief, nay, I might
add, my virtues; that henceforth I trampled reverence and the recollection
of former esteem under my feet. I lost all regard to his intellectual
greatness, and all pity for the agonies of his soul. I also would abjure
forbearance. I would show myself bitter and inflexible as he had done. Was
it wise in him to drive me into extremity and madness? Had he no fears for
his own secret and atrocious offences?</p>
<p>I had been obliged to spend the remainder of the night upon which I had
been apprehended, in prison. During the interval I had thrown off every
vestige of disguise, and appeared the next morning in my own person. I was
of course easily identified; and, this being the whole with which the
magistrates before whom I now stood thought themselves concerned, they were
proceeding to make out an order for my being conducted back to my own
county. I suspended the despatch of this measure by observing that I had
something to disclose. This is an overture to which men appointed for the
administration of criminal justice never fail to attend.</p>
<p>I went before the magistrates, to whose office Gines and his comrade
conducted me, fully determined to publish those astonishing secrets of which
I had hitherto been the faithful depository; and, once for all, to turn the
tables upon my accuser. It was time that the real criminal should be the
sufferer, and not that innocence should for ever labour under the oppression
of guilt.</p>
<p>I said that "I had always protested my innocence, and must now repeat the
protest."</p>
<p>"In that case," retorted the senior magistrate abruptly, "what can you
have to disclose? If you are innocent, that is no business of ours! We act
officially."</p>
<p>"I always declared," continued I, "that I was the perpetrator of no
guilt, but that the guilt wholly belonged to my accuser. He privately
conveyed these effects among my property, and then charged me with the
robbery. I now declare more than that, that this man is a murderer, that I
detected his criminality, and that, for that reason, he is determined to
deprive me of life. I presume, gentlemen, that you do consider it as your
business to take this declaration. I am persuaded you will be by no means
disposed, actively or passively, to contribute to the atrocious injustice
under which I suffer, to the imprisonment and condemnation of an innocent
man, in order that a murderer may go free. I suppressed this story as long
as I could. I was extremely averse to be the author of the unhappiness or
the death of a human being. But all patience and submission have their
limits."</p>
<p>"Give me leave, sir," rejoined the magistrate, with an air of affected
moderation, "to ask you two questions. Were you any way aiding, abetting, or
contributing to this murder?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"And pray, sir, who is this Mr. Falkland? and what may have been the
nature of your connection with him?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Falkland is a gentleman of six thousand per annum. I lived with him
as his secretary."</p>
<p>"In other words, you were his servant?"</p>
<p>"As you please."</p>
<p>"Very well, sir; that is quite enough for me. First, I have to tell you,
as a magistrate, that I can have nothing to do with your declaration. If you
had been concerned in the murder you talk of, that would alter the case. But
it is out of all reasonable rule for a magistrate to take an information
from a felon, except against his accomplices. Next, I think it right to
observe to you, in my own proper person, that you appear to me to be the
most impudent rascal I ever saw. Why, are you such an ass as to suppose,
that the sort of story you have been telling, can be of any service to you,
either here or at the assizes, or any where else? A fine time of it indeed
it would be, if, when gentlemen of six thousand a year take up their
servants for robbing them, those servants could trump up such accusations as
these, and could get any magistrate or court of justice to listen to them!
Whether or no the felony with which you stand charged would have brought you
to the gallows, I will not pretend to say: but I am sure this story will.
There would be a speedy end to all order and good government, if fellows
that trample upon ranks and distinctions in this atrocious sort were upon
any consideration suffered to get off."</p>
<p>"And do you refuse, sir, to attend to the particulars of the charge I
allege?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, I do.—But, if I did not, pray what witnesses have you of
the murder?"</p>
<p>This question staggered me.</p>
<p>"None. But I believe I can make out a circumstantial proof, of a nature
to force attention from the most indifferent hearer."</p>
<p>"So I thought.—Officers, take him from the bar!"</p>
<p>Such was the success of this ultimate resort on my part, upon which I had
built with such undoubting confidence. Till now, I had conceived that the
unfavourable situation in which I was placed was prolonged by my own
forbearance; and I had determined to endure all that human nature could
support, rather than have recourse to this extreme recrimination. That idea
secretly consoled me under all my calamities: it was a voluntary sacrifice,
and was cheerfully made. I thought myself allied to the army of martyrs and
confessors; I applauded my fortitude and self-denial; and I pleased myself
with the idea, that I had the power, though I hoped never to employ it, by
an unrelenting display of my resources, to put an end at once to my
sufferings and persecutions.</p>
<p>And this at last was the justice of mankind! A man, under certain
circumstances, shall not be heard in the detection of a crime, because he
has not been a participator of it! The story of a flagitious murder shall be
listened to with indifference, while an innocent man is hunted, like a wild
beast, to the furthest corners of the earth! Six thousand a year shall
protect a man from accusation; and the validity of an impeachment shall be
superseded, because the author of it is a servant!</p>
<p>I was conducted back to the very prison from which a few months before I
had made my escape. With a bursting heart I entered those walls, compelled
to feel that all my more than Herculean labours served for my own torture,
and for no other end. Since my escape from prison I had acquired some
knowledge of the world; I had learned by bitter experience, by how many
links society had a hold upon me, and how closely the snares of despotism
beset me. I no longer beheld the world, as my youthful fancy had once
induced me to do, as a scene in which to hide or to appear, and to exhibit
the freaks of a wanton vivacity. I saw my whole species as ready, in one
mode or other, to be made the instruments of the tyrant. Hope died away in
the bottom of my heart. Shut up for the first night in my dungeon, I was
seized at intervals with temporary frenzy. From time to time, I rent the
universal silence with the roarings of unsupportable despair. But this was a
transient distraction. I soon returned to the sober recollection of myself
and my miseries.</p>
<p>My prospects were more gloomy, and my situation apparently more
irremediable, than ever. I was exposed again, if that were of any account,
to the insolence and tyranny that are uniformly exercised within those
walls. Why should I repeat the loathsome tale of all that was endured by me,
and is endured by every man who is unhappy enough to fall under the
government of these consecrated ministers of national jurisprudence? The
sufferings I had already experienced, my anxieties, my flight, the perpetual
expectation of being discovered, worse than the discovery itself, would
perhaps have been enough to satisfy the most insensible individual, in the
court of his own conscience, if I had even been the felon I was pretended to
be. But the law has neither eyes, nor ears, nor bowels of humanity; and it
turns into marble the hearts of all those that are nursed in its
principles.</p>
<p>I however once more recovered my spirit of determination. I resolved
that, while I had life, I would never be deserted by this spirit. Oppressed,
annihilated I might be; but, if I died, I would die resisting. What use,
what advantage, what pleasurable sentiment, could arise from a tame
surrender? There is no man that is ignorant, that to humble yourself at the
feet of the law is a bootless task; in her courts there is no room for
amendment and reformation.</p>
<p>My fortitude may to some persons appear above the standard of human
nature. But if I draw back the veil from my heart they will readily confess
their mistake. My heart bled at every pore. My resolution was not the calm
sentiment of philosophy and reason. It was a gloomy and desperate purpose:
the creature, not of hope, but of a mind austerely held to its design, that
felt, as it were, satisfied with the naked effort, and prepared to give
success or miscarriage to the winds. It was to this miserable condition,
which might awaken sympathy in the most hardened bosom, that Mr. Falkland
had reduced me.</p>
<p>In the mean time, strange as it may seem, here, in prison, subject to
innumerable hardships, and in the assured expectation of a sentence of
death, I recovered my health. I ascribe this to the state of my mind, which
was now changed, from perpetual anxiety, terror, and alarm, the too frequent
inmates of a prison, but which I upon this occasion did not seem to bring
along with me, to a desperate firmness.</p>
<p>I anticipated the event of my trial. I determined once more to escape
from my prison; nor did I doubt of my ability to effect at least this first
step towards my future preservation. The assizes however were near, and
there were certain considerations, unnecessary to be detailed, that
persuaded me there might be benefit in waiting till my trial should actually
be terminated, before I made my attempt.</p>
<p>It stood upon the list as one of the latest to be brought forward. I was
therefore extremely surprised to find it called out of its order, early on
the morning of the second day. But, if this were unexpected, how much
greater was my astonishment, when my prosecutor was called, to find neither
Mr. Falkland, nor Mr. Forester, nor a single individual of any description,
appear against me! The recognizances into which my prosecutors had entered
were declared to be forfeited; and I was dismissed without further
impediment from the bar.</p>
<p>The effect which this incredible reverse produced upon my mind it is
impossible to express. I, who had come to that bar with the sentence of
death already in idea ringing in my ears, to be told that I was free to
transport myself whithersoever I pleased! Was it for this that I had broken
through so many locks and bolts, and the adamantine walls of my prison; that
I had passed so many anxious days, and sleepless, spectre-haunted nights;
that I had racked my invention for expedients of evasion and concealment;
that my mind had been roused to an energy of which I could scarcely have
believed it capable; that my existence had been enthralled to an ever-living
torment, such as I could scarcely have supposed it in man to endure? Great
God! what is man? Is he thus blind to the future, thus totally unsuspecting
of what is to occur in the next moment of his existence? I have somewhere
read, that heaven in mercy hides from us the future incidents of our life.
My own experience does not well accord with this assertion. In this instance
at least I should have been saved from insupportable labour and
undescribable anguish, could I have foreseen the catastrophe of this most
interesting transaction.</p>
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