<h2><SPAN name="Chapter_XXVIII"></SPAN>Chapter XXVIII</h2>
<h3>In which we have at last introduced a decent sort of heroine, who, however,<br/> only plays a second in our history, Snarleyyow being first fiddle.</h3>
<br/>
<p>But we must leave Mr Vanslyperken, and the widow, and the
<i>Yungfrau</i>, and all connected with her, for the present, and
follow the steps of Ramsay, in doing which we shall have to
introduce new personages in our little drama.</p>
<p>As soon as Ramsay had taken leave of Vanslyperken, being a
stranger at Amsterdam, he inquired his way to the Golden Street, in
which resided Mynheer Van Krause, syndic of the town, and to whom
he had obtained his principal letters of introduction. The syndic's
house was too well known not to be immediately pointed out to him,
and in ten minutes he found himself, with the sailors at his heels
who had been ordered to carry up his baggage, at a handsomely
carved door painted in bright green, and with knockers of massive
brass which glittered in the sun.</p>
<p>Ramsay, as he waited a few seconds, looked up at the house,
which was large and with a noble front to the wide street in face
of it, not, as usual with most of the others, divided in the centre
by a canal running the whole length of it. The door was opened, and
led into a large paved yard, the sides of which were lined with
evergreens in large tubs, painted of the same bright green colour;
adjoining to the yard was a small garden enclosed with high walls,
which was laid out with great precision, and in small beds full of
tulips, ranunculuses, and other bulbs now just appearing above the
ground. The sailors waited outside while the old gray-headed
servitor who had opened the gate, ushered Ramsay through the court
to a second door which led into the house. The hall into which he
entered was paved with marble, and the staircase bold and handsome
which led to the first floor, but on each side of the hall there
were wooden partitions and half-glass doors, through which Ramsay
could see that the rest of the basement was appropriated to
warehouses, and that in the warehouse at the back of the building
there were people busily employed hoisting out merchandise from the
vessels in the canal, the water of which adjoined the very walls.
Ramsay followed the man upstairs, who showed him into a very
splendidly-furnished apartment, and then went to summon his master,
who, he said, was below in the warehouse. Ramsay had but a minute
or two to examine the various objects which decorated the room,
particularly some very fine pictures, when Mynheer Van Krause made
his appearance, with some open tablets in his hand and his pen
across his mouth. He was a very short man, with a respectable
paunch, a very small head, quite bald, a keen blue eye, reddish but
straight nose, and a very florid complexion. There was nothing
vulgar about his appearance, although his figure was against him.
His countenance was one of extreme frankness, mixed with
considerable intelligence, and his whole manner gave you the idea
of precision and calculation.</p>
<p>"You would--tyfel--I forgot my pen," said the syndic, catching
it as it fell out of his mouth. "You would speak with me, mynheer?
To whom have I the pleasure of addressing myself?"</p>
<p>"These letters, sir," replied Ramsay, "will inform you."</p>
<p>Mynheer Van Krause laid his tablets on the table, putting his
pen across to mark the leaf where he had them open, and taking the
letters begged Ramsay to be seated. He then took a chair, pulled a
pair of hand-glasses out of his pocket, laid them on his knees,
broke the seals, and falling back so as to recline, commenced
reading. As soon as he had finished the first letter, he put his
glasses down from his eyes, and made a bow to Ramsay, folded the
open letter the length of the sheet, took out his pencil, and on
the outside wrote the date of the letter, the day of the month,
name, and the name of the writer. Having done this, he laid the
first letter down on the table, took up the second, raised up his
glasses, and performed the same duty towards it, and thus he
continued until he had read the whole six; always, as he concluded
each letter, making the same low bow to Ramsay which he had after
the perusal of the first. Ramsay, who was not a little tired of all
this precision, at last fixed his eyes upon a Wouvermann which hung
near him, and only took them off when he guessed the time of bowing
to be at hand.</p>
<p>The last having been duly marked and numbered, Mynheer Van
Krause turned to Ramsay, and said, "I am most happy, mynheer, to
find under my roof a young gentleman so much recommended by many
valuable friends; moreover, as these letters give me to understand,
so warm a friend to our joint sovereign, and so inimical to the
Jacobite party. I am informed by these letters that you intend to
remain at Amsterdam. If so, I trust that you will take up your
quarters in this house."</p>
<p>To this proposal Ramsay, who fully expected it, gave a willing
consent, saying, at the same time, that he had proposed going to an
hotel; but Mynheer Van Krause insisted on sending for Ramsay's
luggage. He had not far to send, as it was at the door.</p>
<p>"How did you come over?" inquired the host.</p>
<p>"In a king's cutter," replied Ramsay, "which waited for me at
Portsmouth."</p>
<p>This intimation produced another very low bow from Mynheer Van
Krause, as it warranted the importance of his guest; but he then
rose, and apologising for his presence being necessary below, as
they were unloading a cargo of considerable value, he ordered his
old porter to show Mr Ramsay into his rooms, and to take up his
luggage, informing his guest that, it being now twelve o'clock,
dinner would be on the table at half-past one, during which
interval he begged Ramsay to amuse himself, by examining the
pictures, books, &c., with which the room was well furnished.
Then, resuming his tablets and pen, and taking the letters with
him, Mynheer Van Krause made a very low bow, and left Ramsay to
himself, little imagining that he had admitted an attainted traitor
under his roof.</p>
<p>Ramsay could speak Dutch fluently, for he had been quartered two
years at Middleburg, when he was serving in the army. As soon as
the sailors had taken up his portmanteau, and he had dismissed them
with a gratuity, the extent of which made the old porter open his
eyes with astonishment, and gave him a favourable opinion of his
master's new guest, he entered into conversation with the old man,
who, like Eve upon another occasion, was tempted, nothing loth, for
the old man loved to talk; and in a house so busy as the syndic's
there were few who had time to chatter, and those who had,
preferred other conversation to what, it must be confessed, was
rather prosy.</p>
<p>"Mein Gott, mynheer, you must not expect to have company here
all day. My master has the town business and his own business to
attend to: he can't well get through it all: besides, now is a busy
time, the schuyts are bringing up the cargo of a vessel from a far
voyage, and Mynheer Krause always goes to the warehouse from
breakfast till dinner, and then again from three or four o'clock
till six. After that he will stay above, and then sees company, and
hears our young lady sing."</p>
<p>"Young lady! has he a daughter then?"</p>
<p>"He has a daughter, mynheer--only one--only one child--no son,
it is a pity; and so much money too, they say. I don't know how
many stivers and guilders she will have by-and-bye."</p>
<p>"Is not Madame Krause still alive?"</p>
<p>"No, mynheer, she died when this maiden was born. She was a good
lady, cured me once of the yellow jaundice."</p>
<p>Ramsay, like all young men, wondered what sort of a person this
lady might be; but he was too discreet to put the question. He was,
however, pleased to hear that there was a young female in the
house, as it would make the time pass away more agreeably; not that
he expected much. Judging from the father, he made up his mind, as
he took his clothes out of his valise, that she was very short,
very prim, and had a hooked nose.</p>
<p>The old man now left the room to allow Ramsay to dress, and
telling him that if he wanted anything, he had only to call for
Koops, which was his name, but going out, he returned to say, that
Ramsay must call rather loud, as he was a little hard of
hearing.</p>
<p>"Well," thought Ramsay, as he was busy with his toilet, "here I
am safe lodged at last, and everything appears as if it would
prosper. There is something in my position which my mind revolts
at, but stratagem is necessary in war. I am in the enemy's camp to
save my own life, and to serve the just cause. It is no more than
what they attempt to do with us. It is my duty to my lawful
sovereign, but still I do not like it. Then the more merit in
performing a duty so foreign to my inclinations."</p>
<p>Such were the thoughts of Ramsay, who like other manly and
daring dispositions, was dissatisfied with playing the part of a
deceiver, although he had been selected for the service, and his
selection had been approved of at the Court of St Germains.</p>
<p>Open warfare would have suited him better; but he would not
repine at what he considered he was bound in fealty to perform, if
required, although he instinctively shrank from it. His toilet was
complete, and Ramsay descended into the reception-room: he had been
longer than usual, but probably that was because he wished to
commune with himself; or it might be, because he had been informed
that there was a young lady in the house.</p>
<p>The room was empty when Ramsay entered it, and he took the
advice of his host, and amused himself by examining the pictures,
and other articles of <i>virtu</i>, with which the room was
filled.</p>
<p>At last, having looked at everything, Ramsay examined a splendid
clock on the mantelpiece, before a fine glass, which mounted to the
very top of the lofty room, when, accidentally casting his eyes to
the looking-glass, he perceived in it that the door of the room, to
which his back was turned, was open, and that a female was standing
there, apparently surprised to find a stranger, and not exactly
knowing whether to advance or retreat. Ramsay remained in the same
position, as if he did not perceive her, that he might look at her
without her being aware of it. It was, as he presumed, the syndic's
daughter; but how different from the person he had conjured up in
his mind's eye, when at his toilet! Apparently about seventeen or
eighteen years of age, she was rather above the height of woman,
delicately formed, although not by any means thin in her person:
her figure possessing all that feminine luxuriance, which can only
be obtained when the bones are small, but well covered. Her face
was oval, and brilliantly fair. Her hair of a dark chestnut, and
her eyes of a deep blue. Her dress was simple in the extreme. She
wore nothing but the white woollen petticoats of the time, so
short, as to show above her ankles, and a sort of little jacket of
fine green cloth, with lappets, which descended from the waist, and
opened in front. Altogether, Ramsay thought that he had never in
his life seen a young female so peculiarly attractive at first
sight: there was a freshness in her air and appearance so uncommon,
so unlike the general crowd. As she stood in a state of
uncertainty, her mouth opened, and displayed small and beautifully
white teeth.</p>
<p>Gradually she receded, supposing that she had not been
discovered, and closed the door quietly after her leaving Ramsay
for a few seconds at the glass, with his eyes fixed upon the point
at which she had disappeared.</p>
<p>Ramsay of course fell into a reverie, as most men do in a case
of this kind; but he had not proceeded very far into it before he
was interrupted by the appearance of the syndic, who entered by
another door.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to have been obliged to leave you to your own
company, Mynheer Ramsay, so soon after your arrival; but my
arrangement of time is regular, and I cannot make any alteration.
Before you have been with us long, I trust that you will find means
of amusement. I shall have great pleasure in introducing you to
many friends whose time is not so occupied as mine. Once again let
me say how happy I am to receive so distinguished a young gentleman
under my roof. Did the cutter bring despatches for the States
General, may I enquire?"</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Ramsay, "she did; and they are of some
importance."</p>
<p>"Indeed?" rejoined Mynheer inquisitively.</p>
<p>"My dear sir," said Ramsay, blushing at his own falsehood, "we
are, I believe, both earnest in one point, which is to strengthen
the good cause. Under such an impression, and having accepted your
hospitality, I have no right to withhold what I know, but with
which others are not acquainted."</p>
<p>"My dear sir," interrupted Krause, who was now fully convinced
of the importance of his guest, "you do me justice; I am firm and
steadfast in the good cause. I am known to be so, and I am also, I
trust, discreet; confiding to my tried friends, indeed, but it will
be generally acknowledged that Mynheer Krause has possessed, and
safely guarded, the secrets of the state."</p>
<p>Now, in the latter part of this speech, Mynheer Krause committed
a small mistake. He was known to be a babbler, one to whom a secret
could not be imparted, without every risk of its being known; and
it was from the knowledge of this failing in Mynheer Krause that
Ramsay had received such very particular recommendations to him. As
syndic of the town, it was impossible to prevent his knowledge of
government secrets, and when these occasionally escaped, they were
always traced to his not being able to hold his tongue.</p>
<p>Nothing pleased Mynheer Krause so much as a secret, because
nothing gave him so much pleasure as whispering it confidentially
into the ear of a dozen confidential friends. The consequence was,
the government was particularly careful that he should not know
what was going on, and did all they could to prevent it; but there
were many others who, although they could keep a secret, had no
objection to part with it for a consideration, and in the enormous
commercial transactions of Mynheer Krause, it was not unfrequent
for a good bargain to be struck with him by one or more of the
public functionaries, the difference between the sum proposed and
accepted being settled against the interests of Mynheer Krause, by
the party putting him in possession of some government movement
which had hitherto been kept <i>in petto</i>. Every man has his
hobby, and usually pays dear for it, so did Mynheer Krause.</p>
<p>Now when it is remembered that Ramsay had opened and read the
whole of the despatches, it may at once be supposed what a valuable
acquaintance he would appear to Mynheer Krause; but we must not
anticipate. Ramsay's reply was, "I feel it my bounden duty to
impart all I am possessed of to my very worthy host, but allow me
to observe, mynheer, that prudence is necessary--we may be
overheard."</p>
<p>"I am pleased to find one of your age so circumspect," replied
Krause; "perhaps it would be better to defer our conversation till
after supper, but in the meantime, could you not just give me a
little inkling of what is going on?"</p>
<p>Ramsay had difficulty in stifling a smile at this specimen of
Mynheer Krause's eagerness for intelligence. He very gravely walked
up to him, looked all round the room as if he was afraid that the
walls would hear him, and then whispered for a few seconds into the
ear of his host.</p>
<p>"Indeed!" exclaimed Krause, looking up into Ramsay's face.</p>
<p>Ramsay nodded his head authoritatively.</p>
<p>"Gott in himmel!" exclaimed the syndic; but here the bell for
dinner rang a loud peal. "Dinner is on the table, mynheer,"
continued the syndic, "allow me to show you the way. We will talk
this over to-night. Gott in himmel! Is it possible?"</p>
<p>Mynheer Krause led the way to another saloon, where Ramsay found
not only the table prepared, but, as he had anticipated, the
daughter of his host, to whom he was introduced. "Wilhelmina," said
Mynheer Krause, "our young friend will stay with us, I trust, some
time, and you must do all you can to make him comfortable. You
know, my dear, that business must be attended to. With me, time is
money; so much so, that I can scarcely do justice to the affairs of
the state devolving upon me in virtue of my office. You must,
therefore, join with me, and do your best to amuse our guest."</p>
<p>To this speech, Wilhelmina made no reply, but by a gracious
inclination of her head towards Ramsay, which was returned with all
humility. The dinner was excellent, and Ramsay amused himself very
well indeed until it was over. Mynheer Krause then led the way to
the saloon, called for coffee, and, so soon as he had finished it,
made an apology to his guest, and left him alone with his beautiful
daughter.</p>
<p>Wilhelmina Krause was a young person of a strong mind
irregularly cultivated; she had never known the advantage of a
mother's care, and was indeed self-educated. She had a strong tinge
of romance in her character, and, left so much alone, she loved to
indulge in it.</p>
<p>In other points she was clever, well read, and accomplished;
graceful in her manners, open in her disposition, to a fault; for,
like her father, she could not keep a secret, not even the secrets
of her own heart; for whatever she thought she gave utterance to,
which is not exactly the custom in this world, and often attended
with unpleasant consequences.</p>
<p>The seclusion in which she had been kept added to the natural
timidity of her disposition--but when once intimate, it also added
to her confiding character. It was impossible to see without
admiring her, to know her without loving her; for she was nature
herself, and, at the same time, in her person one of Nature's
masterpieces.</p>
<p>As we observed, when they retired to the saloon, Mynheer Krause
very shortly quitted them, to attend to his affairs below, desiring
his daughter to exert herself for the amusement of his guest; the
contrary, however, was the case, for Ramsay exerted himself to
amuse her, and very soon was successful, for he could talk of
courts and kings, of courtiers and of people, and of a thousand
things, all interesting to a young girl who had lived secluded; and
as his full-toned voice, in measured and low pitch, fell upon
Wilhelmina's ear, she never perhaps was so much interested. She
seldom ventured a remark, except it was to request him to proceed,
and the eloquent language with which Ramsay clothed his ideas,
added a charm to the novelty of his conversation. In the course of
two hours Ramsay had already acquired a moral influence over
Wilhelmina, who looked up to him with respect, and another feeling
which we can only define by saying that it was certainly anything
but ill-will.</p>
<p>The time passed so rapidly, that the two young people could
hardly believe it possible that it was past six o'clock, when they
were interrupted by the appearance of Mynheer Krause, who came from
his counting-house, the labours of the day being over. In the
summer-time it was his custom to take his daughter out in the
carriage at this hour, but the weather was too cold, and, moreover,
it was nearly dark. A conversation ensued on general topics, which
lasted till supper-time; after this repast was over Wilhelmina
retired, leaving Ramsay and the syndic alone.</p>
<p>It was then that Ramsay made known to his host the contents of
the despatches, much to Mynheer Krause's surprise and delight, who
felt assured that his guest must be strong in the confidence of the
English government, to be able to communicate such intelligence.
Ramsay, who was aware that the syndic would sooner or later know
what had been written, of course was faithful in his detail; not
so, however, when they canvassed the attempts of the Jacobite
party; then Mr Krause was completely mystified.</p>
<p>It was not till a late hour that they retired to bed. The next
morning, the syndic, big with his intelligence, called upon his
friends in person, and much to their surprise told them the
contents of the despatches which had been received--and, much to
his delight, discovered that he had been correctly informed. He
also communicated what Ramsay had told him relative to the
movements of the Court of St Germains, and thus, unintentionally,
false intelligence was forwarded to England as from good authority.
It hardly need be observed, that, in a very short time, Ramsay had
gained the entire confidence of his host, and we may add also, of
his host's daughter; but we must leave him for the present to
follow up his plans, whatever they may be, and return to the
personages more immediately connected with this narrative.</p>
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