<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<p class="p2">That night there had been great excitement in
the village of Nowelhurst. A rumour had reached
it that Cradock Nowell, loved in every cottage
there, partly as their own production, partly as
their future owner, partly for his own sake, and
most of all for his misfortunes, was thrown into
prison to stand his trial for the murder of his
brother. Another rumour was that, to prevent any
scandal to the nobility, he had been sent to sea
alone in a seventy–four gun ship, with corks in her
bottom tied with wire arranged so as to fly all at
once, same as if it was ginger–beer bottles, on the
seventh day, when the salt–water had turned the
wires rusty.</p>
<p>It is hard to say of these two reports which
roused the greater indignation; perhaps on the
whole the former did, because the latter was supposed
to be according to institution. Anyhow, all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
the village was out in the street that night; and
the folding of arms, and the self–importance, the
confidential winks, and the power to say more (but
for hyper–Nestorean prudence) were at their acme
in a knot of gaffers gathered around Rufus Hutton,
and affording him good sport.</p>
<p>Nothing now could be done in Nowelhurst without
Rufus Hutton. He had that especial knack
(mistaken sometimes in a statesman for really high
qualities) which becomes in a woman true capacity
for gossip. By virtue thereof Rufus Hutton was
now prime–minister of Nowelhurst; and Sir Cradock,
the king, being nothing more now than the
shadow of a name, his deputyʼs power was absolute.
He knew the history by this time of every cottage,
and pigsty, and tombstone in the churchyard; how
much every man got every week, and how much
he gave his wife out of it, what he had for dinner
on Sundays, and how long he made his waistcoat
last. Suddenly the double–barrelled noise which
foreruns a horse at full gallop came from the
bridge, and old folk hobbled, and young got ready
to run.</p>
<p>“Hooraw—hooraw!” cried a dozen and a half
of boys, “here be Hempror o’ Roosia coming.”</p>
<p>Boys will believe almost anything, when they
get excited (having taken the trick from their
fathers), but even the women were disappointed,
when the galloping horse stopped short in the
crowd, and from his withers shot forward, and fell
with both hands full of mane, a personage not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
more august than the porter at Brockenhurst
Station.</p>
<p>“Catch the horse, you fool!” cried Rufus.</p>
<p>“Cuss the horse,” said the porter, trying to
draw breath; “better been under a train I had.
Donʼt stand gaping, chawbacons. Is ever a sawbones,
surgeon, doctor, or what the devil you call
them in these outlandish parts, to be got for love
or money?”</p>
<p>“I am a sawbones,” said Rufus Hutton, coming
forward with his utmost dignity; “and itʼs a mercy
I donʼt saw yours, young man, if thatʼs all you
know of riding.”</p>
<p>The porter touched his hair instead of his hat
(which was gone long ago), while the “chawbacons”
rallied, and laughed at him, and one
offered him a “zide–zaddle,” and all the women of
the village felt that Dr. Hutton had quenched the
porter, and vindicated Nowelhurst.</p>
<p>“When you have recovered your breath, young
man,” continued Rufus, pushing, as he always did,
his advantage; “and thanked God for your escape
from the first horse you ever mounted, perhaps you
will tell us your errand, and we chawbacons will
consider it.”</p>
<p>A gruff haw–haw and some treble he–heʼs added
to the porterʼs discomfiture, for he could not come
to time yet, being now in the second tense of
exhaustion, which is even worse than the first,
being rather of the heart than lungs.</p>
<p>“Station—Mr. Garnet—dead!” was all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
man could utter, and that only in spasms, and
with great chest–heavings.</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton leaped on the horse in a moment,
caught up old Channingʼs stick, and was out of
sight in the summer dusk ere any one else in the
crowd had done more than gape, and say, “Oh
Lor!” By dint of skill he sped the old horse
nearly as quickly to the station as the fury of
Jehu had brought him thence, and landed him at
the door with far less sign of exhaustion. Then
walking into the little room, in the manner of a
man who thoroughly knows his work, he saw a
sight which never in this world will leave him.</p>
<p>Upon a hard sofa, shored up with an ash–log
where the mahogany was sprung, and poked up
into a corner as if to get a bearing there, with
blankets piled upon him heavily and tucked round
the collar of his coat, and his great head hanging
over the rise where the beading of the brass
ends, lay the ill–fated Bull Garnet,—a man from
birth to death a subject for pity more than terror.
Fifty years old—more than fifty years—and
scarce a twelvemonth of happiness since the
shakings of the world began, and childhoodʼs dream
was over. Toiling ever for the future, toiling for
his children, ever since he had them, labouring to
make peace with God, if only he might have his
own, where passion is not, but love abides. The
room smelled strongly of bad brandy, some of
which was oozing now down his broad square chin,
and dripping from the great blue jaw. Of course<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span>
he could not swallow it; and now one of the
women (for three had rushed in) was performing
that duty for him.</p>
<p>“Turn out that drunken hag!” cried Dr. Hutton,
feeling he had no idea how. “Up with the
window. Bring the sofa here; and take all but
one of those blankets off.”</p>
<p>“But, master,” objected another woman, “heʼll
take his death of cold.”</p>
<p>“Turn out that woman also!” He was instantly
obeyed. “Now roll up one of those
blankets, and put it under his head here—this side,
canʼt you see? Good God, what a set of fellows
you are to let a manʼs head hang down like that!
Hot water and a sponge this instant. Nearly
boiling, mind you. Plenty of it, and a foot–tub.
Now donʼt stare at me.”</p>
<p>With a quick light hand he released the blue
and turgid throat from the narrow necktie, then
laid his forefinger upon the heart and watched the
eyelids intently.</p>
<p>“Appleplexy, no doubt, master,” said the most
intelligent of the men; “I have ‘eared that if you
can bleed them——”</p>
<p>“Hold your tongue, or Iʼll phlebotomise you.”
That big word inspired universal confidence, because
no one understood it. “Now, support him
in that position, while I pull his boots off. One
of you run to the inn for a bottle of French
cognac—not this filthy stuff, mind—and a corkscrew
and a teaspoon. Now the hot water here!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
In with his feet, and bathe his legs, while I sponge
his face and chest—as hot as you can bear your
hands in it. His heart is all but stopped, and his
skin as cold as ice. Thatʼs it; quicker yet! Donʼt
be afraid of scalding him. There, he begins to
feel it.”</p>
<p>The dying manʼs great heavy eyelids slowly and
feebly quivered, and a long deep sigh arose, but
there was not strength to fetch it. Dr. Hutton
took advantage of the faint impulse of life to give
him a little brandy, and then a little more again,
and by that time he could sigh.</p>
<p>“Bo,” he whispered very softly, and trying to
lift his hand for something, and Rufus Hutton
knew somehow (perhaps by means of his own child)
that he was trying to say, “Bob.”</p>
<p>“Bob will be here directly. Cheer up, cheer
up, till he comes, my friend.”</p>
<p>He called him his friend, and the very next day
he would have denounced him as murderer to the
magistrates at Lymington. Now his only thought
was of saving the poor manʼs life.</p>
<p>The fatherʼs dull eyes gleamed again when he
heard those words, and a little smile came flickering
over the stern lines of his face. They gave him
more brandy on the strength of it, while he kept
on looking at the door.</p>
<p>“Rub, rub, rub, men; very lightly, but very
quickly. Keep your thumbs up, donʼt you see?
Mustnʼt get cold again for the world. There now,
heʼll keep his heart up until his dear son arrives.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
And then his children shall nurse him, much
better than any one else could; and how glad
they will be, John Thomas, to see him looking so
well and so strong again!”</p>
<p>All this time, Rue Hutton himself, with a
womanʼs skill and tenderness, was encouraging, by
gentle friction over the stagnant heart, each feeble
impulse yet to live, each little bubble faintly rising
from the well of hope, every clinging of the soul
to the things so hard to leave behind. “While
there is life, there is hope.” True and genial saying!
And we hope there is hope beyond it.</p>
<p>Poor Bull Garnet was taken home, even that
very night. For Dr. Hutton saw how much he
was longing for his children, who (until he was
carried in) knew nothing of his danger. “Please
God,” said Rufus to himself, as he crouched in the
fly by the narrow mattress, even foregoing his
loved cheroot, and keeping his hand on his patientʼs
pulse; “please God, the poor fellow shall breathe
his last with a child at either side of him.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile, an urgent message from Sir Cradock
Nowell was awaiting the sick man at his
cottage. Eoa herself had brought word to Pearl
(of whom she longed to make a friend) that her
uncle was walking about the house, perpetually
walking, calling aloud in every room for Mr. Garnet
and John Rosedew. He had heard of no disaster,
any more than she had, for he seldom read
the papers now; but Mr. Brockwood had been
with him a very long time that morning, and Dr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span>
Buller came in accidentally; and Eoa could almost
vow that there was some infamous scheme on
foot, and she knew whose doing it was; and oh
that Uncle John would come back! But now they
wanted Mr. Garnet, and he must hurry up to the
Hall the moment he came home.</p>
<p>Mr. Garnet, of course, they could not have: his
strength was wrecked, his heart benumbed, his
mind incapable of effort, except to know his children,
if that could ever be one. And in this paralytic
state, never sleeping, never waking, never
wholly conscious, he lay for weeks; and time for
him had neither night nor morning.</p>
<p>But Mr. Rosedew could be brought to help his
ancient friend, if only it was in his power to overlook
the injury. He did not overlook it. For that
he was too great a man. He utterly forgot it. To
his mind it was thenceforth a thing that had never
happened:</p>
<p class="ppq6 p1">“To–morrow either with black cloud<br/>
Let the Father fill the heaven,<br/>
Or with sun full–blazing:<br/>
Yet shall He not erase the past,<br/>
Nor beat abroad, and make undone,<br/>
What once the fleeting hour hath borne.”</p>
<p class="p1">Truly so our Horace saith. And yet that
Father gives, sometimes, to the noblest of his
children, power to revoke the evil, or at least annul
it,—grandeur to undo the wrong done by others to
them. Not with any sense of greatness, neither
hope of self–reward, simply from the loving–kindness
of the deep humanity.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In truth it was a noble thing, such as not even
the driest man, sapped and carked with care and
evil, worn with undeserved rebuff, and dwelling
ever underground, in the undermining of his faith,
could behold and not be glad with a joy unbidden,
could turn away from without wet eyes, and a
glimpse of the God who loves us,—and yet the
simplest, mildest scene that a child could describe
to its mother. So will I tell it, if may be, casting
all long words away, leaning on an old manʼs staff,
looking over the stile of the world.</p>
<p>It was the height of the summer–time, and the
quiet mood of the setting sun touched with calm
and happy sadness all he was forsaking. Men
were going home from work; wives were looking
for them; maidens by the gate or paling longed
for some protection; children must be put to bed,
and what a shame, so early! Puce and purple
pillows lay, holding golden locks of sun, piled and
lifted by light breezes, the painted eider–down of
sunset. In the air a feeling was—those who
breathe it cannot tell—only this, that it does them
good; God knows how, and why, and whence—but
it makes them love their brethren.</p>
<p>The poor old man, more tried and troubled than
a lucky labourer, wretched in his wealth, worse
hampered by his rank and placement, sat upon a
high oak chair—for now he feared to lean his head
back—and prayed for some one to help him. Oh,
for any one who loved him; oh, for any sight of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
God, whom in his pride he had forgotten! Eoa
was a darling, his only comfort now; but what
could such a girl do? Who was she to meet the
world? And the son he had used so shamefully.
Good God, his only son! And now he knew, with
some strange knowledge, loose, and wide, and wandering,
that his son was innocent after all, and
lost to him for ever, through his own vile cruelty.
And now they meant to prove him mad—what use
to disguise it?—him who once had the clearest
head, chairman of the Quarter Sessions——</p>
<p>Here he broke down, and lay back, with his
white hair poured against the carved black oak of
the chair, and his wasted hands flung downward,
only praying God to help him, anyhow to help
him.</p>
<p>Then John Rosedew came in softly, half
ashamed of himself, half nervous lest he were
presuming, overdrawing the chords of youth, the
bond of the days when they went about with arm
round the neck of each other. In his heart was
pity, very deep and holy; and yet, of all that filled
his eyes, the very last to show itself.</p>
<p>Over against the ancient friend, the loved one of
his boyhood, he stopped and sadly gazed a moment,
and then drew back with a shock and sorrow, as of
death brought nearer. At the sound, Sir Cradock
Nowell lifted his weary eyes and sighed; and
then he looked intently; and then he knew the
honest face, the smile, the gentle forehead. Quietly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span>
he arose, with colour flowing over his pallid cheeks,
and in his eyes strong welcome, and ready with
his lips to speak, yet in his heart unable. Thereupon
he held the chair, and bowed with the
deepest reverence, such as king or queen receives
not till a life has earned it. Even the hand
which he was raising he let fall again, drawn back
by a bitter memory, and a nervous shame.</p>
<p>But his friend of olden time would not have
him so disgraced, wanted no repentance. With
years of kindness in his eyes and the history of
friendship, he came, without a bow, and took the
hand that now was shy of him.</p>
<p>“Cradock, oh, I am so glad.”</p>
<p>“John, thank God for this, John!”</p>
<p>Then they turned to other subjects, with a sort
of nervousness—the one for fear of presuming on
pardon, the other for fear of offering it. Only both
knew, once for all, that nothing more could come
between them till the hour of death.</p>
<p>The rector accepted once again his well–beloved
home and cares, for the vacancy had not been
filled, only Mr. Pell had lived a short time at the
Rectory. The joy of all the parish equalled, if
not transcended, that of parson and of patron.</p>
<p>And, over and above the ease of conscience,
and the sense of comfort, it was a truly happy
thing for poor Sir Cradock Nowell, when the loss
of the <i>Taprobane</i> could no longer be concealed
from him, that now he had the proven friend to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
fall back upon once more. He had spent whole
days in writing letters—humble, loving, imploring
letters to the son in unknown latitudes—directing
them as fancy took him to the Cape, to Port
Natal, Mozambique, or even Bombay (in case of
stress of weather), Point de Galle, Colombo, &c.
&c., in all cases to be called for, and invariably
marked “urgent.” Then from this labour of love
he awoke to a vague form of conviction that his
letters ought to have been addressed to the bottom
of the sea.</p>
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