登陆注册
5790100000083

第83章 Chapter the Last

A parting glance at such of the actors in this little history as it has not,in the course of its events,dismissed,will bring it to an end.

Mr Haredale fled that night.Before pursuit could be begun,indeed before Sir John was traced or missed,he had left the kingdom.

Repairing straight to a religious establishment,known throughout Europe for the rigour and severity of its discipline,and for the merciless penitence it exacted from those who sought its shelter as a refuge from the world,he took the vows which thenceforth shut him out from nature and his kind,and after a few remorseful years was buried in its gloomy cloisters.

Two days elapsed before the body of Sir John was found.As soon as it was recognised and carried home,the faithful valet,true to his master's creed,eloped with all the cash and movables he could lay his hands on,and started as a finished gentleman upon his own account.In this career he met with great success,and would certainly have married an heiress in the end,but for an unlucky check which led to his premature decease.He sank under a contagious disorder,very prevalent at that time,and vulgarly termed the jail fever.

Lord George Gordon,remaining in his prison in the Tower until Monday the fifth of February in the following year,was on that day solemnly tried at Westminster for High Treason.Of this crime he was,after a patient investigation,declared Not Guilty;upon the ground that there was no proof of his having called the multitude together with any traitorous or unlawful intentions.Yet so many people were there,still,to whom those riots taught no lesson of reproof or moderation,that a public subscription was set on foot in Scotland to defray the cost of his defence.

For seven years afterwards he remained,at the strong intercession of his friends,comparatively quiet;saving that he,every now and then,took occasion to display his zeal for the Protestant faith in some extravagant proceeding which was the delight of its enemies;and saving,besides,that he was formally excommunicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury,for refusing to appear as a witness in the Ecclesiastical Court when cited for that purpose.In the year 1788he was stimulated by some new insanity to write and publish an injurious pamphlet,reflecting on the Queen of France,in very violent terms.Being indicted for the libel,and (after various strange demonstrations in court)found guilty,he fled into Holland in place of appearing to receive sentence:from whence,as the quiet burgomasters of Amsterdam had no relish for his company,he was sent home again with all speed.Arriving in the month of July at Harwich,and going thence to Birmingham,he made in the latter place,in August,a public profession of the Jewish religion;and figured there as a Jew until he was arrested,and brought back to London to receive the sentence he had evaded.By virtue of this sentence he was,in the month of December,cast into Newgate for five years and ten months,and required besides to pay a large fine,and to furnish heavy securities for his future good behaviour.

After addressing,in the midsummer of the following year,an appeal to the commiseration of the National Assembly of France,which the English minister refused to sanction,he composed himself to undergo his full term of punishment;and suffering his beard to grow nearly to his waist,and conforming in all respects to the ceremonies of his new religion,he applied himself to the study of history,and occasionally to the art of painting,in which,in his younger days,he had shown some skill.Deserted by his former friends,and treated in all respects like the worst criminal in the jail,he lingered on,quite cheerful and resigned,until the 1st of November 1793,when he died in his cell,being then only three-and-forty years of age.

Many men with fewer sympathies for the distressed and needy,with less abilities and harder hearts,have made a shining figure and left a brilliant fame.He had his mourners.The prisoners bemoaned his loss,and missed him;for though his means were not large,his charity was great,and in bestowing alms among them he considered the necessities of all alike,and knew no distinction of sect or creed.There are wise men in the highways of the world who may learn something,even from this poor crazy lord who died in Newgate.

To the last,he was truly served by bluff John Grueby.John was at his side before he had been four-and-twenty hours in the Tower,and never left him until he died.He had one other constant attendant,in the person of a beautiful Jewish girl;who attached herself to him from feelings half religious,half romantic,but whose virtuous and disinterested character appears to have been beyond the censure even of the most censorious.

Gashford deserted him,of course.He subsisted for a time upon his traffic in his master's secrets;and,this trade failing when the stock was quite exhausted,procured an appointment in the honourable corps of spies and eavesdroppers employed by the government.As one of these wretched underlings,he did his drudgery,sometimes abroad,sometimes at home,and long endured the various miseries of such a station.Ten or a dozen years ago--not more--a meagre,wan old man,diseased and miserably poor,was found dead in his bed at an obscure inn in the Borough,where he was quite unknown.He had taken poison.There was no clue to his name;but it was discovered from certain entries in a pocket-book he carried,that he had been secretary to Lord George Gordon in the time of the famous riots.

Many months after the re-establishment of peace and order,and even when it had ceased to be the town-talk,that every military officer,kept at free quarters by the City during the late alarms,had cost for his board and lodging four pounds four per day,and every private soldier two and twopence halfpenny;many months after even this engrossing topic was forgotten,and the United Bulldogs were to a man all killed,imprisoned,or transported,Mr Simon Tappertit,being removed from a hospital to prison,and thence to his place of trial,was discharged by proclamation,on two wooden legs.Shorn of his graceful limbs,and brought down from his high estate to circumstances of utter destitution,and the deepest misery,he made shift to stump back to his old master,and beg for some relief.By the locksmith's advice and aid,he was established in business as a shoeblack,and opened shop under an archway near the Horse Guards.This being a central quarter,he quickly made a very large connection;and on levee days,was sometimes known to have as many as twenty half-pay officers waiting their turn for polishing.Indeed his trade increased to that extent,that in course of time he entertained no less than two apprentices,besides taking for his wife the widow of an eminent bone and rag collector,formerly of MilIbank.With this lady (who assisted in the business)he lived in great domestic happiness,only chequered by those little storms which serve to clear the atmosphere of wedlock,and brighten its horizon.In some of these gusts of bad weather,Mr Tappertit would,in the assertion of his prerogative,so far forget himself,as to correct his lady with a brush,or boot,or shoe;while she (but only in extreme cases)would retaliate by taking off his legs,and leaving him exposed to the derision of those urchins who delight in mischief.

Miss Miggs,baffled in all her schemes,matrimonial and otherwise,and cast upon a thankless,undeserving world,turned very sharp and sour;and did at length become so acid,and did so pinch and slap and tweak the hair and noses of the youth of Golden Lion Court,that she was by one consent expelled that sanctuary,and desired to bless some other spot of earth,in preference.It chanced at that moment,that the justices of the peace for Middlesex proclaimed by public placard that they stood in need of a female turnkey for the County Bridewell,and appointed a day and hour for the inspection of candidates.Miss Miggs attending at the time appointed,was instantly chosen and selected from one hundred and twenty-four competitors,and at once promoted to the office;which she held until her decease,more than thirty years afterwards,remaining single all that time.It was observed of this lady that while she was inflexible and grim to all her female flock,she was particularly so to those who could establish any claim to beauty:

and it was often remarked as a proof of her indomitable virtue and severe chastity,that to such as had been frail she showed no mercy;always falling upon them on the slightest occasion,or on no occasion at all,with the fullest measure of her wrath.Among other useful inventions which she practised upon this class of offenders and bequeathed to posterity,was the art of inflicting an exquisitely vicious poke or dig with the wards of a key in the small of the back,near the spine.She likewise originated a mode of treading by accident (in pattens)on such as had small feet;also very remarkable for its ingenuity,and previously quite unknown.

It was not very long,you may be sure,before Joe Willet and Dolly Varden were made husband and wife,and with a handsome sum in bank (for the locksmith could afford to give his daughter a good dowry),reopened the Maypole.It was not very long,you may be sure,before a red-faced little boy was seen staggering about the Maypole passage,and kicking up his heels on the green before the door.It was not very long,counting by years,before there was a red-faced little girl,another red-faced little boy,and a whole troop of girls and boys:so that,go to Chigwell when you would,there would surely be seen,either in the village street,or on the green,or frolicking in the farm-yard--for it was a farm now,as well as a tavern--more small Joes and small Dollys than could be easily counted.It was not a very long time before these appearances ensued;but it WAS a VERY long time before Joe looked five years older,or Dolly either,or the locksmith either,or his wife either:for cheerfulness and content are great beautifiers,and are famous preservers of youthful looks,depend upon it.

It was a long time,too,before there was such a country inn as the Maypole,in all England:indeed it is a great question whether there has ever been such another to this hour,or ever will be.It was a long time too--for Never,as the proverb says,is a long day--before they forgot to have an interest in wounded soldiers at the Maypole,or before Joe omitted to refresh them,for the sake of his old campaign;or before the serjeant left off looking in there,now and then;or before they fatigued themselves,or each other,by talking on these occasions of battles and sieges,and hard weather and hard service,and a thousand things belonging to a soldier's life.As to the great silver snuff-box which the King sent Joe with his own hand,because of his conduct in the Riots,what guest ever went to the Maypole without putting finger and thumb into that box,and taking a great pinch,though he had never taken a pinch of snuff before,and almost sneezed himself into convulsions even then?As to the purple-faced vintner,where is the man who lived in those times and never saw HIM at the Maypole:to all appearance as much at home in the best room,as if he lived there?And as to the feastings and christenings,and revellings at Christmas,and celebrations of birthdays,wedding-days,and all manner of days,both at the Maypole and the Golden Key,--if they are not notorious,what facts are?

Mr Willet the elder,having been by some extraordinary means possessed with the idea that Joe wanted to be married,and that it would be well for him,his father,to retire into private life,and enable him to live in comfort,took up his abode in a small cottage at Chigwell;where they widened and enlarged the fireplace for him,hung up the boiler,and furthermore planted in the little garden outside the front-door,a fictitious Maypole;so that he was quite at home directly.To this,his new habitation,Tom Cobb,Phil Parkes,and Solomon Daisy went regularly every night:and in the chimney-corner,they all four quaffed,and smoked,and prosed,and dozed,as they had done of old.It being accidentally discovered after a short time that Mr Willet still appeared to consider himself a landlord by profession,Joe provided him with a slate,upon which the old man regularly scored up vast accounts for meat,drink,and tobacco.As he grew older this passion increased upon him;and it became his delight to chalk against the name of each of his cronies a sum of enormous magnitude,and impossible to be paid:

and such was his secret joy in these entries,that he would be perpetually seen going behind the door to look at them,and coming forth again,suffused with the liveliest satisfaction.

He never recovered the surprise the Rioters had given him,and remained in the same mental condition down to the last moment of his life.It was like to have been brought to a speedy termination by the first sight of his first grandchild,which appeared to fill him with the belief that some alarming miracle had happened to Joe.Being promptly blooded,however,by a skilful surgeon,he rallied;and although the doctors all agreed,on his being attacked with symptoms of apoplexy six months afterwards,that he ought to die,and took it very ill that he did not,he remained alive--possibly on account of his constitutional slowness--for nearly seven years more,when he was one morning found speechless in his bed.He lay in this state,free from all tokens of uneasiness,for a whole week,when he was suddenly restored to consciousness by hearing the nurse whisper in his son's ear that he was going.'I'm a-going,Joseph,'said Mr Willet,turning round upon the instant,'to the Salwanners'--and immediately gave up the ghost.

He left a large sum of money behind him;even more than he was supposed to have been worth,although the neighbours,according to the custom of mankind in calculating the wealth that other people ought to have saved,had estimated his property in good round numbers.Joe inherited the whole;so that he became a man of great consequence in those parts,and was perfectly independent.

Some time elapsed before Barnaby got the better of the shock he had sustained,or regained his old health and gaiety.But he recovered by degrees:and although he could never separate his condemnation and escape from the idea of a terrific dream,he became,in other respects,more rational.Dating from the time of his recovery,he had a better memory and greater steadiness of purpose;but a dark cloud overhung his whole previous existence,and never cleared away.

He was not the less happy for this,for his love of freedom and interest in all that moved or grew,or had its being in the elements,remained to him unimpaired.He lived with his mother on the Maypole farm,tending the poultry and the cattle,working in a garden of his own,and helping everywhere.He was known to every bird and beast about the place,and had a name for every one.

Never was there a lighter-hearted husbandman,a creature more popular with young and old,a blither or more happy soul than Barnaby;and though he was free to ramble where he would,he never quitted Her,but was for evermore her stay and comfort.

It was remarkable that although he had that dim sense of the past,he sought out Hugh's dog,and took him under his care;and that he never could be tempted into London.When the Riots were many years old,and Edward and his wife came back to England with a family almost as numerous as Dolly's,and one day appeared at the Maypole porch,he knew them instantly,and wept and leaped for joy.But neither to visit them,nor on any other pretence,no matter how full of promise and enjoyment,could he be persuaded to set foot in the streets:nor did he ever conquer this repugnance or look upon the town again.

Grip soon recovered his looks,and became as glossy and sleek as ever.But he was profoundly silent.Whether he had forgotten the art of Polite Conversation in Newgate,or had made a vow in those troubled times to forego,for a period,the display of his accomplishments,is matter of uncertainty;but certain it is that for a whole year he never indulged in any other sound than a grave,decorous croak.At the expiration of that term,the morning being very bright and sunny,he was heard to address himself to the horses in the stable,upon the subject of the Kettle,so often mentioned in these pages;and before the witness who overheard him could run into the house with the intelligence,and add to it upon his solemn affirmation the statement that he had heard him laugh,the bird himself advanced with fantastic steps to the very door of the bar,and there cried,'I'm a devil,I'm a devil,I'm a devil!'

with extraordinary rapture.

From that period (although he was supposed to be much affected by the death of Mr Willet senior),he constantly practised and improved himself in the vulgar tongue;and,as he was a mere infant for a raven when Barnaby was grey,he has very probably gone on talking to the present time.

End

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 甜妻带着小萌宝

    甜妻带着小萌宝

    一场意外,她被那个男人吃干抹净,未婚先孕,沦为城中笑柄!该死的女人,睡了他的人,偷了他的种,还想过的春风得意?做梦!七年后,她带着天才儿子耀眼回归,再次出现在他的视线中……当腹黑遇见腹黑,拼的是演技,讲的是计!只是……男人冷笑,这吃里扒外的变态熊孩子确定是他的种?
  • 催命判官加班中

    催命判官加班中

    催命判官崔珏就是地府的一个倒霉催加班狗,坑爹上司阴天子三天两头出去嗨,坑的他只能泪流满面的加班看魏征他们三缺一。借下凡巡游的空想给自己放假,结果自己被坑成了妹子,结果各种恶鬼平均五步一个,不知道的还以为是地府戒严五步一哨。阳间出事怨气暴增,恶人生恶鬼。没泡成妹子就变妹子的崔珏决定奋发图强,于是——阳间多了一个动不动划人生死簿送人下地狱的漂亮妹子。从此,恶鬼不索命,因为有人替她们把让她们变鬼的人给催了命。 此书纯属编造,与现实无任何关联,与现实中崔府君,钟天师等人无有关联,
  • 失忆的证人

    失忆的证人

    二十岁的苏童实习期间,亲眼目睹一桩残忍的凶杀案,因极度恐惧导致失忆。失去部分记忆的苏童,靠拼命工作隐瞒内心的惶恐,而成为一名出色的职业经理人。二十八的苏童应聘进入东华集团,成为项目筹建的总监。期间,苏童遭遇到莫名的威胁,并卷入一宗杀人案,在一名神秘乞丐帮助下洗脱嫌疑,亦不得不黯然离职……
  • 退散吧,白莲花!

    退散吧,白莲花!

    穿越到白莲花游戏中,疏影感觉压力好大。为了达到回家的目的,疏影走上了和白莲花女主敌对的道路。本着干一行爱一行的职业素养,是要把白莲花所有的桃花全都斩断,灭掉所有的金手指,达到驱散吧,白莲花的目的!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 人间月照天子剑

    人间月照天子剑

    皇子篡位,天下将乱。外敌环伺,内忧不断。在一个名不见经传的小山村里,一位穷书生好心收养了一位孤儿。十五年后,一段波澜壮阔的故事便在这个孩子身上发生了......
  • 天幻至尊

    天幻至尊

    绝世精将缘情而死,却发现自己身在异处。寻情之路,似漫非长。新世界的发现,将带来什么……一代传奇,巅峰崛起,就此展开!
  • 谛听阁

    谛听阁

    古老的大唐,有一个神秘的家族——明氏一族。传说这个家族的人,能驭百鬼、驱妖邪。繁华的长安城,还有一个神秘的古董店——谛听阁。据说这里拥有长安城最多的秘密。在外人眼中,明胤继承了明氏一族最浓醇的血脉,前途无量。却没人知道他藏身在谛听阁,背负着家族的使命,举步维艰。
  • 冷酷兵王回归都市

    冷酷兵王回归都市

    一次意外,亲手杀死了自己的兄弟,自责的他选择了逃避回归都市,师傅却让他做一名学生,在校园里又会出现怎样的故事,但,当他知道那次意外是一场阴谋,他,又如何力挽狂澜。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 抬头不见低头贱

    抬头不见低头贱

    【风尚阁】告诉你,阅读是一件美丽的事。http://pgsk.com/fengshang/一句话文案:同在屋檐下的冰山男欢脱女,擦出别样的激情小菊花。◇◆◇◆◇◆每个女人都有一个命犯的克星,她于笑笑自然也不例外。明明总是被他的腹黑所压迫,却还是忍不住每天早上都会对他说早上好。还美其名曰:每天一句早上好,心情好啊没烦恼。甚至还费尽心思的向他表白!每个男人都有一个命犯的桃花劫,他陈墨自然也不例外。明明总是说她是无聊无趣无品味的三无女人,可是却在不知不觉中期待着她会用什么口气来跟他说早上好。更不明白自己为什么会在她丧失信心时对她说:于笑笑,你可知在我陈墨的心里,万家灯火不及你眼中烟火!她说他‘腹黑恶毒没人性’,他说她‘无聊无趣无品味。’也许他们两人自那天在男厕所这么一个别致的地方相遇起,就注定这是个大大的桃花劫,一辈子也逃不掉的劫。罢了罢了,在劫难逃,不如不逃。◇◆◇◆◇◆经过多次斗智斗勇的实战演练,她终于深刻意识到:房东猛于虎,调戏需谨慎;人在屋檐下,不得不低头。男主表面腹黑冷漠实则是纯良无害的小白兔一只。女主表面热情可爱实则是又色又痞的大尾巴狼一匹。〖看欢脱痞气小色女如何绝地反击成功扑到腹黑冷脸面瘫美男。〗【这是一个男主女主互克,男主女主互爱的萌宠文~】---------------------------爱收藏的才是乖宝贝儿~~有收藏就有动力,赐予我力量吧亲们~~《诱心总裁强索欢》http://pgsk.com/a/579380/